Point 10: A U.S. security guarantee for Ukraine. Analysts argue Russia would never accept this, because Washington has repeatedly violated past agreements and Moscow can already dictate the battlefield without such arrangements. Points 13–14: Using frozen Russian assets to rebuild Ukraine and reintegrating Russia into the Western-led economic system. Russia rejects both: they want their frozen assets returned and see no advantage in rejoining Western institutions like the G7 now that BRICS economies rival or surpass them. Point 21: Freezing the line of contact in areas Russia is currently capturing (Zaporizhzhia, Kherson). Russian commanders publicly announce that they are still advancing and intend to liberate all territory they consider part of the new Russian regions—making a “freeze” unacceptable. The analysts emphasize that Russia is gaining momentum: major towns have recently fallen, defensive lines are collapsing, and Russian manpower advantages (after full mobilization) are becoming decisive. They argue Ukraine is exhausting tens of thousands of soldiers per month and cannot replace them fast enough. The conclusion: Russia holds the military advantage, and the West’s plan contains demands Moscow will never accept. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s leadership remains publicly defiant, but privately faces catastrophic military realities on the ground.



















