Putin's Biggest Promise to Russians JUST COLLAPSED — Kursk Residents EVACUATE the Region.

Putin's Biggest Promise to Russians JUST COLLAPSED — Kursk Residents EVACUATE the Region.

► Subscribe to get 40% OFF the Vantage Plan by scanning the QR code or using this link: https://ground.news/russiandude Putin’s worst nightmare may finally be here, because this text argues that the real cost of the Russia-Ukraine war is no longer hidden somewhere far away in occupied territory or on abstract military maps, but is now landing directly on Russian citizens through destroyed infrastructure, unpaid promises, displaced families, and a state that can no longer easily cover the bill. The central example is Kursk, where Ukraine’s incursion only affected a relatively small part of the region, around 5 percent at its peak, including several dozen villages and the town of Sudzha, yet the official infrastructure damage estimate already reached 700 billion rubles, with the real total likely moving far beyond one trillion once combat costs, equipment losses, and wider economic consequences are counted. The text says that is the nightmare for the Kremlin, because if even a limited disaster inside one Russian border region creates this scale of financial strain, then the fantasy that Moscow can easily rebuild devastated parts of Donbas starts to collapse. The description also focuses on the human side of that crisis, with 112,620 officially displaced residents in Kursk still struggling for compensation after the government ended the 65,000-ruble monthly support payments in January 2026, even though many people remained displaced and the counter-terrorism regime was still in force. Instead of delivering housing quickly, officials allegedly redirected funds, slowed the process, and allowed local propaganda to paint refugees as greedy or privileged, turning state failure into resentment against the victims themselves. The housing certificate system is presented here as another trap, because residents often cannot get compensation without inspections, but many damaged areas remain inaccessible or unsafe, which means the state refuses to confirm destruction while also refusing to solve the reality people are living in. The text also argues that the Kremlin is making the problem worse through centralization, merging hundreds of municipalities into a few dozen districts and moving decision-making farther away from the people who actually lost homes, property, and stability. When placed alongside Ukrainian strikes on oil terminals like Ust-Luga and Primorsk, the broader picture becomes clear: Russia’s war bill is growing, revenue pressure is rising, infrastructure repairs are expensive, and Moscow is being forced to choose between war spending, propaganda, regional repairs, and basic support for its own displaced citizens. That is why Kursk is framed not as a side story, but as proof that Putin’s biggest fear is no longer theoretical defeat on a map, but the moment ordinary Russians begin seeing the war as a direct, personal, and very expensive burden inside Russia itself. ► Bonus Content, Support for the Channel, Early Access, and MORE:   / therussiandude   Please consider subscribing to my channel if you wish to continue receiving daily news summaries.