However, the end of the war does not mean the end of the struggle. Western policymakers must beware of complacency. Once CNN, the BBC, and the New York Times have gone home and NATO’s leaders have turned their attention to the next global flashpoint (Iraq, as it looks to be), we know that the Russians will test Ukraine. They will test the Ukrainian people’s desire to remain truly independent. They will test the Ukrainian leadership’s ability to turn down the comforts and corrupt spoils that working with Russian businesses has brought to former leaders. They will test the West’ attention span and commitment.
Ukraine's Energy Challenge
OP-ED
Andrew Holland: Winter is coming. US and its allies must prepare a strategy to boost Ukraine’s energy security
A woman warms herself in the sun as she sits at the monument for Ukrainian popular actor Mykola Yakovchenko in the centre of Kyiv on March 27, 2013.
It appears that the war between Ukraine and Russian-backed separatists may now be coming to an end, as a cease fire agreed on September 5 looks (increasingly) durable.