Analysts in 2026 are tracking a Kremlin pivot in visual messaging — from wartime ideological maximalism toward what advisers reportedly call an ‘image of victory' designed to sell a peace deal at home despite high casualties and limited territorial gains. Soviet-era posters and billboards have proliferated across Russian cities for three years, framing the Ukraine war as the heir of the Great Patriotic War. New material seen by reporters describes the Z-bloggers — pro-war commentators with large followings — as ‘armchair patriots' whose emotional intensity is now seen as an obstacle, with proposals for ‘emotional retraining' and support for moderate voices in state-aligned media. The analysis builds on three decades of image management by President Vladimir Putin, from KGB officer to wartime ruler.
The image pivot
Analysts in 2026 are tracking a Kremlin pivot in visual messaging — from wartime ideological maximalism toward what advisers reportedly call an ‘image of victory'. The strategy is designed to sell Russians on a peace deal despite high casualties and minimal territorial gains.
Soviet visuals as the anchor
Soviet imagery and narratives have been a central part of Vladimir Putin's justification for his assault on Ukraine. Posters and billboards with Soviet allusions have filled Russian cities over the past three years, equating the war in Ukraine with the Great Patriotic War.
Z-bloggers as the new obstacle
New material seen by reporters describes the Z-community of pro-war bloggers and commentators as ‘extremely emotional armchair patriots' whose intensity is now seen as an obstacle. Proposals include ‘emotional retraining' of those under control and elevation of more moderate voices.
Three-decade image arc
The pivot builds on three decades of image management by President Putin — from enigmatic KGB officer to wartime ruler. The Centre for European Policy Analysis describes the pattern as deliberate iteration rather than improvisation.
Why the shift matters
A negotiated outcome with Ukraine — or its framing — would require domestic audiences that have been mobilised for maximalist victory to accept something more limited. The visual reset is the front edge of that political problem.
Mentioned in this story
Subject of the image-management analysis; documented arc from KGB officer to wartime ruler.
Bloggers and commentators central to wartime mobilisation; now seen as an obstacle to the peace narrative.
Documented Moscow's reuse of Soviet visuals to justify the war.
Kremlin equates the Ukraine war with the Great Patriotic War in propaganda imagery.
Aims to sell Russians on a peace deal despite high casualties and minimal gains.
