Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
July 18, 2022
Three Other Writers With Thoughts On Ukraine

Today I will point to three other writers with current thoughts around the war in Ukraine.

Yelensis of Awful Avalanche has fun with the current news from Kiev:

Ukraine War Day #145: Zelensky Surrounded By Traitors And Spies

The big news coming out of the Ukraine this past weekend: Zelensky has fired his Prosecutor-General Irina Venediktova, and also the head of the SBU (Security Agency, successor to Soviet KGB), a man named Ivan Bakanov. Both of whom used to be tight members of Zelensky’s inner circle, especially the latter.

I love the way Zel just casually tossed that out, about Ukie security forces routinely chatting with Russian military intelligence. Russophile blogosphere having a field day, natch! Maria Zakharova trolled Zelensky on Twitter, calling these dismissals “effective de-Nazification” on Zelensky’s part. Other bloggers have compared Zelensky to Stalin, in his paranoia starting to turn against his inner circle. However, to me it doesn’t even seem like paranoia, I think these Ukrainian agencies probably are riddled with Russian spies. Ukrainian government officials are so corrupt, they would do literally anything for money.

With some 35,000 people on staff the SBU is as big as the FBI but controls a 90% smaller population. Next to internal security it is also tasked with fighting economic crimes. It is brutal, utterly corrupt and filled with Russian spies and has been so since the Ukraine became on independent nation. The only correct but dangerous move would be to dissolve it.

With Zel’s inner circle falling apart the clock for his own demise is only ticking faster.

Yves Smith is not impressed with the Ukraine’s ‘success’ in the war.

Russia’s Campaign in Ukraine: Nearing an Inflection Point?

She reviews the current situation and suggest how the war will continue:

Speculation among Western sources that read Russian or have good Russian contacts (see the Larry Johnson-Andrei Martyanov-Alexander Mercouris roundtable, hosted by Gonzalo Lira, as an example) is that Russia will pause after it has secured Donbass and will deliver its conditions for a peace to Ukraine. These are certain to be unacceptable since the bare minimum ask will be conceding the loss of Donbass and Crimea (and let us not forget neutrality and denazification too). The West of course will flatly reject it. That’s fine by Russia since it would not trust any deal with Ukraine or the West as far as it could throw it.

The point of this offer at the point of securing the first objective of the Special Military Operation is to play to China, India, the global South, and secondarily to the more cautious and war-averse members of the Russian citizenry, that Russia going beyond the narrowest implementation of the SMO was not due to Russia wanting to take more territory, but being forced to do so to achieve its additional goals of demilitarization and denazificaition. If Ukraine and its allies won’t do so voluntarily, Russia will by force.

It was actually the Serbian president Aleksandar Vučić, who has good relations with Russia and was surely told to transmit this message, who said that Russia will make a peace offer and that the west will likely reject it:

“I know what awaits us. As soon as Vladimir Putin finishes business in Sieversk, Bakhmut and Soledar, and then on the second line Sloviansk – Kramatorsk – Avdeevka, his proposal will follow. If they don’t accept it, and they don’t intend to, we will go to hell,” Russian news service Izvestia quotes the Serbian leader as saying on July 14.

So Russia will continue. Yves Smith concludes:

My belief is still that Russia will give priority to taking Odessa unless there are logistical considerations that argue against that. The Ukraine military is so close to collapse that Russian forces going to Odessa sooner rather than later is a real possibility. It’s the psychologically most important target for the Russian people, and economically more valuable than Kiev. The West would recognize that Russia getting control of what was Ukraine’s entire Black Sea coast as an enormous loss.

I suspect what Russia decides to do with or about Ukraine to the west of the Dnieper is event dependent. However, the West has decided to tie itself even more tightly to the Ukraine albatross. I had said to Lambert that it was not impossible for Russia to have decisively won (as in taken Odessa) by sometime in October, but even with the Western forces clearly unable to rout Russia, that Europe and the US would keep its citizens cold and hungry this winter just to spite Russia.

West of the Dnieper lies Kryvyi_Rih the mineral wealth of which was developed under Russian and then Soviet control. It has always had a symbiotic relationships with the heavy industry in the Donbas region. It is probably even more valuable than Odessa.

Except for the last 30 some years Kryvyi Rih had been under Russian control since 1775. It is about 100 kilometer north-east of Nikolayev and only 40 kilometer from the current frontline. This map may reflect the Russian thinking of a future borderline in southern Ukraine.


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The last point Smith makes is important. Yes, the ‘west’ is likely to continue its suicidal sanctions even when Russia stops the war and offers peace. It is U.S. pressure on the Europeans that will keep the sanctions going.

On February 7, before the war started, Michael Hudson pointed out that the real target of the U.S. instigation of a war in Ukraine is Germany:

The threat to U.S. dominance is that China, Russia and Mackinder’s Eurasian World Island heartland are offering better trade and investment opportunities than are available from the United States with its increasingly desperate demand for sacrifices from its NATO and other allies.

The most glaring example is the U.S. drive to block Germany from authorizing the Nord Stream 2 pipeline to obtain Russian gas for the coming cold weather. Angela Merkel agreed with Donald Trump to spend $1 billion building a new LNG port to become more dependent on highly priced U.S. LNG. (The plan was cancelled after the U.S. and German elections changed both leaders.) But Germany has no other way of heating many of its houses and office buildings (or supplying its fertilizer companies) than with Russian gas.

The only way left for U.S. diplomats to block European purchases is to goad Russia into a military response and then claim that avenging this response outweighs any purely national economic interest. As hawkish Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Victoria Nuland, explained in a State Department press briefing on January 27: “If Russia invades Ukraine one way or another Nord Stream 2 will not move forward.” The problem is to create a suitably offensive incident and depict Russia as the aggressor.

The current German government is more or less under U.S. control. I will need to be changed before the sanction nonsense can stop. A ‘winter of discontent’ (see below) will probably do that.

At Larry Johnson’s site Helmholtz Smith looks at the sanction disaster the ‘west’ has caused for itself and explains why Russia has no inventive to change its current way:

OPERATION Z – DON’T INTERRUPT

One of Napoleon’s observations is that you should never interrupt your enemies when they are making a mistake. Russians know this, not least because they were careful not to interrupt Napoleon himself in 1812. Putin and his team have had plenty of opportunities to meet NATO’s leaders, observe them, negotiate with them and assess them. It’s unlikely they’re very impressed. But when they started their “special military operation” in Ukraine they could never have dreamed how self-destructive NATO would be.

What mistakes? First, the West has not shot itself in the foot with its economic sanctions – Hungary’s Viktor Orban is right when he observes that it has put a slug into its lungs. One can still limp along with a broken foot, but a shot to the lungs is pretty serious. Second, who in Moscow could have imagined that NATO would shovel its ammunition and weapons stockpiles into the Ukrainian black hole in the expectation that if they can get the latest wonderwaffe to General Steiner they’ll be in Moscow by Christmas.

A good reason for Moscow to take it slowly – let the mistakes develop, compound and metastasize. It’s happening by itself. Naturally, inevitably, logically. No outside effort required. An unexpected bonus.

Don’t interrupt.

Even The Economist has noticed – Europe’s winter of discontent. (Still thinks that it’s Putin that put the double-tap into the lung though. But it is The Economist which has done its bit to bring us to this point.)

Why would Moscow want this to end any time soon? Time is working and the enemy is making lots of mistakes.

Don’t interrupt.

Comments

The SBU is essentially a state sanctioned criminal organization, which makes it unsurprisingly leaky in regards to confidential information.
Just 15 or 20 years ago, elements within the SBU were using skinheads to control drugs and other illicit trade in the country, subsequently allowing their parallel neo-Nazi organizations to grow and shielding them from legal repercussions. Fast forward to today and individuals from the very same neo-Nazi organizations are now running, not just the SBU, but the entire country via key positions in the security and military apparatus.
Although the simplest hypothesis ties the reorganization in with the strike in Vinnitsa, which is implied, it could also be a false trail. The primary utility of the SBU is its ability to commit extrajudicial acts; raids, murders, blackmail schemes, forgeries, unlawful arrests and so on. Presumably at the behest of state authorities, but undoubtedly also serving various other interests. Calling on the SBU to organize a secret meeting, to provide security for a secret meeting or simply keeping them in the loop of a secret meeting is a huge liability that’s generally avoided, since the only secrets they are likely to keep are ones that implicate members of the organization itself.
Naturally, I wouldn’t entirely dismiss the possibility that the leak came from the SBU — after all, they do a fair amount of surveillance work, phone taps etc. But, it could also just be a pretext to trim the fat of the organization in order to reorient it even further towards active measures. For instance, if they’re expecting the impending loss of major city centers where they haven’t been able to root out pro-Russian support entirely, maybe they have some radical ideas on how to accomplish such an objective that aren’t being well-received. Or, it could just be a stunt to hold someone (anyone) responsible for Vinnitsa by popular demand; maybe even by demand of foreign backers and maybe on the basis of their assessment of where the leak most likely originated. Either way, disbanding the organization or restructuring it under the current circumstances wouldn’t have any positive effects; it’ll continue cosplaying Mafia or Gestapo until the cosplayers are dealt with in the same way the real deal was dealt with.

Posted by: Skiffer | Jul 18 2022 21:42 utc | 101

Russia’s Gazprom declares force majeure on some gas supplies to Europe
Posted by: circumspect | Jul 18 2022 16:48 utc | 1

23:30 local time past, and still deafening silence on German mainstream media. Guess they’re still figuring out what to say, while today’s newspapers parroted Brussels’ circle-jerk de jour: SANCTIONS ARE WORKING!!1 Russia feels them! Talents are leaving in troves!

Posted by: Nervous German | Jul 18 2022 21:44 utc | 102

“Yves Smith” is definitely a woman – McKinsey analyst turned blogger who got popular around the time of the 2008 financial crisis. Supporter of MMT and generally of heterodox economics
Hopefully this puts an end to the ridiculous speculation about HIMARS and CAESARs being sold. But will anything convince people that the US embassy isn’t moving to Lviv?
https://t.co/kt3DGDWvqF

Posted by: Yenwoda | Jul 18 2022 21:46 utc | 103

The Collective Waste can not afford to carry on with the per capita resource use. Not when the rest of the 85% of the human population now and the several billions more that will be born for the rest of this century and into the next will require their fair share of the pie.
The Collective Wastes slave and resource thieves know that. They are using this events and Ukrainian proxy Nazis to steer us, the peoples of the CW towards that position. So that we return to servitude and become the poorest beggars for the Aristos who will build this new iron curtain – not to stop Russia China or the SCO but to imprison us in the CW.
Stoltenberg pretty much said something the same as Shweb has and the praetorians are doing in lockstep across the CW.
I really don’t think that will play well with the poor majority- you can try and cry Wolf pointing at Russia but what about our beloved little puppet meerkats that we’re occupying the psyche and homes and beds of British kids?
Just need to keep track of these arseholes at the top and storm their palaces – be rid finally of these ancient bloodsuckers.
I agree that the full shock and awe option will be available for these idiots who think they can hold out in the heights looking for easy targets in the plains – they will vaporise.
It can be all over by next week if we kick these unelected nato and EU wonks where they really don’t expect as we are supposed to subserviently follow their tune to isolate us from the rest of humanity.

Posted by: DunGroanin | Jul 18 2022 21:51 utc | 104

Posted by: Nervous German | Jul 18 2022 21:44 utc | 105
Talents leaving in troves, like Khamatova who according to some Zgustova is learning Latvian to keep on acting -a very demanded language- or the mummy Pugachova and his husband du jour some comical comic whose name I can’t recall enjoying oriental food in occupied Palestine. The fifth column is leaving, as they say in English, good riddance!

Posted by: Paco | Jul 18 2022 21:54 utc | 105

I think the idea that the suffering of Western populations isn’t baked into planning is an internalization of the idea that geostrategic economic aggression isn’t effective. The western polities have long since stepped over the line into technocratic fascism. Why has the Pentagon allowed China and Russia to achieve hypersonic dominance while endlessly wargaming: BCN warfare planning?
It is premature triumphalism not to examine the potential for escalation “Nazis” maintain.
One example of a response to Russian resilience: biological warfare developed by covert CRISPR programs, low-yield nuclear weapons, followed by a Jakarta program to unite civilization under a militaristic technocracy.
Full spectrum dominance I believe it’s called.

Posted by: Ralph Reed | Jul 18 2022 21:57 utc | 106

Posted by: Skiffer | Jul 18 2022 21:42 utc
Yep. And the KGB, then FSB wasn’t much different during end times of the USSR and the 90’s. Ukraine has been a failed state since 1991, but unlike Russia it has never pulled itself out of the failed state trap (or it’s been held in the trap by the US). All the expectations of a state are gone in systemic failure. Even if things look nominally normal, if dysfunctional, they are not. Crime, organized and unorganized, rules everything. Everything is corrupted by it. Nobody in Ukraine even remembers what having a functioning state looks or feels like. And that’s partly why they dream of Europe but then don’t fit in when they arrive en masse as refugees.
Everyone in the SBU is for sale and half the ideological purists are only that way because it is the most personally profitable. There are no true believers in a failed state, what is there to believe in? Zelensky and his buddy got rich by one of them being “the big guy” who always needed a cut at SBU. But somebody also has to take the fall someday. There’s no loyalty in a failed state either.
I rewatched both Brat movies recently and the fundamental power of both is that Danila retains his principles in the context of an obviously failed state and a less obvious one. Like his speech to close the second movie, when the sleazy American thinks he’s gonna get shot. And if you want to go some ways towards understanding more than a generation of Russian men, watch those movies.
https://youtu.be/7LBi0xQH5Og

Posted by: Lex | Jul 18 2022 22:20 utc | 107

“Should’ve shot yourself in the foot while it was in your mouth” – Aesop Rock

Posted by: liveload | Jul 18 2022 22:29 utc | 108

I think that H. Smith here has made one of the classic understatements of the ‘American Century’®
“… Putin and his team have had plenty of opportunities to meet NATO’s leaders, observe them, negotiate with them and assess them. It’s unlikely they’re very impressed….”
Imagine what Putin and Lavrov thought of a deep thinker like Mike Pompeo, or clowns like Johnson and Scholz or such a blowhard as Trump, or arrogant know-nothings and russiaphobes like A. Blinken and H. Clinton
And the horror of even ever having to deal with Samantha Power or Victoria Nuland! the horror…!!
even if they mightily disagreed with John Kerry, at least to me he carried some small bit of gravitas.

Posted by: michaelj72 | Jul 18 2022 22:30 utc | 109

True, that is what an honourable man would choose. But those men are far between. But when you stand on the line of life and death, everything is blurred. I killed a co -soldier, who was so seriously wounded, we (on foot) could not care for him and we would not leave him to the guerillas, so he asked we would finish him off. Which I deep in my hearth, I regret to say we did. At this moment, war was vivid and clear to me, and I knew I had to get out. But I will never forget his eyes, even when steadying the gun against his temple, he died a brave man. He was buried in a shallow grave, with his insignia. I came home one day, he did not. It is indeed very sad, now I have chosen to write about it. But that is how it was.

Posted by: Den Lille Abe | Jul 18 2022 22:34 utc | 110

Grrr | Jul 18 2022 18:52 utc | 44
Excellent analysis of the West in terms of social psychology.
I’d like to add that we’re still in the phase of denial. As a German my assessment of the subsequent phase in my country is, that the revolt-to-come will be an authoritarian one. This is based on empirical studies of authoritarianism in Germany by Brählert and Decker at the university of Leipzig. The authors believe that the narcissism-bolstering function of the strong, charismatic leader has transfered to the identification with the strength and potence of the German economy. If that narcissistic crutch breaks away, things can get very ugly here in a political sense. My assessment is also based on the observation that only the post-fascists of the AfD are willing to represent the interests of the 99%. The socialist Linke is about to fail dramatically at this historical point. Michael Hudson’s way to socialism won’t be a very straight one, I fear.

Posted by: Moses | Jul 18 2022 22:35 utc | 111

Michael.j | Jul 18 2022 21:07 utc | 95
I think this Gallup Poll also shows how ‘out-of-touch’ the Western-bought puppets of their governments are. … Duda of Poland, Fiala of Czech, Petkov of Bulgaria, Nausada of Lithuania, Capkova of Slovakia, etc. are pathetic knaves for the Neo-Colonialists of Brussels, Washington, and London.
Only folks like Orban truly represent their people and refuse to bow down to ‘The Crown’.

Posted by: Robert | Jul 18 2022 22:37 utc | 112

Posted by: njet | Jul 18 2022 20:02 utc | 74
„breakdown“ of course , not breakthrough

Posted by: njet | Jul 18 2022 22:48 utc | 113

The dismissal of the head of the SBU happened days after zhe strike on the House of Officers at Vinnitsia. Maybe a hint that reports about the conference with western arms industry representatives were true? I read posts speculating about the possible intelligence source here at MoA.
Does anyone else see a connection?

Posted by: Moses | Jul 18 2022 22:48 utc | 114

I always wondered why Russia had not obliterated the SBU headquarters and its top leaders with it since they have caused so much trouble and damage. This includes kidnappings, assassinations, murders of Russian POW’s, etc. My only conclusion was that Russia has many insiders in the SBU that is feeding them information to support the war effort and they have come to the conclusion that the info the SBU provides offsets the damage they are doing to Russia’s war effort.

Posted by: Joe | Jul 18 2022 22:50 utc | 115

https://www.conservapedia.com/Essay:_Western,_liberal_dominance_over_the_world_is_over

For a large part of the Western population, living standards are stagnating.. Western politics is in turmoil – more partisan, ugly, unproductive; and fueled by social media. The biggest geopolitical change of this century will come from China not Russia. We are coming to the end of Western political and economic dominance. The world is going to be at least bi-polar and possibly multi-polar. it is the first time in modern history that the East can be on equal terms with the West.

Sanctioning themselves on energy will increase this tendency buy giving competive advantage to China. It’s german industry what realy keeps EU afloat.
I think EU is so amorph structure that it could esaily be lead buy any outside influence and few very active radicals inside.
Poland should be credited with destruction of Ukraine, too. Petro Poroshenko claimed that he will make country like Poland. (From where ukrainians and belorussians were deported – population exchange, and poles imported.)
UK alsou leads in this destructive russophobia. I ‘m suprised that so far Russia had not used card of celtic nationalism. UK acts like it still is a major empire but Scotland is asking for an independance (to hawe a country like Norway).
In USA there is different options about Ukraine at least among conservatives.
https://www.conservapedia.com/Russia-Ukraine_war
Zionist conspiracy and other religious nonsence don’t play a role there. But Israel could play a positive role as it is trusted buy both major sides, USA and Russia. Turkey wanted to play intermediary, it is larger and more powerfull but is not trusted buy both.

Posted by: Alef | Jul 18 2022 22:51 utc | 116

Posted by: Ralph Reed | Jul 18 2022 21:57 utc | 109
Sorry to burst you USA exceptionalist bubble but the reasons include:
1. Hubris ie we are always the greatest
2. over extension of empire- just too big to manage
3. Nepotism and decline in skill set of “leaders”
4. Wealth concentration in the hand of a few
5. Influx on new immigrants with a different set of ideals and without the same degree of US patriotism
6. Corruption
7. Unrest amongst the “slaves”
8. Petty squabbling amongst the elite
9. Rivalry amongst the military/powerful
10. Environmental pollution
11. Decadence
12. Over reliance on the “colonies”to contribute wealth and skills.
I am sure there are more, but everyone of the above contributed to the collapse of the Roman Empire and we are witnessing the collapse of the current super empire. It will take 30 years for it to play out but by 2050, some other Empire will rule the roost.
Accept reality and learn to accept that the days of US domination are nearing their end. Pray that they do not bring the whole world down via MAD

Posted by: watcher | Jul 18 2022 22:54 utc | 117

Until today, german people don’t realize what tsunami is rolling towards them. This will change in september/ oktober.
So we could start betting when Scholz will resign and we will have Neuwahlen.
My guess is february 2023.

Posted by: njet | Jul 18 2022 22:55 utc | 118

pppp | Jul 18 2022 21:11 utc | 98
a) The poll does indeed represent a desire by the populace for a Soviet system that they remember. (Whether they personally liked Russians is irrelevant.)
b) The poll does indeed indicate that nearly half of Poles and Romanians would like a return to their previous system. Are you saying that these people are delusional?
c) Russian arrogance is different than Western arrogance. … Russian arrogance is a personal thing. You have to prove yourself to them first. … Western arrogance is embedded into its system in governance, economy, and culture. It is an incurable disease.
d) Russians Imperialists had the history of being conquered and living under outside rule, and being attacked to destroy their civilization. They may over-react but on the whole are much better than Western Imperialists.
It’s a shame that you despise Russia. … That comes through clearly in your personal attacks.

Posted by: Robert | Jul 18 2022 22:56 utc | 119

F-35 Program Stagnated in 2021 but DOD Testing Office Hiding Full Extent of Problem
This is something the public has suspected for a long time about the F-35 fighter, but the true depth of the debacle is just starting to come to the surface.
Despite more than 20 years and approximately $62.5 billion spent so far on research and development alone, program officials still haven’t been able to deliver an aircraft that can fly as often as needed or to demonstrate its ability to perform in combat, which places military personnel in jeopardy. Most of the important details can only be found in the non-public version of the report, but some key findings are available in the public version:
— The F-35’s availability rates “plateaued” over most of 2021 and then declined in the final months of the year.
— Program leaders abandoned the efforts to complete the troubled Autonomic Logistics Information System (ALIS) and instead decided to build a new network called Operational Data Integrated Network (ODIN). The new system, meant to anticipate maintenance problems and track parts and repair processes, runs faster and is more deployable than ALIS but is already behind schedule and has some of the same cyber vulnerabilities.
— The Joint Simulation Environment, meant to be a high-fidelity and fully validated and verified simulator to test the F-35’s high-end capabilities, is now more than four years behind schedule. A full-production decision can’t be made until the planned 64 tests in the simulation can be completed.
— The F-35 program’s modernization effort, an effort to complete the delivery of capabilities that should have been included under the original development contract, is behind schedule and has done little to reduce the high number of unresolved design flaws.
Full analysis here:
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2022/03/f-35-program-stagnated-in-2021-but-dod-testing-office-hiding-full-extent-of-problem

Posted by: Robert | Jul 18 2022 23:11 utc | 120

The polls are interesting.
Firstly everyone over about 50 remembers the Soviet system. They can directly com[are their living standards today with those of their youth.- indeed probably most of those over 40 can compare ie they were 10 at the time of the change.
Now all of those between 40-60 will have children and are negotiating their education and health and future, and they can directly compare it with whatever they had as children themselves. If things are worse then this is a very powerful motivator for unrest.
Also, oddly enough, grandparents often have a bigger political influence on children than do parents. So while in 1990 no doubt the young (15-30) were enthusiastic to be part of the west, their parents (40-65) were no doubt less so. It is quite likely that the emerging generation 15-30, may rebel against their parents (as the young always do) by adopting some of the views of their grandparents.
So those figures in the polls do not surprise me.

Posted by: watcher | Jul 18 2022 23:17 utc | 121

Den Lille Abe | Jul 18 2022 22:34 utc | 113
That must be hard for you to relate.
My grandfather never spoke of his experience in WW II to anyone in my family except me on one occasion when I was an 8 year old during a holiday family gathering, when he took me upstairs to his bedroom alone after I’d been sorting his penny collection and was captivated by the “steelies,” coins minted from steel in 1943 to save copper. After giving me some more pennies he pulled his medals out of a sock drawer and described them. They included two bronze stars(the family myth was that he had deserved the silver star but had bucked Patton after the Battle of the Bulge where he lost over 80% of the men in his command as an Army Captain, when the dangerously domineering general had demanded he remove his materiel from the road after everything had been mucked out at tremendous cost with a decimated unit.) Then he handled his service revolver and broke into tears as he handed it to me and said “Don’t let anyone ever tell you that this is good.”
I’ve had time to consider this and have reached the conclusion that he probably used it in the way you’ve described as a tool to “mitigate attrition” and possibly, more horrifyingly as a one for motivation in the chaos of his unit’s near annihilation.
As a veteran myself who’s spent a lot of time at the VA in therapeutic contexts and out in the world with homeless veterans from Korea and Southeast Asia to the wars in Central America, Afghanistan and Iraq I know that revelations such as yours are rare indeed, not something to blabber about. I’m sure their are countless thousands of us who wish we could share appropriately traumas that are beyond words to prevent this mass mutilation from escalating.
Too many treat war vicariously, like a mass spectator sport. One reason so many of us are silenced is because we feel affinity with the Russians’ gravitas rather than the puerile bloody jingoism of the public self-described citizens of Ukraine.

Posted by: Ralph Reed | Jul 18 2022 23:22 utc | 122

watcher | Jul 18 2022 23:17 utc | 124
Great point about grandparent’s effect upon the younger generation. … Grandchildren generally respond well to ancient wisdom.

Posted by: Robert | Jul 18 2022 23:22 utc | 123

@112 I hope you are prepared for Liz Truss. She strikes me as the head-mistress type. Any Tories that get out of line will get a jolly good spanking.

Posted by: dh | Jul 18 2022 23:34 utc | 124

Posted by: polarbear4 | Jul 18 2022 21:09 utc | 97
1. This is the quote Hudson attributes to Nuland. “As hawkish Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Victoria Nuland, explained in a State Department press briefing on January 27: “If Russia invades Ukraine one way or another Nord Stream 2 will not move forward.”
At that press briefing Mrs Nuland in fact stated “As I said, we’ve had extensive consultations at every level with our German allies. I’m not going to get into the specifics here today, but we will work with Germany to ensure that the pipeline does not move forward.”
2. In a later question Matt Lee, not Mrs Nuland, used the words given – ” on Nord Stream 2, you echoed what Ned said on television earlier: If Russia invades Ukraine, one way or another, Nord Stream 2 will not move forward. That’s what you said, that’s what he said,…”
https://www.state.gov/briefings/department-press-briefing-january-27-2022/
3. I should make it clear that the subsequent sentence – “The problem is to create a suitably offensive incident and depict Russia as the aggressor.” is Hudson’s view, not a statement from Mrs Nuland.
4. The Hudson quote in its entirety is copied from “b”‘s article, where it’s linked to the full text.
5. There is also a less ambiguous statement from President Biden himself at his press conference with Scholz on February 7th:-
“PRESIDENT BIDEN: The first question first. If Germany — if Russia invades — that means tanks or troops crossing the — the border of Ukraine again — then there will be — we — there will be no longer a Nord Stream 2. We will bring an end to it.”
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/02/07/remarks-by-president-biden-and-chancellor-scholz-of-the-federal-republic-of-germany-at-press-conference/
……………………………….
As you do, I also find the events between December 2021 and February 21st 2022 important and would like to know more of what Scholz was thinking and planning at that time.
I’m getting more and more sceptical of the view that Scholz was the inexperienced newcomer rushed into this by Biden.
But I may be prejudiced. Scholz is the most powerful man in the EU and right up to February 21st I was convinced he’d manage to get Minsk 2 pushed through. I was most disappointed when he didn’t. So maybe regarding Scholz as Biden’s accomplice rather than his patsy is due to that.
But whatever part Scholz played Hudson was right when he wrote on February 7th, “The only way left for U.S. diplomats to block European purchases is to goad Russia into a military response and then claim that avenging this response outweighs any purely national economic interest.”
He was right because that’s what happened.

Posted by: English Outsider | Jul 18 2022 23:38 utc | 125

Posted by: michaelj72 | Jul 18 2022 22:30 utc | 112
Imagine what Putin and Lavrov thought of a deep thinker like Mike Pompeo, or clowns like Johnson and Scholz or such a blowhard as Trump, or arrogant know-nothings and russiaphobes like A. Blinken and H. Clinton
Are U sure Mike Pompeo a DEEP thinker? Stop taking Kool Aid…

Posted by: JC | Jul 18 2022 23:45 utc | 126

Maybe the Ukrainians will wake up and realise they are being humiliated!
So arms supplies to the Ukraine were not free.. Ukraine is being looted and destroyed!
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/ukraine-cbank-has-sold-over-12-bln-its-gold-reserves-during-war-deputy-head-2022-07-17/
Eight years ago as Russia seozed Crimea from Ukraine, Ukraine’s gold appeared to have been hastily shipped to the United States. Nobody in authority would deny it:
https://gata.org/node/14744
Today the Ukrainian central bank acknowledged that $12 billion of its gold reserves recently was sold under pressure of the war with Russia that began this year:
https://www.gata.org/node/22063
Since Russia began its attack on Ukraine’s non-Crimean territory in February, the United States and its allies have appropriated tens of billions of dollars in military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. So why would Ukraine need to sell its gold reserves unless doing so was a condition of all that U.S. and European assistance, especially since the United States already had taken custody of the Ukrainian gold?
Stripping the wounded of their valuables in wartime always suggests greed or desperation — like desperation to keep the gold price down to support the U.S. dollar and other Western currencies..
https://gata.org/node/22066

Posted by: Ric G | Jul 18 2022 23:46 utc | 127

Posted by: JC | Jul 18 2022 23:45 utc | 129
I think reference to “deep thinker” was very sarcastic.

Posted by: watcher | Jul 18 2022 23:52 utc | 128

I ‘m surprised that so far Russia had not used card of Celtic nationalism. UK acts like it still is a major empire but Scotland is asking for an independence (to have a country like Norway).
(yeah, I fixed the typos)
Posted by: Alef | Jul 18 2022 22:51 utc | 119

Clearly you have never watched the Scots fight amongst themselves close up. Once they don’t have Westminster to complain about, they will turn on each other.

Posted by: Opport Knocks | Jul 18 2022 23:53 utc | 129

Posted by: JC | Jul 18 2022 23:45 utc | 129
“Imagine what Putin and Lavrov thought of a deep thinker like Mike Pompeo”
I’m pretty sure he was being facetious.

Posted by: JR | Jul 18 2022 23:54 utc | 130

I find it amusing when people ascribe the term “anti-capitalism” to Naked Capitalism because there’s no other word in the USSian or British lexicon ca. 2022 for simply describing the various depredations of modern finance capitalism in a clinical fashion, which is what NC does. I s’pose at least nobody’s called them filthy commies yet; well, nobody NOT on Wall Street.
From NC’s “About” page:

The meltdown also showed the high cost of the economic restructuring that began in the 1970s and accelerated in the Reagan/Thatcher era. Most people in advanced economies do not realize that we are in the midst of a finance-led counter-revolution. In parallel to the enclosure movement of the early capitalist era, which turned formerly self-supporting peasants into wage slaves, we are now in the midst of a large scale, concerted campaign to reduce the bargaining power and pay of ordinary workers relative to investors and elite technocrats. We believe this effort is not only detrimental to most citizens, but is ultimately destructive to the capitalists classes, since highly unequal societies produce worse outcomes on virtually all broad measures, such as crime rates, longevity, and educational attainment. Indeed, inequality exacts a cost in terms of the health of even the top cohort. But this cohort seems to define its self-interest in narrow economic terms.

Seems pretty reasonable to me.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Jul 18 2022 23:57 utc | 131

Anyone know the status of Patrick Lancaster?? Last post I could find was July 03.

Posted by: Rjhimself | Jul 18 2022 23:57 utc | 132

Also why all the hullaballoo over a nom de plum? Many female authors have assumed male sounding names when writing. I would guess Yves did so because she writes in and about the more-than-usual-male-dominated Wall Street and investor bro world. Somma these dudes see a woman’s name on an article and immediately brush it off.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Jul 19 2022 0:00 utc | 133

One other writer with thoughts on U: the execrable Stephen King.
https://southfront.org/russian-pranksters-in-action-stephen-king-promised-zelensky-to-write-fake-horror-scripts-for-ukrainian-propaganda/
“Russian pranksters Vovan and Lexus are known for calling politicians and celebrities on behalf of other famous persons, asking awkward questions and showing the real faces of their interlocutors. This time the victim of their prank was Stephen King, who thought he was talking to the President of Ukraine Zelensky.
Stephen King supported the cancel culture, claiming that Russian writers have to “shut up”, and called Zelensky a “great man”.
The pranksters asked the American write to provide Ukrainian propaganda with fake scripts on the alleged brutality of Russian servicemen against Ukrainian nationalists. Stephen King agreed and promised to try his best to spread the fake reports all around the world so that the Ukrainian conflict continues to gain highlights in the global media. The writer also said that he would search for journalists who could cover the fakes.
“If you write us a horror movie, what could the cruel Russians have allegedly done to innocent nationalists … we could present this material as real,” they turned to King.
“We will do everything we can. It is very important to show this to the whole world so that the whole world follows the news from Ukraine every day. We cannot allow other news to take center stage,” the screenwriter replied.
During the conversation with the prankers, King was wearing a baseball cap with the Ukrainian flag, but he did not know that the flag was upside down.”

Posted by: Scorpion | Jul 19 2022 0:07 utc | 134

watcher | Jul 18 2022 22:54 utc | 120
I am not a believer in US exceptionalism but someone who is well versed in the praxis of the US empire. I was in US Space Command as a satellite operator between 1983 to 1987 stationed at Offutt AFB where Strategic Air Command headquarters were and experienced the near death of the world firsthand. I was investigated for “treason and espionage” by the Air Force OSI during Iran and had previously been turned into my group commander as a security violator during the bombing of Libya when I challenged the celebratory atmosphere as we received telexes from the Mediterranean while officers cheered the supposed “death of Quaddafi’s infant daughter” broadcast on CNN on a television they’d wheeled into the operations center(see “letters” :https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v33/n07/rory-stewart/here-we-go-again and “Love, Politics, and Escape From the US Air Force(pg 155) https://www.umass.edu/rso/rsu/takeover!/ch7.pdf for background).
During the Reagan era it would be easy to ridicule the American’s public diplomacy as errant, bumbling and driven by ideologues. I witnessed the plans for a US Space Force disappear after the Challenger disaster and three Atlas rocket failures in succession at Vandenberg AFB. The SAC software for nuclear weapons had failed an essential upgrade over 6 years at a cost of well over 100 billion dollars destroying a major generals career(which is nearly unheard of). The most brilliant mind at Lawrence Livermore Laboratories was ruined in pursuit of Edward Tellers Star Wars’ x-ray lasers. I saw the Afghan mujadeen outside my classroom at the University of Nebraska file by looking shellshocked as they had been brought there to learn “civics.”
But behind the scenes at the technical level things weren’t so haphazard. The Army was given nanotechnology development in 1981, global warming was modeled through 2030 with the Gulf Stream being the wildcard, the telecommunications revolution was being implemented in a way that maintained the veneer of civilian control, and the problem of the feasibility of nuclear and biological warfare was planned with massive inputs and near absolute secrecy. Think of the choreographed investigation of CIA cocaine stimulus by Senator Kerry which as he told me with a white face when I challenged him in 1990 “would have resulted in an impeachment, and we didn’t think the nation would be well served by that.
I learned that the bulk of US computing power was monopolized by the Pentagon and CIA for extensive modelling. I myself worked below Air Force Global Weather’s computational facility which was two Cyber supercomputers connected to a massively parallel processing network array of 64 Vax computers. Speaking of “Vax” I watched the semantics of information technology deploy the concepts of “memes,” “viruses” etc. As the old anarchist joke goes “‘semantics'(some antics) are more important than others.
I return to the point that the Russian government wouldn’t be resorting to the folly of warfare, with myriad consequences that aren’t predictable, if they underestimated the West. Why should we just to comfort ourselves emotionally that it’s A-OK with our limited capacity to understand what is happening, let alone what is planned, an our inability to share the costs coherently.
As the cliche goes, war doesn’t decide who is right; it determines who is left.

Posted by: Ralph Reed | Jul 19 2022 0:29 utc | 135

“As a German my assessment of the subsequent phase in my country is, that the revolt-to-come will be an authoritarian one. This is based on empirical studies of authoritarianism in Germany by Brählert and Decker at the university of Leipzig.”
Posted by: Moses | Jul 18 2022 22:35 utc | 114
Not to argue with an empirical study but just add a thought:
One reason authoritarianism might lead Germans out of a dysfunctional impasse is because a crisis context is terrible for large group processes taking time to hear and process a wide variety of views. That sort of thing needs peace to have even half a chance.
No, in a crisis you need clarity, a clear sense of direction forward and a firm hand at the tiller. And then execution of something entirely different.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jul 19 2022 0:29 utc | 136

Apart from three other writers with thoughts on Ukraine, we have at least one more writer with thoughts in the necessary role of the Britons in each and every European war, and thus also, if not because of viccinity, in the Spanish Civil War….
It seems that not so openly as today in the Ukraine, but they willingly breached agreements on oil supplies with the Republican government while providing fuel and a free passage through Gibraltar Streight to the península to Franco´s troops, without which that army would had kept isolated in Africa and unable to move forward.
https://www.europasur.es/campo-de-gibraltar/Franco-Gibraltar-falsa-neutralidad-britanica-guerra-civil-I_0_1629137391.html
https://www.europasur.es/gibraltar/franco-falsa-neutralidad-guerra-civil_0_1631237366.html
What tells to us that the history of the Britons fuelling fascism in Europe is quite older than their unfatigable intent in Ukraine.
In fact, the Britons should be made accountant for the 40 years of harsh fascist dictatorship in Spain and its hundreds of thousand of killed and dissapeared as necessary collaborateor without which the triumphg of the fascists would had been imposible.
We keep this record for future Nuremberg Trials 2.0.

Posted by: Ghost of Mozgovoy | Jul 19 2022 0:37 utc | 137

@88 & @91, i too have been trying to configure this puzzle, thank you very much. brilliant post.

Posted by: emersonreturn | Jul 19 2022 1:00 utc | 138

I seriously doubt the war support from the US can go on indefinitely, past 2023, not at the demand level of funds per month being coughed up by Goofy Joe. People here are already not happy about the Fortune being shoveled into this while the US rots on the vine here. 100 Billion there, 100 Billion again, its’ gotta stop as where the F are they pulling this $$ from. So it is bleeding the US dry to a great extent, people increasingly unhappy about inflation and lack of job security and etc., the fuse it lit. And that’s a good thing. So if the US rejects whatever Russia will be proposing, it will be just another in a list of gigantic mistakes. Or seemingly so, as all this also seems too stupid to be believed or accidental, and the immiseration of the citizens of the collective West is actually detailed out as the goal and plan of the NWO great Reset, this Economy is a Ponzi scheme and that is set to blow. The US is about to experience its Bernie Madoff reckoning

Posted by: edwardi | Jul 19 2022 1:02 utc | 139

Posted by: Rob | Jul 18 2022 17:29 utc | 13
Posted by: PavewayIV | Jul 18 2022 17:50 utc | 20
I suspect the 35,000 member SBU contains a majority who voted for Z in the last 404 election; Z was the candidate who promised peace.
Those 35,000 have parents, possibly grandparents and children, brothers, sisters, neighbours and friends, all of whom are now subject to compulsory military service. After a few days of training they will be sent to the front lines from which they are unlikely to ever return.
Given their knowledge of corruption in 404 (and corruption is a secret services stock in trade), their awareness of the Z death cult and what it implies for their loved ones, the 35,000 have every incentive to seek an immediate RF victory. They exert themselves to ensure the 5% of the population that seized the state, the Azov thugs and compatriots, are introduced to Mr Kinzhal at the earliest opportunity.

Posted by: Sushi | Jul 19 2022 1:06 utc | 140

Den Lille Abe | Jul 18 2022 22:34 utc | 113
For me at times, it seems some are doomed to die and some are doomed to live. When I took up flying, I didn’t care if I lived or if I died. I have had assorted autoimmune conditions most of my life that make life very uncomfortable. In my last year or so of flying, I got hit with what has fucked me to this day. I stopped doing pre flight checks and hoped the rotors would fall off. It had to be an accident to ensure my wife would collect on my life insurance. The last time I flew it got to where I couldn’t see the stock on the ground nor my gps screen for running a grid pattern. It was like looking into a thick fog. The bloody thing would not fall out of the sky
Six people I knew in that time flying the mad max whirlybirds died. Most were younger than me with young families and everything to live for. One in particular – a good friend. Everything to live for. Early thirties, first born bubs, 6000 hours of flying and whacked a powerline strung between two hills one morning just before sunup.
They who had every reason to, and wanted to live died. I who didn’t care and in the end wanted to die lived?
I have not been in the military, but I put in a few years professional shooting. When the trayback 4WD was full of carcasses, I would pull up to skin them. Everything covered in blood. I would look and think how terrible is war. It got harder and harder until one evening I looked at a roo through the scope for awhile then put up the gun and went home.
DLA Surely difficult to live with, but you did nothing wrong. Take care.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jul 19 2022 1:07 utc | 141

@ Robert | Jul 18 2022 19:14 utc | 52
“Back in the USSR” was a song penned by the Beatles to gently mock the Beach Boys, with whom they were in a friendly rivalry. The harmonies in the background, the basic back-beat, and the guitar work were all modeled–along with the lyrics–as an imitation “California is so great! Beach-girls are the best in the world!” songs that the Beach Boys were putting out at the time.
The USSR was chosen because it’s the diametric opposite to California: cold, snowy, and of course the US’s arch-enemy during the Cold War.
So the song was less laudatory of the Soviet Union than it was a mockery of the Beach Boys’ (and, by extension, the entire US’s) nationalistic jingoism.

Posted by: Pacifica Advocate | Jul 19 2022 1:16 utc | 142

Posted by: English Outsider | Jul 18 2022 18:20 utc | 28
Great post!
I think your conclusion is correct. It is also likely all other EU states, through the mechanism of Brussels, or via NATO, pre-committed to the sanctions regime under the false belief that Putin would back down in the face of wall to wall western solidarity.
History will show they schemed their own demise.
Leaders who bring their nations to a state of collapse need someone to blame. To claim you were mislead by a penis-piano-player coke addict would be an even greater embarrassment than causing the destruction of your own polity.
They will need someone of stature, someone with coercive powers greater than those wielded by Putin, a wolf in sheeps clothing who fed them lie, after lie, after lie.
Who will that be?
A leader facing great defeat
Blames the enemy

Joe Tzu

Posted by: Sushi | Jul 19 2022 1:24 utc | 143

JR 133
Same as MBS said to joe tzu: “remember abu ghraib”

Posted by: ThusspakeZarathustra | Jul 19 2022 1:26 utc | 144

English Outsider | Jul 18 2022 23:38 utc | 128
Thank you so much! Agree. None of them are innocent, imo.

Posted by: polarbear4 | Jul 19 2022 1:30 utc | 145

Appreciation and gratitude for the many poignant, deeply personal posts in this thread. Humbling…

Posted by: Scorpion | Jul 19 2022 1:39 utc | 146

Pacifica Advocate | Jul 19 2022 1:16 utc | 146
I think you missed my attempt at irony and parody. … That last point was just for fun.
Nonetheless, who knows? … Perhaps you have bought the Rolling Stone magazine version of events.

Posted by: Robert | Jul 19 2022 1:44 utc | 147

@ 52/151 – I guess that’s why a lot of people in the former Soviet Union play on the word democracy as dermocracy – дермократия – literally, “shitocracy”
Shit = дермо.
It’s what we have here in Pindostan.

Posted by: lex talionis | Jul 19 2022 2:16 utc | 148

Kvyri Rog is being defended by a Volksturm brigade that’s been getting hammered for the last 3 weeks.
The 17.Tank was usually stationed in Keri Rog but was sent by NATO to be part of the attack force against the LPR. This elite unit appears to have been annihilated in the cauldron battle liberating the LPR.
Net Net – the Allies could liberate Kvryri Rog PDQ from the south. All that stand in the way is a battered Volksturm brigade.
Posted by: Exile | Jul 18 2022 19:23 utc | 59
Fascinating news from three different cities with similar names? About the military analysis, there is a number of brigades in this area, preparing to attack Russian positions in the south, and contrary to what we may think, they actually move around quite a bit, notwithstanding Russian air superiority. OTOH, Russian strategy is to prepare a meat grinder and PATIENTLY wait for Ukraine to send the better units there. However, the most resilient units are the nazis facing Donetsk city, so indeed, this strategy requires to take over the entire Donbass region.

Posted by: Piotr Berman | Jul 19 2022 2:18 utc | 149

Taking Odessa must be the top priority of Putin.
That will permanently dent US power.

Posted by: Jason | Jul 19 2022 2:24 utc | 150

Posted by: Pacifica Advocate | Jul 19 2022 1:16 utc | 146

“Back in the USSR” was a song penned by the Beatles to gently mock the Beach Boys, with whom they were in a friendly rivalry. The harmonies in the background, the basic back-beat, and the guitar work were all modeled–along with the lyrics–as an imitation “California is so great! Beach-girls are the best in the world!” songs that the Beach Boys were putting out at the time.

I was actually thinking about this song today as I shoveled snow (guess where I am) from my driveway and my thoughts about this great tune was how far ahead of the curve were the Beatles back then. I didn’t know that it was intended as you alluded to. To sing the praises of the USSR in the 60s took some balls.
Fast forward to day. Didn’t Paul do a Rolling Stones thing recently. John must be rolling in his grave somewhere.

Posted by: Sam Smith | Jul 19 2022 2:25 utc | 151

JC | Jul 18 2022 23:45 utc | 129
You have exposed yourself as *not* being a deep thinker, as you were unable to discern the sarcasm employed in a sentence that refers to Mike Pompeo as a “deep thinker”.
Maybe refrain from posting until you’re familiar with the subtext of chat here at the bar.

Posted by: Melaleuca | Jul 19 2022 2:27 utc | 152

twitter stopped me from sharing. said i could go to some learning center.
Scorpion @137

Posted by: polarbear4 | Jul 19 2022 2:39 utc | 153

Thank you PeterAU.
For anyone having trouble with vk.com complaining about your browser just add an “m.” before “vk.com” to make it start “https://m.vk.com” and it should load just fine.
[And may I add —completely unrelated— what a rat’s nest of JavaScript VK looks like —blergh! Sickening and vomit-inducing. But doing it my way one can avoid having any of it run and still read the good content, I think I had to allow scripts for the main url to get clear pictures though]
– – –
Romantic polls.
People are very good at remembering the good things unless remembering the bad things holds some special value (be it personal profit, social/group cohesion, ideological “merit”, or guarding actual truth).
“The past is a different country” and all that.
– – –
A pre-revolutionary Europe.
Anyway as for Europe and in particular western Europe plenty of people are already past the breaking point and have been since long before the last year so it is only a matter of time. Plenty of people already struggle to eat.
Other indicators of significant unease are things like the yellow vests and the alternative right etc.
By the way don’t people know that the main reason European militaries are so weak is because the politicians fear them so much? German “elites” as an example seems to have a minor panic about “far right” (hah!) security personnel every second month. I bet even communists would be labeled “far right” nowadays 😛

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 19 2022 2:45 utc | 154

traducteur #48 “She”? Yves is a man’s name, not a woman’s.
Yes, correct. People say “she” some out of ignorance but others out of knowledge that the founder and main writer at “Naked Capitalism” is Susan Webber (a she), who chose to write under the nom de plume “Yves Smith”. Some of the other occasional writers at NC also use the Yves Smith by-line.

Posted by: petra | Jul 19 2022 2:45 utc | 155

“[…] today as I shoveled snow (guess where I am) […]”

Antarctica?

“[…] from my driveway […]”

Okay, not Antarctica then.
Patagonia? Somewhere far south since there is (unless cloudy) constant sun and heat in the arctic now during (the northern) summer.

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 19 2022 2:50 utc | 156

@ 48 – George Sand

Posted by: lex talionis | Jul 19 2022 2:51 utc | 157

Or maybe the Himalayas? 🙂

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 19 2022 2:57 utc | 158

@162 & 155 – I’m guessing high in the Altai mountains in Central Asia. And hopefully high.

Posted by: lex talionis | Jul 19 2022 3:03 utc | 159

Posted by: e | Jul 18 2022 20:36 utc | 88
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkVed6OLe5I
> That’s a Ukrainian folk song they’re singing BTW.
And if someone wants to sing along, here are the lyrics.

Posted by: hopehely | Jul 19 2022 3:49 utc | 160

thanks b…
i can’t keep up with the posts, but i found this one interesting..
@ Kate Frey | Jul 18 2022 21:30 utc | 100
that is an interesting comment.. i don’t follow any of this closely, but i find your comment interesting regardless.. thanks..

Posted by: james | Jul 19 2022 4:37 utc | 161

HIMARS
Over at New Atlas, analyst Brian Berletic is tearing his hair out.
It’s just a truck he says, on repeat.
His latest, short, vid debunks the debunkers. (Who cling to the idea of the HIMAR invincibility)…
Yes. Russian MoD vid shows they have found and tracked HIMARS.
-/As Russia has destroyed most of Ukraine’s mlrs up till now, and destruction of the mTRIPLE7* systems is old news, Russias claim to have destroyed 3 of the 8 HIMARS systems claimed to be “on the battle field” is credible,/ he says.(slightly paraphrased)
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VO-Qo5qw4U0

Posted by: Melaleuca | Jul 19 2022 5:11 utc | 162

@Posted by: MOrbert | Jul 19 2022 0:23 utc | 138
We have been in the “slow” phase of the campaign as more and more of the Ukrainian army are sucked into the killing fields of the Donbass and the Russians overcome eight years of Ukrainian defensive line building. Its normal for such campaigns to be slow-fast-slow etc. As the defensive lines are broken through and access to open land is achieved (central Ukraine) the fast all arms thrusts can be let loose – in this case at least to the Dnieper, and by then there probably won’t be much organized Ukie army left between the Dnieper and Odessa.
The Serbian President’s statement that Russia will make a time-limited formal set of peace demands to Ukraine once the Donbass is cleared makes sense, as it covers Russia legally/diplomatically/ethically with the rest of the world. Once the peace proposal times out the deep battle “quick” phase will commence.

Posted by: Roger | Jul 19 2022 5:21 utc | 163

With Julian Assange on the verge of being extradited to the US to face a life sentence in Guantánamo Bay, now a French and German journalist are being prosecuted for reporting on war crimes in Ukraine. The German Public Prosecutor has taken action against the accused without hearing her. Does Europe still take freedom of expression seriously?
Those are the issues featuring in my new article “Is telling the truth a crime?”, see https://geopolitiekincontext.wordpress.com/2022/07/19/wordt-de-waarheid-vertellen-een-misdaad/
For a translation in your preferred language, just click the Google translate box in the ruight upper corner.

Posted by: Paul-Robert | Jul 19 2022 5:49 utc | 164

@88
Your argument, of the rich biodiverse Russian population had been mine for a very long time, especially for beginners, rather inbred populations would be an easier target for an epidemic.
Unless you develop a vector (like a virus) which only targets the inbred population, but which delivers IMMUNITY.

Posted by: Rootman | Jul 19 2022 6:17 utc | 165

I am not saying that the following is likely, but as an example:
Right now there is a strain of monkeypox targeting gay men. Apart from some discomfort and perhaps a few scars, it is almost harmless.
If a bioweapons lab would release smallpox, non of the gay men would succumb, while 50-90 % of the rest of the population would.
Again I don’t believe this is the case, but it explains the mechanism…

Posted by: Rootman | Jul 19 2022 6:23 utc | 166

Vovan and Lexus posing as Zelenskiy call Stephen King: video. King wears an obligatory upside down Ukrainian flag baseball cap and calls Bandera “a great man”.
At this point, it would be easier for the Ukrainian government to simply flip the flag and pretend it has always been that way to avoid embarrassment for their clueless U.S. liberal supporters—just like they pretend that Ukrainian Nationalists had nothing to do with murdering 100,000 Poles (as well as a large number of Ukrainians who refused to follow their murderous ideology) and assisting Germans in murdering 1,500,000 Ukrainian Jews.

Posted by: S | Jul 19 2022 6:35 utc | 167

@S | Jul 19 2022 6:35 utc | 171
Don’t want to upset anyone but a very large part of Americans are seriously uneducated. As well as Europeans, they’re not better. They’re also raised to believe they’re a superior race and everyone else is their slave. They don’t know or care about nazi symbols or who bandera was. The logic is “Putin did something without permission from Biden” or “Trump won’t allow this to happen”. It’s everywhere in the comments or titles.
They probably think the Ukr nazi is someone in Antonio Banderas’ family

Posted by: rk | Jul 19 2022 6:51 utc | 168

> (see the Larry Johnson-Andrei Martyanov-Alexander Mercouris roundtable, hosted by Gonzalo Lira, as an example)
God damn, when will people see that Lira figure for what he is?

Posted by: Mr Y | Jul 19 2022 7:06 utc | 169

Posted by: Robert | Jul 18 2022 22:56 utc | 122
I happen to actually live in Poland. I don’t need some foreign analyst to tell me what people around me think.
Half of those people would rather suck Soros d***k and claim it’s ambrosia than demand return of Soviet rule and the other half despise anything Russian more than they despise west.
The whole poll is BS made on purpose. I do not know what the purpose is but scaring western population into obedience because “Russians come back” is a possible option.
I live long enough to remember Russian/Soviet rule and their behaviour. No, thanks.
Speaking about arrogance: It’s arrogant to tell people who actually experienced the system how they should feel about it.

Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 7:15 utc | 170

There’s a US delegation going to Taiwan these days to talk about “security”. They’re all “former” somethings in US or nato.
Ukr said they’re winning in their public report to US Joint Chiefs of Staff. Can’t wait for CNN to say that next week zelly will put the flag on Moscow.

Posted by: rk | Jul 19 2022 7:17 utc | 171

@pppp | Jul 19 2022 7:15 utc | 174
Then go to war young boy, help your nazi brothers in Ukropol

Posted by: rk | Jul 19 2022 7:19 utc | 172

@Sunny Runny Burger @ lex talionis
According to the “windy dot”, today there is fresh snow
1. Patagonia
2. New Zealand
3. Greenladia
4. Himalayas and Karakoram
5. Northeast Siberia
6. Alaska / Yukon / British Columbia (mountains)

Posted by: tRI | Jul 19 2022 7:30 utc | 173

Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 7:15 utc | 174
————
That was not Soviet rule, but Polish communist/opportunist rule. Poles usually need someone to follow, then the Soviets, later the Americans — in the near past it was Trump…even Melania was good enough for them. Remember Melania’s speech in Warsaw? Anyway, the inborn Russo-hate is helping now, isn’t it, with all that rising prices? With that Pinokio as the PM?

Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 7:33 utc | 174

Effects of drugs on the human body:
“Ukraine will destroy the Black Sea Fleet of the Russian Federation and retake Crimea, Deputy Defense Minister of Ukraine Volodymyr Gavrilov said in an interview with the Times. Cleaning of the Black Sea began from the Serpent’s Island, and sooner or later the Russian Black Sea Fleet will also be attacked, as it is inevitable to ensure the security of Ukraine. According to the deputy defense minister, Russia must give up Crimea if it wants to continue to exist as a state”

Posted by: rk | Jul 19 2022 7:44 utc | 175

Mr Y | Jul 19 2022 7:06 utc | 173
Some do. Clowns like you do not.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jul 19 2022 7:55 utc | 176

Mr Y | Jul 19 2022 7:06 utc | 173
…”when will people see that Lira figure for what he is?”
There’s a trope: It’s easier to deceive people than to convince them they’ve been deceived.
Me, …my very, very first encounter with his very first Ukrainian siterep yt which I viewed at The Saker: Lira by name, Lira by nature.

Posted by: Melaleuca | Jul 19 2022 8:00 utc | 177

On the way, I stop by an old friend – the commander of a cannon division with the call sign “Tobol”. The last time we saw each other was in May, when he was standing near Rubizhne. Now, with his artillery, he ensures the advancement of the troops in the most difficult direction – Artemovsky and Soledarsky.
– What has changed in these two months?
“Resistance has dropped noticeably,” says a young LNR lieutenant colonel. – It exists, but not as desperate as in Severodonetsk or Popasnaya. They use city buildings, and that, of course, is sad. People will need to go back somewhere. Not everyone can be explained that it was not the troops of the Russian Federation or the LPR who used the housing stock as firing points. Well, the enemy began to use NATO weapons. Quite unpleasant, but we have established a fight with them.
– Last time you and I only dreamed that sooner or later the republic would be liberated. Today you are helping your neighbors…
– None of the fighters perceived the further advancement as helping some other republic, a neighboring state. This is Russian land, and we are marching within the framework of the SMO, fulfilling the requirements that the command has presented to us.
– That is, there is no desire to lie on the stove and rest on the laurels of a winner on a republican scale?
– Of course not. War to the end. When the flag of the Russian Federation will be hoisted over Kiev, then it will be possible to take a vacation for 10 days. And then – as the commander will determine.

Read on

Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 8:02 utc | 178

Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 7:15 utc | 174
————
That was not Soviet rule, but Polish communist/opportunist rule. Poles usually need someone to follow, then the Soviets, later the Americans — in the near past it was Trump…even Melania was good enough for them. Remember Melania’s speech in Warsaw? Anyway, the inborn Russo-hate is helping now, isn’t it, with all that rising prices? With that Pinokio as the PM?
Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 7:33 utc | 178
Ostro, take it easy

Posted by: Grishka | Jul 19 2022 8:05 utc | 179

“e @88–
Your comment’s been buzzing like a fly in my brain for weeks but I never composed it into a comment like yours that bears repeating:
“Russians are among the most genetically diverse people on the planet, the result of centuries of foreign invasions, migration and assimilation of over 200 different ethnic groups. A bioweapon that targets Russians would probably kill us all, with the possible exception of Africa.”
Posted by: karlof1 | Jul 18 2022 20:48 utc | 91
INDEED! [How ethnically complex Russia AND Africa are]:
Africa, at about 6% of the Earth’s total surface and 20.4% of the land area, doesn’t just straddle the equator, but is the only land mass to stretch in its entirety from both the Northern to the Southern, as well as from the Western to the Eastern temperate zones. Differently looked at, Africa is bigger than the countries of Russia, the United States, and India ALL IN ONE.
Many a folk sound like one of those folks who “Go to Africa for a weekend!” – somehow entirely covering in that travel “week” or “weekend” an area geographically larger/as large as: India, China, Japan, the United States (including Hawaii and Alaska), Mexico, New Zealand, the U.K., all of Western Europe, and all of Eastern Europe – ALL put together as one.
‘Today’ [2022] Africa is home to some 5,500 distinct tribes and people groups with complex linguistic and cultural traditions that span humanity’s story over more than a 150,000 thousand years. They dynamically range over Africa in the form of some 55 nations and 12 kingdoms, numbering over a billion people, with more than half of them 18 yrs. old, or YOUNGER, born of the world’s fastest growing population (avg. age 19.7 yrs). They are, sit atop, and are amidst an incomparable, incompletely mapped, and incredibly diverse concentration of the Earth’s bioorganic, natural, mineral, human resources, and developing skills.
With reference to e@88 and karlof1’s quote, Africa is also one of the most biologically diverse and culturally complex environments on Earth. Evolutionary transformations in humanity’s travels along its way have generated and continues the tremendous diversity seen most clearly in its oldest populations, in Africa.
In one study of the San, a diverse group of hunter-gatherers who’ve been living in Southern Africa for at least 20,000 years, and who share historical and linguistic connections, any two San who spoke different languages, even if they lived within walking distance of each other, are genetically MORE different than a European compared to an Asian. “If we really want to understand human diversity, we need to go to Africa and we need to study those people,“ says Stephan Schuster of Pennsylvania State University.
Indeed, some two decades after the completion of the Human Genome Project (HGP), its focus on populations from high-income countries has come at the cost of understanding health and disease that might benefit the world in that less than 2% of human genomes analyzed, so far, have been those of African people, despite the fact that Africa, where humans [Homo Sapiens] originated, contains MORE genetic diversity than any other continent. Last year, analyses of whole-genome sequences of just 426 (!!) people across 50 ethnolinguistic groups in Africa revealed more than 3 million variants that were previously unknown.
Certainly, African populations are amazingly diverse – in art, language, culture, religious ideas and genetic diversity – and home to one third of the world’s more than 7,000 languages. For instance, in the two Congos there are 286 living languages; in Kenya, 69; Tanzania, 128; Morocco, 11; Cameroon, 286; South Africa, 24; and in Nigeria, 514.
As record-breaking adventurer, writer, and aviator Beryl Markham, the first woman to fly the north Atlantic solo east-to-west wrote in ‘West with the Night’ —-
“Africa is mystic; it is wild; it is a sweltering inferno; it is a photographer’s paradise, a hunter’s Valhalla, an escapist’s Utopia. It is what you will, and it withstands all interpretations. It is the last vestige of a dead world or the cradle of a shiny new one. To a lot of people, as to myself, it is just ‘home.”

Posted by: Pilar | Jul 19 2022 8:19 utc | 180

OSTRO QUOTE: “Europe is like an old man with stiff joints, has paper money or money as a entry in the bank account, but without enough resources to back the currency.”
Thomas Mann wrote a short story about an older European woman who falls in love with a young American soldier. As their affair continues, she starts to menstruate again (having stopped a few year prior). She sees this as him having a rejuvenating effect on her. But as it turns out, she has cancer, and dies.
Pity more of our ‘leaders’ didn’t read more Mann, they might have learned something.

Posted by: dermotmoconnor | Jul 19 2022 8:25 utc | 181

Posted by: rk | Jul 19 2022 7:19 utc | 176
Did I attack you ad hominem ?
Posted by: watcher | Jul 18 2022 23:17 utc | 124
Firstly everyone over about 50 remembers the Soviet system. They can directly com[are their living standards today with those of their youth

Indeed, everyone remembers empty shelves back then, rationing meat, flour, sugar, alcohol, fuel, even milk.
link
So while in 1990 no doubt the young (15-30) were enthusiastic to be part of the west, their parents (40-65) were no doubt less so. It is quite likely that the emerging generation 15-30, may rebel against their parents (as the young always do) by adopting some of the views of their grandparents.
Wrong. Actually those 30-65 (at 1990) were part of Solidarity movement rather than teenagers. They actively worked to make Soviets out.

Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 8:26 utc | 182

Two “developments”
The first is; does Sholtz wants to become the next Dictator? This might happen when Germany takes over the presidency of the G7. (My emphasis)
“The European Union can no longer afford to keep national vetoes when deciding on European Union foreign and security policy”.
*
“The conflict has also pushed Berlin towards a more active foreign policy role globally, benefiting from its presidency of the Group of Seven industrialised nations this year.
Scholz said the G7 and other countries could work together to find solutions for the world’s food crisis, climate change and the pandemic if Germany takes responsibility for Europe and the world.
He said Germany would make proposals for joint European migration policy, building European defence, technological sovereignty and democratic resilience in the coming months.”

Centralized idiocy will become the norm, if it isn’t already.
****
Second development is that the US has supposedly given the OK for using HIMARS on Crimea. No confirmation yet, but this would be a red cape to a Bull, and so the “Directors” in Kiev had better find a “better hole”. This could also be the reason that the US wants all Americans to leave Ukraine. Note that the US supplies both target information/geolocation and choice of targets, which will put them personally in the line of fire.
****
Wave a red cape to enrage a bull, and then draw a red line for the US to hide behind
Joe Tzu.

Posted by: Stonebird | Jul 19 2022 8:34 utc | 183

@Moses #114
…only the post-fascists of the AfD are willing to represent the interests of the 99%. The socialist Linke is about to fail dramatically at this historical point…
AfD DOES NOT represent the interests of the 99%. Very much on the contrary. They act as a massive social wrecking ball. Defund the state, privatize education and public services, oppose minimum wage and employer’s share in health insurance, tax breaks for the rich, raise the retirement age to 70+ years, cut social benefits and press those who were thrown overboard the capitalist cruiser to accept slave wages/conditions…
Die Linke is a valley of tears, as far as the foreign policy (Russia) is concerned. But having to weigh foreign policy and internal affairs, I conclude THAT FOREIGN AFFAIRS ARE SECOND-RANKING. Life is material. They (or part of them) are the only ones who do not pursue any point of the above described agenda as all the other “popular parties” and the spearhead AfD. The Linke’s point that Russia’s SMO is against international law IS DEAD WRONG. International law is a joke, as long as it is applied selectively to Russia exclusively. Alone the facts, that they do not oppose with due emphasis the crimes of the nazi regime in Ukraine and the ever growing more ridiculous lies of the state maedia are sufficient to expose them as complicit in the war against Russia (and the own population) and the elevation of the risk to slide into hot WW3. And here we haven’t even spoken about the death trail of the US and its satellites, Germany including, in the last 50 years.
In summary, AfD may be the ones who actually try best to avoid nuclear annihilation of the 100%. But that’s only to steer the 99% into deeper enslavement for the 1%. And it is a SIDE EFFECT. The real aim behind all this is to let the (German only, not globalist, not even European) 1% keep benefitting from cheap Russian energy / lucrative market and maintain the saga of trickle down.

Posted by: OttoE | Jul 19 2022 8:46 utc | 184

ostro | Jul 19 2022 8:02 utc | 182
The absolute tragedy of war. I have watched the US carve a path of destruction through the world, my country tagging along. Families destroyed. Young men dead. Women children and old people dead. Like Syria, Ukraine has been swamped with US propaganda. Goering spoke about how easy it is to take the common man to war. To be able to raise a family in peace and relative prosperity…
I watch the casualty figures in Ukraine. Now the yanks are conscripting Ukraine women – at least a law that has passed and will come into force in the near future. I don’t care about the extremists – the nazis nationalists whatever.
I guess the smarter Ukrainians got out of the place long before, but now Russia has set up a killing machine and the yanks will feed Ukrainians into it as fast as they can.
To”Make Russia pay a price”
I am not religious but this term comes to mind – There But For the Grace of God, Go I.
The sooner the US goes down the better.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Jul 19 2022 8:46 utc | 185

Wrong. Actually those 30-65 (at 1990) were part of Solidarity movement rather than teenagers. They actively worked to make Soviets out.
Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 8:26 utc | 186
——————
Sure, they did, but they couldn’t get the inborn Russo-hate out. 😏
Even the children born few years ago has that inborn sickness. Even the the children to be born will too. That’s the tragedy of the Poles.
Other than the Americans, they don’t love/like any other country…Now, they love the demented One too, but before they were only in love with the Orangutan…

Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 8:49 utc | 186

pppp@186
I am originally from Hungary. I came to Australia in 1986. Many Hungarians say that life for the ordinary person had been better under communism. Better health care, education and every one could afford a house. Ww are going back in a few years time.

Posted by: Peter Schmidt | Jul 19 2022 8:51 utc | 187

Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 8:26 utc | 186
The problem you have is that for many, especially the very poor, rationing was a heck of a lot better than what followed. Not everywhere I agree and for Poland I suspect life may have improved for most. It most certainly did not in Russia when the oligarchs rules and from the look of that polling I would say that in many countries the same is true.
My quick thoughts are that Poland, Lithuania, the Czech Republic and perhaps a couple of others have seen improvement, for the rest it has been a backward step.

Posted by: w | Jul 19 2022 8:53 utc | 188

Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 8:26 utc | 186
You have been really stupid to call Russia a shitty country, especially when you are Polish, even as a sarcasm is just a malicious irony, perhaps it depicts you as a distorted depiction of a despicable character, present gas problem that is affecting European gas supplies does a great job at exposing the legitimate baseness and vileness of Polish government in particular and Polish ethos in general. On one hand they engaged in total hostility against Russia, against Mother Russia, promoting Neo Nazis in Ukraine, Belarus and interfering with Nordstream 2 pipeline, ramming supply boats for the Russian crews in the Baltic, now they have come begging for discount, now judge for your self, isn’t a wonder that you people are universally held in contempt., for such cheap flippant behaviour, after all these backstabbing
and enmity to come and ask for favourable treatment!
The largest producer and exporter of Soybeans is US, and its biggest export to Japan, Korea and China is Soybeans, not anything else!
But this kind of behaviour and attitude are not just from yesterday and today, they been there for centuries, it is the case of the rapist claiming to be the victims!
Pols repeatedly attacked Russia, burned down Moscow, Novgorod, Yaroslavl , would collect young Russian village women, and sold them all the way down on the Marrakesh slave market! in this enterprise there always your fellow Catholics , Latvians, Lithuanians , Estonians and Finns, but treating your fellow Slavic people in such a brutal manner was not confined to Russia, in Invasion on Czechoslovakia, by the Germans, it was the Polish Army that committed the greatest atrocity, by the massacring the Czech civilians in the town of Teschen, given that Czechs are fellow Slav and Catholics just like Pols, shows nothing but total depravity.
Perhaps you be kind enough to tell the barflies about Karol Józef Wojtyła who turned Vatican in to biggest paedophile organisation in the world, after the CIA and the elites placed him on the throne.
There is lot of junk about Katyn massacre, in total around 2200, Polish Military men, when the Nazis put down the Warsaw uprising, the toll was around 20000,
and guess what , the man that command the NAZI force was none other than SS Commander by name of Zelewski, in order to compensate for being a Polish, went to extra length to flatten Warsaw , and that is after Allies had landed at Normandy ! Another one of these notorious Polish psychopath criminals was Eduard Lewinsky, who manipulated his name in to Eric Von Manstein. The Smolensk Air crash that took out the Polish Government was another inside job, to be blamed on Russia, two Polish investigating officers were murdered by the Polish secret service , one of them was Major Marek!
If Stalin was around, he would have dealt with this trash Government in the manner he handled Katyn, may be a Kytn type operation is due!
Russia is the only country in the world that helped Black Africans against imperialist depredation, at Battle of Adwa(1871), it annihilated Italian Amy in Ethiopia,
and liberated Balkans and Georgia from Muslim rule!
Слава Россия

Posted by: Grishka | Jul 19 2022 8:59 utc | 189

Posted by: Peter Schmidt | Jul 19 2022 8:51 utc | 191
——————
A few months ago, Poland’s heartfelt friend was Orban and Hungary. They even wanted fight the EU together, to break it within. Poland even wanted to create Three Seas Initiative with Hungary, but now Orban and Hungary is the main opponent/enemy as Russia. Orban came out as a guy, who can look after his 10 million people quite well!

Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 9:03 utc | 190

I had a slightly different take on this so called firing – This friend is the one who’s handling all of zelensky’s investments and assets and is a partner for decades . My view is that this firing is a eyewash so that he can get out of government and go back to private life where he’s going to finalise the groundwork for zelensky’s eventual abdication and exit from government under the guise of ‘ new blood needed ‘ and ‘ i am tired ‘ narrative – That would enable him to retire peacefully and enjoy the billions he has looted and who else can ensure that everything works this way other than your childhood best friend and partner who with his newly acquired experience in intelligence has acquired the knowledge, means and contacts to create the ideal situation to escape without taking any responsibility – Plus having someone with deep legal knowledge within your inner circle who’s the ex prosecutor general means you are aware of the legal loopholes and obligations – I think this is a false flag

Posted by: Tranceislife | Jul 19 2022 9:22 utc | 191

Posted by: rk | Jul 19 2022 6:51 utc | 172
They probably think the Ukr nazi is someone in Antonio Banderas’ family
That was until operation Z of Zorro.
Banderas was a great actor until he went to Hollywood, there he got rich and famous, Hollywood specialty, but had to play the game of a propaganda cog, Zorro’s character -the only few chapters I watched were from the old black and white TV series- is total Hollywood crap, to justify robbing Mexico of half its land.
Fortunately Banderas is back home, and doing interesting stuff again, he could afford to dump Hollywood for his native Malaga, not a bad change I think.

Posted by: Paco | Jul 19 2022 9:24 utc | 192

Dmitry Medvedev

The weapon that is
and which is not immediately
Amazing things are happening across the ocean today. Despite last year’s fiasco with $85 billion worth of military equipment abandoned in Afghanistan, the White House continues to uncontrollably pump weapons to the agonizing Kiev regime. This is not the first time such a decision has been made. So, as Mayakovsky said, someone needs it.
The US military’s Kabul-Kandahar corruption experiments are over, but gray schemes for arms sales to third countries are not. They bring a lot of greenbacks. Despite the rotten chaos in Nezalezhnaya, deliveries of the “deadly metal” there are carried out like clockwork. Well, the United States needs a new Afghanistan, which is rapidly becoming the current Ukraine. The thieves’ funnel sucks in more and more expensive weapons.
The Pentagon predictably denies everything, lies convulsively and incompetently gets confused in the testimony. At the same time, any voices trying to object are immediately suppressed. For criticizing the uncontrolled supply of weapons to Kiev, even the Russophobic congresswoman of Ukrainian origin Spartz, who until recently advocated a bloody Lend-Lease, got it. For she encroached on the secret – loot, which, as you know, does not smell of either gunpowder or corpses.
Moreover, in this situation, examples from history do not speak in favor of the United States. For example, a significant part of the Washington regional committee usually participated in secret deliveries of weapons in circumvention of various embargoes. “Sleepy Joe”, by the way, already in the 80s was a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. So the experience of secret deals on blood is significant there.
The conclusion is simple. The American weapons now being delivered to Little Russia will spread through the hands of various criminals all over the world. More precisely, it is already spreading with might and main. Moreover, under the “roof” of the administration and intelligence agencies of the United States. In fact, America once again becomes a sponsor of international terrorism. I do not rule out that later, together with the responsible countries, we will have to work out the possibility of creating a special mechanism to investigate this rotten weapons plot. And it is possible to think about the formation of a special international body for the seizure of American gifts crawling out here and there.
However, this will not affect the final score. Professional gun thieves in the US and Ukraine will line their pockets well.
Terrorists and radicals will have more deadly types of military equipment.
Russia will achieve all its goals.
And there will be peace. On our terms. And by no means on those about whom confused political impotents are squealing in Europe and overseas.

Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 9:26 utc | 193

Posted by: dermotmoconnor | Jul 19 2022 8:25 utc | 185

Thomas Mann wrote a short story about an older European woman who falls in love with a young American soldier. As their affair continues, she starts to menstruate again (having stopped a few year prior). She sees this as him having a rejuvenating effect on her. But as it turns out, she has cancer, and dies.

Hahahahahaha! Your comment just made my day!
Europe is old. Not like China (or Russia) who is much older but she has this innate ability to rejuvenate herself over the past 5,000+ years of civilization. The current rejuvenation under Xi Jinping is the latest and probably the greatest. This epic rejuvenation could not be happening if it wasn’t for Mao (laying the solid foundations for a New China) and Deng Xioaping (opening China with reforms).
Europe, on the other hand, is both running out of time and resources. And genuine leaders.
Ukraine, for all intent and purposes, serves as a mirror for the rest of Europe that it so desparately wants to join.
Old Woman, beware of your dying and rotting state!

Posted by: Sam Smith | Jul 19 2022 9:35 utc | 194

Maria Zakharova

State Department spokesman Ned Price said that a possible circumvention of anti-Russian sanctions or the provision of weapons by China to Russia would be “expensive” for Beijing.
Ned, just as “very expensive” as Saudi Arabia?😹 Will you also make a pariah from Beijing? Think twice, because all the “pariahs” declared by Washington are only getting stronger, and then the United States bows to them. You will have to blush like the members of the American delegation during your meeting with the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia bin Salman, when Joe Biden was asked: “Is Saudi Arabia still a pariah?”
Don’t forget, Biden personally announced three years ago that he would “make the Kingdom pay the price and turn them into pariahs,” and now, with an empty canister and an outstretched hand, he went to bow to Crown Prince bin Salman, who proved himself a statesman and in the name of world stability deigned to receive the president of an economically bankrupt country.
Ten years ago, US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner articulated wonderfully the reasons why the US does not declare bankruptcy: “I have to use various accounting tricks as measures to prevent default.”
The American economy is supported only by American military bases where they exist, and the responsible behavior of truly independent countries where they are not. The United States spends more than it produces for many years. There is nothing to repay the debt of 30 trillion dollars. And everyone knows it. The fact that Washington is planning and carrying out coups d’état in various parts of the world, as former US national security adviser John Bolton recently spoke so frankly, does not mean any financial solvency.
I would compare, Ned, the political and economic systems of the United States and Britain with bankrupt aristocrats who mortgaged all their property several times, they owe everyone, but they can’t refuse a prosperous life. And their only salvation is the good attitude of those around them and the holders of their debts. Only you are not aristocrats. Yes, philistines.
Returning to China. Does the State Department want to make Beijing “pay a heavy price”? The problem is that, unlike the US, the People’s Republic of China is creditworthy and can afford an independent policy based on responsible approach and true multilateralism.

Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 9:36 utc | 195

Interesting set of debaters. I am also Hungarian (born 1952, so I’m 70), but for over 50 years I have been living, working (and paying taxes and contributions for health and pension insurance) in Poland. I experienced the worst years in terms of supply in Poland (interesting fact: when in Poland “there was nothing”, beef consumption was 12 kg / year / person. Today it is 2.5 kg.) So I have a quite specific point of view and a lot (sometimes critical) comments on what I have read about Poland, but unfortunately I do not have time to share them. And that would be off-topic after all.

Posted by: tRI | Jul 19 2022 9:46 utc | 196

Posted by: La Bastille | Jul 18 2022 21:27 utc | 99

The repaired turbine will be delivered to Germany by airfreight, then to Russia through Finland [no Idee for the transit Germany to Finland….]

The NATO junta now governing Finland is practically at war with Russia. I am not sure Finland will allow the turbine to pass through.
The economic war against Russia may have already cost Finland 50 billion euros. The state-owned energy company Fortum is the largest owner of German Uniper. Finnair lost its direct flights to China and Asia because of the flight ban. The Helsinki airport might have become a hub for Russian air passengers, but Finland cut passenger train traffic between Finland and Russia. Freight trains were also suspended in March, but restored after the junta realized that all imports from China come through Russia.

Posted by: Petri Krohn | Jul 19 2022 9:49 utc | 197

Posted by: tRI | Jul 19 2022 9:46 utc | 200
————————–
So, you immigrated to Poland in those nice days of Edward Gierek…😃

Posted by: ostro | Jul 19 2022 10:20 utc | 198

Posted by: Pilar | Jul 19 2022 8:19 utc | 184
“Certainly, African populations are amazingly diverse – in art, language, culture, religious ideas and genetic diversity – and home to one third of the world’s more than 7,000 languages. For instance, in the two Congos there are 286 living languages; in Kenya, 69; Tanzania, 128; Morocco, 11; Cameroon, 286; South Africa, 24; and in Nigeria, 514.
As record-breaking adventurer, writer, and aviator Beryl Markham, the first woman to fly the north Atlantic solo east-to-west wrote in ‘West with the Night’ —-
“Africa is mystic; it is wild; it is a sweltering inferno; it is a photographer’s paradise, a hunter’s Valhalla, an escapist’s Utopia. It is what you will, and it withstands all interpretations. It is the last vestige of a dead world or the cradle of a shiny new one. To a lot of people, as to myself, it is just ‘home.”
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gall–Peters_projection
This map shows true relative size of Africa.
Their time will come around again once the capitalist colonial hegemonic model is done and dust.

Posted by: Scorpion | Jul 19 2022 10:27 utc | 199

Plus having someone with deep legal knowledge within your inner circle who’s the ex prosecutor general means you are aware of the legal loopholes and obligations – I think this is a false flag.
Posted by: Tranceislife | Jul 19 2022 9:22 utc | 195
BINGO!
In other words: the wheels are coming of the wagon but hopefully it can still make it to the airport to catch their flight to Miami or Tel Aviv (same difference).

Posted by: Scorpion | Jul 19 2022 10:42 utc | 200