Tymofiy Mylovanov Profile picture
President, Kyiv School of Economics; Minister of economy, Ukraine, 2019-2020; Associate professor, University of Pitt...
Jul 14 5 tweets 2 min read
Khodorkovsky [former Russian oligarch brought down by Putin]: Putin now has to manage what he never learned: a real economic breakdown.

He knows recruiting and special operations. Now the system’s “pants” are tearing, and he does not know how to stitch them back. 1/ Khodorkovsky: Now a critical amount of refinery capacity is under threat.

If Ukraine keeps striking and Russian air defense keeps missing about 20% of incoming drones and missiles, plants across European Russia, the Urals, and western Siberia will stay at risk. The only fix is a sharp cut in private fuel use.

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Jul 14 6 tweets 3 min read
Khodorkovsky [former Russian oligarch brought down by Putin]: Civilian cars burn over half of Russia’s gasoline.

To keep freight and emergency services running, Russia must cut civilian fuel use by half or two-thirds. Prices will do the cutting. Ukraine scored a political win.1/ Khodorkovsky: Fuel crisis may grow much worse if Ukrainian strikes continue at today’s scale.

Omsk refinery shows almost all major Russian refineries are within range. Putin seems absent, and Mishustin has vanished into the fog.

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Jul 14 11 tweets 3 min read
Kostyantynivka made the Kremlin's ruby-red stars and the glass on Lenin's mausoleum. Now Putin is grinding it into rubble to seize it.

The real prize is leverage over Trump, to argue holding Donbas is futile and Kyiv should concede — Christopher Miller, Financial Times. 1/ Kostyantynivka held about 70,000 people before the war. Around 2,000 remain, living without gas, water, electricity or medical help as food supplies run out.
They shelter in ruined blocks, and Russian drones have cut their movement to almost nothing. 2/
Jul 14 7 tweets 2 min read
For Putin, a ceasefire is a tool to win the war politically. Freeze the front, rebuild the army, break Ukraine's ties with Europe, then strike again.

He did exactly this after Minsk in 2014. — Michael Kimmage & Hanna Notte, Foreign Affairs.

1/ Image Putin's ceasefire playbook: call for elections in Ukraine, then use subversion to promote corruption narratives about Zelenskyy.

Offer endless circular negotiations. Encourage compliant Europeans to legitimize Russian-occupied territory.

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Jul 14 10 tweets 2 min read
Ukraine broke a 300-year rule. Armies won by centralizing weapons — standard parts, a few factories, crates to the front.

Kyiv inverted it via small workshops design a drone, the front reworks it, lessons feed back to industry. Update cycles as short as 3 weeks, — Charles Dainoff, Geoffrey Fain Williams, Robert Farley, FP. 1/Image Ukrainian drones have largely frozen the front and let Kyiv hit Russian logistics deep in the rear. Against an enemy iterating just as fast, an older drone isn't inferior — it's useless. Whoever adapts quicker wins the microcycle. 2/
Jul 14 10 tweets 2 min read
Crimea was supposed to be Putin’s fortress: a military base, Black Sea launchpad, and imperial trophy.

Now its 2.5 million people face blackouts, water cuts, fuel shortages, dead cell service, broken transit, rising prices and a collapsed tourist season, — Politico. 1/ Image Ukraine is now targeting the routes that keep Russia’s forces in the south supplied. The aim is not just to hit Crimea, but to isolate it and weaken Moscow’s position across the southern front. 2/
Jul 14 7 tweets 2 min read
Russia is turning war recruitment into quotas for companies.

In Buryatia, each firm gets a target for workers to send to the front. If it refuses, it must pay 100,000 rubles for every man it keeps, Dozhd. 1/ Image The plan lists each company's headcount, how many men aged 20 to 60 it employs, and how many of them it must send to the war.
A source close to the republic's administration said the district chief gets a target from the regional staff, then splits it across enterprises. 2/
Jul 14 9 tweets 2 min read
Russia and China are planning to break Starlink.

First, block its expansion through regulators and spectrum claims.
Then jam service by region, infect user terminals, and build cheap weapons to kill satellites faster than SpaceX can replace them — The Insider, Der Spiegel. 1/ Image The documents cover 5 areas: space weapons and anti-satellite systems, integrated air and missile defense, autonomous swarm loitering munitions, next-generation armored vehicles and military aviation. 2/
Jul 14 7 tweets 3 min read
Zelenskyy: Eight countries will build an “anti-ballistic Lego” with Ukraine.

France, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Norway and others bring different parts. Ukraine takes the missile part. Partners bring radars and industry support. 1/ Zelenskyy: Russia advanced slowly, then Ukraine pushed back. For 50-55 km, Putin paid 150,000 men.

That is the real war. His ballistic missile strikes only show that he is still waging it.

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Jul 13 4 tweets 2 min read
Zelenskyy: We launched a new anti-ballistic program, Freya, to mass-produce anti-ballistic weapons, systems, and missiles.

Today, the anti-ballistic coalition held its first founding meeting.

1/ Zelenskyy: Ukraine has a missile, but it is only part of the system.

Together, in the next 12 months, we can build Freya: an affordable anti-ballistic system that closes the gap and gives Europe enough new protection.

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Jul 13 6 tweets 3 min read
Volker: Zelenskyy has learned how to deal with Trump. This time [in Ankara] he was disciplined.

He didn't want to talk too much in public. He wanted their private meeting to have a positive tone. He joked a little.

That's the right way to handle things. 1/ Volker: Zelenskyy has an advantage over Russia in drones, counter-drones, electronic warfare, defense tech, innovation and logistics.

Many things that Putin is not able to do. Long-range strikes are hitting Russia's source of money: its oil and gas industry. 2/
Jul 13 4 tweets 2 min read
Ex-CIA officer Wiswesser: Under Putin, Russian intelligence can do no wrong without accountability.

Blow up a DHL plane in Lithuania, set a shopping center on fire in Warsaw or try to kill Rheinmetall's CEO in Germany. That makes it a formidable adversary. 1/ Wiswesser: Russian intelligence understands very little about how the United States works.

It projects its own corruption and political system onto the West. If Putin had understood the West, he should never have invaded Ukraine. 2X
Jul 13 6 tweets 3 min read
Kuleba: Putin is living through his Stalin moment. When everything falls apart around you, you do not give in.

You tighten the screws and double down: nothing can break me. Putin is waiting for winter to crush Ukraine’s energy system and its people’s resilience.

1/ Kuleba: Ukraine asked to build Patriot missiles at home in December 2023. The West takes too long to make obvious decisions.

War is becoming more aerial, and Ukraine will never have enough Patriots to intercept all ballistic missiles.

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Jul 13 4 tweets 2 min read
Applebaum: Ukraine does not need a D-Day landing in Crimea.

It needs to make the peninsula unviable: make the settlers who moved there after 2014 question their choice, go home, and undermine Putin’s claim that Crimea is permanently part of Russia.

1/ Applebaum: When Putin took Crimea in 2014, he looked weak and unpopular. Crimea gave Putinism new life.

It made Russians believe Russia could be great again, revived imperial feelings, and gave Putin the achievement he points to.

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Jul 13 5 tweets 2 min read
Applebaum: Russians say they have no fuel, can’t do their jobs, and don’t know what comes next. But ordinary Russians have little impact on the Kremlin.

Don’t view Russia through a democratic lens. Propaganda says Russia is winning; reality says Russians are worse off.

1/ Applebaum: Putin mentioned a town that doesn’t exist and described a settlement as surrounded, with no evidence.

Either he makes things up, or someone misinforms him about the battlefield. He may be delusional, or his circle feeds him what he wants to hear.

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Jul 13 9 tweets 2 min read
At a secret factory in southern Germany, Helsing SE mass-produces AI attack drones for Ukraine.

The HX-2 weighs 26 pounds, can cost as little as €17,500, needs barely a week of training and has been deployed by the thousands, NYT. 1/ Image Helsing is Europe’s most valuable AI defense start-up.

Founded in 2021, it set out to mass-produce cheap war machines as Western defense moves beyond multiyear contracts for tanks, jets and submarines toward cheaper, nimbler systems. 2/
Jul 12 12 tweets 2 min read
Venezuela is formally sovereign, yet power is exercised from Washington.

Marco Rubio controls its money, oil rules, sanctions, appointments and public messaging.

Decisions about elections, timelines, and who can run remain unresolved or influenced from abroad, — NYT. 1/ Image Most Venezuelan export revenue goes first to the U.S. Treasury, then gets disbursed back through Venezuela’s banking system.

Rubio’s team decides what can be spent, and by whom. 2/
Jul 11 6 tweets 3 min read
Kasparov: If Russia crosses into Estonia or Finland — NATO formally needs Article 5, Brussels, the American general reports to Washington.

The question is: will Trump not be playing golf at that moment?

1/ Kasparov: I see zero signs that Russia is ready for any negotiation process — not in propaganda, not in the economy, not in statements from Putin, Lavrov or Peskov.

Maybe I missed something. But so far we see exactly the opposite vector.

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Jul 11 7 tweets 2 min read
Queues stretch up to nine miles beyond Crimea's checkpoints. 79% of hotel bookings cancelled. Fuel sold on Telegram at $25 a gallon. Blackouts last for days. Water available one hour a day.

Putin's "sacred" peninsula has become a burden. — The Telegraph.

1/ Image Ukraine struck 50 energy facilities in Crimea between July 1–8. Hit 76 shadow-fleet tankers in the Sea of Azov this week. Long-range strikes jumped 1,150% in 2026.

Six choke-point bridges under attack. Russian authorities suspended all fuel sales to private individuals.

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Jul 11 4 tweets 2 min read
Browder: Trump is both U.S. president and a businessman.

It wouldn't be a leap to say Putin could have made lucrative business offers in exchange for less support for Ukraine. I don't see a better theory for what's happening.

1/ Browder: The U.S. told Gulf allies not to buy Ukrainian drone technology.

I have heard this from sources I trust, and I believe Trump did not want Ukraine to benefit. Europe should instead invest in Ukrainian defense technology through joint ventures and production.

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Jul 11 5 tweets 2 min read
Browder: Ukraine has damaged 25–40% of Russia’s oil refining capacity.

If it doubles that, it can tell Russia: stop bombing our civilians, and we stop hitting your refineries. Ukraine has also turned the front line into a drone kill zone where crossing is deadly.

1/ Browder: We should not underestimate Russia.

It still has a much larger population, deeper financial resources, and bigger ammunition stockpiles than Ukraine.

Even if Russian forces in Crimea collapse, Ukraine may still lack the troops needed to retake it.

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