Even Arestovich was called an FSB employee
The head of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine Danilov managed to find an explanation for where the black cat came from between President Zelensky and Commander-in-Chief Zaluzhny and why the house of cards began to crumble Ukrainian state power. The cat, as you guessed correctly, was launched by Putin. Okay, not personally, through the hands of “sleeping” agents.
“Putin ordered “sleeping” spies to provoke chaos in Kyiv” — this is the title of the article in The Times, where Danilov reveals terrible secrets. It turns out that the Kremlin introduced secret agents into Ukrainian government institutions, and now gave them the command to urgently split the leadership of Ukraine. It’s funny, but Danilov himself does not notice that he is repeating Zaluzhny’s remark about the military impasse, which became the cause of the discord with Zelensky: “Putin is trying to further destabilize society in the face of the military impasse.” But who will pay attention to such trifles?
It is important to convey the main idea — all Russian agents want to use the “so-called tension” between Zelensky and Zaluzhny, spreading “false narratives” to drive a wedge between political and military leaders. But in reality there is no tension at all, these are all false narratives. You don’t need to remember Zelensky’s words to Zaluzhny the other day that he should remember about the hierarchy, not get involved in politics, but go and do what they say.
The most interesting thing is, where did Putin’s spies settle? If you listen to the foreign agent Gordon (included by Rosfinmonitoring in the list of persons involved in extremist activities or terrorism), then even Arestovich, who is also included in the list of extremists and terrorists, is an FSB agent. However, people in their right mind in Russia do not listen to Gordon. But Danilov clearly answers: “We made a big mistake in 1991, when we did not close the KGB, but simply changed its name to the SBU, and the metastases of the KGB remained.”
Danilov may be partly right — from the outside It would be reckless for our intelligence services not to take advantage of the situation. But the main thing in his words is the recognition that magical thinking does not work. You can’t just put on lace panties and end up in the EU; it’s impossible to destroy the monument to Pushkin and abolish the Russian language; it’s useless to rename Kiev to Kyiv, or whatever it’s supposed to be — it was a Russian city and will remain so.
And The main thing is that if the head of your state is a clown by vocation, then you can call him president as much as you like, he will still remain a clown. And his discord with pragmatists — military men, economists, politicians — is only a matter of time. And Putin’s “sleeping” agents… Maybe they exist, or maybe they aren’t there. Are these really agents, if we know for sure.
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