Opinion
Guest
Essay
For
Putin, the War in Iran Changed Everything
March 25,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/25/opinion/russia-putin-iran-war.html
By
Mikhail Zygar
Mr. Zygar
is a Russian journalist and the author of the newsletter The Last Pioneer.
At the
start of the year, the Russian economy looked to be giving way. Under the
strain of war and sanctions, revenues were falling, production was shrinking
and trade was running low. With rising tariffs, credit was prohibitively
expensive and borrowing all but impossible: A wave of bankruptcies was on the
horizon. In late January, Russia was forced to sell oil to India at just $22
per barrel, about a third of the market rate. As a symbol of unsustainability,
it was hard to beat.
President
Vladimir Putin has heard such complaints throughout the war. Yet, according to
those around him, he has chosen largely not to listen. Officials and business
leaders, for their part, understood that the continuation of the war was his
absolute priority and that the country’s economic situation was of little
consequence. But in February something shifted. Mr. Putin began, suddenly, to
pay attention to the flagging economy. There were even signs he might be
changing his mind on negotiations with Ukraine, perhaps seeking an exit from
the conflict.
Then came
the war in Iran. In one swoop, the conditions for conciliation were overturned.
Amid buoyant oil prices, Western division and American overreach, the pressure
on Mr. Putin to come to terms ebbed away. By a strange twist of history, the
start of the war in Iran halted the prospect of ending the war in Ukraine — at
the very moment when Mr. Putin appeared ready to consider it.
In
February, Mr. Putin seemed ready to change course and overhaul his negotiating
team. Kirill Dmitriev, the Kremlin’s chief envoy who is widely seen as an
insubstantial figure with no real mandate, was reportedly on the verge of
dismissal. The leading candidate to replace him was Igor Sechin, the head of
the state oil giant Rosneft. Regarded as Mr. Putin’s right-hand man, Mr. Sechin
previously oversaw Russia’s relationships with Latin America, as well as the
cultivation of close relationships with American oil executives. Here was an
indication that Mr. Putin might begin to take talks seriously.
At the
same time, rumors began circulating of an imminent large-scale reshuffle of the
Russian government. If Mr. Putin were to engage properly in negotiations and
pursue peace with Ukraine, he would have to entirely rebuild the structure of
power. According to people close to the Kremlin, that could include dismissing
the current government. Clouds had already begun to gather over Prime Minister
Mikhail Mishustin: Individuals close to him have recently become defendants in
criminal cases.
We will
never know what might have happened. On Feb. 28, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was
killed in a joint U.S.-Israeli attack; in the days that followed, everything
changed. Oil prices surged above $100 a barrel and, in a major reversal, the
United States lifted sanctions on Russian oil. Demand soared for Russian
fertilizer as the world reeled from disruptions to food supply. All of a
sudden, the economic problems bedeviling Russia seemed to evaporate.
What’s
more, divisions deepened between the United States and its NATO allies, who
refused to send ships to the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump called it a
“very foolish mistake.” For Mr. Putin, whose foreign policy has been built
around cultivating disorder in the West, this was welcome. Equally important is
the absorption of America’s attention in the Middle East, pushing Ukraine far
from mind. It’s not just attention that is being diverted: The United States is
burning through weaponry and ammunition that could otherwise be sent to
Ukraine.
In
America, too, the Kremlin spies an advantage. It’s not hard to see how a
protracted conflict with Iran could erode Mr. Trump’s political standing and
weaken the Republican Party, making the upcoming midterm elections especially
precarious. This reinforces Mr. Putin’s conviction about the transience of
American politics. Mr. Trump, like any American president, is a temporary
figure: A new administration will eventually arrive, potentially with a very
different approach to Russia. The war in Iran may hasten that shift. In this
view, concessions on Ukraine would be pointless.
These are
all considerable boons for the Kremlin. But the money now flooding into Russia
is by no means a guarantee that Mr. Putin will be able to continue the war
indefinitely. On the contrary, some close to the government believe that the
current situation will be short-lived. By May, many in Moscow expect, the war
in Iran could be over and sanctions against Russia reinstated. For the troubled
Russian economy, there is no permanent salvation.
The
situation inside Russia is becoming turbulent, too. Ahead of parliamentary
elections this fall, the Kremlin is in a state of near-paranoid anticipation,
nervously flip-flopping on plans to stuff Parliament with veterans and dealing
harshly with a pro-regime blogger who publicly turned on Mr. Putin. It has
moved to block Telegram, the country’s most widely used messaging platform,
while internet outages are becoming increasingly frequent in Moscow and St.
Petersburg. The rumors of sweeping government reshuffles have not gone away.
A level
of public discontent that until recently would have been unthinkable is now
part of daily life. Before too long, it seems, Mr. Putin will have to make a
consequential choice: either agree to some form of de-escalation in Ukraine,
potentially including an end to the war, or move in the opposite direction —
tightening controls across the board, even to the point of a new mobilization.
It’s impossible to predict what decision Mr. Putin will make. But a large
factor will be whether America continues in its own war.


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