Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov explicitly rejected two suggestions reportedly considered by US President-elect Donald Trump’s team in early November 2024 as conditions for ending the war in Ukraine – the delay of Ukraine’s membership in NATO for 20 years and the deployment of European peacekeepers in Ukraine. Lavrov stated in an interview with Kremlin newswire TASS published on December 29 that Russia is “not satisfied” with the Trump team’s reported early November 2024 proposals to delay Ukraine’s membership in NATO for 20 years and to station a European peacekeeping contingent in Ukraine.[1] Lavrov is amplifying Russian President Vladimir Putin’s December 26 explicit rejection of the Trump team’s reported suggestion to delay Ukraine’s membership in NATO for 20 years.[2] Lavrov stated that any agreements to end the war in Ukraine “must eliminate the root causes” of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and “must establish a mechanism to make it impossible to violate them.”[3] Lavrov claimed in an interview on December 26 that the two main “root causes” of the war are NATO’s alleged violation of obligations to not advance eastward and “aggressive absorption” of areas near Russia’s borders and the Ukrainian government’s alleged discrimination against ethnic Russians and Russian language, media, and culture in Ukraine.[4] Lavrov’s statements are part of ongoing senior Russian officials’ statements that the Kremlin refuses to consider any compromises on Putin’s late 2021 and early 2022 demands.[5] These demands include forcing Ukraine to become a permanently neutral state that will never join NATO, imposing severe limitations on the size of the Ukrainian military, and removing the Ukrainian government.[6]
Russian President Vladimir Putin enshrined his alleged policy of Ukrainian “denazification” in a new state strategy document about countering extremism, demonstrating how Putin continues to make the same demands for the removal of the Ukrainian government that he made in 2022 when launching the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Putin signed on December 28 a new Strategy for Countering Extremism in Russia.[7] Putin signed Russia’s last iteration of such strategy in 2020. The 2024 strategy includes mentions of “Russophobia” for the first time, which the document defines as the “unfriendly, biased, and hostile” attitudes and “discriminatory actions” towards Russian citizens, language, and culture by states that are unfriendly to Russia. The 2024 document, unlike the 2020 version, also lists Ukraine as a main source of extremism and accuses Ukraine of disseminating neo-Nazi ideas. The documents states that Russia needs to “eliminate” the source of extremist threats that come from Ukraine. Putin claimed in February 2022 when he launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine that Russia was pursuing the “denazification” of Ukraine – an attempt to justify the removal of the legitimate, democratically elected government of Ukraine.[8] Putin has made similar statements recently reiterating his refusal to consider compromises on his late 2021 and early 2022 demands.[9] The document’s mentions of “Russophobia” and “discrimination” against Russian citizens, language, and culture also align with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s recent talking point that such alleged discrimination by the current Ukrainian authorities is a “root cause” of Russia’s war against Ukraine that any future negotiations must address.[10] The Kremlin will likely exploit this new strategy document to justify its calls for the removal of the Ukrainian government as “anti-extremist” measures.
Ukrainian forces are successfully innovating to combat Russian guided glide bomb strikes against Kharkiv Oblast. Kharkiv Oblast Military Administration Head Oleh Synehubov stated on December 29 that Russian forces started experimenting with and conducting D-30 universal joint glide munition (UMPB) guided glide bomb strikes against Kharkiv Oblast in March 2024 and have since modified them to have a range of up to 80 kilometers.[18] Synehubov stated that Russian forces started launching guided glide bombs from within Russian airspace roughly 40 kilometers away from the international Russian-Ukrainian border, allowing the bombs to strike targets up to 40 kilometers inside Ukraine. Kharkiv Oblast Police Force’s Explosive Department Head Volodymyr Bezruk stated that D-30 guided glide bombs can deviate from a target by up to 50 meters and that the damages from D-30 UMPB and unguided FAB-250/500 glide bombs are similar because both bombs use the same type of warhead.[19] Bezruk stated that Ukrainian forces are using machine guns and electronic warfare (EW) interference to down and divert guided glide bombs since glide bombs’ lack of a thermal energy signature prevents portable air defense systems from targeting the bombs. Ukrainian Kharkiv Group of Forces Spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Yevheniy Romanov stated that Russian forces launched the most guided glide bombs against Kharkiv City in May and September 2024 but that Russian forces have not conducted any guided glide bomb strikes on Kharkiv City since November 2024 and have been using aviation assets less frequently in the northern Kharkiv Oblast border area. Romanov noted that Ukrainian forces recently struck several large ammunition depots within Russia that stored guided glide bombs, limiting the Russian military’s guided glide bomb stockpiles. The spokesperson of a Ukrainian brigade operating in the Lyman direction stated that Russian forces conducted roughly three to four guided glide bombs strikes per day in the Lyman direction in November 2024 but are now conducting strikes with Shahed drones instead.[20]
Key Takeaways:
- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov explicitly rejected two suggestions reportedly considered by US President-elect Donald Trump’s team in early November 2024 as conditions for ending the war in Ukraine – the delay of Ukraine’s membership in NATO for 20 years and the deployment of European peacekeepers in Ukraine.
- Russian President Vladimir Putin enshrined his alleged policy of Ukrainian “denazification” in a new state strategy document about countering extremism, demonstrating how Putin continues to make the same demands for the removal of the Ukrainian government that he made in 2022 when launching the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
- Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev accused Russia of shooting the Azerbaijan Airlines Embraer 190 passenger flight over the Republic of Chechnya on December 25 and of attempting to cover up Russia’s responsibility for the plane’s crash in Kazakhstan — effectively rejecting Russian President Vladimir Putin’s lackluster apology.
- Ukrainian forces are successfully innovating to combat Russian guided glide bomb strikes against Kharkiv Oblast.
- The US delivered its first liquified natural gas (LNG) shipment to Ukraine on December 27.
- Salome Zurabishvili announced her departure from the Georgian presidential palace on December 29 but stated that she considers herself to be Georgia’s “legitimate” president.
- Russian forces recently advanced near Pokrovsk and Vuhledar and in western Zaporizhia Oblast.
- Russia reportedly continues to face labor shortages that Russian military recruitment and persistent demographic problems are likely exacerbating.