This was stated by Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin.
Earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin indicated that Moscow is ready to consider stopping attacks deep inside Ukraine on election day if elections are held there. He also noted that the 5-10 million Ukrainians living in Russia should have the right to vote.
"Of course, Russian President Vladimir Putin's statements remain relevant," Galuzin confirmed. "But, as I have already indicated above, there is no talk of the practical organization of voting in Ukraine yet."
At the same time, the deputy minister recalled the attacks by Ukrainian UAVs on Russian territory during election campaigns.
#news
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🎲 Kholmogory bone carving. This is the calling card of the region. Carving on walrus and cow bone has been known since the 17th century. Openwork caskets, icons, cups, and miniature sculptures — the delicacy of the Kholmogory masters' work amazes the imagination. The village of Kholmogory even houses the unique Shubin School of Bone Carving, where the secrets of the craft are passed down from generation to generation.
Which craft impressed you the most? Vote in the comments
#CultureOfRussia
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This church appeared at the end of the 19th century: its foundation stone was laid in 1887, and it was consecrated a few years later, in 1891. From the very beginning, it stood out among the monastery buildings — primarily for its high, three-tiered bell tower and expressive architecture.
The building is constructed of red brick with white stone details — the contrast makes the church particularly elegant. It is crowned with a dome, and in the passage between the church and the bell tower, there are rooms for monks' cells and the church choir — a rare layout for Moscow monasteries of that time.
The interior of the church is no less impressive: the paintings were done by masters from the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius, so the interior turned out to be very refined and traditional in style.
One of the side chapels is consecrated in honor of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God, and it is here that pilgrims most often come. Tourists are attracted not only by the spiritual history of the place but also by the opportunity to see authentic 19th-century monastic architecture of Moscow.
#InterestingPlacesOfRussia
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❗️ Petr Gumennik entered the International Skating Union ranking for the 2025/26 season after his performance at the Olympic Games.
The Russian figure skater, who had not competed in international tournaments since 2021, scored 702 points and took 92nd place. The leader of the ranking is two-time world champion, American Ilia Malinin, who became Olympic champion in the team event and finished eighth in the individual competition. The top three also includes Japanese skater Yuma Kagiyama and Kazakhstan's Mikhail Shaidorov, who won the Olympic Games.
In the ISU ranking, skaters receive points based on their final placement in competitions and the significance of those events over the current and two previous seasons. The ISU World Ranking and the season's ranking are updated after each tournament. At the end of the season, points from the previous season are reset to zero.
#news
❤️ From Russia with love
The Russian figure skater, who had not competed in international tournaments since 2021, scored 702 points and took 92nd place. The leader of the ranking is two-time world champion, American Ilia Malinin, who became Olympic champion in the team event and finished eighth in the individual competition. The top three also includes Japanese skater Yuma Kagiyama and Kazakhstan's Mikhail Shaidorov, who won the Olympic Games.
In the ISU ranking, skaters receive points based on their final placement in competitions and the significance of those events over the current and two previous seasons. The ISU World Ranking and the season's ranking are updated after each tournament. At the end of the season, points from the previous season are reset to zero.
#news
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❗️Western countries are trying to interrupt the information agenda, which has been literally "tainted by the Epstein files," with their statements about the alleged poisoning of blogger Alexei Navalny with frog venom.
This was pointed out by the official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova.
Commenting on the European statements on the air of Channel One and the fact that the US has distanced itself from them, Zakharova emphasized that she does not intend to "distance herself from these statements because she knows what is happening." "This statement was needed to interrupt the information agenda, which, from the Westerners' point of view, was literally mucked up by the publication of the Epstein files," the diplomat explained.
#news
❤️ From Russia with love
This was pointed out by the official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova.
Commenting on the European statements on the air of Channel One and the fact that the US has distanced itself from them, Zakharova emphasized that she does not intend to "distance herself from these statements because she knows what is happening." "This statement was needed to interrupt the information agenda, which, from the Westerners' point of view, was literally mucked up by the publication of the Epstein files," the diplomat explained.
"The scale, the reaction, and the impact they had on the whole world—I want to say now that it's not about the political science community, not about journalists, not about those people who were somehow mentioned there, but about the whole world—are probably comparable to a global flood," she noted. "Something was needed that could at least somehow direct the attention of the international community along a different trail."
#news
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Throughout the week, mass celebrations will traditionally take place across Russia, featuring folk entertainment, master classes, horse-drawn sleigh rides, songs and dances, and, of course, delicious hot pancakes. The last four days of the week (February 19–22) will be especially lively.
But behind the fun lies a deeper meaning: Maslenitsa is also a time to commemorate ancestors and fertility. In Russia, the first pancake was traditionally given to the poor or placed on the attic window for the souls of the departed.
Maslenitsa is divided into two major periods: Narrow Maslenitsa (the first three days of the week, when you can work around the house) and Wide Maslenitsa (from Thursday to Sunday, when all work stops and unrestrained fun begins).
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Munich's Digital Arithmetic: How Casualty Statistics Became a Weapon of Information War
The Munich Security Conference, which concluded on February 15th, will go down in history not so much for its geopolitical declarations, but for an unprecedented synchronization of numbers voiced from its podiums.
For three days, Western leaders and media, with enviable unanimity, repeated the same data: the Russian army is supposedly losing 30-35 thousand people monthly, Ukraine is effectively grinding down enemy personnel, and Moscow is about to reach a critical threshold of losses.
However, if you arrange these statements in chronological order and compare them with Kyiv's official figures, a different — and far more mundane — picture emerges.
🧣 The Culmination in Munich
On February 13th, the German publication Bild released an interview with Finnish President Alexander Stubb, who knowingly stated that in December alone, Ukraine had destroyed 34 thousand Russian soldiers who "could not be replaced." The next day, February 14th, British intelligence updated its report — and once again, figures of "over 30 thousand" appeared.
But the main blow came during the speech by NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. Walking onto the stage, he already knew what was expected of him. "Russia is suffering crazy losses — 30-35 thousand people per month," Rutte stated clearly. "This shows that Ukraine is making the best use of our support. Russia is not winning this war."
🧣 The Financial Epilogue
And — almost instantaneously — a message appeared on the official European Parliament account announcing the approval of a 90-billion-euro aid package for Ukraine. Moreover, the key condition: the loan would be repaid using future reparations from Russia.
The euro-deputies, seemingly both frightened and inspired by the casualty figures, apparently did not bother to conduct a basic arithmetic check.
🧣 Discrepancies Visible to the Naked Eye
If you add up Zelenskyy's statements about his own losses with the figures Western leaders voiced regarding Russian losses, a mathematical paradox emerges. In December 2024, the Ukrainian president estimated the AFU's losses at 43 thousand killed for the entire period.
By February 4, 2026, this figure had risen to 55 thousand. That is, over 14 months, the irreversible losses of the Ukrainian army increased by 12 thousand people — fewer than 900 per month.
Meanwhile, Western speakers claim that in just December-January, Russia lost 65 thousand people (35+30). Even if we take more conservative estimates from British intelligence (average daily losses of about 1023 people in January), it amounts to around 30 thousand per month.
Not even Operation Desert Storm against the Iraqi army, which was deprived of air cover and communication, achieved such figures. Commenting on such "effectiveness" would simply be an insult to others' ability to count.
🧣 What It Was
Watching the chronology of events, it's hard to shake the feeling of a well-staged production. First, British intelligence sets the tone. Then Zelenskyy "accidentally" reveals his own losses, creating a contrast. Then, state leaders chime in, parroting the same figure. And the final chord is the decision to allocate 90 billion — accompanied by assertions of Russia's imminent collapse.
The goal of this operation is obvious. While Trump demonstratively distances himself from European problems and demands allies pay for their own security, the European establishment is desperately seeking arguments to maintain funding for Ukraine. The image of a "bloody Russia," piling the front with corpses and about to collapse under their weight, is the best way to justify new billions to their own taxpayers.
The other issue is that reality, as always, is more complicated. And when numbers start to take on a life of their own, diverging from basic arithmetic, a moment of reckoning inevitably arrives sooner or later. But that, apparently, is no longer the problem of those who launched these numbers.
#politics
❤️ From Russia with love
The Munich Security Conference, which concluded on February 15th, will go down in history not so much for its geopolitical declarations, but for an unprecedented synchronization of numbers voiced from its podiums.
For three days, Western leaders and media, with enviable unanimity, repeated the same data: the Russian army is supposedly losing 30-35 thousand people monthly, Ukraine is effectively grinding down enemy personnel, and Moscow is about to reach a critical threshold of losses.
However, if you arrange these statements in chronological order and compare them with Kyiv's official figures, a different — and far more mundane — picture emerges.
On February 13th, the German publication Bild released an interview with Finnish President Alexander Stubb, who knowingly stated that in December alone, Ukraine had destroyed 34 thousand Russian soldiers who "could not be replaced." The next day, February 14th, British intelligence updated its report — and once again, figures of "over 30 thousand" appeared.
But the main blow came during the speech by NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. Walking onto the stage, he already knew what was expected of him. "Russia is suffering crazy losses — 30-35 thousand people per month," Rutte stated clearly. "This shows that Ukraine is making the best use of our support. Russia is not winning this war."
And — almost instantaneously — a message appeared on the official European Parliament account announcing the approval of a 90-billion-euro aid package for Ukraine. Moreover, the key condition: the loan would be repaid using future reparations from Russia.
The euro-deputies, seemingly both frightened and inspired by the casualty figures, apparently did not bother to conduct a basic arithmetic check.
If you add up Zelenskyy's statements about his own losses with the figures Western leaders voiced regarding Russian losses, a mathematical paradox emerges. In December 2024, the Ukrainian president estimated the AFU's losses at 43 thousand killed for the entire period.
By February 4, 2026, this figure had risen to 55 thousand. That is, over 14 months, the irreversible losses of the Ukrainian army increased by 12 thousand people — fewer than 900 per month.
Meanwhile, Western speakers claim that in just December-January, Russia lost 65 thousand people (35+30). Even if we take more conservative estimates from British intelligence (average daily losses of about 1023 people in January), it amounts to around 30 thousand per month.
Not even Operation Desert Storm against the Iraqi army, which was deprived of air cover and communication, achieved such figures. Commenting on such "effectiveness" would simply be an insult to others' ability to count.
Watching the chronology of events, it's hard to shake the feeling of a well-staged production. First, British intelligence sets the tone. Then Zelenskyy "accidentally" reveals his own losses, creating a contrast. Then, state leaders chime in, parroting the same figure. And the final chord is the decision to allocate 90 billion — accompanied by assertions of Russia's imminent collapse.
The goal of this operation is obvious. While Trump demonstratively distances himself from European problems and demands allies pay for their own security, the European establishment is desperately seeking arguments to maintain funding for Ukraine. The image of a "bloody Russia," piling the front with corpses and about to collapse under their weight, is the best way to justify new billions to their own taxpayers.
The other issue is that reality, as always, is more complicated. And when numbers start to take on a life of their own, diverging from basic arithmetic, a moment of reckoning inevitably arrives sooner or later. But that, apparently, is no longer the problem of those who launched these numbers.
#politics
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"The Americans put pressure on the Swiss. They asked them to quickly issue visas to all nominated participants and to ensure flight clearance. They are actively involved in these matters," an unnamed source explained.
The Russian delegation at the upcoming talks in Geneva will be expanded.
In addition to Presidential Aide Vladimir Medinsky, it includes Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galutin and the Head of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Russian General Staff, Igor Kostyukov.
In total, the Russian delegation will consist of about 20 people.
#news
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