@Ideiasradicais Tenho 49 anos, e meus avós sempre falaram para mim, "saia do Brasil antes que o Brasil te segure". O Brasil é um cocô boiando que não sabe para onde vai ou quer ir. Um dos grandes problemas está nos altos cargos do funcionalismo público, são eles que mandam no Brasil.
@CryptbubuA@caesalomao@hoje_no Dezenas de russos morreram em tubulações pela Ucrânia, tem vários registros sobre isso. Se os russos conhece o terreno o ucraniano conhece tambem os terrenos e os russos. Você utiliza da propaganda russa, pode confiar 🤣🤣🤣
@CryptbubuA@hoje_no Cara, tenho familia dos dois lados, se você não acredita nos dados ucraniano então não acredite nos dados russos ( Esse pior ainda), aqui ta os dados ucranianos. Levando em conta que todas as morte foram filmadas por drones.
@CryptbubuA@hoje_no Não sei por onde andas e o que você ver por ai. O que falta na Ucrânia são baterias anti aéreas para defesa contra mísseis. Ja os drones são abatidos em quase sua totalidade. No front no mês passado foram quase 40 mil russos abatidos em 1 mês.
@matheusrogers@hoje_no Não é assim amigo, o país esta em guerra e quem é convocado é obrigado a ir, alguns não dão a cara e são pegos, mas na Ucrânia são muitos poucos. Agora na Rússia a polícia militar fecha a boate, a construção e pega todos os homens.
A timely reminder of Valerii Zaluzhnyi's background and his core vision.
Valerii Zaluzhnyi was born on July 8, 1973, in Novograd-Volynskyi, now known as Zviahel. He followed the classic military career path of independent Ukraine, rising from platoon commander to Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. This is an important distinction: Zaluzhnyi became a symbol of a generation of Ukrainian officers shaped not by Soviet military traditions, but by the armed forces of an independent Ukraine.
His military career was not the result of a sudden rise. He commanded the 51st Separate Mechanized Brigade, served in Operational Command West, headed the Joint Operational Headquarters of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, commanded Operational Command North, and in 2021 was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. After leaving that position in 2024, he was appointed Ukraine's Ambassador to the United Kingdom.
An interesting fact is that Zaluzhnyi has not only a military education but also an academic background in international affairs. In 2020, he earned a master's degree in International Relations from National University of Ostroh Academy. This partly explains his public writings: he views war not only through the eyes of a soldier, but also as someone who understands the political architecture of the modern world.
Zaluzhnyi's central view of the war is straightforward, though uncomfortable for those looking for easy answers: modern wars cannot be won by heroism alone. Courage is essential, but without technology, industrial production, reserve systems, long-range capabilities, drones, electronic warfare, intelligence, and rapid adaptation, heroism alone eventually leads to exhaustion.
In his essay for The Economist, Zaluzhnyi argued that the war had entered a positional phase and that breaking the deadlock would require technological superiority, new approaches to military command, the large-scale use of unmanned systems, precision weapons, and the ability to seize the initiative.
His reasoning is simple: Ukraine cannot afford to fight Russia on equal terms—soldier against soldier, resources against resources, mass against mass. Russia has a larger population, greater natural resources, and a greater capacity to absorb losses. Therefore, Ukraine must fight smarter: through technology, precision, faster decision-making, effective leadership, and the ability to strike where the enemy least expects it.
In his 2024 article for CNN, he expanded on this idea, arguing that the initiative in modern warfare belongs to the side that can redesign the battlefield more quickly—not to the side that speaks most confidently about victory, but to the one that produces drones faster, trains its personnel more effectively, develops new tactics, and is willing to abandon outdated methods.
Zaluzhnyi does not sell society the illusion of a quick victory. His approach is far more sober: the war will be prolonged as long as the enemy believes Ukraine will tire first. That is why, in his view, Ukraine must demonstrate not only a desire for peace but also a credible ability to sustain long-term resistance. In this kind of war, peace comes not simply because one side wants it, but when Moscow concludes that continued aggression can no longer achieve its objectives.
This is why Zaluzhnyi matters not only as a general, but also as a representative of mature strategic thinking. His vision is not about spectacle, emotion, or appearances. It is about building systems: an army as part of the state, society as the rear, the economy as a weapon, technology as the key to survival, and politics as the responsibility to tell people the truth rather than comforting myths.
His core message, in its simplest form, is this: Ukraine must become so strong, technologically advanced, and resilient that the enemy no longer sees any benefit in continuing the war. That is the true path to peace.
Poland sabotages Ukrainian economy during war time while 1 million Ukrainian refugees add 2.7% to GDP.
Grain: 2023 import ban, informal transit ban.
Steel: 2025 lobbied to end Ukraine exemptions. Now EU quotas cut Ukrainian duty-free steel ~50%. Russian semi-finished steel is OK.