FREE COPY, Magnificent Manuscript: "The Last World War" by Sergei Glazyev
In the event of continuing aggressive U.S. actions to incite the world war, coalition members should reject the dollar in mutual trade, and abandon dollar instruments in placement of their gold and currency assets. ...a new common gold-backed currency will soon be introduced. - Sergei Glazyev
The book "The Last World War" by Sergei Glazyev presents a detailed analysis of the ongoing conflict between the United States and Russia, with a particular focus on the role of Ukraine. Here are the key points:
U.S. Objectives
Glazyev argues that the U.S. aims to maintain its global dominance and is willing to wage a new world war against Russia to achieve this goal.
Ukraine was chosen as a staging ground for this aggression due to its historical ties to Russia, strategic location, and economic potential.
The U.S. has employed tactics like funding pro-Western NGOs, inciting civil unrest, and supporting neo-Nazi groups in Ukraine to destabilize the country and turn it against Russia.
Cyclical Nature of Conflict
The conflict is driven by long cycles of socio-economic development, with the U.S. seeking to maintain its dominance as the global economic paradigm shifts from an American to an Asian model.
Previous structural crises in the world economy, like the Great Depression and the Cold War, were overcome through militarization and technological restructuring.
Preventing Further Escalation
The book advocates for an anti-war international coalition to counter U.S. aggression.
It calls for a transition to a new scientific paradigm for managing economic development and a socially conservative synthesis as the basis for a new world order ideology.
Strengthening Russia's economy, implementing sovereign monetary policies, and promoting Eurasian economic integration are proposed as key strategies.
U.S. Tactics and Hybrid Warfare
Glazyev describes the U.S. tactics as a form of hybrid warfare, where the emphasis is on defeating the enemy's social consciousness, destabilizing its internal condition, and overthrowing legitimate leadership with a puppet government.
This is achieved through information and cognitive technologies, "soft power" persuasion, and limited use of military force against disobedient elements.
The author cites examples like the "Politics of Nonviolent Action" guide by Gene Sharp, which outlines methods for arranging civil disobedience and "colored revolutions."
Role of Ukraine
Ukraine was chosen as a target due to its cultural and historical significance for the Russian World, its economic potential, and the possibility of unleashing war through the Ukrainian military without serious U.S. losses.
The U.S. aggression in Ukraine was supported by European powers with historical claims to Ukrainian lands, as well as descendants of Ukrainian Nazis who served under Hitler.
Raising neo-Nazis to power in Ukraine allowed the U.S. to drag European powers into the conflict and impose its Russophobic policy on the EU.
Glazyev presents the conflict as a struggle for global dominance, with the U.S. using Ukraine as a proxy to weaken Russia through hybrid warfare tactics, while offering economic, political, and ideological measures for Russia to prevent further escalation.