19 sep. 2023

The Cursed War of Aggression

Then we went to February 24, 2022. It had been maybe 10 hours since Vladimir Putin announced some kind of  “special military operation” against Ukraine, but the fighting was already taking place dangerously close to Kyiv. 
Russian forces were trying to take control of the Hostomel airport on the north-western outskirts of Ukraine’s capital. Columns of tanks and other heavy equipment were heading towards Kyiv from Belarus. It was only a 130 kilometers journey. 
“If the ILs would have been able to land at Hostomel, we might be today in a totally different situation than what he have." 
Estonian military intelligence chief colonel Margo Grosberg took pause before said that the answer seems just a tad too long. But he acknowledges that the Hostomel battle that day (24.2.2022) might well have been the most crucial battle in the whole course of the Ukrainian war so far.
Then, roughly 800 km away in Pskov, 18 IL-76 transport planes started their engines and headed towards the takeoff track. 
According to VSquare the planes were full of perhaps Russia’s most elite airborne troops from the 76th Guards Air Assault Division. The approximately 1,000 troops loaded onto the planes were highly trained, and many of them already experienced from the Chechen wars. 
Their objective was to fly to Kyiv and quickly finish their war of aggression, so-called “special military operation”.
The ILs were already halfway towards the Hostomel airport when, according to VSquare, Christo Grozev was the first to publicly draw attention to it: 
“The only plausible goal would be to capture and subordinate Kyiv and install a puppet government today. While the world is watching and doing almost nothing.”
But luckily this time Grozev got it a little bit wrong. 
Two different sources confirmed to Delfi Estonia that Estonia’s military intelligence, officially known in English as the Military Intelligence Centre of Estonian Defense Forces, had sent an advance warning to their Ukrainian colleagues before the troops had even stepped on the planes.
And Ukraine poured everything it had around Kyiv to keep the planes from landing. The Ukrainians showered the airfield with artillery fire to make the landing strip unusable. Apparently one of Russia’s KA-52 attack helicopters was shot down and crashed on the runway making it virtually impossible for the ILs to land. After circling in the Ukrainian sky for some time, they needed to return to the base. 
Read more from here.

During the war, Grosberg asked for a different type of present from Ukraine. He asked for a Russian unmanned aerial vehicle, drone that Ukraine had captured. The Ukrainians packed one of a specific type of UAVs that was in surprisingly good condition. Back home, the Estonian military intelligence was able to study the UAV and Grosberg says the local defense forces are now better aware of how to defend against it. Then they sent the model back to Ukraine.
Besides Russia’s totally failed initial planning, the second reason that the war has carried out for so long lies in the collective west and its slow political decision making process, according to Grosberg. 
“Now, 550-plus days into the war, we have agreed to supply Ukraine with weapons and equipment that president Vladimir Zelensky asked on day one. "
If it would have been granted right then and not delivering heavy equipment by a few pieces at a time only, the situation could be much different.
Grosberg makes clear that he doesn’t think much of the supposed “red lines” that might push Putin to opt for tactical nuclear weapons. 
Surely, he says, the new weapons won’t cross that red line, if indeed such a line exists. 
 "I don’t see the threat of tactical nuclear weapons as significantly high."
Anyway, I don't think that humanity has the right to use nuclear weapons anymore.


16 sep. 2023

Here comes the truth

On Tuesday, the head of Estonian military intelligence, Colonel Margo Grosberg, turned fifty. The head of military intelligence closed the door and gave a rare interview.

On the afternoon of February 24 of last year, around four o'clock, about twenty large IL-76 transport planes started taxiing at the Pskov military airfield.
"These were stuffed to the brim with Russian paratroopers, considered the highest elite of the army there. They are trained and experienced, fought in the Chechen wars and were legendarily brutal there, killing private individuals openly and for no reason.
Now about a thousand of them were to fly to Kiev and quickly complete what other Russian troops had already begun: a coup d'état in Ukraine, followed by the handover of the entire country to Russia."

                                                                              Margo Grosberg

Yesterday was his last day of work. He admits that he has also had surprises in the Ukrainian war.

7 sep. 2023

Fine!

 

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6 sep. 2023

The fired man says

Russian historian and political scientist, Doctor of Historical Sciences Valery Garbuzov was fired from his post as director of the Institute on the USA and Canada of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Why?
Just previously, he wrote a long article in which he described in detail the absurdity of state propaganda, condemned anti-Western rhetoric and indicated Russia’s real place in the world: 
According to Garbuzov thus, today there are only two informal empires on the planet - the USA and China. Russia is a former empire, the heir to the Soviet superpower, "experiencing an extremely painful syndrome of suddenly lost imperial greatness."
"The fact that Russia today exhibits a pronounced post-imperial syndrome is more a tragic pattern than a historical anomaly", 
Garbuzov wrote.
Then.
"Its peculiarity is that it did not appear immediately after the collapse of the USSR in 1991, but made itself felt much later, with Putin coming to power. More than 30 years later, the delayed syndrome, the possible occurrence of which was not previously given much importance, has acquired a threatening character..."
Some say that in a society that truly values education and scholarship, this sort of free thinking and introspection would not be viewed as a threat, but appreciated as a helpful warning to heed.