Financial Times writes: The US is ready to open the doors to the depths of its intelligence archives for Kyiv. A decision that changes the rules of the game. Now strikes on Russian targets are not only drones and missiles. It is also information that allows seeing weak spots where there was only fog before.
Intelligence instead of billions
Instead of another package of direct financial aid — a map, compass, and flashlight. Donald Trump, unwilling to spend American taxes on someone else’s war, still makes a move: he allows data sharing. A “seismic shift,” as one White House source called it. The American president demands that allies buy weapons from the US themselves and transfer them to Ukraine. A cunning, pragmatic business in the era of great war.
London in Washington’s shadow
FT claims: The UK is already helping Kyiv in long-range attacks. Now the task is to build a collective NATO strategy. So that the strikes become not a chaotic series, but a cold rhythm. The ability to find loopholes in Russian air defense turns into a separate art of war.
Drones, oil, and nerves
Since August, Ukrainian drones have struck at least 16 out of 38 Russian refineries. Diesel exports in Russia have fallen to a five-year low. Each attack is not just a hole in the roof of a plant, it is panic in the markets, it is the question: where next time?
Balance between war and negotiations
And yet a parallel note sounds: special envoy Keith Kellogg says that the US will pressure both Moscow and Kyiv. To accelerate the end of the conflict. But has a war ever ended without the last strike?
Today intelligence is a weapon, and perhaps much sharper than a missile.
