Putin Doesn't Want Peace. He Wants More Time
It should be obvious by now that Russian President Vladimir Putin is playing for time. His negotiators are dragging out peace talks, making enough conciliatory noises to fend off renewed US pressure while Russian missiles and drones pound Ukraine. If the White House wants to broker a lasting settlement, its going to have to make continued war more costly for him.
With Russian forces registering little progress on the front lines, the Kremlin has intensified its attacks on Ukrainian civilians. Earlier this month, on the eve of negotiations in Abu Dhabi, Russia launched 450 drones and 71 missiles at Ukraines energy grid in -20C (-4F) temperatures. Days later, Russia struck again, targeting the high-voltage transmission lines that form the grids backbone.
Each strike compounds previous damage. Ukraines largest private power producer, DTEK, says roughly 80% of its thermal generating capacity was destroyed or damaged. Those fuel-fired plants, which accounted for roughly two-thirds of Ukraines thermal capacity before the war, provide both electricity and district heating. Ukrainians now face not only blackouts but also freezing homes, stalled elevators in tall buildings and disrupted water supplies. Kyiv residents get only a few hours of electricity a day. The citys mayor says nearly 600,000 people have fled the capital.
The Kremlins aim is twofold: to freeze Ukrainian civilians into submission, and to convince the world that Russias victory is inevitable and aid to Ukraine merely delays that outcome at needless expense. In fact, after nearly four years of fighting, Russia controls only a fifth of Ukraines territory and has made paltry territorial gains since early in the war at enormous cost. An estimated 1.2 million Russian soldiers have been killed, wounded or are missing. Roughly 40% of federal spending now goes to defense and security, draining Russia
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2026-02-17/war-in-ukraine-putin-s-energy-strikes-demand-real-consequences?srnd=homepage-americas