July 02, 2023:
Information Clearing House
-- The secret of a
perfect psyop is that no one really understands
it.
A perfect psyop accomplishes two tasks: it
renders the enemy dazed and confused while
achieving a set of very important goals.
It goes without saying that sooner rather
than later we should see the real goals emerging
out of the strategic play in Russia I described
as
The Longest Day.
The Longest Day may or may not have been a
larger than life psyop.
To clear the fog, let’s start with a roundup
of the usual “winner” suspects.
First one is undoubtedly Belarus. Due to the
priceless mediation of Old Man Luka, Minsk is
now gifted with the most experienced army in the
world: the Wagner musicians, masters of
conventional (Libya, Ukraine) and
non-conventional (Syria, Central African
Republic) war.
That is already inflicting the Fear of Hell
in NATO, which is suddenly facing in its eastern
flank a super pro army, very well equipped, and
de facto uncontrollable, and on top of it hosted
by a nation now equipped with nuclear weapons.
Simultaneously, Russia props up dissuasion on
its western front. Like clockwork that is
leading NATOstan to invest in ballooning
military budgets (with funds it doesn’t have).
That process happens to be a key plank of
Russian strategy since at least March 2018.
And as an extra bonus Russia creates a 24/7
threat to the whole of Kiev’s northern front.
Not bad for a “mutiny”.
The Dance
of the Oligarchs
Way more complex is Russia’s internal
dynamics. Putin’s current and subsequent
difficult decisions may entail loss of
popularity coupled with loss of internal
stability -depending on the manner
Kremlin-defined strategic victories are
presented to Russian public opinion.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
Whatever 24/7 NATOstan mainstream media spin
may come up with, the Kremlin’s official
explanation for June 24 boils down to a
Prighozin demonstration: he was just trying to
shake things up.
It’s way more complicated than that. There
were strategic gains, of course, and Prighozin
seems to have followed a very risky script that
in the end favors Moscow. But it’s still too
early to tell.
A key sub-plot is how the Dance of the
Oligarchs will proceed. Independent Russian
media was already expecting some – treasonous –
players, including state functionaries, to buy
their one-way ticket when the going got tough
(or to say they were “ill”, or refuse to answer
important calls). The Duma – fed by Bortnikov’s
FSB – is already working on a hefty list.
The Russian system – and Russian society as
well – see people like these as supremely toxic:
in fact much more dangerous than the
demshiza (a term that mixes “democracy” and
“schizophrenia”, applied to globalist
neoliberals).
On the military front, it gets even more
complicated. Putin has charged Defense Minister
Shoigu to compile the list of Generals to be
promoted after The Longest Day. To put it
mildly, for quite a few people, from many
different persuasions, Shoigu has become a toxic
element in Russian politics.
Wagner – rebranded, and under new management
– will continue to serve Russia’s interests via
Minsk, including in Africa.
Old Man Luka, wily as ever, has already
firmly stated there won’t be any provocations
against NATO via Wagner. Wagner recruiting
bureaus will not be opened in Belarus.
Belarussians may join Wagner directly. As it
stands, most of Wagner fighters are still in
Lugansk.
For all practical purposes, from now on the
Russian government won’t have anything to do,
militarily and financially, with Wagner.
Additionally, there are no heavy weapons to
be confiscated. Already on Monday, June 26,
Wagner had moved their heavy weapons to Belarus.
What remains – and had not been moved during The
Longest Day – was returned to the Ministry of
Defense (MoD).
The Dance
of the Generals
A clear winner in the whole process is
Russian public opinion: they made that
graphically clear in Rostov. Everyone was
supporting Putin, Russian soldiers, Wagner and
Prighozin – at the same time. The overall
objective was to improve the Russian army to win
the war. It’s as straightforward as that.
The purge inside the MoD will be tough. Under
the pretext of repression or “rebellion”,
operetta Generals” (as defined by Putin himself)
that did not train their soldiers properly, did
not organize the mobilization properly, or were
incompetent in battle, will definitely be axed.
The problem is that they’re all part of
Gerasimov’s circle. To put it diplomatically, he
needs to answer a lot of serious questions.
And that’s what brings us to the “General
Armageddon has been arrested” monster fake news
gleefully parroted by the whole of the NATOstan
info universe.
General Surovikin did receive Prighozin in
Rostov – but he was never an accomplice to the
“rebellion”. Vice-Minister of Defense Yevkurov
was also at the HQ in Rostov, and received
Prighozin alongside Surovikin. Yevkurov may have
played the role of strategically-placed
observer.
The Prighozin rebellion soap opera de facto
started back in February – and nothing was done
to stop it. Regardless whether one shares the
official narrative – or not.
What this implies is that the Russian state
saw it coming. Does that make The Longest Day
the Mother of All Maskirovskas?
Once again: it’s complicated. Unlike the
collective West, Russia does not practice or
enforce cancel culture. Wagner was protected via
martial law. Any insult against a “musician”
fighting neo-nazi Banderistan would be met by as
much as a 15-year jail term. Each Wagner fighter
is officially a Hero of Russia – something Putin
himself always stressed.
On the maskirovka front, there’s no question
the simmering tensions in Russian military
circles before The Longest Day were manipulated,
fog of war-style, to disorient the enemy. It
worked like a charm. On the fateful June 24
itself, Surovikin was running a war, and not
spending the day drinking brandy with Prighozin.
The NATOstan axis is really clutching at
straws. It took just a Surovikin-related rumor
to send them into rapture – proving once again
how deeply they fear General Armageddon.
A key vector is how Surovikin is regarded by
public opinion compared to the surviving
“operetta Generals”.
He built the now legendary three-layered
defense which is already burying the
“counter-offensive”. He introduced the wildly
successful Shahed-136 Iranian drones in the
battlefield. And he organized the meat grinder
devastation in Bakhmut/Artemyovsk – which has
already entered the military annals.
Way back in the Autumn of 2022, it was
General Armageddon who told Putin that Russian
forces were not ready for a large-scale
offensive.
So whatever the 5th columnists
fabricate, General Armadeggon is not going
anywhere – except to win a war. And Russia is
not “leaving” Africa. On the contrary: a
rebranded Wagner is there to stay, and remains
on speed dial in several latitudes.
The trend, short term, seems to point to a –
convoluted – draining of the Russian military
swamp. The Longest Day seems to have galvanized
Russians of all stripes into identifying who the
real enemy is – and how to defeat it, whatever
it takes.
“Nothing
happens by chance”
Historian Andrei Fursov, reviving Roosevelt,
observed that “in politics, nothing happens by
chance. If it happens, you bet it was foreseen.”
Well, maskirovska rides again.
Yet the main problem faced by Russia is not
the Hegemon and NATO: it’s domestic.
Based on conversations with Russian analysts,
and their impressions from very sharp people who
lived in Russia, Ukraine and in the West, it
would be possible to identify basically four
main groups trying to impose their idea of
Russia.
- The “Back to the USSR” gang. Includes,
of course, some former KGB. Have some kind
of support from the general population. A
lot of educated specialists (old school
pros, mostly pension age). This project
suggests a revolution – a 1917 on steroids.
But where is Lenin?
- The “Back to the Tsar” people. That
would imply Russia as the “Third Rome” and a
prominent role for the Orthodox Church.
Hefty funds behind it. A big question mark
is how much popular support, especially in
“deep” Russia, they really have. This group
has nothing to do with the Vatican – which
is sold to The Great Reset.
- The Plunderers – as in robbing Russia
blind in favor of the Hegemon. Congregates 5th
columnists, and all manner of “totalitarian
neoliberals” worshipping the “values” of the
collective West. The remaining ones will
soon get a knock on the door by the FSB.
Their money is already blocked.
- The Eurasianists. This is the most
feasible project – in close collaboration
with China, and aiming towards a multipolar
world. There’s no place for Russian
oligarchs here. Yet the degree of
collaboration with China is still highly
debatable. The real burning question: how to
really integrate, in practice, the Belt and
Road Initiative with the Greater Eurasia
Partnership?
This is just a sketch – open for discussion.
The first three projects may hardly work – for a
series of complex reasons. And the fourth still
has not gathered enough steam in Russia.
What is certain is that all of them are
fighting each other. May the current draining of
the military swamp also serve to clear the
political skies.
Pepe's
latest book is
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