Terrorists of Kiev Have No Future

Dmitry Orlov

This week, just as representatives of Kiev and Moscow gathered again in İstanbul for a technical meeting (not negotiation) to exchange memoranda and arrange for exchange of prisoners and the corpses of soldiers (lots of Ukrainian corpses; very few Russian ones) there occurred three types of terror strikes attributed to the Kiev regime.

1. FPV drones deployed from shipping containers somehow smuggled into Russia and operated remotely via Elon Musk’s Starlink system destroyed several Russian military aircraft in Murmansk, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Ryazan and Amur regions. In Murmansk, local men threw rocks and sticks to prevent FPV drones from taking off from the depths of a cargo container, then torched the entire rig. The drone operators managed to damage three Tu-95MS/MSM and two Tu-22M3 (nuclear-capable strategic bombers), all of them at least 40 years old (although modernized) and one An-12 military transport which was ready to be scrapped anyway. In Ivanovo, some ancient AWACS planes, all ready for the scrap heap and some without engines but decorated to look complete on satellite images were, ahem, damaged; so much for Western military intelligence. These events caused certain people to hyperventilate while discussing how they may have triggered a certain clause in Russia’s nuclear doctrine, which they did not do because of the missing characterization of “serious”.

2. An entirely unsuccessful attempt to use drone vessels and a submarine to blow up the supports of the Kerch Strait Bridge. None of these drones penetrated the boom-and-net setup that protects the bridge supports and did not even image the reinforced concrete “pucks” that protect the supports. Traffic on the bridge was paused for a bit, then resumed without incident.

3. Most importantly, there were terrorist attacks against trains in Kursk and Bryansk regions. A successful terrorist attack blew up a highway overpass over a railway corridor just as a passenger train was about to pass under it. Another similar attack on a railway bridge damaged a freight train. Over a hundred people required medical treatment. The engineer driving the passenger train died heroically, doing his best to slow down the train, thus saving many lives. The locomotive and three of the cars jumped the track while colliding with pieces of the highway overpass. Debris was cleared and railway traffic was restored within 24 hours. The injured passengers were treated at area hospitals while the more severe cases, including a four-month-old baby, were airlifted to Moscow for expert treatment.

“Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday that the Kiev regime, which blew up bridges in the Bryansk and Kursk regions, is degenerating into a terrorist organization. In this regard, the president questioned the advisability of high-level negotiations with the Kiev authorities. Experts note that after such statements, the political leadership of Ukraine can only be treated as terrorists, and their sponsors as accomplices of terrorists.” [Andrey Rezchikov, vz.ru]

Putin’s stance on terrorists has been well known and consistent for close to a quarter of a century: “Terrorists, murderers, and monsters … will face one unenviable fate — retribution and oblivion. They have no future.

After the Ukrainian-organized Crocus City Hall terror strike, Putin said this:

“All the perpetrators, organizers and beneficiaries of this crime will inevitably receive just punishment — whoever they are, whoever directed them. I repeat, we will identify and punish everyone who stands behind the terrorists, who prepared this atrocity, this blow to Russia, to our people. We know what the threat of terrorism is. We count on cooperation with all states that sincerely share our pain and are ready to actually, really join forces in the fight against the common enemy — international terrorism with all its manifestations.”

[…]

The exact next steps will be decided in secret at a Security Council meeting in Moscow. We will probably not know what exactly they decide to do. But we should expect the life expectancy of America’s Kiev proxies to drop appreciably.

[…]

Via https://boosty.to/cluborlov/posts/8bcf0a45-acd7-4d14-92fe-99c1fd33b16b

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on June 05, 2025 06:29
No comments have been added yet.


The Most Revolutionary Act

Stuart Jeanne Bramhall
Uncensored updates on world affairs, economics, the environment and medicine.
Follow Stuart Jeanne Bramhall's blog with rss.