Russia mutiny: Hope turns to indifference in Ukraine but some believe this is only act one of Putin's drama
According to an article published by Sky News, Vladimir Putin has been weakened, but he outfoxed a battle-hardened leader and still runs a Kremlin bent on waging war in Ukraine. Caliber.Az reprints this article.
For much of June 24, it seemed Ukraine's enemies were about to turn on themselves.
Russians killing Russians was a spectacle Ukrainians would watch with relish.
If that sounds bloodthirsty, imagine parts of your country being violated for a year-and-a-half by an enemy committing every war crime in the book. Rape, looting, kidnapping, massacre, constant attacks on civilian targets including a dam.
By the end of the day, there was a sense of crushing disappointment. "Everyone is sorry," one Ukrainian said, "because we had hope".
Ukrainian leader President Zelenskyy says the events over the last 24 hours show Russia is in chaos, with no one in control.
And claims from Western analysts that Putin has been weakened by the episode are also some consolation.
Russia looks militarily weak too. Taking an army within a couple of hundred kilometres of Moscow can be done it seems in less than a day.
But the fact remains that the gravest threat to Putin yet has failed and Ukrainians will be asking themselves this: if Russia's dictator could outfox a warlord with a battle-hardened army of mercenaries, can he be threatened by anything else?
And while he remains in the Kremlin the war goes on until his forces can be defeated.
Not much sign of that yet.
Ukrainians know, though, that nothing in Russia is quite what it seems.
"I still don't think that this is a long truce," said one. "Still, they made noise, scared the Russians, showed Putin's weakness. I don't think that they directly agreed on everything, someone can violate the agreements."
There is the sense here that we have seen only act one of this drama play out so far.
There is the hope Russia will be weakened on the frontline most - where it counts for Ukrainians two weeks into their counteroffensive.
For now, though, the war goes on with all that means for people trying to get by.
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Before the coup fizzled yesterday we went to the site of Russia's most recent strike. A hamlet on the outskirts of Dnipro.
A massive hole had ripped up the street, vegetables blasted from their beds, walls flattened and roofs lifted off. There was no military target nearby.
Eleven people had been injured, three of them children.
The news from Russia was of little consequence. They seemed too tired from the attack and a year-and-a-half of war to be overly excited.
We will believe it when we see it seemed the sentiment. That scepticism seems to have been well founded, for now.