Though it is understandable that the war in Gaza has dominated the headlines and political attention in the west, it brings profound consequences for Ukraine.
"For a long time, there was never a period of more than a couple of days where Ukraine wasn't at the top of the news agenda," Shaun said. "But there were already complaints in Ukraine that western focus had begun to fade – the story was becoming less clear cut, and harder to tell in ways that captured people's attention. And then 7 October happened."
If news bulletins are less likely to lead on developments in the Donbas than they once were, that may not matter much for Ukrainians in its own right. But a sense that public attention is elsewhere changes the political calculus for leaders in the US and Europe – and arguably contributed to a recent congressional vote that saw Republicans block $50bn in new security assistance to Ukraine. A $250m package this week is scant consolation. Jack Watling's Observer piece - which points out that the EU has delivered just 300,000 of the 1m shells it promised in March, and that Russia is now firing five times as many artillery shells each day as Ukraine – sets out the severity of the shortfall.
Pentagon officials say that there are enough munitions to last Ukraine for the winter, and Biden could yet get a deal that will secure the money. As an alternative, the US and Europe are reportedly considering drawing on $300bn in frozen Russian assets instead.
If the funding does not come in some form, "that will be catastrophic for Ukraine," Shaun said. "They are already facing shortages of everything they need." Volodymyr Zelenskiy visited Washington earlier this month, but his pleas for more support appeared to have left Republicans unmoved.
Hints of internal division
Amid all of this is a growing sense that politics may be returning in Ukraine. "One view you hear is that Zelenskiy (pictured above) has had this superpower of communication, but he's not the most important guy in the world in the way that he was," Shaun said. There are whispers that some of his advisers feel he is too bullish about the prospects for progress in the war, and that he has not yet adapted to a changing reality. "He hasn't quite found a new way to talk to the world, or to his country."
In theory, there is meant to be a presidential election in March – "but counterintuitively, most observers say that it would not be democratic to hold it. Zelenskiy floated going ahead, but there has been huge opposition, because you can't have proper elections in wartime, and he would get five more years in a very difficult period."
It has also been suggested that the head of the army, Valeriy Zaluzhny, could emerge as a rival. "We don't know if he has political ambitions," Shaun said. But there is definitely a feeling that he has this huge capital, and that there is a simmering rivalry with Zelenskiy that is mostly going on in private but sometimes spills into the public domain."
What happens next
Despite such significant setbacks, Shaun said, "there is still an extraordinary sense among many people that, even if they are exhausted, this is their fight, and they have to fight it." But without confidence that US support will come through, sheer determination is not enough. And even those who wonder if it may soon be time to seek peace – even at the cost of a vast chunk of Ukrainian territory and leaving millions under Russian occupation – are sceptical that Putin will treat a ceasefire or peace as anything other than a chance to refresh his forces and try again in a couple of years.
"Most people realise that any peace deal Putin would sign – not that he's said he wants one – would not be worth much without major security guarantees from the west," Shaun said. "That, above all, is the source of the gloom: this feeling that it is unclear how to keep going, but also unclear how to stop."
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