The West still talks about Ukraine as though it were a charity case. Increasingly, it looks more like Europe’s future military power.

You might remember the images: Zelensky walking Kyiv’s streets in the early hours as Russian tanks rolled in, refusing evacuation even as Western officials debated not whether Ukraine would fall, but how long it would take. His defiant plea as Russian strike teams moved to kill or capture him: “I need ammo, not a ride.”

Britain, alongside European partners, responded with weapons, training, money and sanctuary for refugees in what still looked like a hopeless fight. Our national psyche instinctively rallies behind the outmatched underdog with justice on their side. Four years later, the same challenge remains.

But Ukraine – once treated as a dependent recipient of support – is transformed.

It has pioneered a new generation of warfare, born of necessity. Like earlier wars that began with cavalry charges and ended with tanks and combat aircraft, so this one is redefining combat.