BrownerandFry
Banned
- Messages
- 1,141
- Reaction score
- 198
This may be a minority position, but it seems that the security interests ofThis is a good explainer from The Hill on his poll numbers after the invasion of Ukraine:
Basically, shouldn't read too much into polls now, and the ones that really matter will be months from now. Regardless, they are nowhere close to regime change driven by the citizenry... they are much closer to that driven by oligarchs, which is why he has made the strategic moves he has recently. Putin's best exit strategy is to get a ceasefire with Ukraine that he can branded as a "win" that also includes removing sanctions. An extended military campaign or extended sanctions is likely to backfire on him over time as propaganda has a shelf life. For example, things like an extended absence of Russia from FIFA will grate on people. As will economic collapse, loss of jobs, loss of food, loss of American tech, etc. Taking the long view, if people look back at Russia pre-invasion and then contrast it to Russia post-invasion no amount of propaganda will be able to whitewash that things relatively suck and they will put the blame on Putin.
Ukraine
US
NATO/EU
may be better served by a weakened, less credible, more suspect Putin,
getting stares from the Kleptocrats
the parents of the dead soldiers
the parents of the conscripts
We may all be better off with him remaining as the titular leader, albeit as a spayed cat.
