The Kremlin’s inner polling reveals solely 25% of Russians favor persevering with the battle in Ukraine and 55% help peace talks, an impartial Russian media outlet says.
Meduza says it obtained entry to the survey performed final month by the Russian Federal Protective Service. The outcomes are markedly completely different from a July survey that confirmed 57% of Russians favored the battle.
Denis Volkov, director of the impartial sociological institute Levada Center in Moscow, mentioned the share of Russians favoring peace talks and rejecting the battle started rising quickly with the September “partial mobilization” draft that added 300,000 troopers.
“This is sheer reluctance to take part in the war personally,” Volkov instructed Meduza. “Now the risks are greater, and people want to start the talks.”
The British Defense Ministry mentioned the outcomes of the FPS poll have been in step with one performed in October, including: “With Russia unlikely to achieve major battlefield successes in the next several months, maintaining even tacit approval of the war amongst the population is likely to be increasingly difficult for the Kremlin.”
Other developments:
►Russian crude has already fallen to near $60 per barrel despite the international benchmark Brent that closed Friday at $85.42.
►The office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the cap was too high, urging adoption of a $30 cap.
RUSSIA REJECTS $60 CAP:West could be cut off from Russian oil, but has been shrinking purchases for months
Russia calls for ban on oil price caps
A high Russian official referred to as Sunday for a world ban on oil worth caps, in the future earlier than a $60 per barrel purchase cap on Russian oil announced by the European Union and U.S. goes into effect. Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said Russia would trim production rather then sell under the cap.
“We will sell oil and oil products to those countries that will work with us on market conditions,” Novak said. He said the limit being imposed by the U.S. and much of Europe “runs counter to all the rules of the World Trade Organization.”
Russia has been adding tankers to its shipping fleet in hopes of selling more oil to China, India and other nations since Europe has vastly cut back on pipeline purchases. But Western insurers are banned from insuring cargos not being traded under the cap, adding to Russia’s export woes.
Mikhail Ulyanov, Russia’s representative to international organizations in Vienna, Austria, tweeted that Europe will be forced to live without Russian oil.
“Very soon the #EU will blame #Russia for using oil as a weapon,” Ulyanov said.
Blinken calls Russia’s war strategy ‘barbaric,’ says sanctions are working
Secretary of State Antony Blinken called the Russian assault on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure ahead of winter “barbaric” and said the U.S. is trying to supply the parts necessary to restore it.
In a CNN interview Sunday, Blinken additionally mentioned the Biden administration is working with Congress on laws that will label Russia a state sponsor of terrorism whereas avoiding some of the unintended penalties such a designation might convey.
And though the quite a few sanctions the U.S. and its allies have imposed on Russia have not deterred the Kremlin’s aggression towards Ukraine, Blinken mentioned they’re having an influence. Specifically, he mentioned the punitive measures are curbing Russia’s capacity to switch weapons and modernize its economic system.
“Every single day that goes by with these sanctions in place the burden on Russia gets heavier and heavier, its ability to prosecute these kinds of wars gets weaker and weaker,” Blinken said.
Kherson still being battered despite retreat of Russian troops
Russian forces fled the southern city of Kherson last month in a much-ballyhooed victory for Ukraine, but the region continues to be hammered by Russian shelling. Power outages are frequent, and Kherson regional Gov. Yaroslav Yanushkevich said evacuations of civilians stuck in Russian-held territory outside the city would resume temporarily.
Russian forces moved to the Dnieper River’s eastern bank last month. Yanushkevich said a ban on crossing the waterway would be lifted during daylight hours for Ukrainian citizens who “didn’t have time to go away the quickly occupied territory.” His announcement cited a “possible intensification of hostilities in this area.”
Kherson is one of 4 areas that Russian chief Vladimir Putin illegally annexed in September and vowed to defend as Russian territory.
Contributing: The Associated Press