Shrinking horizons
Unless it secures victory in Ukraine, the Kremlin faces declining influence in the Black Sea and beyond

Vladimir Putin’s vision of restoring Russia to its rightful place as a global power has long rested on dominating the Black Sea and projecting power in the Mediterranean and the Middle East. In the years before Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Putin largely succeeded in that goal.
Given that Russia’s naval presence and power in the Mediterranean hinges on the strength of its Black Sea Fleet, the war in Ukraine’s strain on Russian resources has had a ripple effect.
Consumed by its own crisis, Russia no longer has the clout or the bandwidth to mediate regional conflicts, as it did with the Astana meetings and Sochi summits on Syria.
If the war in Ukraine carries on, and Russia’s position in the Black Sea continues to weaken, its influence in the Mediterranean will also wane.












