Brasnya
- Brasnya is a wanna-be nation-state from the Generation 1 continuity family.

Brasnya is an Eastern European[1] Russian (or soviet) state. Its capital is Zyargy. It is somewhere in the process of breaking away from Russia (or the Soviet Union). The winters look harsh there.
Fiction
IDW Comics continuity
Brasnya had a standing army with its own tanks for at least sixteen years. While separatist militants under Georgi Koska fought with Russian troops before, the Brasnyan army had never fired a shot in anger. Russian and Brasnyan politicians always worked out a mutual face-saving deal instead. The Decepticons placed facsimiles in both the militants and the Brasnyan government, including one that replaced Koska himself. Escalation issue 3 American intelligence agency Skywatch had a contact, Major Arkurin, in the Brasnyan capital. Escalation issue 6
Megatron aimed to use the conflict between Brasnya and Russia to initiate a new, global war that would leave humans in a weakened position when the Decepticons chose to take action. To accomplish this, he turned himself into a gun, had Koska "fire" him at a Russian oil pipeline, then used a cloaked Blitzwing to take potshots at Russian and Brasnyan forces (who each thought the other side was firing) to instigate a conflict. This worked until the Autobots intervened; the sight of giant transforming robots stunned both sides into standing down, and the Russians pulled out after being faced down by Prowl and Hot Rod. The situation cooled down. Escalation issue 5
Later on, Skywatch arrived in the area to examine it with intention of tracking down the Transformers. Devastation issue 1
Notes
- The name is probably a takeoff on "Grozny," the capital of Chechnya, a federal subject of Russia which has a violent history of separatism.
- Escalation issue 3 refers to Brasnya as a "breakaway soviet state", which is corroborated by issue 4. While on first sight this may seem to imply that the Soviet Union still exists in the present-day setting of Escalation, issues 5 and 6 replace "soviet" with "Russian" and "breakaway" with "former", thereby apparently fixing a major world politics flub. Simon Furman later stated at the German C.O.N.S. convention in July 2012 that any references to "soviet" are to be considered an error and should read "Russian" instead.

