The current mutual spike in militant rhetoric between the US and 
Russia looks like an ordered and coordinated side help in creating and 
massaging the "right" atmosphere in the last few weeks that remain till 
the US presidential elections. On Russia's side most of the measures 
look hasty, improvised, and rather symbolic, that is, weak (3 ships 
here, 5000 soldiers there etc.).
 This does not mean that there 
is no risk or danger in heating up the talk (of hitting each other with 
bombs or even nuclear missiles). Equally, such aggressive talk does not 
make it less irresponsible or less a tool of psychological war (even 
against one's own population like today's reported announcement of 
assuring the people of Petersburg with 300 grams of bread and a nuclear 
shelter). And, yes, there are enough people who not only would not mind,
 but would rather welcome pulling off something similar to Erdogan's 
"stabbing Russia into the back."
 Still wider and cooler heads 
have noted that, facing the steady resilience of Damascus and Putin's 
own ever harder to conceal anxiety and crumbling facade, Moscow had 
displayed in the past a pattern of sorts--just before caving in with 
Minsk 1 and 2 or with the rejection of the Novorossiya referendum in 
Donbass or the deals on Syria (signing on the US demands), Moscow tried 
to project and increase its "firmness" and "patriotism" and to use up 
that "assurance" and capital on the sudden sellouts which left the 
beguiled public disoriented, confused, stunned, surprised, unprepared 
and--dumb.
 For a more careful look still reveals that both Putin
 and Lavrov are fighting hard (and desperately) to bring the 
Lavrov-Kelly pact on Syria back from the dead, together with saving al 
Qaeda in Aleppo and Aleppo for the rebels, and that the Kremlin is still
 moving resolutely forward in its "strategic" haggling over presenting 
the Kuril Islands to Japan as part of the newly found supposed "trust" 
or confidence in Japan (perhaps as good and logical as the newly 
restored confidence in Erdogan). Similarly, the Kremlin is still trying 
to square the circle of Donbass and return it ("re-integrate" it) to 
anti-Russian, NATO-dependent Ukraine.
It is also interesting to note that, very recently, the Russian media, including the state media, began posting photos of Putin, which, unlike the previous ones often doctored, carefully designed and angled,  are presenting Putin in his more true-to-life much less impressive and much less stately physiognomy. This is, moreover, happening while there is a growing talk about a possible early presidential election in 2017 (instead of 2018).
For how, let say, BBC covers some aspects of this situation, see for example here.
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