Darya Dugina's assassination — an old-fashioned way for Russia to respond
© 2022 Peter Free
23 August 2022
Maybe not that, but this?
Regarding anticipated responses to Ukraine's alleged instigation of Darya Dugina's assassination, we must keep in mind that Russian leadership has been consistently restrained, during its special military operation.
For instance, Uraine's Nazi leadership — including its most annoying (and continually bloviating, cocaine-swilling) puppet, Zelensky — are still walking around, chest-beating about this and that. Thereby building and maintaining an anti-Russia tide of sanctions, money and weapons from our demonstrably shit-for-brains, Nazi-adulating, decadently effete and rotten West.
Eliminating those Ukrainian Hitlerian fascists would have been one of my early moves as a Russian dictator-in-chief.
Putin, historically however, takes an arguably more chickenshit view of tactical and strategic maneuvering than mine.
Given this increasingly irritating trait of his, what might Russia do now, in response to Darya's assassination?
My recommendation . . .
. . . one that retains Putin's geopolitical caution — but very slightly escalates it to a visibly confined form of vengeance — would be to track the (purportedly) identified murdering culprit down.
Along with her assistants and her bosses.
And literally string them all up.
Upside down, gutted and dead as can be.
On poles (of one kind or another) lining one of hideout Estonia's (or wherever else's) main roads.
Thus, serving as a message to the planet that mayhem-messing with the Bear is a noticeably pain-bearing idea.
The moral? — Old style Soviet and Israeli Mossad vengeance techniques still have their place
Use them.
Or be perceived as weak.
Perceived weakness is a geopolitically lamentable state that only invites more proxy war from the West's unending stream of parasitic cowards.
In short, a great leader takes risks.
A feeble one remains mired in the known and easily calculable.
Are ya listening Vlad?