Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
September 3, 2022
The Ukrainian ‘Counteroffensive’ Was Destined To Fail – Today It Did So

On August 24 the British prime minister Boris Johnson visited Kiev:

In comments made next to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the Mariyinsky Palace, Johnson said Ukraine “can and will win this war.”

Johnson's visit was the start signal for the long announced Ukrainian 'counteroffensive' towards Kherson.

In early April Johnson had called on and visited Kiev to stop well developed peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine:

“Russian and Ukrainian negotiators appeared to have tentatively agreed on the outlines of a negotiated interim settlement,” wrote Fiona Hill and Angela Stent. “Russia would withdraw to its position on February 23, when it controlled part of the Donbas region and all of Crimea, and in exchange, Ukraine would promise not to seek NATO membership and instead receive security guarantees from a number of countries.”

The news highlights the impact of former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s efforts to stop negotiations, as journalist Branko Marcetic noted on Twitter. The decision to scuttle the deal coincided with Johnson’s April visit to Kyiv, during which he reportedly urged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to break off talks with Russia for two key reasons: Putin cannot be negotiated with, and the West isn’t ready for the war to end.

Over the last months Britain has trained several thousands of Ukrainian troops and their officers. Together with Ukrainian special forces Britain's MI-6 secret service planned a special operation for Ukraine to regain control over the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant on the south side of the Kakhovka Dnieper reservoir. This was designed to coincide with a visit of IAEA inspectors, long held up by Ukraine, to visit the ZNPP.

The Kherson offensive started on August 30 on five axes. It was destined to fail. Three of these attempts to gain ground held by Russian troops failed. One axis was stopped after taking a few small villages of no strategic value. The only 'successful' attack was across the Inhulet river near Andriivka in the direction of the dam and river crossing that closes off the Kakhovka Dnieper reservoir.


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The plan was crazy to begin with. The whole area is flat open steppe. The troops would have had to created a 50 kilometer (30 miles) long corridor through open hostile land. The towns on the way are mostly one or two street agricultural mini-villages with one story homes that offer little protection. The Ukrainian forces have no air defense or air attack capability to cover advancing troops. Its artillery capabilities are a tenth of what the Russian military can provide in the area. It was obvious from the beginning that this was a suicide mission.

Reportedly the Ukrainian military command was against this mission. But the Ukrainian political leadership, the Zelenski regime, ordered it to proceed. It was under political pressure from its foreign supporters to show at least some success.

The attack was launched on August 30. The Ukrainian military created three river crossings over the Inhulet near Andriivka. This already smelled bad. Why didn't the Russian airforce or artillery immediately destroy those crossings?

It was obvious that this was a trap.

In a CNN piece, co-written by the notorious 'intelligence' stenographer Natasha Bertrand, the U.S. military distanced itself from the upcoming catastrophe:

In the buildup to the current Ukrainian counteroffensive, the US urged Kyiv to keep the operation limited in both its objectives and its geography to avoid getting overextended and bogged down on multiple fronts, multiple US and western officials and Ukrainian sources tell CNN.

Those discussions involved engaging in "war-gaming" with Kyiv, the sources said — analytical exercises that were intended to help the Ukrainian forces understand what force levels they would need to muster to be successful in different scenarios.

The Ukrainians were initially considering a broader counteroffensive, but narrowed their mission to the south, in the Kherson region, in recent weeks, US and Ukrainian officials said.

Officials say they believe there is now increased parity between the Ukrainian and Russian militaries. But western officials have been hesitant to label the nascent Ukrainian operation — which appeared to begin on Monday in the southern province of Kherson — a true "counteroffensive."

How successful Ukraine is likely to be in regaining lost territory remains an open question, sources familiar with the latest intelligence tell CNN.

For three days the Ukrainian military sent battalion after battalion into the salient. These were good professional troops trained by Britain. They were equipped with modernized Polish T-72 tanks and up-armored Dutch Infantry Fighting Vehicles (YPR-765 IFV). But while these force were able to create a deeper salient it would soon become their grave.

As I wrote on September 1.

The Ukrainian Kherson offensive continues despite extremely heavy losses. The Rybar map shows one of the axes where the Ukrainian army still tries to press forward after having been rooted from Bruskyns'ke.


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The area is flat open steppe with no coverage for troops to hide. The Russian side is by far superior in artillery and has air supremacy. Whoever ordered the Ukrainians to press this suicidal campaign under these circumstance is guilty of murder and should go to prison for the rest of his life.

On September 1, the very day the IAEA delegation was to arrive, the Ukrainian side made a daring attack to seize the ZNPP. But the Russian side had been warned. The two waves of Ukrainian special forces, also trained by Britain, were killed while crossing the reservoir or were running into ambushes as soon as they had landed. They ended up dead. The IAEA inspection proceeded as planned.

Jeffrey Kaye @jeff_kaye – 21:18 UTC · Sep 2, 2022

UN Secretary General's spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said on Thursday:
"We are glad that the Russian Federation did all to keep our inspectors safe"!
I expect mainstream press to not report this.
Link to Interfax report

On the third day of the offensive the bridges across the Inhulet river where still intact. The Russian tactic was obvious. A scheme that it had used previously on the Karkiv front:

Will Schryver @imetatronink – 22:28 UTC · Sep 2, 2022

The truth of the Kherson "offensive" is written on the maps for all to see: AFU attacks; Ru hits 'em hard, then pulls back; AFU advances; Ru hits 'em again, but pulls back more; AFU adds forces to salient; Ru flanks them in force & cuts off their rear; trap closed; turkey shoot.

Late yesterday the Russian air force made its first real showing in this 'counteroffensive' affair. It attacked Ukrainian forces at the front of the salient in the tiny village of Bezimene with some 24 'dumb' 500 kilogram bombs. This ended the existence of the village and of all Ukrainian forces in it.

The Russian airforce then proceeded to destroy all river crossings over the Inhulet.

The Ukrainian forces are trapped:


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They have one choice. Give up, wave white flags or die.

Here is the current Rybar overview of the larger Kherson region. All Ukrainian attempts in this 'counteroffensive' have failed to make any significant progress.


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The number of Ukrainian casualties are huge. Reports from Odessa, Nikolaev and Kryvy Rih speak of thousands of wounded. Many more have died. Hundreds of Ukrainian tanks and infantry fighting vehicles were destroyed or captured by Russian troops.

The 128th mountain assault brigade from the Ukrainian Transcarpatia region was involved in the general attack and got destroyed. (Why use 'mountain assault' specialists in the open steppe?) The governor of the region reportedly ordered a day of mourning.

The Russian side has now launched some attacks of its own to gain areas and towns the Ukrainians had held for some time. The Ukrainians are scrambling to mobilize local reserves in Nikolaev to counter these moves.

In 'western' media, complicit with the Zelenski regime, neither the bloody defeat of the 'counteroffensive' in Kherson nor the attempted raid on the ZNPP ever happened.

The only mention of it I found in the New York Times is this:

In a statement, the [Russian defense] ministry claimed that Russian forces had intercepted two groups of Ukrainian commandos, up to 60 troops combined, who crossed the Dnipro River in boats to sabotage or seize the plant.

In total the 'counterattack' on Kherson was a complete failure that predictably ended up destroying Ukraine's main military reserves and a major part of the stock of heavy vehicles it had received from the 'west'.

The ZNPP, which was the main 'public relation' target of the whole affair, is still in Russian hands and now secured by the presence of a permanent IAEA delegation.

bruno bertez @BrunoBertez – 7:27 UTC · 3 Sep 2022

"The IAEA is there to stay for as long as it is needed. We are not leaving.” [IAEA director] Grossi said. “For those who may have intentions on the plant, knowing that international inspectors are there, witnessing and informing immediately what is happening, has an important stabilising effect.”

Heads in Kiev should and will likely roll over this. But that is not enough. Those in London who came up with this lunatic idea should be removed from their positions.

Meanwhile U.S. President Joe Biden has asked for $13.7 billion in additional money for Ukraine.

He wants to fight Russia down to the very last Ukrainian. A fight Russia does not want but is assured to win.

Can Biden be held to account for this?

Comments

The turbine saga is about the most damming indictment of globalism as you could find. You would think this would be an alarm call to do as much at,or as close to home as possible. But the EU has idealogues in charge.Not rational thinkers.

Posted by: Bob | Sep 3 2022 16:17 utc | 101

Posted by: Disgusted European | Sep 3 2022 14:35 utc | 71;
I would not be surprised that the small country situation you describe is situated in the Netherlands. I absolutely agree with your comment. It is (also)fully applicable here in my little
NL country.

Posted by: DutchZ | Sep 3 2022 16:18 utc | 102

When it comes to the Ukrainian (and Western) “leadership,” I’m reminded of Rick James’ immortal words: “Cocaine is a hell of a drug.”

Posted by: worldblee | Sep 3 2022 16:19 utc | 103

The Rand Corp. planned this Ukrainian mess in a paper published in … (drum role please) 2019. One full year before the covid lockdown. Available for all to see:
https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR3063.html
But what struck me most in recent days was the comment by Nikolay Patrushev, Putin’s National Security advisor. He said that the US was out to provoke China (Pelosi, etc.) in order to seize its investments and assets like the Russian sanctions. In other words, the US has become a “robber” nation, provoking wars, and stealing what ever they can get their hands on. Seen in this context, this war cannot end, because it may be a ploy to service the dismal finances of the US. If it did suddenly stop with Russians victorious, the blob will think up something else.

Posted by: Stierlitz | Sep 3 2022 16:20 utc | 104

Posted by: GW | Sep 3 2022 16:09 utc | 101
To leaks and oil escaping!
For almost 12 years I have maintained turbines in power plants in Überolt and also in the nuclear power plants in Ukraine because these turbines were from the former GDR in Soviet times.
As for your opinion on the oil stains:
These turbines are high performance machines, I doubt you have ever seen such machines in your life!
Oil stains may be negligible on your standard machines? But definitely not with turbines!
And : Simens sent a written diagnosis to the manufacturer and recommended shutting it down !
Excerpts of this document were even made public, but not mentioned by western media.
They only published an opinion of a Simens employee who is based in Germany and has never seen these turbines !!!
The media jumped at this “opinion”!
and
From the offensive so far NO word in the media in Germany, which says enough about where the opinions in the mob should be directed.

Posted by: mo3 | Sep 3 2022 16:22 utc | 105

veto@43
Unfortunately for all concerned, particularly in the U$$K and the U$$A; both MI6 and CIA are joined at the hip and have been so since the formation of the latter in 1947, with considerable input from the Sceptred Isle.
MI6 has long been essentially a proprietary of the crime clan which owns the Crown. It is the bully-boy of highest international finance and as you correctly point out, give the orders to #10 and Whitehall. CIA is the junior partner, but does enjoy operative control of the entire Federal governmental infrastructure in the U$$A.
So the spy agency run the show, but as managers, not proprietors.

Posted by: aristodemos | Sep 3 2022 16:23 utc | 106

Posted by: Tigger | Sep 3 2022 16:01 utc | 95
“So things seem relatively cosy in Mexico. What do you do when this same artificially imposed inflation, foreign-organised riots (like already in Panama), etc. reach that US-puppet-run country of Mexico (it will happen)?”
I have no Plan B and will attempt to live off local produce and stuff since am in small town / rural area. But it might not work out.
“Would it be time to just gather your friends and start something to change matters in your own country? I mean, thanks to Germans taking such a good care of mama Merkel, the Europe is today where it stands? The change never starts if everyone in the Europe is just looking after their own arse and well-being? What do you think would happen in Russia, if everyone just chose to run to Mexico when people in Eastern Ukraine needsed their fellow country man’s support?”
My son and family decided to stay in Germany and try to tough it out. My son will no doubt be working to build a support network but also help his country and people in whatever simple ways he can. He is 30 and says it is about time he had to face some real challenges in life. Pretty good attitude but he has to be prudent with two young children and a wife to support – no ‘charging barricades’ heroics. This winter is going to be a huge test for the nation, I suspect, and hopefully he won’t regret staying instead of leaving a few months ago. Still, if he has to flee and can do so, the house is there for another 6 months until the lease is up.

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 16:30 utc | 107

Petulant, spoiled children know only to double down – will do the right thing, once all other options have been tried.
In spirit of anti-Russian hysteria:
(The Russians Are Coming, clip)
https://youtu.be/PBHYbeg2nao e
Хорошего дня

Posted by: jared | Sep 3 2022 16:32 utc | 108

At a time when the Kherson counter-offensive resembles nothing more than the Bay of Pigs (but without US air cover) I’ve finally seen an MSM reference to it in the Independent: “Troops on the ground say the Russians are putting up stiff resistance”. Pure Monty Python: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4slV0qSgvV4

Posted by: TPaine | Sep 3 2022 16:32 utc | 109

‘ Can Biden be held to account for this?’
The US is being shown to be engaging in nuclear and biological terrorism. I would tread carefully.

Posted by: financial matters | Sep 3 2022 16:36 utc | 110

Scorpion @ 93
The Mexicans I work with say its a bad time to go to Mexico. Things are falling apart. Once the cartel identifies you they are coming to your door for protection money. They recruit poor children as lookouts and have a massive network of on the ground intelligence. There is nowhere to hide.
Posted by: circumspect | Sep 3 2022 16:10 utc | 102
Thanks for the heads up. Mexico is very large country and cartel activity isn’t everywhere (also moves around). Supposedly Chavez had HQ a few miles from our modest new hill country property but that was years ago. They rarely return to places they were in. One of the big rackets now is avocados so they are terrorizing avocado farmers in Michoacan. But hopefully I can take your message as a warning and rouse brujo skills to summon spirit protectors!

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 16:36 utc | 111

I apologize if this is a stupid question but it really bugs me. Beyond the feint to Kyiv, is Russia really supplying any more assistance to Donbass forces than Ukraine receives from the West? If anything it seems to me that Russia is less economically/ militarily involved than the West. I don’t find fault with that, but then this could be another case of me having brown eyes…

Posted by: Butch | Sep 3 2022 16:42 utc | 112

@114 “….our modest new hill country property.”
Keep emphasizing the modest part. Don’t be flashy. And don’t be a boca ruidosa gringo.

Posted by: dh | Sep 3 2022 16:45 utc | 113

Ukraine is winning. All right,it isn’t winning in any sense. However, the military geniuses of the BBC, CNN and divers stink-tanks say otherwise. As do Ukrainians. New depths have been plumbed by Mrs Z. It seems that her country’s backers are counting pennies while Kiev counts casualties. Don’t see why she’s whining – she isn’t going short of pennies and she isn’t in danger of becoming a casualty.

Posted by: DilNir | Sep 3 2022 16:48 utc | 114

One mourns for the scores of thousands of young and not so young Ukrainian conscripts who are thrown into the Russian meat-grinder artillery…all for the sake of those world-power highest finance shot-callers who wish to economically destroy Russia and turn Ukraine into NovoIsrael, or NovoKhazaria, to be more precise.
Human lives are seen in the minds of the ultimate controllers of the collective West as mere goyim (cattle) to become blood sacrifices for their satanic world-control agenda;
My advice to those Ukrainian conscript soldiers and to those relatively few professional soldiers who have survived their suicidal missions from their “superiors”, to act on behalf of their own lives and those of their loved-ones.
Shoot to kill all “nationalist” retreat blocker fanatics. Kill them. They are the enforcers for the evil ones. Then with the threats from behind your backs, furl out the white flags in order to surrender to your Slavic brother Russians. From all accounts you will be treated well, as misled prodigal sons.
Advice to the Ukraine general staff and other ranking officers. You know this war with your Russian brothers is nothing less than total madness. Overthrow the regime in Kiev. Arrest fellow rankers who stubbornly refuse to get it…as a first measure. Your country is being destroyed by those who run it on behalf of their own greed and orders from the U$$K and the U$$A. The Secret police must be arrested as well as the entire administration. They will need to answer in court for their destruction of a country they only value for its monetary assets.

Posted by: aristodemos | Sep 3 2022 16:52 utc | 115

yeah…biden will be “held to account” just like bush, obama, clinton, bush sr., reagan and etc. maybe if the average yank was paying any attention to this at all but i’d say “ukraine fatigue” set in quite a while ago. the latest MSM line here is “there are reports of heavy fighting but the ukrainians have been tight lipped about how it’s going“. because it would kill the wire service borg to check out the dozens of sitreps on the internet. they also keep showing bojo for some reason…i guess the dustbin of history is getting renovated or tented for bedbugs?
i know in modern “democracies” it’s always important to have civilian control over the military but zelensky’s coked up stunts aren’t sustainable. i’m honestly surprised with all the leaks and spies around him that he hasn’t been couped and “hanged from a lightpost” yet.

Posted by: the pair | Sep 3 2022 16:52 utc | 116

Posted by: mo3 | Sep 3 2022 16:22 utc | 108
(about turbines)
also:
“So the spy agency run the show, but as managers, not proprietors.”
Posted by: aristodemos | Sep 3 2022 16:23 utc | 109
Great posts like these – and so many others – are why I greatly value this forum. And as always thanks be to b!

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 16:53 utc | 117

Scorpion @110
“I have no Plan B and will attempt to live off local produce and stuff since am in small town / rural area. But it might not work out.”
Mexico will have its problems, for foreigners propably even worse than one could expect in Germany. I do not understand how “no plan B” in Mexico is better than plan A in Germany? Even Hungary is near – but you would just end up bringing German problems to Hungary, like you do in Mexico too.
It should be your son’s wife and two kids to be taken to exile – the men should stay in homeland to make a change? What do you have left if you end up being robbed off your savings by cartels in Mexico? Then you go back to Germany and ask for help?
Hypothetical question, what happens when 1 000 000 Germans rent house from Mexico? I am sorry for pushing you, but you should really re-consider and take some responsibility. Germany has robbed all other EU countries for decades, used EMU to keep extremely good purchasing power for German people, while all others were pushed for austerity by Merkel – and now you just leave with your savings and let others to fix the mess?
No wonder why Europe is collapsing…

Posted by: Tigger | Sep 3 2022 16:54 utc | 118

Posted by: Tigger | Sep 3 2022 16:54 utc | 121
This is not really the place but you have misunderstood my situation no doubt due to my not being clear.
I don’t come from Germany but my son and family do – long story. I live in Mexico which in a way IS my Plan B. My Mexican wife’s family might offer a Plan C if necessary. (But I get captured by cartels, I doubt there will be a Plan C!) As I said, my son decided to stay in his country Germany which I think was the best decision. He was VERY upset by the covid policies and if he didn’t have wife and kids would definitely have left. The house here is rented for them in case of nuclear war or power plant blow-up or some such to serve as a bolt-hole for a few months until they can return or figure out where to move longer-term. If they leave Germany probably will end up in Malaysia, Singapore, Dubai or Thailand not Mexico. Each family has to do their best to look after themselves in the best way possible; I don’t think their decisions need to factor in long-term national karma and such.

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 17:07 utc | 119

Every fool shilling for the idiotic prolonging of this long lost war should be forced to read this, if not shoved into the trenches themselves. A criminal, shameless push to fight to the last Ukrainian, to absolutely no positive purpose, by people sitting comfortably in their easy chairs. Yes B, it SHOULD be criminal. https://poets.org/poem/dulce-et-decorum-est

Posted by: muttman | Sep 3 2022 17:08 utc | 120

A few months ago I rented my German family a small house in Mexico just in case. Cost: $1250.00 US per annum (not per month!). It’s nothing fancy but actually quite nice; 10 minute walk to small town downtown, surrounded by neighbour’s large garden and lovely view of nearby mountain range with 2 BR’s, hot water, internet. Not bad!
Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 15:43 utc | 90

Did you fly there or rent it sight unseen? Because if the latter…

Posted by: Opport Knocks | Sep 3 2022 17:09 utc | 121

More Tweets
I checked the tweet with the video of the captured YPR-765. Twitter often shows “More Tweets” somehow related to the original tweet. Today’s selection was hilarious.

Defense of Ukraine @DefenceU · 20h
Ukraine government organization
Victory
Dmytro Kuleba @DmytroKuleba · 22h
Ukraine government official
Weapons
Oleksii Reznikov @oleksiireznikov · 20h
Ukraine government official
JUSTICE
James Vasquez @jmvasquez1974 · 18h
One kid was 19 and only had the opportunity to live 1/4 of his life. I know he had four sisters and he was one of our more talented drone operator. The other young man was relatively new so I don’t know much about him but he’s still our brother.

Posted by: Petri Krohn | Sep 3 2022 17:15 utc | 122

Posted by: aristodemos | Sep 3 2022 16:23 utc | 109
Just read this article that seems to jive with what you say, use your favorite translation tool. It is not the Russian way but if they decide sometime to go for the decision centers the British embassy should be high up on the list, just like what NATO did with the Chinese one in Belgrade.
https://segodnia.ru/content/260813

Posted by: Paco | Sep 3 2022 17:15 utc | 123

It’s now time to drop the all important question, “now what?”.
Kyiv’s plan was to launch a counteroffensive sometime in August that eventually recovers all territory including Crimea.
Moscow’s plan was demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine and the liberation of Donbas.
Washington’s plan was to help Kyiv in it’s objective. One of the many reasons is to secure the industrial sector of Donbas & recover the lost money laundering opportunities for democrats, deep state and non-Trumpian republicans. And makes some arms sales money along the way.
London’s plan was to help Washington’s plan. Because what else are they going to do?
Brussel’s and Berlin’s plan was to avoid bathing in warm water, stink all day, burn firewood like neanderthals, add tweets with frostbit fingers about how all that is destroying Putin and Russia.
Now that all of these plans have reached, or nearing a conclusion (some plans have succeeded, others failed), the question is now what?

Posted by: FieryButMostPeaceful | Sep 3 2022 17:15 utc | 124

mo3 @ 108
That may well be correct. I have never seen a turbine compressor in my travels.
Scorpion @ 114
Be aware, things are changing rapidly and the cartels have been omnipresent over most of the country with each cartel taking an area sort of like how the Mob carved up the US into operating areas. Local authorities will be no help. In fact, they are on the payroll as well. Hungry may be a better choice.

Posted by: circumspect | Sep 3 2022 17:16 utc | 125

@Tigger,
If Scorpion leaves DE, he deprives those particular rulers of tax cattle, human shield, cannon fodder, or whatever else they might use him for. At least there’s that.
As for staying to organize or participate as opposition, speaking for myself, I’m not going to martyr myself to help people who never listened to years of warnings and who, as a consequence, will when TSHTF very likely accept the latest installment of lies from a new crop of liars working for the same or similar interests, support the latest wrong policies, and shoot the wrong people. There’s no way for these people to get caught up under duress on matters they ignored when they had time to judiciously study them.
I’m leaving, going somewhere yet to be decided.

Posted by: dfg | Sep 3 2022 17:25 utc | 126

Quoting Jacques Baud, “the Russians do not need to advance—it would be enough if Ukrainians themselves would come and get killed.” And they did.

Posted by: Wilikins | Sep 3 2022 17:27 utc | 127

@OttoE, Norwegian. #80, #83 etc, (I am glad your post has been deleted)
Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 3 2022 15:26 utc | 83
Although I rarely comment here, I have been reading this, and many other blogs, since before 1995, when the internet was just starting off
Yes, most of us were all sweet and innocent. Some of us used our own names, and we even phoned each other up, and met – if we had a common interest – but most of us were “anonymous”. We had no idea, what each other looked like, but we knew each other, in the pub, before the meeting, when we introduced ourselves.
Don’t dox people. It’s not nice.
I have massive respect for a few real journalists, who travel to foreign lands, and get doxed, by a former British Tory MP, and then the hotel where these journalists are staying gets bombed, 2 days later and they are lucky to survive.
I know the world is going mad, but I think you may have betrayed your own principles, which both of us respect.
Tony

Posted by: Tony_0pmoc | Sep 3 2022 17:27 utc | 128

Did you fly there or rent it sight unseen? Because if the latter…
Posted by: Opport Knocks | Sep 3 2022 17:09 utc | 124
I mentioned my little house story as an example of preparation for flight if necessary which someone else commented and didn’t expect it to garner so much interest! Sorry for the distraction.
The house we rented is next door to the rental we live in whilst we build a third 15 minutes up the road which, hopefully, will be ready to move in by March and then we’ll have enough room up there for the whole family if they need a temporary bolt-hole.
Of course there is no need to rent a house. They could flee and rent hotel rooms. But a family does better in a home with a kitchen and since it was so affordable (and that way there would be no noisy neighbours) I took it. We had already been discussing their possibly leaving Germany because of the political climate after covid but when the SMO started that raised the level of concern considerably and since the house was next door and opened up, I rented it.
Still, it might be good for some people to consider where they would go if they feel they should leave. It is not an easy choice these days if you want a good economy, a sane culture and government and the visas work out. For Americans and Canadians Mexico is an easy destination though it’s not everyone’s long-term cup of tea for sure.
In Mexico this year many hundreds of thousands of gringos (news reports are saying 5 million but I think it’s a misprint of 500,000) have moved in apparently no doubt for a wide variety of reasons not least of which is costs & inflation but some of which is government encroachments on liberty. These are older retirees and younger digital nomads mainly I believe. Probably most in Mexico City, Chapala and Puerto Vallarta, but I don’t know for sure. Presumably, they are a good market for kidnappers. Where I live I go weeks without seeing another foreigner and then suddenly see half a dozen or so downtown but that’s about it and that’s the way I like it. Apparently many Europeans have retired here but I rarely see any. They probably feel the same way I do and keep low profiles.

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 17:29 utc | 129

paco @ #126
I wouldn’t put it past Russians to target diplomatic personnel. Do note that such a thing would constitute an escalation and the reaction that would follow would make the soup boiling.

Posted by: mandella | Sep 3 2022 17:37 utc | 130

Scorpion @ 114
Be aware, things are changing rapidly and the cartels have been omnipresent over most of the country with each cartel taking an area sort of like how the Mob carved up the US into operating areas. Local authorities will be no help. In fact, they are on the payroll as well. Hungry may be a better choice.
Posted by: circumspect | Sep 3 2022 17:16 utc | 128
OK, this should be the last one!!
I found a great 38′ Atkins Nereia ketch build by a boatyard in the 70’s (ferrocement) for sale in Mexico a few years ago. Owner suddenly died. Could be had for $10,000 but I will still too ill from Lyme (which is why I moved here from cold, damp Nova Scotia) and it needed work. Not a lot, but more than I could handle in still unfamiliar country. (Basically needed a new mast, a tender and electronics, nothing else.) So I passed. That was my SHTF plan! Off to Tahiti!
I saw recently that it’s on the market for $100,000 which is well worth. Oh well…. So now I go up to Mexican hill country to watch cows make butter and goats make cheese. And probably no electricty the first year which am actually looking forward to.
And so it goes…

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 17:39 utc | 131

@Tony_0pmoc | Sep 3 2022 17:27 utc | 131

Don’t dox people. It’s not nice.

WTH. I linked to a commercial web page that is selling its its services and then using those services for political agitation without the paying customer knowing in advance.
The conference I attended was very expensive and paid for by my employer. Such places are not to be used for political agitation, period. I told the conference organizers that I will not attend again unless I get guarantees it will not happen again, they understood my point. I think others should be warned against such activities. Linking to commercial web pages is not “doxing”. Grow up.

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 3 2022 17:40 utc | 132

@ Paul Greenwood | Sep 3 2022 14:35 utc | 71
Thank you for your reply, as well as your many other informative posts, sharp humor included. (Well, except that one time you directed it at me! Hahaha…)
I was wondering, in particular though, if you thought one country or empire could cope, better than others, with a “no Russian fuel available” scenario. If an evil country thinks it possesses an edge in that scenario, perhaps an outage in Russian fuel is not an “unintended consequence” but shrews policy.

Posted by: dfg | Sep 3 2022 17:40 utc | 133

Prior comment should’ve ended with “shrewd policy”.

Posted by: dfg | Sep 3 2022 17:42 utc | 134

@ Scorpion
I like the boat idea. I browse “Yacht World” listings occasionally. But, I can’t convince my spouse!

Posted by: dfg | Sep 3 2022 17:44 utc | 135

@ Richard Whitney | Sep 3 2022 15:51 utc | 93
If you watch enough boxing matches, you will see a boxer employ the RF strategy. He will retreat, and appear to be taking a beating, all the while encouraging the enemy, causing the opponent to step up his attack while coming forward. When the opponent gets satisfied with his attack, the boxer has drawn him in and lowers the boom. Announcers often miss the strategy in real-time, but it is obvious after the fact, in replay.
It’s “Rope-a-dope
The rope-a-dope is a boxing fighting technique in which one contender draws non-injuring offensive punches (while leaning against the rope of the boxing ring) to let the opponent tire themselves out. This gives the former the opportunity to then execute devastating offensive maneuvers to help them win. The rope-a-dope is most famously associated with Muhammad Ali in his October 1974 Rumble in the Jungle match against world heavyweight champion George Foreman in Kinshasa, Zaire. — wiki

Posted by: Don Bacon | Sep 3 2022 17:50 utc | 136

I like the boat idea. I browse “Yacht World” listings occasionally. But, I can’t convince my spouse!
Posted by: dfg | Sep 3 2022 17:44 utc | 137
Dmitri Orlov had a great project for a while. Quidnon (why not). A 50′ junk-sailed ocean cruising flat-bottomed barge-houseboat.
But he junked the project and moved back to Russia! I think you’ll enjoy: https://quidnon.blogspot.com/
Hint: if you are old, go small rather than large unless you have many crew.
If you are old you might do better with catamaran, though I’ve never been on one (yet).
If you are poor, consider ferrocement, the favorite of many bluewater sailors – low maintenance, breathes, no rot, easy to repair if well made, costs 30% of equivalent plastic and better. Wood is best but requires continual maintenance. Iron (imo) is nuts… rusts; aluminum ok but a) pricey and b) no ‘soul’.

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 17:55 utc | 137

Did I tell you about the time I sailed on a recently built large sailboat in faraway international waters and the mast fell? . . .I guess not.

Posted by: Don Bacon | Sep 3 2022 17:56 utc | 138

@ Scorpion
Thanks! for the interesting tips and link.

Posted by: dfg | Sep 3 2022 18:01 utc | 139

Kyiv Independent prints some truth!! . .quote
Suicide missions, abuse, physical threats: International Legion fighters speak out against leadership’s misconduct

The leadership of the intelligence-run wing of the International Legion is allegedly implicated in various violations, including abuse, theft, and sending soldiers unprepared on reckless missions.
One of the unit’s commanders and a frequent subject of the soldiers’ complaints is an alleged former member of a criminal organization from Poland, wanted at home for fraud. In the Legion’s unit, he is involved in coordinating military operations and logistics.
The legion’s fighters accuse him of abusing power by ordering soldiers to loot shops, threatening soldiers with a gun, and sexually harassing the legion’s female medics. . . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Sep 3 2022 18:04 utc | 140

Now what?

@FieryButMostPeaceful | Sep 3 2022 17:15 utc | 127
Now that all of these plans have reached, or nearing a conclusion (some plans have succeeded, others failed), the question is now what?

The same question was in the air on the evening of July 16th, 2014. There was the eerie feeling of entering the unknown. The Southern Cauldron had closed. Over 4000 Ukrainian troops were trapped between the Novorossiyan Armed Forces and the Russian border. Most would later die. Only the sky falling could save them. Ukraine would need to sue for peace. Donbass would be free.
The question was answered in the afternoon of the 17th of July. MH17 would fall from the sky. The West started its sanction war against Russia. The timing could not have been an accident.

Posted by: Petri Krohn | Sep 3 2022 18:07 utc | 141

Scorpion
The much discussed Mexican cartels are US intelligence operations. Mexico is always one step from behaving like a sovereign independent country, they require discipline. Cartels are purely a playground for Langley to practice and train and enjoy being scum. Trade in drugs and guns is and ever has been fully controlled. Yes, you are most likely to be singled out, if you are, for mundane reasons by low level thugs. But anything is possible.
Some genius in Langley or Chatham came up with the Kherson offensive. Which made no sense at all, Nothing in the empire does. Don’t expect Mexico to be a complete refuge from Empire insanity. I certainly can’t come up with a safer destination. We live in interesting times.

Posted by: oldhippie | Sep 3 2022 18:11 utc | 142

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 3 2022 17:40 utc | 134
“Linking to commercial web pages is not “doxing”. Grow up.”
Well, I was nearly a friend of Craig Murray, though never actually met him. It is entirely possible and likely, that he banned me from his blog, because I accidentally posted on some newspaper related blog, (probably even his own) who were hounding him at the time, that he and his family, had another commercial interest and private company, totally unrelated to his political activities.
In the UK, if you are a Company Director, even if its a tiny little company, unless you cheat, using methods that are legal, it is extremely easy to find your company’s registered address.
Two days later, he had all the media banging at his door
A year later he is in jail.
Craig Murray didn’t do anything wrong.
I just didn’t think. I didn’t deliberately dox him.
I merely hinted the information is easy to find.
If you really want to, it is not that hard to find almost anyone, especially if they haven’t done anything wrong.
I gave up my computer sh1t in 2004, and had been on loads of very expensive courses paid by my employer (private large British company)
It was 9/11 that did my head in. No one would believe me
It’s a lot worse now.
I merely told the truth, sometimes not thinking about the possible consequences.
Tony

Posted by: Tony_0pmoc | Sep 3 2022 18:22 utc | 143

@ Don Bacon | Sep 3 2022 17:56 utc | 141
I’m definitely interested in your story. Maybe post it to the open thread, since I think I’m already testing b’s patience? 😉
Looks like it should be the thread on page “open-not-ukraine-thread-2022-142.html”.
BTW, if retelling your story potentially doxes you, no need to share.
@ Petri Krohn | Sep 3 2022 18:07 utc | 144
@ oldhippie | Sep 3 2022 18:11 utc | 145
Oh…god. What a world. Thanks for the reminders, tips.

Posted by: dfg | Sep 3 2022 18:23 utc | 144

Posted by: DutchZ | Sep 3 2022 16:18 utc | 105
Have you also noticed that now that in the Netherlands the population is suffering under inflation and can’t pay their bills anymore that all of the sudden the media has launched an offensive where they showing how bad it is for Ukrainians, how they are suffering under war conditions ?
As if there is some director saying, “people in Holland should stop whining look at the suffering in Ukraine.”

Posted by: Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 18:24 utc | 145

Some genius in Langley or Chatham came up with the Kherson offensive. Which made no sense at all, Nothing in the empire does. Don’t expect Mexico to be a complete refuge from Empire insanity. I certainly can’t come up with a safer destination. We live in interesting times.
Posted by: oldhippie | Sep 3 2022 18:11 utc | 145
Another short paragraph by oldhippie which says it all! Gracias!
Well, I don’t regard it as a refuge except in one regard: when considering where to retire on current income with current visa possibilities I picked Mexico 50% for climate and 50% economy. That’s what I told myself at the time. But in fact I picked it because after spending a few week’s at an old American friend’s house in a small town where Trotsky got shot in Michoacan, and not speaking a word of Spanish (though do – poorly – speak German, French & Italian so it’s not a complete mystery) I found I really liked it. Why? Simplest way of saying is the for me it feels more real whereas US and Canada now feel artificial, stretched. I would have liked to move to States down south but the humidity in FLA, GA, LA is too much and I never made it as far West as AZ, NV and CA. I’m an East Coast – Atlantic – Brit zone person who somehow found Mexico close enough to the Atlantic to be acceptable. There are many things I dislike greatly but have no yen to go back Stateside and now have a wife who doesn’t want it either though she would follow me if I were to insist.
But I never thought of it as a refuge in dangerous times. I just find it more human realm or something. Good refuge? Maine, Azores, BC Pacific NW islands maybe. Or downtown NYC might be just as good!!

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 18:24 utc | 146

The far-right ISW, way down the page, displays its ignorance by saying that Russian talk about Ukraine failure “due to a lack of constant Ukrainian claims of territorial gains is a deliberate obfuscation of reality.” . . .quote

. . .Russian milbloggers increased their amplification of these narratives on September 1-2 as the information space around the success and tempo of the Ukrainian counteroffensive remained murky.[8] Russian sources will likely continue propagating these false information narratives to exploit Ukrainian operational silence. As ISW has previously noted, complex counteroffensives cannot be resolved overnight or in a matter of days, and the Russian presentation of an immediate Ukrainian failure due to a lack of constant Ukrainian claims of territorial gains is a deliberate obfuscation of reality.[9] . . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Sep 3 2022 18:28 utc | 147

I lived in Puerto Vallarta before moving back to the States.
If you pay attention, not a problem.

Posted by: Duncan Idaho | Sep 3 2022 18:38 utc | 148

In the end, Russia will be faced with a failed state on its border.
With the warning nobody can predict the Russian moves.
Posted by: jhill | Sep 3 2022 11:19 utc | 8
You need to add the EU to that observation.
An EU with no ability or resolve to prevent millions of Ukrainians moving there.
And flooding the EU with who knows what weapons wise.
Wait until the Ukrainians start thinking about the fact that their sons were butchered for neocon hubris and corporate greed.
The EU could become a very dangerous place.

Posted by: Jpc | Sep 3 2022 18:42 utc | 149

@wagelaborer | Sep 3 2022 15:32 utc | 83
Sorry, your reply escaped my earlier attention. But I am 100% with you. The bioweapon threat is IMHO in the same league like the nuclear one. With the big distinctions that (1) It is apparently pursued by one side only, and (2) It is purely aggressive, not defensive, not even deterrent. This my assessment is as long valid as the programs (all several hundreds of them) are not laid open to 100% to the world.
Apropos Organic Consumers: Naturalblaze were the first who made me aware of such research. In January 2018 they published an indeed “explosive” article by Dilyana Gaytandzhieva.

Posted by: OttoE | Sep 3 2022 18:47 utc | 150

Can Biden be held to account for this?
Posted by b on September 3, 2022 at 10:37 UTC | Permalink
Regretfully, no. Any accountability for all things WH, three-letter agencies – the Pentagon, ended and was buried on Jan 7, 2021 at 3 a.m.

Posted by: ERing46Z | Sep 3 2022 18:47 utc | 151

@ERing46Z | Sep 3 2022 18:47 utc | 154
On November 22, 1963.

Posted by: too scents | Sep 3 2022 19:00 utc | 152

Intelslava video More than 70,000 Czechs are rallying in Prague demanding the resignation of the government, cheap Russian gas and neutrality. – One reason more to love my southern neighbors. Just asking: In case you get what you demand and we keep stuck with the NATO Greens: I’m looking for a hut in Krkonoše as an exile for 3 people…

Posted by: OttoE | Sep 3 2022 19:06 utc | 153

@ Flying Dutchman | Sep 3 2022 11:17 utc | 6
I think Hill and Stent got that substantially wrong. Everything I read at the time indicated that Russia’s bottom line was recognition of the accession of Crimea into Russia and the Donbass republics territory in full.

Posted by: Figleaf23 | Sep 3 2022 19:22 utc | 154

Posted by: oldhippie | Sep 3 2022 18:11 utc | 145
Great clarity.

Posted by: anon2020 | Sep 3 2022 19:25 utc | 155

https://t.me/intelslava/36343
Graphic but it shows the UAF troops didn’t stand a chance
Posted by: Down South | Sep 3 2022 11:32 utc | 14
I noticed a lot of US dollars. Makes me wonder if a US mercenary is among the deceased.

Posted by: Guernica | Sep 3 2022 19:26 utc | 156

@48 john
I agree, John. Wholeheartedly.
The poor Ukrainians being forced to fight deserve our heartfelt prayers and best wishes for their souls.
But we shouldn’t kid ourselves that there is proof the Ukes treat Russian POWs in the most heinous ways.
To be a soldier means to bury any inkling of care and humanity until the surrender order has been signed by the opposing side.

Posted by: NemesisCalling | Sep 3 2022 19:31 utc | 157

A winter without energy from the Ukraine to the Atlantic. There is no making sense of the Atlanticisms vision for humanity. I guess that is a clear way to reduce CO2 emissions and depopulate the planet. Even if they fell from power what would replace them? There is nothing on standby waiting to take over for them. It is the same in the USA. There are no options other than Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dumb.
oldhippie @ 145
I work with a guy who came out of the cartel as a child. I am sure the agency has some sort of revenue money laundering sharing agreement but these entities are also deeply independent and dangerous. I could go on but it is a bit off thread.
Mexicans are a proud people. It is nothing like we read about in the papers and nothing like 5 or 10 years ago or anything like the ’60’s when they did not exist.

Posted by: circumspect | Sep 3 2022 19:31 utc | 158

Posted by: Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 18:24 utc | 148
Posted by: DutchZ | Sep 3 2022 16:18 utc | 105
I first visited Holland in 1968. My Dad (English – Stockton-on-Tees, and later Oldham) but well travelled, was talking Pigeon English as if he was back in China) to the Dutch people we met who spoke better English, than us.
I have always liked the Dutch, and did a tour of Amsterdam (even the naughty bits) with my wife and 10 year old daughter in the year 2000
The trains were far more advanced than anything in England. Everyone in Amsterdam incredibly friendly..We cycled round all the museums..the lot…
The Dutch people hadn’t changed at all – still the same
But the culture was different to London where we still live.
It was almost exactly the same degree of cultural difference as Dublin, where we also took our 10 year old daughter for a long weekend.
people were just so nice to us.
they all knew we were English.
I am currently totally disgusted with The British Government
It seems they are a total embarrassment, to both the CIA and Mossad, and you can’t get much worse than that.
But I am staying here in London.
It’s my home and we get on.
These Malthusian London lunatics in power will soon be gone.
There is no fundamental shortage of energy nor food
If your head can handle it – start off with The Sociopath next door -by Martha Stout.. Only attempt to read Political Ponererolgy, if you already know how completly evil, some humans can be to each other.
Psychology is incredibly powerful. It has been basis of religious cults like The Roman Catholic Church for thousands of years.
People from childhood, believe what they are brainwashed with.
It’s very hard to escape the cult, because you believe nearly everything they tell you on your tv screen or mobile phone.
Read a book instead, and start writing and form a band
It’s your world too.
Tony

Posted by: Tony_0pmoc | Sep 3 2022 19:46 utc | 159

@ Exile | Sep 3 2022 12:59 utc | 44
There is even a much more recent example right in the Ukraine theatre — the Debaltseve pocket.

Posted by: Figleaf23 | Sep 3 2022 19:46 utc | 160

@Tony_0pmoc | Sep 3 2022 18:22 utc | 146
Cc: Norwegian
I asked Norwegian for a name. I meant of course that of the company. But failed to make that clear. My bad. As it turns out, the company IS synonymous with his name. A dilemma for those wo want to boycott. Can’t tell the name, because… doxing?
Your Craig Murray analogy is only half convincing. Your “didn’t do anything wrong” is in our case half untrue, half vague. Do you mean “legally wrong”? Then the question arises, whose law it is and whether or not it is applied justly to all citizens. Ask Murray himself, he can give you a lesson on that. – Morally, the C++ guy DID wrong. And he KEEPS DOING wrong. In public and in bold letters. Just look at his homepage, top right corner. “Stop the war criminal Putin!” He WANTS his name connected with this message. That’s not doxing. That’s advertising.
We had long discussions about International Law (when is the use of the military accepted, when is it not), the Geneva Conventions, etc., also at this bar. Nothing, I repeat nothing, points to Putin being a criminal. Very much on the contrary. Especially if compared with the POTUSs of the last decades. Just look from Clinton onwards. All of them outmatch Putin in this field.

Posted by: OttoE | Sep 3 2022 19:46 utc | 161

@njet 34
A measured concise job describing the war till now.
Particularly well stated on why the west is “winning” the management of the information battle
quoting from the piece:
“Ultimately, Ukraine’s ability to shape the narrative has been aided and abetted by four major facets of the information war:
1 Russia has done little to contest Ukraine in the information space. Ukraine enthusiasts eagerly propagate Ukrainian claims, no matter how absurd, but the information coming from the Russian side mostly takes the form of dry briefings from the MOD. Ukraine is playing a Marvel movie, Russia is putting on a webinar.
2 Russia’s operational plans are a secret. This very fact allows the Ukrainian side to interpolate their aims, putting words in Russia’s mouth, as it were. This is how we got to the claim that Russia expected Kiev to fall in three days, but more generally the inherent uncertainty in war favors the side with the more aggressive propaganda arm.
3 People, to put it bluntly, don’t know anything about war. They don’t know that armies use up lots of vehicles in a high intensity conflict, and so a picture of a burning tank seems very important to them. They had never heard of MLRS before this year, so the HIMARS seems like a futuristic wonder weapon. They don’t know that ammo dumps are a very common target, so videos of big explosions seem like a turning point.
4 Finally, Ukraine has enjoyed the enthusiastic collaboration of western governments, government-controlled “thinktanks” like the Institute for the Study of War, and western media.
Through the interaction of these factors, people are being barraged with information which they are not equipped to interpret, and the sheer noise has convinced most people that Ukraine is, if not winning outright, at the very least badly frustrating the Russian army and exposing Russian incompetence.”
A good summary of why I am in the minority when discussing the war with my friends

Posted by: Lone Plateau | Sep 3 2022 19:48 utc | 162

Military Summary reports that the 3rd Army Corps (equipped with the newest weaponry, manned by volunteers) is moving from Rostov towards the Zaporozhye oblast where on September the 11th a referendum will be held (together with the people in Kherson oblast) with the question of joining the Russian Federation. This new armed force is expected to attack the area close to the city of Zaporozhye. Obviously this will strengthen the will of those who are praying & politically willing that their oblast becomes Russian and it functions as a signal as well to those who are now literally waiting in the dark for the coming of the (electric) light that will come simultaneously together with the liberation of the area by the Russians.

Posted by: Oblomovka daydream | Sep 3 2022 19:50 utc | 163

I’d say the biggest factor is people have no idea just how fortified the Donbas is. On the other hand the Russians have little incentive to move ,as long as Kiev keeps dispatching troops to the grinder. Given the situation in Europe. A longer war may prove more beneficial,than a quick push before winter.

Posted by: Bob | Sep 3 2022 19:56 utc | 164

@OttoE | Sep 3 2022 19:46 utc | 162
Thank you.

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 3 2022 20:00 utc | 165

Scorpion. Do you know B Traven. A refugee from the Munich Communist uprising after WW1 he ended up on Mexico and wrote some incredible novels, in English. One of them-Treasure of the Sierra Madre he adapted for John Huston’s movie.

Posted by: bevin | Sep 3 2022 20:00 utc | 166

Posted by: Bob | Sep 3 2022 19:56 utc | 165
All the news is about Kherson at the moment, but the Rus army is still slowly pushing in Donbass and creating a new deep cauldron, in fact for the first time the Rus army has pushed the Ukr Army away from Donetsk. They just taking their time minimizing their own losses while maximizing the Ukr losses.
War of attrition in my opinion.

Posted by: Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 20:13 utc | 167

Apparently, the Ukrainian Forces training in the UK has not gone well. That is, according to a US military assessment. … See here:
https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1566023495665999873
I wonder if the UK Army has upgraded the highly-vaunted ‘NATO Standards’ implemented over the past 8 years, or perhaps the Ukrainians have just had enough of this charade.

Posted by: Robert | Sep 3 2022 20:14 utc | 168

It seems two key interventions in the Ukraine conflict by Brits PM Boris Johnson (April 9th and 26th August not including his visit on June 17th)have both prolonged and intensified the hostilities resulting in the massive slaughter of combatants predominantly Ukranian conscripts in actions that were ill judged and executed with little or no military foresight. At its most cynical the excessive casualties suffered by Ukraine might suggest that this was a planned outcome by MI6/CIA Western Intelligence to create a hurricane of grief and hatred in Western and Central Ukraine sufficient to fuel a proxy war against Russia for decades.
Boris Johnsons unmistakeable role in this NATO proxy war should be understood in this context and every effort made to publicise and expose his criminality and the guilt of the UK’s Military and Intelligence assets operating in Ukraine.

Posted by: Rick | Sep 3 2022 20:16 utc | 169

Reading Disgusted European’s posting, this Irish-American couldn’t help thinking about Ireland. If Ireland isn’t the small European country about which he writes, it might as well be.

Posted by: Lysias | Sep 3 2022 20:23 utc | 170

My wife sent me today a screenshot of a blog entry, which she found somewhere on “reddit” and wanted to know what I think about it. In this text an alleged LPR volunteer called “Murz” says that he believes the AFU offensive in the south can be repelled quite easily but that then he fears the DPR and LPR generals will take this as the signal to start an offensive of their own – and that this will fail miserably because the DPR and LPR forces are in a very poor state.
I cant’t share the screenshot, but it contained a link to the original blog entry – which is in russian. So the text in the screenshot seems to be (auto?)translated.
The link is: https://kenigtiger.livejournal.com/2177221.html
Actually, I don’t know what to think of it. So I just share it and I’d like to know what the barflies make of it.

Posted by: Helmuth von Moltke | Sep 3 2022 20:29 utc | 171

@bevin:
No, have been internetting too much past few years. Need to change that. Thanks for the recommendation.
@circumspect: thxs for the warning. Antennas up.
(I know nothing of the cartels except that Intelligence is involved but, as you said above, have always also assumed that there is mucho local flavor and no doubt the muscle types would think nothing of inflicting pain or death as part of their internal honor code. But again, I know nothing and hopefully will never find out!)
I know and appreciate enough about Mexico to not be so arrogant as to presume I could even scratch the surface even were I to spend years trying. I regard it as one of the world’s great cultures but it is so different from the Europe and America I grew up in that I cannot really see what is going on, even when right in front of me. So I am happy to be a guest here and try to behave accordingly, with humility and respect. Where we are is Olmeca territory, the civilization millenia before the Aztecs, so the people here have been around since before the flood. Mexico is a country with many layers and levels, most of which I can only dimly perceive, only barely guessing…

Posted by: Scorpion | Sep 3 2022 20:33 utc | 172

Posted by: Helmuth von Moltke | Sep 3 2022 20:29 utc | 172
Seems like a bunch of nonsense
I’m not an insider or anything, but I know enough about military stuff that nothing happens on the ground in Ukraine that is not approved by Rus mil high command.
DPR and LPR generals can not just launch an offensive on their own, without severe consequences for themselves, there is of course a unified command of the Rus MOD that they have to obey or else.

Posted by: Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 20:39 utc | 173

You can make allowances for Boudicea and the 1st century Celtic Britons for not knowing better against the Romans. But the UK military have 2,000 years of military history from which to draw from.
If the Ukrainian people do not rise up against Zelensky by how, there’s little hope for them.

Posted by: SeanInNYC | Sep 3 2022 20:40 utc | 174

There will be no Minsk 3.
There will be Russia’s terms.
https://www.lauriemeadows.info/conflict_security/Treaties_of%20_Settlement-Ukraine.html
Denazification will require Ukraine to agree a new constitution. What did the Germans enact (constitutionally) to de-nazify?
That may be a clue.
But even that, as Lavrov said, is not the ‘main thing’.
A security treaty with Europe is.

Posted by: Powerandpeople | Sep 3 2022 20:49 utc | 175

There will be no Minsk 3.
There will be Russia’s terms.
https://www.lauriemeadows.info/conflict_security/Treaties_of%20_Settlement-Ukraine.html
Denazification will require Ukraine to agree a new constitution. What did the Germans enact (constitutionally) to de-nazify?
That may be a clue.
But even that, as Lavrov said, is not the ‘main thing’.
A security treaty with Europe is.

Posted by: Powerandpeople | Sep 3 2022 20:49 utc | 176

So the IAEA cukoo is in the ZNPP nest. Russia looks on as they post more western propaganda and form opinion against Russia. In the months ahead there is serious risk that this will be used to frustrate Liberation forces accession of the NPP’s just further west.
The IAEA is a fully owned subsidiary of Western mendacity. Watch that space.

Posted by: uncle tungsten | Sep 3 2022 20:57 utc | 177

@Bemildred
I read a long form piece a few years ago about how Churchill was notorious for accumulating bad debts and welching on his payments, abusing his political power as cover as much as he could manage. He died a pauper and would have been otherwise buried anonymously if not
for his name. The man didn’t nearly stack up to the myth.

Posted by: nwwoods | Sep 3 2022 21:04 utc | 178

Oblomovka daydream | Sep 3 2022 19:50 utc | 164
Ah yes, the 3rd Corps. I’m wondering whether it’s there to actually go into battle or whether it’s just part of the Russian military excercises currently going on.

Rick | Sep 3 2022 20:16 utc | 170
“It seems two key interventions in the Ukraine conflict by Brits PM Boris Johnson (April 9th and 26th August not including his visit on June 17th)have both prolonged and intensified the hostilities…”
And yet there are still people who regard the US government as the leading perpetrator in this conflict.

Helmuth von Moltke | Sep 3 2022 20:29 utc | 172
Verehrter Graf Moltke,
“very poor state” sounds very, very exaggerated to me. But they certainly will be worn and depleted, won’t they? It’s them who do most of the fighting, and dying.

Posted by: Scotch Bingeington | Sep 3 2022 21:08 utc | 179

Take a look for yourself what happened in Prague today:
70,000 protest against sanctions over prizes against aid to Ukraine
.
https://ibb.co/qMmyNZm

Posted by: mo3 | Sep 3 2022 21:17 utc | 180

BoJo needs simple messages. He can just about understand the difference between ‘ Market Forces will Decide ‘ rules Ok and ‘personal greed ‘ rules ok. He is a modern oligarch.
But the idea that the vacuum of his brain has encompassed the ethics of murdering Ukranian Conscripts is ridiculous. This is a man who broke every ministerial code solely in order Not to be Prime Minister when a criminal interventionust invasion was taking place.

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2022 21:28 utc | 181

Ukraine made another effort to attack ZNPP last night? after all that failure/ that’s insane, completely ueffort nmoored leadership.
Posted by: annie | Sep 3 2022 14:39 utc | 73
From what I am reading on this MoA string, Zelensky may not have a choice. Someone on this string noted that the UK and others in the EU/ US may have informed Zelensky that either he makes some real progress in field against Russia soon or be prepared to go to the negotiation table with nothing in hand. I suspect that the western mushrooms are starting to wake up, as they notice that the war is starting to hurt where mushrooms hurt the most: The wallet.

Posted by: Guernica | Sep 3 2022 21:29 utc | 182

Germany has robbed all other EU countries for decades
Posted by: Tigger | Sep 3 2022 16:54 utc | 119
While this statement has some merit, reality is not as one-sided.
Please note the euro was the price Kohl had to pay for Mitterand to agree with German re-unification.
Also, all euro countries used the introduction of the euro to have a quick devaluation, at the expense of Germany.

Posted by: Passerby | Sep 3 2022 21:29 utc | 183

Thanks to Zelensky for reminding me to cue up Scarface after dinner tonight. Excellent suggestion.

Posted by: nwwoods | Sep 3 2022 21:32 utc | 184

b. Those in London who came up with this lunatic idea should be removed from their positions.
As I understood, Truss is the favourite as the new PM. It will be even worse when she will be chosen.

Posted by: Olivier | Sep 3 2022 21:46 utc | 185

@xLemming:
The people are deceived via their own weaknesses, primarily pride. The deceivers make them believe that they are superior intellects capable of “critical thinking” (where in reality they are full manipulated useful idiots without ever having had an original thought in their entire lives).
Their power of critical thought is then expressed by passively consuming the “reasonings” of the “fact checkers” and debunkers of “conspiracy theories”.
In this fashion they are made to feel superior to the “flat earthers” and internalize whatever narrative they are being fed.
Now I am asking you: should we feel empathy for these people?
I say no. It is their own shortcoming of character that leads them to ruin.

Posted by: bottle | Sep 3 2022 21:51 utc | 186

Be forever thankful that you’re not an innocent child born in Ukraine

Posted by: sadness | Sep 3 2022 22:02 utc | 187

Have posted the machine translated latest Rus mod briefing on US bio weapons here for any interested.
https://vk.com/@739151204-bio-weapons-briefing-september-3

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:08 utc | 188

uncle tungsten | Sep 3 2022 20:57 utc | 178
The western clownshow will not outwit current Russia leadership. These organizations will be used and abused by Russia commensurate with the level of corruption in these organizations.
Putin and Lavrov are far from being suckers. It is all part of de-Americanizing the world.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:17 utc | 189

Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 20:39 utc | 174
Jimmy the tool, DPR and LPR can act autonomously. We saw that with the attempted crossing of the Donets river some time back.
Because it wasn’t Russia, the crossing was a tactical defeat of Donbas forces.
Keep up the good work and continue trolling. Everyone must earn their pieces of silver.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:29 utc | 190

@Disgusted European
Add to that that many people now can no longer listen to a reasoned argument, in effect cannot bear anyone else but themselves speaking.
To manipulate these people you have to feed the “information” packaged with music, images and in very small bites and do that for extended periods, day in day out.
Do that on a subliminal level, e.g. as background noise or insert the villain of the day and some (not necessarily related) notion with negative connotations in the same sentence, even if completely nonsensical.
In the United States for example the population has been habituated to be in the presence of a running TV at all times and everywhere: in the fitness center, at the oil change, in the halls of “universities”, …
From this background flow fragments like Putin,…, war crimes,…, chemical attack,…
and it sounds so familiar, you hard it before: Saddam,…,weapons of mass destruction,…,war crimes,…
The background noise of the TV is like the proof that the civilization is still alive much like an animal herd bleats constantly to assure the members of its continued existence.
This is the intellectual food the population grazes on.
It is the state of the “behavioural sink”, which you may want to look up on Wikipedia for your amusement.

Posted by: bottle | Sep 3 2022 22:29 utc | 191

Helmuth von Moltke | Sep 3 2022 20:29 utc | 172
You usurp as a username, the name of someone far more intelligent than yourself.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:34 utc | 192

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:29 utc | 191
O wow, what did I do to you ?
You got me confused with Jimmy2 or something ?
I been on this board for months man

Posted by: Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 22:35 utc | 193

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:34 utc | 193
O I got it now, you just accuse others of what you are yourself, all clear now

Posted by: Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 22:37 utc | 194

Jimmy | Sep 3 2022 22:35 utc | 194
My apologies. I am not properly keeping up with usernames. I am tired, pissed, and pissed off.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:42 utc | 195

Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:08 utc
Thanks for the biolab update.

Posted by: spudski | Sep 3 2022 22:50 utc | 196

The common people of Mexico, no matter where I have traveled, are among the most gracious, kind and welcoming people one could find anyplace.
Merida, Cancun, Cozumel, Playa Del Carmen, Juarez, Chihuahua, Las Barrancas Del Cobre, Matamoros are the places I have visited.
Never had any issue with the people. Beautiful, smiling, happy people.

Posted by: Chaka Khagan | Sep 3 2022 22:54 utc | 197

Peter AU1 | Sep 3 2022 22:17 utc | 190
Glad to see you back … and I agree with your comment.
80% of the world (ROW) could care less what the West pontificates.
“The West” is over … The Empire is done … but won’t accept it.
Reminds me a bit of Blanche in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ …
The rise and fall of … Blanche, a faded Southern Belle …
who succumbs to madness.
Strange, to me anyway, that many saw madness on exhibit in Biden’s speech Thursday night … and fail to see the madness of US/NATO forcing Ukrainians to fight in a faux “proxy” SMO (war) they couldn’t possibly win to start with, while Empire continues to throw money and weapons … and men into the mess.
Madness.

Posted by: crone | Sep 3 2022 22:54 utc | 198

What is seen with the naked eye is a reflection. According to the relatively understood laws of physics the eye receives photons, and neurons transmit that reception to the brain, which then translates it into what we perceive as thought, recognition, understanding. What we are seeing with our physical eyes is an after image of what has already occurred, quite literally. What makes the things that we can visibly see happen, has already finished happening, well before that.
Such is also the case here.

Posted by: Josh | Sep 3 2022 22:54 utc | 199

Meanwhile, in the country Boris Johnson has thoroughly ruined in the twin manufactured crises of the 2020’s (so far :wink:):
Whitehall chiefs set to use carbon paper for important documents in case of blackouts amid crisis
GOVERNMENT officials are preparing to use carbon paper to make copies of important documents if Britain is hit by devastating blackouts.
It is part of Doomsday planning across Whitehall amid fears the energy crisis could cause power cuts this winter.

If things are about to get so bad that London – the only part of the UK its elite gives a damn about – London, one of the wealthiest and most populated cities (or alternatively, shitholes) on the planet can’t keep the lights on in winter… the UK is doomed.
If the UK is doomed, the whole of Western Europe ist kaput, because they have even fewer energy options. By the spring, Western Europe will be a very different place. The US will not escape being sucked into the cascading failures of Europe’s business, then financial sectors. The sanctions, having gained immense kinetic energy through gravitationally slingshotting across the planet, will finally return to its place of origin, the good old USA. Like an atom bomb, baby. This isn’t an American grand strategy, it’s their collective foolishness, hubris and aloofness from the punch-in-the-mouth realities of life writ grandly, to their strategic undoing.
But we already knew that.
Madness, of course. Future historians (Chinese ones, presumably) will hold up the cautionary tale of how the West finally overextended itself – and thus toppled to its demise as global rules-setters – in what should’ve been a minor territorial incursion at worst in a country that, while important to Russia, is strategically of minor importance at best to the West.
But, as my gran used to say: “their eyes are bigger’n their bellies”

Posted by: ZX | Sep 3 2022 22:55 utc | 200