Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en
When the Kremlin says a firm "no," everyone understands that it means "yes."
On top of that, payments for participating in the "SMO" have dropped significantly. In short, there is absolutely no incentive for Russians to die on Ukrainian land by a Ukrainian drone.
But the Kremlin has no intention of ending the war. Therefore, the only tool left is a new mobilization, the same "unpopular measure" that Putin has already announced once, after first solemnly swearing that "nothing of the sort would happen." The result: 300,000 Russians sent to their deaths and over a million who fled abroad.
Now the situation is repeating itself: losses are exceeding recruitment capabilities, and the issue of mobilization is once again hanging in the air. Analysts at the Institute for the Study of War are openly discussing the likelihood of involuntary call-ups in Russia.
But the Kremlin remains silent on this issue, broken only by Medvedev and Peskov, who insist that "no mobilization is planned."
This raises a simple rhetorical question: when representatives of the KGB system, raised on professional lies, start denying something with particular fervor, doesn't that mean the decision has already been made?