Who poses the greatest threat to Putin: Piontkovsky named possible groups Angela Figin Terrorist attacks have become more frequent in Russia. In particular, on the evening of June 23, in two cities of Dagestan, Derbent and Makhachkala, unknown armed people fired at Orthodox churches, a synagogue and a police post. Probably The North Caucasus branch of the Islamic State, Wilayat Kavkaz, is behind this. Russian publicist from the United States of America Andrei Piontkovsky told 24 Channel, paradoxically, these people are close to Putin’s government. The greatest threat to the Russian president now comes from those who are ideologically close. In particular, in the Caucasus these are anti-Western, anti-Jewish, Islamic fascists. At the same time in Moscow and In general, in Russia, Vladimir Putin is having more and more problems with the z-audience, whom he must please and who are asking completely legitimate questions about why his threats are not being implemented. It started when Emmanuel Macron let Putin go and said that he was going to send French troops into Ukraine, and at the same time reminded that France is also a nuclear country,” said Piontkovsky. After the Russian terrorist attacks in the Republic of Dagestan, which killed 25 people, the Kremlin pretends to be stable, the country's president ignores the events without making a special address. The head of Dagestan, Sergei Melikov, said that the terrorist attack against “brotherhood, multinational unity and confessional indivisibility” of the republic is an attempt to split Dagestan. At the same time, the Russian Foreign Ministry complained that terrorists in Dagestan were trying to sow interreligious hatred.More and more problems are arising
Who poses the greatest threat to Putin: Piontkovsky named possible groups
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