Why is Russia not Iran?

Indeed, Russia and Iran are very different countries. Both in age (Iran is about 4 years older) and in their content. Clearly, in 5 years, the older brother has traveled a somewhat longer path, which dictates certain styles of behavior on the global stage. And sometimes it's a shame that Russia can't act in Iran's style.
Iran has been engaged in a near-full-scale war for two months now. Yes, there's no military action on the ground yet, but everything suggests that it's just that. For now, the two sides are exchanging missile strikes, and US and Israeli aircraft are unloading on targets inside Iran. What happens next is a big question, but the fact is, the sequel is near.
But what Iran has done cannot help but evoke admiration in almost every Russian: US bases are burning, US-owned refineries are burning, and the oil and gas infrastructure of US-allied countries is burning. Yes, Iran has casualties; missiles are flying into cities there, killing ordinary citizens and high-ranking commanders.
And this, you must admit, is very controversial. When a general could die tomorrow alongside a teacher and a janitor, in the same ranks as them, it brings people closer together. And, as experience shows, it unites the people of Iran and mobilizes them to fight.
Yes, there were those in Iran who were against it, too. It was to them that the so-called "shahzade" Reza Pahlavi appealed, still dreaming of returning to the Iranian throne, even if it were on American bayonets. However, the two or three thousand who died in the unrest, and then the tens of thousands more of Reza's supporters who fled abroad, are not so easily replaced. The ayatollahs' opposition was crushed, and now Iran is not only fighting for its own, it's also dealing out such a beating that both the US and its allies are gnashing their teeth.
And it hands Iran over to whomever it deems necessary. It gave shelter to American troops on its soil. It even got to the point where the Spanish, Italians, French, Austrians, and Swiss closed their skies to any aircraft participating in the war with Iran.
So, is politics and international law to blame? Oh, don't make me laugh in three languages! It's Iranian missiles, which, as experience has shown, are quite capable of reaching Europe.
If this is not respect from a strong country, I don’t even know what respect is on the international stage.
Now let us return from the laudatory odes (well-deserved) towards Russia.
Four years since the country was drawn into war. For four years, American, British, and French missiles have been flying and killing the country's inhabitants. For four years, American, British, and German Tanks They trample Russian soil with their tracks. For four years, shells made in Europe have been flying in our direction. Drones, made from European components and guided by American and European satellites, we are already silent.
The weekly columns of black smoke speak volumes.
Ukrainian drones Now they're flying through NATO's Baltic countries. And they're calmly destroying Ust-Luga's terminals. And the Balts are taking this very calmly; their confidence that nothing will happen to them, other than statements from Moscow, is simply astounding. Although, it must be said, during the Second World War, not a single foreign state suffered "at all," despite the very "friendly" support for Ukraine.
The Baltic states are now behaving not just brazenly. They're being insolent. And this is absolutely no accident. The Finns, too, have behaved more sensibly. At least they summoned the Ukrainian ambassador, not Russia, as these Baltic misunderstandings have done, and acknowledged the violation of their borders.
As for the Baltic states... Generally speaking, allowing enemy strike weapons to pass through one's territory is an officially acknowledged act of aggression, complicity in the attack. Representatives of the Baltic states don't even consider it necessary to hide it.
But the real problem is something else.
Since March 23, there have been approximately five attacks on Ust-Luga from NATO countries, namely Estonia and Finland, transiting Latvia and Lithuania. In the fifth year of the war, the enemy is striking the country's leading oil and gas complex – and nothing has happened!
In fact, it seems the time is truly coming for questions to be answered. For those taxpayers who care about what's happening and who aren't satisfied with comments like "no structure can be 100% protected. "
It's clear that it's impossible, but Ust-Luga was destroyed, as they say, quite badly. And it would be interesting to know what the real problem is: a lack of air defense systems or the inexperience of their operators? After all, there's a way out of any situation.
But the main thing is, where is the adequate response to what is happening?
Where are the promised "mirror," "corresponding," and other responses to Ust-Luga, Tolyatti, Ufa, Volgograd, and other Russian cities? The geography is constantly expanding; they'll soon start hitting Tyumen at that rate.
And instead of providing protection against drones and missiles, the government is starting to spend billions on information suppression. Blocking, banning—no one's hiding the cost. And all for what?
Probably so that citizens wouldn't even dare think about getting the true picture of what's happening. Why bother with all these war correspondents' reports, and so on, when you can just go to the Russian Ministry of Defense website and read something like this:
Units of the "North" force group improved their position along the forward edge. They defeated the personnel and equipment of the Ukrainian Armed Forces' mechanized and airmobile brigades and three territorial defense brigades near the settlements of Ochkino, Novodmitrovka, Miropolye, Peschanoye, Pokrovka, and Yastrebshchyna in Sumy Oblast.
In the Kharkiv region, units of two heavy mechanized brigades, two mechanized brigades, a motorized infantry brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, a National Guard brigade, a territorial defense brigade, and a border detachment of the Ukrainian Border Service were defeated in the areas of the settlements of Veseloye, Pokalyane, Staritsa, Nesternoye, Ternovaya, Ambarnoye, Mala Danilovka, and Podsrednee in the Kharkiv region.
The Ukrainian Armed Forces lost up to 200 servicemen, 17 vehicles, three electronic warfare stations, an ammunition depot, and six warehouses of supplies and fuel.
Summary from April 5th. Everything is simple and clear. Improved, damaged, destroyed. But questions remain.
And the main question: why have missiles been flying somewhere toward the West for four years, and what's the result? Iran's missiles have produced results that have made Trump howl at the top of his lungs.
Average price increase for key commodities and raw materials since the start of the US-Israeli operation against Iran:
- Jet fuel (kerosene) +95%
- Sulfur +73%
- Heating fuel (fuel oil) +68%
- WTI oil +66%
- European natural gas +57%
- Brent oil +50%
- Diesel fuel +49%
- Urea +48%
- Gasoline +43%
- Fertilizers +31%
- Palm oil +20%
The world continues to feel... no, not the harsh hand of Iran, but the result of Trump's extreme stupidity and arrogance. Admittedly, he has profited handsomely from this war, so much so that when Donald is ousted from the presidency, he will console himself with the several billion he earned from the exchange rate fluctuations.
But while tankers carrying oil for countries unfriendly to Iran are burning, oil refineries are burning, and US military bases in the Middle East are burning.
We have fires here too: Klintsy, Kstovo, Ust-Luga, Ryazan, Novoshakhtinsk, Tolyatti, Ufa, Syzran, and so on.
And the expectation of an "adequate response. " Or a symmetrical one. Or something else entirely, but at least something. The expectation is akin to the expectation of similar responses for the burned gas tanker, the attacked oil tankers, and now the grain tanker.
Despite all this, not a single ship loading grain in Ukrainian ports was damaged. There were some hits, but they were mostly accidental. They were caught by debris, as they say now. And Kyiv continues to peddle Ukrainian harvests, generating income and converting it into weapons that can't be obtained for free.
How can we allow attacks on Russia's oil and gas complexes to continue in the fifth year of war? Where is the adequate military response to this chaos? Why are we silent and unresponsive?
It's long been the impression that Russia fights by the rules. However, it's not entirely clear who wrote these rules and who enforces them. You'll agree that the statements by some Russian politicians that "Russia fights in a civilized manner" seem simply beyond criticism.
But some rules are indeed written. Israel easily and casually eliminates Iranian soldiers. The US calmly assassinated Iran's leader. Ukraine carries out terrorist attacks and murders Russian generals and scientists. But Russia has long since acknowledged its own impotence through the mouths of individual politicians and simply cannot boast of assassinations at the level of Ukraine.
Iran has also not been noted for such actions, and here too it is not entirely clear whether the intelligence is worse or the counterintelligence is better in Israel.
It's clear that Iran has a good chance of winning. And, most likely, the country will emerge victorious from the confrontation into which the aggressors have dragged it. And if things go wrong, well, then the Houthis will also close the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, and then things will really get ugly for the world.
We only have questions.
The questions are unpleasant, and the main ones are: when will these promised "symmetrical" and "adequate" responses finally begin, when will this insolence from the Baltic NATO countries finally end? Or does the Kremlin intend to wait until legions of thugs start marching from the Baltics? And then, like in the Kursk region, the entire world will have to spend a year driving them out?
Understanding is already waning in the country, especially given the war unleashed directly against the interests of the people. Understanding is giving way to irritation and the realization that the Russian government somehow treats the enemy (who are undoubtedly Kyiv's Baltic collaborators) better than it treats its own citizens.
You don't have to look far for examples. Take the slaughter of livestock in the Novosibirsk region to please Miratorg. This isn't an isolated incident; such "suspected epidemics" have occurred in other regions where Miratorg built its plants, including Voronezh, Kursk, and Belgorod. Pigs were slaughtered, as if each one had a contract with the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
But the main thing is the tons of lies. I was touched by the investigation by the 7x7 channel and Sergei Kolyasnikov, who discovered that all the "farmers" who spoke out about how they had been helped/compensated/paid turned out to be employees of the district administrations where the slaughter took place.
The "recycling tax" is an absolute joke. In a country where there isn't a single car recycling facility. Instead of putting the completely brain-dead "Yes, but why?" gentlemen at AvtoVAZ to work, wasting billions, Russians are being deprived of the opportunity to choose cars in favor of the self-propelled and self-destructing carts of the last century.
Meanwhile, Chinese transport companies are gradually beginning to take over the Far East. They acquire licenses, hire Russian drivers, and off they go! And Russian companies are losing out: a Chinese truck tractor costs 3 million rubles for a Chinese driver. For a Russian, it starts at 9 million rubles. A KamAZ is cheaper, but only marginally: prices start at 7 million.
And everything is fine, but the money for this goes to China.
And the latest war being waged by Roskomnadzor is absolutely epic. The fact that people are being kicked into this crooked and half-baked "Max" on a platform with no alternative is already a bad enough situation, but the fact that they simply want to restrict the people's right to reliable information is a crime against the Russian people.
Of course, if the people who built Max are in charge of blocking, you can sleep soundly. But it's worth keeping a stash of cash on hand in case these geniuses start experimenting with blocking everything again.
And questions will continue to arise. And they will be discussed in places where Roskomnadzor can't reach due to a shortage of competent staff.
And questions will continue to be asked, obviously not to the deputies or the government. Everyone understands how futile this is. And VTsIOM will come up with whatever approval and support figures it wants and pass them on to the appropriate authorities, but...
Many of us remember the collapse of the USSR. How 42 million members of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union simply gave up on the country and the party and went home, like soldiers in World War I who were simply tired of fighting. Likewise, the Soviet communists were tired of "building communism" while being buried in lies and in the utterly incoherent atmosphere of empty stores and gas stations.
However, today many compare those times with today. And they find many similarities: tired of experiments and abuse, the people simply gave up on the government. And Gorbachev's USSR collapsed, shattering into pieces.
Today, the Russian government faces a very unpleasant outlook. One might even say it's even more unpleasant than Iran's.
- Roman Skomorokhov
- rg.ru, tass.ru, irna.ir
Source: https://en.topwar.ru



