Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
November 11, 2025
How To Start War With Russia – A British Think Tank Has Ideas

Once a while the writers at RUSI, the British Ministry of Defense think tank, produce some valuable research. Mostly though they are out to push war mongering nonsense. A recent piece in Foreign Affairs by Jack Waitling is of the later kind.

Ukraine’s Hardest WinterForeign Affairs, Nov 11 2025
With the Donbas in Peril, Europe Must Pressure Russia Now

I’ll leave the dozens of outright lies, false assertions and delusions therein for others to mock.

Waitling’s main thesis is that more (economic) pressure on Russia will somehow press it towards a ceasefire without concessions from the Ukrainian side. But his suggestions on how to do that are all designed to drag Europe into an even more direct battle with Russia.

To support the Ukrainian campaign against Russia’s oil industry the Europeans should close the Strait of Denmark:

For Ukraine’s international partners, the question is whether they are prepared to match Ukraine’s campaign against Russia’s oil infrastructure with comparable real rather than performative pressure on Russia’s economy. Above all, this means targeting Russia’s shadow fleet: the hundreds of decrepit tankers, operating under flags of convenience, often without insurance or trained crew, to move its oil to India and China. This will require denying the 80 percent of Russian seaborne oil exports that pass through the Strait of Denmark and threatening secondary sanctions against the ports where shadow fleet vessels unload.

Some European governments—including Denmark—have cited the 1857 Treaty of Copenhagen, an international agreement that established tariff-free transit of commercial shipping through Danish waters, as a legal barrier to action. But this is an excuse rather than a real obstacle. The countries that have a Baltic coastline today, excluding Russia, could agree to a new treaty requiring ships to meet certain standards of insurance and certification to be allowed to navigate the Baltic—for example, on grounds of ecological protection. Since the aging vessels of the shadow fleet do not meet these requirements, such a treaty would deny them entry into the straits. This would not impinge on the principle of tariff-free transit for commercial shipping through Danish waters.

Nice idea. But would enforce such nonsense and how?


Neither Russia, nor any non-NATO country, would recognize such new treaty. Ships not insured in London, i.e. the ‘shadow fleet’, would continue to sail but be accompanied by Russian naval forces. What country will be willing to sink the Russian frigate that protects a ‘shadow ship’ convoy from outside intervention? On what legal grounds?

Ukraine does not have a recruitment problem, Waitling claims, but must receive better in country training by NATO forces:

There has been widespread confusion about Ukraine’s manpower situation. On the one hand, Ukraine has enough people to keep fighting. Nationally, there is no manpower problem. But the number of combat-ready infantry in the Armed Forces of Ukraine has been declining for almost two years. At some point, it will hit a level that will render it impossible to hold the front, barring a shift in Kyiv’s approach to force generation.

The challenge is less about pulling people off the street and more about improving the quality and capacity of training and integration of Ukrainian infantry into combat brigades. There are more people serving in the Ukrainian military today than at any point during the war, but the military is unable to train its personnel to perform frontline combat functions. To solve this growing problem, Ukraine’s new Army Corps will need to establish brigade rotations and allow better units to help train the less capable ones.

With more than 160,000 desertions this year alone in Ukraine one might doubt that better training would somehow result in more Ukrainian troops on the frontline.

This is an area in which Ukraine’s international partners can make a significant contribution.

European states could also deliver in-country military training. By allowing Ukrainian forces to train on their equipment, in a setting in which European trainers would be supported by the Ukrainian commanders who will ultimately employ these soldiers, such a step would directly address Ukraine’s force generation challenges. It is true that the presence of European trainers in Ukraine would provide an inviting target for Russia. But Russia has had limited success targeting Ukrainian trainers, so this is clearly a manageable risk, and it could play a key role in building the units Ukraine needs to sustain its defensive line.

What can European NATO trainers, which have zero recent experience in war, teach Ukrainian soldiers who have fought a high intensity conflict for over three years? Who will be willing to send these trainers to Ukraine? What is the plan after dozens of them die due to the inevitable Russian missile attack that will follow such their deployment?

Waitling does not only want to push western ‘trainers’ into Ukraine, but also their air forces:

Poland and Romania could request Ukrainian permission to engage air threats over Ukrainian airspace that are approaching NATO’s border, just as Israel intercepted many of Iran’s Shahed-136 drones in Jordanian airspace. Without creating an obligation for Poland, Romania, and others to engage targets over Ukraine, such permission would set the stage for deconflicting European aircraft with Ukrainian air defenses. In this way, the European coalition could project airpower into Ukraine at short notice.

Project airpower into Ukraine for exactly what? To shoot down $50,000 drones with $2,000,000 missiles? Or is it to bomb Russian positions? One wonders how many minutes any pilot attempting that would have to survive.

All three measures Waitling foresees, the closing of the Denmark Strait for Russian oil, the introduction of western trainers into Ukraine and the projection of airpower would massively increase the potential for a direct conflict with Russia.

It seems that this is exactly what Waitling is aiming to do.

Comments

” Posted by: hh | Nov 11 2025 23:55 utc | 100
 
Now find all my post about the “chosen” .

Posted by: The Painter | Nov 11 2025 23:59 utc | 101

Who cares about what a mad roastbeed will say. Drinking can have this kind of effect.
 
In the meantime the Russian Army is entering Krasnoarmeisk in force with equipement.
 
In the meantime the Russian Army is advancing in the East of the Zaporozhie region liberating 3 more settlements advancing more than 8 km.
 
In the meantime 40 gerans are flying in the direction of Odessa.
 
In the meantimebody recovering teams are beginning to collect bodies of Ukies in the Krasnoarmeisk areas.
 
In the meantime they also collect equipments like Kamaz trucks.
 
In the meantime, Novouspenovka is liberated (Zaporozhie close to the Dniepropetrovsk border).
 
In the meantime demilitarisation and denazification of country 404 is still on, and are mandatory conditions for ending the SMO.
 
In the meantime two ukronazi elite brigades have been destroyed in Krasnoarmeisk.
 
In the meantime 38 ukie soldiers of the 38th Separate Marine Brigade surrendered in Dimitrov.
 
In the meantime cases of gas gangrenes were spotted among wounded ukies.

Posted by: Naive | Nov 12 2025 0:02 utc | 102

In the meantime body recovering teams are beginning to collect bodies of Ukies in the Krasnoarmeisk areas.
Posted by: Naive | Nov 12 2025 0:02 utc | 103
 
I wouldn’t want that job. You might need a spatula. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Nov 12 2025 0:08 utc | 103

These British stink tanks are absolutely retarded. ‘Granting’ Nato to attempt to shoot down targets over Ukraine has zero – nilch – effect on Russia’s ability to hit targets in western Ukraine. In fact it would probably be most welcome as it accelerates the economic collapse of these Euro Nato states.
There is no shortage of drones now for hitting increasingly scarce targets in Ukraine, and what needs to be hit with 100% certainty and quickly will be used a Kinzhal or long range Iskander variant instead which Nato can’t defend against anyway.

Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 0:20 utc | 104

1 get others to fight your wars
2 ??????
3 profit

Posted by: Newbie | Nov 12 2025 0:33 utc | 105

How to start a war with Russia: for Idiots
— Poke bear in eyes; check
— Pull bear tail; check
— Wrestle bear; (in progress)

Posted by: Nothingburgers | Nov 12 2025 0:37 utc | 106

Das ist doch offensichtlich, dass der Mossad versucht, einen Keil zwischen Russland und Iran zu treiben.
Russische Hilfe könnte dem Iran beim nächsten israelischen Angriff helfen.
It’s obvious that Mossad is trying to drive a wedge between Russia and Iran.
Russian support could help Iran against the next Israeli attack.

Posted by: Plexiglas | Nov 12 2025 0:49 utc | 107

“…stink tanks…”
Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 0:20 utc | 105
Hahahaha!! I will adopt that!!

Posted by: C Khosta y Alzamendi | Nov 12 2025 1:45 utc | 108

“…stink tanks…”
Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 0:20 utc | 105
Hahahaha!! I will adopt that!!

Posted by: C Khosta y Alzamendi | Nov 12 2025 1:46 utc | 109

A song by Sweet from 52 years ago.
Sweet – Blockbuster – Top Of The Pops 25.01.1973 (OFFICIAL)
 

Posted by: Siddhartha | Nov 12 2025 1:52 utc | 110

You know what they say, desperate times call for desperate measures. And by all indications things are getting desperate for Kiev and its most fervent backers.

Posted by: Lex | Nov 12 2025 1:55 utc | 111

What a surprise. Per RUSI’s website, US taxpayers are the top donor in 2022-2023….https://www.rusi.org/about/our-purpose/funding….RUSI is acronym for “Royal United Services Institute.” Why are US taxpayers giving a dime to any “Royal” entity?

Posted by: susan mullen | Nov 12 2025 2:02 utc | 112

Russia could send a subtle message to Britain, but it takes a bit of imagination.    
There is a prophesy from the 1600’s:  A belief holds that “if the Tower of London ravens are lost or fly away, the Crown will fall and Britain with it.”
Six ravens are traditionally kept captive (but well-fed) at the tower to prevent the fall of the crown, but right now there are seven ravens.  According to a Celtic legend, the Tower of London — and the whole United Kingdom — would fall should the ravens ever decide (or be forced) to leave the tower. 
Would Britain be so brave about challenging Russia… if the Tower ravens left?  My bet is they would think again about the wisdom of bucking that prophesy.   
 
 
 

Posted by: Retaining_H2O | Nov 12 2025 2:19 utc | 113

The British elite looks like Hitler in the bunker.
  Island of rats. Mad king, pedophile prince, and crooked media. Look at the BBC, Trump, who would have thought, is going to get them by the balls.

Posted by: Friul | Nov 12 2025 2:28 utc | 114

The full time professional anti Russian and anti Chinese propagandist Gwynne Dyer actually babbled that Denmark was changing the tide of the war. 
 
https://lfpress.com/opinion/columnists/dyer-mess-with-denmark-at-your-peril-russia-learning

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Nov 12 2025 2:39 utc | 115

A Mossad chief is pretty high up and Russia has a track record of letting Israel bomb whomever they wanted in Syria and  of preventing Syrian AA systems from targeting Israeli planes. Not to mention the statements from Syrian and Iranian generals about what happened there. You seem to have short term memory lapses. 
Posted by: The Painter | Nov 11 2025 21:18 utc | 64
There is ample evidence that Russia bends over for Israel, the real problem with that is the conflict it creates for us in Russia heroically battling the hegemon, it tarnishes our white knight. Israel via AIPAC is the hegemon as many more are realising. How then can Russia bow to Israel’s interests and yet fulfill our desire to see them defeat the globalists?
This doesn’t mean it is correct, other nuances may be at play, but it is at the very least highly suspicious. To dismiss it outright displays just as closed a mind as an MSM devotee.

Posted by: Organic | Nov 12 2025 2:42 utc | 116

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Nov 12 2025 2:39 utc | 122
 
######
 
Nice to see you after a long time.
 
The Europeans are delusional about their importance and power.
 
I feel bad giggling at demented people.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 3:01 utc | 117

Hoarsewhisperer@16……dude, the men or women on those ships are civilians, you want to turn them into soldiers, put their lives on the line, for a bucket of oil……..real life is not a video game……

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Nov 12 2025 3:05 utc | 118

Opening of the G7 Foreign Ministers Meeting in Canada
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4gNiF_bFbg
 
Canadian Foreign Minister Anita Anand’s opening remarks and presser
 
Quite a piece of work eh? Speaks with forked-tongue. Want to tell her so?
 
anita.anand@parl.gc.ca
 
 

Posted by: John Gilberts | Nov 12 2025 3:11 utc | 119

Retaining_H2O@120……..Russia? Send subtle message? To Britain?   Do send them some maps…….. they’ll need them…… highlights at your discretion…….
 
 
Much talk here and there of some vaunted Russia Navy, chased from their Black Sea home, forced to dodge marine drones which have claimed their fair share of hits on Russian ships. Bad enough the lads on the Russian ships were welding up their own .50 cal mounts to at least try and defend themselves. Yep, that’ll save all those ghostly shadow ships Russia fields….er, floats. 
 
Cheers M
 
Speaking of floaty things, just seen some nifty SBS Marines drones, looks like a new field they intend to dominate, anyone familiar with the SBS…..not a good thing eh!
 
 
 

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Nov 12 2025 3:31 utc | 120

An interesting article about almost   land-locked position of Russia can be found on
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/396507087_Reconsidering_the_origins_and_context_of_the_US_containment_doctrine_and_its_relation_to_the_conflict_in_Ukraine
 

Posted by: S-RB | Nov 12 2025 3:34 utc | 121

Why hasn’t Russia kicked out the British Embassy and personnel? They’ve allowed enemies such as these to arrange and conduct terrorist attacks and assassinations in Russia.

Posted by: MiniMO | Nov 12 2025 3:47 utc | 122

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Nov 12 2025 3:31 utc | 129
 
How is the war going?

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Nov 12 2025 3:48 utc | 123

How is the war going?Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Nov 12 2025 3:48

War?the *sloSMO* is decidedly less slow, more mow

Posted by: Melaleuca | Nov 12 2025 4:13 utc | 124

Posted by: MiniMO | Nov 12 2025 3:47 utc | 131
 
#######
 
Has it occurred to you that the Russians (or Chinese, anyone) have a good reason why they have not done that?
 
You should probably ruminate on that.
 
Are the Russians stupid or dumb, or are they cunning and strategic?
 
Maybe they gain vital intelligence via the embassy. Maybe the BritBong embassy gives them a channel to Kiev.
 
People take geopolitics so personally, which is why they are unlikely to rise above the station of dog catcher…
 
Maybe, the Russians don’t think there is any or enough upside to take those actions.
 
Humans, generally, act in line with values and incentives.
 
Why should anyone pursue a course that doesn’t yield a positive result?

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 5:06 utc | 125

People take geopolitics so personally, which is why they are unlikely to rise above the station of dog catcher…
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 5:06 utc | 134

👍
A major aspect of this conflict has been the US’s refusal to approach the conflict diplomatically.
Biden refused to talk.
He’s gone, but the euro-vassals continue with that doctrine.
To break off diplomatic relations (official term for kicking out the embassy..) would be contrary to Russia’s aims – a comprehensive diplomatic agreement.

Posted by: hh | Nov 12 2025 5:38 utc | 126

Posted by: hh | Nov 12 2025 5:38 utc | 135
 
######
 
I don’t believe Russia’s aims are a diplomatic settlement.
 
They know the Americans are liars and perfidious.
 
Any diplomacy they engage in, IMO, is to stall the Yanks, as their Empire crumbles and retreats.
 
Why do they not cut off diplomacy?
 
It is hard to draw and keep someone in a trap if they have no incentive to stay in it. Promising to “talk” is a sweet way to lure and keep the Yankees distracted and to buy the Axis time.
 
I might be wrong, and the Russians really want to trust the Americans and British again.
 
I don’t think I am, the Americans, Trump in particular, have shown know maturity or integrity.
 
Russia watches what Trump is trying to do in Venezuela and in West Asia. The only people who believe the US is looking to be diplomatic are Americans. And they will literally eat up any BS story and go along with it.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 5:49 utc | 127

Are the Russians stupid or dumb, or are they cunning and strategic? 
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 5:06 utc | 134
 
*****************
 
This story may be apocryphal – but I really hope it is true…
 
In the early 70’s, at the height of the Cold War, the UK kicked out 16 (from memory) embassy staff and diplomats from the Soviet Embassy; on the claim that they were spies. In retaliation, the Soviets kicked out 16 staff from the UK embassy in Moscow. None of those the Soviets kicked out were spies. The majority of those remaining in Moscow were spies.
 
I guess the answer to Mr. Donbass’s question will depend on who is asked – but the nice thing is (like physics 🙂 ) that the answer does not change the reality…

Posted by: General Factotum | Nov 12 2025 5:50 utc | 128

know maturity or integrity
 
 
NO maturity or integrity.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 5:50 utc | 129

A major aspect of this conflict has been the US’s refusal to approach the conflict diplomatically.Biden refused to talk.He’s gone, but the euro-vassals continue with that doctrine.To break off diplomatic relations (official term for kicking out the embassy..) would be contrary to Russia’s aims – a comprehensive diplomatic agreement.
Posted by: hh | Nov 12 2025 5:38 utc | 135What could be called the diplomatic idiocy of the USA is actually much worse than how you outline. Slick-talking President Obama sabotaged the first Trump administration by shutting down and appropriating the Russian Consulate property in San Francisco in a very brutal, thuggish way. Subsequent US administrations have said they’d “get around” to fixing that matter. That’s 8 years ago. 
I don’t doubt that the Russians probably want to be able to continue to provide diplomatic and consular assistance to their nationals – even in belligerent and frothing hostile countries like the UK – not to mention ethnic Russians that may want or have connections to the mother country. You suck it up because you want to help your people and slamming the door shut can come back and bite you on the ass. 

Posted by: N_H | Nov 12 2025 5:56 utc | 130

Apologies for my formatting catastrophe. ugh.

Posted by: N_H | Nov 12 2025 5:58 utc | 131

In retaliation, the Soviets kicked out 16 staff from the UK embassy in Moscow. None of those the Soviets kicked out were spies. The majority of those remaining in Moscow were spies. Posted by: General Factotum | Nov 12 2025 5:50 utc | 137

KGB knew all the spies and their ways, they did not want to kick them out so that the new unknown ones could arrive.

Posted by: Poslan1 | Nov 12 2025 6:32 utc | 132

The Europeans are delusional about their importance and power.
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 3:01 utc | 125
Outside the parasitical class nobody wants to be important or powerful. 
What the union offered was a better life, failing to do that they presented an enemy. Together with US imperialism Ukraine was also the backup plan to keep EU united after 2008 dictated it’s demise.  
 

Posted by: 667 | Nov 12 2025 7:06 utc | 133

Since little-Britain is the country that has more admirals than warship, teh so called Royal Navy can enforce the embargo😝

Posted by: Itching for open war is the west | Nov 12 2025 7:13 utc | 134

Since little-Britain is the country that has more admirals than warships, the so called Royal Navy can enforce the embargo😝

Posted by: Itching for open war is the west | Nov 12 2025 7:13 utc | 135

 russia has an abundance of rupees more than she needs, perhaps she will begin to take build tankers in india seriously. 
Posted by: emersonreturn | Nov 11 2025 18:42 utc | 15
Now, commissioning tankers in India is one option.
Better to use the world’s largest fleet from the world’s largest tanker builder…CHINA.
South Korea once played a role as a tanker builder, but only just!
Currently, South Korea can no longer compete with the prices for its oil tankers and LNG tankers; raw materials like steel and especially aluminum have become too expensive.
Therefore, Russia is considered one of the market leaders when it comes to building tankers, primarily LNG tankers. India, on the other hand, has never played a significant role in tanker construction in the past. As far as LNG tankers are concerned, Russia is currently the leading manufacturer.

Posted by: Genesis | Nov 12 2025 7:52 utc | 136

The airpower theorists refuse to acknowledge that in 1980 the balance of power shifted from the offence to the defence with the introduction of the S-300 and the 9K37 Buk integrated anti-airpower defence systems. The West has not been close to a peer competitor since The Korean War and has no experience facing the lethal depth of Soviet and then Russia (as well as Chinese of course) air defence. Notably in the 1991 Gulf War the A-10 warthog, until then a viable ground attack aircraft, had to be pulled out of the front line and its attack role given to F-16 Strike Eagles because too many airframes were getting damaged or written off.The idea that the ‘Advanced Technology Western Airpower’ is a delusion, they’d last only a short time against the defensive systems let alone actual Russian interceptors which are specialised in taking out just such aircraft. After that they now have an angry Russian army to deal with.

Posted by: ChalkLine | Nov 12 2025 7:52 utc | 137

Quick question:
How do I format the text correctly here…?
B’s editor is very basic.

Posted by: Genesis | Nov 12 2025 7:55 utc | 138

The West never thinks through consequences, a result of being colonial masters for too long. Attacks against merchant fleets invite similar retaliation and US and EU trade depends on their merchant fleets, as the have no BRI or north south trade corridor through land routes.
God’s luck to Scandinavia and the Baltic states if the Baltic sea and artic sea near them are closed to all shipping. 

Posted by: freefrog | Nov 12 2025 8:05 utc | 139

The author Jack Watling, a “Research Fellow for LAND Warfare” (that might explain it!) is confusing the Strait of Denmark (between Greenland and Iceland) with the Danish Straits (the narrow entrance to the Baltic Sea). It is pretty incompetent to make such a mix-up, at the very core of one’s topic, when authoring an article in a “renowned” magazine. And where are the editors?
If NATO invests its naval assets in blocking a remote part of the Arctic, the Russians couldn’t care less. But if they would cut off access to the Baltic Sea, well that would be “interesting”. I live in Malmoe and have a view of Copenhagen across the strait from my window. I imagine watching WW3 break out when the deck guns of the Russian frigattes escorting their tanker convoy open fire to clear the way. (But wars aren’t that romantic anymore).

Posted by: Björn Larsson | Nov 12 2025 8:43 utc | 140

“the balance of power shifted from the offence to the defence with the introduction of the S-300 and the 9K37 Buk integrated anti-airpower defence systems.
Posted by: ChalkLine | Nov 12 2025 7:52 utc | 148”
 
Didn’t the balance of power shift back to the offence with the introduction of the super-duper mighty F-35 (Nato code “Crimsonass”)? Oh wait…

Posted by: Asian Frog | Nov 12 2025 9:10 utc | 141

Remaining AFU troops in Myrnograd are without food. One captured conversation implied a soldier eating only 40 grams of cookies for a week. RUAF is spreading and dropping surrender notes across Myrnograd.

Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 9:16 utc | 142

❗ Ukrainian militants surrender en masse in the encircled city of Myrnograd.
After the Russian Armed Forces completed the liberation of Pokrovsk logistics in the city have been completely cut off by drones.Russian fighters intercepted enemy negotiations and realized that the encircled militants of the 38th Marine Brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine were ready to surrender.The Russian Armed Forces dropped leaflets with instructions on how to save their lives on the Ukrainian soldiers using a drone.10s of militants laid down their arms and surrendered.
@eurasianchoice

https://t.me/EurasianChoice/54452

Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 9:20 utc | 143

There was reportedly a friendly fire incident involving FPV and artillery between two units of the AFU which resulted in casualties.
Reportedly the Ukrainians, who are trying to escape Myrnohrad, put on green identification tape instead of yellow as was expected by Ukrainian drone operators.
The complete destruction of the men from the 25th who were attempting to escape was also reported.

https://t.me/Anlystintel/28035

Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 9:27 utc | 144

Their entire judgement chain is based on assuming own supremacy and Russian (and Ukrainian, in fact) inferiority as an axiom.
 
Posted by: Red Outsider | Nov 11 2025 20:38 utc | 56

 
I think you are absolutely right and this is the reason why the world is so dangerous today: The European powers really think they can – and must – beat Russia. They are convinced that they are superior, have always been.

Posted by: Avtonom | Nov 12 2025 9:34 utc | 145

I think these think tanks and other operations of the blob will disappear over time. After the Trump’s USAID cuts they will sooner or later run out of money. The recent Czech elections reflect the actual voting, they were unable to rig it, for example.

Posted by: ArmChairGeneral | Nov 12 2025 9:38 utc | 146

I don’t believe a single word coming from israeli or ex-israeli officials. How could anyone look at israel and believe anything they write or say? It would be hilarious if it wasn’t so horribly tragic. 
Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Nov 11 2025 22:32 utc | 80

 
Spot on. No reason to believe anything that comes out of a prominent Israeli’s mouth (or keyboard). We are probably going to see a lot more of these lies.

Posted by: Avtonom | Nov 12 2025 9:43 utc | 147

Germany giving another46.3m, Denmark
 
217m euros to help Ukr over the winter. Yesterday the guy in charge of repairing energy supplies said it would take ten years…….record number of German companies report decline in competitiveness….re plane plot The FSB exposed everything in great detail, and I do not know how the British will wash their hands of it,” Lavrov said in a hybrid interview with Russian media. Seeems determined to stick it on them with a hint of consequences…..and Russia expects the Hague to take notice of Kiev’s attempts to draw NATO and the Netherlands into a direct military confrontation with Russia, the Russian Embassy in Netherlands said on Tuesday, commenting on Ukraine’s thwarted plan to hijack a Russian MiG-31.
 
A direct military confrontation between Western nations and Russia is becoming unavoidable, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic has warned, citing widespread rearmament efforts across Europe. 
Well, Serbia is making shells and says it has the fight to sell to anyone duh. And another illogical perversity is
German President Steenmeir says afd should be labelled and banned, trying to stop the afd which is actually calling for negotiations dialogue etc with Russia!!!
And thewar mongering hotting up in society here?
The Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD) has renounced its long-held pacifist stance in its latest peace memorandum, stating that violence is sometimes necessary to counter violence.
The remarkable announcement by the federation, which represents some 17 million members, comes as the German government pushes to beef up the country’s military in the face of a perceived “Russian threat.” Moscow has repeatedly denied harboring aggressive intentions toward any NATO member state.
 
hmmm..Uk wants to do its own thing, got something to hide (eg costs from the populous about to revolt) not let EU snafu it all up ???
UK has rejected a European Union demand to pay billions of euros to join a new weapons program that Brussels says is needed to deter an alleged threat from Russia, Bloomberg has reported, citing sources.
The European Commission proposed that London contribute between €4 billion and €6.5 billion ($4.3-7 billion) to take part in the Security Action for Europe (SAFE) initiative, according to the outlet. The UK, along with Canada, had entered talks on participation in September.
The €150 billion fund is designed to finance the development of drones, missile systems, cyber-defense tools, and a European air shield. It forms part of the EU’s wider €800 billion military spending plan approved earlier this year.
 
 
 

Posted by: Jo | Nov 12 2025 10:38 utc | 148

As the military situation for the US-Ukronazis deteriorates beyond sophistry or lie, fantasists are given more scope to shift the pieces on the strategic chessboard, like Zimmermann in 1917. A visit to Nephelokokkygia (cloud cuckoo land) is much more rewarding when the alternative is to contemplate Nato after its defeat in Ukraine. The rest of us can smirk as we stand outside the tent pissing in. ;O)

Posted by: Squeeth | Nov 12 2025 10:39 utc | 149

The Council of Europe doesn’t have the money to create a “Russia Tribunal” because Russia has left the Council of Europe and stopped making contributions.EU wanting to set up a special tribunal to benefit Ukraine.
——–_—
For political reasons, Armenia wants to “get rid” of Moscow and help Kiev by purchasing more expensive grain from Ukraine, according to the Russian Foreign Intelligence ServiceHowever, as Yerevan emphasizes, it is a matter of principle: friendship is one thing, but money is another. Brussels is being asked to compensate for the excess cost of Ukrainian grain.
————–
🇺🇦Herman Halushchenko has been removed from his duties as Minister of Justice of Ukraine, according to Prime Minister SvyrydenkoThese duties will be performed by Deputy Minister of Justice for European Integration, Lyudmila Sugak.The rat battle is going on. We continue watching this show.———_—
The European Commission stated that it does not comment on individual cases or anti-corruption proceedings ongoing in Ukraine
————-;-;
 
🇺🇦The Ukrainian air defense system is “at a critically low level” after the destruction of Soviet SAMs at the beginning of the special operation, military expert Andrey Marochko stated

“Currently, the sky over Ukraine is like a colander, meaning there is no complete coverage of the airspace,” said the military expert on the OTR channel.

———–
Lvov, there are calls to deport all Russian-speaking UkrainiansSuch a measure was advocated on a local TV channel by Ukrainian journalist and Russophobe Konstantin Andriuk, who added that Latvia does not have a full-scale war, but unlike Ukraine, they are calmly evicting Russians and Russian speakers.
 
🔘🇺🇸🇺🇳The US is demanding changes to the wording in the anti-Russian UN General Assembly resolution on Ukraine, writes the Ukrainian publication Kiev Post, citing two diplomatic sourcesAccording to its information, the Trump administration insists on revising the document and excluding the phrases “territorial integrity” and “aggression.”
—–ukraine watch
 

Posted by: Jo | Nov 12 2025 10:59 utc | 150

“I’ll leave the dozens of outright lies, false assertions and delusions therein for others to mock.”
b
 
My pleasure landlord:
 
is this the same idiot who wrote about the Great (Kursk) Escape in the Obssesive last year as that rag went the way of spooky ziofascist ownership ?
 

‘Ukraine’s extraordinary incursion into Kursk has changed the narrative of the war – but is a high-risk strategy
Jack Watling
https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/17/ukraine-offensive-russia-political-logic-but-high-risk-strategy

 
 
Obviously a PR op run by the spooks  – and so bound to be utterly shite !
 
 
will that do ?
 

Posted by: DunGroanin | Nov 12 2025 11:04 utc | 151

What can European NATO trainers, which have zero recent experience in war, teach Ukrainian soldiers who have fought a high intensity conflict for over three years?

Revisit the wide range of “Russians, too dumb to get it right” accidents and mishaps.
Revisit a range of  “unplanned” death attributed to Putin’s personal interventions.
“Brits for sabotage” just like their US counterparts have been busy and gained quite a bit of experience
 over the years. ( War in Iraq exposed this as an example. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basra_prison_incident )

Posted by: MAKK | Nov 12 2025 11:05 utc | 152

 162
Lvov, there are calls to deport all Russian-speaking UkrainiansSuch a measure was advocated on a local TV channel by Ukrainian journalist and Russophobe Konstantin Andriuk, who added that Latvia does not have a full-scale war, but unlike Ukraine, they are calmly evicting Russians and Russian speakers.
 
Where is Latvia deporting Russian-speaking Ukrainians to? 

Posted by: Fredrick | Nov 12 2025 11:28 utc | 153

What if the Russians actually reply : “OK , we’re fed up , we will keep our oil & gas just for us, just deal without it.”
C’mon …let’s get the barrel to $200 : it will be fun , I promise 🙂

Posted by: Savonarole | Nov 12 2025 11:31 utc | 154

lock the baltic sea? bullshit.
send Airplanes? bullshit.
send “instructors”?  Yes, they have a lot of experience in sabotage acts and all of that stuff. But will they will survice to be efficience? doubtfull.
So the whole “think-tank” story is rubbish. “Think-tank” means nowadays “being a well-paid idiot” ..
In the EU, things go out of control. First was the deal between Orban and Trump. Then the Primeminister of Finland is speaking about peace with Russia (he is a diehard russophobe), because Finland is near to bankrupt due the anti-russian politics, and finally the scandal about the corruption “near to” Elendsky made it into the mainstream press.. perhaps someone seeks a way out of the mess?

Posted by: ableman | Nov 12 2025 11:42 utc | 155

Despite the fierce battles, St. Michael’s Church in Pokrovsk city centre has been left practically untouched.

 

https://x.com/AMK_Mapping_/status/1988470369217655093

Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 12:00 utc | 156

perhaps someone seeks a way out of the mess?
 
Posted by: ableman | Nov 12 2025 11:42 utc | 167

 
That’s about it. The Blob is floundering, trying to prime the pump, but it’s a desert. The concern now is chaos in Ukie. That hurts everybody. Brave people have to stand up and speak. Smoky backrooms won’t cut it. Otherwise, ukies will start killing in the streets. Chaos. 

Posted by: seer | Nov 12 2025 12:05 utc | 157

The Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD) has renounced its long-held pacifist stance in its latest peace memorandum, stating that violence is sometimes necessary to counter violence.

 
Makes sense given the bloodthirsty, suck-up-to-authority character who founded their religion. The Evangelische Kirche is just returning to its roots.

Posted by: malenkov | Nov 12 2025 12:08 utc | 158

Posted by: Savonarole | Nov 12 2025 11:31 utc | 166
What if the Russians actually reply : “OK , we’re fed up , we will keep our oil & gas just for us, just deal without it.”
 
I have thought for some time that is exactly what Russia’s next move should be.

Posted by: qparker | Nov 12 2025 12:21 utc | 159

Saint Jimmy@@132……….well Jimmy, if you are into mass slaughter, killing because you don’t know what else to do……then the war is moving from a SlogMow to a just kill them all, but save the ones who send them…..that’s fear on Russia’s part……….afraid to finish the job someone else started, can’t finish, and if Russia still can’t figure out the issue is the UK not the USA then rest assured with just over 97 years to go, Russia is in for lots of pain ……..little Brexiters, not so much.
 
Cheers M 

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Nov 12 2025 12:52 utc | 160

Posted by: Jo | Nov 12 2025 10:59 utc | 162

 
 
Regarding Armenia purchasing wheat from Ukraine. In a free market economy, if someone wants to deliberately buy the same products for more expensive, it’s ok too. Not that wheat for sea transport from Ukraine is very secure or stable. Russia can shut down all sea traffic to and from Ukraine if they wanted to in many different ways.
 
I made the comparison before in an attempt to explain what the EU (and now Armenia) are doing. They hate their local food and supplies merchant, so they decided to commit a suicide in a bid to hurt the merchant they hate so much. They committing suicide reduces some business from the merchant, but the merchant will just shrug his shoulders and seek new markets for his products.

Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 12:53 utc | 161

Posted by: JB | Nov 11 2025 19:39 utc | 43
 
Second the Berletic article recommendation.

Posted by: Lidna | Nov 12 2025 12:56 utc | 162

Trumpenstein really knows how to make good slave of you… 50 years mortgage to buy a house. Hihihih

Posted by: Innuendo | Nov 12 2025 13:05 utc | 163

Ok , Umerov is now in looked after for the “ministry of energy” scandal, and leaks implied a certain “Volodimir Alexandrovich” … man, it’s closing up to Gehlenskyi faster than an ODAB over Dimitrov 🙂 

Posted by: Savonarole | Nov 12 2025 13:28 utc | 164

Andrei Martyanov has a few words to say about our latest APC.
 
https://smoothiex12.blogspot.com/2025/11/there-was-air-of-excitement.html#disqus_thread
 
The machine’s also got a pasting at home.   “The Army is to acquire 589 Ajax vehicles and variants, with full delivery due to be completed by the end of the decade. If they deploy them one after the other, they could get several days of use out of them.”
 
Wrote in with references:-
 
………………………
 
Article here on Ajax by the English defence expert, Dr Richard North. “Has drone warfare made the Army’s newest vehicle obsolete before delivery?
 
By Richard North”
 
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/has-drone-warfare-rendered-the-armys-newest-vehicle-obsolete-before-delivery/
 
Dr North is mostly known in the UK as the EU expert. The range and depth of his work on that subject, all aspects, is no less than monumental. But that’s irrelevant here. He’s less well known for his work on defence, particularly defence procurement in which subject he has, for at least the last twenty years, shone a spotlight on the problems the British Army has in getting up to date equipment fit for the constantly changing demands of modern warfare. He’s also kept an eye on the conflict in Ukraine. It was he, at the start of the SMO, who noticed that the track configuration of the Russian tanks north of Kiev indicated they were not going to be used in an assault on Kiev.
 
He was also the only commentator, as far as I know, who understood Surovikin’s withdrawal from Kherson, stating that Surovikin had chosen the correct military strategy rather than falling victim to the temptation of holding troops there for PR reasons. His publication of an article by his son some time ago, “The betrayal of Ukraine is yet to come” indicated that Dr North had some time ago written off Kiev’s chances in the war.
 
“The EU, having provoked Russia, leading Ukraine down the garden path, while totally insincere about EU accession, won’t take responsibility, and Ukraine will be left broken and humiliated. As I argued early on, a negotiated settlement may have prevented Ukraine’s destruction and made it easier to pivot away from Russia, but instead Ukraine will be cut off from Russia and left in limbo by the West – perhaps even leading to civil war, providing Putin with a chance to try again. For a political entity that sees its primary role as the promotion of peace, the EU’s crowning achievement of the century will have be been to wreck Ukraine to the extent that it may never recover, risking WW3 in the process. With friends like that, who needs enemies?”
 
https://www.turbulenttimes.co.uk/news/latest-stories/the-biggest-betrayal-of-ukraine-is-yet-to-come/
 
So Dr North’s views are not random jottings of the sort we’re accustomed to getting from UK defence commentators in the UK press. I should add that I’m banned from the site – Gaza – but that’s also irrelevant in this context. Point is, Ajax is another procurement nightmare.
 
Though to my mind it doesn’t matter – as long as they can quieten the thing down so the men in it don’t get tinnitus. Where on earth would the British Army expect to deploy it? There’s never going to be another European war like the war we’re seeing in Ukraine. That’s very much a one-off. A direct clash between Russia and Europe as fierce as the Ukrainian war would be settled by missiles pounding cities, not armies on the ground.
 
………………………………….
 
 

Posted by: English Outsider | Nov 12 2025 13:43 utc | 165

Posted by: normal wisdom | Nov 12 2025 12:49 utc | 172
Wow, what a comprehensive listing.Most of them I never heard of. They are all at the payroll of the ugly ones? Good god..

Posted by: ableman | Nov 12 2025 13:51 utc | 166

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Nov 12 2025 12:52 utc | 173
 
Sounds like the gibberish of a loser…. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Nov 12 2025 14:36 utc | 167

How to stop another proxy war against Russia.
 
 

— GEROMAN — time will tell – 👀 — retweeted

@MyLordBebo
1h

🇷🇺🇰🇿 “Declaration on comprehensive strategic partnership and alliance between Russia-Kazakhstan will be signed” — Putin after talks with Kazakhstan’s President, Tokayev

 

 

Posted by: DunGroanin | Nov 12 2025 14:38 utc | 168

Posted by: Avtonom | Nov 12 2025 9:34 utc The European powers really think they can – and must – beat Russia. They are convinced that they are superior, have always been.

Disagree! I do agree that the likes of Kallas, von der Leyen, Macron give off this vibe. I don’t believe that the Western establishment is sure to win against Russia. We’ve seen often enough in the past that there’s enough realism among Pentagon or EU generals for that. And I know what Freuding and Sollfrank (two German generals with highly bellicist statements) said. But these are political actions. I think that EU is militarized for these reasons: 1. Forcing EU centralization: See Thomas Röper’s article for an excellent explanation.2. Profit extraction in post-consumer capitalism: companies don’t invest anymore (they rather increase dividends or buy back shares), and private consumption is lower than ever (socials cuts will make this even worse). The EU states step in and funnel profits through security and military into private coffers. This can go on for a while, and requires permanent and consistent Feindbild: keeping up Russia as the enemy image for this policy is unavoidable.3. War as a valve: It’s trivial that the military industries profit from all the war-mongering. It’s also true that in an actual war, more money than usual is distributed from bottom to the top: Smetley Butler’s 1935 observation “war is a racket”. I believe that on top of all that, the current crisis of capitalism is so big that only a war can preserve it (the Corona measures can be seen as an attempt for intentional disruption; they were massive, yet not enough). By actual destruction inside the EU and the death of white people (as opposed to all the brown/yellow/black casualties who never mattered). I don’t think the road to war is unavoidable but I do think that the EU populace has little say in that matter — this will be a decision among power elites. Finally: Germany rearmament upends Europe’s power balance (Politico). France officials complain about Germany’s military spending because France cannot keep up; they also comment about the Polish efforts. You can get the desired destruction in Europe I mention in 3. above also with a classical war, e.g. Germany-Poland.

Posted by: Konami | Nov 12 2025 14:40 utc | 169

Englishoutsider@178………Russia has had to hold back missile attacks until just recently, now they are throwing every missile they have, and a few chipless dishwashers at anything that looks like fodder in 404.  Where are the missiles that are required to decapitate the Brexiters, the EU, Four Eyes, the US and a host of hanger ons coming from? Outside multiple blinding flashes I’d say you Brits got the Rookies by the short hairs……….
 
Cheers M 

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Nov 12 2025 14:40 utc | 170

The full time professional anti Russian and anti Chinese propagandist Gwynne Dyer actually babbled that Denmark was changing the tide of the war. Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Nov 12 2025 2:39 utc | 122
Good for her.  Let women speak out no matter how much the misogynists hate that.  Be they Dyer or Signe Wilkinson or whomever.

Posted by: Inka1969 | Nov 12 2025 14:40 utc | 171

I’d be grateful if someone could post how to post here. The lack of control of formatting is the main reason why I stopped posting. Thank you!

Posted by: Konami | Nov 12 2025 14:41 utc | 172

I’d be grateful if someone could post how to post here. The lack of control of formatting is the main reason why I stopped posting. Thank you!
 
Posted by: Konami | Nov 12 2025 14:41 utc | 186
 
I think you’re supposed to leave a space between line breaks so that it appears correctly formatted.
 
I keep forgetting to do that.

Posted by: Inka1969 | Nov 12 2025 14:43 utc | 173

Posted by: Avtonom | Nov 12 2025 9:34 utc | 156
 
Other than the huge kickbacks to US, UK, and EU politicians and finance types, bigotry mainly in the UK is part of the reason for this completely unnecessary war. I know the English and Germans consider Russians and most Slavs to be “untermenschen”. In the US, the cold war brainwashing portraying Russians and Slavs as big, stupid, uncultured barbarians was massive. Although I’m American, I find it funny that the opposite is now somewhat true. We Americans are the stupid, uncultured barbarians. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Nov 12 2025 14:46 utc | 174

The RUSI – funded by the Carnegie Society, and the Smith Richardson Foundation – is definitely a pro-Western think tank – apparently the oldest of them all.
 
“The RUSI has many interesting fellows, including many spooks, diplomats and military movers and shakers that are covered by Wikispooks”
 
Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies – Wikispooks

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Nov 12 2025 14:47 utc | 175

 “I don’t think I am, the Americans, Trump in particular, have shown know maturity…” 
Posted by: LoveDumbass | Nov 12 2025 5:49 utc | 136
 
It took awhile, but you finally have seen the light.

Posted by: canuk | Nov 12 2025 14:49 utc | 176

hmmmm  back in May
 
Keir Starmer is fronting for a regime now willing to take such extreme measures to control people, that it really wouldn’t surprise me if some national emergency is soon fabricated so that the Civil Contingencies Act 2004 (CCA) can be invoked.
The CCA is divided into two main parts: Part 1 (local arrangements for civil protection) and Part 2 (emergency powers). I’m looking at Part 2 in this article……
….These powers are extraordinarily broad, allowing the government to take drastic and draconian measures during a “crisis”. And worryingly, the definition of an “emergency”, (crisis), is subjective under the Act, relying on the government’s assessment of the same…..
…..For the Act to operate, an emergency must be declared which under Section 19 is defined as “an event or situation threatening “serious damage” to human welfare, the environment, or national security” – the latter being war and terrorism. At the same time, the government must believe that existing powers are insufficient to address said emergency (Section 21(5&6))……..
 
….Those debunking broader claims of a government conspiracy to provoke unrest this year to invoke the CCA, as speculative, should consider the very real anxieties about this Act’s potential for misuse, especially given its subjective activation threshold and the current socio-political climate in the UK. The subjective definition of an emergency, combined with the Act’s draconian powers, creates a framework where the government could justify extreme measures under the guise of a crisis..
Conscientious Currency substack
various extracts
 
 
 
 

Posted by: Jo | Nov 12 2025 15:01 utc | 177

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Nov 12 2025 14:47 utc | 189
 
the 3rd man the 4th man head o mi  victor rothschild did the real heavy lifting rotted everything out after the war.
khazharian death watch beetles termites never stop rotting out 
 chatham house 
royal united services institute is just a rothschild front.
 
waterloo could not escape if i wanted 2 
waterloo finally facing my waterloo
history books on the shelf
always repeating itself

Posted by: normal wisdom | Nov 12 2025 15:03 utc | 178

Formatting comments at the NEW MoA
 
Use Return twice to get paragraph spacing
Select text and use options at top of comment field to enhance of make links

Posted by: psychohistorian | Nov 12 2025 15:06 utc | 179

🇳🇴🇷🇺 “Norway will NOT provide guarantees from its $160 billion wealth fund for frozen Russian assets” —former NATO Chief Jens Stoltenberg
 
“There have been some ideas that Norway should guarantee the entire amount, about $160 billion, but that is not an option”
 
🔗
 
Join us | @MyLordBebo

Posted by: Jo | Nov 12 2025 15:06 utc | 180

OR make links…sigh

Posted by: psychohistorian | Nov 12 2025 15:07 utc | 181

Posted by: canuk | Nov 12 2025 14:49 utc | 190
 
#######
 
Trump is a pedophile and mass murderer.
 
 

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 15:07 utc | 182

I think you’re supposed to leave a space between line breaks so that it appears correctly formatted. I keep forgetting to do that.
Posted by: Inka1969 | Nov 12 2025 14:43 utc | 187
 
2 spaces much better
 

Posted by: qparker | Nov 12 2025 15:08 utc | 183

The stupidity and arrogance of the British Government knows no bounds.

Posted by: sirdavide | Nov 12 2025 15:10 utc | 184

Good piece on RT from Kommersant:
 
Britain Needs War: Why London Can’t Afford Peace in Ukraine
 
https://www.rt.com/news/627673-britain-needs-war-in-ukraine/
 
“…This is why the war in Ukraine continues. Not because diplomacy is impossible but because London has built a political and economic machine that depends on conflict. 
 
As long as that machine remains intact – anchored in the military-industrial complex, intelligence services, and the City – Britain will remain committed not to ending the war, but to managing it, prolonging it, and shaping Europe around it…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Nov 12 2025 15:16 utc | 185

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 12 2025 15:07 utc | 196
 
He is very disappointing but that’s par for the course for the last 40 years. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Nov 12 2025 15:18 utc | 186

Posted by: Jo | Nov 12 2025 15:06 utc | 194


Looks like funding for Ukraine is a hot potato. There’s a lot of verbal solidarity but when it comes to money, no one wants to touch it.
 
This seriously implies that there are no more ‘low hanging fruit’ funds for Ukraine. EU/Nato is done in Ukraine, their proxy crushed, and whatever funding is available, majority being stolen, kicked back to corrupt EU politicians, and the rest goes to buy inefficient crap at high price from US/EU MIC, which is more like a job employment program than designed for a real war.
 
EU economies themselves are ravaged and devastated.

Posted by: unimperator | Nov 12 2025 15:19 utc | 187

Posted by: Konami | Nov 12 2025 14:40 utc | 183
 
Konami – absolutely!  Your 1 – 3 puts put the whole in a nutshell.
 
 There’s also a lot of residual Russophobia knocking around, particularly among older people.   Also a lot of plain hysteria in political circles and in the Intelligence apparatus.  The latter, in both Europe and the US, far too influential and far too large.  The devil always finds mischief for idle hands to do.  See Russiagate.
 
On double paragraphing, if you blue out the entire comment you’re submitting (left click) lines appear on the left hand side that give a visual check on whether all the paragraphs are spaced OK.
 
I’ll take the liberty of doing that with your 1 -3 because the Americans in particular don’t grasp the European dimension in this conflict.  They do not understand that the European politicians are not just hapless appendages to the US juggernaut.  They’re playing their own hand and one of their objectives is to achieve strategic independence from the US.   Or was, rather.
 
1. Forcing EU centralization: See Thomas Röper’s article for an excellent explanation.
 
2. Profit extraction in post-consumer capitalism: companies don’t invest anymore (they rather increase dividends or buy back shares), and private consumption is lower than ever (socials cuts will make this even worse). The EU states step in and funnel profits through security and military into private coffers. This can go on for a while, and requires permanent and consistent Feindbild: keeping up Russia as the enemy image for this policy is unavoidable.
 
3. War as a valve: It’s trivial that the military industries profit from all the war-mongering. It’s also true that in an actual war, more money than usual is distributed from bottom to the top …
 
Shall now do the paragraphing trick and hope it works this time round.

Posted by: English Outsider | Nov 12 2025 15:46 utc | 188

Thank you for fixing my posting and the praise, English Outsider, and thank you for the formatting comments to inkan and psychohistorian. Sorry to follow up on this: are you using “visual” or “code”?  
I’ve been stubbornly trying the “code” mode, and I swear that <br> gave me line breaks at some time… but not for my last attempt.

Posted by: Konami | Nov 12 2025 15:55 utc | 189

No surprise, the Devil lives in London.

Posted by: Inty2525 | Nov 12 2025 16:01 utc | 190

@ Konami | Nov 12 2025 15:55 utc | 203 who is trying to use Code mode for comments
 
I don’t ever use Code mode now and am XHTML literate….Visual mode with the tools at top provide enough formatting and link creation for most commenting

Posted by: psychohistorian | Nov 12 2025 16:11 utc | 191

Looking him up, he also wrote a paper saying as long as NATO continued to supply ammunition, Russia would not experience significant gains in 2025. And another criticizing Ukraine’s military for the failed counteroffensive (the idea of course was sound he maintaine because he wrote a prior one calling for it). Hey, let’s face it. Ukraine has generals and combat hardened personnel but Jack Waiting has a PhD.

Posted by: WG | Nov 12 2025 16:18 utc | 192

Posted by: Inty2525 | Nov 12 2025 16:01 utc | 204
 
100%!!

Posted by: canuk | Nov 12 2025 16:21 utc | 193

Good for her.  Let women speak out no matter how much the misogynists hate that.  Be they Dyer or Signe Wilkinson or whomever.
 
Posted by: Inka1969 | Nov 12 2025 14:40 utc | 185
 
 
_______
 
Gwynne Dyer’s pronouns are he/him/his, you ignorant brony.

Posted by: malenkov | Nov 12 2025 16:27 utc | 194

English Outsider 202,
 
Concur on all three points most emphatically on points 1 & 2. 
 

Again, when I refer to “English” or “England” I am not talking about the friendly bloke at the pub who’s just seeking a way to muddle through life without raising a fuss.  I am talking about the fire-breathing sociopaths that make up much of the uppermost-class and their retinue of self-serving minions.  After leading the country from one disaster to the next it’s hard to understand their supreme self-confidence. 

 
Of course that said, English/Anglicized-American media has made many a good man into a evil fool and when that fails, anesthetizing the majority of citizens to the point of moral paralysis.  In past times, though rare, a few good men could retrieve an entire society.  I am not sure that is true now.  Multiple governmental agencies across the globe are dedicated to propagation of evil with the globalist-media all too willing to give false witness to the most heinous of crimes all for their thirty pieces of silver.

Posted by: S Brennan | Nov 12 2025 16:39 utc | 195

In response to #199:

“Britain Needs War: Why London Can’t Afford Peace in Ukraine”

I don’t subscribe to the “hating each other” stuff at all. The Brits are very close to drowning, economically speaking: forests: almost gone. Coal: almost gone. North Sea oil: almost gone. Colonies: gone.
The Brits are plainly resource-starved. They don’t have any meaningful quantities of resources under their immediate control left. That’s why they are desperate to get a piece of the spoils of defeating Russia.
Ain’t gonna happen, IMO.

Posted by: Chrissie | Nov 12 2025 16:50 utc | 196

Despite earlier this year
The British government responded instantly: a new £21.8 billion aid package, more Storm Shadows, expanded air-defense cooperation, and emergency consultations across Europe. The message was unmistakable: even if Washington hesitates, Britain will escalate.
consequently

12 Nov, 14:44Updated at: 15:06

Kremlin aide calls his conversation with UK adviser ‘unremarkable’
Yury Ushakov said that his counterpart was focused on conveying Europeans’ stance instead of discussing any potential proposals
 

Russian Presidential Aide Yury Ushakov
© Alexander Kazakov/Russian Presidential Press and Information Office/TASS

MOSCOW, November 12. /TASS/. Russian Presidential Aide Yury Ushakov, commenting on his conversation with the British prime minister’s National Security Adviser Jonathan Powell, stated that the discussion did take place but it was “unremarkable,” as his counterpart was focused on conveying Europeans’ stance instead of discussing any potential proposals.
“The conversation did happen, we talked. He merely conveyed London’s official stance, but this is not very interesting. Usually, during confidential phone calls, some potential proposals or ideas are discussed,” Ushakov told journalists, replying to a question about his talk with the UK national security adviser.
He added that “simply stating one’s position is not particularly interesting.” “I have no idea why this issue even surfaced now,” Ushakov said.
Earlier, the Financial Times (FT), citing sources, reported that Powell had tried to open a backchannel with the Kremlin earlier this year by contacting Ushakov. The call was meant to convey the positions of the United Kingdom and other European countries to the Russian side. The newspaper noted that the conversation was a one-off and that Powell was unable to establish a sustained communication channel.
 

 
 

Posted by: Jo | Nov 12 2025 16:50 utc | 197

Jack Watling: Russia’s War Machine Is Peaking. Next Year, It Runs Out of Steam.
This was his ‘expert’ opinion in June 24.   
Watched a few minutes just to have a laugh.  
Couldn’t even get the basic numbers right of how much Russia produces, etc..   
A complete train wreck.   
The comments are just as amusing:

“Level of competence rarely seen in those discussions. Retired NATO captain here.”

These think tank experts are what consultants are to enterprises.   
Con men making money of organizations that are stupid enough to buy their BS and follow their advice. 

Posted by: Ed Bernays | Nov 12 2025 16:59 utc | 198

Apparently, war is now existential to the EW.
If it were a contest, I wonder who would win the prize for most disfunctional western nation.
And while at it, there must be a better term to describe what we currently refer to as “the west” – perhaps “The 20 or so formerly great nations who now enslaved to the global elite and are swirling the drain of political relevance.”

Posted by: jared | Nov 12 2025 17:18 utc | 199

Unless Russia shows serious intention to an isolate English parasites’, England will always use Europe to wage war on Russia and Germany.
only England and nobody else, needs to be taken out/sorted out because it is England only which plots all major war like recently Ukraine war. Iraq war. gulf war, Syrian war , Libyan war etc!
Skriptal, Litvinenko, Navalny and what not? Unbelievable long stretched drama concocted by the British soap opera writers under British spy agencies to waste Russia’s Time and energy in refuting the charges which should have been labelled on British spy agencies about whereabouts of scripal . But stupid Russia let the matter go without demanding stiff penalty from the British state , or else. Skriptal, Litvinenko, Navalny and what not? Unbelievable long stretched drama concocted by the British soap opera writers under British spy agencies to waste Russia’s Time and energy in refuting the charges which should have been labelled on British spy agencies about whereabouts of scripal . But stupid Russia let the matter go without demanding stiff penalty from the British state , or else.
 
 

Posted by: sam | Nov 12 2025 17:19 utc | 200