# > Putin is down. This is the time to start kicking him
>
> ***The West must ensure that Volodymyr Zelensky is empowered to secure a just peace for the Ukrainian people***
>
> *Published 11 May 2026 5:02pm BST*
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>
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> Russian President Vladimir Putin has attempted to project an image of strength and inevitability over Russia’s disastrous war in Ukraine. Yet the reality on display during Saturday’s deeply underwhelming Victory Day parade in Moscow told an altogether different story.
>
> For the first time in two decades, Russia could not muster a single tank in what is traditionally the Kremlin’s grand annual exhibition of military might – an event Putin himself describes as a warning to Russia’s enemies. What the world witnessed was not power, but weakness: a diminished parade, hollow symbolism, and a regime increasingly fearful of its own vulnerability.
>
> Speaking after the scaled-back spectacle, Putin declared: “I think that the matter is coming to an end,” referring to what he still absurdly calls his “special military operation” in Ukraine. Yet even the parade itself exposed the Kremlin’s anxiety. With Ukrainian drones and missiles now capable of striking deep inside Russia, Putin clearly dared not risk displaying valuable military hardware at a known time and location. Instead, the regime relied heavily on massed marching formations, including North Korean troops, to create the illusion of scale and strength.
>
> A temporary US-brokered ceasefire undoubtedly allowed the event to proceed without incident, although both Ukraine and Russia later accused one another of breaching the three-day truce. Nevertheless, the atmosphere surrounding the parade was unmistakably subdued.
>
> Even Putin’s speech, usually a lengthy endurance test in which the dictator indulges in imperial nostalgia and Soviet-era rhetoric, was remarkably brief and muted. Gone was the swagger of a leader convinced of inevitable victory. In its place stood a man attempting to justify an increasingly costly and strategically catastrophic war. Putin insisted Russia was fighting a “just” war and described Ukraine as an “aggressive force” being armed by Nato. It is an extraordinary claim from the man who launched an entirely illegal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine more than four years ago, having already illegally annexed Crimea in 2014.
> Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a military parade on Victory Day
> The atmosphere surrounding the parade was unmistakably subdued Credit: Alexander Kazakov
>
> Later, during a press conference, Putin accused the West of fuelling confrontation with Russia. The irony is breathtaking. It is Russia, not the West, that has spent years conducting a sustained hybrid war against Europe and particularly the United Kingdom. The murder of Alexander Litvinenko and the attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury remain chilling reminders of the Kremlin’s willingness to conduct state-sponsored attacks on British soil, alongside relentless cyber warfare, sabotage and espionage across Europe.
>
> Nevertheless, the suggestion of peace emerging from the Kremlin offers some hope for Ukraine’s exhausted civilian population, many of whom have spent years sleeping in underground shelters rather than their own homes. The strategic landscape has shifted dramatically since previous negotiations, when Putin believed he could dictate terms demanding that Ukraine surrender territory, weaken its armed forces and abandon its Western ambitions.
>
> Today, the battlefield reality is moving increasingly in Ukraine’s favour. Ukrainian forces continue to make incremental but meaningful advances while Russia suffers appalling losses in both manpower and equipment. Crucially, Ukraine is now beginning to manoeuvre armour more effectively through what had previously become a static, drone-dominated battlefield. These small tactical gains could soon evolve into something far more significant.
>
> At the same time, Ukraine has demonstrated an increasingly sophisticated ability to strike strategically important targets deep inside Russia, even without large-scale American military support. Critical infrastructure attacks are now placing growing pressure on the Russian economy and exposing the Kremlin’s inability to fully defend its own territory. Putin’s implicit admission that Moscow itself can no longer be guaranteed safety sends a powerful message: Russia’s war is no longer confined to distant frontlines.
>
> All of this comes amid growing signs of unease inside Russia itself. Public criticism of the war, once almost unthinkable, is becoming more visible as ordinary Russians begin to question the price of Putin’s disastrous gamble in Ukraine. This criticism would be even more evident were it not for a recent crackdown on internet services in Russia and the silencing of many dissenting voices.
>
> If Europe, and critically the United States under Donald Trump, remain firmly committed to supporting Kyiv, then the prospect of achieving a just and sustainable peace settlement may now be closer than at any point since the illegal annexation of Crimea over a decade ago.
>
> The responsibility now lies squarely with Western leaders. Britain, under Keir Starmer, still has an important role to play despite years of underinvestment in our own military. Let us hope he still has the bandwidth to lift his head occasionally for a look around as he tries to save his own skin. The British Armed Forces remain highly professional and significant.
>
> What Saturday demonstrated beyond doubt is that Putin is wounded politically, militarily and psychologically. History teaches us that when a dangerous predator is weakened, that is precisely the moment to apply maximum pressure – not to offer concessions for the sake of expediency. The most effective time to kick a man is when he’s down.
>
>
> The West must ensure that Volodymyr Zelensky is empowered to secure a just peace for the Ukrainian people, rather than allowing Putin an escape route simply to bring the fighting to a premature close.
> * Col Hamish de Bretton-Gordon commanded the 1st Royal Tank Regiment and his next book Tank Command is published on June 4 2026*
>
capmilk on
Any time is a good time to kick Putin.
And any reason is a good reason.
Common-Ad6470 on
Indeed, the last thing to do is give Putin a lifeline with a ceasefire, he needs to crash and crash hard.
mattiasso on
The last thing putin will see it’s an open window in a high rise building
Flaky-Gear-1370 on
Don’t tell Donny, he’ll create another crisis to bail out the Russian economy
Minaridev on
And when you get down on your knees tonight
And wish the world away
When you’re fucked up enough to see the light
You’ll pray to die today (You’ll pray to die today)
DavidShaw90s on
It is absolutely insane to me that there are still politicians in the West advocating for a ceasefire right now!
Sorry, but you do not force a negotiated settlement when your enemy is literally too scared to drive a single tank through their own capital city on their biggest national holiday. The fact that Putin had to fill the Red Square with North Korean troops just to make the parade look populated tells you exactly how depleted his reserves actually are! He is terrified of Ukrainian drones hitting Moscow on live television.
The author is 100% right. Dictators only offer peace talks when they are losing and need time to rebuild their supply lines. If the West forces Ukraine to freeze the conflict now just because it is politically convenient, Putin will just spend the next three years churning out artillery and start the whole thing over again.
Now is the exact time to double down on deep strikes inside Russian territory and force the Kremlin to actually feel the economic and structural cost of this war. You don’t let the predator catch its breath.
thinmonkey69 on
Perhaps there is a spot for him at the Mussolineum.
Hot-Rate201 on
Another happy hour of mythology
Pristine-Hand-5074 on
Please kick as strong as its possible.
great_whitehope on
Honestly they need to give them a way out.
With the straight closed, secure peace with promise of using Russian oil in Europe so their economy doesn’t crash.
It’s a win/win. Russia gets to save face and Europe gets energy security until Iran conflict ends.
Tiraloparatras25 on
You half us in the first half. Not gonna lie.
Murky-Ad-6976 on
Yeah yeah whatever bro
StrangerConscious637 on
Putin, Trump and Netanyahu are down…. we should get rid of all 3 fascists at once.
smallstepforman on
Reddit immature delusion, showing the problem with modern education, lack of critical thinking, and the impact of propaganda. 4 legs good, 2 legs bad.
Cr4yz33 on
Waiting for the Internet Comment Etiquette episode with Erik
27 commenti
please do
# > Putin is down. This is the time to start kicking him
>
> ***The West must ensure that Volodymyr Zelensky is empowered to secure a just peace for the Ukrainian people***
>
> *Published 11 May 2026 5:02pm BST*
>
>
>
>
>
> Russian President Vladimir Putin has attempted to project an image of strength and inevitability over Russia’s disastrous war in Ukraine. Yet the reality on display during Saturday’s deeply underwhelming Victory Day parade in Moscow told an altogether different story.
>
> For the first time in two decades, Russia could not muster a single tank in what is traditionally the Kremlin’s grand annual exhibition of military might – an event Putin himself describes as a warning to Russia’s enemies. What the world witnessed was not power, but weakness: a diminished parade, hollow symbolism, and a regime increasingly fearful of its own vulnerability.
>
> Speaking after the scaled-back spectacle, Putin declared: “I think that the matter is coming to an end,” referring to what he still absurdly calls his “special military operation” in Ukraine. Yet even the parade itself exposed the Kremlin’s anxiety. With Ukrainian drones and missiles now capable of striking deep inside Russia, Putin clearly dared not risk displaying valuable military hardware at a known time and location. Instead, the regime relied heavily on massed marching formations, including North Korean troops, to create the illusion of scale and strength.
>
> A temporary US-brokered ceasefire undoubtedly allowed the event to proceed without incident, although both Ukraine and Russia later accused one another of breaching the three-day truce. Nevertheless, the atmosphere surrounding the parade was unmistakably subdued.
>
> Even Putin’s speech, usually a lengthy endurance test in which the dictator indulges in imperial nostalgia and Soviet-era rhetoric, was remarkably brief and muted. Gone was the swagger of a leader convinced of inevitable victory. In its place stood a man attempting to justify an increasingly costly and strategically catastrophic war. Putin insisted Russia was fighting a “just” war and described Ukraine as an “aggressive force” being armed by Nato. It is an extraordinary claim from the man who launched an entirely illegal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine more than four years ago, having already illegally annexed Crimea in 2014.
> Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a military parade on Victory Day
> The atmosphere surrounding the parade was unmistakably subdued Credit: Alexander Kazakov
>
> Later, during a press conference, Putin accused the West of fuelling confrontation with Russia. The irony is breathtaking. It is Russia, not the West, that has spent years conducting a sustained hybrid war against Europe and particularly the United Kingdom. The murder of Alexander Litvinenko and the attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury remain chilling reminders of the Kremlin’s willingness to conduct state-sponsored attacks on British soil, alongside relentless cyber warfare, sabotage and espionage across Europe.
>
> Nevertheless, the suggestion of peace emerging from the Kremlin offers some hope for Ukraine’s exhausted civilian population, many of whom have spent years sleeping in underground shelters rather than their own homes. The strategic landscape has shifted dramatically since previous negotiations, when Putin believed he could dictate terms demanding that Ukraine surrender territory, weaken its armed forces and abandon its Western ambitions.
>
> Today, the battlefield reality is moving increasingly in Ukraine’s favour. Ukrainian forces continue to make incremental but meaningful advances while Russia suffers appalling losses in both manpower and equipment. Crucially, Ukraine is now beginning to manoeuvre armour more effectively through what had previously become a static, drone-dominated battlefield. These small tactical gains could soon evolve into something far more significant.
>
> At the same time, Ukraine has demonstrated an increasingly sophisticated ability to strike strategically important targets deep inside Russia, even without large-scale American military support. Critical infrastructure attacks are now placing growing pressure on the Russian economy and exposing the Kremlin’s inability to fully defend its own territory. Putin’s implicit admission that Moscow itself can no longer be guaranteed safety sends a powerful message: Russia’s war is no longer confined to distant frontlines.
>
> All of this comes amid growing signs of unease inside Russia itself. Public criticism of the war, once almost unthinkable, is becoming more visible as ordinary Russians begin to question the price of Putin’s disastrous gamble in Ukraine. This criticism would be even more evident were it not for a recent crackdown on internet services in Russia and the silencing of many dissenting voices.
>
> If Europe, and critically the United States under Donald Trump, remain firmly committed to supporting Kyiv, then the prospect of achieving a just and sustainable peace settlement may now be closer than at any point since the illegal annexation of Crimea over a decade ago.
>
> The responsibility now lies squarely with Western leaders. Britain, under Keir Starmer, still has an important role to play despite years of underinvestment in our own military. Let us hope he still has the bandwidth to lift his head occasionally for a look around as he tries to save his own skin. The British Armed Forces remain highly professional and significant.
>
> What Saturday demonstrated beyond doubt is that Putin is wounded politically, militarily and psychologically. History teaches us that when a dangerous predator is weakened, that is precisely the moment to apply maximum pressure – not to offer concessions for the sake of expediency. The most effective time to kick a man is when he’s down.
>
>
> The West must ensure that Volodymyr Zelensky is empowered to secure a just peace for the Ukrainian people, rather than allowing Putin an escape route simply to bring the fighting to a premature close.
> * Col Hamish de Bretton-Gordon commanded the 1st Royal Tank Regiment and his next book Tank Command is published on June 4 2026*
>
Any time is a good time to kick Putin.
And any reason is a good reason.
Indeed, the last thing to do is give Putin a lifeline with a ceasefire, he needs to crash and crash hard.
The last thing putin will see it’s an open window in a high rise building
Don’t tell Donny, he’ll create another crisis to bail out the Russian economy
And when you get down on your knees tonight
And wish the world away
When you’re fucked up enough to see the light
You’ll pray to die today (You’ll pray to die today)
It is absolutely insane to me that there are still politicians in the West advocating for a ceasefire right now!
Sorry, but you do not force a negotiated settlement when your enemy is literally too scared to drive a single tank through their own capital city on their biggest national holiday. The fact that Putin had to fill the Red Square with North Korean troops just to make the parade look populated tells you exactly how depleted his reserves actually are! He is terrified of Ukrainian drones hitting Moscow on live television.
The author is 100% right. Dictators only offer peace talks when they are losing and need time to rebuild their supply lines. If the West forces Ukraine to freeze the conflict now just because it is politically convenient, Putin will just spend the next three years churning out artillery and start the whole thing over again.
Now is the exact time to double down on deep strikes inside Russian territory and force the Kremlin to actually feel the economic and structural cost of this war. You don’t let the predator catch its breath.
Perhaps there is a spot for him at the Mussolineum.
Another happy hour of mythology
Please kick as strong as its possible.
Honestly they need to give them a way out.
With the straight closed, secure peace with promise of using Russian oil in Europe so their economy doesn’t crash.
It’s a win/win. Russia gets to save face and Europe gets energy security until Iran conflict ends.
You half us in the first half. Not gonna lie.
Yeah yeah whatever bro
Putin, Trump and Netanyahu are down…. we should get rid of all 3 fascists at once.
Reddit immature delusion, showing the problem with modern education, lack of critical thinking, and the impact of propaganda. 4 legs good, 2 legs bad.
Waiting for the Internet Comment Etiquette episode with Erik
Yes Russia now is weaker, but im sorry we cannot be fooled by propaganda, Ukrainian troops are not advancing, you can see here: (https://www.reddit.com/r/UkraineRussiaReport/s/CY6x0aoYwT)
I mean… is there ever a time *not* to kick Putin?
A cornered rat becomes very dangerous and may commit a desperate act, and yes, i mean nuclear.
No lifeline, no peace until Ukraine wants it and agrees to it. This is our chance to squash Mordor
Gonna piss on him instead for all suffering he has caused.
curb stomping is too humane for putin.
😂😂😂😂
Is Mathias Döpfner’s Telegraph/Politico/Bild press machine now starting to prepare the ground for a lifting of Russian oil sanctions?
I’ve got a bottle of fireball waiting when i hear the happy news! Slava Ukraini!
Ukraine already made a mistake in the past of overcommitting on a counter offensive. There are mine fields to go through.
The better bet is to bleed the attacker, not go on a counter attack.