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War in Ukraine feels increasingly normal after four years
Summary
Four years after Russia's Feb. 24, 2022 invasion, Ukraine continues to face frequent attacks and rising drone strikes while international military support has declined.
Content
Four years after Russia launched a full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022, fighting across Ukraine continues and many cities have faced repeated strikes. The article describes growing use of drones and missiles, rising civilian casualties, and a sense that global attention and some military support have waned. It also notes diplomatic talks in places such as Abu Dhabi and Geneva but no clear end to the fighting.
Key facts:
- Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022.
- The article reports that more than 54,000 drones were launched at Ukrainian cities in 2025 and that civilian deaths rose by about 30% to just over 2,500 confirmed that year.
- Direct U.S. military assistance to Ukraine stopped after January 2025, while the European Union and Canada provided about €36-billion in military aid last year; overall allocated military support was reported to be down 13% from the 2022–2024 average.
- Negotiations in Abu Dhabi and Geneva have taken place, but a settlement that ends the fighting was not reported.
Summary:
The article describes a four-year conflict that remains active, with increased drone and missile attacks and a decline in some international military support. The human and civic effects in Ukraine are ongoing, and what comes next is undetermined at this time.
