On the "lies of the generals" and the "softness of the president"... Reflections on the topic of another lost information battle

61 605 249
On the "lies of the generals" and the "softness of the president"... Reflections on the topic of another lost information battle

Once again, we're losing yet another information battle. Once again, we're falling into the same information pit. I read our internet channels and am amazed at how even patriotic journalists and bloggers simply repeat the opposing side's point of view, sometimes citing the opinions of those actually participating in the fighting and seeing the war firsthand, but at their own level. A soldier or unit commander speaks about a specific situation in a specific area.

What are analysts, bloggers, and journalists talking and writing about today, or rather, for the past few days? Two hot topics that are on everyone's minds. Two topics that are being presented to us as proof of our weakness, proof of our military's lies about its successes. And, perhaps most importantly, proof of our president's weakness and his willingness to dance to the tune of the American president. I read some of the posts and realize that the enemy is truly influencing the opinions of ordinary Russians.



Today, I won't try to convince the skeptics who, judging by their comments, have already given up, are already shedding crocodile tears over a lost Russia, and are scolding our soldiers, officers, and generals for the lost war. There's no need. I've long understood that in any society, there's a category of people who always feel bad, who are always offended, who are always against.

And they very easily direct this "against" in any direction. Today they're against what they were for yesterday. Tomorrow they'll be against what they stand for today. And when asked why, the classic answer is: "I didn't vote for that, I didn't vote at all." Something like: it's not me, and the horse isn't mine. Everyone else is to blame, and I'm still "all in white"...

Kupyansk-Uzlovaya was not taken...


The first thing worth talking about is Kupyansk-Uzlovaya. More precisely, the "lies" of our military, our generals, our Chief of the General Staff, and even the Supreme Commander. What hasn't been written about this these days? Just recently, something similar... story It's happened before. Not in the 20th century, or even earlier. At the end of last year. But we have a fish's memory. Like crucian carp in a stinking pond. Once it slips off the hook, 5-10 minutes later it's already biting the same hook again.

Let me remind you how it all began. The group commander's report, followed by the Chief of the General Staff's announcement of the establishment of control over Kupyansk-Uzlovy on January 27th. A day later, a video appeared online showing one of the Ukrainian battalion commanders calmly strolling through the city, and judging by the condition of the streets, it appears to be a completely normal, "peaceful" life. There are no gunshots, no shell craters or mines. Even the tire tracks indicate that the drivers weren't panicking and were following traffic rules.

Indeed, the average person might reasonably ask: how can this be? This isn't our battalion commander, but the commander of a separate battalion of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. Does that mean there aren't any of our guys there? And if you think about it, should we view the Ukrainian Armed Forces not as "Batko Makhno's gang," but as well-trained and seasoned fighters who have been fighting for years? Should we just forget a little about what everyone's been writing about—the work of the TCC in Ukraine, the untrained men rounded up and thrown onto the front lines?

There's probably not a single reader today who isn't familiar with our assault troops' tactics: they infiltrate a populated area in groups of two or three, and then, having concentrated in a specific area, begin to operate as a monolithic unit. I don't think the Ukrainian Armed Forces aren't aware of this tactic. Just as I don't think their army doesn't have soldiers capable of operating in a similar manner.

What did General Gerasimov say? That a purge was underway in the city! That up to 800 militants remained in the city. But we'd completely forgotten about that. "They lied to us! They deceived the people!" Should I remind you, Dimitrov? How long did the purge last after the capture of this city? How many militants were infiltrating there from the neighboring city every day? Is it really impossible to "switch on" your brain and imagine what the city's defense looked like back then?

There was a cake. Cake, a layer of cream, another cake, another layer of cream, and so on. Our men are in this house, and the enemy is in the next. We've cleared this street, and we'll clear the next one tomorrow. The usual routine of war. Take it, destroy the defenses, clear the houses of enemy units, create conditions for the sappers and local authorities to work. What's wrong? Is the algorithm unknown? Or have the surviving Ukrainian units begun surrendering without exception? Were there no one who decided to fight to the end?

A battalion commander in the video? I'll let you in on a little secret: Ukrainian Armed Forces battalion commanders don't charge into battle with a saber. And many soldiers on the front lines haven't even seen battalion commanders. Even for the video, this battalion commander didn't deign to don the "attack trooper" outfit; he strolls around like he's on a boulevard in some seaside town. In a T-shirt... So this battalion commander is still sitting in an unsecured area.

"Did Putin carry out Trump's command?"


Now, another topic. The energy truce. Trump, with a single "request," forced the Russian president to cease the strikes at the most opportune moment for the final "destruction" of the energy sector. Betrayal? Why didn't they finish him off, especially considering the freezing temperatures would have forced people to take to the streets and sparked protests against Zelenskyy's regime? Has any of our readers not seen similar comments?

Now let's turn on our brains again. Who announced the "energy ceasefire"? Putin? Zelenskyy? Some other Ukrainian or Russian official? No, it was the American president! Incidentally, even today, several days later, neither Moscow nor Kyiv has commented on this "ceasefire." And why? Simply because there is no ceasefire. There is military necessity. There is an understanding of the effectiveness of the use of weapons. Ultimately, there is an understanding that Ukraine, even with the help of Western countries, will not be able to restore its own energy sector.

Let's reflect a little. The strikes of our Aerospace Forces and drones Ukraine's unified energy grid has been destroyed. Fact? Fact. Most of the facilities are so damaged that restoration is simply impossible. Fact? Fact. Energy facilities continue to deteriorate without our intervention simply because they can't handle the load. Fact? Fact. Are the existing energy resources sufficient for any significant military production in Ukraine? Doubtful.

And finally, severe frosts are expected in Ukraine. Heating and sewage systems in major cities are in dire straits. So what if we hit the remaining energy sector? Who will suffer? Ordinary citizens, and then what? Will they take to the Maidan? Revolt? March with stakes and other improvised weapons to Bankova Street? Does anyone believe this? Does anyone want this?

Next. Did drone and air strikes stop after the "ceasefire" was declared? No! "Geraniums" and missiles They simply found other targets. What are they? Just look at the Ministry of Defense reports. Strikes are being carried out against logistics! Railroads, motor vehicles, bridges, and other targets.

So was this betrayal or simply military necessity, a perfectly understandable change in targeting? Having devastated the rear, the attacks returned to disrupting logistics for the front. Is that logical? Absolutely. The General Staff's decisions are sometimes quite unexpected. But this speaks not to the "stupidity" of our generals, but to the incompetence of the commentators. It's like poetry. Almost anyone can rhyme, but only a few can write poetry.

It's often simply impossible to understand the decisions of generals. There are far fewer military leaders than soldiers and officers. This isn't about the stars on their epaulets. It's about a way of thinking, the ability to think big, to think outside the box, to think in a way that makes your decisions unexpected and fatal for your adversary.

There will be no conclusions today. There will be no "predictions." At the beginning of this article, I stated my goals. I think that's enough...
249 comments
Information
Dear reader, to leave comments on the publication, you must sign in.
  1. +78
    2 February 2026 03: 31
    Yes, the author has indeed chosen a heavy burden for himself: to justify the actions of the leadership. I just wanted to say that no one except our enemies criticizes our soldiers and officers.
    1. +53
      2 February 2026 03: 51
      It is often simply impossible to understand the decisions of generals.
      1. +16
        2 February 2026 04: 09
        It's not funny, Auntie. It's not funny... ("Gentlemen of Fortune")
    2. +29
      2 February 2026 08: 46
      Yes, the author has certainly chosen a heavy burden for himself: to justify the management's actions.

      +
      I agree.

      The author, without realizing it, touched upon the topic of information warfare.
      "...Who announced the 'energy ceasefire'? Putin? Zelensky? Some other Ukrainian or Russian official? No, it was the American president!"
      MOSCOW, January 30 — RIA Novosti. Russia has agreed to refrain from strikes on Ukraine until February 1 at the request of White House President Donald Trump, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov announced.
      "...Yes, there was a personal appeal from President Trump <...> asking President Putin to refrain from striking Kyiv for a week, until February 1, while favorable conditions for negotiations are being created," he responded to a question about whether Moscow supported Washington's initiative... https://ria.ru/20260130/udar-2071209099.html


      Russia lost in terms of information.
      The Russian government should have been the first to immediately announce, through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, that the Russian Armed Forces would refrain from striking Kyiv for a week, until February 1, while favorable conditions for negotiations were being created, and there would have been no need to explain TRUMP's request.

      And it so happened that...
      Trump announced his request on January 29.
      The Russian authorities remained silent.
      People began to guess: what was it?
      And only the next day, Peskov reported that “Trump made a personal request to [Russian] President Vladimir Putin.”

      PS
      It seemed that Trump could do anything.
      1. +51
        2 February 2026 08: 56
        "Yes, there was a personal appeal from President Trump <...> asking President Putin to refrain for a week." Why wouldn't President Putin personally appeal to President Trump to shut down Starlink over Ukraine for a week and stop sharing intelligence? And receive a veiled refusal in response.
        1. +42
          2 February 2026 11: 17
          The Putin of 2007 would probably have done the same, but the current one has become overgrown with "friends," has become old and soft in relation to his entourage, which acts openly to the detriment of the Russian state.
          1. +3
            2 February 2026 21: 38
            Quote: Pioneer1984
            became old and soft,

            "Are you still wandering? Shooting? - You've become old and lazy. - Do you remember what I was like? - Those were the days."
      2. -17
        2 February 2026 09: 22
        This is what Peskov seemed to say about this “sore topic.”
        Russia has agreed to US President Donald Trump's proposal for an energy truce with Ukraine in order to create favorable conditions for negotiations. This was announced by the Russian leader's press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, during a briefing. 

        "I just want to emphasize this again. We're talking about creating favorable conditions for negotiations," he said.

        The US President announced that he personally asked Russian leader Vladimir Putin not to strike energy facilities in Kyiv and other cities amid the cold weather. Trump claimed that "many people" told him not to waste his time on the request, but the Russian president agreed. 


        The Kremlin confirmed an energy ceasefire until February 1.
        Politics / International Relations
        During the briefing, Peskov confirmed that Russia had agreed to refrain from strikes on Ukraine until February 1.

        Read more: https://www.vedomosti.ru/politics/news/2026/01/30/1172940-rf-poshla-na-peremirie?from=copy_text

        It feels like the Ukrainian press is being consumed more and more.
        1. +18
          2 February 2026 09: 27
          It feels like the Ukrainian press is being consumed more and more.


          Trump announced his request 29 January
          Russian authorities [i]was silent
          .
          People began to guess: what was it?
          But only the next day, January 30Peskov reported that "Trump made a personal request to [Russian] President Vladimir Putin."
          1. 0
            7 February 2026 19: 36
            Trump announced his request on January 29.
            He's a talking head. Search his nickname on American websites. In English, it translates as "bullshit."

            People began to guess: what was it?
            Which people are you talking about? The Russian people didn't care much. Or are you talking about your own?
      3. -19
        2 February 2026 09: 44
        Quote: AA17
        And it so happened that...
        Trump announced his request on January 29.
        The Russian authorities remained silent.
        People began to guess: what was it?
        And only the next day, Peskov reported that “Trump made a personal request to [Russian] President Vladimir Putin.”
        PS
        It seemed that Trump could do anything.

        When Trump whistled, our media, press secretaries, and you too, were still asleep on your pillows. Keep in mind the time zone difference. When it's still night here, it's already daytime for them.
        1. +17
          2 February 2026 10: 45
          When Trump whistled, our media, press secretaries, and you too, were still asleep on your pillows.


          Dear sir, you are very much mistaken.

          "Moscow, Russia is 8:00 hours ahead of Washington, United States of America (USA)" https://24timezones.com/ru/difference/washington/moscow

          When Trump whistled, our media, press secretaries, and I, too, were not sleeping.
          The first information about Trump's request began to appear in Russian media after 18 p.m. Moscow time on January 29.
          Trump asked Putin to halt airstrikes on Kyiv for a week due to freezing temperatures.
          January 29, 2026, 18:46 PM News Feed https://trt-tv.ru/2026/01/29/tramp-prosil-putina-na-nedelyu-prekratit-udary-po-kievu-iz-za-morozov/

          Military operation in Ukraine, January 29, 20:19 PM
          82 549
          Trump announced Putin's agreement to halt strikes on Ukraine for a week.
          https://www.rbc.ru/politics/29/01/2026/697b96b69a794732b02244cd

          Trump asked Putin to halt airstrikes on Kyiv for a week due to freezing temperatures.
          According to the American president, the Russian leader "agreed to do this"
          TASS website editorial office, January 29, 20:12 p.m.
          https://tass.ru/mezhdunarodnaya-panorama/26290497


          They should have announced first on January 29th that they agreed to refrain from attacks on Ukraine until February 1st in order to create favorable conditions for negotiations, so that the media would not refer to Trump’s requests.

          But the press secretaries, and you too, were already asleep on your pillows and woke up only at lunchtime on January 30, 2026, when Russian citizens had already discussed this news.
        2. 0
          2 February 2026 23: 49
          Quote: Nyrobsky
          Quote: AA17
          And it so happened that...
          Trump announced his request on January 29.
          The Russian authorities remained silent.
          People began to guess: what was it?
          And only the next day, Peskov reported that “Trump made a personal request to [Russian] President Vladimir Putin.”
          PS
          It seemed that Trump could do anything.

          When Trump whistled, our media, press secretaries, and you too, were still asleep on your pillows. Keep in mind the time zone difference. When it's still night here, it's already daytime for them.

          Hi, I think it's the other way around: when it's night here, it's still daytime for them.
          1. +1
            3 February 2026 02: 47
            "It seems the other way around to me." The International Date Line runs right between Kamchatka and Alaska. So, when it's 9 a.m. on January 30th (so to speak) in Vladivostok, it's 18 p.m. in Washington, D.C., still January 29th. It just seems that way to you. ;)
          2. -1
            3 February 2026 04: 38
            Quote: Ivan Kuzmich
            Hi, I think it's the other way around: when it's night here, it's still daytime for them.

            Hey, it was just a joke. But people got excited and started downvoting me, as if time zones didn't exist. Forget it. hi
          3. +1
            3 February 2026 07: 59
            Any "personal" requests at this level are a bribe. The Chinese will confirm this.
      4. +43
        2 February 2026 09: 52
        But we have a fish's memory. Like crucian carp in a stinking pond. Once a fish gets off the hook, 5-10 minutes later it's already biting the same hook again.
        Hey, Staver! I remember your articles about not abandoning Kherson! I remember very well the arguments you made for not abandoning the city. And then you explained why you did. You are that very crucian carp, but not even the "wise" one. Even a "pike" would disdain to bite you.
        1. +14
          2 February 2026 23: 02
          Some authors like to change their shoes to suit the party line. Sometimes they wear bast shoes, sometimes they wear ankle boots.
      5. -15
        2 February 2026 14: 11
        Russia lost in terms of information.

        You are absolutely right.
        And yes, they are also right about what the Kremlin could have done to make things different.
        It's just here, right now, that the people who helped Kyiv win are grazing.

        And what kind of nonsense the fighters and doomsayers haven't written.
        And that the SVO ended, Putin surrendered.
        And that there is a truce on the entire front and now the SVO will regroup and begin to attack
        And that the khokhly will fix everything in a few days.
        There is a political sect called NOD; they simply wrote that Putin carried out Trump's order to capitulate.
        Well, okay, they wrote, some for money, some for phenomenal stupidity.
        BUT all of YOU who are now reading this comment, you frantically upvoted them.
        Isn't it time to look in the mirror and realize that in the information war, you're playing on the enemy's side. Not the Ukrainians, but the global enemy. Who long ago realized that Russia can be
        can only be won from within. And which repeats what has already been done many times.
        1. -14
          2 February 2026 15: 26
          I wonder if the owners of this resource and others realize what might happen to them if the Red Commissars come to power? After all, they're far from poor in dollar terms. They fit the definition of "bourgeoisie"! I really wonder if they'll want to share their bank accounts with the proletariat. I think when the idea of ​​universal justice dawns on them, based on the example of others who've had their capital taken away, they'll head for the Polish border. They'll succeed, they'll make money from it, and...
        2. 0
          3 February 2026 02: 50
          They say the less you talk, the stronger your teeth and nerves. In our modern reality, many make money in war... Through articles (for or against, it doesn't matter), budget redistribution, speculation on raw material prices for the military-industrial complex, or directly on weapons. Like in that old fable—the swan, the crayfish, and the pike, each to their own devices. But is it really better to march in orderly ranks, forced, toward a bright and uniform future? IMHO.
        3. +1
          3 February 2026 03: 09
          Perhaps the public subconsciously senses that the motivations in the current conflict are not so clear-cut? That's why they're rushing around, each in their own way, like in the fable "The Swan, the Crayfish, and the Pike."
          P.S. They say the less you talk, the stronger your teeth and nerves. Especially if you don't understand the full depth of our depths.
          "Don't chatter!.. It's not far from chatter and gossip to betrayal." IMHO.
      6. +1
        3 February 2026 13: 31
        What kind of heavy burden is this? Money in your pocket. I'll note that if you use your brain, as Staver urges, you see... No one brings grist to the enemy's mill like Staver. With his clumsiness and changing shoes in a jump
      7. 0
        7 February 2026 00: 17
        The Russian government needed to be the first to immediately announce, through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, that the Russian Armed Forces would refrain from carrying out strikes for a week, until February 1st.
        for energy facilities.
        Yes, that's right, it's precisely this fact that is unclear.
        Why are we hearing this from Trump?
        It seemed there was a mutual agreement: we wouldn't attack energy facilities, and Trump would put pressure on the Greens. Moreover, the Merengues proposed this privately, but they themselves (from Trump's pocket) made it public. And trust them after that.
    3. +20
      2 February 2026 09: 10
      If the author is going to tell the truth, they should tell it completely, not selectively. Especially after raising the Kupyansk issue.
      "...then the statement by the Chief of the General Staff about establishing control over Kupyansk-Uzlovy on January 27."
      And what about the reports from August 30th of the same General Staff on Kupyansk?
      1. 0
        2 February 2026 10: 04
        Just like with Rostov-on-Don on November 29, 1941 and July 24, 1942. Watch it to the end...
    4. 0
      2 February 2026 13: 26
      Quote: ASSAD1
      Justify the actions of the management

      And who knows the true actions of the management?
      Turn on your brain? It's work! And sometimes it's quite painstaking and uninteresting. Yes
      And not like reading newspapers or watching TV and trying to prove something to your neighbor until you're hoarse. lol
      "Took"—what's that in modern warfare? As Comrade A.V. Suvorov taught: "If you take a city, set up a guardhouse."
      So, organize a commandant's service, establish a rear, or is a settlement considered captured when the enemy can no longer organize resistance, but there are separate groups available?
      And the transfer of individual positions and areas from hand to hand, especially in conditions of sparse combat formations (small groups), occurs all the time.
      And the enemy is waging war not only on the battlefield, but also through information. Everyone knows about this, but unfortunately, not everyone is aware of it.
      As for the fighting near Kupyansk, it's clear that the Ukrainian counteroffensive failed to achieve its goal. We're not planning a major attack in this direction, but we need to apply pressure. Primarily to destroy the enemy's reserves, which could be used in other directions.
      1. +3
        3 February 2026 03: 24
        To use your brain, even if you have one, you need a reliable and unbiased information base. And that's a big problem these days. Sure, you can just paint outline maps based on speculation—taken/kept, taken/not taken. Gossip from Baba Gala, filtered through secrecy and censorship (and double filters, here and there).
        Show-offs, speculations, fortune-telling, and, for some, profit.
    5. 0
      3 February 2026 23: 57
      Believe it or not: but after the first rhetorical questions and phrases - Staver said, and so it was!!!
  2. +18
    2 February 2026 04: 19
    wassat
    Well, let's talk about the author's advantages!
    1. The author is persistent and has been working on the topic for two days already.
    2. I haven't seen comments on other articles get 50 (fifty) "clean" upvotes!
    "+50
    Yesterday, 05: 48
    Commenting on this esteemed author's articles is simply ruining them. I won't even begin to discuss the general logic and the general thesis of the article, where one unsubstantiated assertion clashes decisively with the next equally unsubstantiated one.
    But I can't help but note the author's remarkable instinct. He had to choose this from all the possible examples of "our successes"... It's not even clear whether the author is doing this by accident or is being sarcastic.

    3. The author is recognized from the first letters and words: "+18
    Yesterday, 07: 14
    Believe it or not, after the first rhetorical phrases he said “Staver”…

    4. 121 (!) comments wouldn't write themselves, but 17726 views is no joke! A solid asset to the site!
    https://topwar.ru/277132-hotim-sohranit-stranu-nado-govorit-o-nashih-pobedah-peregovory-potom.html
    request
    1. +6
      2 February 2026 05: 49
      There are 4 well-recognizable authors on VO based on their writing style... smile, without a signature you can tell who it is.
      I wish they'd give the material to AI for processing...this guy will cut all the corners and rough edges in the articles...individual writing characteristics are inherent only to the human personality...which I really welcome.
      1. +26
        2 February 2026 06: 12
        Quote: The same LYOKHA
        I wish they would at least give the material to AI for processing

        I don't think AI can handle this. It may be artificial, but it's still intelligent, and only natural intelligence could produce so many contradictions in a single article. laughing
        And don't you feel sorry for the AI? It might not be able to handle it and go crazy from the work you've proposed. laughing
    2. +48
      2 February 2026 07: 37
      Well, the only useful thing to read in Staver's articles is the comments to them.
      1. +32
        2 February 2026 09: 24
        So no one reads the articles, everyone immediately goes to the comments! It's obvious what's written there anyway. The government is good and wise, but the people are no good—they don't believe it when they're lied to, they're no good at information warfare. But they should believe! In solidarity! But they don't believe it... when they're shown black and then shown white, white, white, the people just don't believe it. It's just terrifying, comrades, what's going on! We won't win the war like that. When they show them black and say white, and everyone repeats white, white—that's when we'll win.
        Seriously, this would be really funny if it weren't so sad, because, in fact, those who think like Staver are, by all appearances, the decisive majority in the corridors of power. Why take Kupyansk? Let's just say we took it and shout about it from every corner of the room. It's like 1984.
      2. +21
        2 February 2026 11: 42
        There was such a wonderful game. FarCry 3.
        And there was the most charismatic main villain - Vas (Vaas in the original).
        So, those who played the game, I think, remember his brilliant speech towards the protagonist, I’ll quote:
        I told you what insanity is, didn't I? Insanity is doing the same exact thing over and over again. Over and over again, hoping for change. That's insanity. The first time I heard that, I don't remember who said that shit, and boom, I killed them. The point is, okay, he was right. And then I started seeing it everywhere. Everywhere you look, these idiots. Everywhere you look, doing the exact same thing, over and over and over and over again. And they think, "Now everything is going to change. No, no, no, please. Now everything is going to be different."

        This is an accurate description of our existence. Staver posts the same articles. We read them all the same, marveling at the author's madness and commenting. But that's also madness—we're doing the same things.
        At the highest level, this manifests itself in the fact that we participate in elections and elect the same people in the hope that something will change. And this is our greatest folly...
    3. +20
      2 February 2026 09: 54
      Yes, a seasoned propagandist... To juggle words and facts like that, to turn everything upside down, to pass off black as white - not everyone can do it, it takes great talent!
    4. +15
      2 February 2026 10: 32
      Quote: Wildcat
      The author is persistent and has been working on the topic for two days already.


      Yep. I couldn't believe my eyes at first – was it really Staver again? Had he switched to a Stakhanovite regime? Or had the fees increased?
      Articles like these are a classic example of how propaganda turns into counter-propaganda and starts working in the other direction.
      Here, YouTube's algorithms, where both likes and dislikes have the same impact on traffic and the channel's creator's earnings, don't work.
  3. +7
    2 February 2026 04: 28
    On the "lies of the generals" and the "softness of the president"

    Putin carried out Trump's command like a dog.

    1. +7
      2 February 2026 09: 58
      Putin carried out Trump's command like a dog.
      That is, Staver called our guarantor a bad name!!!!! Castrate this empty-headed fool with blunt, rusty scissors! laughing
  4. +11
    2 February 2026 04: 31
    About the so-called "energy truce".
    I believe several factors came together in this case. We weren't opposed to switching to strikes on other targets, since Ukraine's power grid was so badly damaged. So much so that, as the author rightly noted, it won't be possible to restore it. Certainly during the war. Then Trump came along with this ceasefire. And, of course, the junta's representatives were also nagging him about how difficult it is to live without electricity these days. But what's more important is that, while the power grid isn't completely destroyed, it's been seriously damaged. And there's no point in wasting ammunition on it anymore.
    About the battalion commander.
    I'd like to argue with the author a bit here. Yes, Kupyansk-Uzlovaya hasn't been completely cleared, even though it's under our control. But excuse me, even in such a situation, an entire enemy battalion commander can't just stroll around freely. "Under control" means that enemy soldiers awaiting the clearing shouldn't be able to venture out of basements and crevices without consequences. Clearing means digging the enemy out of their hiding places. Control means control of the entire town, and a certain number of enemy forces trying their best to hide in those holes. If the enemy controls even two or three streets, then the town isn't entirely ours. And that's not a clearing; it's the elimination of a cauldron, if you will.
    1. +28
      2 February 2026 07: 11
      Following the author's logic, we could land troops near Lviv, enter some buildings, and call it control. Control is when anyone who sticks their head out to pose with a weapon dies a minute later, and you can immediately provide photo and video evidence of their mortal pig-snouted carcass. And when both sides pose, it's trench warfare.
    2. +1
      2 February 2026 23: 58
      Quote: Grandfather is an amateur
      About the so-called "energy truce".
      I believe several factors came together in this case. We weren't opposed to switching to strikes on other targets, since Ukraine's power grid was so badly damaged. So much so that, as the author rightly noted, it won't be possible to restore it. Certainly during the war. Then Trump came along with this ceasefire. And, of course, the junta's representatives were also nagging him about how difficult it is to live without electricity these days. But what's more important is that, while the power grid isn't completely destroyed, it's been seriously damaged. And there's no point in wasting ammunition on it anymore.
      About the battalion commander.
      I'd like to argue with the author a bit here. Yes, Kupyansk-Uzlovaya hasn't been completely cleared, even though it's under our control. But excuse me, even in such a situation, an entire enemy battalion commander can't just stroll around freely. "Under control" means that enemy soldiers awaiting the clearing shouldn't be able to venture out of basements and crevices without consequences. Clearing means digging the enemy out of their hiding places. Control means control of the entire town, and a certain number of enemy forces trying their best to hide in those holes. If the enemy controls even two or three streets, then the town isn't entirely ours. And that's not a clearing; it's the elimination of a cauldron, if you will.

      Hello, how was it in 1942? The Germans took almost the entire city of Stalingrad except for a narrow strip of land along the Volga, but nevertheless, the enemy failed to conquer the city.
      you noticed correctly
    3. 0
      6 February 2026 15: 26
      Quote: Grandfather is an amateur
      But excuse me, even in such a situation, an entire enemy battalion commander cannot calmly walk around it.

      In fact, the author wrote, albeit a little clumsily, that this photograph was taken when no database was kept there.
  5. +49
    2 February 2026 04: 57
    Let's leave the generals, let's leave the front lines, and go deeper into our country. And let's use our brains: the problem isn't the generals, the problem isn't the reports, the problem is the very lack of these problems. The system is deeply sick, everyone cheerfully reports on constant salary increases, affordable housing, modern medicine, and some kind of fairytale world that we somehow haven't entered. Lies are everywhere; reality and the reports are completely opposite. So someone goes to work on a "new" bus that was late and also broke down, and then walks through a snow-covered city that was supposedly cleared. Then he arrives at a job where he supposedly has a high salary, and after working, he probably leaves, 180%, even though there was no power for half a day. Then he goes to the clinic, but it turns out the last specialist has already quit, and appointments are only available for a month, and anyway, the clinic is closed because there are no patients. He goes to the store and wonders, why is everything so expensive? They said the harvest was good, and everyone was paying for utilities, but then the rates went up. It turns out the grids were worn out, even though they reported replacing 90% of them. So we live in a land of irrational numbers. Life is a fairy tale, a real equation with a ton of unknowns and no right answer. Everyone's been so full of lies that they don't even know the truth anymore, and many have seriously come to believe this fantastical reality.
    1. +17
      2 February 2026 05: 06
      I agree with you, the problem can't be just in the army, for example; it spreads like cancer throughout the entire state.
      1. +36
        2 February 2026 05: 18
        And the worst thing is, this gap between reality and fantasy only grows with each passing year, and the system's inadequacy has become so inept that if you were to report to a cranberry and fermented baked milk lover and to ministers that we've already prepared the first company of interstellar Cheburashkas to fight the unicorns on Jupiter, no one would even bat an eyelid; they'd praise you, maybe even give you a medal...
      2. +12
        2 February 2026 05: 20
        It also depends on the stage of the cancer. At the early stages, it's still possible to localize the tumor and burn it out. But at the advanced stages, if metastases have occurred, there's nothing that can be done.
      3. +6
        2 February 2026 20: 51
        It could all end like in the Soviet Union. Isn't it clear? They're relying on backup airfields.
        Europeans are flunkies, sure, but they don't lie like that in everyday life. If they can, they do it. If not, they just say they don't have the money.
        Here we are constantly whitewashing and whitewashing the authorities.
        Even when she shit herself
    2. +37
      2 February 2026 07: 38
      If you turn on our TV, all you hear is about victories in Ukraine, what Zelenskyy has done and how, what Trump is doing and how, how the US and EU are falling apart and rotting, and what's happening in other countries around the world. There's no news at all about what's happening in the vast expanses of our vast country—except for the snowfall in Moscow and Kamchatka. My question is: how can we get Russian news channels to cover what's happening in different parts of this vast country? Instead of all the "Zelenskys," "Trumps," "Mertzes," and so on?
      1. +27
        2 February 2026 08: 11
        Especially on Channel One.
        Every day there's news about Moscow—they've opened more hospitals, schools, roads, and bridges. They've bought trams and MCD cars, and opened another 400th metro station. They've given out free water in the heat. They've bought driverless snow blowers.
        And how Muscovites froze at 10°C and drowned in snow.
        The question is: Are you deliberately angering the rest of the country's residents?
        No news about other regions?
        1. +2
          2 February 2026 20: 31
          There is no life on Mars yet...
      2. -6
        2 February 2026 09: 18
        Or maybe that's how it should be? Especially when there's a war going on! We need to get the people in the right frame of mind and silence the alarmists! At least (I don't know if it was right) in the USSR, they protected the people's psyche and showed only good news from the vast expanses of the country and bad news from the decaying West. At least I had confidence in the future. Remember how everything changed with the advent of democracy: the TV shows only murder and violence, theft and banditry, all the ugly stuff. As a result, the people began to feel like hunted animals, and nostalgia for the "glorious times" of Brezhnev's stagnation emerged.
        1. +12
          2 February 2026 09: 28
          maybe that's how it should be
          You forgot, and the author kept silent. The naked parties continue. The oligarchs and officials of the SVO are not affected in any way.
          It turns out that some people slurp caviar from a trough and don't bother. While others, finishing the crust without salt, have to work even harder.
          1. +8
            2 February 2026 10: 04
            You forgot, and the author kept silent. The naked parties continue. The oligarchs and officials of the SVO are not affected in any way.
            How come this doesn't offend you?!!! Of course it does. The oligarchs are making huge profits from the war. And the officials are making fortunes. And those who don't share are imprisoned, and other officials are making fortunes from it. And the troughs are getting deeper and fuller, while our plates are getting smaller and meager.
            1. -18
              2 February 2026 10: 34
              No need to look into other people's plates (there are responsible employees for that), it's not the time. When the war ends, then you can start causing trouble.
              1. +5
                2 February 2026 14: 58
                There's no point in looking into other people's plates (there are responsible employees for that), it's not the time.
                And when will that time come? After the "war," we need to rebuild what was destroyed—now is not the time! And we won't even be entitled to plates by then, because there won't be anything to put on them. So I'll say this now, while I have the strength and opportunity to say it. And we only see responsible officials, church leaders, honest and competent police officers on television, in various soap operas. In real life, no matter how hard I look, I haven't come across any. Only the "responsible officials" that exist. You're apparently one of them.
          2. +1
            3 February 2026 09: 47
            The combined wealth of Russia's richest businessmen has grown by $19,392 billion since the beginning of January, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
        2. +6
          2 February 2026 12: 19
          Quote: Pavel Logachev
          At least I had confidence in the future.
          There's such confidence now in "Europe's leading economy," with the affordability of foreign cars and the opportunity to travel to Turkey? TV screens are filled with victories and celebrations, but the story of Dolina is more important than the deaths in the shelling in Donbas. Most of us still believe in Russia's rise from its knees, and they mistake constitutional duty and immediate responsibilities for heroic deeds and great favors. The point is, if everything is so good, why, after four years, aren't our troops yet at the Polish border, and even their galoshes are now from China...
        3. +5
          2 February 2026 12: 53
          Quote: Pavel Logachev
          At least I had confidence in the future.

          So I also have confidence in tomorrow.
          But every day after tomorrow they knock on that bottom, damn...
        4. +4
          2 February 2026 14: 34
          In Chernobyl, they also "spared for the psyche" – they kept silent for three days, and a lot of people suffered because of it. Yes, before perestroika, they didn't talk about disasters, or anything negative at all – but in the end, the authorities didn't gain from this, they lost! Because the silence bred speculation and gossip, which ultimately caused even more harm than the truth. And at party and Komsomol congresses and meetings, no one spoke out or voted against; everyone unanimously raised their hand in favor. And the media didn't criticize anyone. As a result, the Soviet Union no longer exists. And personally, I don't want to step on the same rake again.
          1. +2
            2 February 2026 15: 32
            I won't argue; the truth is needed. But who knows the truth? Excessive negative information is even more harmful during war than excessive emphasis on successes. If panic had been raised in Chernobyl and the effects of radiation had been studied, the sarcophagus wouldn't have been built so quickly, and there might have been more victims.
            1. +1
              5 February 2026 04: 34
              Stirring up panic and defeatism during war is clearly unacceptable and should be punished, I agree. But blatant lying is also absolutely unacceptable. Yes, I agree with Belousov's statement, "You can make mistakes, but you can't lie." When, during the enemy invasion of the Kursk region, they shamelessly lied that only a few hundred "militants" had entered—there's no need to say how damaging such a lie was. It reminded me of Dagestan in 1999. There, they initially lied that only 200 militants had arrived. And regarding Chernobyl, I disagree that the initial silence was beneficial. Many people suffered because of it. Both local authorities and local civil defense services should have been prepared for such a situation. For some reason, they prepared for a nuclear war, but not for a disaster like this.
    3. The comment was deleted.
    4. +1
      3 February 2026 10: 18
      Quote from turembo
      So we live in a land of irrational numbers, not life but a fairy tale, a real equation with a bunch of unknowns, without a correct answer, everyone has lied so much that they themselves no longer know where the truth lies, and many have seriously believed in this fantastic reality.

      Everything you described also happened in the USSR. almost verbatim.
      And the leadership's lies are one of the reasons for the collapse
  6. +30
    2 February 2026 05: 16
    On the "lies of the generals" and the "softness of the president"...



    When you listen to V. Putin's speeches, you understand that the information and reports he receives have nothing in common with reality....
    It seems impossible to eradicate cases of distortion of incoming information, therefore after the statements “you can make mistakes, but you can’t lie...” comes the following: “they shot down and destroyed everything...”
    Putin doesn't want to hear about bad things, so they tell him things that don't upset him.
    Generals and officials are afraid of being accused of failing to carry out their orders and the subsequent consequences, so they sing him a cappella the song "My Beautiful Marquise"... And he really likes it...
    Hence, decisions taken at the ‘top’ are based on what is desired, embellished, and not on the actual state of affairs on the ground...
    .... that's how the vertical power structure works... as the classic said: 'Nothing pleases the eye of a boss more than a skillfully crafted piece of crap' (c) .... ))
    1. +1
      2 February 2026 05: 50
      A gimmick isn't a modern invention; the army in the Soviet era pulled off such gimmicks. Painting grass seemed like child's play.
    2. -17
      2 February 2026 06: 54
      How do you know what the president wants to hear and what news he categorically rejects, what is reported to him and what isn't? Are you the "leader's secret adviser?"
      1. +19
        2 February 2026 08: 44
        Well, there could be two answers. Either he genuinely doesn't want to hear bad things, so they lie to him, publicly, and he allows it. How many times would you allow yourself to be deceived? And here, the process is ongoing. Either he knows everything and can't, or he doesn't want to change anything. And which is worse, I don't even know.
        1. +9
          2 February 2026 10: 06
          Well, there can be 2 answers here.
          The third option is that he is like that himself and he doesn’t care what he says, they will do something else anyway.
    3. +11
      2 February 2026 09: 08
      When you listen to V. Putin’s speeches, you understand that information and The reports he receives have nothing to do with reality. ...

      That's how the whole country watched the Security Council meeting on February 21, 2022, where everyone nodded and said they were ready...
      but what actually happened?
      1. +15
        2 February 2026 09: 23
        Well, I wouldn't say that the flustered Naryshkin gave the impression of readiness. There was a clear lack of readiness for this kind of conflict. He certainly knew something, but he didn't dare say it outright.
        1. +6
          2 February 2026 09: 27
          He definitely knew something, but he didn’t dare say it directly.

          Well, if problems are swept under the carpet, what results can be expected?
        2. +8
          2 February 2026 12: 33
          Quote: Glock-17
          There was a clear lack of readiness for this kind of conflict.
          Recall Putin's speech at the start of the Second World War. These words are from the text of the speech.
          We are ready for any development of events. All necessary decisions in this regard have been made. I hope that I will be heard.
        3. +5
          2 February 2026 15: 25
          He definitely knew something, but he didn’t dare say it directly.
          Most likely, he knew nothing, since, judging by subsequent events, the SVR doesn't work here. So he was afraid he might get into trouble for the disorganized service. But, as we see, his fears were in vain.
        4. +4
          2 February 2026 21: 04
          So he understood everything. His hands were shaking. Looking back, and seeing the dynamics, it's hard to blame him. Now this "weakness" of his seems like an understanding of the real situation.
          1. +1
            2 February 2026 22: 59
            It's hard to blame him, because this could happen to anyone. It's worth noting that he was a spy, and they're especially trained not to give themselves away with body language. But even he lost his cool in that situation.
            1. 0
              3 February 2026 00: 41
              Quote: Glock-17
              It's hard to blame him, because this could happen to anyone. It's worth noting that he was a spy, and they're especially trained not to give themselves away with body language. But even he lost his cool in that situation.

              Hello, sweetie - a scout, almost illegal
      2. +8
        2 February 2026 11: 07
        "The Security Council meeting on February 21, 2022, where everyone nodded and said they were ready..."
        No, there was one who didn't shoot. laughing He obviously knew something. More than anyone else.
      3. +2
        3 February 2026 00: 40
        Quote: Dedok
        When you listen to V. Putin’s speeches, you understand that information and The reports he receives have nothing to do with reality. ...

        That's how the whole country watched the Security Council meeting on February 21, 2022, where everyone nodded and said they were ready...
        but what actually happened?

        Hi, everyone nodded, and someone even started stuttering (probably guessing something).
    4. +12
      2 February 2026 10: 25
      Well, well, well! Putin knows nothing! I'm laughing so hard...
      1. +12
        2 February 2026 11: 08
        "Putin doesn't know anything! I'm laughing so hard..."
        I don't really care that he knows what's most important to me, what he does and doesn't do
    5. +21
      2 February 2026 13: 01
      Quote: Streck
      Putin doesn't want to hear about bad things, so they tell him things that don't upset him.

      Why did the old regime fall? Mainly because they fought against the dissatisfied, and not against the causes that caused discontent. But the people who supported Russia were dissatisfied. Therefore, when they fought with them, they fought with the best, and the state administration was entrusted to nonentities who knew how to flatter and reassure” (August 2, 1917).
      VV Shulgin, Deputy of the Second, Third and Fourth State Dumas of the Russian Empire.
      1. +4
        2 February 2026 15: 30
        Well, we're looking at Russia at the end of the 19th century, so we're on the right track.
        1. +2
          2 February 2026 21: 17
          It's hard to disagree. We're making the same mistakes.
  7. +7
    2 February 2026 05: 24
    What matters most to me is the opinion of the soldiers and commanders on the front lines about this truce...what will they say?
    So far, I've heard Zelensky thank Trump, not Putin, for this truce.
    This is some kind of nonsense and madness... Putin gave the order to stop the shelling, and the Ukrainian Nazis thank Trump for it. request
    Who is fooling whom?
    Everything got mixed up into one heap.
  8. +5
    2 February 2026 05: 58
    "There are fewer military leaders than soldiers." And there are even fewer politicians than military leaders...
  9. -5
    2 February 2026 06: 24
    Quote: Adrey
    And you don’t feel sorry for AI?

    To be honest, Aliska on Yandex has really gotten on my nerves with her tricks.
    Well, despite all her intelligence, she doesn't understand Russian... I tell her, "Alice, go to such and such a place"... she still gets in the way... You turn her off, and she still comes out of somewhere and nags under her breath, like, "How can I help you?" am am am
    1. +5
      2 February 2026 07: 34
      Quote: The same LYOKHA
      To be honest, Aliska on Yandex has really gotten on my nerves with her tricks.

      I had a friend who tried hiding it in a closet. But you could use more radical methods, not the Kotoleopold ones. laughing
      1. +5
        2 February 2026 09: 01
        Our grandchildren gave our grandmother a smart speaker with Alice. It turned out to be the best gift ever – she talks and communicates with the speaker... and sings old songs together... winked
        1. +2
          2 February 2026 09: 03
          Quote: Monster_Fat
          Our grandchildren gave our grandmother a smart speaker with Alice.

          I am not an "AI-phobe" at all. laughing.
    2. KCA
      +2
      2 February 2026 08: 06
      I have Yandex Browser, but I don't know anything about Alice. Maybe I shouldn't have unchecked the box during installation? As Comrade Laertsky sang, "I send them to [there], and then they go away, and they don't bother me."
      1. +2
        2 February 2026 10: 05
        There is Alice in the browser too, but she doesn’t react in any way until you call her yourself.
        But Yandex columns are a completely different matter.
  10. +33
    2 February 2026 06: 32
    The author gets a C-. He just wasted his time.
    An ordinary propaganda piece justifying the country's incompetent leadership.
    And that means it brings grist to the mill of imperialism.
    In 1418 days and nights, the Bolsheviks won the Great Patriotic War, from the catastrophe of 1941 to the capture of Berlin in 1945. And this was a war against the Wehrmacht, the most powerful army on the planet at the time. The USSR fought against the economy and people of all of Europe.
    And now how many days and nights has the war been going on?
    And we haven't liberated Donbas yet. And there's no end in sight...
    The fascists were driven out of Kursk along with the Korean communists because they couldn’t cope on their own.
    1. +12
      2 February 2026 07: 51
      There are a couple of small and not so small BUTs... back then, for all 1418 days, the people were united with the leadership, because they understood who we were fighting and what we were fighting for. And we weren't alone; most of the world fought alongside us, and most importantly, most of the global economy was beating the Germans. And what about now? Now, if you look at which side has the support of the population and the world, it becomes very unpleasant, whether you like it or not, but questions arise.
      1. +3
        2 February 2026 14: 56
        You haven't mentioned another crucial detail: the final PRICE of that Victory. The true casualty figures are still unknown.
    2. +12
      2 February 2026 07: 55
      Apparently, there is no goal to win.
      1. +4
        2 February 2026 08: 33
        Someone might have a goal, but neither the General Staff nor the Presidential Administration have the drive to achieve it. Nor do the people.
      2. +19
        2 February 2026 11: 03
        Quote: Million
        Apparently, there is no goal to win.


        To begin with, this goal should have at least been clearly stated. Instead of confusing the people with some vague "denazifications" and "demilitarizations." Which, by the way, no one even remembers today.
      3. +5
        2 February 2026 12: 42
        Quote: Million
        Apparently, there is no goal to win.
        Apparently, the goal is different. Perhaps to exhaust Russia's military resources and surrender its strategic nuclear forces. Perhaps to prioritize the interests of the oligarchs. Perhaps it's both; capitalists have no homeland, only constant interests in personal enrichment.
    3. -6
      2 February 2026 08: 13
      Your assumptions?
      Why so long?
      1. +6
        2 February 2026 11: 13
        "Why is it taking so long?"
        But no one needs it. The Supreme Commander-in-Chief said, "We're happy with everything." So who's going to tear something apart after that to suddenly achieve something successful? This will do. laughing
    4. +10
      2 February 2026 10: 26
      You're not talking about that! Stalin was a satrap and a fool, but our Supreme, he's supreme over all the elites! He's got such tricks up his sleeve that the enemy won't know what hit him! The whole world will crumble!
    5. +3
      2 February 2026 12: 16
      There is no point in comparing WWII with the Soviet Union.
      1. +2
        2 February 2026 12: 30
        I agree, it’s more appropriate to compare it with the Civil War, which lasted 5 years and it’s still unclear who was right!
        1. +9
          2 February 2026 13: 30
          Here it is.
          During the Great Patriotic War, there was a brutal mobilization of all forces and resources. Ideology. The goal was to win.
          Now some are in the trenches, others in expensive restaurants. Some are going on vacation from the front, others to Thailand. Some are giving away their last pension, others are "topping up" their account.
          The goals of the SVO are not clear to most people.
  11. BAI
    +22
    2 February 2026 06: 36


    What did General Gerasimov say? That a cleanup operation was underway in the city! That up to 800 militants remained in the city.


    The author is talking about a purge. But the reports to Putin and Belousov spoke of complete control.
    As for the 800 militants, one can recall the 300 militants in the Kursk region.
    1. +39
      2 February 2026 07: 03
      They've simply had enough of their lies; they don't even consider us human beings.
      "You can fool some of the people all the time, you can fool all of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time."
  12. +17
    2 February 2026 06: 46
    We're not bombing strategic bridges. The Beskydy Tunnel is intact. Business
    Let's get in the way. Capitalism. Damn it.
    Our President doesn't have full power. He shares it with the privatizers.
    Once war is declared, the Commander-in-Chief has all the power.
    Then privatization can be adjusted.
    1. +15
      2 February 2026 10: 27
      What's the point? The plebs are dying, the oligarchs are getting rich, their ratings are rising, what more do you need?
      1. +8
        2 February 2026 14: 12
        One would naively like to believe that the tsar is good and the boyars are bad.
        He wants to, but he can't. They won't let him. He maneuvers.
        Only there is less and less of this faith.
        Especially after the recent congratulatory message to the Family.
    2. +8
      2 February 2026 11: 40
      "Then privatization can be adjusted."
      not long after that he will be commander-in-chief laughing
      1. +6
        2 February 2026 12: 50
        Alas. There is much we don't know and will never know.
        Every person fears for his own life and the lives of his children.
        They could have warned.
  13. +10
    2 February 2026 06: 52
    Quote: ASSAD1
    Yes, the author has indeed chosen a heavy burden for himself: to justify the actions of the leadership. I just wanted to say that no one except our enemies criticizes our soldiers and officers.

    From the article: What did General Gerasimov say? That a cleanup operation was underway in the city! That up to 800 militants remained in the city.
    What Gerasimov actually said: The Russian Armed Forces have liberated the city of Kupyansk-Uzlovaya, announced Chief of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, General of the Army Valery Gerasimov. According to Gerasimov, as quoted by RIA Novosti, the task was accomplished by fighters from the "West" force group.
    There was simply no need to make an announcement ahead of time; it was necessary to wait until they had cleared the area and repelled a couple of counterattacks, and then the people would not have had any doubts or objections.
    1. +7
      2 February 2026 08: 00
      The area of ​​the city of Kupyansk is 33 square kilometers.
      800 militants in such an area - can we say that the city is taken?
      1. +4
        2 February 2026 11: 15
        "The area of ​​the city of Kupyansk is 33 square kilometers."
        The area of ​​Kupyansk-Uzlovaya, which was discussed, is 4,5 square kilometers. 800 soldiers for this area is a lot, that's a couple of battalions, at least.
    2. +7
      2 February 2026 09: 10
      What Gerasimov actually said: The Russian Armed Forces have liberated the city of Kupyansk-Uzlovaya, reported the Chief of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, General of the Army Valery Gerasimov.

      The author is stupidly trying to replace what was said with his own fiction...
    3. 0
      3 February 2026 11: 36
      "What Gerasimov actually said: The Russian Armed Forces have liberated the city of Kupyansk-Uzlovaya."
      Well, everything is correct here, but here's a small detail: there is no city: Kupyansk-Uzlovoy. It's simply a district of Kupyansk (or a suburb), where the locomotive depot is located, and around it are the workers' residential buildings, about 800 people. Gerasimov can easily claim a hero's star; perhaps Kupyansk-Uzlovoy was actually liberated without even being noticed; it's too small. laughing Another question arises: did the previous liberator of Kupyansk surrender his star? Or shoot himself? Or is he drilling a hole for another star after the next liberation?
  14. 0
    2 February 2026 07: 23
    Hybrid warfare is, first and foremost, a war for people's minds. And here we must weigh the successes of the collective West against those of our country. Only then will we understand what we need to do.
    1. +11
      2 February 2026 07: 41
      Quote: Nikolay Malyugin
      Hybrid warfare is, first and foremost, a war for people's minds. And here we must weigh the successes of the collective West against those of our country.

      The group commander's report, followed by the Chief of the General Staff's statement on establishing control over Kupyansk-Uzlovy on January 27. A day later, a video appeared online showing one of the Ukrainian battalion commanders calmly strolling through the city, and judging by the condition of the streets, it seemed like a completely normal, "peaceful" life was going on there.

      I wonder who in this case did more harm to the "minds" of our people? Or was it also the "collective West"?
      And only then will we understand what we need to do.

      Is it really still not clear!? How sad... crying
    2. -11
      2 February 2026 07: 57
      Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

      Quote: Nikolay Malyugin
      Hybrid war is, first and foremost, a war for people's minds.

      You're right. Hybrid warfare is a war on all six priorities of human governance (see figure).

      The eternal question: who is to blame and what to do...

      War looks different from the trenches and from the office window, but victory is planned at headquarters and achieved on the battlefield. What is the role of those who are NOT directly involved in this—those not in the trenches or at headquarters? shut up and let them work.

      As Putin said: "I haven't graduated from the General Staff; let the professionals do the work." And they are working, and working well! As a result of this work, the West has long since abandoned its intentions to defeat Russia on the battlefield. We are advancing, liberating more than one settlement every day. The enemy is retreating.

      Regarding Putin fulfilling Trump's request, and until yesterday, our troops hadn't struck Kyiv. What needed to be destroyed has already been destroyed. In a week, what they manage to restore, we will destroy again. So, it turns out Trump sort of said something to Putin and boosted his approval ratings, Putin sort of agreed, and our "patriots," without understanding the essence of the matter, got excited.
      1. -1
        3 February 2026 11: 41
        "As Putin said: 'I haven't graduated from the General Staff, let the professionals do the work.' And they are working, and working well! As a result of this work, the West has long since abandoned its intentions to defeat Russia on the battlefield. We are advancing, liberating more than one settlement every day. The enemy is retreating."
        It's not funny anymore. If someone had said something like that four years ago, maybe someone would have fallen for it. But now everyone knows (or guesses) the real state of affairs. This war is ongoing, and will continue for a long time, and it will end something like this.
  15. +3
    2 February 2026 07: 33
    Not "the enemy is influencing us." It's the truth. And it's a shame it's coming from the enemy.
    1. +2
      2 February 2026 08: 32
      The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

      Quote: Monster_Fat
      And it's true.

      Everyone has their own truth. The only question is which truth is closer to each person, and each person, having answered this question for themselves, must also understand whose side they stand in.
      1. -2
        2 February 2026 09: 43
        Quote: Boris55
        Everyone has their own truth. The only question is which truth is closer to you.

        If you drink with thieves, beware of your wallet.
        If you drink with thieves, beware of your wallet.
        If you walk on a dirty road, you cannot help butting your feet.
        If you pull your hair out, you won’t put it back.
        If you pull your hair out, you won’t put it back.
        And your head is always responsible for where your ass sits.
        "The truth is always one"
        This is what the pharaoh said.
        He was very smart
        And for this he was called -
        Tutankhamun.
        1. +1
          2 February 2026 09: 56
          Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

          Quote: ROSS 42
          "The truth is always one" - said the Pharaoh.

          And who can confirm that the pharaoh said such a thing? laughing

          A father's son considers him old - this is the son's truth, and a father, the father of a son, considers him still young - this is his truth.

          It was once believed that the sun revolved around the Earth—that was the truth of the time, people believed it, and it was true. But Giordano Bruno refuted that truth. Now we have a new truth.
          1. 0
            2 February 2026 10: 01
            You're trying to interpret your "truth" from different perspectives. For everything to fall into place, you need to define the time period. Old, young... How old is the whole criterion?
            1. 0
              2 February 2026 10: 11
              The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

              Quote: ROSS 42
              Old-young...How many years - that's the whole criterion.

              Let's know that the son is 7 years old and the father is 27. How does this change the son's truthfulness toward his father? Let's know that the grandfather is 57 years old, and how does this change the grandfather's relationship with his son? Nothing. They still think one is old and the other is young. laughing

              Knowledge expands our understanding of the world, relationships, and politics. The greater our knowledge, the deeper our distinctions.
              1. +5
                2 February 2026 10: 50
                Quote: Boris55
                They still thought that one was old and the other was young.

                Even a negative rating didn't make you any smarter.
                You are still trying to create a symbiosis of subjective and objective perception.
                The truth is the number of years, and everything else is fantasy in animation.
                You keep writing that the essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism, and I can assume that you will not get to the bottom of this essence until the very end of your life...
                Take a poster to Red Square and greet Putin every morning, but don't bother me!
                1. -4
                  2 February 2026 11: 37
                  Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

                  Quote: ROSS 42
                  Even a negative rating didn't make you any smarter.

                  Most of the downvoting began after I expressed my political preference for Bolshevism. Should I pay attention to the enemies of the Bolshevik Stalin and Bolshevism as a manifestation of the spirit of Russian civilization? Of course not! I don't need a pat on the head, a basket of cookies, or a barrel of jam.

                  Quote: ROSS 42
                  You keep writing that the essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism, and I can assume that you will not get to the bottom of this essence until the very end of your life...

                  Pushkin described the manifestation of the spirit of Russian civilization in "Ruslan and Lyudmila" as: "Here is the Russian spirit, here it smells of Russia."
                  Many perceived Russia as nothing less than ruled by God himself.
                  Lenin grasped this phenomenon and on its basis created the Bolshevik Party.

                  Each person describes the manifestation of the spirit of Russian civilization to the best of their knowledge. To deny it is to misunderstand the essence of Russian civilization, which, after every upheaval, rises like a phoenix, becoming ever more beautiful. hi
                  1. +7
                    2 February 2026 11: 42
                    So you're not mistaken. You understand that you're being downvoted because you're labeling a liberal, a pro-Western Putin, as a Bolshevik.
                    1. -7
                      2 February 2026 11: 56
                      V.V. Putin is my president. He is a Bolshevik!

                      Quote: Gardamir
                      So you are not mistaken.

                      I'm not mistaken. I understand perfectly well why the flags under commenters' avatars disappeared on VO since the start of the SVO—to make it easier for the Center for Informed Ops Operations to conduct anti-Russian propaganda in Russia. Many people fall for it.

                      Putin is a Bolshevik! We should thank him for saving Russia from collapse and for its continued existence. For whom did he do this? For us, for the majority of the Russian people!

                      I've written about what else he did to the majority of the people many times. I don't want to repeat myself, but if you insist, I'll do it again.

                      ps
                      A Bolshevik is someone who expresses the interests of the majority.
                      Liberals express the interests of a minority, mainly the interests of the West.

                      Judge by the latest referendum (election) results. The liberals are a statistical outlier that can be ignored.
                      1. -6
                        2 February 2026 12: 35
                        You have to understand one thing: they don't care who's in power in Russia. Their main goal is to terrorize us endlessly! And the policies of "Military Review" have given them this opportunity. You won't be able to prove anything to these people, because they have a different function. Why do you think they're all red? Because under this pretext they can endlessly criticize our government, since ideologically it's their enemy. Just a moment, chosen by the majority of the population. Our government, in my opinion, is making a mistake because of its ideology of freedom. In my opinion, we need to move on to their methodsIf this individual was found on Russian territory and is engaged in his propaganda, then I ask you to welcome him to the hundred and first kilometer, as they did with the “bourgeois”.
                      2. +6
                        2 February 2026 12: 44
                        Quote: Boris55
                        Putin is a Bolshevik!


                        - Here, Vasily Ivanovich, the peasants are summing up: are you for the Bolsheviks or for the Communists?
                        - What?
                        - I ask, are you for the Bolsheviks, or are you for the Communists?
                        - I am for the International.

                        And what about Putin, who keeps his registration card and party membership card in his desk (somewhere):
                        "Russia will remain a market liberal economy," Putin said.

                        Vladimir Putin confirmed once again that there will be no revision of the privatization results.

                        And he set the personal income tax for the bourgeoisie at 22% (in China it is 46%)
                        and he set the retirement age for men at 65, when half of the Russian population only lived to 65 (to collect the pension contributions that their employers contributed to their pension fund)...
                        Exactly – a Bolshevik... Every year he orders the Mausoleum to be draped and does not allow Stalingrad to regain its famous historical name...
                      3. +8
                        2 February 2026 12: 52

                        A Bolshevik is someone who expresses the interests of the majority.

                        You will agree that a "Bolshevik" is the one who has the most money.
                      4. 0
                        3 February 2026 08: 21
                        The essence of Russian civilization is Bolshevism.

                        Quote: Per se.
                        You will agree that a "Bolshevik" is the one who has the most money.

                        Don't confuse whoever has the most money with the interests of the minority. The post below explains what Bolshevism is.
                      5. +1
                        3 February 2026 09: 41
                        If this minority owns the majority of Russia's wealth, then they are the "Bolsheviks" for whom it is not 37 and who are not abandoned.
                      6. +1
                        3 February 2026 09: 48
                        Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

                        Quote: Per se.
                        If this minority owns the majority of Russia's wealth, then they are "Bolsheviks" in this regard.

                        In your view, whoever stole the most was a Bolshevik, but in our view, it's the other way around. Read the excerpt from the book below. The main points are highlighted in a different color; at least read this.
                      7. 0
                        3 February 2026 10: 06
                        Quote: Boris55
                        Who do you think stole more?
                        No, this is sarcasm, directed at your "Bolsheviks", especially when the Duma and Medvedev personally are to blame for everything, which does not allow the "tsar" to reign for the benefit of the majority.
                      8. +1
                        3 February 2026 10: 14
                        Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

                        Quote: Per se.
                        The Duma and Medvedev personally are to blame for everything

                        Do you disagree that our life is regulated by Laws?

                        Then why do we need the police, the prosecutor's office, the Investigative Committee, etc.? What is the purpose of executive power if there is nothing to execute?

                        Let me remind you. The First Duma was nicknamed "the printer gone mad" because it was so quick to rewrite the USSR laws that arrived in batches directly from the US Embassy...
                      9. 0
                        3 February 2026 16: 01
                        Quote: Boris55
                        Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

                        Quote: Per se.
                        The Duma and Medvedev personally are to blame for everything

                        Do you disagree that our life is regulated by Laws?

                        Then why do we need the police, the prosecutor's office, the Investigative Committee, etc.? What is the purpose of executive power if there is nothing to execute?

                        Let me remind you. The First Duma was nicknamed "the printer gone mad" because it was so quick to rewrite the USSR laws that arrived in batches directly from the US Embassy...

                        Hi, I sometimes wonder why we need the prosecutor's office either? Eliminate this agency and nothing will change, believe me.
                        The Earth will not start rotating in the opposite direction.
                  2. +5
                    2 February 2026 12: 26
                    Quote: Boris55
                    They started downvoting me for the most part after I stated my political preferences for Bolshevism.

                    Don't try to mislead me. Many on the site know user tatra (Irina), an apologist for the communist USSR and a hater of the enemies of communism. She gets downvoted just as much, but her posts convey some logic and common sense.
                    I suggested you change your rhetoric and try to get to the bottom of the claims against you, but you have your own truth...
                    Today, there's no point in claiming that Russian civilization rules the country (or anywhere else). There's the Russian mentality and the Russian community. We live within it, and allowing this community to be destroyed and ignoring the mentality of the peoples of Russia is unacceptable.
                    Lenin made so many mistakes, the results of which we are still dealing with today, but his genius, compared to today's leaders who are incapable of speaking without a piece of paper, is undeniable.
                    1. -1
                      3 February 2026 08: 13
                      Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

                      Quote: ROSS 42
                      Don't try to mislead me.

                      I am not asking anyone to believe me and that my opinion is the only correct one.
                      I'm simply openly expressing my political preference, my opinion, and I see no reason to change it at the whim of the crowd, mostly those who hate the Bolsheviks, the Bolshevik Lenin, and the Bolshevik Stalin, thanks to whom the red flag over defeated Berlin glows on your avatar. Attitudes toward Bolshevism and the Bolsheviks are the litmus test that determines friend or foe.

                      Quote: ROSS 42
                      tatra (Irina), an apologist for the communist USSR

                      She has some misunderstanding about the fact that there were two opposing factions within the Communist Party: the Bolsheviks and the Trotskyists. In the film "Chapayev," when the peasant asks Chapayev whether he's for the Bolsheviks or the Communists, the people at the time made a distinction. Today, most people don't have that distinction.
                      Bolsheviks are Lenin, Stalin
                      Communists are Trotsky.
                      Irina defends Trotskyism, which built NEP 0.1 and was shut down by Stalin. After Stalin's death, Trotskyists built NEP 2.0, which we live in...

                      Quote: ROSS 42
                      Today, there's no point in claiming that Russian civilization rules the country (or anywhere else). There's the Russian mentality and the Russian community. We live within it, and allowing this community to be destroyed and ignoring the mentality of the peoples of Russia is unacceptable.

                      Pushkin called this phenomenon the Russian spirit. You call it mentality. This phenomenon exists (under various names) and cannot be denied.

                      An excerpt from the book "The Sin of Judas of the 20th Congress.

                      "... Bolshevism is not a Russian variety of Marxism and not a party affiliation. And the phrase “Jewish Bolshevism” used by Hitler in Mein Kampf is completely meaningless, since Bolshevism is a manifestation of the spirit of Russian civilization, and not the spirit of the bearers of the doctrine of biblical global slavery on a racial basis.

                      Bolshevism existed before Marxism, existed in Russian Marxism, and somehow exists today.It will continue to exist.

                      As the Bolsheviks themselves, members of the Marxist party RSDLP * (b), it was they who expressed in politics the strategic interests of the working majority of the population of multinational Russia, as a result of which only they had the right to be called Bolsheviks. Regardless of how infallible the Bolsheviks are in expressing the strategic interests of the working majority, how much this majority itself is aware of its strategic interests and is true to them in life, essence of Bolshevism not in the numerical superiority of the adherents of certain ideas over the adherents of other ideas and the thoughtless crowd, but precisely in this:
                      - in a sincere desire to express and implement the long-term strategic interests of the working majority, who want no one to parasitize on their labor and life..."
                    2. 0
                      3 February 2026 10: 56
                      There is a Russian mentality

                      Here lies the root, or, better yet, the very "place of the needle." It would take a long time to prove, but the conclusion is: "Russianness" from birth or from one's first language is only a probability, a supplement to one's early years... It was developed by the Russian peasantry and, from them, was recorded by those who are no longer read. The thing is that this, after all, original set of certain social rules, was lost by the so-called "civilized and not so" peoples, and self-reproduced, gaining long-term entrenchment, only in the Russian economic system under its special conditions. Since the emergence of the bourgeois "kulak," and then socialist industrialization, the psychology of the "Russian agricultural commune" no longer exists. A stratum of "relocant cosmopolitans" has begun to accumulate. The RSDLP(b), in the naivety of early Marxism, once hoped that the "proletarians" would govern themselves. First "in general", then "in a particular case..."; but thanks to the "intelligentsia-minded pedants of teaching", they successfully failed... In short, it may be that soon we can only speak of the "Russians" as "heralds...", and we will have to continue, to restore what has been forgotten, with the "multicolored contingent":)
  16. +10
    2 February 2026 07: 37
    Who announced the "energy ceasefire"? Putin? Zelensky? Some other Ukrainian or Russian official?

    Yes. He stated.
    Russia has agreed to refrain from striking Ukraine until February 1 at the request of US President Donald Trump, according to Russian presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov.
    Read more: https://www.vedomosti.ru/politics/news/2026/01/30/1172923-kreml-podtverdil-peremirie?from=copy_text
    You can break this article down to its atoms. But why? It's a staver.
  17. +13
    2 February 2026 07: 39
    Speaking of the crucians who don't remember, I not only remember, but I also understand that what's happening is similar to the late 80s. There are a lot of people here who like to spit on the past, like, "Why didn't they come out to defend the Soviet Union?" And now, why isn't anyone coming out? Bringing in migrants is a blessing. They're not bringing in Kyrgyz anymore, they're bringing in Indians, and there's some kind of epidemic going on there. By the way, I didn't come up with this. As soon as the Second World War ends, they'll declare an epidemic.
    Regarding the specific topic, there are two points. When there were real liberations in 2022, they filmed it from every angle. Everyone knew and saw it; no one doubted it. This is the 21st century, so show real video evidence, not photos from space.
    1. +4
      2 February 2026 11: 20
      "Everyone knew and saw it; no one doubted it. This is the 21st century; show real video evidence, not photos from space."
      The rubble piles look alike. If you've seen one, you've seen them all. Maybe they're just showing us this one all the time?
  18. Eug
    +16
    2 February 2026 07: 42
    [/quote]They scold our soldiers, officers, and generals[quote]


    I haven't read, seen, or heard anything about soldiers and officers (those directly on the LBS) being criticized anywhere except in the author's book since the first year of the Air Defense Forces. But I've heard mixed reviews about supply officers and rear-echelon personnel. The same goes for generals. When did the public begin to understand the issues surrounding Lapin and Akhmedov? And why is the leadership's response so delayed? And who was awarded the Hero of Russia title for Kupyansk, and WHEN? Is this also a case of "you can't lie"? And when will there be a reaction (if any)? Incidentally, no one thought of separating Kupyansk-Uzlovaya (the station) from Kupyansk (the city) until the Russian General Staff...
  19. G17
    +31
    2 February 2026 07: 48
    The author is a classic conservative, eager to justify any cowardice, incompetence, and betrayal. I especially liked the phrase "...shedding crocodile tears over a lost Russia, scolding our soldiers, officers, and generals for the lost war." That's an outright lie. No patriotic blogger has ever written or spoken like that. On the contrary, since 2014, the people and the army have wanted victory over the enemy, not cowardly ceasefires. And our army is beyond criticism. Because our brothers, fathers, and friends are there. The criticism is directed at those who deserved it, having stolen victory with "Minsk," "Istanbul," and "Anchorage" missiles, who constantly lie about the situation on the front and "borrow cities," disregarding losses, for the sake of a pretty daily report. Wars are started for the sake of Victory, not to achieve a dubious "peace" with the enemy through an endless Verdun-like slaughter.
  20. -16
    2 February 2026 08: 33
    The author is of course right, although not in everything.
    Because war is war and once something is started, it must be finished.
    I'm talking about the destruction of Ukraine's energy grid, where the author began to pity the unfortunate ordinary people, saying they shouldn't be deprived of the comforts of civilization. So why did they start it, one wonders? That's right, they started it to create problems for the current Ukrainian regime, which will spend the funds received from its sponsors on solving current problems, and not on the war and their planned murder of 50 of our soldiers a month. Creating such a mess in the rear that they won't think about anything else—that's the task that needs to be solved. Remember Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya and her heroic deed? Remember who sold her out? That's why it's a heroic deed and not an act of terrorism in our historiography. Woe to the vanquished, and the matter must be brought to an end once it's begun.
    Otherwise, the author is right.
    I suspect that many of these figures who scribble here comments that are as illiterate as they are depressing and defeatist don't live in Russia and don't represent it. The "well-wishers" are mostly from nearby, but many are from further afield, mainly from the Israeli diaspora. They are our doomsayers, eternal whiners, ethnic minorities, defeatists, empty-headed scoffers, and irresponsible chatterboxes. There are probably also those who work in Zipso. Because how can one understand this figure who, I quote here, says: "It's not 'the enemy that influences'. But the truth. And it's a great pity that it comes from the enemy." (Monster_Fat)
    (What's the difference) This one definitely works specifically on the enemy

    And the most important thing is that the public wants to talk, as they have been accustomed to discussing the political situation in their kitchens since the days of the late USSR, when everything was allowed.
    They agreed then to the collapse of the country and to a large extent this was facilitated by the moods in society that these people were stirring up
    Apparently they can't wait to repeat their experience.
  21. +5
    2 February 2026 08: 33
    I don't even know what's worse: lying generals with a soft-hearted president or aggressive, self-righteous patriots. In the fall of '41, the loudest of them burned their party cards and fled Moscow in all directions. It's understandable: it's hard to be a loudmouth on the front lines.
    1. +1
      3 February 2026 11: 05
      Good comment, correct.
      I read everything from above and am amazed at what kind of seers, analyzers and experts I come across here!!!
      How skillfully they understand the planning of combat operations, how they can stand to the death in strongholds, and how nobly and decisively they shoot in the event of their forecasting and expert errors!
      I think that if these "miracle heroes", having also signed contracts, had personally rushed into battle, then they would undoubtedly have won victory in the SVO long ago!
      Everyone knows that we never retreat, that all headquarters plans are only realized 100 percent, and the enemy is exclusively in constant retreat, is cowardly by definition and is armed exclusively with spears and arrows...
      And the fact that today and yesterday we are fighting with all of Europe and America, with their various intelligence services, weapons, planning and intellect - that's nonsense, the main thing for us is Kupyansk, because it is there that the essence of victory is "decided", right?!

      And as for the home front, the economy, the snowdrifts with migrants and prices - this is a most fertile topic!
      I wonder how many of those writing are currently standing at a machine sharpening blanks for shells, and how many are assembling drones in military-industrial complexes?!
      It's surprising that no one is waving shovels to clear the streets and courtyards covered in extreme snowfall...Who's to blame? The Commander-in-Chief? Gerasimov?
      And who pees in the elevator? The same ones?

      We all lived these days the way we lived them and there’s no point in blaming the mirror!
      It is we who throw stacks of ballots into ballot boxes and falsify protocols during elections.
      We are the ones writing convenient new textbooks that our children are learning from and will learn from.
      We are the ones who bribe everyone from the maternity hospital to the cemetery guardhouse...
      We are the ones who are handing over our culture to all sorts of "praying mantises" and "horses".
      And we were squealing with delight at the air darts with tank ballets-biathlons!

      But at the same time, we discuss here thoughtfully about what not to do and what to do!
      If you know how to do it, then quickly go and return Kupyansk and don’t forget to take Orekhov and Kharkov along the way.
      Otherwise, it's the most banal "kitchen with greasy oilcloth and beer"!

      P.S. "Criticism should be constructive, objective and timely.
      Otherwise, it is gossip and rumors flavored with elements of partial truth."
  22. +14
    2 February 2026 08: 39
    Still, the function to minus articles is very necessary.
  23. +10
    2 February 2026 08: 41
    Staver surpassed Orwell himself
    War is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength.
    (Orwell)

    Why? Simply because there is no ceasefire. There is military necessity. There is an understanding of the effectiveness of the use of weapons. Ultimately, there is an understanding that Ukraine, even with the help of Western countries, will not be able to restore its own energy sector.
    (Staver)


    When printing was invented, it became easier to control public opinion; radio and cinema took this direction even further.
    (Orwell)

    Now, another topic. The energy truce. Trump, with a single "request," forced the Russian president to cease strikes at the most opportune moment for the final "destruction" of the energy sector. Betrayal?
    (Staver)
  24. +9
    2 February 2026 08: 47
    "So what if we hit the remaining energy sector? Who's going to suffer? Ordinary citizens, and then what? Will they take to the Maidan?" Weren't these the same citizens who rioted on the Maidan in 2014, clamoring for lace panties and croissants with coffee in Paris? Or were they holed up in their warm apartments, watching the Nazis and silently approving of the overthrow of the legitimate government.
  25. +14
    2 February 2026 09: 13
    Everyone's gotten used to it. The multi-move player himself doesn't mind being deceived.
    1. +17
      2 February 2026 09: 37
      Quote: Antony
      Everyone's gotten used to it. The multi-move player himself doesn't mind being deceived.

      But I got the impression that he decided to sit it out in a cushy place without taking risks, without trying, without being responsible for anything...
      Where are those promised 20 million highly skilled jobs? 20 million migrants from all the villages of the Soviet Union are turning the country into a kishlak. What's there to talk about?
      As of 2019, 18% of the population in Russia did not have running water, and 22% did not have access to sewerage.

      The country also classified data on officials' incomes and data on gold production and spending in the country...
      1. +5
        2 February 2026 21: 46
        The strategist will lead us into such a cave that we might not get out.
        Maybe they really did scare me.
        Maybe they're pulling his leg. Lukashenko's there, they communicate. He wouldn't say he's doing God knows what.
        And the fact is that some people are dying on the territory from shelling, and some are traveling abroad.
        It's complete nonsense. The Americans are fighting on foreign soil. And here we are being harassed every day from Moscow to Kamchatka.
  26. +15
    2 February 2026 09: 19
    The whole article, as they used to say, is servility...
    1. +1
      2 February 2026 21: 41
      You couldn't have said it better, Sergey...
      P.S. Yours is short, but mine is just what I need!)
  27. +3
    2 February 2026 09: 30
    It's like poetry. Almost anyone can rhyme, but only a few can write poetry.

    You're probably right. Only poetry is written about the timeless, the eternal, while about bribe-takers, charlatans, mediocrities, and cynics, it's enough to fit a few lines of rhyme...
  28. +13
    2 February 2026 09: 31
    The author did a poor job of portraying those who ask logical questions as fools. It's not surprising, really... By siding with the weak, you become weak yourself.
  29. Owl
    +5
    2 February 2026 09: 32
    The energy sector had to be finished off, without any two-day truces, so that Ukraine's nuclear power plants could not transmit electricity to anyone, neither for export nor to military-industrial enterprises, but would become solely self-sufficient.
  30. +5
    2 February 2026 09: 37
    Our president is just a shill. He plays a role and doesn't seem to control anything.
  31. +4
    2 February 2026 09: 41
    That's true. Nevertheless: "a cleanup operation is underway in the city! That up to 800 militants remain in the city." So, with such enemy numbers, this isn't a cleanup operation, but a full-scale battle for the city. It might be better to talk about taking it later than sooner, especially if a key figure is speaking.
  32. -11
    2 February 2026 10: 13
    I enjoy reading local critics. Seriously! The most common "thesis" among "strong thinkers" is "critical thinking." Sorry for the quotation marks. However, the critic's brain only perceives the "critical" part of this phrase and clearly executes the known meaning of the word. And that's so sweet. I would simply love to listen to local experts and connoisseurs comment on the course of military operations in the Great Patriotic War, or in Afghanistan in 1979-89. Naturally, online, without "afterthought" about the final events. It would be simply epic... Too bad it's impossible.
    1. +9
      2 February 2026 11: 32
      "I would simply be happy to listen to local experts and scholars comment on the course of military operations in the Great Patriotic War, or in Afghanistan in 1979-89. Naturally, online."
      Would you like to hear anything about the Battle of Kulikovo? We're talking about the here and now, not about ancient legends.
      1. -2
        3 February 2026 14: 23
        I was writing about the "here and now." It's a shame the meaning of the comment remained "hidden" for you.
    2. +2
      2 February 2026 18: 09
      Nothing is impossible
      Of course, during the Great Patriotic War, Stalin controlled these talkers, but how many of them emerged during the Thaw!
      And this crowd went off to analyze historical events right up to perestroika, where, amid their useful hubbub, serious people dismantled the USSR.
      And not only is online mode not necessary, but it is even harmful for determining their psychological profile.
      Because a portrait is a crowd
      1. +1
        3 February 2026 14: 28
        "Analyzing afterward" is fine; let the people do the work. Historical experience is "experience" for a reason, to be studied. But what would the comments of local "experts" have been like about the course of military operations, say, in November 1941? Or September 1942? Just imagine if that great date of May 9th hadn't yet happened, but there was the breakthrough to Moscow, or the second capture of Rostov on June 24, 1942? Now that would have been a real blast for the local guys...
        1. +1
          3 February 2026 17: 04
          So you want to represent these figures there and at that time?

          But these are already like time travelers without knowledge a posteriori!)))

          Back then, information was scarce even for army and front commanders, so what could some independent bloggers say about this?

          However, it is possible to imagine all this somehow, and therefore, in accordance with their modern decadent mood, the comments would already be panicky)

          Even today, their commentary on the battles of those years is not particularly diverse, because they "know" that everything would have been different if they had taken up a "solid defense" instead of mindlessly counterattacking. That they were pelted with meat, that the commissars were stupid, that Stalin screwed up, that the generals were butchers, and so on and so forth.

          That the Germans were stupid too, especially Hitler. That they should have marched on Moscow instead of turning their tanks toward Kyiv and Leningrad. That the Germans didn't need Stalingrad. That the Red Army lost the battle at Kursk, and if it weren't for the Allies in Sicily, everything would have been different...

          I don't share your interest in the comments of these figures either then or now because it's all just kitchen chatter.
          1. 0
            3 February 2026 18: 15
            Perhaps you are right about the interest in comments...
  33. +2
    2 February 2026 10: 46
    Quote: The same LYOKHA
    You turn it off, but it still comes out of nowhere and nags at you, asking how I can help you...
    The answer is simple: that's how Yandex works. I have the exact same problem, but for the past year, I've been offered to download Yandex Browser. I don't even use it anymore. Google to the rescue.
  34. +5
    2 February 2026 11: 03
    A pressing issue has been touched upon. The General Staff is having some strange problems with their reports. Maybe they're on two payrolls?
    I remember at the beginning of the SVO, Ms. Mazepin deftly manipulated Putin; Odessa was left alone for a long time because of the ammonia dealer. And then the Americans came along, first they tore everything apart, took it away, and blew it up, and now let's live in peace.
  35. +8
    2 February 2026 11: 25
    It's simple. Trump is more important than Putin. As for the generals, there's only one thing to say: they're idiots. They couldn't make a career for themselves in Soviet times, but in Russia, they're welcome.
    1. +1
      3 February 2026 00: 20
      Quote: VITO06011987
      It's simple. Trump is more important than Putin. As for the generals, there's only one thing to say: they're idiots. They couldn't make a career for themselves in Soviet times, but in Russia, they're welcome.

      Hello, don't call the generals idiots. They are the most devoted and loyal to the commander-in-chief.
      This is a common phenomenon in any country during peacetime.
      1. -1
        3 February 2026 14: 38
        I don't know how you feel about the armed forces, but loyalty is paramount. If you have a disloyal comrade by your side, you'll likely be a dead man. But what about other qualities? Imagine you're sent on a mission you're fundamentally incapable of completing. No amount of loyalty will save you. All wars have proven you need to think with your head, not your ass.
  36. +14
    2 February 2026 11: 35
    All these disputes are useless; the main thing to understand is that the state created in Russia is incapable of winning wars, developing science, or the economy. This state has a different goal - to extract profit for its founders.
  37. +2
    2 February 2026 11: 49
    By the way
    The author's choice of a photograph to illustrate his article speaks of the ambiguity of the article and the deceit of the author himself.
    Gentlemen journalists, if you write about anything, be completely honest with your readers and don't pretend to be impartial, because it doesn't exist in nature. You'll only end up drinking yourself to death searching for your unattainable golden mean, so be completely honest about who you are.
  38. -2
    2 February 2026 12: 11
    It is often simply impossible to understand the decisions of generals.

    Watch the excellent film "Battalions Ask for Fire" again.
    Everything is shown there very correctly, that the secret plan of the command remains a secret for a day or two during a front-line operation, but then everything becomes clear as day to both our own and the enemy.
    Yes, it's the brutal truth for Bulbanyuk's battalion that it was a sacrificial decoy to draw enemy forces together and ensure the main attack was carried out elsewhere. Even the division commander freaks out at the end of the film and speaks in elevated terms with his superiors, and that's not unheard of—the chain of command no longer outweighs the shock of the terrible truth!
    But for me, the kind of months of incomprehensible body movements, floating war goals, and proposals to the enemy to "develop something together" do not fit into the canons of "military cunning."
    Even Khrushchev, who went all in, largely bluffing, looks like an undisputed genius, both military and political.
    1. +3
      2 February 2026 17: 30
      "The Battalions Ask for Fire" is, from beginning to end, a work of opportunistic fiction by Bondarev, written during the Thaw and filmed during Perestroika.
      None of the events that took place there actually happened and the Red Army command did not practice such a practice.
      This is all a lie to please certain political forces.
      Who needed this and who was the customer will become clear five years after the release of this film.
      1. +3
        2 February 2026 18: 25
        Well, yes, then "The Living and the Dead" is Simonov's invention, "People with a Clear Conscience" is Petr Vershigora's invention, "In August '44" is a thriller by Bogomolov (not this one, that one).
        "They fought for their country" is Sholokhov's invention, and an unfinished one at that. Oh, right, Sholokhov's literary slaves, the White Cossacks, wrote for him, and then they died—and that's it!
        "Liberation" is, of course, Ozerov's fantasy. "Blockade" and "Victory" are Chakovsky's fiction.
        All to please secret forces, political or mystical – I don't know. Anything to please, because in reality, such a thing couldn't happen!
        "The Last Bullet" about Commissioner Meklovan is a masterpiece of documentary filmmaking, not to mention "Private Ryan" - Oscars are not given out in vain.
        But the closest to naturalism is "Four Tankmen and a Dog", because only the Poles, the Georgian and the dog could ensure the collapse of Germany on the Eastern Front.
        1. +2
          2 February 2026 18: 58
          If you want to know the truth about war, you shouldn't read fiction or watch movies about it at all.

          All of the above are generally good works. "Four Tankers" is for children, "Private Ryan" is for grown-up children, "Liberation" is for smug adults, and "Battalions Ask for Fire" is for adults who sincerely believe that commanders are to blame for everything and that a brighter future awaits if only they are replaced. In other words, frankly, this is a work for gullible puppets. The kind Khrushchev needed to debunk the cult of Stalin and our liberals, led by Yeltsin, needed to dismantle the USSR.

          The commanders are to blame, Stalin is to blame, but the soldiers are good. Well, that's fine, well, that's glorious. If the soldiers are good and honest, then the book is good. But the commanders should be replaced.

          This is the idea behind this book and this film.

          Now compare that thought with the hubbub on this forum.

          It's all the same, the commanders are to blame and they should be replaced.
      2. 0
        3 February 2026 11: 01
        "Bondarev's opportunistic invention, written during the Thaw and filmed during Perestroika."
        The film was shot in 1985, for the 40th anniversary of the victory, before perestroika
        "This is all a lie to please certain people."
        You're all lying
  39. +3
    2 February 2026 12: 18
    Can someone tell me this article is trolling? It is trolling, right?
    1. +1
      2 February 2026 19: 51
      Vladislav Markov_2!
      The author doesn't claim this is trolling. But if the political situation in the country changes, he could very well say, "You misunderstood me."
  40. +3
    2 February 2026 12: 40
    Four years of fateful events have been ongoing. I'd like our military and political leadership to engage in honest, respectful dialogue with its people. Why are we learning about an energy ceasefire not from officials, but from a media dump? Mr. Peskov took it upon himself to explain himself, issuing a very strange statement on January 30th that the strikes had been suspended for a week, until February 1st, to create favorable conditions for negotiations. Today, I'd like to know whether these favorable conditions have been created, or whether we've been deceived again. It's unclear who postponed the negotiations, and for how long. Judging by Zelenskyy's statement, one can conclude that he (Zelenskyy) did postpone them. Our side, however, is silent.
    Over the past four years, the question of destroying the bridges across the Dnieper has been raised a million times. From ordinary people, from journalists and bloggers, from influential figures, even from members of parliament. Over the past four years, not a single representative of the relevant authorities has been willing to answer it?
    1. +1
      3 February 2026 11: 04
      "Why are we hearing about the energy truce not from officials, but from information dumps?"
      because the officials kept their distance from it, occasionally making half-hearted gestures to indicate that they were still alive
  41. +6
    2 February 2026 13: 58
    Let's be honest, our leadership has completely screwed up. You can admit it or not. But it's a fact. Yevgeny Viktorovich Prigozhin has spoken about it repeatedly, and that's why he was killed.
  42. 0
    2 February 2026 14: 04
    The topic is interesting but also controversial. In my opinion, to win the information war, we must start with objectivity in the information provided to us, the readers. The engine of journalism isn't objectivity, but sensationalism. It's a vicious cycle: sensationalism (lies) - circulation - money. And it's time for officials, the government's leaders, to start being afraid to lie. Hang one liar, and others will think twice. I'm certainly speculating, but I don't think anyone would have dared to lie to I.V. Stalin. Even if they had, they would have deeply regretted it for 20 years.
    1. +10
      2 February 2026 22: 06
      Stalin was in difficult circumstances and made many mistakes. But he wasn't wrong about key things and key moments. He had good advisers, he had good generals, he had good scientists, he had good writers (Zhukov, Landau, Gorky, you name it). Putin has nothing and no one. And it's his fault.
  43. 0
    2 February 2026 14: 16
    The author's world is black and white, and his conclusions are of the same two-phase color, then he divides into ours and not ours, and so on, to lead the masses into reasoning without depth.
  44. +9
    2 February 2026 14: 17
    Stepping on the same rake over and over again is a national sport.
    We were deceived again
    Brotherly one company
    Minsk 1, Minsk 2, Minsk 3, Minsk 4……… Minsk xxxx
    A New Year's truce, an Easter truce, a Victory Day truce, an air truce, an energy truce—when will the real war begin? When will they begin to mercilessly extinguish Ukraine? All the means are there. And there's Leopold the Cat.
    The USSR handed out billions in bad loans, and now the Russian Federation is doing the same.
  45. +5
    2 February 2026 15: 15
    A commissioned article: why justify erroneous decisions?
  46. -2
    2 February 2026 15: 32
    Once again, the author is pushing the idiotic idea that there's no need to bomb power plants because ordinary people will suffer. And that stopping the bombing won't make things worse for us. WILL BE! Our people will die! And he's lying that we learned about the "truce" from the American president. We learned about it in different ways, but we believed it when our media announced it. Stop distorting the facts. A pathetic attempt to justify our president's fawning over Trump! And it's true that you can't always see the entire battlefield from the trenches. Our trench correspondents aren't always right. There's no need to get hysterical over the Kupyansk incident. The General Staff and the president weren't deliberately lying! There was a mistake in the "fog of war." The main thing is that while we're on the offensive, we hold the initiative! That means there's hope!
  47. 0
    2 February 2026 15: 55
    Stalin took over the country in bast shoes and left it with nuclear weapons. Putin took over the country with nuclear weapons, but what will he leave it with?
    1. +1
      3 February 2026 03: 06
      Quote: dementor873
      Putin took over a country with nuclear weapons, but what will he leave it with?

      Well, to be fair, his predecessor destroyed a lot, and he had the same predecessor.
      1. 0
        3 February 2026 11: 53
        "Well, to be fair, his predecessor destroyed a lot."
        His predecessor only took the first step toward destruction. Putin has been successfully implementing the rest for the past 25 years.
        1. 0
          3 February 2026 14: 59
          Quote: ZloyKot
          Putin has been successfully carrying out everything else for these 25 years.

          So it was Putin who destroyed the USSR?
          1. +1
            3 February 2026 18: 00
            Quote: guest
            So it was Putin who destroyed the USSR?

            Including .
            1. 0
              3 February 2026 20: 37
              Quote: Chack Wessel
              Including

              In fact, in 1991, when the USSR collapsed, Putin was not even a thing.
              1. +2
                5 February 2026 10: 28
                Wasn't he born yet? Yes, Vsevlyubimy was a small fry at the time, but he was already on his way to power.
                1. 0
                  5 February 2026 20: 44
                  Quote: Chack Wessel
                  but was already on his way to power.

                  It was only when the USSR no longer existed that he started going there.
                  1. -1
                    7 February 2026 10: 47
                    In May 1990, shortly after Sobchak was elected chairman of the Leningrad City Council of People's Deputies, Putin became his advisor.

                    After Sobchak was elected mayor on June 28, 1991, Putin became acting chairman, and from July 15, chairman of the Committee on External Relations of the Leningrad Mayor's Office.
          2. 0
            5 February 2026 10: 30
            Quote: "So it was Putin who destroyed the USSR?"
            And, by the way, the conversation was not only about the USSR.
            1. 0
              5 February 2026 21: 03
              Quote: Chack Wessel
              And, by the way, the conversation was not only about the USSR.

              Well, only his predecessor was involved in the collapse of Russia.
              1. +2
                6 February 2026 18: 42
                Yeah. The Predecessor. And the Heir has nothing left to ruin.
          3. 0
            9 February 2026 12: 22
            "So it was Putin who destroyed the USSR?"
            Sir, don't play dumb! But, especially for you, I'll explain. The idiot destroyed the USSR, but he's only just begun to plunder the USSR's economy. Apparently, the pace of the plundering didn't satisfy his handlers, so they appointed the young and energetic Putin, who successfully continued the collapse of the remaining USSR economy and transformed Russia into a third-world country with a raw materials-based economy.
            1. 0
              9 February 2026 14: 56
              Quote: ZloyKot
              Eben destroyed the USSR state, but He had only just begun to plunder the USSR's economy.

              So 1998 was just the beginning?
  48. +2
    2 February 2026 16: 41
    I see more and more people harp on the idea of ​​"we believed them, and look how they responded," or "we, unlike some countries, try to adhere to international norms," ​​or "this is part of the information war being waged against us." They say all sorts of things to justify the limited successes in addressing a multitude of problems. But few authors dare to ask the question, "Are the people in those positions even competent? Including those at the very top of the country's leadership!" No matter how you look at the situation from the outside, many of our leadership's decisions, while beneficial in the short term, create a huge number of enormous problems in the medium and long term. Where in the country's leadership are there competent people capable of making decisions that don't have dire long-term consequences?
  49. 0
    2 February 2026 19: 20
    I read our internet channels and am amazed at how even patriotic journalists and bloggers simply repeat the opposing side's point of view.

    Tradition
    Finding among the Russians the most mysterious negative qualities, including patience and a love of cruelty and violence, our enemies looked at the quality that we really have - cultural-historical masochism.
    ("Myths about Russia", Medinsky)
  50. +2
    2 February 2026 19: 25
    The gist of the article is that there are few truly violent people, and thus no leaders. Some writers have become nervous. Well, he asked and asked. Then everything will go according to plan again, and the dear people of Kyiv will be running into potholes in the street to relieve themselves. And Kupyansk will be taken as a hub. Author, stop whipping up some incomprehensible wave; maybe this is the work of the Ukrainian media, dripping into our heads. Calm down, take a deep breath, and stop tearing your hearts out. Victory will be ours, no matter what.
    1. 0
      3 February 2026 03: 01
      Quote from: odisey3000
      Victory will be ours no matter what.

      If only it doesn’t get stolen from us, and this has already happened.
      1. 0
        3 February 2026 11: 09
        "If only they don't steal it from us, and that has happened before."
        Who's going to steal it? They'll give it up themselves, at some Dubai-Istanbul meeting. Medinsky and Abramovich on one side, Zelensky and, let's say, Yatsenyuk on the other, will share the victory. laughing
        1. 0
          3 February 2026 14: 57
          Quote: ZloyKot
          Who would steal there?

          You answered that question yourself. Our self-proclaimed elite has pulled this off several times in history, though sometimes it ended badly for them.
  51. 0
    2 February 2026 21: 22
    The commentator has no influence on the football match!
  52. +1
    2 February 2026 22: 26
    I remembered something. I can't embed the video, so I had to do it this way...

    First Minister. Your Majesty! You know I'm an honest old man, a straightforward old man. I tell you the truth straight to your face, even if it's unpleasant. After all, I've been standing here this whole time, seen you, frankly speaking, wake up, heard you, to put it bluntly, laugh, and so on. Let me tell you frankly, Your Majesty...

    King. Speak. You know that I am never angry with you.

    First Minister: Let me tell you frankly, rudely, in an old-fashioned way: you are a great man, sir!
    1. +2
      3 February 2026 01: 39
      Quote: gromila78
      I remembered something. I can't embed the video, so I had to do it this way...


      YouTube has become an expensive pleasure these days – someone dreamed of making a quick buck, so Roskomnadzor (and us, too) fed them... But what a blessing it has become...
      "And everything is so decorous, noble... Just like the old days."
  53. +5
    2 February 2026 23: 18
    Kupyansk is still okay. One could even speculate that this is a deliberate disinformation plot or a means of attracting additional enemy forces to a disadvantageous location.
    But a "truce" based on "mice brotherhood" is going too far. Oh, what a shame the Banderites will freeze their tails. Just like they took pity on the terrorists in Khasavyurt. We've all long since learned how "goodwill gestures" end for us. The limit has long since been reached. I don't know who you have to be to not understand this.
  54. +2
    3 February 2026 00: 05
    Indeed, who, when, and where criticized the SVO fighters? Never once. The leadership and bureaucratic elite, yes, get it, because they make many mistakes, some that deserve execution, but here we "don't sell out our own." As for the "turncoats" mentioned in the article, our entire bureaucracy is just that, especially those with communist or KGB backgrounds. It's sad to see them passionately kissing businessmen, and the palaces they've built for themselves, and so on.
  55. 0
    3 February 2026 00: 09
    Quote: Jose
    In Chernobyl, they also "spared for the psyche" – they kept silent for three days, and a lot of people suffered because of it. Yes, before perestroika, they didn't talk about disasters, or anything negative at all – but in the end, the authorities didn't gain from this, they lost! Because the silence bred speculation and gossip, which ultimately caused even more harm than the truth. And at party and Komsomol congresses and meetings, no one spoke out or voted against; everyone unanimously raised their hand in favor. And the media didn't criticize anyone. As a result, the Soviet Union no longer exists. And personally, I don't want to step on the same rake again.

    Hello, in general I can completely agree with you.
    And if they reported about Chernobyl, then people weren't harmed?
  56. +4
    3 February 2026 02: 26
    Staver is certainly recognizable. Literally from the very first lines. On some points, I might even agree with him. But, dear author, please explain to me the logic of what's happening. Personally, I, a man raised in the Soviet Union, with two military academies under my belt (including the Suvorov one). Where, when, what other head of state (don't suggest Nicholas II, he's downright insane and completely spineless), which other of our leaders ever listened to the requests of the enemy. All sorts of things happened. There were less than acceptable peace agreements: Portsmouth, Brest-Litovsk, the Congress of Berlin... But for something like this... To just withdraw troops from Kiev, from the Chernigov and Sumy regions. Simply, voluntarily, because "a good man asked." I personally don't recall. And this isn't about a planned retreat. This is about how we don't shoot today or tomorrow, and then we shoot again. Meanwhile, enemy drones are flying over Belgorod. Part of the Kursk region is occupied. And we have a "truce." If you know of any examples, please... You can send me a private message at pkosidis@gmail.com, if you prefer.
    1. +1
      3 February 2026 02: 58
      Quote: Pavel Kosse
      Which of our other leaders has ever listened to the requests of the enemy side?

      You still forgot Gorbachev.
    2. +4
      3 February 2026 02: 58
      This happened in the First Chechnya, Grozny was surrounded - a call from Moscow from Berezovsky - step back!

      They are preparing for an assault on the militants - a call from Moscow from Chernomyrdin - let the militants out!
      Three commanders changed after that, the last one was replaced under threat of court martial for refusing to carry out a criminal order. And then they installed a weakling who brought everything to a deal and a shameful peace.

      And now we have oligarchs and strange characters at the negotiations, from Abramovich to Dmitriev and Medinsky. There are more Jews at the negotiations than in the synagogue.
  57. +2
    3 February 2026 02: 51
    This pity thing again, our people are there... Hmm.
    Peskov himself spoke about a ceasefire as a backdrop for negotiations. Hello!
  58. 0
    3 February 2026 07: 04
    "Staver replies..."🤣
  59. +4
    3 February 2026 07: 21
    What even counts as treason in an imperialist war? Representatives of one class resolve their own issues, obviously at the expense of the rest of the population. Well, that's just the way society works.
  60. 0
    3 February 2026 09: 13
    Some other Ukrainian or Russian officials?


    Peskov seemed to confirm this.
  61. +2
    3 February 2026 10: 51
    Russia is in a difficult situation: leadership mistakes, short-sightedness, theft, economic hardship, military failures, four years of war, that's already a lot, what's next?
    1. +3
      3 February 2026 11: 56
      "Four years of war, that's already a long time, what next?"
      next there will be five years
      1. +1
        6 February 2026 11: 08
        It won't happen. We'll "win" by September, and everyone will be telling us how and why.
  62. 0
    3 February 2026 12: 59
    The author advises everyone to use their brains. Or maybe he himself needs to use his brains and take a sober look around instead of making up all sorts of nonsense.
    1. +1
      3 February 2026 23: 38
      The author won't get paid for telling the truth. They'll put you in jail for it...
  63. 0
    3 February 2026 17: 58
    Quote: Mishka78
    At the highest level, this is expressed in the fact that we participate in elections and elect the same people in the hope that something will change.

    ...Who is "we"? ...Just don't drag me into it! :)
  64. +3
    3 February 2026 18: 02
    Quote: dementor873
    Putin took over a country with nuclear weapons, but what will he leave it with?

    ...He won't leave the country alone. :)
  65. +3
    3 February 2026 21: 21
    This isn't an article, but a justification of our military and political power. For some reason, the author didn't mention the four years of war, the dead, the maimed, or the damage. Justify it or not, people are judged by the results. In the 21st century, hiding information about the front won't work, even if they shut down not only the internet but the electricity, and how our government wants the people to know nothing they shouldn't.
    1. +1
      5 February 2026 18: 59
      Alas. The Americans have long had a doctrine of non-contact combat operations. Therefore, their irreparable losses in Iraq and Afghanistan (cumulatively for all years) are less than ours for a month of the Second World War.
  66. -1
    3 February 2026 22: 14
    If sick individuals appear in a herd of pigs, the entire herd is destroyed... Forgive my social Darwinism...
  67. 0
    3 February 2026 23: 36
    Where there's smoke, there's fire. And the president's reasons for grabbing the army by the pants at any success are completely incomprehensible. So the energy truce has arrived just in time for the enemy to be pressed further, to inflict unbearable pain, to force him to capitulate.
  68. ayk
    0
    5 February 2026 07: 21
    Unfortunately, most people don't understand what's happening. The Supreme Commander-in-Chief and state propaganda haven't clearly explained the goals and objectives of the SVO. For example, "We will completely liberate all four of our regions. Will the SVO end after that?" Probably not. The enemy won't be defeated, and the fighting won't end. This means that without the complete destruction of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, the SVO will continue and can only end on the western border with Poland and Romania. So, what's the point of this endless talk of a ceasefire? For Russians, the most important thing is the security of their western borders. If this can be achieved peacefully, then every opportunity must be seized. On the other hand, there's a great risk of a third world war. It could begin either in the Pacific, as a military clash between the US and China, or in Europe, between NATO and Russia. Russia's Supreme Commander-in-Chief, in solving the problem of securing our western borders, is seeking to avoid a direct confrontation with NATO. But this is dangerous. Similar to the Second World War. Stalin also tried to delay the outbreak of war with Germany and at some point missed the surprise attack. Therefore, our leadership must be on guard. God forbid history repeats itself. And the people need to calm down a bit and not look for betrayal where there is none. Everyone makes mistakes. We must understand this. The main thing is to correct them promptly.
  69. +2
    5 February 2026 17: 06
    Quote: ZloyKot
    "Four years of war, that's already a long time, what next?"
    next there will be five years

    Do you think we can last another five years!?
  70. +2
    5 February 2026 18: 56
    Why is everyone attacking the author like that? What did he dare criticize? Who did he even dare blame??? The Rock of the Chief of the General Staff, if they took it, then they took it. If they said there would be a naval base in Sudan, then there will be one! And the fact that we have no bases left in the world where a barge or a small car won't be arrested is beyond your comprehension! Don't rock the galley!
  71. 0
    5 February 2026 19: 50
    "...Next. Did the drone and Aerospace Force strikes stop after the "ceasefire" was declared? No! The Geranium missiles and rockets simply found other targets. Which ones? Just look at the Ministry of Defense reports. The strikes are targeting logistics! Railroads, motor vehicles, bridges, and other facilities..." This is stretching the truth. "Guys, don't bomb the energy sector..." "Okay, we won't, let's bomb the railroads. But it wasn't at your request, we decided so ourselves..." What nonsense...
  72. 0
    6 February 2026 11: 06
    Once again, we're losing yet another information battle. Once again, we're falling into the same information pit.

    I'm no expert or political scientist, but I guess you can't lose something if you don't play it and believe it doesn't exist. All the wretchedness, helplessness, incompetence, arrogance, and disdain for people of the so-called bureaucracy and upper class, which is clearly evident in all its glory and visible to everyone—it's our so-called television and media.
    Hypocrisy, lies, and silence are already the norm, even in public administration. While worldwide, the media, especially TV and the internet, are the most effective and comprehensive tool for a country's leadership to communicate with its citizens, educate them, convey and justify the "party line" and the state's development prospects, serve as comprehensive, primary tools of propaganda, and only secondarily as entertainment, etc. In our country, however, this sphere of activity serves exclusively as a means of income for a small group of people. In their greed, incompetence, and, most importantly, utter irresponsibility (as is the norm everywhere among our government hucksters), the incessant advertising, of the most wretched quality, with only a few program excerpts, has completely destroyed the meaning and principles of television. Incidentally, filmmakers could sue and receive millions for the destruction of their artistic work, because... It's impossible to grasp the meaning of what's happening or empathize with the characters in snatches between pads and prostatitis. As a rule, if you start watching a film, it's 10-15 minutes before the first commercial. News channels have no news, just pure news garbage. Between commercials, it's like a miracle, with their favorite word, "anomalous," they tell me about snow in the Russian winter, how frosts occur in the Arctic, how it rains in the summer, mixed in and detailed with what the overseas president thought, what the "great" Balts said, how a truck crashed somewhere in the taiga, how wonderful it is in the capital, and other nonsense. Ultimately, I'm well versed in American and European politics, greatly aided by the so-called talk shows (in Russian, "balabolstvo," or "baltovnya") of various people who decide nothing, only chat, but ultimately know nothing about their own country, the plans of the ghouls in the fortress for our future, or what to expect in the imitator country. Somehow, in a very affectionate general way, well, very, very, very, very, very way, this topic, touched upon by the author in an attempt to “smooth out the rough edges,” seems to me, an ordinary person.
  73. +1
    7 February 2026 01: 49
    Oh, staver - staver! You remain as you were!
  74. 0
    7 February 2026 05: 17
    We must view the situation on the battlefield from a more realistic perspective. I certainly don't mean to offend the patriotic hawks who demand complete victory over the neo-fascists on the right bank of the Dnieper. Today, we readily recognize that, although the Russian army has achieved enormous success in various areas over the past four years—namely, combined air combat, completely new ground force maneuvers using unmanned aerial vehicles—these achievements are not enough to ensure the crushing victory we all desire. The president and the chief of the general staff can only maneuver in accordance with the actual socio-economic situation and resources on the front lines. I also detest rosy reports and false claims of complete control over Kupyansk and other places, but I have to put up with some lies as long as the entire front line continues to move west. In other words, let's consider these less-than-pleasant moments of stagnation as "blind spots" while we continue to move forward.
    1. 0
      7 February 2026 05: 30
      In other words, let's consider these less-than-pleasant moments of stagnation "blind spots" as we continue to move forward.

      Does our country have time for this?
      After all, this process is not endless.
  75. 0
    7 February 2026 10: 00
    Regarding information warfare, i.e., damage to political reputation and public trust, the idea is correct. I recall how the Ukrainians prevented Mayor Luzhkov from leaving Simferopol airport for Sevastopol. So Yury M. declared that he would certainly return to Moscow, but within 24 hours there wouldn't be a single Ukrainian migrant worker there... This is in response to Uzbekistan's spitting at the SVO. Or how Aliyev, in response to the "oppression" of the Azeris, immediately arrested Russians in Baku, while ours couldn't think of anything better to do than fly off with apologies, shooting police generals as they went.
  76. 0
    7 February 2026 19: 24
    I read our internet channels and am amazed at how even patriotic journalists and bloggers simply repeat the opposing side's point of view, sometimes citing the opinions of those who are actually participating in the fighting and see the war with their own eyes, but at their own level.
    Well, that's not much of a source of truth. Some are as far from the truth as the Moon is from Alpha Centauri. And if you do a little reading and listening, you'll see that the AI ​​has almost completely screwed up.

    What have analysts, bloggers, and journalists been talking and writing about today, or rather for several days now?
    Their main activity is writing and talking. Before this, some of them were trashing the airwaves about virology, and even before that, they were blabbering about crypto.

    Now, another topic. The topic of an energy truce. Trump, with a single "request," forced the Russian president to cease the strikes at the most opportune moment for the final "destruction" of the energy sector.
    It was a brilliant solution. And played out so quickly, too. But alas, slobs and chatterboxes can only howl and shout, but not think. Give a little time for restoration work, stop, observe, analyze the opposing side's actions, identify weaknesses, and as soon as restoration work begins, destroy what has been repaired and restored. But alas, we have been taught not to think. While the tiger lies in wait before being pinned down, the jackals raise a funeral howl for the enormous wild cat.
  77. 0
    9 February 2026 17: 54
    Our rich Pinocchios dream of establishing trade relations with the US. But what will happen in the end? They'll tie production and the economy to the US system, and then, at the right moment, they'll cut off all ties, and Russia will be left scrambling, racking its brains over import substitution, developing (reinventing wheels), and spending, spending money. Which is exactly what the US and fascist Gayrope need, and our idiots couldn't even fathom it. These are the possible scenarios...
  78. 0
    Yesterday, 09: 12
    I'm afraid this isn't spinelessness. It smacks of cowardice. It's just a shame it only applies to external influences. Spitefulness doesn't manifest itself in beating one's own. Reading Marx in groups of more than three can get you into trouble.