The Kremlin's refusal to yield on Ukraine is less a surprise than a reminder that for Vladimir Putin, the domestic political climate is a far more volatile asset than any battlefield terrain. After weeks of speculation that Moscow might trade territorial gains for a ceasefire, the Russian president has made clear: no concessions are on the table. The reason, according to sources close to the administration, is a mounting fear that public opinion at home could move against him faster than a rouble on a bad day.
Let us be clear about the calculus here. Putin's regime runs on a peculiar form of political capital. It is not measured in votes or polls, though those exist. It is measured in silence. The tacit acceptance of the war by a populace weary of upheaval but conditioned to stability. Any concession that looks like retreat, that smells of defeat, would be a margin call on that capital. The Kremlin knows that once the narrative of inevitable victory is punctured, the sell-off could be swift.
This is not about the integrity of the Russian state. It is about the integrity of the Russian narrative. For two years, state television has sold the war as a glorious crusade against Nazi aggression and Western decadence. To now admit that some of the occupied territories might be given back as part of a deal would be like a company suddenly writing down its most prized asset to zero. The market for propaganda would never recover.
And the public opinion data, such as it is, confirms the risk. Independent polls, where they exist, suggest a creeping unease. The Levada Centre, the last serious pollster in Russia, reported that while support for the war remains high, the number of people wanting peace talks has edged above 50 per cent for the first time. That is a leading indicator. The Kremlin reads it like a bond yield curve: when the short-term desire for peace exceeds the long-term acceptance of conflict, the tipping point is near.
But there is another dimension to this: the economic drag. Western sanctions have not yet broken Russia, but they are a persistent tax on growth. Inflation is running at over 7 per cent. The rouble has been stabilised only by capital controls and mandatory forex sales. And the budget deficit is ballooning as military spending soaks up more than a third of all expenditure. The war is a cost that compounds daily, and there is no refinancing option. The Kremlin can print roubles, but it cannot print patience.
So why not cut losses now? Because Putin fears that any concession would legitimise the opposition at home. The anti-war movement, though crushed, is not dead. It is a dormant hedge fund waiting for a trigger to go long on dissent. One sign of weakness, and the short sellers of loyalty could pile in. The security apparatus knows this. They have seen what happens when the Tsar blinks. In 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed not because it was invaded, but because the elite lost faith in the project. The same could happen to Putin.
This is the real reason for the intransigence. It is not about strategy or diplomacy. It is about preserving the domestic balance sheet. The Kremlin is running a leveraged empire, and the collateral is the public's belief in inevitability. Once that belief cracks, the margin call is triggered.
The West, meanwhile, seems to misunderstand this dynamic. They believe that economic pressure and military setbacks will force Putin to negotiate. But they are looking at the wrong financial statement. The Kremlin's primary concern is not the trade deficit; it is the political deficit. And you cannot fix that with land concessions. You fix it with narrative control.
Until Putin can convince his own people that any deal is a victory, there will be no deal. And that means the war grinds on, with all the fiscal and human cost that entails. The markets, as ever, will price this in. Gilts will wobble, safe havens will strengthen, and volatility will remain the order of the day. But for the man in the Kremlin, the only chart that matters is the one he keeps in his head: the imaginary line between popular patience and revolt. And he is not cutting that line any time soon.








