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USSR 2.0

Logo of telegram channel pussyputin — USSR 2.0 U
Logo of telegram channel pussyputin — USSR 2.0
Channel address: @pussyputin
Categories: Politics
Language: English
Subscribers: 361
Description from channel

We’re real-streaming The Return of Dark Empire - stories and insights from the horse’s mouth.
Reach us out via @USSRfeedback

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The latest Messages 3

2022-04-07 17:44:49
Here are the latest developments on day 43 of the invasion:

Russia has now withdrawn its forces from around Kyiv

Russian forces have left Sumy and are being redeployed to eastern Ukraine

Thousands flee eastern Donbas region before expected Russian push

Russian troops attempting to encircle Ukrainian forces near Slovyansk

Ukrainian forces still resisting Russian attacks in southern city of Mariupol

USSR 2.0
2.5K views14:44
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2022-04-02 19:57:04
McKinsey framed the potential scenarios of invasion of Ukraine for how the war will potentially affect livelihoods outside the conflict zone

Link to the full report

USSR 2.0
3.2K views16:57
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2022-04-01 15:20:33 Kazakh official: We will not risk being placed in the same basket as Russia

https://www.euractiv.com/section/central-asia/interview/kazakh-official-we-will-not-risk-being-placed-in-the-same-basket-as-russia/

USSR 2.0
3.0K viewsedited  12:20
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2022-04-01 07:37:38 Repeating ’70s Strategy of Grand Chess-Master Brzezinski: Biden Appears to Have Induced Russian Invasion of Ukraine to Bankrupt Russia’s Economy and Advance Regime Change

Jimmy Carter’s National Security Council adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski famously bragged about having induced a Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 by supporting Islamic fundamentalists with the goal of “giving the Soviets their Vietnam.” The collateral damage of the war—the destruction of Afghanistan and the growth of al-Qaeda—was inconsequential to the “grand chess-master", however.

Brzezinski died in May 2017, but his spirit lives on in the Biden administration which appears to have followed his blueprint, substituting Afghanistan with Ukraine. Its strategy appears to have been to induce a Russian invasion of Ukraine to bog Russia down into a quagmire while crippling its economy through sanctions that hold the prospect of bringing Vladimir Putin down.

The U.S. media leaves the impression that Putin invaded Ukraine based on his diabolical whims, leaving out the entire back story. Future historians will recognize that the U.S. provoked the current war by:

Refusing to abide by Putin’s legitimate demand that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) not be expanded to Ukraine or anywhere further to Russia’s border—going against a promise made in 1990 by U.S. Secretary of State James A. Baker that NATO would not expand “one inch eastward.”

Supporting the Maidan Coup and Ukraine’s War on Eastern Ukraine.

Supporting Ukraine as it violated the Minsk peace ceasefire protocols.

The successful provocation of the Russian Bear allowed the US to legitimately impose sanctions. The purpose behind the sanctions was made explicit in a 2019 report issued by the Rand Corporation, entitled “Overextending and Unbalancing Russia,” which assessed how encouraging domestic protests, providing lethal aid to Ukraine, and undermining Russia’s image abroad might weaken and destabilize the country.

Regime change could be achieved when the Russian population blamed Putin for their hardships and mounted a rebellion against him.

But would this strategy work again?

We'll discuss different potential scenarios in future articles.

USSR 2.0
2.7K viewsedited  04:37
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2022-03-31 08:33:38
Russian invasion of Ukraine: Tracker

March 31, 2022

Estimated deaths: ~23,000
Non-fatal injuries: ~2,000
Buildings destroyed: ~1,800
Displaced: ~ 10,000,000
Property damage: $ 565 billion

Source: Reuters & BBC

USSR 2.0
2.7K views05:33
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2022-03-29 06:52:30
Just a reminder

80 years ago the city of Leningrad was under siege for 900 days. The Nazis severed all supply chains into the city and pummeled the infrastructure, ultimately leaving a million Russian civilians dead.

Meanwhile:





USSR 2.0
2.3K views03:52
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2022-03-27 10:18:32
Source: The Economist
2.3K views07:18
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2022-03-27 10:17:58 The Stans want nothing to do with Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine

Central Asian republics were once part of the Soviet Union
, some of them share a long border with Russia, and their population includes a large ethnic-Russian minority. Russian language also still dominates an info sphere of the region. Broadly speaking, they might be considered as allies of Russia; however, the aggressive expansionism of their former colonial master is testing that friendship to the limit.

Importantly, none of the countries has condemned the invasion but nor has any succumbed to pressure to follow Mr Putin’s lead and recognise the breakaway regions of Luhansk and Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. At a vote in the un General Assembly deploring the invasion, on March 2nd, three abstained and two simply did not show up.

Kazakhstan, the biggest and richest of the lot, has long cultivated warm relations with Russia. In January, when protests in several cities turned violent and threatened to destabilise the country, Kassym-Zhomart Tokayev, Kazakhstan’s president, invoked the treaty’s mutual-defence clause and asked for help from Mr Putin, who duly delivered. But the country also enjoys good relations with the West and has no desire to join Russia as an international pariah. He is the only Central Asian leader to have spoken to Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, since the invasion began. Authorities in Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest city, have allowed anti-war protests—though only once—and Kazakh police have fined drivers displaying the letter Z, a symbol of Mr Putin’s invasion. Yet two bloggers known for anti-Russian rhetoric have been jailed, too.

Whatever their leaders’ diplomatic manoeuvres, it will be hard for the Stans to avoid the economic fallout. The rouble’s collapse has dragged down their currencies. Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are energy-rich and may hope to cash in on buoyant oil and gas prices. But even that can be held hostage. Russia says a pipeline, which crosses its territory to the Black Sea and carries most Kazakh oil, may close for repairs for two months. The move is seen by many as a response to sanctions, with Kazakhstan as collateral damage. “There is this famous saying that if Russia sneezes, Kazakhstan gets a cold,” says a senior Kazakh official. “This will be not a sneeze but perhaps pneumonia, and we will get covid or something.”

Adapted for USSR 2.0 from The Economist
2.3K views07:17
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2022-03-26 18:47:19 Cryptocurrencies and stablecoins are not useful for sanction-dodgers

Though politicians and regulators in America and Europe at first feared that people and entities hit with sanctions would use cryptocurrencies to dodge the restrictions, little evidence of such activity has materialised. Instead, crypto institutions appear to be under the thumb of governments, too. And there has been a huge surge in crypto donations to help the government in Ukraine.

Three fundamental issues block Russian sanction-dodgers from using Decentralized Digital Assets

The lack of necessary infrastructure in Russia such as large exchanges prevent Russians' ability to convert significant amounts from fiat to crypto.

Since using the crypto as a means of payment is still limited, sanction-dodger should at some point leave a cryptosphere. However, a majority of large exchanges (Coinbase, Binance etc.) shows solidarity with regulators and blocks the ability of Russians to convert from crypto to fiat.

As blockchain transactions are public, once identified, it is easy to trace the history of funds. So moving money around in crypto is not as private as is widely thought.

USSR 2.0
2.3K views15:47
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2022-03-26 13:23:18
Anonymous leaked 28GB of data stolen from the Central Bank of Russia

Links to the documents:
Link 1
Link 2

Our team has started an analysis of the leaked documents and will share the results of investigation as it progresses.

The access might be blocked in your country, use the Tor Browser to overcome this issue

USSR 2.0
2.3K views10:23
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