It’s always hard to tell, but I don’t think that Vladimir Putin is planning to ramp up Russia’s war with Ukraine. At least, not today. Three levels of background are in order here. First, what happened today: Putin announced that Russia would offer expedited citizenship to residents of ‘certain’ parts of eastern Ukraine and then confirmed that he had in mind quite specifically the quasi-occupied territories knows as the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics. Ukraine’s president-elect, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, promptly decried the move and called for increased sanctions. Second, what happened before: Russia has a history of handing out passports in territories it has helped break away from other post-Soviet states, particularly Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which became de facto Russian protectorates after the Georgian civil war of 1993, a fait made more accompli when Russia itself went to war with Georgia in 2008 — in part to defend its citizens living in the territories. It’s not hard, then, to understand why the Kremlin’s move has Kiev on edge.

Third, what has happened elsewhere: Russia is not the only country in the region to play passport politics. Perhaps most notoriously, Hungary has extended citizenship to as many as a million ethnic Magyars living in neighboring countries, creating a very useful voting block for Viktor Orban and his ruling Fidesz party. A similar number of Moldovans, on the other hand, have gained Romanian — and thus EU — citizenship, on the basis of their own ethnicity. We could go on: Armenia and Karabakh, for example, or Turkey and Bulgaria. But Russia’s approach to passport politics somehow seems different: more overtly aggressive and, unlike in Hungary, designed more to serve foreign policy purposes than domestic political ends. And yet — while Kiev’s consternation is justified and Europe should absolutely be paying attention — I don’t think today’s news signals escalation in the offing. Here’s why. Despite all the hot takes that Zelenskiy is somehow Putin’s man in Kiev (he’s not), the Kremlin most likely finds the post-election situation vis-a-vis Ukraine somewhat unsettling. Zelenskiy, after all, campaigned on a less confrontational line towards Russia than outgoing President Petro Poroshenko, and one of his few clear policy promises was to seek a cease-fire in the east. That, oddly enough, is a problem for Moscow. As I (and others) have argued elsewhere, the Kremlin is reasonably happy with the current temperature of its conflict with the West. Sanctions themselves are basically priced into the Russian economy, as policymakers and business leaders operating on the assumption that they’re not going to be lifted or even appreciably eased in the foreseeable future. Moreover, even as ordinary Russians seem to tire of geopolitics, the sense of conflict with the West and the ‘rally around the flag’ it engenders remain important to Putin’s legitimacy. Thus, were Kiev to seek a pathway towards normalization with Russia, it could undermine an important pillar of domestic political stability.

The Kremlin is reasonably happy with the current temperature of its conflict with the West.