NYT: After the Alaska summit, Putin said the war’s ‘root causes’ lie in Russia’s lost Cold War status, not Ukraine.
He avoided calling it a war, referred to ‘the situation around Ukraine,’ and demanded a new European ‘security balance’ to restore Moscow’s global power. 1/
Putin linked today’s fighting to grievances first voiced in Munich 2007 and again in 2022: NATO expansion, loss of Moscow’s hegemony, and a world where Russia no longer sets the rules. 2/
This narrative casts Ukraine as a pawn in a Western plot. By refusing to name the war, Putin implies the real struggle is not territory, but Russia’s status against NATO and the US. 3/
Lavrov wore a ‘USSR’ sweatshirt in Alaska to underline Kremlin nostalgia.
Russian media praised Trump’s warm welcome of Putin and his remark that ‘Russia is No. 2 in the world’ as proof Moscow had regained great-power standing. 4/
Russian nationalist elites echoed the same theme. Senator Klishas said the summit confirmed Russia’s right to pursue its “special operation” while demanding a new European security architecture. 5/
Putin’s goal remains to rewrite the post-1991 order: push NATO out of Eastern Europe, bar Ukraine from membership, and regain recognition as a global equal alongside the US, like at Yalta in 1945. 6X
Putin tightens the grip of dictatorship. Russia has erased WhatsApp from its internet.
Roskomnadzor removed the Meta-owned app — used by at least 100M Russians — from the national registry, making access nearly impossible without VPN workarounds, FT. 1/
It’s a deeper block than past slowdowns.
By Dec, WhatsApp traffic had already been throttled 70-80%. Now Moscow appears to be cutting access long-term — after labeling Meta platforms “extremist” and degrading YouTube. 2/
The push is toward Max — a state-designated “national messenger” owned by VK, linked to Putin’s inner circle.
Modeled on China’s WeChat, it combines messaging and госservices — but without encryption. 3/
NATO's PURL initiative hit $4.5B in commitments to buy US weapons for Ukraine — led by Germany, Netherlands, and Norway.
More pledges expected when defense ministers meet in Brussels Feb 12 — United24. 1/
US Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker called Germany, Netherlands, and Norway "PURL champions" for making significant contributions and pushing other allies to follow. Their leadership is driving the program forward. 2/
Japan is joining too — expected to formally confirm participation in coming weeks. Tokyo's contribution will be financial, limited to non-lethal defensive items like radar systems, body armor, and protective equipment. 3/
Sanctions have sent Russia's foreign trade to Soviet-era lows.
Exports now make up just 17.8% of GDP — the lowest in modern Russian history and comparable to the USSR's final years before collapse — United24. 1/
Exports fell from 22.2% of GDP in 2024 to 17.8% in 2025. Imports dropped from 17.8% to 15.2%. Compare that to pre-war levels when exports were typically 25-30% of GDP. 2/
This mirrors 1990-91 Soviet figures almost exactly: exports were 18.2% of GDP in 1990 and 13.3% in 1991. Russia is now as isolated from the global economy as the USSR was before it collapsed. 3/