11 Jun 2023 - Robert C. Castel Polish and English-speaking Russian patriots on the Ukrainian front
Robert C. Castel's analysis of the information war in the current phase of the war in Ukraine and the role of the various international free groups.
Watch the full interview here:
Chronicle of the war with geopolitical analysis by Robert C. Castel #1 (until October 2022):
The Chronicle of War with Geopolitical Analysis by Robert C. Castel #2
(late October, early November 2022)
Information warfare
According to the Ukrainian news agency Unian, the Russian military is preparing a large-scale information and psychological operation to mislead the population after the launch of the Ukrainian counter-offensive.
What would such an information operation consist of? What means could be used and for what purpose? Who are the targets? Could it also bring about change on the front line? How can it be defended against?
Situation in Belgorod
There is no let-up in the fighting in the border region of Belgorod, where anti-Putin Russian Free Russian Forces, Polish partisans and international brigades of all kinds have entered Russian territory.
Are we going to have to get used to seeing such unacknowledged front lines developing alongside the 'official' war?
On the other side, we see the role of the Wagner group or even of Kadyrov's Chechens, who are acting as a regular army if you like, or as a private army if you like. How do such actors change the nature of war?
Can we expect the role of such gangs to increase in the future? What are the consequences of not being subject to international law, for example?
At the same time, the Belgian government is questioning Ukraine for using Belgian-made weapons against Russian troops within Russia's borders. Is it possible to maintain nation-state control over arms when there is an uncountable flow of arms into Ukraine?
Ukraine's nuclear weapons intentions
Some speculate that the Belgorod incursion was aimed at seizing a nuclear weapons storage base on the border. This nuclear weapons storage base No 1150, also known as Belgorod-22, is located just 17 kilometres from the Ukrainian border.
Is it realistic for Russia to store nuclear weapons in such a sensitive location? And what would it mean if Ukrainian freemen were to get their hands on nuclear weapons?
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