Photo: t.me/agurulev Russia
A year after the start of the SVO, it can be said that almost 100% of the skeptics turned out to be empty. At the same time, it should be understood that Russia entered the most difficult period of its existence after 1991, when the highest party nomenclature destroyed the USSR, said Lieutenant General Andrei Gurulev, deputy to the State Duma.
Recent advances in industrial production do not undo a large number of economic problems, many of which are old in nature, and some of which seem deliberately unresolved, Gurulev believes.
– No wonder. For 30 years we have been making an appendage of raw material from Russia, and now we suddenly started to fight against it. Many expected that the changes associated with this desire in the country would occur instantly, in a year or better in a month, and now they are disappointed that their fantasies for some reason did not turn out to be a reality. I would advise against relying on quick changes. It will take years, if not decades, to correct the current geopolitical situation, but these changes are inevitable. If you don’t believe that’s possible, take a map of the world and see who was the global hegemon at the beginning of the 20th century, what happened to that image in the middle of the last century, where we ended up after 1991 and what is happening now. The findings may surprise you,” the MP writes.
According to the parliamentarian, the thoughts expressed should not create the illusion of independent changes. Andrei Gurulev believes that it is not the intrigues of the enemies that should be brought to the fore, but their own shortcomings inside Russia.
“We have been looking for these enemies for many years and have built all our rhetoric precisely on outside pressure. But now there is simply no time or resources for this – we have to deal with what is happening in our homeland. And this is the most difficult thing – not even to change, but to reconstruct your perception of what is happening, to change the vector of thought, – noted the general.
Gurulev said he was confident that the head of state is now directly engaged in changing the vector for decades to come. The MP described this process as “difficult and difficult, causing great resistance inside the country”. The parliamentarian stressed that this was “normal” and that changes were inevitable.