Ukraine thinks it can hold off Russia as long as it needs to
Russia may have Chinese volunteers, but Ukraine has drones

LAST MONTH Russia drove Ukrainian forces out of most of the territory in Russia’s Kursk region that they had seized the previous August. The Russians deployed their own elite brigades, North Korean troops and a new weapon—fibre-optic drones that are controlled by a long, lightweight filament rather than by radio signals, making them impossible to jam. Now the fighting has spilled back over the border into Ukraine. Settlements close to the frontier are being pummelled, and several thousand civilians have fled or been evacuated. Some Russian assault units have crossed the border—though so far, insists Volodymyr Artyukh, the head of Sumy province’s military administration, “they have been eliminated.”
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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Advantage, defence”
Europe
April 12th 2025- Germany’s new centrist government is reassuring but bland
- The EU’s response to Donald Trump’s tariffs seems to work
- Ukraine thinks it can hold off Russia as long as it needs to
- How Europe hopes to turn Ukraine into a “steel porcupine”
- Turkey’s government is trying to repress its way out of a crisis
- Spanish morgues are straining to identify migrants
- The thing about Europe: it’s the actual land of the free now

From the April 12th 2025 edition
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Could the sporting ban precede a political one?
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Enforcement of EU law has become an afterthought
A pragmatic amnesty for separatists benefits Catalonia
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