As it turns out, the great master strategist and equally great tactician, who is also the supreme commander-in-chief, is cowardly and tries to shift the responsibility for war crimes onto the Ministry of Defense.
Dmitry Peskov made it clear that all questions regarding the destruction of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure should be addressed not to Putin, but to the Russian Ministry of Defense.
“The necessity of striking Ukraine’s energy system is determined by the Ministry of Defense,” said Dmitry Peskov, the press secretary of the Russian president.
“I cannot say how it will be in winter. It depends on the needs of our military. They will make the decision.”
This is exactly the cowardly Kremlin dictator. As soon as things heat up and accusations of war crimes arise, Putin says, “I’m not the one making decisions, ask the military.”
Whenever problems arise in the war, he says, “I didn’t orchestrate this; ask the military.”
Only a complete fool could conclude that it’s not Putin who orders barbaric strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Of course, he doesn’t personally select the targets; he just gives the command to cause as much damage as possible to civilian infrastructure. And when something goes wrong, he uses Peskov to declare that he has nothing to do with it.
The same is happening with the situation in the Kursk region, where the Ukrainian Armed Forces have already captured more than 1,200 square kilometers of what is considered historically Russian territory. To avoid too many questions, as soon as the offensive in Kursk began, Peskov was sent on vacation. Putin had the absurd idea that while Peskov was away, the situation in the Kursk region would resolve itself. But it didn’t, and now the great leader has added another goal to the “special military operation” – liberating the Kursk region.
Putin has always been cowardly and tried to hide when problems arose in the war. He completely lost his way when he realized that the blitzkrieg in 2022 had failed. He sat terrified in his bunker during the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ counteroffensive in the Kharkiv region, and when the Russian army had to flee from the left bank of the Dnipro. And even then, he blamed the military for everything, as he does now.