New Management Wanted: Ukraine Cannot Seem to Stop Delighting Putin.

Wink
Uncle Volodya says “As long as the government is perceived as working for the benefit of the children, the people will happily endure almost any curtailment of liberty and almost any deprivation.”

Those who have been following, since its inception, the western attempt to turn Ukraine into a remote-controlled weapon against Russia have probably noticed a curious phenomenon. Whenever Ukraine falls short of western expectations for it, or fails to act as the west directed it to act, it is said to be making Putin happy. Kind of like how your mother used to tell you, when you were a small child, that the bogeyman would get you if you didn’t stop getting out of bed, or asked for just one more drink of water so you could stay up a little longer. Visions of Putin’s smirking face are called up to rebut Ukraine’s consistent failure to let go of an oligarch-dominated political system and magically achieve prosperity, while having nothing to do with its former largest trading partner – Russia – and not bothering Europe by horning in on its subsidies in an attempt to sell more goods to it. For its part, the United States insists on running Ukraine, appointing a special envoy – Kurt Volker – to preserve its feeling of international importance after it was pointedly left out of the Normandy Format; Meddlers R Us; we don’t need no steenking invitations.

A glance over trade statistics suggests this was a wise choice for the Exceptional Nation – the year before the Glorious Maidan, Revolution of Dignity, the USA did around $3 Billion worth of trade with Ukraine, selling it $1.92 Billion worth of goods and services, and buying $1.03 Billion worth of goods and services from it, posting an American trade surplus of $888 Million. Last year the USA did around $4 Billion worth of trade with Ukraine, selling it $2.46 Billion in goods and services, and buying $1.35 Billion worth of goods and services from it, handsomely increasing the American trade surplus to $1.13 Billion. Considering Ukraine is impoverished and living on handouts, while the per-capita GDP has fallen by more than 6% despite the country having lost about 3 million people (Ukraine’s population today is almost exactly what it was in 1960), that’s quite an achievement.

Per-Capita GDP 2009-2018

Ukraine GDP per capita PPP

Population of Ukraine 2009-2018

Ukraine Population

Ukraine, and indeed the world, cannot seem to stop dancing to Putin’s tune – the puppet-master pulls the strings, and we all jerk and stumble as he wills. If nothing else brings home to you how genuinely fucked-up the world is, consider for a moment that the best excuse world leaders have for not being able to direct global affairs to their liking is that Putin – leader of what is supposed to be the most isolated and friendless country in the universe – prevents them from having their way, and laughs at their discomfiture.

In that spirit, we’re going to take a look at Justin Lynch’s “Ukraine’s Election Is a Mess—and That’s Exactly What Putin Wants”, for Foreign Policy magazine.

Before we get started – unusually, I suppose – we’re going to assume it is nonsense based on common sense. As we’ve often mentioned before in various conversations, Ukrainian and Russian are mutually intelligible languages. What leader in his right mind wants an unstable, never-far-from-imploding impoverished state right on his doorstep, considering his own state is a likely destination for fleeing refugees, economic or otherwise? Russia was already home to the world’s biggest Ukrainian diaspora, and the dizzying circles Ukraine has made of the toilet bowl since early 2014 have increased Russia’s population of Ukrainians by more than a million. Russians are not idiots, and they keep electing Putin by a wide majority. He can’t be completely clueless, and even though the west portrays him as sustained only by purest evil, there’s no reason to imagine continued instability in Ukraine pleases him except that it is probably fun to watch the west step on its dick again and again, after all its bragging that it will show everyone how it’s done. Ukraine as a western project is a thundering failure, and the west owns every bit of that failure. But Moscow would much prefer it reach some level of stability, although of course it would not like it a bit if a Ukraine relentlessly hostile to Russia became a NATO member.

That was Washington’s plan, at first; together with its European allies, it was going to make a prosperous market vassal of Ukraine, and push the NATO envelope right into Russia’s face. The thing is, Washington does not seem to get how badly it stinks at nation-building, because it always tries to make a new nation that is a great opportunity for American investors, without any of the rest of the framework. What’s the sense of plowing American know-how, money and effort into building a prosperous state, if other people are going to benefit? Freedom isn’t free, you know.

So, after already concluding that the basic premise of his article is codswallop, let’s take a look at what he actually said. I took that step already because I know you are not going to reach a different conclusion; the article is an interesting example of how bias causes us to find various concepts believable, simply because we like to believe them, and so they appear truthful to us without any further evidence that this is the case. I’ll explain why that’s interesting as we go along. Ready? Let’s look.

Mr. Lynch opens with a protest, in Kiev – westerners simply will not spell it ‘Kyiv’, as the Ukrainians want everyone to do, because Ukraine is a western work-in-progress, and they will damned well spell it the way they like. The protest seems to consist mostly of fake demonstrators who were paid to attend; Mr. Lynch can tell, because they look disinterested and disengaged, ‘as if they had taken sleeping pills before the march’, and because they ‘insinuated’ (that’s what you say when nobody actually said that, but you believe it anyway) that they were being paid to attend. His suspicions are confirmed when a man driving a small black car yells out his window that the protest is a fake.

Just as an aside here, the United States considers itself the global expert on manipulating opposition movements and influencing the masses, mostly by showing them what they want to see and playing upon their biases and prejudice, by intuiting what they want to believe, and providing them with incentives to go on believing. But here’s a thought – what if pretty much everyone is capable of using those tactics, and elements in Ukraine are trolling the United States, for their own reasons?

Mr. Lynch does not offer any substantiation for his allegations that he witnessed a ‘fake protest’, presumably one sponsored by a Poroshenko rival, to discredit the President. But he clearly believes that to be the case; perhaps because the unidentified man who affirmed for him that the protest was a fake was driving a small black car. Certainly hard to argue with a sign like that. What other evidence does he have? The man who fingers the protest as a fake is not named, and there is no indication in the article that Mr. Lynch spoke with him further, or at all. He just drove by, and yelled out the window that the protest is a fake, presumably in English, unless Mr. Lynch had an interpreter handy. And the protesters just look like they were paid. Or sleepy.

Let me ask you this – in eastern-European elections, how many times have you seen that guy pop up, the one who always approaches a western reporter, accidentally, and asks him where he goes to get paid for attending the demonstration, or voting for candidate A, or whatever? Doesn’t it happen pretty much every time? It certainly is featured in at least one western report on pretty much every such election or protest in which the west has a considerable investment in the election or demonstration being a fraud. Now ask yourself this – knowing how western reporters stand out at such events, and knowing in advance what the west wants to believe: how hard would it be to discredit a perfectly legitimate event by just sidling up to the reporter and saying, “Hey, buddy – where does I go to gets paid for attending this fake protest?”

That might not be the case in this article; I wasn’t there, and Mr. Lynch was. But it is plain he judges, as seems to be the mainstream American view and is certainly the wish of Washington, that Ukraine would do best by re-electing Poroshenko to another term. Zelenskiy is as nice a guy as you could wish, but basically a buffoon and a know-nothing who might easily fall under malign Russian influence. Tymoshenko is crooked as a dog’s hind leg, but Washington does not feel confident enough that she would not double-cross them if she thought it was in her interests. Poroshenko is a dullard, a drunk and a greedy rich man who wants to get richer – but he stays bought. He can be relied upon to protect America’s investment in Ukraine, and to drag the country closer to the west, by legislation if necessary.

Mr. Lynch describes the election whose threshold we are upon as ‘chaotic’, but the west is not ready to suggest it is not democratic, and if the vote is held up to questions as to its validity, a whipping-boy has already been selected; Russia. Some 80% of Ukrainians reportedly expect the vote will be rigged, there were no presidential debates between the candidates, SBU members are reportedly on the Central Elections Committee, only Poroshenko can draw upon state services which will announce how many voters are actually in the country when nobody really has any realistic idea, and there are no cameras at the polling stations (Thanks, Eric). As if that were not enough, Poroshenko has ordered the SBU and Police Special Forces to patrol the streets and polling places during the election, ostensibly to safeguard the democratic sanctity of the vote. Voting at the point of a Kalashnikov, anybody? And that’s in addition to members of the nationalist militias being granted observer status by the Central Elections Committee; they will have over 300 ‘observers’ in 34 voting districts. It’s hard not to get the message that Poroshenko will know how you voted. Better watch out; you better not cry – better not vote for that TV clown, I’m tellin’ you why.

As sometimes happens, this post has been overtaken by events, and the vote is actually all but done and counted. Zelenskiy has a commanding lead, as advance polling forecast, but keep in mind that Poroshenko’s goal at this point is not to beat Zelenskiy, but to make it into the runoff. And it looks as if he has done that.

Going back to Mr. Lynch’s article, we see once again the double standard of evidence: Lutsenko’s allegation that he was given a ‘do not prosecute’ list by the United States Ambassador to Ukraine, on their first meeting – Lutsenko, of course, is Ukraine’s Prosecutor-General. And it is typical of US meddling that it goes right to the head man or woman. But unnamed ‘experts’ do not find the report credible…because Lutsenko does not supply any evidence. Perhaps he should have driven by in a small, black car, and shouted his allegation out the window. American analysts find foreign-policy reporting credible when it supports their convictions – which are heavily influenced by the need to be the world’s exceptional nation, able to pull off the impossible-for-everyone-else – and full of shit when it does not. If you were looking for a picture of ‘tunnel vision’, I just drew it.

Put another way, it is inconceivable to the experts Washington draws upon for nailing down the narrative that America would never – never – engage in what is unquestionably interference in another country’s justice system, with the goal of exempting certain individuals from prosecution.

Say – would you like an example which will blow that thinking into the weeds, in the most revelatory way possible? You don’t have to ask me twice: here you go.

“We hold former President Maduro and those surrounding him fully responsible for the safety and welfare of interim president Juan Guaidó and his family,” Robert Palladino, a State Department spokesman, said on Thursday. “It would be a terrible mistake for the illegitimate Maduro regime to arrest Juan Guaidó.”

The USA ordered Venezuela’s president to safeguard its designated ‘interim president’ from arrest. The article suggests the Venezuelan government wants to arrest him for orchestrating power blackouts in the country, in an effort to coerce the poor into abandoning Maduro. And the USA has form for this, having blueprinted the stirring-up of civil unrest over power blackouts back in 2010, when Hugo Chavez was President. But let’s pretend that never happened – Juan Guaido is openly colluding with a foreign government to overthrow the elected government of his own country, and put himself in charge with the backing of that country. In anyone’s language, that is gimme-a-T.R.E.A.S.O.N treason, the kind of over-the-top lawbreaking that in the United States, Beacon o’ Freedom, is punishable by death. Who cares about blackouts? Guaido is a documented traitor to his country, and the nation with which he is colluding ordered his government not to prosecute him! Do you find it hard to believe Washington might have an asset or two in Ukraine it does not want burdened with a corruption investigation? I, for one, do not. It is about as hard to believe as a suggestion that the Gulf of Mexico contains water, or that men sometimes scratch their balls when they are waking up.

If you were waiting for a quote that summarizes how little Washington cares what Poroshenko has to do to win, just as long as he does, bring in Liubov Tsybulska, the head of the Hybrid Warfare Analytical Group.

“I like that it’s real democracy,” she wrote in a text message. “Russians call it mess, but that’s how free society does election.” In fact, Ukraine’s elections could not be any more different than Russia’s, because current polls show the outcome is almost completely unpredictable.”

Oh, my. Say, is Donald Rumsfeld still alive? Because all we need now is for him to come in at the end of that quote, and remark sagely, “Freedom is untidy”. America does not give a tin shit what you do, just as long as you’re on the side of the angels. And if the author meant Russia’s elections are completely predictable in the sense that advance polls usually reflect how the election will turn out, well, duh. What the fuck is the purpose of advance polls, if not to make a judgment on how the vote is going to go? The Russian candidate who is forecast to win handily in advance polling conducted immediately prior to the election…consistently wins handily. Imagine my surprise.

But here is the poster-country for democracy – the ones who thought it up, you might say – openly admiring, in one of the country’s premier foreign policy magazines, the concept that the messier and more uncertain the election process is, the more democratic it is. And nobody having a clue who is going to win spells excitement! Convicted felons are still prohibited from standing for election in the USA, though – are prohibited from voting, in fact – because that might make things a little too exciting.

The point at which I couldn’t continue reading any more occurred where Peter Dickinson of the Atlantic Council gave Poroshenko a free pass on the issue of his political cronies being busted buying parts for defense equipment from Russia, and then upcharging the government for them and pocketing large profits. In a country where the average monthly wage is $257.00 USD at today’s exchange rate, a country that lives on loans from the international community, loans which Ukrainian children not yet born will still be working to pay off. But according to Dickinson, Poroshenko is such a failure at anti-corruption that the revelation he is corrupt is unlikely to damage his re-election prospects much. I just sat there, slowly shaking my head from side to side in wonder.

“For a country at war with Russia, the allegations have sparked ire. But Peter Dickinson, a fellow at the Atlantic Council, said that the claims may not be significant. “He has almost zero credibility as an anti-corruption crusader and therefore this issue is not an important part of his re-election bid,” Dickinson wrote. “Poroshenko’s electoral appeal is rooted in the notion of ‘better the devil you know’ and his presidential campaign rests on his ability to convince voters that he is the lesser of all available evils.”

Poroshenko might have an uphill battle convincing his own voters of that reality, but he has plainly gone down a treat in Washington.

Let me put my cards on the table here – the current political class in Washington, irrespective of party affiliation and almost without exception, is so debauched and untethered that it enthusiastically supports the election of unabashed criminals where their election serves American foreign-policy goals. Is it too late to be astounded? Yes, it is. Ukraine is lightly chided for its rampant corruption, while Russia is held up to universal scorn…because Putin.

Douglas Hofstadter, author of “Metamagical Themas;Questing for the Essence of Mind and Pattern”, is going to take us out. Douglas?

“It turns out that an eerie type of chaos can lurk just behind a facade of order – and yet, deep inside the chaos lurks an even eerier type of order.”

 

 

 

 

 

1,282 thoughts on “New Management Wanted: Ukraine Cannot Seem to Stop Delighting Putin.

  1. The western media is all a’dither with variations on Ukraine “leaping into the unknown” and “entering uncharted waters” after “comic elected president”.

    I don’t remember headlines like “What next for Ukraine after crook elected president” when Poroshenko assumed the mantle of state leadership. Zelenskiy is, strictly speaking, an actor and not a comic, although he has done comic roles. America had a former actor for a president, and many conservatives reckon his like will never be seen again, in the most positive context possible. Ronald Reagan starred in “Bedtime For Bonzo”, a film about a psychology professor trying to teach human morals to a chimpanzee. It was not a documentary. Yet when Reagan’s background came up, he was always a ‘former actor’, not a ‘comic’.

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    1. Walker’s obsession with dill is well-known. And it appears his claim to have lived in Russia for 14 years is accurate.

      https://www.pri.org/stories/2015-08-11/russias-dill-obsession-getting-out-hand-0

      He’s certainly entitled to not have dill on dishes if he asks for it to be left off, but what a bitter blow it must have been to find the halfwits of Kuh-yiv are every bit as stunned as the Russians, and can’t get it through their heads that there are people who do not like dill.

      I get it. For a few years, I made lunch for my wife nearly every night, for work the next day (my schedule usually does not allow for it now). I tried to make interesting and tasty dishes, like sun-dried tomato tapenade on toasted baguettes, or a shrimp-and-avocado wrap. I aimed, as I said, for it to be flavourful, and sort of a gourmet treat and not just a dull sandwich. On occasions she asked me to make the tapenade without garlic – she is sensitive about her breath when speaking to parents and so forth – I would be so insulted that I would let her make her own lunch for a couple of days; how can you make tapenade without garlic? It’s like making a hamburger without meat.

      This is a little different – she likes garlic, just not at work. Walker hates dill. Fine. Make him dishes you personally think cry out for dill, like Borsch, but without dill. Refuse to call it borsch. Call it “Heresy”. Call it “Tomato Soup”, because that’s more or less what he seems to want.

      I spent quite a lot of time in Russia, too, although nothing like 14 years, and I have a Russian mother-in-law at home who makes most of the family’s meals. We rarely have dill, although everyone likes it. the idea that Russians put it on everything is pretty hard to credit. I ate a lot in Russia, and the only dish I can remember being served in which dill was an automatic ingredient was akroshka, a cold soup with meat, cucumbers, a milk/kvas broth and sliced radishes. And dill.

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      1. Next time Shaun Walker is in Russia and wants to go out to eat with friends, he’ll have to bring his own food from home, like parents do with small babies.

        If he ever gets posted to China, he’ll have to tolerate shallots, ginger and garlic.

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        1. Why doesn’t he simply keep a standing order in Britain for fish and chips to be flown over to him? I recall Miriam Elder used to squawk that it would be cheaper and faster for her to send her dry cleaning to New York. So do it.

          Don’t fly your fish and chips over via Aeroflot, though; the Russians will put dill on it, just because all food items must be under a coat of dill.

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      2. Funny how Walker always has a smartphone on hand with which he beams around the world photos of dishes that he finds so offensive, yet he never took the trouble of taking some shots of the Russian tanks that he saw crossing from the Russian side of the Russian/Ukrainian border into the Ukraine.

        We always grow dill on our dacha herb patch garden. Love it!

        We grow other herbs as well: loads of parsley, basil, coriander, rosemary.

        My favourite one of all and which is very often used in Georgian dishes is coriander or кинза [kinza].

        In fact, on our table, both at home and at our country house, we often eat herbs as though they were vegetables and have them laid out on a dish:

        My wife and I often wrap the herbs up in lavash bread, which is an unleavened bread common to the Caucasus and the Middle East:

        I remember how we once had an English guest at our flat, one of those fellow countrymen of mine who looks in horror at every dish that he does not recognize and which bears little or no resemblance to fish and chips, who, upon seeing the dish full of herbs that my wife had placed on our kitchen table, said to me: “What are you going to do with that?”

        I simply replied: “Eat it”, and then took a bunch of herbs and stuffed them into my mouth whilst he looked on in horror.

        What a dickhead he was!

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        1. What an ignorant person!

          I used to grow chives, tree onions, dill, rosemary, lemon balm, chervil, parsley, coriander and fennel. The fennel was my favourite. Even in central Scotland it gets to over six feet. Masses of flowers attracting hover flies and other pollinators which in turn attract lots of birds. A beautiful, useful plant. Still have a few tree onions in pots. Very hardy.

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          1. Yes, we grow all of those too. Whatever grows in Scotland grows here: we’re pretty much on the same latitude here as Glasgow.

            I always plant a big bed of garlic every year as well. I’m a garlic freak.

            And there’s this that grows everywhere around our country residence, along the headwaters of the Moscow river and its tributaries:

            https://images.lady.mail.ru/454374/

            It’s called щавель (Rumex acetosa) in Russian [shchavel’] — sorrel.

            I often just pluck it up and chew on it when strolling around my estate when trying to cop my serfs skiving.

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        2. Your fellow English pal would starve in Asian or Middle Eastern countries where people make salads out of coriander, parsley, chives, lemongrass and all kinds of other herbs. Tabbouleh (with parsley as a main ingredient) is one of the classic Middle Eastern dishes.

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            1. In fact, on his second visit (long story as to why he was my guest: he was not a colleague and was only in Mordor for 3 days), having told her of his vulgar attitude towards what edibles were being presented to him, I asked my wife to prepare some chips (French fries) for him, which she duly did, and added to them some fried sausages. (She had already witnessed the eating habits of many in the UK.)

              When she placed the plate of sausage and chips before him on the table, he looked on them with relish and said: “Ah, real food!”

              I kid you not!

              Ignorant cnut!

              Now that is vulgar!

              I mean, what I said above.

              🙂

              The more I look upon my compatriots from a distance, the more I dislike them!

              I should add that I am speaking specifically of certain English types and not the Irish, Scots or Welsh.

              Oh, that reminds me! I must tell you all a funny yarn on this food topic.

              When I was living in Germany with my German pal Hermann and his wife, my host once invited an Irishman to dinner, a man who had been seconded to Thyssen Stahl, where Hermann worked.

              The Irishman was typical of many of his breed: quick witted, full of humour, “a divel of a lad” as they say.

              Anyway, Hermann’s Frau dished up a huge hunk of mutton for dinner. She had bought it at a local Turkish Gastarbeiter store. We, my Fritz friends and I, were rather fond of mutton, but apparently Hermann’s Irish guest had never tasted it before.

              Mutton is rather greasy.

              Anyway, the irishman tucked in, took a bite, started to chew, swallowed, paused in thought, then politely asked in his Dublin brogue: “And what kind of meat might this be?”

              Hermann, not knowing the English for “mutton” replied: “Hammel”.

              “Oh, it’s Hammel is it?” said the Irishman, laughing. “Well to be sure, I must have got the bloody hump!”

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              1. I was in a Indian restaurant in east London, not a take-away joint that’s designed for western customers but an authentic place selling the sort of food and snacks you’d find in the sub-continent. In the queue in front of me was a Jamaican guy asking some questions about the food. He was asking about the type of meat used in one dish “is it goat?”. No, said the guy serving, “it’s mutton”. The Jamaican guy asked what that was; the guy serving sort of looked him up and down and replied “it’s slightly older lamb”.

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        3. Moscow Exile, that dish of herbs looks amazing and I love the idea of herbs stuffed into the equally wonderful looking bread. Hard to understand your picky guest. I often make a herb quiche at this time of year but with shop bought herbs; you’re lucky to be able to grow your own.

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          1. Fern, Russians often make “grass butties” as I call them — an English play on words, because the Russian word for “herb” is the same as for “grass”, namely трава [trava].

            In any case, the English word “herb” is taken from the French l’herbe, which means “grass”.

            Some pictures of Russian grass butties in the making and all rolled up in lavash bread:

            And if you can’t be bothered eating the herbs with bread, then just pop a bunch of them into your mouth.

            That’s what we usually do at the table when eating shashlyk — just grab a skewer of shashlyk and a handful of whatever herbs take your fancy.

            Vodka, balalaika music and dancing bears are optional.

            🙂

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              1. Preparing shashlyk at the dacha:

                and this is how we eat it, Walker:

                You can give the dill to me if you don’t want it, soft arse!

                Plus 21 °C (70 °F) here now. The dacha is calling!

                🙂

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                1. That looks great ME! I get the polish treatment. I’ve become a particular fan of Stari Rolnik brand of horseradish with sosiki and the other great meats, not that different from stuff you can get in the Balkans but at least it hasn’t spent the last six months in cold storage.

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                2. I’m a horseradish freak as well. Loads of it grows in our garden. You have to watch it though, or it takes over!

                  The sauce that I just love with shashlyk is a dark purple Georgian concoction made of plums and pomegranate. it’s sharp and sour and goes down a treat with the pork on a skewer, though I must admit, I like mutton shashlyk as well.

                  I think I must have been weaned on mutton. It was far more common than beef where I was brought up in the North-West.

                  Lancashire Hotpot was traditionally made with mutton when I was a child.

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                3. Yes, it can take over, which is why you need another fighter in the corner. I recommend ‘Ajvar’, particularly the Macedonian brands. Also, dollops of garlic on everything until it blows your socks off

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      3. He has lived in Russia for 14 years, yet I have never actually heard him speak Russian ( you would think some sort of quote or interview to Ekho,Dozhd, Radio Svoboda, RBK or Ukrainian drivel like Gromdaske would have been possible in 14 years). The reason I mention this is because of the frequent faux-pas this cretin has committed on twitter and in his articles that have shown a chronic misunderstanding of Russian language and culture

        Light-hearted stories like this are fine and can be quite beneficial ( look at the length and enlightened interest just on the thread of this comment about it by everyone here) – but what I can’t stand is that useless rubbish lke RT, out of all the things to try to highlight about Walker, and the general standard of “work” the likes of him to – they choose to go with this.

        Guys like that should be routinely pulled apart for the misleading nature of their work

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    1. An ‘unholy alliance’; a ‘marriage made in hell’ – my dears, how dramatic!!!

      If anyone deserves to have a lifelong enemy in the Russians, its Americans. By God, they’ve earned it, through unrelenting hatred and non-stop demonization. The notion that Russia ‘interfered in the American elections’ is pure, unadulterated crap, it never happened, but it is now such an article of faith in America that you could never get people to doubt it – it is an established fact hammered in by constant repetition. And all to save Hillary’s dignity, so she would not have to face up to having run a worse campaign than Trump.

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  2. https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/venezuela/article229548044.html

    Another well coiffed european- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_Vecchio- looking POS…

    (Venezuelan people of French descent)

    Vecchio:

    “I think as a government it is important to have good relations with all countries in the world. We want to promote democratic values internationally. We do not want to interfere in other countries. Good relations and mutual respect with all countries is what we want. We want oil to be a normal commodity in the international arena, and not use it as leverage. We want our trade deals to have all the countries involved gaining something good out of them. The way we see it, Chavez has been taking from the country and not been giving people anything back. Without interfering in other countries, we also want to be able to deal with our own internal affairs –

    ****we do not want Cuba, Brazil, the US or anyone interfering with Venezuela’s own matters. That is very important.”****
    http://thepolitic.org/an-interview-with-yale-world-fellow-carlos-vecchio/

    What a moron piece of crap…can’t even keep his lies straight!!!

    But looks as if American based resistance to the Guaido nonsense is gathering steam!!!!

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    1. It pleases Washington to playact that its coup attempts have been successful to some degree, and that acceptance in America of Juan Guaido’s appointees (always spoken of as “Venezuela’s Juan Guaido”, as if the country has gratefully accepted his leadership) will set the example that the world will quickly follow. But it will be the USA that loses out in the end. Venezuela is forging new partnerships and alliances, and has more or less written the USA off – if Washington is not successful at overthrowing and replacing Maduro, the USA-Venezuela partnership is toast, and Venezuela will likely sell Citgo. The USA will have to look elsewhere for heavy crude, while other customers buy what the USA used to get. And America will have made another enemy whose people hate it. What a winning formula! You’d think it was, the way Washington keeps repeating it.

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      1. “What a winning formula! You’d think it was, the way Washington keeps repeating it.”

        Ummm..I think you may recall the familiar (cliche) definition of “insanity”…

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    1. There are some who think that this dastardly Russian plan to conquer India was all a load of bollocks, though.

      The Russians could never have seriously planned to invade India, with or without the aide of the Frogs, simply because of the logistics involved: it was a long march from European Russia to the frontier of British india and a march that crossed some of the most inhospitable territory in the world, whereas on the other hand the British could transport by sea troops and equipment to India far quicker than the Russians could transport theirs to the frontier — 6 weeks, I think it was then from the UK to India by sea.

      Some point out that rumours of a Russian probe towards the Indian frontier always arose when the Russian Empire was about to kick off one of its regular wars in the Caucusus, to the detriment of the Ottomans, or in the sphere of influence of the Persian Empire, in order to divert the western European power’s attention, primarily that of the British.

      On the other hand, some maintain that such rumours of imminent Russian attacks against British India had their origin in London, where the military used these scare stories so as to get parliament to fund their expansion plans.

      Probably both sides played the same game in what was to become known as “The Great Game”.

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      1. My impression from what I have read (Hopkirk et al – not me!) is that the Russian Empire was more interested in playing a hold and deny role via Afghanistan against a rapaciously expansive British Empire.

        Defense usually requires much less in the way of resources than attack so complicating British expansion makes sense. After all, who was it who got whupped in the ‘hood by the locals more than once?

        Does it really make any sense at all that Russia would go up against Britain in India where the Brits were already deeply entrenched and had all the infrastructure and support, not to mention ports at hand? I can see why Team GB would play up the Russian threat, but even when they did have victories such as in the Crimean War, but it was still at quite a toll and made them wary despite their ejaculations. The bigging up Florence Nightingale for example served a very useful propaganda role in deflecting the horrific state and care of military casualties, suffering and disease of wounded British soldiers (I’m not detracting from her later work in GB that sanitary conditions were very important and big changes were made, etc). To be honest, I don’t see why the British establishment would big up any women willingly unless it served them. Cynical, me.

        Like

  3. В Генпрокуратуру Украины были вызваны работники администрации Порошенко
    Трех соратников пока еще действующего президента подозревают в содействии бизнесмену, которого следствие обвиняет в хищении миллиардов гривен
    22 April

    Members of the Poroshenko administration have been summoned to the Office of the Ukraine Prosecutor General
    Three associates of the current president are suspected of assisting a businessman whom investigators have accused of stealing billions of hryvnia

    Political scientists are gazing into the coffee grounds to see which deputy or minister will be the first to be arrested by order of Zelensky. But now, without waiting for the actor’s presidency to begin, the Prosecutor General’s Office of the Ukraine has begun to scour the Poroshenko entourage. The deputy head of the presidential administration, Alexey Filatov, the former head of the presidential administration, Boris Lozhkin, and the former head of the National Bank, Valeriya Gontareva, have been called in for questioning. These are the people closest to Pyotr Alekseevich [Poroshenko].

    They have been involved with the runaway oligarch Sergey Kurchenko. He is suspected of embezzling $625 million during the Viktor Yanukovych administration.

    Well, now you do not even need to wait for the inauguration of Zelensky. Security forces have already set into motion criminal cases that have been specifically taken off the back-burner.

    “We shall soon see high-profile arrests”, political analyst Alexander Solukov told KP. “Everyone will want to show their loyalty to Zelensky. Many will run over to his side, where they will begin negotiations and secret deals, against which the Ukrainians voted. But no one will cover for Poroshenko’s friends. Before, prudent security forces turned a blind eye to billions of dollars of theft. Now the party is over. For their deeds they shall have to answer. Pyotr Alekseevich will not be sent to prison, but the squeeze is being put on his associates. Many of them will soon be behind bars.

    And after that, new snouts will be stuck into the feeding trough.

    Like

    1. haha, I’m reading in the Russian press how so many of those Ukrainian pundits who really laid it into Zelensky, are now coming crawling to him. These were fervent Porky supporters and accused Z of being Putin’s spy. Now all of a sudden they are turning on Porky and trying to show their loyalty to the new regime. Porky will be burned at the stake by his former bootlickers.

      That’s the difference between American and Ukrainian “democracy”. The American losers (like Hillary) at least don’t crawl, they go on the offensive and try to destroy the newcomer. Maybe they have more pride, maybe they are just more insane(?)

      Like

      1. Oh, I wouldn’t rule out Porky trying to destroy the newcomer – after all, he still has loads of political connections, and Zelenskiy has none. Often that’s all ‘political experience’ means; a network of cronies and like-minded movers and shakers. As we have often discussed in American politics, a divisive election often offers the loser an opportunity of expressing his/her displeasure by urging his/her followers to make the country ungovernable by the victor.

        Like

    2. I wonder if these are not deliberate warnings meant to make Poroshenko flee with his ill-gotten gains. It seems a bit backwards to be musing publicly about high-profile arrests when the investigations must be in their early stages and before those under investigation have received restraining orders.

      Whatever the case, it makes a mockery of Poroshenko’s attempts to link Zelenskiy to the oligarchy.

      Like

  4. Independent: Red Joan review: Judi Dench gives a typically subtle and deft performance as the OAP Soviet spy
    https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/reviews/red-joan-review-film-judi-dench-spy-true-story-sophie-cookson-a8876051.html

    Is she a hero or traitor? The filmmakers can’t quite decide

    …The 1930s was the period of Stalin’s show trials, mass starvation in Ukraine and extreme terror but none of the Oxbridge communists in Joan’s new circle of friends are willing to acknowledge any of this..
    ####

    Following from my previous post about the Pork Pie News Networks either ignoring the return of fascists to power or minimizing their effect as ‘Russian paranoia’, we see the results of this in places like the bit in the article above where fascist propaganda gets laundered as ‘common fact‘ because everyone is repeating it so it must be true. All those f/tards who turn a blind eye think it is all harmless but at the same time rail against public displays of racism, discrimination and other forms of nastiness expressed by the public and more particularly the politicians.

    The media do not consider themselves responsible in any way for the atmosphere that is produced, daaarling, because they’re all liberal, right thinking and down right decent kind of people. So while they’re being selectively blind to such scum and at the same time smearing the Labor party leader as everything under the sun, they’ve learned nothing from Pastor Niemoller’s warning. When the people who ‘deserve’ to be swept away are gone, guess who’s next?

    I don’t give a shit about the film, obvs. The Brits just can’t get away from their institutional and pervasive Russophobia which rears its head when the government needs it to.

    Like

  5. …The 1930s was the period of Stalin’s show trials, mass starvation in Ukraine and extreme terror but none of the Oxbridge communists in Joan’s new circle of friends are willing to acknowledge any of this..

    And at the same time there was a Collectivization Famine in Kazakhstan, 1931–1933 and in the RSFSR and elsewhere in the Soviet Union — all well documented and recorded, but, interestingly, no one, least of all the reviewer for the Independent, seems to be aware of this now.

    One place where there was not a famine in those years, however, was in Galitsia, then part of Poland — but don’t say that out loud in Lviv/Lvov/Lemberg!

    Like

      1. Must be that dead-repressive place you live. Nothing in the spam filter – well, nothing but the usual pharma crap; anyone interested in cheap amoxycillin via the internet?

        Like

    1. I think Stalin’s scientists must have perfected a genetic/administrative border respecting food weapon that would only kill genuine Ukrainian speakers….

      Like

  6. In other news, the FBI has unsealed documents showing that Hitler escaped to Argentina in 1945 in a submarine.

    Turns out (Surprise Surprise!), that Hitler faked his own suicide; that must come as a genuine shock to Goebbels and his wife and children, who actually did kill themselves in solidarity with the Führer. Meanwhile, the Führer was a cowardly custard who escaped to Argentina and was given a life of luxury on a Rancho. Six highly-placed Argentinian officials conspired to rescue Hitler and set him up in his BRAND NEW RANCH.

    Like

  7. I wonder if America’s business community is beginning to wake up to the apparent fact that Elon Musk is an eccentric nut with flashes of brilliance, but a high-school boy’s worldview? This august body was formerly anxious to pony up huge amounts of cash for his ideas, and admittedly he largely delivered on Tesla. But where his grandiose predictions once inspired a rush to the bank and his casual dismissal of established technologies as ‘lame’ once evinced nervous laughter, he seems to have lost his mojo.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-04-23/tesla-autonomous-presentation-fails-to-lift-stock-price

    Like

    1. Musk’s life is an illustration of the Peter principle: he was very successful in the field of online payment systems, but he rose to his level of incompetence when he tried to be Henry Ford and Howard Hughes in one person.

      Like

    2. Here is one product that Elon Musk was successful in making and selling once upon a time:

      Current news is that he’s trying to develop an electric leaf blower. I imagine that won’t be too expensive for his factories to make. He could always market his leaf blowers by guaranteeing they’ll work 100% of the time and they probably only need to be used once every few years or however long it takes for trees to grow from seedlings again in the ash.

      Like

  8. BTW, apparently Manfred Weber was in the lo-land of Po-land canvassing support for his bid to be head of the European Commission (thus replacing Tusk – the man, not the album) by promising that he would ‘Stop NordStream II… using the laws that are available’? WTaF does that mean? It’s been cleared , Germany has an exemption, so how does he stop it by respecting the agreement? Does he think the Poles are stupid or something? Hold on, the g/f says PiS really are that stupid…. Wait for it… Is Weber taking the PiS?! 😉

    Like

    1. On closer examination, Weber does not seem to be that confident that he can do anything – he promises to ‘try’. He will ‘use all legal instruments available’ (which has already been attempted and the EU has had to retroactively apply some new laws just to get a greater measure of control over the pipeline) and ‘check all the opportunities’. He realizes the project is already in an advanced state of construction, but he will ‘try his best’.

      https://news.yahoo.com/epps-weber-wants-stop-nord-stream-2-gas-160933733.html

      Poland does not have to take any Russian gas at all – it can make a new law that it will not allow Russian gas to enter the country. Then it can reverse-flow patriotic EU gas from some partner at a significant upcharge. Suit yourselves, blockheads. But that’s not what it wants. It wants to have cheap gas, AND mouth off all day long about the eeeevil Russians. Just hook up your stoves to all that natural gas that Poland floats on, why not? It might take a blowtorch to get it burning, but what price independence? When the going gets tough, the tough get going. Pick your inspirational metaphor.

      Like

      1. NSII have said they’ll sue the shit out of the EU if they even think about f/king up the project.

        Politico: Nord Stream 2 threatens to take EU to court over gas rules
        https://www.politico.eu/article/nord-stream-2-threatens-to-take-the-eu-to-court-over-new-gas-rules/

        Applying new EU gas regulations would be ‘unreasonable, arbitrary and discriminatory,’ pipeline operator warns.

        The company behind the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline is threatening to sue the EU if it’s not allowed to avoid new regulations that it says endanger the billions of euros that have been invested in the project.

        In a letter obtained by POLITICO https://politi.co/2W6cLuY , Nord Stream 2 CEO Matthias Warnig wrote to European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker that if the pipeline is not eligible for a derogation from the new rules, “the measure would be discriminatory against [Nord Stream 2] as an investor” and the EU may be breaking an international treaty….

        … but still needs permission from Denmark. The Danish regulator ..

        …Based on how satisfied Nord Stream 2 is with that answer, “the investor can then either initiate the dispute settlement proceedings and essentially ask that an investment tribunal awards damages caused by a possible violation of [the treaty],” or it can decide against this option, said Kim Talus, professor of energy law at the University of Helsinki….
        ####

        On the one hand it makes sense for NSII to give both barrels straight away and take ‘tards like Weber down a couple of notches – damaging his credebilty in upcoming EP elections and running for EC Pres.

        On the other hand, there is clearly nothing the Commission can do to stop NSII unless they fundamentally undermine their gold plated ‘Rule of Law.

        Other investors would demand other much stronger guarantees so NSII could just have kept schtum.

        On balance, I think they made the right decision.

        Strategic patience is great practices, but sometimes you need to kick someone in the balls pour decourager les autres.

        Choose your battles, innit?

        They’ve got their own website. Woo!
        https://www.nord-stream2.com/

        Like

        1. The letter was pre-Weber, 12.04.2019 (minor formatting by me):

          Nord Stream 2
          Committed. Reliable. Safe.

          Nord Stream 2 AG, Baarerstr. 52, CH-6300 Zug

          Mr Jean-Claude Juncker
          President of the European Commission European Commission
          Rue de la Loi 200 1049 Brussels Belgium

          Date: 12.04.2019

          Proposal for a Directive (the “Amending Directive”) amending Directive 2009n3/EC (the “Gas Directive”): Request for clarification on the application of the derogation regime to the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline (“Nord Stream 2”) and notification of possible breach of the Energy Charter Treaty (“ECT”)

          Dear President,

          1. Nord Stream 2 AG (“NSP2AG”) addresses this letter to you, as President of the European Com­ mission, and, therefore, the representative of the European Union (the “EU”) for the purposes of the ECT. We also refer in this regard to Regulation 912/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 July 2014 establishing a framework for managing financial responsibility linked to investor-to-state dispute settlement tribunals established by international agreements to which the European Union is party.

          2. NSP2AG wishes to raise its concerns regarding the impact of the Amending Directive on the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline. The purpose of the letter is:

          a. To seek clarification on the application of the derogation regime proposed by the Amending Directive; and

          b. To provide notice to the European Commission as representative of the EU of a possible breach of the ECT, and to request that the EU attempts to reach an amicable settlement with NSP2AG in accordance with Article 26(1) of the ECT.

          Background to NSP2AG’s Investment In the EU

          3. NSP2AG is a company incorporated in Zug, Switzerland.

          4. Since it was established in 2015, NSP2AG has been engaged in the planning and construction of the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline, a pipeline which is being built in order to transport natural gas from Ust-Luga in Russia to Lubmin in Germany via the Baltic Sea.

          5. NSP2AG is the owner and operator of the entire pipeline.

          6. This pipeline, once operational, will significantly expand European gas supply capacity. It is antici­ pated that EU wholesale gas prices will be up to 13 percent lower by 2020 due to the additional gas which Nord Stream 2 will be able to make available to the European market.

          p.2

          7. The pipeline will also have a positive economic impact on the EU. Construction and operation of the pipeline are expected to create over 31,000 jobs in the EU and investments associated with the project will likely contribute €5 billion to the gross domestic product of the EU.

          8. Since construction of the pipeline began, the Nord Stream 2 project has already contributed at least
          €3 billion to the economies of the EU and its Member States, including through contracts with EU companies, employment of EU citizens and the purchase of materials for the project.

          9. The construction of Nord Stream 2 in the German territorial sea has been finalised. The pipeline is expected to become operational by the end of 2019.

          The proposal for the Amending Directive and the derogation regime

          10. On 8 November 2017 the European Commission tabled the proposal for the Amending Directive with the aim of extending the Gas Directive and certain associated rules to gas pipelines to and from third countries (“Import Pipelines”). Such Import Pipelines were previously outside the scope of the Gas Directive, as explained in the Commission proposal. 1

          11. Following discussions in the Council of the EU, the European Parliament and in “trilogue” discus­ sions, on 14 February 2019, the Council published a compromise text of the Amending Directive. A final text of the Amending Directive was approved by the European Parliament on 4 April 2019 but still needs to be approved by the Council of the EU. It is understood that the aim is for the Amending Directive to enter into force by summer 2019.

          12. Pursuant to the Amending Directive, Nord Stream 2 would fall within the scope of the Gas Directive on the territory of the Member States and in the territorial sea of the Member State of first intercon­nection with an EU Member State’s network, i.e. the German territorial sea.

          13. Under the Amending Directive, Article 49a allows for a derogation in relation to Import Pipelines “completed” before the entry into force of the Amending Directive (a “Derogation”). This Derogation allows Member States not to apply key provisions of the Gas Directive concerning unbundling rules, third party access and tariff regulation to such pipelines for objective reasons, including enabling the recovery of the investment made. Any decision on a Derogation must be taken within one year after entry into force of the Amending Directive.

          14. The rationale of the Derogation is “to take into account the legitimate expectations of existing op­ erators and the previous lack of specific Union rules applicable to gas pipelines from third coun­ tries” .2

          The potential impact of the Amending Directive on Nord Stream 2

          15. When and if the Amending Directive comes into force and is transposed into German law, the sec­tion of Nord Stream 2 within the geographic scope of the Directive (i.e. on German territory and in the German territorial sea) in principle becomes subject to the Gas Directive rules on, inter alia, unbundling rules, third party access and tariff regulation.

          16. The Derogation would allow Germany to derogate from these rules but this depends on the inter­pretation of the concept of a “completed” transmission line. The relevant section of Nord Stream 2 will be substantially “completed” if the amendment enters into force by summer 2019 but it will not be operational.

          17. The difference between being able to benefit from a Derogation or not (i.e. between being consid­ered “completed” or not) is significant. The Amending Directive and the legislative history demon­strate that the Derogation is provided for to allow recovery of the investment made and to protect legitimate expectations of investors. Such concerns are not materially different for a “completed”, “half-completed” or “almost completed” pipeline. The problem is the same in all these scenarios,

          1 Explanatory Memorandum, COM(2017) 660 final, p. 2.

          2 Questions and Answers on the Commission proposal to amend the Gas Directive (8 November 2017), Question 3, See also recital (4) of the Amending Directive.

          p.3

          namely that considerable financial resources have been invested in infrastructure and investment risk undertaken and that the rules for owning and operating this infrastructure are suddenly funda­ mentally changed by new regulation. In the case of Nord Stream 2 the final investment decision was taken several years ago, billions of euros have been spent and almost all commitments have been entered into. The design of construction and operation of the pipeline was based on existing legislation.

          18. The exemption regime of Article 36 of the Gas Directive would not be a suitable alternative for a Derogation. We note in this respect that the European Commission has stated: ‘1t]he logic of the derogation is [ ] very ddferent than the one used in exemption procedure under Article 36’ .3 These fundamental differences include at least the following:

          a. An Article 36 exemption is available where investment is contemplated, not where it has already been undertaken.

          b. In the case of an Article 36 exemption an investor is given clarity about its regulatory treat­ ment before it takes a final investment decision. The Derogation is concerned with inves­tors whose regulatory situation changes fundamentally after taking a final investment deci­sion and making the investment

          c. An Article 36 exemption is available to infrastructure that would normally be regulated but seeks an exceptional and more favourable treatment. The Derogation is for infrastructure that was not regulated but becomes regulated due to a change in law.
          It should be uncontested, therefore, that an Article 36 exemption cannot be seen as somehow equivalent to a Derogation under Article 49a.

          NSP2AG Is an Investor which has made an investment in the EU for the purposes of the ECT

          19. NSP2AG is a Swiss company headquartered and having substantial business activities in Zug, Switzerland. Switzerland is a contracting party to the ECT. NSP2AG is therefore an investor within the meaning of Article 1(7)(a)(ii) of the ECT.

          20. Since 2015, NSP2AG has invested more than €5 .8 billion into the planning and construction of Nord Stream 2. NSP2AG has made an investment within the area of the EU within the meaning of Article 1(6) of the ECT.

          21. Therefore, the Nord Stream 2 pipeline and the associated project is an investment of an investor for the purposes of the ECT.

          Failure to make NSP2AG eligible for the benefit of a Derogation would be a breach of the ECT

          22. In the event that the Amending Directive is adopted and implemented, and Nord Stream 2 is not eligible for a Derogation, and if no other steps are taken to put NSP2AG in the same position as if it was eligible for a Derogation, this would be a breach of the EU’s obligations under the ECT in relation to NSP2AG as an investor. Among other things, the measure would be discriminatory against NSP2AG as an investor and Nord Stream 2 as its investment.

          23. If the basis for Nord Stream 2 not being eligible for a Derogation were that, unlike comparable existing pipelines, Nord Stream 2 had not been fully completed by the time the Amending Directive came into force, such an outcome would clearly be unreasonable, arbitrary and discriminatory. We note in this respect that, when tabling its proposal in November 2017, the Commission explicitly stated that Nord Stream 2 was the only “advanced” pipeline project that would be affected by the amendment. 4 Like for other completed pipelines, very significant investment will have been made

          3 Questions and Answers on the Commission proposal to amend the Gas Directive (8 November 2017), Question 6.

          4 Questions and Answers on the Commission proposal to amend the Gas Directive (8 November 2017), Question 10 ”Which other new pipeline projects would be affected by the proposal”. More generally, the Nord stream 2 pipeline was a prominent part of the factual background to the legislative process. The Commission’s Questions and Answers document explicitly discusses the Nord stream 2 pipeline in 4 of the 11questions and answers it addresses.On 12 June 2017 the European

          p.4

          in Nord Stream 2 on the basis of an investment decision (and consequent material financial com­mitments) made and implemented prior to the adoption of the Amending Directive. It would be reasonable for NSP2AG to be entitled to recover that investment. Conversely, it would be unrea­sonable and discriminatory for the EU to design the Amending Directive and the Derogation in such a way that only Nord Stream 2 is significantly affected. In fact, Nord Stream 2 should be more eligible for a derogation than other Import Pipelines, not less, because other existing Import Pipe­ lines have already recovered investment in full or in part. Nord Stream 2, by contrast, has not re­ covered any investment.

          24. This may constitute a breach of Articles 10 and 13 of the ECT. NSP2AG is therefore raising this issue now in the hope of receiving clarification from the EU that Nord Stream 2 will be eligible for such a Derogation in order to address such a breach.

          Notification to the European Commission under the ECT

          25. Given the current uncertainty regarding the operation of the Amending Directive and the availability of a Derogation to Nord Stream 2, NSP2AG requests that the EU confirms that Nord Stream 2 will be treated as “completed” and falling within the Derogation regime like other Import Pipelines in which investments have already been made before adoption of the Amending Directive.

          26. NSP2AG is concerned to protect its valuable investment. Accordingly, NSP2AG serves this letter as a notice of dispute to the EU under Article 26 of the ECT and requests that the EU attempt to reach an amicable settlement with NSP2AG in accordance with Article 26(1) of the ECT.

          Response requested from the EU

          27. We should be grateful for a response to this letter by 13 May 2019. Yours faithfully

          Nord Stream 2 AG

          4 Commission had also tabled a recommendation for a Council Decision authorising the opening of negotiations of an agreement between the EU and Russia on the operation of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline.

          Like

          1. Europe wants the gas – you know they want it; who wouldn’t, at a prospect of gas prices going even lower than they are now, by more than 10%? But leaders have to pretend to prefer freedom gas from America, at a far higher price, simply because the Americans could not charge low prices and still make money. I could see them selling at a loss if it would mean stopping Nord Stream II, but sooner or later the price would have to go well above what it is now, because of considerations already stated. But Europe dares not hurt America’s feelings by seeming to have a spine. Good old Uncle Sam, who will sanction you into the ground at the drop of a hat if he thinks you need a lesson. Just the sort of partner on whom you want to make yourself dependent.

            The assumption upon which everyone seems to be proceeding is that if Nord Stream II can be stopped, the Russians will have to continue subsidizing Ukraine’s spite by transiting Europe’s gas through it. I’m afraid I don’t see that happening. Turkish Stream is well under way,

            http://vestnikkavkaza.net/news/Serbia-launches-construction-of-Turkish-stream.html

            and once completed, I believe Russia would rely on its pipelines other than those which pass through Ukraine. It would be counter to Russian concepts of justice for Ukraine to be rewarded for its mendacity. If Europe comes up short for gas because of it, the prices would go up. American freedom gas would obviously capture a part of the market, since the price would enter its realm of profitability, but the security of supply would not be there and it could not be delivered in volumes which would compete with pipeline gas. Europe would still buy all the Russian gas it could get its hands on, at a much higher price.

            Like

  9. @Mark:
    https://thenewkremlinstooge.wordpress.com/2019/03/31/new-management-wanted-ukraine-cannot-seem-to-stop-delighting-putin/comment-page-3/#comment-26082

    No…NO…NO!!!!!

    You’re being as stubborn and cantankerous as a four year old who has frozen himself in the head down arms folded across chest position when told by mom something he does not want to believe:

    Here are the facts again for you…OK???

    “The tone for the past weekend was set by the New York Times in an editorial published in Saturday’s print edition (see: “The Mueller report and the campaign against Russia”), which acknowledged the failure of the anti-Russia campaign to provide any evidence of coordination between the Trump campaign and alleged Russian “meddling” in the 2016 election.
    The editorial nonetheless sought to salvage the effort by the military-intelligence apparatus to frame up Russian President Vladimir Putin as the alleged political mastermind of Trump’s surprise electoral victory, arguing that in Mueller’s report “one conclusion is categorical: ‘The Russian government interfered in the 2016 presidential election in sweeping and systematic fashion.’”
    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/04/23/muel-a23.html

    “sweeping and systematic”…….so there !!!!!!!!!

    Like

    1. Well, it would not be the first time I have been called stubborn.

      Others have pointed out that much of the advertising alleged to have caused American voters to lose faith in The American Way was actually posted after the polls had closed, when they could not have swayed the vote. The issue seems mostly to have been racism in America, with insinuations that the Russians used the ‘Black Lives Matter’ campaign to get folks all sturred up, and convinced they live in a land of double standards.

      I’m not going to get into that in any more detail right now – suffice it to say it will be an unusual day in America when a black person calls in a suspicious person report on a white person for being in a black neighbourhood, and the police actually show up to check it out.

      Is America a racist nation? That’s not for me to judge; I don’t live there. But a very significant percentage of people, many of whom do live in America, seem to think so. Was that issue a major one for American voters in the last election? I guess it was, certainly among black people and civil libertarians. But the choice was between two white candidates, neither of whom was on anyone’s radar as a reformer for race relations, and the notion the American people elected Donald Trump because they saw a black brother in him struggling to get out is so ludicrous I could barely manage to type it out.

      Like

      1. Mark… I was kidding you about being stubborn!! No offense was meant. OK! :O)
        OTOH… The American elite is for the most part comprised of morons and/or racists… So there you have it!

        Like

        1. I was not serious either. I have been called worse things than stubborn, and it was obvious you were being sarcastic anyway. But thanks for the comment – I was starting a detailed reply, but I ran across a reference that convinced me there was enough material for a whole post, and I was sort of looking for something to write about. So you were part of the inspiration.

          Like

  10. WOW!!!!
    Even Bloomberg acknowledges that USA Venezuela policies ,strategies and tactics are a total misguided clusterfuck of serial displays of foreign policy ineptitude and incompetence indicating a lack of basic intellectual wherewithal to comprehend the situation on the part of the (racist) gringo morons in the State Department and the WH.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-04-23/trump-s-venezuela-mistakes-are-a-gift-to-maduro

    (However Shannon O’Neil is at her core a reactionary lamenting that the racist motivated attempted coup wasn’t done right….she is NOT advocating for the Venezuelan people to be freed of attempts to install a gringo loving racist white european based elite to oppress and exploit the POC in Venezuela)

    Like

    1. Boeing’s corporate headquarters are actually in Chicago (since September 2001) though the Seattle metropolitan area is still the main area where the planes are made.

      This fact alone should give us all pause for breath. Chicago is the Holy City of Neoliberal Economics, and the University of Chicago is its Holy Temple where in the 1960s / early 70s Chile’s “Chicago Boys” studied under Milton Friedman and like-minded professors and then returned to Santiago to serve under the Pinochet regime. Recall also that Chicago School economics was the ideology applied by Harvard University alumni to reform the Russian economy with the blessing of Anatoly Chubais in the 1990s. No doubt various bean-counters up to and including senior executive level who have worked at Boeing since its move to Chicago have also been U of C graduates. That must have some effect on the corporate culture at Boeing and what it considers Boeing’s values and reason for existing are.

      Like

  11. Ambassador to Russia, Naval Forces Europe Commander, view dual aircraft carrier strike group operations in the Mediterranean
    4/23/2019 12:14:00 PM

    MEDITERRANEAN SEA (NNS) — U.S. Ambassador to Russia, Jon M. Huntsman Jr. and Adm. James G. Foggo III, commander, U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa and Allied Joint Force Command Naples, Italy, observed dual carrier strike group (CSG) operations from the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) in the Mediterranean Sea…

    ““Each of the carriers operating in the Mediterranean at this time represent 100,000 tons of international diplomacy,” Huntsman said. “Diplomatic communication and dialogue coupled with the strong defense these ships provide demonstrate to Russia that if it truly seeks better relations with the United States, it must cease its destabilizing activities around the world.”

    Yet another threat.

    The words of a millionaire Mormon, a place man who passes for what is called a diplomat, an ambassador, in civilized nations, in those nations that have long established cultures and traditions, .

    Russia “must cease its destabilizing activities around the world”.

    Who do these people think they are?

    “One hundred thousand tons of international diplomacy”?

    Since when has the issuing of military threats and the brandishing military hardware been deemed as diplomacy?

    Schoolyard bully-boy diplomacy?

    Utter immatureness?

    Gross vulgarity?

    Dick waving?

    Why are these uncouth people unable to recognize the hypocrisy of their words?

    Are they really so blind to their ignorance and the offensive nature of their behaviour?

    There come to mind the words of French politician Clemenceau, who lived and worked in New York and who was married to a US citizen:

    “America is the only nation in history which, miraculously, has gone directly from barbarism to degeneration without the usual interval of civilisation”.

    Like

      1. The aircraft carrier still has a role to play and it is still a fearsome weapon, but I agree it is not the guarantee of frantic obedience it once was. There was a brief era when all the United States needed to do to stifle unwanted behaviour was to deploy a carrier task group near the area. But it is arguable if Russia was ever completely cowed by such a tactic, and it certainly would not be now – it would be a gift, as few things would be such a symbolic blow to American posturing and prancing as the loss of an aircraft carrier and maybe several of its escorts. Few could argue the point that the USA has become accustomed to the aircraft carrier being invulnerable, far out of reach, while all the danger is concentrated against the strike aircraft it carries while they are engaged in attacking the enemy ashore. But that is no longer true unless the carrier stay so far out at sea that its aircraft have only a couple of minutes over the target before they have to return for fuel. And America has become accustomed also to attacking second-rate countries whose military capability is far less than its own. It has never actually taken on an enemy like Russia or China.

        Like

        1. “…it would be a gift, as few things would be such a symbolic blow to American posturing and prancing as the loss of an aircraft carrier…”

          Yes, Mark this is exactly what I meant. I never meant to completely dismiss the aircraft carriers. In fact, I still very much think that they still have a place in modern warfare – just not ones that displaces 100k tonnes of water and are being dangled around before a determined adversary that has various means imaginable to hurt them.

          Like

          1. I almost choked on this putdown by Maria Zakharova regarding US carriers in the Mediterranean – absolutely perfect:

            I would like to remind the Ambassador that Russia, throughout its centuries-long history, has repeatedly encountered such threats, issued as recommendations, and has repeatedly demonstrated their worthlessness…Perhaps the Ambassador would like for Russia to have one more holiday to celebrate?

            https://sputniknews.com/world/201904251074460088-russian-foreign-ministry-response-to-huntsman/

            Like

            1. My god! What an old hag!

              At least, that’s what how alleged Argentinian – Canadian always described her whenever he decided to mention her. He never tired of doing this. He must have thought he was being so smart in doing so.

              Like

              1. Venezuelan so he claimed. He struck out on Syria and North Korea. Venezuela is shaping up like another bitter disappointment for our international boy of mystery.

                Like

              2. Actually, he claimed to be Venezuelan, just studying in Canada. Or maybe his family lived here now, I can’t remember. But that is a favourite technique for shutting down argument – claiming the knowledge of the situation unique to a local, so that dissenters feel uncomfortable challenging on-the-ground knowledge. I am reminded again of that dork who claimed to live in a majority-Mexican town, but also claimed to live less than two hours drive from Chicago.

                Like

                1. He claimed to be a Venezuelan studying in Canada, his family in Venezuela having sent him there and presumably paying his college fees while at the same time he claimed he was sending money back to his folks.

                  Cortes probably still waiting for the guy to reply to his question in Spanish in an old cobwebby comments forum.

                  Like

                2. His compulsory and pejorative term “Old Hag” tagged onto the delightful Zakharova’s name whenever he mentioned her seems to indicate that he is in his early 20s or even younger, or that he is a mature man with a juvenile mind.

                  I find Zakharova to be an extremely attractive woman, attractive in mind and body. She is a little more than 25 years younger than I am and has the Russian equivalent of a Ph.D.

                  The Venezuelan-Canadian used to say that he only insulted those who insulted him. I should like to know when Zakharova insulted him.

                  Also, though he did not say this, he poured forth his bile onto not only those who insulted him, but also the Ukraine, and placing the definite article before “Ukraine” was insult enough for him.

                  He vented forth on me because I had written “Yukie” and “Yukiestan”.

                  I had never insulted him personally, though I quickly realized he was a cnut.

                  Like

                3. I insulted him quite a lot, in spite of which he posted a couple of comments on my blog. Eventually I disappointed him too, he accused me of being brainwashed and belonging to a cult, he thinks we are all culties of the Great and Benevolent Mark.
                  Who has us all brainwashed into being Kremlin Stooges.

                  Like

                4. He acknowledged that he was young and naive about worldly matters but tried to hide it behind clumsy use of sexually explicit language. The same crude deception was at work about being a poor boy from the slums of Venezuela.

                  My guess is that he was a student at a community college in Canada seeking an associates degree in IT. Nothing wrong with that. His manic obsession with Maria is related to issues with his mother; perhaps abut being overly sheltered as a youth and having impure thoughts regarding mom. The rest of his histrionics flow from that. All speculation of course.

                  Like

                5. I would be surprised if anything he said about himself was accurate. He almost always covered his location so that his posts were bounced several times and could have originated from anywhere. The one time I noticed that he did not, the posting came from a server at the University of Guelph.

                  https://www.uoguelph.ca/

                  Like

                6. Nobody on earth but Ukrainians care whether Ukraine has a ‘the’ in front of it. And if you remember his original complaint was Ukrainianoids being referred to as Ukes.

                  There are plenty of internet gusanos (purportedly) from Venezuela on twitter if you want to know what one sounds like.

                  For example:

                  Many more can be found flittering around any leftish twitter personality commenting on Venezuela.

                  Like

                7. I don’t doubt for a moment that life in Venezuela is shitty. There very probably are water and electricity shortages that make the people want to scream with frustration. But the Venezuelan liberals want to reward the very people who are responsible for the deprivation of ordinary services, while the shifting of blame to ‘Maduro’s incompetence’ or even the ‘fact’ that ‘Socialism is always a failure’ is just about the most obvious bait-and-switch ever. I am not interested in living under a socialist system myself – I find Canada to still be fairly good at looking after everyone while remaining unabashedly capitalist, and to still have something of a social conscience. However, if people in another country choose a socialist government in a democratic vote, I think the rest of the world and especially the United States of America should mind its own fucking business. In fact, Socialist governments have enjoyed some notable successes; Bishop’s government in Grenada ushered in free health care and free secondary education, doubled the number of secondary schools and raised the already-high literacy rate to 98% in just four years. But know-nothings branded him a ‘Marxist thug’ , while western academics stroke their chins and ruminate that socialism never works. Yet in many of the instances it failed, it was hounded and persecuted to failure by the forces of capitalism.

                  Oil-rich Venezuela is in a very good position to make socialism work. And the west does not want that to happen, anywhere. It might give people ideas. So it will never quit taking runs at Venezuela until it seizes control of it and forces it into the capitalist model where the poor and middle classes are ruled by the wealthy. And there’s always an element willing to betray the country so long as they are confident they will end up in the ruling class. Guaido is a perfect example. A patriot who is willing to have his leadership of the country forced on his people by a foreign military, if necessary.

                  However, if Venezuela makes it out of this still able to say its soul is its own, it will have learned a lot of valuable lessons about the way the world works, will be a lot less naive and will be that much harder a nut to crack. Its wealth, should it ever build it up again, will be well out of the reach of the west.

                  Like

                8. The U of Guelph requires the following for students from Venezuela:

                  Venezuela

                  Successful completion of the first year at an accredited institution of higher learning is typically required along with the Bachillerato. (See also: IB and American Patterned Education)

                  Odd, he never mentioned this other schooling experience in his posts about living in the slums of Caracas.

                  Above said as if more proof were needed of his fakery.

                  Like

  12. Always niggling, always poking, always provoking! I am sure they are too dumb to think up these little irritations for themselves, so if these retards don’t think them up, I wonder who does it for them?

    Украина отказалась хранить в тайне советские секретные изобретения

    24 APR 201913:05
    The Ukraine has refused to keep the lid on Soviet secret inventions

    Kiev will no longer keep Soviet secrets undisclosed. On April 24th, the Ukraine withdrew from the agreement on the mutual ensuring of the safety of interstate secrets in the sphere of the legal protection of inventions. This agreement ensured the safety of secret inventions created in the Soviet Union.

    Agreement on the protection of Soviet secret inventions was signed in June 1999 in Minsk, reminds “Interfax”. In addition, the Ukrainian government has terminated an agreement on the establishment of a common statistical base of the Economic Union. The agreement on a common statistical base of the Economic Union was signed in Almaty on February 10, 1995 between the Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia and Kyrgyzstan.

    President Petro Poroshenko promised to look closely at all international agreements concluded within the CIS and to withdraw from those that did not meet the national interests of the Ukraine if only in the slightest way. In addition, he instructed the cabinet to start the procedure of officially withdrawing from the constituent bodies of the CIS.

    Since August 2018, the representative of the Ukraine office at the statutory bodies of the CIS has been closed: all contacts are now made only through the Ukrainian Embassy in Belarus.

    Like

    1. One last shit on the bed before he leaves his orifice? There’s no class in the chocolate faced ass that is Porkoshenko.

      Like

    2. But remaining on the Eurodole is most certainly in Ukraine’s interest, so we don’t have to worry about his repudiating any agreements which keep the cash flowing in exchange for more or less fuck-all.

      The Ukrainian Boris Yeltsin is occupying his final days in making it impossible for Russia and Ukraine to ever have any kind of relationship ever again, because it would take only the rise of another leader like him to result in the same behaviours and slavish obeisance to Russia’s enemies. He is poisoning the well for Zelenskiy, supposing he turned out to be any different than Poroshenko.

      So be it. Ukraine will remain the poorest state in Europe, its population will continue to drain away and disperse, and eventually the IMF will get tired of ladling out the lolly. It should be remembered that niggling irritants and pure prickishness like this are things for which all Ukrainians will eventually be punished by the loss of transit income to the economy. Porky won’t mind – he’s rich, and well-insulated from want.

      Like

  13. Salon via Antiwar.com: Reporter Sharmine Narwani on the secret history of America’s defeat in Syria
    https://www.salon.com/2019/04/21/reporter-sharmine-narwani-on-the-secret-history-of-americas-defeat-in-syria/

    ####

    All at the link and very worth it with lots of interesting tidbits, including this one The Syrian opposition used to burn tires on the tops of buildings to simulate shelling for TV cameras. – that threw up a memory flag for me that was one of the tricks used in Bosnia (as was revealed later – I think in one of the numerous UNPROFOR soldier biographies that came out) and was swallowed hook, line and sinker by the Humanitarian Media. In fact quite a few of the things she highlights as the Western regime change M/O and media manipulation are identical over the years. Quelle surprise! I don’t think the retarded PPNN care at all as it has been repeated so many times so they must believe that it is the result that counts. The same is true about the number of supposed deaths and who died, i.e. inflated and only non-government civilian opposition gets killed. The PPNN was wailing 200k dead at the end of 1992 (as claimed by Sherif Bassouni) whereas it was a little of 100k for all in the ultimate reckoning. Still, as I said, lots of what she said has strong echoes of behavior in Bosnia.

    Like

    1. This is a fabulous find. A direct refutation of Uncle Sam’s self-serving bullshit by someone who has been there, right there in the disputed zones, and obtained information and admissions directly from the fake rebels. An excellent reference, one to bookmark. Totally eviscerates the White Helmets.

      Like

      1. Sharmine Narwani is the journalist who took up the Syrian govt’s offer of a tour of a laboratory found in the then recently liberated East Ghouta area in March 2018, about the time the SAA captured hundreds of jihadis and found at least 300 of them had EU passports. This was also when the Skripal poisoning nonsense erupted in the UK. No Western journalists were interested in the offer.

        I recall reading then (when Narwani first made her report) that the laboratory was set up with American-made equipment that apparently matched equipment the US had exported to Saudi Arabia previously. There were vats, large containers and pipes suggestive of a small chemical-making factory. Drums of chlorine were found as well.

        Like

    1. A useful compendium of facts. Kuh-yiv wants to bury the whole Maidan experience except for a saccharine sanitized version which depicts the much-beloved ‘fledgling democracy’ struggling to raise its brave little head. The west wants to enable that desire, and so history is being rewritten to show events in a light which is much more acceptable to a culture raised on Concord Bridge and the Minutemen, Paul Revere’s brave midnight ride. No room for cynicism in the Land Of The Free. Much like the downing of MH17, which will; forever and ever be blamed on Russia thanks to a concentrated propaganda campaign, and the west standing aside to allow the culprit unrestricted access to the evidence, and even to run the investigation. Not a lot of criminals can ever hope for such largess; that one will go down in history as the Golden Fleece of crime.

      Like

  14. AsiaTimes.com: Russia stands to gain amid Syria energy crisis
    https://www.asiatimes.com/2019/04/article/russia-stands-to-gain-amid-syria-energy-crisis/

    Russia steps in

    Russia seemed noticeably absent from the current crisis, at least until recently, despite having established a strong position in the Syrian energy sector in the past two years.

    In February 2018, Russia and Syria signed a multi-year roadmap for cooperation in the energy sector. The Syrian government, in turn, invited Lukoil, Gazprom Neft, and other Russian companies to restore the country’s energy infrastructure and to develop its offshore natural gas sources…
    ####

    The rest at the link.

    Speculative at best, but still interesting. What are the logistics of shipping enough oil/whatever through the Bosphorus to Tartus? Doesn’t it make more sense for Russia to broker transit via i-raq from Ii-ran despite the potential political problems? i-rack is trying to kick the Americans out so more threats from Washington would only play in to their hands. And is it true that i-ran is really demanding its debts be repaid this early? I’m not so sure… Something’s afoot though.

    Like

    1. Good catch! But where’s the outrage, as America strangles civilian populations of enemy countries around the world with its stupid sanctions? If Russia imposed economic sanctions on Ukraine, supposing it was only buckwheat or something like that, America would scream with fury – why, America insists that Russia continue to transit Europe’s gas supply through Ukraine, and pay them to do it, even though the two countries are enemies. But nobody seems to notice anything amiss with American ruthlessness and cruelty as it imposes suffering from afar so that it can inject its own political choices into the government.

      Like

    1. 1 week ago Sally Bernstein
      “Leave Venezuela and their oil alone. Do we really need another Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen…etc. The US is starting to look like a lurching, dying Empire. You’d think the citizens would wake up and see how this is all about business interests and not humanitarian anything. Spend those trillions here at home! We have all kinds of issues. Been on vacation to D.C. lately? Massive homeless population living in the shadows of all this wealth. Start there. No profits for anyone except helping the homeless is morally right.”

      CalMex
      “So, we are to believe that 20,000 Cubans are able to control the 128,000 soliders who comprise Venezuela’s armed forces. Oh, and the convicted liar, Elliot Abrams is the source of this ludicrous claim.

      What the story fails to take into account is that Guaido is in league with some much hated gringos, like Pence, Bolton, Abrams and, of course that pillar of democracy, Donnie Trump.

      It just might be the case that Venezuelan soldiers, while not happy with Maduro, are not going to be pawns in yet another episode of Washington ham-handed meddling in the nation’s internal affairs.

      Trump makes nice with thugs like Kim and Putin but somehow can’t stomach Maduro. Wonder why?

      The days when DC could move Latin American leaders around like chess pieces have come to an end.

      The only way this one gets fixed is if Venezuelans alone take matters into their hands.”

      Like

      1. squier13:
        Exactly! And not only US interference, but specifically the role of Elliot Abrams in the Dirty Wars of the 1980s. His role both in the Iran-Contra conspiracy as well as actual genocide in Guatemala and El Salvador make him among the great war criminals of the 20th Century. That he has been rehabilitated to play this role again in Venezuela is something special. He should have spent the last 30 years in prison.

        mindurian:
        I know about the CIA’s previous activities in Central America, but I wonder if the CIA has the muscle to really do anything today… I doubt it.

        squier13:
        It’s the same guy, Elliot Abrams. Like, literally the same person!

        Like

    2. Sorry; can’t read it – the Washington Post is particularly insistent that I subscribe before I can read any of their content, and I don’t just get the annoying window that you can still read around – the story disappears completely, and is replaced by a little box that offers “Continue reading for X dollars”.

      Like

  15. https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/04/saudi-arabia-carries-out-mass-execution-death-penalty-shiites-37-people-one-day.html?sid=5388f0d9dd52b818310003e9&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=traffic&utm_source=newsletter&utm_content=TheSlatest

    “The individuals were found guilty of attacking security installations with explosives, killing a number of security officers and cooperating with enemy organizations against the interests of the country, the Interior Ministry said,” according to the Associated Press. “Executions are traditionally carried out after midday prayers. Public displays of the bodies of executed men last for around three hours until late afternoon prayers, with the severed head and body hoisted to the top of a pole overlooking a main square.”

    Like

  16. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree that will simplify getting a Russian passport for eastern Ukraine residents of the breakaway republics. Putin said that the move is aimed at protecting human rights.

    The new rules, that took effect immediately on Wednesday, apply to the permanent residents of the breakaway parts of Ukraine – Lugansk and Donetsk regions – the area which has an estimated 3.7 million residents who are predominantly ethnic Russians. The decree allows for the residents of the two republics to get a Russian passport under a simplified three-month procedure.

    The decree has been published on the Kremlin website three days after Ukraine elected a new president.

    It’s not aimed at “creating problems” for Ukraine, Putin explained. “People living on the territories of the Donetsk and Lugansk republics are completely deprived from any civil rights, it crosses all boundaries from a human rights perspective to tolerate this situation,” he said.

    Ukrainian authorities have imposed a strict blockade on the breakaway regions, trying to prevent any cash and goods flow into the self-proclaimed republics. Apart from continuous artillery shelling of residential areas, Kiev also repeatedly disrupted water and electricity supply. Their residents therefore are forced to frequently go to Russia, in order to get the most basic household items or healthcare. Moscow, on its part, tried to ease the hardships of the Lugansk and Donetsk residents, repeatedly sending humanitarian convoys packed with food and other basic items and recognized the identity documents issued by the republics in 2017.

    source

    What evil swine those Russians are!

    Украина запросила экстренное заседание Совбеза ООН
    24.04.2019 | 20:58

    The Ukraine has requested an emergency meeting of the UN security Council
    24.04.2019 | 20:58

    The Ukraine has asked that a meeting of the UN security Council be called because of the decision of the Russian side to facilitate the obtaining of citizenship by the residents of the breakaway DPR and LPR, reports TASS, citing a source.

    It is noted that the Ukrainian side has asked that an emergency meeting of the UN security Council be called in order to resolve issues “threatening” its sovereignty.

    According to the source, the date of a preliminary meeting is already known. The meeting is scheduled for the afternoon of April 25.

    Earlier, Vladimir Zelensky’s winning team in the Ukraine presidential elections said that it was necessary to impose sanctions, owing to the fact that the Russian leader Vladimir Putin had simplified the receipt of Russian passports for residents of the self-proclaimed DPR and LPR.

    What stalwart defenders of freedom and democracy those Ukrainian lawmakers are!

    Meanwhile, Ukrainians move in droves to Russian and Poland, whether they be in possession of foreign passports or not.

    Like

    1. Zelenskiy is in the same position as Trump – he has to come out swinging at Russia, or opposition elements crow that he is in bed with Putin.

      I’d be interested in seeing Russia impose some sanctions of its own – Ukraine cannot really hurt Russia very much with its pinprick sanctions, but Russia could hurt Ukraine a great deal. For some reason, it continues to turn the other cheek.

      A discussion I had elsewhere reminded me of a long-ago conflict: Grenada. At the time, the president America wanted deposed had just been arrested and executed by his own countrymen. But the Americans invaded anyway, less than a week later. Their purported reason was the safety of American college students in Grenada. In other words, other Americans, their brothers, although they were not native to that country. This was supposed to be noble and inspiring.

      Hints by Russia that it might intervene to protect the rights and even lives of ethnic Russians living in eastern Ukraine, however, are received with howls of derision by the Exceptional Nation. That’s just a transparent excuse for invasion, a flimsy fig-leaf for self-interest!

      Uh huh.

      Like

      1. ..but Russia could hurt Ukraine a great deal. For some reason, it continues to turn the other cheek.
        ####

        The long game. As much as the ‘tards in Kiev squirm and make PR gestures, as you say ‘pinprick sanctions, they are not improving the situation on the ground and even the dumbest of the dumb see that even with the full support of Washington that nothing is happening, then the shift of public opinion over time to well they are our neighbors and we do need to have some kind of relationship with them will continue.

        How long does Kiev political class think its citizens will be happy to depend on an ICU financial (IMF/whatever) drip from the western ‘powers’? They can talk loudly, but voters still have the vote. Time is on Russia’ side and it really doesn’t have to do anything very much apart from tweak Kiev’s nose every now and then. Magnanimous in strategic strength.

        Like

  17. ME brought up poverty in an earlier post so,

    al-Beeb s’allah!: Food bank supplies help record numbers
    https://www.bbc.com/news/education-48037122

    Baked beans, tinned fish and canned fruit are carried out of a church in west London by neatly-dressed people in their 30s and 40s.

    The UK’s biggest food bank network, the Trussell Trust, gave 1.6 million packs of food supplies in the past year.

    This was more than ever before and a 19% annual increase.

    The food bank in St Matthew’s Church in Fulham is one of three sites run by Hammersmith and Fulham Foodbank, a charity which feeds about 300 people a week….

    …”They just do not have enough to live on,” says Mrs Aikens.

    This can be low pay, low benefits, delays to universal credit, interruptions in earnings, illness, unexpected costs, debts, rent arrears, rising utility bills… but in the end, it comes back to a lack of money.

    “The tipping point between coping and not coping can be pretty abrupt,” says Mrs Aikens….
    ####

    Must be Russian fake news.

    But, the government and their lickspittle press loudly proclaims that ‘there are record numbers of people in work’. Yes, badly paid, poor hours, a modern version of the Victorian ‘workhouse’, which means the government can continue to cut any government support and offer lower taxes to voters. I’m amazed the strategy has worked for so long. What’s the point of low taxes if everything else costs and arm and a leg? Childcare in the UK is significantly more expensive than in Germany for example. WTF? Is this ‘the market providing’ under the government’s ridiculous rules that make even the Germans look rational? Quality of life simply doesn’t come in to it.

    Like

  18. You know that former soldier cum Conservative MP cockwad Johnny Mercer who along with fellow MP Turdhat don’t like Russia? Well he’s an even bigger twat than we imagined:

    al-Beeb s’allah: MP Johnny Mercer’s salary funded by failed bond scheme marketing agent
    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-devon-47884273

    …Johnny Mercer receives £85,000 from Crucial Academy, a company ultimately funded by Surge Financial Limited…

    …Mr Mercer, himself a former Army officer, is contracted to work 20 hours per month, a rate of more than £350 per hour…

    …According to Mr Mercer’s register of members’ interests, his only other regular income is the £85,000 per year from Crucial Academy…

    …The company claims to have trained 80 veterans since July 2018, with more than 72 “finding gainful employment post-course in the cyber security industry”…
    ####

    What it doesn’t say is that as Conservative MP, he voted for cutting support for bereaved amry families in 2017! What a cnut!

    https://www.thecanary.co/uk/analysis/2019/04/24/tory-mp-earns-85k-from-an-armed-forces-charity-yet-voted-to-cut-support-for-soldiers-bereaved-families/

    …Following the vote, changes to Bereavement Support Payment Regulations significantly reduced help available to bereaved families and partners. Despite more than 4,000 letters of objection, the new system could mean widowed parents and families losing out on up to £12,000 a year.

    Under the old system, if a spouse or partner died, families could claim a tax-free £2,000 Bereavement Payment. As the Mirror reported, those with children could also apply for the Widowed Parent’s Allowance, “a taxable benefit of up to £487.71 a month (£5,852 a year)”. This was payable for up to 20 years. The new scheme means that, despite an increased tax-free payment, parents only receive help for 18 months. Unmarried parents receive nothing…
    ####

    Die for your country and your family gets fucked by the government.

    Like

    1. While he gets paid at a rate of more than £350 per hour. Nice work if you can get it. Only one of the many, many reasons I regard politicians as the scum of the earth, lower even than lawyers (with a few rare exceptions, such as Alex Mercouris).

      Like

  19. Finally! Putin signed a decree allowing a process for Donetsk/Luhansk residents to apply for Russian citizenship and a Russian passport. I start to break this story down in my latest post.
    Westie press, it goes without saying, is having a screaming fit over this news. They see it as an absolute “provocation” and a challenge to the new Ukrainian Comedy-President.
    President Putin responds laconically: “In what way are Russians less deserving than Romanians?” I think we all know the answer to that question!

    Like

      1. You meet more interesting people in hell, so I don’t give a fig about your damnation, Yalensis!

        I mean, who wants eternally to strum harps whilst chanting:

        Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts.
        heaven and earth are full of Thy glory.

        Like

        1. This guy certainly isn’t strumming a harp in a little white frock and singing songs of Lord God Almighty on a little white fluffy cloud in a pale blue sky.

          Like

        2. Yes, most of the rock and rollers are probably going to hell, or at least some way station between the two locations. But it’s all the imps, poking and poking, you can’t get a decent rest. The thought of ‘eternal rest’ is a compelling one, since I am fond of my sleep; working an afternoon shift to me is almost like not working at all, as it allows me to wake up when I choose and I loathe getting up to the alarm clock. The thought of sleeping forever almost makes death nothing to fear, if nothing to look forward to, either. But being poked by imps so that you cannot enjoy your well-earned rest is diabolical.

          Like

          1. This Russian girl (Alisa Sadikova) got a head start when she was very young:

            Now all that remains is that she be as boring as … well, as boring as all the people who end up in Heaven.

            Like

        1. Ha, ha!! One of the greatest films I ever saw. I must have been about 11 or 12, and so it had much more impact than if I had been an adult, and the cheesy special effects were quite adequate for their time. Charlton Heston was my boyhood hero. The remake, while technically dazzling, didn’t even come close. I suppose a lot of it was the atmosphere of the old Capitol Theatre in Middleton, Nova Scotia (it’s a pub now, although they kept the sign); modern cineplexes just don’t cut it for me.

          Like

  20. Sp!kec: How the West fell out of love with social media
    https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/04/25/how-the-west-fell-out-of-love-with-social-media/

    Some Westerners are actually lauding Sri Lanka’s authoritarian social-media ban.
    ####

    It’s always the same crap. A new tool comes along and it is either witchcraft of liberating. Then someone figures out how to subvert it and at some point PANIC! What really makes me laugh is that al-Beeb s’allah and the Shitish press squeal about ‘Russia cutting off the internet’ on the one hand, and on the other demand controls on their own Internet, rolling over and having their bellies tickled by the government.

    Here, in-continent, we’re much more relaxed about such things (well, anything to do with sex in particular) but those other bastions of free speech – les grenouilles – are not far behind in clamping down whereas the Germans are far more reticent about such behavior. Shutting down leakers and hiding embarrassment seems to be the primary goal rather than any sensible rules. Tech companies are more interested in giving hand jobs to their shareholders than spending money on basic protection…

    Like

  21. GCHQ says ‘“The allegations that GCHQ was asked to conduct ‘wire tapping’ against the then president-elect are nonsense. They are utterly ridiculous and should be ignored,”.

    Just as the RAF pilots were used to fly American U2’s following Garry Power’s shoot down and the US pilot ban on flights over the Soviet Union, the US agencies could not legally spy on Trump but their allies could on their behalf. Why exactly should Trump be doing the UK any favors? Does the Special Relationship extend to covering up UK gov’s dirty work on behalf of the previous administration? Hmmm.

    Like

    1. It is traditional for the UK political establishment to respond to accusation with hoots of derision and ridicule, as if no thinking person could imagine anything so unlikely. Then, when enough time has passed that people are most likely to call it water under the bridge, they’ll allow it was all or mostly true. This is called ‘lying’ in other countries. I seem to recall the British intelligence services denied having anything to do with the overthrow of Mohamed Mossadeq in Iran, and his replacement with the hated Shah of Iran, because Mossadeq was about to nationalize the British-owned oil industry (then the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC), which was to become BP). Over time the denials petered out, and now they’re rather proud of that moment in history when they brought democracy and freedom to the benighted heathen. Similarly, the convulsed-with-laughter demurrals of spying on Russia using a fake Styrofoam rock as a receiving device. They eventually owned up to it when enough time had elapsed that the Russian government was unlikely to take any action and when everyone in the attention-deficit Anglosphere had had time to forget their mocking denials of having had any part of such a ridiculous deception.

      Like

  22. Euractiv mit Neuters: Ukrainian President-elect calls for IMF talks to lower gas prices for households
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/europe-s-east/news/ukrainian-president-elect-calls-for-imf-talks-to-lower-gas-prices-for-households/

    …The IMF, which has said it wants to see gas prices set at their market level, declined to comment.

    Zelenskiy, who has yet to take office, said in a statement on his team’s Facebook page he wanted prices to be lower, something the government and Naftogaz have already agreed between themselves.

    “Let’s not just in words, but in deeds show that we can take decisions in people’s interests,” the statement said. “For the past four months, gas prices in Europe have been decreasing and now the price of gas for the population in Ukraine is higher than the price of gas on the European market.”..
    ####

    The best things in life are free,
    But you can save it for the birds and bees,
    I want money, that’s all I want…

    If you sup with the Devil, the Devil expects something in return. Looks like Zelenskiy will shortly find out that all the kind words of support from the West count for naught when it comes to cold, hard cash.

    Like

    1. Yes, you’re right about that, because refusing to crank the gas price higher is a deal-breaker, as western darling Viktor ‘pine-cone-face’ Yushchenko learned when he was turned down for a second massive loan tranche because he would not raise gas prices. That’s an article of faith in the western book of Prying Ukraine Away From Russia; a lesson Zelenskiy is likely to learn early.

      https://news.yahoo.com/much-yet-eu-urges-ukraine-leader-push-reforms-095456024.html

      “We need to get him on the phone, set up meetings, get our message across about the seriousness of the need for reforms and our support but only on the basis of reforms. Clearly it’s a rebuke to Poroshenko, but the same reforms of the economy, against corruption are still crucial.”

      I could see the IMF holding off on raising the price for a year or so, just to give Zelenskiy a symbolic victory in exchange for his loyalty and commitment to more western ‘reforms’. But lowering the prices is dead in the water, and a Ukraine under the west’s thumb will never again see the liberal subsidies and price discounts which prevailed while Ukraine and Russia were still relatively friendly. Which is just a longer way of saying ‘never’. Get used to those prices, Ukrainians. Ukraine is now paying higher fees for its gas than Europe does – welcome to progress!

      Like

  23. It ain’t over till the fat lady sings:

    Poroshenko Moves To Stage COUP Against Zelensky

    and going out exactly how they came in:

    25 April 2019 14:01
    Ukraine’s parliament, the Verkhovna Rada, voted in favour of adopting a draft law on the Ukrainian language, in Kiev on Thursday. The law would reportedly result in the mandatory use of the Ukrainian language by state agencies, as well as by professionals including doctors and teachers. A total of 278 MPs voted in favour of the bill, while 38 voted against. Outgoing Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko is expected to sign the vote into law.

    source

    Like

    1. Yes, I just saw that story and was about to post it;

      https://news.yahoo.com/ukraine-passes-language-law-championed-outgoing-president-094953133–business.html

      He’s obviously trying to make it difficult for Zelenskiy to undo all his little ‘reforms’, plus hand him a stinging rebuke because he customarily speaks Russian in public. It seems clear Poroshenko will spend his final days in office signing new laws into force that will make it difficult or impossible for Zelenskiy to govern. Then Poroshenko can just sit in the bushes while chaos develops, and wait to be invited back. I doubt very much anything approaching that would ever happen, but you can forget about Zelenskiy doing anything for a while other than digging out from under the pile of new Poroshenko laws. Meanwhile, he’ll be having lots of meetings with European leaders, who will pull out all the stops to persuade him to have absolutely nothing to do with Russia. But that’ll turn out to be another own goal once gas transit across Ukraine slows to a trickle, and Ukraine becomes strategically much less relevant.

      The story you posted obviously goes much further, and sounds much like the measures Saakashvili implemented when it appeared he hoped to become Georgia’s powerful Prime Minister, and began transferring powers to that office so that the President would be largely a figurehead. It goes without saying that all these maneuvers have the blessing of the United States, and some proibably came from Volker.

      Zelenskiy’s best defense would be to make these maneuvers public, and to acknowledge he will be unlikely to make any changes at all as he will be circumvented by the arm of the Poroshenko Bloc which remains in government.

      Like

    2. Doctors? Die 4 u? That’s just nuts.

      But the most obvious question is, what about in the Rada itself? How many of those MPs can actually speak ‘Ukranian’ and if they can’t will they get subsidized mime lessons or google to do subtitles to their mimes?

      Like

  24. Russian Foreign Ministry says language law ‘contradicts Constiution of Ukraine’
    The law foresees total and forced ‘Ukrainization’; it stipulates significant limitations and sometimes even direct ban of the use of languages of the national minorities in various areas of social life – spokeswoman Mariya Zakharova

    17:57, 25 April 2019

    The Foreign Ministry of the Russian Federation has evaluated a newly-passed law on the Ukrainian language. Mariya Zakharova, the Ministry spokeswoman, claimed that the law provided for ‘total Ukrainization’ and contradicts the basic law of the Ukraine, the country’s constitution, the official is quoted by the TASS news agency as having said on April 25.

    ‘It is basically a law on forced Ukrainization — total Ukrainization, in fact. Its provisions foresee considerable limitations, and in some cases, even a direct ban on the use of the Russian language and those of national minorities in various areas of social life’, reads the message.

    Related: Zelensky to analyze language law after inauguration.

    Zakharova added that certain provisions of the law contradict a number of legal norms and the Constitution of the Ukraine.

    On April 25, the Ukrainian Parliament supported a law on the functioning of the Ukrainian language as the state language. 278 MPs voted for the bill, which had been discussed and amended during the last two months. The document includes 2,500 amendments. It foresees that the President, Parliamentary Speaker, ministers, officials of all levels, teachers, judges, and doctors are obliged to know Ukrainian perfectly. The law enforcement agencies and courts are bound to use Ukrainian, too. The document also concerns law enforcement agencies. Those breaking the law shall face fines up to USD 377.

    [proofread by ME because the linked text is in Ruslish!]

    Like

    1. re: the link above to Zelensky’s analysis of the law following his inauguration as president:

      “The Ukrainian language is the only one state language in the Ukraine. It was so, it is so and it shall remain so. Concerning this issue, no compromise is possible. The state should take care of the development of the Ukrainian language, the extension of the sphere of its use. There is no argument about this and the whole of society agrees on it.”

      [proofread and adjusted — ME]

      Back to square one, 2014, and the introduction of a language law, quickly abolished, but not quickly enough to trigger the breakaway of parts of the Lugansk and Donetsk provinces.

      A state language for a fictive state, but that is how some states came about, such as Estonia, whose language was artificially cobbled together from village dialects by mid-19th century “intellectuals” in Tallinn (then Reval), which highbrows spoke Germann and/or Russian.

      The first broadsheets printed in the Estonian language were distributed by Estonian nationalists around the backwoods. The story goes that none of the yokels could understand it — at least, those who could read couldn’t.

      Like

      1. It’s all about sowing the earth with dragons’ teeth for Zelenskiy. I leave it to your imagination what the western media would say if Putin were to start signing laws, in the waning days of his administration, which took all powers away from the incoming president, and vested them with his cronies instead. Perhaps he will, and then we’ll see. But for now, crickets. Just a lot of twaddle about what a wonderful clean election this was, democracy has at last touched Ukraine with her gentle hand. Instead, Porky is expertly maneuvering Zelenskiy into taking positions he cannot easily walk back, until he is essentially a caretaker for Poroshenko’s policies until he can mount a comeback. I personally thought it was dead clever of Zelenskiy to suggest he would hold a referendum on joining NATO, because the subtext was that he did not so much want Ukraine to join NATO as he wanted to gauge popular support for the idea, and I believe such a referendum would have shown a steep decline in public support from the giddy days of 2014. He could have then used the results of the referendum to support some divergent policies. But he has since been outgunned by Porky before he even takes office.

        Like

    2. I can see Irina Farion is going to be kept busy micro-managing the Verkhovna Rada, all the govt bureaucracies and agencies, the courts, the hospitals and medical centres, the banks and all educational institutions from universities, colleges and think-tanks down to all the childcare centres, or whatever remains of all these places, making sure all of them are centres where Ukrainian is known and spoken perfectly.

      Heck, the country should rename itself Farionaine.

      Like

  25. So if the Svidomite wet-dream were to become reality and the Crimea once again became part of the Ukraine, surely that would mean, according to the new legislation, that the use of Tatar on the peninsula would be proscribed and that no documents, signs etc. in Tatar would be tolerated.

    As far as i am aware, this is not the case in the Crimea at present, where the Russian authorities, according to Volker and the shites that he advises on matters of state, constantly state that those loveable Crimea Tatars live a life of hell under the Moskali yoke.

    And here’s that French bint again, the Frog Ambassador to the Ukraine, she who was upset about Yukie comments as regards the Notre Dame conflagration:

    We condemn the decision of Russia to facilitate the granting of Russian citizenship to the inhabitants of Donetsk and Luhansk. This decision contradicts the Minsk agreements and does not facilitate efforts to resolve the conflict.

    Interesting replies to Dumont’s Tweet:

    condemn this Ukrainian pro-Nazi government that fires on civilians and glorifies collaborators with the horrors of the Hitler regime!

    Who are you to judge, you bitch? When Merkel gave Poroshenko 85 million to murder in the Donbass you did not condemn the EU. The USA, Canada and Israel carried out a coup in the Ukraine! You are accomplices to the murders in the Donbass. You do not want to foot the bill for your actions, you scum, but soon you shall have to!

    Like

    1. Although this appears a relatively inconsequential action, the US State Department plainly recognizes it for what it is – a first step to making the Donbas/Lugansk Republics a Russian protectorate like Abkhazia and South Ossetia, with a status which will virtually guarantee Russia would intervene militarily if an attempt were made to overrun them such as Saakashvili tried in Georgia in 2008. And the panic in the west is evident, as it makes it that much less likely those regions will ever again return to Kuh-yiv’s control.

      What’s that old saying? You catch more flies with honey than you do with boneheaded fuckery, something like that. But boneheaded fuckery has become the Ukrainian default position, as it continues to listen to its western ‘partners’ who could not lead a piss-up in a brewery. Kuh-yiv had ample opportunity to lure the eastern regions back with a genuine offer of fair treatment, a degree of autonomy and a benign trading policy with both countries it borders upon – it could, in its most ambitious manifestation, have become a trading bridge between them which would have seen something like the old relationship prevail. But Kuh-yiv was having none of it, and it’s their way or the highway. So be it; as ever, those who sow the wind shall reap the whirlwind.

      Like

  26. Traitor to the Soviet Union and the Soviet Peoples Mikhail Gorbachev has been admitted to hospital.

    He’s on his way out, I reckon.

    Brace yourself for torrents of shite about him and his “achievements” from Western commenters as soon as he has kicked the bucket.

    Like

    1. Yes, I’ve been waiting for him to pop his clogs – he’s already well past the age when La Russophobe would have us know neo-Soviet men bite the dust as regular as clockwork due to their chronic alcoholism, inferior genetic makeup and general horribleness.

      I’m sure when he does shuffle off this mortal coil, perhaps in the next few days, he will be eulogized as Russia’s Last Great Reformer. He wasn’t all bad, though; he did say, more than once, that when he envisioned the Soviet Union taking the plunge and westernizing, he had intended for it to take perhaps a couple of decades, and not the 24 months or so in which the Harvard Boyz tried to do it.

      Then again, giving him the greatest benefit of the doubt, he intended it should be for the country’s benefit and survivability, however misguided he may have been. The Harvard Boyz were just doing a fun experiment, with no downside if it all went pear-shaped.

      Like

    1. The Connecticut story in particular was a real cluster-fuck of police incompetence. The city cop ended up shooting the campus cop because he (the city cop) was just firing wildly in all directions. The campus cop, receiving fire from the city cop, leaped out of his vehicle, leaving it in drive; and his vehicle then plowed into the vics vehicle. The 2 vics (=victims of the cop shooting) are both African-Americans. The young guy wasn’t actually shot, but his girlfriend was.
      Both of the cops involved are also African-Americans.
      Due to the videos and body-cams, every single idiocy was recorded.
      Word on the street is that the campus cop will be okay, he didn’t really do anything wrong, aside from jumping out of his car and leaving it in drive; but his desire to retreat from being shot at was fully understandable. The city cop is pretty much toast at this point. He will never work again, not even as Dogcatcher.

      The one tiny silver lining is that the New Haven community responded with massive outrage, both blacks and whites marching together against the police in a show of racial unity.

      Like

  27. The USA elite…alpha mad dogs of the pack of its lackey rabid ghoul states of gluttonous orgiastic depravity.

    As from a Bosch triptych…hideous monsters fellating monsters fellating monsters ….all the way down

    Alison Maynard • 11 hours ago
    One monstrous, criminal, bloody act after another perpetrated by the Saudi “monarchy,” this group of vicious thugs, good buddy with that champion of freedom and democracy, the United States. I can’t stand this.

    Charlotte Ruse • 11 hours ago
    “One of the headless corpses was then crucified and left hanging in public as a hideous warning to anyone who would even contemplate opposing the absolute power of the ruling royal family.”

    If you didn’t know that this slaughtered occurred in Saudi Arabia you would think it was the work of a drug running psychopathic gangster on a vicious killing spree to terrorize a local population into submission.

    Maybe there’s NO difference between the way a sadistic gangster operates his business and the brutal fascists regimes supported by the US in the Middle East.”

    solerso • 7 hours ago
    The US, its vassals in Europe – the Trump administration personally are responsible for this..Maybe one day we will be treated to the sight of Bolton, Kushner, and pompeos fat head “crucified” in a public square in Washington

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/04/25/saud-a25.html

    Like

    1. A weird article and can’t find the Petro on lists of cryptocurrency. Might be a good bet if Venezuela survives the onslaught (I think they will).

      Like

    2. Ha, ha!!! The Petro received a skeptical welcome because the state oil company which backs it has debts far above its market cap – well, shit a brick. But the gross government debt of the United States is over 100% of its GDP. However, the US government pretends like everything is just fine, and encourages people to continue to buy and hold dollars – and they do.

      https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/government-debt-to-gdp

      Despite all the doom and gloom in Venezuela and the half-scary-half-meaningless inflation figures the State Department keeps pumping out, the USA is still highly motivated to acquire control over it through its proxy. I suspect that means Venezuela is not quite the train wreck the Staties keep making it out to be. The US Government is quite confident it could get things on a paying basis virtually overnight – which means the Venezuelans could do it, too. But the United States does not have a powerful country sitting on its chest, trying to squeeze the breath out of it. Roll on the day when it does. Nothing puts bullying in perspective for the bully like having his own face rubbed in the dirt.

      Like

      1. Forgot where I saw the story. Venezuela has arrested a number of saboteurs and issued arrest warrants for others in connection to the blackouts. Also, the government indicated that the electrical grid is becoming more stable. Presumably the Russian specialists have hardened it against cyber attacks and critical systems have better physical protection. This will take away Guido’s and Mrco’s Pmain talking point.

        Like

        1. From Telesur (in English)
          https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Venezuelan-Authorities-Identify-5-Electrical-System-Saboteurs-20190423-0025.html

          Venezuelan Authorities Identify 5 Electrical System Saboteurs

          Minister of Communication Jorge Rodriguez, unveiled Tuesday the identification of five people involved in attacks on the National Electric System (SEN).

          Rodriguez named Ramon Oswaldo Garcia, in Spain; Miguel Jose Freita in Colombia; Julio Cesar Acuña and Jesus Rodriguez Landoni in the United States; and Otoniel Ramon Sanchez, who has been detained, as those involved in what the Venezuelan government has said was sabotage against the country’s electricity system.

          “There are requests to Interpol regarding people related to the attack on the electrical system who live in the United States, Colombia, and Spain,” Rodriguez said in a news conference …

          The attack on Venezuela’s electricity grid system was multi-pronged: it involved setting up wildfires near power lines and there may have been at least one cyberattack and possibly two such attacks.

          Like

          1. For freedom and democracy!

            Similar to cutting off the water supply to the Crimea civilian population and downing power transmission towers so as to cut off the electricity supply for civilian use.

            All serious crimes and, in wartime, war crimes.

            Waddya say to that, Uncle Sam?

            Oh, I know: they are acts of diplomacy!

            Like

              1. Well, well – Jeffrey Sachs, point man for the Harvard Boys who cheerfully wrecked the post-Soviet Russian economy with ‘shock therapy’ in the 90’s, now wearing a good-guy suit. Will wonders never cease.

                Like

    1. “I did not carry an assault weapon around a foreign country so I could come home and see them used to massacre my countrymen.”

      This was an odd remark by Pete Buttigieg. Assault weapons are fine for shooting foreigners abroad, just not Americans over here.

      Perhaps you think that’s an unfair spin on the remark. He apologized if it “came out wrong.” But from Buttigieg’s account of his time in Afghanistan, it doesn’t seem as if he has thought very hard about American militarism or empire. Buttigieg served overseas for seven months with naval intelligence, taking a hiatus from his mayoral duties. By his account, it was mostly uneventful, as the U.S. war was winding down and he spent most of his time either doing analysis at a computer terminal or driving gear through the city. He did not apparently meet a single Afghan who he thought worthy of naming in his book, and the people of Kabul appear as anonymous pieces of scenery. (In this respect they are like the Black people of South Bend or the homeless people of Harvard Square: nameless nonentities whose opinions Buttigieg has never sought.)

      Buttigieg spends a lot of his time in Afghanistan googling things and meditating on why soldiers must die in wars that are largely over. He doesn’t have any serious criticisms to make of the military itself, and one can see how he’s the type of person who would pronounce himself “troubled” by Barack Obama’s clemency for Chelsea Manning. (Remember that Manning publicly exposed U.S. war crimes, a misdeed for which she was imprisoned and tortured.) The scope of Buttigieg’s self-awareness can be seen from the fact that, in recalling his ambivalence about deployment, he quotes a friend quoting G.K. Chesterton to him: “An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered.” A morally serious person would realize that one American person’s inconvenience/adventure is another non-American person’s incinerated wedding party. Considering Buttigieg’s stance on Israel, totally oblivious to the mass killings and the brutality of occupation, we might worry about his commitment to restraining militarism.”

      Having read this…I quickly concluded that which was so eloquently stated by the article’s author Nathan Robinson:

      “No more Bright Young People with their beautiful families and flawless characters and elite educations and vacuous messages of uplift and togetherness. Give me fucked-up people with convictions and gusto. Give me real human beings, not CV-padding corporate zombies.

      If we are lucky, Buttigieg Fever will dissipate quickly when people realize this guy is the same rancid wine in a new wifi-enabled bottle. “Hah, remember when Pete Buttigieg became a thing for a hot second?” It will be remembered as neoliberalism’s last gasp, a pitiful attempt at co-optation that was met with a unanimous reply of “Nice try.” Let’s hope to God that’s how this goes.”

      Great catch PO….!! Thanks

      Now where’s one on AOC-word???

      Like

        1. Fine expose, but such challenges will really become effective when they prevent such fakes from being elected. So far, not even close, and having the knowledge of what phonies they are put out there does not seem in any way to prevent their having successful political careers during which they systematically betray every value they pretended to hold.

          Like

    2. I actually found his story fairly inspiring. He’s a handsome young man in an age when the press likes its politicians fresh and photogenic. His answer to the suggestion that he doesn’t have any policy positions makes perfect sense to me; an incoming president never knows, when election day is drawing to a close, what kind of opposition he is going to face, and Congressional elections which will tell him how much clout he has to ram through controversial projects are still two years away. Anybody who lays out his roadmap on Day One is a fool or a liar. The president also does not have a realistic idea, when he is campaigning, what is going to be the true state of the country he is left to run, since the various departments are occupied with fighting over funding and blowing smoke up everyone’s ass. You don’t have a clue how much money you really have to fund your plans until your own people have done a review, and it’s often an alarming kick in the pants.

      Obama was in an ideal position. He was elected on a blue tide that gave him the power to pass anything he wanted (not literally, but close) whether the Republicans liked it or not. And he wasted it, fishing around for consensus and the patently stupid myth of bipartisanship, until Congressional elections were upon him and the Republicans gained enough seats to block everything he put forward, which they promptly did – he couldn’t send out for pizza, if it depended on Republican approval.

      But a pumpkin could come third to Sanders and Biden – Jesus, coming in behind Mr. Touchy-Feely could be a political-death benchmark. He’s not there yet, and the American media has for decades displayed a tendency to talk someone up for president based on a single incident or pivotal moment, without any reason to imagine it will be repeated.

      I’d be a little skeptical, myself; not least because the American political herd has been thinned and thinned until all that’s left is fools and liars. A few crossovers are both. But a truly inspiring leader hasn’t been seen since…well, you know, I can’t remember when. Kennedy? Certainly nobody after him. Choosing a candidate for president of the USA these days is a little like a woman having to choose a prospective father for her future child from a field of Alfred E. Neuman look-alikes, after watching them all fail to correctly spell “Parenthood”. ‘Inspiring’ is only a whisper of distant memory.

      Like

      1. He is a sociopath in my opinion with well-honed skills for presenting a fake gosh-darn kid just trying to do good; just like America is a gosh-darn good country just trying to do good. That will be his shtick.

        His blank slate approach to politics is clever as you mentioned, but not because he does not have an agenda. He is avoiding the trap of identity politics that have ensnared the Democratic Party. He will, if elected, provide the mandatory feel-good about America fluff as his real agenda unfolds (more accurately, the agenda of the deepest state).

        I think he is being groomed for a run for the Presidency for 2024 if Trump wins or 2028 if some Democrat wins. Just speculation at this point.

        Like

      2. I have to agree with Patient Observer: Pete Buttigieg does not give the impression of having any ideas or principles of his own. It’s one thing not to have an actual roadmap that says “we start here at first base, we do this, this and this, and then we reach second base” and so on, because your opposites could steal it for their own; but it is another to have a long-term vision that sets out goals, in which people can actually discern your values and principles, and where your head and heart really are.

        Like

  28. Kalen on Zelensky:

    Kalen • 11 hours ago
    Very true, working class of Ukraine never had any stake in this … anointment of Mayor of Kiev (falsely called presidential elections ) by US Imperial ambassador to this loose assemblage of Nazi and oligarchic run enclaves and ad hoc gangster statelets formerly called Ukrainian state that Soros paid EU-fills idiots of Maidan let hijacked and destroyed by Ukrainian Oligarchic-Nazis Holy alliance for profit and political gains with distinct and huge support from Germany (Bandera exile country, welcome home for Ukrainian criminal Nazis after WWII ) , Canada (Bandera’s son citizenship country and center of Ukrainian Nazi supporters among oil industry executives ) and Obama Imperial US establishment among others fascist NATO states.

    After this sorry season of false hope trading called election campaign, making up what Zelensky stands for, just days after his win it is clear according to Bloomberg interview with Ukrainian Minster of Finances, that Zelensky have just pledged continuation of economic and financial policies of Poroshenko and to continue implementing criminally imposed by IMF devastation of welfare state, as he learns his lesson, time honestly, no stealing of western loot which had Poroshenko ousted. And .. for Russiagate fanatics, yes, he will continue tough stand against, so far non-existent phantom of Russian aggression.”

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/04/25/pers-a25.html

    Like

  29. I think Biden threw his hat in the ring today. This Burisma thing could derail him if Hunter is made out to be sufficiently corrupt.
    Biden is a Russiaphobic warmonger.

    Like

    1. There’s that little episode where Joe Biden threatened Poroshenko back in 2016 that the US would pull US$1 billion in loan guarantees to Ukraine and send the country clean round the S-bend of bankruptcy if Poroshenko didn’t pull the Ukrainian prosecutor general Viktor Shokin. At the time, Shokin had an investigation probe into Burisma’s activities and Hunter Biden’s role in those activities.
      https://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/436816-joe-bidens-2020-ukrainian-nightmare-a-closed-probe-is-revived

      Like

      1. Well, I be go to hell. I do remember Biden’s smug satisfaction over Shokin’s firing, which I took at the time as another American political affirmation that God is in his heaven and all’s well with the world, so long as Washington can still order its acts and dispositions. But I don’t recall knowing, ever, that Shokin’s department was investigating Burisma. It is also a little disquieting to see in print an American acknowledgment that NABU is ‘closely aligned with the US Embassy’, although a little comforting that they refuse to call the city ‘Kyiv’.

        Like

  30. al-Beeb s’Allah!: North Korea summit: Kim accuses US of ‘bad faith’
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-48062071

    …Negotiations between the two countries broke down during a summit in Vietnam in February, with no deal reached over North Korea’s nuclear weapons.

    Those talks reportedly stalled over North Korea’s demand for full economic sanctions relief in return for some denuclearisation commitments – a deal the US was not willing to make…
    ####

    How the f does al-Beeb s’Allah get away with such outrageous lying by omission. Is it run by a kindergarten?

    NK has clearly and publicly stated that it did NOT ask for full sanctions relief, but only some, i.e. to show good will from the Washington side.

    In what school is giving up your nukes for a meaningless promise to not be bombed to shit make any sense, least of all after the promises made to Ghadaffi? It’s as if Washington thinks NK doesn’t have, tv, internet or any comms.

    Nice and very public move by Pootie-Poot & Un. A big F Y to Trump and his schizoid ‘deal making’ / flipflopping/ good cop-awful cop routine which is dead in the water.

    Like

  31. On that language law

    The opposition bloc has already said that they believe the law is unconstitutional and will appeal to the constitutional court to recognize the law as unconstitutional.

    And there are grounds for this. A year ago, the Ukraine Constitutional Court recognized the law “On the Fundamentals of the State Language Policy” (protecting the Russian language) as being contrary to the Constitution.

    “The Ukraine Constitutional Court has concluded that violations of constitutional procedure for the reviewing and adopting of draft law No. 9073 during its adoption as a whole at the evening plenary session of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine on July 3, 2012, had a systemic nature and had a significant impact on the final result of the adoption of the law. The above is the basis for recognizing the law as being unconstitutional according to part one of article 152 of the Constitution of Ukraine”.

    That is to say, any law adopted in violation of constitutional procedure is considered to be unconstitutional.

    Below, the reality about українська мова:

    In which language do they speak in “Independent” Ukraine?
    The language spoken at home by ukrainians, according to the National University of Linguistics

    *Syrzhik

    a mixed Russian-Ukrainian patois

    Like

  32. From the Independent, where els?

    Controversial Miss USSR pageant in London slammed for ‘serious lack of historical awareness’
    The USSR Empire may have collapsed 28 years ago – but in London, the idea feels alive and carefully preserved, writes Anna Myroniuk

    3 hours ago

    “Miss USSR” was held in Moscow for three years before the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Its successor, “Miss USSR UK” has run in London for seven years.

    The contest is now growing – in 2018, the same competition took place in Monaco, and according to the organisers, is set to be an annual event. There are also plans now to stage “Miss USSR” in Montenegro.

    But this year’s main contest is taking place on 27 April in London’s luxurious Hilton Hotel in Mayfair.

    It unites women from across the former Soviet countries – including those the USSR occupied in 1940.

    Indeed the vast majority of this year’s applicants appear to come from Ukraine, despite the ongoing conflict with Russia…

    “It shows a serious lack of taste and historical awareness,” former British ambassador to Latvia Ian Bond told The Independent, now foreign policy director at the Centre for European Reform.

    “Imagine if someone organised a ‘Miss Third Reich’ competition for women from countries occupied by the Nazis? Or even ‘Miss British Empire’?!” he adds.

    On the contest’s website, an applicant from Crimea is listed among the girls representing Russia.

    Russia annexed the Ukrainian peninsula in 2014, in a move considered illegal by the UN General Assembly. The vast majority of the international communities does not recognise Crimea as a part of Russia.

    Oh, what a surprise — the writer of the above linked article, Anna Myroniuk, is a Ukrainian journalist based in London!

    Whatever! I don’t like beauty contests.

    I guess the high number of Ukrainian competitors feel that taking part in such a demeaning parade is a much better way of acquiring lucre rather than sitting in a window in Hamburg, Amsterdam etc.

    I should imagine that Myroniuk would agree with me on that point.

    Then again, maybe not …

    Like

    1. Recipient of the prestigious Chevening Award.

      “Chevening is the UK Government’s international awards scheme aimed at developing global leaders. Funded by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) and partner organisations, Chevening offers two types of award – Chevening Scholarships and Chevening Fellowships – the recipients of which are personally selected by British embassies and high commissions throughout the world.”

      https://www.chevening.org/

      Freelance writer for The Kyiv Post and RFE/RL.

      Like

  33. https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/04/26/bide-a26.html

    “Notwithstanding his media persona as a jovial “Uncle Joe,” Biden is an experienced and ruthless representative of American imperialism. As Obama’s former vice president, he had a hand in all of the administration’s war crimes, including the bloodbaths in Libya and Syria and the continuation of Bush’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The administration made drone assassination a key element in its foreign policy, and even declared the right to assassinate American citizens, exercising this “right” to murder Anwar al-Awlaki in 2011. Obama also bolstered the repressive apparatus of the state, expanding government surveillance programs and funneling billions of dollars in military hardware to local police forces.

    The Obama administration led a major assault on democratic rights. This included the prosecution of more whistleblowers than any other president, including the arrest and torture of Chelsea Manning, and the campaign against WikiLeaks editor Julian Assange for exposing US war crimes. Biden called Assange a “high tech terrorist” in 2010, and then-Secretary of State Clinton asked her staff whether they could “drone” him.

    Obama also deported more than 2.5 million immigrants, more than any previous administration, earning him the sarcastic nickname “Deporter in Chief.” Obama’s policies included the imprisonment and deportation of thousands of unaccompanied children, a direct precursor to Trump’s cruel and inhumane policy of separating families.

    In other words, Obama and Biden paved the way for a more overtly authoritarian form of imperialist reaction, of which Trump is the personification.

    The Obama administration’s intervention in Ukraine in 2014 demonstrates the hypocrisy of Biden’s declared opposition to Trump’s ties to fascists. The US and NATO-sponsored overthrow of pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych was spearheaded by neo-Nazi groups such as the Svoboda Party and the Right Sector. As long as these layers directed their violence against individuals targeted by American imperialism, they were universally hailed in the media as fighters for “democracy” and “human rights.”

    Biden’s own family was personally enriched by the coup, when his son Hunter Biden was appointed to the board of directors of the Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma Holdings. Biden later strong-armed the Ukrainian government into firing a prosecutor who was leading a corruption probe against Burisma, a fact which he publicly bragged about in 2018.”

    Like

  34. https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/04/26/frye-a26.html

    “The French bourgeoisie’s human rights propaganda is a lying political cover for a policy of war and the enrichment of French defence contractors via mass killings and terror. Since the Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen’s civil war in 2015 to fight Shiite Houthi rebels it accuses of ties to Iran, Saudi Arabia has imposed sanctions and blockaded Yemen, provoking the world’s gravest humanitarian crisis. Nearly 14 million people are on the brink of starvation as the Red Sea blockade blocks supplies of food, fuel and medicine destined for more than 20 million Yemenis.

    Since launching the war, the coalition has carried out an unrelenting onslaught of airstrikes in Yemen. According to the DRM, the coalition has carried out 24,000 air strikes since 2015, including 6,000 in 2018. These attacks caused at least 8,000 civilian deaths.”

    Like

  35. Financial Times
    Published on 26 Apr 2019

    The FT’s Washington correspondent Kiran Stacey on how the decision to allow the Chinese telecoms group to help build Britain’s 5G network has fuelled American angst. Limited access allows Huawei to build parts of the network’s ‘noncore’ infrastructure

    Republicans of all people are contemplating the US government taking over the US 5G network and setting up a “national champion”! Say it ain’t so! So much for the “free market” and “laisezz-faire” economics!

    This whole Huawei dispute/controversy has been a revelation for those who don’t know any better. The way the US government has gone about trying to undermine, and quite frankly attempt to bankrupt a foreign private company – shows the world how hypocritical the US is about capitalism and the “free market”. Unable to compete in the global market for 5G or gas for that matter – the US resorts to economic thuggery!

    Like

    1. I’m frankly surprised the UK did not simply invite the CIA to build its 5G network – it has never seemed to mind before having Uncle Sam rifling through its underwear drawer, so long as it got to participate in global surveillance with the big dogs.

      Like

  36. Antiwar.com: US Agrees With Russia, China on Framework for Afghanistan Pullout
    https://news.antiwar.com/2019/04/26/us-agrees-with-russia-china-on-framework-for-afghanistan-pullout/

    State Dept: Nations support ‘orderly’ withdrawal of foreign troops

    …The general idea is that the US and allied forces would leave Afghanistan as part of a peace deal, which would come with a commitment from the Taliban to keep ISIS and al-Qaeda out of the country…
    ####

    So the US can cooperate if it wants to! Call me cynical, but think of the $$$ saved and the diplomatic victory to be claimed by you know who.

    Like

  37. TV clown fears he will be raped without a chaperone:

    Like

    1. If he actually said that. I am reminded of the time Putin was alleged by Radislaw Sikorski – another lying Pole – to have confided to him that Ukraine was ‘not a real country’, and proposed divvying it up between the two countries. That turned out to be an embarrassing and complete fabrication.

      Like

    2. If he’s too skeerd to lead, then it’s already over. The far right neo-Nazi’s will be running things soon. (Ha ha, no – that’s Washington.)

      Like

    3. I should think that Angela Merkel and Emmanuel Macron’s presence is kind of needed if Zelensky did meet with Putin because a Ukraine-Russia discussion would have to involve revisiting Minsk II and France and Germany need to be there as well. So if it is true that Kwasniecki made that statement, I wonder what his motive was in saying that. Is he running interference for Washington DC to try to stop any talks between Zelensky and Putin?

      Like

    1. Indeed interesting.

      I retain a small interest in events in NE Spain and suspect that the “independentistas” of Rostov or Western Siberia and the rest have just the same credibility as Puigdemont and his fellows bawling “Freedom!” as a great way to rake in the dosh with the blessing of the Empire.

      Closer to home? Sadly, much the same.

      Like

    2. I’ll digest it when I have a bit more time; I’m just heading out for the second of three morning shifts for which I have to be at work at 05:45. It sounds familiar, and I may have seen it when it came out. Whatever, the phrase, “a declining state that disguises its internal infirmities with external offensives” sounds a bit Freudian to me, and reads more like an admission than an accusation. Similarly, if the United States happily acknowledges the Russian defense budget is less than a tenth its own, why does it feel the need to increase the latter every year? Perhaps because it is not actually a ‘defense’ budget at all? Revealing, already.

      Like

  38. I barely finished posting the conclusion to my story about DPR/LPR residents getting Russian passports, when a new development arose: Now Putin is saying that ALL Ukrainians might be eligible to apply for Russian passports. In other words, not just the ones living in the Donbass.

    This initiative could cost Moscow a lot of money — internet people are already pointing out that Ukrainian pensioners could thus be eligible for Russian pensions, etc.
    But personally I think it’s a great idea. Let Ukrainians vote with their feet, it’s the best way to bring down Banderstan.

    Like

    1. I agree; it would be money well-spent. I suppose the Mirotvorets crowd would threaten everyone with dire consequences if they betrayed the ol’ blue-and-yellow, and to print their names in a list of traitors, but it seems pretty likely there would be an accelerated drain of population out of the Next Great EU Member. And that would be embarrassing for both Kuh-yiv and Washington, which has invested itself 100% in Ukraine, believing that to be a major irritant to Russia.

      Like

  39. Meanwhile, Valery Gerasimov, Head of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, had called upon NATO to cease its war-mongering activities along Russia’s border.
    Today NATO responded to Gerasimov. They provided a link to their NATO website where, they said, Gerasimov could post his complaint. In other words, “fuck you” to Russia.

    Like

      1. And if Geraldo Rivera were there, Putin should grab a suitcase of cash and head for Nigeria.

        I provide the link below for those who wish to test their ability to withstand the psychic pain of direct exposure to 100% pure bullshit hate:

        https://www.foxnews.com/story/geraldo-rivera-goes-to-war

        I will send one (1) gold doubloon to the first one who can finish the article in at least a semi-comatose state. Read at your own risk. Reward subject to retroactive change without notice.

        Like

  40. From MOA:

    https://www.moonofalabama.org/2019/04/russia-think-tank-study-shows-how-to-overextend-and-unbalance-the-us-of-a.html#more

    Please read the entire article (its short in length). The article exposes another example of shallow and self-serving “analysis” of Russia by alleged high-power braniacs. The analysis was simply meant to align with US group-think about Russia without reference to reality. I am sure that the authors will have a good score on their annual performance review for ass-kissing.

    Like

  41. UNIAN via BMPD: Antonov Group President Alexander Donets: We need to return to what we now how to do best, military transport aircraft. It always got us results.

    https://www.unian.net/economics/transport/10531239-prezident-gp-antonov-aleksandr-donec-my-dolzhny-vernutsya-k-tomu-chto-umeem-delat-ochen-horosho-k-gruzovym-voennym-samoletam-eto-u-nas-vsegda-poluchalos.html

    AKA- We’re up shit creek without a paddle – as predicted by BMPD 11 months ago.
    https://bmpd.livejournal.com/3625342.html

    ####

    In short, for Russian part substitution the projects are 95% complete, they just need money from investors for it. The An-132D project with Saudia Arabia is on the rocks due to ‘a change in partner’. 10 An-178 for Azerbaijan (2016) is blocked for lack of non-Russian parts. The An-188 project based on the An-70 with Turkey is on hold. They have most of the parts for a second An-225 but it is unassembled and required ‘redesign’ and will cost “hundreds of millions of dollars” to complete. An-124 re-engineing is not profitable though there is strong growth in the cargo market. More at the link and yes, I did use an online translator (again).

    So, they’re stuffed.

    Why would anyone invest? Boeing is helping Embraer with its jet powered KC-390, it has its own C-130J, the C-27A modernization of the Italian G.222 was flogged back to the Italians and U-rope has the developmental disaster that is the A400M. The Russians are building the Il-112V which should take the place of rough, ready and cheap Antonovs elsehwere. India shows ‘interest’ in the modernized 132D with western bits, but….

    Like

    1. In short, “It always got us results…when we were producing military transport aircraft for Russia”. But they’re not any more, and Russia has largely replaced the former Ukrainian contribution with domestic production. After building that production from the ground up to replace withheld Ukrainian production, Russia is not now going to shut down its own lines in favour of buying from a declared enemy who is more likely than not to withhold its products again for political advantage, or simply to please its masters in Washington.

      So they are, indeed, stuffed. And deservedly so, since Russia made all the reasonable and responsible offers it could have done in spite of Ukie poo-flinging and capering for effect, all the things they do to make themselves feel wise and clever, and was rebuffed every time. Make as many aircraft as you can – it’ll keep you busy, if not wealthy, and maybe you can use the completed airframes for cheap housing.

      Like

    1. “Ethical, straight, telling the truth … All those good things.”

      Ha, ha, ha!!! Jeez, I think I might have coughed up something I need. Holy shit; ‘telling the truth’. I’m surprised he can even remember the words.

      Like

  42. “Amid mass beheadings, Wall Street scrambles for Saudi profits
    27 April 2019
    The hideous public beheadings of 37 men in a single day in Saudi Arabia last Tuesday have provoked scant protest from Western governments and the corporate media.
    The same newspapers and broadcast networks that have summoned up their moral outrage over abuses, both manufactured and real, by governments in Russia, China, Iran, Syria or Venezuela, are clearly unmoved by these criminal executions. They maintain their stony silence even as those who were decapitated with swords included three young men who were arrested as minors, tortured into signing confessions and convicted of “terrorism” for daring to join protests against the country’s monarchical dictatorship.”

    dmorista
    To understand what is going on here we should remember that there are political realities and there are economic realities, and they interact and often come into conflict in places like Saudi Arabia. Historically, Saudi Arabia has been closely affiliated with the U.S. ever since Franklin D. Roosevelt stopped by, in the US Navy cruiser Quincy in February 1945, on his way back to the U.S. from the Yalta Conference. This relationship was reinforced and modified when Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, and John Connally handled the transition from the Bretton Woods global financial arrangements (fixed currency values and the U.S. dollar guaranteed at $35 an ounce) to the new “Petro-dollar” agreements and arrangements in 1971 (floating currency values and the U.S. dollar no longer redeemable for gold at any price). These new arrangements were based establishing the dollar as the only currency that oil producing societies would accept for payment; this was enforced by the Saudis using their dominant role in oil production and was backed up by a U.S. pledge to defend Saudi Arabia and, even more importantly, for the U.S. Navy to defend the world’s sea-lanes to allow oil tankers to move without hindrance. It would seem that this last set of arrangements is coming to an end, though not quite yet.

    The global socioeconomic and political scene has changed quite bit since 1945 and even since 1971. In 1945 the U.S. stood supreme, with well over 50% of the world’s productive capacity and wealth, the rival industrial centers were mostly lying in ruins after horrific struggles had raged over them. The Third World was still largely undeveloped territory with extractive operations far and away the main economic activities. Iran, Mexico, and Venzuela were all much more significant petroleum producers than was Saudi Arabia. The Saudis had just begun to pump significant amounts of oil in the late 1940s, and in 1945 were still mostly semi-nomadic desert dwellers (see graph “Oil production in the 1930-1950 period, Iran compared to Saudi Arabia” at ).

    Now the U.S. has fallen to about 15% of Global GDP, the main industrial centers of the Earth are in East Asia, and Saudi Arabia whose loyalty to the U.S.-led imperial system is at the very least open to question. The value and profits of the Saudi oil system are now a major part of the West’s, and the U.S.-led imperial system’s, assets. The public execution of 37 dissidents by the most gruesome and primitive of methods is just a minor demonstration of just how determined these people are to maintain their power. But the bedrock relationship, that included Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf States and the U.S., of the 1970s – early 2000s is fraying. The Saudis now sell about 625,000 barrels a day of oil to China, this is in addition to Oman that sold 624,000 barrels a day to China in 2017, Kuwait that sold 363,000 barrels a day that year, and even Iraq that sold 738,000 barrels a day to China during that period (see “China goes for gas in Iran”, Gerald Butt, June 5, 2018, in the Petroleum Economist, at ).

    For the time being the Saudis, who are now tightly aligned with the Israelis in the propaganda and cover action campaigns against Iran, as well as the ongoing atrocities in Syria, are still closely associated with the U.S. as well. But the economic and political power of East Asia, and China in particular, will continue to grow. China is proposing to build various pipelines to bring oil and gas from Iran to East Asia (see for example “China to Build Pipeline From Iran to….{Pakistan}”, at ); these various projects are in addition to the pipelines they have already built from Western China to Central Asia and other projects already implemented. It would be an easy thing to connect pipelines, already built from Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf States to the Mediterranean and Europe, to the Iranian – East Asian system and move product direct from Saudi Arabia to China. One already built project moves oil and gas from the new Chinese built deep water port in Myanmar (at Kyaukphyu {Sittwe}) into southern China (see “Sino-Myanmar Pipelines” at
    ).
    These various pipelines mostly have the virtue of being invulnerable to U.S. naval interference. That is not true of the Myanmar Pipeline from the deep water port there.”

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/04/27/pers-a27.html

    Like

    1. On the other hand, I suppose one could understand Maddow’s concern, seeing that the exposure of this whole charade may pose a threat to her $10 million a year income.

      Like

          1. French-Canadians are not Canadians? Gosh, I hope that’s not true – they supply something like half our Olympic athletes.

            Maté is sometimes Spanish, but in its dominant usage is the Hungarian Ecclesiastical version of Matthew. It can also be French, a diminutive or familiar form of the French Mathieu. But those are patronyms, not surnames. However, they come up in a search for “origin of the surname Maté”.

            He doesn’t sound French, unless he is perhaps from the West Island region of Montreal. Many children from there grow up learning both French and English fluently, with no noticeable accent in either.

            Like

            1. Maybe Philippe Reines (who should know his accent aigu from his circumflex) got Maté mixed up with one of these guys (or all of them perhaps):

              Like

              1. That’s awesome that Reines exposed himself as such an ignoramus. To be sure, I misread Maté as French, but at least I know the difference between an accent aigu and an umlaut!

                Just for the record here is what the different French accents look like. What the French call the tréma is what Germans call the umlaut.

                Actually, I should have guessed that Maté is Jewish, for 3 reasons:
                (1) His first name is Aaron
                (2) He lives in Brooklyn
                (3) He writes for The Nation – haha!

                Like

                1. It is difficult to believe Reines calls anyone ‘pretentious’ when he uses a quote about himself as his online identification.

                  The search is ever on, to discover trendy new ways to make ordinary English words look more foreign and gangster – ‘boyz’ is a classic example. You can still tell what it is and what it means, but it looks all edgy and ghetto. I think we must have pretty much exhausted the possibilities for putting a ‘z’ where an ‘s’ would ordinarily go, and there’s an argument to be made that placing umlauts and French accents where they do not naturally go is irritating and pretentious (I have known girls who are as English as can be who were named Cheryl at birth, but who insisted from their teenage years on upon being known as ‘Cher’, with either an accent aigu or an accent circumflex above the ‘e’). But Reines screwed up by misidentifying the umlaut, an accent in a surname is rarely an affectation, and Reines is exactly the type of superior-acting know-it-all that is a delight to pillory regardless the scale of his mistake. Mr. Maté also made a spelling error in his tweet, but Reines got so excited over what he perceived to be pretentious fake accents that he appeared to have missed it.

                  Whatever the case, I knew almost nothing about Aaron Maté despite having seen him a few times in video clips, and now I know much more, so it seems a win/win from my perspective.

                  Like

  43. Kenneth Rapoza, normally a fairly level-headed source of commentary, is clearly upset that Zelenskiy won in Ukraine (like many Americans). But he comforts himself that the IMF now has Ukraine hooked through the ball-bag, and so Zelenskiy will have to govern as the IMF wills regardless his populist promises. Along the way, Rapoza has a revelation – Ukraine is really a corrupt oligarchy! It never appeared so under the stable leadership of Poroshenko the tycoon entrepreneur.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/kenrapoza/2019/04/24/ukraines-funny-president-may-have-to-wait-until-october-to-lead/#36b1247678e2

    Every single mention of Zelenskiy in the western media must now include that he is a comedian, apparently.

    Like


  44. I want to speak Russian

    At the end of his term in power, Petro Poroshenko has pissed up Zelensky’s back by his adopting a scandalous law on language. Zelensky will now have to cope with the consequences of the signing of this document, which has already caused discontent amongst Ukraine citizens and those of neighbouring Hungary and Romania, as well as international organizations for the protection of human rights.

    This law provides for the complete transition of the entire system of education, in school, pre-school and higher education, to that of the state language.

    In addition, this total Ukrainization has come down heavily upon cultural and mass events. All performances will have to be presented in Ukrainian or accompanied by subtitles. How a theatrical performance is going to be accompanied with subtitles has not been explained in the documentation of the law.

    Also, publishing activities are to be conducted in Ukrainian. This applies to both books and periodicals. For periodicals, which are already experiencing not the best of times, the necessity of publishing in the state language material that is published in Russian, the volume of which already exceeds that of material published in Ukrainian, can become a death sentence.

    The Ukrainian language is also to be used in television and radio broadcasting. Programmes in the Ukrainian language should make up most of the airtime.

    These changes are not pleasing to everyone. In addition, their implementation will require additional financial costs, which for a country whose economy is already going through hard times, can be disastrous.

    source

    Like

    1. If any other country – barring, perhaps, the UK – were overseeing ‘fledgling democracy’ Ukraine’s transition to a ‘prosperous western-oriented market democracy’ than the United States, the way things are going might sound a note of warning. But the United States actually does not give a flying fuck what eventually becomes of Ukraine, and Ukrainians are apparently too obtuse to see that. So long as it is useful as a daily irritant and provocation against Russia, it is serving its purpose, and when it finally runs out its string, the USA will abandon it and cheerfully leave its smoldering ruin on Russia’s doorstep.

      Every once in awhile, a hard lesson has to be taught. The Ukrainian nationalists have the bit firmly in their teeth, and believe they are going to make some sort of hardcore-Ukrainian super-state out of the place, and that accommodation will be made for it in the EU. There’s going to be some sort of virtual wall between Ukraine and Russia, and Ukraine will grow fat and wealthy on its trade with the EU. Europeans will be happy to learn to speak Ukrainian, presumably, because Ukrainians learning English does not appear to be part of the plan.

      But let them go ahead with it. Let them learn what it’s like to blindly follow a friend who does not care what eventually happens to them, so long as they are useful for a time. The ongoing American lab experiment which sees a minority consumed by hate running the program causes only alarm in Europe, judging by the Europeans not lining up to invest in the new blue-and-yellow paradise. But by God, say what you will about Ukrainians, they do not do things halfway, and little failures will neither deter nor suffice.

      Like

  45. More BS from the usual suspects…

    1. The traffic situation looks perfectly normal, with ships transiting and others waiting for their turn.
    2. According to the stated itineraries (accessible through VesselFinder and MarineTraffic), only ONE (!) of the ships currently in queue is bound for Ukraine (Mariupol), the rest are bound for Russian ports.
    3. Just stop.

    P.S. Happy Easter, everybody! Here we celebrated it last week, but Orthodox ditto is right now.

    Like

    1. I know it is. The buggers at the church across the road woke me up about 02:00 today with their bells crashing and banging away.

      Ah well, have to be tolerant, I suppose:

      ХРИСТОС ВОСКРЕС

      or, as I whispered in my holy grove at dawn:

      ᚺᚨᛁᛚᛟᛞᛁᚾ

      Like

      1. No worse than the call to prayer EVERY DAY, several times at that, from the Mosque. Although, I must admit, some of them (not the recorded ones) can be quite melodious.

        Like

    1. I’d be curious to see what this genius looks like in 10 years’ time when he collects his doctorate degree for 10 years of research on how binge-drinking affects academic competence.

      Like

      1. It looks like satire to me. Americans are well aware of the dangers of overindulgence in alcohol and in binge drinking, and their laws against underage drinking are quite strict. Alcohol is slightly more available there than here, as grocery stores are allowed to sell beer, but drugs have always been more a problem in the USA than alcohol abuse.

        Like

        1. OSU is a famous party school and it would be natural to expect a full-ride scholarship for a prodigy of alcoholism. BTW, the big rivalry ’round here in football is between OSU and UofM as well as OSU and MSU.

          Like

          1. I enjoyed the two hosts the most – the superficiality, banality and glibness of every damn US infotainment show. The Onion has got it nailed. Who can forget the piece on when Obama’s home teleprompter broke down?

            Like

  46. “Zelenskiy is for us a far greater threat than Poroshenko. He has not yet become president but is already chipping away at the relationship between our countries”. With these words, Ukrainian political émigrés in Russia have commented on Vladimir Zelensky’s angry reaction to the Russian intention to simplify the handing-oute of citizenship to all Ukraine citizens.

    The decision of Vladimir Putin to simplify the procedure for residents of the LPR and the DPR to obtain Russian citizenship, as well as the intention to think about extending this simplification to all citizens of the Ukraine, has caused an emotional reaction from the newly elected President of the Ukraine, Vladimir Zelenskiy.

    “I should not advise the Russian authorities to waste time trying to tempt citizens of the Ukraine with Russian Federation passports. The Ukraine is different, in that we Ukrainians have freedom of speech in our country, a free media and Internet”, wrote Zelenskiy on Saturday on his Facebook page, accusing Russia of having an alleged lack of “natural rights and freedoms”amongst its citizens .

    Such words of Zelenskiy were not ignored in Russia.

    “Zelenskiy has started wrongly. An ideological presidency built on the demagogy of “freedoms” and attacks on Russia is doomed. He should be asking himself why 1.2 million Ukrainians have already fled to Poland from this “free” Ukraine; 3 million are working in Russia, and in the Donbass they are queuing up for our passports”, Alexey Pushkov, Chairman of the Federation Council Information Policy Committee, wrote on Twitter.

    Journalists have also criticized the position taken by Zelenskiy and have taken note of his demagogic style.

    “The Ukraine is a country having a free media? Seriously? While Kirill Vyshinsky is in prison — to even let this topic slip out of one’s mouth should be embarrassing. A country having a free Internet and human rights? So the new law on language is not to be taken into account? Is the “Peacemaker” site an example of democracy? In short, there is something to work on in your own country before you declare yourself to be a “a shining city on a hill” to former USSR citizens —but they are already writing well about this matter”, wrote in Facebook Media Manager Peter Lidov-Petrovskiy.

    In turn, the publicist Dmitry Olshansky has pointed out that “in this anti-Moscow rhetorical construct, the hand of a Moscow speechwriter is instantly guessed, but these are trifles”.

    “In essence, the problem with this proud logic is that freedom as a popular value only works together with money; if there is no money, then it’s just too bad”, Olshainsky said, adding that Russia, as a more prosperous country, “will, with its simple ruble, put the squeeze on the “freedom” mechanically copied from the twentieth century and for which neither Americans nor Europeans wish to pay”…

    “Zelenskiy does not know what he is writing about. If, in 2004, 30 million people took part in the elections, now – only 18 million have done so. the Vast majority of 12 million went to Russia, because they do not face there a language barrier: we have a common mentality, and to live in Russia now is just more comfortable. And I am sure that for millions of Ukrainians, a Russian passport is still a pipe dream”, Chairman of the Ukraine Union of Political Emigrants and Political Prisoners Larisa Shesler told “Vzglyad”.

    “And Zelenskiy’s words about freedom of speech are just lies, because in comparison with Russia, in there Ukraine there is no freedom of speech at all. Suffice it to say that the editor-in-chief of RIA Novosti Ukraine, Kirill Vyshinsky, has simply been sitting for more than a year in prison. The editor in chief of “Strana.ua”, Igor Guzhva, was forced to leave the country and obtain asylum in Europe. The murder of Oles’ Buzina has still not been solved. And there still are Anatoliy Shari, Ruslan Kotsaba, Vasiliy Muravitskiy, Dmitry Vasilets, Pavel Volkov and some tens of the repressed journalists, but Zelenskiy cannot recall them”, emphasized Shesler.

    Source : Зеленский превзошел Порошенко во вранье и демагогии

    Zelenskiy has surpassed Poroshenko in lies and demagoguery

    Lying twat. Will dance to someone’s tune.

    Like

    1. Oh, well. It looks like he insists on learning the hard way. As long as he doesn’t think the West has his back whatever he does…

      Vis passports. I think Mark posted quite some time ago that Russia has already attracted away quite a few highly skilled engineers (Antonov/others) and the their families from various plants in the Ukraine with higher pay, housing, better conditions and no Ukrainian nazis.

      Like

    2. I must admit I had very low expectations of Vladimir Zelensky so I’m not too surprised that he’s starting to make Porky Pig look angelic – and this is even after PP started doing more wrecking-ball work in the last days of his Presidency, in order to derail Zelensky’s leadership and maybe lay the grounds for impeaching or overthrowing him in the not-too-distant future, than the fat one ever did in the previous 5 years.

      I’m only surprised that I set the bar too high for Zelensky.

      Like

      1. I didn’t see any real likelihood of a Russia/Ukraine rapprochement under Zelenskiy, but I guess Porky and the Washington gang wanted to make absolutely sure. If I am disappointed in anything about Zelenskiy, it’s that he allows himself to be maneuvered so easily so early. Russia has likely just written him off, and will not even try to approach him – which was Porky’s and his string-pullers’ intention. So he can enjoy flying around Europe and to Washington to hobnob with his ‘friends’, and might as well not waste anyone’s valuable time trying to kick-start the Normandy Four Plus Volker. Zelenskiy probably has nothing better to do, but Merkel and Micron and Putin do.

        Like

  47. I’m pleased to accidentally discover Martin Sieff over at Strategic Culture. I have good memories of his stuff from long ago but I don’t quite remember why, though old school proper journalist springs to mind even if he now off the leash – one of the joys of writing for oneself!

    https://www.strategic-culture.org/contributors/martin-sieff/#articles

    How about this from the end of March:

    Chaining America’s Destiny to the Chaos of Ukraine
    https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2019/03/31/chaining-americas-destiny-to-the-chaos-of-ukraine/

    The three leading candidates in this election, current President Petro Poroshenko, former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and literal clown Volodymyr Zelensky outdo each other in their expressed hatred of Russia.

    Like

  48. A week old but revealing.

    Politico.eu: NATO’s Germany hatefest
    https://www.politico.eu/article/nato-germany-hatefest-defense-spending-row-donald-trump/

    …“We cannot ensure the defense of the West if our allies grow dependent on Russia,” Pence said. “If Germany insists on building the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, as President Trump has said, it could literally turn Germany into a captive of Russia. It is simply unacceptable for Europe’s largest economy to ignore the threat of Russian aggression.”

    Germany rejects that argument, countering that the project would merely change the delivery path Russian gas takes to Germany, not the overall volume.

    Pence’s remarks received a muted response, in part because the audience included many Germans and other Europeans.

    At one particularly awkward moment, Pence praised “the resolute American leadership of President Donald Trump.” He then paused to allow for applause but none came…

    …Sitting next to Czaputowicz, Constanze Stelzenmüller, a prominent German security analyst with the Brookings Institution who opposes Nord Stream but took issue with the nature of the criticism, responded: “There are Eastern European countries which buy 100 percent of their energy from Russia and are not notably in any way captive of Russia. These things do not correlate and they also do not correlate in the German case, which is why I will say to you it is insulting to call us captive of Russia because we’re holding together the Russian sanctions consensus in Europe at a very real cost to German business.”…
    ####

    Plenty more quite revealing insights at the link.

    I’d love to see the real numbers on that, but we know they are huge. It’s clear that Germany counts the economic hit of anti-Russian sanctions in its calculations of ‘European defense’, not simply the €€€ spend on weapons, therefore a more holistic and accurate accounting. Recall that the UK is most likely to leave the EU leaving both France and Germany, neither buying the F-35 unlike other European countries, the F-35 system designed to tie them in militarily to the US for the next few decades.

    Like

    1. Fantastic!

      Can’t remember which game show used to torture unsuccessful contestants with “Here’s what you would have won” but in this case it’s a beautiful GIRFUY * in the direction of the ASBO neighbours and their protectors.

      * standard local acronym in which the first word is “get.”

      Like

      1. In that case you might appreciate this video clip with Zelensky in 2014., it’s back into fashion. There’ s even a pig in it. As an aside, I’m absolutely jealous of how easily they move in high heels, my ankles are hurting just from watching them.

        Like

  49. President-elect Zelenskiy and Poroshenko crony Groisman have decided to defy the IMF, and cut gas prices.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-04-24/ukraine-to-cut-gas-prices-in-move-that-may-strain-imf-relations?srnd=markets-vp

    Let’s see who blinks first. I’m betting the IMF will set Zelenskiy straight, because if he actually lowers gas prices, it will be a great deal harder to raise them again, and the IMF is not at all interested in seeing a slide back to where prices were before. They might let him get away with one tiny symbolic rollback. I guess we’ll see. But either way, a price reduction is an acknowledgement that Ukraine is not doing as well as the west promised it would if it hitched its wagon to Europe’s star.

    Like

    1. Plus, it is springtime already and the price cuts are only for households/i>, i.e. voters. Maybe the plan is to try and push for a general election considering that the Rada is mostly hostile (as you already pointed out). Fortuitous timing. Early days. Again, judge by what is done rather than said.

      Like

  50. news.com.au via Antiwar.com: Zelensky open to separatist region talks
    https://www.news.com.au/world/breaking-news/zelensky-open-to-separatist-region-talks/news-story/a75019317fad162f2f4cf44979339e37

    …”I hope that Russia will show evidence of its openness towards a de-escalation at the next Normandy meeting,” said Zelensky in a statement circulated on Sunday.

    “I would once again like to say that I am ready for negotiations.”…

    …”We are prepared to discuss the new conditions for how Ukraine and Russia can live together,” he said, though a normalisation of ties is only possible once the Crimean Peninsula and Donbass region are no longer occupied…
    ####

    It all rather depends if he still insists on having the Ukrainian army killing Ukrainian citizens. Cart, horse and all that. There will be no ‘normalization’.

    Like

    1. The subtitle to that piece reads, literally:
      “Ukrainian president-elect Volodymyr Zelensky says he’s "ready for negotiations" over the conflict in eastern Ukraine.”

      Are those air quotes? – haha!

      Like

      1. Arggg, my joke went flat, because WordPress rendered those HTML air quotes in my comment. Click on al’s link, you’ll see what I meant… There is an ampersand followed by the word “quot” and then a semi-colon.

        P.S. I have forgotten how to “escape” HTML tags in the comment section, does anyone of you nerds out there remember?

        Like

        1. If you started with ““, then you end with “” and if you started with ““, then you end with ““. Is this what you are looking for? If you are escaping a link to an article, then if the header started with ““, you end with ““. To escape, you enter whatever you started with but insert the virgule before the letter representing the action.

          Like

            1. It’s insidious! HTML reminds me of that gag in “Life of Brian”, where the Pharisees can’t tell you which words are tabu, because they can’t tell you without pronouncing the tabu words and thus becoming tabu themselves….
              With HTML, you can’t tell somebody how to write an HTML tag without that tag rendering itself…
              Actually, there is a way to do that, I just don’t remember how!

              Like

    2. We have had successive scenarios in which Ukraine asks Russia to trust it that nothing punitive or untoward will happen to residents of the east if Russia only stands aside and allows Ukraine to reconquer it. There must be a military operation, because Ukrainians outside the east demand that it be retaken, but nobody will get hurt and as soon as the east is returned to the fold, all will be friends together again. Russia thus far seems to find that a little hard to believe – can’t think why. And the Ukies will never again see the day when Crimea is Ukrainian.

      Like

  51. Commenters above were discussing Zelensky’s ignorance in trying to troll Putin right out of the box. Here is more info about Zelensky’s epic fail.

    So, basically, to Putin’s program to offer Russian passports (and hence dual citizenship) to all Ukrainians who meet the criteria — same way as Huns, Romanians and Poles are doing for their ethnic cohorts in Transcarpathia — Zel tried to pass the whole thing off as a joke.

    Zel started off with the stern tone of a man who thinks he wields power and authority: “I would not recommend to the Russian government that they waste their time trying to tempt Ukrainian citizens with Russian passports.”

    In the next utterance, Zel tried to sound self-righteous: “For sure it’s possible that some will be found who are still under the influence of Russian propaganda, and it is possible that these will accept [the offer] for the sake of finding a job, or perhaps fleeing from a criminal investigation.”

    In his third utterance, Zel went over the top trying to be funny: “In fact, I am ready to offer Vladimir Putin a list of Ukrainian citizens who, in the upcoming days, will find it very uncomfortable to live in [the Ukraine] a country which they have robbed, and misused their high positions.”

    [This was supposed to be a joke hinting at Poroshenko officials who might want to flee the country. But the joke went flat, and Ukrainians were all over Zel for offering to “compile a list” of undesirables and present said list to Russia.]

    “Let Russia decide,” Zel went on ineptly trying to reach for a punchline, “where it would prefer to keep such professional criminals — in Rostov or Magadan?”

    Thus just showing what an amateur Zelensky is, and should not try to troll a professional like Putin. There is an American saying: “Never kid a kidder.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Some negative reactions to Zelensky’s inept effort to troll Putin.

      Pundit Igor Lesev: “You’re still a nobody. But you’re acting like you think you’re Faust. Too soon.”

      Journalist Vyacheslav Chechilo: “What a pity, that you closed the window of possibility for normalizing relations between Russia and the Ukraine, before it was even opened.”

      Journalist Mikhail Mishchishin: “Poroshenko has arisen.” [from the dead, using Biblical language]

      Journalist Ekaterina Roshchuk: “Half the people who voted for you were expecting you to end the war, even if you had to get on your knees to Putin, and now you’re brazenly trolling Putin in Ukrainian, on your Facebook, this will not help your ratings.”

      Blogger @borisenkodmitr: “While Zelensky is resting after the elections, it could turn out that he returns to Ukraine [where everybody took Russian passports and left] only to find himself the last man still there, and have to turn off the light.”

      Like

        1. Putin: “Если они будут выдавать гражданство россиянам на Украине, а мы – украинцам в России, мы довольно быстро придём к общему знаменателю и искомому результату. У нас будет общее гражданство”. (translation: If they grant citizenship to Russians in Ukraine, and we grant citizenship to Ukrainians in Russia, we will quickly come to a common denominator and the DESIRED RESULT. We will have common citizenship”.

          Like

          1. Ha, ha!! I guess if he felt he must say something, he would have been hard-pressed to come up with anything better than that. It was trolling, a little, but sort of friendly mockery. Russia has been repeatedly pushed by US proxies to make a public statement which Ukrainian nationalists can rally the people around, something they can use to say “See? We told you Russia can never be a friend”.

            This, though, suggests that strengthening of Slavic brotherhood has been Russia’s aim all along, while there is really nothing in it for Ukrainians to get furious about.

            Like

      1. Zelensky thought he was being smart saying he would make the same offer to Russians (i.e: give them Ukrainian citizenship). Putin replied that he could only support Zelensky’s offer, since both countries giving citizenship to each other’s citizen was the fastest way for them to unite and become one country 😀

        Like

        1. If he started giving Ukrainian citizenship to Russians, than that would only be a good thing: just as a former NZ prime minister once said as regards one of the results of Kiwis emigrating to Australia, such a move by Zelinskiy can only be welcomed, in that it will result in the raising of the average IQ of Ukrainian citizens.

          Like

          1. I think he was even more barbed, suggesting that New Zealanders moving to Australia would raise the IQ of both countries. The same principles, if applied to this case, suggest that Russians who would move to Ukraine are so stupid that their departure would raise Russia’s IQ, while even the stupidest Russians are smarter than the smartest Ukrainians. It was really quite a brilliant insult, when you think about it, and I often wondered if the New Zealand PM came up with it himself, or if it was suggested to him.

            Like

            1. The idea behind the joke is actually old: it’s known as the Will Rogers phenomenon or the Will Rogers paradox which means the joke dates back to the 1930s during the Great Depression.

              The statistical phenomenon behind the joke appears in medical journals that discuss comparisons of the results of recent medical trials with those of past trials that are used as standards of comparisons, when the guidelines for classifying patients with diseases such as cancer change over time. Here is an example:
              https://academic.oup.com/jnci/article/95/15/1105/2520379

              “At least in some cases, historical controls may become history, thanks to the recent changes in a national set of cancer staging guidelines. A large study has shown that using the new American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging guidelines—in place as of January 2003—results in dramatic artifactual improvements in stage-specific survival among women with locally advanced breast cancer. Although unlikely to affect treatment decisions, the findings suggest that comparing the results of current clinical trials to historical controls may result in misleading benefits.

              The problem has been dubbed the “Will Rogers phenomenon,” because the situation resembles that of a classic Will Rogers quote, “When the Okies left Oklahoma and moved to California, they raised the average intelligence level in both states.” By taking the patients with the worst prognosis and reclassifying them as having more severe disease, the new AJCC standards raised each stage-specific survival rate, said Wendy A. Woodward, M.D., Ph.D., a radiation oncology resident at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. In essence, because the prognosis of those who “migrated”—although worse than that for other members of the better-stage group—was better than that for other members of the worse-stage group, survival rates rose in each group without any change in individual outcomes.

              Similar findings have already been demonstrated in lung cancer patients, therefore the results are not unexpected. Nonetheless, said Woodward, the extent of the difference was quite surprising. “We’re showing that the 10-year overall survival for stage II [breast cancer] patients can increase by more than 20% simply by using the new staging system,” she said. “That’s the kind of difference that if you were looking at new clinical data on a drug you’d be bowled over.”

              She and her colleagues looked at records of 1,350 women with locally advanced breast cancer who had been followed for a median of 10 years, and they used the raw clinical data to stage patients according to each set of guidelines. This June, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting in Chicago, she reported “a surprising difference” in stage-specific mortality between the 1988 and 2003 AJCC guidelines. For example, women diagnosed with stage II breast cancer according to the 1988 guidelines had 5- and 10-year survival rates of 72% and 53%, respectively; yet among those same women classified with stage II disease according to the 2003 guidelines, survival rates were 86% at 5 years and 75% at 10 years.”

              The paradox is discussed at this link in connection with multiple sclerosis and other cancers:
              https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20106348

              Like

          2. Yes that former Kiwi PM was the famous Robert Muldoon.

            I wonder why he never took his own advice; we surely could have done with some of his wit in Canberra. After all, on leaving politics, he was a bit at a loss as to what to do with his life but then theatre and late Friday night TV beckoned and he found a new career as New Zealand’s answer to Barry Humphries.

            Like

        2. Nothing wrong with dual citizenship. Or 3, or more. Like I said before, passports are like a box of chocolates: The more you have, the better off you are!

          Like

          1. Well this guy must have been given a poisoned chocolate:

            https://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/9211c4621f1a437a6005d1cf85617dbc?width=1024

            This was in the wake of the incident when a Hamas representative was killed in Dubai by Mossad agents using fake Australian passports with stolen personal details of Australian citizens. At the same time the Federal Environmental Minister Peter Garrett was getting pounded over his administration of a homes insulation program in which four electricians were electrocuted while installing insulation in houses in four separate incidents.

            Like

  52. Check out this video A 12-year Russian kid named Belyavsky landed the world’s first quintuple jump in practice. For the record, it’s a [counter-clockwise] salchow jump. Don’t be confused by the fact that his coach is tracking him in a harness, it’s pretty clear that the kid jumps and lands without any assistance from the harness! (although the presence of the harness might add a psychological security and would obviously not be allowed in competition).

    The boy starts with a classic entry: Forward right inside mohawk (sort of), step down on right back outside edge, without further ado straight to the forward left outside 3-turn and then the jump. wow!

    Like

  53. Rusaviation.com: Upgraded Russian Tu-214ON surveillance plane makes maiden flight over US nuclear and military sites
    https://www.ruaviation.com/news/2019/4/29/13422/
    ####

    In other news, Russia is replacing its Mig-29s in Armenia at the Erebuni AB with Su-30SMs which is quite the upgrade. The background I assume is that Azerbaijan is still building up its military stocks to renew the war over Ngorno-Karabakh at a time of its choosing. Remember it had been buying i-Sraeli suicide drones when one ‘accidentally’ was tested live against Armenian soldiers. Since then, the company has been bought out by Rafael (i-Srael’s big missile house), rebranded and updated the product and is selling it again to Azerbaijan (I think I posted about this a few months ago. The question is, is Aliyev dumb enough to take western words of support as writ considering what happen in Georgia, Libya, i-Rack etc. etc. I would say clearly not.

    Like

  54. John Helmer: REUTERS BITES OFF TONGUE IN US WAR AGAINST VENEZUELA – ROSNEFT FORCES WITHDRAWAL OF NEWS FABRICATION
    http://johnhelmer.net/reuters-bites-off-tongue-in-us-war-against-venezuela-rosneft-forces-withdrawal-of-news-fabrication/

    …According to a publication by Reuters issued on Tuesday, April 23 – but made to appear to have been published on April 18 – the news agency has admitted it “could not determine” its earlier allegation that a “scheme uncovered by Reuters” was true. The new Reuters claim also disavows the charge that Rosneft was acting illegally with Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA) to bust US sanctions imposed on the Venezuelan company in January; and on Evrofinance Mosnarbank, a state bank, sanctioned on March 11.

    Now, Reuters says, “experts see no violation of sanctions.” The “scheme uncovered by Reuters” reported on April 18 has been reprinted this week as a “new approach described to Reuters.”

    The unprecedented retreat by Reuters followed a Rosneft press statement issued on April 19. The company called the Reuters report an “outright lie…purposeful misinformation, legalization of rumours…invent[ed] information fabricated for the purpose of causing damage to the Russian economy, Russian companies, and the Russian state.” Welcoming the correction in Moscow, Rosneft calls it “an unprecedented admission that we were right in our evaluation of Reuters’ article.” ..
    ####

    Plenty more at the link.

    And the consequences are precisely what? Taking The Guardian‘s Luke Harding and others… precisely nothing.

    Like

    1. Tremendous. In its own way, easily as big as Gennady Tymshenko’s handing The Economist its ass, and making it apologize for printing that Vladimir Putin was the silent majority shareholder in Gunvor. Russia seems to have learned that in instances where it is sure it has been the victim of deliberate fabrication, it can use international legal action or the threat of it to make the liars back down. I just would not want to see that become the norm, since we have quite enough legal-system bickering going on in the world, and it delights only the lawyers. But there are times when the fabricator must be pinned to the wall with the spotlight in his eyes, and asked, “Is it true?? Can you prove it???” If the public answer is “No” to both, that’s punishment right there. Nobody ever publicly takes Harding to task, not in a forum in which he must participate, and makes him admit that most of what he says about Russia is simply made up by him. Ditto lying gits like Shaun Walker and Roland Oliphant, who say they found themselves caught in the middle of a Russian armored convoy surreptitiously entering Ukraine, but never got a single picture or video.

      I’m beginning to think it is almost safe to go ahead and call the game for Maduro. The United States can continue to make life even more miserable for Venezuelans, of course, but it cannot do so with the stamp of righteousness and it is pretty clear now to everyone that Washington is trying to implant Guaido for entirely self-interested reasons. The rest of the world seems to be losing its appetite for it, and Guaido never really caught on despite an all-out effort by Washington to brand him, constantly referring to him as ‘Venezuela’s Guaido’ when he was always really ‘Washington’s Guaido’ and trying to pretend that legislation introduced by Guaido to privatize state assets has any legitimacy at all. It would be quite a surprise to see ‘Guaido fever’ catch on in Venezuela now, and so long as the military remains loyal, I think Washington has failed again. Continuing to inflict misery on the country looks daily more like spite and frustration rather than nobility, and the longer it goes on, the worse Washington looks. At the same time, it has gone much too far to mend fences with Venezuela and suggest it was all just a big misunderstanding.

      Characteristic of Washington’s epic flailing are Pompeo’s threats of ‘consequences’ to those who stand in the way of regime-change success in Venezuela, his smug announcement that ‘at least one’ of Maduro’s ministers is about to flee for Washington’s welcoming arms (classic misdirection aimed to breed suspicion over who is the traitor, and cause a panic), and his insistence that Maduro is ‘going to go’.

      https://www.newsweek.com/us-venezuela-war-maduro-russia-china-overthrow-coup-1408654

      Never mind – as long as the stock market stays high, Americans will be reassured that they remain the world’s biggest ass-kickers, and that all America’s plans are on the way to fruition. What is actually happening is that the USA is making more enemies every day, and becoming more disliked. It camouflages this by injecting itself into every situation, just as if it had been invited.

      Like

  55. At the start of the year, on January 9, The Hill, a leading US political newspaper, as if setting the year’s agenda put out an article entitled “Managing Russia’s dissolution”. The article reviews the measures needed to dismantle Russia and instigate civil conflicts on the territory of Eurasia. The author, Bugajski, describes Russia as “a declining state that disguises its internal infirmities with external offensives”. He further claims that “Russia is heading toward fragmentation” under “rising social, ethnic and regional pressures” and simultaneously blamed the federal government both for failing “to develop into a nation state with a strong ethnic or civic identity” and for working to centralize control over the regions.

    https://southfront.org/managing-russia-dissolution-truth-or-desire/

    Like

  56. Live from São Paulo, Brian Mier connects a fascist coup in Brazil to an imperialist agenda in the US – toppling center-left governments in Latin America with disinformation campaigns and targeted judicial lawfare operations, subverting democracy in service of the demands of global capitalism.

    Brian is co-editor of the new book of interviews “Year of Lead: Washington, Wall Street and the New Imperialism in Brazil” from Brasilwire: https://www.blurb.com/b/9404546-year-of-lead-washington-wall-street-and-the-new-im

    Like

    1. Well let’s see …

      1/ Guaido pleaded for foreign intervention but he’s going ballistic at the presence of Russian personnel in Venezuela which he calls … foreign intervention
      2/ Guaido ties Venezuela’s humanitarian crisis to socialism in front of a Congress representative of the Democratic Socialists of America (Alexandria Ocasio Cortez) – wonder if she let that pass?

      Gauido’s statements otherwise are the exact opposite of what has actually been happening in Venezuela. For example he says Maduro’s govt burned the trucks carrying “humanitarian aid” at the border near Cucuta when everyone knows Guaido’s own goons were the ones who threw Molotovs at the trucks and set them on fire while Venezuelan border police were waiting for them to attempt to breach the border.

      Like

    2. Just reading the headlines, he denounces Russian military intervention in Venezuela while calling for foreign military intervention in Venezuela.

      Like

        1. Yeah, but it’s not the same thing at all.
          Russian military intervention is demonic, whereas American freedom drones are carried on the back of angels.

          Like

          1. P.S. – in the end it was all for naught. Moby just used that gold doubloon to pick his baleen after swallowing down the Captain and all the crew. (oops, sorry, I should have said SPOILER ALERT!)

            Like

  57. Ever wonder why Airbus is not publicly dancing with joy over Boeing’s discomfiture? Me, too. Here’s an interesting explanation; the two essentially work together to control the core airliner market, and an Airbus attempt to take over the market would destabilize the relationship that makes them essentially collaborators.

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-airbus-boeing-strategy-analysis/why-airbus-isnt-pouncing-on-boeings-737-max-turmoil-idUSKCN1S51SI

    Fun facts according to the author – Airbus is partly responsible for pushing Boeing into re-engineering the 737 rather than introducing a new design, and that Boeing cannot accept market share below 40%. Which it’s at right now, in the single-aisle market.

    Like

    1. I was thinking something like that; especially to keep out Russian and Chinese rivals. Collusion in many respects to ensure Western dominance.

      From what I have heard, Boeing is still dazed by the 787 experience and will not undertake a new air frames for many years to come – just re-winging and re-engining tried and true hulls.

      Like

    2. That two companies dominating the market for passenger jet construction should collude on price and supply and to keep potential rivals out of the market through various means (such as undercutting on price and lobbying regulators to restrict market entry) is no surprise – this is stuff that is taught in senior high school economics.

      Like

      1. Yes, oil companies do the same, and we even had grocery chains conspiring to fix the price of bread artificially high a couple of years ago. What I found interesting is the angle that Airbus had maneuvered Boeing into the position of re-engineering the 737 rather than designing a new plane. I don’t suppose there’s anyone left who actually believes either company makes aircraft for the love of aviation or out of an imperative to produce a first-quality product, but it was a bit of an eye-opener for me nonetheless, considering how potentially risky air travel is. I suppose it’s a minor miracle that more planes don’t crash. You would think the emphasis would always be on safety no matter what, and backup systems out the wazoo – since a catastrophic failure of an aircraft in flight normally results in everyone being killed, just from the fall and the impact if nothing else. Crashes by every other form of transport are typically more survivable.

        Like

        1. I find the article a bit simplistic. American Airlines played Boeing and then partially reverse-dicked Airbus. Efficiency almost always wins and for once Airbus (who are naturally more cautious and follow the red-blue development philosophy) made the right choice (bad ones, A340, A380).
          Boeing also pushed Bombardier’s CS100 in to Airbus’s hands and thus accidentally benefited by having Embraer fall in to its own. Again a f/k up that in this case might turn out well.

          China will break the duopoly but it’ll take a bit of time. Hopefully Russia will be an integral part of China’s airline manufacturing industry rather than just be absorbed, an Eurasian Airbus if you will.

          The 737 problems? Why is Airbus getting the blame when Boeing did it to themselves? That’s just taking the piss. The former has short assed legs because the floor is higher to take more cargo, i.e. $$$ cargo than $$$ PAX, a decision made back in the 1950s and not revisited despite airport equipment easily handling the difference in height. Boeing wanted to have its cake and eat it not to mention over-estimating its engineering chops despite a series of events (like Airbus) over the years that showed they weren’t quite masters: A380/A400M/787 production problems; F-18E/f wingdrop;C-130J engine wash;F-35 etc.

          Like

    3. Airbus has its own history of a fatal passenger jet crash involving Angle-of-Attack sensors. There was the incident (which I remember Northern Star mentioned in a previous comment not so long ago) of the Airbus jet that crashed in the Mediterranean Sea near Perpinya on the French-Spanish border in 2010.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XL_Airways_Germany_Flight_888T#Investigation

      In that incident the flight crew were unaware that the two front sensors were giving incorrect information (one of those sensors was blocked by ice) and those sensors were over-riding the third sensor giving the stall warning, after the crew had attempted a test of the three sensors. This suggests that the software behind the sensors had not been designed so that the third sensor could over-ride the front two sensors if its information indicated stalling.

      I think for that reason (and maybe others linked to duopoly market characteristics, and those specific to the passenger jet manufacturing industry), Airbus is wise to keep its head down.

      Like

        1. There is one kid called Loki and one called Thorfinn as well so the names reflect an interest in Norse heritage rather than the heritage of the Anglo-Saxons.

          I also found an Artemis, an Athena and two Aphrodites among the girls. Some kids are going to have a lot to live up to. Especially the bub called Honey-bee.

          Like

          1. The North of England and the North Midlands of England were more Anglo-Danish than “Anglo-Saxon”. I am talking about that area of England that was once the “Danelaw”. Furthermore. in the Northwest of England, it was more Norse than Danish.

            The suffix “-by” on place names is the North Germanic equivalent of the West Germanic “-burg” or “-borough” or “-brugh” placename endings. The ending “-by” is, therefore, common to place names in Sweden ,and Denmark. However, in the North Midlands and North of England, there are more place names ending in “-by” than in the whole of Scandinavia.

            In my old neck of the woods, there are such Norse/Viking place names as Elsby, Irby, Formby, Helsby, Kirby, Kirkby, Ormskirk, Skelmersdale, Bickerstaffe, Hoscar, Bescar, Scarisbrick etc.

            The further one moves inland from the coast, the more frequent become the Anglian place names, such as Bebbington, Warrington, Bolton, Newton, Newburgh, Pennington, etc.

            The Saxons settled in the south, southeast and southwest of what is now England, hence Essex, Middlesex, Sussex, Wessex.

            Like

            1. Spotted a Lordswill and a Lucifer as well in the list.

              In a few years’ time, a kindergarten teacher will be dealing with a full-on religious war if these two show up in the same class.

              Like

  58. My latest: on how a State Department propagandist/Islamist name of Ramazan Alpaut, has called on “men of the North Caucasus” to teach Margarita Simonyan a lesson.
    Being a pussy of an extremist, Alpaut wants other people to do his dirty work. He works for Uncle Sam, it goes without saying…

    Like

      1. Simonyan needs to purge some of the kreaklies who infest RT. It’s painful looking at the tabloidesque nonsense they offer as international news. The crap includes this

        https://www.rt.com/news/457938-venezuela-vehicle-run-over-protesters/

        Why not just encourage people to rely on the BBC and NYT, Margaret? Or offer Tintin a contract? There’s a huge gulf between “edgy” and “competent” and the staff seems to prefer the edginess to the provision of a reasonable level of coverage. Cos it’s always about their next gig, innit?

        Like

        1. Simonyan is a kreakle herself (partially reformed). She once gave an interview (for which I lost the link, sorry!) in which she explained how the intelligentsia of her generation (=kreakles) used to ABSOLUTELY ADORE America, right up until the pindosi started bombing Yugoslavia.

          Is that what it took to open their eyes?

          Like

          1. Yeah, but in that same interview, which I well remember, when saying that in the USA she just watched MTV all the time, she added the rider that at the time she was only 16.

            Another thing I remember was that she was brought up in poverty, in a communal dwelling in Krasnodar if I rightly remember, in an extended Armenian family.

            She didn’t say her upbringing was poverty stricken in so many words, but that’s the impression I got.

            Those whom I call kreakly are generally pampered twats.

            Like

          2. I would argue that American repudiations of Russia prior to that were mostly of the sort which could be blamed on misunderstanding, or be categorized as the sort of prosecution that might pass with a changing of the guard in Washington. I would argue as well that the bombing of Yugoslavia, in isolation, might also have been forgiven eventually, had not the coincident attempt to ruin Russia economically with ‘shock therapy’ under Gorbachev and Yeltsin taken place.

            The bombing of Yugoslavia was also the introduction of disinformation operations on a prime-time scale, as the news were dominated with hate propaganda against Milosevic and the prancing of OTPOR. It was wildly successful from NATO’s viewpoint, but Russians were well aware that it was wholesale demonization and that it had cast Milosevic as a completely different leader than he was. Also, it marked the departure from NATO submitting to the will of the UN Security Council, as it went ahead with a military intervention although the Security Council had not authorized it, calling it a ‘humanitarian intervention’. There were many things about the bombing of Yugoslavia which marked a watershed moment in western history, in which the west made a lasting decision that it would no longer allow its behavior to be constrained by international law.

            Like

  59. The Register: Oh dear. Secret Huawei enterprise router snoop ‘backdoor’ was Telnet service, sighs Vodafone
    https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/04/30/huawei_enterprise_router_backdoor_is_telnet/

    We all want to see hard proof of deliberate espionage. This is absolutely not it

    …A claimed deliberate spying “backdoor” in Huawei routers used in the core of Vodafone Italy’s 3G network was, in fact, a Telnet-based remote management interface.

    The Bloomberg financial newswire reported this morning that Vodafone had found “vulnerabilities going back years with equipment supplied by Shenzhen-based Huawei for the carrier’s Italian business”…

    …Given Bloomberg’s previous history of trying to break tech news, when it claimed that tiny spy chips were being secretly planted on Supermicro server motherboards – something that left the rest of the tech world scratching its collective head once the initial dust had settled – it may be best to take this latest revelation with a pinch of salt. ..
    ####

    Plenty more at the link and don’t forget to hit the comments.

    Bloomberg – If it’s yeller, it’s not yur fella

    WTaF? It’s up there with the ‘Russian Spy Whale’ story that broke yesterday, a Belgua whale with two straps and a GoPro mounting found by the Norwegian fishermen off the northern coast of Norway, the straps’ buckles reading ‘St. Petersburg Equipment’ – in English! I have to admit, it is a pleasant feeling watching the ‘quality’ western press willingly burning its own reputation to the ground so publicly in their need to please their patrons. You couldn’t make this stuff up and be believed.

    Like

      1. The last thing Maduro’s government wants to do is make a martyr of Guaido, so that a real opposition movement can coalesce around his memory. He needs to be beaten right out in public, in front of everyone, so that he is known to be a US puppet and a nothing. His over-the-top agitation shows he is getting desperate and that he knows his time is drawing to a close; his ‘crowds’ get smaller and smaller, and he is more and more an object of derision each time. People have had time to make their decision, and things are plainly not breaking Guaido’s way. Venezuelans know he is a main cause of their misery, and that it is being visited upon them to make them accept an American appointee as their leader. And that as soon as he takes power, he is going to privatize their state resources and sell them off to American investors, where they will be gone beyond any hope of recovery. After that, they can look forward to the remainder of their time on earth as subjects of a US territory, like Puerto Rico. Guaido will cover this by saying that Venezuela needs to raise a lot of money quickly, to alleviate the suffering of the people – suffering that he brought upon them, to break their will. And America will look like a benevolent sugar-daddy.

        Like

        1. You’re right Mark.

          It’s just difficult to not think of someone who is willing -indeed eager-to sacrifice tens of thousands of Venezuelan lives in the furtherance of his own political aggrandizement as not swinging limp neck snapped a the the end of a gallow’s rope .

          Like

    1. Did you read the trailer at the end?

      “Pompeo said Maduro prepared to flee Venezuela Tuesday morning, but backed off the move because of advise from the Russia government.

      “He had an airplane on the tarmac. He was ready to leave this morning, as we understand it. And the Russians indicated he should stay,” Pompeo said during an appearance on CNN late Tuesday afternoon

      “He was headed for Havana,” the secretary of state added, referring to the Cuban capital.

      Pressed for evidence, Pompeo said his claim was based on “conversations.”

      Remember how well that ‘fall of Tripoli’ fake worked in Libya? This is plainly an attempt to duplicate it, to generate momentum which will result in a panicky population running Maduro right out of town and handing the country to US-appointed weasel Juan Guaido and that radical nutjob Leopoldo Lopez. And if that doesn’t work, it will offer a nice little bonus in increased hatred for Russia, all dividends from a made-up incident that never happened.

      Like

      1. Pompeo is now the one in a panic. This latest stunt, like the humanitarian-aid-being-blocked-by-Evil-Maduro show, was a miserable failure. It had the same apparent flaws – rushed, poorly executed and without anything in reserve.

        Either they triple down with an overt military action (mercenaries most likely) or they find some way to climb down. In that regard, Russia may engineer a face saving exit for the US by agreeing to withdraw its military forces (all 100 troops) and the US can crow about how it backed down Russia and removed its malign influence.

        Like

    2. The best advice for Maduro is not to do anything and let Juan Guaido and his mentor Leopoldo Lopez look stupid. The fact that Lopez had to be trotted out to support Guaido already shows that Guaido’s expiry date is approaching faster than even I had anticipated. I had figured Guaido would be good for six months after his self-promotion as interim President.

      Like

      1. I agree. Actually, I agree with both viewpoints – Guaido’s performing and always having to do that clenched-fist thing are damned annoying, and he probably should swing for his usurpation of the constitution for his own purposes; it plainly does not say what he alleges it does. But, ironically, it was borderline-illiterate sourpuss Elliott Abrams who harshed his mojo, with the stupid ‘clarification’ that Guaido’s 30-day interim presidency would commence the day Maduro steps down. So, obviously, that means that right now he has no authority at all, and is rabble-rousing and stirring up trouble and blatantly trying to overthrow the elected government without any license or mitigating factors of any kind. He is a traitor and a criminal. But his American backers just as plainly hope he will be whacked or arrested or something, anything that will let the USA intervene. And Maduro knows it. So for the present, the best he can do is just manage the situation and let Guaido make a fool of himself. His demonstrations are looking a little thin, and by and by he will have to carry his own sign all by himself, and shout at passing traffic while holding up his clenched fist. At that point it should be safe to have him committed for his own good, and there is little Washington could say, since he will obviously have no following.

        My core impression of the situation has not changed – if he believed he genuinely had the support of the population, he would have stood for election, and had he won, his legitimacy could not be questioned. He knew he would not win, so he let himself believe the mighty indispensable nation could put him in the driver’s seat by strategy and trickery.

        Like

  60. The Real News Network
    Published on 30 Apr 2019
    Tuesday morning self-declared president and opposition leader Juan Guaidó called on the military and the population to oppose the Maduro government. Only a few thousand civilians and very few soldiers heeded the call. Mike Fox reports from Caracas

    Like

    1. Leopoldo Lopez has asked for and been given asylum in Chile’s embassy in Caracas. I’m now starting to wonder whether the whole point of the “coup” was actually to provide cover for Lopez to escape his house arrest and find refuge in the embassy of a country on board with the US regime-change plans. Guaido’s whereabouts remain unknown.

      News just in is that Lopez has now transferred from Chile’s embassy to Spain’s embassy.

      This surely represents one more stage if not the final stage in Lopez’s abandonment of his Guaido
      protégé. If Guaido is unaware of how he might have been used by Lopez and that his life (and the lives of his wife and daughter) might now be in danger, that would not surprise me.

      Like

      1. The ratlines are in operation. The 64 bolivar question is how the US can declare a face-saving victory. Of course, it is hardly over but how many times must a US engineered regime effort fail? The answer is blowin’ in the wind.

        Like

      2. The final sentence puzzles me, Jen.

        Guaido would have to be thick as a brick not to be aware of how vulnerable he has been left by the manoeuvres yesterday. Maybe he is and would carry on regardless if they were to make him wear a bib stencilled front and back with a bullseye. It’s about the creation of narrative; a friend might take him and his family aside and sit them down to relax and watch a movie – Capricorn One, for example – and see if the penny drops.

        Like

        1. He may still be too thick to get the point of the movie.. I have the impression Guaido is truly a useful idiot.

          Like

          1. Based, however, on the whole wheels-within-wheels thing, I have to wonder if Guaido is not just an obvious decoy, employed to simultaneously free and legitimize Lopez. Difficult to imagine, though, because Lopez’s national support is even lower than Guaido’s.

            Like

  61. https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/04/30/guan-a30.html

    “The Pentagon has announced the abrupt firing of the commander of the infamous US prison camp at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba.

    In a statement released Sunday, the US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), which oversees the extra-legal detention center, claimed that Rear Adm. John C. Ring, the camp commandant, had been relieved of his command because of a “loss of confidence in his ability” to lead. The facility has a staff of 1,800 troops and civilian personnel deployed to continue the imprisonment of 40 remaining detainees.

    The dismissal comes just weeks before Ring was to complete his tour as the 18th commander of the prison camp, which was opened in 2002 as part of the “war on terror” launched under the administration of George W. Bush. The timing suggests retaliation by the top brass over what it sees as the rear admiral’s overly frank statements to the media.
    Last December, he gave an interview at one of Guantanamo’s detention centers to NBC News in which he complained about the deterioration of the camp facilities and the failure of Congress to appropriate funds for their replacement or repair. He also warned that the aging of the prisoners could soon turn the notorious site of torture, rendition and illegal detention into something resembling a nursing home.

    Ring had estimated last year that $69 million was needed to replace the most dilapidated of the camp’s facilities, which houses the 15 so-called “high-value detainees” who were transferred to Guantanamo in 2006–2007 after being imprisoned and tortured at CIA “black sites” around the world.

    His firing came on the same day that the New York Times published a lengthy article titled “Guantánamo Bay as Nursing Home: Military Envisions Hospice Care as Terrorism Suspects Age.” Written by Carol Rosenberg, who has reported from Guantanamo since 2002, previously for the Miami Herald, the article included extensive statements made by Ring during a recent press trip to the prison camp.

    “Unless America’s policy changes, at some point we’ll be doing some sort of end of life care here,” the Times quoted the commander as saying. “A lot of my guys are pre-diabetic… Am I going to need dialysis down here? I don’t know. Someone’s got to tell me that. Are we going to do complex cancer care down here? I don’t know. Someone’s got to tell me that.”

    The oldest prisoner at Guantanamo is now 71, while the average age is 46. Many have been held since the facility opened in 2002, and the majority of them, 26 in all, have never been charged, much less tried for any crime.

    Defense One quoted Ring as stating: “I’m sort of caught between a rock and a hard place. The Geneva Conventions’ Article III, that says that I have to give the detainees equivalent medical care that I would give to a trooper. But if a trooper got sick, I’d send him home to the United States. And so I’m stuck. Whatever I’m going to do, I have to do here.”

    Like

  62. Huh????

    View at Medium.com

    “This is when all the confusion arose. The Republic of China (ROC) claimed that Taiwan had been “returned” to “China” and that it was now part of the ROC. Whereas, in reality, the ROC was simply occupying Taiwan on behalf of the wartime allies until the island’s status could be formalized. This meant that the ROC government was administrating Taiwan but did not actually own it. It had no internationally-recognized sovereignty over the island. To this day, the ROC government, which retreated to Taiwan in 1949, has continued to stridently claim it owns Taiwan, and to this day, the ROC has no internationally recognized sovereignty over the island.

    The civil war in China continued, and the Nationalists lost to the Communists and retreated to Taiwan in 1949. The Communists founded the People’s Republic of China (PRC) that same year. Both the regime in Taiwan, the Nationalist government, and the regime in China, the Communist government, claimed to be the sole government of China. As such, they both claimed that Taiwan was part of China.

    However — and this is important — the postwar treaty to formally end the war had not been negotiated. This meant that nobody had internationally recognized title to the island of Taiwan. The two Chinese governments were just making noise because they had realized it might be possible to annex the island as part of the post-war division of spoils.

    The US was busy sorting out the situation in East Asia and determining what its policies would be. Even in the late 1940s it was well known to US observers that the majority of Taiwanese would have preferred to set up an independent state of their own. Moreover, the US did not want to hand Taiwan to either of the murderous, authoritarian, and corrupt governments then in power in Taiwan and in China. Moreover, in 1950, the Korean War began. It was then that Truman made his famous statement of Dec 27, 1950:

    “The Cairo Declaration of 1943 stated the purpose to restore ‘Manchuria, Formosa and the Pescadores to the Republic of China.’ That Declaration, like other wartime declarations such as those of Yalta and Potsdam, was in the opinion of the United States Government subject to any final peace settlement where all relevant factors should be considered. … Also, the United States believes that declarations such as that issued at Cairo must necessarily be considered in the light of the United Nations Charter, the obligations of which prevail over any other international agreement.”
    Note that Truman makes two key points. First, whatever was said at the wartime conferences was meaningless until it had been confirmed by a formal peace treaty. Second, that the United Nations Charter is the highest international law. The latter point is often forgotten in discussions of how international law applies to Taiwan.

    In 1951, as the Korean War raged, delegates from all the powers except the two Chinese governments met in San Francisco to hash out the postwar treaty, now known as the San Francisco Peace Treaty (SFPT). Under Chapter 2, Article 2, Section B of the treaty, it states that Japan “renounces all right, title, and claim to Formosa and the Pescadores.” However — as designed by the US — the SFPT doesn’t say who received Taiwan. It merely states that Japan has given it up. The Treaty simply leaves the question of Taiwan’s sovereignty open, for resolution at a later date. Over sixty years later, it remains unresolved.

    However…….

    View at Medium.com
    “Does the ROC government even exist? Yes, in part because of these island claims. Recall that while the ROC administrates Taiwan, it has no legal sovereignty over it. These island claims are the only places in the world where the ROC has existence as an independent sovereign entity, and for that reason alone ROC diehards guard those claims fiercely. But there are others, intimately involved with the Chinese dream of annexing Taiwan to China.

    One of the functions of the ROC’s island claims is to get people to conflate them with claims of Taiwan.
    One of the functions of the ROC’s island claims is to get people to conflate them with claims of Taiwan. This is common in the media, which is typically too lazy to clearly distinguish between the ROC and Taiwan. Thus one constantly reads “analysis” saying that “Taiwan claims islands in the South China Sea” or “Taiwan claims the Senkakus” even though “Taiwan” does no such thing — it is the ROC which makes the claim. This campaign is also aimed at domestic audiences in Taiwan in the hope that Taiwanese will start thinking of the Senkakus and the South China Sea islands as “theirs”.

    For those Stooges who were perhaps a little confused about the history and current status of underlying SCC politics..

    Hope this clears things up!!!

    Like

  63. Oh, pout. Those neo-Soviet barbarians at Gazprom doubled their annual net profit in 2018, and increased their share of the European gas market from 34.7% to 36.7%. That’s in a year during which the United States lobbied continuously for Europe to decrease its reliance on Russian energy, and buy more American LNG.

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-gazprom-results/record-russian-gas-sales-to-europe-help-gazprom-profits-double-idUSKCN1S51DU

    Putin has the luck of the devil, or something. I seem to remember someone saying that who didn’t like him much. Meanwhile, the Exceptional Nation’s spoiler assaults seem to be having something less than the desired effect.

    Like

    1. Thanks for the wonderful video clip of the parade. Can’t help but wonder how many who were marching in or observing the parade subsequently lost their life in your GPW.
      Also it appears as if women were prominently incorporated into the parade, unlike the ranks of goosestepping SS and Wehrmacht fascists in Berlin.

      Like

      1. Yeah, if only …

        I was thinking when I was posting that clip that only four-and-a-half years after that parade had taken place, the Nazis were at the gates. In fact, the front line in December 1942 was where my dacha is — 55 miles west of Moscow as the crow flies, and much closer to the capital elsewhere, e.g. where Sheremet’evo airport is now. And the surrounding pine forests around my country cottage are all hummocky within, the remnants of shell bursts. And it does not take long before you find war detritus if you start scratching around.

        Like

    2. For those who may not know, the lower of the above Russian web May Day greetings reads:

      1 MAY
      DAY OF SPRING AND LABOUR

      Apparently, that’s the new May Day slogan here.

      Many, however, on the Russian web disagree:

      REMEMBER THE MEANING OF THE FIRST OF MAY!

      1st May is the day of international workers’ solidarity
      in the struggle for liberation from capitalist exploitation

      AND NOT

      “The Spring and Labour Holiday”

      Like

      1. Source of the above: Да здравствует Первое мая! (статья Сталина, 1912)

        Long live the First of May! (article by Stalin, 1912)

        “The workers should have their own holiday, and on it they should proclaim: universal labour, universal freedom, universal equality of all people. This holiday is May Day.” — J.V.Stalin, Works: Volume 2 1907-1913, Politizdat, 1954, pgs. 219 – 224

        If the likes of Lucas and Co. at Chatham House, London, see the above, they will go into seizures, as will so-called journalists such as Harding and Walker.

        I sincerely hope they do and go into seizures and, as a result, enter a vegetative state.

        Like

  64. May Day in England has always been an important day and long before socialism was even dreamt of or before the existence of the proletariat, which first appeared in the UK, of course.

    May Day was a pre-Christian celebration of Spring and there was much singing and dancing in villages. But in the 17th century, those pain-in-the-arse Puritans prohibited the May Day holiday, saying it was “ungodly”. They banned Christmas celebrations as well and for the same reason. On Christmas Day, they decreed, you had to go to church and pray, and having done that, study the bible – no parties and singing and drinking!

    The thing those awful Puritans disliked most about the May holiday was that they knew it was really about sex!!!! And those Puritans had problems as regards sex, I suspect: they thought that anything that gives pleasure must be sinful. They were weirdos, stupid freaks!!! And they are still with us!

    This composed in the 13th century English round is a favourite on May Day:

    Associated by most nowadays, I should imagine, with the 1973 film “The Wicker Man”.

    The round was composed in the Wessex dialect of Middle English, in the south of England before the great vowel shift greatly affected southern English pronunciation, hence the pronunciation of “summer” and “come” is as mine is, the vowel shift not having shifted as greatly in the North as it has in the south.

    The words run and are spelt thus in the original:

    Sumer is icumen in
    Lhude sing cuccu
    Groweþ sed
    and bloweþ med
    and springþ þe wde nu
    Sing cuccu

    Awe bleteþ after lomb
    lhouþ after calue cu
    Bulluc sterteþ
    bucke verteþ
    murie sing cuccu

    Cuccu cuccu
    Wel singes þu cuccu
    ne swik þu naver nu

    Sing cuccu nu • Sing cuccu.
    Sing cuccu • Sing cuccu nu

    Note that the rune þ was still used in the 13th century for “th”.

    In modern English orthography, the above reads thus:

    Summer is a-coming in,
    Loudly sing cuckoo!
    Seed grows,
    Meadow blooms,
    And newly springs the wood,
    Sing cuckoo!

    Ewe bleats after lamb,
    Cow lows after calf;
    Bullock prances,
    Buck farts,
    Sing merrily cuckoo!

    Cuckoo, cuckoo,
    Sing you well, cuckoo,
    Never stop now.

    Sing, cuckoo, now; sing, cuckoo;
    Sing, cuckoo; sing, cuckoo, now!

    Singing about Billy goats farting must have been the done thing in 1250!

    No continuous aspect in Middle English, nor in early Modern English for that matter! — “What readeth thou, sirrah?” as Shakespeare would have said.

    The construction “a-doing”, a contraction of “on doing”, with its use of a gerund, being a precursor of the continuous aspect and still used in colloquial English in some parts of the world.

    And the verb “swiken” (stop, cease, fail, deceive), in the imperative “swik”, is cognate with the Modern German “schweigen”, meaning “to keep quiet, remain silent, cease, keep calm”: Schweig nicht! — Do not be silent!

    Also, in mediaeval England, May was in summer, not spring.

    And early this morning, they did this in Oxford, England:

    (Shot May 1st, 2018)

    The choristers of Magdalen College choir singing Hymnus Eucharisticus from the Great Tower. Hymnus Eucharisticus was composed in the 17th century by a Fellow of Magdalen and has been sung every year from the Great Tower on May Morning for around 500 years.

    Like

        1. Robeson apparently spoke Russian quite well! A good egg, on the whole, despite his rabid loyalty to Stalin 🙂

          Here is another good one: Some of the meaning was lost over time, but this haunting song was originally about a white man who fell in love with a Native American, the daughter of a chief who lived on the Missouri River.

          Like

          1. P.S. – some of the original lyrics include: “Oh Shenandoah, I love your daughter… etc.”
            Also, Robeson pronounces “Missouri” incorrectly, it’s actually pronounced “Missoura”.

            Like

      1. There are a few of those Pathé newsreels that were dug up about 5 years ago. Unfortunately, some of them have no sound or it’s been lost or whatever, or only part of the soundtrack is audible, such as this one, in which the sound comes on just over half-way through at 1.43:

        Like

    1. Same story from the Guardian (no, not that one: a Canadian daily six days a week in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island): Exclusive: Wife of Ukraine president-elect got penthouse bargain from tycoon

      Bought for less than half the market rate from business tycoon Oleksandr Buryak, according to official income and property records.

      Buryak is a former member of the Ukrainian parliament who, with his brother Sergei, was controlling shareholder in Ukrainian lender Brokbiznesbank from at least 2010 until they sold the majority stake in mid-2013, according to data from Ukraine’s securities and exchange commission and a disclosure statement from the bank.

      Unnamed former Brokbiznesbank executives are under criminal investigation on suspicion that they embezzled money from the bank starting in 2012, according to court documents filed by prosecutors.

      As part of that investigation, prosecutors seized the assets of two companies suspected of benefiting from the alleged fraud, court documents show.

      Both firms, Seredynetske and Svarog-Bukovyna, are owned by Oleksandr Buryak and were owned by him at the time the alleged fraud took place, according to the official Ukrainian register of company ownership.

      Buryak did not respond to questions about the investigation. Reuters could not independently confirm if he is being investigated. A representative from Svarog West Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Seredynetske and Svarog-Bukovyna are parts of Svarog West Group.

      WEALTHY ASSOCIATES

      Zelenskiy’s opponents accuse him of being a pawn of Ihor Kolomoisky, one of Ukraine’s richest men whose media company has worked closely with the comedian’s TV production business. Both Zelenskiy and Kolomoisky deny the president-elect is under the tycoon’s influence.

      Kolomoisky told Reuters he believed Buryak sold the apartment to Zelenska cheaply because his bank was short of liquidity and he needed to raise cash quickly. He did not offer evidence to support that claim.

      The Ukrainian central bank declared Brokbiznesbank illiquid on Feb. 28, 2014, 10 months after the apartment sale.

      Same journalists as well. All with Yukie names.

      I don’t know which came first with the story 8 hours ago: Reuters or the Charlottetown Guardian.

      THe Reuters story, which is exactly the same as that in the Guardian and by the same Yukies (Canadian diaspora?) is dated thus: MAY 1, 2019 / 9:04 AM / UPDATED 10 HOURS AGO

      Like

    1. Her Britannic Majesty’s newly appointed Secretary of State for Defence:

      I kid you not!

      Penelope Mary Mordaunt was born on the 4 March 1973 in Torquay, Devon. The daughter of a former paratrooper, one of twins, she was named after the Leander-class frigate HMS Penelope.

      And appropriately for a minister of defence, she’s already packing a pair of bazookas.

      So, I’m a sexist!

      So what?

      🙂

      Like

      1. According to the non-government controlled BBC, “Downing Street said the PM had ‘lost confidence in his ability to serve’ and Penny Mordaunt will take on the role”.

        The expression “lost confidence in his ability to serve” is stuffy British diplomatic jargon for “the useless twat was told to shut the fuck up and get the fuck out out of his former ministerial office”.

        So sad!

        Such wasted talent!

        Back to fireplace sales, I suppose, when the May government falls and he loses his seat.

        Like


              1. Oh shit! I think I’m gonna be sick!

                Shut up and go away, arsehole! Let a bonny lass take over:

                Can’t be any worse than you were, you tosser!

                Although, on second thoughts …

                Like

                1. Oh, I’m sure she could, and she will want to set the tone right away so as to dispel any suspicions that she might be squishy where Russia is concerned. I imagine we will be treated to a re-run of how GRU agents poisoned the Skripals with Novichok in the imagined safety of their new homeland, how Russia shot down MH17, bla bla bla and so on and so forth, Her Majesty’s government shall remain rigidly opposed to Russia’s existence until they all kneel in the dirt and beg forgiveness, promising to pay any penalty in return for favour.

                  I suppose that’s a file photo of Gavin Woodenhead and not one taken after his unceremonious sacking, but it certainly does present a pleasant contrast to his usual cheery smirk.

                  Like

        1. Much as we all distrust Gavin Williamson, the way in which Treason-n-Mayhem has sacked him, without giving him the chance to respond to the accusation that he leaked details of a National Security Council meeting on Huawei to a Daily Telegraph journalist, and to defend himself, sets a troubling precedent. May has effectively set herself up as no better than an autocrat and dictator.
          https://www.theblogmire.com/in-defence-of-gavin-williamsons-right-to-defend-himself/

          I’m beginning to see why May might promote non-entities like Williamson and Sajid the Sontaran to the positions they had / have … she essentially wants yes-people less talented and competent than herself to flatter her and kiss her leopard-skin shoes.

          Penny Mordaunt might well be accepting a poisoned chalice.

          Like

      2. Highlights from her bio:

        ‘To pay her way through sixth-form college, Mordaunt became a magician’s assistant to Portsmouth magician Will Ayling, once president of The Magic Circle.’

        ‘She then worked as a communications specialist for the Freight Transport Association before, in 2000, working briefly as Head of Foreign Press for George W. Bush’s presidential campaign,[14][15] She was director of communications for Kensington and Chelsea London Borough Council between 2001–2003, before leaving to set up a new Anglo-American website called ‘virtualconservatives’.[16][8] She worked for the Bush campaign again in 2004.’

        ‘When receiving The Spectator magazine’s Parliamentarian of the Year award in November 2014, Mordaunt said that she had delivered a speech in the House of Commons just before the Easter recess in 2013 on poultry welfare so as to use the word “cock”, as a forfeit for a misdemeanour during Naval Reserve training.[26][27] Mordaunt used the word “cock” six times and “lay” or “laid” five times. Following her comments, she was accused by Labour MP Kate Hoey of trivialising parliament.[28]’

        ‘In 2015, it was reported that Mordaunt had the tenth highest expense claims for the 2014/2015 year out of all the UK’s 650 MPs’

        An American asset, and a fearful tit.

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        1. Yes, indeed, for, in my opinion, few British speakers of English — at least those of my generation, albeit she is no spring chicken either — use the verb “lay” to mean “to have sexual intercourse”.

          It often amuses me when I hear speakers of US English using the term “rooster” so as to avoid saying “cock”.

          Likewise, it tickles me how they prefer to pronounce “Uranus”, and not as I pronounce it.

          🙂

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    2. Anything that gets rid of that pugnacious git is a bonus. However, I have to wonder if it marks the application of pressure from the UK’s bestest friend from Across The Water, and signals a return to spineless compliance which will see Huawei banned from the UK’s network as well. What do we know about his interim replacement – Penny Mordaunt, wasn’t it?

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        1. Interesting. I would have to give it a 5 for form, although it’s certainly something I couldn’t do. She’s not a delicate flower, and is quite a substantial girl, but she has quite a pretty face and her hair is lovely. I suppose we should not expect any change in the hectoring Russophobic tone of the British government, and I don’t imagine the Kremlin bothered to mark the change other than to enjoy a quiet chuckle over Williamson’s departure. Well, let’s wait and see what tone she sets with her initial policy statements. But I don’t expect anything different from Williamson’s brainless threats – after all, he wasn’t sacked because he was too hard on Russia.

          The second dive was, if anything, worse than the first. I’m not sure of the context; she obviously doesn’t dive for a living, the clip identified her as a Tory MP. Was it some sort of dare?

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          1. She over-rotated, and it was a belly flop. Must have hurt, actually.
            Speaking of Penny, this piece in VZGLIAD profiles her as a Russophobe.
            She has stated that Russia is a threat to the world, since it keeps egregiously vetoing UN resolutions. She was hot-to-trot on the “Assad must go” front and hates Russia for “giving the green light to Assad’s monstrous crimes”, yada yada.

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          1. Can’t imagine there was much to clean out, even in Gavin Williamson’s matchbox-sized desk.

            I guess there’ll be no more Tatler interviews with Cronus!

            “Yesterday I ate Philip Hammond. I crunched his head right off. I like my food to have a pulse. All right, so it wasn’t the real Philip Hammond. It was a cricket. Gavin likes to name my treats after MPs who aren’t behaving themselves. Does it influence the way they vote? I couldn’t say. But I like to watch politicians squirm when Gavin lets me out of my tank and onto his desk to stretch my legs. I tend to leave my tank only during particularly tight votes. Gavin and I have been together since I was a spiderling. I’m a year old now. I’m a Mexican redknee tarantula, but Staffordshire born and bred (Gavin likes having a constituent nearby). We spend most of our time in the House of Commons and No. 9 Downing Street – I commute with Gavin in my tank. My title is the Official Spinner and Spy-der to the Chief Whip. My only other real friend is Larry the cat, Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office. I like Larry a lot – Parliament has a bit of a rodent problem, and it’s up to the two of us to cut insurgency off at its head. Figuratively speaking, of course…”
            https://www.tatler.com/article/gavin-williamson-pet-tarantula-cronus-interview

            (Notice that the tarantula talks just like its puppet … uh, I mean its master.)

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  65. Euractiv: Bulgaria’s Borissov dreams US funds could facilitate LNG import
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/news/bulgarias-borissov-dreams-us-funds-could-facilitate-lng-import/

    Bulgarian PM Boyko Borissov said on Monday (29 April) that his country could import US LNG if the price were competitive, EURACTIV’s partner in Bulgaria Dnevnik.bg reported. He hinted that US subsidies could be the solution and that there were US funds to the tune of $1 billion available, but only added that “we are only starting the discussion”.

    Borissov also said that on 20 May construction of the Bulgaria-Greece interconnector would officially start. The delayed pipeline should bring Azeri gas from the Southern Gas Corridor, but it could also bring US LNG from Greece to the ‘Balkan’ gas hub, yet to be built near the port of Varna….

    ….Russia’s initial plan was to bring its gas to Varna under the so-called South Stream pipeline, but Bulgaria lost to Turkey after the European Commission found many irregularities in the Bulgarian-Russian inter-governmental agreement for South Stream.
    ####

    More correctly, Borissov couldn’t organize a cock up in a brother (see, my university education wasn’t wasted)! I was wondering what had happened to Boiko ‘Bollocks’ Borissov. Now we know. Still dreaming of Bulgarian streets being paved with gold without spending much money at all. the walking breathing clusterf/k continues.

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      1. I think the expression you were seeking is “could not organize a piss-up in a brewery”.

        A “cock-up” is an abject failure, from when the cock of a flintlock fails to strike the powder pan when the trigger is pulled, namely the coock stays up in its cocked position.

        I suppose one could say: “He couldn’t organize a shagfest in a brothel”, which would mean the same as not being able to organize a piss-up in a brewery.

        Other expressions that I like and which also describe someone’s utter uselessness are:

        … as useless as a chocolate teapot/fireguard

        and my favourite:

        He’s as useless as a one-legged man in an arse-kicking competition.

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        1. I like, “I wouldn’t send him to look for lettuce in a salad”. A favoured military insult is “Couldn’t make 2 I/C of a blank file”, but it’s complicated to translate.

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    1. Oh, I don’t know; normally I would be disposed to agree. But we must ever make allowance for self-interest in all but the most saintly of people, and Borrisov is quite safe from that accusation. I wouldn’t think much of any politician who did not try to get the best circumstances for his country, and Borrisov would not have to look very far to find a country in which the west just gives it gas money. Oh, they call it a loan, but what kind of fool loans money to someone who has no realistic prospects of ever paying it back? Sometime in the future, maybe, things might turn around – but you would find few financial institutions who will make substantial loans based on what might be.

      Where a lot of post-Soviet countries fall down is accepting a ‘great deal’, or negotiating for one, in which the west will assume a significant role in policymaking in the country because of leverage it has acquired. I’m not sure what leverage the United States might acquire in Bulgaria by selling gas to it at a loss. It is at least possible that Borrisov is simply trying to look reasonable by proposing conditions Washington will not meet. But even if he thinks there is a realistic possibility Washington will agree, he is not conceding much to American influence by letting it give him cheap gas. Moreover, the USA cannot supply it in quantities which might allow Bulgaria to become dependent on it.

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  66. The power of the Kremlin revealed: its limits and its techniques:

    “Rabbitnexus says:Next New Comment
    May 1, 2019 at 6:04 am GMT
    Pompeo is such a clown. LOL. Russia couldn’t possibly have been involved in the failed coup in Venezuela since they were busy the same night introducing trained snails into my vegetable garden.”

    Comment on the Saker’s latest article on Unz.com

    Like

    1. On the MOA site I liked this comment:

      “Bay of piglets…” [I have to remember that one and re-use it!]

      “Guido’s cute little coup-let. If you stage a coup and nobody notices as it is so half-assed, is it really a coup?”

      Cute!

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