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Why Has The Media Suddenly Started To Discuss Replacing Zelensky?

It looks like the West is losing faith in Zelensky and Ukraine…could they be preparing to ditch their chosen ally?

Cracks have certainly started to appear in the world’s unwavering support for the globalist pawn and former comedian.

British, American and even Polish authorities have started to air their complaints about Zelensky’s perceived ungratefulness and arrogance.

Even Brazil and South Africa have felt at ease to deny his requests, and have debated his ideas without the need for an automatic agreement.

Zelensky’s suspected substance abuse, along with his targeting of political opponents and canceling of upcoming elections, have also begun to be openly debated.

TGP reports: Now, the mainstream media has started to talk about scenarios involving his death, and his replacement by a military junta.

They even asked him whether he was worried by ‘Russian attempts to kill him’, to which he answered ‘he couldn’t afford to be’.

Politico reported:

“’If I were thinking about it constantly, I would just shut myself down, very much like Putin now who doesn’t leave his bunker’, the Ukrainian leader said in an interview with CNN last month. ‘Of course, my bodyguards should think how to prevent this from happening, and this is their task. I don’t think about it’.”

Ukrainian officials, who previously worried the topic appears far too macabre, have also begun addressing it.

“U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said as much: ‘The Ukrainians have plans in place — that I’m not going to talk about or get into any details on — to make sure that there is what we would call ‘continuity of government’ one way or another’, he told CBS news last year.

Formally, under the constitution, the line of succession is clear. ‘When the president is unable to fulfill his duties, the chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine [the Ukrainian parliament] takes over his responsibilities’, said Mykola Knyazhytsky, an opposition lawmaker from the western city of Lviv. ‘Therefore, there would be no power vacuum’.

The chairman of the Verkhovna Rada — Ruslan Stefanchuk, a member of Zelenskyy’s Servant of the People party — doesn’t have an especially high trust rating in opinion polls. It is around 40 percent, less than half of Zelenskyy’s. And he’s not popular with opposition lawmakers.”

Whiule they admit that Zelensky’s death would be a major ‘psychological shock’, it is envisioned that political power would be held by a committee of top officials, most likely formed by Stefanchuk, Andrii Yermak, the former movie producer at the head of the office of the president, as well as Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and top general Valery Zaluzhny.

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Rupert Murdoch-owned UK paper The Sun has even reported that Russia’s Vladimir Putin gave Wagner PMC boss, Evgene Prigozhin, orders to assassinate Zelensky.

Nobel prize-winner Dmitry Muratov:

“I think that he may not ask for forgiveness [from Putin] saying: ‘Let me come back’.

But he may commit some great atrocity for the benefit of Russia.

“Ukraine’s security service said Monday it had detained a woman from the country’s Mykolaiv region, accusing her of trying to gather intelligence for Russia on the movements of President Volodymyr Zelensky.”

The woman was reportedly trying to establish ‘the time and range of locations’ of Zelensky’s visit to the Mykolaiv region of southern Ukraine.

“The Security Service of Ukraine, known as the S.B.U., also accused the woman of working to locate Ukrainian ammunition store points and electronic warfare systems in the area, saying it had intelligence that showed Russia sought the information in order to plan a ‘massive airstrike’ in Mykolaiv. It did not explicitly specify whether Mr. Zelensky was the intended target.

‘Officers detained the woman red-handed in her attempt to pass intelligence to the Russians’, the statement added, without providing further details.

[…] In its statement on Monday, the agency did not name the woman or say when she had been detained, saying only that she was a resident of the small, historic port city of Ochakiv who had previously worked as a saleswoman in a Ukrainian military store. She has been placed in custody and could face up to 12 years in prison, it added.”

Why the sudden interest in this theme? Is the West preparing to ditch his chosen ally? Stay tuned, because as the counteroffensive peters out and the US elections start to loom in the not-so-distant future, things can change very quickly.

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