What Will Actually Happen if Russia Invades Ukraine

What is Going On Inside Vladimir Putin's Head? 12 Experts Weigh In (newsweek.com)



WORLD
What is Going On Inside Vladimir Putin's Head?
12 Experts Weigh In


Newsweek
BY BRENDAN COLE
3/2/22 AT 10:13 AM EST


1646496794469.png

Questions surround the state of mind of Russian president Vladimir Putin. After his invasion of Ukraine, there are concerns at how far he might go to secure victory.

SEE: What is Going On Inside Vladimir Putin's Head? 12 Experts Weigh In (newsweek.com)

1. Michael McFaul, former U.S. ambassador to Russia


"Putin listens to no one inside Russia. He's been in power for over two decades, so does not take advice from anyone anymore. He also is very isolated. He is the only decision maker that matters. He alone can end this war.

"[Chinese President] Xi is the only leader in the world he respects."

2. Rose Gottemoeller, ex-deputy Secretary General of NATO
"Vladimir Putin has always cultivated a cool and calculating demeanor, but now he is showing increasingly erratic and emotional behavior—so there is a shift.

"From our perspective, it certainly looks irrational, but no doubt that is not how Putin sees it. He's considering himself a figure of destiny, to bring the Russian-speaking peoples together again. For him, it seems, it is a vital historical objective."

3. Steve Pifer, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine
"We are seeing a different Vladimir Putin from 10 or 15 years ago. He now seems more emotional, particularly when it comes to Ukraine, and he is taking a much larger risk with the invasion than one would have expected from him earlier.

"One also has to wonder about the effect of the isolation in which he has lived and worked the past two years, apparently out of concern about COVID."


4. Gustav Gressel, senior policy fellow, European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR)
"He sees himself as the recreator of imperial Russia. The thing is with the 'madman' theory, he is playing a bit with that.

"He is rational if you know his mindset and that is a social Darwinian mindset, where military power and military strength form the core essence of the state and the core momentum of Russian identity.

"If you know his mindset, what he does is perfectly rational. It is not mad, is just that you have to adopt to this mindset.

"Everything he does today, at some point, he has written or said. It is just that we have continuously excused him for doing so, in saying, "that's just basically rambling, he's a hobby historian, he meant that as a joke,' etc. No, he didn't. He was serious and we are seeing it now. "


5. Douglas Page, assistant professor of political science at Gettysburg College, Pennsylvania
"While evidence may emerge about Putin's mental instability, we also should consider the persona that Putin may be willingly crafting during this intense crisis, even when that persona reflects desperation.

"The idea that one's opponent is irrational and crazy is enticing, but this idea also can serve an important purpose for an opponent like Putin. An irrational opponent is more unpredictable and can be viewed as more willing to incur absurdly high costs in a conflict.

"For example, nuclear war would doom Russia, but an irrational Putin could raise more questions in the West about his willingness to use nuclear weapons. This perception in the West may follow Putin's objectives regarding nuclear deterrence and limiting Western involvement in Ukraine.

6. Ian Johnson, assistant professor of military history at the University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana
"His historical rhetoric suggested aspirations beyond Ukraine, restoring Russian primacy over areas formerly in Russia's orbit across Eastern Europe.


"Putin is well-versed in history. He clearly believes that he has an opportunity for a historic legacy, one that puts him in line with those figures he cites so frequently in his speeches—Peter the Great and Stalin, among them — both of whom expanded the borders of the Russian or Soviet state at the expense of their neighbors."

Ukrainian serviceman

A Ukrainian service member in Kyiv on February 26, 2022. The west is looking at what Russian President Vladimir Putin will do next in the military campaign that has not gone to plan.SERGEI SUPINSKY/GETTY

7. William Muck, political science professor, North Central College, Naperville, Illinois
"It does appear that Putin has shifted how he understands and engages with the international community. The tone and language from his recent speeches are particularly telling. Putin has been much more aggressive, provocative, and nationalistic.

"One gets the sense that he now sees himself as a historic figure. That his war in Ukraine is about rewriting the end of the Cold War and making Russia great again.


"People talk of Putin as this brilliant chess player who skilfully outplays his rivals in the international system. That may have been the case in the past, but I think the better current metaphor for his mindset is poker. Putin is a gambler, and his invasion of Ukraine suggests he is all-in on this hand.

"If he wins, it is possible he goes down in history as the figure who restored Russian greatness. However, if he loses, this may be the beginning of the end of the Putin regime in Russia."

8. Matt Qvortrup, political science professor, Coventry University, U.K.
"He is very out of touch and that is why he expected things to go differently."

"Rationality means you get what you want and what is good for you. For Vladimir Putin, what is good for him is not good for Russia, it is not what is good for the world, it is what will keep him in power.

"He does not want to suffer the fate of [Ex-Serbian leader] Slobodan Milosevic, or [Ex-President of Zimbabwe] Robert Mugabe, and for that reason, he would want to use any available means.


"The shocking thing is that he will be willing to go all the way. It is conceivable that he will use nuclear weapons if he is desperate and for him that might be a rational thing because that might keep him in power."

9. William Hague, former British Foreign Secretary

"While it is clear that a great many Russian diplomats and officials think he has made a terrible mistake, there will be nothing they can do now to restrain their isolated, paranoid, obsessive and increasingly angry president.

"Tragically for the people of Ukraine, he will have no doubts about what he must do. He will be telling his generals to go deeper, faster, more brutally and destructively if necessary." — The Times of London


10. Lord Owen, former British Foreign Secretary

"He is a very able, intelligent person, never underestimate people who you are dealing with who you don't agree with...it's easy to dismiss them as being mad. I don't believe that is a reasonable judgement of him. But he does seem to be more imperious.

"There is no check on this leader of Russia. In the old Communist days, there was a Politburo, in which you could see collective decision making. That's all gone for Putin.

"He's one single autocratic dictator and he's isolated for the last two years under COVID...you get the feeling there's nobody to even argue with him, let alone contradict him."— Channel 4

11. Fiona Hill, former U.S. National Security Council advisor on Russia

"I think a lot of people are noticing that something seems to have flipped somewhat with Putin almost as if he's made a rather emotional and, on the surface, a somewhat unexpected decision.

"He's usually pretty cynical and calculating and very calm. Always very sarcastic and kind of harsh in the way that he talks about things. But the announcement that he was basically going to invade Ukraine, he was viscerally emotional.

"This is what happens if you have got the same person in power for 22 years, he's been in a bubble, especially over the last two and a half years." — MLive


12. Tatiana Stanovaya, founder of analysis firm R.Politik firm

"There are people who go crazy and believe that they serve some higher power, God, or something else, perceiving themselves only as a...tool in the hands of great forces.

"Putin is not there yet, but there is something in common. For him, this higher power is the State, as it has been historically understood and he sees himself as its servant.

"The problem is that personal responsibility is diminished and you feel that you are acting on behalf of history.

"With such a vision you can go very far without remorse."— Telegram


.
 
What is Going On Inside Vladimir Putin's Head? 12 Experts Weigh In (newsweek.com)



WORLD
What is Going On Inside Vladimir Putin's Head?
12 Experts Weigh In


Newsweek
BY BRENDAN COLE
3/2/22 AT 10:13 AM EST


View attachment 3998

Questions surround the state of mind of Russian president Vladimir Putin. After his invasion of Ukraine, there are concerns at how far he might go to secure victory.

SEE: What is Going On Inside Vladimir Putin's Head? 12 Experts Weigh In (newsweek.com)

1. Michael McFaul, former U.S. ambassador to Russia


"Putin listens to no one inside Russia. He's been in power for over two decades, so does not take advice from anyone anymore. He also is very isolated. He is the only decision maker that matters. He alone can end this war.

"[Chinese President] Xi is the only leader in the world he respects."

2. Rose Gottemoeller, ex-deputy Secretary General of NATO
"Vladimir Putin has always cultivated a cool and calculating demeanor, but now he is showing increasingly erratic and emotional behavior—so there is a shift.

"From our perspective, it certainly looks irrational, but no doubt that is not how Putin sees it. He's considering himself a figure of destiny, to bring the Russian-speaking peoples together again. For him, it seems, it is a vital historical objective."

3. Steve Pifer, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine
"We are seeing a different Vladimir Putin from 10 or 15 years ago. He now seems more emotional, particularly when it comes to Ukraine, and he is taking a much larger risk with the invasion than one would have expected from him earlier.

"One also has to wonder about the effect of the isolation in which he has lived and worked the past two years, apparently out of concern about COVID."


4. Gustav Gressel, senior policy fellow, European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR)
"He sees himself as the recreator of imperial Russia. The thing is with the 'madman' theory, he is playing a bit with that.

"He is rational if you know his mindset and that is a social Darwinian mindset, where military power and military strength form the core essence of the state and the core momentum of Russian identity.

"If you know his mindset, what he does is perfectly rational. It is not mad, is just that you have to adopt to this mindset.

"Everything he does today, at some point, he has written or said. It is just that we have continuously excused him for doing so, in saying, "that's just basically rambling, he's a hobby historian, he meant that as a joke,' etc. No, he didn't. He was serious and we are seeing it now. "


5. Douglas Page, assistant professor of political science at Gettysburg College, Pennsylvania
"While evidence may emerge about Putin's mental instability, we also should consider the persona that Putin may be willingly crafting during this intense crisis, even when that persona reflects desperation.

"The idea that one's opponent is irrational and crazy is enticing, but this idea also can serve an important purpose for an opponent like Putin. An irrational opponent is more unpredictable and can be viewed as more willing to incur absurdly high costs in a conflict.

"For example, nuclear war would doom Russia, but an irrational Putin could raise more questions in the West about his willingness to use nuclear weapons. This perception in the West may follow Putin's objectives regarding nuclear deterrence and limiting Western involvement in Ukraine.

6. Ian Johnson, assistant professor of military history at the University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana
"His historical rhetoric suggested aspirations beyond Ukraine, restoring Russian primacy over areas formerly in Russia's orbit across Eastern Europe.


"Putin is well-versed in history. He clearly believes that he has an opportunity for a historic legacy, one that puts him in line with those figures he cites so frequently in his speeches—Peter the Great and Stalin, among them — both of whom expanded the borders of the Russian or Soviet state at the expense of their neighbors."

Ukrainian serviceman

A Ukrainian service member in Kyiv on February 26, 2022. The west is looking at what Russian President Vladimir Putin will do next in the military campaign that has not gone to plan.SERGEI SUPINSKY/GETTY

7. William Muck, political science professor, North Central College, Naperville, Illinois
"It does appear that Putin has shifted how he understands and engages with the international community. The tone and language from his recent speeches are particularly telling. Putin has been much more aggressive, provocative, and nationalistic.

"One gets the sense that he now sees himself as a historic figure. That his war in Ukraine is about rewriting the end of the Cold War and making Russia great again.


"People talk of Putin as this brilliant chess player who skilfully outplays his rivals in the international system. That may have been the case in the past, but I think the better current metaphor for his mindset is poker. Putin is a gambler, and his invasion of Ukraine suggests he is all-in on this hand.

"If he wins, it is possible he goes down in history as the figure who restored Russian greatness. However, if he loses, this may be the beginning of the end of the Putin regime in Russia."

8. Matt Qvortrup, political science professor, Coventry University, U.K.
"He is very out of touch and that is why he expected things to go differently."

"Rationality means you get what you want and what is good for you. For Vladimir Putin, what is good for him is not good for Russia, it is not what is good for the world, it is what will keep him in power.

"He does not want to suffer the fate of [Ex-Serbian leader] Slobodan Milosevic, or [Ex-President of Zimbabwe] Robert Mugabe, and for that reason, he would want to use any available means.


"The shocking thing is that he will be willing to go all the way. It is conceivable that he will use nuclear weapons if he is desperate and for him that might be a rational thing because that might keep him in power."

9. William Hague, former British Foreign Secretary

"While it is clear that a great many Russian diplomats and officials think he has made a terrible mistake, there will be nothing they can do now to restrain their isolated, paranoid, obsessive and increasingly angry president.

"Tragically for the people of Ukraine, he will have no doubts about what he must do. He will be telling his generals to go deeper, faster, more brutally and destructively if necessary." — The Times of London


10. Lord Owen, former British Foreign Secretary

"He is a very able, intelligent person, never underestimate people who you are dealing with who you don't agree with...it's easy to dismiss them as being mad. I don't believe that is a reasonable judgement of him. But he does seem to be more imperious.

"There is no check on this leader of Russia. In the old Communist days, there was a Politburo, in which you could see collective decision making. That's all gone for Putin.

"He's one single autocratic dictator and he's isolated for the last two years under COVID...you get the feeling there's nobody to even argue with him, let alone contradict him."— Channel 4

11. Fiona Hill, former U.S. National Security Council advisor on Russia

"I think a lot of people are noticing that something seems to have flipped somewhat with Putin almost as if he's made a rather emotional and, on the surface, a somewhat unexpected decision.

"He's usually pretty cynical and calculating and very calm. Always very sarcastic and kind of harsh in the way that he talks about things. But the announcement that he was basically going to invade Ukraine, he was viscerally emotional.

"This is what happens if you have got the same person in power for 22 years, he's been in a bubble, especially over the last two and a half years." — MLive


12. Tatiana Stanovaya, founder of analysis firm R.Politik firm

"There are people who go crazy and believe that they serve some higher power, God, or something else, perceiving themselves only as a...tool in the hands of great forces.

"Putin is not there yet, but there is something in common. For him, this higher power is the State, as it has been historically understood and he sees himself as its servant.

"The problem is that personal responsibility is diminished and you feel that you are acting on behalf of history.

"With such a vision you can go very far without remorse."— Telegram


.


Lindsey Graham Appears To Encourage Russians To Assassinate Putin
7000.jpg

 
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Trade Sanctions

The trade sanctions could be a blessing, I have noted the dangerous problems in the United States with influencers/athletes being infected with AIDS or actors/directors such as Charlie Sheen somehow catch AIDS. Rappers/music moguls catch AIDS or die in prison.



Here you see him attack a person getting rich while sandbagging jobs which parallels with what many athletes cause.

What if Putin or some Russian hockey player tries to endorse a homegrown product? What if Putin wants to enact favorable trade policy to create jobs. We have seen what has happened to President Trump. Many of these IT/consumer electronics companies in Russia are now gone and the baggage they bring whether spying or job hoarding.
 
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Red Cross: Evacuation Route Offered to Fleeing Ukrainians Was Mined

Newsweek
BY KHALEDA RAHMAN
ON 3/7/22 AT 8:01 AM EST


An evacuation route out of the besieged port city of Mariupol in Ukraine was mined, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

Dominik Stillhart, the director of operations for the ICRC, told the BBC's Today program on Monday that the organization had been talking to both sides "for days on end," but issues remained with confirming the details of cease-fire agreements that would allow civilians out of bombarded cities.

He said that agreements "in principle" had immediately broken down because they lacked the precise detail about the routes and who could use them.

Stillhart said some ICRC staff had tried to get out of Mariupol on Sunday,
but then discovered the road indicated to them was mined.

"We have a team on Mariupol on the ground," he said. "They were ready yesterday despite the fact that it was not entirely clear what exactly the agreement was. And as soon as they reached the first checkpoints, they realized that the road that was indicated to them was actually mined. So therefore, the agreement couldn't be implemented.

"That is why it is so important that the two parties have a precise agreement for us then to be able to facilitate it on the ground." The ICRC has been contacted for additional comment.


1646670801011.png
Evacuees cross a destroyed bridge as they flee the city of Irpin, northwest of Kyiv, on March 7, 2022.DIMITAR DILKOFF/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES


Evacuation Route Offered to Fleeing Ukrainians Was Mined—Red Cross (newsweek.com)

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For years Putin has warned the West about having NATO on it's borders. The West chose not to listen to him

Putin already knows that sanctions would come against Russia if he attacked Ukraine. Picturing him as some demonic crazed might be the furthest thing from the truth. For all we know, this could be a calculated scheme by the Russians.
 
“Dear Muslim brothers, in our country, you will not go to heaven,” an Azov fighter says in a video shared by Ukraine’s National Guard.

Ukraine’s ‘Neo-Nazi’ Battalion Is Greasing Bullets in Pig Fat for Russia’s Muslim Soldiers

“Dear Muslim brothers, in our country, you will not go to heaven,” an Azov fighter says in a video shared by Ukraine’s National Guard.
RF
By Rimal Farrukh
ISLAMABAD, PK
March 1, 2022, 8:02am
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SERVICEMEN OF THE PRO-UKRAINIAN AZOV BATTALION ATTEND AN OATH CEREMONY IN KIEV IN 2014. PHOTO: GENYA SAVILOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
A video shows a masked man dipping bullets into chunks of gelatinous lard before carefully loading them into a gun’s magazine. As he performs the unusual ritual, he calmly issues a grave warning.
World News
The Ruble Has Collapsed. Here’s What It Means for Russia.
VIOLA ZHOU
03.01.22
https://www.vice.com/en/article/jgma4k/russia-ruble-collapse-economy
“Dear Muslim brothers, in our country, you will not go to heaven. You will not be allowed into heaven. Go home, please. Here, you will encounter trouble. Thank you for your attention, goodbye,” the unidentified man says.
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The video was posted by the National Guard of Ukraine on Sunday on Twitter, three days after Russian forces launched a military assault into Ukraine. The caption says it depicts an Azov fighter preparing bullets to be aimed at “Kadyrov orcs” by lacing them with fat from pork, which is forbidden to Muslims. The reference is believed to be addressed to Muslim Chechen soldiers. On Saturday, Ramzon Kadyrov, the leader of Russia’s Muslim-majority Chechnya region, said Chechen soldiers had been deployed to fight alongside the Russian army in Ukraine.

As the Russian-Ukrainian conflict threatens to engulf Eastern Europe, military propaganda and rhetoric have revved up on both sides of the divide.
The Azov Battalion is an ultranationalist volunteer arm of the National Guard of Ukraine that was formally infused into its ranks after it fought against pro-Russian separatists in 2014. The battalion has been accused of espousing neo-Nazi beliefs and reportedly continues to bear Wolfsangel insignia, used by Nazi units during World War II.
The battalion’s first commander was Andriy Biletsky, a white nationalist who in 2010 said that Ukraine’s national purpose was to “lead the white races of the world in a final crusade… against Semite-led Untermenschen [subhumans].”
World News
Critics Call Out ‘Racist’ Western Coverage of Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine
HEATHER CHEN
03.01.22
https://www.vice.com/en/article/akvy84/racist-western-coverage-ukraine-russia
Russian President Vladimir Putin has justified his so-called “special military operation” with intentions to “demilitarise and de-Nazify” Ukraine. Kadyrov, the Chechen leader, also echoed Putin’s characterization of Ukrainian forces as “Nazis.”
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The claims of a “Nazi” Ukraine have sparked widespread outrage and have been strongly denied by Ukrainian officials, including its Jewish president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who reportedly lost members of his family in the Holocaust.
The video of the Azov fighter has been criticised for blatantly espousing racist rhetoric as part of pro-Ukrainian military propaganda. It has been called out for Islamaphobia by social media users, including British-Pakistani comedian Tez Ilyas, who reacted to it in a tweet saying, “Being killed by a lard covered bullet doesn’t disqualify one from entering Muslim heaven. Far-right racists made that up and the official Ukrainian National Guard is endorsing it. These are the forces my Foreign Secretary wants British civilians to go fight with?”
“In the latest news you just can't make up: Ukraine’s National Guard publicly praised its neo-Nazi fighters from the white-supremacist Azov movement for greasing bullets with pig fat to kill Russian Muslims, demonizing them as ‘orcs,’” another Twitter user said.
Although restricted by Twitter for hateful content, the video remains accessible on the platform. Facebook, meanwhile, has refrained from flagging content involving the Azov Battalion. According to internal policy documents viewed by The Intercept, the social media company will temporarily “allow praise of the Azov Battalion when explicitly and exclusively praising their role in defending Ukraine or their role as part of the Ukraine’s National Guard.”
World News
Foreign Fighters Are Rushing to Join Ukraine’s New International Battalion
TIM HUME, HENRY LANGSTON
02.28.22
https://www.vice.com/en/article/akvyq4/russian-ukraine-invasion-foreign-fighters-battalion
Islam forbids its adherents to consume pork. In some past conflicts involving Muslim combatants, pig fat–laced bullets from their enemies made headlines for inciting Islamophobia. In 2013, an Idaho City-based ammunition firm came under fire for its line of “Jihawg Ammunition” – bullets laced with pork grease and writing that condemns “Islamist terrorists to hell.”
A well-documented incident involving fat-laced ammunition was the 1857 Indian War of Independence. After rumours spread that the cartridges of Enfield rifles, which had to be bitten off to be used, were greased in pig and cow fat – sacrilegious to Muslim and Hindu soldiers – Indian infantrymen abandoned their rifles and fought against their commanders in the British East India Company. The soldiers eventually lost the war, and thereafter India was brought under the direct control of the British crown.
 
Russia is trying to weaken the transatlantic union. As in transatlantic slave trade union??? :cool: Go Russia !
 
Ukrainians who told Russian warship ‘go f–k yourself’ are still alive: officials
By
Emily Crane
February 28, 2022 8:55am
Updated

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The Ukrainian border guards who told a Russian warship to “go f–k yourself” as they defended Snake Island in the Black Sea are still alive and being held captive by the invading forces, Kyiv’s navy revealed Monday.
The 13 guards were initially presumed dead after they defiantly refused to surrender their post on the small island near the Romanian border when two Russian vessels approached last Thursday.
The Ukraine Navy said in a Facebook post that the guards had been “taken captive by Russian occupiers.”
“We are very happy to learn that our brothers are alive and well,” the post said.
00:0101:34





1_th.jpg

Ukrainian officials had declared last week that the guards had all been killed after Moscow’s forces opened fire with barreled gunships and airstrikes, cutting of all communication with the 42-acre island.
But the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine revealed on Saturday that the guards could still be alive.
Ukrainian servicemen.The 13 guards were initially presumed dead after they defiantly refused to surrender their post.Russian Defense Ministry/TASS via Getty ImagesSnake Island.The Ukrainian guards were defending Snake Island in the Black Sea.Facebook/Armed Forces of Ukraine
Russia claimed on Friday that the Ukrainian guards had actually surrendered — and made no mention of carrying out strikes.
The story of the brave soldiers made international headlines when an audio clip emerged of the exchange between Ukrainian and Russian forces.
“This is a Russian warship,” an unidentified voice can be heard saying. “I propose you lay down your weapons and surrender to avoid bloodshed and unnecessary victims. Otherwise you will be bombed.”
Get the latest updates in the Russia-Ukraine conflict with the Post’s live coverage.
“Russian warship, go f–k yourself,” the Ukrainians replied.
In the wake of the clip going viral, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy promised to decorate the presumed-dead border guards with the nation’s highest honor.
“On our Zmiinyi Island, defending it to the last, all the border guards died heroically. But they did not give up. All of them will be posthumously awarded the title of Hero of Ukraine,” he said on his website.
Ukraine border guard.A video clip of the Ukrainian service members saying “Russian warship, go f–k yourself,” went viral.Twitter/COUPSUREUkrainian servicemen board a bus.Ukrainian servicemen board a bus after being taken by Russian troops.Russian Defense Ministry/TASS via Getty ImagesUkrainian servicemen.Russia claimed on Friday that the Ukrainian guards had surrendered.Russian Defense Ministry/TASS via Getty Images
It was not immediately clear if Zelensky’s promise would remain in effect if the guards returned home alive.

Russian warship that attacked Snake Island has been destroyed | ABC7


A Russian warship that attacked Snake Island in a video that went viral for its portrayal of Ukrainian defiance has been destroyed, according to new reports. Full story: https://abc7.com/snake-island-russian...
 

Russian Shoppers Are Literally Fighting Each Other for Sugar

In scenes reminiscent of the last days of the Soviet Union, Russians are scrambling to get their hands on basic goods.
HA
By Howard Amos
March 21, 2022, 11:35am
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Videos of Russian shoppers fighting over sugar in supermarkets have gone viral, showing just how scarce the staple food has become in the economic fallout from the war in Ukraine.

In videos coming out of towns and cities across Russia, crowds of people are shouting, jostling and climbing over each other to grab the last bags of sugar in barren shops.
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Some stores have imposed 10kg rations per customer, and there have been reports of people attacking anyone they think is panic-buying. In one scuffle in the northern city of Severodvinsk, a man with five packets of sugar in his shopping basket was punched five times in the face during a confrontation with an angry shopper.

Russians who remember the turmoil of the last few years of the Soviet Union know only too well the importance of grabbing rare goods when you see them, particularly in a crisis. Sugar is usually bought in bulk by Russians who are going to preserve large amounts of fruit, or make samogon, high-proof moonshine popular in the countryside.
“It’s a madhouse,” one shopper in the southern Russian city of Volgograd told a local media outlet last week. “The shop assistants say sugar is re-stocked every now and again, but it’s immediately snapped up — people are deliberately standing watch in order to buy it all.”


Sugar shortages have been the first major material consequences of the Kremlin’s decision to invade Ukraine felt by many ordinary Russians. It’s been caused by a cocktail of factors that include government attempts to regulate prices, skyrocketing demand and a crash in the value of the Russian currency. Although Russia imports a relatively small amount of sugar, the gyrations in the value of the ruble mean foreign companies are suddenly unwilling to sign contracts with their Russian counterparts.
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Similar shortages are almost inevitable as Western sanctions and the continuing fighting in Ukraine isolate Russia from the global economy. Inflation in Russia is rising rapidly and a cost-of-living crisis is looming.
Sugar shortages are not confined to one particular region or Russia's major cities — there have been reports of empty shelves as far away as the island of Sakhalin, a Russian territory in the Pacific Ocean. Some neighbouring countries that import Russian sugar, such as Kazakhstan, also have a sugar deficit, and rising prices and supermarket scuffles to go with it.
The shortage of sugar is already being felt by sweet manufacturers and confectionery outlets, with brands such as Ferrero Rocher set to ramp up prices by 20 percent. “Our suppliers don’t have any sugar,” Arthur Borodin, the administrator at a vegan cake shop in St. Petersburg, told VICE World News. Even though the shop only needs 40kg of sugar a week, they haven’t been able to find a supplier.
Russian officials insist there’s no sugar deficit and that the crisis is an artificial one, caused by consumer panic-buying and unscrupulous manufacturing and distribution companies hoarding sugar in an attempt to push prices higher. Even so, the government last week imposed a temporary ban on sugar exports.
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"Of course not everyone can cope with their emotions, but if you know the real information, then you understand that there is absolutely no need to run around the shops to buy toilet paper, buckwheat, sugar, and so on," said Dmitry Peskov, Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesperson, on Friday.
Russian law enforcement agencies have warned that they are investigating companies in regions suffering from sugar deficits.

The cost of sugar went up as much as 31 percent last week, but it’s not the only thing becoming hugely expensive. With an exodus of foreign businesses and Western sanctions expected to lead to shortages of foreign goods, the price of imported cars and household items, like hoovers and televisions, has also shot up more than 20 percent since the war began.
Despite an emergency rate hike and the imposition of currency controls, it looks unlikely the authorities will be able to bring inflation under control. Prices in Russia rose 4.3 percent, more in the two weeks following the invasion than the government hoped they would over the entire year. Predictions for Russia’s annual inflation rate now range from about 15 percent to as high as 30 percent.
Those currently experiencing difficulties getting sugar are at the sharp end of what is likely to be a protracted and painful economic crisis. Yevgeniya Buldakova, head of a boutique chocolate manufacturing company in St. Petersburg, said she was still receiving sugar deliveries, but that her suppliers had raised prices about 8 percent since the start of the war. Judging by the lack of sugar in local shops, she believes her company will soon face shortages. “We’ve had no problems yet, but I think we will do soon,” she said.
 
The economic and sanctions fallout of Russia’s war in Ukraine


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IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva spoke with 60 Minutes about whether the global economy is on the brink of a recession and why she does not think China will get involved in the war. "60 Minutes" is the most successful television broadcast in history. Offering hard-hitting investigative reports, interviews, feature segments and profiles of people in the news, the broadcast began in 1968 and is still a hit, over 50 seasons later, regularly making Nielsen's Top 10.
 
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