The deal the Russian people have made with the Putin Kremlin is that they will tolerate a high degree of repression in return for a decent standard of living - and safety. But the stymied, arguably failing, war against Ukraine is now threatening that bargain. Prices and taxes are high. Catastrophic Russian casualties are now leading to even once-invulnerable children of the elite to face conscription, which many Russians understandably view as a death sentence.
The latest humiliation is that Ukraine has refused to agree to a ceasefire during the Kremlin Victory Day parade tomorrow, meaning that fear of Ukrainian drone attacks is rife. And the parade will not even feature any armored vehicles or big weapons systems because so many have been destroyed in the war with Ukraine. So the big news tomorrow will not be the unveiling of some new missile or tank, but whether or not Ukrainian drones strike Red Square during the parade. Kyiv, increasingly, controls the war's narrative. JL
The May 9 procession on Red Square in the heart of Kremlin power is being curtailed because of the potential for Ukrainian drone strikes. The May 9 holiday, Victory Day, is the most important on the Russian calendar. The Kremlin has made the Soviet triumph in World War II a civil religion for Russians. (But) the mood is hardly festive. Prices and taxes are rising as the economy struggles to bear the cost of the war in Ukraine. A new wave of repressive measures has led to internet restrictions. Polls show record numbers of war-weary Russians want peace. Showing unaccustomed weakness, the Russian government appealed unsuccessfully to Ukraine for a cease-fire on the parade day and acknowledged “additional security measures” to protect President Vladimir V. Putin.























