Sky Politics is a military-political doctrine of Time and Spirit (founded by A.P. Devyatov), which complements classical geopolitics. While geopolitics divides Space and the resources of the earth, sky politics deals with the management of Time and meanings.
Geopolitics vs. Sky Politics
- Geopolitics (Western School): Thinks in terms of Space (Land vs. Sea), territorial conquest, and resource control. It is a zero-sum game (someone wins, someone loses).
- Sky Politics (Russian School): Thinks in terms of Time and Spirit. It is not important where your tanks are, but when your Time comes. Sky politics teaches to win without war, timely changing meanings and intercepting the future.
Power from Heaven
The essence of the teaching is that history moves not chaotically, but according to cosmic cycles. True power (“Mandate of Heaven”) is given to those rulers and peoples who feel these rhythms and act in resonance with the “Will of Heaven” (the Creator’s design). Sky politics teaches the art of timeliness (Kairos) — the ability to make the right move at the right moment, using the energy of the wave of history, rather than resisting it.
Technology of Victory
Sky politics uses a model of interaction of forces through colors and images:
- Blue (Liberals/West): Individualism and Law.
- Red (Socialists/East): Collectivism and Justice.
- Gold (Spirituality/Harmony): Connection with Heaven.
Victory is achieved not by destroying the opponent’s “color,” but by creating a harmonious pattern where each color occupies its place. Russia is a country capable of uniting “red” justice with “blue” liberalism and “white” tradition under the “golden” cover of Heaven.
Harmony of the World
Unlike the Western model of “struggle of opposites” (chess), sky politics offers a model of harmony of three forces (card game or “rock-paper-scissors”), where victory is achieved not by destroying the opponent, but by transforming their energy into a new quality.

Man Evgeny – blog author
I lived and studied abroad in New Zealand, taking English language courses. I lived and worked in South Korea in the fields and at sea. In total, I’ve visited four different countries, different from those where Russian is spoken. I’ve interacted with people from at least 20 different cultures, religions, and faiths. I share my experiences on my blog. I try not to judge or make any judgments, but I do draw conclusions.