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KYIV, UKRAINE — Valera Kondratenko, 32, would feel right at home working on Wall Street and living on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. He has an advanced degree in finance, works as the investment director for a private equity fund, speaks perfect English and tweets about Elon Musk's SpaceX.
In fact, Kondratenko lives in Kyiv.
He's doing everything he can as a civilian to support Ukraine's war effort — he helped found a grassroots group that imports vehicles for the armed forces — and he's hopeful about the outcome of the fighting. But he's also unsentimental.
"If there's any hint of compromise with the Russians," he says flatly, "there's no future for me in Ukraine. If we give them Donbas, it's only a matter of time before they take another bite of the apple. I can't build a future for myself or my family under the shadow of a Russian takeover."
As Russia's war of aggression enters its fifth brutal month, the Group of 7 leaders have committed to stand with Ukraine "as long as it takes." But that phrase means many different things to different people, and even some of Ukraine's most stalwart European and U.S. supporters, making grim World War I analogies and citing dwindling voter approval of the conflict, are starting to suggest terms for a compromise settlement. One proposed scenario: Western reconstruction aid and security guarantees for a divided country modeled on North and South Korea.
After a month in Kyiv and conversations with dozens of Ukrainians, I see no support for this position inside the country.