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

Posted by: Lex | Jul 18 2022 22:20 utc | 110
Thanks Lex, dystopian but probably very close to the truth.

Posted by: anon2020 | Jul 19 2022 10:59 utc | 201

Whether Michael Hudson is putting words into Victoria Nuland’s mouth or not is almost beside the point. He captures the gist of it, i.e. whole “deep structure” of these so-called transatlantic relations. I remember reading somewhere that Zbigniew Brzezinski entertained the idea of sending immigrants to Germany to make Germans like strangers in their own country. I may forget the author and the wording. So when Nuland says something about Nord Stream 2, she is building on the agreement between Trump and Merkel to put an end to it. Trump built on the work of previous administrations which had already begun to push American LNG to the world.
It seems like mass immigration and the current energy suicide are two sides of the same coin of keeping Germany down. And amazingly, Steve Bannon showed his true colours a few weeks ago when he started preaching (or suggesting) in his “War Room” that Germany must be punished for getting an unfair advantage with the help of cheap Russian energy. That may be what matters to Trump and him but I think the deep structure goes a lot deeper, energy policy being just an “epiphenomenal” element.
And what happens to Germany happens to the EU, which is why it must be so important to put this monstrosity called the EU together. Just to build it up to be able to destroy it in a centralized fashion. For instance, isn’t it possible that in the Greek financial crisis, both Germany and Greece were losers?

Posted by: Jonathan W | Jul 19 2022 11:48 utc | 202

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 | 200
What a tease!

Posted by: Scorpion | Jul 19 2022 12:08 utc | 203

@Ralph Reed | Jul 19 2022 0:29 utc | 139

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 an engineer, I used to work with VAX/VMS computers from DEC in the 1980’s and early 1990’s. It was very good and well ahead of the PCs. As for memes, I remember a sticker “I have been VAXinated” from DEC.

Posted by: Norwegian | Jul 19 2022 12:24 utc | 204

@Mr Y | Jul 19 2022 7:06 utc | 173

God damn, when will people see that Lira figure for what he is?

We do, that was a particularly good roundtable discussion. I guess speaking a lot of truth combined with good analysis is undesirable to you. Remember, you could always contribute with something constructive rather than merely shitting on someone.

Posted by: Norwegian | Jul 19 2022 12:41 utc | 205

@115
European leaders are selected for their obedience and for their incompetence. The USA doesn’t want its puppet states to have competent leadership that could potentially challenge their control. They want lackluster bootlickers as the managers of the European provinces.

Posted by: Grrr | Jul 19 2022 12:47 utc | 206

Another Lira-led Round Table coming up today https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hz00YsG37bE

Posted by: Jonathan W | Jul 19 2022 12:54 utc | 207

@ostro
“So, you immigrated to Poland in those nice days of Edward Gierek…”
In a way, yes.
I came to study in 1971, in 1977 I made the decision that I would stay forever. The days weren’t so nice anymore.

Posted by: tRI | Jul 19 2022 13:06 utc | 208

@Scorpion
“What a tease!”
I did not want to be angry, nor did I want to disregard the noble group of participants in the discussion. The matter is quite delicate, and I do not know enough English, so I will formulate my thoughts in Polish and use a Google translator. Each time I have to check that the meaning has been kept reasonably well. I translate the text back and forth several times. It is very time consuming. I’m not sure if I’m writing nonsense anyway.

Posted by: tRI | Jul 19 2022 13:21 utc | 209

I shit thee not, younger people in the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact countries literally watched pirated VHS copies of American soap operas and sitcoms from the 1980s. Though now they will deny it with high vigor, they were in absolute love with shows like “Dynasty” and “Baywatch”. Like American weeaboo carefully studying anime cartoons for “cultural context” that could give them “insight into the secrets of Japanese life”, these poor naive bumpkins got their ideas about what capitalist life was like by studying escapist crap entertainment that was created to anesthetize the American working class while their good-paying union jobs were shipped overseas. The ignorant clods behind the Iron Curtain thought the escapist fantasies being fed to the American population contained deep insight into real life in the West!
Every emigre to the USA from “communist” countries shares the same conviction: They all arrived in America too late and just as it was starting to go to shit. They all think they just barely missed America when it was awesome.
Sorry guys, but America was never what you imagined when you were watching pirated VHS tapes of crappy soap operas. Likewise to the children here in this thread, the Soviet Union was never the real world version of Mordor. Both are just nonsense implanted in the imaginations of naive provincials by mass media.

Posted by: William Gruff | Jul 19 2022 13:46 utc | 210

European leaders are selected for their obedience and for their incompetence. The USA doesn’t want its puppet states to have competent leadership that could potentially challenge their control. They want lackluster bootlickers as the managers of the European provinces.
Posted by: Grrr | Jul 19 2022 12:47 utc | 210

Superb broadside.

Posted by: anon2020 | Jul 19 2022 14:15 utc | 211

just as I thought the propaganda was entering a respite, i read the dumbest fucking article I’ve yet seen on the Daily Beast. I’m not even going to link to it. fucking idiots.

Posted by: pretzelattack | Jul 19 2022 14:25 utc | 212

European leaders are selected for their obedience and for their incompetence. The USA doesn’t want its puppet states to have competent leadership that could potentially challenge their control. They want lackluster bootlickers as the managers of the European provinces.
Posted by: Grrr | Jul 19 2022 12:47 utc | 210
Superb broadside.
Posted by: anon2020 | Jul 19 2022 14:15 utc | 215
And the same thing domestically. In fact they seem to get dumber and more subservient as time goes on. I suppose as the “elites” decay, it becomes harder to find inferior and less principled people to be their minions.

Posted by: Bemildred | Jul 19 2022 14:32 utc | 213

Posted by: OttoE | Jul 19 2022 8:46 utc |
As far as domestic policy is concerned you’re absolutely right about the German AfD’s neoliberal agenda in the interest of the 1%. Problem is only, that in this case, foreign policy is far from “second rank”, but overruling anything else and besides deadly material, not only with regards to WW3 but with regards to freezing in your flat this winter and loosing your job and income.
My point about the 99% was wrong, it appears to me. Now the AfD by representing the 1% is as a side effect representing the interest of the 100%, as interests exceptionally converge with regards to an end of sanctions. They will win landslide victories due to the complete failure of the left.

Posted by: Moses | Jul 19 2022 15:50 utc | 214

Posted by: Grishka | Jul 19 2022 8:59 utc | 193
Now, that’s a full clusterfuck of thoughts.
For once I did not call Russia shitty country, you pulled this out of your brown end. I did not even touch subjects of gas or soybeans.
The difference between Warsaw Uprising and Katyn is Katyn was murder of POWs, a war crime, while people in Warsaw Uprising died fighting, while Red Army waited on the other side of Vistula river waiting for Germans to do the dirty job.
may be a Kytn type operation is due
By saying this you endorse and instigate a war crime which make yourself a criminal.
By the way this demonstrates why no one wants Russians back in Poland.
Regarding the plane crash, I am listening. I actually consider scenario where Russians were paid to take the blame and cover real culprits, Kursk style.
Nah. You know nothing. If you had acccess to these things you would not be babbling here.

Posted by: pppp | Jul 19 2022 16:19 utc | 215

Interesting backgrounds and stories of Eastern European people here. … Both my father’s and mother’s family came to America (Philadelphia) in the early 20th century under ‘Hungarian Passports’, yet neither were ethnically Hungarian.
Dad’s side came from what is now Eastern Slovakia as his family is ‘Carpatho-Rusyn’ (Greek Catholic). They spoke the Rusyn language. … Mom’s side is from a few hundred kilometers north in what is now Po-Karpatkia Polski. They spoke a dialect of Polish. … The remaining family members had a rough go of it.
My great grandfather, great uncle, and their cousin on mom’s side were sent to Majdanek concentration camp in 1943 and never heard from again. … A few years ago, they were commemorated in the small Polish town on the 75th anniversary of the ’round up’ for standing up against the Nazis.
In American we have several ‘Katyn Memorials’ in Polish American neighborhoods. They seem to dominate and skew the conversation amongst Polish Americans. They certainly become a central point for cheap political grandstanding around election time.
So, I often ask the question, how many Poles were killed at Katyn? Most think that there were 100,000 of thousands (some even think millions).
After correcting their biased view, I then ask them a simple question: … The Germans killed 6.5 million Polish citizens during that war, so where are all the monuments to these victims? … This question is usually met with dead silence, perhaps out of shame.
Although once, a rather bright young Polish girl answered me with, “At Katyn, these were the Polish intellectuals”. … I then replied to her, “So out of the other 6.5 million Poles there were no ‘intellectuals’? … She became very angry at my retort. … I then thought to ask the obvious and naïve question: … OK then, how many Poles does it take to screw in a light bulb? (But my better self discipline halted my urge to insult her.)
As an American of Rusyn and Polish backgrounds, and separated from the country by over 100 years, I think it is important to put all of these things into perspective. … For me,
My father’s side suffered the first industrial concentration camp round-ups (in 1915, three decades before WW2) at Thalerhof (near Graz Austria). … Carpatho-Rusyns (not Jews) were the first targeted population in Europe for extermination. Their crime? They wrote in the Cyrillic alphabet.
My mother’s side suffered Majdanek in 1943.
However, the survivors of both my mother’s and father’s family were liberated by the Red Army in 1944. That stopped the concentration camp business for good. … To that, I will always be grateful for their sacrifice and bravery. … Slava Krazny Armii Rossiya !!!

Posted by: Robert | Jul 19 2022 21:01 utc | 216

On 24th February 2022, the world changed. It won’t be the same again. Unfriendly countries is a fixed, and they will always be unfriendly countries. Not exactly enemies, but not to be trusted, and to be defeated, in a few weeks, months or years, but thoroughly defeated.
Posted by: ostro | Jul 18 2022 20:22 utc | 82

I am told that those same European nations had decent trade relations with Russia well before president Biden and NATO put a wrench in the works this past year. How were those relations even forged to start with?

Posted by: joey_n | Jul 19 2022 21:16 utc | 217

@ostro. You posted that the US won’t be able to repay its 30 trillion debt. It’s much worse than that as that figure fails to account for state, city and county debts. Nor for all the unfounded future liabilities such as government pension plans.
They can tell Russia that they are siezing their reserves, same with China, Japan etc. But what happens when they do the same in the US and tell retirees sorry your retirement funds are gone? Or tell the blue zoos that EBT cards can’t be reloaded?
Instant violence and the end of the US as one nation.

Posted by: Neal | Jul 19 2022 23:31 utc | 218

For pppp , 219
Warsaw upraising was not coordinated with the Red Army, staying on the right side of the Vistula River – with overextended supply lines DUE TO RELENTLESS chasing of the German army.
The Polish Commanders wanted to surprise Soviets and “liberate” Warsaw – than playing the role of the true military AND POLITICAL WINNERS.
The Soviets complied – and prepared Their Next Step. Reorganizing and resupplying – for further jump over the River. They later came to Berlin, per the German “Invitation”, accepted at Stalingrad.
There is Much more on this topic, but I am not a lecturer or teacher of reading. To be a full man, per Bacon, one has to read. Or study. Good if in several languages at once.

Posted by: LogosApplied | Jul 19 2022 23:51 utc | 219

What am I missing …. today on Reuters … Exclusive: Russia seen restarting gas exports from Nord Stream 1 on schedule – https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/exclusive-russia-seen-restarting-gas-exports-nord-stream-1-schedule-2022-07-19/
Yet all I read about is Russia withholding gas …. what is the story ?

Posted by: Saggy | Jul 20 2022 0:33 utc | 220

saggy @224
The gas pipeline is very long. There may be pressure fluctuations with unstable supply, something akin to the vibrating string (albeit in the pipe the vibrations are not perpendicular to the axis of the gas medium). The Russuans apply Maintenance means.

Posted by: LogosApplied | Jul 20 2022 0:56 utc | 221

This may explain a lot:
The Polish portal Onet announces that the Wheel was invented at the territory of . . . Ukraine. It was round. More or less.
The real oldest circular wheel sample, per the German researches – is from Slovenia.
Ukrainian inventions are surprising.

Posted by: LogosApplied | Jul 20 2022 1:15 utc | 222

Posted by: Saggy | Jul 20 2022 0:33 utc | 224
I think the story is the EU is starting to ease sanctions against Russian banks. Hence the back and forth.
https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/eu-soften-sanctions-russian-banks-allow-food-trade-2022-07-19/

Posted by: Jonathan W | Jul 20 2022 5:04 utc | 223

To Robert at 21:01
Interesting. My paternal grandparents emigrated to Canada around the same time from a village near Kosice in Eastern Slovakia, also Greek Orthodox.
Many stories of that time and what happened through and after WW II.
If you read this we could continue a discussion on an open thread. I read most of MoA so I will look for a further post from you.
The history of the last century is rich with detail and stories from different angles.
USSR was not factored in that family, perhaps because of forced collectivization. They were doing fine before.
After Czechoslovakia was no longer a USS Republic the families took ownership of their homes in the city and were doing well. They were uncertain about joining the EU some time ago, I am out of touch so not sure how they are doing in that part of the country now.

Posted by: jonku | Jul 20 2022 7:50 utc | 224

Saggy the story is that places like Reuters (100% compromised and used as a “source” by the MSM) would be the last to know and the first to lie 🙂

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 20 2022 8:37 utc | 225

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 | 155
Tiksi, Sakha has a blank for Jul 19 weather, but for 20th there forecast is snow/rain mix. It is a town on the shore of Arctic Ocean.
My personal experience with late July snow is in Yellowstone National Park, although we did not notice accumulation that would require shoveling. Later, the night in our tent was quite chilly, below freezing — prepare good sleeping bags for summer trips to Wyoming, as we did

Posted by: Piotr Berman | Jul 20 2022 11:33 utc | 226

@polarbear4 | Jul 18 2022 21:09 utc | 97
“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.”
any chance i could get a link for this? i am saving things to explain to my old blog friends when this is all over. this is sooo important. either way, thanks!
– – – – – – – – – – – – –
see America’s Real Adversaries Are Its European And Other Allies – Analysis [2022-02-12] By Michael Hudson

Posted by: rettiwt | Jul 20 2022 11:49 utc | 227

jonku | Jul 20 2022 7:50 utc | 228
Thanks for the reply. … My father’s side is from a town north of Kosice, and the remnant family then migrated to the larger town Mihalovce, some still later to Brno (now Czech Rep).
I recommend a starter book ‘Our People: Carpatho-Rusyns in North America’: … https://c-rrc.org/product/our-people/
It was written by a Canadian professor, Dr. Paul Magosci, in the 1980s and interestingly he was perhaps the first to identify this group because of the consequences of the late 19th and 20th century. Since then, the identity (and forgotten history) has grown immensely.
Culturally, in America, Carpatho-Rusyns were always confused a ‘Russian’ or as ‘Ukrainian’. My Aunt Olga used to call us ‘Slavish’.
Hollywood even struggled to identify us, but actually did a pretty good job of character development and cultural setting in the 1979 award winning movie, The Deerhunter. … This scene from the wedding at Lemko Hall (Cleveland) is one of my all time favorites. It captures the essence of the Vietnam era in America as well as the working class Carpatho-Rusyn ethnic clannishness. As a child, I can remember going to wedding receptions just like this. They were so much fun. … Watch here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdvGm5QXNE0

Posted by: Robert | Jul 20 2022 18:02 utc | 228

… and the latest from today
“Russia about to ‘run out of steam’ in Ukraine, British spy chief says”
Reuters, Yahoo aso,
Larry, sonar21.com used the headline for his latest, excellent article.
Great work of MoA a.a, Thank you!
Danke!

Posted by: BobRudolf | Jul 22 2022 14:21 utc | 229

“You wonder what the founders of the EEC Monnet, Adenauer would make of these pampered idiots?”
Well, Monnet was anyway an American spy. French in nationality, but he hated France and was paid by the OSS (we now know exactly how much). In his writings, he quite specifically stated that democracy should have no say in the thing, and that the EU should essentially be a technostructure without any influence from the plebs. Schuman had been a German soldier in the 1st WW, and was very discreet during WWII. What’s more, the declaration that bears his name was actually written by Dulles, Secretary of State of the USA.
Since the first chairman of the EU Commission was Walter Hallstein, and that the latter had been asked by Hitler in 1938, as a German Jurist, to prepare a project of a EU directed by Nazi Germany, I suppose it is no wonder that the US took over the Nazi project of fettering the various European countries together, rendering them insignificant as potential adversaries of the USA’s rising power.

Posted by: Nanabozho | Jul 24 2022 16:04 utc | 230

What happened to gas for rubles – is Germany paying in rubles for Nord 1 gas?
Also, on Military Summary today it says that Russia will delay an offensive in the Kherson region for over a month so they can learn to use the Iranian drones, …. is this a joke?

Posted by: Saggy | Jul 25 2022 0:59 utc | 231

It not so much of keeping Germany down as keeping them “on side” – is I think the way the players see it.
It is a cartel, serving merchantile/financial interests which they rationalize as serving sovereign interests – no one (other than people) is giving weight to popular intrests (the people suffer as they will).
Do not ascribe to cunning, what can be explained by sloth and incompetence (or something like that).

Posted by: jared | Jul 25 2022 13:27 utc | 232

Chinas interests are structurally conflicted.
Taiwan is at this point a sovereign state, that is not for the US to negotiate.

Posted by: jared | Jul 25 2022 13:33 utc | 233

“Yves Smith is not impressed …”
oooh, Yves Smith!
Since when does a former McKinseyite know anything about anything? And you guys read her tripe?

Posted by: sumbody | Jul 26 2022 0:50 utc | 234