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Russia risks becoming ungovernable and descending into chaos

There is growing opposition to President Putin at home

A person holds a Russian Passport at Vaalimaa border crossing point between Russia and Finland, in Vaalimaa, Finland, September 23, 2022. REUTERS/Janis Laizans

By Arkady Ostrovsky Russia editor, The Economist

WHEN RUSSIA’S president, Vladimir Putin, invaded Ukraine on February 24th 2022, he set out to grab territory, deprive it of sovereignty, wipe out the very idea of its national identity and turn what remained of it into a failed state. After months of Ukraine’s fierce resistance, its statehood and its identity are stronger than ever, and all the things that Mr Putin had intended to inflict on Ukraine are afflicting his own country.

Mr Putin’s war is turning Russia into a failed state, with uncontrolled borders, private military formations, a fleeing population, moral decay and the possibility of civil conflict. And though confidence among Western leaders in Ukraine’s ability to withstand Mr Putin’s terror has gone up, there is growing concern about Russia’s own ability to survive the war. It could become ungovernable and descend into chaos.

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