What is bad ? All that proceeds from weakness.
- Nietzsche
Russia ready to hit UK with wave of cyber attacks, minister will warn
Russia’s Biggest Smallest Superpower: The Atomic Huff and Hybrid Puff War
Russia’s war against Europe isn’t coming—it’s already here. It’s not tanks rolling across borders; it’s sabotage, cyberwarfare, assassinations, and psychological warfare.
The attacks are multiplying. To avoid escalation, Western governments prefer to pretend they don’t see the elephant in the room.
But the truth is, Moscow is running a shadow war against Europe, striking where it hurts the most—without ever taking real responsibility.
Putin’s worldview is built on a lie: the belief that Russia is still a great power.
The world moved on after the Soviet Union collapsed, but Moscow never did.
Trump was the only Western leader who momentarily entertained the fantasy of Russia’s lost grandeur. The real problem?
A great power needs great power resources. And Russia, quite simply, doesn’t have them.
The numbers don’t lie: In 2023, Russia’s GDP was a meager $2 trillion—less than half of Germany’s and barely enough to place it 11th in the world.
Economic strength defines great power status, and Russia falls embarrassingly short. Even with a bloated military budget consuming 8–9% of its GDP ($126 billion in 2025), it’s dwarfed by Europe’s $400 billion military spending.
Even adjusted for economic disparities, Russia remains a shadow of what it pretends to be.
And then there’s its outdated economy—60% of exports are raw materials, the profile of a third-world country, not a global superpower.
The Russian military, once feared as an unstoppable force, has been humiliated in Ukraine. A country one-fourth its size has managed to resist for three years.
The myth of the Russian bear collapsed under the weight of reality.
The Russian Scam Show: Fighting the Wars It Can Win
Putin’s strategy?
Fight only where victory is guaranteed. Against weaker enemies, Russia uses brute force. Against strong ones, it fights in the shadows.
This is why its wars in the West aren’t fought with tanks but with hacking, propaganda, disinformation, extremist funding, assassinations, and covert sabotage disguised as “accidents.”
Welcome to 21st-century warfare—where autocracies thrive because they don’t have to deal with the “inconveniences” of democracy.
Since 2022, Russia’s hybrid warfare has expanded from Ukraine to Europe itself. Assassination plots in Germany, arson in Poland, and the severing of undersea cables in the Baltic Sea—all designed to make Europe feel vulnerable, destabilize societies, and push democracy closer to Russia’s authoritarian playbook.
The Kremlin’s Shadow War: A Billion-Dollar Investment in Chaos
Russia’s covert war isn’t just growing—it’s exploding. Russian hackers, many working for the GRU, are world leaders in cyberattacks. Their goals?
-
Steal intelligence – as seen in the hacks on the German Bundestag and SPD headquarters.
-
Rig elections – Moscow has interfered in 26 parliamentary elections. In Moldova, it bought 300,000 votes. In Romania, priests were paid €1,000 each to preach in favor of pro-Russian candidates. The far-right AfD in Germany? Their Austrian backers suspiciously smell of Russian influence.
-
Weaponize media – Russia Today funneled $10 million into pro-Kremlin propaganda during U.S. elections. The Kremlin’s election interference budget in 2022? A whopping $300 million.
-
Crash economies – Half of Russian cyber-attacks aim to overload vital infrastructure. One-third hit the financial sector, digital networks, and transportation. Another 20% target local governments. Russia is fully capable of shutting down entire essential services in smaller countries.
The West’s Losing Battle: Fighting With One Hand Tied
Europe is scrambling to catch up, increasing cyber defense budgets by 20% per year, now at €52 billion.
But defense is always more expensive than offense. A full-scale counter-strategy will take Europe at least four to five years—years it doesn’t have.
And democracies, with their legal and moral constraints, are always at a disadvantage against dictatorships. The West, afraid of escalation, often buries the truth when Russia strikes.
But how do you fight back against an enemy that thrives in secrecy?
Responding with Russia’s own playbook—hacking, sabotage, election interference—feels morally uncomfortable for Western democracies. And propaganda doesn’t work in a country where the population has been brainwashed to accept suffering as patriotism.
The West’s Best Weapon: The Reality Check
If Russia’s goal is to make Europe weak and unstable, then the best counterattack is to highlight what Russians don’t want to hear:
The brutal truth. No amount of nationalist propaganda can hide the fact that Russians live shorter, poorer, and more oppressed lives than their Western counterparts.
While Europe debates electric cars, Russians debate how to afford bread. While Westerners complain about inflation, Russians worry about whether they’ll have running water in winter.
The only way to weaken Putin’s grip is to constantly remind the Russian people what they’re missing.
The dream of a better life knows no borders. And no amount of cyber-warfare can change that.
Sincerely,
Adaptation-Guide
ADAPT OR DIE!
WE ARE READY! ARE YOU?