'Pariah' Putin On Post-MH17 Cover Pages

The August 4 cover of "Time" magazine says the West is losing "Cold War II" against "Putin's dangerous game."

For "Newsweek," Putin is the "West's public enemy number one."

Putin's "Russian Spring" has brought about a "Cold War" in the middle of July, posits Ukraine's "Focus" weekly magazine.

Romania's "Adevarul" daily, dated July 25, pictures Vladimir Putin playing poker with European leaders. The headline reads, "Where does Europe's cowardice in the face of Russia come from?" An explanation follows: "Europe and Russia are tied by bilateral trade and oil and gas that are imported from Russia, so if sanctions are imposed on Moscow, they will affect the EU economy."

"Stop Putin Now!" says the July 28 cover of Germany's "Der Spiegel" magazine with photos of some of the MH17 victims.

The July 28 issue of Poland's "Niepodlegla" calls the Russian leader "Bloodymir."

The July 25 cover of Britain's "Private Eye" features a photo of Putin against the backdrop of the Buk missile-defense system, suspected of bringing down Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, and captions it, "I will find those responsible and give them a rocket."

The August 1 U.S. edition of the British news magazine "The Week" shows Putin with "blood on his hands" in front of the Buk surface-to-air missile launcher, which has been blamed for the MH17 downing.

"The Economist" pictures Putin entangled in a "web of lies."

"Getting Away With Murder" -- Canada's "Maclean's" weekly news magazine puts the blame for the MH17 crash squarely on "Putin's ambitions."

Australia's "The Spectator," dated July 26, pictures Russia as an armed bear gobbling up an airplane.

July 25's "Polska" quotes an online statement by a parent of one of the MH17 victims saying, "Mr. Putin, You Killed My Only Child."