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Sanjeev's avatar

There will books written long after about what motivated Putin to attack Ukraine. Leonid Ivashov, an objective Soviet General warned about the disastrous consequences of attacking Ukraine. Ivashov's warning was based on ground realities that were quite obvious. How could Putin, supposedly a competent intelligence officer himself, could ignore such obvious clear warnings? Ivashov's letter is a scathing critique of Putin regime; it's model of state, foreign policy and economic policy - all of it becoming a failure.

https://www.eastviewpress.com/on-the-eve-of-war-appeal-of-the-all-russian-officers-assembly-to-the-president-and-citizens-of-the-russian-federation/

Sometimes the truth comes from unlikeliest of sources. Like from sociopath Yevegny Prigozhin. According to his candid admission (around time of his mutiny). Russia is in hands of oligarchy and Kremlin's task is to deliver wealth to these oligarchs.

But Russian oligarchy is cut off from global elites for two reasons. First is that US always excluded Russia from its global security architecture and economic integration after end of cold war. Second is that Russia's oligarchy became further excluded after it was cut off from world due to western sanctions, expropriations and boycott after Crimea's annexation.

So there was combination of two mixtures. First is ambition of Putin for revisionism & foolish militaristic project of eurasian integration. Second is Russian Oligarchy which went along with Putin's project for plunder of Ukraine by capturing it (or so they thought). The Russian people have no power to oppose the policies of ruling elites. And Russian elites are putting them into the meat grinder.

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Ronan Palmer's avatar

Fascinating, and Berdyaev does feel eerily contemporary. Thank you.

At the end of your essay, you write: "These are things which the contemporizes are not apt to judge well: history can prove that “apocalyptic messianism” has entirely lost its ideological hold on Russia, but, it is not impossible to believe that it is emerging right now under a different ideological form that we cannot fully grasp."

That is true not only of Berdyaev, but of the many other convulsions of thought and practice that are emerging today. Never before in my career have I felt the metaphor of "seeing through a glass darkly" more apt.

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