Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
February 28, 2022
Disarming Ukraine – Day 5 | Money War On Russia – Day 1

Historian Anne Morelli has summarized Arthur Ponsonby's classic book Falsehood in War-Time as this:

  1. We do not want war.
  2. The opposite party alone is guilty of war.
  3. The enemy is inherently evil and resembles the devil.
  4. We defend a noble cause, not our own interests.
  5. The enemy commits atrocities on purpose; our mishaps are involuntary.
  6. The enemy uses forbidden weapons.
  7. We suffer small losses, those of the enemy are enormous.
  8. Recognized artists and intellectuals back our cause.
  9. Our cause is sacred.
  10. All who doubt our propaganda are traitors.

h/t Bernd Neuner

As an example I offer you yesterday's Policy statement by Olaf Scholz, Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany

The above are what you hear and see in current 'western' news. It is not reality.

The U.S. and its proxies in the EU and elsewhere have put up very harsh sanctions on Russia to damage its economy.

The final intent of this economic war is regime change in Russia.

The likely consequence will be regime change in many other countries.

This war is waged at a financial size that is unprecedented. The consequences in all markets will be very significant to extreme. But experience from Iran shows that such financial wars have their limits as the targeted country learns to survive. Moreover Russia is in a much stronger position than Iran ever was and is better prepared for the consequences.

The rubel fell some 30% today but Russia's central bank immediately more than doubled its interest rate to 20%. It is willing to fight inflation before it is really sets in. How much of Russia's investment and consumption depends on imports from the 'west'? Can't most of it not be replaced by imports from China?

All energy consumption in the U.S. and EU will now come at a premium price. This will push the EU and the U.S. into a recession. As Russia will increase the prices for exports of goods in which it has market power – gas, oil, wheat, potassium, titanium, aluminum, palladium, neon etc – the rise in inflation all around the world will become significant.

'Western' central banks are still at practical 0% interest rates and will be reluctant to increase those as that will cause a deeper recession. This makes it likely that inflation in the 'western' world will increase at a higher rate than Russia's.

Germany's crazy move to add $120 billion to defense spending (up from some $40 billion p.a.) will within a few years create a strong military imbalance in Europe as Germany will then dominate all its neighbors. This is unnecessary and historically very dangerous. The shunning of economic relations with Russia and China means that Germany and its newbie chancellor Olaf Scholz have fallen for the U.S. scheme of creating a new Cold War. Germany's economy will now become one of its victims.

On February 4 Russia and China declared a multipolar world in which they are two partnering poles that will counter the American one. Russia's move into the Ukraine is a demonstration of that.

It also shows that the U.S. is unwilling to give up its supremacist urges without a large fight. But while the U.S. over the last 20 years has spent its money to mess up the Middle East, Russia and China have used the time to prepare for the larger conflict. They have spent more brain time on the issue than the U.S. has.

The Europeans should have acknowledged that instead of helping the U.S. to keep up its self-image of a unipolar power.

It will take some time for the new economic realities to settle in. They will likely change the current view of Europe's real strategic interests. 

Some tactical observations:

This map shows the ground taken by Russian military over the first days.


Sourcebigger

This map shows the likely current intent of the Russian forces.


Sourcebigger

  • There are 12 to 15 brigades of Ukrainian forces (blue) at the Donbas front. If the Russian's (red) move fast enough they can cut those off from the rest of the country or bomb them while they try to escape on the only big road between those two pincer arrows.
  • After a lull Russia has reintroduced Su-34 fighters to Ukraine. They will attack Ukrainian troop concentrations.
  • The Russian elements north of Crimea have taken two important bridges and crossed the Dnieper towards the west. This opens the way to Odessa further west as well as for a march northward towards Kiev on the western side of the Dnieper.
Comments

@Republicofscotland | Feb 28 2022 15:49 utc | 74

which pursued a strict nationalistic policy of “Polonization,” banning the use of the Ukrainian language there.

It didn’t start that way. The sizeable Ukrainian minority in post WW1 Poland maintained their own cultural and social organisations which had started when Galicia had been part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. They had schools for Ukrainian speakers and their own political parties. What they lacked was autonomy. The closure of Ukrainian schools dates from the mid thirties and was one of the Polish state’s responses to the campaign of sabotage and murder started by the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) which had been founded in 1929. Reprisals for violence such as the assassination of a Polish Government Minister in 1931 and the Minister of the Interior in 1934 included burning disaffected villages, internment, striking voters from the electoral register if they could not read or write Polish and settling Polish military colonists in frontier areas. OUN partisans were based/sheltered in Germany and Austria.

Posted by: cirsium | Feb 28 2022 22:12 utc | 301

The end of this war will be the beginning of the end of the EU itself. I don’t agree with Putin but the extent at which EU leaders have gone to discredit/butcher their own institutions to “save Ukraine” is just staggering. They had 8 years to reign in the crazies in Kyiv to stop the madness in Donbas but they all pretended and even encouraged them to keep killing fellow Ukrainians. If they think things will simply go back to normal after this madness, they’re mistaken. Europe will never be the same again.
Funny how the main instigators of this madness are sitting comfortably across the Atlantic while the Ukrainians are doing the dying. It’s like Afghanistan on repeat. If Europe is to survive the future, they need to get rid of all the Atlanticist politicians who care more about Washington DC than their own people.

Posted by: Zico | Feb 28 2022 22:14 utc | 302

@Canadian Cents #296
Indeed, and Bhadrakumar also references:
1) No Muslim nation has expressed support for the US/EU spat with Russia
2) Israel is clearly not on board
3) Turkey is clearly not on board
So now we have the following countries not on board the US/EU sanctions vs. Russia – not actively opposing per se but also not actively supporting it:
China, India, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Syria, Israel, Turkey.
It seems quite a number of countries that have formerly been vocal supporters of American policies, are no longer doing so.
Thanks for putting up the link, CC.

Posted by: c1ue | Feb 28 2022 22:15 utc | 303

For anyone that is interested, there’s a channel on youtube by a Ukrainian that offers daily briefings about the front line. It’s in Russian, but you can get auto-generated English subtitles. Not ideal since the translation is sometimes very bad or the text lags behind. However, today the guy, Yuri, has posted a video on his backup channel with a voiceover in English. It’s mostly understandable. See this one here about a recent false flag op in Ukraine: Video

Posted by: AnalyticMind | Feb 28 2022 22:17 utc | 304

@129
I see that you don’t understand!
First to leave the war zone are women and children, families, elderly, sick; then the rest!
Maybe your culture is different, first young and fit?
If so, then I don’t expect that you will understand.

Posted by: Xpilgrim | Feb 28 2022 22:19 utc | 305

@rick sterling #192
Re: Jack Rasmus economic analysis
If this is the best Mr. Rasmus can do – it is a very poor job.
A collection of generic pablum with zero insight and minimal data.
You would be far better off looking at the details of what Sergei Glaziev put forward.

Posted by: c1ue | Feb 28 2022 22:19 utc | 306

Sushi| 272

Tar sands production can be upgraded to medium quality “Syncrude” but this requires significant inputs of NG or lease condensate.

And a very expensive plant that takes years to build.
The recent trend has been to export diluted bitumen (“dilbit”) to underused Texas refineries that could handle it because they were set up for Venezuelan heavy oil.

Posted by: Keith McClary | Feb 28 2022 22:26 utc | 307

# imo | Feb 28 2022 15:04 utc | 39

What evidence is there to discount the option that basically it is a sop to the old Trump bitch about Nato/Germany not carrying their share of the cost of Nato etc?
That is, like many other colonies (e.g., Australia), is it a tribute payment/transfer to the hegemon?

Thank you, you nailed it. Xerxes Biden will have every tribute owing. Just recall what he did as VP and Ukraine special envoy. The thief in chief.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Feb 28 2022 22:31 utc | 308

Venom | Feb 28 2022 21:59 utc | 293
… if you live in a major European city, head for the hills.
As a college student I lived through the Cuban Missile crisis, hour by hour, day by day … I agree with you. In October 1962 the US and Communist party leaders were talking to one another. From the year 2007 forward, that has not been the case. With condemning Russia as the evil empire (provincial) most contacts were abolished and diplomats thrown out. During the Trump years the State Department was dilapitated … a state of ruin. The empire unraveling.
Biden’s unipolar position of military might thinks bullying will get results. 🔥

Posted by: Oui | Feb 28 2022 22:32 utc | 309

Permission to speak freely
that is something we dont know about
lots of things beyond explanation
get investigated and found
to be human error
can I just say
stupid humans
are making us
more likely
to be batteries
for the AI

Posted by: steve | Feb 28 2022 22:37 utc | 310

They had 8 years to reign in the crazies in Kyiv to stop the madness in Donbas but they all pretended and even encouraged them to keep killing fellow Ukrainians.
Posted by: Zico | Feb 28 2022 22:14 utc | 305
Of course they wouldn’t, they’re their crazies.
It seems current politicians, media and international bigfarts are entirely content to simply not mention the FUCKING NAZIS that are an important piece of this picture.
The first implication is that the people of Donbass and the russian-speaking population of ukraine at large are “not people” to the western “authorities”

Posted by: Misotheist | Feb 28 2022 22:37 utc | 311

So based on your logic expressed here, Putin’s Russia has waged this ongoing campaign to then see the polity of the country to turn against him which themselves emanate from EU/US massive sanctions. In short, Putin is stupid enough to regime change himself by starting a war?
Putin actually has managed to regime change the EU (and possibly the larger Western countries) for his ongoing campaign will put stability and security first and foremost and has already put the democratization and far-left woke ideology that is destabilizing and transmissible (also backed by NATO) by nature to death through de-funding. This is a civilizational war and Russian and western civilizations should understand this. EU leaders understand the opportunity here. All the monument topplings, erasings of history, the radical intersectionality ideology and cultural Marxism among the youth have left a bitter taste in the mouths of western leaders and street justice protests across the West by the nihlistic left alarmed western leaders in recent years. This is why the Scholz gov. surprisingly increased the future German defense budget to reach the equivalent of the 2% of the GDP which the socialist Merkel had for years ignored to do so. This is why Finland and Sweden and Switzerland are tilting to the center and getting mugged by reality that maybe it is not such a bad idea to re-direct some of that decorative woke ideology money (that usually find their ways in Russia, China, Iran. etc.) to security in order to protect freedom and democracy already existing and save whatever still left in society…

Posted by: Russell Kirk | Feb 28 2022 22:38 utc | 312

The end of this war will be the beginning of the end of the EU itself. I don’t agree with Putin but the extent at which EU leaders have gone to discredit/butcher their own institutions to “save Ukraine” is just staggering. They had 8 years to reign in the crazies in Kyiv to stop the madness in Donbas but they all pretended and even encouraged them to keep killing fellow Ukrainians. If they think things will simply go back to normal after this madness, they’re mistaken. Europe will never be the same again.
Funny how the main instigators of this madness are sitting comfortably across the Atlantic while the Ukrainians are doing the dying. It’s like Afghanistan on repeat. If Europe is to survive the future, they need to get rid of all the Atlanticist politicians who care more about Washington DC than their own people.

Posted by: Zico | Feb 28 2022 22:38 utc | 313

# Zico | Feb 28 2022 22:14 utc | 305

Funny how the main instigators of this madness are sitting comfortably across the Atlantic while the Ukrainians are doing the dying. It’s like Afghanistan on repeat. If Europe is to survive the future, they need to get rid of all the Atlanticist politicians who care more about Washington DC than their own people.

YES!!
After brexit the EU itself is economically mangled prior to being demolished. Who would have guessed that reactionary President de Gaulle could be so prescient. If only France would listen now as it did then.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Feb 28 2022 22:41 utc | 314

“know nothing” says Mr. Know it all. You are so articulate when you are not copy pasting!
pingpong team? That’s somewhat racist and dismissive of China.
Propaganda for whom? Are you so deluded to think comments on MoA will influence global decision makers and change the course of history? You guys are so full of yourselves. I was just sharing my opinion, and unlike Mr. “Know it all”, not repeating the output of Russia’s writers for hire and (genuine) sympathizers. Every single thing pushed here is either directly Russian or by writers who have been on Russian payroll.
A “collective leadership” btw does not mean “a group of people”. CPC has is a Political System that is not based merely on Chinese nationalism nor is it dependent on a single individual. Putin indeed is Russia’s hope and if he goes the rest may fold. But that is not the case with Xi. China under CPC’s leadership — that’s an actual revolutionary party with historic continuity btw — was already exploiting western barbarian’s greed long before Xi showed up. And even the Taiwan issue is ultimately not immediately critical for them. They’ve been happily buzzing Taiwan with PLA letting them know who is the Boss, and there is continued brain drain from Taiwan to China which Taiwan is desperately trying to stem.
As for propaganda, why is it every one here echoing Russian positions, Russian historic grievances, and yes Russian propaganda? Of course, certainly, Russian’s have reasons to be upset, but NATO was not about to invade Russia, so China had no immediate concerns about RF suddenly collapsing leaving China alone. And, in fact, China is not alone. It is even attracting states that are still nominally US client states.
And no, China does not want to see a divided world — they are investing all over the globe. They want a new Global Order, not another cold war married to an emotional (fact) ex-Superpower who also happens to be buddy buddy with India.

Posted by: hyphen | Feb 28 2022 22:44 utc | 315

Poland; 13 km from Ukrainian border.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vr605GTO1Sk

Posted by: Xpilgrim | Feb 28 2022 22:47 utc | 316

@karlof1 262
thanks will read those when i get a break later this evening
@framarz 264
Yep I saw that. Would see it in short term pricing if escalation continues. But with some exceptions (ie within market boundaries of exporters) it is a global trade with most places closely linked in price, regional differences following transport cost. That peak crisis pricing is a whole another level of economic dislocation, not seen in a long time

Posted by: ptb | Feb 28 2022 22:47 utc | 317

@hyphen | Feb 28 2022 22:44 utc | 318
Ridiculous. You are widely copypasting or plagiarizing (without naming the authors) the crap on Politico, Project Syndicate, and similar assets predicting the fall of Xi Jinping, then trying to masquerade as advocate for China.

Posted by: aquadraht | Feb 28 2022 22:51 utc | 318

@266 “”The measures we are introducing, that large parts of the world are introducing, are to bring down the Putin regime,” the unnamed official said.”
Every now and then somebody slips up and accidentally tells the truth. Nobody’s perfect.

Posted by: dh | Feb 28 2022 22:52 utc | 319

In situations like this, I always read the views of people like Bernhard Hoftsman, Pepe Escobar, The Saker and many other brilliant geopolitical analysts, to try and work out what is going on.
Most of the time it is quite easy to work out, but the “war” in the Ukraine, is very different from the normal NATO bomb fest (genocide another country for a laugh) eg bombing My Ex’s Family and Friends in Serbia in 1999.
Then it gets personal.
This is not me, but he’s about the same age as me, and just had a long weekend in Kiev, and found a British Pub (unfortunately closed) It was like Lockdown in London…hardly anyone there. No bombs going off. No loud explosions, basically nothing out of the ordinary (compared to to most of the last 2 years)
https://twitter.com/johnsweeneyroar/status/1497520139042009089
I wish I had the balls to do that.
Tony

Posted by: Tony_0pmoc | Feb 28 2022 22:53 utc | 320

# c1ue | Feb 28 2022 22:19 utc | 309

You would be far better off looking at the details of what Sergei Glaziev put forward.

Agreed with that and thanks to John Helmer for his current report.
I assume that Russian economic strategists are closely considering/collaborating China economic strategy and have a number of plans available in response. Recent Western sanctions combined with Biden’s move to send a team of retired US military leadership losers to Taiwan will rapidly set the glue of the existing eastern banking system.
I suggest it will also create a chasm between the west and east IT operating systems. The current insecure world of western backdoors is likely to become acutely challenged.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Feb 28 2022 22:53 utc | 321

The end of this war will be the beginning of the end of the EU itself. I don’t agree with Putin but the extent at which EU leaders have gone to discredit/butcher their own institutions to “save Ukraine” is just staggering. They had 8 years to reign in the crazies in Kyiv to stop the madness in Donbas but they all pretended and even encouraged them to keep killing fellow Ukrainians. If they think things will simply go back to normal after this madness, they’re mistaken. Europe will never be the same again.
Funny how the main instigators of this madness are sitting comfortably across the Atlantic while the Ukrainians are doing the dying. It’s like Afghanistan on repeat. If Europe is to survive the future, they need to get rid of all the Atlanticist politicians who care more about Washington DC than their own people.

Posted by: Zico | Feb 28 2022 22:54 utc | 322

@hyphen
To add that for an illiterate: Pingpong is a common term for table tennis, and “pingpong diplomacy” became a standing term for US-PRC realignment under Nixon. Chinese are still world leaders in table tennis, as Russians in ice skating.
The racists are you and your ilk.

Posted by: aquadraht | Feb 28 2022 22:57 utc | 323

Using Ukrainianised place-names on a forum such as this seems peculiar, and one assumes it is mostly done out of ignorance rather than as a statement. Of course, some here may choose to deliberately for their own reasons, but the rest may want to bring their pens in line with their sensibilities…
In roman transliteration, it’s Lvov, Kharkov, Ivano-Frankovsk, Ternopol (not -iv, -il), Gostomel not Hostomel, etc. etc. Look at a gazetteer if you are uncertain.
As for Lugansk, I even see people using Luhansk FFS.
Please, this isn’t about historical changes over tsarist, pre-tsarist or soviet times. It is about the post-coup period up till now, when the Ukrianian language has been and continues to be wielded fervidly by -er- “nationalists” as one of their tools of repression of the Russian majority in their country, along with rewriting history, desecration of monuments and worse.
. This must hardly be news to any of us, so I do find it odd that so many are careless about this aspect of discourse. It’s not that there us anything intrinsically bad about the U language. But when language is used politically so brazenly and harshly, it does call for a modicum of care.

Posted by: petra | Feb 28 2022 23:03 utc | 324

@Republicofscotland #33
Good question: the purpose of all this (quite possibly manufactured crisis with both sides knowing participants) is to maintain Emergency status suspending constitutional checks and balances to keep pushing totalitarian Reset agenda part of which basically involves crashing major Western economies, cultures, political cohesiveness etc.
This is not about Ukraine. It’s about world regime change.

Posted by: BaronAsh | Feb 28 2022 23:04 utc | 325

The author of “The Putin Doctrine”, Sergey Karaganov, has his own website, Russian language of course, with a series of articles and interviews. One of them from 15 February the day prior to the initial publication of his thesis, “It is necessary to break it.” Interview with Historian Magazine, provides further insight into that provocative essay. An example:
Question: “As you know, the most radical way to revise the existing rules and, in general, the existing system of the world order is war. At the same time, only it can give an idea of the true balance of forces. But war is a bad scenario…
Karaganov: “I agree with both the first and second statements. As a rule, the systems of international relations have indeed changed as a result of either big wars or even a series of big wars. And you’re right that war is not the best scenario. But the dilemma before us is quite simple. If we remain in the current system (e.g., indifferent to NATO’s expansion into Ukraine), war is inevitable. I am talking about this so confidently now, because back in 1997-1998, my colleagues and I wrote from the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy that if we accept the expansion of NATO as legitimate, then Ukraine will be further in the alliance, and then war will follow. A quarter of a century later, we see that this is where things are going.
“In this sense, our formulation of the question is to find a way to achieve a stable and fair security system in Europe and thus avoid a military conflict. We want to change the system without a big war. Nevertheless, I do not rule out that a small war or a series of local wars can still happen. There is simply a high probability that our Western ‘partners’ will try to prevent the ‘soft’ scenario from forgetting history or malicious stupidity, which, alas, they have been demonstrating over the past decades, try to prevent the ‘soft’ scenario. So the situation is really acute. But it is so sharp that you need to go to the end, because if you do not do this, the system will still fall apart. And then a big war will be inevitable, which can begin on conditions beyond our control. The choice, then, is obvious. Either we lead the way and impose a just peace that ultimately benefits everyone, or…” [The next question is then asked]
Here’s his homepage that unfortunately has yet to be updated since the above interview. Here’s the homepage of the publication he’s Chairman of the Editorial Board, the journal Russia in Global Affairs.
Since the Kremlin’s website continues to be blocked by cyber assault from the Outlaw US Empire, we’ll need to look at other sources of information on policy development.

Posted by: karlof1 | Feb 28 2022 23:05 utc | 326

@hypen
China obv wants a “soft landing” for the US empire, to maximize commerce. Is less in a hurry, less stomach for a forceful showdown of its own initiative vs NATO or Russia.
Not being in a hurry can’t quite be said for US.
I’m sure you’re aware of US strategy docs love the so called Thucydides trap, and see a showdown with China being resolved by an energy blockade. Same analyses state US has limited time before Pacific naval primacy is over due to the industrial disparity. Do the math.
In part couple years, after the Huawei and Meng Wenzhou, and attempted regime change in HK, and overt militarization of Taiwan, and PR taking a dump on the Olympics, and accusing China of creating Covid (tho China beat the snot out of US containing it – othe than HK very notably – and actually following thru promises to give vaccines to half the world)… yea the idea of US trying to take China down became dramatically more real.
Lastly, as it seems now, China comes out of this Ukraine crisis just fine. Japan with nukes is dangerous, but considerably *less* dangerous than US nukes in Japan. All you can eat commodities from Russia is worth a LOT, it’s China’s only medium term vulnerability. And main-economic-competitor EU now having double or triple the energy price is just icing on the cake.

Posted by: ptb | Feb 28 2022 23:16 utc | 327

Let us all hope and pray that the pincers firmly embrace Puke Harding and that he is well and truly broiled inside the cauldron and the undigestible bits spat out on the slag heap of mendacious failed newspapermen.

Posted by: Mrs Pliddy | Feb 28 2022 23:20 utc | 328

Posted by: Tony_0pmoc | Feb 28 2022 22:53 utc | 323
“People think that people that run this place are Nazis. No, They are not.”
Well I don’t live there but I think people running that place run it like THEY WERE Nazis.
https://twitter.com/fediaxxx/status/1497536859982991368/photo/1

Posted by: Tom_12 | Feb 28 2022 23:21 utc | 329

Reante 165, you’re gone all off on speculation with no data, channeling voices, I suppose, take the meds

Posted by: ScottinDallas | Feb 28 2022 23:22 utc | 330

Ukraine can now only be broken. Expertly presented back in 2015 by John J. Mearsheimer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrMiSQAGOS4
I’ll toss in the bonus by Niccolo Soldo:
https://niccolo.substack.com/p/fuck-it-russias-final-break-with
[excerpt:]

Since the 2014 Maidan Revolution, Ukraine has seen the following happen to it:
– Crimea annexed by Russia
– Donbass now effectively Russian
– Russia stating that Donbass extends into presently-held Ukrainian territory
– Millions of Ukrainians fleeing/emigrating Ukraine
– Collapsed economy
– Economic and political reforms stalled
– Collapse in birth rate (happening everywhere, of course)
What has Ukraine gained since the Maidan revolution? This is a fair question to ask. Another fair question to ask is “how are you going to get your occupied territories back, since doing so means war with Russia?”
The most important question to ask Ukrainians is: “In light of all the things that you have lost and in light of the USA openly saying that they will not defend you, is ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’ really worth it, considering that you might even lose more than you have already?

[end excerpt]

Posted by: Seer | Feb 28 2022 23:23 utc | 331

Here is the missing link from my post at 225 @PeterAU1 & @ Tom
Contemporary violent extremists in action:
https://theintercept.com/2022/02/25/israel-palestine-west-bank-demolitions/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=The%20Intercept%20Newsletter
Note the usual hypocritical apologists.
The videos of Azov, originally posted by imo, were horrifying and hard to watch. It seems like many other violent extremists everywhere, they don’t have much of a philosophy, just a list of people and groups they hate, like Poles, Russians, Roma, Communists and Jews. It looks like Azov share a similar list with Nazis, similar iconography and similar methods.
No wonder they now support Zelinsky.
No wonder Zelinsky supports NATO and the Bandit State, he has his little list too! [Russians]

Posted by: Paul | Feb 28 2022 23:29 utc | 332

The West is contorting itself into pretzels to prop up a NAZIST force embedded in a war that’s been festering for 8 years.
A NAZIST force that they DO NOT dare mention in the MSM.

Posted by: Misotheist | Feb 28 2022 23:30 utc | 333

Live stream interview with Alfred de Zayas, former United Nations Independent Expert on the Promotion of a Democracy and professor at Geneva University school of diplomacy, it is probably the most informative talk on international affairs I’ve ever listened to. He starts with explaining the Ukraine situation in depth, than goes on to so many other important topics.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21h_2RyQKRU
It strikes me that the Maidan coup and placing advanced weapons in Eastern Ukraine which is like a 8 minute flight from Moscow Is one of the stupidest most irrational acts in US history, it’s hard to fathom what the plan was other than to force Russia to invade than do this sanctions/ cut off from swift/ asset theft..etc.This makes me suspicious that this is part of something also related to the Covid shutdown/ vax passport scheme, as people say a “great reset” or intentional destruction of the current world order.

Posted by: James C | Feb 28 2022 23:32 utc | 334

If you are unable to realize how this is fucking high treason to western values, there’s three possible reasons.
One of them is that you didn’t learn anything from the 20th century.
Another one is that western culture and values don’t mean shit and it’s about time to discard them.

Posted by: Misotheist | Feb 28 2022 23:34 utc | 335

@331 Tom_12 | Feb 28 2022 23:21 utc
Tony_0pmoc is a troll from off-guardian. Probably 77th brigade.

Posted by: Some Random Passerby | Feb 28 2022 23:40 utc | 336

karlof1 @223, the Hudson article is also at nakedcapitalism.com, with a comment from him that I replied to with thanks — comments also there from Yves replying to some misapprehensions.
Also, a link in Links to a New Zealand short piece correcting the Snake Island story of purported deaths there – raised my assessment of that publication and hopes for clarity on the reporting scene.
NC also gave space to the Condaleeza Rice interview, and this wry comment followed:
“That interview with Condi Rice is hilarious.
It’s clear that the lovely interviewer had no clue that she was asking Condi to admit that she was a war criminal herself,and the nod in response was perfect .
The interviewer and audience can assume that Condi agreed that Vlad “The Impaler” Putin did commit a war crime by invading the Ukraine and Condi,if put under oath can say that she simply acknowledged the question by nodding.
That interviewer has beautiful eyes, I stopped the clip to admire them and realized I could see all the way to the sales rack at Barney’s.”
Perceptive article with new aspects from Prof. Hudson, karlof1, as I’m sure you will highlight,or have already done so — I have some catching up to do!

Posted by: juliania | Feb 28 2022 23:42 utc | 337

Sorry, that was ‘New Zealand Herald’ short piece.

Posted by: juliania | Feb 28 2022 23:44 utc | 338

Have you noticed how quickly people who are just pretending go to pieces when their bullying is blocked? And then choose the most destructive response? To themselves. See my complete (brief) commentary – PUNISHING PUTIN – at willthomasonline.net/. -William Thomas USNR (Resigned)

Posted by: William Thomas | Feb 28 2022 23:44 utc | 339

So after I paused the DoD briefing, and wrote my comment earlier, I went back and listened to the rest. Nothing new, but let me be honest, the next time Kirby referred to Russian military setbacks in Ukraine (because they love to emphasize the negative), he phrased it as: they suffered setbacks.
However, the DoD’s experts know full well the Russians are holding back to protect civilians. They’re experts on military strategy; that’s what they do all day, and yet they won’t admit what Scott Ritter frankly perceived right away; because they’re too dishonest!
USNATO refuse to admit that the Russians are holding back to protect civilians and suffering setbacks as a result.
Okay, so I should have waited and watched the whole briefing before writing my comment but, I made a salient, undeniable point regarding the humanity of the Russian military in this theater of operations, when the security of Russia is at the highest risk, and the USNATO behemoth is trying to destroy Russia’s economy with the most brutal sanctions and destroy Putin in the process.
The Snake Island incident also proves my point that they are distorting the truth to demonize, dehumanize and undermine the skill of the Russian military.
Every night you see the frustrated Western media on rooftops in Kiev waiting for the shock and awe that never arrives and seizing all night long on one or two bombardments of fuel or munitions depots on the horizon to sensationalize them into something they’re not while hyping the imminent threat that never comes to rescue their credibility.
The U.S. media just can’t wait til the Russians enter the city so they can tear into the narrative of Russian brutality and exaggerate every detail with endless play by play war porn and exaggeration.

Posted by: Circe | Feb 28 2022 23:45 utc | 340

With regard to the Montreux Convention there are several commentators who are under a misaprehension.
————————————————-
Article 19:
In time of war, Turkey not being belligerent, warships shall enjoy complete freedom of transit and
navigation through the Straits under the same conditions as those laid down in Article 10 to 18
Vessels of war belonging to belligerent Powers shall not however, pass through the Straits except in
cases arising out of the application of Article 25 of the present Convention, and in cases of assistance
rendered to a State victim of aggression in virtue of a treaty of mutual assistance binding-Turkey,
concluded within the framework of the Covenant of the League of Nations, and registered and
published in accordance with the provisions of Article 18 of the Covenant.
—————————————————–
None of the NATO countries are “belligerent powers”, so they are still free to enter and leave provided they follow the rules set in Articles 10 to 18.
Russia and Ukraine are “belligerent powers”, so neither of them can reinforce their fleets from the Mediterranean.
Not likely to bother the Russians, as they have all the naval assets they need in the Black Sea.

Posted by: Yeah, Right | Feb 28 2022 23:48 utc | 341

Re: the Posonby/Morelli war propaganda cliches.
All quite the case, every time. However, one key one of late is missing,and that is: Tabloid press calls opponent leader a faggot.
This has universally been the case with all the US wars of the last several decades where the US actually engaged in military actions against an opponent. Anyone who argues otherwise needs to consult back issues of The National Enquirer, and The Sun for the UK, in the appropriate time frames.
So a warning here for all. You see tabloid headlines about Putin’s sexual preferences being astray from heteronormative, well, a US war is on its way.
Good senior paper for some university poly-sci major here. Good luck in getting anyone in tabloid journo-land to answer honestly, answer period, though.

Posted by: Daniel White | Feb 28 2022 23:53 utc | 342

Begin with an accusation of breach against political correctness on the thinnest of grounds, a suitable opportunity can be procured.
Continue with blatant attempts at manipulation to try and undermine the self-worth of the target group.
Preemptive accusation of shilling just in case.
Wave vigorously a false flag of a different group which doesn’t spontaneously conflict with target group.
Distract for a while.
Question the very legitimacy of the target group simply for clustering around its shared interests (which is the point, in both senses)
Casually dismiss the legitimacy of the entire point of target group
Wave false flag vigorously again
I’m pretty sure I’ve seen this exact playbook enacted before, or close enough, but DAMN I forgot to copy the quote line!
I guess that’ll do for plausible deniability in this day and age, right? Right?

Posted by: Misotheist | Feb 28 2022 23:58 utc | 343

After days of DDOS attacks on RT, and overcoming them by times, it appears the disquis comment section is now another casualty.
RT tolerated the Western troll army for a long time, maybe no longer. Maybe just another consequence of the Western assault on anything Russian. I dunno, but what I do know is it was the last venue of note where people could speak freely.
Whither the last vessel for the little people to speak.

Posted by: bubbles | Mar 1 2022 0:07 utc | 344

Does anyone else consider it important that the Russian military destroyed the US Naval Operation Centre in Ukraine’s Ochakov?

Posted by: Perimetr | Mar 1 2022 0:07 utc | 345

Posted by: Russell Kirk | Feb 28 2022 22:38 utc | 315
NGL, you had me until you dropped CuLtUrAl mArXiSm 🤪

Posted by: Misotheist | Mar 1 2022 0:11 utc | 346

US has expelled 12 Russian members of the UN delegation, and is trying to stop Lavrov attending UN security council sessions.

Posted by: Arfur Mo | Mar 1 2022 0:12 utc | 347

@karlof1 – thanks for those links!

Posted by: ptb | Mar 1 2022 0:18 utc | 348

@Posted by: michaelj72 | Feb 28 2022 22:08 utc | 299
“4. The Russian Federation still insists on the demands voiced by Putin. According to political scientist Bashirov, this unpleasantly surprised the delegation of Kyiv, which thought that the Russian Federation would cave in after Western sanctions.”
This reflects the utter disconnection with reality of the Ukrainian sock puppets and the US/Western elites directing them, I forget who said it but it is so true in this situation, to probably misquote “The US always underestimates the staying power of their opponents and overestimates their own”. The shock to their system that Putin is not backing down will take some time to resonate through their thick skulls and thin skins.
Now I really do think that they have not thought about step 2 after step 1 of sanctions. Step 2 is the Western collateral damage and Russia’s counter-sanctions. I remember that Europe was shocked that Russia counter-sanctioned them last time.

Posted by: Roger | Mar 1 2022 0:23 utc | 349

About tactics and strategy of dealing with cities. Russia has rich experience from Chechnya and Syria, and deeply analyzed various painful lessons. American/NATO approach seems to require the destruction of a large proportion of building, and leaving it to natives to rebuild or not. Sometimes it is avoidable, sometimes not, but it reduces the cost of war to use less ammo and spend less on the reconstruction if the aftermath. If you do not do the latter, political goals of the war are screwed (it does not hurt the belligerent power too much if the war is pointless, but in that case it is a colossal waste of resources).
Putin’s Russia is obsessed with tight budgeting, and maximizing the degree of humanity in the sieges of cities is a good thing. There are various steps that may be applicable or not. One step, perhaps out of necessity, is letting city and region authorities make total mess, so later occupation will come as a relief.

Posted by: Piotr Berman | Mar 1 2022 0:23 utc | 350

US has expelled 12 Russian members of the UN delegation
Posted by: Arfur Mo | Mar 1 2022 0:12 utc | 349
But no Israel’s of course. Oh how they adored Netanyahu.

Posted by: bubbles | Mar 1 2022 0:23 utc | 351

If you are unable to realize how this is fucking high treason to western values, there’s three possible reasons. […]
Posted by: Misotheist | Feb 28 2022 23:34 utc | 337
Indeed, it reminds me often quoted and not necessarily accurate quote from an interview:
Reporter: What do you think about Western Civilization?
Mahatma Gandhi: It would be an excellent idea!

Posted by: Piotr Berman | Mar 1 2022 0:26 utc | 352

Not just regime change in Russia – The US(and ‘allies’) are totally determined to obliterate any nation that runs counter to their idea of how the world must be run. That includes China. So, they want to make sure the object lesson is driven home through this Ukraine conflict.
Ideology is everything to the US ruling class.
That is why they can ignore warnings from the Fed, bankers, international bodies who ask for a more rational and calm approach to Russia and the many organisations (and nations) who accept that Russia has a legitimate grievance.
We will all have to live through this turbulent revolution in world geopolitics. It didn’t have to be so extreme but for the US ideology trumps thoughtful engagement – with anybody.

Posted by: digital dinosaur | Mar 1 2022 0:27 utc | 353

Here is a claim That Oil Markets are bad but Russia Sanctions are still possible

When asked why oil prices aren’t higher than they are given the grave situation in Ukraine, one manager of a $1 billion hedge fund has a frightening answer: it’s because traders just haven’t realized just how bad things are yet.
Andurand compared what’s happening now with the Russia/Ukraine crisis to the ostrich effect that took place during the early stages of the Covid-19 crisis: no one wants to believe how bad things are.
Regardless of what some believe, though, Andurand, chief investment officer at Andurand Capital Management, is banking on crude oil prices staying high, or even rising higher.

But that hasn’t stopped Andurand from believing that there is still room to sanction Russian oil.
Assuming that Russia exports 6.5 million barrels of oil per day, 2 million make their way to China and will keep making its way to China—sanctions or no sanctions. That leaves 4.5 million barrels per day. But if Urals keeps selling at a massive discount, China may increase its purchases, up to an additional 1.5 million barrels per day. The remaining 3 million barrels per day that flows to countries that would likely adhere to sanctions, is what the market would be short. Gulf producers could increase oil production by 1.5 million barrels, Andurand estimates, leaving 1.5 million barrels per day to be made up with coordinated SPR releases.

The first part is reasonable – specifically that oil futures are still backwardated when it is very possible we will see contango. Backwardation means futures prices are lower for future deliveries than present; contango is the opposite. Given high demand and insufficient supply, it makes no sense why backwardation is still there unless you believe this is all just a “temporary inflation”.
The 2nd part though, is utter bollocks.
OPEC+ is already unable to meet its production quotas.
Note in the past, the fights were all about raising the quota. So where exactly would 1.5 mbd come from when OPEC+ can’t even meet its 400 kbd quota increase? [bd = barrels per day. m = million, k = thousand]
Then there’s the SPR nonsense. Ok, let’s say Biden coughs up another 50 mbd from the SPR – that would be roughly 30 days @ 1.5 mbd.
It seems more than idiotic to think that an oil sanctions regime on Russia would last only 30 days. Iran’s sanctions have lasted for practically a generation to date.
So we have a fantasy SPR release combined with a fantasy OPEC production increase. Does 2 fantasies make a reality?
This doesn’t even go into the fact that the ENTIRE Middle East is not signed up to the US/EU sanctions regime.
Not the UAE, not Saudi Arabia, not Iran, not Israel.
I don’t think these 4 countries have agreed on the same action, ever, before.

Posted by: c1ue | Mar 1 2022 0:28 utc | 354

The non-occupation
Russia tells UN it has no plans to occupy Ukraine.
but…
TASS writes:

In the morning of February 28, the Russian Defense Ministry announced that Russian forces have liberated the towns of Energodar and Berdyansk in Zaporizhzhie Region.
(Posted by: Circe | Feb 28 2022 14:25 utc | 8)

Evidently liberated areas are not “occupied” and will thus never be returned Ukraine.

Posted by: Petri Krohn | Mar 1 2022 0:31 utc | 355

could anyone assist with problems to reach johnhelmer.net? I get error messages from the “cloudflare network”, a dobious DNS resolver “service” I do not want or like. It does not let me through and fraudulently claims that the site be down.
In fact the site seems to be accessible over an ipv6 address 2606:4700:3035::ac43:bb6d but the resolver seems unable or unwilling to route to.

Posted by: aquadraht | Mar 1 2022 0:31 utc | 356

A note to James …conservatively speaking my list from earlier has 25 names (I eliminated 5 doubtfuls) But not to worry – six hearty newbies more than make up for the formers. And that’s only halfway through fourth page of this thread. (Think I’ll squeeze out through that corridor now, Vintage Red. We’ve got some aromatic chicken with my name on it.)
Oh, and Norwegian…I found a short piece by John Helmer[Dances with Bears] on Boris Nemtsov. Just duck-duck those two; it should come up. Rather cryptic, but food for thought.

Posted by: juliania | Mar 1 2022 0:34 utc | 357

Now the valley cried with anger,
“Mount your horses! Draw your sword!”
And they killed the mountain-people,
So they won their just reward
The stupidity of it all.
My heart still bleeds for the people of Syria and Libya. They bleed red just like you and me. The West offers aid agencies, cuz they really do care. God bless the people who try to mitigate these crimes against humanity.

Posted by: bubbles | Mar 1 2022 0:38 utc | 358

karlof1 | Feb 28 2022 23:05 utc | 328
Thanks Karl. We are moving into the latter day inquisition. Not sure what future historians will call this dark age. But all part of the rise and fall of civilizations and empires. And as Karaganov notes, these changes are marked by wars. With change, war is inevitable, so I am very much in agreement when he says small wars are better than large wars.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Mar 1 2022 0:44 utc | 359

The International Criminal Court is opening an investigation. Its jurisdiction is very limited in relation to Russia so, after only 5 days of fighting, this is purely performative, which says something of “justice”.

Posted by: Jonathan W | Mar 1 2022 0:47 utc | 360

aquadraht | Mar 1 2022 0:31 utc | 358
Tom Q sorted that one out for me the other day. If you are getting that, it means Helmer’s site has been under attack from a server you are going through.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Mar 1 2022 0:49 utc | 361

Yeah, Right | Feb 28 2022 23:48 utc | 343
However, Turkey seems to be saying that NATO countries, by supplying weapons to the Ukraine, are belligerent powers.

Posted by: Cossack | Mar 1 2022 0:54 utc | 362

Let me tell you all something; I’m getting just a little sick of the Chinese position. They can put an end to all this in a heart beat, if they flex some geopolitical, financial and even military muscle just to let USNATO know there’s another big guy on the block and he’s gonna make their life very uncomfortable if they don’t reverse course on weaponizing Ukraine to threaten Russia, reinstate Swift for Russian banks and remove sanctions against Putin and Lavrov.
Xi can play some cards if he wanted to.
After all, China’s the world’s second leading economy. Does he really think the West is not going after China and him once they’re finished with Russia and Putin?
China was public enemy No.1 for the West before this happened, not Russia. It’s still at the top of the hit list.
How long do you think it’s gonna take if the West succeeds in bringing down Russia to go after China guns blazing with the bravado they gain from this potential conquest?
I don’t get China’s detachment at this critical moment shaping the world’s future and power structure for better or worst for this Century.
Divided you fall like dominoes.

Posted by: Circe | Mar 1 2022 0:54 utc | 363

from ‘Nightvision’ over at The Saker/Andrei R., who also appears the Military Advisor on twitter, as of 7:08pm EST this evening
check the actual map here: https://twitter.com/miladvisor/status/1498040991726686216
Not a bad 4-5 days for Russia and the denazification, demilitarization of Ukraine
http://thesaker.is/day-4-of-the-russian-offensive-in-the-ukraine/
Nightvision on February 28, 2022 at 7pm ·
Map of latest territory: https://twitter.com/miladvisor/status/1498040991726686216
I have precisely calculated total captured territory so far to be 135,000km2. The total area of Ukraine is 603,000km2.
This comprises 22% of total Ukrainian territory under control of Russian forces (this does NOT count Donbas, which would add even more).
So to the detractors, 22% of the largest country in Europe in 4 days is slow? Don’t forget when the giant cauldron collapses, it will instantly add another massive area.
Btw when Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, it took until October 6 to conquer the much weaker country that’s half the size of Ukraine, and yet Germany is supposed to be the most vaunted invasion force in history.

Posted by: michaelj72 | Mar 1 2022 0:56 utc | 364

Posted by: Jonathan W | Mar 1 2022 0:47 utc | 362
The US isn’t a member of the ICC for a very simple reason. It doesn’t want to be held to account for it’s multiple war crimes. No dissent allowed, march in lock step or else. It’s like what their founding Mafia leaders practiced, not sure if this comment will pass the sniff test, but it’s a matter of comply or as the American mafioso’s would say, ‘We’ll fuck you up”

Posted by: bubbles | Mar 1 2022 0:57 utc | 365

Petri Krohn | Mar 1 2022 0:31 utc | 357
Hard to tell how this will end up. Putin was somewhat pissed because the Ukraine nationalists had ripped down the statues and changed street names of all the people who had actually created Ukraine.
Putins track record makes me think he intends current Ukraine to stay intact,but then there was his sentance something along the lines ‘if you want to be decommunized, we can do that… prior to communist russia/soviet union, there was no ukraine.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Mar 1 2022 1:00 utc | 366

visa-free entry to Ukraine for fighters. go frack some Nazis on Uncle Sam’s dime! wouldn’t that be so awesome if masses of US youth went to Ukraine and tossed grenades at and put bullets thru the skulls of the US Nazi assets in Ukraine?
but there’s no need for visa waivers for US citizens to fight Nazis, is there? remember kids: the same people who formed ISIS now WANT YOU for their Nazi army.

Posted by: rjb1.5 | Mar 1 2022 1:02 utc | 367

c1ue | Mar 1 2022 0:28 utc | 356 “I don’t think these 4 countries have agreed on the same action, ever, before.”
Historical changing of an era c1ue. We are either lucky enough, or unlucky, to watch it happening live in our time.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Mar 1 2022 1:07 utc | 368

@347 Extremely important. I believe the UK was planning something similar in the Sea of Azov.
https://euromaidanpress.com/2020/04/30/new-ukrainian-naval-base-east-a-countermeasure-against-russias-hybrid-strategies-in-the-sea-of-azov/
(Yes, I know it’s a Ukrainian website)

Posted by: dh | Mar 1 2022 1:08 utc | 369

to yeah Right at #343
“Not likely to bother the Russians, as they have all the naval assets they need in the Black Sea.”
this is perhaps true, as far as it goes, but if something happens in Syria, the Russians may want or need to send naval power that way.
I do know that they are often sending supplies to Syria via their Black Sea Fleet too, I have seen a number of photos of their vessels passing through the Straits carrying supplies and vehicles etc etc on their way to Syria. Is that not correct?
so in a sense, Turkey/NATO is using this Montreux convention thing as a partial choke-hold on Russian activities in support of the Syrian government.

Posted by: michaelj72 | Mar 1 2022 1:10 utc | 370

rjb1.5 | Mar 1 2022 1:02 utc | 368
for the record, i am not advocating violence. but those who live by the sword get what they deserve. reap what you sow.
withholding labor, massive non-participation, is perfectly effective with enough people just saying, screw it, i quit. e.g., if the transportation sector in the Washington DC metro area went on strike, this country could be shut down in a couple of days. (please don’t tell me it’s illegal. weapons to Ukraine is a goddam war crime.)

Posted by: rjb1.5 | Mar 1 2022 1:11 utc | 371

Published a new article, “It’s Not the Parting of the Red Sea; It’s Far More Earth Shaking: The Putin Doctrine”. It’s a shame the Kremlin website remains unavailable since much reference material is only available there, so some links in the article might not function at this time. But as I noted in my conclusion, what was provided to the world that foreshadowed all that has transpired since is the “Russi-China Joint Declaration For a New Era”, with its Manifesto in the second paragraph as I pointed out when it was published.

Posted by: karlof1 | Mar 1 2022 1:15 utc | 372

US expelling Russian delegates to UN – Maybe China can set up a UN office in Beijing and guarantee access to ALL delegates.

Posted by: digital dinosaur | Mar 1 2022 1:22 utc | 373

Posted by: juliania | Mar 1 2022 0:34 utc | 359
“(Think I’ll squeeze out through that corridor now, Vintage Red. We’ve got some aromatic chicken with my name on it.)”
*Forms corridor with column of T-90s on one side, Polite Men in Green on the other*
Bon Appétit!

Posted by: Vintage Red | Mar 1 2022 1:22 utc | 374

Thanks for the replies while I was busy writing. Tomorrow begins March with its Ides. Will a wannabe Caeser be felled that day? Perhaps it’ll be an institution, not an individual. I await Russia’s announcement of its counter-sanctions.

Posted by: karlof1 | Mar 1 2022 1:25 utc | 375

aquadraht| 358
johnhelmer.org works for me, but does not show the images (their URLs point to johnhelmer.net).
I can see the images using an iphone connected to the same modem.
I hope an expert will comment.

Posted by: Keith McClary | Mar 1 2022 1:26 utc | 376

@inkan1969
Your comparison only works in the absence of a broader context – the incessant malignant spread of NATO, destruction of dozens of countries and millions of lives by the West as well as their clear intent to destroy Russia. On the day that Russia opens its 900th base in Hawaii, I’ll consider your equivalence.

Posted by: Jacob’s ladder | Mar 1 2022 1:28 utc | 377

Posted by: michaelj72 | Mar 1 2022 1:10 utc | 371

this is perhaps true, as far as it goes, but if something happens in Syria, the Russians may want or need to send naval power that way.

They could launch all the kalibr missiles they want from vessels stationed in the Caspian sea, like the last time.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 1 2022 1:29 utc | 378

Climate change means the khazars colonising Palestine will need a colder clime in Ukraine, a backup khanate if you will. Plan A failed as Putin beat torya to the punch and took her intended Crimea instead, theyr Plan B has suffered the same fate, once again Putin takes Odessa and no khazar state viable in Ukraine anymore. And all along the dumb goyim in the West are unable to see, THANK GOD FOR THE SPIRITUAL POWER OF THE (Monastic) RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH THAT IS ABLE TO SEE THROUGH THE EVIL OF THE SYNAGOGUE OF SATAN khazar emigre deep state in the US. Sura 5:82 of the Quran makes sense now.

Posted by: Anon | Mar 1 2022 1:30 utc | 379

The world should be de nazified, left and right, unfortunately Washington and the
EU see the Ukrainian version as useful idiots.American bankers and corporations were eager to do business with hitler. Greed carries on and it has no conscience.

Posted by: bubbles | Mar 1 2022 1:33 utc | 380

For those who can’t access kremlin.ru, here are archived versions of Putin’s historic speeches:
Address by the President of the Russian Federation (February 21, 2022)
Address by the President of the Russian Federation (February 24, 2022)

Posted by: S | Mar 1 2022 1:42 utc | 381

fyi
https://twitter.com/ASBMilitary/status/1498450557769588743
Feb 28 at 6:10pm
“Slovakia “categorically rejects” giving its jets to Ukraine”
Slovakia, Bulgaria and Poland have all denied requests for Migs/jets from Ukraine
you know why, folks? Because they don’t want to be nuked/bombed by Russia, that’s why. Russia/Putin have made it clear that not only will Russia shoot down any such planes but they will also take out the command centers/platforms that launched/assisted such aggressive attacks on russian troops etc….
That’s one reason, I assume, why Putin put the nuke forces on alert, to send the message to the ignoramuses running nato and in DC to keep their busy devil’s hands out of Ukraine from now on.
And here’s what Pepe Escobar remarked earlier today:
https://twitter.com/RealPepeEscobar/status/1498271650604855298
The Russian Northern and Pacific fleets, Long-Range Aviation Command and strategic bombers are all now on maximum alert.
NATOstan better not try to fly any “military aid” to Ukraine.
Are you listening now?

Posted by: michaelj72 | Mar 1 2022 1:45 utc | 382

@S | Mar 1 2022 1:42 utc | 382
Thank you!!

Posted by: LuRenJia | Mar 1 2022 1:45 utc | 383

petra | 326

KyivNotKiev is an online campaign started by the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) together with the 15 member centre for strategic communications “StratCom Ukraine” on 2 October 2018. Its goal is to persuade English-language media and organisations to exclusively use Kyiv (derived from the Ukrainian language name Київ) instead of Kiev (derived from the Russian language name Киев) as the name of the Ukrainian capital.[1][2] It is a part of the wider campaign “CorrectUA”.
The organisation intends to internationally assert a Ukrainian identity and help shed international perceptions of linguistic relics of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union by promoting the exclusive use of Ukrainian-language transliterations for Ukrainian place names.[3][4][5] The campaign is run by the Department of Public Diplomacy of the MFA.

In September 2020 the English Wikipedia switched from using Kiev to Kyiv.[27]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KyivNotKiev

Derussianization?

Posted by: Keith McClary | Mar 1 2022 1:46 utc | 384

re : dh | Mar 1 2022 1:08 utc | 370
Yes the UK agreed to build a new naval base on the Black Sea as the primary fleet base for Ukraine and a new base on the Sea of Azov. it signed the agreement to do so last June
What I am not clear on is whether the naval base that Russia destroyed at Ochakov was supposed to be a Ukrainian Naval Operations Center, or if it was to be jointly inhabited by Ukraine and the US? I would also like to know if any US personnel were at the base at the time of its destruction. We haven’t heard a word about it . . . to hot a news topic to be reported???

Posted by: Perimetr | Mar 1 2022 1:49 utc | 385

Posted by: Circe | Mar 1 2022 0:54 utc | 365
China has Russia’s back economically, and that’s all that Russia requires of/from China. Russia is going to be quite capable of completing its military/”police” operations. It’s the aftermath that is of most concern, the economic fallout that is most worrisome for Russia (of course, the biggest concern lies in nations’ ability to refrain from using nukes- not that one can trust a POTUS, but Biden says that nuclear weapons are not going to be used [something along those lines, which is a very rare thing as everyone always is so bellicose about keeping “everything on the table!”]).

Posted by: Seer | Mar 1 2022 1:50 utc | 386

C @342 said;”The U.S. media just can’t wait til the Russians enter the city so they can tear into the narrative of Russian brutality and exaggerate every detail with endless play by play war porn and exaggeration.”
Yep!!

Posted by: vetinLA | Mar 1 2022 1:57 utc | 387

@386 I can’t help much. I forget where I first read about the UK base in Berdyansk. I guess it was a joint operation with Ukraine. Orchakov would be the same. I’d like to know more.

Posted by: dh | Mar 1 2022 1:57 utc | 388

Just a thought, but what if the Russians become frustrated with their “liberation” and apply “scorched earth” tactics? Pull out and completely destroy Ukraine. That would create a deadzone along half of their border with the West. They ain’t gettin’ any brownie points in the world anyway, for behaving nicely.

Posted by: Pete | Mar 1 2022 2:16 utc | 389

Thanks b. You continue to do great work.
A few items to share – lest we forget
Video:RT Cross Talk Feb. 28, 2022 on YouTube but if blocked view here:
https://21stcenturywire.com/2022/02/28/crosstalk-will-russia-demilitarize-and-denazify-ukraine/
Will Russia ‘Demilitarize’ and ‘Denazify’ Ukraine?
A refresher:the History to 2016 is warranted – ‘Ukraine on Fire'(2016) a documentary produced by Oliver Stone. Interviews several familiar faces. Run time 1 hr 34 mins.
https://21stcenturywire.com/2022/02/27/sunday-screening-ukraine-on-fire-2016/
Say it’s not so, are these whom the west embrace?
 Images. Ukraine’s Kiev Regime is not “Officially” A Neo-Nazi Government.
https://globalresearch.ca/the-kiev-regime-is-not-officially-a-neo-nazi-government/5384722/

Posted by: Likklemore | Mar 1 2022 2:24 utc | 390

Greater considerations; as per Joseph Kilma McKenzie, also known as Sgt. McKenzie.
Lay me doon in the caul caul groon
Whaur afore monie mair huv gaun
Lay me doon in the caul caul groon
Whaur afore monie mair huv gaun
When they come a wull staun ma groon
Staun ma groon al nae be afraid
Thoughts awe hame tak awa ma fear
Sweat an bluid hide ma veil awe tears
Ains a year say a prayer faur me
Close yir een an remember me
Nair mair shall a see the sun
For a fell tae a Germans gun
Lay me doon in the caul caul groon
Whaur afore monie mair huv gaun
Lay me doon in the caul caul groon
Whaur afore monie mair huv gaun
Whaur afore monie mair huv gaun
Me Da fell tae a Germans gun, I remember him

Posted by: bubbles | Mar 1 2022 2:28 utc | 391

Southern Europe is well equipped with LNG ports, thanks to Algerian imports, the number two supplier of NG to Europe. Those Mediterranean ports could get the gas to Germany from there, and would be the best ports from US/Houston. Texas built those facilities but there really isn’t much demand, Fukushima presented an opportunity, but that’s a long way from Houston, Western Europe, not so far.

Posted by: ScottinDallas | Mar 1 2022 2:39 utc | 392

Russia’s share of global industrial commodities Table 1.
https://stockhead.com.au/experts/guy-on-rocks-the-other-big-loser-in-the-conflict-and-a-junior-copper-plays-time-to-shine/?
Platinum group elements PGE] and nickel are worth watching.
A well known multinational bank has spent multi millions taking a big position, i.e. %10, in Australia’s Western Areas Limited [WSA] a nickel producer. Mitsubishi has also taken a big position in WSA.
This was called war profiteering once.

Posted by: Paul | Mar 1 2022 2:44 utc | 393

Reante 217, Peak Oil is irrelevant, we don’t lack reserves, we’re still not there yet, an 80 year failed prophecy, you’re too teleological. There are vast lands to be fracked, we’ll move on from oil before we run out of oil, it wasn’t a leather nor horse shortage that ended the Horse and Buggy era. Peak oil is another boogie man around which much nonsense is woven

Posted by: ScottinDallas | Mar 1 2022 2:47 utc | 394

Those who have followed the Canada Freedom Convoy 2022 protest in Ottawa are familiar with PM Trudeau accusing the protesters and the opposition Conservative Party members in the House of Commons of waving Swastika flags.
Well, how about his Deputy with the UPA?

Canadians reacted with outrage Sunday night after Deputy PM Freeland posted and then removed a controversial photo in which she’s seen carrying a banner of notorious Nazi collaborator ‘Ukrainian Insurgent Army.’
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland drew the ire of thousands of social media users Sunday night after the Twitter account of the second-highest ranked official of Canada’s Trudeau administration uploaded a photo in which she proudly poses in downtown Toronto carrying a red and black banner bearing the nationalist slogan “Slava Ukraini.” The photo was taken down around 12 hours later after angry social media users flooded the replies, and a similar photo without the offending banner was quickly reposted by her account. Her office has yet to offer an explanation for the switch. [.]

https://sputniknews.com/20220228/canadian-deputy-prime-minister-sharesthen-deletesphoto-holding-fascist-banner-at-ukraine-protest-1093464399.html

Posted by: Likklemore | Mar 1 2022 2:50 utc | 395

Test (earlier posts did not go through)

Posted by: Occasional Poster | Mar 1 2022 2:51 utc | 396

Southern Europe is well equipped with LNG ports,
Posted by: ScottinDallas | Mar 1 2022 2:39 utc | 393
But there’s none in Germany and the existing facilities in Europe don’t have close to the capacity to make up the loss of Russian gas, not by a long shot. But hey, Dallas has an interest in vending it’s extreme surplus of gas at 3 times the price to European plebs.

Posted by: bubbles | Mar 1 2022 2:53 utc | 397

# Perimetr | Mar 1 2022 0:07 utc | 347

Does anyone else consider it important that the Russian military destroyed the US Naval Operation Centre in Ukraine’s Ochakov?

Important??
mate, I would say it is a cause celebre, but I am too p!ssed to open another flagon.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Mar 1 2022 2:59 utc | 398

Only a few days into this Operation Military Means Russia seem to have accomplished its stated goals; well, most of them anyway. Russia wanted Ukraine demilitarized–now that the Ukro-Nazi and the Ukrainian demoralized military (with the air force and navy completely neutered) are on the run or under siege, that’s equivalent or better than being demilitarized. Russia also wanted Ukraine to never be a NATO member–seeing Ukraine being under siege while not a single NATO soldier stepped up to the plate, you can tell Ukraine will never be a NATO member. Only goal of Russia not accomplished at this point is for Ukraine to stay neutral. Well, two out of three ain’t bad.

Posted by: Oriental Voice | Mar 1 2022 3:02 utc | 399

re: uncle tungsten | Mar 1 2022 2:59 utc | 399
hahahaha. I admire your spirit. Have another one on me!

Posted by: Perimetr | Mar 1 2022 3:07 utc | 400