A Ukrainian serviceman, ex-military chief and analysts predict what lies ahead for largest European conflict since World War II.Residents react at the site of a Russian air strike in
Zaporizhzhia,
Ukraine, on December 19, 2025 [Reuters]Published On 26 Dec 2025Kyiv,
Ukraine – Russian soldiers are terrified of Ukrainians, says Vasily, a burly officer limping uneasily on the cobblestones of
Kyiv’s Sophia Square, where
Ukraine’s largest Christmas tree stands“I’ve jumped into their trenches. They’re really afraid of us,” he told Al Jazeera.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4A
Ukraine reporter’s guide to managing wartime blackouts caused by Russialist 2 of 4Ukraine “to create fear” with Russian General’s killinglist 3 of 4Why is
Russia escalating attacks on
Ukraine’s Odesa?list 4 of 4Zelenskyy unveils details of new peace plan, seeks Trump talks on territoryend of listHowever, their fear does not mean that
Kyiv can dictate the end-of-war terms as
Russia has more servicemen, a stronger economy and a much bigger war chest – while
Ukraine remains outmanned and outgunned, he said.“When I see the enemy at 800 metres, yell into the radio that I see a tank and give its coordinates, but they say, ‘Hold on’, I realise that we simply have nothing to strike it with,” Vasily said, referring to the dire shortage of artillery shells while he was on the front line, before losing his left foot to a landmine in 2023.Vassily remained in service and asked to withhold his last name in accordance with wartime regulations.‘One can’t hope for the full end’A four-star general thinks, however, that the only realistic achievement could be a “pause” in the war that will enter its fifth year in February 2026.“With such an aggressive neighbour [as
Russia], one can’t hope for the full end of the war,” Ihor Romanenko, former deputy head of
Ukraine’s general staff of armed forces, told Al Jazeera.“There won’t be peace with
Russia until we liberate the lands within
Ukraine’s [post-Soviet] 1991 borders,” he said.And if
Moscow breaches the ceasefire pause,
Kyiv would have to “stop the Russians on the front line” through a major bolstering of its military potential, he said.
Kyiv would need to introduce universal and “fair” mobilisation without any exemptions, further boost domestic arms manufacturing, prioritise wartime needs in its economic decisions, and introduce stricter martial law, he said.This year,
Ukraine’s military-industrial complex has provided up to 40 percent of what the armed forces need – a major boost from 15 to 20 percent in 2022.Western allies provide the remaining 60 percent – and their further aid should be “decisive and fast”, Romanenko said.Ukrainian servicemen leave their dugout with a Darts middle-range strike unmanned aerial vehicle before launching it towards Russian troops in the Donetsk region,
Ukraine, December 16, 2025 [Sofiia Gatilova/Reuters]“A window of opportunity” to sign a peace deal may emerge in the second half of 2026 – if
Russia does not succeed in breaching the front line and advancing rapidly and realises that
Kyiv can stomach the war of attrition, another analyst says.“Everything will depend on the Kremlin’s and [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s personal readiness to agree,” Volodymyr Fesenko, head of the
Kyiv-based Penta think tank, told Al Jazeera.If the war’s “dead-end” development becomes clear to
Moscow next year, then there is hope to reach a peace deal by late 2025, he said.And even if Putin agrees, it would take months to iron out and “connect” the warring sides’ versions of a peace deal, Fesenko said.
Ukraine may have to bend to the White House’s demands to cede the
Kyiv-controlled part of the Donetsk region, including several heavily fortified cities and towns, in exchange for
Russia’s withdrawal from three Ukrainian regions in the east and north – otherwise, the war will go on into 2027, he said.(Al Jazeera)There are bigger global factors that influence the war’s possible end.In 2026, the very definition of the collective West will change after Washington’s withdrawal from the “global policeman’s” role and the end of the “Western hegemony” over the rest of the world, according to
Kyiv-based analyst Ihar Tyshkevich.A truly “multi-polar” world is emerging as China boosts its global clout and domination in Asia, but still cannot fully challenge Washington’s domination, he told a news conference in
Kyiv on Monday.This process will also trigger the “erosion” of international law that will influence
Ukraine’s position, he said.For
Ukraine, the worst-case development is a “Finnish scenario,” Tyshkevich said, referring to the 1939 Finnish-Soviet war, when
Moscow tried to reconquer its tsarist-era province.Even though Soviet forces suffered heavy losses that prompted Nazi Germany’s invasion of the USSR in 1941,
Moscow cut off a tenth of Finland’s territory and forced Helsinki to recognise it.In
Ukraine’s case, the “Finnish scenario” will mean
Kyiv’s recognition of
Moscow-occupied regions as part of
Russia.Tyshkevych called another possible scenario “Georgian” in reference to the 2008 war between
Russia and Georgia, when
Moscow defeated smaller Georgian forces and “recognised” two breakaway regions – South Ossetia and Abkhazia – as “independent.”A Ukrainian war veteran competes with the kettlebell in the ‘Games for Heroes’ cross-fit competition of military amputees in Kharkiv,
Ukraine, September 12, 2025 [Thomas Peter/Reuters]For
Ukraine, the Georgian scenario means no control over occupied areas, but
Kyiv’s refusal to recognise them as
Russia’s.A third, “interim” scenario means the war is frozen and talks go on, he said.There is only one scenario of the war’s end, according to Nikolay Mitrokhin, a researcher with Germany’s Bremen University.
Ukraine would be “pushed out” of the remaining one-fifth of the southeastern Donetsk region – or would have to leave it voluntarily and recognise the loss of 90 percent of the neighbouring Zaporizhia region and 15 percent of Dnipropetrovsk that
Russia currently controls, he said.‘Donetsk was the source of our problems’As Western pressure in the way of sanctions on
Russia is “weak”, because too many nations are interested in bypassing them and trading with
Moscow, the Kremlin has enough resources to continue the war for at least another two years, he said.In turn,
Ukraine has the resources to resist, but its “corrupt and cowardly” government is not capable of mobilising enough manpower, he said.As a result, Ukrainian forces slowly retreat in key directions as Western mediators cannot convince
Russia to stop, he said.“There are, however, chances that Trump and his administration will either force Zelenskyy to leave Donetsk or to hold a wartime [presidential] vote and really change the team that rules
Ukraine,” Mitrokhin told Al Jazeera.Meanwhile, many average Ukrainians are growing wearier of the war, Russian shelling, blackouts and an economic downturn.“Donetsk was the source of our problems. Let
Russia have it and pay tens of billions to restore it,” Taras Tymoshchuk, a 63-year-old former economist, told Al Jazeera, referring to a
Moscow-backed separatist uprising in Donetsk and neighbouring Luhansk in 2014. “I want to wake up because the birds are singing, not because I hear Russian drones and missiles.”