Clearly angered by the intensification of Russia’s air marketing campaign towards Ukraine, Donald Trump has pivoted from the suspension of US navy help to Ukraine to promising its resumption. Russia’s strikes on main cities killed extra civilians in June than have died in any single earlier month, in line with UN figures.
Over the previous two weeks, the US president has made a number of disparaging feedback about his relationship with Vladimir Putin, together with on July 13 that the Russian president “talks good after which he bombs everyone within the night”.
Not solely will the US resume supply of long-promised Patriot air defence missiles, Trump is now additionally reported to be contemplating a complete new plan to arm Ukraine, together with with offensive capabilities. And he has talked about imposing new sanctions on Putin’s regime.
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That is the background towards which the eighth Ukraine Restoration Convention came about in Rome on July 10 and 11. The occasion, attended by many western leaders and senior enterprise executives, was an necessary reminder that whereas the struggle towards Ukraine can be selected the battlefield, peace will solely be received as the results of rebuilding Ukraine’s economic system and society.
Ending the struggle anytime quickly and on phrases beneficial to Kyiv would require an infinite effort by Ukrainians and their European allies. However the nation’s restoration afterwards can be no much less difficult.
In response to the World Financial institution’s newest evaluation, on the finish of 2024 Ukraine’s restoration wants over the subsequent decade stood at US$524 billion (£388 billion). And with each month the struggle continues, these wants are growing. Ukraine’s three hardest-hit sectors are housing, transport and vitality infrastructure, which between them account for round 60% of all harm.
On the identical time, the Worldwide Financial Fund (IMF) offered a comparatively constructive evaluation of Ukraine’s general financial scenario on the finish of June, forecasting development of between 2% and three% for 2025 – more likely to develop to over 4% in 2026 and 2027. However the IMF additionally cautioned that this trajectory – and the nation’s macroeconomic stability extra typically – will stay closely depending on exterior assist.
Making an allowance for a brand new €2.3 billion package deal from the EU, consisting of €1.8 billion of mortgage ensures and €580 million of grants, the cumulative pledge of over €10 billion (£8.7 billion) made by international locations attending the Ukraine restoration convention is each encouraging and sobering.
It’s encouraging within the sense that Ukraine’s worldwide companions stay dedicated to the nation’s social and financial wants, not merely its means to withstand Russia on the battlefield.

Roberto Monaldo/LaPresse
However it’s also sobering that even these eye-watering sums of public cash are nonetheless solely a fraction of Ukraine’s wants. Even when the EU manages to mobilise its general goal of €40 billion for Ukraine’s restoration, by attracting further contributions from different donors and the personal sector, this is able to be lower than 8% of Ukraine’s projected restoration wants as of the tip of 2024.
Because the struggle continues and extra of the (diminishing) public funding is directed in direction of defence expenditure by Kyiv’s western companions, this hole is more likely to develop.
Overcoming the trauma of struggle
Cash just isn’t the one problem for Ukraine restoration efforts. Rebuilding the nation just isn’t merely about undoing the bodily harm.
The social affect of Russia’s aggression is difficult to overstate. Ukraine has been deeply traumatised as a society because the starting of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
Usually dependable Ukrainian casualty counts – some 12,000 civilians and 43,000 troops killed since February 2022 – are nonetheless more likely to underestimate the true quantity of people that have died as a direct consequence of the Russian aggression. And every of those may have left behind members of the family struggling to deal with their loss. As well as, there are a whole bunch of 1000’s of struggle veterans.

EPA/Sergey Dolzhenko
Even earlier than the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, there have been almost half 1,000,000 veterans from the “frozen” battle that adopted Russia’s annexation of Crimea and incursion into jap Ukraine. By the tip of 2024, this quantity had greater than doubled to round 1 million. Most of them have complicated social, financial, medical and psychological wants that must be thought of as a part of a society-wide restoration effort.
Returning refugees
In response to information from the UN refugee company (UNHCR), there are additionally some 7 million refugees from Ukraine and three.7 million internally displaced folks (IDPs). That is equal to at least one quarter of the nation’s inhabitants. The monetary wants of UNHCR’s operations in Ukraine are estimated at $800 million in 2025, of which solely 27% was funded as of the tip of April.
As soon as the preventing in Ukraine ends, refugees are more likely to return in larger numbers. Their return will present a lift to the nation’s financial development by strengthening its labour power and bringing with them abilities and, probably, funding. However like many IDPs and veterans, they might not have the ability to return to their locations of origin, both as a result of these aren’t inhabitable or stay beneath Russian occupation.
Some returnees are more likely to be seen with suspicion or resentment by these Ukrainians who stayed behind and fought. Tensions with Ukrainians who survived the Russian occupation in areas that Kyiv could get better in a peace deal are additionally seemingly, given Ukraine’s harsh anti-collaboration legal guidelines.
As a consequence, reintegration – within the sense of rebuilding and sustaining the nation’s social cohesion – can be a large problem, requiring as a lot, if no more, of Ukraine’s companions’ consideration and monetary assist as bodily reconstruction and the transition from a struggle to a peace-time economic system.
Given the mismatch between what is required and what has been offered for Ukraine’s restoration, one might be sceptical concerning the worth of the annual Ukraine restoration conferences. However, to the credit score of their organisers and attendees, they recognise that the foundations for post-war restoration should be constructed earlier than the struggle ends. The non-military challenges of struggle and peace should not fall by the wayside amid an unique concentrate on battlefield dynamics.




















