Most experts now believe that reflected not a desire to end the war, but a reflection of military failure and growing economic hardship for ordinary Russians who had supported it - before it began to interfere with their daily lives. The implicit bargain had been that they would not complain as long as they didn't have to feel the effects. The Russian military's inability to protect them from increasingly successful Ukrainian attacks on their infrastructure and life style has put an end to that deal. Inflation is up, gas is rationed, internet access is often closed and the war feels closer than they want. Putin may have no intention of ending it, but he clearly feels the need to suggest that he might, before, that is, he is forced to. JL
Mary Ilyushina reports in the Washington Post:
Mary Ilyushina reports in the Washington Post:
Vladimir Putin is under pressure not only from stalemate, stagnation and heavy losses on the battlefield but also a battered economy, rising public frustration and setbacks worldwide in Iran, Hungary and Venezuela. The frontline remains stalled, with Russia still failing to achieve Putin’s goal of seizing the entire Donbas region. Putin's “Image of victory” narratives are designed to sell Russians on a peace deal despite high casualties and minimal territorial gains, reflecting contingency planning within the Kremlin’s political bloc. The most immediate risk is losing the passive majority that has tolerated the war — as long as it was kept at a distance — but now feels its strain in daily life.























