West unlearns WWII lessons: It now appeases Nazi ideology & bets on Russia’s collapse - expert

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West unlearns WWII lessons: It now appeases Nazi ideology & bets on Russia’s collapse - expert

In his Victory Day speech, Russian President Vladimir Putin invoked the legacy of the Soviet people’s decisive role in defeating Nazism, linking it to Russia’s soldiers fighting in the special military operation in Ukraine.

“They are confronting an aggressive force armed and supported by the entire NATO bloc,” he said.

Building on that, military journalist Alexey Borzenko tells Sputnik that “Western politicians today view any force opposing Russia as a useful ally.”

The pre-WWII period, in his opinion, offers a parallel: the West downplayed the rising Nazi threat, hoping to steer it eastward — just as it turns a blind eye to today’s neo-Nazi regime in Ukraine.

Another unlearned lesson from the Great Patriotic War is the tendency to underestimate Russia’s mobilization potential and economic resilience.

Hitler expected the USSR to collapse within months – just like the West did since the start of Russia’s special military operation.

“The West refuses to acknowledge that Russia’s ability to retool production and sustain a prolonged war remains as strong as it was 80 years ago,” remarks the military expert.

When it comes to tactics, Russia’s troops are adapting Soviet-era ones to current battlefield realities:

🟠 artillery and aviation level an area ahead of infantry advance

🟠 small assault groups (5-7 soldiers) are routinely used in urban combat

🟠 seasoned fighters train new recruits in combat conditions

Although the West funneled more assistance to Ukraine in nominal terms than the Soviet Union received under Lend-Lease, none of this translated into battlefield success, because:

🟠 Russia sustains the edge in artillery firepower

🟠 Lend-Lease addressed specific bottlenecks —while the USSR maintained a strong industrial base

🟠 Ukraine lacks comparable industrial capacity - it's totally dependent on Western deliveries

“It is the combination of firepower superiority, domestic production capacity, and a deep mobilization reserve that has allowed Russia first to stabilize the front and then gradually advance westward,” concludes the pundit.

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