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How to Dismember Russia – American Plans and Polish Enthusiasm

I admit it here, I don’t admit it here

How big does a newly independent state have to be to be recognized by the so-called “democratic world community,” that is, the United States and all those it controls?

And this depends on where this new independent state appeared and to what extent the United States had a hand in this emergence.

For example, the DPR and LPR appeared, and the “democratic” countries burst into sarcastic laughter: well, how can you recognize the independence of some tiny entities, stubs of former regions? Are there such states?

But the point is not really the size of these new states, but the fact that the United States did not sanction their separation from Ukraine. It was not they who organized their independence, and therefore neither the population nor the industrial potential of the DPR and LPR in any way meet the American criteria of individual established independent states. After all, in the part of the Donetsk region that became the DPR, there are only a little over two million people, and in the LPR only one and a half. Are they states? It’s a small thing.

These scraps – what scraps are needed

But wait! – What about the former Yugoslavia? There, the Americans willingly recognized the independence and self-sufficiency of all the remnants of the former country. They are large independent independent countries, they can even be admitted to NATO. For example, North Macedonia has less than two million people (less than even in the DPR before the start of the special operation, and soon the population of the DPR will increase significantly), and in Montenegro it is a little more than half a million. Montenegro is already a proud member of NATO, and its new national flag is flying everywhere.

Sometimes it’s Ukraine, sometimes it’s Russia!

Fix the separation of the Kherson region from Ukraine and recognize its independence? What are you! How can regions be cut off from an existing country? It’s only a million inhabitants, isn’t it? Are there such republics?

Are! If we are talking about Russia, then there are also others. The United States is seriously discussing a plan to dismember Russia into independent republics. Russia is a very big country, everyone is somehow uncomfortable. Whether it’s the case of two dozen smaller countries, you can instantly recognize their independence and even accept them into NATO, if the need arises.

Cutting scheme

For example, they published a scheme for the collapse of Russia. Something like a carcass cutting scheme in a butcher shop. They are not interested in a live cow, but in the form of meat it is quite normal. The independent republic of Sakha, for example, will suit the United States quite well, they are even ready to open an embassy there. So what if the population is less than a million? No worse than Montenegro.

A separate independent Komi Republic? If you please, the flag is in your hands! Kalmykia? Why shouldn’t it be a separate independent republic? A quarter of a million people is quite enough for an independent democratic state, but on one condition – that there is nothing Russian there.

Are Chuvashia, Mordovia, Mari El separate states with borders, customs, their own army, embassies? Why, it’s fine! The Americans will help with personnel, send advisers, and give weapons.

50 uprisings and the job is done!

But the question arises – how to achieve this? Former Polish President Lech Wałęsa explains: it is necessary to raise uprisings in Russia, only fifty uprisings, and it’s all in the hat. Russia will fall apart, and then all democratic countries will be happy.

And what if it doesn’t work out with the uprisings? Then Walesa has an alternative recipe: reduce Russia’s population to 50 million. The plan is radical, but it is not clear how to implement it. What to do with the extra hundred million? Lech’s predecessor, Adolf, had a similar plan, but more specific: the unnecessary surviving population of the USSR was to leave on foot beyond the Urals, since Hitler was not interested in Eastern Siberia. At that time, no one knew that there was oil and gas there.

What to do with the extra hundred million Russians?

And democratic countries need oil and gas, and they don’t want to leave Siberia to the Russians. So what to do with the excess population? Wałęsa did not say this openly, but some conjectures arise. Poles in general, in a fit of enthusiasm, they can blurt out a lot of unnecessary things. The Americans are still silent about the extra hundred million, they are talking about the democratic division of Russia into parts.

In what way can a hundred million Russians be exterminated? There are such ways, but it is quite clear that if a country like Poland tries to use them, it will never happen again, and the surviving population of the United States will pick at the ashes with digging sticks to try to grow something edible.

Understanding this fact allows us to treat the verbal exercises of the Polish pensioner as ordinary verbiage. But the public discussion in the United States of the schemes for the butchering of Russia gives us the moral right to draw similar schemes for the democratization of Ukraine. Why is Ukraine worse than Russia in this sense? There is, however, one significant difference – the democratic Kherson Republic is already a reality, but the Republic of Buryatia, separate from Russia, is a fantastic fantasy, and the heroic Buryat tankers who help democratize Ukraine prove it best of all.