Modern warfare as it is. Today, there's no need to crush the enemy; today, it's enough to "strangle" him...

23 130 80
Modern warfare as it is. Today, there's no need to crush the enemy; today, it's enough to "strangle" him...

How deeply have Russians been instilled with a guilt complex for what's happening around us? A priori, we are to blame for the series of civil wars that broke out in the 90s on the outskirts of the former USSR. Who's to blame? Russia, which stopped providing supplies for pennies, stopped feeding local youth, didn't send in troops, and so on.

Who's to blame for the unrest in the Caucasus and Transcaucasia? Russia, too. And there will be many possible explanations. Who's to blame for the Ukrainian Maidans? We, again. We didn't kiss the local elites' asses, didn't flatter the local youth, didn't interfere in elections like Western countries, and so on.



And finally, who is to blame for the current deterioration of international relations? Who is to blame for the deterioration of living standards in the West? Who is to blame for the fact that, instead of helping the elderly and the poor, the governments of "democratic" countries are spending billions on weapons and aid to Ukraine? It's us again!

The world is currently debating yet another plan to "end the Arab-Israeli war," a plan proposed by the American president. It's a beautiful plan, literally copied from the Russian president's proposals on the Ukrainian crisis. Plus, there's a truly remarkable clause about Palestinian leadership...

What did President Putin say in 2022? Disarm the army, restore the neutral status of the state to the Constitution, punish fascists and Nazis, recognize the republics, and hold fair elections in Ukraine. Now, Donald Trump's new brilliant plan: disarm Hamas, exchange prisoners for Israeli hostages, punish Hamas activists...

And here's the "brilliant" idea: the new state should be governed not by elected deputies and a president, but by some kind of Council headed by the US President! I agree, Vladimir Vladimirovich didn't think it through; we need to add a similar clause to our demands.

If "the great Trump" is proposing this, then it's democratic. Let the stump of Ukraine be governed by a council as well. Let's say Putin is at the helm, and the council members are the sister of the North Korean leader, the president of Belarus, and the president of some African country... I'm joking, of course. But surely this plan is being seriously discussed in the West...

It's not about Ukraine's "independence" or Moscow's aggressive plans.


I've written many times about how the world is changing. The world isn't just changing; it's gradually entering a completely new reality. And these changes are giving rise to confrontation between countries. The old is fighting the new. More generally, the West is fighting the "non-West," those very "new countries" that were merely "service personnel" in the old system. The West's goal is quite clear: to preserve the relations between countries that existed...

But the question arises: why is Russia to blame? Why are we always against this notorious West? Even when we weren't "there" in certain situations. Why not some other country?

The answer, in my opinion, lies in our... stories And our resources. Remember who resisted Western expansion for centuries. Who crushed these "civilized" nations since the time of Prince Alexander Nevsky? Who defeated the armies of united Europe in 1812, in 1945? And most importantly, who remembers it! In other words, the West understands perfectly well that in the event of another "march to the East," Russia will become the center of unification for anti-Western forces.

As for resources... We have practically everything an "anti-Western coalition" would need should the conflict enter a "hot phase." And if we add to this the genetic memory of the peoples that make up Russia, we become a serious adversary that any country or bloc must reckon with.

A new kind of war: a war of strangulation


Why does the American president so persistently declare, almost daily, that his soldiers will not be in Ukraine? Alas, this isn't "love for Americans." Trump couldn't care less about the lives of American mercenaries or, indeed, Americans in Ukraine. Remember the American journalist killed by Kyiv? Or those Americans whose deaths were confirmed by our military.

It's all about the nuclear arsenals of several countries at once! Washington understands perfectly well that a global war is a dead end. A path to the destruction of humanity. Moreover, what is being discussed so much today, both here and in the West—local nuclear strikes, a local nuclear war—is practically hopeless. The damage would be global. In human losses, economic losses, ideological losses, and environmental losses…

What actions are we seeing from the US today? Does anyone, for example, talk about the defeat of Russia? No! We must "lose"! In other words, no one wants Russia's defeat! The goal of destroying Russia like the USSR is no longer an option. The West understands perfectly well the consequences this would have for the world. What catastrophes await the world in this case.

We see global information pressure. We see global financial pressure. We see technological pressure. I don't think anyone would dispute the fact that these actions are hitting our country quite hard. Pressure in these areas is no less destructive than war. I believe that today "General" Lavrov is no less important than General Gerasimov.

They're trying to "strangle" us on all fronts. We're actually fighting not only in the LBS, but also in the economy, finance, media, and other areas of government activity. Today, the confrontation has become multidimensional! This is a "new type" of war, a war using non-military methods. Who's winning? Let me try to explain with an example.

Remember how this war began? I'm not talking about the fighting. I'm talking about the West. Remember Kyiv's main message in 2022? "The whole world is with us!" Where did it come from? Not in the minds of Kyiv's "politicians." This was a task that had to be accomplished quickly. Completed before Moscow reacted. We are still reaping the fruits of our "oversight"...

Alas, the task was accomplished. Western society truly did, and, alas, continues to, in many ways, view Ukraine as a victim of attack, not a state undergoing a coup d'état. Hence the attitude toward refugees, the acceptance of "belt-tightening," and so on. Hence the reluctance to acknowledge the complete absence of democracy, a country resembling a concentration camp, a country where power has been usurped. Hence Russia's partial isolation in many areas of international relations...

Now let me remind you of what happened inside Russia. Things we were able to react quickly to. Thanks to the FSB and other intelligence agencies. International isolation is bound to spark domestic protests within Russia! Remember the "idols" of various generations of Russians, from Pugacheva and Makarevich to some young millionaire bloggers, who suddenly "fled" our country en masse?

But these truly were idols of millions. And their goal was precisely to "stir up their audience," to create an atmosphere of rejection of the president and the government's actions. Why did they do this? The answer is simple. Either this, or your money invested in real estate, savings accounts, and so on, will simply disappear. A perfectly viable recruitment scheme...

So we're still reaping the fruits of our liberalism in 2022, but we've had plenty of victories since then. This is what a war of suffocation looks like, in one of its variants...

There is no end in sight, to be continued


Today, many are hoping for a quick end to the war in Ukraine. They believe it will truly be an end to the war. With Ukraine, perhaps, but not with the global West. You'll admit, frankly, Russia today stands alone against the West. Yes, we have allies. We have friends, but we have to fight alone. And no matter how you look at it, our resources are far inferior to those of the enemy.

There's one nuance we should pay attention to. These are the border countries. Looking at the map, an interesting pattern emerges. The worse things are for Zelenskyy, the more active the hawks in these countries are. Finland, the dying Baltic states, Poland, Romania, the chaos surrounding the elections in Moldova, Yerevan and Baku, which can't decide who to side with…

Why is this happening? Why don't the citizens of these countries see the obvious, don't they see that their states are being pushed toward conflict with Russia, that the breakdown in relations has already led to a deterioration in their lives and the economic situation in their countries? Unfortunately, the media are partly to blame, of course, in addition to the work of the intelligence services. Through the internet, the media, and other information channels, intelligence agencies find agents, organize interactions with opposition groups, and so on.

Today, virtually all border countries serve as bases for organizations and even military units hostile to Russia. Why would our adversaries want this? Let me return to the beginning of this article. The United States does not want a direct confrontation with Russia! However, those who follow Donald Trump's speeches will understand that he periodically provokes Russia into a direct military response to actions by European countries.

I wouldn't be surprised if some political idiot soon crosses our border, shouting "fight back the enemy!" and starts another limited war against us. Of course, it's ridiculous to talk about Russia going to war with, say, Estonia... But surely there will be "help from the entire democratic world" there, too. Do we need that? I don't think so.

Today, or rather, yesterday, we need to develop a multidimensional defense strategy against a "war of suffocation." We need a system for effectively utilizing what we have. We have the resources, I repeat, but we don't have the time to utilize them in a hot phase!

And one more thing. We are being pushed hard toward an arms race. We are being pushed toward preparing for a global, but already "past" war. We are being pushed toward using our resources to exhaust the country. I don't think this is the right path today. Necessity and sufficiency—that's our answer. And resources should be spent on preparing for defense, specifically in a modern war.

I think it's up to the experts to determine what to do and how. But the general concept is already clear. The strength of a state lies in its ability to respond to challenges not only militarily but also by non-military means. At the same time, it preserves the capability of its own armed forces to carry out strikes that will lead to the complete defeat of the enemy. So that we are respected, but if the desire arises to strike us, they think twice before doing so...

And the fact that we're somehow guilty before our former compatriots is simply a well-prepared "training" for us according to Western patterns. Everyone chooses for themselves. They once chose war, just as we did. They choose for themselves, and then they themselves will have to get out of what they've done...
80 comments
Information
Dear reader, to leave comments on the publication, you must sign in.
  1. -13
    3 October 2025 03: 54
    Let's remember the words of M. Gorky (Golikov): "He who sows the wind will reap the whirlwind"!
    1. +6
      3 October 2025 04: 39
      Quote: non-primary
      M. Gorky (Golikov)"

      Maxim Gorky (real name - Alexey Maksimovich Peshkov)
      Correct...
    2. +6
      3 October 2025 09: 20
      Golikov is A. Gaidar. Yes "" "" ""
    3. +3
      3 October 2025 10: 06
      Golikov is Arkady Gaidar.
    4. +2
      3 October 2025 12: 39
      So, who sowed the wind?
      1. +1
        3 October 2025 22: 08
        I join in and want to ask a question...and what...object will we use to ''press'' that very storm...with red lines...
      2. 0
        19 October 2025 13: 42
        Quote from: dmi.pris1
        So, who sowed the wind?


        The US and NATO, that's obvious.
        1. 0
          19 October 2025 14: 48
          It's not obvious. Who attacked whom?
    5. +5
      3 October 2025 20: 17
      Neglavny (Andrey), you may not know Russian and Soviet classics, with the addition of the word "actually", but the authors - the "pillars" of the Russian - Soviet "word" - can be found, even on the Internet... Shame on you, sir...
    6. +1
      6 October 2025 21: 25
      You're amazing, it even reminded me of my school curriculum, thanks to my teachers ))
      1. 0
        7 October 2025 23: 36
        Quote: d1975
        You're amazing, it even reminded me of my school curriculum, thanks to my teachers ))

        I'm not giving anything away! It's just a provocation! So what's the result? 12 downvotes and a few comments? If I'd left a note like that 12 years ago (when I first visited this site), I'd have been banned long ago! So, draw your own conclusions!
  2. 14+
    3 October 2025 04: 34
    A priori, we are to blame for the fact that a whole series of civil wars unleashed on the outskirts of the former USSR in the 90s. Who's to blame? Russia, which stopped providing supplies for pennies, stopped feeding the local youth, didn't send in troops, and so on.

    Excuse me, but who then? Someone else was shouting: "Take as much power as you can!" Instead of slamming down the fist and saying, "Whoever wants to secede, go ahead, but within the borders you entered," then clearing out the entire military base and charging everyone for their investments. Believe me, the number of people wanting to rule and wield power would have decreased by 99,9%. It's one thing to be left with everything ready-made, but quite another to be a banana republic without bananas—even the most ardent nationalists would shut up. The union would probably still exist, well, with the exception of the Baltics. And even if it had collapsed, there wouldn't have been so many conflicts in the CIS; there simply wouldn't have been anything to divide, and most importantly, there wouldn't have been anything to fight with.
    Instead of admitting our mistakes, we blame them on everyone else, like there's no way to catch a crocodile, no way to grow a coconut. Of course, some patriotic person will say, "Yeah, you're screaming about repentance!" Yes, we do, but for some reason, in these people's minds, it's the West they should repent to. Why? What have we done to them? Nothing, so certainly not to them, but perhaps we should admit our mistakes to our own citizens, tear down all those Yeltsin Centers and other "French Bakery" centers. Stop the course of self-destruction—that's what people want. They want factories to reopen, not go bankrupt and be torn down, and have shopping centers or housing estates built in their place. Otherwise, what kind of unifying center will we become? Take away our resources, which we sell left and right for cheap, and our birthday, and we'll celebrate in complete solitude. We're selling what's left, so for now, it's profitable to be friends. Thirty years ago, everyone laughed at China for its "cheap labor." Now, everyone wants to be friends with China. It's a serious economy now, with a manufacturing base and a real force to be reckoned with. But if we don't get our act together, we'll sink to some obscene depths.
    1. -2
      3 October 2025 05: 38
      You're being beautifully angry. Aren't you particularly interested in the people who wanted to create their own state? We accepted the collapse of the USSR, but the emergence of independent states—"we need to hit them with a fist"? Where was Russia's fist in the 90s? Forgotten about the "off-duty" officers. Forgotten about the "Bush Legs" and the black-and-green Chinese down jackets as the Russian uniform? Gorbachev's betrayal, and then it all went downhill... Ten years of "flying over the abyss," which for some reason everyone forgets. Russia of the 90s and Russia of the 21st century are two different countries. In every sense. And China? A good example. Only in the PRC there were no traitors in the top leadership. There were men "with balls." Who weren't afraid to brutally strangle liberals... and we fell for the pretty wrapping.
      1. +9
        3 October 2025 05: 57
        I didn't understand your initial point. The people wanted to create their own state, and they seemed to have done so, so why did Russia have to beat everyone up for it? It's unclear. The question of having a state is also debatable, as many remember the referendum on preserving the union, and if I'm not mistaken, the majority voted to preserve it, but the authorities weren't even planning on it.
        1. +3
          6 October 2025 15: 43
          Ignore the author's modern mantra of "PVV came and restored order," even though the actual policy hasn't really changed. He simply forgets that in the "holy 90s," the price of a barrel of oil never rose above 25 degrees Celsius (and if you take the average temperature in a hospital, it's 15 degrees Celsius), and when PVV fell below 25 degrees Celsius, it never did (but there were 100s, 110s, and even 140s). And he's also being disingenuous about "never interfering in our neighbors' affairs"—there was never any campaigning on the part of the President of the Russian Federation to get Ukrainians to vote for a particular candidate, and we never once congratulated the loser on winning an election, only to later admit defeat. And there are plenty of "never" and "never" phrases like that.
      2. +6
        3 October 2025 07: 54
        Staver, 9 passed a quarter of a century ago. And? Did they strike with a fist? It's still gone. So there's no point in remembering what continues. Only covered with a fig leaf. On the body of the naked king.
      3. +1
        3 October 2025 10: 19
        Only in the PRC were there no traitors in the top leadership. There were men with balls. Who weren't afraid to brutally strangle liberals... and we fell for the pretty wrapping.

        It's worth remembering that the Chinese carefully studied all of our mistakes in specialized institutes—they had our negative experience—"smart people learn from the mistakes of fools."
    2. +1
      3 October 2025 10: 17
      When Yeltsin uttered his phrase "take as much sovereignty as you can swallow," he wasn't referring to the Soviet Union republics, but to our internal, autonomous republics, the ASSRs, now republics within the Russian Federation. Regarding secession within the borders everyone had established, that's also quite complicated. The territories of some of the Soviet republics that gained independence in 1991 were, in whole or in part, part of the RSFSR when the USSR was formed. More than half of Belarus, the bulk of what is now Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan, were part of the Russian Federation. And shortly before the creation of the USSR, most of the Donbas was transferred from the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR. If the Russian Federation had the same territory as the RSFSR when the USSR was formed, its area today would be 3 million square kilometers larger. On the other hand, we are now outraged by the excessive number of Central Asian migrants. And if we were within the 1922 borders, then our fellow citizens would be tens of millions of Uzbeks, Kazakhs, Turkmens, Tajiks, Karakalpaks, and they would be able to move around the country without any restrictions at all.
    3. +1
      5 October 2025 19: 59
      Quote from turembo
      Perhaps it's worth admitting your mistakes and demolishing all those Yeltsin centers and other "French bakers" centers.

      …. I'm terribly sorry, but I have a question: who needs to admit their mistakes? The one who opened all those Yeltsin Centers? …Please, no innuendo here, these are difficult times.
      :)
  3. +2
    3 October 2025 05: 49
    I'm trying to predict the future development of the SVO now...nothing is working.
    The factor of unpredictable decisions by the Kremlin, such as Minsk 1, 2 and Istanbul, always comes into play.
    It is impossible to build anything on such a shaky swamp of variable values.
    All that remains is to go with the flow of current events and hope for the best. request
    1. 0
      3 October 2025 06: 55
      So the president said they're killing 20,000-30,000 Nazis a month and recruiting 15,000-20,000 more. Ten thousand a month is the Nazi army's decline. It would take about three years for it to become three times smaller than ours...has that made it any easier?
      1. +4
        3 October 2025 06: 57
        Quote: Vsevolod Sidorov
        It will take about 3 years for it to become three times smaller than ours...has it become easier?

        No... Putin stated that Ukraine now needs to think about negotiations.
        The Ukrainian Armed Forces urgently need a respite on the front...and I fear another ceasefire for Ukraine...to restore military resources. request
      2. The comment was deleted.
        1. The comment was deleted.
        2. The comment was deleted.
          1. The comment was deleted.
      3. The comment was deleted.
        1. The comment was deleted.
    2. +6
      3 October 2025 07: 51
      Quote: The same LYOKHA
      I'm trying to predict the future development of the SVO now...nothing is working.

      Well, nothing complicated. Next year will be the same as this one.
      1. 0
        3 October 2025 22: 14
        And how many years do you predict until the collapse of the Ukrainian Armed Forces??? Go ahead... 3-5 maybe 100 years... whoever has more
  4. -2
    3 October 2025 07: 14
    The West is tired of getting into our pockets; it has already put its hands in our underwear.
    I can imagine if we had supported the coup in Mexico with weapons...
    And here it is - normal!
    At the level of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the question must be posed as follows:
    Gentlemen, get your hands out of our pants!
    This is our area of ​​interest, don't interfere here at all.
    Otherwise they will crawl into the anus.
    1. +1
      3 October 2025 07: 42
      Quote from Kuziming
      This is our area of ​​interest, don't interfere here at all.
      Otherwise they will crawl into the anus.

      And why did you decide that everyone would run away in terror?
    2. -1
      3 October 2025 22: 15
      ...Otherwise they'll climb into your anus...and without soap or rubber gloves.
  5. +1
    3 October 2025 07: 41
    We're being pushed to use our resources to exhaust the country. I don't think that's the right path to take right now.

    Let's say
    And resources must be spent on preparing defense in a modern war.

    Wouldn't that exhaust the country? For example, is building a low-orbit satellite communications system cheap? Or is the author hoping China will give it to us?
    What and how to do, I think, will be determined by “narrow” specialists.

    Narrow specialists with deep pockets... They have long been determining...
  6. +6
    3 October 2025 07: 42
    My God, what nonsense about guilt? Where and who considers themselves guilty? Or is it just for the sake of "beauty"?
    1. 0
      9 October 2025 06: 19
      Yes, these are Staver's usual howls, that you just can't get used to his style🤣
  7. +1
    3 October 2025 07: 52
    Quote: Puncher
    Well, nothing complicated. Next year will be the same as this one.

    They consoled me... crying
  8. +3
    3 October 2025 07: 54
    Quote: Puncher
    Narrow specialists with deep pockets... They have been determining for a long time...

    Another official of Deputy Bondarenko has been arrested in the DPR for stealing defense budget funds. request
    This is how we live: for some it’s war, for others it’s a mother.
    1. +1
      3 October 2025 10: 31
      We need to look into her biography. Perhaps she took part in the creation of the DPR and has merits for the republic. Unfortunately, not everyone can withstand the test of large sums of money. On the other hand, perhaps she was a victim of a behind-the-scenes power struggle. For example, do you believe that General Popov was involved in the theft of materials for defensive fortifications in the Zaporizhzhia region for which he was convicted?
    2. 0
      5 October 2025 20: 07
      Quote: The same LYOKHA
      Another official of Deputy Bondarenko has been arrested in the DPR for stealing defense budget funds.

      Oh, please! You're making me laugh! Just how many billions of cash did that official steal!? ... Some National Welfare Fund people have been here, and they're still free! And you're telling me about some official! :)))
      In short: my head is a pain, my money is gone, and I have crap in my mouth.
  9. +3
    3 October 2025 07: 58
    I believe that today "General" Lavrov is no less important than General Gerasimov.
    When the question of strangulation arises, Field Marshal Nabiullina should be the first to be mentioned. But she's not mentioned in the text, even though Lavrov, who plays the tenth role, is. Why is that, I wonder?
    1. -1
      5 October 2025 20: 08
      Quote: Mikhail3
      When the question of strangulation arises, Field Marshal Nabiullina should be the first to be named.

      And the one who appointed her.
      1. 0
        7 October 2025 12: 57
        The Federal Reserve System is a different department.
        1. -1
          13 November 2025 05: 31
          Quote: Mikhail3
          The Federal Reserve System is a different department.

          So, are you implying that whoever appointed Nabibulla to her position is an agent of the Federal Reserve System? :)
          1. +1
            13 November 2025 21: 21
            I'm not hinting. I'm saying what I'm saying. Searching for hidden meanings in my posts is a chore.
            1. 0
              2 December 2025 20: 34
              I will not report your posts to the appropriate authorities, but I advise you to refrain from your innuendos.
              :)
  10. +4
    3 October 2025 08: 58
    A new kind of war: a war of strangulation

    It's funny, Tirpitz wrote about this "new" type of war a century and a half ago, as did Napoleon's contemporaries and even Nelson, so praised by the British.
    And the train of stupidity keeps passing and passing through the brains of some writers.
  11. +6
    3 October 2025 09: 20
    The article was written by some schoolboy, with a level of thinking and logical reasoning appropriate to his age.
  12. +1
    3 October 2025 09: 52
    We're being pushed to use our resources to exhaust the country. I don't think that's the right path today. Necessity and sufficiency—that's our answer. And resources should be spent on preparing for defense, specifically in a modern war.
    I think it's up to the experts to determine what to do and how. But the general concept is already clear. The strength of a state lies in its ability to respond to challenges not only militarily, but also through non-military means.


    No, that's not it. Victory in a modern war requires overwhelming superiority in the quality and quantity of weapons. And a convincing demonstration of this superiority on the front is a classic. A convincing demonstration doesn't mean a 100% defeat; it means showing that it's possible and inevitable. A smart adversary only needs to see and calculate this, and they'll agree to an agreement—a real agreement, not a sham one.

    This is how it would look now, in our time, in this conflict.
    From the front line, toward the enemy, measure out 150 kilometers in depth, along its entire length. These 150 kilometers are divided into three 50-kilometer zones, each with a 50-kilometer radius. All three zones must be under the absolute control of reconnaissance and target acquisition forces, in real time. And conduct the operation as follows: 80-90% of enemy forces, reserves, ammunition, and supplies in general, must be destroyed in the third zone, using reconnaissance, target acquisition, drone strikes, and all other precision weapons—bombs, missiles. In the second zone, finish off any that have somehow managed to penetrate. The appearance of enemy forces in the third 3-kilometer zone, directly adjacent to the front line, is already an emergency; to eliminate such penetrations, large forces must be deployed, for which purpose reserves—tank, infantry, missile and artillery units, and large air forces—must be kept ready in the immediate rear.
    And these three lines, they must, of course, not be static, the front is not on the defensive, they must slowly, but still advance.
    This tactic must be supported by the appropriate quality and quantity of military equipment that will allow such tasks to be accomplished in this manner.
    Unmanned aircraft should play a key role here. To this end, the military-industrial complex could develop and mass-produce a whole line of unmanned, reconnaissance and attack aircraft with a range of 1000 km, allowing them to fly from a rear airfield, drop bombs or missiles, and return. A very good and inexpensive ground-launched missile is also needed, with a range of up to 200 km, high precision, and a variety of warhead options and guidance types—coordinate-based, laser-guided from a UAV, or ground-based.
    We need to develop and mass-produce various ground-based remotely controlled vehicles for reconnaissance, target acquisition, assault, combat engineering, and supply. One of these is a light assault tank, controlled remotely (but still providing crew accommodations for now), with a 57mm automatic cannon. This vehicle should also be put into production.
    1. 0
      3 October 2025 11: 54
      Quote from gribanow.c
      I need a very good one and inexpensive land-based missile, with a range of up to 200 km, high-precision, with different warhead options and guidance types - by coordinates, by laser from a UAV, or from the ground.
      The first part contradicts the second - an inexpensive one cannot have several guidance methods
      1. -2
        3 October 2025 13: 06
        It could be a modular design, the body and engine are unchanged, but the control unit and warhead can be different, installed at the factory, so the product has the required characteristics.
        1. 0
          3 October 2025 16: 57
          Quote from gribanow.c
          It could be a modular design, the body and engine are unchanged, but the control unit and warhead can be different, installed at the factory, so the product has the required characteristics.

          And as usual in war, those needed here and now are not at hand at that moment.
          1. -1
            3 October 2025 19: 28
            The warrant officer will answer for this.
    2. 0
      3 October 2025 12: 33
      These are sound ideas—the essence of which is to isolate the BD area. The problem is where to get the electronic components and motors for these UAVs.
      1. -2
        3 October 2025 12: 57
        It seems that all the necessary ingredients for mass production are in place—a secure rear, resources, cities, a functioning civilian sector, trade with China, and time, which isn't pressing yet. If all this were put together, we could begin creating new capacities for the production of military equipment and components. Let these be state-owned factories, state-owned enterprises, or joint-stock companies with a controlling state stake. If people are needed, let there be a small labor mobilization: every city resident in the regions where these new factories will be should work four hours a day at military factories and construction sites, and also receive training there. How much labor could be obtained in Moscow alone without any damage to the economy? Two or three million, there you have it. Let a plan be developed for which components and in what quantities we urgently need to establish production here, for which new weapons models; China will share some of it; after all, it's an ally.
    3. +3
      5 October 2025 20: 11
      When I read lines like these, I remember O. Bender: “And the capital will automatically move to New Vasyuki!”
      1. -2
        6 October 2025 08: 13
        If the founders of the State of Israel had said so, it would not exist to this day; we would only dream of it. But in the midst of the sands and desert, cities, an army, and a military-industrial complex have grown up.
        1. +1
          13 November 2025 05: 33
          I see absolutely no reason to envy Israel.
  13. +2
    3 October 2025 12: 44
    I think people have forgotten that war is an economic act. All plans, declarations, intentions, and ominous phrases are meaningless without a strong economic foundation. An economic foundation, in turn, is a projection of the development of social productive forces. How can productive forces be developed with effectively open markets, constantly rising taxes, a financial policy with 20% interest rates on loans, and distortions in wages? And what about Russia—they haven't even left the WTO. Raw materials and semi-finished goods are still being supplied to unfriendly countries. How do you understand this—a war against oneself? Is that really it?
    Therefore, the first step is to stop supplying raw materials, fertilizers, metal, and agricultural raw materials abroad, primarily to Europe.
    Who believes this will happen?
    1. -1
      3 October 2025 17: 01
      Quote: dozornysevera
      Raw materials and semi-finished products were and are supplied to unfriendly countries.

      Until 1944 Soviet parts of Sakhalin worked японская oil concession - oil was pumped to Japan......
      Given Japan's enormous need for oil, Stalin extended the US-Japan war...
      1. -1
        5 October 2025 20: 13
        Should we have declared war on Japan?
        1. 0
          5 October 2025 23: 36
          Quote: Chack Wessel
          Should we have declared war on Japan?

          We should stop blabbering like they like to do now: "But Stalin didn't trade with his enemies!!!!!!!"
          He was quite a trader - when I considered it necessary for the countryDespite Japan's detention of Soviet ships and even their sinking, what could be more hostile?
          1. -1
            28 October 2025 05: 48
            Stalin traded with Japan during the war!? Are there any references to this trade?
          2. 0
            13 November 2025 05: 34
            As I understand it, I won’t see a reference to the USSR’s trade with Japan during the war with it?
            1. 0
              13 November 2025 06: 14
              Quote: Chack Wessel
              As I understand it, I won’t see a reference to the USSR’s trade with Japan during the war with it?


              It's a well-known fact.

              "Thus, the USSR used the concession policy in the Far East to solve its foreign policy problems. Japanese military-industrial circles were interested in hydrocarbon production. In 1920-1943, the Japanese drilled 343 production wells in Northern Sakhalin, including 312 during the concession activity of 1926-1943. In some years, they exceeded the planned indicators. Their oil production volumes in 1927 amounted to 109 percent of the plan, in 1929 - 122 percent, 1935 - 129 percent, drilling indicators in 1928 - 114 percent of the plan, 1932 - 122 percent, 1934 - 190 percent, 1936 - 160 percent."
              https://zavtra.ru/books/trudno_ustanovit_kto_yavlyaetsya_hozyainom_mi_ili_yapontci?ysclid=mhwucy3dzn368068069


              This resulted in a paradoxical situation in which Japan, an ally of Germany, was producing oil in the Soviet Union, which, in turn, was allied with the United States and Great Britain. However, given the situation on the Soviet-German front by the fall of 1941, the Soviet government was not interested in exacerbating relations with Japan. In the complex military and political environment, the Soviet Union did not insist on the liquidation of the concessions. In October 1941, the Japanese side even received an extension of their right to extract and export oil until 1943.
              https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Японские_нефтяные_концессии_на_Северном_Сахалине_в_годы_Великой_Отечественной_войны

              Where to get oil? In the Soviet Union, on Sakhalin ...
              Few people, except for a small circle of specialists, know that until the autumn of 1944, in the area of ​​the small town of Okha, in the north of Sakhalin, the Japanese were extracting oil on a completely legal basis.
              Namely, according to the so-called collective agreement “on the Japanese oil concession on Sakhalin Island,” concluded back in 1925.
              https://www.sb.by/articles/sekretnye-kontsessii.html?ysclid=mhwurwalg3922771829
              1. +1
                2 December 2025 20: 36
                I asked for a link to the USSR's trade with Japan during the USSR's war with Japan.
                1. -1
                  2 December 2025 21: 39
                  Quote: Chack Wessel
                  I asked for a link to the USSR's trade with Japan during the USSR's war with Japan.

                  And receiving the due share of money and concession payments is apparently NOT trade in your opinion, right?
                  Or "it's different"??!!
  14. +1
    3 October 2025 14: 42
    How can you win a war while lying on a stove? It's a challenging task. I'd even say unconventional. The enemy, however, is following the same rules that have been known since time immemorial. That's why they're still fighting.
  15. +3
    3 October 2025 21: 06
    Modern media warfare...there's no point in defeating an enemy if you don't have the guts...it's enough to boldly declare in the media that the enemy has already been defeated...author, you're stepping on the same rake again, 22 years old!
  16. +3
    3 October 2025 22: 25
    We are responsible for those we have tamed. It wasn't the Soviet republics that destroyed it, but Russia. It abandoned everyone and went to embrace the West. The collapse of the USSR was illegal! A coup d'état occurred! Now who should we lay any claims to and what? Wherever Russia left, wherever it abandoned, the West has arrived, with all the ensuing consequences. We must honestly admit that Russia's entire foreign and domestic policy has been a complete failure. What our great-grandfathers and grandfathers had conquered has been thrown out of existence. So, it turns out our ancestors were such fools, they pieced together an empire bit by bit, while we, so smart and good, went and squandered it all. So why should we be surprised that we've become bad, guilty, and splendidly alone? We betrayed the memory of our ancestors and wiped our feet on their spilled blood, their achievements for our sake.
    1. +2
      6 October 2025 10: 05
      Quote: Anyuta Glorious
      Wherever Russia left and abandoned, the West came.

      So, from time immemorial, border guards have had absolute, indisputable wisdom: “You can't escape the border, it always follows you."The Romans already knew this when they discussed the plan to retreat from Hadrian's Wall.
      1. -1
        8 October 2025 17: 43
        Yes, the laws of life are inescapable. One of them states that if you don't expand your state, there will always be those who want to expand it at your expense. They surrendered the USSR to their enemies, to their delight! They stole everything, destroyed education... Oh, it's terrible what's happening.
  17. -1
    4 October 2025 18: 29
    Our president, 20 years ago, said there would be no arms race; we need weapons that guarantee the destruction of the enemy for years to come. The greatest danger for Russia now is the enemy within, especially one that corrupts the younger generation with false Western values, not the freedom to create and build, but licentiousness and destruction. We'll hold out both at the front and in the rear, but what then? What in 10-20 years? After us.
    1. +2
      5 October 2025 20: 13
      And who, in your opinion, is this internal enemy?
    2. 0
      6 October 2025 09: 28
      The most dangerous thing for Russia now is the internal enemy.

      This is the comprador "elite" and the oligarchy
      1. 0
        28 October 2025 05: 49
        Can you be more specific? At least a few names.
      2. 0
        13 November 2025 05: 35
        So, can you name at least a few names? :)
        1. 0
          13 November 2025 08: 12
          The newspaper Pravda says:
          "The Russian economic model depends on the extraction and export of raw materials. The manufacturing industry's share of GDP does not exceed 15 percent. Capital outflow remains unabated. At the end of 2017, it amounted to $30 billion—three times more than the previous year. In total, over 60 trillion rubles have been withdrawn abroad in the post-Soviet era."
          https://gazeta-pravda.ru/issue/19-30662-22-26-fevralya-2018-goda/manifestu-kommunisticheskoy-partii-170-let/

          So let's find out the names of all those who did this, who took 60 trillion rubles abroad instead of investing them here. And who organized and supported the system that made this possible. I want to know their names too. In 2017, Russia's budget was 13 trillion rubles. That means the scale of this sum is more than four annual budgets.

          Glazyev gives a different figure.

          Glazyev: About $1 trillion has been withdrawn from Russia over the past 30 years
          According to him, the macroeconomic policy recommended by the IMF led to the large-scale outflow of capital from the country.

          Banki.ru (https://www.banki.ru/news/lenta/?id=10909117)

          1 trillion is 70-80 trillion rubles. Even by today's standards, that's three state budgets; by the standards of the 2000s and 2010s, that's six or seven annual budgets.

          I want to know their names too. Who created the political and economic model under which this is happening? Who supported its existence? Who didn't interfere? And who are the actual owners of capital who did this? This is obviously a major business; this figure doesn't come from the piggy banks of ordinary workers who deposited a few thousand rubles in some foreign bank.
          So, who are these trillionaires, and who are these leaders? I want to know their names too. Who are they, where are they, how is this happening?

          Was this the will of the people? No. And yet, it happens. What do you call a political system in which power doesn't belong to the people, but to the rich, not even directly, but so they can enrich themselves by the trillions and funnel money abroad, which is their main goal?
        2. +1
          13 November 2025 09: 20
          What are the names of those who made the decision to invest the Central Bank of the Russian Federation's resources in Eurobonds? Instead of investing them in Russia's development? I don't know, but is there any way to find out? Or is it impossible for the average person?
          1. 0
            2 December 2025 20: 37
            Quote from gribanow.c
            What are the names of those who made the decision to invest the Central Bank of the Russian Federation's resources in Eurobonds?

            Please - Lenin with a bomb, Strelkov and the Pechenegs.
  18. 0
    6 October 2025 10: 00
    We're fighting not only in the LBS, but also in the economy, finance, media, and other areas of government activity. Today, the confrontation has become multidimensional! This is a "new type" of war.


    Why "new type"? Has it ever been any different? Has any war in history ever been purely military? Or didn't Charlemagne wage an information war with Empress Irene? Or wasn't there a parade of mutual sanctions, including secondary ones, during the Napoleonic Wars? Or, for example, didn't Russia secretly purchase (in violation of all the sanctions to which it itself joined), gun barrels in the same England through smuggling (sorry, “parallel import”).

    War has always been a complex process, at least in the three-dimensional space of "power-politics-economics." It always has been, is, and always will be. And don't think we've invented anything new here.
  19. +1
    6 October 2025 21: 53
    What nonsense. The Khmer Rouge was crushed to the point of insignificance, but the guerrilla war has been going on for over 40 years.
    .
    In a civil war, people, not objects, are destroyed. Until the last bearer of a hostile ideology is destroyed or isolated, the war does not end.
  20. 0
    7 October 2025 16: 39
    We have practically everything that the “anti-Western coalition” will need in the event of a “hot phase” of the conflict.

    We have NOTHING except mineral resources and a nuclear shield inherited from a more developed civilization, which was destroyed by the rotten communists and Komsomol members themselves.
  21. 0
    8 October 2025 08: 40
    Katz is veiledly suggesting surrender. No way!
  22. 0
    9 October 2025 14: 28
    I don’t understand, is he strangling us or is he strangling someone else?
    1. 0
      7 December 2025 16: 07
      What difference does it make now!?