Reality behind a parade of power
RUSSIA celebrated the 80th anniversary of Nazi Germany's defeat last month with visiting heads of state and a show of armed might in Red Square, staged as a display of global clout, grandiose and intimidating, and a portent of eventual triumph in the war against Ukraine.
The annual military parade below the walls and towers of the Kremlin was the largest since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, a commemoration the government and its cheerleaders used to raise support for the war, conflating what may be the greatest source of national pride with the far more divisive current conflict.
'Our great victory 80 years ago is a new narrative, a new conception of Russia's current standoff with the West,' Sergei Lyaguzin, an international relations professor, said on Russian state television.
Behind the pomp, though, Russia stands on shakier ground than the Kremlin's confident show suggested.
Its military is barely advancing on the battlefield, its economy is sputtering, prices for oil, its main export, are falling and, perhaps most surprising, US President Donald Trump is hinting that his view of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his war is souring.
Putin has played down these challenges, accepting short-term economic pain and diplomatic setbacks in the hope that his persistence will eventually yield a triumph of historic proportions, said Alexander Kolyandr, a Russian economy expert at the Centre for European Policy Analysis, a research group.
'They are convinced that they are more resilient than their opponents,' he said. 'They believe that victory will not go to the side that is the best, but to the one that remains standing the longest.'
After initially echoing Moscow's talking points – even falsely blaming Ukraine for the war – Trump has hardened his rhetoric about Putin and the Kremlin in recent weeks.
Trump is threatening to punish the buyers of Russian oil, he is sending more advanced weapons to Ukraine and he has struck a mineral development deal with Ukraine that gives the United States a valuable stake in Ukraine's future security and prosperity.
Russian forces have seized an average of 6.5 sq km a day over the past three months, according to calculations by a Finnish-based military intelligence firm, the Black Bird Group. At this pace it would take Russia years to conquer the regions that it has already claimed to annex.
Rather than changing course, Putin has doubled down on his policies and demands.
He has declined Trump's proposal to freeze the fighting along the current front line before starting to negotiate a peace deal, and has demanded that the United States get the European Union to lift some of its sanctions.
At the same time, Russian forces have continued to pound Ukrainian cities, leading Trump to issue a rare rebuke of Putin.
'It makes me think that maybe he doesn't want to stop the war, he's just tapping me along, and has to be dealt with differently,' with additional sanctions, Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
Despite such challenges, about a dozen heads of state were in Red Square for the celebrations, underscoring the Kremlin's claim that far-reaching Western sanctions have failed to isolate Russia.
More than 130 pieces of military equipment, including intercontinental missile carriers, rolled through Moscow and soldiers from friendly nations marched with Russian troops, showing that Russia is not alone in what it presents as a proxy struggle against Nato.
On the economic front, however, Russia is wounded and losing steam, pressured by falling oil prices, rapidly dwindling foreign currency reserves, record-high interest rates and the punitive sanctions imposed by the United States and its allies in response to the invasion of Ukraine.
Russia has accepted a decision made last month by a group of major oil exporting countries, known as Opec+, to ramp up output, a move that has depressed oil prices already hit by the impact of Trump's tariffs.
Falling oil revenue, which finances about 40% of Russia's government budget, is already hurting its war economy.
The Russian finance ministry more than tripled the budget deficit forecast for this year to 1.7% of gross domestic product, and slashed its price forecast for its main type of exported oil from US$70 (RM299) per barrel to US$56 (RM239).
Analysts estimate that to cover the rising deficit, the government would have to either spend its remaining rainy day stockpile of foreign reserves and gold, or print more money, which would worsen the already high inflation, now running at about 10%.
The Kremlin considered, but then scrapped, a proposal to reduce public spending to compensate for declining oil prices.
Putin has tolerated the central bank's policy of keeping interest rates at record highs in an attempt to dampen price increases.
But a growing chorus of Russian officials and businesspeople has blamed the interest rates, kept at 21% since October, for wiping out growth without cooling prices, a lose-lose economic scenario known as stagflation.
Russian consumers are grumbling about food prices, which rose at an annual rate of more than 12% in March, but these concerns have so far have not translated into broader dissatisfaction with the government, said Denis Volkov, head of Moscow-based independent pollster Levada Centre.
Rising wages, government subsidies for the poor and decades of living with high inflation mean that in surveys conducted as recently as April more Russians say that their economic situation is improving, rather than worsening, he said.
That political stability allowed Moscow to project national unity in the anniversary celebrations, despite the lack of major diplomatic or military breakthroughs in the war.
Putin has regularly used Victory Day, Russia's main secular holiday, to convey that time is on his side.
Russia's determination and size ground down Germany's Wehrmacht, Europe's military hegemon at the time, in World War II, goes the propaganda messaging, and Ukraine's Nato-supplied and trained forces will eventually follow suit. — ©2025 The New York Times Company
This article originally appeared in The New York Times
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
28 minutes ago
- The Sun
US factory struggles with Trump steel tariffs impact
BELCAMP: The sweltering summer heat at Independent Can's Maryland factory contrasts sharply with the snowman-decorated metal containers taking shape on the production line. But the real tension stems from President Donald Trump's steep steel tariffs, now doubled to 50%, which CEO Rick Huether says are wreaking havoc on his business. Huether, 73, who began working at his family's company at age 14, is determined to keep the nearly century-old firm afloat. However, Trump's tariffs on imported steel and aluminum have complicated operations, forcing Huether to consider price hikes of over 20%. 'We're living in chaos right now,' Huether told AFP. The factory, which employs nearly 400 workers across four sites, relies heavily on imported tinplate—a steel variant coated with tin to prevent rust. Yet, US production meets only 25% of the demand, leaving manufacturers like Independent Can dependent on foreign suppliers. While Huether supports strengthening US manufacturing, he criticizes Trump's unpredictable tariff policies. 'Those all require us to buy in the neighborhood of 70 percent of our steel outside of the United States,' he said. The tariffs have already led to a 20-25% drop in orders as customers brace for economic uncertainty. The company's Iowa plant shut down last year partly due to earlier tariff hikes. Now, with costs soaring, Huether fears history may repeat itself. Some buyers are shifting to American-made products, but Huether remains skeptical. 'During the pandemic, we took everybody in... our business went up 50 percent,' he said. Yet, post-pandemic, clients returned to cheaper Chinese alternatives. Huether insists on long-term contracts to mitigate risks. 'We need to have a two-year contract,' he said. Despite the challenges, he remains hopeful. 'I think that our business will survive,' he added, though navigating the next six months remains uncertain.


New Straits Times
42 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
Nvidia insiders sold over US$1bil in stock amid market surge
NEW YORK: Nvidia insiders sold over US$1 billion worth of company stock in the past year, with a notable uptick in recent trading activity as executives capitalize on surging investor interest in artificial intelligence, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. More than US$500 million of the share sales took place this month as the California-based chips designer's share price climbed to an all-time high, the report said. Nvidia's chief executive Jensen Huang started selling shares this week for the first time since September, the SEC filing showed. Nvidia's stock hit a record on Wednesday, and the chipmaker reclaimed the crown as the world's most valuable company after an analyst said the chipmaker was set to ride a "Golden Wave" of artificial intelligence. Its latest gains reflect the US stock market's return to the "AI trade" that fueled massive gains in chip stocks and related technology companies in recent years on optimism about the emerging technology. Nvidia did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. Nvidia's shares have rebounded over 60 per centfrom their closing low on April 4, when Wall Street was reeling from President Donald Trump's global tariff announcements. US stocks, including Nvidia, have recovered on expectations the White House will reach trade deals to soften the tariffs.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Trump's tax-cut and spending bill clears first US Senate hurdle
WASHINGTON: The US Senate narrowly approved a procedural vote on President Donald Trump's sweeping tax-cut and spending bill, setting the stage for an overnight debate. The Republican-controlled chamber voted 51-49, with two GOP senators joining Democrats in opposition. The 940-page bill, which funds immigration, military, and tax priorities, faced delays as Democrats demanded a full reading before debate could begin. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer criticized the rushed process, calling it a 'radical bill' released 'in the dead of night.' Republican Senators Thom Tillis and Rand Paul opposed the bill, citing concerns over Medicaid cuts and increased federal debt. Trump criticised Tillis on social media, hinting at potential primary challengers. The legislation extends Trump's 2017 tax cuts, boosts military and border security spending, and raises the federal debt ceiling by $5 trillion. A nonpartisan analysis estimates the bill could add $4.5 trillion to the national debt over a decade. Elon Musk condemned the bill, calling it 'utterly insane and destructive' for ending electric vehicle tax breaks. Meanwhile, Republicans adjusted provisions to delay Medicaid cuts and support rural hospitals. If passed, the bill returns to the House for final approval before reaching Trump's desk.