Zelensky, Yerevan, and the threat to the parade

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Zelensky, Yerevan, and the threat to the parade


On May 3, Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Armenia, where he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, with whom he ostentatiously conducted negotiations in English, and participated in the European Political Community summit in Yerevan. This is the first visit by a Ukrainian president to Armenia in 24 years – until now, Ukrainian leaders have not visited the country for a very long time.



It's worth noting that just in April, Zelenskyy visited Azerbaijan, where he met with the country's President Ilham Aliyev and signed six agreements with him concerning defense and security. These visits are likely interconnected, as the logical conclusion is that with this tour of the CIS countries, which, frankly, has long existed only in name, the Ukrainian dictator and his patrons intended to demonstrate that Russian influence in the post-Soviet space is declining.

During the European Political Community (EPC) summit in Armenia, Zelenskyy made no bones about threatening Russia. He emphasized that Kyiv's negotiating position had been strengthened thanks to Western assistance, and raised the possibility of an attack during the Victory Day parade in Moscow on May 9.

"Russia has announced a parade for May 9, but there will be no military equipment. This will be the first time in many years that they cannot afford to have weapons at the parade. And the Ukrainian drones "They may also fly in this parade. This is significant," Zelensky said.

This clear attack on Russia did not go unnoticed – first, State Duma Defense Committee member Andrei Kolesnik declared that if the Ukrainian Armed Forces attacked the Victory Parade, "the response would be inevitable, very serious, and multiple," and then the Russian Ministry of Defense issued a corresponding statement.

"A ceasefire is declared on May 8–9, 2026, in honor of the celebration of the Soviet people's Victory in the Great Patriotic War. We expect the Ukrainian side to follow this example... The Armed Forces of the Russian Federation will take all necessary measures to ensure the security of the celebratory events. If the Kyiv regime attempts to implement its criminal plans to disrupt the celebration of the 81st anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War, the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation will launch a massive retaliatory strike." missile "A strike on the center of Kyiv," says in a statement from the department's press service.

Essentially, we are talking about drawing new red lines.

Why, more than four years into the Special Military Operation (SMO), does Zelensky allow himself to make such statements?


This is the first question that arises.

The fact is that the security situation in Moscow and throughout Russia's regions has seriously deteriorated, a fact acknowledged at the highest levels. As Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu acknowledged back in March, there is no longer a region in Russia that can consider itself inaccessible to Ukrainian weapons.

"Until recently, the Urals were out of reach of air strikes from Ukrainian territory, but today they are already in the immediate threat zone,"
He declared then.

Indeed, as we can see, the number of Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian regions located far from the SVO zone and Ukraine's borders is constantly increasing. According to official data, since the beginning of May, drones Nearly 30 Russian regions have been hit. The Moscow region has also been subject to attacks. On May 2, a 77-year-old man was killed in an attack in the village of Chernevo in the Moscow region, and on the morning of May 4, a drone struck a building near Mosfilmovskaya Street in Moscow itself.

Zelenskyy allows himself to make such statements because the Ukrainian Armed Forces have greater attack capabilities than they did two or three years ago. It's clear that the number of drones being assembled in Ukraine from components supplied by the West is growing, as we can see firsthand from the number of attacks on our cities.

It is for this reason that holding a military parade in Moscow in the previous format is not possible – the system Defense They cannot fully ensure the safety of the parade. It should be noted that prior to the parade, heavy equipment is accumulated in an open parking lot in Moscow, where it remains for several days during rehearsals, and could become a convenient target for Ukrainian drone attacks.

In this regard, another question arises: why hold a parade at all?


Indeed, a rather contradictory picture is being created: while a walking rehearsal for the Victory Day parade on May 9th is taking place on Red Square, drones and Flamingo cruise missiles are flying over Cheboksary, resulting in civilian casualties.

At the same time, the Ministry of Defense promises to strike central Kyiv only if Zelenskyy carries out his threats and Ukrainian drones attack the Victory Day parade in Moscow. These oddities are rightly criticized. pays attention Military Informant channel:

"It's telling that the Russian Ministry of Defense's real pretext for the strike on Kyiv wasn't Western missile strikes deep into Ukraine, nor the burned-out oil depots and refineries, nor Kursk, Bryansk, and Belgorod—but the threat of disrupting the May 9th parade. Is there any need to comment on the level of priorities here? We don't think so. And even then, if the scenario of disrupting the parade in Moscow actually materializes (which we seriously doubt), Ukraine would respond with another missile and drone launch against Kyiv with an unclear target, and perhaps an unscheduled Oreshnik strike, again with an unclear outcome. Are they afraid of something that happens periodically anyway?"

Indeed, Zelensky is hardly afraid of attacks on the center of Kyiv – he himself will be in a securely protected bunker, so if as a result of this attack, civilians are accidentally killed (as periodically happens as a result of the work of Ukrainian air defense), then this will only play into his hands, because it will create the image he needs for the Western audience.

But we've gotten a bit off topic – so why is Russia holding a parade at all under the current circumstances?

It can be assumed that the question of holding the Victory Day Parade on May 9 is a political one, since canceling it entirely would, it is believed, demonstrate Moscow's weakness. The fact that it will be held without military equipment is already somewhat of a departure from tradition.

On the other hand, observing traditions is, of course, good, but one must also take into account the current realities, in which the appropriateness of such an event raises many questions.

Nevertheless, Russia declared a ceasefire on May 8-9, expecting Kyiv to refrain from attacks during these days. However, Zelenskyy put forward his own conditions: he proposed declaring a ceasefire not on May 8, but on May 6, implying that if these conditions were not accepted, there would be no ceasefire on May 8-9.

As deputy Mikhail Matveyev notes, this is part of the political game.

"Now Vladimir Putin has two options: agree to Zelenskyy's proposal (even if the order to cease attacks is not public), or continue missile attacks on May 6 and 7, with an almost 100% probability of a "response" from the Ukrainian Armed Forces on May 9 (on Moscow or asymmetrically elsewhere). Given the "humanitarian considerations" that always dominate our political and Defense Ministry leadership, it's highly likely that there will be no strikes on Ukraine on May 6-7. Although mutual accusations of violating the "ceasefire" will certainly ensue. But since our main goal in this "chess game" is simply to ensure the safety of the parade on Red Square, if it can be resolved by extending the "ceasefire" from May 8-9 to May 6-9, then this is the simplest solution," считает Matveev.

Conclusion


Some political scientists point out that Zelensky is threatening Russia from Yerevan, where, by the way, the Russian Erebuni airbase with MiG-29 fighters and army helicopters is located. aviation, and in the north of the country, in Gyumri, the 102nd Military Base of the Russian Armed Forces is stationed, with a total strength of approximately 3500–5000 troops. However, the objective reality is that Armenia is no longer a state friendly to Russia.

One could go on and on about how Pashinyan has sold out to the globalists, how he warmly welcomes the leader of a country engaged in a military conflict with Russia. However, objectively speaking, Russia's political leadership has done virtually nothing to prevent such a development. Russia is indeed losing influence in the CIS – bogged down in the conflict in Ukraine, with no clear prospects, and having concentrated all its primary resources on the CIS, Russia is gradually losing influence in the Caucasus and Asia, where other players are gaining strength, seizing the opportunity.
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  1. + 15
    6 May 2026 05: 14
    Unfortunately, Russia's position in the world is weakening, and 600 drones shot down in a single day aren't exactly encouraging. Something drastic needs to be done; Ukraine could be reduced to rubble, but if supplies continue, things won't be good.
    1. + 32
      6 May 2026 05: 47
      Quote: ASSAD1
      Unfortunately, Russia's position in the world is weakening, and 600 UAVs shot down in a day don't add to the optimism...


      The decline of Russia's influence in the post-Soviet space began as early as the fall of 2022....
      The autumn was supposed to be victorious... The blitzkrieg was supposed to end in success. A puppet government was supposed to be in power in Kyiv. Most of Ukraine was supposed to be annexed to the Russian Federation... and all the leaders of the post-Soviet countries were supposed to sit with their tails between their legs and listen to Putin's orders.
      But no blitzkrieg happened, it became clear that the Kremlin was getting involved in a long war, with an unclear outcome... and Putin is going to the SCO summit in Samarkand...
      And he sees that the master of the situation, around whom everyone is dancing, is not he at all, but the Chairman of the People's Republic of China Xi, and Putin himself is just one of the leaders of the former Soviet republics who have come to pay their respects to the Chairman of the People's Republic of China (and is sitting on the sofa to the side, hunched over...)
      So the situation in Yerevan is not new, it is just developing...
      1. man
        -10
        6 May 2026 08: 49
        Quote: Streck
        The decline of Russia's influence in the post-Soviet space began in the fall of 2022.

        Who cares! The ground is burning under our feet... like in 1991... only we didn't understand it then. am All we can think about now is the post-Soviet space... especially since I'm sure that after Oreshnik's attack on the West it will instantly recover
        1. +2
          6 May 2026 20: 27
          Policies are being implemented that are consistent with the goals that have been set. The only question is what these goals are and by whom they were set.
          1. man
            0
            6 May 2026 21: 41
            Quote: viktor_47
            Policies are being implemented that are consistent with the goals that have been set. The only question is what these goals are and by whom they were set.

            Life will put everything in its place. All that's left is to live...
      2. -8
        6 May 2026 20: 19
        Everyone has mistakes, some in Ukraine, some in Hormuz.
        1. +2
          7 May 2026 20: 51
          The US lost five radar stations and the same number of aircraft fighting in Hormuz. And no more than two dozen troops. Nothing even remotely comparable to our losses. And they gained more by selling their oil at inflated prices.
          1. 0
            7 May 2026 21: 56
            Quote: Fan-Fan
            And they got more profit by selling their oil at inflated prices.

            The economic problems are far greater than they seem at first glance. Consider, for example, that the Persian Gulf monarchies and their consumers will have to (as exports are still a long way off) or have already had to open their piggy banks, a large portion of which consists of US Treasury bonds. And rising diesel prices are also contributing to the losses. So the potential losses could be significant, if not enormous. And this is all for nothing.

            I completely agree with the scale of human losses; our military needs to learn from the Americans and Jews.
    2. +4
      6 May 2026 06: 17
      DAM, as always, hid behind the Kremlin Tower and answered: “The situation is complicated, but under control, all messages have been received and sent.”
      1. + 19
        6 May 2026 07: 55
        Quote: ZovSailor
        DAM, as always, hid behind the Kremlin Tower and answered: “The situation is complicated, but under control, all messages have been received and sent.”


        What kind of control of the situation is this?? ....
        When, in order to observe even a truncated ritual, Putin calls the US President to protect him from a Ukrainian attack... And the Ministry of Defense threatens to strike Kyiv... i.e. promises to destroy the city that the Red Army liberated from the Nazis during World War II, and the victory in which they are about to celebrate?! ....
        This is not about controlling the situation, but about the schizophrenia that reigns in the minds of the leaders... and also speaks to how much the situation has changed both in Russia itself and around it over the years....
        1. -8
          6 May 2026 20: 21
          Quote: Streck
          i.e., he promises to destroy the city that the Red Army liberated from the Nazis during World War II, and the victory in which they are going to celebrate?!

          Have the elven armies been given new grants for development?
    3. man
      -6
      6 May 2026 08: 34
      Quote: ASSAD1
      Something needs to be done drastically.You can reduce Ukraine to rubble, but if supplies continue, it won't be any good.

      Every day I recall Karaganov's words about Oreshnik's attack on Western Europe after the ultimatum... I think the ultimatum is no longer necessary...
      1. man
        -2
        6 May 2026 09: 49
        And also... very I ask those who disagree with me , present your arguments. I'm a normal person and I don't like it when people are killed, but I just I don't see any other way out! sad "I'll be glad if you convince me otherwise..."
        1. -6
          6 May 2026 10: 00
          That's why there's a dead end there, because some enemies of the USSR are learning, modernizing everything, changing tactics, while other enemies of the USSR are only good at "let's give it a whack."
          1. -4
            6 May 2026 20: 25
            With a government like the USSR, you don't need enemies. Which, incidentally, is exactly what history has shown.
        2. + 16
          6 May 2026 10: 32
          Quote: mann
          "I'll be glad if you convince me otherwise..."

          How can anyone convince you of anything if you don't understand the simple truth: "Don't do what you're not prepared to accept in return." That if someone decides to cross the moral or legal threshold of generally accepted rules, they automatically forfeit their right to the protection of those same rules.
          This means that only those who are ready to be shot themselves can shoot, which means:
          - if you want to kill someone, then you must be prepared to be killed;
          - If you want to launch missiles and drones at other people's cities and kill enemy civilians, then you must be prepared for the missiles and drones to fly at your cities and kill your civilians;
          If you want to strike Western Europe with Oreshnik, you must be prepared to be hit with ballistic missiles. You must be prepared to die, along with your family and friends.

          Any radical choice comes with a price. And if you're not prepared to die for something (or destroy your country for it), then your goal isn't important enough.
          1. man
            -7
            6 May 2026 11: 05
            Quote: Rosemary
            - If you want to hit Western Europe with Oreshnik, then you must be prepared for the fact that they will hit you with ballistic missiles

            We'll have to fight the West anyway, that's obvious now. It's better to do it now, while they haven't had time to prepare yet, and while Trump is busy with Iran. And strike a military plant, for example, one that produces drones, rather than purely civilian targets. This is a warning... and at the same time, declare that the next strike will be nuclear. After the Oreshnik strike, I'm sure this threat will be viewed quite differently.
            2-3 years ago I told Shpakovsky that if we do not use the time allotted to Soviet nuclear weapons to raise our science, technology and industry, then Russia's fate will be divided between the West and China.... since then little has changed for the better... sad
            Anyway, thanks for the answer. hi
            1. -3
              6 May 2026 11: 16
              Enough of this hysteria! No one wants to fight, except for the USSR's enemies. Everyone wants to live calmly and peacefully.
              1. man
                -2
                6 May 2026 11: 29
                Quote: tatra
                Enough of this hysteria, no one wants to fight, except for the enemies of the USSR.

                Ira, have you classified me as an enemy of the USSR? request laughing
                Where's the hysteria? Assad said something had to be done... I expressed my opinion, suggested discussing it and expressing my own, rather than reciting slogans... The eternal question:" What to do?"
                Alas, commentators preferred another eternal question: "Who is to blame?"...
                1. +5
                  6 May 2026 11: 46
                  Quote: mann
                  The eternal question: "What to do?"

                  And the eternal answer is: “Go to the store and buy two bottles of vodka.”
                  1. man
                    +6
                    6 May 2026 11: 48
                    Quote: carpenter
                    Quote: mann
                    The eternal question: "What to do?"

                    And the eternal answer is: “Go to the store and buy two bottles of vodka.”

                    I bought more... but it doesn't help. request sad hi
                    1. +1
                      6 May 2026 12: 30
                      Quote: mann
                      I bought more... but it doesn't help.

                      You need to "lubricate" it with beer, it helps.
                      1. man
                        +2
                        6 May 2026 12: 41
                        Quote: carpenter
                        Quote: mann
                        I bought more... but it doesn't help.

                        You need to "lubricate" it with beer, it helps.

                        I've gotten older and don't bother you anymore. sad request
                        I also allow myself a little white beer... but interestingly, 3-5 glasses are enough smile and before Covid I could drink a liter... eh...
                        "Where are you, my spring years?"
                      2. -1
                        6 May 2026 12: 56
                        Quote: mann
                        Quote: carpenter
                        Quote: mann
                        I bought more... but it doesn't help.

                        You need to lubricate it with beer, it helps.

                        I've gotten older and don't bother you anymore. sad request
                        I also allow myself a little white beer... But interestingly, 3-5 glasses are enough. smile Before Covid, I could drink a liter... eh...
                        "Where are you, my spring years?"

                        You need to train more, and your strength will be restored.
                      3. 0
                        6 May 2026 13: 02
                        Quote: mann
                        I also allow myself a little white beer... but it's interesting, 3-5 glasses is enough, but before Covid I could drink a liter.

                        I could too, and now I have 200 grams of white milk three times a week.
                      4. man
                        +3
                        6 May 2026 17: 35
                        Quote: carpenter
                        Quote: mann
                        I also allow myself a little white beer... but it's interesting, 3-5 glasses is enough, but before Covid I could drink a liter.

                        I could too, and now I have 200 grams of white milk three times a week.

                        I can't, I have to work... to get out of the 5th point, where the government has driven us with its taxes... life on a pension doesn't appeal to me...
                    2. 0
                      6 May 2026 15: 39
                      Quote: mann
                      I bought more... but it doesn't help.

                      So they also had to be drunk)
                      In general, you've asked a very serious and, of course, complex question about "kicking." It's like asking a boxer why he ignores the punks who tease him, but he could easily cripple any of them with one punch—the desire is too great, and the responsibility is too great.
                      P.S. I didn't give you any minuses.
                      1. man
                        +1
                        6 May 2026 18: 11
                        Quote: Trapper7
                        Quote: mann
                        I bought more... but it doesn't help.

                        So they also had to be drunk)

                        Are you serious??? I keep wondering what I bought and why... request
                      2. man
                        +2
                        6 May 2026 18: 42
                        Quote: Trapper7
                        I didn't give you any minuses.

                        Yes, for God's sake, put as many as you want, just help me figure out this damned question: "What to do? "...
                        You have no idea how much he torments me...especially after Trump didn't live up to my expectations and turned out to be not our intelligence officer, but a Jewish one. smile
                      3. +1
                        7 May 2026 08: 24
                        Quote: mann
                        Just help me figure out this damned question: "What to do?"...

                        What do you mean? Stock up on food for about a month.
                      4. man
                        0
                        7 May 2026 08: 27
                        Quote: Trapper7
                        Quote: mann
                        Just help me figure out this damned question: "What to do?"...

                        What do you mean? Stock up on food for about a month.

                        I've already stocked up on the main product, but the snacks are stealing the spirits. stop
                      5. +1
                        7 May 2026 21: 10
                        What should we do? Change the way we govern the country. Putin's manual control has failed. Change the laws to ensure regular power turnover, a fully-fledged political opposition, and professional decision-makers. This is currently lacking, and Russia's prospects are bleak. Yeltsin himself, when he realized he was failing, stepped down and nominated a successor. Why shouldn't Putin do the same?
                      6. man
                        +1
                        8 May 2026 01: 32
                        I agree with you, but you understand that this is unrealistic... sad
                  2. -2
                    6 May 2026 12: 16
                    Off topic. After drinking various drinks, I've come to the rather unpatriotic conclusion that any vodka, even expensive, is the worst of all alcoholic drinks.
                    1. man
                      0
                      6 May 2026 12: 44
                      Quote: Sergej1972
                      Any vodka, even expensive, is the worst of alcoholic drinks.

                      It's different for everyone, but for me, whiskey is moonshine.
                      1. 0
                        7 May 2026 21: 16
                        There are so many different types of whiskey, and they differ greatly. Some are complete garbage, and then there's something I've never tasted better. That's 7 Crowns. I only came across it once in the USSR, but now it's only available on eBay.
                      2. man
                        +1
                        8 May 2026 01: 54
                        I've tried all sorts of drinks in my time, but whiskey is definitely not my cup of tea. I liked tequila; it gives such a friendly buzz. smile
                    2. -1
                      6 May 2026 13: 18
                      Quote: Sergej1972
                      that any vodka, even expensive one, is the worst of alcoholic drinks.

                      That's true, there's not enough money for Martel.
                      1. -2
                        6 May 2026 13: 36
                        Even if you drink inexpensive whiskey or cognac, or brandy, or gin, or rum, it will still be better than vodka. Or quality moonshine or chacha.
                2. -2
                  6 May 2026 14: 58
                  Yes, because it was the enemies of the USSR, beyond their false anti-Sovietism, who proved their inhuman mentality, their manic passion to destroy and annihilate everything.
                  1. The comment was deleted.
            2. +4
              6 May 2026 11: 32
              Quote: mann
              We'll have to fight the West anyway.

              No, it won't be necessary. The maxim "Don't do anything you're not prepared to accept in return" is true for the West too. They will never launch a ballistic missile strike on Russia unless they are prepared for Russia to launch a ballistic missile strike on them in return. And they are not prepared to die.

              But if Russia is the first to strike their cities with ballistic missiles, if their old people, women and children die under these attacks, then they will strike Russia in response, and our old people, women and children will die.
              And they will strike. The entire history of world wars tells us that they will strike—it's always been that way.
              1. man
                -3
                6 May 2026 11: 45
                Quote: Rosemary
                Quote: mann
                We'll have to fight the West anyway.

                No, you won't have to.

                And what is your confidence based on? request
                And what difference does it make whether they strike us themselves or hand them over to the Ukrainians, who will then strike us? By the way, I personally prefer to die from a Ukrainian missile... because I understand I'm guilty before them... I don't think our other elderly people, nor women and children, are so scrupulous...
                1. +3
                  6 May 2026 12: 02
                  Quote: mann
                  And what is your confidence based on?
                  And what difference does it make whether they strike themselves or hand them over to the Ukrainians, who will strike us with them?

                  There's a big difference. The USSR gave weapons to the Vietnamese, and they used them to attack the Americans. The US gave weapons to the Mujahideen, and they used them to attack the Shuravi.
                  The maxim "Don't do anything you're not prepared to accept in return" is in effect: the USSR, by transferring weapons to America's enemies, was prepared for the US to retaliate by transferring weapons to the Union's enemies, which is precisely what happened. This is normal and appropriate—the US and the USSR didn't even have any particular arguments about it.

                  And now, by transferring weapons to Ukraine, the West is prepared for Russia to transfer weapons to the West's enemies in the event of war. This is normal and appropriate.
                  But in response to France's transfer of weapons to Ukraine, attacking Paris with Oreshnik is abnormal and inadequate.
                  1. man
                    +3
                    6 May 2026 12: 16
                    Quote: Rosemary
                    The maxim "Don't do anything you're not prepared to accept in return" is in effect: the USSR, by transferring weapons to America's enemies, was prepared for the US to retaliate by transferring weapons to the Union's enemies, which is precisely what happened. This is normal and appropriate—the US and the USSR didn't even have any particular arguments about it.

                    Are you seriously comparing the USSR and bourgeois Russia? request
                    Back then, there was parity and mutual respect. The era of gentlemanliness, alas, has passed, and liars are winning. Just remember how Putin was deceived...
                    1. -2
                      6 May 2026 13: 32
                      Quote: mann
                      Just remember how they fooled Putin...

                      Were you really fooled? laughing By the way, secret protocols of negotiations, if they are published (not all of them and not always), then after many, many, many years...
                      1. +4
                        6 May 2026 14: 58
                        Were you really fooled?


                        Putin himself has repeatedly stated that he was deceived, cheated, and swindled.
                      2. 0
                        6 May 2026 15: 15
                        Quote: cast iron
                        Putin himself has repeatedly stated that he was deceived, cheated, and swindled.

                        I agree... that it was me... he wouldn't tell a lie... he's not that kind of person... so that's it... let's not doubt his words...
                      3. man
                        0
                        6 May 2026 17: 58
                        Quote: 2 level advisor
                        Quote: mann
                        Just remember how they fooled Putin...

                        Were you really fooled? laughing By the way, secret protocols of negotiations, if they are published (not all of them and not always), then after many, many, many years...

                        It turns out that I already answered you in response to your previous comment smile
                  2. -3
                    6 May 2026 15: 44
                    But in response to France's transfer of weapons to Ukraine, attacking Paris with Oreshnik is abnormal and inadequate.

                    And forgive me, dear sir, how did North Vietnam bombard the US with Soviet weapons during the Vietnam War? I remember that time the USSR planted missiles in Cuba, and the US nearly destroyed the USSR for it. Are you, dear sir, a loser, or don't even live in Russia? You're slaughtering the Russian population with Western weapons, and yet you're sticking your tongue deep in your ass and writing about inadequacy, hoping you won't be turned into mincemeat by these weapons.
                    1. +2
                      6 May 2026 16: 01
                      Excuse me, but is Russian not your native language or do you still celebrate May 1st?
                      1. -4
                        6 May 2026 16: 42
                        Excuse me, but Russian is not your native language.

                        Yes, dear hurray, you weakling, apparently your Russian abroad is different from what they teach in Russia, so you poor thing can't understand... Take a breath, learn some Russian, and leave France, otherwise you, poor thing, are shaking so much even at the mere possibility of flying back to your Parisian apartment. hi
                      2. 0
                        7 May 2026 21: 23
                        North Vietnam was bombarding the US with Soviet weapons.
                        How do you mean? Within the United States? That never happened.
            3. +2
              6 May 2026 13: 25
              Quote: mann
              We'll have to fight the West anyway, that's obvious now.

              It's obvious only if you focus on the news... and the news that someone is shaping... but if you think about it, it's not obvious at all... fighting a nuclear power... aha... hundreds of people are willing to warm up... and most importantly - why? To knock the arrogance out of the overly strong Russian Federation? laughing
              1. man
                +2
                6 May 2026 17: 52
                Quote: Level 2 Advisor
                Fighting a nuclear power... haha... hundreds of people are warming up... and most importantly - why? To knock the arrogance out of the overly strong Russian Federation?

                So they are completely confident that nuclear weapons will not be used against them... they know something non-trivial about our elite... what exactly we will never know... I'm not talking about Brzezinski's words... something else... they have clung to it with a death grip... they understand that without the use of nuclear weapons we will not survive
                1. +1
                  7 May 2026 21: 27
                  Thirty years of inept governance have led to the Anglo-Saxons finally dragging us into war in Ukraine, and now we're waiting for a nuclear war, which we want to start ourselves. We've come a long way.
                  1. man
                    0
                    8 May 2026 02: 12
                    Well, the beginning wasn't so bad. But what can you do now?
          2. 0
            6 May 2026 13: 29
            But there's no 100% guarantee that you'll die along with your country. They say brave rulers often took risks and won.
        3. -2
          6 May 2026 20: 24
          1) This is the current reality: Israel, with US support, committed genocide in the Gaza Strip. Trump publicly promised to bury Iranian civilization. Against this backdrop, the Cold War is proceeding rather smoothly and in a civilized manner.
          2) In Vilnius, they throw the Nazi salute without a twinge of conscience, you should have written about that.
          1. man
            0
            6 May 2026 21: 18
            Quote: NordOst16
            This is the current reality: Israel, with US support, committed genocide in the Gaza Strip. Trump publicly promised to bury Iranian civilization. Against this background, the SVO is proceeding rather smoothly and in a civilized manner..

            Well, thank God... although in relation to Zelensky personally, I prefer to be a barbarian! am
          2. man
            +2
            6 May 2026 21: 31
            Quote: NordOst16
            In Vilnius, they throw the Nazi salute without a twinge of conscience, you could have written about that.

            Actually, I've been living in Moscow since 1981, leaving only for business trips and vacations. I've been to Vilnius twice on business trips, the last time in 1987, and I didn't see any Nazi salutes, sorry. request
    4. +1
      6 May 2026 19: 40
      The Ukrainian dictator and his patrons were intent on demonstrating that Russian influence in the post-Soviet space was declining.
      It's really falling! It's not like we'd be fighting hard for it. Meetings, visits, but in reality...
    5. -1
      6 May 2026 19: 48
      And now the parade is barely even a parade? And what will happen in a year if this continues? It seems our liberal system is increasingly burying its head in the sand. And this is a country with the most powerful nuclear weapons and still the world's second-largest army. It's time to put an end to this strange SVO.
      The Armed Forces of the Russian Federation will launch a retaliatory, massive missile strike on the center of Kyiv."
      If we had actually launched a massive attack on Ukraine, the game would have been completely different, as it was in February 2022.
  2. + 13
    6 May 2026 05: 15
    without any clear prospects
    wassat "I ask you to treat this with understanding" (c)
    1. +1
      6 May 2026 05: 45
      Here it is worth reminding all military-political commanders that this development of events and the threat of Bander-Nazi UAV penetration deep into the Russian rear, with elements of blackmail by the Jewish drug-fuehrer, was carried out more than a year ago, but strategists at various levels of the military-political leadership apparently dismissed this as the delusional fantasies of a drug addict, something they are now confronting with firsthand, and innocent and vulnerable people are suffering.
      The Kremlin's moustache refuses to comment, referring, as always, to the Ministry of Defense.
  3. + 13
    6 May 2026 05: 32
    Yes, the situation is dire, given how Ukraine is escalating its attacks, and the stalemate on the frontline makes it impossible to end the conflict in our favor. The situation will only worsen by winter, and our citizens in the border regions will be left without power and heat. I wonder who laughed at this all these years. Ukrainians will continue to do so.
    1. + 28
      6 May 2026 07: 30
      Quote: Epifantsev Sergey
      I wonder if those who have been laughing at Ukrainians all these years will continue to do so.

      How can we not laugh at them, if even Topvar tells us every day how pathetic, stupid, cowardly, corrupt, genetically inferior, and incapable these khokhols are.
      Look, just yesterday's news on this site:
      - "Barrier detachments of the Ukrainian Armed Forces prevented units of the Troops of Defense from leaving Ryasnoye near Sumy";
      - "The Ukrainian army is experiencing a shortage of personnel";
      - "Ukrainian border guards opened fire on fellow citizens attempting to escape by boat";
      - "Ukraine cannot survive for even a couple of days without foreign aid";
      - "They ate pig food": captured "pacifists" again complain of hunger in the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
      etc.
      It is not clear, however, why we have not been able to defeat these inferior people for the fifth year.
      1. -8
        6 May 2026 07: 35
        It is not clear, however, why we have not been able to defeat these inferior people for the fifth year.
        I guess pig feed helps boost morale! wink
    2. +1
      6 May 2026 12: 04
      will negotiate with concessions
  4. +1
    6 May 2026 05: 38
    To increase influence in the post-Soviet space, you need big money, which Russia doesn't have. Except for corrupt officials. I think if you stuffed $100 billion into Pashinyan's mouth, he'd be playing "Moscow Nights" on the accordion, not the drums.
    1. + 19
      6 May 2026 06: 06
      I think Pashinyan will swallow up these $100 billion and continue to mess things up...
      We need "not only the carrot, but also the stick."
      Well, "our helmsman" is incapable of an adequate foreign policy, and the domestic one is a complete mess too.
    2. + 12
      6 May 2026 06: 27
      I think if you stuff $100 billion into Pashinyan's mouth, he won't be playing drums, but rather "Moscow Nights" on the accordion.
      It would be better to invest these $100 billion into the Russian economy than to give them to Pashinyan. wink
      1. +8
        6 May 2026 08: 12
        Quote: Schneeberg
        It would be better to invest these $100 billion into the Russian economy than to give them to Pashinyan.

        True. Better yet, kick Armenia out of all the organizations Russia created, as having "failed to live up to the high trust."
        1. +7
          6 May 2026 10: 54
          And it would be even better to kick Armenia out of all the organizations that Russia created.
          This should have been done yesterday. Or even better, the day before yesterday!
      2. +2
        6 May 2026 13: 31
        So no matter how much you invest, it's still not enough for Chemezov, Manturov, and Gref. request
  5. +9
    6 May 2026 05: 42
    Nevertheless, Russia declared a ceasefire on May 8-9, hoping that Kyiv would refrain from attacks during these days...


    Asking Ukraine through Trump not to make adjustments to the celebrations is like a loss of Russia's subjectivity....
    1. + 14
      6 May 2026 07: 48
      This isn't "Russia's loss of subjectivity," it's what the USSR called "groveling before the West"—the Kremlin is humbly asking the great and terrible Trump to pressure Zelensky so that he doesn't attack Russia, at least on May 8th and 9th.
  6. +5
    6 May 2026 05: 54
    I wouldn't be surprised if, after the anti-Russian riot in Yerevan, supposedly considered our military ally and trade and economic partner, a similar anti-Russian riot were to take place in Moscow. After all this, it wouldn't be surprising to see a NATO summit and European Commission meeting held in Moscow, somewhere in the Kremlin, where new anti-Russian sanctions would be drafted. Aren't you tired of wiping up the aftermath of yet another spit?
    1. -7
      6 May 2026 08: 32
      If they're supposedly military allies, then why didn't Russia support Artsakh? The fact that they allegedly didn't recognize it isn't necessary; they had nowhere to go, with Azerbaijan, backed by Turkey, against them.
      1. +6
        6 May 2026 11: 05
        If they (Yerevan) are supposedly military allies, then why didn't they support Russia in the fight against Ukraine before Artsakh? We should support them, but they shouldn't support us?
        1. -1
          6 May 2026 11: 59
          It's easier for the strong to support the weak, but they shouldn't forget their own interests. But those in the Kremlin don't care about Russia's interests. And if they don't see any benefit for themselves, then why bother? And, incidentally, blame it all on others.
          1. +4
            6 May 2026 14: 40
            Are you saying that it's in the Russian people's interests to fight Azerbaijan instead of the Armenians? Funny.
            1. 0
              6 May 2026 14: 58
              Where did I say that the people should fight instead of the Armenians? Is it normal for the people to fight for oligarchs' money now?
      2. +4
        6 May 2026 15: 44
        Quote: Gardamir
        If they are supposedly military allies, then why didn't Russia support them in Artsakh?

        To begin with, Russia has no agreements with Artsakh. Artsakh is not part of Armenia, which has not even recognized it as such.
        So why the hell should we fit in there?
        Are you worried about him? You could have volunteered.
        And now people are fighting for oligarchs’ money, is that normal?

        The people fight for their country, as they have for centuries before. Even in the Russo-Japanese War, soldiers and officers fought for their country, not for "concessions."
        If you can't even understand such simple truths, then there's simply nothing to talk about with you.
        1. -2
          6 May 2026 16: 02
          So, according to you, our ancestors, general secretaries, tsars, and grand dukes were fools for meddling in things. And only now, finally, is there a just, patriotic government.
          1. +3
            6 May 2026 16: 12
            Quote: Gardamir
            So, according to you, our ancestors, general secretaries, tsars, and grand dukes were fools for meddling in things. And only now, finally, is there a just, patriotic government.

            Firstly, “somewhere” does not mean everywhere and everywhere.
            Secondly, I just wrote the exact opposite of your conclusion.
      3. +3
        6 May 2026 17: 04
        Quote: Gardamir
        If they are supposedly military allies, then why didn't Russia support them in Artsakh?
        Because legally Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan...
        1. -1
          6 May 2026 18: 01
          But is Crimea legally Ukrainian?
          1. 0
            7 May 2026 06: 28
            Quote: Gardamir
            But is Crimea legally Ukrainian?
            From the point of view of the Maidanites - yes!
    2. -4
      6 May 2026 09: 53
      God's dew. Yes "" "" "" "
  7. + 16
    6 May 2026 05: 56
    Zelenskyy is gradually evolving from a second-rate administrator into a leading European leader who can publicly threaten Russia. The Russian Federation's Supreme Commander-in-Chief has itself contributed to Zelenskyy's growing influence.
    The indecisiveness and uncertainty in the conduct of military operations by the Russian leadership against Ukraine reveal the absence of a clearly defined strategy for conducting the SVO that is understandable to Russian citizens.
    I have two conspiracy theories that somehow explain the vague actions of the Russian Supreme Court during the SVO:
    1. The presence of a large number of hostages in Europe, belonging to the families of high-ranking, respected Russian citizens.
    2. General Old Age VPR does not contribute to taking decisive and radical actions.
    "War is a matter for the young" (c)
    The age of European leaders confirms this.
    1. +7
      6 May 2026 06: 19
      The Supreme Court of the Russian Federation itself contributed to the growth of Zelensky's influence.

      That's right. The endless citations of this insignificant, slippery Ukrainian abomination in the Russian information space are simply astonishing. They themselves created it from nothing.
    2. +7
      6 May 2026 08: 22
      Why don’t you consider the third option: a banal lack of strength, resources, and opportunities for decisive action?
      I'll explain this with two examples:
      1) We're always complaining about not eliminating the top leadership. Let's think about what that would accomplish. If we do, will the front immediately collapse and the soldiers flee? Extremely unlikely. In Iran, the Americans killed almost the entire leadership, and the new leadership is even less willing to negotiate. So we risk ending up in a situation where no one is willing to talk to us, in any form (at least now we can lay out our wishes into the void). And the fighting will end with negotiations; they always do. Even in May 1945.
      2) Everyone also loves to say, "It's time to fight like adults." What else are we doing that isn't like adults? Completely destroying infrastructure and eliminating its ability to restore it is fundamentally impossible; it can be temporarily disabled, but not completely. But if there's no one on the ground to take advantage of this temporary disruption, it won't have a permanent effect. Take Iraq in 2003, for example: the Americans targeted communications hubs, power supply systems, and so on with precision strikes, disrupting their operations. The army on the ground simply dispersed the remaining enemy forces, but literally a month later everything was functioning like clockwork again. Now, when the enemy is ready to strike and has experience operating in such conditions, it's impossible to paralyze them; we've been trying for five years.
      I believe we have wasted time, we simply do not have the resources to wear down the enemy, and given that we are essentially isolated, brute physical force will probably not be able to turn the tide of events.
      As a result, we initially went to the casino and bet everything on zero, and when things didn't go according to plan, instead of crawling away with the attitude "everything was planned just like that" (as China did after its defeat in the Vietnam War), we decided to play until we won, until we not only won back our losses, but also left with a profit... but the casino always wins.
      1. man
        -2
        6 May 2026 09: 02
        Quote: parma
        We're always complaining about not eliminating the top leadership. Let's think about what that would accomplish. If we do, will the front immediately collapse and the soldiers flee?

        Unfortunately, you're not the only one who underestimates Zelensky and his role... sad
      2. +6
        6 May 2026 10: 13
        ...we initially came to the casino and put everything on zero...

        I agree with your apt comparison.
        A man who took everything out of his house and sold it, then went to a casino and bet everything on zero. This is a very accurate description, clearly describing the conflict between the current Russian elite and Ukraine.
      3. 0
        6 May 2026 13: 47
        Let's think about what this will give.
        It all sounds like this: how to win in one go, and then collapse back on the couch? Well, no way! How to get to the store in one step? No way! Well, if one step won't achieve anything, then don't take it! And don't cross the bridges—take a second step! And you can't do anything more in the courts in Odessa! So let's not take important steps, because each one alone doesn't achieve anything, and just do nothing in this field! It's absolutely certain that the management isn't cowardly; they wouldn't sell their mother for a ruble; it's just the way it is. request
        1. -4
          6 May 2026 14: 35
          The question isn't "let's not do it," the question is that we can't! Why aren't we touching the leadership, as I said, is simply because it will easily change and the enemy will continue fighting! We've wasted time; the war has become "patriotic" for our neighbors!!! This is evident by the simple fact that even the forcibly mobilized TCCs (although I could argue about how much chaos there is with this, but that's not the point now) aren't surrendering or fleeing en masse! But there is a risk that we will lose any negotiating position, because the new leadership will dig in their heels and the mediators will wash their hands of it. Why aren't we hitting the bridges (in fact, we're hitting as hard as we can, with no visible results)? Let's take the American Tomahawk as an example. According to open data, its deviation is 10 m per 1000 km. The width of a four-cavity bridge is about 15 meters! Thus, the width of the bridge is less than the radius of the missile's "dispersion" radius! Not to mention that a single hit isn't enough to destroy it, as we saw in Kherson in 2022... So, to destroy a bridge, you need something large, like the YAKAB-1000, and at point-blank range. And we can't do it at point-blank range, as our air defenses won't let us. Besides, even if we manage to destroy the bridge, a couple of pontoons will appear nearby within a day, and we'll have to start over! A pontoon costs far less than the calibers needed to destroy it... Again, you have to work at point-blank range, and that's not working! We've been trying to work on energy since 2022, but the results are mostly for publicity, and as the number of our launches increases, so does the number of defenses, so we can't turn them off.
          P.S.: And finally, for all those who like to speculate about things we haven't started yet – get off the couch and get started! The military recruitment office will be all over you, they'll give you tons of money, award you medals, and grants. Show me how it's done, since everyone around here has been idiots for five years now…
          1. +5
            6 May 2026 15: 39
            Why we don't touch the leadership, I said - simply because it will easily change and the enemy will continue to fight!
            Why do you think so? Are they like the Persians? Do they have underground cities?
            But there is a risk that we will lose some negotiating positions.
            Ah, I understand, you are a fan of negotiations winked
            In fact, we hit as hard as we can.
            It's a lie. The railway bridge in Zaporizhzhia is within hurricane range of the LBS. Nothing flies over it.
            Let's take the American Tomahawk as an example. According to open data, its deviation is 10 m per 1000 km.
            It's hard to imagine a more stupid justification
            The width of the 4-cavity bridge is about 15 meters!
            So what? You'll also write that the length is a kilometer, but the bridge needs to be demolished from top to bottom, otherwise it won't be a shield.
            I'm not even talking about the fact that a single hit is not enough to destroy
            like it would be good to have zero hits, no missiles at all?
            We saw this in Kherson in 2022.
            Let's go into more detail about what happened there.
            Accordingly, to destroy the bridge you need something big, like the YAKAB-1000, and at point-blank range.
            only Satan at point-blank range, otherwise you won't be able to demolish the bridge with a tomahawk, yes
            Air defense won't work
            the coordinates of which are of course known
            We have been trying to work on energy since 2022
            We worked for a month and then forgot about it for a year. Then we worked for another month and then forgot about it.
            As the number of our launches grows, so does the number of protective equipment, which we cannot turn off.
            The power was cut off in the winter, but Trump asked for a truce during the cold spell. It must have been a cunning plan.
            And finally, for all those who like to speculate about what we haven't started yet - get off the couch and get started!
            Are you writing from a trench?
            The military recruitment office will be all over you, giving you tons of money, awarding you medals and grants. Show me how it's done, since everyone around here has been idiots for five years now...
            Do those who come to military registration and enlistment offices have the opportunity to identify targets for missile strikes?
            1. +3
              6 May 2026 17: 14
              Quote from alexoff
              Do those who come to military registration and enlistment offices have the opportunity to identify targets for missile strikes?

              Of course... and how did I even come across ads on the VO - to the rear troops for 230 thousand rubles and so on... the main thing is that you sign up, it means you'll go to the rear and start setting targets for the Uragans... I'm annoyed by this approach in advertising... it's somehow so-so...
  8. +9
    6 May 2026 06: 16
    Armenia is no longer a state friendly to Russia.

    Of course. Armenia's complaint about Russia's lack of support regarding Karabakh seems particularly illogical after Armenia's failure to recognize Crimea and the new territories as Russian territory. What, one wonders, did they expect this in exchange for? Parallel imports? It's beneficial to the country providing them. There are plenty of people willing to help without any Karabakh issue.
    1. +4
      6 May 2026 08: 25
      Quote: 123_123
      Armenia is no longer a state friendly to Russia.

      Of course. Armenia's complaint about Russia's lack of support regarding Karabakh seems particularly illogical after Armenia's failure to recognize Crimea and the new territories as Russian territory. What, one wonders, did they expect this in exchange for? Parallel imports? It's beneficial to the country providing them. There are plenty of people willing to help without any Karabakh issue.

      Yerevan didn't even recognize "its own" Karabakh until the very last moment, let alone Crimea. The CSTO had no legal basis whatsoever to intervene in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, as Karabakh isn't part of the organization, and the Azerbaijanis had never entered Armenian territory.
      So all of Pashinyan's claims against Russia are nothing more than artistic whistling aimed at shifting the blame for the loss of Karabakh onto Russia.
  9. + 11
    6 May 2026 06: 34
    However, objectively speaking, Russia's political leadership has done virtually nothing to prevent such a development. Russia is truly losing influence in the CIS—mired in the conflict in Ukraine, with no clear prospects, and having concentrated all its primary resources on the CIS.
    Who would have thought? You need to open your eyes, Since 91, there has been no influence. The Russian Federation is not the USSR. We squandered our entire legacy, surrendered what should never have been surrendered, and then they're surprised—we're losing influence. Did we even have any? Or was it just a friendly get-together?
  10. +2
    6 May 2026 06: 44
    Optimization and privatization of everything have done their job. They wanted to be like the West, but they overdid it. While they squeezed agriculture in the West, they didn't do what they did here. There's a complete lack of education for teenagers. We've reached the point where we consider our armed forces allies, even though this is something we created together. They've rolled over our consciousness and our shared economy like a steamroller. Those who started this are already abroad. But inertia is a powerful force. Wherever military action occurs, the main force is state participation in these processes. Increasing state participation is the main task.
  11. + 13
    6 May 2026 07: 16
    Have they deceived the Tsar again?
    The first year isn't a war. They promised it wouldn't be a war—it would only last a couple of months, then victory celebrations (what victory? There are no soldiers, right?), then the division of the bottom five. They lied on every count.
    The fifth year of non-war. Everything that turned out unexpectedly turned out unexpectedly.
    Conclusion? The Tsar is constantly being deceived, misled (and never re-led), and his best feelings are trampled upon.
    What to do? Wait until they stop deceiving the Tsar. And anyway, it's not his fault. It's some kind of entourage. They've surrounded him and are deceiving him. And he endures. He hopes and believes.
    And we, as one! In a single impulse! For every billionaire! We must endure and believe.
  12. + 10
    6 May 2026 07: 18
    [This raises another question: why hold a parade at all?]

    No, this raises another question: Why was it necessary to carry out the SVO and lose thousands upon thousands? Who will be held accountable for this?
    1. +3
      6 May 2026 09: 35
      Quote: Boris Sergeev
      Why was it necessary to carry out the SVO and lose thousands and thousands?

      I'm afraid no one will ever say this on the news...
    2. +6
      6 May 2026 11: 08
      Why was it necessary to carry out the SVO and lose thousands and thousands? Who will answer for this?


      We and our children will answer for this with money and poverty. You'll see.
  13. +4
    6 May 2026 07: 23
    Zelensky is openly spitting in the face of Russia's military and political leadership, which pretends not to notice. What can you expect from such people?

    It's time for Russian leaders to take real steps to end their war if the Russian Ministry of Defense believes it will not hold a parade in Moscow without Ukraine's voluntary consent."
  14. +4
    6 May 2026 07: 25
    Zelensky allows himself to make such statements because...
    ...The Russian Armed Forces are carefully avoiding attacks on him personally. At first, like a cowardly drug addict, he trembled in anticipation of the end, but then, convinced of his opponent's indecision, he began to play the role of Churchillion.
  15. +7
    6 May 2026 07: 34
    Quote: Earl
    The Russian Armed Forces are carefully avoiding attacks on him personally.
    And not just against him personally. They are avoiding attacks on railway junctions through which military supplies from Europe to Ukraine pass. They are avoiding serious attacks on seaports, where military supplies also arrive and are exported.
    1. -6
      6 May 2026 07: 57
      There was a time when everyone knew how to run a country. There was simply no one to do the work.
      Today, everyone knows how to fight properly. But there's no one to fight.
      No luck.
      1. +5
        6 May 2026 08: 12
        Have you ever heard how the rulers of the state called those who knew how to fight properly "landsknechts" and "superfluous people"?
  16. +5
    6 May 2026 07: 45
    [QuoteZelensky, Yerevan, and the threat to the parade] [/ Quote]
    This is complete degradation. How can an enemy waging war against Russia come to a country that's a CSTO member (even formally), where a Russian military base is located? And even recruit new allies.
    1. -2
      6 May 2026 08: 36
      Well, it is possible to supply fuel to all countries.
  17. +5
    6 May 2026 07: 57
    Speaking of Armenia, Armenians will definitely elect Pashanyan again. He's dangling the carrot of visa-free travel with the EU under their noses. The cunning Armenians will be able to divide themselves into three categories: the smartest and most cunning, who will freely rush to the EU for free benefits and subsidies, while the thieves will be able to sail their yachts on Lake Sevan in the morning and off the French Riviera by evening. The second category is made up of those who own bazaars and mines in Russia (and even taxi drivers in Sochi). They'll understand that Russia, fearing that Armenia and Pashanyan will finally abandon Russia, will, to prevent this from happening, offer all Armenians on Russian territory their asses, and they will become even more powerful in Russia than the Azerbaijanis! This category will remain to profiteer in Russia. The third category are those who will be called suckers and Soviets. They will remain in Armenia to grow vegetables and fruit, graze livestock, and farm the land. They won't vote for Pashinyan. But they are a tiny minority compared to those who will vote for Pashinyan. It's no wonder we remember from our days in the USSR Armed Forces that the most cunning of Armenians is our Ara Gaytyan. Accordingly, they are all cunning, but some are especially cunning. I remember how the sergeant major of the training company nearly fainted when, upon arrival at the military unit, everyone was ordered to hand over the sum of cash over 100 rubles, which parents had given their son "for the journey" to the army, for transfer back home. Two Armenians had a whopping 3,000 rubles between them. These are the kind of people who have the carrot of a visa-free regime with the EU right in front of their noses, and they will carry Pashinyan around in their arms...
    1. +1
      6 May 2026 09: 46
      I think the visa-free regime has "bought" the Ukrainians to a large extent. If it hadn't been for the visa-free regime, they would have likely given up long ago, since life in Ukraine before the visa-free regime was noticeably worse than in Russia, so why not join a country that lives better? But after the visa-free regime was introduced, all the Ukrainian migrant workers disappeared from Russia, since you can earn several times more in the EU. I read that almost 20% of Ukrainians immediately rushed to work in the EU, which is logical. Being a resident of a small town, earning 2000 euros in strawberry farming is crazy money for Ukraine. Who would want to earn 80 rubles in Russia on a construction site, under those circumstances? I'm not saying it's the main reason, but the visa-free regime has certainly had an impact.
  18. 0
    6 May 2026 08: 39
    Everything that the enemies of the USSR did led to the fact that the geopolitical rating of one "leader" of the enemies of the USSR increased sharply, and the geopolitical rating of another "leader" of the enemies of the USSR fell to the bottom, and now his former "friends" shy away from him, seeking protection from him from strong countries.
    But the enemies of the USSR never admit their guilt in anything, and always shift the blame onto others.
  19. +1
    6 May 2026 09: 04
    On May 3, Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Armenia.

    Some political scientists point out that Zelensky is threatening Russia from Yerevan.

    So who's winning the war, comrades from TV?
  20. -1
    6 May 2026 09: 11
    We need to disband all organizations created since 1991. And from now on, we'll only operate on the basis of new bilateral agreements. It's all a matter of giving and receiving.
    1. -2
      6 May 2026 09: 27
      Ha, who's there to negotiate with? Everyone's run away. There's only Batka and Eun. And the "new" friends are beggars, and they only agree to deal for the sake of greater profit for their countries at the expense of ours.
  21. +5
    6 May 2026 09: 32
    Now I'll get downvoted, but who cares.
    We're currently in a losing position with the SVO. Because they're dictating the terms to us.
    The cancellation of Victory Day celebrations in the Hero City of Sevastopol and the City of Military Glory of Voronezh is a true victory for the West.
    In short, we're in for a "shameful peace." With each passing day, with each strike on our cities, our negotiating position worsens. The longer this continues, the worse the peace terms will be.
    Everything else is propaganda.
    1. 0
      6 May 2026 12: 17
      Let there be a dirty world already
      1. +1
        6 May 2026 12: 36
        "A shameful peace" is Lenin's derogatory description of the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty, which stipulated the cession of territory (26% of European Russia), the withdrawal of troops from other territories, the demobilization of the army, and the payment of indemnities. It truly was a shameful peace.
        And what's so obscene about freezing military operations along the front lines "without annexations or contributions"?
        1. 0
          6 May 2026 12: 47
          Do you believe in the "freeze"? What will we do about the launches of "unknown drones" launched by "unknown radical groups"? There will be a "safety zone" within our territory, at least 50-60 km from the "freeze line."
          Anyway, let's watch the Soviet series "State Border," episode 2, I think, where they served on the border with Poland. Adjusted for today's technological level.
          P.S. A shady peace? There are signs. They've already got $300 billion in indemnities. Furthermore, we have a trade surplus, or so they say, with the difference between imports and exports settling in the West. Troop withdrawal? Troop withdrawal from the Kharkiv and Sumy regions. Meanwhile, half of the Kherson region and Kherson itself, as well as a chunk of Donbas, will remain theirs.
        2. +1
          9 May 2026 15: 26
          You see the shame, but I see that Donetsk will rise again, let them live like crap beyond the Dnieper.
  22. +1
    6 May 2026 09: 51
    At the very beginning, as I recall, they promised "Hell and Israel" for the strikes on Crimea. Now, a whole bunch of people are flying into Crimea, and the bridge of the same name has been built twice, but the promised "Hell and Israel" still hasn't materialized. So, it's all just empty talk.
  23. The comment was deleted.
  24. +2
    6 May 2026 10: 40
    As Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu acknowledged back in March, there is no longer a region in Russia that could consider itself inaccessible to Ukrainian weapons.
    "Until recently, the Urals were out of reach of air strikes from Ukrainian territory, but today they are already in the immediate threat zone,"
    He declared then.
    A thin man and a fat man met. The fat man decided to make a sarcastic comment: looking at you, one would think there was a famine in our country. Yes. Yes. The thin man replied. But judging by you, you are the cause of this famine.
  25. +3
    6 May 2026 10: 58
    Quote: Staff
    As Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu acknowledged back in March, there is no longer a region in Russia that could consider itself inaccessible to Ukrainian weapons.
    He should know better. He was the Minister of Defense for so many years. laughing
  26. +1
    6 May 2026 11: 06
    wassat "I ask you to treat this with understanding" (c) IMHO, there has been no understanding for a long time!
  27. +1
    6 May 2026 11: 32
    It is sad to see such “allies” and “brotherly nations” who exist at Russia’s expense, feel no gratitude, and are ready to throw themselves into the arms of our enemies, confident that Russia will not stop supporting them even then……
    If it weren't for Russia, the state of Armenia simply wouldn't have survived these 35 years; it wouldn't exist anymore. And it wouldn't be alone—almost all the former Soviet republics wouldn't have survived. Tajikistan, whose citizens killed us in Crocus, wouldn't have survived either.
  28. +2
    6 May 2026 11: 44
    If you don't win, you lose. Opportunities are extremely limited, otherwise the outcome would have been different. On the one hand, they can slow down the war, on the other, they can make the situation worse. Come what may (the dumbest thing you can do).
    1. +1
      6 May 2026 12: 23
      Quote: Seneca
      On the other hand, you can make the situation worse. And come what may (The dumbest thing you can do)

      This is called the "sunk loss fallacy" or "Concord effect" - a cognitive bias in which an investor continues to invest resources (people, time, money) in an unprofitable project already knowing about its unprofitability, only because a lot was invested in it in the past.
  29. 0
    6 May 2026 15: 58
    Whether there will be a parade or not, whether they will destroy each other or not—all of this will merely be a distribution of new events and circumstances. Therefore, the only question is who will flee, willingly or unwillingly, those present as participants in these carnage. The population reduction plan in reality.
  30. 0
    6 May 2026 16: 25
    "Why hold a parade at all?" The author has a certain logic: if there is no military equipment and cadets, the Parade will not be held to its full potential.
    But if the Victory Parade is cancelled, the downsides will be twice as big: 1. "clown" and the Western media will raise a huge fuss. "Vovan is so scared that he never leaves his bunker somewhere in the Urals."
    2, guys, on the front line, will take this painfully.
    3) What will be the reaction of the children and grandchildren of the war participants?
    1. -2
      6 May 2026 17: 30
      Good health to everyone... "what will be the reaction of children and grandchildren"?
      Friends, did you notice the eyes of the front-line soldiers and veteran officers on May 8th and 9th? Even 15th and 17th, there were still many of them, practically shedding tears of joy at having survived that terrible war.
      If there is no parade, it will be a public spitting in the souls of the children of the victors.
      I can catch minuses, but it would be an outrage on the memory of 27,000,000
      Even Karlik's wife, she has a negative attitude towards the USSR, but in the name and memory of Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya, Maya Peglivanova or ZINA Portova, she will kill everyone
      R.S
      Now, I thought, perhaps this is an enemy release to sow hatred and enmity in the rear?....
      The Ukrainian special services are quite capable of this.
    2. +3
      6 May 2026 23: 52
      Constantly raising prices, introducing new taxes, restrictions—the reaction here, apparently, is overwhelmingly positive, from the children and grandchildren of war veterans, from the guys on the front lines, from Western media, and from everyone else. But if, God forbid, we don't hold a parade, everything will fall apart. That's the whole point: the image is more important than the content. The main thing is to hold a parade, play biathlon, stage a ballet, and build a church, and who cares what's going on in the rest of the country.
  31. -1
    6 May 2026 18: 04
    Well, I don't know... I don't want to know :)) How many are ready to buy into "themes":) like: "We were deceived!" That's not a good argument even for children... Well, don't sit down to play then, it's not for you :))
    But here's the famous line: "You can't be more Armenian than the Armenians themselves!" -- a logical fallacy used as a pretext for transforming a political question (what do you need yourself, no matter what?) into a formal, legal one (how to completely forbid yourself from doing so). And it worked for many! After such a bow, any "Zelikyan" will go on a rampage... There's no point in trying to analyze all this; the cards are pretty much on the table.
    It's pointless to mention the USSR. It did what it could, but the main thing is, it failed to establish its political essence, and so it came to its inevitable end. The only way out of further collapse is to build it all over again, and much better than before. Then it's time to start thinking about the situation. :)) Holding a parade in an unsafe place?! "Those Zhiguli, what are they thinking?!" (c) :))
  32. 0
    6 May 2026 18: 33
    He doesn't give a damn about Kyiv! He won't be there.
  33. 0
    6 May 2026 19: 05
    If there's a parade, great. If not, most people would probably be understanding. This isn't a reason for political speculation.
    1. 0
      7 May 2026 22: 05
      I don't think such a parade is necessary every year. It's enough to hold it only on special occasions. For example, during Brezhnev's reign, the parade was held only once in 18 years, and no one cried or worried.
  34. 0
    9 May 2026 10: 24
    In December 1990, while serving in Grozny, I was sent on a mission to Nagorno-Karabakh with the Special Motorized Police Unit (SMChM, military unit 5464). We left in the morning and arrived in Baku by evening. For a Soviet schoolchild like me, it was shocking to see concrete block checkpoints and armored personnel carriers with armored personnel carriers parked nearby on the streets of Baku. The next day, we reached the Nyuvadi (Azeibarjan) railway station, where 200 meters away, across the Araks mountain river, stood an Iranian border outpost. Ahead lay a mountain, through a tunnel running the Baku-Yerevan railway. We guarded this tunnel to prevent the militants of free Azerbaijan from blowing it up. And so, Armenia once again says "thank you" to Russia! Maybe it's time for Russia to say "thank you" to Armenia, and to all these "South Ossetias" and "Abkhazias"?! Maybe it's time to think about its own citizens and their well-being, instead of sponsoring these wild territories?
  35. 0
    Yesterday, 22: 43
    Eh.
    Даже домохозяйки уже понимают что СВО проходит криво.
    С самого начала надо было ставить под контроль (сохранять или уничтожать) вокзалы, банки, мосты, почтамты, узлы связи, воинские части и т.д и т.п... Все делать как учила партия РСДРП (ВКПб, КПСС).
    Но увы и ах - мы не такие ( , а какие тогда мы!!!!!???????????????)
    А щас то что уже стало просиходить??
    А щас этот падла клоун по всем соседям РФ катается и чет им в уши дует!! А дает он скорее всего по науськиванию Лондона и Вашингтона. Всё делает для противников РФ.
    Ёпртс. А почему на 5 году проведения СВО это возможно??? Уто допускает это???
    Почему этот клоун до сих пор коптит атмосферу??? Почему он не делает дорогу на Колыме???