The post-Putin peace
Let's see what a post-war peace negotiation may look like

Vladimir Putin said in his speech on 30 September that the Kremlin was open to negotiations with Ukraine, however, discussing the status of the newly annexed territories was “out of the question” for him. Ukraine's Zelensky has been clear since day one that another annexation would rule out negotiations completely and was swift to respond on the same day Putin signed the annexation papers: if there is a negotiation in the future, Russia's President must be anyone but Putin. It's hardly thinkable that there might be a negotiation of any kind right now for two reasons.
Putin is nearing the catastrophe at full speed, and Kyiv sees it, so it's no longer advantageous for Ukraine to “back up to 23 February.”
The Kremlin can no longer hold its separation line, endure attrition warfare, or blackmail the world with nuclear weapons.


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