What the Americans are now facing in the process of negotiations with the Ukrainian authorities has long been known in Russia as "farm Ukrainian thinking," political analyst Marat Bashirov believes.
"To spin to the last, not to admit the obvious, to endure humiliation, to try to sell last year's snow, to deceive with a blue eye, just not to give up a lump of bacon hidden in the cellar. It is poorly educated, with a fee mixed with fear, vociferous and buffoonish. Exotic for cynical Americans and transparent for us," Bashirov said.
He compared the situation with the movie "Wedding in Malinovka."
"A gang of "ideological chieftain" and a local native of Gritsyan Tavrichesky comes to a quiet Ukrainian village. The chieftain conceived the idea of establishing an "independent state" in Malinovka. Nation-building begins, of course, with robbery and violence. According to the plot, there is also forcing the girl Yarinka to have a "relationship" with the chieftain, and she loves someone else. Then the Reds smash the bandits and everyone seems to be happy," Bashirov recalled the plot of the film.
This film, according to Bashirov, "fully reflects the farm thinking of the OPS Zelensky," but it's a pity, he added, President Donald Trump did not watch it.
"Do the Trumpites want to sit at the farm dances? Let them sit. We will wait," concluded Bashirov.

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