(CNN) — The biggest problem for Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, in 2023 will be fueling his war in Ukraine, both in men and materially.
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On a visit to a weapons factory in mid-January, he praised the workers for ramping up production 3 shifts a day 24/7. He told them that they would be exempt from being called up for military service in the Ukraine.
Hundreds of thousands of military-age men fled Russia last year for fear of being drafted.
More than 100,000 Russian servicemen are believed to have already been killed in Ukraine.
It is the most unpopular feature of Putin’s war so far, more recruitment may breed more resentment towards him.
But at the rate at which he burns soldiers on the front line, it means this dilemma will only get worse.
Economy
Your second biggest problem will be paying to feed the war.
International economic sanctions are beginning to take their toll, and if it chews into the pockets of Russian citizens, then Putin has a problem.
The dangerous tightrope walk that Putin is trying to get ahead involves keeping the value of the ruble high, keeping people in jobs. This is only going to get more difficult: a cold winter next year and the increase of impoverished Russians on the streets might increase the risk of a revolt once morest the war and once morest Putin himself.
And this will play into Putin’s long-term concerns: the 2024 elections.
Support for Putin
In 2021 he signed a law that allows him to remain leader until 2036, but he has built a house of cards. Russian elections are neither free nor fair.
Putin has eliminated his dissidents by locking up opposition leaders, seizing control of all the media.
But even that requires Russian power brokers to engage in mafia-style fighting once morest one another.
If you can’t make a profit from the war in Ukraine—or worse, if it starts to accumulate losses— His grip on the power play in Russia might be weakened.
All of that is still a long way off; his immediate problem is paying the bill for being “the butcher” in the Ukraine.