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Ukraine raises the cost of war for Moscow: deep strikes, diplomatic victories, and testing Putin's resilience

DéfenseReservado a suscriptores Jun 24, 2026 at 10:006Añadir a favoritos

Ukraine raises the cost of war for Moscow: deep strikes, diplomatic victories, and testing Putin's resilience
Max Tcvetkov · Unsplash

A series of Ukrainian successes-drones over Moscow, diplomatic breakthroughs, consolidated Western support-is reshaping the cost balance of the conflict. Each deep Ukrainian strike is a financial variable: Russia’s war budget, European defense contracts, commodity prices.

Context

Eighteen months after the summer 2024 counteroffensive, Ukraine has transformed its strategy: fewer frontal territorial gains, more long-range strikes on Russian logistical hubs, command centers, and energy infrastructure. This approach structurally raises the economic cost of the war for Moscow while testing the Kremlin's political limits.

Data

Russian 2026 defense budget: ~7.5% of GDP (~$130 billion), the highest since the Cold War (IMF, 2026). Documented Russian material losses (ORYX): +14,000 armored vehicles since 2022. Ukrainian drones striking the Moscow region: at least 3 confirmed strike series in June 2026 (CNBC, US DoD). Western military aid to Ukraine since 2022: ~$250 billion (Kiel Institute, May 2026). Ukraine’s 2025 GDP: +5.2% (IMF), driven by the war economy and reconstruction.

Analysis

Ukraine’s deep-strike strategy pursues two complementary objectives: degrading Russian military logistics (depots, refineries, rail networks) and forcing Moscow to mobilize defensive resources in its strategic depth, far from the front. For investors, the key issue is the opportunity cost for the Russian economy: every ruble spent on interceptor missiles is a ruble not invested in the productive sector. With a military budget at 7.5% of GDP, Russia is approaching levels of wartime effort that historically preceded major macroeconomic crises (USSR 1989: 15% of GDP).

Probability-weighted scenarios

  • Prolonged attrition (55%): The conflict continues to mutually exhaust both sides, without a decisive breakthrough; European defense budgets remain structurally higher (+20% NATO by 2027).
  • Forced negotiation (30%): Russian economic pressure (ruble, sanctions) and the 2026 US elections push toward a ceasefire; energy prices destabilize, and defense budgets are redeployed.
  • Escalation (15%): Ukrainian strikes on critical Russian infrastructure → asymmetric Russian response → NATO Article 5 clause activation.

Portfolio implications

European defense stocks (Rheinmetall, Leonardo, Thales, KNDS) benefit from multi-year structural demand regardless of the conflict’s outcome. European energy producers remain exposed to geopolitical risk premiums. Ukrainian bond markets (eurobonds) incorporate a gradual reconstruction premium.

Risks & blind spots

A surprise peace deal could cause European defense stocks to drop by 15-25%. European gas prices remain sensitive to any signals of de-escalation or escalation regarding Baltic Sea infrastructure.

To monitor

NATO summit July 2026 (defense budget commitments); Rutte-Trump meeting (coordination); oil/gas price trends on geopolitical premiums; upcoming US Congress deliberations on military aid.

Key takeaway

Ukraine’s deep-strike strategy is reshaping the war’s economic calculus, forcing Russia into a costly defensive posture while creating long-term structural demand for European defense sectors.

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Daniel SchmidtCorrespondant défense, espace & souveraineté (Berlin / Washington)
Il suit l'économie de la défense, du spatial et de la souveraineté technologique.
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Comentarios (6)

Inicia sesión para unirte a la conversación.

Cla1re 25 Jun 2026 · 07:51

L'Ukraine montre que la résilience et l'innovation paient, même face à un géant. Les données sur les frappes et le soutien occidental le prouvent.

J.P.R. 25 Jun 2026 · 07:43

Deep strikes and diplomatic wins don’t pay the bills. Wait for the winter energy math-Moscow’s resilience isn’t just about Putin’s ego.

J.P.R. 25 Jun 2026 · 07:33

Ukraine’s playing 4D chess while Putin’s stuck in a Cold War playbook-game theory meets guerrilla warfare, and the West’s finally waking up.

eco_analista_BCN 24 Jun 2026 · 20:33

Los datos muestran que el costo económico para Rusia supera ya los $180 mil millones. Cada drone en Moscú es un recordatorio de su fracaso estratégico.

ekonomist_74 24 Jun 2026 · 20:01

Цена войны для России растёт, но исторический опыт показывает: автократии редко сдаются под давлением экономики, а не поражения на поле боя.

EconEddie_89 24 Jun 2026 · 16:49

Poking the bear with drones and diplomacy-classic Sun Tzu meets modern hybrid warfare. Let’s see if Putin’s resilience is steel or rust.

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