(AP) – Russia’s top counterterrorism body on Monday blamed Ukrainian intelligence agencies for the bombing attack that killed a well-known Russian military blogger who fervently supported Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
Russian officials said Vladlen Tatarsky, 40, was killed Sunday as he was leading a discussion at a cafe on the banks of the Neva River in the historic heart of St. Petersburg. Over 30 people were wounded by the blast, and 10 of them remain in grave condition, according to the authorities.
The National Anti-Terrorist Committee, a state structure that coordinates counterterrorism operations, said that the “terrorist act” against Tatarsky was “planned by Ukrainian special services” with the involvement of people who have cooperated with an anti-corruption foundation created by jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny. It noted that the arrested suspect was an “active supporter” of Navalny’s group.
Shortly before the announcement, Russia’s Investigative Committee, the top state criminal investigation agency, reported the arrest of Darya Tryopova, a 26-year-old St. Petersburg resident suspected of involvement in the attack. Tryopova had been previously detained for taking part in anti-war rallies.
Investigators believe that the bomb was hidden in a bust of the blogger that the suspect had given to him as a gift just before the explosion.
According to Russian media reports, Tryopova told investigators that she was used as a carrier to deliver the explosive device, but didn’t know that it was hidden in the bust.
Witnesses said that the suspect asked questions and exchanged remarks with Tatarsky during the discussion. One witness, said the woman told Tatarsky that she had made a bust of the blogger but that guards asked her to leave it at the door, suspecting it could be a bomb. They joked and laughed, and then she went to the door, grabbed the bust and presented it to Tatarsky.
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Russian officials said 40-year-old Vladlen Tatarsky, a well-known military blogger, was killed as he was leading a discussion at a cafe in St. Petersburg. Over 30 people were wounded by the blast, and 10 of them remain in grave condition, according to the authorities.(Source: Russia Investigative Committee via CNN)A video showed Tatarsky making jokes about the bust and putting it on the table next to him just before the explosion.
Russia’s Investigative Committee, the state’s top criminal investigation agency, opened a probe on charges of murder.
No one publicly claimed responsibility, but military bloggers and patriotic commentators immediately blamed Ukraine for the attack and compared the bombing to last August’s assassination of nationalist TV commentator Darya Dugina, who was killed when a remotely controlled explosive device planted in her SUV blew up as she was driving on the outskirts of Moscow.
Russian authorities blamed Ukraine’s military intelligence for Dugina’s death, but Kyiv denied involvement.
Dugina’s father, Alexander Dugin, a nationalist philosopher and political theorist who strongly supports the invasion of Ukraine, hailed Tatarsky as an “immortal” hero who died to save the Russian people.
Reacting to Tatarsky’s death, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said late Sunday his activities “have won him the hatred of the Kyiv regime” and noted that he and other Russian military bloggers have long faced Ukrainian threats.
Yevgeny Prigozhin, the Russian millionaire owner of the Wagner Group military contractor spearheading Moscow’s offensive in eastern Ukraine, said he owned the cafe and handed it over to a patriotic group for meetings. He said he doubts the Ukrainian authorities’ involvement in the bombing, saying the attack was likely launched by a “group of radicals” unrelated to the government in Kyiv.
Since the fighting in Ukraine began Feb. 24, 2022, Ukrainian authorities have refrained from claiming responsibility for various fires, explosions and apparent assassinations in Russia. At the same time, officials in Kyiv have jubilantly greeted such events and insisted on Ukraine’s right to launch attacks in Russia.
A top Ukrainian government official cast the explosion that killed Tatarsky as part of internal turmoil.
“Spiders are eating each other in a jar,” Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak wrote in English on Twitter late Sunday. “Question of when domestic terrorism would become an instrument of internal political fight was a matter of time.”
Tatarsky, who had filed regular reports from Ukraine, was the pen name for Maxim Fomin, who had accumulated more than 560,000 followers on his Telegram messaging app channel.
Born in the Donbas, Ukraine’s industrial heartland, Tatarsky worked as a coal miner before starting a furniture business. When he ran into financial difficulties, he robbed a bank and was sentenced to prison. He fled from custody after a Russia-backed separatist rebellion engulfed the Donbas in 2014, weeks after Moscow’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula. Then he joined separatist rebels and fought on the front line before turning to blogging.
Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Москва, 2 апреля – АиФ-Москва.
В интернете появилась видеозапись с дарением статуэтки военкору и блогеру Владлену Татарскому. Спустя несколько минут прогремел взрыв, унесший жизнь военкора.
На кадрах видно, как блогер вытаскивает из коробки позолоченную статуэтку.
«Какой-то красивый парень. Это что, я? Просто золотой», — сказал он.
Ранее СМИ сообщали, что статуэтку Татарскому подарила некая девушка. По одной из версий, в ней было заложено взрывное устройство.
По другой версии, статуэтку перед передачей блогеру осматривали, а девушка была ему знакома. Также свидетели сообщают, что она находилась в помещении во время взрыва, который произошел спустя несколько минут.
Представители движения «Кибер Фронт Z», организовавшие творческий вечер с Татарским, принесли соболезнования родным и близким пострадавших. Также они сообщили, что принимали определенные меры безопасности, но их оказалось недостаточно.
Напомним, вечером 2 апреля в центре Санкт-Петербурга в кафе «Стрит-бар» на Университетской набережной произошел взрыв, в результате погиб Владлен Татарский и еще 16 человек получили ранения.
Vladimir Putin has revived sexpionage (corr) classes to teach spies how to obtain state secrets by seduction, a new book claims.
The Russian president boasts an army of honeytrappers expert in the art of baring all in the bedroom to bewitch the enemy.
They include actresses, singers, dancers and teachers who have been handpicked by Putin’s intelligence experts.
READ MORE: Putin’s soldiers ‘too drunk’ to win war as they blow themselves up and fight each other
The women – known as swallows’ – and their male equivalent dubbedravens’ are then taught how to seduce foreign dignitaries in order to squeeze them for information.

Russian President Vladimir Putin hopes honeytrappers will bring in state secrets (Image: AP)The tactic was honed by the KGB during the Cold War when the recruits were sent to a special sexpionage’ school in Kazan, 500 miles east of Russia’s capital Moscow.
According to new book Agents Of Influence by Mark Hollingsworth: “Young, impoverished girls were taught how to approach foreigners in clubs, hotel lobbies or even fake brothels calledmalinas’ – Russian for raspberries’ – fitted with bugging devices and cameras.
“The aim was to obtain kompromat (corr) – compromising information, recordings and photographs that could be used as leverage to persuade an intelligence officer or diplomat to spy for the KGB or reveal secrets.
“The incriminating material would be deployed at once or filed away for when the target became more powerful and influential.”

The art of seduction is viewed in Russia as a powerful spy tool (Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)The school was thought to have closed down following the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. But Putin, 70, who served as a KGB officer for 16 years from 1975 rising to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, is said to have revived the tactic in the Russian secret service unit that replaced it called the SVR (corr).
According to Hollingsworth swallows and ravens are still at work as Putin plots the next move in his invasion of Ukraine.
“The Cold War drew to a close not with a bang but a whimper,” the author wrote. “But none of the protagonists would have believed that a new Cold War using the same intelligence methods would return decades later.
“When former KGB officer Vladimir Putin came to power in late 1999 he swiftly installed his fellow ex-KGB comrades into all areas of Russian life.”

Anna Vasilyevna Chapman worked as a Russian intelligence agent (Image: instagram.com/anya.chapman)CIA officer-turned-author Jason Matthews based his best-selling novel Red Sparrow on graduates of the Russian sex spy school. Actress Jennifer Lawrence, 32, played one in the 2018 movie of the same name.
Matthews said over six months they were trained in being alluring’ at an academy called State School Number 4.
A typical day was watching naughty films, studying languages, learning how to dress up and instruction on how to elicit information from the target,” the ex-agent said.
It’s said they also had to disrobe and practice some of the tricks they’d learned.”

Jennifer Lawrence starred as a spy in the mystery thriller ‘Red Sparrow’ (Image: Splash News/20Th Century Fox)They included moves from the Kama Sutra and sex tips picked up by Soviet officials in naughty’ cities like Bangkok and France. They also had to learn how to pop a champagne cork and serve caviar.
Once trained they were given sexy lingerie and dispatched to the five star hotels around Moscow to await their targets.
“These men would get back to their hotels after an exhausting day at work and sitting all alone in the bar, was a comely Russian girl who spoke a little English and was a good listener,” Matthews said when the film was released.
“It’s then a short walk from the bar to the bedroom.”

Chapman was expelled from the United States in 2010 after pleading guilty to espionage (Image: instagram.com/anya.chapman)For more shocking stories from the Daily Star, make sure you sign up to one of our newsletters
here
Only the target did not realise the room had been bugged with cameras and audio equipment – and Russian agents were recording the tryst.
Victims were shown photos of themselves caught in the act and threatened with exposure.
If they were single they were told the girl was under-age or that she was pregnant. Their only hope of keeping their secret was to spy on their own country.
Meanwhile their swallow would be handed a new life often in a luxury city centre apartment.
READ NEXT:
by Rajan Menon and Karol Kalush
Rajan Menon is the Anne and Bernard Spitzer Professor of International Relations at the City College of New York/City University of New York, Senior Research Fellow at the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace at Columbia University, and Director of the Grand Strategy Program at Defense Priorities. His books include Conflict in Ukraine: The Unwinding of the Post-Cold War Order.
Karol Kalush (a pseudonym) is a former US intelligence officer with direct experience in Ukraine and its surrounding region.
EXPERT PERSPECTIVE — On the heels of Xi Jinping’s visit to Russia, the world seems to be waking up to the implications of China’s possible emergence as the peacemaker to end Russia’s war in Ukraine. As unlikely as this may seem, bear in mind that this war has confounded experts and pundits, shredding widely-held assumptions about both Ukraine and Russia.
The Chinese economic presence in Ukraine is already substantial through trade and major construction projects, and the PRC, while closely aligned with Moscow, has made sure to keep the channels of political communication with Kyiv open. China has reasons to mediate a settlement in Ukraine and to participate in its post-war economic reconstruction.
Ukrainian policymakers must continue to chart their relationship with the PRC, during and after the war. If the US wishes to counter China’s current and future influence in Ukraine, it ought to be remain active in assisting Ukraine’s economic revival and strengthening Ukrainians’ security. But the West should keep in mind that Ukraine’s leaders have amply-demonstrated strategic savvy, and a keen grasp of their country’s interests.
If there’s one thing that the war in Ukraine has taught us, or certainly should have, it’s the virtue of humility. Just about everything that’s happened since Russia’s February 24, 2022, invasion has confounded people who thought they knew a thing or two about these two countries—and about war more generally.
Three years ago, the proposition that Vladimir Putin would mount a full-on attack aimed at “regime change” against a country larger than France might have seemed outlandish, even though Russia’s war against Ukraine actually began in 2014, which means that it has been underway for nearly 3,300 days, not 365-plus. And once Russia’s invasion started, most everyone, including the CIA’s analysts, thought Ukraine’s resistance would crumble within days, so overwhelming was the magnitude of Russian superiority, which may explain the conclusion of two RAND Corporation experts a month before the invasion that Western weaponry would be of scant help to Ukraine. Vladimir Putin also anticipated quick success because he overestimated Russia’s military prowess and underestimated the morale of the Ukrainian people. Put also underestimated Volodymyr Zelensky’s capacity to emerge as a war-time president who would rally them to defend their homeland.
How did Moscow and Washington both get it so wrong? This question needs to be addressed as part of a larger point that what now seems unlikely, could well happen in the relationship between China and Ukraine.
False Forecasts
Contrary to expectations in both Washington and Moscow, a year after the invasion, Russia remains mired in Ukraine. Despite Putin’s September mobilization of 300,000 additional people for the fight, the widely-anticipated Russian offensive hasn’t amounted to much: the 600-mile front line has barely moved since November. Moreover, Russia has suffered heavy losses in soldiers and equipment—to the point that it’s now sending to the front T-54 tanks, machines that date back to the latter half of the 1940s and is even running short of the artillery shells that it has used to devastating effect. Then there’s the utter incompetence of the Russian military—something that took experts aback after the much-vaunted military modernization drive Putin launched in 2008.
Some will claim that the pre-war predictions went awry because there were too many variables to consider, for instance: Would Zelensky ask for a ride to a safe haven abroad—as other Ukrainians leaders from bygone years had done—or seek ammunition to stay home and lead the fight? Would Ukrainians who regard Russian as their primary language rise up to defend the homeland or welcome the “liberators”? Would Europe and the US confine themselves to condemning Russia or would they arm Ukraine for “as long as it takes”?
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But as long-time observers of Ukraine, we have a different explanation for why the commonplace expectations were wide of the mark. Many Western experts, and Russian officials, got things wrong for a variety of other reasons. These include a lack of deep, first-person, on-the-ground familiarity across the country with different segments of Ukrainian society; the assumption that Ukraine’s past would be a sure-fire guide to its future despite the unprecedented threat it faced to its very existence in February 2022; the acceptance of common stereotypes, including the old chestnut that Ukrainians who spoke Russian at home would support a Russian invasion; the belief that Russia’s agents in Ukraine would be successful in overthrowing the Kyiv government; and the failure to understand the extent to which corruption, outdated equipment and tactics, poor training, and lousy logistics had degraded the Russian army.
The bottom line: based on what we have all witnessed since Russia’s war on Ukraine, we ought to re-examine prevailing beliefs and come to terms with the fact that some of our basic assessments and expectations proved dead wrong—and that could be true of the standard views of China’s role in Ukraine. And as a result, we should also consider the implications for Western interests if China were to play a larger role in Ukraine.
The China-Russia “No-Limits” Friendship
That’s the spirit in which we venture a scenario, which at first blush will strike readers as, at the very least, implausible: The possibility that China could broker a peace settlement in Ukraine, and one that Kyiv could find acceptable, and also play a major role in Ukraine’s post-war economy. Admittedly, this seems like a remote prospect now. After all, the “strategic partnership” between Beijing and Moscow that began in the 1990s—in other words, pre-Putin—has now become a “no limits” partnership, as Xi Jinping and Putin called it in a statement they signed a little more than a fortnight before the latter unleashed his army on Ukraine.
But consider that since the war began, China’s energy imports from Russia have skyrocketed from $41 billion at the end of 2021 to $68 billion at the end of 2022. Total trade has soared from $141 billion to $190 billion, and Russia has looked to China for critical imports it can no longer get from the West. China has not only refused to apply sanctions against Russia, it has refused to support UN General Assembly resolutions condemning the war.
So, why on earth would China mediate a deal to end the war that’s acceptable to Kyiv, which, at minimum, would require Putin to withdraw his army to the pre-war lines? And why would Beijing strengthen its economic ties with Ukraine?
Answer: unadulterated self-interest.
Xi and Putin may use superlatives to describe their friendship—Xi calls the Russian leader his “best friend”—but countries aren’t completely, or even principally, guided by emotion. Their calculations are generally rooted in self-interest, and China is no exception. As the détente Beijing recently brokered between Iran and Saudi Arabia to much acclaim shows, China under Xi seeks to rival, and perhaps supplant, the United States’ global influence and eventually its standing as the world’s most powerful and influential country. Beijing backs Russia now not for sentimental reasons, or because of Xi’s fondness for Putin, but because China’s leaders doesn’t want the United States to be able to focus even more resources and attention on East Asia in general, and China in particular.
Don’t miss The Cipher Brief reporting from Kyiv: As Ukraine announces a planned counteroffensive in the spring, the head of the country’s Main Intelligence Directorate, Major General Kyrylo Budanov, is predicting that the coming battles will be ‘decisive’.
Beijing as Mediator?
This bring us to Xi as a potential peacemaker in Ukraine. If Xi could serve as the prime mover for a political settlement that ends the war, Europe, now securely tied to the United States, would sit up and take notice, and China’s standing on the continent, indeed the world, would be boosted big time. A diplomatic settlement in Ukraine enabled by Chinese mediation would be interpreted by Europeans, and people worldwide, as confirmation that Pax-Americana is being slowly supplanted by Pax-Sinica. It would also mean that Chinese influence in Ukraine—a country of 41million with a land area larger than any country in Western or East-Central Europe and that is certain to eventually play a big role on the continent—would increase instead of being marginalized by the United States. And what a coup it would be for Beijing if it played kingmaker in Ukraine after the West devoted tens of billions of dollars to support Ukrainians’ resistance to Russia.
But how could Beijing achieve so audacious an objective?
For starters, no matter the rhetoric of an equal partnership, it’s pretty clear, certainly to China, that Moscow plays second fiddle to Beijing. Gone are the years when China looked to the Kremlin for direction and leadership. China’s economy has become the world’s second largest; Russia’s ranks 27th. Russia’s is largely a hydrocarbon economy; China’s has become a force to be reckoned with in everything from green energy and high-speed rail to AI. China used to be wholly reliant on Russian weapons; increasingly, it’s building top-flight armaments of its own. Both China and Russia have demographic problems, but Russia’s population problem looks far worse in the short term. Yes, Russia is selling even more energy to China since the war began ($88 billion in the 12 months after the war began compared to $57 billion during the same amount of time before it started), but given Western sanctions where else could Moscow look for a single big market now that Europe no longer plays that part?
In short, China has significant leverage over Russia, but the reverse isn’t necessarily true. Beijing could offer Russia all manner of benefits if it agrees to exit a war that’s manifestly failing. And without China’s backing, Russia would be much more vulnerable to Western pressure.
Xi would achieve another diplomatic coup by brokering peace in Ukraine, but why would Kyiv want him to play that role? For openers, China could muster the influence needed to nudge Russia toward a settlement that (potentially) the Ukrainians could accept as honorable and, in their eyes, worth the huge sacrifices they have made to defend their homeland. If the war drags on to 2024 (or beyond that) and Western support wanes, China’s bargaining chips could become more important for settle a conflict. The United States, for all its might, influence, and wealth, may prove unable to compel Russia to get out of Ukraine, short of direct military intervention, a step that no American president would take and that Biden ruled out from the outset. Washington may be able to ensure that Ukraine’s army has the weapons it needs to evict Russia, but that may take years more of warfare, which will burden Ukraine in numerous ways and possibly even lead to an economic collapse if international economic support is reduced.
China in Ukraine’s Post-War Economy
Ukraine needs a lot of money to finance its reconstruction. No one knows just how much, but one estimate, that of Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, is $750 billion, and that was in October 2022. The World Bank’s latest estimate is $411 billion. The Kyiv School of Economics (KSE) pegs the cost at over $140 billion. But even if the price tag turns out to be only half of the KSE’s estimate, we’re still talking serious money. The United States and Europe will certainly help out, but neither wants to be stuck with the entire bill. Moreover, if Western economies face huge headwinds, which is possible given that growth is already slowing and inflation accelerating, Ukraine fatigue could set in and support for Kyiv could attenuate.
Enter China with its $3 trillion in foreign exchange. Ukraine will need all the help it can get to rebuild its economy, so massive has been the destruction Russia has wrought; and Beijing has the big bucks that could help. Plus, with the years of experience it has gained by now on account of construction projects worldwide (together with other investment they total $2.27 trillion—and that’s just since 2005), many related to its global Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), China also has the expertise. (BRI spending alone could surpass $1 trillion by 2027.) In addition, Chinese trade with Ukraine has been growing substantially, and by 2021 China had become Ukraine’s top trade partner, with the total value twice that of Ukraine’s trade with Russia, which was in third place behind Poland.
Between 2012 and 2021, China’s exports to Ukraine increased threefold and its imports by the same magnitude. A recent report by the Council on Foreign Relations notes that “by 2019, China replaced Russia as Ukraine’s largest trade partner, becoming the top importer of Ukrainian barley, while Ukraine overtook the United States as China’s largest corn supplier. Ukraine is also a major arms supplier for China, second only to Russia, and China is the largest buyer of Ukrainian arms.” Chinese investments in Ukraine encompass a range of projects, from the modernization Mikolaiv and Yuzhny ports to the building of a new subway line in Kyiv, which will extend from the Dnipro river’s east back to the center of Kyiv and is expected to cost $2 billion, based on the 2018 preliminary feasibility study.
The economic ties between the two countries already has a substantial foundation and hence the potential for further growth, especially as Ukraine’s economic relationship with Russia diminishes. By helping to rebuild post-war Ukraine, which it is already doing during the war, China could establish a much bigger and enduring economic presence in a country that is rich in resources, is agricultural powerhouse, and has a vast pool of consumers, whose purchasing power will increase as reconstruction advances. Moreover, Ukraine’s location makes it a conduit for Chinese goods bound for Europe. As Olga Drobotyuk of the Institute of Contemporary China Studies—based in Kyiv—notes, both Beijing and Kyiv are clearly aware of this. They have already cooperated on building a freight rail connection linking China and Ukraine and, during the last six years alone, signed agreements totaling nearly $3 billion covering an array of BRI projects. Describing the China to Europe rail line, the Chinese news agency Xinhua noted that during the first six months of 2021 “trains carried 720,000 twenty-foot equivalent containers.”
Then there’s the strategic dimension. As China acquires a growing stake in Ukraine, Russia will have to think twice—maybe three times—before invading again, which works to Kyiv’s advantage. As for China, Ukraine’s geography could give it a next-door-neighbor position in Europe, furthering its aim to compete with the US for influence on the continent by establishing a stronger foothold on the EU’s doorstep. Beijing no doubt realizes that the Silk Road rail line from China to Europe via Russia and Ukraine cannot continue to advance so long as Russia continues its war in Ukraine.
China’s 12-point peace plan, unveiled on February 24, omits points central to Ukraine’s conception of the terms on which the war must end. Yet, tellingly, the very first point invokes the UN Charter and international law to emphasize the “sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of all countries,” a formulation that Putin could have hardly wanted given that Russia’s invasion violates the Charter and international law. And the final point stresses the importance of “post-conflict reconstruction,” adding that “China stands ready to provide assistance and play a constructive role in this endeavor.” Though Xi’s declared intention to speak with President Volodymyr Zelensky following his March visit to Russia remains unfulfilled, it shows that China has at least entertained the thought of serving as mediator. And Zelensky, as witness his March 29 decision, hard on the heels of Xi’s trip to Russia, to invite the Chinese president to Ukraine, is likely inclined to see what China has to offer on the diplomatic front and perhaps to shift its thinking in ways more favorable to Kyiv.
As the war drags on, and Beijing realizes that Russia cannot win (at least by Moscow definition of a “win”), and that backing a failing war does not serve China’s interests, the Chinese position may change and become more evenhanded. We cannot be certain this will happen, but the possibility should not be excluded given what China stands to gain, diplomatically and economically, by attempting to broker a settlement that ends the war—and perhaps succeeding.
What would China sacrifice to gain such multifaceted influence and prestige? Well, nothing really, because it’s not as if Russia can turn elsewhere, having burned many of its bridges to the West and won’t be able to rebuild them rapidly even after a peace settlement. Russia, too, seeks to shape Ukraine’s trajectory, but its invasion of Ukraine dashed that ambition, but China’s resources for influence-building in Ukraine are far greater. Beijing can preserve its influence in Russia, acquire a larger strategic and economic presence in Ukraine and the rest of Europe, and strengthen its standing as a global power. Its choice is not limited to backing Russia or abandoning it.
Be Open to the Unexpected
The war in Ukraine had produced many surprises, and that should serve as a warning against making confident forecasts or excluding potential moves on the chessboard. So, to be clear: We are not predicting that the scenario we sketch here is certain to materialize. One can think of several reasons why it wouldn’t. Nor do we claim that there aren’t possible downsides to the outcome we’re asking readers to consider, though we do believe that Kyiv will have the savvy to decide what benefits it and what does not when dealing with China in the near and long term. Besides, we do not envisage, let alone recommend, that Ukraine’s leaders align with Beijing, something they might have no intention of doing in any event. Our point is that there are sound economic and strategic reasons for Ukraine’s leaders to consider the role China can play in their country. Ukraine can craft a hardheaded relationship with China while simultaneously strengthening ties with Europe and the United States to pursue the larger goal of integration with the West. Kyiv does not face an “either/or” choice.
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The growth of China-Ukraine political and economic ties will likely raise eyebrows, even create apprehension, in Washington, but American leaders ought to keep in mind another lesson that this war has offered, namely that Ukrainians are fully capable of deciding their future and have the strategic acumen to do so—wisely, without illusions, and with their own national interests squarely in mind. If the United States and its allies seek to limit China’s influence in post-war Ukraine they should, instead of merely warning Kyiv about the risks of building ties with Beijing, play a substantial role in its reconstruction, take steps to increase trade and private investment in that country, and increase its defense capabilities.
A war that has upended many conventional assumptions might end in ways we don’t expect. The same applies to current beliefs about what will happen in a post-war Ukraine and which countries will be the key players. China will likely be among them because it has both the motives and the resources to deepen its involvement.
The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals. Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
Have a perspective to share based on your experience in the national security field? Send it to [email protected] for publication consideration.
Read more expert-driven national security insights, perspectives and analysis in The Cipher Brief
Putin’s army is “not far” from losing the Ukraine war, according to a veteran of Russian politics. The Russian President and his generals believed they would be able to declare a swift victory in Ukraine, after launching their invasion in February 2022. Now, after just over a year of bitter fighting, Putin’s army is still struggling to make much headway in its military campaign.
The focus of recent fighting has been centred in Ukraine‘s eastern provinces, as the Russians desperately seek to assert their control over the Donetsk region.
Russian units including Wagner mercenaries are currently bogged down in a vicious and bloody attritional battle to take the Donbas city of Bakhmut. The battle has been raging for months and has cost the Russians tens of thousands of men for incremental gains.
Military analysts at both the UK’s Ministry of Defence and for the Washington-based think-tank The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) have suggested that the Russian assault there is stalling, despite concerted efforts break the will of the Ukrainian army.
A key Kremlin opponent told the Express.co.uk that Putin’s army was on the brink of defeat and this would pave the way for regime change in Russia.
Alexander Osovtsov said: “My vision is that all the plans of Putin and his generals will be ruined.
A Ukrainian tank fires off a round (Image: Ukraine General Staff)
“They wanted to get Kyiv in three days. And today it is rather funny to think they believed that was possible.
“What’s going on? The Russian army which they presented as a terrible and strong force is fighting for Vuhledar, Bakhmut and is spending month by month in the attempts to occupy such towns and even villages.
“And of course it means they are not far from losing this war at all.”
He added: “Normally such regimes have to be finished and destroyed after the military defeat.
“That’s why we are doing our best to prepare ourselves and to replace the current authorities of Russia.”
READ MORE: Wimbledon ‘concerned’ Russia may use Daniil Medvedev as propaganda
Putin’s army is on the brink of defeat (Image: Getty)
Alexander Osovtsov is a veteran Russian politician (Image: Facebook Alexander Osovtsov )
The 65-year-old is a veteran of Russian politics and was at the forefront of the pro-democracy movement that toppled the Communists in the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.
He served on the Moscow City Council and was also elected as an MP for the Democratic Choice party, that was founded by Yegor Gaidar – a former Russian Prime Minister under President Boris Yeltsin, who was responsible for introducing the market reforms that transformed the command economy after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Mr Osovtsov is currently a member of the Executive Council of the Congress of People’s Deputies (CPD).
The CPD is a political forum of around 76 anti-Putin politicians determined to overthrow the present dictatorial regime and build a democratic Russia.
In February it held its second conference in Warsaw, where participants further discussed their plans for regime change in Russia.
Ukrainian war (Image: Getty)
Members of the Congress have told the Express that regime change in Russia will require the use of force and that they are actively building their own militia to help them kick Putin and his acolytes out of Ukraine.
Known as the Freedom of Russia Legion, the militia is presently fighting against Putin’s army in Ukraine.
Ilya Ponomarev said: “We have what is called the Freedom of Russia Legion, which is part of the Ukraine military.
“It currently consists of two battalions of Russians who are fighting on the front lines and on the most difficult part of the front – they are currently in Bakhmut – and resisting Wagner out there.
“So they receive military experience and they are very well armed.
“And we need them to grow – obviously two battalions is not enough but they are growing.” He added that up to 10,000 Russians wanted to join the Legion and defeat Putin.
Russian military blogger killed in St Petersburg blast Investing.com India
Explosion in Russian cafe kills prominent military blogger Odessa American
Vladlen Tatarsky, who was killed in an explosion at a cafe in St. Petersburg on Sunday, was one of Russia’s most outspoken and ultranationalist military bloggers, known for his ardent pro-war commentary and occasional criticism of Moscow’s battlefront failures.

The explosion in Russia’s second-largest city of Saint Petersburg killed a prominent pro-Kremlin military blogger and injured 25 others on Sunday evening
The post Russian Detains Suspect in St Petersburg Cafe Bombing first appeared on The Brooklyn Radio – The News And Times.
В российском Санкт-Петербурге подорвали известного пропагандиста Владлена Татарского. В результате взрыва он погиб. Кремль уже начал искать виновных. Полный текст новости
An explosion occurred inside a cafe in Saint Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city, killing well-known military blogger Andrew Strident supporter of the war in Ukraine, according to Russian officials. Andrew was facilitating a conversation at the time.
#russiaukrainewar #cafeblast #WION
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Russia blames Ukraine for bomb that killed military blogger The Washington Post
Russia blames Ukraine for bomb that killed military blogger KSWO
“Russia” – Google News
“Russia” – Google News
The explosion in Russia’s second-largest city of Saint Petersburg killed a prominent pro-Kremlin military blogger and injured 25 others on Sunday evening
It is the primary responsibility of a state to protect its population from the threat of landmines and explosive remnants of war (ERW) – United Nations policy.
German minister reassures Kyiv of Berlin’s commitment to Ukraine’s victory and reconstruction.
В британской разведке считают, что значительную часть потерь армия РФ терпит не из-за боевых причин, а из-за чрезмерного употребления алкоголя. Россияне продолжают пытаться окружить Авдеевку и Бахмут. Однако свою поставленную задачу по захвату Донецкой и Луганской областей к 31 марта они не выполнили. В СНБО Украины предлагают переименовать Севастополь в “Объект № 6”.
#украина #бахмут #потерирф
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