AE-NMidlands wrote: ↑Wed Sep 28, 2022 6:16 pm
and another take on it:
Russia is offended by the West refusing to take and pay for gas (and equally the W not seeming to have been spooked by the Russians pretending that the first pipeline has had to be shut because of a fault or maintenance problems)
So the sociopath ups the ante by blowing up his own (out-of-use) pipeline
on the day a competing pipe from Norway is being opened to show that if he wants to strangle the west he can do the same to theirs too.
Not too implausible I think.
A
Highly plausible, hadn't thought of the implied threat to the Baltic Pipe, but that does indeed make a lot of sense from the twisted perspective of Putin. I really struggle to get my head around what Putin is trying to achieve. I know that he's a scholar of the old Imperial Russian school, and advocates the rebuilding of the Tsarist era Russian Empire, and that he saw the fall of the Soviet Union as a disastrous failing by his then bosses, when he was still working in the KGB (although even a blind man would see that Mikhail Gorbachev had no good choices to make, at the end of the Soviet era).
Putin's lack of understanding of his own countries capabilities, together with the reaction of other countries, even those seen as possible allies, like China, is the thing I find most surprising. The war in Ukraine has exposed the rotten underbelly of the Russian armed forces, from levels of incompetence that I don't think anyone from the West anticipated, to widespread corruption, that was, perhaps, more predictable.
For the past couple of years I've been following a few Russian YouTube channels, and what has hit me is how disconnected from reality many within Russia are. It seems that the older population believe all that Putin says, and only really have access to state media, like TV. Younger Russians are far more tech savvy, able to use VPNs and understand better how the media can be manipulated as a propaganda tool.
I know that YouTube is deeply flawed and biased, and that the underlying motive for the majority of "content creators" is to make money, and that inevitably skews the way they present things, but if anyone has a few hours to spare, and the inclination to see what younger Russians are thinking, then I can recommend the following channels (in no particular order):
https://www.youtube.com/c/NikiProshin Probably the least biased Russian channel. Niki seems to put a lot of effort into trying to give a balanced view, whilst still being pretty obviously anti-war.
https://www.youtube.com/c/MultiNfz Roman's views are not for the faint hearted. Avidly anti-Putin, moved to Georgia a few months ago, lots of bad language (which I've found seems to be a generic Russian trait), but his views are valid, as a young Russian that is very much against what his government is doing.
https://www.youtube.com/c/DepressedRussian and
https://www.youtube.com/c/NatashasAdventures are both channels that give a view of life in the far east of Russia, not that well presented (IMHO), but do show how, even in the far reaches the actions of the Russian government are seriously impacting the lives of Russians. Natasha has now left Russia and is living in Georgia, like many others on YouTube I very strongly suspect this is mainly so she can continue to earn revenue from YouTube without too much hassle from the sanctions.
https://www.youtube.com/c/ZacktheRussian probably the most hard core anti-government young Russian on YouTube. Not the best content, but a useful insight into how protesters were treated, if you look back at videos from just before he left Russia (seems he had little choice, because of his anti-government protests).
There are several other Russian vloggers around, some better than others, but the above are channels that I've watched since before the war against Ukraine started, and I think they give a reasonably well balanced view of the way that younger Russians think. One stand out feature is that there is an overwhelming view that the people have no control over their government, and don't seem to think that they necessarily should have. It's as if government is something that is always imposed on the people, with no real opportunity for democracy. I'm not even convinced that most Russians actually want democracy - it seems not to be something that is valued at all by most Russians.
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