As Ukrainian forces continue to annihilate North Korean troops and occasionally take them prisoner, some intriguing details have come to light. A short thread 🧵 1/9
Capturing POWs has proven challenging as North Koreans and Russians alike are apparently instructed to kill wounded NK soldiers to prevent them from falling into Ukrainian hands. Yet recently Ukrainians have successfully captured two NK soldiers alive. 2/9
Both individuals carried Russian military service cards alleging they were born in the Tuva Republic, a region included in the Russian Federation. Russian non-regime media also report that the Russian authorities transferred identities of actual Tuvans to drafted NK soldiers. 3/9
The choice of Tuva is understandable: native Tuvans bear a physical resemblance to North Koreans. 4/9
By the way, Russia’s former Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu is himself of Tuvan origin. 5/9
The fact that the captured NK soldiers’ documents claimed Tuva as their birthplace corroborates earlier findings. Russian service cards recovered from the killed NK soldiers similarly falsely listed the Tuva Republic as their place of birth. 6/9
Yet another particularly interesting discovery was a diary found on one killed NK soldier. Ukrainian Special Operations Forces translated a number of pages from that diary, which the former owner had regularly updated, and one part was especially revealing for me. 7/9
Here is a DeepL translation (UA->EN) of that part. It reveals that the soldier’s motivation to fight was not connected to Russia’s war itself but stemmed from his loyalty to the NK regime – loyalty that appeared partly driven by a sense of guilt over something he had done back home. 8/9
Of course, this is just one example, and it would be unwise to generalise. However, at least in this specific case, the soldier’s motivation to fight in a distant foreign land was not about bringing about a global communist revolution – something that would be too natural for many 20th century communists – but, curiously, about his own individual interests. 9/9
Putin’s daughter, Katerina Tikhonova, is rumoured to be under consideration as a potential successor to her father as Russia’s leader. This idea is presumably being pushed by the Kovalchuk brothers, who are close to Putin. 1/5
I still don’t really see Putin vacating his position before his physical demise – although, of course, he could remain the major power broker behind whoever he selects to succeed him. 2/5
Western mainstream media have played a major and deeply disturbing role in amplifying the ideas of Russian fascist ideologue Alexander Dugin, both in the West and beyond. 1/10
By falsely portraying Dugin as having considerable – if not definitive – influence on Kremlin thinking, they encouraged far-right as well as non-far-right sympathisers of the Putin regime around the world to regard his fascist ideas as legitimate critiques of Western liberal democracy. 2/10
The warped logic underpinning this is as follows: if one agrees with Putin’s view of the West, and if Putin is presumed to be influenced by Dugin (as Western media often claim), then it appears reasonable to turn to Dugin’s work as the supposed source of Putin’s anti-Western outlook. 3/10
Interesting details have emerged about the elimination yesterday of Zaur Gurtsiyev, a Russian war criminal who commanded air operations during the capture of Mariupol in Ukraine in 2022. 1/4
According to VChK-OGPU sources, Gurtsiyev was drawn into a scheme involving a homosexual honey trap. He met a man on a gay dating website, and they exchanged explicit photos. 2/4
The man was part of a set-up. When they eventually agreed to meet in person, he was given a device supposedly intended to record compromising material on Gurtsiyev. 3/4
Playing for time while preparing a new offensive against Ukraine and further sabotage operations across wider Europe, the Kremlin has – at this stage still unofficially – voiced five major demands, according to Reuters sources. 1/6
Putin “wants a ‘written’ pledge by major Western powers not to enlarge the U.S.-led NATO alliance eastwards”. Of course, NATO is one of the organisations Putin fears most – so how exactly will Russia keep destabilising Moldova and Georgia, and continue destroying Ukraine, if they join NATO? 2/6
Russia “also wants Ukraine to be neutral”. That’s an odd demand: Ukraine’s neutrality was enshrined in its Constitution when Russia invaded and occupied part of Ukraine back in 2014! What's the point of being neutral again if that did not deter Russia from invading the country? 3/6
Vladimir Medinsky, the head of the Russian delegation at the Russia-Ukraine talks, stated that Russia “fought Sweden for 21 years” and is prepared to wage war against Ukraine “however long it takes” – “Russia is prepared to fight forever”. 1/5
Medinsky is not a random adviser to Putin; he oversees the historical revisionism mechanism, one of three key tools used to enforce Putin’s worldview on the West and Ukraine. The other two are pan-Russian ultranationalism and dehumanising political technology. 2/5
The mechanism of historical revisionism sacralises Russian history and embeds a sense of perpetuity in the idea of a Western conspiracy against Russia, with Ukraine portrayed as merely one malign element among many. 3/5
Putin has no ideology; he is, in fact, an intellectually unsophisticated person. His entire political worldview rests on two very simple narratives. 1/9
One is that the West is waging an eternal war against Russia.
The other is that Ukraine is merely an instrument of the West in the current episode of the perennial anti-Russian war. 2/9
In my recent essay, I traced the origins of these ideas to Putin’s teenage years and his fascination with Soviet spy thrillers, showing how his KGB service and specific events later solidified that basic worldview: 3/9shekhovtsov.substack.com/p/putins-genoc…