Vladimir Putin · Ukraine · Russia · Pentagon · Fortune Technology
Putin is running out of money to wage war on Ukraine, and this Russian-occupied territory is running out of fuel as Kyiv
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The Kremlin’s war machine is short on money and fuel as Ukrainian drones wreak havoc on Russian supply lines.
Key facts
- The pivot toward economic stagnation follows hotter war-fueled GDP gains of more than 4% in 2023 and 2024
- Defense spending could send the government’s budget deficit into dangerous territory, the report said, noting that the shortfall through April had already deepened to 5.9 trillion rubles
- While Russia has been recording deficits for four years, a wider gap would further drain its reserve fund, which is now down 60% from prewar levels
- The Kremlin’s war machine is short on money and fuel as Ukrainian drones wreak havoc on Russian supply lines
Summary
More than four years after Vladimir Putin failed to seize all of Ukraine in a full-scale invasion, analysts say Kyiv’s forces have turned the tide with improved drones and tactics. At the same time, Russia is reeling as casualties reach staggering heights; recruitment of replacement troops wanes; and areas far from the front lines come under attack. Russia’s changing fortunes were exemplified earlier this week at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, which kicked off as long-range Ukrainian drones damaged a nearby refinery and naval shipyard, sending plumes of smoke over Putin’s attempt to create his own version of the Davos gathering. With its war on Ukraine now a quagmire and its economy shrinking, Kremlin finance officials recently told Putin that his war is unaffordable, .