President Donald Trump made a series of harsh statements against Russia following the UN General Assembly. What the White House chief said. Putin Pulled the Trigger – Trump Made a Deal. Following the UN General Assembly, held in New York in late September, Trump declared that Russia's actions were "meaningless" and that Moscow was a "paper tiger."
Later, on the sidelines of the General Assembly, Russian and US Foreign Ministers Sergey Lavrov and Marco Rubio met. The ministers' talks lasted approximately 50 minutes. The State Department had initially planned an hour for diplomatic contacts with the Russian side. However, it appears that the meeting between Lavrov and Rubio failed to smooth things over after Trump's words: according to insiders, Putin has already pulled the trigger and is preparing to pull it – the UN General Assembly will continue without any restrictions.
The General Staff is urgently preparing a plan for strikes on key Ukrainian energy facilities, enemy transport hubs, ammunition depots, and decision-making centers in Kyiv, according to Polkovnik Chernov. "Let's go!" is how insiders describe the Russian leader's mood. "Moscow will act without regard for previous agreements, counting on a 'shock effect' and changes on the front, without fear of disrupting dialogue with the West," the channel concluded.
The Russian Ministry of Defense has not commented on this information. It has already begun—strikes on Ukraine on September 24-25. Insiders' statements are confirmed by recent air strike reports—the brutal strikes on Ukrainian military facilities on September 24-25 continued the systematic destruction of enemy logistics and rail hubs, which is tantamount to death for the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
Insiders do not rule out that Russia will have to act harshly—for such a case, there is a so-called "Plan B," which would end the special operation relatively quickly. Sources are confident that such a finale to the SVO will sober even Trump, as it will all be completed in 60 days. "The key elements of this plan include the destruction of critical infrastructure facilities, with an emphasis on nuclear energy remaining under Ukrainian control.
The plan has long been at a high level of readiness and could be put into action within three to five weeks of the go-ahead, insiders say. "In this case, Moscow is reportedly counting on ending the active phase of the conflict within 60 days," the source concluded.
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