More support for Ukraine can help end war in 2023, says Boris Johnson
The former prime minister wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal calling for increased western backing for Ukraine.

Boris Johnson has urged western countries to ālook urgentlyā at what more they can do to support Ukraine in the hopes of ending the war against Russia as soon as next year.
The former prime minister, who was hailed by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as a key ally in the countryās fight against Russia, used an article in the Wall Street Journal to argue that ending the war as soon as possible is āin everyoneās interest, including Russiaā.
He said that while the significant financial commitment to Ukraine is āpainfulā during a period of budgetary constraints, ātime is money, and the longer this goes on the more we will all end up paying in military supportā.
Itās in everyoneās interest, including Russiaās, that the curtain comes down as soon as possible on Mr Putinās misadventure
Mr Johnson has remained a vocal supporter of Ukrainian efforts since leaving office in September.
His successor Rishi Sunak, who visited Kyiv last month, has pledged to continue UK backing for Ukraine.
The former prime minister wrote: āThere is no land-for-peace deal to be done, even if Mr Putin were offering it and even if he were to be trusted, which he is not.
āSince the war can end only one way, the question is how fast we get to the inevitable conclusion.
āItās in everyoneās interest, including Russiaās, that the curtain comes down as soon as possible on Mr Putinās misadventure. Not in 2025, not in 2024, but in 2023.ā
Mr Johnson warns that next winter could prove even more difficult than this one, as gas supplies run low for countries once reliant on Russian fuel.
āThe longer Mr Putin continues with his senseless attacks, the longer the global economic haemorrhage will continue as well.
āAre we really going to wait and let this thing drift until Mr Putin has regained some of his leverage?
āIt is time to look urgently at what more the West can do to help the Ukrainians achieve their military objectives, or at least to kick the Russians out of all the territories invaded this year.
āThatās the only plausible basis on which a conversation about the future could begin.ā
Mr Johnson branded as ātotal nonsenseā concerns about āpoking the Russian bearā, saying the argument against stepping up support to Ukraine was āwearyingā.
He also rejected any suggestion that Nato provoked Vladimir Putin into invading Ukraine, as he said the response from western countries to Russiaās invasion had helped āatoneā for years of failing to stand up to the Kremlin.
āDecades of western lassitude and irresolution about Ukraineās status⦠enticed the bully to make his mistake.
āThe West has atoned for this failure with a stunning display of coherence and unity since February. We must be stronger and bolder.ā