Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
January 9, 2026
Winter Strikes Kiev

Last night Ukraine was finally confronted with the consequences of attacking Russian infrastructure.

And no, I do not mean last nights Oreshnik strike on the large gas storage facility in west Ukraine. The seismic impulse from that strike likely damaged the geological structure that allowed the gas to be stored in caverns. It can now escape and has been seen burning. Those were the Ukrainian reserves for the rest of the winter. The strike was in revenge for the late December drone strike on Russia’s strategic command facility and Putin’s home near Novgorod. It was also a warning, mostly to Europe.

But the real hurt came with a medium-sized drone and missile strike on Kiev. At least three combined-thermal-electric facilities were taken out. These used to provide water, heating and electricity to the blocks of Soviet era high rises that cover much of Kiev. These strikes, as the Russian Ministry of Defense empathizes in its reports, are in retaliation for strikes on Russian infrastructure facilities. Russia at a time, offered a ceasefire on infrastructure strikes. Ukraine did not keep to it.

Now nearly half of Kiev’s high-rise apartments have lost water, heating and electricity supplies. This while the temperature has gone down to minus 20° Celsius at night. Municipal workers have started to drain (in Russian) all water from intra-house systems. Otherwise the risers and pipes would freeze and break open. But it also means that water and heat supplies will not come back to those high-rises until the temperatures are back in a positive Celsius range.

The buildings have thus become unlivable. Hundreds of thousands if not millions will have to live elsewhere.

The mayor of Kiev Vladimir Klitschko has called on residents to leave the capital:

Half of Kyiv’s apartment buildings, almost 6,000, are currently without heat supply after critical infrastructure in the capital was damaged in a large-scale Russian attack.

“Municipal workers have connected social facilities – in particular hospitals and maternity hospitals – to mobile boiler houses. And together with energy workers they are working to bring electricity and heat supply back to Kyiv residents’ homes,” Klitschko said.

He added that the combined attack on Kyiv on the night of 8-9 January was the most painful for the capital’s critical infrastructure facilities.

“City services are operating under emergency conditions. And unfortunately weather conditions are forecast to be difficult in the coming days.

I also appeal to residents of the capital who have the opportunity to temporarily leave the city and go where there are alternative sources of power and heat, to do so,” Klitschko concluded.

A similar situation exist in Dnipro, one of Ukraine’s most industrial cities, since yesterday.

During the war the parts of the Ukrainian population that were not directly involved in fighting seemed to have little interest in what was happening. There was still a lot of nightlife in Kiev, all goods were available and even the few short interruptions of electricity were not much to bother with.

This will now change. Electricity is off for most of the time. Shops are closing because running business on generators is unprofitable. Local public transport is mostly down. Longer range tail transport is interrupted. Apartments are unlivable. The consequences of the war have become personal.

This will change the mood even of those who want to prolong the war. The numbers of those willing to accept the loss of territory in exchange for peace will rise.

After a while a change of policies will follow for this.

Comments

Alexander Mercouris: ‘West Wants War’
 
https://www.youtube.com/@AlexMercouris/videos
 
“Medvedev says West wants war – Russian ready; Oreshnik hit military base used by West; More blackouts.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 10 2026 21:01 utc | 401

Ukrainians are not going to surrender.
 
They also won’t exist in 5 years.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 10 2026 21:02 utc | 402

@ malenkov | Jan 10 2026 20:46 utc | 409
 
Yes, it does seem that having dual passports is an official endorsement of hypocrisy…

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jan 10 2026 21:08 utc | 403

Reading that back, I should have probably written (((dual passports))), as I acknowledge there can be genuine circumstances for holding passports of two different nations.

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jan 10 2026 21:11 utc | 404

Alexander Mercouris: ‘West Wants War’
 
Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 10 2026 21:01 utc | 410
 
#####
 
Captain Obvious strikes again!

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 10 2026 21:15 utc | 405

Posted by: Mark2 | Jan 10 2026 20:09 utc | 395
“Vulnerable”. And there is just….no way you live in a world without some kind of autocorrect or spell-checker. Come on now.

Posted by: Stark | Jan 10 2026 21:22 utc | 406

Andrew | Jan 10 2026 20:29 utc | 400
I found “Andrew”
https://old.bitchute.com/video/bsN7vN6QBIQv/

Posted by: gorp | Jan 10 2026 21:28 utc | 407

Published by: Andrew | January 10, 2026, 8:29 p.m. UTC | 400
What Andrew writes seems plausible to me. I know a few Ukrainians here in Germany, they are good guys who don’t let themselves get rattled, no matter what difficulties they face.
Russia is far from winning, and Ukraine has not yet lost.

Posted by: guest from franconia | Jan 10 2026 21:47 utc | 408

I know a few Ukrainians here in Germany

Posted by: guest from franconia | Jan 10 2026 21:47 utc | 418
 
Why are they hiding in Germany? Surely any truly patriotic Ukrainian should be doing their best at the front line?

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jan 10 2026 21:51 utc | 409

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 10 2026 20:37 utc | 404
Honestly no idea. Realize it would be a significant military & national economy budget change. Obvious global political repercussions.
It would militarily untie their hands for decapitation, ISR & hitting all the CIA bases.
The SMO in current form, is very limited.
 
The truth is, they”SMO” ish stuff  has been going on since 2014.  It’s been slow and methodical and COSTLY.  But all good.
 
Seems the finality now is facing the reality that there is NO OTHER WAY of meeting RF goals except by force, on the battlefield.
 
It was a good and served RF as well, the slo mo, but now…decision time.  With Lviv & Kiev hit, go on with decapitation & simply over rum over whelm what’s left and take the whole of Ukraine?
 
Should Ukraine “collapse” as it were, meaning economic, say they even surrender the 4 oblasts…Wouldn’t that leave the RF with a few more years of terrorism and insurgency?
It’s possible that declaring war would initiate a decapitation & occupation situation, which would result in insurgency and gorilla warfare.
 
Collaose of the line, collapse of the economy will result in terrorism, insurgency and gorilla warfare.
In one way,  you’re “defending” your newly acquired territories where they stand, in the other way,  you have your “interim government” sitting in Kiev & Odessa calling the shots  during the “transition”. 
it’s true, maybe another year or so, whoever is in Kiev will sign papers and no need for all that transitional violence,  but it sure isn’t likely atm.
 
RF would fall right into US/UK plan should EU NATO call them to war.  it’s exactly what the US/UK would relish… especially US… sit on sideline while EU NATO/Russia blast each other.
 
US would make a fortune.
So, if RF does feel they need to go outside of Ukraine… I hope they go ahead and open up on the head of the snake & get it over with.  Maybe not full on frontal assault, but some serious wrist slapping on an asset to wake up abruptly US. Or like something too costly,  Like Yemen did with the ships.
Thats getting out there. Something Putin has already addressed and he’s well aware of the EU NATO trap US is orchestrating.
I think we’ll see more of RF decisions for 2026 as we move along,  but think that they are even seeing how badly these EU/NATO Ukraine fantasies and delusions of troops and multibillion funding & absurdities  are getting.  They are simply becoming more dangerous & more of a hazard.
 
Simply, at this time, not seeing the down side to aggressively take all of Ukraine for the RF. If EU/NATO “intervenes”,  well, RF is simply a step ahead of their planned 2028-2030 war…

Posted by: Trubind1 | Jan 10 2026 22:03 utc | 410

It seems to me ukraine is on a europian life support system.
 
Yes it still has a pulse,  a heart beat,  but it cant feed it self and has no foreseable quility of life..
 
It will never be able to sustain itself.
 
Do not resusitait.
 
And europe including england has already been bankrupted by its support. Its not sustainable and we all know it.
Generations yet to be born will still be paying back the debt / loan.

Posted by: Mark2 | Jan 10 2026 22:17 utc | 411

@ Trubind1 | Jan 10 2026 22:03 utc | 420
 
A decent enough analysis, except it misses out the prospect of, and consequences arising from, internal turmoil/conflict within Ukraine itself.
 
Remember there are a lot of competing factions, some driven by a distorted view of “idealogical” or “national” purity, some driven by the rather more base need of keeping their snouts in whatever financial trough the West is topping up, and some who are fed up with the whole corrupt business altogether.
 
Difficult to organise and maintain an insurgency if the constituent parts are infighting. Do you see anybody in Ukraine being a viable figurehead for the insurgency to rally round?

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jan 10 2026 22:19 utc | 412

Posted by: malenkov | Jan 10 2026 20:46 utc | 409
 
The Preterite, even.

Posted by: Cherrycoke | Jan 10 2026 22:22 utc | 413

“Do you see anybody in Ukraine being a viable figurehead for the insurgency to rally round?”
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jan 10 2026 22:19 utc | 423
 
None.
It’s why whether RF installs its “interim” governance or not, a civil war will happen.
But if all CIA and UK M1-6 are gone, It could be contained blowback on RF and Donbas.
A decapitation in my vision, isn’t as much about getting idiot Zelensky et el out,  it’s getting rid of those 14 CIA bases and all the ISR operators.
 
Any “ governance” will be unfruitful for awhile.

Posted by: Trubind1 | Jan 10 2026 22:51 utc | 414

@ james | Jan 10 2026 16:47 utc | 357
 
Hi there, james. Thanks for mentioning Albanese’s repressed book.
 
It’s MIT’s role in the development and promotion of transhumanism which might be the very worst scourge which has poured forth from MIT. We just need to get accustomed to moral depravity being a feature, not a bug, of the Western academic system as a whole. MIT’s Media Lab might be the crown jewel of that system’s utter corruption. The deeper you dig into it, the more you can’t believe how awful the stench of it — with tentacles reaching through the Lolita Express to His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the great rumbling mumbler Noam Chomsky himself.
 
Glenn Greenwald (among others) has spoken most movingly about his perplexity in discovering the real Chomsky today, via photos and testimonials in those Epstein files. I haven’t seen any little girls sitting on Chomsky’s lap, only Ehud Barak — which is ten times worse! My library has been cleansed of his books. What a fool I was to ever credit Chomsky as a human being.
 
We’re talking about the same institution here, you know? I haven’t heard anything to this effect, but it wouldn’t surprise me a bit if leverage — as it were — has something to do with Theodore Postol’s nonsensical analysis of Oreshnik.

Posted by: Aleph_Null | Jan 10 2026 22:55 utc | 415

Posted by: guest from franconia | Jan 10 2026 21:47 utc | 418
 
Well given that it is the Mayor of Kiev who urged people to leave, Andrew seems either lying, ignorant or supremely elitist, living in some upscale very protected suburb. I rather think themayor has a better idea than some arrogant kid in rich man’s towers.

Posted by: watcher | Jan 10 2026 23:10 utc | 416

Posted by: simon | Jan 10 2026 22:58 utc | 427
Putin (and others) are notably MIA these couple weeks.  An occasional utterance from Medevev or Maria.
 
Overall,  guessing huddled, making 2026 projections.
 
It is day to day.  Doubt the expiration of START that DJ was so flippant about is helpful.  Probably some recalibrations are being examined.

Posted by: Trubind1 | Jan 10 2026 23:17 utc | 417

Borzzikman claims a Patriot PAC system was hit in conjunction with the Oreshnik strike on the gas facility and Lvov aircraft repair plant.
 
Technically it is possible, to do. They would never have time to pack the system and get out of the way.

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 10 2026 23:25 utc | 418

The attacks on Venuezala and Iran now will obveously be seen as an attack on Russia, 
Hence the silence before the storm.
 
————-‐-‐———
If your  expecting a storm,  a wind up radio is important,  in case of outages so as to find out what exactly is going on and where. No electricity or even battery is needed.  You’l need long wave.

Posted by: Mark2 | Jan 10 2026 23:37 utc | 419

@ Aleph_Null | Jan 10 2026 22:55 utc | 426
 
thanks for your additional info here.. i have a good friend who is a strong supporter of chomsky.. do you have any links to enlighten him on this info?  i would share them with him.. i suppose if chomsky is connected to epstein that is a bit of a problem in itself as i understand it..

Posted by: james | Jan 10 2026 23:51 utc | 420

https://en.topwar.ru/276190-vysoka-verojatnost-razrushenija-klapannoj-sistemy-i-stvola-phg-oreshnikom.html
 
Article …most likely valves and the main  trunk of the storage system most severely damaged, main gas storage is c 800m deep.

Posted by: Jo | Jan 10 2026 23:52 utc | 421

 
from geopolitiq@substack.com:
“the strategic significance and value of the Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske gas storage facility in Lvov. This has been explained very well in this post (in Russian) on the KARNAUKHOV Telegram channel (all formatting original):
 Underground gas deposits located in western Ukraine are of enormous interest to the United States. The American side hopes to include these facilities in the regasified LNG² transport corridor, which is expected to stretch from south to north and separate Europe from Russian energy resources. By increasing LNG supplies to the European market, the United States is seeking to economically acquire the gas transport infrastructure that has been built over decades for Russian gas supplies to European consumers.
 This is the largest complex of natural gas storage facilities. Their volume (25 billion cubic metres) accounts for about three-quarters of the total volume of all Ukrainian UGS³ facilities (32 billion cubic metres). Ukraine was the first of the USSR⁴ republics to extract gas. Most of the current Ukrainian UGS facilities are former gas fields, which are now used as storage facilities.
UGS facilities are a rather complex engineering infrastructure.
 Why is this so important for the United States? LNG supplies are delivered to Eastern Europe through terminals on the southern coast (in Croatia and Greece) and northern coast (in Poland and Lithuania). The US goal is to connect these terminals with a gas transport network in a vertical corridor, which will stretch from north to south and provide access to both the UGSs in western Ukraine and the Central European Gas Hub (CEGH) in Baumgarten, on the border between Austria and Slovakia. This is the main gas trading platform in Central and Eastern Europe, through which Russian gas flows in transit to Southern and North-Western Europe passed.
This requires expanding the existing infrastructure and, where necessary, creating new “north-south” gas transport infrastructure in Eastern Europe to enable the physical reflux of gas supplies.
 The interests of several countries are intertwined around the UGSs:
 The United States’ goal is to promote its own LNG, which is more expensive for consumers, in Europe, replacing it with lower-priced Russian gas supplied through pipelines.
Poland’s goal is to become a distribution centre for American LNG supplies from the north to Central and Eastern Europe.
Bulgaria’s goal is to become a similar distribution centre for American LNG from the south to Eastern Europe.
The common goal of all players is to exclude Russia from the European market, which is why the United States needs to increase LNG supplies and infrastructure. This is where the main game is being played.
Building a new pipeline network from scratch from LNG receiving stations on the coast to the interior of the EU is too expensive, as the main supplies come from the east.
❕Therefore, the US’s goal is to acquire existing networks. The Americans need to enter the European market from the east, slipping into the Russian supply system from the north and south. In this way, they want to solve two problems: cutting Russia out of the European market and not investing in the construction of new pipeline infrastructure, but exploiting the existing infrastructure.
The strike against this UGS engineering complex upsets the plans of all the players listed above and other players in the gas market.
I think this is Russia’s most painful response to everything the United States is doing in our area of interest.
I hope that this makes clear the HUGE blow that this strike dealt to both the Outlaw US Empire and its European vassal states, which – by the way – were quick at blaming Russia for their own sabotage of Nord Stream pipelines, but now are quiet because they realize how bad this blow is for them!”

Posted by: ctiger | Jan 11 2026 0:11 utc | 422

The question is if Russia would dare to repeat this attack on Ukrainian energy infrastructure.
 
Posted by: simon | Jan 10 2026 22:58 utc | 427
 
######
 
Who will stop them?
 
Also, Dima is dumb. Get better sources.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 11 2026 0:15 utc | 423

Posted by: ctiger | Jan 11 2026 0:11 utc | 434
Painful blow for EU/USA. The next thing would be the pipeline from Norway. If EU can live without Nordstream, surely they don’t need that either. 
 
C’mon, lets see some help for EU to finish the Net Zero project!

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 11 2026 0:16 utc | 424

Russia is far from winning, and Ukraine has not yet lost.
 
Posted by: guest from franconia | Jan 10 2026 21:47 utc | 418

Russia has already won, youre honestly just too stupid to realize it. Sorry if that hurts your feelings, tired of entertaining the fantasies of psuedointellectuals and propagandists.
 
Andrew, if you want your nation to continue to be a used condom for America, keep it up. The Russians could give a shit. Just dont expect anyone from the West to come save you. Your entire country has been pushed into the fire by cowardly americans and their NATO puppies, as a sacrificial pawn. Good luck, and all.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Jan 11 2026 1:10 utc | 425

I challenge any NATO fans to explain which move or moves Ukraine could attempt that would reverse the borders to 2021.
 
If they aren’t losing, then tell us how they can win.
 
We here about Russia liberating towns but nothing about Ukraine recovering towns.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 11 2026 1:31 utc | 426

Hear not here

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 11 2026 1:31 utc | 427

Anatolii Sharii: (auto-dubbed)
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSmtyVPnvg
 
“Christians against Pagans. Zelensky is a demon.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 11 2026 1:44 utc | 428

440 corrected:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSmtyVPbnvg

Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 11 2026 1:46 utc | 429

 We’re talking about the same institution here, you know? I haven’t heard anything to this effect, but it wouldn’t surprise me a bit if leverage — as it were — has something to do with Theodore Postol’s nonsensical analysis of Oreshnik.
Posted by: Aleph_Null | Jan 10 2026 22:55 utc | 426
 
Thanks, pretty sure Postol’s views were debated and debunked at the Bar when hazelstick debuted.

Posted by: Suresh | Jan 11 2026 2:11 utc | 430

Posted by: james | Jan 10 2026 23:51 utc | 432
 
As a linguistic / mass media student in my undergrad years Chomsky was studied intensely. The information he imparted was brand new then. Many would not believe it.
I went to one of his lectures in my final year . He was like a God to me. 
However he has fallen very low in may people’s estimation… mine included.
I have read several articles defaming him
 
this link was embedded in an UNZ article written by Caitlin Johnstone December 17th of this year. (I didn’t include the  unz link in case it wouldn’t go through)
 
https://www.thenation.com/article/society/noam-chomsky-jeffrey-epstein-emails/#

Posted by: ld | Jan 11 2026 2:17 utc | 431

james
I will chance this link its orse
https://www.unz.com/kbarrett/why-chomsky-is-wrong-about-9-11/

Posted by: ld | Jan 11 2026 2:23 utc | 432

worse
sorry

Posted by: ld | Jan 11 2026 2:24 utc | 433

@  ld | Jan 11 2026 2:17 utc | 443
 
thanks id! good article and it casts much doubt on the idea of chomsky being degraded from meeting epstein…  maybe aleph views it differently.. there is definitely room for conjecture, but either way – thanks for the article and offering an alternative viewpoint on chomsky.. 

Posted by: james | Jan 11 2026 2:37 utc | 434

@ ld | Jan 11 2026 2:23 utc | 444
 
thanks.. that comes thru as well.. i will read it.. 

Posted by: james | Jan 11 2026 2:39 utc | 435

DW: Scott Ritter: ‘Russia all in to confront worst-case scenario.’
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DuS17MeaWgE
 
“Vladimir Putin was targeted by Donald Trump. There’s no other way to spin this. I’m not here to advise the President of Russia, but I am here to tell him as an expert analyst: ‘you’re being played like a fool…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 11 2026 2:48 utc | 436

What Andrew writes seems plausible to me. I know a few Ukrainians here in Germany, they are good guys who don’t let themselves get rattled, no matter what difficulties they face.Russia is far from winning, and Ukraine has not yet lost.
Posted by: guest from franconia | Jan 10 2026 21:47 utc 
No, the “good guys who don’t let themselves get rattled, no matter what difficulties they face” just GTFO of the danger zone and as far away as possible.
I wouldn’t be rattled either if I were sitting in Germany.  Not yet, anyhow.

Posted by: spudski | Jan 11 2026 3:29 utc | 437

“Vladimir Putin was targeted by Donald Trump. There’s no other way to spin this. I’m not here to advise the President of Russia, but I am here to tell him as an expert analyst: ‘you’re being played like a fool…”
Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 11 2026 2:48 utc
 
Thanks for posting the link John G, I think Scott is right.  

Posted by: spudski | Jan 11 2026 3:44 utc | 438

Posted by: NemesisCalling | Jan 10 2026 16:48 utc | 358
“Ughhh…lack of preview function strikes again. Should read: “crisco” candles. ”
 
Crisco is expensive now ($5 a can) and doesn’t have a lot of BTU per can. For cheaper heat check out rocket stove mass heaters if you have access to wood.

Posted by: Paranaense | Jan 11 2026 4:48 utc | 439

Let’s say someone kills Putin.
 
Then what happens?
 
But, maybe escalation is the motivation…
 
I dunno. Invade Venezuela, invade Greenland, attack Iran, kill Putin, won’t have meaningfully changed the math on the debt or the situation with supply chains.
 
I have thought about it because it is a hard thing to think about (a challenge). What could the US start doing tomorrow that would improve its fortunes and lifespan?
 
Which expeditions and projects would they have to abandon, and whatever those are, would they be enough?
 
I guess we would have to lay out what the issues are first.
 
The debt is one.
 
Supply chains are another one,
 
The AI race is one.
 
Social cohesion in the US is a big one that, no matter what, I am not sure can be improved. There is no bedrock to build upon.
 
I think that nothing will improve until some manner of political reform occurs. Until there is confidence in a government that most people believe represents them and their welfare.
 
That means no more Tech Oligarchs in the WH, no more standing ovations in Congress if Bibi visits.
 
As I type that, I realize how impossible any of that sounds.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 11 2026 5:39 utc | 440

Yulia Latynina (@YLatynina) / Posts / X
To everyone who writes that the US and Europe have helped the Ukraine too little, I want to remind you that under Lend-Lease the USSR received goods and weapons worth approximately 11-13 billion, which at the current exchange rate is 180-250 billion dollars. According to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy Ukraine Support Tracker, as of today, the Ukraine has received $300-350 billion in aid from the US and Europe. In the history of mankind, nowhere in the world has any country ever, received more from its partners than has the Ukraine. For example, the Marshall Plan in today’s money is 160-200 billion. The total amount of support for Israel is 300 billion in today’s prices, but this is over 75 years. Afghanistan – 150-200 billion, but this is over 20 years. 
 
 

Posted by: Moscow Exile | Jan 11 2026 6:21 utc | 441

Yulia Latynina (@YLatynina) / Posts / X
Posted by: Moscow Exile | Jan 11 2026 6:21 utc | 450

 
Useful to note that Yulia Latynina is one of the most harsh AntiRussian journos, she relocated with the start of the SMO and kept attacking Russia’s policies. Seems that now she starts seeking the ways to be pardoned and permitted to return back to Russia.

Posted by: Poslan1 | Jan 11 2026 6:34 utc | 442

Grok3 calculates the amount of steam produced by the Oreshnik as:
“In summary, a 1,300 kg Oreshnik payload at Mach 10 releases energy equivalent to ~1–2 tons of TNT, potentially vaporizing roughly 50–500 kg of water into steam (most likely on the lower end in typical targets). This is a rough physics estimate — actual amounts vary hugely by soil moisture, impact angle, and exact distribution. The weapon’s primary effect remains kinetic shock and fragmentation, not massive steam generation.”
However, 500,000g of steam translates to 27,778 moles of water at STP, or about 889,000 litres of gas that contributes to fracking of the underlying sediment.  The area around some of the injection/extraction wells may be leaking gas from the physical displacement of the pipes.
This expansion is in addition to the metal plasma and shock wave of the leading compressed gases.  The metal and ceramic materials will form oxides in reactions with water, yielding the release of hydrogen gas.  Assuming two oxygen atoms/metal oxide yields at least 6018 moles of metal oxide.  This releases 12,036 moles of diatomic hydrogen or 385,000 litres of hydrogen gas.  
Combining the volumes of steam and hydrogen gases yields approximately 1,270,000 liters, or 1,270 cubic meters, of instantaneous volume displacement.  This calculation assumes the high-end volume of steam and the low-end valence state 2 formation of metal oxides. 
The instantaneous release of these gases causes fracking of the basement sediment regolith, which greatly exceeds the resultant crater formation depth.  
While this fracturing is not deep enough to fracture the lithologic discontinuity holding the natural gas, it provides additional pathways for gas release from ruptured pipes.

Posted by: Krollchem | Jan 11 2026 6:43 utc | 443

Useful to note that Yulia Latynina is one of the most harsh AntiRussian journos, she relocated with the start of the SMO and kept attacking Russia’s policies. Seems that now she starts seeking the ways to be pardoned and permitted to return back to Russia.

Posted by: Poslan1 | Jan 11 2026 6:34 utc | 451
She’s been doing that for a while now. She still lives abroad though and is critical of the “regime”, but does not “stand with Ukraine”. One could even label her now as a “Russian Patriot”. The august authority known as the Ukrainian Centre for Countering Disinformation has criticized her “for promoting narratives that can be interpreted as justifying certain actions by the Russian Federation or manipulating trust in institutions”. 

Posted by: Moscow Exile | Jan 11 2026 6:47 utc | 444

Posted by: Moscow Exile | Jan 11 2026 6:47 utc | 453
 
#####
 
I have observed that some people play both sides, uncertain of who the victor will be.
 
This woman, if things change for Russia, might yet pivot her support again. They are very flexible (good for survival) with their loyalties.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 11 2026 7:01 utc | 445

Useful to note that Yulia Latynina is one of the most harsh AntiRussian journos, she relocated with the start of the SMO and kept attacking Russia’s policies. Seems that now she starts seeking the ways to be pardoned and permitted to return back to Russia.

Posted by: Poslan1 | Jan 11 2026 6:34 utc | 451
 
She buggered off out of Russia — to Germany, I think — before the SMO kicked off. 
12 September 2017
Prominent Russian journalist and political commentator Yulia Latynina has fled Russia after a series of attacks led her to fear for her life. The Russian Union of Journalists (RUJ) has appealed to the Russian government to investigate the attacks. 

Prominent Russian journalist and political commentator Yulia Latynina has fled Russia after a series of attacks led her to fear for her life. The Russian Union of Journalists (RUJ) has appealed to the Russian government to investigate the attacks. 
 
The International and European Federation of Journalists joined its affiliate the RUJ in condemning the attacks on Yulia Katynina [sic] and called on the Russian government to bring the perpetrators to justice.
 
This latest attack is part of a string of attempts to intimidate and silence the journalist. In July 2017, Latynina’s home was sprayed with an unknown chemical, causing breathing problems for several children and elderly people inside the house. In August 2016, unknown assailants poured a bucket of faeces over Latynina whilst on her way to work. 
 
Latynina, 51, is a well-known journalist in Russia and fierce critic of the Kremlin, writing regularly for newspaper Novaya Gazeta and hosting a weekly political commentary radio program on Ekho Moskvy. “I have left Russia in connection with threats to my life,” she said in a twitter post on Sunday after making an official announcement the day earlier on Ekho Moskvy that she had fled Russia to an undisclosed location. 
 
RUJ Secretary Timur Shafir said “The problem of the lack of proper reaction from society and law enforcement agencies to crimes against journalists leads to the fact that their number only increases and leads to even more serious consequences. We regard the next attack on our colleague Yulia Latynina not just as hooliganism or act of intimidation, but as an immediate threat to her health and life.”
 
Latynina told listeners that her car was set on fire by unknown arsonists on Sunday 3 September. She said that she was afraid the arsonists “were prepared for a loss of life” due to the possibility of an exploding petrol tank and proximity to her house. “What scares me is that the people who set this fire understood that the result could have been corpses, and they didn’t care”. 

Posted by: Moscow Exile | Jan 11 2026 7:40 utc | 446

US To Secure $800 Bn in Ukraine Reconstruction Contracts – The Telegraph
 
https://www.rt.com/russia/630786-us-ukraine-reconstruction-deal/
 
“Washington and Kiev are preparing to sign an $800 billion agreement to rebuild Ukraine, the Telegraph has reported. The deal is scheduled to be sealed at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos later this month, Western sources told the newspaper.
 
The newspaper noted that US [Zionist] envoy Steve Witkoff called the agreement a crucial part of the overall ceasefire package he has been negotiating for the past few months. A top state official reportedly said that the world’s largest investment group BlackRock would participate in the program…”
 
And Russia…?

Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 11 2026 7:51 utc | 447

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 11 2026 1:31 utc | 435

I challenge any NATO fans to explain which move or moves Ukraine could attempt that would reverse the borders to 2021. If they aren’t losing, then tell us how they can win. We here about Russia liberating towns but nothing about Ukraine recovering towns.

Your question is disingenuous.
 
First of all, you frame your post in a way that equates any challenge to your assertion as an endorsement of NATO. It’s a loaded question.
 
As to your assessment itself, it rests on the premise that NATO’s objective is the physical integrity of Ukraine. I believe this is a gross mis-characterization and we have seen many examples where the West orchestrates a civil war, not by affinity for the rebel factions, but for the purpose of undermining or even destroying the targeted state.
 
In my opinion, the West doesn’t see captured Ukrainian territory as a loss but as an opportunity to strike Russian military and civilian targets and undermine its international trade.

Posted by: robin | Jan 11 2026 8:46 utc | 448

Posted by: Moscow Exile | Jan 11 2026 6:21 utc | 450
[…]

 
Spasibo balshoy Moscow Exile, these data are very interesting and informative. Two considerations:
(1) The total accounted for by the Kiel Institute is official transfers to the Ukraines. There is a lot more which is spent in the West or to Western assets in the Ukraines for purposes of supporting the Ukraines.
Ukraine is the largest proxy in history. And yet it is being defeated, destroyed, and depopulated.
(2) On the other side of the ledger, it is also very relevant to take into account that Lend Lease to the Soviet Union and the Marshall Plan were executed under a different monetary system, where our bucks we backed up by gold. So the generation of currency was constrained.
Whereas today (Israel, Afghanistan, the Ukraines) we have a monetary system based entirely on fiat, much, much less constrained.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Jan 11 2026 9:03 utc | 449

Posted by: Aleph_Null | Jan 10 2026 22:55 utc | 423
 
OT but Glenn Greenwald was hardly a Chomsky fan in the first place and there are immensely mighty powers that has tried to discredit the man for as long as most of us have lived. 
 
Of course I’m not defending that slimebag Epstein. He deserved to be killed several times over.
 
But not all those people that he made sure were photographed with him are guilty of anything other than perhaps in some unfortunate moments in their life having a little weakness for flattery.

Posted by: Avtonom | Jan 11 2026 9:44 utc | 450

LoveDonbass @ 454
 
“some people play both sides”
 
Is that really such a bad thing? 
 
I see many a nation-state doing likewise.
 
(Yep, sadly without the “empire of evil”, everybody else would be panic-stricken owing to chi-com ambitions or your favourite kgb agent having more interest than just the Ukraine.)

Posted by: YT | Jan 11 2026 10:15 utc | 451

Hunt for Ukrainian/Nato air defense systems with Tornado-S systems (Kharkov oblast).
https://x.com/Zlatti_71/status/2010039648903458860

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 11 2026 10:25 utc | 452

Posted by: robin | Jan 11 2026 8:46 utc | 457
In my opinion, the West doesn’t see captured Ukrainian territory as a loss but as an opportunity to strike Russian military and civilian targets and undermine its international trade.

An interesting opinion.  Will the West  view the future Russian capture of Odessa as such an opportunity?
For that matter. how does the presently liberated areas of the Donas fit with this assertion?  Please elaborate.
 

Posted by: Barrel Brown | Jan 11 2026 11:13 utc | 453

ritain is set to ‘put leading edge weapons into the hands of Ukrainians’ with powerful long-range ballistic missiles that can destroy Russian targets more than 300 miles away. 
Nightfall rockets – which are packed with 200kg warheads, can be fired in quick succession and reach as far as Moscow – could prove a valuable asset in Volodymyr Zelensky’s ongoing fight against Vladimir Putin‘s forces.
Now British firms are being sought by the Ministry of Defence to design, develop and deliver the first three test missiles in a contract worth £9million. 
Hailing the potential of the new weapon, Defence Secretary John Healey told The Sun: ‘You defend your cities by having layers of defence and you partly defend by being able to attack.’
The Labour minister made the comments while on a visit to Kyiv – and just moments after narrowly avoiding a Russian missile and drone attack in the area on Thursday, which killed four people. 
Describing how the train he was travelling on was forced to make an emergency stop, he said:  ‘It was a serious moment and a stark reminder of the barrage of drones and missiles hitting Ukrainians in sub-zero conditions.
‘We won’t stand for this and are determined to put leading edge weapons into the hands of Ukrainians as they fight back.’
The announcement of the Nightall project comes as the Defence Secretary also revealed the UK will spend £200 million preparing British troops for deployment to Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire with Russia.

Posted by: Jo | Jan 11 2026 11:35 utc | 454

Jo | Jan 11 2026 11:35 utc | 463
*** ‘We won’t stand for this and are determined to put leading edge weapons into the hands of Ukrainians as they fight back.’The announcement of the Nightall project comes as the Defence Secretary also revealed the UK will spend £200 million preparing British troops for deployment to Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire with Russia. ***
 
 
Already past time that London should be destroyed, especially Whitehall and the “City” areas.
Combined with assassination of the Zionist/US Oligarchy’s pet “UK” whoring-chimps politely called ‘establishment politicians’, ‘military heads’,  bought ‘academics’ and mass-media US-Zionist imperial propagandists no matter where they are.
They are otherwise incurable. 
 

Posted by: Cynic | Jan 11 2026 12:06 utc | 455

You can sign a petition on behalf of Jaques Baud here:
 
https://www.openpetition.eu/petition/online/sofortige-aufhebung-der-sanktionen-gegen-jacques-baud
 

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Jan 11 2026 12:13 utc | 456

Cynic @  464
And how can we sever the ties or strangle hold between all our political partys  / mp’s and the israelie lobby groups and their slush money /  funds.
 
That right their is the problem. Behind  this war against Russia.

Posted by: Mark2 | Jan 11 2026 12:23 utc | 458

Ignore the above- its in Bulgaria! 
 
What was i thinking?!
 
Note to self: don’t use Google maps on a phone – its too small.
 
Insert embarrassed emoji here: [  ]
 

Posted by: Occasional poster | Jan 11 2026 12:24 utc | 459

Posted by: Jo | Jan 11 2026 11:35 utc | 463
 
According to Dmitry Orlov, there’s a public discussion in Russia whether Britain should be nuked to restore deterrence with Nato. USA would also not get involve, were something happen to Britain. 

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 11 2026 13:30 utc | 460

Unimperator @ 469
At the momment its a regretable enevatabilty, and its ‘on’ england not Russia.

Posted by: Mark2 | Jan 11 2026 13:38 utc | 461

….According to Dmitry Orlov, there’s a public discussion in Russia whether Britain should be nuked…
Posted by: unimperator | Jan 11 2026 13:30 utc | 469

 
Not nuked, the term “glassified”  is being used, that might meaqn Oreshnik as well, thus Russia will be avoiding the nuke complaints and fallout issues.

Posted by: Poslan1 | Jan 11 2026 13:42 utc | 462

Glassified uk and now a very (and uncharacteristic ) harder Marat (who is often connected to MoD proper)
 
Hope this is all an escalate to de-escalate.
 
otherwise one might be heading for some hard times
 
https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/the-new-baltic-war-or-scandinavians
 
I’d worry if I was NE Europe

Posted by: Newbie | Jan 11 2026 14:05 utc | 463

Posted by: Newbie | Jan 11 2026 14:05 utc | 472
[…]
 
Thanks. I recommend reading Marat’s essay.
I don’t want to sound presumptuous but I have to say I’ve been predicting that after the Ukraines are fully annxed into Russia, Russia will “attack” [Note 1] the Baltic statelets, especially Latvia and Lithuania, with the latter very unfortunately having its capital in the way of a connection from Pskov to Kaliningrad.
It’s like the Vogon army destroying the Earth to make way for the interstellar galactic highway in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. So sad.
Note 1. Russia will find a good, reasonable way to make the Baltic annexation looks like a defensive move. It won’t be necessary to annex all of them just a wide corridor from Pskov to Kaliningrad which, very unfortunately, will include Vilnius. Marat has mentioned Klaipėda so perhaps poor Lithuania will lose its capital and access to the sea. Many such things will happen this century ’cause a new stable geopolitical equilibrium is forming from the decline of America and Europe and the capitalist transformation of Russia and China.
It may will be also some major campaign including not only the three Baltic statelets but also Sweden and Findland, Marat is hinting in that direction.
Why not just be friends and make money out of Russia’s development? Why are we so envious, petty and spiteful? Asking for a friend.
 
 

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Jan 11 2026 15:23 utc | 464

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Jan 11 2026 15:23 utc | 473
 
Accepting “hate injection” has its price. For Ukraine it is unfathomable.
Question is if the other hate drug users will turn back from the abyss.
For Germany I see upcoming opposition ( it showing in smallish bouts …
US going overboard with imperialistics seems to cause “cold turkey” withdrawal symptoms here)

Posted by: MAKK | Jan 11 2026 16:37 utc | 465

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