logo
‘A psychological victory': 3 writers discuss Ukraine's drone strikes

‘A psychological victory': 3 writers discuss Ukraine's drone strikes

Washington Post02-06-2025
You're reading the Prompt 2025 newsletter. Sign up to get it in your inbox.
On Sunday, Ukraine launched surprise drone strikes that targeted strategic bombers parked deep inside Russian territory. Ukrainian officials claimed the strikes damaged or destroyed dozens of planes. This development feels like a game changer, but how exactly? I sat down with two of my colleagues, Max Boot and Jim Geraghty, to discuss if Ukraine's sneak attack on Russia could change the outlook of the war. — Damir Marusic, assignment editor
💬 💬 💬
Damir Marusic Do you think the strikes change things, practically, on the battlefield? What lessons, if any, do you think Russian President Vladimir Putin has taken away from them?
Max Boot It probably won't be a big change on the battlefield but it will certainly hamper Russia's ability to fire missiles at Ukrainian cities. This is not a game changer but it's a significant operational and psychological victory for Ukraine. I doubt the message will get through but it should help convince Putin he is not going to win this war.
Jim Geraghty I'm sure any alleviation of Russia's ability to launch cruise missiles at Ukraine will be welcomed, but I agree with Max, this is primarily a psychological and symbolic blow to Putin and the Russians.
Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement
Jim On my second trip to Ukraine, I spoke with Akhmed Zakayev, the prime minister of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, the Chechen government in exile; Chechens are fighting against the Russians in Ukraine. He told me, 'Russians like to fight wars on other people's territory. They hate to fight wars on Russian territory.' Putin won't feel any pressure to cut a deal until the elites in Moscow and St. Petersburg feel the consequences of the war. Strikes deep in Siberia send a strong signal that no spot in Russia is safe from Ukrainian retaliatory strikes.
Damir Ukrainians have long argued that hitting Russia hard does not lead to further escalation — that the support of the West is enough of a deterrent. Do you expect Russia to escalate after this, or will it just be more of the same grind?
Max Short of nuclear weapons (which I don't expect) there is not much Putin can do that he hasn't already done. Russian hard-liners keep demanding carpet bombing of Ukrainian cities. The reason Putin isn't doing that is not because he's a closet humanitarian: It's because Ukrainian air defenses are too strong. Of course, the Kremlin will claim some big air attack on Kyiv as 'revenge' but they've been mounting air attacks since the start of the war. It's not like Putin would be going easy if the Ukrainians weren't hitting back.
Jim Agreed. One of the many problems of fighting a war with maximum brutality is there's not much room to escalate in response to the enemy's actions.
Damir The Ukrainians had been planning this strike for more than 18 months, and the United States knew nothing about it. Max, you mentioned there was a message for Putin there. Was there a message for the United States, and specifically the Trump administration, here as well?
Jim That this was the finest operational secrecy since the Dallas Mavericks traded Luka Doncic to the Lakers.
Max 😂
Max I think the message is that the Ukrainians don't trust the United States. They have scar tissue from all of the overly restrictive limitations imposed by the Biden administration on the use of U.S. weapons, so they are using drones not only because they are so effective but also because they are made in Ukraine. Of course, the level of mistrust between Kyiv and Washington has gone up exponentially since President Donald Trump came to office. The Ukrainians know they are dealing with an American president who has a soft spot in his heart for the war criminals in the Kremlin.
Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement
Jim Hey, if Trump wants to get back into the inner circle of Ukraine's operations, I'm sure Kyiv would loop him in on the memos in exchange for some more Patriot missiles.
Damir Max, you wrote a terrific piece over the weekend about what these strikes mean for the future of warfare — that the era of the drone is upon us. Zooming out, what do you guys think this means for the defense of Taiwan, for example?
Max This attack confirms the lesson we've been learning for more than three years in Ukraine: Drones are the future of warfare. In the war's early days, more than 70 percent of the casualties were being inflicted by artillery. Now 70 percent are being inflicted by drones. This is a lesson that every nation in the world, including Taiwan, needs to take onboard. Taiwan needs to crank up drone production to make it too difficult for China to invade. The U.S. also needs to crank up production. As I noted in a recent column, the U.S. can only manufacture about 100,000 drones a year. Ukraine made 2.2 million last year and is aiming to make 4.5 million this year. We've fallen behind in the drone revolution.
Jim Like Max, my first reaction was 'Wow, this is an amazing accomplishment for the Ukrainians. The Russians must feel like a Ukrainian drone could hit them anytime, anywhere.' My second reaction was, 'Whoa, wait a minute, how secure are our air bases from an attack like this?' My guess is: not particularly protected. Although, when I visited Kyiv earlier this year, a lot of European allies were in town, looking for drone warfare lessons and suppliers from the Ukrainians …
Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement
Damir Jim, regarding our own security, that's exactly what popped into my mind. Remember those stories about Chinese entities buying up land near our military installations? At the time, I assumed it was about espionage, but since this weekend, I wonder if there might be other reasons.
Max Counterdrone warfare has to become an urgent priority for every military in the world. The Ukrainian attack revealed the vulnerability of airfields (and other installations) all over the world to similar sneak attacks. It used to be that you needed to build long-range missiles to have long-range strike capacity. No longer. Now you can achieve the same result with ultracheap drones that can be reconfigured to carry explosives in a ramshackle workshop; terrorist groups could easily manufacture them. If we aren't worried, we aren't paying attention.
Damir And it's not just military airfields, right? Civilian defense has to be in the mix — power stations, airports, data centers …
Jim Okay, I wondered if this was a silly thing to bring up, but in the 2013 … er, cinematic classic featuring Gerard Butler, 'Olympus Has Fallen,' the North Koreans launch a devastating attack on the White House using machine guns hidden in garbage trucks. It seemed cheesy and implausible at the time, but the scenes at those Russian airfields must have felt like that — ordinary trucks opening up and unleashing an arsenal upon unsuspecting targets nearby. Every military and spy agency around the world is looking at the Ukrainian operation and asking, 'If they can pull that off, why can't we?'
Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement
Damir Final question: Do you think that efforts such as Trump's Golden Dome missile defense project are now less of a priority? Should there be a pivot?
Jim The threat from ballistic missiles isn't mythical, but I think there will be a lot of fair questions about why we would spend so much on large missile defense and not take action to defend against smaller, lighter, cheaper drones.
Max I've long thought that Golden Dome was a monumental boondoggle that will not achieve its objective of space-based missile defenses. We should be spending that money on drones and drone defenses. That is the real future of warfare.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zelenskiy says Russia hit gas facility in Odesa region to undermine preparation for winter
Zelenskiy says Russia hit gas facility in Odesa region to undermine preparation for winter

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Zelenskiy says Russia hit gas facility in Odesa region to undermine preparation for winter

By Pavel Polityuk KYIV (Reuters) -Russia has struck a gas facility in Ukraine's southern Odesa region, undermining preparations for winter, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Wednesday. He said that gas infrastructure had been attacked in the village of Novosilske on the border with Romania, where the Orlovka interconnector, through which Ukraine receives gas via the Transbalkan route, is located. "This was a deliberate blow to our preparations for the heating season, absolutely cynical, like every Russian blow to the energy sector," Zelenskiy said on Telegram. Reuters could not independently confirm details of the attack and there was no immediate comment from Russia. Ukraine has faced a serious gas shortage since a series of devastating Russian missile strikes this year, which significantly reduced domestic gas production. Russia has repeatedly denied targeting civilians since launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine more than three years ago, but says infrastructure such as energy systems are legitimate targets because they help Ukraine's war effort. Earlier on Wednesday, the governor of the southern Odesa region reported an attack on gas infrastructure and the main gas pipeline, saying that work was under way to pump gas out of the pipeline. Ukrainian energy officials did not say whether the interconnector was damaged and whether gas would continue to be pumped. According to the Ukrainian transit operator, 0.4 million cubic metres of gas was scheduled to be pumped through Orlovka on Wednesday. Last month, Ukraine pumped a small test volume of Azerbaijani gas through the Transbalkan route for the first time and announced plans to significantly increase gas imports from Azerbaijan's SOCAR energy firm. The Transbalkan route allows gas delivery from Greece via Bulgaria and Romania to Ukraine. Kyiv has called the route "extremely important", as it provides access to liquefied gas from Greek and Turkish LNG terminals, Azerbaijani and Romanian pipeline gas and, potentially, to Bulgarian offshore gas.

Trump envoy Witkoff visits Moscow in last-ditch trip before sanctions deadline
Trump envoy Witkoff visits Moscow in last-ditch trip before sanctions deadline

Washington Post

time23 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Trump envoy Witkoff visits Moscow in last-ditch trip before sanctions deadline

President Donald Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, arrived in Moscow early Wednesday in a last-ditch effort to try to eke out a peace deal with Russia before Trump's Friday deadline to halt fighting in Ukraine. The head of Russia's sovereign wealth fund, Kirill Dmitriev, met Witkoff at Moscow's Vnukovo International Airport, Tass news agency reported. The state news outlet aired video of Witkoff and Dmitriev, both wearing sunglasses, walking in Zaryadye Park near Red Square and the Kremlin on Wednesday morning.

Trump Ramps Up Tariff Blitz With India, Pharma, Chips in Sights
Trump Ramps Up Tariff Blitz With India, Pharma, Chips in Sights

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Ramps Up Tariff Blitz With India, Pharma, Chips in Sights

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump said he'd impose increased tariffs on countries buying energy from Russia while clarifying that levies on semiconductor and pharmaceutical imports would be announced 'within the next week or so.' Mayor Asked to Explain $1.4 Billion of Wasted Johannesburg Funds All Hail the Humble Speed Hump PATH Train Service Resumes After Fire at Jersey City Station Istanbul Policies Stalled as City Leaders Remain in Jail What England's New National Cycling Network Needs to Get Rolling Coming just days after Trump re-set his tariff plan with rates on imports from trade partners ranging from 10% to 41%, his latest blast of trade threats and deadlines shows his quest to remake global trade in America's favor is far from done. That's even as the latest economic data suggests the US economy is grappling with the fallout. In a divergent approach toward Asia's giants, Trump said he'd raise tariffs on India 'very substantially over the next 24 hours,' accusing its Russian oil purchases of 'fueling the war machine.' By contrast, he said he was 'very close to a deal' with China to extend a trade truce that saw the two countries agree to reduce tit-for-tat tariff hikes and ease export restrictions on rare earth magnets and certain technologies. India, which hoped to lure manufacturers amid Trump's tariff blitz, will face a double squeeze as Trump said levies on pharmaceutical imports would be announced in the next week or so, along with tariffs on semiconductors. Unlike Beijing, which used its dominance of rare earths in trade dealings with Washington, Delhi has no such leverage. Asian stocks struggled for direction in early trade Wednesday. The S&P 500 was on the brink of all-time highs on Tuesday, before losing steam. Trump is threatening secondary tariffs on buyers of Russian oil as he ratchets up pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin to halt the war in Ukraine. The Kremlin is weighing options for a concession that could include an air truce with Ukraine to try to head off the threat of such sanctions. When asked if he'd follow through on a previous threat to impose tariffs on additional countries, including China, Trump said 'we'll be doing quite a bit of that.' In an interview with CNBC earlier Tuesday, Trump indicated he would push forward with escalated tariffs on India in particular. 'We settled on 25% but I think I'm going to raise that very substantially over the next 24 hours, because they're buying Russian oil,' Trump said. 'They're fueling the war machine. And if they're going to do that, then I'm not going to be happy.' He also detailed timing and discussed potential levels of US tariffs on semiconductor and pharmaceutical imports. 'We'll be putting a initially small tariff on pharmaceuticals, but in one year — one and a half years, maximum — it's going to go to 150% and then it's going to go to 250% because we want pharmaceuticals made in our country,' Trump said Tuesday in the interview on CNBC. Trump said the US was 'getting along with China very well.' 'It's not imperative, but I think we're going to make a good deal,' Trump said. Still, Trump downplayed the notion that he was eager for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, saying he would only want to see his Chinese counterpart as part of an effort to conclude trade negotiations. 'I'll end up having a meeting before the end of the year, most likely, if we make a deal,' Trump said. 'If we don't make a deal, I'm not going to have a meeting.' 'It's a 19-hour flight — it's a long flight, but at some point in the not too distant future, I will,' Trump added. A preliminary deal between the US and China is set to expire on Aug. 12. That initial truce eased worries of a tariff war that threatened to choke off bilateral trade between the world's two largest economies and also gave the countries more time to discuss other unresolved issues such as duties tied to fentanyl trafficking. Last week, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng met in Stockholm — the third round of trade talks between the US and Beijing in less than three months. While Chinese officials and the Communist Party's official newspaper had signaled satisfaction with the Stockholm talks, the pact remained fragile. Bessent had said that any agreement to extend the arrangement would be up to Trump. Russia's Secret War and the Plot to Kill a German CEO AI Flight Pricing Can Push Travelers to the Limit of Their Ability to Pay Government Steps Up Campaign Against Business School Diversity What Happens to AI Startups When Their Founders Jump Ship for Big Tech The GOP Is Choosing Pesticides Over the MAHA Moms ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store