Since taking office, US President Donald Trump’s administration has pledged to end the war and facilitate what it calls a “just and sustainable” peace. Yet for all the talk about Ukrainian minerals, Russia’s territorial claims, Vladimir Putin’s interests, and Trump’s whims, almost nothing has been said about the people involved.
The war has often been reduced to statistics — combat casualties, civilians killed and injured, women sexually assaulted, children abducted, towns destroyed — but what we are witnessing this year is no less dehumanising. The US approach to “peace” talks has erased people entirely, treating their suffering as irrelevant. This sets a dangerous precedent, paving the way for a future in which human lives are expendable, and dignity is negotiable.
People must be central to any peace deal. In February, after six months of silence, Russia returned Ukrainian journalist Viktoria Roshchyna’s body. It bore signs of torture, and several internal organs were missing — including her eyeballs, brain, and part of her trachea. I knew Roshchyna personally. She was talented, devoted to her work, and extraordinarily brave. In the summer of 2023, she travelled to the occupied territories to report on the illegal arrests and torture of civilians. Then she vanished.