Kamil Galeev Profile picture
Feb 28, 2022 26 tweets 9 min read Read on X
Let's discuss the informational dimension of this war. Many complain about "propaganda" which distorts its image. Bad take. Propaganda affects public opinion which is only one aspect of what's happening. Let me introduce a better, more comprehensive term - *information warfare*🧵 Image
Consider the following. Internet is full of videos & photos of Russian troops in Ukraine. They are mostly created by civilians who shoot Russian forces on their phones and then upload to the internet. For example here people take videos of Russian soldiers who occupied their town
Or here someone is taking a video of how Russian column is moving - probably from a gas station
Or here a Ukrainian driver took video of a Russian Military convoy which stopped in the field, commented where this all is happening and uploaded it to TikTok. There are tons of such videos and you can easily google thousands of them, if you want
But. There are *much* fewer videos of Ukrainian troops. That's understandable. If you aggregate them, you can track location&movement of enemy. Ofc Ukrainian army wants to have such data on Russians and doesn't want Russian to have data on them. Track the enemy but stay in shadow Image
Indeed. Huge asymmetry in online visual info creates a certain bias. It seems that Ukraine is flooded by huge amounts of Russian troops, but it's not quite obvious whom they are fighting with. Ukrainian army stays in shadow. That's perhaps why so many observers thought Russia won Image
How is this information asymmetry achieved? Well, first of all majority of Ukrainians are pro-Ukraine (see a crowd chanting "go home" to Russian soldiers). They know they can help their own by recording Russians. But not all of them are thoughtful or patriotic
There is a pro-Russian fifth column. And there are simply idiots who would upload whatever for likes and a dopamine boost not thinking about the consequences. These two groups would be enough to fill the internet with recordings of Ukrainian troops. And yet, there are few of them
Why? One could assume Western social media are censuring such videos. That might be true. But this asymmetry also exists on Telegram. Which has very, very little censorship at all (you can find whatever there) and it hardly collaborated with Ukrainians. Probably with Russians Image
Which means this asymmetry is not a result of platform policy. It is a result of such videos either 1) not being uploaded at all 2) or quickly deleted. How do they do that?
Alexey Chadaev, an apparatchik of Russian parliament argues that Ukrainians are tracking and deanonymizing whoever tries to upload videos with Ukrainian troops. They come to their home and explain they're quite wrong. Meanwhile, uploading videos with Russians is socially approved Image
Let's sum up. One shouldn't reduce information warfare to propaganda. It's not only about who's nice and who's bad. It's also about controlling the supply of *accurate* data such as visuals of troops. Thus you create an asymmetry: the enemy is transparent but you remain in shadow
In this context much of Western war analysis sounds somewhat misleading. If you think about it, that's quite an egocentric take below: Ukrainians work on social media to win "symbolic victories" = persuade us, Twitter users, that they're cool. Nope, that's much more than that Image
Apart from a certain egocentric perspective - "there's no more urgent business amidst of this war than to win my sympathy" - it's also a bad take for another reason. Ukraine is good in social media in comparison with whom? Apparently with their enemy, the Russians
So the underlying assumption of this argument is that Russia's *not* so good in social media. But that's just wrong. Russia's great and amazing in social media. It launched its own propaganda campaign which is absolutely victorious and achieved its goals brilliantly Image
What goal does Russia pursue in this information war? What kind of image does it want to convey? I believe that the logic behind the Russian propaganda campaign is based on a fundamental Machiavellian principle - it's much more necessary to be feared than loved Image
That makes total sense. Love is fragile. Love can evaporate for some minor reason - and does all the time. It can be easily broken by confrontation. Meanwhile, fear is robust. Fear is antifragile. It's much easier to disappoint a lover, than to reassure a scared person Image
Putin knows that and purposefully builds a scary image. Because it's robust, antifragile. If you demand new and new concessions based of love, you both lose love and don't get concessions. But if you do it based on fear, it gonna work as long as people believe you are scary Image
The lack of love wouldn't be a problem for Putin and wouldn't undermine his strategy. The real problem would be lack of fear. His policy is entirely based on presumed cowardice of opponent. If he's opposed, he'll back off. Because in reality he's very timid and cautious Image
When Putin talked with Macron over a Very Long Table many interpreted it as a humiliation of the President of France. Why? Cuz Putin is so scary. Nobody believed that such a masculine, virile leader is mortally afraid of covid. And yet, that's how he talks with his own generals Image
Macho image is vital for success of Putin's policies. Others give concessions simply because they're scared of such an unpredictable, dangerous, risky guy and what he may do. That's a result of a thorough media campaign that hides how safetyist and risk-avoidant Putin actually is Image
This rationale is obvious in details, too. Consider what a big focus they did on a Chechen contingent sent to Ukraine. We are sending big and scary highlanders, so now you absolutely need to surrender. Otherwise they're gonna hurt you very much. That's all a well-designed psyop Image
Putin is a KGB agent. They don't fight, they do special operations. An important part of which are carefully-designed psyops in order to persuade you that resistance is useless and you should submit. Or we hurt you. That's a mythos which works only as long as you believe in it Image
Ukraine doesn't believe in this mythos anymore. No belief = no power. Feb 24 Putin promised to "denazify" Ukraine and invaded. Next day Feb 25 Russian Foreign Ministry started complaining that Kyiv "rejected our offer to start negotiations and suggested discussing it tomorrow" Image
So, according to Russian official source, Russia tried to accelerate negotiotions asap *NEXT DAY* after the invasion. Meanwhile Ukrainians decided to postpone them. Because it wasn't planned as a war. It was planned as a Special Operation, built on a psyop. Which didn't work out Image
When you deal with an enemy who fights with psyops:

1. Don't believe
2. Don't give concessions
3. Increase pressure

He's timid, safetyist, risk averse. He's mortally scared and looking for ways out. He'd do or give anything for physical survival

Keep that in mind

End of 🧵

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More from @kamilkazani

Sep 17
Wagner march was incredible, unprecedented to the extent most foreigners simply do not understand. Like, yes, Russia had its military coups in the 18th c. But those were the palace coups, all done by the Guards. Purely praetorian business with zero participation of the army.
Yes, there was a Kornilov affair in 1917, but that happened after the coup in capital. In March they overthrew the Tsar, then there was infighting in the capital, including a Bolshevik revolt in July, and only in September part of the army marches to St Petersburg.

Half a year after the coup. Not the same thing
I think the last time anything like that happened was in 1698, when the Musketeers marched on Moscow from the Western border. And then, next time, only in 2023.

(Army leaves the border/battlefield and marches on the capital without a previous praetorian coup in the capital)
Read 17 tweets
Sep 14
As a person from a post-Soviet country, I could not but find the institutions of People’s Republic of China oddly familiar. For every major institution of the Communist Russia, I could find a direct equivalent in Communist China.

With one major exception:

China had no KGB
For a post-Soviet person, that was a shocking realisation. For us, a gigantic, centralised, all-permeating and all powerful state security system appears to be almost a natural phenomenon. The earth. The sky. Force of gravity. KGB

All basic properties of reality we live in Image
It was hard to come up with any explanation for why the PRC that evolved in a close cooperation with the USSR, that used to be its client state, that emulated its major institutions, failed to copy this seemingly prerequisite (?) institution of state power

Unexplainable Image
Read 7 tweets
Aug 30
Soviet Union was making a lot of weaponry.

No, it was making A LOT of it.

Soviet output of armaments was absolutely gargantuan, massive, unbeatable. “Extraordinary by any standard” , it was impossible for any other country to compete with. Image
From 1975 to 1988, the Soviets produced four times as many ICBMs and SLBMs, twice as many nuclear submarines, five times as many bombers, six times as many SAMs, three times as many tanks and six times as many artillery pieces as the United States.

Impossible to compete with. Image
Which raises a question:

How could the USSR produce so much?

It is not only that the USSR invested every dime into the military production. It is also that the Soviet industry was designed for the very large volumes of output, and worked the best under these very large volumesImage
Read 5 tweets
Aug 24
We are releasing our investigation on Roscosmos, covering a nearly exhaustive sample of Russian ICBM producing plants. We have investigated both primary ICBM/SLBM producers in Russia, a major producer of launchers, manufacturers of parts and components.

Image
We have five OSINT materials, one per each plant. To access our materials, you can either:

a) Click on a respective plant in the diagram
b) Choose it from the list below it

Follow the link: rhodus.com/roscosmos
Image
Each material includes an eclectic collection of sources, ranging from the TV propaganda to public tenders, and from the HR listings to academic dissertations. Combined altogether, they provide a holistic picture of Russian ICBM production base that no single type of source can. Image
Read 20 tweets
Aug 8
Two observations. In the recent years,

1. Silicon Valley has been turning red
2. MAGA discourse has been increasingly dominated by a few tech moguls

Now the thing with moguls is they are extreme outliers, who do not understand they are outliers.
Overall, you can expect tech moguls to have much, much higher level of reasoning abilities compared to the political/administrative class. But this comes at a cost. Their capacities for understanding the Other (masses count as the “Other”) are much poorer.
E.g. Putin is much, much less of an outlier in terms of intelligence compared to Thiel. He is much more average. At the same time, I am positively convinced that Putin understands the masses and works with masses much better.
Read 12 tweets
Aug 3
One problem with that is that too much of the supply chain for drone production is located in China. The thing with drones is that they grew out of toys industry. Cheap plastic & electronic crap that all of a sudden got military significance

America forgot how to produce cheap
Image
That is also the major problem I have with "China supports Russia" argument. China could wreck Ukraine easily, simply obstructing & delaying the drone/drone components shipments. That would be an instant military collapse for Ukraine.
Both Russian and Ukrainian drone industries are totally dependent upon the continuous shipments from China. To a very significant degree, their "production" is assembly from the Chinese components which are non alternative and cannot be substituted with anything else (as cheap).
Read 4 tweets

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