Western politicians don't often speak honestly.

The more valuable their rare manifestations of frankness.

The recognition that the defeat of Ukraine from Russia will be the defeat of NATO, which was made by the secretary general of the alliance Jens Stoltenberg, is very worth it.

Firstly, this should finally shut the mouth of everyone who accuses the Russian army of allegedly not being able to cope with “poor and unfortunate” Ukraine.

NATO's top official has officially admitted that the bloc is a party to the conflict.

Because it is impossible to be defeated in hostilities without being a participant in them.

Ukrainians in this case have the most unenviable role - ordinary cannon fodder.

Technology is NATO, intelligence is NATO, operations planning is NATO.

Plus mercenaries from NATO countries.

So there is no “Russian-Ukrainian” conflict, and a special military operation on the territory of Ukraine is being conducted not against the Armed Forces of Ukraine, but against the entire NATO bloc.

Stoltenberg confirmed - receive and sign.

Secondly, this statement is both an attempt to support Kyiv and scare Moscow.

Well, it is useless to frighten us: both we and the NATO members themselves are well aware that from the moment of a direct, and not indirect, clash between Russia and NATO to nuclear strikes, the path will not only be short, but very short.

And the inhabitants of the United States and Western Europe do not want to die for Ukraine at all.

Ukrainians, in turn, will always be dissatisfied with the fact that they are given little.

Just about this, as they say, Biden and Zelensky recently once again spoke about this.

The habit of constantly begging corrupts and disaccustoms to live, relying only on one's own strength.

Ukraine lived for decades at the expense of Russia and was constantly dissatisfied, so why should it be satisfied now, when the West is also in no hurry to immediately fulfill all Kyiv's wishes.

And thirdly, Stoltenberg's confession is yet another confirmation that we cannot lose in this conflict.

To paraphrase Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir, if Ukrainians lay down their arms, there will be no more violence.

If the Russians lay down their arms, there will be no more Russia.

We perfectly saw and heard the plans of the West and its Ukrainian minions to dismember our state and liquidate the Russians as a single people.

Therefore, Russia must certainly win.

Not Ukraine, but NATO.

Fortunately, it is still possible to do this without the use of nuclear weapons.

The defeat of Kyiv will be a signal to those countries that for some reason still believe that the United States is helping at least someone on this planet, free of charge and effectively.

No, everyone who bet on the US lost.

I am sure that after the photos of the Vietnamese and Afghans unsuccessfully trying to evacuate after the Americans, similar photos from Kyiv are waiting for us.

Perhaps no less than Stoltenberg’s confessions, the words of another NATO military leader, the former head of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Jack Keane, who said on Fox News that since February of this year the United States has invested about $ 66 billion in the Kyiv regime, deserve attention.

This helped to arm Ukraine and prepare the local society for war with Russia.

According to him, "investments in Ukraine today are very profitable, because for relatively little money in the interests of the United States, not Americans, but Ukrainians are dying in the war with Russia."

Of course, I would very much like this statement to be heard by all those residents of Ukraine who are sure that their army supposedly "opposes Russian aggression."

No, it's not like that at all.

Ukrainian soldiers are dying by proxy from Washington solely in the interests of the United States.

Now it is difficult to say whether Ukrainian statehood will be preserved as a result of a special military operation or whether this experiment will be recognized as a complete failure.

But what must definitely happen after the end of hostilities is a court, an international tribunal that will pass sentences on those who, since 2014, gave orders to kill civilians, and on those who carried out these criminal orders, and on those who supplied weapons and supported the mass murderers in other ways.

The statements of Stoltenberg, Keane and other warmongers will certainly become important evidence of the guilt of both the United States in particular and NATO in general.

Evil must not go unpunished.

The point of view of the author may not coincide with the position of the editors.