Pereiti prie turinio
No. 016 · Discussion
SAUGUMAS IR GYNYBA DEBATE

Frozen Conflict or Endless War: Two Futures for Ukraine

DISCUSSION PARTICIPANTS
PS
Prof. Stefan Meier
Realist, University of Munich
DO
Dr. Olena Kovalenko
Internationalist, Kyiv School of Economics
PS
Prof. Stefan Meier
Professor of International Relations, LMU Munich. Author of "The Limits of Liberal Order." Former advisor to the German Foreign Ministry.

The uncomfortable truth is that Ukraine cannot reconquer all of its territory by military means — not in a timeframe that European publics will sustain. The question is not whether some Ukrainian territory will remain under Russian control, but whether we acknowledge this reality or continue to fund a war of attrition while pretending otherwise.

A frozen conflict — with a de facto ceasefire line, international monitoring, and a political framework for Kyiv's eventual EU accession — is not justice. But it is survival. The alternative is a multi-generational conflict that destroys what remains of Ukrainian civil society while European defence budgets buckle under the strain.

DO
Dr. Olena Kovalenko
Senior Research Fellow, Kyiv School of Economics. Specialises in conflict economics and post-war reconstruction. Former advisor to the Ukrainian Finance Ministry.

The realist case for a frozen conflict assumes that Russia will respect a ceasefire line. History suggests otherwise. The 2015 Minsk agreements created a frozen conflict in Donbas. Russia used the years of "frozen" conflict to rebuild its forces and plan a larger invasion. A second frozen conflict would be a third invasion rehearsal.

More fundamentally, a settlement that allows Russia to retain Ukrainian territory rewards aggression. That signal — that territorial conquest is a viable and sustainable strategy — will not be lost on other revisionist powers. The cost of sending that signal is not borne only by Ukraine; it is borne by every small country that depends on the rules-based international order for its security.

EDITOR'S CONCLUSION

Both positions carry real costs. The realist accepts territorial injustice to prevent demographic and economic catastrophe. The internationalist accepts continued war to preserve the principle of sovereign inviolability. What neither can fully answer is the question of Ukrainian agency: ultimately, any sustainable settlement requires Ukrainian consent — and Ukrainians, consistently in polling, refuse territorial concession.