I thought this was a good read :
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As the war in Ukraine grinds on with no end in sight, it is increasingly important to understand what drives Russia. Is the war President Vladimir Putin’s personal crusade to restore Russia to some notion of former Soviet glory, or does it have deeper historical and geopolitical roots? Is a negotiated settlement possible and, if so, would it provide the basis for a lasting peace, or should Ukraine and the West dig their heels in further and prepare for a long haul?

In Orlando Figes’s view, recent analyses of Russia’s war focus excessively on Putin’s idiosyncrasies, his oligarchic entourage, and events since the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. Instead, Figes recommends that political and military analysts cast a much wider net, drawing lessons from Russia’s long history.

Figes teaches at Birkbeck College at the University of London and Trinity College at the University of Cambridge and has published extensively on Russian and European history. In The story of Russia, he provides a compact but comprehensive account of Russia’s past, concluding with reflections on where Russia is heading.

Figes’s elegantly written book takes the reader from Russia’s Viking and Slavic origins in the 7th century and the Kievan Rus era, through the rule of the Mongols, imperial Russia and the rise and fall of the Soviet Union, to the present day. In the process, he explores numerous themes of relevance to the war in Ukraine.

Russian autocracy has always been absolute. In Western Europe, state and crown gradually diverged, paving the way for today’s liberal democracies. The monarchs that remain lack political power. In Russia, attempts at reform came too late. Figes reminds us that Russia’s autocratic state has broken down twice, in 1917 and 1991. But both times autocracy was reborn in a different form.

In the West, state and church also gradually separated, while in Russia, political power and religion remained intertwined. In Italy, the home to many of Moscow’s architects, churches were built outside the city walls, while in Moscow the most important churches were built within the Kremlin. Reflecting this close relationship, Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, has thrown his weight behind Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

Unlike China, which built a defensive wall and acquired buffer zones, Russia has always been expansionist. From the Mongol conquest in the 11th century, Russia learned that the best way to defend itself was to control as much of the Eurasian steppe as possible. Following the collapse of the Mongol empire, Russia expanded through Siberia and Central Asia, eventually reaching the Pacific.

The strategic significance of the Black Sea is crucial to understanding the invasion of Ukraine. Without the Black Sea, Russia has no maritime access to Europe except through the Baltic Sea, which can easily be blocked. Empress Catherine II ('the Great') annexed Crimea in 1783, and today Sevastopol is home to Russia's Black Sea Fleet, a key element in its naval defense.

Figes traces Russia's current-day oligarchy and corruption back to the late Middle Ages, when boyars (feudal noblemen) were granted land ownership and wealth as a reward for their loyalty to the grand duke in Moscow. During this period, the practice of 'feeding from the land' took root, with officials extracting goods and money from the population. This relationship was not unlike Putin's alliance with his oligarchs, whose wealth depends on their loyalty to Putin.

Figes also discusses the evolution of Russia's military. Under Tsar Ivan IV ('the Terrible'), landowners provided the army with soldiers, based on the size of their holdings. Tsar Peter I ('the Great') expanded description, with groups of peasant households providing soldiers for life. What the military lacked in quality it made up for in quantity. In World War II, the Red Army lost about 12 million soldiers, three times Nazi Germany's military losses.

In its war on Ukraine, Russia is again tapping into its large supply of peasant soldiers. In late 2022, Putin announced the mobilization of an additional 300,000 conscripts. Most come from rural and remote areas and are poorly equipped. With a top-heavy command structure and ineffective non-commissioned officers, in Ukraine Russia's military has lost disproportionate numbers of senior officers . Interestingly, this problem dates back to tsarist Russia, where NCOs were poorly trained and unreliable.

The war in Ukraine has turned Western public opinion against Russia. Within Russia, however, polls indicate a high level of support for Putin and his 'special military operation'. Significantly, there is little evidence of domestic opposition to the war. Figes ascribes this largely to attitudes carried over from the Soviet era, including low material expectations, social conformism and acceptance of authority.

Figes reviews future scenarios. He is concerned that Russia is trapped in a repetitive historical cycle, continuously reverting to Soviet-style authoritarianism. Russia has caused massive death, human suffering and destruction in Ukraine and triggered global energy and food crises. But in the long run, Figes notes, Russia itself is the biggest loser, inflicting enormous damage on its people and economy and setting its own development back decades.

Robert Wihtol is an adjunct faculty member at the Asian Institute of Management and former Asian Development Bank country director for China and director general for East Asia.
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I suspect there may be a difference between what motivated Putin to begin this heinous war and what motivates his continuing it now. Many sources have suggested (and statements by Putin seem to confirm this) that the Russian president now wages war for the sake of being at war.

The Kremlin does not seem to have a coherent strategy or palpable goals anymore. The Russian people has even been told to prepare for "endless" war. And it's not for want of an "off ramp" either, but because its more beneficial for Putin. Nothing unites a people (or at least: nothing justifies oppression) like a sinister foreign enemy. I think he just wages war to maintain his power and numb his imperial phantom pain.

As of late, I've even come to wonder if Putin's death could be beneficial after all. It would not remove his dangerous ideology and there could certainly be more war down the road, but it seems to me one of the most powerful factors driving hostilities is the fact that no one dares to defy him.
 
The man who explains to the Germans how the Russian fights

Gert Gawellek studied at a military academy in the former Soviet Union. Today, he uses that to help the Bundeswehr prepare for a possible war against Russia.



(There are no recent pics of him just the one in the article, its from 2014 he doesn't want to get depicted for security reasons)

Before Gert Gawellek learned how the Russians conduct land warfare, he sat in the "Heroes' Gallery" in the ballroom of the Military Academy "M. V. Frunse" in Moscow. It was 1987, the Soviet academy head opened the academic year. Gawellek was happy. Together with other officers of the National People's Army of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR) and hundreds of soldiers of the Red Army of the Soviet Union, he was destined for higher tasks.
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Before Gert Gawellek learned how the Russians conduct land warfare, he sat in the "Heroes' Gallery" in the ballroom of the Military Academy "M. V. Frunse" in Moscow. It was 1987, the Soviet academy head opened the academic year. Gawellek was happy. Together with other officers of the National People's Army of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR) and hundreds of soldiers of the Red Army of the Soviet Union, he was destined for higher tasks.
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Gawellek is not a person who seeks publicity. In the GDR, he was a reconnaissance officer and led small squads with which he would have gathered information about the enemy on the front lines in the event of war. He was among the first soldiers to fight al-Qaida in southern Afghanistan in the fall of 2001, together with American special forces. Not a man to talk big.
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When Gawellek returned from Moscow in early September 1990, the GDR was on its last legs. With his degree from "der Frunse," named after one of the academy's first commanders, his career would have been mapped out all the way to general in the People's Army. Now he had to worry about being accepted into the Bundeswehr at all. "I didn't believe that my knowledge of Soviet warfare would be needed again," says Gawellek.
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Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
 
Funny stories from wasteland - vol 3

Wagner mercenary terrorizing whole village, kills old villager.
28 old Ivan Rosomakhin was sentenced for 14 in 2020, for murder. But Prigozhin released him, after six month in Ukraine, Ivan was set free and awarded a “Hero”, March 21. He started terrorizing his own villagers, walking around with axe. In a matter of days he committed a murder.



63 years old was sentenced for 7 years, for posting anti-war posts on his social network.



Mordor court arrested WSJ journalist, American citizen

 
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Oh no ....
Dear friends, welcome to the club! - tweeted Foreign Minister Jan Lipavský (Piráti) after learning that Russia had also included Hungary among "enemy countries
 
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Dead orcs are glorified in ruSSian toilets. Such a glory, to die for führers ambitions and orcs will look at you while dumping a shyte!
Truly, ruZZians have different views about life
 

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Turkey finally got their S**t together and accepted Finland into Nato. Looks like I'll get to be third rate Nato reserve infantry after all. :cool:
 
I suspect there may be a difference between what motivated Putin to begin this heinous war and what motivates his continuing it now. Many sources have suggested (and statements by Putin seem to confirm this) that the Russian president now wages war for the sake of being at war.

The Kremlin does not seem to have a coherent strategy or palpable goals anymore. The Russian people has even been told to prepare for "endless" war. And it's not for want of an "off ramp" either, but because its more beneficial for Putin. Nothing unites a people (or at least: nothing justifies oppression) like a sinister foreign enemy. I think he just wages war to maintain his power and numb his imperial phantom pain.

As of late, I've even come to wonder if Putin's death could be beneficial after all. It would not remove his dangerous ideology and there could certainly be more war down the road, but it seems to me one of the most powerful factors driving hostilities is the fact that no one dares to defy him.
If putin throws in the towel, the Russian people, or at least some of the rich/leaders, would sense blood, and at the least remove him, probably of the terminal type.

If he keeps going, he can claim he might still win, especially given the claimed ‘plan’ is to outlast the west. Thus reinforcing the belief in Russia that they can outsuffer any enemy.

It’s a tactic, but most human conflict has tended to bashing the other guys brains out, one way or the other. As quickly as possible.

I don’t know what will happen when he goes, too many variables, but if Russia simpers out of Ukraine, without making peace, and pays a lot in damages, the west should not lower the sanctions etc.
 

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