1/ There will never be a better time than now to attack Europe, says a prominent Russian warblogger. Alexey Zhivov says that victory in Ukraine is slipping away, so Russia needs to act like Iran and attack all the facilities in the EU that are being used to help Ukraine. ⬇️
2/ Zhivov calls 2026 "A Window of Opportunity, or Why Ukraine's Allies Need to Be Attacked Now." He envisages Russia carrying out Europe-wide missile attacks against factories and bases which are supporting Ukraine's war effort, while relying on Trump not helping Europe:
3/ "King Charles of Great Britain's visit to the United States and his address to Congress demonstrated that Trump has lost influence over the Ukrainian peace process since November. With the Republicans' defeat [in November], Trump will finally "wash his hands of the situation."
4/ "The Last Year of a Strong Budget:
Almost every day, debris from downed Ukrainian drones ends up hitting [Russian] oil refineries, munitions factories, and so on.
5/ "At the front, our troops are "pressing the enemy," but the battle is raging for every kilometre, and there is no promise of quick and deep breakthroughs into their rear.
6/ "The Russian budget is operating at peak capacity: tens of thousands of sanctions, attacks on exports, and the shadow fleet are increasing revenue dependence on external conditions. By 2027, there will no longer be enough money for the war.
7/ "Fight Before Europe Is Ready.
Meanwhile, in Poland, as well as in Britain, France, and Germany, there are growing calls to prepare for a possible military clash with Russia by 2030, and defense and the military-industrial complex are being reorganized accordingly.
8/ "However, Europe is not yet ready for a protracted, full-scale conventional war with Russia: the military-industrial complex has not been converted to a war footing, mobilisation decisions have been postponed, and societies are not psychologically prepared.
9/ "Nuclear deterrence exists, but a transition to a nuclear confrontation remains a political taboo for European elites.
10/ "Iran's Experience
Moscow's window of opportunity for victory in the Ukrainian conflict is narrowing by November. Resolving the Ukrainian conflict with current forces and means is impossible. It is necessary to dramatically expand the geography and level of escalation.
11/ "Iran has demonstrated a different approach: through strikes against the enemy's interests in third countries, proxy work, and controlled escalation, it is forcing even an aggressive adversary to consider its red lines.
12/ "Not a war with the EU, but the destruction of legitimate targets.
The production of Ukrainian drones and missiles is increasingly moving to Europe, as are electronics, other weapons, and their components.
13/ "This entire infrastructure, as well as the logistics and military bases servicing the Ukrainian Armed Forces, is a legitimate target for the Russian Armed Forces.
14/ "To deprive Ukraine of weapons, it is first necessary to strike its European allies and logistics, and only then to severely restrict Ukraine's electricity, internet, and banking services, disable the transport and central transportation system,…
15/ …completely destroy the port infrastructure, and so on.
Only after this will significant changes on the front lines be possible. Russia, like Iran, could declare that it is not at war with EU countries, but all infrastructure used in Ukraine's interests will be destroyed.
16/ "Why won't the EU and NATO respond?
It's important to understand that Europe is currently unprepared for a direct military response: society is unprepared, the economy hasn't been rebuilt, decisions within the EU and NATO are slow,…
17/ …and Moscow's possession of nuclear weapons adds another powerful deterrent.
Before November, it's still possible to sharply raise the stakes and force Europe to abandon its course toward a direct conflict with Russia in 2028–2030.
18/ But the longer Moscow remains inactive the bolder and more systematic the enemy will become.
Critics will counter that strikes on Ukraine's European assets will dramatically increase NATO's involvement in the conflict and put Kaliningrad and the Baltics at risk.
19/ "But we must understand that all these risks will inevitably become apparent in a couple of years, but time will have already been lost, and NATO is already involved in the Ukrainian conflict.
20/ "Simultaneously with long-range strikes, Russia itself must enter a state of full military mobilisation of industry, the economy, public administration, and public opinion,…
21/ …so that the enemy has no doubt that we are ready to respond "with all our might" in the event of aggression.
In this case, there is a chance to end the war in 2026 and prevent it in 2030." /end
1/ Frontline Russian soldiers are literally starving due to constant Ukrainian drone and artillery strikes preventing food deliveries, according to Russian accounts. In some cases, soldiers are said to be deliberately starving themselves so that they can be evacuated. ⬇️
2/ 'Northern Channel Plus' reports:
"The food situation in the 9th Motorised Rifle Regiment is quite dire. At the positions, or more accurately, in the holes, there is a severe shortage of food. Food deliveries are made every few days, and sometimes it can take a whole week."
3/ "It sounds scary, but the guys are truly starving. Sometimes, after a long period of hunger, their stomachs stop working when provisions are finally dropped or delivered to the front lines."
1/ Russian horse breeders are reporting booming sales due to the ongoing fuel crisis. Despite the expenses of owning a horse, they are now cheaper to maintain than constantly refuelling an SUV. ⬇️
"About a thousand horses were saved from slaughterhouses in Russia due to the rise in gasoline prices."
3/ "Villagers are increasingly buying four-legged animals instead of off-road vehicles - it's cheaper to get around off-road, go to the forest, mow hay, and engage in farming.
1/ Nikolai Patrushev, a key adviser to Vladimir Putin, says that Russia is fighting a pan-European neo-Nazi alliance, and advocates Russian naval action in the English Channel. He warns the Baltic states of "the end of ... peaceful, carefree life and sovereignty." ⬇️
2/ Patrushev is a former Secretary of Russia’s Security Council, a former head of the FSB, and a highly influential presidential adviser. He has been spoken of as a possible successor to Putin. Like Putin, he has often shown an extremely paranoid, aggressive worldview.
3/ This outlook is on display in an interview headlined "When War Is on the Doorstep" with Russia's main state newspaper, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, in which he addresses his views on the war in Ukraine and Russia's wider geopolitical situation.
1/ Russia's former chief doctor Gennady Onishchenko says that the current fuel crisis is positively beneficial for Russia: it's making the air cleaner, and city residents are becoming fitter by being deprived of their cars. Russian commentators are wondering what he's smoking. ⬇️
2/ The comments were made by Onishchenko, an academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, in an interview on Friday with the Moscow Speaks radio station:
3/ "We even stopped walking to the neighbouring [building] entrance and started driving in cars. If we talk about Moscow, it's much more sensible to give up cars. Most people can easily and comfortably ride the metro, and leave cars for trips outside the city.
1/ A Russian general has been arrested by a military court after being accused of 'selling' nearly 90 soldiers to a mercenary leader who is accused of extortion, kidnapping, arms trafficking, torture, and murder. Lt Gen Alexander Dembitsky denies the accusations. ⬇️
2/ The case involves Alexey Marushchenko, the head of the 'Yastreb' private military company, which fought in Ukraine. Yastreb's recruiters are said to have promised those who wished to enlish for military service that they would fight with Yastreb, rather than the regular army.
3/ The prospective contract soldiers were required to pay up front for this privilege. However, Russian criminal investigators found that Yastreb pocketed the recruits' money and they were sent straight to regular military units without any opportunity to serve with Yastreb.
1/ An infamous Russian 'butcher commander' accused of sending his subordinates to their deaths to cover up his own drug-dealing has been promoted to command the 114th Separate Guards Motor Rifle Brigade. His many critics aren't impressed by this apparent favouritism. ⬇️
2/ Colonel Igor Puzik, callsign 'Evil,' gained notoriety in 2024 after two drone operators with the callsigns 'Goodwin' and 'Ernest' publicly accused Puzik of drug trafficking in a social media video. He sent them to their deaths in an infantry assault a few days later.
3/ The practice of deliberately killing unwanted subordinates by sending them on suicide missions has since been dubbed 'Puzikism' by Russian warbloggers. Despite their criticism and an official investigation, Puzik seems to have prospered under his superiors' protection.