US President Donald Trump, in the midst of his triumph ending the Gaza war and gaining the return of the Israeli hostages, is jacking up the pressure on Russia. The major threat, but not the only one, is the threat to deliver Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine that would be used to target assets inside Russia.
Russia has not won the war on the ground in Ukraine. Even without the Tomahawk, Russia will experience heavy losses to Ukrainian drones aimed at Russia’s energy infrastructure and military industries. Ukrainian raids on Russia happen nearly every night, just as Russian raids on Ukraine appear fairly persistent.
Russia has limited financial ability to replace its losses, and shutdowns of power and equipment losses do not play well with the public.
In effect, Ukraine has retaliated fairly effectively for heavy Russian raids on Ukraine’s critical infrastructure, and so far at least Ukraine has been able to manage such losses or at least persist through them.

Nonetheless there are limits to everything. How long can Ukraine sustain mounting losses, and how much reverse punishment can Russia take in pursuit of its goals in Ukraine? There are no answers to these questions, or to the question of how long the war itself will continue.
The modern battlefield has changed significantly. Drones and precision weapons, along with aerial-dropped mines, have made armored assaults nearly a thing of the past. Some say that the life of a main battle tank is a mere 72 hours, meaning that hardware will be rapidly destroyed and experienced crews are few and far between.
Observers say that Russia is now outproducing Ukraine in drone manufacturing and deployment, but not enough yet to change the battlefield significantly in Russia’s favor.
Meanwhile new types of smart drones with artificial intelligence features are starting to appear, making drone lethality independent of their operators. Surprisingly, these drones, important ones fielded by Russia, are stuffed with US electronics including from the AI-leader, Nvidia.
Whatever sanctions and export controls the US imposes, the system is like swiss cheese, full of holes and roundabouts, making the supply chain, as far as Russia is concerned, fairly secure.
Russia’s two main problems in the war come in two distinct directions.
A key problem is the conservative and risk-averse Russian military leaders. They are under great pressure to produce results and minimize casualties, largely contradictory objectives. With some 700,000 troops in the battle zone, Russia has not been able to mount a singular campaign against a Ukrainian strategic target.
The proof is easy to illustrate: Pokrovsk, a key city and objective for Russia, remains mostly in Ukraine’s hands. The Russians were able to insert small squads into the south of the city, but the attempts to cut off supply lines, mainly in the north, were countered fairly effectively by Ukraine. Pokrovsk has been nothing much more than a squeeze play where Russia has not been able to squeeze hard enough.
Sooner or later Russia’s military will need to decide whether it can force a major advance. If they can’t, they cannot win the war.
The second problem is Russia’s lack of credible allies. North Korea is not a credible ally. However many North Korean troops died in Kursk, on Russian territory, the evidently high numbers of those casualties suggests that North Korea will not use its forces on Ukrainian territory. In any case, the heavy losses were a big blow to Kim Jong-Un’s credibility, and his tearful performance at funerals in Pyongyang was not much more than a cover-up for failure.

Similarly Russia’s near neighbor, Belarus, wants to avoid engaging in the conflict, and has made it clear to Poland and others that Belarus is not a threat (even though Poland put a lot of troops and hardware on Belarus’s border).
Iran, a Russian ally, is all but worthless. Iran has been effectively neutered by the US and Israel, its nuclear program trashed and much of its air defense system ruined. The Russians were smart to move production of Iranian drones to Russian territory.
Likewise China, despite backdoor help to Russia in the form of supply chain support, deliberately has not been a player when it comes to Ukraine. China is always balancing its trade situation and geostrategic priorities, but Russia and Ukraine hardly matter, other than symbolic exercises and military parades.
This leaves Moscow isolated, and if Moscow cannot soon achieve a military victory, it will need to end the war in Ukraine. The part that is less certain is how long Ukraine can hang in against a powerful and persistent adversary.
President Trump instinctively knows this, and is playing the game of leverage on Russia. The risk, for Trump, is to go too far and lead Putin and Russia to desperate measures. Putin’s future, unlike Trump’s, is tied up in the Ukraine outcome. Thus the risk of a bigger war, or the introduction of new classes of weapons, is lurking on the near-horizon.
It would seem Trump has to cook up a deal that Russia might find attractive. There are formulas that can end the war, and which give Russia half a loaf. The answers can be found in mitigating the Russian territorial annexations, except perhaps Crimea, and backing NATO away from Russia’s territory, a key Russian objective. Large buffer zones and reductions in military supplies are promising and need to be explored.
A word about territorial mitigation. Russia has outright annexed a number of territories, Donbas (Luhansk and Donetsk), Zaporizhia, Kherson and Crimea. But with the exception of Luhansk and Crimea, Russia only holds around 75% of these territories. There is room for deals that could result in a framework for a deal for two countries, Russia and Ukraine, in peace, not war. For example:
- mixed territorial administration,
- recognition of Russian rights,
- withdrawal of forces,
- mutually agreeable economic cooperation.
No one has proposed, let along discussed, solutions that can lead to a long term reconciliation between the major actors.
Trump also understands that Russia faces an economic crisis. Aside from petroleum exports, specialty metals including enriched uranium and titanium, and grain, Russia lacks a commercially viable domestic industrial base that can compete internationally. It is particularly deficient in electronics. The impending crisis is easy to visualize: the massive amounts of the Russian budget going into armaments production will no longer serve much purpose if the war ends. This means Russia could quickly transition from full employment, which is the case now, to pockets of serious unemployment. With troops returning home, and less conscription, jobs will be at a premium and the industrial base is not ready to absorb them. On the other hand, keeping the war going also is not sustainable -the costs are too high and government income too low to keep them running.
Bringing US investment to Russia could be very significant, but Russia needs to clean up its legal system that often plays havoc with foreign investors. This is no trifling matter where Russian government officials and industry leaders behave like predators instead of partners.
But Russia will need a bailout to make a deal. This is a Trump specialty. It needs to be matched with better ideas on an overall deal ending the war, as suggested above. The case of only a ceasefire does not square the circle.
Zelensky has said he will resign when the war ends. Trump needs to hold him to that decision, perhaps asking him to go sooner rather than later.
Trump has some options to do for Ukraine what he did for Israel and Gaza.
Stephen Bryen is a former US deputy undersecretary of defense. This article was originally published on his Substack newsletter Weapons and Power. It is republished with permission.

Rich Russians have stuff in the West, not in Peking.
Hey Rooster, why you don’t go on UNZ site to post comments?
Big gay Rooster, bi guys love your bird size Sausage, ff 🖕u
You like to trash and bash chinese and China, there are many China articles on UNZ, you can post there to trash and bash China.
There is no one in Asia that wants Russia to lose.
Everybody is on the side of Russia. The only difference is whether they want to be OPEN about it or whether they want to HIDE it – that is the only difference.
I am being OPEN about it here. I am not HIDING it.
You are boing open… with a fake name ?
Big gay Rooster, the guys will ff🖕u
This site is named “Asia Times” but the articles don’t reflect views of Asians.
Asians want Russia to crush Ukraine and gain complete victory.
Russian victory is Asian victory, buddy.
No one in Asia wants Ukraine to win. Everyone is supporting Russia.
That’s Chinese (overseas Chinese).
Meanwhile Russia still holds alot of historic Chinese lands
Asians admire Russia and Putin.
Putin is a highly respected figure in Asia.
He DARED to challenged U.S. global hegemony. People in Asia respect him for that.
This idiotic writer thinks he can fool people with his stupid propaganda
With a swath of land bigger than Portugal and a population of roughly 10 milion of russian speakers under its controll Russia has nothing to show…Interesting point of view. Storm Shadow are newer and probably better than Tomawack, they did not make any difference.
Nothing to show in the last 3.5yrs – a 3wk SMO !
This fellow is getting too much fake news from Zelensky clowns. Russia’s aim is not primarily just taking territory. It is about destroying the Ukrainian military. When that collapses, Russia can have as much or as little territory.
Laymond Ree. It’s a heads or tails who collapses first. Russia or Ukr.
Ukraine is dying.
More so Russia, TFR’s below 2.1 since 1979. Maybe you might have a chance to find a gf (if the ladies like squinty eyes)
So the West is desperate for a ceasefire….looks like they are losing then
Just like Syria, Youthis, Hez(no)bollox, Hamas etc?
Big gay Rooster, do not be an incel. The boys will ff u
Why should Putin believe that any deal he reaches with Trump will be honored by future American administrations?
Why should he believe that Trump will stick to the agreement in two years?
No self respecting leader trusts the US. It matters not what puppet is shuffled every 4 years. They always end up getting John Mcain
You mean they have elections, unlike China?
Russia’s problem is endemic corruption. The poor performance of their armed forces is a consequence of it. Surveying the world, the countries that make the least progress are invariably the most corrupt. If you want a dramatised picture of Russian corruption, watch The Fool (2014), a crime film about local government. Rotten Tomatoes rates it 93% fresh.
Russia is purging corruption in the military, unlike the West where they celebrate corruption. If your barometer of a war is Hollywood shock and awe, you are in for disappointment. The Russians do not fight like blowhards. They fight attrition. And according to all metrics of attrition war, they are winning. Ukraine is -15 million people down and-25% territory down since 2022, and bankrupt. That is NOT winning.
Purging corruption? Tht explains why so many people have met mysterious ends, like falling out of windows.
Coming up for 4yrs and the 3wk SMO has taken 1% more land.
That is not winning,
Rules, thank for the reply, except it veers off the subject. I know they have been tackling corruption in the army, but the problem is much wider than that, it pervades society. Russia was corrupt under the Tzars, corrupt under the Soviet Union, and is corrupt today. Ultimately, it is the reason for the war. If Russia had realised its potential—prosperity for everyone not just the few, Ukrainians would be clamouring to get in, not as far away as possible.
‘If your barometer of a war is Hollywood shock and awe, you are in for disappointment.’ You are putting words in my mouth with the intent to belittle or patronize me. I don’t do that to you, don’t do it to me!
Right, dumb russians did not learn a thing from the Hafgan-war USA army success story
This is it. Have turned to the deep state and peddling the Russian energy story now? BTW, the three letters agency started this Russian energy thingy about a month ago. You are late.
Tomahawk is just another wonder-weapon spin, which we have seen several failure iterations. Russia is ready for Tomahawk. To be fair to you, just wait and see.
In the mean time, Pokrovsk, Kupyansk, Siversk, etc., “immaterial” to you, will destroy the remaining Ukrainian troops and belong to Russia before the end of this winter. Mark my words.
OK I’ll hold you to that. The end of Ukr by the end of Winter. Although fighting stops due to General Winter.
Have you really been to Russia?
Chinese have very small weapons.
No only been to Russia many times, also to your mom’s bedroom many times. She liked my size.
Who needs a legal system or even the law when you got Chump as the dear leader🤣🤣🤣🤣
China about to cut off western access to rare earth. 🤣🤣🤣🤣 This should qualify for winning the Nobel peace prize.
The author forgot to say that China is the winner out of all this.
My share in Aussie REE are doing very well. Plenty of places to get REE, but the slopes have got very little arable land,
You can put yourself on autoplay now. Nothing new comes out of your castrated beak.