Mark Galeotti Mark Galeotti

Has Ukraine called Putin’s bluff?

Vladimir Putin (Credit: Getty images)

Has Vladimir Putin’s bluff just been called? It certainly looks like it. So long as the Ukrainians were refusing to countenance a ceasefire, then Moscow could portray them as being the obstacle to the kind of quick deal Donald Trump appears eager to conclude. Kyiv had previously floated the idea – after another unhelpful intervention from French President Emmanuel Macron – of a limited ceasefire extending just to long-range drone attacks on each others’ cities and critical infrastructure and operations on the Black Sea. But this was a non-starter that was too transparently a trap for Putin, hoping to make him look like the intransigent party if he turned it down.

This certainly seems to have been Kyiv’s plan as of last night, when an unprecedented attack on Moscow with some 140 drones, which killed three civilians. The timing was hardly coincidental, intended to try and put pressure on the Kremlin.

Moscow is aware that an angry Trump would be far more dangerous than Joe Biden ever could be

After their meeting with US interlocutors in Jeddah today, though, suddenly the Ukrainians are apparently signed up to a full

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Mark Galeotti
Written by
Mark Galeotti

Mark Galeotti heads the consultancy Mayak Intelligence and is honorary professor at the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies and the author of some 30 books on Russia. His latest, Forged in War: a military history of Russia from its beginnings to today, is out now.

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