A losing battle worth the fight
Why Russian voters shouldn’t simply boycott next year’s sham presidential election

Vladimir Putin will soon be launching his re-election campaign, or the pale imitation of what passes for one in a military dictatorship. With his prospects of winning all but certain in a system designed to deliver him victory, the situation may seem hopeless, but is still worth the fight.
Even official statistics show there are tens of millions of people in Russia who don’t support the war.
This is where the tragedy of Russian democracy is exposed at its most farcical, but it’s better to take an active stand against Putin’s dance of death than a passive one.

Against all odds
How sound economics has brought Ukraine’s GDP close to prewar levels despite four years of devastation
Four years of hell
Putin’s misjudged effort to subjugate Ukraine has only helped cement its national identity, and it won’t ever stop fighting

The artlessness of the deal
Trump’s diplomatic blitz exposes his fundamental misunderstanding of peacemaking

Electoral illusion
Claims that Kyiv is preparing to go to the polls to end the war in Ukraine are far-fetched to say the least

Anyone’s game
Who would win if presidential elections were actually held in Ukraine this spring?

Suspect citizens
Much as in Soviet times, the Kremlin still views those with second passports as disloyal

The new atomic era
The expiration of the New START Treaty last week showed that the world has grown too comfortable with nuclear weapons

Powerless
Farcical peace talks in Abu Dhabi have gone nowhere as Ukraine freezes amid Russia’s winter onslaught

Under pressure
Giving up Donbas in return for US security guarantees could be fatal misstep for Ukraine


