Hey Sup Forums, can you redpill me on this book (Foundations of Geopolitics)?
I've just started reading some of it and it's fucking me up real good. It's scary how pretty much all of this is happening already.
>Russia should use its special forces within the borders of the United States to fuel instability and separatism. For instance, provoke "Afro-American racists". Russia should "introduce geopolitical disorder into internal American activity, encouraging all kinds of separatism and ethnic, social and racial conflicts, actively supporting all dissident movements – extremist, racist, and sectarian groups, thus destabilizing internal political processes in the U.S. It would also make sense simultaneously to support isolationist tendencies in American politics.
Putin also recently went to Japan and offered the the Kuril Islands to Japan and provoking anti-Americanism.
Call it a conspiracy theory if you want but this book is in wide circulation among Russia's Defense Ministry and puts all of Russia's recent geopolitical activity into a context that makes sense.
Landon Rodriguez
inb4 obligatory russian posts that dugin is a clown and his books are ravings of a lunatic
Jack Barnes
What does that even mean?
Chase James
>this book is in wide circulation among Russia's Defense Ministry
According to (((who)))?
Jaxson Perry
>In 1996, Andrey Kozyrev, the Russian foreign minister who was a symbol of the westernizing strain in Yeltsin’s policies, was sacked, and the same year, General Rodionov, Dugin’s patron at the General Staff Academy, was appointed defense minister, replacing Pavel Grachev, who, as head of the airborne forces, had sided with Yeltsin in the August 1991 attempted coup. Also in 1996, the Duma voted to abrogate the decision of the Belovezh Agreement of 1991, which declared the Soviet Union officially dissolved, and simultaneously to recognize as legally binding the results of the 1991 referendum, in which 70 per cent of Russian voters supported the preservation of the USSR. It was obviously only symbolic, but a mere five years after the end of the USSR, a majority of the Russian elite — if one accepts the overwhelming Duma vote as an adequate bellwether — supported the restoration of empire.
In my opinion, there doesn't need to be a conspiracy
This is just nationalists who share similar interests converging around a narrative
Xavier Taylor
All Ivans are liars. They are the Eastern Jew, as Hitler would put it
Oliver Allen
Muh geopolitics. Why are Russians writing books about something they are so awful at? Literally a country with a GDP smaller than Italy with ambitions of world domination, fucking lmao.
Austin Cox
Trump was a major success for Russian foreign policy
>Other noteworthy Putinite Trump supporters include Aleksandr Dugin, the chief composer of the Kremlin’s new ideological synthesis of Communism and fascism, and its leading organizer of pro-Moscow fifth-column movements in the West. “In Trump we trust,” says Dugin, apparently proposing the substitution of Trump for God in the American national motto.
Are you mad? we will not give a single grain of sand from those islands to Japan. Otherwise Mr Putin will be hanged on the tree.
Alexander Anderson
Putin is negotiating with Abe over ending the dispute right now.
Blake Jackson
There is no translation for this book. Every major intelligence agency probably already read it and is prepared. Russia still manages to do what is suggested in the book. Now USA and the elites are so fucking scared that Russia keeps winning that they try to establish a Cold War 2.0 before a Trump presidency. It will be easier to oppose Trump if the whole world is scared of Russia and every move will be questioned if it helps Russia.
Jayden Roberts
Dugin also once said that there are reed people who live in Kazahstan in the lake and worship a giant, three meter tall cat. They poisoned the wind, and pose serious threat to mother Russia.
John Cooper
I don't care about how insane his opinions are.
I care about his influence in the Kremlin. According to some Western sources, he basically wrote the book for annexing Crimea.
Benjamin Butler
>offered the the Kuril Islands to Japan Can't wait for the putinbots to start defending this one.
Adrian Price
So what? They lost the war, why would the winner give anything to the losing side after 70+ years? And so you know - Japs don't even want islands, they want sea around them.
Josiah Ward
As Dugin outline, Putin will give the islands to Japan to help build new ties and stoke anti-Americanism in the far-easts greatest power
Japan wanted the TPP to contain Chinese influence. Now that Trump made that a non-entity, they're going to seek other trade partners. In this case, SEA and Russia.
Tyler Martinez
Dugin is correct because he is also a multidimensional chess player.
Putin and Dugin are playing the West like a fiddle for promoting white nationalist parties that seek to divide and destroy EU/NATO
Ian Myers
Your secret is out vatnik, no one should fall to your jew scheming
Gavin Thompson
Oh shit! Guess y'all better stay together and keep paying for those all those 'fugees Germany ordered.
Samuel Gray
Immigration is better solved by the EU as a whole. It would be universally easier to enforce borders along Turkey and the mediterranean waters than to hope a maginot line in France will solve immigration problems
Christopher Edwards
why no translation?
Jayden Bennett
Never read so much bullshit in one paragraph. He unites the worst principles of the right and left.
Dominic Cruz
Are you surprised that Putin is trying to destabilize the west for his benefit? You shouldn't be the old USSR would destabilize countries all the time. They did it in south america and Afghanistan.
No one here will believe it because they are either Russian shills or they are useful idiots. The GOP has gone from cold warriors to the party that loves putin as some savior or the white race.