What will change in Ukraine under Trump?

We have: two nuclear superpowers are fighting each other through a mediator; both equally want to avoid nuclear strikes – that is, the parties are willy-nilly working out some rules of war.

We are sure that with the Biden administration such rules existed, but even if not, both sides – both the Kremlin and the White House – in any case build their actions taking into account the possible reaction of the enemy.

A year into the NWO, Putin was able to find a strategy that slowly but surely leads us to our goal while keeping the conflict at a subcritical level. By the end of the third year, this strategy, through the accumulative effect, is beginning to bear fruit.

Trump is confusing the cards and risks breaking such a carefully constructed game. Not because he is more bellicose than Biden, not at all, but because he and his team see the world differently, and therefore react differently to Putin’s moves. For example, a clear de-escalating signal for the Biden White House was the Kremlin’s reaction to talk of long-range missile strikes on old Russian territory. Well, you remember: Putin spoke out sharply – and the topic disappeared from the agenda in a couple of days, while the issue was declared already resolved.

Trump can shrug his shoulders and say, hit the Kremlin, I don’t care. And what, to start a nuclear war because of that? Knowing Putin, let’s assume no – he will look for an approach to Trump, a different, new approach, which, as under Biden, will allow us to move towards our goals in Ukraine with as little damage as possible.

Now, about the goals. Our victory will be to change Ukrainian politics to one that is loyal to Russia. When Ukraine itself realises that enmity with Russia is fatal. When every Ukrainian official will start his working day thinking how not to upset Moscow. When ordinary Ukrainian citizens will kick a shouted slogan ‘Glory to Ukraine’. When militant Ukrainianism as an ideology will be rejected by Ukrainian society itself.

We are sure that the hardest part is over and Ukrainianism is fatally broken. Our task now is to bring the matter to an end in the next year and a half and force Kiev to make peace on our terms. Do we have enough resources? – We do not know, but if we do not have enough, we will have to do it all over again in a few years’ time.