Ukraine Blog 42 – Russia is heading for Disaster and fast!

Dear friends, family and colleagues,

It has been silent from my side for a while, right at the time not only Ukraine, but the whole ex-USSR exploded in flames. Most of you know this is because I visited Serbia for the wedding of my very dear friend (Brat Moj!). But we have got a lot to catch up. It’s going to be a long one, so buckle up! In short Russia has entered the irreversible road of complete disaster. I’m confident enough to tell you that the end is in sight and it will not just end with a complete Ukrainian victory, but with a complete, very violent, disintegration of the Russian Federation. In special number 2 I stated that there’s a less than one percent chance that U.S./NATO special forces will move in to recover Russian nuclear weapons.

Ukraine Special 02 - Defining Strategic Goals (spectraltransition.blogspot.com)

I now increased this possibility to sixty percent! So let’s break down how we got here. The big news that was of course on everybody’s mind, was the partial (it’s actually a full mobilization, but we will get there) mobilization announced by Putin and Sergei Shoigu, the minister of defense. I was always convinced that at some point the Russians had to enter the stage of mobilization and I was also convinced that a good mobilization would actually help the Russians to stabilize the front. Russia right now has tried to fight a major conventional war with a peacetime military that they deployed to create piecemeal solutions for major challenges. However, the extremely poor execution of the mobilization has ensured that in one week the narrative changed from “Russia escalating” to “Russia on the path of disintegration.” On February 24th,  Putin opened Pandora’s box. On September 21st he removed the lid, so that it can’t be closed again. Let me explain why.

When Shoigu gave the details, he said that mobilization would only apply to men with previous military experience. Based on the footage that has come out now, actually everyone the recruiters can get their hands on will be mobilized, making it in fact a full mobilization. The reasons for this are as follows

1.       The Soviet-Union operated in all aspects of society on a quotum system. Grain production, steel production and also military recruitment need to make quota. And the ones that are accountable for when these are not met, are political officers (at the time the Communist Party, now the Siloviki gang of Putin). This means that the political officers will do everything to recruit in the fastest, but also most inefficient way.

2.       A lot of people with proper military experience are closer to the regime. For now they are for a large part exempted from military service.

3.       This is yet another opportunity for the regime to get rid of ethnic minorities like North-Caucasian people, Baskhirs, Buyratians and Tuvans. However, now it’s not professional “Kontraktniki” soldiers who will be sent, but normal people. And the first reactions have been full of anger.

So why is this so dangerous for Putin. To understand a little bit, we have to look at Russian society. It consists roughly of three components. I took these components from in my view brilliant political philosopher Vlad Vexler. Please watch the video as well Putin's Partial Mobilisation (it's disastrous) - YouTube

1.       The radicals: they are highly politicized, are organized, mobilized and quite often far more radical than Putin. They constitute around 20 percent of the population. Examples are Igor Strelkov Girkin, known for his quite realistic view on the battlefield.

2.       The anti-establishment: This is a mix of liberal, moderate left wing and moderate conservative opposition. This is the group to which Boris Nemtsov belonged and Alexei Navalny belongs. This group is against the Siloviki system and against the war, but completely demobilized, because of prosecutions, arrests and assassinations. No form no real treat to the system. They form another 20 percent of the population.

3.       The passive silent majority: This is by far the largest group of around 60 percent of the population. Putin made a silent deal with them. The deal roughly is: “Putin, you can play superpower. It’s ok, we will even cheer for you, but don’t ask us to join, leave alone to die for it.”

And it’s this last group that’s going to be the problem for Putin: He broke the contract. Suddenly the Russians that have been cheering for years and months behind their TV’s when Syrians and Ukrainians were killed are asked to join and pay with their lives.

And this fits perfectly in the mind of Putin. In blog 16 (Ukraine Blog 16 - When You Sign A Deal With The Devil... There's A Price To Pay (spectraltransition.blogspot.com)) I wrote that Putin is the devil that will always will come back to ask for a payment after you sign a deal with him. It turned out brutal dictators like Bashar al Assad and Alexander Lukashenko came away with saying no. Even North-Korea issued an official statement, the likes of which I have never seen in its more than 70 years of existence, where they denied delivering ammunition to Russia

North Korea denies supplying weapons or ammunition to Russia | North Korea | The Guardian

For once I believe Kim Jong-Un, for the simple reason that he only has to lose from this kind of deal. He will become part of the problem and as such risk being sucked into the madness that will arise. By staying on the sidelines, Kim ensures that his regime can exist many years more. Kim is perhaps crazy, but not stupid.

So the only party that signed up with Putin where the devil can still collect the dues, are the passive silents. This is the group that now needs to make a choice:

1.       Agree with the cause, go to Ukraine and face a certain death. If you’re lucky, you will be captured by the Ukrainian army

2.       Rise up and fight the monster

To all the “poor Russian men” that are trying to get out to Georgia, Kazakhstan and Mongolia. I don’t have sympathy for them. They had months to get away or do something. They only decided to run when their time came. If they were like real men, they would fight like the Iranian women are currently doing on the streets of 130 cities in Iran.

The last capable Russian army units are currently cut off and fighting for survival in Kherson. So how does the mobilization goes after just six days? In one word: disastrous

1.       Discipline is a mess. Recruits that often never had any military experience, arrive on the training ground, completely drunk and have no respect for officers

a.      (1) Oleksandr Seredyuk 🇺🇦 on Twitter: "Alcohol keeps attacking russian positions. In this video, it already knocked out a couple of russian soldiers-to-be before their departure for the front lines. https://t.co/wkK79I3ujj" / Twitter

b.       (1) Jane on Twitter: "Second army in the world meets its heroes #mobilizacja #MobilizationInRussia #Mobilized #RussianArmy #Russian https://t.co/MJtISfW6hS" / Twitter

c.     (1) Daniel 🇺🇦 on Twitter: "Videos of Putin's forced mobilization in Russia. Watch 🧵till the end. #UkraineWar #UkraineRussiaWar #mobilization #mobilisation #Putin #UkraineWillWin #NAFOfellas (1) New recruits getting on the bus https://t.co/lBtdMAEiTp" / Twitter

2.       I already suspected in the past couple of weeks that Russia is finally getting low on equipment stocks. On the trains of vehicles, we only see old World War II era trucks. There’re still a few tanks and artillery pieces on them. However, there are usually only a couple of them per train and the models are ancient. The new mobilized troops (or Mobiks) are issued old AKM and AK-47 rifles that haven’t been cleaned for decades. There are no medical supplies, so the men have to ask their wives and girlfriends for tampons.

a.      (1) Irakli 🇬🇧🇪🇺🇬🇪🇺🇦⚽🌍🏘️ on Twitter: "#RussianArmy recruits doing their first weapons check after #mobilization. #Russia #Ukraine #UkraineRussiaWar #mobilization #MobilizationInRussia #Armenia #kpss2022 #UkrainianArmy https://t.co/nqcfezMJdk" / Twitter

b.     (1) LouiseMensch 🇺🇸🇺🇦 on Twitter: "25/ @MOD_Russia Officer ‘Rosa Klebb’ with a hearty, motivating welcome speech to new #mobilisation draftees. She tells the Future Sunflowers to bring their own tampons to staunch blood and steal tourniquets from “car first aid kits” as Russia has none. https://t.co/IzkQTGiiVT" / Twitter

c.     (1) IgorGirkin on Twitter: "Хайтек для мобилизованнных? https://t.co/RawLUskZ5a" / Twitter

3.       Shoigu initially said that there would be two weeks of military training for each mobilized unit (which is still ridiculously low for even recruits that have some past military experience). However, it’s now confirmed that most units are already being send to the battlefield after just one day of training or no training at all.

a.       (1) Mykola 🇺🇦🇺🇸🇵🇱🇨🇦🇬🇧🇱🇹🇱🇻🇪🇪🇫🇮 on Twitter: "The mobilized #Russians are sent to the front lines - to #Kherson - without a minimum of training "no firing, no theory, nothing." Departure is scheduled for September 29th. Bye Bye! #mobilisation #mobilization #MobilizationInRussia #Russia #Ukraine #War #мобилизация https://t.co/lv1p6p1hDt" / Twitter

History tells us that sending recruits in this condition to the battlefield doesn’t make them an asset, it makes them a LIABILITY! My favorite clip on what happens when you put untrained recruits in the firing line, comes from the movie “Der Untergang” and shows how the Volksstürm actually made the defense of Berlin in 1945 even harder for the remaining trained soldiers.

                               Volkssturm Scene - Downfall - YouTube

We already start to see similar behavior on the battlefields in Ukraine.

(1) D.Emery on Twitter: "RUS soldier - either drunk or suicidal - makes a slow walk towards UKR lines. Clip ends before you see what happens next, but I doubt he lived much after the end of the clip https://t.co/6BHdno952f" / Twitter

Make no mistake: I’m one hundred percent confident that the Mobiks will generate zero added value on the Ukrainian battle fields. The difference with the Volkstürm and the Mobiks is that at least the Volkstürm was motivated. I haven’t seen any motivation in the Mobik videos. They will have to face the Ukrainian army that despite being in a war managed to upgrade, train and motivate itself to probably the best army in the history of mankind. Ukraine has shown, it’s able to rotate forces in such an efficient way that has rarely been shown in military history. It’s now an oiled machine, battle hardened and battle tested. Tens of thousands of Mobiks will be killed in Ukraine and the ones that make it back will tell the stories that there’s nothing but hell for them waiting in Ukraine. The first real signs of insurrection have already begun in Dagestan and Kabardino-Balkaria. I suspect full blown revolts to start pretty soon in these republics.

(1)   (1) Business Ukraine mag on Twitter: "Unrest is spreading in Dagestan as people protest against mobilisation into the Russian army. This is a dangerous moment for the Putin regime https://t.co/SjDWlhwIVY" / Twitter

(2)   (1) Alik Puhati on Twitter: "Nalchik, a woman screams at an official: You send our children there, and then they burn in tanks. https://t.co/EuvWCdXRbp" / Twitter

These regions have always been problematic for the central government in Moscow and many are waiting to settle the score. Pretty soon Putin will have to decide whether he needs to send forces to republics and oblasts in open revolt or to defend territory in Ukraine.

It seems like all is coming together now. For the past month it became clear how weak Russia is on the international stage.

1.       Azerbaijan attacked and occupied territory that’s internationally recognized as Armenia. Armenia is supposed to be under the protection of the CSTO, the Russian-led equivalent of NATO. All indications are there that this was a probe attack to see how Russia will react in case of a real invasion. Besides one written weak statement there was none. Azerbaijan is now moving everything into place to start a full scale invasion of Armenia.

2.       Again, also in the CSTO a large border conflict erupted between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. The latter even advanced and occupied territory of the other. Again, Russia did and said nothing.

3.       Kazakhstan indicated it will close the border for Russians and will cease important economic cooperations with Russia.

4.       At the summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, almost all leaders let Putin wait for multiple minutes. Interestingly enough, it’s Putin that invented this type of behavior.

Russia is now externally a nobody. Now the inward collapse has started. First of all it happens way faster than I anticipated. In addition, I expected a more peaceful disintegration of Russia. Of course it remains to be seen how it goes, but I predict a very violent long lasting civil war in Russia, the likes of which we haven’t seen since the civil wars of the Balkans, Afghanistan and Somalia of the nineties. However, I expect this war to be very brutal, since it will happen after the removal of the only institution with perceived legitimacy in Russia, Vladimir Putin. It will be a war (or many civil wars) with no morality involved. And I mean any form of morality. To explain it more clearly: National Socialism was horrible, but it was a form of morality. This war won’t be about that. It will be about basic resources to survive.

So what to do after we enter this stage:

1.       Complete the transformation of the Ukrainian (and I think the army of a free Belarus as well) to the most modern NATO force. Though the threat of invasion will be gone for the most part, the eastern NATO border (yes, they will become NATO members) will be one of the most unstable borders in the world that need to be protected at all costs.

2.       In line with Special 2: remove all nuclear weapons from the territory that’s now the Russian Federation. I’m pretty confident that in the event we enter full chaos (my prediction, around December 2022), the Western (and quite possibly Chinese) forces will be able to evacuate all strategic Russian nuclear weapons. I’m afraid we will not be able to get out all tactical nuclear weapons. They are smaller warheads on more compact delivery vehicles.

Will all of Russia be cursed? No, I think over the next three years, many new states will emerge on the territory of what’s now the Russian Federation. Some of them have a bright future. They have historical links with neighboring countries, like Karelia with Finland and quite often possess rich natural resources. Some of the territories will develop into quite rich and peaceful nations. Others will engage in brutal civil wars for many years (my bet will be on the northern Caucasus).

But first we have to maneuver Putin to the end game. Ukraine is again advancing fast and on the verge of defeating major Russian formations (more on that in the next blog). Putin is upping the game with sabotaging the North Stream pipelines, forced referenda and nuclear saber-rattling. Plenty of drama, but we’re in the end game now. And thanks to Putin’s stupidity it’s getting faster than I thought. Well, for once, thank you for that, Vlad!

Слава Україні!

Niels

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