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Why many in Ukraine oppose a ‘land for peace’ formula to end the war

Russia’s steady gains along much of the Ukraine war’s battlefront have fueled doubts among Ukrainians that their military will ever reclaim significant swaths of lost territory.

And as pressure grows to reach a negotiated settlement, they are increasingly resigned that any peace deal will entail giving up much if not all of the land Russia now occupies. According to a Gallup poll published this week, 52% now say Ukraine should be willing to give up territory to end the war.

Why We Wrote This

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Should Ukraine relinquish territory seized by Russia in return for an end to fighting? Opposition had been strong throughout the long war, but Ukrainians are shifting on whether their territory is inviolate. Still, distrust of Vladimir Putin runs deep.

Still, many remain adamant that what is at stake is not just some eastern provinces bordering Russia, but Ukraine’s existence as an independent nation. And the notion remains strong that Ukraine’s acquiescence to Russia on the territorial issue would send a devastating signal around the world that force prevails over the rule of law.

“It sounds very good if it could end the war, but the truth is that if you give Russia one meter of territory, they will see that as weakness, and they will not stop until they take everything,” says Yevhen, an engineering student at Mykolaiv’s Black Sea National University.

“We Ukrainians know this,” he adds, “but it’s something the world must understand as well.”

Standing on the shrapnel-pocked steps of Mykolaiv’s Black Sea National University, second-year engineering student Yevhen ponders the seductive appeal of the formula “land for peace” for ending Russia’s war against Ukraine.

And then, like many of his fellow Ukrainians, he firmly rejects the idea.

“It sounds very good if it could end the war, but the truth is that if you give Russia one meter of territory, they will see that as weakness, and they will not stop until they take everything,” says Yevhen, who asked that his last name be withheld.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Should Ukraine relinquish territory seized by Russia in return for an end to fighting? Opposition had been strong throughout the long war, but Ukrainians are shifting on whether their territory is inviolate. Still, distrust of Vladimir Putin runs deep.

“We Ukrainians know this,” adds the student, whose city was blasted and bombed – but never occupied – following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. “But it’s something the world must understand as well.”

For months Russia has advanced – slowly and at great cost, to be sure – along much of the war’s battlefront. That has fueled doubts that Ukraine’s military will ever reclaim significant swaths of lost territory.

Moreover, Russia’s steady gains have fed resignation that any peace deal will entail giving up much if not all of the 20% of Ukrainian territory Russia now occupies.

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