Andrew Korybko
They’re all primarily due to his belief (however
possibly mistaken) that Putin won’t risk tensions spiraling out of control in
response
It was earlier assessed that “The
Next Putin-Trump Meeting Might Lead To Something Tangible This Time Around”
due to newfound mutual interests in reaching a deal, but then Trump canceled
the Budapest Summit on the grounds that he didn’t think it’d be worth
his time. He also imposed new energy
sanctions on Russia and might
be lying about not having approved Ukraine’s use of long-range
missiles. Trump’s latest
flip-flop surprised many but can be attributable in hindsight to the
following five reasons:
----------
1. He’s Driving A Hard
Bargain To Coerce Putin Into Maximum Concessions
Russia’s minimum goal is to
obtain full control over Donbass, without which Putin can’t hypothetically
freeze (let alone end) the war without
“losing face”. Trump refuses to coerce
Zelensky into withdrawing from there, instead believing that he can
coerce Putin into freezing the conflict without first controlling Donbass, thus
amounting to maximum concessions. That’s still unacceptable for Putin and might
always be, but Trump seems to be taking his refusal personally, perhaps seeing
it as a challenge to his authority.
2. The Warmongers Appear To
Have Once Again Made Him Change His Mind
Trump’s announcement was made
during a meeting with NATO chief Mark Rutte, thus suggesting that warmongers
like him, Zelensky, Lindsey
Graham, and others still have his ear. He’s infamously capricious, with
many having noticed that he tends to be influenced by the last person who
talked to him. This idiosyncrasy makes him comparatively easier to manipulate
than most, which has enormous implications in terms of how certain lobbies and
foreign forces could influence US policy throughout his second term.
3. Trump Seems To Truly Believe That The Any Escalation Will Remain Manageable
Trump wouldn’t try to drive a
hard bargain and end up giving in to the warmongers unless he truly believed
that any Russian-US escalation would remain manageable. His calculation
presupposes that there won’t be any overwhelming response from Putin that would
then push them towards climbing the escalation ladder all the way to the top.
It’s predicated on the assumption that Russia is weaker than the US and will
therefore back down if significantly pressured. That’s a gamble to take.
4. He’s Also Not Abandoning
His Stratagem Of Dividing-And-Ruling Eurasia
Senior refinery executives
told NDTV that
“Flows of Russian oil to major Indian processors are expected to fall to near
zero” after the latest sanctions, which could divide the newly
solidified Russia-India-China (RIC) triangle if true. Trump might also
expect that China will do the same to get him to curtail the additional 100% tariffs that
he threatened to impose on it next month. He could still be proven wrong on
both counts, but in any case, his latest escalation shows that he’s still
trying to divide-and-rule Eurasia.
5. Trump Might Be Betting
On Chinese Non-Compliance With The Latest Sanctions
China isn’t expected to comply
with the US’ latest sanctions since it’ll gain by purchasing at a steep
discount whatever oil Russia might soon be unable to sell to India. The interim
Sino-US trade deal might then collapse if Trump imposes his threatened tariffs
on China and makes their curtailing conditional on it dumping Russian oil. He
might even want this predictable sequence of events to unfold, however, so as
to justify accelerating his planned “Pivot (back) to (East) Asia” for more
muscularly containing China.
----------
Trump’s reason for once again
escalating against Russia is primarily due to his belief (however possibly
mistaken) that Putin won’t risk tensions spiraling out of control in response
even if he never agrees to the maximum concessions being demanded of him. The
US might have also concluded, whether rightly or wrong, that India is the weak
link in RIC which can be coerced into breaking up BRICS.
To be clear, these explanations don’t equate to endorsements, but they cogently
account for what Trump just did.
Andrew Korybko, Substack, October 23, 2025
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Trump 2.0’s Eurasian Balancing Act Has Failed
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