3 Kommentare

    1. Sanctions are finally hitting home. Battlefield losses have sailed past the million figure. But there the good news ends for Vladimir Putin’s enemies. The Russian president is not a man for turning – though there is one thing that could make him change course.

      On 24 February it will be four years since Putin’s forces [poured into Ukraine](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/russia-when-invade-ukraine-2022-why-putin-started-war-timeline-conflict-2160097?ico=in-line_link) from Russia, Belarus and occupied Crimea. Most of them then had little or no warning of what their president had planned for them, believing themselves to be on military exercise and – once they’d crossed the border – that any operation would be short-lived.

      Many of those men will be dead, as will so many more who followed them. The latest estimates from the Centre for Strategic and International Studies are that Russia’s battlefield casualties – killed, wounded and missing – are nearly 1.2 million.

      Mark Rutte, the Nato Secretary-General, told delegates at Davos that Russia had lost 1,000 men a day last December. For sake of comparison, Ukraine’s casualty figures are estimated as being around half that, largely because offensive forces sustain more casualties than defensive forces and Russia has a scarily high capacity for risk. Casualty counts are an imperfect science but it will be clear even to Vladimir Putin that he is incurring huge losses for what are now marginal territorial gains in a war which, had he foreseen the slog it would become, he might have been less inclined to start.

      Add to that the fact that sanctions are, not before time, actually hitting home. Muscovite friends complain of tax hikes and ever rising prices on groceries, utilities and public transport. As military spending soars, the Kremlin is watching oil revenues plummet, especially now the US is [pressuring India to stop buying Russian oil](https://inews.co.uk/opinion/putin-strategic-error-relationship-shows-why-4199810?ico=in-line_link). Europe is readying a 20th package of bracing sanctions which will impose a full maritime services ban on all Russian crude delivery.

      That means EU companies would be barred from providing support services to any cargo vessel carrying Russian crude – insurance, financing, technical assistance at ports and so on and should make a further huge debt on Russian crude revenues. To date, the ban has been just on those tankers carrying crude priced above the G7-stipulated price cap. “Russia will only come to the table with genuine intent if it is pressured to do so. This is the only language Russian understands,” said Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, as she announced the proposed sanctions.

    2. DescriptionSignal458 on

      Have I misunderstood that last paragraph? Putin was born in 1952, long after the siege of Leningrad.

    3. Vegetable_Maize_2054 on

      Uh, and a shit economy. Brain drain. Substandard manufactured goods. Terrible weather. A culture suppressed by cynicism. 4th story windows. An autocracy again… but I get your point.

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