In today’s Vatnik Soup, we introduce our first Czech vatnik, Tomio Okamura. He’s best known for building a political career on xenophobia while being of mixed origins himself, and for pushing Kremlin narratives in Czechia, a country otherwise very supportive of Ukraine.
1/19
Okamura was born in Tokyo in 1972 to a Japanese-Korean father and Czech mother. He spent part of his childhood in Japan, and part in a Czechoslovak foster home where he was heavily bullied. His mixed origins made it difficult for him to fit in either country.
2/19
Nonetheless, after working odd jobs in Japan, Tomio returned to Czechia and became a successful entrepreneur in Japanese tourism. He then rose in politics: Senator in 2012, MP in 2013, he founded two parties: Dawn of Direct Democracy and SPD (Freedom and Direct Democracy).
3/19
Despite having been treated as such himself, his political career is built mainly on hostility towards “outsiders”, foreigners, minorities. SPD brands itself as “direct democracy,” but its core positions are far-right, nationalist, anti-EU, anti-NATO, and anti-immigration.
4/19
Okamura and his party have repeatedly voted against resolutions supporting Ukraine and condemning Russian war crimes, thereby aligning with Russian interests.
The Czech Ministry of the Interior considers Okamura and his party as part of a hostile “fifth column”.
5/19
They push the usual stale vatnik BS about “Zelenskyy’s corrupt junta”, how helping Ukraine defend against Russian terrorism would “only prolong the conflict” and mean “escalation”, etc.
In turn, Russian-linked “alternative media” and troll farms promote their party.
6/19
Okamura is thus at odds with Czechia’s history and values: the country joined NATO in 1999 and the EU in 2004; EU membership was approved in a 2003 referendum by 77%, while NATO enjoys 86% support per the latest polls. You can guess why: like Ukraine and other countries…
7/19
…in the Central/Eastern Europe region, Czechia has direct experience with Russian terror: it was invaded by the Moscow-led Warsaw Pact in 1968, and Soviet troops remained until 1991. The Czechs also know very well how it feels to be betrayed by the West, and how dangerous…
8/19
… it is to give territory to an invader—you know, “for peace”. The atrocities of Nazi occupation were followed by those of the Red Army. While partisans and GIs actually liberated part of the country, Stalin took all the credit and none of the blame.
9/19
Russian aggression isn’t abstract for Czechs, and it didn’t end with the Velvet Revolution. In 2014, an ammunition depot in Vrbětice was attacked by Russian saboteurs from GRU Unit 29155, the same unit behind the Salisbury Novichok poisoning. Two Czechs were killed.
10/19
After Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Czechia became a leading supporter of Ukraine, including the crucial ammunition initiative, which Okamura vehemently opposes. Support for Ukraine has also been symbolic and with classic Czech humor:
Prague renamed streets near the Russian embassy after opposition figures, and the Czech MFA has called out the Russian one. Czechia also symbolically annexed Kaliningrad, sorry, Královec. Justice Minister Eva Decroix has even praised Vatnik Soup.
Private, civil society initiatives like Gift for Putin @GiftPutin @DarPutinovi raised tens of millions of euros for heavy military equipment, one of the largest citizen-funded defense efforts ever. Okamura, on the other hand, can’t even acknowledge who the aggressor is.
13/19
After the Oct 2025 elections, Okamura became Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies and his party formed a new government with Andrej Babiš. SPD got the ministry of defense with Jaromír Zůna. His initial statements were pro-Ukraine… until the party brought him back in line.
14/19
Okamura immediately removed the Ukrainian flag from the parliament building, which had been there since the full-scale invasion of February 24, 2022. But the response was telling: other MPs hung Ukrainian flags from their own offices, as well as on his, uhm, house.
15/19
Even though Czechia has relatively few systemic problems with immigration, SPD ran racist, anti-African billboards that landed the party in legal trouble. But where xenophobia meets pro-Kremlin narratives is where they really find their element — and Okamura revels in it.
16/19
Since 2022, 400,000 Ukrainian refugees received temporary protection in Czechia. Many of them work and pay taxes. But while Czechia chose solidarity, Okamura chose hatred, framing refugees as competitors rather than fellow human beings fleeing Russian aggression.
17/19
In conclusion, Tomio Okamura is a politician full of contradictions who turned past humiliation into political cruelty—and in doing so, serves the Kremlin, not his country. Okamura ignores Czechia’s collective memory: Western betrayal, Soviet occupation, Russian sabotage…
18/19
… and the awareness that Czechia could be next after Ukraine. But even Japan is helping Ukraine. Even Tomio’s brother, Hayato, is pro-Ukraine. Tomio, on the other hand, chose the Russian path: I suffered, so let’s make everyone else suffer too.
19/19
Make sure to follow @vatniksoup_cs , where the Czech version of this traditional Czech soup will soon be posted.
The book “Vatnik Soup – The Ultimate Guide to Russian Disinformation” is available in English (2nd edition), Danish and Czech: vatniksoup.com/en/books/
Enjoyed this soup? Brandolini’s law: The amount of energy needed to refute vatnik propaganda is an order of magnitude bigger than that needed to produce it. Fact-based research takes time and effort. Please support our work: vatniksoup.com/en/support-our…
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In today’s Vatnik Soup, we’ll talk about why we’re doing this: why we think Ukraine is so important and why we believe that souping vatniks and debunking their propaganda narratives is so crucial to counter Russia’s & their allies’ wars of aggression and achieve real peace.
1/20
War is expensive, and Russia is not a rich country that could afford this: Hospitals? Roads? Plumbing? No: everything into terror and destruction.
But not only that. There is a 2nd item in the Russian state budget that remains strong no matter what:
Manufacturing support for that terror and destruction. Propaganda. Vatniks. “Innocent” travel bloggers. “Independent” journalists. “Patriotic” politicians. Russia spends hundreds of billions of rubles a year ($5 billion) on this, and that kind of money buys you A LOT of BS.
In this second (and possibly last) Basiji Soup, we’ll explore how the Islamic Republic of Iran has prepared for a conflict with the US and Israel. We won’t cover the military aspects, but another kind of war — information warfare.
1/20
In the 1st Basiji Soup, we souped the Islamic Republic, its disinformation operations, its hypocrisy, its support of terrorism including Russia’s, its (one-sided?) relationship with Putin, and the mass protests against it that started two months ago:
The Internet blackout has been crucial in allowing the regime to cover up its massacre of the protesters and especially the scope of it, making it difficult to assess the number of victims. They went to great lengths to jam Starlink, after having made its use illegal.
In this 7th Debunk of the Day, we’ll expose the “Chickenhawk” fallacy. The chickenhawk accusation or the “go to the front!” imperative is a dishonest attempt to silence anyone supporting Ukraine by pushing them to go fight. A barely hidden death wish, as it’s always uttered… 1/5
…with zero regard for who you are or what your personal circumstances might be — you could already be there, on your way there, a veteran, or unable to fight. More broadly, not everyone can or should be a soldier, just as not everyone can or should be a policeman or a nurse. 2/5
Yet a society still needs those things to be done, and the fact that not everyone can go to medical school or fight crime does not mean that we have to surrender to invaders and criminals, nor that we cannot all have an opinion on healthcare. 3/5
In this 6th Debunk of the Day, we’ll talk about a complex and controversial topic: conscription. It is used by vatniks to attack Ukraine for drafting men to fight, while conveniently ignoring the alternative, including the horrors of conscription into the Russian army. 1/8
Military obligations are a reality in many countries, from the most peaceful democracies to the most tyrannical dictatorships — unless you have “bone spurs”. Some argue it is a necessity for defense against invading armies, especially for small countries. 2/8
Others point out that it goes against individual rights or that a professional army is better. And Zelenskyy might agree: he did in fact end conscription. But then a full-scale invasion happened: exactly why many nations, including the US, still keep some form of draft. 3/8
In today’s Vatnik Soup, we’ll introduce the International Olympic Committee (IOC) @Olympics . It’s mostly known for organizing sporting events, and for being supposed to foster the Olympic ideal while actually submitting to dictators.
1/15
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) was founded in 1894 in Paris by Pierre de Coubertin with a noble goal: promote peace through sports. Politics out, sportsmanship in: sounds great in theory.
2/15
But in practice, the IOC has a long history of accommodating authoritarian regimes, always in the name of “neutrality,” “dialogue,” and “keeping sports separate from politics”, usually not in a particularly consistent or moral way.
In today’s Wumao Soup, we’ll tell you 15 things about the People’s Republic of China that you didn’t learn from TikTok, Douyin or DeepSeek.
1/20
This is our 2nd Wumao Soup. In the 1st one, we introduced how the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) online propaganda works. Now we’ll cover some of the big topics they hide or lie about. Think of it as an antidote soup to their propaganda.
1 - Tiananmen Square massacre
Yes, it happened. Yes, it was a massacre. Vatniks, wumaos, and tankies in the West deny it, while China censors the slightest mention of it, even the date it happened.