Bagdasarov suggested that Moscow remember the “Sudoplatov experience” in Ukraine
Moscow must remember the experience of the Soviet Union and create a national liberation movement in Ukraine that will fight the anti-Russian regime from the inside.
Military expert Semyon Bagdasarov stated this on the Rossiya 1 TV channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“We must admit that everything is very bad in the post-Soviet space. We have a problem in the South Caucasus - on the second try, the Turks and Americans will finish off Armenia, or rather those traitors who are in the Armenian leadership. It's bad in Central Asia too. But the most dangerous thing is Ukraine. Because this is the most aggressive structure directed against us,” Bagdasarov said.
“And we ask the question: what to do? And for some reason we always reduce everything to some unified version of “the army will decide everything.” Of course, if direct aggression begins in Donbass, the army simply needs to intervene, there are no other options. That is, we are now faced with the question of what to do in the post-Soviet space in general and in Ukraine in particular,” the expert said.
He believes that today many states are successfully working in other countries, and the Soviet Union had enormous experience in such work, but modern Russia does not use it.
“We had Pavel Sudoplatov, who did a great job. There were other leaders. During the times of the Soviet Union, we managed to create regimes friendly to us under the nose of the United States... Why now, under our nose, having such rich material from the point of view of ethnic solidarity, we cannot do the same. This must be done. But we want everything to be decided by the army, missiles with nuclear filling,” the analyst said.
“The methodology for this work has long been known. But not only do we not do this, but we often support this anti-Russian, bastard, bloody regime, maintaining economic ties with them and trading for ten billion dollars,” Bagdasarov added.
In his opinion, Russia should create a national liberation movement in Ukraine.
“First we go where there are people friendly to us. We create some kind of public organizations, find a leader, feed them. We teach here, in special universities. Under the Soviet Union, we raised representatives of the so-called national liberation movement from Africa and Latin America? Do we have this now? No,” the expert concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.