Kiev Regime Shuffles Cabinet Like Deckchairs on the Titanic
The political scrambling is comparable to the chaotic retreat of Ukrainian troops in the Donbass.
Dozens of ministers and senior officials in the NATO-backed Kiev regime have tendered their resignations ahead of a chaotic reshuffle. The political scrambling is comparable to the chaotic retreat of Ukrainian troops in the Donbass.
Among those falling on their own sword is Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba who, after the nominal president Vladimir Zelensky, was the most internationally recognizable face of the regime. Kuleba and Zelensky were something of a double act, trotting around the world peevishly and insatiably begging for more military and financial aid.
The mass resignations are a sure sign that the NATO-backed regime that came to power 10 years ago in a CIA-orchestrated coup knows its days are numbered. Zelensky, for now, is still holding on to the presidential office even though his electoral mandate expired in May. He can be likened to the captain of the doomed Titanic.
All this regime fragmentation comes as the Kursk incursion fizzles as a failed gamble.
Officially, the cross-border attack on the Russian Federation’s Kursk region which began on August 6 was aimed at distracting Russian forces from the Donbass region in former eastern Ukraine. The Kursk breakout appeared to have initial success and Western media were ecstatic in reporting its supposed blow to Russian morale.
Four weeks on, however, the gamble is proving a wildly losing bet. Russian forces are not diverted and are moving even more rapidly to push aside Ukrainian defenses in Donbass. Even Western military analysts
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