Vladimir Putin blames an Islamist attack on Ukraine and America
How to use a disastrous security failure to bolster dictatorship
Few Russian leaders apart from Stalin have been as obsessed with their own security, while failing so spectacularly to provide it for their people, as Vladimir Putin. From the bombings of apartment blocks in various cities in 1999, to the terrorist attack on March 22nd at Crocus City Hall, a concert venue in Moscow, his main concern has always been his own grip on power. Predictably, Russia’s president has tried to turn the latest security failure into a justification for his dictatorial rule and for his war against Ukraine, which has already cost hundreds of thousands of lives.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The uses of terror”
Europe March 30th 2024
- Ukraine is in a race against time to fortify its front line
- Vladimir Putin blames an Islamist attack on Ukraine and America
- Why the French are drinking less wine
- Carles Puigdemont aims to reignite Catalan separatism
- Turkey’s opposition hopes for a shake-up in local elections
- How Europe’s fear of migrants came to dominate its foreign policy
Discover more
A harrowing rape trial in France has revived debate about consent
Anything less than yes is no
How the wolf went from folktale villain to culture-war scapegoat
The startling return of wolves in Europe raises hackles
The Netherlands’ new hard-right government is a mess
Conflicts over asylum, farms and the constitution could bring it down
Ukraine’s Roma have suffered worse than most in the war
Half of them may have fled
Pedro Sánchez clings to office at a cost to Spain’s democracy
His opponents accuse him of subverting the constitution
Why the hard-right Herbert Kickl is unlikely to be Austria’s next chancellor
In spite of his strong win