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Record 67% of Russians Back Peace Talks as Defense Budget Strains Economy in 2026

· 6 min read

A new poll shows 67% of Russians now favor negotiating to end the Ukraine war — a record high — while only 24% want to continue military action. Russia's fiscal deficit widened further in early 2026 as defense costs absorb an outsized share of GDP.

A record 67 percent of Russian citizens now say the government should pursue negotiations to end the war in Ukraine, according to a survey conducted by the independent Levada Center and published Wednesday. The figure is the highest recorded since the February 2022 invasion began and represents a six-point increase in a single month. Only 24 percent of respondents said Russia should continue military operations without talks — a figure that is, by the same measure, a record low. The data arrives as Russia's own economy shows increasing strain from four years of war expenditure, despite the short-term windfall from elevated oil prices driven by the Iran conflict.

The Levada Center, which operates under significant domestic political pressure and conducts its surveys by phone to avoid surveillance risks, is considered by Western analysts to be the most reliable polling organization still operating independently in Russia. Pollsters note that Russian respondents consistently underreport anti-war sentiment due to fear of the country's "discrediting the military" laws, which can result in prison sentences. The true proportion favoring negotiations may be higher than the 67 percent figure suggests.

The polling shift is being driven by economic pressure as much as war fatigue. Russia's fiscal deficit widened to nearly 4 percent of GDP in 2025, and early 2026 data from the Russian Finance Ministry suggests the gap is growing further. Defense spending now consumes between 35 and 40 percent of Russia's federal budget — by some independent estimates, even higher when security agency budgets are included — leaving fewer resources for social programs, infrastructure, and the industrial subsidies that had historically cushioned economic shocks. Inflation in Russia has been running above 10 percent annually, with food prices up 16 percent year-over-year according to Rosstat data.

The National Wealth Fund, Russia's sovereign stabilization reserve, has been depleted from a pre-war peak of approximately $200 billion to around $45 billion — roughly three months of defense spending at current rates. Finance Minister Anton Siluanov acknowledged in a closed session of the Duma, leaked to the Meduza outlet, that "the structural constraints are real and will become more visible in the second half of 2026." Western sanctions have cut Russia off from roughly $300 billion in frozen assets held in European clearing systems, compounding the pressure.

Against this backdrop, the oil price windfall from the Iran war has been genuinely significant. Russia has earned an estimated $300 to $400 million per day in additional revenues since the Strait of Hormuz closure pushed Brent crude above $95 per barrel — a premium that has partially offset the budget strain. Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak announced Wednesday that Russia is increasing oil supply deliveries to China and India to capture additional volume at elevated prices, a move designed to maximize revenue before any ceasefire in the Middle East ends the price spike.

Russia's military posture on the ground in Ukraine has not softened despite the polling data. The Institute for the Study of War formally declared Russia's spring-summer offensive underway on March 22, citing 619 combat engagements in four days across multiple fronts in the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson regions. On Wednesday, Russia's Ministry of Defense claimed control over the settlement of Shevyakovka in the Kharkiv region and reported advances along the Toretsk axis. Russia launched 153 Shahed-series drones at Ukrainian territory overnight, the heaviest barrage in two weeks, with 130 intercepted by Ukrainian air defenses.

The disconnect between public opinion and military policy is not unusual in authoritarian contexts, but Western analysts note it creates a structural vulnerability for the Putin government. Carnegie Endowment senior fellow Tatiana Stanovaya, writing in a policy paper published this week, argued that Russia's leadership is caught between the economic logic of negotiations and the political logic of maintaining a nationalist consensus that has been built on the premise of victory. "Putin cannot offer Russian society a deal that looks like defeat," Stanovaya wrote, "but the cost of not offering a deal is also rising faster than Moscow expected."

President Putin has shown no public inclination toward negotiations. At a ceremony Tuesday marking the 75th anniversary of the Soviet atomic bomb, Putin said Russia's nuclear deterrent "remains the cornerstone of our national security" and warned that any attempt to impose a solution on Russia from outside would be met with "appropriate response." The statement was widely read as directed at both Washington and Brussels.

**What this means for you**

The Russian public opinion shift matters for Western investors and businesses in ways that are not immediately obvious. European governments hold roughly €300 billion in frozen Russian sovereign assets at Euroclear, the proceeds of which are being used to fund Ukraine's €90 billion EU loan. The legal framework for using these assets is being challenged in European courts, and the longer the war runs, the more complex the legal picture becomes. A negotiated settlement, even an imperfect one, would clarify that legal ambiguity faster than continued conflict.

For energy markets, the Russia-Ukraine dynamic intersects with the Iran conflict in a compounding way. Russia has a financial incentive to keep oil prices elevated for as long as possible — meaning Moscow is not a neutral actor in the Iran diplomatic process. Any scenario where Russia uses its Security Council veto or its intelligence-sharing relationship with Iran to extend the conflict deserves to be priced into risk models.

The 67 percent number represents something concrete: war fatigue inside Russia is real, measurable, and growing. Whether Putin's government acts on it — or suppresses it — will determine whether 2026 ends with negotiations or a deeper entrenchment on both sides.

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of Russians now favor peace talks with Ukraine?
A Levada Center survey published March 26 found 67% of Russians favor negotiations to end the war — a record high, up 6 points in one month. Only 24% want to continue military operations without talks, a record low. Pollsters note that fear of domestic prosecution may mean the true pro-negotiation figure is even higher.
How much has Russia's defense spending increased?
Russia's defense budget now consumes an estimated 35-40% of federal spending. The fiscal deficit widened to nearly 4% of GDP in 2025 and is projected to grow further in 2026. The National Wealth Fund has been depleted from $200 billion before the 2022 invasion to approximately $45 billion.
How is Russia benefiting financially from the Iran war?
Russia earns an estimated $300-400 million per day in additional oil revenues since the Iran conflict drove Brent crude above $95/barrel. Deputy PM Novak announced Russia is increasing oil deliveries to China and India to maximize revenue while prices remain elevated.
Is Russia launching a spring offensive in Ukraine?
Yes. The Institute for the Study of War declared Russia's spring-summer offensive underway on March 22, citing 619 combat engagements in four days. Russia launched its heaviest drone barrage in two weeks on March 26 (153 Shahed drones, 130 intercepted) and claims to have captured new territory in the Kharkiv region.
What is Russia's position on Ukraine negotiations?
Despite record public support for negotiations, President Putin has shown no public inclination toward talks. At a ceremony on March 25, Putin emphasized Russia's nuclear deterrent and warned against externally imposed solutions. The Kremlin remains committed to its stated war objectives.
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