Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
31MAY

Easter ceasefire expires; violation counts diverge

3 min read
09:14UTC

Putin's truce ended at midnight Moscow time on 13 April. Kyiv logged 10,721 violations; Moscow logged 1,971. Novaya Gazeta Europe's reading of asymmetric compliance is the useful one.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ceremonial truces pause the wire stories, not the war.

Vladimir Putin's unilateral Orthodox Easter truce, decreed on 9 April, expired without extension at the end of 12 April. The Ukrainian General Staff tallied 10,721 Russian breaches over the period, including 119 ground assaults. The Russian Ministry of Defence tallied 1,971 Ukrainian breaches, including 258 artillery firings, 1,329 kamikaze drone strikes, and 375 munitions drops.

The Kremlin had rejected Volodymyr Zelenskyy's earlier Easter proposal targeting energy infrastructure attacks in late March . Putin's eventual decree came without any prior US diplomatic contact, per his published Kremlin calendar showing nine days of domestic engagements and no US meetings ahead of the announcement. Novaya Gazeta Europe, a Russian exile outlet based in Riga, assessed that Russia held back on strategic-strike activity throughout the pause while tactical-range fire carried on. That matches the pattern of asymmetric compliance: a partial halt on rear-area bombardment paired with unchanged close-in operations.

The timing of the window closes is the other analytic point. The decree concluded just as Hungarian polling day entered its final hours , giving Moscow a news cycle of Orthodox Easter imagery during the period the electorate was still voting. The immediate post-expiry barrage is detailed in event 4. The sequence is now a datable pattern: decree, partial compliance, expiry, return to baseline tempo. Any future Russian ceremonial ceasefire can be read against the same test, Russian long-range activity during the window, and the first 24 hours after.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia's Vladimir Putin called a 32-hour ceasefire for the Orthodox Easter holiday. It ran from the evening of 11 April to midnight on 13 April. After it ended, both sides accused the other of thousands of violations during the window. Ukraine logged over 10,000 Russian violations, mostly artillery fire and small attacks along the front. Russia logged nearly 2,000 Ukrainian violations. Both sets of numbers are real in the sense that fighting continued; they differ because each side uses its own definition of what counts as a violation. The ceasefire was announced by Putin without any prior negotiation with the US or Ukraine, and it expired without any framework for extension. The night after it ended, Russia launched its largest drone barrage in days.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 10,721 violation count that Ukraine logged measures a different thing than battlefield restraint: it includes every artillery round, every drone, every mortar that crossed the contact line during the 32-hour window. The Russian count of 1,971 Ukrainian violations uses the same imprecise instrument in the opposite direction. Neither count addresses whether the ceasefire altered the strategic trajectory of the war, which it did not.

The structural reason these unilateral ceasefires produce the same outcome each time: they are announced without any enforcement mechanism, without any agreed definition of a violation, and without any consequence for non-compliance. Their function is domestic Russian information management and international signal-sending, not battlefield management.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The fourth unilateral Russian ceasefire decree, each producing the same violation-count dispute, establishes a pattern that makes future unilateral ceasefire claims less credible with each repetition.

  • Risk

    The ceasefire's alignment with Hungarian polling day, ending at midnight on 12 April, the day of the election, created a domestic political frame for Orbán that was disrupted when Tisza won decisively despite the timing.

First Reported In

Update #13 · Treasury kills the Russian crude waiver

Al Jazeera· 16 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Human rights monitors (Hengaw, Amnesty International, Iran HRM)
Human rights monitors (Hengaw, Amnesty International, Iran HRM)
Monitors documented a second death sentence for Zahra Tabari, 68, reported cemetery record deletions at Behesht-e Zahra, and a poll showing 81.5% of medical residents want to emigrate, against a background of 200+ confirmed executions since February. Iran's security courts operate at uninterrupted wartime tempo regardless of the diplomatic track.
Pakistan (mediator)
Pakistan (mediator)
Islamabad carried Trump's revised MOU demanding HEU destruction to Iranian negotiators, formally inheriting the role of sole active mediator after Oman's forced withdrawal. Pakistan lacks Oman's banking infrastructure for frozen-asset routing and carries its own regional stakes, making it a less structurally neutral broker.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait intercepted Iranian missiles and drones for a second time in days on 1 June, with air-raid sirens sounding nationwide, after invoking Article 51 self-defence on 28 May following the Ali Al Salem ballistic-missile strike. The repeated interceptions test whether Kuwait's domestic politics can sustain hosting US forces as a de facto co-belligerent.
China (PRC)
China (PRC)
Beijing sent scholars to Shangri-La rather than its defence minister and addressed Taiwan without mentioning Iran, maintaining bilateral energy corridor protection with Tehran while refusing diplomatic exposure at multilateral forums. Trump barred China as an HEU custodian on 27 May, removing Beijing from the deal architecture while China continues supplying DPI hardware that caps Iran's internet.
Lloyd's of London / war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's of London / war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's held its Hormuz war-risk designation at $10-14 million per voyage while Brent recovered to $93.91, maintaining the structural divergence from futures pricing that has persisted since late May. Underwriters require a UN Security Council resolution or government certification letter, not diplomatic optimism.
Gulf Cooperation Council states (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar)
Gulf Cooperation Council states (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar)
Five Gulf states wrote to the IMO on 21 May rejecting Iran's PGSA transit authority over international waters; Saudi Arabia and the UAE have not confirmed participation in the European Hormuz mission. The GCC is navigating between US security guarantees and exposure to Iranian fire, with no Gulf state formally co-belligerent except Kuwait.