Something Worse Than Ukraine's Strikes Is Humiliating Putin - Pyotr Kurzin Geopolitics
Ukraines strikes on St. Petersburg were dramatic enough. Smoke over Putins hometown. Chaos around Russias flagship economic forum. Delegates arriving beneath black clouds as Ukraine demonstrated it could strike one of Russias most symbolic cities.
But the real story this week may be something far bigger.
Because while the world focused on drones and oil terminals, Russia was quietly losing influence somewhere else entirely: Armenia. One of Moscows oldest and most loyal post-Soviet allies is drifting westwards and the Kremlin suddenly looks unable to stop it.
In this video, I break down why Putins biggest humiliation may not be happening on the battlefield at all, but in the slow collapse of Russias sphere of influence across the former Soviet world.
From Zelenskys public peace offer, to Putins awkward rejection, to Armenias geopolitical shift away from Moscow, this is about more than Ukraine. Its about whether Russia can still command loyalty, fear, or influence in the regions it once dominated.
And increasingly, the answer appears to be no.