Five thousand miles from Kyiv, one cannot
know with any kind of certainty how things are going in the war. I read daily,
but not exhaustively, updates on the offensive, reports of modest gains, of
casualties, and the shortage of ammunition. That Putin might hang on and the
war become a long one should come as no surprise to anyone with any knowledge
of history. Things always drag on longer than expected. Lightning victory—I
cannot name one offhand, and I have read a lot of history. A war being fought
in trenches will be slow going. Which is why the friends and allies of Ukraine
must remember to be patient. The sharing of materiel and treasure is as nothing
compared to the sacrifices Ukrainians make daily, nightly, hourly. We should
honor their heroic example, their perseverance, with our patience and continued
support.
Some weeks ago I read Edith Wharton’s account
of France at the outset of World War I, Fighting
France. “War is the greatest of paradoxes,” she wrote, “the most senseless
and disheartening of human retrogressions, and yet the stimulant of qualities
of soul which, in every race, can seemingly find no other renewal.” If your
motives are noble, national self-defense among them, you are ennobled. The
qualities of soul on exhibit in Kyiv and Bakhmut and Robotyne, on the streets,
in the trenches, and aloft on the wings of drones—courage, ingenuity,
resilience—deserve our fullest appreciation.