Absolutely. On day three of the war, when NATO realized they could degrade the Russian military to a fraction of its current size, the war strategy was set.
And the strategy is to fight a proxy war, supplying Ukraine with anything and everything they can get away with without provoking too strong a response from Russia. Russian military gets significantly weakened, NATO military contractors get fat juicy contracts, NATO gets to see what works in a unique battle scenario ... everyone wins. Well, except for Russia and Ukraine.
This playbook has occurred time and time again since the dawn of nuclear weapons. Just ask the Koreans and Vietnamese how fun it is to host a proxy war.
By the way, in case you were wondering why the heck Russia still hasn't claimed air superiority, this video does a good job in answering that question. It isn't just that the Russian air force isn't great, it is mostly that Ukraine is huge.
[Edit, and the word you are looking for is albeit (not "all be it").]