RTWed, 29 Oct 2025 14:20 UTC

© AFPItalian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto
Ukraine lacks the strength to reconquer territories lost to Russia, Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto has said. He added that Moscow will in any case never relinquish the territories.
Crosetto discussed the issue in an interview with Bruno Vespa, featured in the journalist's new book set for release this week. In the conversation, Crosetto laid out his view that the situation on the ground leaves no realistic path for Ukraine to reclaim its former regions.
"To reconquer the territories lost in 2014 and after February 2022 is today considered impossible by everyone," Crosetto told Vespa, as quoted by ANSA news agency.
"Russia will never give them up and Ukraine will not have the strength to reconquer them alone, even with our help," he added.
Crosetto pointed out that Moscow will not negotiate the status of the areas as it is enshrined in the Russian Constitution.
Ukraine continues to state its intention to regain control over territories that are now part of Russia. Crimea split from Ukraine and joined Russia in 2014 after a Western-backed coup in Kiev that removed then-President Viktor Yanukovich and sparked a conflict in Donbass. In 2022, the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics in Donbass, along with Kherson and Zaporozhye Regions, similarly voted to join Russia in referendums.
Russian President Vladimir Putin described the areas as
"ancestral Russian land" and said
their people had "independently and freely chosen to join Russia." Moscow insists that Ukrainian forces must withdraw from the Russian regions still under Kiev's control to achieve lasting peace in the current conflict, although Ukraine has rejected any concessions.
Ukrainian forces have been losing ground for months as Russia pushes deeper into Donbass and Dnepropetrovsk and Zaporozhye regions. Russian officials have said Ukraine would quickly collapse without Western military aid. Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has denied reports of serious setbacks while urging Western backers for more weapons and aid.
Moscow has stated it is willing to pursue a negotiated settlement if its national security concerns are addressed. Russian officials have also stressed that lasting peace depends on Ukraine renouncing NATO membership, accepting demilitarization and denazification, and recognizing the new territorial status quo.
Comment: Saying the quiet part out loud. More from
ZeroHedge:
Russia's military currently holds some 20% of Ukrainian territory, and early in the conflict Moscow declared the annexation after popular referendum of the four oblasts of Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia.
Citing the Italian defense chief further, RBC-Ukraine writes, "According to him, Russian leader Vladimir Putin cannot back down, in part because he changed the constitution, declaring the occupied territories Russian in every sense, thereby putting himself in a position where he cannot negotiate."
And yet the reality is that the Zelensky government and its backers in NATO still appear completely unwilling to negotiate based on ceding territory.
Zelensky has refused to even recognize Russia's hold over Crimea, and Moscow is certainly never going to give up Crimea and home to its Black Sea naval fleet.
"It is up to them [the Ukrainians] to decide what is the greater sacrifice: conceding territory or continuing a bloody war that could intensify. Ukrainian losses amount to 520,000 people, while Russian losses exceed 1 million. The difference is that Ukrainians are aware of their losses, whereas the Russian people have no idea," Crosetto continued.
But Crosetto holds no sympathies with Moscow - quite the opposite in fact - as he's also said that Russia is sowing propaganda among European populations, and even seeks to destabilize and confuse Italy.
We reported earlier Wednesday that the key logistical hub of Ukraine's eastern front - Pokrovsk, is poised to be captured by the Russian army, given its infantry forces are already inside southern districts of the frontline city.
Comment: Saying the quiet part out loud. More from ZeroHedge: