╌>

Putin is Stronger Than Ever—Why?

  
Via:  Nerm_L  •  9 months ago  •  3 comments

By:   Brendan Cole (Newsweek)

Putin is Stronger Than Ever—Why?
Despite setbacks in Ukraine, the Russian president looks set to consolidate his power at next month's elections.

Sponsored by group News Viners

News Viners

Is Putin really stronger?  Or is this just another lie told by liberals (and that includes neoliberals) to manipulate public opinion?

From the lowly vantage point of an American peon, Vladimir Putin doesn't seem any different today than when Bill Clinton hob knobbed with him.  Vladimir Putin has been around for a very long time.  The young and ignorant may not recognize that the liberal/neoliberal rhetoric about Putin has not changed in decades.  It seems new to young liberals who don't know the history and are yet to be indoctrinated.

Liberals (and that includes neoliberals) may have finally overplayed their hands.  A society cannot sustain a perpetual condition of outrage, anger, fear, and guilt without tearing itself apart.  Society finally gives up and just lets the puppies drown.  Society doesn't really care about Putin, NATO, Ukraine, or European politics any longer -- just let those puppies drown.

Liberals (and that includes neoliberals) doubling down on the same old, tired hair-on-fire outrage, anger, fear, and guilt only hastens societies complacency.  They're your puppies, you save 'em.


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Vladimir Putin has faced setbacks during his full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Now, two years into the war, circumstances appear to be turning in his favor, and his grip on power shows no sign of waning.

Ukrainian resistance at the war's start saw Russian forces pushed back from Kyiv and, later in 2022, retreats from Kharkiv and Kherson delivered blows to Putin and bold headlines for Kyiv, as did strikes on Russian Black Sea targets, which continue.

But over the past few weeks, Putin has had some news go his way. U.S-led sanctions aimed at isolating Russia from the global financial system may have caused ructions but the IMF last month predicted GDP growth of 2.6 percent in 2024—more than double its previous forecast.

Also, Putin heads into an election on March 15 that he is assured of winning buoyed by the death of Russia's most prominent opposition politician, Alexey Navalny, Western wobbles on more aid for Kyiv, and the capture of Avdiivka, in the Donetsk oblast.

Newsweek illustration. After setbacks in his war on Ukraine, Vladimir Putin's position appears stronger.Newsweek illustration. After setbacks in his war on Ukraine, Vladimir Putin's position appears stronger.Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty

"Domestically, Vladimir Putin is stronger than before," Ralph Carter, political science professor at Texas Christian University, told Newsweek. "He's rallied public opinion behind his leadership, calling Western sanctions an attack that he's neutralized.

"He's also neutralized domestic opposition, with the deaths of Alexei Navalny, his most prominent critic, and Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of The Wagner Group. The message to Russians—if it can happen to them, it can happen to you."

A vehement critic of Putin's wartime conduct, Prigozhin seized military facilities in Rostov-on-Don and marched on Moscow with his Wagner Group of mercenaries. He died in a plane crash widely seen as punishment for his challenge to Putin's authority, although the Kremlin has denied any responsibility.

New Markets, Trump and Congress Deadlock


Putin is pivoting away from the West and in the teeth of sanctions which saw Europe decrease its reliance on Russian energy. Moscow has found some success in finding new markets for its valuable exports, in particular China and India.

"The position of Putin appears stronger than it was six months ago," John Hall, law professor at Chapman University, California, told Newsweek. "Attempts to isolate Russia economically have proven far less successful than hoped, primarily because of India's willingness to purchase Russian oil.

"The war in Ukraine is going better for Russia than it has for months, as Russia has secured pipelines of weaponry from North Korea, Iran and China, while Ukraine faces serious shortages of weaponry and manpower."

With no discernible end to the deadlock in U.S. Congress over further funding for Ukraine, Putin has also benefited from former president Donald Trump's rhetoric, embraced by part of the GOP, opposing more military support for Kyiv.

"Trump has used his influence to undermine any on-going support for Ukraine, a policy that benefits only Putin," added Hall.

NATO Solidarity Questioned


Trump's disparaging of NATO, which has included urging last month Russia to attack its members that do not meet a 2 percent minimum spending requirement, has also played into Putin's hands, said U.S.-Russian relations expert Ken Osgood, history professor at Colorado School of Mines.

"Cracking NATO solidarity has been a goal of every Russian leader since Joseph Stalin," he told Newsweek. If Trump were to take the White House and be unable to change the U.S. relationship with the alliance, or even if he loses the election, "Putin has already scored a significant gain by making an American withdrawal from NATO a serious (topic) of political conversation."

What About the Long Term?


Jennifer Kibbe, professor of government at Franklin & Marshall College, told Newsweek that Putin is "clearly in a stronger position in Ukraine than he has been for over a year having just taken over Avdiivka and with Ukraine struggling as its weapons supplies slow down."

"Unfortunately, at least in the short to medium term...his grip on power is more consolidated than ever and it's highly unlikely that it could unravel."

But the swiftness of the mutiny by Prigozhin last June showed just how quickly the situation in Putin's Russia can change.

"Yevgeny Prigozhin managed to take over a major military command center without firing a shot, and march with armed loyalists to within a couple hundred miles of Moscow—not the sort of state breakdown that could happen in a fully consolidated totalitarian regime," Stephen Hanson, professor of government at William & Mary University in Virginia, told Newsweek.

"It is important not to overstate the security of Vladimir Putin's long-term grip on power."

Beth Knobel, former Moscow bureau chief for CBS News, said that Russians are growing wary of the war, and the high losses could eventually hurt the president's standing.

"I actually think Putin is in a weaker position now than two years ago," the Fordham University professor told Newsweek. "Russians have lost a lot because of the war in Ukraine."

The arrests of those paying their respects publicly to Navalny were a sign of this, in her view. "Putin deeply fears the kind of popular revolution that we have seen in other nations."

Randall Stone, director of the Skalny Center for Polish and Central European Studies at the University of Rochester, said that Putin will take pains to avoid the street protests that swept leaders this century in post-Soviet states like Georgia and Kyrgyzstan as well as Ukraine.

"Putin is very insecure, and the rebellion of the Wagner forces made clear how tenuous his hold on power is. He does not dare to end the war in Ukraine without a substantial victory, but public distaste for the war limits his war effort," Stone said.

Konstantin Sonin, a Russian-born economist who works at the University of Chicago, said that the death of Navalny is a "huge win for Putin in the short-term," but that the Russian president has "totally cornered himself."

"I do not think that there is a way out what he is in. He cannot stop the war. He cannot stop repression," he told Newsweek. "It's not like that it can go infinitely, so I assume that this brings him closer to his end."


Tags

jrGroupDiscuss - desc
[]
 
Nerm_L
Professor Expert
1  seeder  Nerm_L    9 months ago

Boomers ain't gonna live forever.  And now the Boomers are being forced to face their own mortality.  This Putin crap we've heard for the last four decades just ain't that important any more.

 
 
 
mocowgirl
Professor Silent
1.1  mocowgirl  replied to  Nerm_L @1    9 months ago
This Putin crap we've heard for the last four decades just ain't that important any more.

Well, let's consider what is really important to daily life.

Paycheck or Putin?

Shelter or Putin?

Food or Putin?

Medical care or Putin?

Dental care or Putin?

Transportation or Putin?

Loved ones or Putin?

Recreation or Putin?

Super Bowl or Putin?

Does Putin (or any other dictator or politician) even make the Top 100 of what is important in an individual's daily life?  Should he/they be that important?

 
 
 
mocowgirl
Professor Silent
2  mocowgirl    9 months ago

One of the many things to consider that could have more impact on our daily lives than Putin.

Nearly 30,000 objects are hurtling through near-Earth orbit. That’s not just a problem for space (accuweather.com)

(CNN) —   Once upon a time, gazing at the night sky was an escape from manmade messiness on Earth.

Not anymore.

Nearly 70 years after the launch of Sputnik, there are   so many machines   flying through space, astronomers worry their light pollution will soon make it   impossible to study other galaxies   with terrestrial telescopes.

Then there is the space junk — nearly 30,000 objects bigger than a softball hurtling a few hundred miles above Earth, ten times faster than a bullet.

And after NOAA used   high-flying aircraft   to take first-in-a-generation samples of the stratosphere,   new science   shows that the for-profit space race is changing the sky in measurable ways and with potentially harmful consequences for the ozone layer and Earth’s climate.
 
 

Who is online










238 visitors