5

Friday, 08.09.2023.

09:30

Is Putin facing the fall from power?

Vladimir Putin will fall from power in four acts. The first two have already taken place, and the third and fourth acts are underway, the media write.

Izvor: B92, N1 ZAGREB; EXPRESS.CO.UK

Is Putin facing the fall from power? IMAGE SOURCE
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5 Komentari

Sortiraj po:

Peter Sudyka

pre 8 meseci

He certainly won't come out stronger, even if Russia somehow manage to win this war.

1) The sanctions are forcing Russia to try replace Western investment, companies, technology, software with either domestic and non-Western equivalents. This alone sets Russia behind by many years.

2) Brain-drain. Nearly a million Russians, most of them young and highly educated, have escaped Russia to avoid being drafted for Putin's stupid war or out of protest against Putin's stupid war to begin with. With an aging population like Russia, this brain-drain is comthing Putin simply cannot afford in the long run.

3) Military losses and psychological damage. Tens of thousands of Russians have died, hundreds of thousands are wounded and whatever the outcome of the war, masses of Russian men will be coming home broken both physically and psychologically. The damage after Afghanistan was already noteworthy and helped in part bring about the USSR's collapse, imagine what the effect will be here with Russia losing far, far more men and materials than Afghanistan, Chechnya and Georgia combined.

4) Russia has pumped enormous amounts of money into logistics, fuel and military equipment into this war. Whether or not they win, they've lost thousands of combat vehicles and hundreds of aircraft in this war (far more than all of America's post-WW2 conflicts combined). Any idiot that thinks Russia can afford a drawn out conflict so that Ukraine bleeds out is delusional.

Tom Sawyer

pre 8 meseci

The source: N1, Express and B92!? … The finest yellow journalism available.
B92, have you no shame?
You and your BBC axis masters are an embarrassment for what now passes as failed “main stream media”.
The human intelligence in the diverse multipolar world have recognized your lies long ago.
Articles of fiction, such as this narrative, simply reflect the depths of your failure.

Diana

pre 8 meseci

There is a powerful partisan movement at work in Russia. Among its organizers are many of Putin’s former colleagues. The drone attacks on Russia are the work of Russian partisans.

Diana

pre 8 meseci

The war is lost for Putin. The Russian generals are well respected by the FSB and will see to it that their country will not be destroyed by a mad dictator.

Tom Sawyer

pre 8 meseci

The source: N1, Express and B92!? … The finest yellow journalism available.
B92, have you no shame?
You and your BBC axis masters are an embarrassment for what now passes as failed “main stream media”.
The human intelligence in the diverse multipolar world have recognized your lies long ago.
Articles of fiction, such as this narrative, simply reflect the depths of your failure.

Diana

pre 8 meseci

The war is lost for Putin. The Russian generals are well respected by the FSB and will see to it that their country will not be destroyed by a mad dictator.

Diana

pre 8 meseci

There is a powerful partisan movement at work in Russia. Among its organizers are many of Putin’s former colleagues. The drone attacks on Russia are the work of Russian partisans.

Peter Sudyka

pre 8 meseci

He certainly won't come out stronger, even if Russia somehow manage to win this war.

1) The sanctions are forcing Russia to try replace Western investment, companies, technology, software with either domestic and non-Western equivalents. This alone sets Russia behind by many years.

2) Brain-drain. Nearly a million Russians, most of them young and highly educated, have escaped Russia to avoid being drafted for Putin's stupid war or out of protest against Putin's stupid war to begin with. With an aging population like Russia, this brain-drain is comthing Putin simply cannot afford in the long run.

3) Military losses and psychological damage. Tens of thousands of Russians have died, hundreds of thousands are wounded and whatever the outcome of the war, masses of Russian men will be coming home broken both physically and psychologically. The damage after Afghanistan was already noteworthy and helped in part bring about the USSR's collapse, imagine what the effect will be here with Russia losing far, far more men and materials than Afghanistan, Chechnya and Georgia combined.

4) Russia has pumped enormous amounts of money into logistics, fuel and military equipment into this war. Whether or not they win, they've lost thousands of combat vehicles and hundreds of aircraft in this war (far more than all of America's post-WW2 conflicts combined). Any idiot that thinks Russia can afford a drawn out conflict so that Ukraine bleeds out is delusional.

Diana

pre 8 meseci

The war is lost for Putin. The Russian generals are well respected by the FSB and will see to it that their country will not be destroyed by a mad dictator.

Diana

pre 8 meseci

There is a powerful partisan movement at work in Russia. Among its organizers are many of Putin’s former colleagues. The drone attacks on Russia are the work of Russian partisans.

Tom Sawyer

pre 8 meseci

The source: N1, Express and B92!? … The finest yellow journalism available.
B92, have you no shame?
You and your BBC axis masters are an embarrassment for what now passes as failed “main stream media”.
The human intelligence in the diverse multipolar world have recognized your lies long ago.
Articles of fiction, such as this narrative, simply reflect the depths of your failure.

Peter Sudyka

pre 8 meseci

He certainly won't come out stronger, even if Russia somehow manage to win this war.

1) The sanctions are forcing Russia to try replace Western investment, companies, technology, software with either domestic and non-Western equivalents. This alone sets Russia behind by many years.

2) Brain-drain. Nearly a million Russians, most of them young and highly educated, have escaped Russia to avoid being drafted for Putin's stupid war or out of protest against Putin's stupid war to begin with. With an aging population like Russia, this brain-drain is comthing Putin simply cannot afford in the long run.

3) Military losses and psychological damage. Tens of thousands of Russians have died, hundreds of thousands are wounded and whatever the outcome of the war, masses of Russian men will be coming home broken both physically and psychologically. The damage after Afghanistan was already noteworthy and helped in part bring about the USSR's collapse, imagine what the effect will be here with Russia losing far, far more men and materials than Afghanistan, Chechnya and Georgia combined.

4) Russia has pumped enormous amounts of money into logistics, fuel and military equipment into this war. Whether or not they win, they've lost thousands of combat vehicles and hundreds of aircraft in this war (far more than all of America's post-WW2 conflicts combined). Any idiot that thinks Russia can afford a drawn out conflict so that Ukraine bleeds out is delusional.