Russia has such a short history of democracy (or what passes for it) that we really don't know this for a fact. Hopefully they are better than this.Puja wrote:A nervous Putin is worrying though - Russians don't follow weak leaders and a strongman who is seen to lose a war to a weaker opponent won't last long. If he regards winning the war as an existential threat to his leadership and it doesn't become winnable, there's no limit to what he might do. The quote of "What's the point of a world if it doesn't have Russia in it?" is alarming enough when you don't take the corollary that Putin believes that he is Russia. Mutually Assured Destruction doesn't weigh heavily if you feel you're already on the verge of destruction anyway.Sandydragon wrote:Martial law is not a great prospect but perhaps a sign that the limited protests are making Putin very nervous?Zhivago wrote: There is talk that Putin is going to enact martial law soon. That's a pretty scary prospect. But also seems like Putin is in denial, and he sees only escalation as the way out. Escalate to de-escalate. Miscalculated this time, he escalated too much.
Puja
Putin has many children and grandchildren. He's not going to be indifferent to the end of the world. So I still think this hard/crazy man stuff is ultimately a bluff. Neither are his lieutenants indifferent to Armageddon - they may fear for their lives under normal circumstances but this would become irrelevant in the face of Putin trying to press the big button. They wouldn't let it happen.
We need to be calm, united and firm. Otherwise it won't stop with Ukraine. The Ukrainians are doing the world (or at least, the Democratic world) a heroic service here. We need to keep them supplied, and then rebuild their country when it's over.