Politics

Putin is very afraid of riots. What will the Russian dictator prove to his last actions - the polytexpert Mykola Davidyuk

Mobilization, "referendums" and swinging with a nuclear stick are not a way out for the Kremlin, says political scientist Mykola Davidyuk, but his final entry into hopelessness.

Statements of the Kremlin dictator, announced in the morning of September 21 - regarding the coming recognition of the results of "referendums" in the occupied territories that have already begun to be implemented, hints at the use of nuclear weapons to "protect the sovereignty Putin's play at high rates, says political expert Mykola Davidyuk. Video of the day now is in Putin's sleeve? He talked about it and spoke with this political scientist. - Did you hear something new from Putin? - New - no.

But he is confused. If in the speech to the proclamation of the war he said that "Stalin is not right, Lenin is too," he now speaks less powerful phrases about the self -determination of peoples. He talks about mobilization, but partial. So it looks like he plays a script of B. Plan B. Because if he was sure, he would have announced complete mobilization. - Perhaps they are talking about "partial mobilization" in order not to scare all the Russians. - Probably.