This video blog uses irony to analyze the Ukrainian government’s phenomenon of paper hyperactivity, with numerous loud promises and the signing of new agreements and declarations masking the absence of real decisions on the war and security.
Since the failed counteroffensive in 2023, the government has signed over 28 security agreements with Western and G7 countries. However, despite these documents, the real issue of security remains unresolved, with little result on the ground.
Special attention is given to the wave of new aviation agreements—including those with France and Sweden—multi-year contracts for aircraft and air defense systems that are, in fact, declarations of intent stretched over 5–10 years and requiring tens of billions of dollars in funding. The same pattern is seen in earlier promises about thousands of missiles, mass air defense purchases, a blackout in Moscow—mostly unfulfilled and only existing on paper.
The author stresses that such “paper tours” and contracts simulate busy activity to compensate for a lack of concrete action, rather than delivering a real impact on the battlefield. He highlights the wide gap between what is declared and what actually happens—these agreements seem substantial on paper but do not solve the real issues at the front or with national security.
The blog concludes with an appeal to critically assess such news and not confuse impressive promises with actual change on the ground.





