Última hora
BRPrincípio de incêndio em escola estadual de Boa VistaJP成田山表参道の老舗うなぎ店「駿河屋」で火災、祇園祭も一部中止CN中国自然资源部:今年秋冬季或形成超强厄尔尼诺事件DEBahnstrecke Düsseldorf-Köln nach Böschungsbrand gesperrtCN珠江委召开会商会部署近期台风暴雨洪水防范应对工作TRBakan Kacır, Zonguldak'ta Sanayi ve Teknoloji Projelerini AçtıDEKritik am Reformpaket der Bundesregierung: "Sozial unausgewogen und voller Widersprüche"USDemand for Household Staff Soars, Driving Salaries to Record HighsARمحاولة سرقة غريبة في لندن: ابتلاع خاتم خطوبة ثم إعادتهTRTürkiye ve Rusya'dan Şehircilik ve İklim Alanında Ortak AdımlarBRPrincípio de incêndio em escola estadual de Boa VistaJP成田山表参道の老舗うなぎ店「駿河屋」で火災、祇園祭も一部中止CN中国自然资源部:今年秋冬季或形成超强厄尔尼诺事件DEBahnstrecke Düsseldorf-Köln nach Böschungsbrand gesperrtCN珠江委召开会商会部署近期台风暴雨洪水防范应对工作TRBakan Kacır, Zonguldak'ta Sanayi ve Teknoloji Projelerini AçtıDEKritik am Reformpaket der Bundesregierung: "Sozial unausgewogen und voller Widersprüche"USDemand for Household Staff Soars, Driving Salaries to Record HighsARمحاولة سرقة غريبة في لندن: ابتلاع خاتم خطوبة ثم إعادتهTRTürkiye ve Rusya'dan Şehircilik ve İklim Alanında Ortak Adımlar
Newsgather
BackRussia-Ukraine War Surpasses World War I Duration
Russia-Ukraine War Surpasses World War I Duration
En desarrollo
Times of India13.06.2026Mundo4 dk okumaIndia

Russia-Ukraine War Surpasses World War I Duration

En resumen

  • The Russia-Ukraine war has now lasted over 1,569 days, exceeding the duration of World War I and becoming Europe's longest conflict since WWII.
  • Despite diplomatic efforts and comparisons to WWI's trench warfare, peace remains elusive as neither side appears ready for concessions.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

The Russia-Ukraine war, initiated in February 2022, has surpassed the duration of World War I. What began as a swift expected operation has evolved into Europe's longest and bloodiest conflict since World War II, with numerous failed attempts at peace.

Tamaño de fuente

The Russia-Ukraine war has entered uncharted territory. More than four years after Russian forces crossed into Ukraine in February 2022, the conflict has now lasted longer than World War I, the global conflict that raged from 1914 to 1918 and came to be known as the Great War. According to a NYT report, the war has reached 1,569 days, surpassing the duration of World War I. What began as a military operation that the Kremlin believed would bring Kyiv to its knees within days has instead evolved into Europe's longest and bloodiest conflict since World War II. In 2022, Moscow expected a swift victory. Instead, the invasion has turned into a prolonged and costly confrontation, reshaping Europe's security landscape and defying nearly every early prediction about its trajectory. So far, numerous attempts have been made to cool tensions between Moscow and Kyiv. None has succeeded in bringing the war any closer to a durable peace. American commander-in-chief Donald Trump, who has often cast himself as a dealmaker capable of resolving some of the world's toughest conflicts, also sought to play mediator. Yet the Ukraine problem proved far more hard-nosed than expected. In one of the conflict's most closely watched diplomatic moments, Trump rolled out the red carpet for Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Alaska, hosting him on American soil for the first time in a decade. The optics included handshakes, bilateral talks, joint appearances and promises of engagement. But when the cameras were switched off, little changed on the battlefield. Putin returned to Moscow, and the war machine kept moving. Zelenskyy, meanwhile, continued to shuttle between capitals in search of support. Dependent on Western military aid and financial assistance to sustain Ukraine's resistance, the Ukrainian leader made repeated visits to Washington. Yet some of those visits generated as much discussion about his trademark wartime attire as they did about the substance of diplomacy, a reminder of how symbolism often competed with strategy in the public narrative surrounding the war.

Putin's gamble, Zelenskyy's resistance

The war between Russian President Vladimir Putin, the former KGB officer who has dominated Russian politics for more than two decades, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the comedian-turned-politician who became the face of Ukraine's wartime resistance, has stretched far beyond initial expectations. Few would have predicted that Ukraine, a country outside Nato and without nuclear weapons, would be able to withstand Russia's military power for so long. Equally, the Kremlin is unlikely to have anticipated that a campaign expected to last days or weeks would still be raging more than four years later. Russia launched the invasion seeking to bring Ukraine firmly within its sphere of influence. However, Kyiv's resistance, backed by extensive Western military and financial support, transformed the conflict into a grinding war of attrition, consuming lives, resources and political capital on a vast scale. "I thought maybe two or three years, and then politicians will find some kind of consensus," a Ukrainian soldier identified only by his call sign "France" told The New York Times. Instead, the war continues with no clear end in sight.

Echoes of World War I

For years, analysts and military observers have compared the war in Ukraine to World War I. The similarities are difficult to ignore: trench warfare, brutal infantry assaults, staggering casualties and the relentless struggle for incremental territorial gains. The Economist described the anniversary as a "sombre milestone", mentioning the irony that a conflict many expected to last only days has now outlived the war that people in 1914 believed would be "over by Christmas". The parallels extend beyond duration. Then, as now, military planners anticipated quick victories. Instead, soldiers found themselves trapped in prolonged warfare, battling not only the enemy but also exhaustion, uncertainty and rapidly evolving military technologies. Where machine guns, tanks and mustard gas transformed warfare a century ago, drones, precision strikes and digital surveillance define the modern battlefield. For many Ukrainians, moreover, the war's origins stretch beyond 2022. They trace the conflict back to 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and Moscow-backed separatists ignited fighting in eastern Ukraine. Viewed through that lens, the conflict has already lasted well over a decade.

Search for peace

Despite the symbolic milestone, peace remains elusive. According to The Economist, recent battlefield developments have marginally improved Ukraine's position. Ukrainian drone strikes are reaching deeper into Russian territory, while Europe is preparing substantial financial assistance for Kyiv even as American support appears less certain than before. Yet diplomatic efforts remain stalled. Putin has shown little willingness to engage in meaningful negotiations despite repeated calls from Ukraine and its Western allies. The war continues with neither side appearing ready to make the concessions necessary for a breakthrough.

Lessons from Versailles

For The Economist, the lessons of World War I's aftermath may ultimately prove as important as the lessons of the war itself. The Treaty of Versailles ended the fighting in 1919 but left behind grievances and unresolved tensions that contributed to another, even more devastating global conflict two decades later. That history, the publication argues, should weigh heavily on policymakers seeking an end to the Ukraine war. A future settlement is unlikely to resemble a decisive victory by either side. Russia is not a defeated state facing unconditional surrender, while Ukraine's allies will eventually confront difficult questions involving territory, sanctions, reconstruction and long-term security guarantees. The challenge will be to construct a peace that prevents future conflict rather than merely freezing the current one.

No end in sight

More than four years after the invasion began, the war has already transformed Europe. The war has tested Western unity, strengthened Ukrainian national identity and exposed the limits of military forecasting. Above all, it serves as a reminder that wars often outlast the ambitions, assumptions and timelines of those who start them.

Qué observar

Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos

  • A future settlement will not resemble a decisive victory by either side.

    Probable · Medio plazo

Preguntas abiertas

  • When will the war end?
  • What will a future peace settlement entail?
  • What is the long-term impact on European security?

Temas relacionados

This article was originally published by Times of India.

Noticias relacionadas

Iran Warns of Retaliation Against Israel for Infrastructure Attacks Amid Renewed US Fighting
Urgente·30 dk önce

Iran Warns of Retaliation Against Israel for Infrastructure Attacks Amid Renewed US Fighting

Iran's security chief warned of retaliation against Israel for infrastructure attacks, stating "Any attack on infrastructure will be retaliated against, and the criminal Zionist regime responsible for these atrocities will not be safe from the response of our fighters." This comes as the US conducted extensive strikes targeting numerous military and civilian sites, with Iran reporting 17 casualties. Israel stated its readiness to resume military action against Iran if necessary.

Economic Times
दिल्ली में यमुना के बाढ़ क्षेत्र में बुलडोज़र: हज़ारों बेघर, भविष्य अनिश्चित
En desarrollo·1 sa önce

दिल्ली में यमुना के बाढ़ क्षेत्र में बुलडोज़र: हज़ारों बेघर, भविष्य अनिश्चित

दिल्ली में यमुना के बाढ़ क्षेत्र (ज़ोन ओ) में अतिक्रमण हटाने के नाम पर ध्वस्तीकरण की कार्रवाई चल रही है, जिससे हज़ारों लोग बेघर हो गए हैं। प्रशासन अदालतों के निर्देशों का पालन करने का दावा कर रहा है, लेकिन प्रभावित लोगों के सामने अनिश्चित भविष्य है।

BBC हिंदी
Más sobre este temaRussia-Ukraine war