RUSSIA MONITOR MONTHLY 05/2021

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A Month After the Collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, the U. S. Banking System is Still Working

A Month After the Collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, the U. S. Banking System is Still Working

The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank has raised fears of a recurrence of the 2008 financial crisis. Fear of the next global recession was further compounded by the unhealed wounds associated with the coronavirus pandemic and the ongoing war in Ukraine. However, after almost a month since the collapse of SVB, it can be concluded that this time the U. S. financial system has dealt with the March tide of failures of three U. S. banks.

Russia Plans to Station Tactical Nuclear Weapons in Belarus

Russia Plans to Station Tactical Nuclear Weapons in Belarus

Russian President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials have invoked the use of nuclear weapons more than once since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine. Putin recently said that Russia has struck a deal with neighboring Belarus to station tactical nuclear weapons on its territory. Russia plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus, President Vladimir Putin told Saturday state broadcaster Rossiya 24.

Ukrainian Cabinet Appoints New Anti-Corruption Chief

Ukrainian Cabinet Appoints New Anti-Corruption Chief

The Ukrainian government has named a new director of the country’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) from among three candidates in a live-streamed meeting of the Cabinet of Ministers that met all the requirements set by both the European Union and financial institutions worldwide. It is to tackle corruption, which is a Western condition for its assistance to Ukraine. Despite that, Ukrainian media outlets and NGOs claim that a new head of the anti-corruption agency has links to Andriy Yermak, a powerful presidential aide.

How Long Will Russia-Ukraine War Last?

How Long Will Russia-Ukraine War Last?

Russia is ready to continue the war in Ukraine for another two years, the chief of Ukraine’s military intelligence said, adding sanctions could make put an end to the war earlier than expected. A similar forecast had been delivered by Lithuania’s military intelligence outlet.

Schwedt Refinery Remains Within Germany’s Government’s Mandate

Schwedt Refinery Remains Within Germany’s Government’s Mandate

Germany’s Federal Administrative Court threw out a case brought by Russian oil company Rosneft against Berlin’s move to place its German subsidiaries under trusteeship and take control of the Schwedt refinery. The German government seized control of Rosneft Deutschland and RN Refining & Marketing last September. Both had a controlling stake in a refinery in Schwedt in eastern Germany.

IMF Approves Loan Package for Ukraine

IMF Approves Loan Package for Ukraine

The International Monetary Fund said its executive board had approved a four-year $15.6 billion loan program for Ukraine, the IMF said in a statement on March 21. The loan is the first major conventional financing program approved by the IMF for a country involved in a large-scale war.

Ukraine Expels Pro-Russian Clergy from Kyiv Pechersk Lavra

Ukraine Expels Pro-Russian Clergy from Kyiv Pechersk Lavra

Orthodox monks who had been ordered out of a monastery in Kyiv refused to leave as a deadline to vacate the complex expired back on March 29. Metropolitan Pavlo, an abbot of the monastery, said that the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) would not leave the site pending the outcome of a lawsuit to stop the eviction. Force will not be used to evict representatives of the UOC from the Pechersk Lavra in Kyiv, according to the Ukrainian authorities. But they have more tools––as they can ban the church.

Russian Oil Revenues and Exports Fall Amid Sanctions

Russian Oil Revenues and Exports Fall Amid Sanctions

February crude oil and product exports averaged 7.5 million barrels a day, the lowest since September 2022 and a drop by 0.5 million bpd from January 2023. The flow of money into the country from international oil sales fell to $11.6 billion in February, down 43 percent from a year earlier and down $2.7 billion from January 2023.

Russia’s Budget Deficit Soars Considerably As Energy Revenues Drop Sharply

Russia’s Budget Deficit Soars Considerably As Energy Revenues Drop Sharply

The beginning of this year looks gloomy for the Russian federal budget. Russia’s monthly fiscal deficit reached a record high amid the EU-imposed ban on seaborne crude oil exports and the increasing operational cost of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The government is not likely to stick to the budget nor will it plug a budget shortfall. However, this does not prompt any disaster for Russia––at least now.

Putin Plans to Deploy Nuclear Weapons to Belarus: Political Move Not Military One

Putin Plans to Deploy Nuclear Weapons to Belarus: Political Move Not Military One

Russia will station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, President Vladimir Putin said. Not surprisingly, Moscow has long been bracing for that move. Furthermore, it is unlikely to change the military situation as Russia has already deployed nuclear weapons to its Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad. Putin’s remarks in the interview come as a political move amid its war against Ukraine and close ties to Belarus.

Bakhmut: A Russian Trap. Part 2

Bakhmut: A Russian Trap. Part 2

It has been seven months into the battle of Bakhmut, where Russian forces have suffered significant losses and made no progress. Yevgeny Prigozhin, the combative boss of Russia’s Wagner private military group, had hoped seizing the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut would bring him a moment of glory but now believes his mercenaries are no longer capable of capturing Bakhmut. Perhaps this is where Russia is poised to suffer a heavy defeat in a Ukrainian counteroffensive campaign. But this is exactly what happens when military strategies give way to political calculations.

Bakhmut: A Russian Trap. Part 1

Bakhmut: A Russian Trap. Part 1

Many believed in mid-March the fate of Bakhmut was sealed, with the city doomed to fall. Yet after Ukrainian forces pulled out of the city’s east and safeguarded supply lines south of Bakhmut, Russia is unlikely to capture it for a long time now. Moscow seems to have understood this and thus Russian forces reduced the intensity of their assaults as they move troops elsewhere.

Syrian President Assad Arrives in Moscow Amid Ukrainian Sanctions and Russian Provocations in Syria

Syrian President Assad Arrives in Moscow Amid Ukrainian Sanctions and Russian Provocations in Syria

The visit of the Syrian dictator to Moscow coincided with an aggressive Russian campaign against the United States in Syria and Ukraine’s decision to blacklist some individuals and companies in Syria. The Middle Eastern country is strategically important to Moscow. Whatever happens in Ukraine, Russia will make efforts to maintain both political and military influence in Syria.

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