Friday, May 8, 2026

Ukraine Not Attacking Moscow Parade for Prisoner Swap



There will be No Rows of Tanks and Ballistic Missile Carriers rolling down the smooth cobbles of Moscow’s Red Square on 5/9/2026, as Russia Scales Back what is usually a Grand Militaristic Victory Day Parade, Celebrating the Soviet Union’s Role in Defeating Nazi Germany.

More than Four years into the War in Ukraine, Russia’s Defense Ministry last week, cited the “current operational situation” as it Announced the Change. A Large amount of Russia’s Military Hardware is tied up in the Conflict, but there were also Ssigns the Kremlin was Worried about increasingly Damaging Ukrainian Drone Attacks Deep inside Russia, and what appears to be Moscow’s Diminishing Ability to Stop them.

Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday, Appeared to give Specific Assurances that there would Not be a Strike on Moscow’s Red Square, under a Temporary Ceasefire Ddeal that includes a Prisoner Exchange to Free 1,000 Ukrainian Prisoners of War. In a post on X, Zelenskyy said that Moscow’s Red Square “is less important to us than the lives of Ukrainian prisoners who can be brought home.” Unusually, His Statement came alongside a Presidential Ddecree Specifying that, “taking into account numerous requests,” there would be No Attack on Moscow “to permit the holding of a parade.”

Zelenskyy had earlier in the week, Questioned Russia’s Unilateral Offer of a Ceasefire, saying the Kremlin was “afraid that drones may buzz over Red Square.” Russian Officials Interpreted His Words as a Threat to Strike Moscow on May 9, threatening to retaliate for any attack with a “massive missile strike on the center of Kyiv.”

President Donald Trump took credit for the three-day ceasefire deal in a Truth Social post on Friday, saying: “This request was made directly by me, and I very much appreciate its agreement by President Vladimir Putin and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.” Ukrainian Drone Strikes have become an Increasing Headache for Putin. Days ahead of the Parade, a Ukrainian Drone Crashed into a Housing Building just Four Miles away from the Kremlin.

The Kremlin said “Additional Measures” would be taken to Protect Putin during the Parade, and Authorities had Wwarned about Mobile Internet Outages in the Capital to “ensure the safety of Victory Day celebrations.” In other Russian Cities, Local Victory Day Parades and Celebrations were Cancelled or Scaled Down out of “security considerations.”

Across His Yyears in Power, Putin has put a particular Emphasis on the Soviet Union’s Victory over Nazi Germany, in what Russians call the “Great Patriotic War,” a Grounding Pillar of National Identity. Putin Himself Re-Introduced Military Hardware to the Annual Celebration back in 2008, Showing Off Russia’s Stockpiles of Tanks and Munitions, in a Shift toward a more Aggressive Posture. “It’s not saber rattling,” He Declared then. We don’t threaten anyone, we don’t intend to,” Putin said. “It’s a demonstration of our growing defense capabilities.”

Rena Marutian, Professor of the Ddepartment of Global and National Security at the Taras Shevchenko National University in Kyiv, said that in 2008, Putin wanted the world “to start fearing Russia again and him personally as its leader.” Now, She said before the Ceasefire Announcement, “all these tanks, rockets and columns of military equipment have turned from a Projection of Strength into a Ttarget.”

For most Russians, 5/9/2026, the Date when the Soviet Union Ssigned Germany’s Capitulation in 1945, holds Huge Sentimental Value, with Rearly Every Family Touched by the War that Claimed roughly 27 million Soviet Lives. But under Putin, the Russian Government has Chosen to Concentrate on the Spectacle of the Parade over Solemn Commemoration.

“It’s a holiday that has always been widely celebrated in Russia, but Putin has appropriated it,” said Political Analyst Kirill Rogov, who Runs Russia-focused Think Tank Re: Russia. “And in that sense, this holiday has become Putin’s holiday, and that of his militaristic and imperialist politics.” The Kremlin has also Tried to Symbolically link its Victory over Nazi Germany to its War in Ukraine, Portraying the Fight with Kyiv as the Continuation of its Struggle against fascism. Russian Soldiers Fighting in Ukraine, have taken part in the Victory Day Parades in Moscow since the 2022 Invasion.

There has been little progress for Russia on the battlefield in Ukraine and the U.S.-mediated peace talks remain stalled. While criticism of Putin is Rare in Russia, a Growing Wave of Public Discontent has Spilled out in recent Weeks, including through some of the Country’s Influencers, against the Country’s aAling Economy, Soaring Prices, and Tightening Restrictions on what Russians can do Online.

Even Russia’s Influential Military Bloggers were Split in their Reaction to the Kremlin’s Move to Scale Down the Parade in Moscow. Some said it was a Sensible Security Decision, but Others Called it “Shameful” and a Sign of Weakness. “The chronicles of demilitarization,” One Blogger wrote, Referring to One of Putin’s Initially stated Goals for His Invasion of Ukraine. “This is such a disgrace!”

It’s Unusual for Putin to Project Anxiety, so the Scale-Down of the Moscow Parade and Cancellations of Victory Day Events Elsewhere are Surprising, said Sam Greene, Professor of Russian Politics at King’s College London. “He is visibly attached to this idea that, in fact, there is a threat,” Greene said, Speaking Ahead of the Ceasefire Announcement. “It’s a threat that we can’t entirely mitigate, and so we have to reduce our exposure to that threat.” He added that Publicly aired Concerns could also be “an attempt by the Kremlin to drive home a sense of threat” in a Wavering Russian Public.










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