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Taoism teaches balance ( Yin and Yang ). The "Yang" of military mobilization must be balanced by the "Yin" of social stability. The danger for Putin’s "Infinite" operation is that even water, when frozen or boiled, changes its nature. A strategy of "eternal war" requires a population that is willing to live in a state of permanent suspension. If the equilibrium breaks—if the "water" of the state turns into the "steam" of social unrest—the Tao of Z may face its ultimate contradiction. The New Normal

In the classic Taoist text, the Tao Te Ching , Lao Tzu writes: "The softest thing in the universe overcomes the hardest thing." For years, Western analysts viewed Vladimir Putin through the lens of a judo master—looking for the quick leverage point to throw an opponent. But as the "Special Military Operation" enters a phase of indefinite duration, a different philosophy seems to have taken hold: a political Taoism of the "Infinite." 1. The Strategy of No-Action ( Wu Wei ) o_daosizme_putina_i_beskonecnoi_specoperacii_z_...

We are no longer watching a war in the 20th-century sense. We are witnessing the birth of a new Russian "Tao"—a philosophy where the "Special Operation" is no longer a means to an end, but the end itself. In this world, the Z is not a finish line; it is a circle, spinning infinitely into the future. Taoism teaches balance ( Yin and Yang )

Traditional warfare seeks a decisive end. However, the current Kremlin strategy appears to have abandoned the pursuit of a quick "victory" in favor of a permanent process. By turning the conflict into a background radiation of Russian life, Putin practices a form of geopolitical wu wei . He is not fighting the current of history; he is waiting for the current to tire itself out. If the West's attention span is a "hard" object, Putin’s strategy is the "water" that slowly erodes it through sheer persistence. 2. The Fluidity of Goals A strategy of "eternal war" requires a population

One of the most Taoist elements of the "Z" era is the lack of a rigid, defined end-state. Goals shift from "denazification" to "demilitarization" to "protection of Donbas," and eventually to a global "anti-colonial" struggle. By refusing to define what "winning" looks like, the Kremlin ensures it can never technically "lose." The operation becomes a state of being—a "Way" (Tao) rather than a destination. 3. Strength in Stillness

While the West operates on the frantic cycles of election years and quarterly reports, Putin’s "Taoism" relies on the strength of the void. By detaching Russia from the global financial system and creating a "fortress economy," the state seeks a self-sustaining cycle that can last for generations. The "Infinite Special Operation" serves as a tool for domestic transformation, purging "foreign" influences and tempering a new national identity in the slow-cooker of a low-intensity, eternal conflict. 4. The Risk of the Breaking Point

The title suggests a deep, philosophical dive into the Kremlin's current geopolitical strategy. It frames the ongoing conflict not just as a military endeavor, but as a manifestation of "Taoist" principles—fluidity, waiting out the enemy, and the "action through inaction" ( wu wei ) of a long-term war of attrition. The Tao of Z: Putin’s "Eternal" Special Operation