Source Notes
Russia Geopolitical Profile: Source Notes
An intermediate note for organizing research material, evidence links, issue structure, and inclusion decisions before the reader-facing article is written.
Russia Geopolitical Profile: Source Notes
Source Map
Primary / official
Authoritative current reporting
- AP News, Putin begins his fifth term as president, more in control of Russia than ever
- AP News, Putin reappoints his prime minister, a technocrat who has kept a low political profile
- AP News, Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has died, prison officials say
- AP News, Xi heads to Russia to show support for Putin as the Ukraine war drags on
- AP News, North Korea says it sent troops to Russia and may send more to help in Ukraine war
- AP News, Russia stages nuclear drills after the New START treaty expired earlier this year
- The Washington Post, U.S.-Russia nuclear arms treaty expires after years of collapse
- The Wall Street Journal, Russia’s Central Bank Cuts Key Rate After Economy Contracts
Secondary / downgraded context
- Wikipedia, Fifth inauguration of Vladimir Putin was used only as supporting chronology for the 2020 term-count reset.
Evidence Notes
- IMF and the World Bank show Russia as a low-growth, high-friction economy rather than a collapsing one.
- AP reporting confirms Putin’s fifth term and Mishustin’s reappointment, which supports the article’s argument about formal institutions versus real power.
- AP reporting on Navalny’s death supports the article’s claim that the national opposition axis was weakened further.
- AP reporting on China, North Korea, and the nuclear drills supports the article’s case that Russia is leaning on coercion plus partner dependence.
- The New START expiry coverage supports the claim that nuclear arms control has become thinner.
- The World Bank and WSJ coverage support the wartime-economy reading: sanctions, lower energy prices, and high borrowing costs still constrain Russia.
Inclusion / Exclusion
- I did not rely on Russian state media for dynamic current claims because it was less useful for independent verification.
- I excluded fine-grained Senate-style institutional detail and front-line tactical analysis because they do not help a country profile.
- I condensed energy trade, sanctions evasion, and shipping risk into a shorter supply-chain reading rather than adding a separate trade table.
Open Questions
- The war’s intensity could shift conscription, fiscal priorities, and domestic security priorities again.
- Dependence on China may deepen further in energy, trade, and technology.
- Military cooperation with North Korea may widen in ways that matter directly for Japan and South Korea.
- Personnel changes or health issues inside the regime could become early signals of post-Putin sequencing.