Zelenskyy's public frustration grows as Putin's war enters a 5th year

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Feb. 24, 2026, 4:30 AM EST / Updated Feb. 24, 2026, 4:49 AM EST

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After four years leading his country in war, Volodymyr Zelenskyy is very frustrated.

Russia may have been thwarted in its immediate bid to sweep aside the Ukrainian president and swallow its neighbor whole. But after months of U.S.-led negotiations, and as the conflict enters its fifth year on Tuesday, there has been little clear progress on key sticking points in peace talks.

Now, Zelenskyy’s defiance of the Kremlin’s full-scale invasion has taken on an increasingly exasperated, if not desperate, tone.

“I don’t need historical s--- to end this war and move to diplomacy,” Zelenskyy said in a post on X last week. It was an apparent reference to Vladimir Medinsky, the lead Russian negotiator whose historical views mirror those of President Vladimir Putin — that much of Ukraine has always been part of Russia, rather than an independent state.

The Kremlin has signaled not just that it won’t ease its hard-line demands, but that it remains determined to assert its historical justification for the war.

 First responders evacuate an injured pregnant woman, Iryna Kalinina, from a Mariupol maternity hospital that was damaged by a Russian airstrike in Ukraine on March 9, 2022. The woman and her baby later died.Iryna Kalinina was evacuated from a maternity hospital in Mariupol, southern Ukraine, in March 2022 following a Russian airstrike. Kalinina and her baby later died from their injuries. This image has become a symbol of the war. Evgeniy Maloletka / AP file

While sharp public statements have always been part of Zelenskyy’s political brand, the Ukrainian leader’s growing public anger with the peace process is palpable, Kyiv-based political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko said.

“His temperament calls for faster solutions. That’s where impatience and irritation come from,” Fesenko said.

Addressing the nation on the eve of the anniversary, Zelenskyy urged Trump to visit Ukraine and said any peace talks must not “nullify” years of sacrifice by his people. “Putin has not achieved his goals,” Zelenskyy added. “He has not broken Ukrainians.”

After four grueling years, Russia controls 20% of his country’s territory, chipping away at its eastern frontiers in a war of attrition that has now lasted longer than the Soviet Union’s fight against Nazi Germany.

Despite Ukraine’s recent gains, neither side has launched a major offensive in months. And the battlefield toll on both sides is approaching nearly half a million dead and 1.5 million wounded or missing, according to a staggering estimate released last month.

28th Separate Mechanized Brigade Conduct Operations In Bakhmut DistrictUkrainian soldiers fire at Russian positions in an attempt to hold the front line near Bakhmut in November 2023.Kostya Liberov / Libkos via Getty Images

Civilian casualties are also growing: Last year was the deadliest for civilians in Ukraine since the invasion and nearly 6 million Ukrainians still live abroad as war refugees, according to the United Nations.

For those who choose to stay behind, conditions inside the war-ravaged country are increasingly intolerable. The power grids of Ukrainian towns and cities are bombarded nearly daily, leaving millions to freeze in the dark during one of the harshest winters in years.

Nataliia Sukhar left her home in northeastern Kharkiv after the war broke out, catching a 15-hour train to Berlin with her then 5-year-old son Gleb on a journey followed by NBC News. She returned to Ukraine in August 2022 and now lives with her family in the western Ivano-Frankivsk region.

“I returned because we felt back then that we belonged in Ukraine,” Sukhar, 36, said in a series of messages on Telegram. “Now that fervor has significantly faded.”

 Nataliia Sukhar and her 5-year-old son, Gleb, rest on a train traveling from Poland to Berlin, Germany, after fleeing the violence in Ukraine.Nataliia Sukhar and her 5-year-old son, Gleb, rest on a train traveling to Berlin, Germany, after fleeing the violence in Ukraine in March 2022.Jacobia Dahm for NBC News

Sukhar, who gave birth to another son just months ago, said the war dragging on has left Ukraine trapped. “The choice is either to surrender a third of Ukraine and allow the aggressor to advance even further into the country or to continue the war at the very limit of our human and economic resources,” she added.

Putin has made it clear that he wants the entirety of Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region, despite Kyiv still holding territory there. Ukraine has rejected the idea, creating a stalemate that persists even as the war takes its toll on both countries.

While Russians have shown some signs of mounting disquiet over the effects of the Kremlin’s war, authorities have sought to showcase the state’s determination to see the fight to its conclusion.

Marking “Defender of the Fatherland Day” in Russia on Monday, just a day before the fourth anniversary, Putin reiterated his justification for invading Ukraine as he handed out state awards to troops, saying that Russia was “fighting for its future.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin makes a toast with servicemen awarded with Gold Star medals of 'Hero of Russia' during a ceremony on Defender of the Fatherland Day in Moscow Monday.Putin toasts servicemen awarded with Gold Star medals of "Hero of Russia" in Moscow on Monday.Mikhail Metzel / Pool / AFP via Getty Images

Putin's hard-line view of the war was evident at a patriotic expo in snowy Moscow last week, organized by a major military history organization that is chaired by Medinsky and featured stands with photos of Russian soldiers who died fighting in Ukraine.

“I believe we must not compromise,” Natalya Belyaeva told NBC News when asked if Russia should ease its demands to reach a peace deal. Her son Dmitry, a senior lieutenant in the Russian military, was killed in Ukraine’s eastern Kharkiv region in fall 2022 while commanding an anti-aircraft missile platoon. He was posthumously granted the Hero of the Russian Federation award by Putin.

“Our guys didn’t shed blood for us to give up or concede something. We must fight to the end,” Belyaeva, 53, said, adding that she expects nothing short of “capitulation” from Ukraine.

Kyiv is also facing immense pressure from Trump to reach a deal.

“Ukraine better come to the table fast,” Trump said ahead of the latest round of talks in Geneva last week.

Initially presented with a U.S. proposal heavily favoring Russia, Ukraine and its European backers have negotiated a more favorable framework. Zelenskyy has since accused Washington of focusing too much on the need for Ukrainian concessions to end the war.

The former comedian, long since transformed into a wartime talisman globally, is also battling to keep hold of domestic favor.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv on Feb. 20, 2026.Zelenskyy in Kyiv on Friday.Henry Nicholls / AFP via Getty Images

An election originally scheduled for early 2024 was postponed by the ongoing martial law, but Trump has been pushing for Kyiv to hold a vote as soon as possible. The re-emergence of his former chief military commander and the separate news of a massive corruption scandal implicating close associates have further weakened Zelenskyy’s standing at home.

Gen. Valeriy Zaluzhny, widely viewed as a serious rival to Zelenskyy in any vote, accused the president of targeting him and undermining the military’s counteroffensive in the summer of 2023, which had the potential to change the course of the war. The anniversary has also fueled some relitigation of the buildup to the war and Zelenskyy’s dismissal of U.S. warnings, which proved to be correct.

Now, Zelenskyy is faced with ultimatums from Moscow and Washington to give up Ukrainian land, Fesenko said — something the Ukrainian leader is unlikely accept in the face of domestic public opinion.

“He is ready for the war that will continue,” he added.

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