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In the wake of the Moscow terror attack, outlets across the spectrum have published opinions on President Vladimir Putin’s leadership.

A Matter of Trust: Marc Champion of Bloomberg (Lean Left bias) cited the reported warning the U.S. sent the Kremlin about an extremist threat and Putin’s downplaying of it as a barometer for the lack of trust between the two nations. Champion argued Putin “fell victim to paranoia” as a result. He also noted that the Islamic State likely sees Russia as part of the “Christian West” and has a similar distaste for its standing as a global power as it does for that of the U.S.

Ukraine Obsession: Hanna Notte, writing for Financial Times (Center bias), claimed “Putin’s Ukraine obsession” has “blinded” him to other national security threats at home. Notte claimed that in the early 2000s, Putin exaggerated al-Qaeda's links to Chechen fighters as a way to get closer to the U.S., but that his paranoia has now left Russia vulnerable to the “real dangers… lurking abroad and at home.”

Power Grabbing: Gary Kasparov, writing for The Wall Street Journal (Lean Right bias), likened the wake of the attack to that of the 1999 Russian apartment bombings that Putin used to platform his presidential campaign. Kasparov, who blamed the Biden administration for “a cowardly new world order,” accused Putin of “creating the conditions to radicalize the Russian population further” by invading Ukraine and using the Moscow attack to “fulfill his new mobilization orders.”

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Soon after Friday’s terrorist attack killed at least 137 people in Moscow, Russian pundits and politicians insinuated that the attackers had links to Ukraine. This came as little surprise. It has become standard for the Kremlin to blame Ukraine for Russia’s internal blunders and accuse it of making common cause with nefarious forces.

Friday’s terrorist attack at the Crocus City Hall concert venue near Moscow killed more than 100 people in a brutal crime against humanity. Many key facts are still unclear, and rest assured they will become only less clear as the Kremlin works to exploit the crisis domestically and abroad.

Coming shortly after his latest sham election, the attack gave dictator Vladimir Putin a rallying cry one day after the Kremlin declared for the first time that Russia is in a “state of war” in Ukraine.