News

‘Russian Nostradamus’ issues warning of ‘extremely dangerous period’ and makes ominous Ukraine war prediction

A Russian Nostradamus has issued a chilling warning about Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine invasion as she claims an ‘extremely dangerous period is coming’.

Speaking to Kremlin-backed newspaper Moskovskij Komsomolets, psychic Kazhetta Akhmetzhanova said the war will eventually come to an end – but it will get worse before it gets better.

Akhmetzhanova has competed on Battle of Psychics and has correctly predicted several tsunamis around the world in the past.

The clairvoyant told the Moscow-based publication: ‘At the moment, an extremely dangerous period is coming, which will last for several months.

‘The situation is very difficult at the moment It is not by chance that world leaders have started calling our President, they understand that the world is on the brink.

‘And that if they cross a certain line, terrible things can happen’.

Akhmetzhanova went on to claim that warmongers are now in agony, realising they will soon have to answer to the full extent of the law.

This was in reference to claims made by tyrant Putin last week that world leaders were calling him to ask if they should really be ‘scared of him’.

‘But Russia – a great power – has already learned from bitter experience, so it will not fall for their tricks anymore,’ she continued.

‘Our Vladimir Vladimirovich is a wise man. He sees through people, he will make balanced decisions. They will be announced in the next couple of months’.

The self-proclaimed psychic said she was confident that the goals and objectives of the special military operation, which were declared initially, will be fulfilled.

Akhmetzhanova finally revealed to the newspaper when she predicts the bloody war will come to an end.

The medium claimed the invasion would be ‘resolved by 2025’ and that the two-year war could come to a complete end as early as Spring.

However, she did say: ‘Our enemies will periodically try to arrange certain kinds of provocations – I see that provocative actions are possible on their part until 2027’.

Akhmetzhanova ended her chilling predictions by stating that Russia’s launching of the Ukraine invasion was ‘correct’, with the country’s army now ‘one of the strongest in the world’ despite Russia suffering its bloodiest month in September since the start of the war, as its front line casualties grew to 1,271 per day.

The prediction comes after US President Joe Biden granted Ukraine permission to fire Western long-range missiles into Kremlin territory.

For two years, President Biden has ignored the pleas of Volodymyr Zelensky to let him use Western missiles to strike key Russian installations across the border.

On each occasion the White House has insisted such a move would be escalatory, leaving the Ukrainian President in a state of despair.

But just two months before President Biden is to leave office, he has finally been convinced that he should approve Ukraine’s request.

The White House hit back at the Kremlin Monday after it claimed US authorisation for Ukraine to strike deep inside Russia was ‘fueling the fire’ – with Putin allies even claiming it could even lead to World War III.

‘With regard to the comments that came out of Russia, the fire was lit by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,’ White House Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer told reporters in Rio where President Biden is attending the G20 summit.

‘So I think this notion of fuel on the fire is simply a side issue to the main issue, which is Russia waging a war of aggression across a sovereign border into Ukraine and continuing to do so,’ he added.

Ukraine plans to conduct its first long-range attacks in the coming days, according to several sources.

The first deep strikes are reportedly likely to be carried out using ATACMS rockets, which have a range of up to 190 miles.

Former senior NATO official Nicholas Williams called the decision to allow Ukraine to fire US-supplied missiles into Russia ‘significant in terms of the end game’.

‘It is significant. The Ukrainians may say it’s too little too late but it’s not too late to affect the end game,’ he told Sky News.

Williams also said the decision was important for ‘positioning Ukraine to not make the significant concessions which Russia wants in order to get peace’.

The weapons are likely to be used in response to North Korea’s decision to send thousands of troops to Russia in support of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, according to sources.

Around 10,000 soldiers from the pariah state have joined the fight to reclaim Kursk, parts of which Ukraine seized in a daring counter offensive in August.

Biden hopes that this response will ‘send a message’ to Kim Jong Un not to send any more, sources said.

Related Posts

Farmers protest live: Jeremy Clarkson and Andrew Lloyd Webber march with thousands of landowners in Westminster demanding Keir Starmer axes changes to inheritance tax

Jeremy Clarkson today challenged the Government to ‘back down’ over its ‘cocked up’ inheritance tax (IHT) raid but Sir Keir Starmer insisted the ‘vast majority’ of farms will be unaffected. The former Top Gear host joined thousands of protesting farmers in the capital to demonstrate against Rachel Reeves introducing IHT on all previously exempt farms worth over £1m, at a rate of 20 per cent, in her autumn Budget . Farmers fear the change will prevent them passing their assets down through the generations as they will be forced to sell off parts of their businesses to pay the punishing death duties.

Train passenger facing criminal record and huge fine for using out-of-date railcard 30 times says it is ‘unfair’ because she was not alerted

A train passenger who faces a criminal record and hefty fine for using an out-of-date railcard 30 times has bemoaned the punishment is ‘unfair’. The accused woman has racked up a bill of £1,100 pounds for her misuse of the card but insists this was a ‘human mistake’ and questioned why no one alerted her to the card expiring. Tash Bacarese-Hamilton, 22, from Wimbledon in London, told of how she had already been crying when she got on the train having just come from a funeral but that her grief was compounded when the ticket inspector arrived.

How to keep your home warm and car running this winter – without breaking the bank

With colder weather forecast this week for much of the country, temperatures are beginning to plummet after a mild start to autumn. Earlier this morning, snow hit London with sleet blanketing the capital as an Arctic chill blasts Britain. Drivers have reported getting stuck on roads, trains have been cancelled and warnings of more icy weather ahead have been issued as temperatures plunged to -11.2C.

Barry McGuigan’s daughter Danika’s heartbreaking final on-screen moment: Actress, 33, lost cancer battle weeks before her award-winning film Wildfire’s opening night – after the boxer broke down in tears on I’m A Celeb

Barry McGuigan moved I’m A Celebrity viewers to tears while emotionally discussing his grief, following the death of his daughter Danika in 2019. The boxer, 63, was praised by fans for speaking about Danika’s passing, five years after she lost her battle with cancer at the age of 33. During the discussion, Barry sadly revealed that his daughter Danika never lived to see the role that could have been her big break.

Britain ‘likely to side with the EU’ against the US if Donald Trump sparks global trade war as ministers warn of exposure to reprisals from China

Britain is likely to line up alongside the EU against the US if Donald Trump triggers a new trade war, a senior minister has signalled. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds told peers that the UK would need to ‘weigh the consequences’ of any demands the incoming US president makes on trade if they risk damaging relations with the EU. Britain has a larger trading relationship with the bloc than America and would be cautious of provisos that may have an ‘adverse’ effect on ties with Brussels, he told peers last night.

Fears grow over Russian sabotage after critical underwater internet cable severed

Fears have been mounting over Russian sabotage after a critical underwater internet cable was severed. The 745-mile fibre optic cable running through the Baltic Sea from Helsinki to the German port of Rostock may have been severed by an outside force, a Finnish state-controlled cyber security and telecoms network company said. The C-Lion1 cable malfunctioned just after 2am on Monday, firm Cinia said.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *