Analysis
Zelenskyy’s assertion assumes a direct causal link between weapons supply and war termination, which lacks empirical certainty. Military aid can strengthen Ukraine’s negotiating position or deter further aggression (as argued by [RAND, 2023](https://www.rand.org)), but wars typically end through negotiated settlements or one side’s exhaustion—not solely via arms proliferation. His phrasing also risks conflating *defensive* military support (which may deter escalation) with arms as a universal 'peace tool,' ignoring cases where weapons prolong conflicts (e.g., Yemen, Syria). The statement leans on an unproven counterfactual: that *sufficient* weapons would *definitively* end the war faster, which remains speculative.
Background
Since 2022, Western military aid to Ukraine (over $100B as of [Kiel Institute, 2024](https://www.ifw-kiel.de)) has helped Ukraine resist Russian advances but has not yet forced a negotiated end. Historical examples (e.g., Korea, Vietnam) show that even overwhelming firepower rarely guarantees swift conflict resolution without parallel diplomatic efforts. Zelenskyy’s framing reflects Ukraine’s urgent need for support but simplifies the complex dynamics of war termination.
Verdict summary
While Zelenskyy’s claim that weapons aid *could* accelerate Ukraine’s defense is plausible, framing arms as a 'tool of peace' oversimplifies their role in ending wars, which historically depend on broader diplomatic, strategic, and political factors beyond military capacity alone.