‘The whole world is against us’: Russian military analyst gives damning assessment of Ukraine war on state TV

‘The whole world is against us’: Russian military analyst gives damning assessment of Ukraine war on state TV


Destroyed military equipment of the Russian army in the city of Bucha.

Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

In a country where independent media and commentary has all but disappeared from public view, it’s rare to hear dissenting voices on the many state-controlled TV networks in Russia — particularly now with the country at war with Ukraine.

But one well-known military analyst and veteran has stood out this week after he appeared on state TV and gave a damning assessment of the Ukraine invasion, or what Russia calls its “special military operation.”

“The situation, frankly speaking, will get worse for us,” Mikhail Khodaryonok, a retired Russian army colonel, told the “60 Minutes” talk show on Rossiya-1 TV program hosted by Olga Skabeyeva, who’s renowned for her pro-Kremlin stance.

“You should not swallow informational tranquilizers,” Khodaryonok told the host as he warned that Ukraine was in no way near being beaten by Russia, and that Kyiv could mobilize and arm a million men if it wanted to.

Khodaryonok, who is also a defense columnist for the gazeta.ru newspaper and a graduate of one of Russia’s elite military academies, according to Reuters, had previously warned Russia against invading its neighbor Ukraine, saying it was not in Russia’s national interests.

His advice unheeded, Russia is now almost three months into a bloody conflict in Ukraine with only a few significant territorial gains in the east and south, and with the invasion likely to turn into a long-term war of attrition with Ukraine’s fighters showing a bravery and resilience underestimated by Moscow.

Moscow has already had to scale back its apparent strategy to invade Ukraine from the north, east and south and has now focused its fighting forces on eastern Ukraine, in the Donbas region.

Khodaryonok emphasized that even if Ukraine had to rely on hundreds of thousands of conscripts that only had a rudimentary military training, what mattered is that their hearts would be in the fight, and that would not bode well for Russia.

“The desire to defend one’s motherland in the sense that it exists in Ukraine — it really does exist there and they intend to fight to the last,” Khodaryonok said before he was interrupted by Skabeyeva who was trying to downplay the effectiveness of Ukraine’s forces.

Neither Khodaryonok nor Skabeyeva could not be reached for comment, Reuters reported.

‘The world is against us’

On the global stage, Russia is now widely ostracized and has been sanctioned to the hilt with even its erstwhile allies in China and India edgy over how long the conflict could last.

“The main deficiency of our military-political position is that we are in full geopolitical solitude and — however we don’t want to admit it — practically the whole world is against us … and we need to get out of this situation,” Khodaryonok continued on the talk show, with the other studio guests appearing dumbstruck by his outspoken critique.

While Russia is increasingly isolated, the West appears more united than ever. Ukraine’s allies in the West continue to supply arms to Kyiv and Russia’s invasion has seen the Western military alliance NATO tighten its security measures. In fact, Russia’s invasion has only served to strengthen the alliance with Finland and Sweden now looking to join the organization.

Russia predicated its onslaught of Ukraine largely on an opposition to it joining NATO (a prospect that was not imminent) and has invariably blamed NATO for the invasion, as well as accusing the military alliance of preparing to invade what Moscow sees as Russian territory in east Ukraine, where two pro-Russian, self-proclaimed republics are located in the Donbas.

But its response to NATO’s forthcoming expansion to include Finland and Sweden has been muted. Although it initially threatened “retaliatory steps” against the expansion, with President Vladimir Putin calling it “a problem,” it has since said the expansion doesn’t make a big difference to it. Geopolitical analysts have noted there is little Russia can actually do about the enlargement anyway, although Russia has threatened to act if NATO military infrastructure is placed in Sweden or Finland.

Khodaryonok said Russia needed to see the reality of the situation in Ukraine: “The main thing in our business is have a sense of military-political realism: if you go beyond that then the reality of history will hit you so hard that you will not know what hit you,” he said.

“Don’t wave rockets in the direction of Finland for goodness sake — it just looks rather funny,” he said.



Source

China’s factory activity grows at fastest pace since October, private survey shows, beating official reading
World

China’s factory activity grows at fastest pace since October, private survey shows, beating official reading

An employee works on a carbon fiber production line at Zhongfu Shenying in Lianyungang, China’s eastern Jiangsu province on July 31, 2025. Str | Afp | Getty Images China’s factory activity gathered speed in January, according to a private survey released Monday, as manufacturers accelerated production and front-loaded cargoes ahead of the extended Lunar New […]

Read More
Gold and silver extend sell-off after historic plunge — yellow metal drops 5%
World

Gold and silver extend sell-off after historic plunge — yellow metal drops 5%

A jeweller shows gold and silver bars at his shop in downtown Kuwait City on Jan. 12, 2026. Yasser Al-zayyat | Afp | Getty Images Gold and silver extended their sell-off on Monday, deepening losses from last Friday’s rout as a firmer dollar and profit-taking drained momentum from a rally that had propelled the metals […]

Read More
CNBC Daily Open: Markets see Warsh as a safe pick for Fed chair — causing gold and silver to plunge
World

CNBC Daily Open: Markets see Warsh as a safe pick for Fed chair — causing gold and silver to plunge

Kevin Warsh, Fellow in Economics at the Hoover Institution and lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in New York City, U.S., May 8, 2017. Brendan McDermid | Reuters Markets got what they wanted. U.S. President Donald Trump tapped Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve, and investors […]

Read More