Stalin expected to crush Finland in 10 days. It took 105 days and 400,000 Soviet casualties. He got 10% of Finnish territory.
Putin invaded Ukraine expecting a quick victory parade. 4 years later, Russia controls just 20% of pre-war Ukrainian territory — WP. 1/
Stalin's USSR had 170 million people vs Finland's 3.5 million. A Soviet general told Stalin it would take 10 days max.
Molotov said Stalin wanted to celebrate his birthday "on the steps of Finland's Parliament in precisely 20 days." 2/
The war ended March 13, 1940 — over three months later with massive Soviet losses the Kremlin concealed.
Stalin had to settle for a fraction of what he wanted. Sound familiar? 3/
Putin's "special military operation" (calling it a war means prison) has now lasted longer than Russia's entire involvement in WWII.
Russia controls just 20% of Ukrainian territory it held four years ago. Putin has "surely defined success down." 4/
Before Stalin attacked Finland, Molotov admitted negotiations were "never anything but a long fuse."
If Finland accepted Soviet demands? "We'll only ask for more until we've taken the whole country." Today's Stalinist in the Kremlin is no different. 5/
Any Ukraine deal without real security guarantees — permanent troop deployments, access to frozen Russian assets, real enforcement — is just "a sizzling fuse."
Putin, like Stalin, won't stop unless forced. 6/
Russia's most stolen book in 2023 was Orwell's "1984." In 2025? The Russian constitution guaranteeing free speech.
Russians "read Orwell for reality, the constitution as a beautiful utopia." History repeating as tragedy and farce. 7X
In Geneva, Ukraine tries to prevent Russia from getting Donbas but to no avail.
The latest round of talks ended without progress, as Moscow demands Kyiv hand over a 50×40 mile strip of territory in Donetsk as the price for ending the war. — NYT 1/
Russia wants a strip of land about 50 miles long and 40 miles wide between the frontline and the administrative border of Donetsk region, covering dozens of towns and villages.
Ukraine refuses to withdraw unilaterally. 2/
Kyiv argues that ceding land would embolden Russia to attack again, either in Ukraine or elsewhere.
Zelenskyy: “Allowing the aggressor to take something is a big mistake.” 3/
Ukrainian soldiers survive –25°C this winter — United24.
On the Sumy front, frozen trenches, failing engines, and constant drone surveillance define daily combat.
Commander “Bull”: “You’d doze off… open your eyes, and the snow had already covered you.” 1/
The temperature drops to –25°C. At dawn, 8 km from Russian positions, anti-drone netting covers Ukrainian artillery.
Snow hides positions and exposes them. Footprints can give coordinates away within minutes. 2/
Bull commands an artillery unit of the 47th Mechanized Brigade. “The first two days without heating are manageable. But by the third or fourth day at –10°C, it gets really hard. Frostbite becomes real.” 3/
A 15-year-old Yana wakes under rubble in Kyiv. A North Korean KN-23 missile hit her home. Inside that missile were Western components — including British-made converters.
Despite sanctions, Russia and others receive components for their weapons — The Telegraph. 1/
On April 24, 2025, 12 civilians were killed in their sleep in Kyiv. Yana’s parents and brother died. Her ribs and leg were shattered.
Zelenskyy said the missile contained 116 Western-made components. Sanctions exist. Yet the parts keep flowing. 2/
From 2022 to 2024, XP Power-labelled shipments worth $2.5M were imported into Russia. Nearly half moved via Hong Kong middlemen.
Dual-use electronics — as useful in a computer as in a ballistic missile. 3/