Kamil Galeev Profile picture
Jan 25 4 tweets 2 min read
Forgive me @leonidvolkov, but you need to:

a) first, take power
b) *then* be calling for tribunals over your critics

Once in Kremlin, you can jail whomever misfortunate enough to be within your reach. Until then you need to:

1) make *specific* accusations
2) provide evidence
Daily reminder

@navalny'st tactic when facing *any* criticism is:

a) ad hominem attack against their critic
b) some made up lie about him or her

(a) doesn't surprise me at all. It is (b) that is amazing

Can @leonidvolkov provide any evidence for the payroll claim for example?
If you can't prove your claim, then why making it all? Be vague, produce some insinuation that doesn't require much proof (as it contains no statement of fact). You can take example from a few Western academicians, who are smart enough to be vague in their smear

Why can't you?
PS I see nothing wrong with working for Tatarstan btw. I am just amazed at why @navalny'sts such as @leonidvolkov are making up some random lies as they go? That's just childish 🤡

Once again, be vague and unspecific in your smear😈. You haven't taken power 🇷🇺, yet

Good luck!

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More from @kamilkazani

Jan 22
The biggest myth about @navalny's sucession is:

Navalny's succession -> the war stops

In reality Navalny's succession can happen only *after* the Russian military defeat. It's not that they want (or can) stop the war. It's them aiming to save & reboot system *after* the defeat
That's what many (clueless) Westerners aren't getting. "@Navalny team may not be perfect, but at least they'll stop the war". No, it's the other way around. They can't and are not going to stop the war. What they could do is to capitalise on the impending Russian defeat
Once again, they are not bringing the Russian military defeat closer, but want to capitalise on it. Therefore, the @navalny movement should be discussed into the context of the endgame. What is the *positive* scenario for when this war ends?
Read 8 tweets
Jan 20
Moscow liberal's logic:

1. There were (allegedly) hundreds of thousands Chechens willing to be a part of Russia
2. Yeltsin bombed them to ashes Mariupol-style
3. "Not clear what was an alternative"

How exactly are these guys different from Putin? Same crazy, murderous mindset Image
Fact

Modern Russia is more of a product of Chechen Wars than of Putin's personality. Remilitarization, buildup of security state, they all started due to the First War. By the late 1990s Yeltsin was actively looking for a KGB heir. All his three last PMs were from state security Image
Moscow liberals want to portray Putin as an "accident". He was not. The system chose Putin, not the other way around. Yeltsin elevated Putin from nothing, started another war to facilitate his succession and used the lowkey nuclear blackmail when Clinton tried to argue Image
Read 13 tweets
Jan 19
Old and more comprehensive thread of threads. Here you can find my earlier texts relating to this war. Starting from Jan 2022

Yes, and there is a book I strongly recommend for the better understanding of *modern* Russia and its origins

"The Time of Berezovsky" by Petr Aven

Absolute, absolute gem. Unfortunately, I am unaware of any translation into English

Shame
The Time of Berezovsky is not really a narrative. It is a collection of interviews on the 1990s, centred around the figure of the most flamboyant of the oligarchs. Interviewer (himself an oligarch) talks with politicians, businessmen, journalists

A great glimpse into the era
Read 6 tweets
Jan 19
This requires a long response. But I'll start with dropping few theses:

1. Revolutionary changes proceed iteration by iteration, agenda and goals mutating on each step

2. Many (most?) independent movements do not look like one on iteration 1. Think about the American revolution
3. Many independence movements (including your own), did not start as such. They aimed for very moderate goals. Or at least we nowadays retrospectively see them as moderate. Their agenda was pronouncedly loyalist. There was little open separatism except for a handful of radicals
4. Many independence movements (including your own) were not led by some cartoonish "regime fighters". They were led by the moneyed, landed, influential individuals who had been *successfully integrated to the previous regime*. Think about Washington or Franklin
Read 9 tweets
Jan 18
This is correct. When forming your opinion about @navalny movement, consume as much of their *external* propaganda specifically directed at foreign audience (=you) as you can. Do not look at their *internal* propaganda though

It was not meant for you!
@navalny @k_sonin's comment is very telling. Notice that he directs you to the content (Op-Eds, movies) constructed specifically for the foreign audience by the largely clueless Western media:

Moscow cultural establishment -> Western media -> You

That's just perspective laundering
The power of the imperial capital is not based only on force. It is also based on the *monopoly of representation*. Verified facts about Russia are being constructed by the Western media. But these media are largely clueless, drawing their opinions from the Moscow establishment
Read 5 tweets
Jan 13
To be fair it may also mean that court politics >>> military considerations

And Shoigu is really good at court politics. Uniquely good, I'd say. He's been serving in central government since 1991 surviving plenty administrations and plenty purges. That's absolutely unprecedented
* I know that between his two ministries he's served as a governor of Moscow oblast. Not the point. The point is him never ever being ousted, a singular, unprecedented case. It seems he's just got rid of a potential competitor and returned back to the pre-invasion power balance
I really want to write on Shoigu vs. Serdyukov one day. "Do your job well and ignore the court politics" formula doesn't work in reality. You'll end up vilified, ousted, universally hated and despised. Absolute destruction - that's the normal price for ignoring the court politics
Read 4 tweets

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