what the fuck is happening in Russia?

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All seems increasingly desperate

Putin televised speech announced for earlier this evening, delayed, rescheduled (has this happened before?) to tomorrow morning

Talk of mobilisation or widescale conscription (with expatriation 'illegal' from tomorrow)...how is this not a losing endgame for them?

nashwan, Tuesday, 20 September 2022 20:45 (one year ago) link

expatriation fleeing, that should be

nashwan, Tuesday, 20 September 2022 21:00 (one year ago) link

good read

Long post I'm afraid but I wanted to explore the question of potential Russian nuclear use carefully rather than simply asert or dismiss it as a possibility. https://t.co/TVO6mKmxhQ

— Lawrence Freedman (@LawDavF) September 20, 2022

nashwan, Tuesday, 20 September 2022 22:30 (one year ago) link

Live from a Russian with his stove on 24/7 spending only 1.44 EUR / month pic.twitter.com/fWiadi7j6u

— yuu ★ (@fwyuuka) September 20, 2022

vlads...

calzino, Wednesday, 21 September 2022 14:15 (one year ago) link

well fuck.

scanner darkly, Wednesday, 21 September 2022 16:25 (one year ago) link

Flights out of Russia sold out fast after Vladimir Putin's announcement... flights to popular destinations such as Istanbul in Turkey and Yerevan in Armenia were snapped up, and prices for remaining seats skyrocketed.

Evgeny, a 31-year-old Russian living in the UK, told the BBC: "Absolutely everyone is afraid, everyone is sending around different information on mobilisation. It is very difficult to figure out what is true and what isn't. Nobody trusts the government."

this doesn't bode well

Andy the Grasshopper, Wednesday, 21 September 2022 19:08 (one year ago) link

if they can afford it they can stay visa-free in Turkey for up to 90 days, can't blame them tbh.

calzino, Wednesday, 21 September 2022 19:17 (one year ago) link

And another one falls down a flight of stairs.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/russian-aviation-scientist-anatoly-gerashchenko-falls-to-his-death-in-latest-plunge-mystery

Elvis Telecom, Thursday, 22 September 2022 01:47 (one year ago) link

It's a plunge mystery...

m0stly clean (Slowsquatch), Thursday, 22 September 2022 02:07 (one year ago) link

if they can afford it they can stay visa-free in Turkey for up to 90 days, can't blame them tbh.

365 days in Georgia - not just Russians, Georgia offers 365 days for anyone!

Large number going there since February has led to rent increases and other pressures though

anvil, Thursday, 22 September 2022 02:30 (one year ago) link

I liked this summation that actually brings in a lot of the history into it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtwyT4NIyZo

Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Thursday, 22 September 2022 02:44 (one year ago) link

Didn't know whether to put this here or in the Ukraine thread. Regardless, a longish but worthwhile read about exactly how fucked Russia is, and how this "mobilization" basically amounts to Putin pounding the table and nothing more, because logistics and materials and money are not on his side:

A brief Twitter thread: what I think of #Russia's capability to even arm its reservists properly.

TL;DR: Russia would struggle to even reactivate meaningful quantities of Soviet surplus heavy weapons fast enough, much less manufacture enough modern kit to matter. 1/

— Janne M. Korhonen 🇫🇮🇪🇺🇺🇳🐟🇺🇦🇵🇸 (@jmkorhonen) September 22, 2022

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 22 September 2022 13:11 (one year ago) link

what if the russians read this finnish blockchain researcher's analysis (he has "been studying industrial mobilizations since 2020," which is around 10,000 waking hours) and decide not to as he's sure they will launch human wave attacks against enemy artillery? did he ever think about that?

XxxxxxxXxxxxxxxxXxxxx (dylannn), Thursday, 22 September 2022 14:18 (one year ago) link

Pretty powerful video. In Dagestan locals clearly don't want to go to war with Ukraine. The recruiting officer argues they have to fight for the future. – We don't even have a present, what future are you talking about," replies a Dagestani man. pic.twitter.com/1O4ob2GhSN

— Tadeusz Giczan (@TadeuszGiczan) September 22, 2022

calzino, Thursday, 22 September 2022 16:31 (one year ago) link

So I'm headed for the nearest foreign border...

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/sep/22/my-heart-sank-with-news-of-draft-russians-flee-in-droves

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 22 September 2022 16:52 (one year ago) link

apparently draft notices were delivered by mail, not electronically, which implies this has been in the works for some time.
news of men being interviewed at border crossings and airports about their military status, purpose of their trip and whether they have a one way ticket.

also news of men getting drafted even though they don’t fall within the criteria outlined by government

scanner darkly, Thursday, 22 September 2022 17:22 (one year ago) link

Apparently they also served draft notices to jailed protestors

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 22 September 2022 17:33 (one year ago) link

the morale of these draftees is going to about where is was with guys drafted into the Vietnam War in 1972

SincereLee 'Scratch' Perry (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 September 2022 17:37 (one year ago) link

scenes from the draft.. some of these guys look pretty old

Еще видео с моего родного города Нерюнгри Республика Саха (Якутия) pic.twitter.com/haaWQX17uf

— Polina (@poli_golobokova) September 22, 2022

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 22 September 2022 17:56 (one year ago) link

President Keyes otm

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 22 September 2022 18:01 (one year ago) link

I'm sure they will be drafting heaviest in places a long long way from Moscow or St Petersburg.

Narada Michael Fagan (Tom D.), Thursday, 22 September 2022 18:28 (one year ago) link

small difference: vietnam and the usa don’t share a border.

scanner darkly, Thursday, 22 September 2022 19:58 (one year ago) link

if Ukraine presented any real danger to the Russian Federation that would be a significant difference, but the only 'threat' here is a set of mostly abstract geopolitical considerations, so, not so very different from the USA and Vietnam.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 22 September 2022 22:58 (one year ago) link

The point about morale is germane.. nobody wants to be the last killed in a pointless, losing war. I watched a british documentary about the U.S.'s final days in Vietnam, and the grunts were basically hiding in trenches and waiting for some kind of peace deal. They were no longer actively conducting the search & destroy missions ordered by the brass

Unfortunately for these Russians, these HIMAR systems can land right in your trench like a fly landing on a cucumber slice.. I think 200 were killed last week when a rocket landed on a bus station where they were hiding out.

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 22 September 2022 23:36 (one year ago) link

(correction: it was last month, not last week)

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 22 September 2022 23:38 (one year ago) link

i haven't kept up, has iron maiden written a fucking amazing song about this war yet

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 23 September 2022 00:14 (one year ago) link

yeah, too bad Lemmy's not with us anymore, I'm sure he could write a sick jam about the "Azov Brigade!!" defending a steelworks to the bitter end

Andy the Grasshopper, Friday, 23 September 2022 00:48 (one year ago) link

if Ukraine presented any real danger to the Russian Federation that would be a significant difference, but the only 'threat' here is a set of mostly abstract geopolitical considerations, so, not so very different from the USA and Vietnam.

well, it’s more than just about geography but yes, having a shared border makes for a very different dynamic - including how some russians feel about the war.

scanner darkly, Friday, 23 September 2022 02:49 (one year ago) link

including how some russians feel about the war.

how do you think these particular Russians you have in mind are feeling? and are they a significanty body among the conscripts or simply "some Russians" not asked to go fight?

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Friday, 23 September 2022 03:23 (one year ago) link

this may be a weak analogy, but imagine some troops from seattle sent to attack vancouver BC.. they might follow orders, but their hearts ain't in it. Too much in common

Andy the Grasshopper, Friday, 23 September 2022 03:39 (one year ago) link

It's so depressing that no matter one's degree of knowledge, life experience, personal politics or opinions, they can just look at these events with an almost boundless level of cynicism and be right <i>so often</i> that it's almost convincing to <i>always</i> look at Russia/Russian goings-on this way.

I know there's some die hard communists on here I've had some run-ins with, and other people who are probably more level-headed than I am, and a few of either type who are probably more forgiving of the Soviet Union or whose horror or distaste is appropriately offset by the none-too-innocent perfidy of American and Western empire, and I get that, but it is so fucking depressing to see all this playing out and have one's worst fears come true, the most cynical expectations fulfilled.

There's a historian named David Glantz, for instance, who's done great work in the early 2000s and almost single-handedly converted the reputation of the Red Army in WW2 from a bunch of scrubs being sent into the meat-grinder with NKVD machine-guns at their back to a disciplined, organized, mechanized force used intelligently to help prosecute an apocalyptic conflict to a successful end, and you know, he's right. The Red Army DID start off shitty, but they got better, and it's important for the historical record to reflect that. It's one of the many ways that the USSR has been mis-remembered and its reputation unfairly maligned, whether you're ultimately a fan of what it stood for or not. The anti-communists and the rehabilitated Nazi generals moaning about "Soviet hordes" had their way for too long, and the record had to be corrected.

But now? Now, all the worst stereotypes of the USSR and Russia, fair or unfair, are coming true. (Except the Orientalist bullshit about "Asiatic hordes," sometimes afloat in twitter when some wag posts a picture of a Buryat soldier or Chechen Kadyrovite and labels them "savage," as though more "pure" Russian soldiers aren't capable of the kinds of atrocities we've already seen enough of this year). Whatever your 'position' is, you just can't be cynical ENOUGH when it comes to this conflict.

Take the Azov bullshit just as the ultimate example: Russians were using their attack on Mariupol as a primary example of "denazification," they captured the Azovites as a telling lesson in "doing right by those poor misled Ukrainians, who are really bamboozled Russians after all;" they were going to put them on trial, in fucking CAGES, and have their own 21'st century Nuremberg tribunals. Hell, they even (probably) killed a bunch of them in Olenivka, and blamed it on the Ukrainians for reasons known only to the Russian army but probably having more to do with torture than the Azovites revealing Nazi secrets. Makes sense so far, right?

But what do they do in the end? They trade dozens of them, including commanders and twitter-famous members of the regiment, in exchange for some shitty no-name Russian officers and a fucking Ukrainian: Medvedchuk, the would-be Russian stooge. It's such a betrayal of everything that the most nuanced, anti-Nazi Western observers have come to expect, let alone the rabid Russian nationalists for whom Azov was akin to Satan's personal goon squad, such a fucking brazen handbrake turn from "denazification" or even the soft-pedaling of said policy as the Russian army got bogged down earlier this year, but still made noises about the upcoming Azov trials in Mariupol. And virtually on the same day that they announce the not-so-partial mobilization inside Russia? Forget saying this is a "spit in the face" of this or that faction, these or those observers from afar. At this point, is there anyone who's not covered in a Biblical flood's worth of saliva, save those happy full-time cynics laughing from inside their submarines? They don't need to see or observe anything when they're always proven right.

This is just one series of circumstances within a short time during this awful war, but it's a useful kind of prism through which to see these bizarre, seemingly contradictory events. Regardless of how evil the outcomes are, they are the result of an amoral, plodding policy that is beyond mere ethics, factional passions, or "realism." Excuses, justifications, rationalizations are chosen and discarded at will with little to no regard for any humans or their reactions. War has often proven to be fertile ground for the absurd, but rarely to this extent.

borrowed Ostalgia for the unremembered 80s (MoominTrollin), Friday, 23 September 2022 03:51 (one year ago) link

Moomin, I always appreciate your comments, since this whole shit-show began

Andy the Grasshopper, Friday, 23 September 2022 04:09 (one year ago) link

"I know there's some die hard communists on here I've had some run-ins with, and other people who are probably more level-headed than I am, and a few of either type who are probably more forgiving of the Soviet Union or whose horror or distaste is appropriately offset by the none-too-innocent perfidy of American and Western empire, and I get that"

Proceeds not to get it.

It's a weird rant. And whatever stereotypes you may hold in your head about Russia (or the USSR though I don't think that matters) it really doesn't matter.

Unfortunately the partial mobilization means the conflict will be prolonged, and the nuclear threat means that some negotiation with Russia will need to take place to de-escalate the conflict.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 23 September 2022 09:47 (one year ago) link

Any consensus on how the mobilization is going to work? I can see how it can potentially solve some of Russia's rotation issues, but beyond that its unclear what kind of plan there is (yet?).

I can't tell if the nuclear threat is different to the previous nuclear threat, what size/type device would be deployed or what location, where it would accrue more advantage than a non-nuclear strike

anvil, Friday, 23 September 2022 11:04 (one year ago) link

I don't want to fuck about and find out.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 23 September 2022 11:07 (one year ago) link

Proceeds not to get it.

It's a weird rant. And whatever stereotypes you may hold in your head about Russia (or the USSR though I don't think that matters) it really doesn't matter.

Weird post imo. Nothing anyone posts here "matters", strange criticism to make.

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 23 September 2022 13:03 (one year ago) link

I mean to say that going on about USSR as something to be defended by "ilx communists" or Russian stereotypes isn't a way to think about this conflict.

If you want to, that is.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 23 September 2022 13:20 (one year ago) link

Suggesting that current Russian policy mirrors the worst stereotypes that have been thrust at Russia through the ages does not have to be some sort of skeleton key to understanding the conflict, it can just be a person of Russian origin expressing dismay at what their country has turned into. In, you know, the Russia thread.

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 23 September 2022 13:27 (one year ago) link

Given what else is in that post I wouldn't say it's "just" exasperation at domestic politics, which is a feeling I know about.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 23 September 2022 14:24 (one year ago) link

Well no, it's also exasperation at foreign policy.

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 23 September 2022 14:31 (one year ago) link

Proceeds not to get it.
Proceeds not to get what? Russia's legitimate security concerns, I assume?

death generator (lukas), Friday, 23 September 2022 14:50 (one year ago) link

"I get that" it's just something people say in the middle of an argument with someone. Oh, I get what you are saying. Just a thing to clear their throats before carrying on like they would do.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 23 September 2022 14:55 (one year ago) link

how do you think these particular Russians you have in mind are feeling? and are they a significanty body among the conscripts or simply "some Russians" not asked to go fight?

― more difficult than I look (Aimless)

i think they love their children too

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 23 September 2022 21:16 (one year ago) link

I know there's some die hard communists on here I've had some run-ins with, and other people who are probably more level-headed than I am, and a few of either type who are probably more forgiving of the Soviet Union or whose horror or distaste is appropriately offset by the none-too-innocent perfidy of American and Western empire, and I get that, but it is so fucking depressing to see all this playing out and have one's worst fears come true, the most cynical expectations fulfilled.

― borrowed Ostalgia for the unremembered 80s (MoominTrollin)

i don't really understand most of your post, but by "communists" you're thinking, like, soviet apologists, right? what folks on the left would call "tankies"? the communists i know are _not_ favorably disposed towards russia or particularly forgiving of the soviet union's atrocities.

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 23 September 2022 21:22 (one year ago) link

I'm dense, so thank you for stating explicitly what I now assume xyz's point was.

death generator (lukas), Friday, 23 September 2022 21:24 (one year ago) link

xxps i don't particularly feel like explaining multiple nuances in russian/ukrainian relationship (partially because moomintrollin knows a lot more historic context and would do a much better job at explaining it) but no, it's only similar to vietnam drafting when you trivialise it to something simplistic - and russian/ukrainian relationship is anything but.

to be clear: i would love to see this idiotic mobilisation to serve as a trigger for civil unrest, i'm just perhaps cynical enough to not expect that it will actually work that way or expect that it will result in more russians supporting ukraine. it won't.

scanner darkly, Friday, 23 September 2022 21:52 (one year ago) link

i've learned a lot over the past few years about revolutionary politics in post-democratic states

people who speak russian tell me that "what is to be done?" in the original russian is a call to revolution

it's hard for me to see it as anything but a shrug

of course, the people united will never be defeated

of course, despots throughout history have known this

putin and the oligarchs have spent the past decades isolating and marginalizing any voices of dissent

of course few people will actually be happy with nicho - with putin's disastrous policies

it doesn't seem remotely plausible that revolution will make things better

it hasn't worked that way in any of the other revolutions and attempted revolutions we've seen in our lifetimes

it is fairly clear at this point what kind of person one has to be to succeed in russian politics

equally clear (even, one must imagine, to putin, even if he will never admit it publicly) is what the russian state is and is not capable of doing

putin wants conscripts to fight in the ukraine? that is fine. actually going to the front, to die for his stupid little war, that is out of the question... does that mean then that one must fight against putin?

if the russian people value their individual survival more than the abstract idea of "liberation" i can hardly blame them

whether that be the "liberation" of the ukraine or their own "liberation" from putin

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 23 September 2022 23:03 (one year ago) link

What hurts is that people appear to be pretty mutable, their behavior and lifestyle and even beliefs can change quite quickly due to any number of inputs. This can be positive but also quite frightening depending on the example used (1930s Germany!)

So, going back to the "stereotypes" talk, there is no such thing as some essential "Russian" mentality. Or a "Chinese" mentality. Or an "American" mentality. But it entirely possible for a mentality to be required to succeed in a given social or political context, giving rise to cadres who happen to possess or cultivate or affect such a mentality. When in Rome, do as the Romans do. This is where we are in contemporary Russia - an inexact but analogous mirror image of the late Soviet period, suffused with cynicism and incompetence, sure, but also paradoxically competitive careerism (you gotta hustle to be a regional industry manager or a member of the Politburo, after all).

Some of those old stereotypes and attitudes - "they pretend to pay us, and we pretend we're working" - sound like they're equally applicable today. I recently saw a theory re: the earlier Russian offensive in the Donbas, compared to the recent and somewhat more successful Ukrainian drive in Kharkiv Oblast, to the effect of: "the people in charge were making small advances over a wide area in order to be able to report constant weekly territorial gains." And so we return to that old saw about the Soviet factory, asked to meet a quota of two tons of nails, producing one two-ton nail. Technically, the plan was fulfilled.

Regarding the "run-ins with communists" paragraph, that was just my attempt to answer a question that no one had yet asked in response, something like "well sure, but what about negative American stereotypes that America then goes and confirms, over and over?" I'm not looking to accuse any communists, real or imagined on my part, of being "soft" on the Soviet Union or Russia currently and as I've tried to explain above with my reference to the history of David Glantz, I don't believe that the USSR was a 100% evil monolith that carelessly ground its citizens into the dust. The point I was working on is that in my eyes, while the search for nuance in what the Russian leadership is doing and how it is steering the war is commendable, it also appears to be increasingly futile, and produces less accurate results than simple crude cynicism. Especially cynicism fueled by decades of stereotypes that this leadership appears to be bent on resurrecting, one after the other. Which is depressing.

borrowed Ostalgia for the unremembered 80s (MoominTrollin), Saturday, 24 September 2022 00:38 (one year ago) link

"Some of those old stereotypes and attitudes - "they pretend to pay us, and we pretend we're working""

Sounds like a typical ilxor tbh.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 24 September 2022 09:03 (one year ago) link

Another revealing video. Scene inside a mustering station in Russia where an officer yells at angry, resentful men who have been mobilized.
“That’s it- playtime’s over. You’re soldiers now!”
pic.twitter.com/oTfomvgsUf

— Patrick Reevell (@Reevellp) September 23, 2022

That podium has seen some shit.

borrowed Ostalgia for the unremembered 80s (MoominTrollin), Sunday, 25 September 2022 15:02 (one year ago) link


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