Bringing this here because it's personal opinion rather than properly sourced news (with or without a depth of opinion behind it). I also hadn't previously PTWed, so that's another good reason to break my duck here...
Even Silvio Berlusconi is turning his back on Putin.
Ex-Italian PM 'deeply disappointed' by Putin's behaviour
Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said that he was "deeply disappointed and saddened" by the behaviour of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
When he was in power, Berlusconi had a close friendship with Putin, and invited him on vacation to his villa in Sardinia.
"I've known him about 20 years ago and he always seemed to me to be a democrat and a man of peace," the 85-year-old billionaire said, addressing a convention of his conservative Forza Italia party in Rome.
[...]
He's not the only one who liked Putin 20 years ago. Almost everyone up to the level of Dubya himself (if you think that's a bonus!) pretty much supported Putin's work in that era.
After the post-Gorbachev reallignment and the 'interesting' blips further along the way, it seemed like Putin was realligning the Russia Federation into 'the real world', and in a number of regards he probably did. Which is not to say he was
the answer to the problem, but he was
an answer to it.
Possibly, if he had accomplished that and then moved away having passed power onwards to (hopefully) a continuation of that progress, he might have been considered a great man. But then he decided to play the hokey-cokey with the leadership of his nation, so that he could return to the top position (having really never having gone away) and then even reorganise matters so that he didn't have to fuss about with such technicalities. Whether he had the idea from the beginning, I don't know, but he seems to have ended up with the need to be an
extremely great man (by his own measure).
I think I've said it before, but I'm wondering how much of the latest turn of events is down to his actually realising his own mortality (maybe an adverse diagnosis?), and he thought he saw an opportunity to buff his legacy up to the greatest level he can. But he's abandoned the "play nicely with the rest of the world" a number of years ago. How long ago, is debatable. Maybe even it was a long-game plan even back to the twenty years ago, or maybe it just inexoribly evolved from a genuine outward-facing perspective that ended up twisting backwards into the more nationalistic/self-centred attitude that we see today.
Future historians will have fun deconstructing this, especially if they ever get access to the kind of information that currently is not public knowledge, or even currently confirmable in any way at all. But I reckon that there'll be a point in time somewhere between 2000 and 2008 that will be the trigger-point.
(I mean, it's all well and good to be pro-<InsertYourOwnCountryHere>, but it seems this has landed on entirely the wrong side of the zero-sum assumption, which is already a net destructive attitude.)