World

Putin lacks war exit strategy as inner circle faces paralysis — The Telegraph

Nation

19 May, 01:57 PM

Russian dictator Vladimir Putin operates without a clear plan to end the war in Ukraine, while his deeply isolated inner circle lacks the power to remove him from office, The Telegraph wrote on May 18, citing a leaked internal document.

Journalists obtained a leaked working document outlining Moscow's strategies for the aftermath of the conflict. The files revealed that a team of officials led by Sergey Kiriyenko, the deputy chief of the presidential administration, is actively drafting highly detailed propaganda talking points for state-controlled media. Their objective is to frame the war as an "invincible" success story, all while burying the reality that none of the Kremlin's primary strategic goals were actually met.

In addition to shaping public perception, the Kremlin is preparing to forcibly neutralize elements of Russia’s ultranationalist, "patriotic" community. Officials fear these hardline factions may view any formal cessation of hostilities as a betrayal and a military defeat.

However, The Telegraph emphasized that despite these extensive bureaucratic preparations on the ground, a "deafening silence reigns at the very top."

Analysts observe that Putin is so ideologically and personally tethered to the invasion that he no longer operates on a rational cost-benefit analysis. Instead, his decision-making is characterized by a "fatal combination of stubbornness and paralysis." Furthermore, Putin and his core inner circle appear entirely detached not just from general Russian society, but from their own ruling elite.

"Putin seems to have no plan for ending the war," the publication noted.

"But his subordinates also have no means to influence him or replace him, even as Moscow itself comes under attack."

Ukraine-Russia peace talks stalemate

The revelation of the Kremlin's internal paralysis follows a freeze in diplomatic momentum. Following a series of high-level trilateral meetings in early 2026, peace negotiations between Ukraine, Russia, and the United States abruptly stalled due to the outbreak of the war in Iran.

On May 7, Ukrainian National Security and Defense Council Secretary Rustem Umerov met with U.S. representatives Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner in Washington. That same day, the Kremlin dismissed the trilateral format, declaring negotiations pointless unless Ukrainian forces completely withdrew from the government-controlled areas of the Donbas.

While Putin unexpectedly claimed on May 9 that the war was "nearing its end," the Russian military immediately resumed massive airstrikes across Ukraine upon the expiration of a brief, three-day truce that ran from May 9 to May 11.

U.S. President Donald Trump remarked on May 12 that the end of the war in Ukraine was "very close," noting his intention to discuss the conflict with Chinese leader Xi Jinping during a high-stakes summit in Beijing. Nevertheless, by May 13, the Kremlin reiterated its rigid ultimatum demanding that the Ukrainian Armed Forces surrender the Donbas — a condition President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has consistently maintained Ukraine will never accept.

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