Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

TexasTowelie

(123,472 posts)
Tue Oct 7, 2025, 07:08 AM Tuesday

Unexpected Reshuffle in Kremlin! Putin Dismisses His Closest War Advisor. Russia's Approach Changes - The Russian Dude



The Kremlin just dropped a political bombshell—Putin has officially sacked Dmitry Kozak, one of his longest-serving and most influential strategists. Kozak wasn’t just another bureaucrat; he was the mastermind behind Russia’s “legal” façade of empire-building—from Crimea’s annexation to the frozen conflicts in Moldova and Belarus. For decades, he helped Putin wrap aggression in paperwork, transforming invasions into “referendums” and occupations into “federalization.” But now, that era is over. His resignation signals that Putin no longer wants lawyers or negotiators—only loyalists and soldiers.

This major reshuffle marks a brutal turning point inside the Kremlin. Kozak was one of the few figures who dared to argue that a full-scale invasion of Ukraine would be catastrophic. He warned that the war would wreck Russia’s economy, isolate the country, and strengthen NATO. He was right—and that’s exactly why he had to go. By removing Kozak, Putin has erased the last voice of restraint, replacing diplomacy with raw power. The Kremlin has officially abandoned the illusion of law and entered an age where missiles and fear are the only policies that matter.

His departure coincides with a new wave of Russian missile and drone strikes across Ukraine—over 500 in a single day—killing civilians, crippling infrastructure, and triggering NATO air alerts along Poland’s border. The timing isn’t coincidence; it’s choreography. Kozak’s exit and the bombardment both announce the same message: Russia has chosen escalation over strategy, terror over tactics, chaos over control.

Inside Moscow’s elite, panic is spreading. Kozak’s fall shows that no amount of loyalty can save you when the system starts eating its own. Technocrats are being replaced by propagandists, managers by enforcers, lawyers by soldiers. The Kremlin is now run by men whose only qualification is obedience. Putin’s circle has shrunk into an echo chamber—one where dissent equals disappearance, and “voluntary resignation” means you were pushed out the window.

The purge of Kozak isn’t just a personnel change—it’s a declaration of war on rationality inside Russia’s power structure. The old method of dressing conquest in legal paperwork is gone. What remains is a state that justifies everything through violence. As the bombs fall and the yes-men take their seats, one thing becomes clear: Putin’s Russia no longer even pretends to play by rules. The lawyers have left the stage. The missiles are writing the script now.
Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Foreign Affairs»Unexpected Reshuffle in K...