Hubris and isolation led Vladimir Putin to misjudge Ukraine
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/04/11/putin-misjudged-ukraine-hubris-isolation/" The Russian leader notoriously doesn't use a smartphone and rarely accesses the Internet. He spent years snuffing out Russian independent news and erecting an authoritarian system of government devoid of constructive feedback or dissent. By early this year, according to U.S. and European officials, he was operating in an echo chamber, surrounded by advisers who, according to Galeotti, "had learned you do not bring bad news to the czar's table." Putin's isolation, the officials said, had been compounded by the coronavirus and his limited contact with others.
… Putin's misconception about Ukrainian weakness was paired with a swaggering view of Russian power. He famously boasted to a top European official in late 2014 that he could easily seize Kyiv "in two weeks" if he desired a misconception he appeared to continue believing until he attempted to do so.
"He has an unwavering belief in his ability to control events," a senior NATO intelligence official said.
Perhaps no moment underscored the level of misconception more than the attempt by elite Russian paratroopers at the outset of the invasion to land at the Hostomel cargo airport northwest of Kyiv apparently with the intention of sweeping breezily into the Ukrainian capital.
"Just looking at how this played out, it feels there was an enormous amount of arrogance," a European official said. "You look at the insertion of the airborne forces at Hostomel airport, which was clearly designed to do a decapitation [mission] in Kyiv and they got smashed."
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