Summary

An incendiary device hidden in a DHL package that ignited in Germany in July was part of an alleged Russian sabotage plot targeting the UK, with intentions to test such attacks for possible future attempts on the US and Canada.

Disguised within shipments of massage pillows, the devices originated from Lithuania, with similar packages discovered in the UK and Poland. Authorities suspect Russian GRU involvement, aiming to cause “mayhem” in retaliation for Western support to Ukraine.

While Russia denies involvement, European intelligence warns these actions risk civilian lives, potentially causing plane crashes.

  • @InverseParallax
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    2 months ago

    It’s a Russian mentality, they call it ‘escalation to deescalate’.

    The Russian mythos is based on the concept that Russians are able to tolerate far more pain than anyone else.

    So they might not be stronger, smarter, or better in any way, but they can always win a war because everyone else is weak when it comes to actual pain.

    If they keep making the world more and more scary, the other side will have to give up whatever you want, because they need to go back to their warm, safe, decadent lifestyle, while you have nothing, therefore, nothing to lose.

    It’s… Old… Older than the czars, it’s as deeply embedded in Russian culture as winter.

    The problem is, after it works once, they feel they have to do it again, because we still have so much and it’s not fair that we’re so comfortable while they aren’t. So the cycle continues till:

    I call if ‘aggressive victimhood’.

    Edit: also they have to do it again because when you concede you proved you were weak and they were strong in the first place, and therefore they have nothing to fear by pushing more.

    There is no real concept of compromise in the Russian psyche, it exists as an abstract concept, but… It’s like heaven, we all want to go there, we just don’t want to do what we need to to get there because we don’t entirely believe.

    • Boozilla
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      52 months ago

      This is interesting. There are somewhat similar sentiments among anarchists in the US who think “burning it all down” is the only way to fix the system (rebuilding it from the ashes). In their fantasy, it’s worth it to them to just destroy any and all parts of the current system and spread fear and chaos. Not the same idea, but I can see some overlap in mentality.

      • @InverseParallax
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        52 months ago

        It makes perfect sense as a threat if you believe you are the victim of the system, and therefore destroying the system hurts your enemy more than you.

        We have similar things here, I grew up in rural communities who fantasized about the day all those spoiled lazy city folk would have to come down and beg the poor humble farmers for food, because then there would finally be justice.

        Meanwhile all the federal and state funding was swallowed by the rich and powerful local authorities, while screaming about how the ciyfolk were all abusing them and never helped at all.

        There is clearly injustice in the world, but we have a long history of exploiting this kind of hierarchical dissonance for personal gain.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      There’s a lot of very specific language in this reply. Anything / anyone you’d suggest reading to substantiate the historicity of this “aggressive victimhood” as you’ve explained it here? Maybe this national inability to conceive of compromise?

      Because I’m no Russophile, admittedly; but all this sort of sounds like waffle and drivel to me.