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Like a weather forecast, but for terror: This app shows you how Ukraine peace talks are really going

Like a weather forecast, but for terror: This app shows you how Ukraine peace talks are really going

Posted on 2 December 2025 By jobuzo

Kolodiy is a patriot: his company, Koza Dereza, makes clothes with traditional designs, and his charity, Wheels of Victory, transports toughened 4WD vehicles to the front to help soldiers in battle. He worries that people do not really understand what is happening in Ukraine. He feels the Russian onslaught is destroying the world he knew.

Composite of screenshots from app showing air-raid alerts in Ukraine

Composite of screenshots from app showing air-raid alerts in UkraineCredit: SMH

The records show that Russia is blasting Ukraine with a devastating intensity at the very time US President Donald Trump says a peace deal is close. Trump’s personal envoy, Steve Witkoff, is expected in Moscow on Tuesday (early on Wednesday, AEDT) to encourage Russian President Vladimir Putin to agree to end the war.

There is no sign, however, that Putin will accept peace unless it comes with a capitulation from Ukraine. The tally shows a surge in strikes this year and new peaks in recent weeks, including 476 drones and 48 missiles in a single night on November 19, when Ternopil was struck.

Russia launched 464 drones and 22 missiles on November 25. It attacked power systems around Kyiv on Saturday, leaving 600,000 without power for much of that day.

In the latest attack, a Russian missile killed four people and wounded 40 others when a ballistic missile struck a civilian target in Dnipro, in eastern Ukraine. Most attacks are at night, but this one was on Monday morning.

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One study of the missile strikes, by the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, shows a dramatic escalation in the second half of this year.

Another study, reported by The Kyiv Independent based on work by Dragon Capital, found that Russia launched 359 missiles and more than 8000 drones in October and November. It said Ukrainian forces intercepted 80 per cent of drones but only 27 per cent of missiles.

Ukraine’s former foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, says the attacks are part of a pattern that shows Putin is under insufficient pressure to sign a peace deal.

“The sequence of contrasting events captured the grim essence of the outgoing year,” he writes in The Guardian about the latest attacks.

Rescue workers at the site of a strike in Ternopil on November 19.

Rescue workers at the site of a strike in Ternopil on November 19.Credit: AP

“By day, diplomatic battles are fought: hopeful statements are issued from Washington, London, Brussels and Kyiv. Immense energy is expended on containing Donald Trump’s initiatives. By night, Putin brutally reminds the world that, for him, war remains the primary tool for achieving ‘peace’.”

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Kuleba concludes that genuine peace will only come when there is a more forceful response from America and Europe to deter Russia.

“Putin is convinced that time is on his side – that Ukraine and its partners are approaching exhaustion,” he writes. “His motivation to sign a deal that does not give him the maximum possible gain is close to zero.”

Putin’s own words show Kuleba is right. The Russian leader last week said that Russia was ready to keep on fighting “until the last Ukrainian dies”. Then, on Sunday, he expressed confidence in seizing the eastern Ukrainian town of Pokrovsk. “Russian forces are advancing in practically all directions,” he said.

Calculating that Europe and America will not do enough to stop him, Putin increases his attacks while Trump and his aides try to negotiate a peace.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is trying to gain more support while Trump sends Witkoff to see Putin, given the risk that the White House will expect Ukraine to sacrifice its long-term security to secure a ceasefire.

Zelensky met French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday in Paris (early on Tuesday, AEDT), and the two men joined a call with leaders from Britain, Germany, Poland, Italy, Norway, Finland, Denmark and the Netherlands. The talks included NATO and the European Union.

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The next step for the Ukrainian leader is an official visit to Ireland on Tuesday with his wife, Olena, including an address to the nation’s parliament, the Oireachtas.

European leaders are showing their support for Ukraine. Even so, their words are not enough to deter Putin, who feels he is on a historic mission to reclaim the Russian empire.

Ukrainians see a weak peace deal as an invitation to Putin to wage war again later. And they see the missile and drone strikes as proof that Putin does not really want peace at all.

“The Russians are dangerous,” says Kolodiy in Ternopil. “They are saying that they are for peace, but they are killing. If somebody wants to understand the condition of the world, just talk to somebody who has survived in Ukraine.”

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Like a weather forecast, but for terror: This app shows you how Ukraine peace talks are really going


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