| Neither loved nor feared: 
 How Much Longer Can Putin Ignore Reality?
 
 October 29, 2025  						| Categories:  Articles & Columns  						| Tags: 													|
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 Note:  My readers know that I do not trust the Western media to  report anything correctly.  I do not say that the Telegraph article is  credible.  I say it is the new narrative that as Russia is on the ropes  Putin can be coerced into a cease fire and thereby no negotiation is  necessary that addresses the root cause.
 
 How Much Longer Can Putin Ignore Reality?
 
 Paul Craig Roberts
 
 Russia’s President Putin should read The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli and ponder the famous statement that “it is better to be feared than loved, if you cannot be both.”  Putin’s problem is that he is neither loved nor feared.
 
 Western propaganda has made him unloved, and Putin himself has made  himself not feared. President Trump now mocks Putin’s Russia as a “paper  tiger.” Putin after four years of conflict hasn’t won a war he should  have won, as I have said so many times and as Trump now says, in one  week.
 
 Having failed to fight for a quick victory and to enforce redlines,  Putin has relied on announcements of new super weapons to substitute for  the lack of response to ever-worsening provocations that Putin’s  never-ending war continues to produce.  Having backed down in the face of every provocation, Putin has squandered the Russian deterrent.
 
 The Kremlin has been unable to prevent Trump and the West from defining the solution as a cease fire.  In an effort to coerce Putin into a cease fire, Trump has now placed sanctions on Russia’s oil customers, India and China.  Writing  in the British Telegraph on October 26, Melissa Lawford, described as  US Economics Correspondent, reports that Russia finally begins to buckle  as it runs out of cards to play just as Trump turns the screws.
 
 Lawford writes that
 
 “Suddenly, Putin has many reasons to be worried.
 
 “Russia’s economy is beginning to buckle. Businesses have been  crippled by high interest rates, government borrowing costs have soared  and economy minister Maxim Reshetnikov warned in June that the country  was ‘on the brink of a recession’. Warnings are mounting over a  potential avalanche of bad debt that could trigger a financial crisis.
 
 “Small pockets of protest are emerging. Earlier this month, hundreds  of people gathered in St Petersburg Square to sing an outlawed song  calling for Putin to be overthrown.
 
 “Meanwhile, Ukraine has been aggressively ramping up its drone  attacks on Russian oil refineries, hammering the country’s petrol  supplies.
 
 “Now Donald Trump is turning the screws. After frustration over a  lack of progress to end the war in Ukraine, the US president announced  new sanctions on two of Russia’s biggest oil companies on Wednesday.
 
 “India and China, the main buyers of Russian oil since the war began,  responded by curbing purchases. It threatens to cut off crucial oil  revenues to Putin’s war machine – and the Russian state.
 
 “’For the first time in three and a half years, Russia’s really  getting hurt,’ says Timothy Ash, an associate fellow at Chatham House’s  Russia and Eurasia programme. ‘I think there’s some panic.'”
 
 On top of it all a “banking crisis looms” with the prospect of bankrupt companies and a large government budget deficit.
 
 Worst of all, Putin’s never-ending war has come home to the Russian population.
 
 “Thick plumes of smoke have been rising from Russian oil refineries  across the country this year following an unprecedented barrage of  Ukrainian drone attacks.
 
 “Since January, Ukraine has hit 21 of Russia’s 38 largest refineries  where crude oil is refined into products like petrol. It has struck as  far as 683 miles into Russia from the Ukrainian border.
 
 “So much supply has been knocked out that petrol prices have surged  by 40% since the start of the year. Officials have introduced rationing  in occupied Crimea while small petrol stations in Siberia have closed  down. Social media is filled with video footage of enormous queues of  cars waiting to fill up.”
 
 The Telegraph article  sets out the new narrative.  Russia is on the ropes.  John  Herbst of the Atlantic Council sees paranoia setting in. Timothy Ash of  Chatham House sees panic. Harvard’s Craig Kennedy sees a large dark  pool of debt that could undermine the economy and the banks’ ability to  finance war procurement.  With  Putin’s central bank director’s 16.5% interest rates, there is no money  available to prevent a systemic crisis. All the while Putin clings to  his faith in negotiations with Trump, which is nonsensical as Trump has  defined Putin’s resistance to a cease fire as Putin’s disappointing  unwillingness to negotiate.  Putin  further degraded himself in the eyes of the West by responding to  Trump’s sanctions on Russia’s oil customers by sending Kirill Dmitriev  to Washington to continue negotiations.   Whatever the truth in this narrative, it is not one that encourages the  West to address the root cause of the problem, which is Russia’s  security.
 
 With the West convinced that Russia faces collapse, how can Putin think he has a negotiation position?  Since 2014 Putin has used strong words never backed by strong action. Putin has no credibility.  Trump and the Europeans do not want the war to end.  It  is too profitable for the US military/security complex with billions of  dollars in commissions spilling over into the pockets of European  policymakers. The prospect of immediate wealth overwhelms any concern  about a future nuclear confrontation, which there will eventually be  when the provocations Putin has encouraged become too great for Putin to  ignore.
 
 Inside Russia both the Deputy Foreign Minister and the host of the  most important Russian state TV news analysis program said that  negotiations have failed, and the only alternative is for Russia to end  the war by destroying Ukraine’s ability to continue fighting.  Polls  show that Russians have a high level of support for Putin, but they  also show that Russians want the war to end now with a Russian victory.
 
 How much longer can Putin ignore reality?
 
 
 
 Trump also denies reality.  RT reports:
 
 Trump backs renewed Israeli strikes in Gaza
 
 The US president denied that the resumption of hostilities was “jeopardizing” the ceasefire
 
 US President Donald Trump has defended Israel’s renewed strikes in Gaza nearly three weeks into a ceasefire he helped broker.
 
 With both Trump and Putin in denial of reality, no good decisions can be made.
 
 
 
 The deployment of nuclear weapons continues
 
 rt.com
 
 Putin’s failure to put a stop to Western provocations is leading directly to nuclear war.
 
 
 
 Putin’s aide Yury Ushakov replies to increasing provocations with  pleas for negotiations thereby increasing Western contempt for Russia.
 
 Russia remains ready for a potential meeting between President  Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart, Donald Trump, presidential aide  Yury Ushakov has said.
 
 Is Ushakov signaling Russia’s willingness to surrender and to accept a cease fire?  The West has made it clear that a cease fire is all that the West is interested in negotiating.
 
 After four wasted years, the only way out for Russia from Putin’s  never-ending ever-widening war is to destroy Kiev’s ability to continue  the war. It is not possible for Putin to continue his strategic blunder  any longer.
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