Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
June 1, 2022
Ukraine Bits: Casualty Numbers, Kampfgruppen, Territorial Defense Forces

Over the last month I had come to the conclusion that the Ukraine is losing about 500 men per day due to intense Russian artillery fire. That number may have been too low.

I had mentioned high Ukrainian casualty rates due to Russian artillery fire on April 25:

The nearly 1,000 artillery missions in the last 24 hours and on the days before speak of intense preparations for upcoming attacks by Russian mechanized forces. Over all artillery will do the most damage to the Ukrainian troops. In World War II and other modern mechanized wars some 65% of all casualties were caused by artillery strikes. The recent rate on the Ukrainian side will likely be higher.

I revisited that on May 5:

The Russian military forces are grinding down Ukrainian ground forces by extensive use of heavy artillery. The Ukrainian artillery has been destroyed or lacks ammunition.The Ukrainian forces have orders to stay in their position and to hold the line. That only makes sure that Russian artillery strikes will destroy them.

The order was given because the 'west' has pushed the Ukrainian president to not make peace with Russia. The consequence will be the assured destruction of the Ukrainian military.

Again on May 14:

The Ukraine is losing up to 15,000 men per month to the war. The total Ukrainian casualties, dead and wounded, are likely already at 50,000. The weapons the U.S. and others provide, are not sufficient to sustain the war. The Ukraine has only 3 days reserves of diesel and gasoline left. The main parts of its forces are immobile and are getting surrounded by Russian forces. Their situation is hopeless.

On May 20 I wrote:

[I]f one trusts the daily 'clobber list' the Russian Ministry of Defense puts out all positions of the Ukrainian army are under heavy artillery fire and it is losing about 500 men per day. There are additional Russian effective strikes on training camps, weapon storage sites and transport hubs all over the country.

In a recent interview with Newsmax the Ukrainian comedian and president Volodimir Zelenski mentioned casualty numbers:

"The most difficult situation is in the east of Ukraine and southern Donetsk and Luhansk.

"The situation is very difficult; we're losing 60-100 soldiers per day as killed in action and something around 500 people as wounded in action. So we are holding our defensive perimeters."

That sums up to 600 casualties per day which is about 18,000 per month which is even higher than my earlier estimates. However Zelenski has interest in lowballing the real number.

As Ivan Katchanowski from the University of Ottawa points out, the numbers Zelenski gives relate to only one region and only to a specific category of people:

Ivan Katchanovski @I_Katchanovski – 4:57 UTC · Jun 1, 2022

#Zelenskyy statement about 60-100 soldiers killed & about 500 wounded per day in combat is minimal casualty number. Missing in action, who are killed, are not reported as killed. Casualty numbers also likely exclude territorial defense, police, SBU, etc & non-combat casualties.

#Zelenskyy statement about 60-100 #Ukrainian soldiers killed & 500 wounded per day refers to #Donbas. It excludes casualties of #RussiaUkraineWar in #Kharkiv region & Southern #Ukraine & casualties of daily Russian missile attacks in other regions of #Ukraine. #UkraineRussiaWar

The real numbers for the dead and wounded on the Ukrainian side may well be double the numbers Zelenski mentioned.

There are at least five different groups of security forces in Ukraine. The normal uniformed police and the SBU which is a secret internal police and political enforcer power derived from the former KGB. The regular military forces includes the army, navy and airforce. The National Guard is different in that it was established under the Ministry for the Interior from fascist militant groups like the Azov, Aidar, Dnepr-1 and 2, C-14 and other battalions. These are actively fighting but not soldiers in any real sense.

Then there are the really screwed ones, the Territorial Defense Force:

It is formed by a core of part-time reservists, usually former combat veterans, and in cases of war can be expanded to local civilian volunteers for local defense, in a case of mass mobilization. That core is expected to lead the mobilized volunteers.

The Territorial Defense Forces also contain the International Legion of Territorial Defense of Ukraine, formed by foreign volunteers.

Other details of interest:

On 25 May 2021, President Volodymyr Zelensky introduced a law to the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's national parliament) "on the basis of national resistance" […] The old Territorial Defence units would be now organized under the new Territorial Defense Forces as a standalone branch of the Armed Forces. Veterans of the Donbas War from the Armed Forces of Ukraine, National Guard of Ukraine and other paramilitary forces involved in the conflict would provide a backbone to train and lead the mobilized volunteers. […] The creation of the branch coincided with the Russian military build-up which had been ongoing since 2021.

On 11 February 2022, the planned number of volunteers was increased to 1.5 to 2 million.

By 6 March, almost 100,000 people had volunteered for the Territorial Defense Forces. Some units stopped accepting volunteer as they reached their operational limit. There were reports of Ukrainian volunteers paying bribes or using connections to join the Territorial Defense.

In February, when the Ukraine government ordered a general mobilization, many people 'voluntarily' entered the Territorial Defense forces to avoid being drafted into the real military. The Territorial Defense battalions were responsible for local defense in their area of the country. People who 'volunteered' for them hoped to stay in their home area instead of being send to the battle front.

However in early May the Ukrainian parliament adopted a law "On the Fundamentals of National Resistance" (machine translation):

Territorial Defense Forces will be withdrawn from the Armed Forces and receive separate funding. They are given a leading role in the organization and implementation of the tasks of territorial defense of Ukraine.

The law defines such concepts as "national resistance", "territorial defense", "resistance movement", "voluntary formation of a territorial community", etc. changed the law on the Territorial Defense Battalions.

The Territorial Defense Forces are no longer part of the military. Are their members still 'soldiers' or are they 'volunteers'? It is not clear to me under who's command they now are.

One consequence of the law was that the Territorial Defense units were no longer territorial but could be ordered to fight all over the country.

As the Washington Post recently reported:

Before the invasion, Lapko was a driller of oil and gas wells. Khrus bought and sold power tools. Both lived in the western city of Uzhhorod and joined the territorial defense forces, a civilian militia that sprang up after the invasion.

They were given orders to head to the western city of Lviv. When they got there, they were ordered to go south and then east into Luhansk province in Donbas, portions of which were already under the control of Moscow-backed separatists and are now occupied by Russian forces. A couple dozen of his men refused to fight, Lapko said, and they were imprisoned.

They were put onto the front line as cannon fodder and later deserted.

In a regular military there will be one unit (brigade, battalion, company) assigned to a specific length of the frontline. A brigade commander will put his mechanized infantry battalions out on the front next to each other and his artillery battalion further back. He may decide to keep a company or two of tanks in reserve. The officers and NCOs in a brigade will usually know each other as they have trained together while growing through the ranks. Such units can fight and coordinated well because their officers and soldiers have worked and partied together for some time and know each other by heart.

Unfortunately for Ukraine it no longer has any complete brigade units. These have fallen apart due to high casualty rates and material losses. This seems to have led to a change of the command structure.

During the last years of World War II the German Wehrmacht often used Kampfgruppen (combat groups). These were a mix of remnants of mostly destroyed regular units put together under the command of one officer and often formed for a specific task. The subunits came from different command cultures and localities and would often not know each other. They were not trained to the same level. To coordinate them was difficult.

There are signs that the Ukraine is now using such a Kampfgruppen concept. Several recent reports of this or that operation or town lost or gained by Ukrainian forces named three or four involved brigades. However, when one looked at the size of those places or operations there was no way that so many full fledged units were involved.

I have come to understand that these were Kampfgruppen like formations under which remnants of the three or four former brigades were subsumed.

Now what happens to a Territorial Defense unit that gets assigned to a Kampfgruppe? As it is most likely the weakest and least armed unit it will be put into those places where the highest loses can be expected. The commander of the Kampfgruppe will naturally keep the forces of those remnant mechanized units he knows best close to himself or in reserve while the infantry cannon fodder of the Territorial Defense unit is ordered to man the frontline. These units are likely to have the highest numbers of casualties.

It is doubtful that Zelenski's numbers included their dead and wounded.

We can therefore somewhat safely assume that the real casualty numbers are now some 200 dead and 800 wounded per day and maybe even above that. How many more will be 'missed in action'?

Before the war the public health system in Ukraine was already in a miserable state. Medical personal that had the means will long have left the country. How will it be able to handle such high numbers of casualties?

Shrapnel wounds caused by artillery are often nasty and more complicate than simple gun shots. If not cared for immediately they are likely to get infected and tend to not heal well.

All this lets me fear that many of the wounded will not receive the necessary care and will not survive the war. Will their death in this or that improvised field hospital be counted as a combat death?

High casualty numbers are not good for morale so Kiev will likely try to avoid to include them.

There is already trouble in the ranks of Ukrainian army. Several several groups of soldiers have called out publicly to stop the senseless waste of life.

At what point will the Ukrainian military or the Territorial Defense units turn against the Zelenski regime?

Comments

Never fear! America is sending 4 heavy weapon missile systems which will totally change the tide of the war IF they reach the front. 🤣 Clown world is a tragedy that keeps on going with no end in sight.

Posted by: Prometheus | Jun 1 2022 22:45 utc | 101

Perhaps some quick population calcs…
About 550 young men turn 18 each day in Ukraine. Let’s say 2/3rds are West of the Donbas or about 360. Who knows how many took off for all points EU but 25% is close…Lowers the number of new 18 y.o. males per day to 270 minus another 5-10% who are physically or mentally unable. Now we’re at 250. Let’s also say Ukraine is suffering around 700 to 1000 casualties a day. Russians are killing/injuring between 3x and 4x the “natural” replacement rate every day.

Posted by: Goodyear | Jun 1 2022 22:46 utc | 102

Couple of bits of news for your perusal:
[https://t.me/s/azmilitary11%5D Russia restricts supplies of neon,argon,helium and other inert gases to foreign markets
[https://twitter.com/Cyberspec1/status/1531965655213572096?cxt=HHwWgIDU8bGp0cIqAAAA%5D
Rus Defence Enterprises have received large new orders leading to vacancy advertisements for several thousand new workers. UEC-Saturn, Omsk Machine-Building Bureau. PO Polet are looking for 2000 new workers & have made all part-time workers into full time starting from June 1

Posted by: Robski | Jun 1 2022 22:46 utc | 103

B> the daily ‘clobber list’ the Russian Ministry of Defense puts out
You know, B, you perhaps really take it as a lowest boundary.
I think I heard someome from RuMoD saying exactly about that clobber list that they decided to only publish absolutely confirmed Ukrainian casualties, as any “optimistic” error would be immediately spot by Western info-machine and would be stretched and paraded to destroy confidence. So they decided to “minimize” their successes to the edge that Western propaganda won’t be able to squeeze them any more.
And specifically about human casualties he said they only include into “body count” when they can with some certainty count individual bodies, before strike or after. Perhaps it is not absolutely accurate and not every single body is counted but still.
It was stressed that if they destroy some building, like a depot, HQ, bunker or whatever, they understand that they most probably killed some Ukrainians inside. But, u less by some stray chance RuMoD knows for sure how many soldiers perished there, almost never, it would go into the “clobber list” just as destroyed facility. The people who died there will not end on the “body count”.
So, yes, it is the lower boundary.

Posted by: Arioch | Jun 1 2022 23:02 utc | 104

What are the Ukrainians and NATO trying to achieve by continuing to lose so many men in this way without any military gains to show for it?
Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 18:08 utc | 12

Obvious: to kill as many Russians and as many Rusian speaking Ukrainians as possible. The Russians are the new Amerindians, the new Afghans, the new Irakis to kill, so as to loot the country. When possible.

Posted by: Olivier | Jun 1 2022 23:12 utc | 105

Posted by: Piotr Berman | Jun 1 2022 17:55 utc | 10
An interesting comment.
The mass “Ministry of Truth” western media are only providing spot oil market prices US export.
The very nice Russians are selling export oil in Rubles. At basic ’12 Month Contract Forward” prices. This translates roughly as USD(air dollars)$80-00 per barrel.
As for the “deaf , dumb and blind” arrogant Europeans. The clowns who cancelled the original contract forward prices. The European consumer will be forced to pay for all fossil based energy. At spot market prices. These fools reap what they sow……
This exposes the evil reformed sisters of ‘Big USSA Oil” existing current “Contract Forward” prices paid by these scum companies. Add to the fact that 56% of US oil is actually imported by Pipe line from Canada and rail freight.
Evil USSA ‘Big Oil’ is reaping in massive super profits, as we speak!
These evil sisters are completely scamming the USSA motorists and all transport companies….. As for new oil leases. The gasbag talking heads are paid to with hold 98% of all the information from the real world.
One could say! The USSA is and has never been a true open retail market for over 200 years.
Truth can be stranger than fiction

Posted by: Bad Deal Motors On | Jun 1 2022 23:13 utc | 106

bevin| 100
Thank you bevin for that vivid description of Soviet history and reality |100

Posted by: @Eldean019 | Jun 1 2022 23:14 utc | 107

Germany promises modern air defense systems to Ukraine

“The Ukrainians have given us assurances that they will not
use these systems against targets on Russian territory,” Blinken said.

Posted by: sln2002 | Jun 1 2022 23:19 utc | 108

from Telegram
“There’s now a regular flow of lucky Ukrainians who get POW’d by Russians. This one. . “. . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Jun 1 2022 23:21 utc | 109

The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.
Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 21:08 utc | 82
Grace Slick had a different view:
“I’d rather have my country die for me.”
“Rejoyce”

Posted by: Henry Moon Pie | Jun 1 2022 23:23 utc | 110

Posted by: bevin | Jun 1 2022 20:53 utc | 78
The North Korean history books note. That the actual start date for the peninsula war began with a massacre on JeJu island in 1948…

Posted by: Bad Deal Motors On | Jun 1 2022 23:25 utc | 111

> Several several groups of soldiers have called out publicly to stop the senseless waste of life.
…and there on Twitter was instantly a western troll claiming those guys are lucky to be Ukrainians because Russian Canon fodder is forced into fight at gunpoint and refuse is are thrown into GULag.
Not sure how those come together. I though persons at gunpoint are Bing immediately killed if disobey, not transported thousand miles away into Northern Siberia. But go figure…
But for the record, when “Russian canon fodder” refuses to go fighting they are not just ending up in GULag, but instead they sue Russia government when it tries to fire them and employ other soldiers who will go. They very much intend to receive lushy monetary and material salaries for their war service while never be called to any actual war.
https://pravo.ru/news/240949/
Bloody Putin regime today is especially bloody.

Posted by: Arioch | Jun 1 2022 23:27 utc | 112

from NYPost, a US rules-based international military offensive:
US using hack attacks to support Ukraine against Russia, general says

America’s keyboard warriors are doing their part to help Ukraine in its war against Russia, the head of US Cyber Command confirmed this week.
“We’ve conducted a series of operations across the full spectrum; offensive, defensive, [and] information operations,” Gen. Paul Nakasone told Sky News in an interview published Wednesday, the first confirmation that the US is waging digital conflict against Moscow in support of the Kyiv government.
Nakasone, who also serves as director of the National Security Agency, did not reveal details of the cyber hacking operations, but did tell the outlet that they were lawful and conducted with civilian oversight.
“My job is to provide a series of options to the secretary of defense and the president, and so that’s what I do,” he said. . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Jun 1 2022 23:30 utc | 113

http://johnhelmer.org/the-oligarchs-play-their-cards-thats-the-loyalty-card-the-get-out-of-jail-free-card-the-rewards-redemption-card/
Interesting piece showing, among other things, ongoing inner conflicts involving Central Bank of Russia, oligarchs, Putin, Glazyev and so forth.
I find it unlikely that if the CBR is consistently undermining the RF that this is not well known by its Western peers (since CBR is part of the BIS group, no?). In which case this also might be part of the reason why the West is both undertaking and dragging out the Ukraine campaign along with sanctions.
For although the sanctions may not have instantly torpedoed RF as planned (if that was ever the case), this article seems to show that there are considerable stresses at play.
And of course for now it looks like the oligarchs are the ones who will benefit the most as western investors bail out and they can pick up those holdings super cheap, all of which has been approved by Putin.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 23:34 utc | 114

from NYPost:
US using hack attacks to support Ukraine against Russia, general says

America’s keyboard warriors are doing their part to help Ukraine in its war against Russia, the head of US Cyber Command confirmed this week.
“We’ve conducted a series of operations across the full spectrum; offensive, defensive, [and] information operations,” Gen. Paul Nakasone told Sky News in an interview published Wednesday, the first confirmation that the US is waging digital conflict against Moscow in support of the Kyiv government.
Nakasone, who also serves as director of the National Security Agency, did not reveal details of the cyber hacking operations, but did tell the outlet that they were lawful and conducted with civilian oversight.
“My job is to provide a series of options to the secretary of defense and the president, and so that’s what I do,” he said.

Posted by: Don Bacon | Jun 1 2022 23:36 utc | 115

Russia will definitely face a more well armed second wave.While Russia having run through men and weapons to date,nato is slowly building up while the Ukrainians whittle down Russia’s military.
For putin it is either peace in June or ruin in July.

Posted by: mcohen | Jun 1 2022 23:40 utc | 116

bevin #27
Thank you for the link to covertactionmagazine and the report on global agriculture products. That was revealing in a geopolitics sense. The first half of the story worked fine but the latter half went off the rails as if two authors were involved. I got the sense that the writer, Mitchel Cohen just could not resist a wholesale condemnation of Russia as a compensation for the good light he shone on them at the beginning. odd but still a good read in spite of some glaring contradiction.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Jun 1 2022 23:43 utc | 117

Posted by: Don Bacon | Jun 1 2022 23:36 utc | 115
I wonder if he refers to “death by thousand cuts” DDoS botnet, which is coordinated by Microsoft GitHub server and is mostly hosted for free on Amazon S3 servers.
And it really caused a lot of RuNet disruptions in February and early March, but since them they do not seem to have large effect.
An interesting detail was that, being hosted by Amazon, delivery service and e-shop, they attacked not only Russian delivery services but even German one, DHL. Because Putin.

Posted by: Arioch | Jun 1 2022 23:44 utc | 118

Here’s what I just wrote over at The Saker on Ukraine’s real casualty numbers…
In the meantime, note those Ukraine casualty figures. In my view, those figures are just “confirmed kills”, as they say. Basically whatever dead Ukrainians they can see from a drone or an estimate based on the size of a crew of a tank or how many troops were in a AFC.
Read the rest of those daily MoD briefings. They show literally *hundreds* of attacks on “concentrations of manpower and equipment” and “supply depots” and “command posts”. Well, do you think those “concentrations” are just innocent tanks and AFCs parked in a field with no one around? That there aren’t at least *one* Ukrainian soldier standing there in a “command post” or “supply depot”?
Of course there are. The casualty figures by the MoD are the minimum figures. The real figures are at least two or three times that. Which means Ukraine is losing a *real* minimum of 600-1,000 troops a day, perhaps on some days as high as 1,500. Last month there were a couple days when missile strikes alone hit 1,000-1,200 a day, undoubtedly killing at least one Ukrainian soldier per strike.
Multiply that by the last 90 days. That’s the real figure of Ukrainian losses. Ukraine started out with allegedly 200,000-250,000 troops. They’ve lost *at least half* that figure over the last 90 days. That’s why you’re seeing nothing but National Guard troops being interviewed in the videos and newspaper articles. That’s all they have left.
The Donbass front is crumbling faster and faster. More and more Ukraine units are choosing to retreat in haste, as revealed by their not taking the time to destroy buildings of the occupied cities any more. More and more units are surrendering en mass.
The Donbass operation will likely be over by the end of June, if not sooner.

Posted by: Richard Steven Hack | Jun 1 2022 23:45 utc | 119

bevin | Jun 1 2022 18:43 utc | 27
wheels within wheels. so the west is basically following Nazi Germany’s script of depopulating Ukraine for more lebensraum? this time more gmo lebensraum! do mama proud, young Ukrainian, and lay down your life (and a few others, if you can) so Big Ag can smuggle gmo’s into Europe.
bevin | Jun 1 2022 20:53 utc | 78
what to say…thanks.
Tom_Q_Collins | Jun 1 2022 18:46 utc | 29
Bentsen and Bush? small, cozy, inbred, nepotistic little world, ain’t it?
Kaiama | Jun 1 2022 18:56 utc | 36
undoubtedly right. only question is how right you are.
Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 19:17 utc | 46
thanks. no surprise left in their world, is there? that fact doesn’t keep mine from new reaching new levels of disgust.

Posted by: rjb1.5 | Jun 1 2022 23:47 utc | 120

@bevin | Jun 1 2022 20:53 utc | 78
@Bad Deal Motors On | Jun 1 2022 23:25 utc | 112
Don’t know whether the reports by Alan Winnington and Wilfred Burchett from Korea are archived somewhere. Would be good for a republication.
I watched Battle of Lake Changjin a while ago. While it was bit much action movie, and covered nothing of the Korean sides (not to alienate South Korea too much I assume) it rightly showed the achievements of the People’s Volunteers Army against the most modern and advanced army of the times, with the industrial potential of the US (47% of world industrial production in 1948) and the UK and other western nations behind it, against a force widely of infantry and light field artillery, and tankists and pilots in their first larger scale mission. The Chinese have every reason to take pride from their achievements.

Posted by: aquadraht | Jun 1 2022 23:48 utc | 121

Introduction to Martyanov’s new book Losing Military Supremacy
via Larry Johnson site: https://sonar21.com/introduction-americas-dangerous-narcissism/
(Larry also has a new Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WchAeh-QKrc&feature=emb_imp_woyt)
“In a grim historic irony, it was America’s main geopolitical foe of the 20th century, the Soviet Union, whose history, should it have been studied properly, could have given answers to some important questions on what America proclaimed to be the best at, while failing time after time to deliver precisely on that claim: modern warfare. But nothing prevented the US from claiming victory in WWI and WWII, nothing prevented it from proclaiming its military to be “the finest fighting force in history.”9 While speaking to the US military at Fort Bragg after the official conclusion of US operations in Iraq in 2011, in what can only be described as an acute case of myopia and ignorance, President Obama doubled down on a his dubious “finest fighting force in history” claim, assuring all that “we know too well the heavy cost of that war.”10 Here was the problem: America doesn’t. With the exception of those who fought and died or were wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan and their immediate families, America, as it was with every American foreign war, never knew the real costs. Even as bodies of American GIs started to arrive in coffins into the US from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Americans continued, as if nothing really happened, to go to work, buy lattes at espresso stands, sell and buy cars, go on vacations, travel around the world and pay their mortgages. Normal life went on as if nothing of significance happened. The very phenomenon which was responsible for the United States emergence as a superpower—war, WWII in particular—was never a factor which had a real impact on the nation and created no real inhibitors in the political elites to their often ignorant, boastful and aggressive rhetoric nor created a necessity to study the subject, which was foundational to American prosperity and success after WWII.
This still hasn’t been done. The outcomes, in full accordance to Clausewitz’ dictum that “it is legitimate to judge an event by its outcome for it is the soundest criterion,”11 have accumulated today into a body of overwhelming empirical evidence of a serious and dangerous dysfunction within America’s decision making process. From the debacle in Iraq, to the lost war in Afghanistan, to inspiring a slaughterhouse in Syria, to unleashing, with the help of its NATO Allies, a conflict in Libya, to finally fomenting a coup and a war in Ukraine—all of that is a disastrous record of geopolitical, diplomatic, military and intelligence incompetence and speaks to the failure of American political, military, intelligence and academic institutions. Moreover, the spectacular failure of several US Administrations and the US “experts” who supposedly know Russia, to build normal working relations, and, ironically, their even greater failure in sabotaging those relations and Russia herself, are a clear indication of an almost complete ignorance of real Russian history and culture among people who are responsible for an increasingly irrational US foreign policy.
This failure is more than spectacular—it is spectacularly dangerous. This book addresses some of the reasons for America’s sad and dangerous state today. The pivot of this book is war and power and how these two have been abused and misinterpreted by the American political and military class. Importantly, it is viewed against the background of Russian-American relations and how Russia, the only country in the world which can militarily defeat the United States conventionally, has been reduced to a caricature by the American “Russian Studies” field, so much so that today it makes any meaningful dialogue between Russia and America’s politicians virtually impossible. It is also impossible because of a dramatic difference in cultural attitudes towards war, a gap which policymakers should at least attempt to narrow.
Excerpt From
Losing Military Supremacy
Andrei Martyanov
https://books.apple.com/us/book/losing-military-supremacy/id1403722563
This material is protected by copyright.”
This looks like an important book.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 23:52 utc | 122

“At what point will the Ukrainian military or the Territorial Defense units turn against the Zelenski regime?”


More than likely Elensky is guarded by NATOstani units precisely to stop a coup…and also to make absolutely sure he knows he’s a prisoner of his masters and does exacting as he’s told.

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayast | Jun 1 2022 23:55 utc | 123

Posted by: Arioch | Jun 1 2022 23:02 utc | 105
Exactly. The Russian MoD casualty figures are undoubtedly 2-3 times less than the real ground figures.
Means Ukraine is losing around 1,000 soldiers a day. Do the math for the last 90 days. Half their original army is gone, at least.

Posted by: Richard Steven Hack | Jun 1 2022 23:55 utc | 124

This failure is more than spectacular—it is spectacularly dangerous. This book addresses some of the reasons for America’s sad and dangerous state today. The pivot of this book is war and power and how these two have been abused and misinterpreted by the American political and military class. Importantly, it is viewed against the background of Russian-American relations and how Russia, the only country in the world which can militarily defeat the United States conventionally, has been reduced to a caricature by the American “Russian Studies” field, so much so that today it makes any meaningful dialogue between Russia and America’s politicians virtually impossible. It is also impossible because of a dramatic difference in cultural attitudes towards war, a gap which policymakers should at least attempt to narrow.
Excerpt From
Losing Military Supremacy
Andrei Martyanov
https://books.apple.com/us/book/losing-military-supremacy/id1403722563
This material is protected by copyright.”
This looks like an important book.
Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 23:52 utc | 122
indeed it exposes the idiocy of people who claim the war is fake.

Posted by: pretzelattack | Jun 1 2022 23:56 utc | 125

The Saker has a link to Michael Hudson on Crosstalk on Rumble…
Michael Hudson on RT CrossTalk Show : World under sanctions
https://thesaker.is/michael-hudson-on-rt-crosstalk-show-world-under-sanctions/
Direct Rumble link:
https://rumble.com/v16anio-crosstalk-world-under-sanctions.html

Posted by: Richard Steven Hack | Jun 1 2022 23:59 utc | 126

Posted by: mcohen | Jun 1 2022 23:40 utc | 116

Russia will definitely face a more well armed second wave.While Russia having run through men and weapons to date,nato is slowly building up while the Ukrainians whittle down Russia’s military.
For putin it is either peace in June or ruin in July.

That is outright childish. I agree to the Saker that the UAF have lost at least 100k soldiers, if not more, as MIA, KIA, wounded unfit for rejoining, captured, and deserted, i.e. irrecoverable losses. That is more than half of the initial UA forces, more to come in the next weeks.
At the moment, the Allied forces destroy more equipment than Ukraine gets from the West, and there is no outlook for improvement. It looks that the stores of MANPADS, ATGM etc. in the West are running low. UAF have wasted 3-4 year productions of US Javelins already, and the US cannot produce more than a few thousand every year.
Training troops on new weapons takes time, learning their proper usage in the theatre takes even more. And the western stuff is no Wunderwaffen, not few of it inferior to Russian equipment. Several batteries of M777 have been destroyed already, not counted those smashed in the warehouses on their way to the frontlines. The US MLRS will not see another fate. As Boris Roshin wrote, they may certainly drink some blood, but be unable to change the realities on the ground.
Still Russia could go on overdrive, do full mobilization, refit industries for wartime conditions. I do not believe that they need it, but signiticant parts of RF civil society is pressing for. Putin and his government are holding them back. For now.

Posted by: aquadraht | Jun 2 2022 0:00 utc | 127

Why is the Ukrainian conflict dragging on despite the foregone conclusion of Russian victory? It is simple, really, reflecting the ethnic, religious, and racial roots of the conflict:
The more dead Slavs, the better (Ukrainian or Russian, it matters not).
The more dead Christians, the better.
The more dead Whites, the better.
The conflict also permits a convenient excuse for the elimination of energy slaves in the combined West (coal, oil, and gas, for which there are zero effective substitutes in terms of energy density, reliability, portability, and supportive infrastructure), and the rehabilitation and glorification of human slavery in the combined West (the next step after the rehabilitation and glorification of the fusion of corporate and state power [i.e., fascism]).

Posted by: Tom | Jun 2 2022 0:09 utc | 128

There is a good, long, article: “War Within the War: The Fight Over Land and Genetically Engineered Agriculture” By Mitchel Cohen
at https://covertactionmagazine.com/2022/05/31/war-within-the-war-the-fight-over-land-and-genetically-engineered-agriculture/
Posted by: bevin | Jun 1 2022 18:43 utc | 27
Thanks Bevin. Being an organic gardener i’m very aware of the GMO + pesticides assault on the natural world.
There was also an article a while back ion NEO about Hunter Biden being the regional Rep for Ukraine for Bayer/Monsanto
“But the Biden family’s interests in Ukraine are not limited to energy alone. In Ukraine, for example, with Biden’s encouragement, large-scale production of genetically modified products (GMOs), which had previously been banned in the country and in the EU, has begun. Nevertheless, Kiev started to hand over Ukrainian precious fertile soil to Western multinationals that produce genetically modified products. One of these companies was, above all, Monsanto, a multinational corporation that produces GMO seeds for cereals and vegetables. Joe Biden’s son Hunter was already in 2015 chairman of the board of the US World Food Program and represented Monsanto in Ukraine. At the same time, the corporation has a controversial reputation for producing the deadly chemical agent Orange, which was used by the US military during the Vietnam War to drive Viet Cong guerrillas out of the forests, killing thousands of civilians along the way.”
https://journal-neo.org/2022/03/05/biden-takes-advantage-of-the-levers-of-power-to-protect-his-family-business-in-ukraine/
IMO people who claim the Empire is stupid do not pay attention to the details. It’s a chaos at the top for the purposes of distraction and shock doctrine, and a generationally planned, brutal corporate acquisition all the down to the bottom and all over the entire world.
People fail to grock time and again the the politicians who front for “democracy” and appear to be so “stupid”, are always multi millionaires and are always also part of the far less visible corporate machine in one way or another.
The fact that the same people who brought us agent orange are behind GMO crops should ring alarm bells for everyone. That they were in the Ukraine alongside the US coup should help to shine a light on how the Empire works all over the world. They don’t care if the wheat fields are bombed, GMO crops can grow on just about any old dead soil with artificial help. The masses don’t know and don’t care where their supermarket flour comes from, laced with pesticides and every other kind of potential poison.
The Empire is fighting on so many fronts it is daunting, the military is but one tentacle of the octopus.
I very much appreciate your analyses based on your understanding of Marxist theory and practice. Many marxists tend to write Russia off as just another capitalist nation. But I see shades of grey, not black and white and I appreciate your commentary for this reason. As per Monsanto in the Ukraine, Western Imperialism will always but ALWAYS come down to greed and $$$ no matter the political, philosophical or religious disguise.

Posted by: K | Jun 2 2022 0:24 utc | 129

1/ uncle tungsten@117
I agree, like you I’m one of those who will recommend on the basis of information provided. Anyone who expects to be fed politically correct pabulum should look out for another site. Also: I didn’t read the entire article.
2/”Don’t know whether the reports by Alan Winnington and Wilfred Burchett from Korea are archived somewhere. Would be good for a republication.” aquadraht @121
You are absolutely right. I’d buy a copy of Winnington’s Daily Worker articles. Here’s an archive:
https://archives.shef.ac.uk/repositories/3/resources/409
AS to Wilfred Burchett who taught me, in 1964, that something very nasty was brewing in Vietnam, I expect that our Aussie contingent will be along soon. Australia has produced some great journalists but Burchett stands head and shoulders above them all. He also told the truth about Hiroshima and Nagazaki.

Posted by: bevin | Jun 2 2022 0:30 utc | 130

This looks like an important book.
Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 23:52 utc | 122
“indeed it exposes the idiocy of people who claim the war is fake.” Posted by: pretzelattack | Jun 1 2022 23:56 utc | 125
Ha ha! I never called it fake but phony as in ‘phoney war.’ But then I looked up the official Phoney War ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoney_War ) and realized that was a bad turn of phrase.
What I did write was when examining things in this conflict that one poster described as ‘not adding up’ that one might consider the possibility that this war might be managed to a certain extent by elites on both sides as has happened in many conflicts in Europe (and possibly also the US Civil War) in the past.
I suppose you feel that the Biden family who have taken millions from both Ukraine and China may not be compromised at all by that even though right now the US is sponsoring a war in Ukraine supposedly directed against China. Nor that Obama’s blood father Frank Davis, a known communist, raises no red flags whatsoever in terms of considering whether or not there are high-level links between his administration and current network and the Kremlin. Nothing to see, move on.
In any case, I think childishly insulting anyone who suggests there might possibly be some elite level skulduggery in the mix in this conflict is both immature and naive.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 0:33 utc | 131

Putin just keeps on winning–almost up to 100 days of continues ass-kicking. China 1937-Japan 1945 It is impossible to know the outcome of a long war. The US promised one, Putin needs one as well–his domestic subjects are not ready to leave Europe and become asian. A long bloody war–scorched earth between the Dneiper and the Dnister/Bug line might do the trick. Not the first time US and its enemies short term strategic objectives coincide.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/russia-s-war-on-ukraine-prompts-denmark-to-vote-to-join-eu-shared-defense-policy/ar-AAXXomr?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=3724685d98554c51beb358039246984d

Posted by: wobblie | Jun 2 2022 0:37 utc | 132

Posted by: malenkov | Jun 1 2022 21:38 utc | 90

I’m sure we’re supplying the trained operators, and I wouldn’t doubt for a minute that we’re supplying, directly or otherwise, rockets that can strike deep within Russia. (Biden’s words are usually mendacious unless they’re malevolent.) So the only question is whether Russia can and will destroy all HIMARS installations before they can be deployed. I’m guardedly optimistic.

I’d recently read (posted the link in another thread)) that Finland was going to be getting those long-range rockets for their HIMARS.
EXPECT (and with 100% certainty the Russians feel the same) that such rockets will end up being used. The US will deny that it is responsible. Russia will send missiles to wherever they figure the rockets came from, perhaps even hitting US war armaments manufacturers.
Russia is able to fund this military operation. US/NATO are not (and of course Ukraine can’t). Perhaps Russia is OK with allowing such equipment to make it into Ukraine such that they can then destroy it, depleting US/NATO supplies AND putting them further in debt (and sprinkle in the possibility of being able to launch long-range missiles in to Finland or?).

Posted by: Seer | Jun 2 2022 0:37 utc | 133

yes, as others have, i also thank you, @bevin. it surprised me how Russia’s resources (and how desperately the west wants them) is rarely mentioned. will go read now.

Posted by: polarbear4 | Jun 2 2022 0:42 utc | 134

@Seer | Jun 2 2022 0:37 utc | 133

Russia is able to fund this military operation. US/NATO are not (and of course Ukraine can’t). Perhaps Russia is OK with allowing such equipment to make it into Ukraine such that they can then destroy it, depleting US/NATO supplies AND putting them further in debt (and sprinkle in the possibility of being able to launch long-range missiles in to Finland or?).

You absolutely have a point here. One must not forget that the SMO is still performed with the tiny military budget of the RF which is considerably less than what the West has already spent for Ukraine’s war and their own armament boost. Not certain who can sustain that longer.
If the West tries to speed up rearming and shipping equipment, they may quickly run dry of aluminium, palladium, titanium 🙂 .

Posted by: aquadraht | Jun 2 2022 0:50 utc | 135

Posted by: K | Jun 2 2022 0:24 utc | 129
“IMO people who claim the Empire is stupid do not pay attention to the details. It’s a chaos at the top for the purposes of distraction and shock doctrine, and a generationally planned, brutal corporate acquisition all the down to the bottom and all over the entire world.
People fail to grock time and again the the politicians who front for “democracy” and appear to be so “stupid”, are always multi millionaires and are always also part of the far less visible corporate machine in one way or another.
The fact that the same people who brought us agent orange are behind GMO crops should ring alarm bells for everyone. That they were in the Ukraine alongside the US coup should help to shine a light on how the Empire works all over the world. They don’t care if the wheat fields are bombed, GMO crops can grow on just about any old dead soil with artificial help. The masses don’t know and don’t care where their supermarket flour comes from, laced with pesticides and every other kind of potential poison.

Well said. It’s very important to remain aware of these various levels rather than focusing only on the kinetic military.
But this anti-Monsanto angle is justification enough for the SMO and generations of people living in those rescued lands in the future hopefully will remember and be grateful for the Russians and Donessians who gave their lives in that cause among several others.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 0:52 utc | 136

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 19:48 utc | 58
It does reflect on the US population given that we keep electing the same people who keep appointing the same people who all have terrible ideas with great conviction and zero fear of consequences.
Victoria Nuland’s first job was under strobe Talbot in the Clinton admin. He was a big fan of NATO enlargement. Then she went straight into the W admin, deputy chief of staff level under Cheney. Her jobs included getting NATO allies on board with Iraq. I believe she was appointed to NATO later in the W admin. Then high ranking pan-European brief at the state department under Obama, working closely with Joe Biden who was the admin’s “point man” for Ukraine. She took some time off while trump was in office doing the think tank thing. Then another high level state appointment when Biden was elected.
I don’t disagree that it may be something more nefarious and I do agree that there’s aways a lot going on that we can only guess at. I also agree that at this level the question of stupid or evil becomes immaterial. But we’ve got true believers (in their own brilliance and the messianic role of the US) in charge. These people are very capable of stumbling what we’re seeing now.
Once upon a time I thought about a masters in Russian and Eastern European studies. For fun I took a 400 level class at the university, one of the most prestigious in the US with a well-known Russian studies program. The kid who was the department’s undergrad star was in it. He had also just spent a year in Russia. His Russian was from a textbook and pretty bad for someone with probably four years of university Russian and a year abroad (I’m sure he read and wrote it well). He didn’t know any slang or Mats (cursing, as a literary art form). He had never ridden in a gypsy cab. A whole year and never used an insanely common mode transport. I got my grandmother around Petersburg in gypsy cabs during her January visit. His knowledge of Russia and her history was pathetic. I’ll bet he has a good job at state or a think tank. He’s probably a Russian “expert”. We’re into multi-generational ignorance and incompetence.

Posted by: Lex | Jun 2 2022 0:54 utc | 137

G.W.Bush was AWOL for nearly all of Vietnam.
Anyone who denies that is…”uninformed,” to put it politely.
@ JulianJ | Jun 1 2022 18:05 utc | 11
I have been coming back to that portion of Putin’s declaration myself, whenever anyone speculates about “how far will Russia go?”
I have come to agree with RSH, in that tegard: if anything is “left over” after Russia is done, it will be the minority of historic Galicia,
I do think the recent deal Elensky has inked with Poland may be significant: it is an effective annexation of the remaining Ukraine by Poland, allowing Poland to now assert a R2P all of Ukraine, as well as to appoint new leadership.
I will be only a smidge surprised if we see Poland directly enter the conflict, soon. I will be only a smidge more surprised if we see Russia declare any Polish forces inside Ukraine (or which act, from Polish territory, in support of Ukraine) as “fair game.”

Posted by: Pacifica Advocate | Jun 2 2022 1:01 utc | 138

bevin | Jun 2 2022 0:30 utc | 130
Thanks, Bevin. I cannot forget that episode Winnington reported from Korea. A hamlet somewhere had been bombed flat by the USAF, killing all villagers, women, children, elderly, livestock. A young Chinese officer of the PVA asked, bewildered: “Why did they do that?” Winnington answered that they may have perceived shooting out of that direction, fearing that some of their troops may get wounded or killed. Still uncomprehendingly, the soldier protested: “But that is what soldiers are for!”
Never read a better description of the difference of “Western” and civilized nations’ methods of warfare. Still, war is and remains all hell.

Posted by: aquadraht | Jun 2 2022 1:03 utc | 139

@James J. O’Meara 19
I have never heard that the F-111 was a bad warplane. It had a reputation for almost always making it back from a bombing run because it had triple hydraulic controls, was heavy and overbuilt, and had no particular Achilles heel. The inventory of F-111’s were used up over Vietnam because they did the bulk of the bombing in North Vietnam. These swing-wing planes were expensive and the “heavy fighter-bomber” no longer matched what the Pentagram thought it needed, so they were not replaced with something similar. If you or anyone has hard data that says otherwise, I’d love to see it. Rotten as the USA has become, it used to build some excellent equipment and it would be foolish to dismiss all of it.

Posted by: JessDTruth | Jun 2 2022 1:31 utc | 140

Posted by: Pacifica Advocate | Jun 2 2022 1:01 utc | 138
“I will be only a smidge surprised if we see Poland directly enter the conflict, soon. I will be only a smidge more surprised if we see Russia declare any Polish forces inside Ukraine (or which act, from Polish territory, in support of Ukraine) as “fair game.”

Perhaps also it creates tension and confusion. Let’s say Poland is in most of Galicia in some capacity or other. Maybe a plebiscite officially aligns them with Poland similar to Donbass with Russia (not recognized but). Then they shell a neutral Ukraine around Kiev, or help Kiev Ukraine shell the restored Donbass further East. If Russia retaliates will this trigger NATO escalation?
In other words, Poland’s presence in Ukraine brings NATO closer to Russia and indeed might even put a NATO area on the border with a new Russian border. So it may also be happening to discourage RF from biting too far into central or Western Ukraine, i.e. stay away from Kiev or else….s

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 1:31 utc | 141

Now that more people are raising the question whether Poland will end up taking land from Ukraine I figure it’s now safe to ask this question:
What IF Ukraine no longer were to exist? (seemed doomed by its very name- “borderlands” – inspiring? not!)
I realize there’s still the sticky point of how Russia could have some sort of buffer, but, if Ukraine ceased to exist one could say that “Ukraine” was de-militarized and de-nazified. I suppose that the Donbass and the South could become buffer states/entities, though unlikely to be “neutral” (siding with Russia; this would be just fine with Russia I’d suppose).
Poland could inch a bit closer. Perhaps Russia could lay claim to helping this outcome, benefiting Poland and that Poland might look to ease up a bit on Russia (Russia could help them deal with the neo-nazis?). Long-term, however, and this seems the case with nearly all European states, it’ll struggle as it is forced to shell out more for energy and weapons. Poland would also have to confront the ex-Ukraine nazis: setting up for a Turkey and PKK scenario?

Posted by: Seer | Jun 2 2022 1:37 utc | 142

@Posted by: Lex | Jun 2 2022 0:54 utc | 137
So very true, I see the same rank ignorance masquerading as “specialist knowledge” in so many parts of North American academia. Martyanov’s typification of Mearsheimer as “sophomoric” is so on the nose. Simplistic analysis passes for genius. The Chinese and Russians have spent the time to “know thy enemy”, the Western establishment flounders around in simplistic delusions of grandeur.

Posted by: Roger | Jun 2 2022 1:40 utc | 143

Posted by: Lex | Jun 2 2022 0:54 utc | 137
“We’re into multi-generational ignorance and incompetence.”
Thanks for your stories….
Maybe we could say that there has been so much deception for so long that the nation has been driven crazy evil stoopid!
Actually, I think what I am worriting about is the degree to which there is a deliberate thrust to bring down their countries on the part of various administrations in both US and Europe clearly many of whom are puppets for other masters at the end of whose strings they dance. That’s what I mean by evil versus stupid. Stupid is that these people think they are doing the right thing but are not. Or maybe they are persuaded by money and honey-tonguing to do corporate bidding (like Monsanto in Ukraine etc.). But evil is that these people are deliberately crashing the country whilst pretending to serve it. I now lean towards evil in this sense because it seems that every single thing they do is hastening the decline or rapid collapse of the country and on so many fronts… financial, cultural, political, military, education etc.
Then there is the greater concern that this managed collapse is coordinated somehow with globalist networks. This seemed possible with Covid and less likely on the surface with the Ukraine conflict but ‘we wonders, Precious, eye we wonders!’
I guess some of these whys and wherefores don’t matter, but it does matter that we perceive who our true enemies are. Stupidity is a hard one to grapple with. Like you started off saying how we keep electing these bozos. (I say ‘we’ though am not a resident US citizen who votes.) Maybe. The choices are limited and outcomes often rigged. But leaving that aside also the system is not just rigged maybe it’s also systemically deceptive, the so-called Uniparty idea. Then you have powerful NGO’s like Soros paying millions to put in local AG’s, Mayors and so forth plus organized fifth column leftist stuff polluting schools with sexual perversion, BLM manifesting paid-for riots helped by paid-for fake Antifa fascists, utterly corrupt media and justice systems and…..
really, is voting anything other than democracy theater at this point? Personally I don’t regard the US as a bona fide representative republic any more. But maybe I’m just too cynical after too many decades living in the Empire of Lies and having been more or less aware of it for many decades now.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 1:46 utc | 144

https://thegrayzone.com/2022/05/31/us-trained-extremists-fighting-russia-blowback/
From an earlier post, but worth a repost.
An excerpt;
US agencies have directly and indirectly trained and empowered Nazis and ultra-nationalists at home and abroad to fight Russians in Ukraine. This program follows the blueprint established by Western intelligence agencies in Afghanistan and Syria.

Posted by: vetinLA | Jun 2 2022 1:56 utc | 145

Elections are not democracy. Sortition — choosing officials by lot from the whole citizen body, as was done in Athens — that is democracy.

Posted by: Lysias | Jun 2 2022 1:58 utc | 146

During the same period that Azovians are rebranding as LGBQ (?) advocates with new emblems, comes the US military.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FUK8xwYWQAIDit5?format=jpg&name=small
Evidence: Deliberate destruction of the USofA. (Turn its military into a bunch of confused pansies!)

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 1:59 utc | 147

During the same period that Azovians are rebranding as LGBQ (?) advocates with new emblems, comes the US military.
Gremlins strike again:
Not ‘advocates with new emblems’
but
Azovians with new emblems…

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 2:01 utc | 148

“…Obama’s blood father Frank Davis, a known communist, raises no red flags whatsoever in terms of considering whether or not there are high-level links between his administration and current network and the Kremlin…” Scorpion@131
But I thought his father was… you know, his father Barack Obama. And he too was an anti-communist. As was Tom Mboya (more on him later) So maybe that is how these high level links between the anti-communist Kremlin and the anti-communist Obama came about.
But maybe the links were between Joe Biden (Obama/ Davis’s V-P) and the Kremlin which would explain why Joe Biden is pretending so hard to be an enemy of Russia. It is the perfect way of preventing people from seeing that he is really a Russian agent. Just as providing Ukraine with all the latest weapons is a perfect way of obscuring the fact that Biden is, in reality, Ukraine’s implacable enemy and Russia’s fast friend.
And then there is Hillary Clinton, whose husband and Foundation have received millions from Russians, many of them known associates of VV Putin. You’d have to be really naive not to see that all those Russiagate charges and associated anti-Putin propaganda were just sophisticated smokescreens designed to divert eyes from the obvious truth: the Clintons work for Russia. And always have done.
Russia and the British Royal Family, which isn’t actually British at all, and is closely related to the Romanov dynasty. And guess who is a self confessed admirer of the Romanovs? That’s right Hillary Clinton’s friend VV Putin.
And don’t let us even get started on the Ukrainian links of the Democratic Party chiefs such as Nuland and Blinken.
And did you know that Earl Browder, Bill Browder’s grand-dad, was the actual leader of the CPUSA? That’s right the Communist Party. And he was the man behind the totally phony Magnitsky Acts which were the bases of the current sanctions regime. From which it is now quite clear Russia is profiting mightily. ‘Thanks Joe’ say the Russians.
And Earl Browder was from Kansas. Guess who else came from Kansas? That’s right Dorothy and the guy behind the curtain. And he was a Communist too. As was Frank Baum, who invented them, pretty close anyway.
And, by the way if Joe Biden is not working for Russia how come Hunter is getting so much money from Chinese Banks. The same banks currently working overtime to undercut the dollar.
Is Joe Biden getting paid in rubles?
Did I mention that Clinton is from Arkansas, which is where Senator Fulbright was from? Plus he got not a Fulbright, as you might expect, but a Rhodes scholarship. Doesn’t that tell you something? Cecil Rhodes, the British Royal Family, the refusal of successive US governments to choose fusion power sources to protect the petrochemical industry with Monsanto and Dow to the fore. The two firms behind Agent Orange.
Anyone heard of the Orange Order? Founded in memory of William of Orange, a critical link in the genealogy of the British Royal Family. It was the Orange dynasty which in 1815 was presented with Belgium, by Tsar Alexander and the British, to go with The Netherlands as a new monarchy.
That’s Belgium where Brussels, the HQ of the EU is located. And NATO too. Now the First Secretary General of NATO was a man called Paul Henri Spaak a former Trotskyist. Which is to say a known Communist, probably a friend of Earl Browder…. (to be continued on page 94)

Posted by: bevin | Jun 2 2022 2:02 utc | 149

@ Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 18:08 utc | 12
Yes why does Zelinski continue with the fight rather than negotiate terms of defeat?
He is a puppet to the rest and to extreme elements within his country – he does not have authority to in fact negotiate terms with Russia. Suspect he would need permission from Nuland among others. If he was allowed to negotiate terms for some gain, he would likely be told to break the terms when it benefited some to do so.
Essentially, Ukraine is a failed state – it goes on fighting, but is already dead. It applies to many western states – still walking and serving master but no longer with any spirit.
But in the interim, it pays the bills.

Posted by: jared | Jun 2 2022 2:09 utc | 150

re: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 23:52 utc | 122
Agree that Martyanov’s book, Losing Military Supremacy is important and a good read. It isn’t his newest book, as it was written in 2018. I particularly like his following book, The (Real) Revolution in Military Affairs (see this link to purchase). See this this link for a review at Moon of Alabama.

Posted by: Perimetr | Jun 2 2022 2:13 utc | 151

Point after point about the U$A’s global behavior towards anyone or nation it perceives as threating.
Threating what?, one might ask. The answer is simple. Threating the empire’s right to achieve Commerce hegemony, something the corporate empire lusts for, increasing “global market share.”
And, in the big business community, it’s almost religious in nature, and, has morphed into a global goal.

Posted by: vetinLA | Jun 2 2022 2:27 utc | 152

Posted by: bevin | Jun 2 2022 2:02 utc | 149
Call me confused, but the litany of so called connections is tiresome and was a waste of my precious time. That some of the “dots” of connection chain are true, does not make the connections any more valid. I expect better comments from bevin.

Posted by: fanto | Jun 2 2022 2:29 utc | 153

The magic of capitalism is competition. What do you call capitalism without competition?
Cult of Mammon?
Sometimes I can’t believe how arrogantly I dismissed the Old Testament in my youth. SSDD…

Posted by: Rae | Jun 2 2022 2:43 utc | 154

That’s Belgium where Brussels, the HQ of the EU is located. And NATO too. Now the First Secretary General of NATO was a man called Paul Henri Spaak a former Trotskyist. Which is to say a known Communist, probably a friend of Earl Browder…. (to be continued on page 94)
Posted by: bevin | Jun 2 2022 2:02 utc | 149
LOL hilarious takedown!

Posted by: K | Jun 2 2022 2:48 utc | 155

Posted by: bevin | Jun 2 2022 2:02 utc | 149
Wow! You know WAY more about all this skulduggery than I can even comprehend, bevin!
https://www.wnd.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/obamadavis.jpg
I gather you are an expert in communism. Clearly you are a very thoughtful, widely read and caring person. But I think you would agree that ideal communism and then what actually happens in various communist States at various times are often at variance. I know little of Russian history but do know that the murder of the Tsar was an atrocity as was the subsequent murder of tens of millions of Christian Russians later. That was communism in action. Their economy at some point gave out. And after 1990 a post-communist Russia has emerged. No doubt some things from those times – hopefully good things for no doubt there were some good things – have contributed to the latest rebirth of the Russian people and polity but also no doubt some things are quite different from the communist era. Russia is no longer communist so tarring the contemporary nation and people with darker deeds from the communist past can be both unfair and inaccurate.
That said, maybe when the Frank Davis wunderkind operation (O’s mother was CIA of course) happened it was during communist times and now they have no use for him because they are not communist. Quite possible. But it is also quite possible that stalwart communists were also deeply patriotic Russians, no? And if so their little black CIA wunderkind operation might not get abandoned simply because of a little thing like post-communist regime change. (Also interesting that the mother was CIA no?)
I’ll go out on a limb here, Bevin: I would be astonished if when the full history is written (long after we are both dead unfortunately) if at all that it doesn’t reveal that Russia has indeed had many tentacles operating inside the US and other Western countries spying out and/or influencing various sectors like politics, culture, military, engineering, business, media and so forth. Especially with an ex KGB as President deeply educated about Western culture and arguably one of the most gifted national leaders in over a century (yes, I include Churchill, Stalin, FDR etc.!).
I would also be astonished if the Chinese are crawling all over the US et alia like ants either.
Just because they articulate principled, intelligent policy positions based in humanitarian norms doesn’t mean they aren’t nation states doing what it takes to protect their interests and/or get the jump on their adversaries, especially a lying conniving one like the US-Zio-Nazi axis. They would be foolish not to. (Don’t you agree?)
Perhaps it is best not to mention such things without substantive proof etc. (though I think the Obama-Davis thing is a no-brainer esp. since he dated O’s mother for a while at the right time, just as the Castro-Trudeau one also makes sense both photographically and timeline-wise). But I think it is also silly to pretend that no such machinations go on behind the curtains of what is usually aired in public.
We should not be too naive. (Nor should we become addicted to compulsively speculative rabbit-holing.)
Especially when millions of lives hang in the balance these days….
I like to think I bring things like these up just to remind us that there are many levels to whatever we are observing and analyzing. And also it can be unfortunate to freeze one’s bias, so to speak, after which you only see what confirms it and pretty soon you are a locked-in partisan. That’s okay, I guess, in that you pick a side and serve it honorably. But again: there are many levels and I think it good to be aware of them even if much of the detail therein remains overly opaque.
All best…

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 2:51 utc | 156

I would also be astonished if the Chinese are crawling all over the US et alia like ants either.
nope….
I would also NOT be astonished if the Chinese are crawling all over the US et alia like ants either.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 2 2022 2:54 utc | 157

Posted by: Jpc | Jun 1 2022 19:08 utc | 43

The casualty rate has to be enormous.
But the ammunition rate expenditure by the Russians must be phenomenal.
How the heck did they have those enormous quantities stockpiled?
And more to the point Western intelligence sources seem to have been completely oblivious to the point of gross incompetence.
Remember the military experts say Russian army will be without ammunition within 4 days back in March.

As Andrei Martyanov will tell you, Russia is a land-based military force. Artillery is its forte. Should clearly follow that they’d be stockpiled with artillery ammunition (and that they have the factories to manufacture it- factories that were at the ready to go into hyper-production).
Did Western “Intelligence” fail to understand Sun Tzu’s warning/advice? Certainly does look like it: but whether there’s some other intent behind being this incompetent is something that me will likely never find out: is Ukraine more about markets (US pushing out Russia from Europe so that it, the US, can sell LNG and weapons (something that it looks it most certainly will be doing, but, again, we are likely not ever going to know what the real driver is/was).

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War

The US hasn’t really won any battles yet it’s been, up to now, the world’s top super power. I wonder what Sun Tzu would have to say about this?

Posted by: Seer | Jun 2 2022 2:56 utc | 158

@ 149; Not bevin..

Posted by: vetinLA | Jun 2 2022 3:10 utc | 159

The debates over economic systems are endless. What system is best? IMO,its a mixed economy.
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/mixed+economy
The debates between capitalism and socialism are a distraction, fostered by the uber-wealthy.
World economies that really work, are mixed.

Posted by: vetinLa | Jun 2 2022 3:22 utc | 160

Posted by: bevin | Jun 2 2022 2:02 utc | 149
Call me confused, but the litany of so called connections is tiresome and was a waste of my precious time. That some of the “dots” of connection chain are true, does not make the connections any more valid. I expect better comments from bevin.
Posted by: fanto | Jun 2 2022 2:29 utc | 153
But he was parodying that line of thinking wasn’t he? I thought it was a great takedown of the “every bad guy is a communist ” meme.

Posted by: K | Jun 2 2022 3:30 utc | 161

In response to

The debates over economic systems are endless. What system is best? IMO,its a mixed economy.
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/mixed+economy
The debates between capitalism and socialism are a distraction, fostered by the uber-wealthy.
World economies that really work, are mixed.
Posted by: vetinLa | Jun 2 2022 3:22 utc | 160

According to Michael Hudson, with whom I agree, all of the nations governments since Roman times have been mixed economies
I agree that “The debates between capitalism and socialism are a distraction, fostered by the uber-wealthy.”
I continue to posit that whether finance is public or private is the defining aspect of today’s societies. The West has private finance and China and others have public finance.
IMO, what group controls access to the punch bowl of finance controls how “mixed” the economy is. And I think that the military action in Ukraine is tied into our war over public/private global finance.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Jun 2 2022 3:34 utc | 162

Posted by: Pacifica Advocate | Jun 2 2022 1:01 utc | 138
The game is whether Polish forces would be able to reign Ukrainian fascist from continuing attacks to RF and her allies in any manners including if they plan to do terrorists attack from the Ukrainian territory it was annexed/protected by Polish forces.
Just like Turkish forces in Idlib would just get bombed if it’s part of attackers to RF and allies.

Posted by: Lucci | Jun 2 2022 3:46 utc | 163

As the vet said, not bevin.

Posted by: Don Bacon | Jun 2 2022 3:50 utc | 164

@ bevin | Jun 1 2022 18:43 utc | 27
That article on the effort to turn Ukraine into a big, depopulated field for agribusiness, GMOs, and the Monsanto (or Monsatan) Corp. is really spectacular and draws all the threads together. From 1945, the US has tried constantly to prevent other countries from growing their own food through the World Bank, as documented by Michael Hudson, who has even said that preventing countries from growing their own food is the main purpose of the World Bank. Obviously, if countries can be kept from growing their own food, they can be starved into submission, and it is true today that only a few countries are actually agricultural surplus countries who export more food than they import. Also, this neofeudalism requires the emptying of the countryside even in surplus countries like the US, where the overwhelming majority could not grow their own food if they had to. Also, the complex technological system of agribusiness everywhere requires a submission by all to outside control of the food supply, even in the same country. Yet, at the same time, it is unsustainable and headed for catastrophe.
So thanks for that article, bevin. A related text that might be useful is the sci-fi novel Earthworks by Brian Aldiss (1965). In Earthworks, Aldiss describes a dystopian earth 500 years in the future, where 24 billion people live in cities built on stilts a couple of miles in the sky to enable the population to stay about the fumes of the poisonous chemicals used to grow crops. But the people are nevertheless subject to epidemics of plaguelike diseases that recur. In order to grow enough food, all the mountains have been shoved into the ocean over the continental shelves to increase the area devoted to agriculture, but the crops often fail owing to insects and diseases that are immune to the pesticides. All is presided over by a dictatorial, centralized state.
So here we are today actually 57 years later, and much of what Aldiss was describing is already coming to pass. Poisonous chemical agribusiness is just one more aspect of US-centered imperialism that needs to be opposed and stopped.

Posted by: Cabe | Jun 2 2022 3:52 utc | 165

In response to

The debates over economic systems are endless. What system is best? IMO,its a mixed economy.
Posted by: psychohistorian | Jun 2 2022 3:34 utc | 162
I think that the debates over systems are not restricted to economics at all. The difference between socialism and capitalism is actually the difference between democracy and corporate fascism, meaning do the people have freedom and equal access to food, clothing, shelter and education or not.
Making it into a debate about forms of finance confuses the issue. Socialism is for the people and is about more than money, capitalism is a financial system created for the wealthy and has no philosophical or practical interest in the well being of the people.
Public and private finance can both exist in a socialist system the difference being that private capital has no say in government. As in what China is attempting to do. In capitalism, public money is increasingly funnelled off to the private sector for the enrichment of the 1%
Economy is only one part of society, elevating it to godlike status is the huge mistake we have made in the wezt.

Posted by: K | Jun 2 2022 4:00 utc | 166

Oh Michael McFaul, you really should consider changing your last name to McFail, Obama’s former ambassador to Russia keeps finding new ways to be embarrassingly stupid. Two weeks ago he was in Toronto for the Munk debates where he infamously admitted that the US diplomats “lie all the time” and that the US specifically lied to Ukraine about them being allowed into NATO (he received a well-deserved rebuke from the Stephen Walt that “if US diplomats lie all the time, why should Russia believe them”). Now McFail has another great fail to his name, during a remote discussion entitled Are Russian Sanctions Working? How Can They Be Strengthened?

Posted by: Kadath | Jun 2 2022 4:12 utc | 167

Posted by: bevin | Jun 2 2022 2:02 utc | 149
Oh dear. Some don’t recognise satire when they see it. Bevin or not Bevin.
The clue was in the final line:
continued on page 94
but perhaps you’d have to be acquainted with Private Eye in the UK to spot it.

Posted by: Walt | Jun 2 2022 4:14 utc | 168

. . .on four HIMARS (targets) to Ukraine, from DOD

As part of the latest presidential drawdown package for Ukraine — this one worth $700 million dollars — the Defense Department has included four M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, or HIMARS.
The M142 HIMARS system allows for the launching of multiple, precision-guided rockets. Along with the HIMARS system, the department is also including the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System to be used with HIMARS. Those rockets are capable of hitting a target more than 40 miles away.
“What the HIMARS will allow them to do is to get greater standoff. Right now, the Howitzers we provided them have about a 30 km range; the HIMARS have more than twice that, which will allow them — even with fewer systems — greater standoff,” said Colin H. Kahl, undersecretary of defense for policy, during a briefing today at the Pentagon.
To ensure the most rapid delivery of HIMARS systems to Ukraine, Kahl said DOD pre-positioned systems inside Europe in anticipation of the president’s decision to approve their transfer to Ukraine.
Before that transfer happens, Kahl said, the U.S. will provide training on the system to both Ukrainian users and maintainers.
“These, of course, are systems that the Ukrainians need to be trained on,” he said. “We think that’ll take around three weeks. They need to know not just how to use the systems, but, of course, how to maintain the system — so, think of logistics, maintenance, things like that. So, it’ll be a number of weeks until that training is complete.” . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Jun 2 2022 4:16 utc | 169

Economic systems are about “managing” resources. ALL is layered/built on top of NATURAL resources. A problem with our current economic systems are that they try to hide the underlying foundation that the planet is finite and that, hence, natural resources are finite. We are unable to grasp the ramifications; rather, we seem to just toss it up in the air and say that “god will deal with it” (“go forth and multiply” on a finite planet was poor advice).
Austerity was always going to come, nature would make certain of that.
“Collapse now, and avoid the rush.” -John Michael Greer

Posted by: Seer | Jun 2 2022 4:16 utc | 170

bevin #130
thank you for your reply. On ukraine agri oligarchs, i await their wailing and tantrums over land and ‘right to farm’ etc.
I will pursue some of those references in that report too.
Wilfred Burchet is a giant among reporters. Like you, i learned much from his pen .. an inspiration. Julian Assange walks in his steps but chose the wrong country for refuge.
good health to you.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Jun 2 2022 4:27 utc | 171

Larry Johnson has identified 12 Kiev units that are refusing to fight. Of these 12, 9 are sub formations from regular NATO style Brigades. Kiev only started with 25 regular brigades. 9/25 means Collapse is a matter of a few weeks, maybe mid-July for start of Phase 3
https://sonar21.com/ukrainian-military-units-betrayed-by-their-commanders/

Posted by: Exile | Jun 2 2022 4:29 utc | 172

Zelenskyy takes his military advice from his 9-year-old son… LOL From Donbass Insider Telegram channel…
https://t.me/donbassinsider/12701

Zelensky’s wife says her nine-year-old son gives military advice to his father
Olena Zelenskaya, wife of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, gave an interview to Dailymail on May 31. she said there that she spoke openly about the military conflict to her children. She added that she was trying to be honest with them. While the couple’s two children, aged 17 and 9, are aware of the situation, Ms Zelenskaya has made a stunning confession. Separated from his father, the youngest regularly gives him advice on how the Ukrainian army should operate.
“It’s different with my son, he’s a growing political scientist; he knows everything, he gives us military advice, what we should buy… What tanks, planes, helicopters we should buy, what we need. Which countries help us badly, which countries help us well. He’s a military expert, you can talk to him about it for months,” Ms. Zelenskaya told the Dailymail.
The First Lady of Ukraine took the opportunity to talk about her husband and said she was not surprised that he inspires the world with his leadership and his spirit of resistance. Finally, she wished that all Ukrainian children could return to school on September 1.
@chroniques_conflit_ukraine

Posted by: Richard Steven Hack | Jun 2 2022 4:33 utc | 173

@ bevin | Jun 2 2022 2:02 utc | 149
Coffee flavored nasal lavage with that one bevin, thanks.
Your posts are important, and appreciated!
Thanks also to K for critical insights lately.

Posted by: waynorinorway | Jun 2 2022 4:39 utc | 174

More stories about demoralized Ukrainian troops from Rybar Telegram channel…

From a Radio France International report from Severodonetsk. Spiritual reading:
“The Russians are bombing and firing mortars 24 hours a day, without a break. When you engage your people, after two minutes of fighting, you already have a lot of wounded that you have to evacuate. New ones arrive, and after a few minutes they are gone alive”
Commander of one of the reserve units:
“Our authorities deceived us, sent us to the front line unnoticed by everyone. My people were not ready for battle. Half of them never even fired a shot. They are demoralized. The Russians are killing us and that’s it. We don’t even have ammunition. Our command does not support us “.
“We only had machine guns and RPGs from 1986. A Degtyarev machine gun from 1943. And a Maxim machine gun from 1933. And we also have a Swedish NLAW portable anti-tank missile system, but the battery didn’t work. That’s all we had,” describes the last operation was a member of the 20th battalion Vladimir Kharchuk.
Andriy Shevchenko, 39-year-old soldier:
“You can’t just fight with AK47s. The Russians will crush us. We’re being bombarded from the air, with mortars, we can’t respond with simple Kalashnikovs or short-range grenade launchers.”
The material ends with a statement that the city is lost.
According to the military, if nothing changes, the entire Donbas will sooner or later fall into the hands of Russia.
@sashakots

Posted by: Richard Steven Hack | Jun 2 2022 4:41 utc | 175

The sort of casualties the Ukrainians are really getting… From Colonel Cassad Telegram channel…

Ukrainian armed formations in the north of the Kharkiv region suffered the maximum losses since the moment when Russian troops withdrew to the border of the Russian Federation in some areas.
The militants of the national formations were destroyed by air strikes in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe settlement of Tsirkuny. Enemy activity west of Stary Saltov was also suppressed, a blow was struck in the area of ​​the village of Shestakovo. In this square, Ukrainian units moved along one of the roads in the direction of the Pechenezh reservoir, along which the contact line passes today.
According to incoming data, in total, in a few hours in the north of the Kharkov region, the enemy lost at least 90 people killed.
@epoddubny

Posted by: Richard Steven Hack | Jun 2 2022 4:55 utc | 176

Latest Russian MoD briefing…

Briefing by Russian Defence Ministry
The Armed Forces of the Russian Federation continue the special military operation in Ukraine.
High-precision air-based missiles of the Russian Aerospace Forces have hit 5 control points, as well as 29 areas of AFU manpower and military equipment concentration.
Operational-tactical, army and unmanned aviation have hit 61 areas of AFU manpower and military equipment concentration.
The attacks have resulted in the elimination of more than 140 nationalists, as well as 9 tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, 1 battery of BM-21 Grad multiple rocket launchers, 6 artillery mounts and mortars, 13 AFU vehicles of various purposes and 1 OSA-AKM anti-aircraft missile system.
Russian air defense means have shot down 1 Su-25 aircraft of the Air Forces of Ukraine near Sergeevka, Donetsk People’s Republic and 1 Mi-8 helicopter near Kharkov during the day.
In addition, 7 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles have been shot down near Gorlovka, Golmovskyi, Yasinovataya, Varvarovka in Donetsk People’s Republic, Malye Prokhody, Novaya Gnilitsa in Kharkov Region, and Pyatikhatka in Kherson Region. Also, 2 Ukrainian Smerch multiple-launch rockets have been intercepted near Malaya Kamyshevakha and Kamenka in Kharkov Region.
Missile troops and artillery have hit 128 command posts, 169 firing positions of artillery and mortar batteries, as well as 623 areas of AFU manpower and military equipment concentration.[MY NOTE: Again, around 900+ strikes which undoubtedly cost the lives (or wounded) of literally hundreds of Ukrainians.]
The attacks have resulted in the elimination of up to 200 nationalists, [MY NOTE: “Confirmed kills” only] as well as 24 units of weapons and military equipment, including 1 battery of 155-mm M777 howitzers, 203-mm 2S7 Pion mount, BM-21 Grad multiple rocket launcher and 2 ammunition depots.
In total, 185 Ukrainian aircraft and 129 helicopters, 1,077 unmanned aerial vehicles, 326 anti-aircraft missile systems, 3,363 tanks and other armored combat vehicles, 457 multiple launch rocket systems, 1,744 field artillery and mortars, as well as 3,329 units of special military vehicles were destroyed during the operation.
#MoD #Russia #Ukraine #Briefing
@mod_russia_en

Posted by: Richard Steven Hack | Jun 2 2022 5:07 utc | 177

@ bevin

(to be continued on page 94)

Us old fogeys would have said “Page 2.” Perhaps you’re old enough to understand the reference. 😉
As for Stalin, I agree: he was growing soft in his old age. Fortunately (for the sake of the planet) not so soft that he wasn’t developing his own atomic weapons, because certainly he must have been aware that the USA’s only regret over having obliterated Hiroshima and Nagasaki was that it didn’t have any nukes left over to obliterate Moscow and some other lucky Soviet city, and that the USA was itching to replenish its supply to obliterate the USSR in toto. Stalin did, after all, have excellent spy networks and must have listened to reports from them.

Posted by: malenkov | Jun 2 2022 5:19 utc | 178

Don Bacon | Jun 2 2022 4:16 utc | 169
I see Russian MoD hit a train tunnel for the first time. Makes me wonder if that is in connection with those missile systems. Narrowing down the alternate paths for entering Ukraine.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jun 2 2022 5:19 utc | 179

The ukies are crumbling.
HistoryLegend has a wicked sense of humour to complement this 17 minutes review of defeat.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Jun 2 2022 5:38 utc | 180

Truman was the template for viciousness of the US persona today, particularly v Russia. FDR had just died in office, so VP Truman became pres. He had no VP. Germany surrendered in May 1945. That left Japan. Stalin had told Truman he was ready to help US finish the job vs Japan. That bothered Truman who couldn’t bear the idea of a multi polar world. So instead of accepting Stalin’s help, so Truman dropped two nuclear bombs on Japan, 3 days apart in August 1945. One would’ve been more than enough. I don’t consider this “winning” v Japan. Yet Truman was basking. “US partner” Churchill was filled with praise of Truman, it was so great that US and UK controlled the bomb instead of some bad country, because US and UK would use it for “good.”

Posted by: susan mullen | Jun 2 2022 6:00 utc | 181

Get it through your heads. Poland and Western Ukraine would get blown to bits by the force of Russia. Both these fools believe that they can entice NATO/ USA to enter the war.
USA/ NATO says no repeatedly to going to war with Russia. USA tells Poland not to set foot into Ukraine, and some still think that you have power.
Now, you are supposedly sending missiles that can reach into Russia, but with instructions for Nazi Ukraine not to attack Russia directly.
You expect Russia to believe that? Poland/ Ukraine nonsense is actually their last gasp to drag USA into war.
Good luck with that. The slow humiliation will turn into immediate reality.
The ignorant puppets in European governments grew up in believing in USA superpower. A reality is soon coming, but in a world where reality is Hollywood, I doubt whether many will acknowledge it.

Posted by: Karl luck | Jun 2 2022 6:00 utc | 182

@Karl luck #181
The problem is that all those weapons nato has sent will be used in terrorism when the regular army will be dead (in weeks or months). And the new mlrs nato is sending will go deeper inside the new borders. Since nato can’t have Ukr, they’ll make it not good for living as revenge. Think how Donbass was attacked for 8 years but much worse.
I can’t help to notice that the cardboard general Shoigu is helping nato achieve exactly that with his crap strategy that allows an endless supply of any sort of weapons and constant shelling inside Russia’s borders with absolutely zero consequences.

Posted by: rk | Jun 2 2022 6:28 utc | 183

@169 Don Bacon | Jun 2 2022 4:16 utc
Brian Berletic (Cartalucci) has a short video about the futility of those HIMARS gifts:
US to Send “Game-Changer” HIMARS to Ukraine: The Rest of the Story [June 1, 15 minutes]
And as always in this operation, it is the “rest of the story” that tells the true tale.
~~
I must say that the impression I get from several sources is that all of these artillery gifts to Ukraine are in effect death traps that will destroy those hapless servicemen assigned to their batteries. The waste of ordinary lives – this is the hallmark of this war.
Berletic has a prior video to this that offers an excellent recap/sitrep – I highly recommend it:
Russian Ops in Ukraine: Rocket Launchers and Lost Cities [May 31, 37 minutes]
He obviously from this report decided to go into more depth (in the first video above, regarding the HIMARS), to demonstrate again the absurd futility of all these gifts of war that simply prolong the agony of Ukraine, and provide zero benefit – negative benefit in fact – in the war effort. He’s done this before, with the howitzers, and he does it well.
~~
We have seen the mainstream stenographers begin their tortured pivot toward the truth of the situation in Ukraine, and Berletic highlights this very well in his longer sitrep.
And so I think that since we in the free commentariat are leading the MSM by at least 2-3 months, and we begin to see increasingly the mounting waste of unfortunate lives spent by the powers that rule them…that maybe this is where the MSM finds itself trapped, eventually, to articulate to its consumers, to have to encompass somehow.
May it choke them all as they try to explain it.

Posted by: Grieved | Jun 2 2022 6:30 utc | 184

I forgot to add that the same Shoigu did NOT put money into attack drones budget and that’s why US is sending now heavy drones (sure… easy to shoot down like they do in Syria but they have multiple missiles each so they can still cause problems). it’s embarrassing Okhotnik is still not finished.

Posted by: rk | Jun 2 2022 6:40 utc | 185

Grieved | Jun 2 2022 6:30 utc | 183
Donetsk city has just been through some heavy shelling from those american artillery pieces. A number of civilians killed.
Pro Russia or anti US military people have been breaking their balls to explain why this is not going slow.
Russia is looking at a long term solution. It allows some western weapons to come through. The long term solution is psychological. Russian artillery cuts through anglo/european propaganda.
Sooner or later, central Ukraine – neutral Ukraine will take control. Americans like names for their colour revolutions. This Russian induced one could be called the red mist revolution.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jun 2 2022 6:57 utc | 186

A really comprehensive day to day tactical analysis, gets down to the nitty-gritty.
https://rumble.com/v16zgpr-ukraine.-military-summary-and-analysis-01.06.2022.html

Posted by: Haassaan | Jun 2 2022 7:04 utc | 187

rk | Jun 2 2022 6:40 utc | 184
Russia is vbery much a latecomer to the drone world, but those large expensive slow flying turboprop combat drones are easy targets for the worlds most advanced air defence. Something like sending a 30 million dollar lamb to the slaughter.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jun 2 2022 7:18 utc | 188

Excerpt From
Losing Military Supremacy
Andrei Martyanov
https://books.apple.com/us/book/losing-military-supremacy/id1403722563
This material is protected by copyright.”
This looks like an important book.
Posted by: Scorpion | Jun 1 2022 23:52 utc | 122
Thanks for that really interesting excerpt.
Explained a lot very clearly as to mindsets.

Posted by: Jpc | Jun 2 2022 7:27 utc | 189

Just published a new op-ed: “Europe: province of the United States”:
https://geopolitiekincontext.wordpress.com/2022/06/02/europa-wingewest-van-de-verenigde-staten/
The headlines are:
For the EU, strategic autonomy is long overdue. The war in Ukraine is dividing the world in two. America is committing economic suicide and dragging the EU in its wake. Russia, China and India are creating a new world order, but not without a fight.
For any other language than Dutch: please use the Google translate box in the right upper corner.

Posted by: Paul-Robert | Jun 2 2022 7:27 utc | 190

187 vbery… Typos like that are best picked ripe.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jun 2 2022 7:27 utc | 191

Paul-Robert | Jun 2 2022 7:27 utc | 189 ” America is committing economic suicide and dragging the EU in its wake.”
No. US is sitting on Europe sucking it dry while trying to stay afloat. EU will go first like a hollowed out insect in a spiders web.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jun 2 2022 7:35 utc | 192

Posted by: James J. O’Meara | Jun 1 2022 18:25 utc | 19
OTOH, the movie The Starfighters, which I’ve referenced before regarding the F-111 (whose poor performance the movie is intended to cover up) depicts AF pilots in exactly that way, even having the AF distribute “bennies” (amphetamine) to hung over pilots. Ah, simpler times!
Actually in real life the “Aardvark” was very good at it’s job as a precision attack nap of the earth attack bomber. It was and still remains one of the better USSA aircraft of the period. The down side was , for though it was a technology marvel. The man hour maintenance required per flight hour was a bear. Like the Russian equivalent yet adaptable in recon. The very easy to fly SU-24. One could say, F-111 fighter bomber. Was a victim of bad mouthing “BS” sales talk from rival USSA plane makers. Oz kept the F-111 flying until the central wing box reached the end of life hours. The central enclosed safety zero zero ejection module has seen no rivals since the original design was drafted.
Back in Gulf War 1.0. . The USSAF overwhelmed by maintenance requirements of the USSA Gulf force inventory. The maintenance group also sidelined the flying ‘POS’ . The notorious crap engine on fire total loss F/A-18 aircraft. A plane well known for complete jet engine failures Resulting in non recoverable fatal total plane loss from internal engine on fire.. The Canadian version scrapped the makers claimed optimistic engine hour TBO. Reduce same to a more realistic 800-900 engine hours pair replacement required. As did the Oz RAAF too.
Back in Nevada at at “Nellis” . A brand new low hours fresh from the factory Oz two seat “Growler” version. Self incinerated on the ground. A very spectacular engine fire/failure in full public view.
On a side note. The original Westinghouse jet engines. As was issued to the first generation F-86 were not all that reliable either. The Korean air war loss rate 7 to 1 was pure Yankee propaganda ‘BS”. In reality the big cannons on the MIG-15 turned them into one hit wonders. The corrected rate was basically one to one. This was also verified again in the early sixties over the skies of Quemoy Island. Until some genius aircraft engineer the USSA. Came with a way to wire in and retro fit first gen AIM 9 missiles to the F-86……..
The USSA Navy aircraft maintenance crew were told “Keep the F-14 in the air . The reason was obvious. A plane which flew on until all spare parts were completely exhausted! Iran reverse engineered and ultimately modified their version to take more modern equivalents.
Back in the USSA ‘Gulf War 1.0’ When , the notorious flying “POS” F/A-1XX flight hours expired. Usually happened within a two week period. . This flying ‘POS’ too was parked and grounded by the USSN Navy. For later maintenance, when time permitted. Modern Jet fighters are all high maintenance man hour beasts in varying degrees.
The only plane which flew with extremely reliability through out “Gulf War 1.0” was the elderly designed tank buster slow and steady ugly “Warthog” . Retrofitted with a tiny “Sony CTV” as a monitor for the camera feed from the two video equipped missiles . Strange but true. One actually lost half a wing in combat. The pilot destroyed the ZSU AV. Flew back to base. The next day with a bolt on replacement wing attached. Took off, on a new attack mission…………
Now the USSAF do have a drug problem with pilots taking excessive uppers and downers. Issued like candy. One known commander “General McPeake” issued a direct order to all USSAF flight doctors. From the day he took on the top job. As a reward on his final day before retirement. The very upset arrogant USSAF flight doctors . Deliberately flouted the order . Reissuing uppers and downers with impunity. Excessive drug taking resulted in a number of deadly friendly fire incidents in Afghanistan. Along with undefined “Pilot Error” fatal air crashes. By the USSAF pilots. The USSAF uses the word “Pilot Error” to cover many of the sinning commanders/flight doctors bad orders to pilots.
Question why do Airline companies prefer pilots trained by dry drug free civil non military flying schools? Answer because no civil aircraft company wants to hire the washed out drug/alcohol addicted ex USSAF fighter jock pilots !
Sadly today the USSAF is heavily infested with drug addicted front line pilots. At one USSA Senate sub hearing . The USSAF, was forced to confess. The video lounge chair pilots had a fifty percent chance of crashing the drone on landing. The USSA army , had mandated from day one! All their drones, as purchased. Required a basic auto landing capability….

Posted by: Bad Deal Motors On | Jun 2 2022 7:51 utc | 193

Economic systems are about “managing” resources. ALL is layered/built on top of NATURAL resources. A problem with our current economic systems are that they try to hide the underlying foundation that the planet is finite and that, hence, natural resources are finite. We are unable to grasp the ramifications; rather, we seem to just toss it up in the air and say that “god will deal with it” (“go forth and multiply” on a finite planet was poor advice).
Austerity was always going to come, nature would make certain of that.
“Collapse now, and avoid the rush.” -John Michael Greer
Posted by: Seer | Jun 2 2022 4:16 utc |
21 century war’s are all about the above!
Nothing else.
Especially the little guys.

Posted by: Jpc | Jun 2 2022 8:24 utc | 194

What can a poor boy do.. 45K suckers in Madrid paid good money to keep financing the poor boys spitting image of what the west has become, a necrophilic horror show that has lost all sense of self awareness, just watch the images, in one of them the caption Nº 7 claims Lip Jagger is jumping!! but there is no Jack and there is no flash. All right, yes, I enjoyed some of their tunes, but half a century ago, watching what is left of those dreams is just a nightmare.
https://elpais.com/cultura/2022-06-01/el-concierto-de-los-rolling-stones-en-madrid-en-imagenes.html
Under “cultura”, from our eternal enemies and occupiers, I’ll do a ukrainian on them, anglo saxons, идите на хуй.

Posted by: Paco | Jun 2 2022 8:32 utc | 195

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/street-harassment-bylaw-calgary-1.6472872
The new amendment defines “harass” as: “Communicating with a person in a manner that could reasonably cause offence or humiliation, including conduct, comment, or actions,” and includes references to a person’s race, religious beliefs, disability, age, marital status, source of income, family status, gender, sexual orientation; and includes a sexual solicitation or advance.
500 dollar fines in Canada if you offend someone. Lol what does that even mean?
Wear masks, forced lockdowns and vaccines All while are leaders support Nazi’s
The Hero elensky’s son giving military advice sounds like North Korea genius leader type stuff
“All hail the new king”
I can’t be the only person concerned? All of this is going on while we openly support Nazi parties
Perhaps this is just a way to steal everything Russia built in Europe? Reducing global carbon consumption would allow Russia to corner the market.

Posted by: OhhCanada | Jun 2 2022 8:46 utc | 196

No. US is sitting on Europe sucking it dry while trying to stay afloat. EU will go first like a hollowed out insect in a spiders web.
Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jun 2 2022 7:35 utc | 191
A revolting but perfect analogy when resources run down.

Posted by: Jpc | Jun 2 2022 8:52 utc | 197

@46 Monsanto: Portuguese-Jewish family from New Orleans who made their fortune with the slave trade. Tells you all you need to know..

Posted by: Lozion | Jun 2 2022 8:52 utc | 198

Posted by: Oriental Voice | Jun 1 2022 21:46 utc | 92
“But, I for one believe one day the masses in the west would have the wool pulled away over their eyes, see their leadership for what they are, and some REAL changes would come. The dumping of ScoMo in Auzzieland is a harbinger.”
‘ScoMo’ or “Scot Morrespin” or Mr Scott Porkman. Had a number of issues of denial. Steadily cut(amputated) to the bone Oz Pacific islander aid. End result. The Chinese aid for building massive safe areas for the Covid -19 vaccinated Chinese to tour the Pacific in safety. Plus long term bonus cash for a forward key base(part of the original Japan Imperial Naval strategy).
Next issue. This same fool denies the reality of climate Change. End result a mini civil war on the QT. Do not expose to the public. Top Ten in LNP management virtually say “No,no no, ……Not Happening ‘Jim’ “. Bottom LNP masses say ‘WTF”.
Too put it simply ! Scott “Porkman” Morrespin literally lost the election for one reason. The mainland Oz female swing voter could not stand the sight of this idiot. Hence the mini colour blue revolution happened. Further down south on “Tassie Devil’s Island”. The women swing voters preferred his original plotted course.
Be very aware female swing voters are a force to be reckoned with. No amount of electoral pork. Will deflect them. When on the warpath.
On a side note mining magnate Clive Palmer’s use of the original “LNP” party name “United Australia Party”. The general voting public threw him and his party the Six O’clock “Balmain Bus”…….
Oz Senate, operates on the basis of true proportional representation. Hence the various colours sitting on the divided cross bench……………………………
No colour revolution to be seen in Oz yet, One can say ‘Oz’ is a traditionalist country that revels in the “Same old, same old”.

Posted by: Bad Deal Motors On | Jun 2 2022 9:06 utc | 199

The Royal Canadian Navy reminds of the upcoming RIMPAC exercise this July off Hawaii, involving 25,000 personnel (check out the logo…?)
https://twitter.com/RoyalCanNavy/status/1532145099630575617
MK Bhadrakunar poo-poos Western analysts who suggest Russia-China is like the US-Canada alliance
https://twitter.com/BhadraPunchline/status/1531970391845249025
Mark Sleboda gives his take on Ukraine for May 20-27
https://twitter.com/MarkSleboda1/status/1532038035134717955
He re-tweets some interesting stuff, like residents of liberated Svetlodarsk hugging Russian soldiers, this Tweet from The Sirius Report:
“Russia have struck a major artery for the shipment of NATO weapons from Europe via the Beskidy railway tunnel. The Beskidy Tunnel is a railway tunnel under the Volovets Pass in the Carpathian Mountains. Confirmed by Ukraine itself.”

Posted by: Bruised Northerner | Jun 2 2022 9:27 utc | 200