CCTV news shows that the Russian army recently launched fierce air strikes on Kiev, Odessa and other places in Ukraine. The Ukrainian military base in Poltava region and the Security Bureau building in Sume were hit hard, and the Ukrainian special forces camp in Slavianka suffered heavy losses. This is not only an escalation of military operations, but also a long-planned "revenge storm".
1. The strategic abacus behind the bombing: What chess is Moscow playing?
The Russian army's operation was by no means a whim. The dispatch of 8 Tu-95 and Tu-160 strategic bombers, combined with 80 suicide drones, formed a "fire power network in the sky and underground." From destroying the core facilities of the Ukrainian army to suppressing its air defense system, the "combination punch of precisely guided bomb + cruise missile" exposed three profound meanings of the Russian army:
1. Blow the nerves - hit the Ukrainian army's logistics lifeline and cut off the NATO weapon transportation line;
2. Shock the West - use dense firepower to tell the United States and Europe: "Don't expect Ukraine to last too long";
3. Psychological pressure - break the battlefield deadlock through day and night bombing and shake the morale of the Kiev military and civilians.
An anonymous military observer admitted: "It's like weaving an iron curtain with missiles and pushing Ukraine to the edge of the cliff."
2. The secret of 13,000 missiles: How thick is Russia's "war passbook"?
The figures disclosed by the Tsar Fort media are shocking: Among the 13,000 missiles of various types, there are both "Oyster" anti-ship missiles that can paralyze the airport with one blow, and there are also Kh-101 nuclear and regular cruise missiles that can covert penetration. What's even more terrible is that Russia can produce 200 missiles every month - North Korea's "friendly support" has made NATO unable to figure out its trump card.
A retired Russian army engineer privately revealed: "The range of Iskander-M can cover the entire territory of Ukraine, and one can blow up half of the military camp. The key is that it costs only 1/5 of the same weapons as the United States." Such cost-effective advantages make the Russian army dare to fight a protracted war.
3. The Sword of Damocles of Nuclear Deterrence: What truth did Kortounov tell?
The British Times' warning is by no means alarmist: the think tank CSIS evaluates that if the war continues to deteriorate, the possibility of the Russian army using tactical nuclear weapons has risen to 20%. Kortubov's "limited nuclear deterrence theory" is particularly thought-provoking - using small-equivalent nuclear bombs to target underground command posts can not only avoid comprehensive nuclear war, but also create a "nuclear seismic effect."
Imagine a scene like this: a 5,000-ton "dagger" hypersonic nuclear warhead, piercing with Mach 6, exploded 500 meters above the logistics hub in western Ukraine, instantly setting off an electromagnetic pulse and radiation dust storm... Will the Zelensky government still dare to receive the Patriot missile?

IV. The helplessness of the West and Trump's silence: Who is promoting nuclear adventure?
When Trump expressed “difficulty in ceasefire” at the Berlin conference, Washington’s cold treatment was being interpreted as condonation. A former White House adviser said bluntly: "They know that sanctions against Russia are already exhausted." But NATO countries are in awkward-
- Germany would rather sell tanks than take nuclear risks;
- Polish border air defense radar stares at Belarus, but is helpless in nuclear deterrence;
- Estonian diplomat smiled bitterly in private: "We are even the javelin missiles for Ukraine are almost at the bottom."
5. Survival rules in the fog of war: Will the next missile carry a "flashing death"?
Ordinary Ukrainian soldiers may not have realized that the white trajectories passing through the night sky may carry a signal of doomsday. A citizen who escaped from Donetsk recalled: "When the air defense alarm sounded last month, neighbors thought it was a false alarm again, and the second wave of missiles directly turned his supermarket into ruins."
And Russian soldiers smelled the danger earlier - chat records leaked from social media showed that some pilots had begun to sign "nuclear mission authorization letters."

VI. At the end: Where is this war running wildly?
When Putin's revenge fireworks burned along the Black Sea coast, humans may be only a few missiles away from nuclear winter. The U.S.-made rocket launcher in the hands of Ukrainian soldiers, the hypersonic weapons in the Russian army, the early warning screen flashing in the late night of the Pentagon... all of this intertwined into a huge net.
Will history repeat Hiroshima in 1945? No one dares to draw a conclusion. But what is certain is that 13,000 missiles not only fill the Russian military warehouse, but also bend the world's wrists waiting for peace.
