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Neoliberal Feudalism's avatar

Hi HS, I was following along and agreed with you up until the end, where you wrote "Russians will not fool around should push come to shove, though. They would rather nuke a few European cities first, than let themselves dragged into yet another European war potentially lasting for decades, draining their resource base." Personally, I see Putin and the Russian oligarchy as completely subservient to the international financial layers above that of the nation state - this is why Putin went along with the COVID scam entirely (as did China), why he is busy implementing Agenda 2030 including biometrics and CBDC, why he is not fighting the Ukraine war like it is a real war (refusing to bomb the Dniper bridges, continuing to supply the Ukraine military with unlimited oil, not attacking key Ukrainian facilities or personnel, etc).

I discuss these aspects here and here: https://neofeudalreview.substack.com/p/the-global-world-order-is-centralized , https://neofeudalreview.substack.com/p/the-ukraine-war-did-not-take-place , and anyone who believes the Ukrainian war is being fought as a "real war" (even though the endless dead bodies are real) must have answers to Strelkov's razor-sharp list of questions about the nature of the war: https://edwardslavsquat.substack.com/p/39-questions-about-the-war-in-ukraine

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Tris's avatar

I fully agree with you that Russia is not the threat that European leaders say it is to sell their ill-conceived rearmament policies to their population. It seems to me obvious for all the good reasons you gave.

But I'm still a bit surprised to find here this argument I believe to be quite simplistic which consists to divide the distance between the actuel front and some European capital to infer how many years it could take to the Russian army to get there. It's deceptive and pointless.

Since the summer of 2022, this war is much more a war of attrition than anything else. The Russian strategy is to destroy the Ukrainian army on the spot while preserving their own army as much as they can. So, at one point the Ukrainian army could well break. And run pretty much like the Syrian one did a few weeks ago, letting the Russian move much faster than they did so far.

And actually, the West's hopes were always (and still are, despite everything and as far as Europeans are concerned) the exact opposite : that the Russian army will end up breaking and retreat back as fast as it can.

And to take the logic a step further, perhaps this is exactly why Russia is not in such a hurry to negotiate. Russia might prefer a clear-cut military victory to a situation reminiscent of Germany in 1918, and a Ukraine where the idea persists that victory would have been possible if only the politicians hadn't betrayed...

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