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Ukraine Now Has Europe’s Biggest Military. What Happens to It When the War Ends?

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Ukraine’s military is likely to rely more on cost-effective equipment like drones in the future.   Julia Demaree Nikhinson/Associated Press By Alistair MacDonald,  The Wall Street Journal , Dec. 30, 2025 11:00 pm ET;  original article contains additional illustrations   When the war with Russia eventually ends, Ukraine will be left with a military larger and with more recent experience than any of its European backers’. Whether it can outlast Russia’s long-term designs in the event of any peace deal is a question for the entire continent, which now sees Ukraine as a bulwark against Moscow’s ambitions.   Finding the money and personnel to maintain 800,000 troops and piles of equipment while devising new capabilities will be among the Ukrainian government’s hardest tasks in the immediate aftermath of the war. European Union leaders recently said they would  lend Ukraine  90 billion euros, around $105 billion, fending off a looming cash crunch in Kyiv and...

Most popular articles in The Kyiv Independent newspaper (Jan 2 )

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Most Popular   [click on item to reach original article]   1 . 'Welcome back to life' — Ukraine's HUR faked death of top anti-Putin Russian commander, claimed Kremlin bounty money 2 . Russian shadow fleet ship that sank in 2024 carried nuclear reactor components to North Korea, may have been torpedoed, La Verdad reports 3 . Ukraine deploys two additional Patriot air defense systems, Defense Ministry reports 4 . Ukraine claims strike on oil refinery on Russia's Black Sea coast, fires reported in occupied Luhansk 5 . Kellogg's daughter on why Trump hasn't ended Russia's war  

In plan for Ukraine, Trump faces fundamental differences with Russia

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Russia invaded Ukraine to restore it to Moscow’s orbit, but President Donald Trump’s peace plan would increase Kyiv’s security, economic and other ties with the West.   January 1, 2026 at 3:32 a.m. People walk across Red Square in Moscow on Monday, the same day that Russia alleged Ukraine had tried to attack one of President Vladimir Putin's vacation residences elsewhere in the country. (Ramil Sitdikov/Reuters) By Siobhán O'Grady, The Washington Post ; original article contains links KYIV — Behind Moscow’s unproven claims that Kyiv tried to attack one of Vladimir Putin’s vacation residences this week lie far steeper hurdles to ending Russia’s war, none more fundamental than Ukraine’s unflinching desire to pursue an independent, democratic future tied to the West and Russia’s insistence on thwarting that dream to return the country to its own orbit at any cost.   Several provisions in the ceasefire plan being pushed by President Donald Trump would increase the involvement of th...