The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - The Return of Kremlin Terrorism || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: April 29, 2026During the Cold War, Soviet intelligence agencies actively sponsored or even created terror cells throughout Europe. A recent mass shooting event in Ukraine suggest a return to old habits could well b...e happening. Join the Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/PeterZeihan Full Newsletter: https://bit.ly/48K69JS
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Everybody, Peter Zine here coming to you from Colorado.
Over this past weekend, we had some interesting developments in Ukraine, not on the front, but back in Kiev.
A Moscow-born individual who had lived in Bachmut in eastern Ukraine previously took seven people hostage in a supermarket and caused quite a bit of ruckus before police took him out.
Russian intelligence is not what it was during the Soviet period, but in bits and pieces it's been rebuilding its capacity.
and among the many tricks that the Russians developed during the Cold War was some really good divide and conquer ideas.
Despite the size of the Soviet Union, Russian leaders, Soviet leaders always had a very good appreciation for just how technologically backwards and corrupt and untrained their forces were.
And they knew if it came to a direct fight with NATO, they really only had two options.
Number one was to absolutely swarm NATO forces with superior numbers,
and number two was to provide some sort of distraction back in the Western countries
so that the Western attention would be divided.
Now, they never really got a chance to test that theory in combat,
and God forbid they're able to now,
but they're starting to rebuild some of those distraction policies.
And I'm not now talking about those Novichek poisonings we've seen,
or dragging and anchor on the seabed.
Those are all really easy things to do.
If we ever get into a real hot fight with Russians, expect to see dozens of those every week.
This is different.
This is sponsoring the creation of terror cells across the West.
We had a number of groups who were basically ideologically motivated to hate capitalism,
that the Soviets would basically work to build out supply and sometimes even task.
Now, I'm not suggesting that this specific case in Kiev was Russian instigated.
I really have no idea.
What I can tell you that even though Ukraine is at war and is awash with weapons, this is the first mass shooting event that we have seen in the country during the conflict.
And it is going to make a few people in the Kremlin think wistfully of old tools from old days.
So regardless of whether or not the Kremlin was involved, it has certainly occurred to them now that there is something to work with here.
What they can work with kind of falls into two general categories.
First, pre-war, roughly one-fifth of the Ukrainian population was ethnic Russians,
and another fifth was Ukrainian ethnics, but Russian speakers primarily.
Even though the Russians have caused the most damage to the pro-Russian parts of Ukraine,
complete with looting and rape camps,
they're still going to be able to find a small minority of pro-Russian groups in those areas
that the Ukrainians would call them collaborators that might be willing to do something along these lines
and remember it doesn't take a lot of people you don't even need one percent of the population
you just need a handful of people who are broken and zealotus and who are willing to kill for someone
whatever that reason happens to be and in a place like ukraine where there's been shooting
for so long and where the Russian intelligence network is so deep and where there are still
millions of Ukrainians and Russian ethnics of Ukrainian nationality living under Russian control,
the recruitment might not be as hard as you think. If you go further west, you fall into
the second category. We have probably passed peak far right in Europe. One of the things that
we have seen over the course of this war is as a rule, Europeans becoming more and more anti-Russian,
because the Russians have been doing sabotage throughout their countries, in addition to now threatening their direct military and strategic existence with the Ukraine war and what would happen after.
That means that hard right forces, whether they're in Finland or in Hungary, are broadly in retreat.
I mean, this is Europe. There's 30 countries. I don't want to make that too blanket of a statement.
But they've really found it difficult to get too much traction in the current environment.
and that is before Donald Trump kind of lost his mind and started berating all of his allies,
including the ones on the far right.
So in just the last couple of weeks, we've seen links between elected officials in places like
Italy fall apart and in places like Hungary where Trump actually personally campaigned for
the former prime minister, or caretaker prime minister now, we've seen that for soundly routed.
When the political appeal of these groups,
fails and their chances of getting power the traditional way through the ballot box starts to fade,
you're going to have zealots and hardcore groups among those factions that are going to be willing
to seek other options. I mean, we've certainly seen that here in the United States. And we probably
will in the months and years to come as Donald Trump basically implodes conservatism in America
and until the Republican Party can reform with more traditional conservative forces like, say, business
interests, you're going to see elements of MAGA really get ugly. That is happening in Europe
right now. And if you take the Russians on one side with their intel network and take a
disintegrating kaleidoscope of rightist groups in Europe on the other, the idea that you can
form these ideological-based violent groups, terror groups, is really not much of a stretch.
The biggest difference is that the last time around, because it was communism, Moscow generated
support among the hard left, whether it was environmentalists or radicals or pro-worker groups
or anarchists, where this time they're going to be doing it among the right, the nationalist
groups, the neo-Nazis, the biker gangs. It's a different feel about the only good news I have
out of this is that it's new.
These groups don't have a history of being violent in the pattern of militant groups in the
60s or 70s.
And the Russians are out of practice for this specific sort of work.
It's one thing to send an agent to Salisbury and poison a guy's tea.
It's quite another to actively plan militant attacks in countries that ever since 2001 have
really been upping their internal security capabilities. So this will happen. A lot of these people
will be caught. The Russians will be exposed, but the volume of people that you need to stir up to
start this sort of process is so low. And there are broken people in every community. The Russians
are just going to be taking advantage of them in a way that they haven't until now.
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