In order to know whether or not Russia is winning its war in Ukraine one has to figure out what the goal of the war is. Afterall, regardless of casualties and loss of equipment and resources, the primary objective of any conflict is its original mission. The best way to think of Russian strategy in Ukraine is to view it as one of those famous Russian egg dolls that have successively smaller dolls within it.
Russia’s stated goal in Ukraine is to de-nazify, de-militarize, and annex territory from Ukraine. The word annex in this case means the formal recognition by Ukraine of Russia’s annexation of Crimea, and the recognition of the Donbass as an independent republic – which would presumably vote to join Russia. Those are the stated goals. The next obvious goal, which is not stated, is the annexation of the Kherson region to protect Crimea’s water supply and form a land bridge to Crimea. The next much less obvious goal would be the Russian occupation and annexation of all Eastern Ukraine – including Odessa. This would make what’s left of Ukraine an impoverished, landlocked no-mans land between Europe and Russia. All of these stated and non-stated goals are either obvious or can be logically deducted from Russia’s military movements.
The smallest, and least visible goal, the smallest of the dolls, is the most important of them all – kicking off the “newest world order”. To understand this one must focus on the thought and strategy of Vladimir Putin. Putin is a judo master, and as such the philosophy of Judo rules his strategic thought. The primary principle of Judo is to use the opponents own force or weight to defeat him. Putin’s use of this strategy is evident on the domestic and international stages. In this case, Putin has used NATO’s (US) strategy to contain Russia (and China), with its push to Russia’s borders, as momentum to “Judo throw it” if you will. The encroachment on Russia’s traditional buffer zones, being those states on Russia’s borders, has given Putin the reasoning needed to convince the Russian people that he must act. Remember the “we have no where to retreat” speech.
At this point, Putin has grabbed the proverbial collar of the West – being the starting of the Ukrainian war. The US and Europe continued to push Putin with large weapon shipments to Ukraine, and massive sanction packages aimed at destroying the Russian economy. The force of these sanctions was meant to throw Russia to the ground, but instead Putin used that very force against his opponent. He began with steps to stop bank runs in Russia, shut down the Russian stock exchange to avoid a similar run, and essentially planted his feat firmly on the ground. Then, with European countries threatening to ban all Russian exports, including oil and natural gas, Putin completed his throw and threw the US and Europe to the proverbial ground – rubble only payment for natural gas and all other exports from Russia. That was the point of the war in Ukraine – the death of the US hegemony and by necessity the US dollar.
Previous to the war in Ukraine Russia had made agreements with the Chinese to use yuan and rubbles for internal trade. Since the war, Russia has been making agreements with India, Pakistan, Iran and others to conduct trade in national currencies – not the US dollar. From hereon in the largest markets in the world, China and India, will not need US dollars for trade in natural resources, and that means the US dollar has lost at least half its worth in real terms. Even Saudi Arabia, with a staggering 70% of its oil exported to Asia, is realizing that it must pick a side in this global divide. It has now begun negotiating with China to sell the oil in Yuan – not US dollars. This breaks an agreement it has has since the 1970s with the US to sell its oil in US dollars exclusively. The need for US dollars has propelled the dollar to the most sought after and valuable currency in the world, and that in turn has propelled the US economy. All that is about to change in a very radical way.
The take away here is that, while on the face of it the war in Ukraine is being described and thought of as a proxy war between Russia and NATO, in reality it is meant to be the catalyst for a bi-polar world – one on the rise (Eurasia) and one on the decline (Atlantia). A massive shift propelled by the elites of the world – in all nations. A deliberate move to consolidate the world’s many countries into two camps. One often hears the phrase “divide and conquer”. You can properly think of this as the age of “consolidate and conquer”. It’s the phase before the move to one world government. As US President recently said: “There will be a New World Order, and America must lead it”. This is what we are truly witnessing today. Not Russia bad Ukraine good. Not China and India must pick a side. Not any of the rhetoric designed to baffle and indoctrinate the ordinary person. So, if you consider that Putin, and by extension Russia, are playing their roles in the creation of this “New World Order”, then you know that Russia is winning the war in Ukraine.
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