A War of Attrition Ukraine Cannot Win on Current Terms
The analysis presented in this piece offers one of the most granular and unflinching battlefield assessments of Ukraine's position as 2025 draws to a close. Where much Western commentary still frames the war in terms of aid packages, diplomatic summits, and negotiation postures, this report grounds itself in kilometers lost, brigades depleted, and the cascading failures of a military running on fumes. The picture that emerges is not of a stalemate, but of a slow-motion unraveling.
The central thesis is stark: Ukraine is approaching exhaustion, and Russia knows it. Rather than negotiate from a position of advantage, Moscow is choosing to press harder, calculating that time is on its side. The author compares Russia to "a wounded, starving vulture sensing weakness in its battered prey" -- a metaphor that captures both the predatory logic and the fact that Russia itself is far from healthy. Yet the asymmetry of exhaustion matters more than the symmetry of suffering.
The Manpower Crisis as Root Cause
The most damning thread running through the analysis is Ukraine's manpower shortage. It surfaces in every sector, every tactical failure, every lost village. The numbers are devastating: in October alone, nearly 22,000 soldiers deserted or left their units without authorization. Journalist Ihor Lusenko's observation captures the scale of the hemorrhage:
Someone leaves the army every 2 minutes.
That figure, the author notes, reflects only reported cases. The actual number is likely higher. The desertions feed what the piece describes as a vicious spiral -- fewer soldiers produce battlefield setbacks, which discourage new recruits, which produce fewer soldiers. The mobilization system has devolved into what the article bluntly calls "busification," with men seized off the streets by territorial recruitment centers in a process that "largely serves to simulate mobilization rather than conduct it."
The average age of a Ukrainian frontline soldier is now approximately 47 years. The decision to allow men under 22 to leave the country -- apparently driven by political considerations -- deprived the military of its youngest and fittest potential recruits. A voluntary recruitment program aimed at younger men produced almost nothing. According to a Reuters report cited in the piece, of 11 young volunteers recruited under the program, none remains on the front line: four were wounded, three went missing, two deserted, one became seriously ill, and one took his own life.
The Corruption Within
Perhaps more alarming than the manpower shortfall itself is the institutional rot the analysis documents. A culture of false reporting has metastasized throughout the Ukrainian command structure. Ukraine Pravda's investigation, cited extensively, describes a military leadership increasingly disconnected from the reality its soldiers face:
The scale of deception is enormous. Everyone reports only good news upward. Truth tellers are dismissed and replaced with people who say, "Yes, sir." Headquarters see one reality, the front line, another.
Drone unit commander Ihor Wutenko adds further detail that transforms this from an institutional critique into something more visceral:
When enemy captures a position, it is reported as ours. Only after all attempts to retake it fail, is it declared lost. They lie about missing soldiers who are clearly dead, about weapon readiness, and about the number of drones shot down.
The corruption extends beyond reporting. The practice of soldiers paying commanders to avoid frontline deployment hollows out units from within. As one account describes, a company with 60 men on paper may have only 20 -- or even 10 -- actually at their posts. This is not a new phenomenon in wartime armies, but it is one that accelerates collapse when combined with the other pressures Ukraine faces.
The Drone Illusion
One of the more analytically interesting threads in the piece concerns Ukraine's attempt to substitute technology for manpower. Facing acute infantry shortages, Kyiv attempted to base its defense primarily on first-person-view drones and artillery. The results were mixed at best. FPV drones proved partially effective against Russian mechanized assaults but far less so against the small infantry units Russia began using for infiltration tactics.
Meanwhile, Russia has closed the drone gap. Russian production of FPV drones has now matched Ukraine's, while fiber optic drone usage has surpassed it. The emergence of the Rubicon unit -- an elite Russian drone formation that targets Ukrainian drone operators specifically -- represents a deliberate strategy to neutralize Ukraine's technological edge. Rather than striking individual soldiers, Rubicon focuses on paralyzing the near-rear logistics network, compounding the difficulties faced by Ukrainian units already stretched thin.
The lesson here extends beyond this particular conflict. Drones have changed warfare, but they have not eliminated the need for trained infantry willing to hold ground. Technology can multiply force, but it cannot replace it entirely. Autumn weather -- persistent fog and rain -- further degraded drone effectiveness, exposing the fragility of a defensive doctrine built around a single capability.
Counterpoints Worth Considering
The analysis, while thorough in its battlefield assessment, warrants some counterbalancing. First, it largely brackets the economic pressures on Russia. The piece acknowledges that Russia "also faces serious difficulties, primarily economic in nature," but does not explore them with anything like the granularity devoted to Ukraine's military problems. Sustained Western sanctions, the cost of maintaining wartime production, and the long-term consequences of brain drain and capital flight all impose constraints on Moscow's ability to sustain this tempo indefinitely.
Second, the assessment appears to draw heavily on Ukrainian self-critical reporting -- from Ukraine Pravda, from battalion commanders, from journalists embedded with frontline units. This is, paradoxically, a sign of institutional health. Armies that cannot produce honest internal criticism are in far worse shape than those whose failures are documented publicly. Russia's own command failures, losses, and corruption receive no comparable scrutiny here, in part because Russian civil society and media have been effectively silenced.
Third, the diplomatic dimension receives only cursory treatment. The mention of Trump's peace initiative is brief and dismissive. Yet the trajectory of Western support -- particularly European commitments that have grown as American reliability has wavered -- could materially alter the balance the piece describes. Ukraine's exhaustion is real, but it is not occurring in a geopolitical vacuum.
The Geography of Collapse
The territorial detail in the analysis is striking. Russian forces have captured an average of 400 to 500 square kilometers per month since June, with 150 to 200 assault actions daily and roughly 200 glide bombs dropped each day. The advance from Kurakova has covered approximately 75 kilometers westward over the past 11 months, leaving about 70 kilometers to the eastern outskirts of Zaporizhzhia. The author notes flatly that "if the current tempo holds, Russian troops could reach the regional capital by the end of next year."
The risk of cascading collapse -- a roll-up of the entire fortified front from Huliaipole to the former Kakhovka reservoir -- represents the nightmare scenario. Such a development would threaten the logistics hub of Pavlohrad and open an eastern approach to Zaporizhzhia. The flat, open terrain offers few natural defensive positions, and Ukraine lacks the reserves to construct and man new defensive lines.
Bottom Line
This analysis presents the war in Ukraine not as a frozen conflict awaiting diplomatic resolution, but as an active military crisis in which one side is approaching structural failure. The manpower shortage, the institutional corruption, the limits of drone-centric defense, and the relentless Russian operational tempo collectively paint a picture of a military that cannot sustain its current posture. The most troubling element is not any single battlefield loss, but the interconnection of failures -- each crisis generating the next, each redeployment creating a new vulnerability. Whether Western support, diplomatic intervention, or some unforeseen shift can arrest this trajectory remains the defining question of the war's next phase. What is clear from this report is that the status quo is not sustainable, and the clock is running against Kyiv.