Fogdog
Well-Known Member
Sitting here in the US, I can only watch and speculate. Not speaking Russian, just listening to the translation and watching his face while speaking, I agree that he knows he's in a crisis, both for his regime but also personally. Wouldn't say he's scared but he didn't project confidence to me. His facial expression when speaking the word betrayal showed anger, but also fear often lies behind anger.So i just knew the shortcut to this thread would just be the latest posts button.
Did anyone react to the speech? He looks like scared like a dog with his tail between his legs.
Armed resurrection, traitors will get 'appropriate action'? Thats far away from 'rain down fire on all of our enemies" spiel of last year or so.
Even General Armageddon is striking out a conciliatory vibe of brothers in arms bladibla.
He is shit scared of squaring up to Prigo and have no idea how many of his own he can trust. Wagner was camping in ukraine, somewhere around Mariupol. That means that someone let them cross the border thru to Russia. He doest know how far this will reach and he is hoping and praying it can be stopped before push comes to shove. That tells me Prigo might be able to do this. But i think Poots might do the scorched earth tactic that works so well with every invasion attempt: if he can blow up the bridges between there and Moscow then Prigo is stuck. But then how is he going send supplies to the front?
It just reminds me of watching the wall going down in Germany; not sure what will happen but damn sure something will.
Rational mind tells me it wont be bad but my clenched butthole have other ideas. Lets hope hes not right...
I found it interesting, his reference to 1917 that he was placing himself on the side of the tsar. That a rebellion against him was like the rebellion against tsar Nicholas. The rebellion triggered the beginning of the end to Russian war effort in WW1 and the beginning of the Russian Revolution that I think nobody would like to see repeated. But still a former officer of the KGB in the USSR casting himself in the role of tsar causes cognitive dissonance to me. But maybe that's where he sees himself.
We will see as this all unfolds how it will play out in the more distant corners of Russia. It doesn't seem that the central government has ability to suppress internal rebellion at this time.
I'm glad for Ukraine that this is happening. It increases the chance of the war ending sooner than later.