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According to the retired FSB officer and war criminal Igor Girkin, who previously fought against Ukraine, predicts that Russia will experience the collapse of the front and rear, which will create a "perfect storm." Supporters have published his newsletter, in which he essentially predicted the imminent collapse of Russia. "The situation is rapidly approaching that very 'perfect storm' that cannot fail to happen. The reason is the total imitation of activity that most officials are engaged in," writes Girkin. According to him, instead of an adequate response to the failures of the front and attacks on the rear, the Putin regime is organizing "lavish celebrations and meaningless forums" just to create "the illusion of control" and "the success of what is happening." The former militant admits the failure of the offensive on Sumy and calls both defeat at the front and the involvement of new countries in the war on the side of Ukraine a real threat.
The report also stated that forty months is a long time in a war. Even more so for an economy already burdened by dangerous dependencies on a fossil-fuel-based world that, with luck, will be consigned to the history books within a few decades. Nearly three and a half years after Vladimir Putin gave the order to invade Ukraine — thus burning all bridges with the West — Russia is now trapped in a maze with no easy way out: sluggish growth and soaring prices, with annual increases in the double digits.The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, once a showcase and symbol of Russia’s strength in the global market, turned a couple of weeks ago into a parade of Putinism — though not a particularly cheerful one. “We are on the brink of a recession,” admitted Economic Development Minister Maxim Reshetnikov. The reserves that had supported the country’s finances in recent years, added Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina, “are depleted.”
Watch the report via the link.
The report also stated that forty months is a long time in a war. Even more so for an economy already burdened by dangerous dependencies on a fossil-fuel-based world that, with luck, will be consigned to the history books within a few decades. Nearly three and a half years after Vladimir Putin gave the order to invade Ukraine — thus burning all bridges with the West — Russia is now trapped in a maze with no easy way out: sluggish growth and soaring prices, with annual increases in the double digits.The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, once a showcase and symbol of Russia’s strength in the global market, turned a couple of weeks ago into a parade of Putinism — though not a particularly cheerful one. “We are on the brink of a recession,” admitted Economic Development Minister Maxim Reshetnikov. The reserves that had supported the country’s finances in recent years, added Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina, “are depleted.”
Watch the report via the link.