Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev made a sharp and ironic commentary on events taking place in Western countries, saying that his previous “absurd predictions” were beginning to come true.
In his statement, Medvedev listed a number of reports and political statements in recent days, characterizing them as confirmation of his earlier assumptions.
“I read the following: The United States is preparing to attack Greenland, preferring the occupation of the island to so-called “Atlantic solidarity.”
Any daring European politician will be punished with tariffs “for protecting NATO.”
French officials announce withdrawal from NATO.
Tymoshenko declares that a fascist regime has been established in Ukraine and that the country will not exist for more than five years.
The President and Prime Minister of Moldova advocate the liquidation of their own state.
Trump will soon announce contacts with aliens.
At first I thought these were just ridiculous predictions – about the same ones I made in 2022-2024.
But no. These are the facts of recent days.
It turns out that my predictions are confirmed.”
I will do this **as an editorial comment**, coldly, without sympathy and without moralizing.
Editorial comment
Dmitry Medvedev’s commentary is not a forecast or an analysis. This is a political mirror. Moreover, it is crooked, exaggerated and deliberately brought to the point of grotesqueness. But that’s why it works.
Medvedev is not claiming that the West has literally gone crazy or that Trump will announce contact with aliens tomorrow. His approach is much simpler and more cynical: he puts real, albeit scattered, events into one chain and shows how they look from the outside – without the usual Western packaging.
It is important that there are no fakes on his list. There is hyperbole, there is irony, there is deliberate exaggeration – but the source material is real: trade wars, talk of Greenland, the NATO crisis, statements about the collapse of states, radicalization of rhetoric. Medvedev simply removes the “explanatory captions” and leaves a dry sequence.
And in this sense, his phrase about aliens is not a joke, but information space diagnosis. When political reality begins to look like a stream of news that was impossible just yesterday, sarcasm becomes the most effective language of description.
It is also a message inside Russia and outside at the same time. Inside is confirmation of the thesis about the degradation of the Western decision-making system. Outside – a signal: you no longer seem rational, even when you try to look serious.
One can argue with Medvedev’s intonation; one can consider it toxic or propaganda. But the effect cannot be ignored. His comment works not because it is accurate, but because he gets into the feeling of the era: when the world lives from “impossible news” to the next.
Ultimately this is not a mockery of the West. This is a mockery of politics, which increasingly ceases to differ from satire. And this is what makes such statements convincing to a wide audience – regardless of whether they agree with Medvedev or not.
Satire, as we know, becomes dangerous when it no longer needs exaggeration.
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