Kremlin Faces Open Revolt Inside - Jason Jay Smart [View all]
Russias economy is not what the Kremlin says it is. In this video, I break down why Swedish, German, and Latvian intelligence are all pointing to the same conclusion: Russias real budget damage is worse, its war economy is under more pressure than advertised, and the official story is starting to crack. Oil and gas revenue has fallen sharply, sanctions evasion is getting more expensive, inflation looks worse than the public numbers suggest, and the real strain behind Russias long-war posture is becoming harder to hide.
That pressure is no longer visible only from outside Russia. Elvira Nabiullina has warned about labor shortages and worsening external conditions. Other voices closer to the system are also sounding more alarmed. I look at the real math behind Russias deficit, the hidden cost of sanctions evasion, the weakening energy picture, and the signs that the Kremlins economic buffer is thinner than it appears.
That changes more than the Russian economy. It changes the war in Ukraine, the leverage around negotiations, and the meaning of Zelenskys warnings about a bad deal. If Russia is weaker than advertised, then Ukraines position looks different, Putins options are narrower, and any outside push for a deal has to be judged against a much more fragile Russian reality. This is the real math behind Russias war economy and the next phase of the war in Ukraine.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 - Intro: The Kremlins Economic Mirage
02:45 - Public Backlash: Why Putins Allies are Turning
05:54 - Sanction Drain: How China Exploits Russia
09:22 - Labor Crisis: The Human Cost Inside Russia
11:20 - Economic Decay: 26 Years of Kremlin Failure
13:09 - Regime Collapse: The End of Putins Rule