| ▲ | lionkor an hour ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
That's a book by Aleksandr Dugin, not Putin. I was asking specifically if there are ANY sources for the recurring statement that Putin wants to conquer back former USSR states. I see why its concerning, and how Dugin's close ties to the government are interesting, but I do not see a quote, or any other source, where Putin explicitly STATES this intent. I don't see it. Surely I'm missing something here. Putin's 2023 "The Concept of the Foreign Policy of the Russian Federation" also does not state conquering back former USSR states. Where is it? If he states it so clearly that people keep quoting it, surely there must be a source for it? Sorry if I'm a PITA. To be clear, I'm interested in this because this would be a fantastic argument to bring to discussions, but without having seen a source, I don't think I could. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | AnimalMuppet an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Imagine that someone writes a post saying something outrageous. And imagine that Trump retweets it. He didn't say it... but he kind of did. I think Dugin's book is like that. Sure, Dugin said it, not Putin. But IIRC Putin did some things to make Dugin's book more influential. I forget the specifics - making it required reading in the Russian military academies, maybe? There have been other statements by Russian politicians who are widely regarded as Putin's mouthpieces. Medvedev, certain key figures in the Russian parliament. I know I've seen that, though I don't recall the specifics. So Putin maybe didn't say it. And yet, his endorsed mouthpieces (more than one) do say it. You said "without having seen a source". Well, I didn't give you one. But if you want to look, I have given some places to start. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||