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Daniel Davis Deep Dive

Andrei Martyanov: Russia Poised for Major New Offensive

60 min • 7 april 2025

1. Russian Diplomatic Strategy

  • Russia often engages in diplomacy not to resolve conflict, but as part of a strategy to buy time or shift dynamics.
  • Ultimately, decisions are made in Moscow, and diplomacy is seen as a tool, not a solution.

2. Russian War Objectives

  • The primary political goal is regime change in Kyiv, replacing what is described as a “NATO puppet” and “neo-Nazi” government.
  • The military goal is the complete destruction of the Ukrainian armed forces.
  • Putin’s comments about “finishing off” Ukraine’s troops are taken literally, not as diplomatic posturing.

3. Timeline and Strategy

  • The Russian military has been told that combat will continue through 2025.
  • After 2025, there may be a shift to political settlement.
  • The war is seen by Russian leadership as existential; they want to ensure Ukraine cannot re-emerge militarily.

4. Public Sentiment and Refugees

  • Many Russians are opposed to the presence of Ukrainian refugees, seeing them as potential security risks or “sleeper cells.”
  • Putin signed an executive order to remove unregistered Ukrainian males of military age from Russia.

5. Military Developments

  • Russia could take Kyiv but doesn’t want to govern Ukraine—only to install a compliant government.
  • Operations are reportedly intensifying in Sumy and Zaporizhzhia, with potential large-scale offensives underway or being prepared.
  • Intelligence suggests Russian forces are making quiet but steady gains, particularly in the Sumy region.

6. Western Perceptions vs. Russian View

  • Critics say Russia’s progress has been slow and limited (about 22% of Ukraine).
  • The speaker argues that Russia’s goal is not to take land, but to destroy Ukraine's military.
  • Capturing territory is secondary to annihilating Ukraine’s capacity to resist.

7. Military Manpower & Attrition

  • Ukraine’s forces are reportedly depleted, with younger and less experienced troops, including women, increasingly being deployed.
  • Russia is deliberately avoiding major offensives in heavily populated, anti-Russian cities (e.g., Kharkiv) to minimize their own casualties and maintain domestic stability.

8. Russian Strategic Approach

  • The war is framed as a “special military operation” rather than full-scale war to avoid full mobilization and preserve the Russian economy.
  • Russia seeks slow, steady attrition rather than rapid conquest, avoiding a total war economy.

9. Demographics & Impact

  • Ukraine’s population is estimated to have dropped from 40 million to about 20 million, largely due to refugees.
  • The speaker uses this as a metric to argue that Russia’s strategy is working, regardless of Western perception.


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