Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 13 minutes ago
Recent strategic insights from Russia Matters and the Council on Foreign Relations indicate that Russia has suffered losses of between 350,000 and 500,000 soldiers in its ongoing conflict with Ukraine, marking the most devastating military defeat for Russia since the Second World War. However, experts caution that this enormous human toll does not signal an end to hostilities, as Putin has reframed the war as a 'holy war,' with high-ranking Kremlin officials portraying him as a katechon, a religious leader combating malevolent forces. The analysis warns that for the United States and its eight NATO allies positioned on Russia's eastern border, a backed-into-a-corner Putin with a 'holy war' ideology is more inclined, rather than less, to consider nuclear escalation.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00Russia has lost up to 500,000 soldiers in Ukraine,
00:03the most catastrophic human loss in Russian military history since World War II,
00:08and yet the war shows no sign of ending.
00:10New strategic analysis from Harvard and the Council on Foreign Relations reveals why.
00:15Putin has reframed this as a holy war.
00:18Senior Kremlin figures are calling him katakon,
00:21religious concept meaning the one who restrains evil.
00:24And in that worldview, surrendering is not just a military defeat.
00:28It is a cosmic failure.
00:30Here is what that means for American national security.
00:34A cornered leader with a holy war mindset.
00:37And 5,180 nuclear warheads is not a rational actor calculating costs and benefits.
00:43He is someone who would rather use nuclear weapons
00:46than accept what he sees as the ultimate shame.
00:49The U.S. must factor that psychology into every decision it makes about Ukraine,
00:54about Iran, and about the NATO summit happening right now in Ankara.
00:58the U.S. must look forward.
Comments

Recommended