I think it was in 2006. The year I started to get a bad feeling in Russia.
On my many travels in the country, I discovered that it was not true, what Norwegian and other European politicians constantly said.
“Russia is still a young democracy, we must give them time.”
“They are on the right track.”
“We need to work with Putin to help him create a better society.”
The statements were more an expression of wishful thinking than expertise, which became clear for the first time when Russia invaded Georgia in 2008.
Predictions came true
For almost 20 years now I have been writing books and articles. Talked for hundreds of hours on TV about the Russian regime’s repression of press freedom, human rights violations and aggressive military rearmament.
And on February 24, 2022, I was right in my gloomy predictions for the future.
Russia started an unprovoked war of aggression against one of its neighbors.
Europe has been thrown into a new great war, in which a seemingly irrational Vladimir Putin destroys everything in his path – from innocent civilians to nuclear power plants.
And yet the war is young. It can get much, much worse.