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US resists 'regime change' talk

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Russian President Vladimir Putin could lose power if Ukraine’s counteroffensive continues, exuberant European officials and dismayed Russian imperialists are beginning to suspect, though U.S. officials hesitate to indulge speculation about “regime change” in the Kremlin.

“We live in an information society and things are changing, even as we are speaking, now actually,” a senior European official told the Washington Examiner. “So we don't know what could happen, we just need to be prepared, when the right moment comes, to take the right decision.”


Other Western officials regard Putin’s fall as a more remote prospect, particularly given fair uncertainty about how much territory Ukrainian forces will liberate before the newly mobilized Russian forces can reach a critical mass of effective troops. Yet the cascade of Ukrainian forces entering once-occupied towns has provoked angry Russian military veterans into dire warnings about the ramifications of continued failure, even as President Joe Biden affirms his intention to leave space for “Putin’s off-ramp” out of the war.

“It’s not helpful to just speculate about what comes next,” the White House’s Phil Gordon, national security adviser to Vice President Kamala Harris, told a Warsaw Security Forum abuzz this week with questions about Putin’s potential collapse. “No, [it’s] not U.S. policy to create regime change in Russia, and we've been very clear about that.”

PUTIN WILL DIE IF RUSSIA USES NUCLEAR WEAPONS AGAINST UKRAINE: ZELENSKY


Putin made an apparent effort to paper over the military setbacks last week by signing documents that purport to incorporate four regions of Ukraine into the Russian state — a territorial claim that exists only on paper, in many places, because Russian forces never managed to take control of all the regions. Ukrainian forces have continued to retake villages and towns across those areas, laying bare the fragility of the Russian claim and stoking the criticism of Russian veterans who have attributed their struggles to the corruption of Putin’s military team.

“We need decisive, competent people not afraid of responsibility — thinking not how to fill their pockets and finish their dacha quickly, but how to serve the motherland,” former Russian FSB officer Igor Girkin, who posed as a pro-Russian separatist commander at the outset of the war in 2014, said this week. “Will people like that be found in the president’s circle? Can he put them in places?”

Russia can “win this war” if the necessary reforms take place, Girkin maintained, but he implied that continued mismanagement could result in Putin’s regime going the way of Czar Nicholas II, the Romanov czar overthrown and killed by Bolshevik revolutionaries during the First World War.

“If this is not done, then we will certainly dance, like we all have been saying,” Girkin said. “We’ll dance to the new 1917. And we’re dancing towards it very quickly.” 


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Russian President Vladimir Putin could lose power if Ukraine’s counteroffensive continues, exuberant European officials and dismayed Russian imperialists are beginning to suspect, though U.S. officials hesitate to indulge speculation about “regime change” in the Kremlin.

“We live in an information society and things are changing, even as we are speaking, now actually,” a senior European official told the Washington Examiner. “So we don't know what could happen, we just need to be prepared, when the right moment comes, to take the right decision.”


Other Western officials regard Putin’s fall as a more remote prospect, particularly given fair uncertainty about how much territory Ukrainian forces will liberate before the newly mobilized Russian forces can reach a critical mass of effective troops. Yet the cascade of Ukrainian forces entering once-occupied towns has provoked angry Russian military veterans into dire warnings about the ramifications of continued failure, even as President Joe Biden affirms his intention to leave space for “Putin’s off-ramp” out of the war.

“It’s not helpful to just speculate about what comes next,” the White House’s Phil Gordon, national security adviser to Vice President Kamala Harris, told a Warsaw Security Forum abuzz this week with questions about Putin’s potential collapse. “No, [it’s] not U.S. policy to create regime change in Russia, and we've been very clear about that.”

PUTIN WILL DIE IF RUSSIA USES NUCLEAR WEAPONS AGAINST UKRAINE: ZELENSKY


Putin made an apparent effort to paper over the military setbacks last week by signing documents that purport to incorporate four regions of Ukraine into the Russian state — a territorial claim that exists only on paper, in many places, because Russian forces never managed to take control of all the regions. Ukrainian forces have continued to retake villages and towns across those areas, laying bare the fragility of the Russian claim and stoking the criticism of Russian veterans who have attributed their struggles to the corruption of Putin’s military team.

“We need decisive, competent people not afraid of responsibility — thinking not how to fill their pockets and finish their dacha quickly, but how to serve the motherland,” former Russian FSB officer Igor Girkin, who posed as a pro-Russian separatist commander at the outset of the war in 2014, said this week. “Will people like that be found in the president’s circle? Can he put them in places?”

Russia can “win this war” if the necessary reforms take place, Girkin maintained, but he implied that continued mismanagement could result in Putin’s regime going the way of Czar Nicholas II, the Romanov czar overthrown and killed by Bolshevik revolutionaries during the First World War.

“If this is not done, then we will certainly dance, like we all have been saying,” Girkin said. “We’ll dance to the new 1917. And we’re dancing towards it very quickly.” 


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