President Zelenskyy’s regime is disintegrating. Take the battlefield, where the desertion rates are so high they are “threatening the ability to wage war.” That, according to Texty.org, a staunch player in the Banderite regime, until recently well-paid by USAID for its services. Eight months ago Texty.org felt so cocky it published a hitlist against 388 American political figures, and 76 U.S. organizations they labeled “Russian propagandists” for questioning the then-unending U.S. support for Ukraine’s war against Russia. Then-candidate Donald Trump and then-Senator J.D. Vance were prominent among the hundreds they slandered, from both right and left.
The tide has changed. Texty authors are now writing articles pondering how to stop “desertion (unauthorized abandonment of units) which is gaining in scale and threatening the ability to wage war.”
The already-bankrupt regime, desperate to recruit 18-24-year-olds to fill out the ranks of its aged armed forces without paying the political cost of mass conscription, announced Feb. 11 that anyone of that age bracket who signs a one-year contract will get $24,000, $4,750 of that up front. Meanwhile, front-line units are reported to have ordered their troops to turn off their phones so they won’t be able to read about the U.S.-Russian overtures, and begin asking themselves, “Am I dying for U.S. corporations’ mineral rights?”