The New Russian Revolution

Julian Macfarlane
8 min readJun 3, 2023

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Prigozhin is in the news again…bigly.

ALL of the mainstream media in the West are running this story.

It is very Prigozhin-i n line with what I have previously written in my previous article on him -and you can be sure that he was aware these comments would be ignite a little fire in that trash dump we call the “media” in the West.

a.) Russia faces a “revolution”; the people against the “elites” as in 1917.

“The children of elites… allow themselves to lead a public, fat, carefree life,” Prigozhin fumed, “while the children of others arrive back shredded to pieces in zinc coffins.”

Putin’s success, including that 80% support he gets, has been largely to do with his success in reining in the oligarchs and controlling corporatism — aka “business elites — -although bureaucracy — aka “governmental elites” — has been a harder nut to crack. In any case, the Russian government has never been more stable. Putin is seen as responsive, if not a reformer.

b.) According to CBS- and the other outlets concur-most apparently stenographing a common script- Prigozhin says that the Russian operation has been “one retreat after another. “

“We stormed in an aggressive manner and stomped our boots all over Ukraine while looking for Nazis, We approached Kyiv, s**t our pants, and retreated. Next onto Kherson, where we also s**t our pants and retreated, and nothing seems to be working out for us.”

As for Kherson (City), they did not “retreat” there either — they carried out a strategic withdrawal to more defensible positions from which they could attrit Ukrainian forces with fewer casualties and without jeopardizing civilian lives. Kherson City, after all, was a Russian city.

The “retreat” from Kharkiv was a similarly strategic maneuver — and very successful- insofar that it, like every other similar action, resulted in thousands of Ukrainian casualties.

Prigozhin obviously understands all this. He reads Telegram too. He has his own channel. This is also a media war. Google versus Telegram. Facebook vs VK.

Google, as often as not is at war with reality.

c.) So the next media point is that key Putin goals — “denazification” and “demilitarization” are unachievable. Big failures! Like everything Russian.

He said the vague goals stated by his long-time associate President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials at the beginning of the war, as aiming to “denazify” and “demilitarize” Ukraine, had failed.

Prigozhin throws a lot of junk in the bin. He says the Ukrainians began the war with 20,000 men and 500 tanks and now have 200,000 and 5000 tanks. “Demilitarization”?

As for “denazification”, the four oblasts in Ukraine that voted to join Russia indicate what Russian Ukrainians think of the Nazis and Western Ukriane’s odious ideology.

Millions have already spoken with their feet- with Ukrainians becoming Europe’s most unwelcome refugees and that trend creating pushback against pro-Nazi governments. The Ugly American once was. Now it is the Ugly Ukrainian.

Again, Prigozhin must be fully aware of this. He did not get to where he is now by being a moron.

d.) Prigozhin warns that Ukraine will mount a counteroffensive which could be successful. Of course, he was saying that about Artymovsk, formerly Bakhmut, too.

“They will try to restore their 2014 borders, and this could easily happen; they will attack Crimea, they will try to blow up the Crimean bridge, cut off the supply lines, and for us, this scenario won’t be good, so we need to prepare for a hard war,” “We are in such a condition that we could f***ing lose Russia, which is the main problem… We need to impose martial law,”

Now, there is no way that Ukraine could restore its 2014 borders. They don’t have the means to besiege Crimea or cut off supply lines. They have already tried attacking the Crimean bridge- unsuccessfully. It is already a hard, hard war — for Ukraine.

Russia is not under real threat- except for UkroNazi terrorism on its borders — much less of a problem than previous Chechen terrorism 20 years ago.

So far, the UAF has not been able to mount a single successful offensive that the Russians did not allow for their own purposes, Kharkov being an example.

In the West, they say he “makes sense” when he massages their delusions, playing fast and loose with facts, as Simplicius has noted. For example, he quotes Wagner losses at 20,000 compared to Ukrainian losses of 50,000 when talking of Bakhmut.

In fact, those 20,000 were in all theaters since the war started. The 50,000 UAF losses are more recent and for Bakhmut only-and limited to those that Ukrainian sources acknowledge and which Western sources therefore take as fact.

a.) Ukrainians don’t count wounded who die outside of combat, perhaps 1 out of 3 compared to 1 out of 10 for the Russians.

b.) The Ukrainians often withdraw under heavy fire, leaving their dead on the battlefield. They may refuse to accept the corpses the Russians collect, since then they would have to pay families of the dead. These KIA become MIA.

Confirmation of this trick lies in UkroNazi attempts to accuse Russians of doing this, when there is no evidence that they do-and if they did it would be almost impossible for them hide.

Prigozhin is not stupid. So why would he say such things, that any Russian could pick apart. He certainly wouldn’t do that if he was angling for political office, which is a common assumption in the West, “telling truth to power”. Ummm…like Joe Biden.

Looking at Prigozhin’s history he has worked too hard and too long to jeopardize his future in this way by saying dumb stuff contrary to the popular wisdom in Russia. Wagner has just been legitimized as a company-something Putin has reportedly long been in favor of — and the organization of emerging from legal limbo.

Russians drink a lot and they understand.

There is no doubt in my mind that Prigozhin’s outbursts strengthen Putin rather than undermine him in his twenty-year struggle with the entrenched remnants of the 20th Century oligarchy, the bureaucracy, and the Westernized Moscow elites — all of whom prospered on the backs of chaos in the 1990s.

Prigozhin’s position in the Russian media as a Mad Max maverick will be rewarded not by political power, I think-but in some other way. He is already a billionaire.

Prigozhin’s strategy in Bakhmut served two purposes.

a.) To sucker the West and keep the Ukrainians fighting — the better to “demilitarize” them- so they are less and less capable of waging war. That applies to NATO. Can it fight a war without ammo and tanks?

Looking at reader response to Western Media articles and videos about Prigozhin’s rant, he has been successful once again. It is a masterful example of how to manipulate confirmation bias. The greater the bias, the harder the fall when the truth becomes apparent. So many people in the West point to Putin as proving that, yes, Russia is losing, the government is tottering, and there is no democracy from Moscow to Vladivostok.

And what of Konstantin Dolgov fired from Telegra after this interview.

a.) His “sacking” lends credibility to Western notions of Russian authoritarianism and censorship. Yet Prigozhin is free to call Gerasimov and Shogiu assholes? And Dolgov is free to comment freely on Telegra letting him go at the request of un-named “powerful people”-a contradiction which indicates that this “censorship” did not extend to anything he said. My guess that Dolgov will be back at work — not necessarily at Telegra but maybe somewhere else — making a lot more money. Maybe he — a pro-Kremlin person- will run for the Duma.

Always keep in mind that Vladimir Putin learned about people on the mean streets of St. Petersburg, like Prigozhin — and in the KGB.

Maskirovka. The concept covers a lot of bases but especially what is called “reflexive control” -which was part of Soviet and later Russian game theory, as championed Levebvre, Burkov and Shchedrovitsky.

The KGB took these sophisticated concepts of game theory and put them to use in practical situations. It is something that Putin certainly learned-and if you look closely at his career, he uses it all the time — although that is a discussion for a later time.

Suffice it to say, it is all about manipulating perception by appealing to existing beliefs and leveraging and directing them to conclusions that you want.

Of course, image is everything. And subtle differences communicate different messages.

In this case, Prigozhin is an illustrative example of practical application of Russian game theory.

His off-the-wall criticisms of Russian elitism and corruptions and his suggestions that revolution is possible are actually more relevant to Zelensky’s Ukraine than to Russia which has made huge progress in dealing with all these problems. If Ukrainians accept what he is saying about Russia, which they are likely to do — then they are halfway to recognizing the more egregious expressions of elitism, corruption, censorship, and authoritarianism at home-things that actually affect impinge on k, if not threaten their lives.

This is a sorta Trojan horse thing.

Think: Russian Matryoshka dolls. Dolls inside dolls. Sometimes a quite different one in each

Russian game theory as practiced by the KGB makes use of this concept has been show to work time and time again.

“Revolutions” are sudden change, — not always lasting. Evolution, however, is adaptation, which if successful leads to more. That big brain of yours is a good example.

This kind of change is slower and incremental, but much more permanent.

Right now, Russia’s war with the West is part of a bigger war of independence in which most of the world will end up participating to overthrow neo-colonialist, neoliberal rule, not because it is wrong but because it no longer works for them.

Ichi and his sister. Ichi (left) is bigger now and supervises me. His two sisters have a comfortable home in the suburbs. Buy me a coffee so I can buy Ichi treats. He and Jet keep me sane. Well… sometimes sane.

By the way, all cats are “on the spectrum”, just like me. Dogs too.

I try to respond to all comments and questions. I research all articles widely but I can’t go into detail on every point. For example, I looked at almost a dozen articles and papers on Russian Game Theory but just cite one. So query me. Criticize me, too.

For example, one of my readers, just noticed one of my photos was wrong- which I immediately fixed. And Aleks of Black Mountain Analysis commented. suggesting I read his newest post. It’s great! Read here! It provides additional information, complementing mine.

Please feel free to ask any questions.

Originally published at https://julianmacfarlane.substack.com.

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Julian Macfarlane
Julian Macfarlane

Written by Julian Macfarlane

Journalist media analyst, author. Publishes on evolution, psychology, anthropology, zoology, music, art, neurology., geopolitics,.

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