By Andrew ChakhoyanNY Post (Feb. 7, 2025)
https://nypost.com/2025/02/07/opinion/russias-war-with-ukraine-is-taking-a-heavy-toll-on-its-economy/When a supposed global superpower like Russia begs Iran for drones, turns to North Korea for artillery shells and watches its Black Sea fleet dismantled by a country without a navy, you know something is off. Before 2022, Russia’s military boasted of being second only to the United States.
Now — as the bitter joke goes — it’s the second strongest in Ukraine.
Trump calling President Vladimir Putin out is both timely and necessary.
He is right: Russia’s economy is “failing” and “IT’S ONLY GOING TO GET WORSE.”
Inflation soared to 9.5% last year, nearly triple the US rate, driven by reckless military spending. But these figures should be taken with pounds of salt.
In 2024 alone, staples like potatoes and onions saw price spikes of 91% and 47% respectively.
The Central Bank’s desperate response — hiking interest rates to 21% — speaks volumes about the state of the economy. Since mid-2024, the ruble has plunged by over 20%, now literally worth just a penny....
All is not well at the front lines either.
In just the past seven months, Russian military casualties have soared to nearly 300,000 killed or wounded — almost matching the previous two years combined. Unsurprisingly, Moscow is struggling to maintain its force levels.
Estimated recruitment rates of 500-600 troops per day meet only half the needed replacements. Meanwhile, Russia’s “meatgrinder” assault tactics have pushed average daily casualties to a stunning 1,570 as of December 2024 — all for minimal territorial gains.
The Kremlin now offers unprecedented loan forgiveness up to 10 million rubles ($94,500) as incentives to recruits: desperately trying to avoid another unpopular mobilization that could trigger mass emigration and domestic unrest....