Diplomacy accelerates, but the drones do not rest
Imagine the scene: Volodymyr Zelenskyy, with that green jacket that is already more iconic than any Met Gala outfit, preparing for a diplomatic marathon on Zoom with 30 countries. Their mission: find fair conditions to end a war that is now almost four years old, a conflict that seems like the longest and most traumatic season of a series that no one asked for. Meanwhile, on the other side of the pond, Donald Trump makes his move, pushing for a “quick deal” with Russia and dropping pearls like Zelenskyy should “be realistic,” which in this context sounds like a euphemism for “resign territory.” The tension is so high that even video calls have the aura of a geopolitical thriller.
The European leaders, whom Trump has classified with his characteristic subtlety as “weak”, are trying to take the reins of the peace negotiations. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, along with British Premier Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron, proposed to Trump that they, along with American officials, finalize the proposals this weekend. The crux of the matter, according to Merz, is deciding “what territories and concessions Ukraine is willing to make.” All this while the Russian president, Vladímir Putin, continues his “brutal war” and, according to the Europeans, is playing for time. A total nonsense.
The Ukrainian response: when diplomacy fails, drones come in
But Ukraine does not sit idly by and wait for politicians to decide its future. In a move that mixes desperation and pure strategy, it launched one of its largest drone attacks of the entire war, paralyzing Moscow’s four airports for seven hours and affecting eight other Russian cities. The Russian Defense Ministry said it had intercepted 287 drones, a figure that sounds more like an invasion by robotic bees than a military attack. The show of force was clear: kyiv can strike far away and in the symbolic heart of the adversary.
And if that were not enough, long-range Ukrainian drones hit for the first time a Lukoil oil platform in the Caspian Sea, about 1,000 kilometers from its territory. A blow not only military, but also economic, which stopped the extraction of more than 20 wells. This attack on Russian energy infrastructure is a direct message: Ukraine’s ability to resist and respond is still alive, defying the narrative of an overwhelming invasion.
Meanwhile, on the diplomatic front, the European Union is trying to anchor Ukraine to the Western bloc, giving it in Lviv a list of reforms necessary for its accession, despite the war and Hungary’s objections. EU membership has become the central objective, an anchor in the storm, especially when the prospects of joining NATO appear frozen. At the same time, Russia is trying to appear cooperative with Trump’s peace efforts, hoping to avoid further sanctions, while accusing Europe of wanting to prolong the conflict. A game of mirrors where each person blames the other.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte issued a chilling warning to Europe: “We are Russia’s next target.” He also pointed to China as the “lifesaver” of the Russian war effort, providing critical electronic components. The war in Ukraine is no longer a local conflict; It is the epicenter of a global reconfiguration of alliances and tensions where everyone, in one way or another, is involved.
The result of all this chaos? A panorama where talks are at a “critical moment”, according to the Europeans, and actions on the field and in cyberspace continue to define reality. Ukraine is coordinating bilaterally with European countries and preparing for a summit in Brussels, while resisting on the ground and expanding its attack radius. The search for peace has never been so full of noise, shrapnel and diplomatic tweets.
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