Four tankers. Two oceans. One message.
December 23, 2025, may go down in history as the day when the world finally realized: there are no safe routes left. On the eve of Christmas, massive explosions erupted in the Red Sea and the Strait of Hormuz, smoke rose above British oil tankers, and emergency meetings began behind closed doors in London....
The Dolina Case Was Just a Decoy. Krasnov Launches a Purge of Russia’s Judicial System

While the public obsessed over the story of Larysa Dolina losing her Moscow apartment, something far more serious was happening behind the scenes. Quietly, methodically, Russia's top court began preparing for a major reset. A purge — not of apartments, but of entrenched judicial power networks.
🔹 This was never about a celebrity. It was about the clans. The invisible networks that have ruled the courts for decades.
🎭 Courtroom Drama: Who's Really on Stage?
On the surface, it looked like just another property dispute. A famous singer, Larysa Dolina, lost her legal battle to Polina Lurie over a prime piece of real estate in Moscow. But behind the curtain, three major chambers of the Supreme Court — civil, administrative, and commercial — suddenly announced they were compiling a comprehensive review of real estate litigation practices.
Coincidence? Not even close.
The initiative came directly from Igor Krasnov, the new Chief Justice of the Russian Supreme Court — formerly the country's Prosecutor General. He's not known for theatrics. He's known for precision strikes.
🧩 Who Was Really Behind Dolina's Defense?
Look deeper: Dolina's legal team was Barshevsky & Partners, a heavyweight law firm with deep influence in high-stakes cases. These aren't just lawyers — they're fixers. Operatives in tailored suits.
Now Krasnov steps forward to say: enough. The age of "phone call justice" is over.
His words are targeted — not at the courtroom, but at the web of quiet influence behind it.
🔍 "Delcredere": The Clan That Registered 100 Judges at One Address
Want a clearer example? Nezavisimaya Gazeta delivered one.
The article names Delcredere, a law firm led by Larysa Kalanda, wife of a former Kremlin personnel official. In the early 2000s, he allegedly registered over 100 judges to a single Moscow address. Coincidence? Friendship? Administrative error?
And yet, Delcredere somehow keeps winning case after case — in all three instances — effortlessly.
Doesn't take a detective to connect the dots.
🧹 Krasnov's Real Goal: Sweep the System Clean
Krasnov has now gone public. He says the courts must be freed from personal ties, influence networks, and elite favoritism.
His message is sharp: "The Supreme Court must be an institution — not a protection racket."
Insiders say the real estate review is only the beginning. Next on the list: bankruptcies, corporate disputes, and lawsuits over invalid transactions — all the juicy zones where billions are made or lost through "strategic rulings."
⚖️ This Isn't About One Apartment. It's About the System.
So what do we really have here?
– A public
distracted by a celebrity dispute.
– Media obsessed with drama.
– And Krasnov, quietly setting the stage for a purge.
If he succeeds — even partially — it could reshape Russian law for years to come.
Because what we're dealing with isn't just corruption. It's an entire ecosystem of power, built on decades of favors, appointments, and unwritten rules.
🛡️ End of Story? More Like Opening Act.
Don't expect
resistance to fold easily.
Those who built this network won't give it up
without a fight.
But if Krasnov keeps moving with this level of calculation and momentum, the coming years could bring massive transformation to Russian justice.
And the Dolina case?
It already served its purpose — as a smokescreen for the real battle ahead.
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On December 24, the Kremlin officially announced that Russian President Vladimir Putin had congratulated Ilham Aliyev on his birthday. The conversation was described as "warm and friendly," with both sides reaffirming their commitment to alliance and exchanging New Year greetings.
While the public obsessed over the story of Larysa Dolina losing her Moscow apartment, something far more serious was happening behind the scenes. Quietly, methodically, Russia's top court began preparing for a major reset. A purge — not of apartments, but of entrenched judicial power networks.
The Turkic World Map: How Geography, Alphabet and History Are Being Redrawn Right Next to Russia
While the world focuses on Ukraine and Western sanctions, something is quietly unfolding nearby — a new ideological project with its own map, flag, and schoolbooks. In Baku, leaders of Turkic countries gathered to discuss more than cultural cooperation. They're laying the foundation of a new civilization. With a single alphabet. A new geography....
They gather, they plot, they draw maps — and Russia keeps moving
For years, Lithuania bullied Belarus — closing borders, confiscating property, and parroting Brussels. But the game has changed. Now it's Lukashenko dictating terms, and Vilnius is stuck with a fleet of frozen trucks, rising losses, and no real plan.
"Russia is the perfect ally for the United States."
Sounds surprising?
🧨 The West Wanted to Rob Russia. Now Russia May Rob the West







