🧵Here’re 3 crucial lessons that reveal Putin's strategic collapse (1/15)
(2/15) The Kremlin’s propagandists claimed the Syria intervention was a geopolitical triumph—a bold move to counter Western influence and return Russia to the big table on the world stage after the annexation of Crimea.
(3/15) Instead of proving Russia’s strength, Syria became a fiasco on par with America’s disaster in Afghanistan—only without any advance warning.
(4/15) Putin’s obsessive focus on the illegal war in Ukraine drained resources from Syria. This left Assad wide open and revealed Moscow’s inability to maintain influence on multiple fronts.
(5/15) Lesson 1️⃣ To Putin, Allies Are Expendable
Diplomatically, Assad’s collapse proves Putin is a fair-weather ally. He might help at first, but his own interests always come first, as Armenia and others have learned the hard way.
(6/15) This setback dents Russian influence across the Global South. After this public humiliation, Putin’s promises to “guarantee security” will be harder to take seriously.
(7/15) It also sends shockwaves through Central Asia. Moscow’s position, unquestioned for decades, now looks fragile—especially as China courts these countries.
(8/15) In the Middle East, Putin’s credibility is shattered. Syria once helped bring Moscow and Tehran closer and made Russia a regional player. All of that is now in doubt.
(9/15) Lesson 2️⃣ Superpower Myth Busted
The future of the Russia’s Mediterranean bases is unclear. Russian ships may have to crowd into the Black Sea—under Erdogan’s watchful eye—or move to the Baltic, now surrounded by NATO.
(10/15) At home, the Syria gamble was supposed to boost pride and faith in Russia’s military. Instead, paired with the Ukraine quagmire, it reveals that Putin’s “superpower” claim is a sham.
(11/15) Lesson 3️⃣ Russia under Putin Lacks Resources to Be Global Power.
The failure exposes a core weakness in Putin’s strategy: brute force alone doesn’t guarantee true stability. There’s no sustainable economic or political framework behind his moves.
(12/15) For years, Putin demanded equal treatment from world powers and insisted on a “multipolar” order. But now we see he can’t effectively project power even when given the chance.
(13/15) Recent events prove that Putin’s global ambitions collapse when he chases them at the expense of everything else. His Ukraine fixation cost him influence abroad.
(14/15) Billions of dollars and countless lives were wasted in Syria. This should wake up anyone who still views Putin as a master strategist. He’s willing to abandon allies if it suits him.
Photo 2 - Syrian diaspora members raise opposition flag at Moscow embassy, Dec. 9
(15/15) For more on how Assad’s fall affects Putin, see @baunov’s analysis for @meduza_en:
Wayne Gretzky signed on to promote a Chinese hockey team. Little did he know, it was actually a front for Putin's buddy to secretly sell Russian LNG.
🧵Here's how the greatest hockey player of all time has played a unknowingly helped Putin fund his illegal war on Ukraine
With pipeline gas exports dwindling, Putin is increasingly relying on LNG to fund his war. He’s entrusted it to one of his closest allies—his hockey buddy, Gennady Timchenko
Russia’s LNG exports are dominated by Timchenko-linked firm, Kunlun Red Star Energy Trading, which despite only having emerged recently, took in 51 billion rubles by the middle of this year
In Russia, children are now enemies of the state: 14-year-olds jailed for vandalism, teens imprisoned for online posts.
🧵With ≈100 minors labeled as terrorist, it's a clear pattern — here's how we got here (in case one famous foreign journalist currently in Moscow wants to ask Lavrov about it)
The surge in minors being prosecuted marks a shift in the nature of the regime from authoritarian to full-blown totalitarian. Even in the early years of Putin’s rule, such a thing would be impossible to imagine
In 2004 a group of National Bolshevik activists occupied the visitors’ room of the Presidential administration in Moscow. Among them were minors, and although found guilty, it was deemed unnecessary to imprison them rferl.org/a/1063679.html
Meet Lyubov Lizunova: At 16, she wrote "Death to the regime" on a garage wall. At 17, she became the first Russian schoolgirl imprisoned for opposing the war.
(Read on)
In October 2022, police detained Lyubov and her friends after they wrote an anti-regime message on a garage wall. What started as a minor vandalism case would spiral into something far more sinister.
Prosecutors charged Lyubov with "extremism" and "justifying terrorism" based on these social media posts. The vandalism charge was dropped due to statute of limitations, but the state pushed forward with the serious charges.
"All my life I've opposed aggression, violence, and war. I've dedicated myself to peaceful activities: science, teaching, governance, and human rights. Never did I imagine that in my country, citizens favoring peace would be accused of 'justifying terrorism' and put on trial." 2/9
"The third year of war is ending—years of casualties and destruction on European soil, suffering unseen since World War II. We cannot remain silent. Our former defense minister claimed Ukraine's losses at 500,000. Think about that number! And what are Russia's losses?" 3/9
Prigozhin is dead, but his African media empire lives on.
Internal Wagner documents show how Putin maintains control over Central African Republic's information space.
🧵Here’s what you need to know
Despite Yevgeny Prigozhin's death last year, his Wagner mercenary group still pushes Putin's agenda overseas, especially in Africa. Thanks to a defecting journalist, the @dossier_center & @FbdnStories have uncovered details of their activities in the Central African Republic.
In 2022, Central African reporter Efrem Yalike wrote a glowing article about Wagner mercenaries helping locals after an attack. He now reveals that the mercenaries staged the attack themselves and that he wrote the piece under orders from his Wagner-linked employers.
Putin found a backdoor for banned AI chips through India's pharmaceutical industry.
The numbers are staggering: $300M in restricted servers, 1,100 units, and a network of companies designed to bypass Western sanctions.
🧵Here's how military tech Russia sanctions have failed
Mumbai-based Shreya Life Sciences, a pharmaceutical company, exported over 1,100 high-end Dell servers equipped with Nvidia AI processors to Russia between April and August 2024. These servers are restricted under US and EU sanctions targeting military tech. bloomberg.com/news/features/…
How does Shreya pull this off? India is not a party to Western sanctions against Russia. Shreya legally imports Dell tech from Malaysia, then re-exports it to Russia. The servers are valued at $300M, highlighting the scale of this trade.