Putin, in remarks at a conference in Moscow on Thursday, had a familiar litany of grievances against our Western opponents and said the West's dominance over world affairs was coming to an end.
Putin accused the West of inciting the war in Ukraine and of playing a dangerous, bloody and dirty game that was sowing chaos across the world. Putin said, the West would have to talk to Russia and other major powers about the future of the world.
"We are standing at a historical frontier, ahead is probably the most dangerous, unpredictable and, at the same time, important decade since the end of World War Two," Putin said at an annual foreign policy conference.
The conflict, which began eight months ago with an invasion by Russian forces of neighbouring Ukraine, has killed thousands, displaced millions, shaken the global economy and reopened Cold War-era divisions.
Asked at the conference whether there had been any disappointments in the past year, Putin answered simply: "No", though he also said he always thinks about the Russian lives lost in Ukraine.
In response to questions, Putin made no mention of Russia's battlefield setbacks in recent months and said Russian aims had not changed.
Russia was fighting to protect the people of the Donbas, he said, referring to an eastern industrial region that comprises two of the four Ukrainian provinces he proclaimed annexed last month.
Fighting on the ground appears to have slowed in recent days, with Ukrainian officials saying tough terrain and bad weather had held up their main advance in Kherson.
On Thursday a close ally of Putin, Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, said 23 of his soldiers had been killed and 58 others wounded in a Ukrainian artillery attack this week in Kherson. After the attack, Chechen forces killed about 70 Ukrainians, he said.
Russian forces shelled Ukrainian positions along the entire line of contact and built fortifications, particularly on the east bank of the Dnipro River, the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said in a Facebook post on Thursday evening.