As Russia ramps up its second offensive, a debate has erupted over whether Moscow or Kyiv will have the upper hand in 2023. While important, such discourse also misses a larger point related to the conflict’s longer-term consequences. In the long run, the true loser of the war is already clear; Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine will be remembered as a historic folly that left Russia economically, demographically and geopolitically worse off.
Start with the lynchpin of Russia’s economy: energy. In contrast to Europe’s (very real) dependence on Russia for fossil fuels, Russia’s economic dependence on Europe has largely gone unremarked upon. As late as 2021, for example, Russia exported 32% of its coal, 49% of its oil, and a staggering 74% of its gas to OECD Europe alone. Add in Japan, South Korea and non-OECD European countries that have joined Western sanctions against Russia, and the figure is even higher. A trickle of Russian energy continues to flow into Europe, but as the European Union makes good on its commitment to phase out Russian oil and gas, Moscow may soon find itself shut out of its most lucrative export market.
In a petrostate like Russia, which derives 45% of its federal budget from fossil fuels, the impact of this market isolation is hard to overstate. Oil and coal exports are fungible, and Moscow has indeed been able to redirect them to countries such as India and China (albeit at discounted rates, higher costs and lower profits). Gas, however, is much harder to reroute because of the infrastructure needed to transport it. With its US$400 billion gas pipeline to China, Russia has managed some progress on this front, but it will take years to match current capacity to the EU. In any case, China’s leverage as a single buyer makes it a poor substitute for Europe, where Russia can bid countries against one another.
This market isolation, however, would be survivable were it not for the gravest unintended consequence of Russia’s war — an accelerated transition toward decarbonisation. It took a gross violation of international law, but Putin managed to convince Western leaders to finally treat independence from fossil fuels as a national security issue and not just an environmental one.
This is best seen in Europe’s turbocharged transition toward renewable energy, where permitting processes that used to take years are being pushed up. A few months after the invasion, for example, Germany jump-started construction on what will soon be Europe’s largest solar plant. Around the same time, Britain accelerated progress on Hornsea 3, slated to become the world’s largest offshore wind farm upon completion.
The results already speak for themselves; for the first time ever last year, wind and solar combined for a higher share of electrical generation in Europe than oil and gas. And this says nothing of other decarbonisation efforts such as subsidies for heat pumps in the EU, incentives for clean energy in the United States, and higher electric vehicle uptake everywhere.
The cumulative effect for Russia could not be worse. Sooner or later, lower demand for fossil fuels will dramatically and permanently lower the price for oil and gas — an existential threat to Russia’s economy. When increased US shale production depressed oil prices in 2014, for example, Russia experienced a financial crisis. Lower global demand for fossil fuels will play out over a longer timeline, but the result for Russia will be much graver. With its invasion, Russia hastened the arrival of an energy transition that promises to unravel its economy.
Beyond a smaller and less efficient economy, Putin’s war in Ukraine will also leave Russia with a smaller and less dynamic population. Russia’s demographic problems are well documented, and Putin had intended to start reversing the country’s long-running population decline in 2022. In a morbid twist, the year is likelier to mark the start of its irrevocable fall. The confluence of COVID and an inverted demographic pyramid already made Russia’s demographic outlook dire. The addition of war has made it catastrophic.
To understand why, it’s important to understand the demographic scar left by the 1990s. In the chaos that followed the Soviet Union’s dissolution, Russia’s birthrate plunged to 1.2 children per woman, far below the 2.1 needed for a population to remain stable. The effects can still be seen today; while there are 12 million Russians aged 30-34 (born just before the breakup of the Soviet Union), there are just 7 million aged 20-24 (born during the chaos that followed it). That deficit meant Russia’s population was already poised to fall, simply because a smaller number of people would be able to have children in the first place.
Russia’s invasion has made this bad demographic hand cataclysmic. At least 120,000 Russian soldiers have died so far — many in their 20s and from the same small generation Russia can scarcely afford to lose. Many more have emigrated, if they can, or simply fled to other countries to try to wait out the war; exact numbers are hard to calculate, but the 32,000 Russians who have immigrated to Israel alone suggest the total number approaches a million.
Disastrously, the planning horizons of Russian families have been upended; it is projected that fewer than 1.2 million Russian babies may be born next year, which would leave Russia with its lowest birthrate since 2000. A spike in violent crime, a rise in alcohol consumption and other factors that collude against a family’s decision to have children may depress the birthrate further still. Ironically, over the past decade, Putin managed to slow (if not reverse) Russia’s population decline through lavish payoffs for new mothers. Increased military spending and the debt needed to finance it will make such generous natalist policies harder.
The invasion has left Russia even worse off geopolitically. Unlike hard numbers and demographic data, such lost influence is hard to measure. But it can be seen everywhere, from public opinion polls across the West to United Nations votes that the Kremlin has lost by margins as high as 141 to 5. It can also be seen in Russia’s own backyard; while an emboldened NATO could soon include Sweden and Finland, Russia’s own Collective Security Treaty Organization is tearing at the seams as traditional allies such as Kazakhstan and Armenia realise the Kremlin’s impotence and look to China for security.
Perhaps most important of all, Russia has reinvigorated the cause of liberal democracy. In the year after its invasion, French President Emmanuel Macron won a rare second term in France, the far-right AfD lost ground in three successive elections in Germany, and “Make America Great Again” Republicans paid an electoral penalty in the US midterms. (The far right did sweep into power in both Sweden and Italy, but such wins have so far failed to dent Western unity and appear more motivated by immigration.)
And this says nothing of the wave of democratic consolidation playing out across Eastern Europe, where voters have thrown out illiberal populists in Slovenia and Czechia in the last year alone. It is impossible to attribute any of these outcomes to just one factor (US Democrats also got a boost from the overturn of Roe v Wade and election denialism, for example), but Russia’s invasion — and the clear choice between liberalism and autocracy it presented — no doubt helped.
Nowhere, however, has Russia’s invasion backfired more than in Ukraine. Contrary to Putin’s historical revisionism, Ukraine has long had a national identity distinct from Russia’s. But it’s also long been fractured along linguistic lines, with many of its elites intent on maintaining close relations with the Kremlin and even the public unsure about greater alignment with the West.
No longer. Ninety-one per cent of Ukrainians now favour joining NATO, a figure unthinkable just a decade ago. Eighty-five per cent of Ukrainians consider themselves Ukrainian above all else, a marker of civic identity that has grown by double digits since Russia’s invasion. Far from protecting the Russian language in Ukraine, Putin appears to have hastened its demise as native Russian speakers (Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky included) switch to Ukrainian en masse. Putin launched his invasion to bring Ukraine back into Moscow’s orbit. He has instead anchored its future in the West.
Of course, one can argue that, however much the war has cost Russia, it has cost Ukraine exponentially more. This is true. Ukraine’s economy shrank by more than 30% last year, while Russia’s economy contracted by just about 3%. And this says nothing of the human toll Ukraine has suffered. But, like Brexit, Western sanctions on Russia will play out as a slow burn, not an immediate collapse. And while Russia enters a protracted period of economic and demographic decline, once peace comes, Ukraine will have the combined industrial capacity of the EU, United States and United Kingdom to support it as the West’s newest institutional member — precisely the outcome Putin hoped to avoid. Russia may yet make new territorial gains in the Donbas. But in the long run, such gains are immaterial — Russia has already lost.
Wow! The propaganda from the U.S. has ratcheted up a few notches in the past few days. Nothing to do with the open secret of them destroying of the Nordstream 2 gas pipeline of course.
A clear act of terrorism. Still waiting for MSM to acknowledge it.
…while the rest of us are still waiting for actual evidence.
That would be a first.
You could start by reading about Seymour Hersh’s article. Here is an overview … https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2023/02/10/pers-f10.html
I read that link, and the links to the link. The strongest “evidence” I could find was
While no one has publicly admitted responsibility, US officials have expressed satisfaction at the pipeline’s destruction.
Doesn’t reach my criterion of proof. But please feel free to show more actual “evidence”
What? Like WMD’s in Iraq?
Exactly. I couldn’t see proof there, I can’t see it here.
Not sure your consistency will go down well here, Woopwoop.
Seymour Hersh has more journalistic cred than absolutely anyone at Crikey. He is no lightweight and has exposed US BS before. He is not someone that can simply be dismissed. After all, we don’t ask for proof on most of the BS spouted by the the writers here on Crikey do we and Hersh is multiple levels above the hacks here.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seymour_Hersh
Isn’t Seymour Hersh woke, though?
Yes, as in ‘not brain dead’.
No, you follow the money. Who benefited from the lies? It’s not hard.
Who benefited from the WMD lies?
Russia and China benefited massively because the US standing in the world was massively diminished, and the Iraq disaster served to strain ties with traditional US allies in Europe (especially France and Germany).
Iran also benefitted massively as it provided them the power-vacuum to fill as it saw fit. Israel also benefitted as did so many private US companies and individuals.
They won’t – just like Crikey
Fake news. Make Russia Great Again.
Not according to the UN definition of terrorism:
“criminal acts, including against civilians, committed with the intent to cause death or serious bodily injury, or taking of hostages, with the purpose to provoke a state of terror …”
If you call blowing up a gas pipe ‘terrorism’, what do you call blowing up residential areas? Hospitals? Civilians? Families? Children? Energy infrastructure?
I call that following the Wests lead in multiple wars.
Fantastic logic: All murderers are free to murder because somebody else once murdered.
The first 4 are NOT the primary targets..
Captitalisation doesn’t make it so.
One of the purposes of territorial wars is to terrorise the invaded population into surrender. The US did it in Iraq in 2003; the Russians are doing it in Ukraine now.
One of the first targets for both the US and Russia was energy infrastructure.
Quite correct. The author of the article is delusional. Worldwide population will soon be in terminal decline, incl the West. The EU and all destroying their own industrial base at the behest of the US……..madness. The US terrorism and home-grown genocides are a fact, commonly glossed over by the MSM. What is wrong with EU politicians….after all, US bribery to facilitate betrayal of their population has its limits I’d have thought.?
Do you actually know anything about the EU and/or can you offer specifics? You’d be pleased to know that Tony Abbott’s chum Hungarian PM ‘mini Putin’ Orban would probably agree with you…..
Note accidentally omitted: Not real name.
That open secret has already been debunked by the following open secret:
Possibly more about US domestic politics, using a mask of anti-imperialism that is then used to denigrate Biden Democrats and bipartisanship of GOP on Ukraine, with talking points shared by right wing media, faux left and the Koch’s GOP Freedom Caucus (similar to the Lib’s ‘Wolverines’).
Careful what you wish for in this Orwellian world of right wing ‘libertarian traps’… also goes for Mearsheimer (Charles Koch), Sachs (Rockefeller Foundation), Kissinger-Chomsky (Nixon’s think tank, now Koch linked), Ritter (Rand Paul), The Nation/CJR and in Europe the far right.
Interestingly another media outlet i.e. MB criticises Crikey as ‘left’; not by the predictable flood of pro Putin subscribers and comments….
Forgot, Tucker Carlson et al. in right wing media would agree with many Putin fan boys and girls; what does that say?
Where are all these ‘pro-Putin’ comments? Lots of comments calling out the simplistic propaganda narratives of the MSM, but it is possible to disbelieve simplistic propaganda and also believe that Putin is an evil war criminal. We are not all black-and-white, goodie-baddie simpletons.
I’ll write this slowly so you understand….. e.g. constant denigration &/or casting doubts around Zelensky, and negative claims made about sovereign Ukraine have the same effect….
You’re obviously a black-and-white, either-or, goodies-baddies person. ‘You’re either with us, or against us.’ The same simplistic mind-set that Koch et al feed off and promote.
Reality is usually both-and, but some people are incapable of this level of cognitive complexity.
There you go, shooting messengers to preserve the black & white of faux anti-imperialist messaging of Anglo left & right; with nothing offered to challenge any ‘cognitive complexity’, through embracing outliers and ignoring credible analysis.
a historic folly that left Russia economically, demographically and geopolitically worse off.
Whereas Ukraine…..
This is how Western ‘think tanks’ implicitly admit the game is over. That Russian dominance is certain and the war will only end when Western powers stop sending military hardware to Ukraine. Meanwhile many more Ukrainians die.
Of course there are no victims in Russia in the minds of Putin boosters?
Is this article a joke?
It does not take a cynic to note that the US is now the largest exporter of natural gas in the world thanks to replacing Russian gas to Europe when in 2016 its gas exports were non existent. Economists and analysts then were questioning the logic to why US gas companies were ordering fleets of gas transport ships to be built when they had no export market for the gas. They knew something was being cooked up.
Oh really?
The thing that inspired more LNG tankers were the number of US gas projects coming online………
……..not some conspiracy theory.
They had saturated the local market and would be obliged to export the new production.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/shipping-companies-banking-on-gas-carriers-as-lng-demand-grows-11552555800
Demand didn’t take off until AFTER the invasion…..
https://www.reuters.com/article/cbusiness-us-markets-stocks-usa-weekahea-idCAKCN0QD01C20150808
https://lloydslist.maritimeintelligence.informa.com/LL1143844/How-tankers-sold-in-the-red-hot-tanker-sale-and-purchase-market-are-supercharging-dark-fleet-oil-trades
So obvious, you have to wonder why Putin didn’t think of it.
Where do you think the Russians could get the several million soldiers required to garrison a country of forty million partisans?
How would they pay for it?
How many of their soldiers would die every day?
It doesn’t matter because Putin and his fossil-fuel oligarchs won’t pay for it or die for it.
Silly solipsistic, syllogistic solecism – the west of the Ukraine will be gobbled up by Poland, Hungary & Romania (all of which have historically sound claims to various bits) if they want the pieces left from a corrupt, basket case failed state.
Russia need only the garrison the front line of the eastern oblasts of Donbas & Luhansk which were, are & will remain Russian – ethnically, culturally & linguistically – long after Zelenskyy succumbs to a cocaine O/D.
I have been puzzled for many months why the USA wants to destroy Germany, just wanting a marketing opportunity for gas seemed petty. Then I saw a video of a speech at a Washington think tank in 2013 where the speaker was discussing the problem a German and Russian alliance would pose for US hegemony, German industrialisaton and Russian natural resources. It was a light bulb moment.
I take it that was an incandescent bulb rather than an LED?
Must be true if you heard it in a think-tank.
Yes, mate. The US openly talks of how it goes about maintaining its hegemony, and people like you stand there with your heads in the sand pretending it isn’t happening.
No mate, I’ve never denied that the US wants to maintain its hegemony. But it doesn’t make any sense for the US to destroy Germany in order to market gas. That’s an incredible simplification that places a single possible motive above all competing motives.
Don’t presume someone is an ostrich just because they don’t fall for any old nonsense purportedly sourced from a think-tank.
It’s still evidence, whether you believe it ‘makes sense’ or not. Most of what the US and Putin do makes no sense to me, but obviously makes sense to them.
That is the old terror of the West, unification of Central Asia.
German brains & organisation with Russian resources would be a formidable bloc – which Thatcher well understood (see the Great Game of Raj, Mackinder, Mahal et al) in opposing German reunification in 1991.
No, crackpot theories of Dugin et al. who also see China as a threat to Russia’s interests, that needs to be taken apart…. while in reality China may be a bigger existential threat to Russia than the ‘west’, NATO, EU, Anglo Saxons etc. (who had been joined by Putin’s elites preferring to live in the EU &/or the ‘west’…..)
At least you have woken up to it.
You cite a ‘think tank’ but don’t say which one e.g. Heritage?
Does it matter? There are many analyses and policy documents emanating from the US establishment that openly discuss how the US should and does maintain its hegemony – militarily, politically and economically.
If so many in the US, where are these (credible) sources and why ignore excellent analysis from Europe? Obsessed about the US and reflecting talking points of Tucker Carlson at Fox News etc. and the faux anti-imperialist left?
If you’re not familiar with the evidence of deliberate US/NATO provocation of this war, starting in the mid 1990’s, then you are not in a position to comment. This war did not start in 2022 – that was just the inevitable (and intentional) outcome of a long series of events over almost three decades.
So you agree then. RW talking points and how too many inc. LNP types around Murdoch/Fox & Koch think tanks (inc. illiberal Hungary Abbott, Downer, Dreher, Mearsheimer, Sachs et al.) concur with Putin’s policies of anti-woke, anti-LGBT, anti climate science, anti-environment etc., in support of authoritarian and corrupt white Christian nationalism, looking to the past…..
No, I don’t agree with any of those things. AND I don’t agree with Putin’s evil invasion of Ukraine. AND I don’t agree with Western (especially US) actions over several decades that have helped the development of these evils by containing and threatening Russia, opposing Russian incorporation into Europe, assisting Russian kleptocrats to impoverish Russians so that they vote for a strongman like Putin – all done to maintain and strengthen US economic and military hegemony and to enrich the arms manufacturers and their puppets in US politics without caring a rats for the Russian or any other Slavic peoples.
Can I say it yet again – it’s both-and, not either-or.
Whatever you are proposing misses an essential element, what does Putin actually propose for negotiations and sustainable peace?
I don’t know, because the Western media censor it out. Going back to the Minsk agreements would probably give us a good idea.
If you say so? So you agree then with RW talking points and how too many inc. LNP types around Anglo RW media & Koch think tanks (inc. illiberal Hungary Abbott, Downer, Dreher, Mearsheimer, Sachs et al.) concur with Putin’s policies of anti-woke, anti-LGBT, anti climate science, anti-environment etc., in support of authoritarian and corrupt white Christian nationalism, looking to the past…..
No need to worry, then.
Does anyone remember this moment aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln?
“Major combat operations in Iraq have ended,” Bush said, the infamous “Mission Accomplished” banner hovering over him. “In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”
All he regretted 8 years later was the banner optics.
“It sent the wrong message. We were trying to say something differently but, nevertheless, it conveyed a different message.”
And 20 years later some of us are cheerleading another insane, fossil-fuel-headed leader unleashing war, death and destruction for power and influence.
I don’t see anyone ‘cheerleading’ Putin. Unless one is a right-wing simpleton, it is possible to disbelieve Western propaganda and believe that Putin is bad news.
Read the comments above, Peter. Plenty of right-wing simpletonia there if that’s what you want to call it.
Why?
Why is defending his country and countrymen from ZUS hegemony so wrong in your eyes?
Who are we talking about?
If it’s Zelensky, I don’t blame him for defending his country, but I think he’s a fool for letting his country and countrymen be suckered or bullied by the US into being the battle-ground and cannon fodder for the US’ coldly cynical war to weaken Russia. A couple of times before and since the Russian invasion Zelensky has talked of negotiating a settlement, but each time someone has told him to forget the idea.
Putin is a power-hungry murdering bastard, but there are only two ways this war will end – either a negotiated settlement or the annihilation of Ukraine. The US doesn’t care about the latter, as long as it weakens Russia.
Got that arse round, or at least very confused…. makes the basic mistake of claiming Zelensky has to do something while deflecting from the reality of Putin who has no constraints?
And you’re making the basic mistake of ignoring the last 30 years of deliberate and well-evidenced US and NATO policy of containing and weakening Russia and any Russia-Europe economic conglomerate – ever since the US, UK, France, Germany and NATO all promised Russia that NATO would not move ‘one inch eastward’ form the German border. This war did not start a year ago.
When you have a mad dog (Putin) growling in the corner, only a fool would start poking it with a stick. Only an evil bastard (the USA) would encourage their kid to poke the mad dog for their own evil purposes.
Substantive evidence for e.g. assumed Russian military power on a ‘special operation’ (that has been bogged down e.g. stuck at Bakhmut), while implicitly deflecting from or ignoring Putin by claiming bullies should be left alone?
Popular and lazy in the Anglosphere to be contrarian and blame ‘the west’, NATO, ‘Anglo-Saxons’, wokeness, US, EU etc., but try analysis from Central Eastern European states, the Balkans and EU, with reality on the ground vs. ideology?
Tucker Carlson Fox News? Koch linked think tanks &/or ageing academic grifters? Kissinger?
Point to someone here who is cheer-leading Putin.
Focusing on and blaming everything else e.g. US etc., while warning nations off action against Putin as he may react negatively? Implicitly blaming Ukraine… spineless and ignorant.
That would be the holograph simulacrum ‘Joe Biden’.
Is ‘Joe Biden’ both a holograph and a simulacrum?
You have to wonder why, if they were going to simply create a President like some sort of Frankenstein monster, the Dems at the pizza parlour didn’t get Bill Gates to create something a bit more dynamic? You know? A sort of younger, more fluent, less unsteady on his feet President to steal the US election from Trump.