Four years ago this week, Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. A war he expected to win in just days has become one of the longest and costliest conflicts Russia has fought since World War II. What began as a blitz intended to decapitate Ukraine’s government has hardened into a grinding war of attrition. The United States’ initial commitment to supporting Kyiv has given way to a policy of strategic ambiguity, with neither Ukrainian victory nor a lasting end to the conflict appearing now to be Washington’s objectives.
With no sweeping changes in territorial control since 2023, Russia has suffered staggering losses for marginal territorial gains. Ukraine’s cities have been battered, its infrastructure repeatedly targeted and its people tested by cold, darkness and relentless attack. Yet Ukraine’s survival as a sovereign state is no longer in immediate peril.
The United States’ initial commitment to supporting Kyiv has given way to a policy of strategic ambiguity, with neither Ukrainian victory nor a lasting end to the conflict appearing now to be Washington’s objectives.
This winter has been the harshest of the extreme conditions Ukrainians have endured. Unable to achieve decisive success on the battlefield, Russia has turned to a punitive strategy aimed squarely at civilians, striking energy systems to deprive Ukrainians of heat, light and water. Having failed militarily, the Putin regime is relying on coercion and cruelty.
Despite this, Ukraine perseveres. Through national mobilization, innovation and sacrifice, it has blunted Russia’s advantages in size, population and resources.
Ukraine’s fight has become one of the defining tests of the 21st century: whether democracies can defend themselves against revanchist autocracy. That is the question confronting Washington, as much as U.S. lawmakers avoid it.
For decades, American foreign policy rested on a simple but powerful insight: Values are not a distraction from power but the source of it. Alliances endure because they are rooted in trust. Deterrence works because adversaries believe the United States will act consistently and predictably. When values guide strategy, American power multiplies. When they are abandoned, power erodes.
The pattern extends beyond Ukraine. Tariff disputes with European partners, flirtation with illiberal movements seeking to weaken the European Union and repeated attacks on alliance commitments have created confusion where clarity is needed. This is not a coherent “America First” strategy. It is strategic drift that shifts the global balance of power in Moscow’s favor.
Under the Trump administration, American policy toward the largest war in Europe since World War II has drifted away from that foundation. Rather than reinforcing deterrence, strengthening alliances and shaping a just peace, U.S. actions too often have pressured Ukraine while offering political and rhetorical relief to Russia. Foreign policy has been treated less as an instrument of American security than as a means for transactional leverage and private advantage. The mirage of deals directed at Trump, his family and friends has warped American policy toward the Russia-Ukraine war, distorting strategy and undermining trust.
Washington policymakers forget at our peril: Chaos abroad never stays abroad.








