• Russia claims they received cryptocurrency.

    Okay, so which currency and which transactions? Crypto has a public ledger, so it should be easily verifiable if these transactions happened.

    But obviously, such evidence has not been provided.

    Even the claim that they were fleeing to Ukraine is dubious, as a “hero’s welcome” would not fall well with the western public (eroding the support they need is not a winning strategy), and the road they were supposedly arrested on leads to Belarus, not Ukraine.

    The Russian narrative does not logically add up, and there’s no actual evidence at all. Meanwhile, the west preemptively warned the FSB that an attack was imminent (which you wouldn’t do if you want the attack to succeed) and named the group behind it, which was backed by evidence (as said group published videos that only they could have taken).

    Please keep an open mind. Ask yourself “which is more likely” and make sure the claims you believe are backed with evidence.

    • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      14
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      8 months ago

      Okay, so which currency and which transactions? Crypto has a public ledger, so it should be easily verifiable if these transactions happened.

      I’m not sure what you mean by this? Crypto is used specifically because it is difficult to trace transactions, so I doubt there is a clear public record of the transactions, it wouldn’t be used for the vast majority of drug sales if it were so easily traceable.