New reporting on Kremlin intentions tests whether NATO’s Ankara language and Donald Trump’s shift on Ukraine can alter Moscow’s military calculus.
New reporting that Vladimir Putin is likely to continue escalating the war despite US diplomatic pressure has undercut the idea that NATO’s Ankara summit and President Donald Trump’s latest Ukraine shift will quickly change Moscow’s calculations.
The immediate diplomatic backdrop is striking. NATO used the Ankara summit to restate support for Ukraine, while Trump signalled a harder line on Russia and a more supportive tone towards Kyiv. But the central question remains whether the Kremlin sees diplomacy as a reason to compromise or as another arena in which to test Western endurance.
NATO’s public position is that Russia remains the primary threat to Euro-Atlantic security and that Ukraine’s security is linked to Allied security. The Alliance’s own Ukraine support page sets out that connection. The new escalation reporting suggests Moscow is not yet persuaded that Western pressure has reached a level that changes the cost-benefit calculation.
Summit language meets battlefield logic
The Ankara summit gave Ukraine important political signals: continued assistance, stronger European and Canadian financing, and renewed attention to air defence. But Russia’s war strategy has not been driven only by diplomatic messaging. It is driven by battlefield attrition, missile pressure, domestic repression and the expectation that Western unity will eventually weaken.
That is why reports of continued escalation matter. If Putin believes he can outlast Ukraine and its partners, then a summit declaration will not be enough. The Kremlin will watch delivery, not language: interceptors, artillery shells, drones, sanctions enforcement and the political resilience of European governments.
EU Global has previously examined Europe’s difficulty in defining a common approach to Russia talks. Any future negotiation will depend not only on diplomatic formats, but on whether Moscow believes the military balance is shifting.
Trump’s shift and its limits
Trump’s tone on Ukraine at Ankara was welcomed by allies who had feared a more disruptive summit. But tone is not yet strategy. The Kremlin will test whether Washington’s position translates into sustained military supply, sanctions pressure and coordination with Europe.
If US support remains unpredictable, Moscow may assume that escalation can still produce political openings. If Europe is unable to turn pledges into weapons at speed, Russia may conclude that NATO’s resolve is broad but shallow.
That is why the reported Kremlin posture is a warning to both Washington and Brussels. Peace pressure works only when Russia believes that continuing the war will worsen its position. If the Kremlin believes time is on its side, diplomacy becomes another instrument of delay.
Energy strikes and retaliation
Ukraine’s deep strikes on Russian energy infrastructure have added a new layer to the calculation. Attacks on refineries, tankers and fuel logistics are imposing visible costs on Russia’s war economy. But they may also encourage Moscow to escalate missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities and infrastructure in response.
This creates a dangerous feedback loop. Ukraine strikes Russian fuel systems to weaken the war machine. Russia responds by intensifying attacks on civilian and strategic targets. NATO then faces renewed pressure to provide air defence and long-range capabilities.
The result is a war in which diplomacy, energy infrastructure and missile defence are increasingly connected.
NATO credibility
For NATO, the key question is credibility. If the Alliance announces large Ukraine support packages but delivery lags, Russia will discount the pledge. If the support arrives quickly and predictably, Moscow’s calculation may change.
That makes the Ankara aftermath more important than the summit itself. The coming months will show whether NATO can move from political commitment to industrial delivery.
Europe’s role is especially important. The United States remains central, but European allies and Canada are now expected to finance and deliver the bulk of support. That shift makes European production capacity a strategic factor in whether Putin escalates or recalculates.
A hard conclusion
The report on Putin’s likely escalation should temper any optimism that a change in rhetoric will produce rapid diplomacy. Moscow’s decisions will be shaped by pressure, not persuasion alone.
If Trump wants a Ukraine peace push to succeed, it will have to be backed by sustained costs for Russia and sustained capability for Ukraine. Otherwise, the Kremlin may read diplomatic activity as Western impatience rather than Western strength.
The Ankara summit may have steadied NATO. It has not yet changed the war.
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