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Pressure mounts on Ukraine amid US peace push
Ukraine's frontline brigades operate at 30 to 50 percent capacity, with some positions defended by just two or three soldiers, intensifying the manpower crisis as Russia presses toward Pokrovsk. This dire shortage undermines Kyiv's stance in talks, where the Trump administration urges a swift peace deal. President Donald Trump softened an initial Thanksgiving deadline for a 28-point plan shaped with Russian involvement to simply "when it's over," yet the pressure persists.
Battlefield strains
Units face relentless combat without adequate trained reserves for rotation, as noted by Gil Barndollar, senior research fellow at the Catholic University of America's Center for Strategic Studies. Russian advances exploit these gaps along the 1,000-kilometer front, particularly around Pokrovsk, where Ukrainian forces report an eight-to-one disadvantage. Zelensky has highlighted a broader three-to-one manpower disparity favoring Moscow.
Negotiation dynamics
The proposed peace framework demands Ukraine cede territory and shrink its military from 850,000 to 600,000 troops, complicating Zelensky's position amid battlefield setbacks. As Russian gains mount, the manpower crisis amplifies calls for compromise, testing Kyiv's resolve under US influence. Sustained deficiencies risk further territorial losses without bolstered reserves.