Marc Champion, Columnist

The US Bombing Iran Was a Win for ... Putin

The possibility of another war in the Middle East has sucked attention, energy and resources away from Ukraine.

A free hand.

Photographer: GAVRIIL GRIGOROV/AFP

The consensus after Israel’s 12-day war with Iran seems to be that it ended in humiliation — not just for the Islamic Republic, but also Russia, which failed to lift a finger for a loyal ally and lost a supplier of critical drones. But that profoundly misreads both President Vladimir Putin’s priorities and the timescale on which he conducts foreign policy.

There’s no doubt that Putin’s ambition to reassert Russia as a force in the Middle East has been set back. The fall of President Bashar Al-Assad in Syria was a significant loss. His failure to come to the aid of Iran, with whom he’d just signed a 20-year strategic partnership was embarrassing.