I Can’t Dance and I’m Too Fat to Fight

Wink
Uncle Volodya says, “Aggression is just when politeness is ignored.”

Too bad that you had to get caught;
That’s not like you to lose face
So sad that you’re not as smart
As you thought you were in the first place…

Doug and the Slugs, from “Too Bad”

“It would be well to realize that the talk of ‘humane methods of warfare’, of the ‘rules of civilized warfare’, and all such homage to the finer sentiments of the race are hypocritical and unreal, and only intended for the consumption of stay-at-homes. There are no humane methods of warfare, there is no such thing as civilized warfare; all warfare is inhuman, all warfare is barbaric; the first blast of the bugles of war ever sounds for the time being the funeral knell of human progress… What lover of humanity can view with anything but horror the prospect of this ruthless destruction of human life. Yet this is war: war for which all the jingoes are howling, war to which all the hopes of the world are being sacrificed, war to which a mad ruling class would plunge a mad world.”

James Connolly

The title is a riff on a common phrase from my youth; when asked by a friend, “Want to go down to the tavern for a beer?”, a casually humorous response might be, “Why not? I can’t dance, and I’m too fat to fly”. It suggests that you have nothing better to do and going to the tavern for a beer is as appealing an alternative as any other, considering one’s physical limitations and the options available.

However, the phrase as it appears in the title struck me as a particularly appropriate aphorism for the west’s confusion and flopping about since it was presented with a written list of Russia’s security concerns and the remedies it would accept to allay those concerns. Strongly implied, although not specified in the written summation, is this, paraphrased: you say we are your enemy, and that you wish to fight. You push us further and further, until our backs are against the wall. Very well, then – either agree to the terms as written, propose alternative arrangements for discussion that are not too far from the terms as written…or fight.

The west was plainly not ready for that. Its ‘diplomatic’ behavior since then suggests it has…well…no good options. Before, it was all pressure, and ‘Russia must do this’ and “the rules-based international order calls on Russia to do that’. Now, it’s ‘we need more time’. Although its more hawkish policymakers – not one of whom will have to fight, if it comes to that – have spluttered that all Russia’s demands are absurd and are complete non-starters, nobody seems ready to commit that response to print. And the Russians have insisted on answers in writing which will be legally enforceable.

You know why that is, don’t you? Sure you do. The verbal commitment that if Russia would just let the west have Germany without making a fuss, NATO would advance no further eastward. And you know how that turned out. The west can officially no longer remember anyone making such a promise, although people who were present on the occasion say the Russian description of the deal is accurate. Not Mikhail Gorbachev, naturally; his western pals would never lie. But he claims the subject did not even come up.

“The topic of ‘NATO expansion’ was not discussed at all, and it wasn’t brought up in those years. … Another issue we brought up was discussed: making sure that NATO’s military structures would not advance and that additional armed forces would not be deployed on the territory of the then-GDR after German reunification. Baker’s statement was made in that context… Everything that could have been and needed to be done to solidify that political obligation was done. And fulfilled.”

Well, the ‘not one inch eastward’ commitment was definitely made; official records of the conversation so reflect.

“And the last point. NATO is the mechanism for securing the U.S. presence in Europe. If NATO is liquidated, there will be no such mechanism in Europe. We understand that not only for the Soviet Union but for other European countries as well it is important to have guarantees that if the United States keeps its presence in Germany within the framework of NATO, not an inch of NATO’s present military jurisdiction will spread in an eastern direction.”

So the semantics of the argument have shifted – western negotiators for the reunification of Germany never promised that NATO would not expand eastward. No, they promised only that there would be no eastward expansion of NATO’s military jurisdiction. You Russians have to learn to pay attention to context. So now the official western storyline is that while the Russians understood that to mean no eastward expansion of NATO, that was not the promise at all; what you thought you heard was not what I said.

Has NATO expanded its military jurisdiction eastward? You tell me. Are new NATO countries with full membership the subjects of Article 5 – an attack against one is an attack against all, conveying the responsibility of NATO military forces to mount a defense in and around the country which is the object of the attack? They certainly are.

“Membership in the most powerful military alliance in the world has given Poland not only security guarantees in the form of Art. 5 of the Washington Treaty, but has also led to an increase in the position and prestige of our country on the international stage. The need to adapt to NATO standards, the participation of Polish soldiers in missions and exercises, and training with soldiers from other NATO countries, has led our Armed Forces in reaching a high level of interoperability (the ability to interact) with other Alliance Members. Our contribution to and involvement in NATO operations, has made Poland a reliable partner both for our Allies and third countries.”

The foregoing is a somewhat roundabout way of illustrating why Russia now wants its agreements with the west in writing, accepted only after a comprehensive review of the text to ensure there is no leeway for interpretation – if you promise, it must be written, “I promise”. Because no matter what NATO says, it will later say “That’s not what I said at all”. Regardless of what was presented to Gorbachev, I don’t think the casual observer would need to be much of a diplomat to guess the intent of the discussion – Baker was plainly seeking to downplay any threat Russia apprehended from an increase in NATO influence. Had he said “Oh, no: NATO plans to take in every eastern European country that makes the cut, full membership. But you should not view that as threatening.”, I’m pretty sure Russian cooperation would have taken an abrupt downturn. Would that be fair to say?

Anyway, be that as it may – present-day Russia intends to not make the same mistake again. And thanks to a constant buzz of western threats and abuse for going on a decade, the options have now boiled away to two. Agree, in writing, or fight.

What if option two is the way it goes? That’s what we’re here to talk about today.

It likely has escaped nobody’s notice that Russian military forces across the spectrum have been drilling hard for at least the last 5 years, many of them unannounced snap drills requiring short-notice deployment of significant forces, some of those over a considerable distance. A wide variety of scenarios have been rehearsed, and the pace has increased, if anything. In a defense-of-the-homeland scenario, not only is the likelihood of Russia being taken by surprise nearly non-existent, its capability to deliver a powerful counterpunch anywhere on its borders should not be in doubt. Its soldiers train as they mean to fight, with live tests of all weapons systems under realistic conditions and in all weather. It has the strongest air-defense system in the world. More important yet, Russia is a major nuclear power, with a ‘Dead Hand’ secondary-strike capability which can be initiated by Artificial Intelligence (AI) even if Russia’s military forces are completely wiped out. How does it work?

  1. If the system were activated, it would determine whether nuclear weapons were used in the vastness of the USSR;
  2. If this were so, the system would check the communication link with the General Staff;
  3. If there was a connection, the system automatically turned off. After some time – from 15 minutes to 1 hour, which passed without any hints of an attack, it would have assumed that the list of officials capable of giving the order to strike was still in place;
  4. If the General Staff does not respond, the system sends a request to Kazbek. If there is no response there either, the artificial intelligence gives any person in the command bunker the right to make the decision. And only then it starts to act.

Many indications are that the Dead Hand system is still active, and the source I cited suggests it may have been returned to combat duty as recently as 2003. See if you can remember 2003. Okay, maybe not everything, but would you say relations between Russia and NATO were better then, or now? Would Russia be more likely to have need of a secondary-strike capability then, or now? If the Russians were not fools, they would also have updated it to connect new long-range strike capacity to the system as it became available, such as the Sarmat, due to enter service this past year. The hypersonic Khinzal is air-launched and outside the control of Dead Hand, but fitting it in the TU-22M bomber would boost its operational range out to 3000 km, and it is ideally suited to destroy critical European infrastructure as the west has no defense against a Mach 8+ missile.https://wsbuzz.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Putin-answers-West-by-showing-off-his-fearsome-new-Sarmat-hypersonic-missile-in-test-launch-795x385.jpg

But lobbing nuclear warheads back and forth is a doomsday scenario, a how-did-we-get-here desperation play when everything else has failed and utter defeat imminent. A much more likely proving-ground for national mettle, especially in the case of a NATO ground-forces thrust against Russia, will be the performance in battle of the infantry and the mechanized forces; the artillery and armored formations. How do they stack up? Let’s look.

Ooooo….I see a problem right away. Owing to its divergent policies of swaggering and talking smack like a Saturday-night drunk, and paying itself a ‘peace dividend’ in its private confidence that its designated enemies will not fight, NATO has allowed its land forces to erode a little more every year. Those skeptical of my conclusions will point out that this article dates from 2014, but I ask them – has NATO’s land-forces capability improved since then? Especially Europe, where the United States is constantly harassing them to spend more on defense. It wants them to buy American weapons and military equipment, of course, but the point stands. NATO is not ready to repel a Russian attack, never mind mount one against Russia itself. What does this NATO Defense College researcher have to say?

“But many lessons learned over the past two decades of alliance operations lend support to the idea of maintaining credible land capabilities of an appropriate size and with a high level of technological sophistication. As Lieutenant General Frederick Hodges stated when NATO Allied Land Command Izmir (Turkey) became operational: “Our tradition after every war has been repeating the mistake of reducing land forces to save money, believing that we can avoid casualties in future wars by relying more on air and sea power . . . and each time, we are required to hastily rebuild land forces to meet the threats the nation consistently fails to accurately anticipate.”

I’ve already pointed out that the Russian air-defense network is several tiers above anything NATO air forces have ever gone up against; western doctrinal assumption of quickly achieving air superiority is going to have to be rethought before any NATO aircraft are even wheels-up. NATO has been slowly but surely going out of the tank business, and it is critically short of helicopters.

Think tanks like the Rand Institute regularly run computer simulations of NATO forces versus the Russians. Western scenarios for actual whites-of-the-eyes ground combat with Russian forces, for reasons I am unable to fathom, almost invariably center around a Russian lunge to seize the Baltics. Why they would want to subjugate and conquer these pipsqueak noisemakers is difficult to imagine, especially considering it would very likely flare into a larger conflict. Russia already has access to the Baltic through the Gulf of Finland – what would be the strategic payoff for Russia?

Whatever they might be thinking, the Rand study uneasily concluded that NATO forces as deployed at the time would not be able to prevent the Baltics from being overrun. And in not much more time than it takes to make a good batch of barbecue-pit pulled pork.

“After conducting an exhaustive series of wargames wherein “red” (Russian) and “blue” (NATO) forces engaged in a wide range of war scenarios over the Baltic states, a Rand Corporation study called “Reinforcing Deterrence on NATO’s Eastern Flank” determined that a successful NATO defense of the region would require a much larger air-ground force than what is currently deployed…The Rand study maintains that, without a deterrent the size of at least seven brigades, fire and air support protecting Eastern Europe, that Russia cold overrun the Baltic states  as quickly as in 60 hours.”

Obviously, smacking the shit out of Europe would be considerably more challenging than overrunning the tough-talking Baltic sourpusses. So let’s take a look at the numbers.

According to Global Firepower, which I have found to be generally reliable for a non-military site, Russia ranks 2 out of 140 in ability to apply military force. The EU is not ranked as a single entity, but as 25 countries by individual capability. Its index rates 0.0000 as perfect military superiority, and the larger your number, the less capable you are.

Russia’s power-index rating is 0.0501. That of the EU’s strongest military power – France – is 0.1283. Quite a gap. If you feel like a bit of unforced laughter would lighten a somewhat oppressive mood, check out the most hardass of the Baltic buttkickers: Lithuania, at 1.7083. The weakest of all is Estonia, at 2.6527, far past the cutoff where you are a military liability rather than a contributor to collective defense, and I am told in confidence that the recommended military action against Estonia is to just throw a very large wet tissue over it.

Give me a second to get the adding machine out – Darya!!! Where did you put the goddamned calculator?? (Yes, under the box of chocolates, I might have guessed). Okay, let’s see what kind of match-up we would be looking at.

It quickly becomes apparent that the European Union has far more military personnel and reserves than Russia. I hope that’s not a surprise to anyone; it should, the EU has nearly four times the population, although some states have proportionally small military forces and no reserves at all. I’m just going to look at Europe versus Russia here, because if history is any guide, the USA will want to simply send expeditionary forces to assist and keep itself out of the battle, real-estate wise. Also, being far away from the smoke and thunder doesn’t mean as much when your enemy is a major nuclear power, and you might find you want to keep the bulk of your forces closer to home. In case you get a Special Delivery yourself.

So, more soldiers for the EU, more than twice as many. But unless you are going to issue each of them a stick and tell them to look at the uniform first and swing second, equipment is going to be a serious force multiplier. The days of lining both armies up on opposite sides of a big field and yelling “Charge!!!” are gone, and a land war in Europe would be an armor and artillery battle. And it would be in Europe; I would rate the chances of European forces throwing Russia back and penetrating into Russia as none and noner.

Okay; equipment. Land Forces Russia – over 12,000 tanks. I’m not sure how Global Firepower tabulates those, and it’s likely some are older models held in reserve, although they are supposed to be maintained for reactivation. Over 30,000 additional armored vehicles for infantry transport, close combat, bridging and de-mining. Over 6,500 self-propelled artillery pieces. That will do to be getting on with for now, because I can’t find a cumulative number for EU forces and have to add up the individual contributions of each state.

EU Land Forces – Just over 5000 tanks, less than half of Russia’s strength. Armored vehicles, the EU is in good shape with more than double those of Russia, but that comes with a codicil that we will get to in a minute. With 2,731 self-propelled artillery pieces, the EU comes up at less than half Russia’s strength there, too. I’ve looked at only snapshots of overall ability to project power not so that I could cherry-pick areas of overwhelming Russian strength – the ability to project power is a big part of the global ranking, and Global Firepower has done that for us already, ranking Russia number 2 in the world and its closest single EU-state competitor at number 7. But a significant factor in capability assessment, also, is interoperability. I know NATO forces exercise together frequently, and they always strut afterward and tout their ‘interoperability’. But what does that mean, really? If you ran an exercise for the combined army, and ordered the Finns to use the Czechs’ assault rifles, how would that work out? Anybody can learn, of course, but who has time and patience to learn when you’re being shot at? The Finns use the RK-62, chambered in 7.62mm. The Czechs use the CZ-805 BREN. It can shoot either NATO 5.56mm or 7.62mm intermediate, so the two weapons could theoretically use the same ammunition, but to use 7.62mm with the Czech weapon requires changing the barrel, gas tubes, breech block, magazine bay and magazine. They say this can be done quickly, but again, being shot at. And they are essentially a completely different weapon that only the native users are completely familiar with.

I know what would improve interoperability – put Spanish officers in charge of the Romanian soldiers. See where I’m going with this? The NATO forces, in spite of efforts to standardize which meet with resistance wherever individual states want to manufacture their own weapons or contract out for their personal choices, rarely use the same equipment. Their weapons are different, they frequently cannot use each other’s ammunition if they are running low, the controls for their armored equipment are different and the labeling that might help is in a variety of foreign languages. They all speak English, don’t they? Well, yes and no; to varying degrees of fluency.

The Russians all speak the same language, although it is a second language for some, to be sure. They use Russian in their communications, which not all NATO listeners speak or understand. They all use the same equipment, and they train together frequently with soldiers from other districts, often in snap drills which are announced with little warning and might see them deployed to a far republic of a huge country. They all use the same ammunition. Their national tactics and battle plans are all the same.

Finally – and I don’t want to be insensitive – we need to take a look at warrior culture. And its cultural opposite, Wokeness.

The warrior culture is rooted in the unrelenting and brutal application of violence, steadily escalating until the objective is achieved and the enemy’s resistance is overcome. There is no room in it for negotiation, for no-fairsies.  Negotiation was meant to preclude violence, and had negotiation worked, violence would not have ensued. There is no room in it for weakness, because in order to apply sustained and steadily-increasing pressure against armed  resistance, you must be fit and strong and committed.

https://i.ytimg.com/vi/Elnzcym0TfU/maxresdefault.jpgWokeness, by way of contrast, is more or less the Bible of no-fairsies. If you didn’t get a chance to run a company because you’re not a man, no fair. The Man is keeping you down, and if you had exactly the same training, education and opportunities, you could succeed as well as anyone else. And that’s more or less true, for applications which rely more or less exclusively on brainpower, instinct and adaptability. These are important in the military, too, but in combat they come far behind the capacity to hit and keep on hitting until whatever you’re hitting goes down.

Let’s look for a moment at some other opinions; I’m not a feminist by any stretch of the imagination, but I like women and I like to think I am fair in my relationships with them. I’ve worked with women in the military for years, I’ve worked for women I thought were airheads who couldn’t be 2 I/C of a blank file, and I’ve worked for women I thought were inspirational leaders. The LGBTQ+++ crowd have been less prominent in my experience because they are generally more circumspect, let’s say, but I don’t really have a problem with them, either. However, I have an immediate and abiding dislike for activists. But I’d rather not get bogged down in self-justification – it doesn’t matter what I think, but what I can substantiate. So let’s see what some other people think.

Let’s look at what the author at The Palace Intrigue has to say. First, he or she (I’m guessing he) subheads the site “an alternative to propaganda”. If you’re going to take that position, better be ready to support your conclusions. You can judge for yourself.

Anyway, he quotes Macron – who always looked to me like a bit of a lightweight and always came across as preoccupied with silliness – as complaining that imported American ‘woke’ culture is “racializing France and creating division among minorities”. Not to keep on about it, but France is supposed to be the strongest military power in the EU.

“That’s all by design. You don’t just go from a historical norm of 2-3% of the population being gay to 17% in one generation. There’s a concerted effort by Hollywood and the Masters of Culture to make it “trendy” to be LGBT, and it’s aimed directly at the young generation, who are the most impressionable and receptive.”

That’s actually true enough; here’s an extract from “Norming and Reforming: Challenging Heteronormativity in Educational Policy Discourses”, by Catherine McGregor of the University of Victoria, just down the road from here.

“More recently in British Columbia, (BC) the Ministry of Education and provincial legislators have mandated a number of policy and programmatic changes, including the introduction of the Safe Schools Act, a new Social Justice 12 curriculum, and the Making Space, Giving Voice (2007) diversity guide for teachers k-12. Such actions are seen as positive progress towards genuine inclusion for all LGBTTIQQ children, youth and their families. On the other hand, evidence gathered around from around BC by the Safe Schools Task Force during 2003 made clear that homophobic language is pervasive in schools, and that much school based bullying is a product of homophobia (Facing our Fears, 2003). Gerald Walton, in his recently completed PhD dissertation No fags allowed, also reported that safe school and anti bullying initiatives typically fail to address homophobia, and that even where anti-homophobic policies are in place, there is a gap between policy and practice in schools (as cited by Kittelberg, 2006).”

That’s ‘diversity guide for teachers K-12’, meaning ‘Kindergarten through Grade 12’. Sexual diversity is part of the educational process, by mandate, starting in kindergarten. Nothing wrong with that, some will say. And maybe there isn’t. But it teaches children, from the dawning of understanding, that inclusion means allowances will be made for the ‘different’ in all fields of endeavor, including the military.

That will involve, of a necessity, the lowering of physical standards to accommodate women – historically lighter and with less upper-body strength than men. I didn’t make that up; it’s just woke reality.

“While it may be difficult for a 120-pound woman to lift or drag 250 pounds, the Army cannot artificially absolve women of that responsibility; it may still exist on the battlefield,” Griest wrote in an essay published Thursday by the Modern War Institute at West Point. “The entire purpose of creating a gender-neutral test was to acknowledge the reality that each job has objective physical standards to which all soldiers should be held, regardless of gender.”

When the modified FORCE (Fitness for Operational Requirements of Canadian Armed Forces Employment) test was introduced, the sandbag drag was demonstrated for my group by a woman who could not have weighed more than 120 pounds. Here is a video demonstration of each requirement. It can be done. But not by everyone. There’s a major disconnect between ‘not by everyone’ and ‘inclusive’ that wokeness will not tolerate.

Again, don’t take my word for it; listen to the US Army.

“Over the last decade or so, we have begun to accept substandard performance in order to make numbers for missions,” he said. “By retaining those soldiers, it basically leads to a consensus that physical training isn’t important, that being in shape isn’t important…In a report released as part of a nationwide effort, the generals found that 69 percent of Minnesota’s youth could not serve in the military. For example, one out of ten of the youth would be disqualified because they suffer from asthma. The report also pointed out that 40 percent of the state’s ninth graders received no physical education.”

It would be wrong to infer the problem is unique to North American military; the problems of indulgence and leverage through activism has spread to Europe. According to this just-last-summer story, nearly 6000 British soldiers received the lowest scores in military fitness tests, which were modified in 2019 from must-pass to can’t-fail. If you are rated ‘unconditioned’, you go on a remedial-training roster until you can pass. Ten times as many women as men were rated ‘unconditioned’, although there are fewer women than men in the military, which might skew the results. It’s still hard to get away from the conclusion that women are less physically able to maintain an unadjusted military standard, and that more soldiers overall in western military forces are unfit for the demands of active service in combat. Or the possibility that your unit might be called to serve in a combat theatre, and that you would go with them even though you are rated ‘unconditioned’.

Is this an accident? Hardly. Again, don’t take my word for it. Check out Walter McDougall’s The Feminization of the American Military. Here are his credentials, lest you imagine he is just some unlettered male-chauvinist oinker responsible for pickled-egg quality control down at Porky’s Pub.

Walter A. McDougall is the Ginsburg-Satell Chair of FPRI’s Center for the Study of America and the West. He is also the Co-Chair of FPRI’s Madeleine and W.W. Keen Butcher History Institute, Chairman of FPRI Board of Advisors, and sits on the Board of Editors for FPRI’s journal, Orbis. He is the Alloy-Ansin Professor of International Relations and Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania.

FPRI is the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Startlingly, McDougall reckoned the feminization of the American military was well-advanced already. Startling because he wrote that report 21 years ago.

“How ought Americans of both sexes to think about their co-educational military and the prospects for women in combat? No doubt many unreconstructed male chauvinists would agree with Nietzsche that “Man shall be framed for War, Woman for the entertainment of the Warrior, and all else is folly.” But one need not be a caveman to argue that objections may be made against women in combat on some basis other than bias, for instance: common sense; the empirical evidence of the past twenty years; and the universal experience of the human race. As former Secretary of the Navy James Webb attests, military institutions must be coercive, hierarchical, and self-sacrificial, and as such they depend on a rigid code of fairness with regard to conduct, performance, and deportment, promotion on merit, and egalitarian treatment that by its nature cannot be gender- neutral. For as soon as the sexes are mixed in close quarters, especially for prolonged and tense intervals, the jealousies, courtships, and favoritism that are bound to erupt must corrode fairness and discipline.”

Military service implies the possibility of being called to fight in a foreign land, perhaps for an extended period lasting months or even years. It is not like other fields of employment. Yet it is a juicy target for woke activists. Why? Because the military does as it is told. That’s its job – to obey orders. So the only ones you have to sell on wokeness are the top leadership. It doesn’t matter what the rest of the military thinks. Very senior military officers are often indistinguishable from politicians, while some owe their very positions to wokeness.

I would not be surprised if many analysts believe Russia has chosen its time very carefully to call a halt to western bullying and demagoguery. The west is divided on many issues, its military forces have been allowed to run down and degrade – especially in Europe – and its accumulated debt burden argues against it being able to mount a costly and sustained joint military effort. Some of its military personnel are on the low end of the readiness scale, and those who are not are demoralized and resentful owing to social-engineering tinkering by the woke folk. By contrast, you will not find too many fat Russian soldiers with purple hair and body piercings. The Russian ground forces are mostly made up of fit young men, the supply constantly replenished through conscription, some with considerable combat experience already and all of them honed by rigorous training with snap inspections and drills for verification of their readiness. Woke ‘values’ are mostly unknown in Russia, at least among the military, and liberalism is mostly restricted to the pampered children of the intelligentsia and a few angry ideologues. Even the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace grudgingly allows that the modernized Russian military is pretty good at its job, and although it tries to argue that it is less capable because it is much smaller than it was, its heart is just not in it.

Which brings us to the question of China and its position vis-a-vis Russia. Western analysts have resisted any discussion of a formal military alliance between the two, long after I would have said the reality stood out like a cockroach on a wedding cake. Now, apparently, assessment is reluctantly coming around to the possibility that they might be a little more than just friends. You probably saw why that’s important, right away, but I’ll point it out for any readers who might work part-time for western think-tanks: uh huh, an active-duty military numbering 2 million strong, ranked number 3 in the world, right behind Russia, with a global power-projection rating of 0.0511. Another 5,000 tanks, 35,000 armored vehicles and 4,000 self-propelled artillery pieces.

“While U.S. officials have long been skeptical of a unified threat from the two countries, some are now changing their tune. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence reported that Beijing and Moscow are now more aligned than at any point in the past 60 years…Yet U.S. steps to contain the two countries have driven them into a marriage of convenience, giving the previously contentious rivals an incentive to marshal resources and intelligence against a common adversary, according to analysts and U.S. officials. China and Russia are eager to restrain U.S. influence as well as its military and financial potency, which they believe more likely if they work in tandem, according to analysts.”

There’s also the consideration that Russia is China’s primary source of energy imports, which it needs to maintain its development, support its trade ambitions and expand its influence. What might happen to those energy imports if Russia were conquered by the western powers? I think China can imagine just fine, extrapolating from American hostility and the eagerness with which its allies scramble to obey its directions.

The time has come, the walrus said, to talk of many things…the relentless tread of marching boots, the overthrow of kings.

What’s it going to be, Washington? The pen…or the sword?

 

436 thoughts on “I Can’t Dance and I’m Too Fat to Fight

  1. I think we know that the answer is sword, but the residual question then is when & where, exactly? My guess would be soon (specifically, during the Olympics and launched by the svidomites, since that approach worked so well for Georgia) & Banderastan, but who the heck knows?

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    1. I frankly think it will not be the sword, however much the USA craves a good short limited war in Europe, because the west is in such poor circumstances to fight one. If I were agitating for war from a western standpoint, the single biggest deterrent – well, the biggest two, I guess – would be China’s probable role and the probability that it would get out of control and go nuclear. Because if it did not, and if China entered the war in any cooperative role with Russia, even if it confined its participation to logistics, the west would lose. And then what?

      What would happen in the event of an unrestricted conventional war in Europe that was won by Russia, in which Europe surrendered unconditionally, or even just sued for a cease-fire because it was plainly losing? Russia has neither the inclination or the population to garrison Europe. But there would have to be some punishment for starting such destruction in the first place. Russia could not simply say, there – let that be a lesson to you, and go home. If the west whipped Russia, it would want to completely change its political leadership and embark on a series of ‘reforms’ similar to those started by the Harvard Boyz in the 90’s, to ensure the economy remained solidly non-competitive and closer to a subsistence level than to anything like prosperity, as well as breaking the country up into more-manageable ethnic statelets. Europe is already like that, although it is wealthy and prosperous. But what would be Russia’s plan for Europe if it conquered it militarily? I think the complete absence of any such plan is very suggestive of Russia’s lack of intent on any such effort. Russia does not want a war, and if one broke out I think it would confine its effort to enough punishment to make Europe call a halt.

      But that begs the question of what Washington would do in such an event. More in the short-term, what might be the American excuse for backing away from war now without being seen to have backed down? For once, Russia has left America no wiggle room at all. It’s either meet our demands, be seen to be engaged in honest attempts to compromise, or fight. The first is simply not going to happen, and the last is probably not doable from a western standpoint. That leaves the middle, which however you spin it looks like backing down.

      Well played, Mauer.

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  2. Thanks once more for this excellent thought-provoking essay, Mark.

    At the time of Gulf War 1, much was made of “Shock and Awe” as the US deployed startling precision guided weapons – startling, that is for the general public. And they truly were startling and awesome. If the proverbial “short, sharp shock” has to be used to bring complacency to an end today, then let’s hope that the message sent and, more importantly, received is unmistakable. And as brief and precisely targeted as possible, with maximum media coverage.

    As for the “woke” nonsense in the military and elsewhere, it’s all okay until the going gets rough and then it is shown for the ridiculous crap it really amounts to.

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    1. Thanks, Cortes! It was interesting to research. Patrick sent me this YouTube video; I actually saw the graphic and was going to use it in the post, but I went with Uncle Sam in the pink hat instead, and I did not know the picture represented a video. Quite the eye-opener.

      I think we’ve all seen the American recruiting spot, “The Calling”, before; I remember it was discussed here a couple of times. But the juxtaposition of it with the Chinese and Russian recruiting ads is chilling. The Chinese ad would make me shit my pants if I worked at the Pentagon. There’s something about endless ranks of armed men in formation all running toward you that makes you think, you know what? Today is probably not a good day for getting in those people’s face. Honey…where’s my Huawei T-shirt?

      Here’s what mouthpiece-of-the-Republicans FOX News thought of the comparison between the Russian and American ads. And they didn’t even see the Chinese one, which would have made them wet the bed for a week.

      Interesting to see their reaction to the part in ‘the Calling’ about the ‘2 moms’ wedding – they quickly switched to I’m-so-tolerant mode and it nearly derailed the discussion. If anyone asked me, I would say the gay wedding was a shameless plug by sexual-diversity activists and had nothing whatsoever to do with a military career, and was pretty much the polar opposite of a straightforward message about the threat and combat readiness. Did you see anything about the recruits’ families in either of the other ads?

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  3. That’s “James Connelly the Irish Rebel” (title of an Irish Nationalist song) whom you have quoted above, Mark. Born in Scotland of Irish parents, as a matter of fact.

    He surrendered to government forces during the 1916 “Easter Rising” in Dublin.

    Connolly had been so badly wounded in the fighting (a doctor had already said he had no more than a day or two to live, but the execution order had still been given) so that he was unable to stand before the firing squad; he was carried to a prison courtyard on a stretcher. His absolution and last rites were administered by a Capuchin, Father Aloysius Travers. Asked to pray for the soldiers about to shoot him, he said: “I will say a prayer for all men who do their duty according to their lights”. Instead of being marched to the same spot where the others had been executed, at the far end of the execution yard, he was tied to a chair and then shotWiki

    Very humane of them, don’t you think?

    As a matter of fact, it wasn’t the British who bombarded the Four Courts but the Irish National Army of the “Treaty Men” in the Irish civil war against the “Non-Treaty Men”, who were against the partition of Ireland.

    The artillery was lent to them by the British army.

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      1. In fact I did not, and that’s very interesting. The name is, of course, good Irish stock, and I remember a band I saw once on TV, called Ceilih Rain, doing a song called “Peace Has Broken Out” which featured it:

        My dear sweet Ireland
        been so long, fighting
        How came this war to thee;
        Carrigan ‘gainst Connolly…

        It was quite moving, and I’ve never forgotten it because of their unusual style. But they were billed as country – and sometimes as Christian – and I’m not a fan of either, so I never heard anything more of them. They weren’t Irish – well, except that they were from Syracuse, New York and you can barely swing a cat by the tail in New York without hitting an Irishman, but not direct from Ireland. It’s quite an interesting story, and something familiar is tickling my brain about the rebel being tied to a chair so he could be shot that makes me think I have read it before.

        For contemporary Celtic style I have yet to see anything beat Runrig doing their killer version of “Loch Lomond”. Runrig were originally from Skye.

        The ‘low road’ spoken of is supposed to mean the afterlife, the soldier in the song will return to his true love in death.

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        1. That’s right!

          The “High Road”— the long slog back to Loch Lomond from the English border city of Carlisle, in which two Scots were prisoners in Carlisle castle and where the song, according to tradition, was composed.

          One Scot knows he won’t live long, but he tells his pal that, nevertheless, he’ll be back home first — if only in spirit.

          It’s only down the road from Carlisle, though, to the border, which is the Solway Firth.

          Crossing the firth, you leave the English shire of Cumberland and enter the Dumfriesshire, Scotland.

          That part of northern England and the Scottish Lowlands is called “The Borders”.

          Note the definite article — as in “The Ukraine”.

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  4. It likely has escaped nobody’s notice that Russian military forces across the spectrum have been drilling hard for at least the last 5 years, many of them unannounced snap drills requiring short-notice deployment of significant forces, some of those over a considerable distance.

    I don’t think you can assume the anti-Russian cabal in Washington have noticed or if they have, that they understand what it implies. Have a look at Gilbert Doctorow’s 2022-0-16 column and Russian appreciations of the intellectual abilities of members of the US administration. Trigger warning: put down all liquids before reading.

    Also I read a US blog heavily infested by fairly well-informed US professionals especially lawyers and their ignorance of modern Russia is sometimes mindboggling.

    BTW when talking about European troop strengths, we seem to be short a trooper or two also Military dealing with more than 10,000 unfilled positions amid growing pressures

    Come to think of it the US Navy has been claiming to be understaffed. for years. We may be getting to the point of “What if they held a war and there was nobody to come?”.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. That’s an excellent piece, thanks for the suggestion. Here’s the link, for others who would like to read it.

      https://gilbertdoctorow.com/2022/01/18/russian-elites-talk-war-evening-with-vladimir-solovyov-16-january-2022/

      Here’s a teaser; Zhirinovsky seldom fails to wind the audience up.

      Zhirinovsky’s opening words set the tone for the entire evening: “The year 2021 was the last year of peace in the new millennium. We have nothing to talk about with the United States. Foreign troops are at our borders along with their weapons. We can hold talks. They took place. Maybe there will be some more, and talking is better than pushing the button on both sides. But the solution can only come by force.” This, he emphasized, was his personal opinion and not the official opinion of Russia.

      “The end may be that part of Europe doesn’t exist any more. Take out London! Leave Ireland alone. Don’t touch Wales. London is the heart of the anti-Russian forces. And London is dancing its last days. Look at the photo of Boris Johnson [projected onto the screen].”

      This, frankly, should scare the living shit out of anyone on the planet who only wants to live a quiet life with enough to get by, and mind their own business. The watchword of both sides for decades has been, avoid war. Don’t let it happen, it must absolutely be the last resort, when all else has failed and we face defeat. But a mood seems to be emerging among political elites on both sides, and it is, we’re going to get there sooner or later, and the likely winner will be whoever throws the first punch. Zhirinovsky must surely know that when he says things like “take out London”, he is talking some pretty heavy ordnance and he is not talking conventional warfare.

      On the one hand it is gratifying to see Russia take a stand and warn that it will not back up a single step further; most of us have been waiting for that for some time. On the other hand, this is already starting to spin out of control. It will require the maximum efforts of cool heads to put the brakes on. And there aren’t any.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’m sure a lot of what Zhirinovsky says on Solovyov’s Sunday night TV current affairs show is done for theatre. Doctorow admits as much in his article. As he says, Zhirinovsky has featured as a regular guest on Solovyov’s show and by going first, he pretty much set the tone and the parameters for the discussion to follow. The other guests basically had to walk back from what Zhirinovsky put down. This looks like TV talk show optics: you put the guest who is most likely to have the belligerent opinion up first, let the guest spout and then bring the drama and emotion back down, rather than put that guest on last and leave the emotion hanging in the air when the end credits start to roll.

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        1. I agree, and Doctorow does indeed say as much; Zhirinovsky can be counted on for both hyperbole and choler. However, the possibility of an actual major war in Europe has moved into the living room, and people in all walks of life are talking about it as a real eventuality. Karl will be delighted, but he’s probably already left to pick up his rifle and helmet.

          As I mentioned earlier, Russia has left its chief tormentors with little to no wiggle room – put up, or shut up. And it has made everyone take a serious look at their own military forces, and how ready or unready they are to enter sustained combat. This is exemplary:

          https://nationalpost.com/opinion/john-ivison-the-perils-of-neglecting-our-military

          Ironically, Ivison nailed the problem right out of the gate.

          “On the other hand, the Russians have benefitted from a decade of investment in new equipment and are at a higher state of readiness than NATO’s forces. “They’re configured to fight hard and win – there is no pretence of being diverse, equitable or inclusive,” said one serving member of the Canadian Forces.”

          The very fact that the Russian military ‘makes no pretense of being diverse, equitable or inclusive’ translates to a hard force that can fight and win. But western priorities, thanks to the prevalence of wokies in the leadership, remain diversity, inclusivity and equitability. The military is simply another large cross-sectional sample group ripe for cultural change. It is not an instrument of national foreign policy, it is performance art for the values circus.

          As an aside, the prospects of an actual war flaring out of nowhere are exacerbated by western media’s non-stop lying and fabrication.

          “Russia seems intent on annexing more of Ukraine, unless NATO agrees to a redrawing of the European security map – effectively conceding Vladimir Putin Soviet-era zones of influence across Eastern Europe.”

          Seems intent how? By its denials of having any intent at all to ‘annex more of Ukraine’, and the complete absence of motivation to do so? “Redrawing of the European SECURITY map” is cleverly worded so the eye will skip right over ‘security’ and assume Vladimir Putin seeks more territory at Europe’s expense. At the same time, if Europe cannot maintain enough killing power to annihilate Russia ten times over, it cannot feel itself safe. But Russia must not threaten it with violence if it does not tone down the tough talk a little.

          “Canada’s foreign minister, Mélanie Joly, is in Ukraine meeting officials and issued a statement saying Russia’s aggressive action of moving 100,000 troops to the Ukrainian border “must be deterred.”

          I love to hear a tough-talking and inspirational leader rallying the troops, like Mel Gibson in ‘Braveheart’, or King Theoden in “The Return of the King”. This is Melanie Joly.

          https://cdn.images.express.co.uk/img/dynamic/78/590x/secondary/Canada-Foreign-Minister-Melanie-Joly-3866648.jpg?r=1642523962688

          Looks like she probably gets in a couple of fights on her way to pick up her dry-cleaning, doesn’t she? Just what we need to make the Russian Army quake in its boots, and I would love to hear her ideas on how Putin can be ‘deterred’. Maybe she had better ask the Defense Minister for a few stirring words.

          Whoops.

          That’s right – don’t mess with me, Putin. I will fuck you up.

          And I’m sure I am not the only one to notice that the number of troops supposedly slavering across the border, waiting for the green light, seems to arbitrarily move up and down and all around with no effort at all to substantiate it. Given Russia’s ability to rapidly deploy large numbers of soldiers anywhere on its territory, technically the entirety of the Red Army is massed on the border, or could be, but a couple of days ago it was 60,000, and then some were withdrawn, and now it’s 100,000. Is anyone keeping score, or is it just put a number out there and watch for a reaction?

          “Given the Russian modus operandi, which is to launch no-notice attacks for limited territorial gains, forces that cannot be brought to bear within a few days are not relevant.”

          Gosh, I’m almost certain the Russians presented the west with a warning that it is ready to fight, in writing, a week ago. Entirely apart from that, the west has been shrieking that the Russians are going to invade Ukraine for nearly two months, daily. Anybody in the military who tries to claim he was taken by surprise by any attack that occurs, because there was ‘no notice’, should be taken out to the woodshed and have his ass striped.

          “Nobody I spoke with made any attempt to excuse the allegations of abusive behaviour by senior officers that sparked the replacement of previous defence minister, Harjit Sajjan, with Anita Anand, who has made it clear her priority is to implement culture change. On the contrary, all the senior figures who contributed to this article agreed that culture change is absolutely necessary to attract new talent. “The CAF needs people and this requires removing disincentives to recruitment and retention,” said one serving member.”

          You heard it here first; there is zero intent to get serious, now or in the near future, about deployability or operational readiness. Instead, the preciousness will be turned to 12. Good luck with that. Within a decade we will probably be absorbed by the United States. I wouldn’t want an asleep-at-the-wheel country like Canada cuddled right up against my northern flank, either.

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          1. 11: 13, January 20, 2022
            Zakharova has accused Canada of lying about the “fallen in the war with Russia” Ukrainians
            Maria Zakharova: Canadian Foreign Minister is lying about the “fallen in the war with Russia” Ukrainians

            Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly has committed perjury by calling Ukrainians killed in the internal Ukrainian conflict the “fallen in the war with Russia”, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has said in her Telegram channel.

            The diplomat refers to Joly’s publication on Twitter following her visit to a memorial to soldiers who have died in eastern Ukraine. “She comes to Kiev, kneels before photos of combatants who had been involved in the internal Ukrainian conflict, and a line appears on her official resources stating that these are ‘those who fell in the war with Russia’ “, Zakharova points out.

            The representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs noted that such actions of the Canadian Minister could be regarded as inexperience, but her previous positions should have contributed to the acquisition of some necessary knowledge. “I wonder how many kilometres the Canadian Foreign Minister would have to walk if she wanted to honour the memory of the victims of NATO operations, whose names had been laid out one after the other?” she asked.

            Earlier, Zakharova said that reports about the evacuation of employees of the Russian Embassy in the Ukraine were provocations: those who distribute them work together — both the White House and American publications. She asked how the Americans know about the actions of Russian diplomats in the Ukraine and why this concerns them.

            From Zakharova’s Telegram channel:

            Maria Zakharova

            Canada’s new Foreign Minister, Melanie Joly, has been in office since the end of October, since just a few months ago. Such tweets could be attributed to her inexperience. But I do not think so. Before her having become the head of the Foreign Ministry, she had headed several other ministries: economy, tourism, and managed the affairs of ‘Heritage Canada’.

            And here she comes to Kiev, kneels in front of photos of combatants in the internal Ukrainian conflict, and on her official resources there is the line that they have “fallen in the war with Russia”. If the Minister were concerned with the heritage of her country, she probably should know what a civil confrontation is. For example, in the Civil War in the neighbouring United States, about 50 thousand people from British North America, the predecessor of Canada, fought on both sides. Whose graves will Canadian officials visit when visiting “big brother”? Will the Minister honour the memory of thousands of civilians in Eastern Ukraine who were killed by the Kiev regime and Ukrainian Nazi battalions? Not a direct analogy, of course.

            There are more direct analogies. The Minister in two of her posts had supervised multilingualism in Canada and directly the speaking of French, which is not the language of the majority. She is a member of the government of a country that has created a special agency to protect, preserve and respect the rights of those who want to speak not in English, but in French. And she has arrived in a country where Russian, the mother tongue of an overwhelming number of citizens, is being persecuted rather like being Jewish in the Third Reich was; she has arrived in a country where, if language departments are created, then only in order to control restrictive quotas, one dare not say,“minorities”. Apparently, the Kiev regime had guessed ahead of the visit of the Canadian with the entry into force of a law banning the distribution of print media in all languages ​​except Ukrainian, English, the official languages ​​of the EU, Crimean Tatar and the languages ​​of other indigenous peoples of the Ukraine (Karaites [Turkic-speaking Karaite Jews] and Krymchaks [Crimean Turkic-Jews]), and abandoning Russian altogether. The authorities in Kiev, nevertheless, have generously allowed the publication of periodicals in Russian, on the condition that they be completely, down to the last full-stop comma, duplicated in Ukrainian. If you want to keep your native language, pay double the price. It can be assumed, slightly paraphrasing the living classic of the Kiev regime school of philosophy, that the necessary financial costs can be borne by ‘not by everyone, but a few who can’.

            Probably, having learnt about these monstrous realities in a state which declares that it acts according to democratic guidelines, Minister Joly wanted to venerate the Ukrainian “Wailing Wall” for human rights, freedom of speech and, in principle, civility, but she could not find such a wall. Well, let there be such a wall: these crimes will not be forgotten.

            And further: I wonder how many kilometres the head of the Canadian Foreign Ministry would have to walk if she wished to honour the memory of the victims of NATO operations, whose names had been lined out one after the other? Let me remind you: the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia was carried out by six Canadian aircraft together with others. Do you know, Minister Jolie, how many children were killed then? Well, next time you want to perjure yourself about others, tell the truth about yourself.

            Liked by 1 person

            1. By the way, who is this:

              She is not Mélanie Joly.

              This is Mélanie Joly:

              Another bloody lawyer, but not an “International Lawyer” as is her German counterpart.

              And she is a French Canadian, I guess.

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            2. Zakharova scored a couple of direct hits there, the most wounding being Joly’s apparent indifference to Ukraine’s determined efforts to stamp out use of the Russian language; I wouldn’t have thought of that, but I suppose that’s why she’s a diplomat for a living and I am not. Well, there are a cou0ple of other reasons, I suppose, but no need to get into that now. Another was the cumulative casualties of NATO operations, which are usually regarded regretfully as collateral damage or blamed on partisan national forces, but never – ever – referred to as ‘fallen in the war with NATO’. Joly needs better speechwriters.

              The point that the dead in Ukraine fell in a civil war is not even really contested by Ukraine except in Kiev’s rhetoric, and it has been caught repeatedly trying to fabricate a case for the presence of Russian forces, usually with the clumsy assistance of its western benefactors. Ukraine consistently describes its forays into Donbas as an ‘Anti-Terrorist operation’. If it believed Russian forces were opposing it and could substantiate that, why wouldn’t it just attack Russia? Why don’t western do-gooders ever ask the people in Donbas who is killing them? It always prints Kiev’s denunciations.

              All semantics, anyway – western merdia (from the French ‘merde’, or ‘shit’) outlets are unlikely to report Zakharova’s rebuttal in its entirety, instead selectively quoting it to make it sound whiny if it is reported at all.

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              1. Zakharova scored a couple of direct hits there, the most wounding being Joly’s apparent indifference to Ukraine’s determined efforts to stamp out use of the Russian language

                I wonder just what Joly’s briefings on this have been? Quite honestly, something like that is a a huge red flag in Canada. Not to mention that she is francophone.

                Heck, if we could get our PM who seems to have zero interest in international affairs to pay any attention to the linguistic situation there it might wake him up a bit.

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                1. True indeed. But he is probably busy choosing what socks he will wear for his next public appearance. Got to give the people what they want. When your electorate is about 80% idiots and incurious dolts, you learn to give them their little distractions.

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                2. This language issue was the spark that kicked the whole separation thing off. Recall that as soon as the Ukrainian nazis had had their coup, stormed the rada and posted their stupidly attired “centurians” around the building, they announced their intent to legislate against the use of Russian in what they called “Independent Ukraine”, in reality the territory of the former Soviet Socialist republic of the Ukraine, created in 1922 by the USSR and last expanded territorially by the same USSR in 1945, when the gross error was made of addding on to the UkSSR the former Polish Galitsia, which had previously been a province of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The immediate reaction to this proposed legislation was moves in the Donetsk and Lugansk provinces to break away from the rest of the Ukraine, whereupon the Yukie arseholes in Kiev immediately backtracked on such legislation, but it was too late: the die had been cast.

                  Also, the reaction then in Nazi Galitsia was the making of threats to separate from the Ukraine and to create an independent Russian hating, Orthodox Eastern Ukrainian hating, Polish hating, Slovak hating, Hungarian hating, Romanian hating shithole of a republic of Galitsia with its capital at Lvov/Lviv/Lwow/Lemberg. In fact, the filth in Galitsia ransacked a Yukietard army weapons store and set up barricades on the main Kiev-Lvov highway.

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            3. In the above tweet, is she aping the Yukietard habit of kneeling in reverence at each and every opportunity, or does she find the details of one of the deceased so interesting?

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        2. I have already mentioned this long ago, I believe, but 3 summers ago, my elder daughter Elena attended a week-long students’ summer camp way out in the sticks to the north of Moscow. Some may describe the purpose of the camp as being that of political indoctrination, as there were huge marquees set up there by political parties and in which conferences, workshops and discussion groups were held. Every party had a big tent there, except for the Bullshitter organization, his “fund”, which was not a party, albeit Navalny is repeatedly labelled in the West as “leader of the opposition”. (I notice that he is now more frequently being called in the Western media a “dissident” FFS!)

          It turned out that my Lena had a great time there (there were other activities there as well – barbecues, dances, concerts etc.) and she attended meetings at all the political tents. She is very much like me: argumentative, stubborn, bad-tempered – and they are her good points! Interestingly, she told me that the least visited “political” tent was that of “United Russia”.

          Anyway, Lena had a chat with several politicians who visited the camp on different days, and when I asked her whom she liked most, she surprisingly answered: “Zhirinovsky”.

          She went on to tell me that he was quite unlike the person one sees projected on the TV screens as he rants away. She said he was quite the gentleman, witty, and very friendly. She’s got a selfie of herself with him. He looks rather jolly in the photo with my Lena beaming at his side.

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    2. Addendum to my remark “their ignorance of modern Russia is sometimes mindboggling.”

      Russia’s air defenses and air force are quite old and out of date and other than ICBMs, Russia lacks the capability to strike the US mainland effectively.

      Arrrgh! I assume the poster has missed the minor contretemps in Syria, and does not realize Russia has submarines.

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      1. Or that Russia has weapons which can easily reach the USA from Russia, and has had for decades.

        https://nationalinterest.org/blog/reboot/yes-chinese-and-russian-nuclear-weapons-can-reach-america-163129

        The new Sarmat, which was scheduled to go into service this past year with an initial defense buy of 50 missiles, has a range of between 10 and 18 kkm. If you lived 15 kkm from the furthest launch point in Russia, would you feel safe?

        https://missilethreat.csis.org/missile/rs-28-sarmat/

        I saw a report in a couple of places that a Russian submarine had recently surfaced off the American coast, just to make the vulnerability case in terms even the most dimwitted can grasp.

        https://beforeitsnews.com/alternative/2022/01/military-alert-russian-nuclear-sub-off-u-s-east-coast-and-amphibious-assault-ships-into-baltic-sea-friday-jan-14-2022-3765378.html

        As I think I mentioned at the time, it was only reported by sketchy sites and mainstream media immediately branded it ‘fake news’.

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  5. today, 02: 31
    Scholz called on Russia to recognize that “strength is in truth, not vice versa”
    German Chancellor Scholz called on Russia to recognize that “strength is in truth, not vice versa”

    MOSCOW, 20 Jan-PRIME. It is time for Russia to recognize that “strength lies in truth, not vice versa,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said at the World Economic Forum.

    He expressed concern about the situation that is developing around the Ukraine.

    “After years of escalating tensions, inaction is not an option. That is why we are negotiating with Moscow in various formats, on our commitment to the territorial integrity of the Ukraine and on our common principles on which peace and security in Europe are based. That borders cannot be changed by force. That it is important to take into account these principles and the relevant rights that derive from them. I am sure that cooperation and dialogue with Russia will help us avoid confrontation, ” the Chancellor said.

    He stressed that Germany is determined to protect the Ukraine in the event of “Russian aggression”.

    “Germany intends to defend the territorial integrity of the Ukraine, and Russia must recognize that strength is in truth, and not vice versa”, Scholz said.

    The Russian side is aware of our determination. I hope it also realizes that the benefits of cooperation outweigh the cost of further confrontation,

    he said.

    Ah, quit the philosophizing, Mr. SPD Nice Guy!

    You German Arschlöcher have paddled yourselves right up Shit Creek with your perpetual dancing to your big buddy’s tune, but what else can you do if you have been a USA occupied country, a country without a constitution, for the past 77 years?

    You know full well that what you pass off as your constitution was written out and enforced upon you by the occupying Western allies until, theoretically, the whole of Germany was united again, after which event you could write out your own constitution. What you have passed off as your Federal Republic of Germany constitution is what you call in German your “Basic Law”, ain’t that so, Olaf?

    Well, the long awaited Wiedervereinigung took place in 1989, but you still ain’t got no constitution, have you Olaf?

    And you know why, don’t you? It’s because pre-1939 German cities such as Stettin, Breslau and Königsberg are now called Szczecin, Wrocław and Kaliningrad.

    Borders cannot be changed by force you say?

    Ever heard of Kosovo?

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    1. Or Iraq?

      Guess who sponsored the resolution for the partition of Iraq, post-victory? Well, here’s a hint; he’s the President now.

      https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/plans-iraqs-future-federalism-separatism-and-partition

      Supported by Hillary Rodham Clinton, I need hardly mention. Speaking of Clinton, Scholz’s pretensions to philosophy sound like he stayed up all night trying to come up with wordplay that would sound like Bill Clinton’s “The power of our example, not the example of our power”. And speaking of that, I see Biden’s devotees are even trying to claim the phrase is his, described here as his ‘legacy phrase’.

      View at Medium.com

      Might have been, had Biden’s inauguration not been separated from the speech in which Clinton said it by 13 years.

      https://thegooddemocrat.wordpress.com/2008/08/28/bill-clinton-power-of-example-vs-example-of-power/

      Anyway, what the hell is Scholz even trying to say? That there is no truth in strength? I’m not getting the inference, I’m afraid. I imagine the Germans are scrambling like mad to defuse this shitstorm before they end up with no gas pipeline at all and a war on their hands in which they are expected to fight their former business partner.

      Plans to partition Iraq bubbled to the surface from time to time after the initial proposal, most recently in 2016.

      https://foreignpolicyblogs.com/2016/10/24/independent-kurdistan-us-protection/

      The aim has always been to get the Kurds their own state, because they are very pro-American, and gerrymander the borders so that the new Kurdish state includes most of the oil. Redrawing borders by force has never been a problem so long as it is the western powers doing it.

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      1. In fact, the borders of Syria, the Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan etc. often appear as dead straight lines on maps — just as if they’d been drawn with a ruler.

        Well, they had, in fact, been drawn with pencil and rulers — by the victorious post-WWI Entente powers, the British and French Empires, who looked upon that part of the world as consisting of their “spheres of interest” and had, therefore, already divvied up between themselves these territories as early as 2 years before the end of hostilities.

        This resulted in those territories of the defeated former “Central Powers” ally, the Ottoman Empire, being the spoils of war for the British and French, who granted themselves “mandates” over said territories for many years until the locals were fit to govern themselves.

        The “Class A mandates” consisted of the former Ottoman provinces of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine.

        “Class A Mandates” were considered sufficiently advanced that their provisional independence was recognized, though they were still subject to Allied administrative control until they were fully able to stand alone.

        The Frogs got the Lebanon and Syria, and John Bull got Palestine and Jordan and controlled client sheiks in the the latter and Saudi Arabia.

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        1. The present-day borders of countries in the Levant are in part the legacy of the 1916 Sykes-Picot agreement which originally gave Tsarist Russia and Italy spheres of influence in parts of the former Ottoman Empire as well. Tsarist Russia was going to get control over areas in northeast and east Turkey and around the Bosporus, and Italy would get control of areas along the Aegean coast.

          Northeast and eastern Turkey were areas that historically had been Armenian before the 1915 deportations and mass killings, and the areas to be controlled by Italy were areas historically associated with Ancient Greece and Ionian Greeks (whose motherland was Attica, around and including Athens) in particular.

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          1. At the time of the 1917 October Bolshevik putsch, the Russian army was kicking Ottoman arse in Anatolia (kicking Ottoman arse had become over the course of the previous 200 years something of an Imperial Russian habit) and during the whole of the WWI hostilities that ended for Russia in 1917, the Russian Black Sea Fleet never lost control of that Russian lake. In fact, the Russian/Soviet Black Sea fleet has only once in the 200 years since the establishment in 1783 of the Imperial Navy base of Sevastopol lost control of the Black Sea, namely during the mid-19th century Crimea War, when the by then British and French steam-powered fleets entered that sea. The Imperial Russian fleets were still sail powered then and many Black Sea fleet ships of the line were scuttled at the mouth of Sevastopol harbour so as prevent an allied incursion into it. After the end of the Crimea War, the allies imposed tonnage restrictions on the Russian Black Sea fleet, but by the 1870s, an Imperial Russian steam powered fleet was in existence and ready to help kick Turkish arse yet again.

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      2. Giving the Iraqi Kurds their own state was a brilliant idea, worthy of the best in US statecraft.

        No need to worry about the neighbours. That insurgency in Turkey is of no consequence. And the 8–12 Kurds in million in Iran and the 2–3= million in Syria are certainly not going to want to be part of a Kurdish state.

        I could not understand US aims in Syria until I came to the conclusion the objective was to turn it into a failed state. I guess the real idea was to turn Syria and Iraq into failed states and if Turkey went that way as well, well so much the better.

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    2. 0.01.2022 15:12
      Chancellor Scholz’s lies. Why Germany should not try to teach Russia what the truth is

      Amongst the American and European polyphonic voices broadcasting the next batch of “condemnations of Russia”, Germany occupies a special place. This is not to say that the Germans are the most radical, but there are some things that are painful to hear.

      The Chancellor and truth
      It is no secret that its economic partnership with Russia is extremely important to Germany. If Germany itself is the locomotive of the European economy, then Russian gas is the fuel of the German economy. That is why, against all odds, Berlin has defended Nord Stream 2.

      But there is no full understanding between the two countries on key issues. And while Russia takes Germany’s interests for granted, Berlin too often takes a moralistic, mentoring tone with Moscow.

      Germany’s new chancellor Olaf Scholz, whilst discussing the international situation and the situation around the Ukraine, has decided to explain to the Russians what strength is. “Germany intends to defend the territorial integrity of the Ukraine, and Russia should recognise that strength is in the truth, not the other way around”, RIA Novosti quoted Scholz as saying on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum.

      No need to talk to Russia like that
      Wittingly or unwittingly, the German leader quoted Danila Bagrov from the film “Brother-2”. However, the hero of the movie expressed himself in a much more lengthy way: “Tell me, American, what is power? Is it money? My brother says it’s money. You have a lot of money. So what? I think strength is in the truth: Who has the truth is the strongest! You’ve cheated someone, you’ve made money… And what, you’ve become stronger? No, you’ve not, because you don’t have the truth behind you!”

      Any lectures from German politicians will for a long time be perceived with a hint of irritation and bewilderment. It is roughly the same as if Berlin were telling the meaning of existence to the state of Israel. The 27 million lives lost as a result of the aggression of the Third Reich are a shadow over Russian-German relations. And if Moscow, unlike Warsaw, does not demand anything from today’s Germany, it does not mean that we have forgotten everything.

      That is why the speech of the notorious “Kolya from Urengoy” in the Bundestag, in which the Wehrmacht fighters were presented as innocent sheep and victims of war, stirred up Russian society. [“Kolya from Urengoy” — a Siberian high school boy who addressed the Bundestag, exonerating “innocent” Nazi PoWs in the USSR — ME]

      Selective memory
      No, Germans do not tear down monuments to Soviet soldiers and do not blame the USSR for starting the Second World War on an equal footing with Hitler’s Germany. But more and more often in German culture, Hitler is portrayed not as the perpetrator of great misfortune, but as a kind of semi-comical character. Modern German society, when talking about Stalingrad, often laments the German youths who died rather than those whose homes they ravaged. Germans prefer tales of “millions of raped Fräulein und Frauen”, who were victims of the lust of the Red Army soldiers. But the suffering of the Soviet people and the heinous crimes perpetrated by the Germans on our soil are now mentioned only in passing.

      And that allows German politicians to behave in the international arena in a way that they cannot behave at home. The chancellor cannot openly support or simply ignore neo-Nazi attacks in Germany because this would mean the end of his political career.

      Neo-Nazis: who should have neo-Nazis?
      But it has been easy for Germany to ignore the neo-Nazis in the Ukraine for eight years now. Berlin’s representatives were the guarantors of the agreement between Yanukovich and the opposition, which has not been implemented. Germany is the guarantor of the Minsk agreements, which have never been implemented owing to Kiev’s unwillingness to implement them.

      Berlin does not see the neo-Nazi Azov regiment, torchlight marches in honour of collaborators, a march in honour of the SS division Galicia in the centre of the Ukrainian capital, and ignores the radical rhetoric of Ukrainian ministers and MPs. The German authorities claim the vote in the Crimean referendum was illegitimate, but recognise the government in Kiev, which came as a result of a coup. Berlin failed to notice the bombing of Luhansk, the shelling of Horlivka and the deaths of children in the Donbass. Berlin has not heard President Poroshenko saying that the children of the Donbass will sit in cellars, nor has it noticed President Zelensky suggesting that the residents of Donetsk and Luhansk should go to Russia if they do not agree to accept the new Ukrainian order.

      German indulgence for Kiev
      Frau Merkel and, following her, Herr Scholz see nothing wrong with the law on “total Ukrainianization” in a country where Russian is the mother tongue and the main language of communication for millions of people.

      The German authorities have not demanded accountability from Kiev for an investigation into the murder of Oles Buzina, the investigation into the burning of the Trade Union House in Odessa or any other high-profile crime. This is particularly surprising against the background of German politicians’ speculation about Russian “unfreedoms”. Berlin has been watching quite calmly both the persecution of opposition politicians in the Ukraine and the closure of the media. Kiev is literally endowed with an indulgence for such actions.

      In 2014, when Ukrainian troops entered the Donbass, ordinary people literally stopped them with their hands and bodies. Back then, no one could believe that the apologists of the German-backed “Revolution of Dignity” would unleash a full-scale civil war, which would then be hidden behind the myth of “Russian aggression”.

      “Our cause is right.”
      Russian aide helped the Donbass survive, but it would never have survived if not for the strength of the people who rose up to fight against the rampaging neo-Nazis. And the strength of the Donbass was and remains in the truth.

      On that bitterest of day – 22 June 1941 – Vyacheslav Molotov said in a speech to the Soviet people: “Our cause is right. The enemy shall be defeated. Victory shall be ours”. Civilized Europe, already occupied by Hitler, did not believe these words. Europeans were convinced that power was on the side of the Wehrmacht boys with the inscription “God is with us” on their metal buckles. But the perfect war machine of the Third Reich, powered by ruthlessness and by the denial of the “chimera called conscience”, was defeated by lads with red banners and a star on their cap, lads displaying the kind of symbols that is now being equated in Europe with the Nazis. Where the truth is, they know very well in Russia. Our compatriots have always paid the ultimate price for it. And now Russians know where the truth is.

      Like

      1. Very well said – the Russian diplomatic corps was slow to learn, but they got there in the end and now they can put the blocks to the oily-tongued westerners with the best of them. Indeed, millions of Russians paid with their lives so that Europeans who had already crumbled under the Nazi boot could be free again – whatever that means in the modern world. And a significant bloc in western Ukraine is the descendants of Nazi collaborators, who worship the Nazis still. Scholz is striving to tread the middle ground, to please his western masters without insulting the Russians too much, but that is a fool’s errand and he will only end up displeasing both. It would bear mentioning again that what is worth going to war over is the gas that passes through the Nord Stream pipeline, not the pipeline itself – if Europeans really want to show solidarity with Ukraine, they can commit to continuing to get their energy supplies through its leaky, whistling pipes, and Russia can take its payment at the Ukrainian border; I’m sure the Ukrainians don’t care who pays the transit fees, as long as they get their cut. But we are down to put-all-your-cards-on-the-table time, and the Europeans should understand that if they reject the Nord Stream II pipeline twin, it will never be tried again in their lifetimes. South Stream was not too big a loss, and even Nord Stream II would not be crippling. But if it became apparent that even completing a pipeline which was contracted for was not enough to keep it safe from American meddling, Russia would not try again. China is a hungry market, and Asia would happily absorb gas exports that would have gone to Europe. We have had it graphically demonstrated for us that supply uncertainty translates to crazy prices, so losses in volume are compensated for by price gains. Europe would pay for certain volumes at the Russian border with Ukraine – after that, if significant percentages bled away into the air through leaks or were stolen by the transit country for its own use, that would be of no concern to Russia; European inspectors could be commissioned to verify the volumes received at the border, and after that the transit would be in the hands of Europe’s beloved Ukrainian brothers. If Europe wanted to cough up the money to bring the Ukrainian transit system up to ‘Euro standards’, knock yourselves out. Germany would be paying for it, which would be a fitting punishment for their waffling.

        What goes around comes around. The point that the west is deliberately selective about which realignments it celebrates as legitimate transitions of government is dead on. If Scholz is not very careful, he will lose what support he and his country have in Russia. I’m sure all the western policymakers have pinned their hopes on Germany being able to wring concessions from Moscow in return for certification of Nord Stream II, but that was already part of the contracted deal and it is just not going to happen. Scholz and his clowns can whistle and kick the can around until doomsday if they like, but they are not going to get extras out of Moscow just for being partners. Scholz must be under incredible pressure to get a deal, but I have no sympathy for him. And if he blows this one, there won’t be another chance.

        Like

  6. Bwah ha ha!! Andrei has a great post up which postulates that America needs war for political reasons, including but not limited to (1) Biden’s cratering job-approval ratings, second-lowest for this point in the presidency since 1954; (2) the projected thrashing of the Democrats in the midterms; and (3) being caught flat-footed without any kind of plan at all for what to do if the big country they have been pushing around since forever suddenly grabbed their wrist and shoved it up their back to their offside ear.

    http://smoothiex12.blogspot.com/2022/01/america-needs-war.html#disqus_thread

    The post is very enjoyable, but I laughed fit to split at the video posted by one of the commenters, featuring Biden stumbling through whether America would have to do anything if Putin only invaded a little bit. President Novocaine; it’s like his tongue is asleep. Classic.

    Reminds me of John “The Walking Chin” Kerry begging for America to be allowed to do ‘just a tiny’ cruise-missile strike on Syria. And it’d be a bargain: the Arabs were going to pay for it!

    Like

    1. The West has become the land of lies and bullshit. Do half of these people even believe half of what they say? They all sound like some sort of talking doll with a string in their back to pull — human rights, rules-based, principles, bibble-babble. Oh, and not to forget “trust the science”.

      Like

      1. I’m afraid that’s just an inevitable consequence of your imaginary ethos and your public performance growing ever more divergent. I think we all remember Trudeau, on the issue of vaccine passports, musing that it might mean you couldn’t even get in to see the Raptors play without a vaccine pass, and implying that would be unfair. It wasn’t a month after that, when he was morphing into Tough Guy, that he was yelling “You don’t have to get vaccinated…but don’t think you’ll be able to get on a plane and put others at risk!!” to what he no doubt saw as tumultuous applause.

        Politicians on the campaign trail or otherwise in the public eye love to polish up the image of a kinder, gentler world where a man’s word was his bond and world-changing agreements were sealed on a handshake. But that’s not the world we live in, and hasn’t been for a long time. Bullshit is the chosen paste to paper over the resulting cracks in national credibility. Anyone – especially Canadians – who believes anything the Canadian government offers as fact is a fool. If Trudeau told me my address, I would check my driver’s license to see if he was lying.

        Like

    2. The engaging thing about him is that periodically his governor slips and he speaks the truth: remember we gave aid to people in the middle east and they all turned into AQ, of I told them to fire him and they did. So he has let it out — if Russia goes all the way to the Hungarian border, the US will have to do something (whatever that something is). But if it only get to a km or too from the border then… well… see Georgia. Since Russia is not going to “invade Ukr”, then Washington and Co will do a Georgia.

      Like

  7. Hey, Obama!

    Seen this?

    From the land where they don’t produce anything:

    09: 15 on 20.01.2022 (updated: 09: 38 on 20.01.2022)
    Russia sets record for non-primary exports in 2021
    Russian non-resource exports in 2021 has broken a record and exceeded $191 billion

    MOSCOW, January 20-RIA Novosti.Russia has significantly increased non-primary non-energy exports in 2021, Veronika Nikishina, head of the Russian Export Center (part of Russian state development corporation), told reporters.

    In January-November 2021, Russia’s non-primary non-energy exports amounted to $170.5 billion, and by the end of the whole year, we estimate the growth of NOE at 36%, to more than $ 191 billion, which was a new historical maximum,

    she said.

    Growth was recorded in almost all product segments, but the largest growth was recorded in ferrous and non-ferrous metals, fertilizers, woodworking products, chemicals, plastics and power equipment.

    Nikishina added that the pandemic had created new opportunities for domestic producers to enter global markets and gain a foothold in them.

    The analytical centre of the Renewable Energy Corporation Group [Norway] for 11 months of 2021 has recorded positive dynamics in all major industries: for example, exports of the chemical industry had increased by 54%, metallurgy by 52%, the timber industry by 43%, mechanical engineering by 31%, food by 23%.

    The main importers of Russian products are China — $15.6 billion, Kazakhstan — $14.4 billion, Belarus — $11.4 billion, Turkey — $10.9 billion, and the United States — $7.9 billion.

    The photograph above was taken from Zaryad’e Park — Red Square and the Kremlin off picture to the right, the now frozen Moscow River in the middle distance.

    The exhaust from a communal central heating plant is visible middle right centre, and, middle distance, from a gas-fired power station near my house.

    I point this out because of a comment made to this above linked article by Andrei Martyanov:

    Russian strategy is all but clear, on the contrary. Presently, Russia can do little more than saber-rattling. It’s not a big economy. It doesn’t have a lot of allies (if any). Its economy doesn’t grow (well, just barely).

    Okay, maybe to build more and more “defense perimeters” around Ukraine wasting more and more resources on that.

    Like if every Russian school at least had a warm toilet (hint: it isn’t so).

    Presumably made by a speaker of North American English (clue “like if” and “defense”), or maybe not, for he uses the term “toilet” instead of “bathroom” or “restroom”.

    How does the commenter know that Russian school toilets are cold now?

    Russian houses and public buildings are kept very warm at this time of year because of community central heating, which starts at the end of October and ends in March and sometimes in April, depending on the ambient tair temperature.

    Like

    1. I should add, though, that they only close schools here when the temperature falls below minus 22 °C [minus 7.6 °F].

      What callous brutes!

      That 22 °C rule is only here though, in Western Russia: I don’t know what they do in the Far East, where it is now in Yakutsk, for example, minus 41 °C [minus 41.8 °F].

      Like

    2. Andrei’s blog has a few stubborn trolls on it who enjoy starting a fight for its own sake – none of the factors described make any difference to the country’s military readiness as they stand. It’s not a big economy – okay, if you say so. I don’t know how big it needs to be, but however many multiples of the Russian economy the US economy is, it has a military its own think-tanks say is less ready to fight and sustain operations through victory than Russia. It doesn’t have a lot of allies. Again, okay, if you say so. It’s the biggest country in the world, and its military apparently has everyone else shit-scared because nuclear weapons are a force multiplier and Russia has (a) more of them than anyone else, and (b) many are deployable, so they can pop up off the coast in a submarine or aboard a long-range aircraft. Victory has many fathers, the saying goes, while defeat is a bastard, and in order to keep its allies close under its control, the USA has to keep on winning. It has never taken on an opponent like this one in these circumstances; wartime Germany was a mighty foe that took the forces of combined allies to beat it, but it had nothing that could reach America from Germany. Russia, as I keep stressing, has China as an ally, and western ‘analysts’ are slowly coming to realize it. Which covers both point one and point two; China is the world’s largest economy. Building defense perimeters around Ukraine? Really? Where’s the Russian ‘border wall’? There’s one in Ukraine, if it hasn’t been already stolen to sell for scrap.

      https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/3/24/what-happened-to-ukraines-border-wall-against-russia

      So I guess if you live in a town in Russia that has a military garrison and is near the border with Ukraine, you are part of Russia’s ‘defensive perimeter’. I never realized Russia was so apprehensive that the Ukrainian Army would invade. Apparently its humiliations at Debaltseve and Ilovaisk made no difference, and Russians are still terrified.

      And that’s why your buttocks are mostly fat; to warm the toilet seat. Who has fatter asses – Russians or Americans?

      Like

    1. Ha, ha!! That’s just a minor irritant, really, and doesn’t truly make Baerbock even look dishonest if she was only doing what everyone else did. Still, it will be a warning to her and her fellow Americaphile, Habeck, to watch their backs, that they have earned the ire of influential forces with their unrestrained jabbering of western catechism.

      Did you see that British-press map, on the same site, of ‘Putin’s Invasion’?? Ha, ha! Not satisfied with fabricating its start, those ambitious British have pursued it all the way to its end, and now the Russians are stalemated and at the negotiating table because they can press no further into Ukraine, having been stopped cold by Ukrainian partisans using British equipment given them by their heroic UK angels.

      https://www.rt.com/russia/546575-putins-plans-ukraine-invasion-msm/

      Little wonder the UK produces such talented fiction authors as Ken Follet and Craig Thomas (who, curiously, are both Welsh) when there is such a deep pool of national talent for storytelling.

      Like

    2. I’m sure that, international lawyer that she is, Annalena Baerbock will be able to argue that any payments that happen to fly under the radar or the table in her direction from donors are entirely legitimate and she can point to the relevant legislation governing payments to Board Directors of political parties during national emergencies to justify her coronavirus bonus. After all, isn’t her CV a formidable example of creative writing?

      Like

  8. 18: 05 20.01.2022 (updated: 19: 36 20.01.2022)
    Moldovagaz JSC fully paid Gazprom’s advance for January
    Deputy Prime Minister Spinu: Moldovagaz JSC fully has paid Gazprom’s advance for January

    CHISINAU, January 20-RIA Novosti. Moldovagaz managed to pay off the next payment to Gazprom on time, Deputy Prime Minister of Moldova Andrei Spinu said.

    The company faced difficulties in January, as the purchase price of gas had increased from $450 to $646 per thousand cubic metres. Moldovagaz paid in full for the fuel received in December, but it lacked about $25 million to pay off the advance payment. The Russian concern warned that in case of non-payment, it was ready to stop deliveries from January 21. The Parliament of the republic introduced a state of emergency for 60 days to resolve the problem.

    “Moldovagaz informs that it has fully paid the advance payment for January”, Spinu has written in his Telegram channel.

    If I’m not mistaken, someone here a few weeks ago was saying that this wouldn’t happen, that Gazprom was being suckered — as per usual because Russia and Putin are weak

    Like

    1. I guess Uncle Sam’s Molecules Of Freedom were all committed elsewhere. Otherwise he would have ridden to the rescue. Sorry, Moldova; you’ll have to settle for some inspiring words about democracy. Oh; and freedom. The freedom to pay your own way, that is.

      Like

  9. January 20 2022, 21:17
    The sofa troops of Ukraine announced mobilization, threatening Russia and the United States.
    On social media, Ukrainian users have launched a campaign of resistance and are issuing dire warnings not only to Russia, but also to the United States, stating that no matter what the world’s hegemons agree on, there will still be no peace.

    While we look on the Internet at scary maps with arrows, world leaders are considering what to do with the Ukraine. Biden’s meeting with Putin is coming up soon, and it’s important for us to create the right backdrop for it. Western elites understand that Zelensky will not fight, and are tempted to appease Putin at the expense of the Ukraine. For the sake of peace. But they must understand that the Ukrainian people will not accept surrender. This may also affect the position of Biden, who is still losing support due to the abandoned Afghanistan

    the project’s Facebook page reports.

    This is followed by step-by-step instructions. You need to take a photo showing your attitude towards the Russian ultimatum and your readiness to fight, and then post the text and photo in social networks.

    No one will force Ukrainians to accept the Kremlin ultimatum. There will still be no peace on Russian terms — even if the West comes to an agreement with Putin, and Zelensky’s power capitulates

    the movement’s website reports.

    At the moment, support for the initiative, especially from public figures, to whom the authors appeal, is, to put it mildly, restrained.

    See linked blog for photographs of Yukietards who support the movement.

    Like

    1. Ha Ha Haaaaaaa!!! That’s brilliant! I love clever lyrics, and those are some good ones, particularly the sly dig that the barge is safe from leaks which might foul the pristine (and pricey) waters of False Creek, where the heads (onboard toilets) on expensive private yachts vent directly into the sea.

      That’s a hell of a way to treat an expensive and delicate instrument, though, playing it in the rain. That’s a Takamine, and they’re not cheap, and acoustic guitars generally do not like moisture. That’s why you keep a little envelope of those silica-gel dessicant crystals in your guitar case.

      Like

  10. Secretary of State Blinken said that the United States is ready to cooperate with Russia in various areas.
    January 21, 2022, 09: 31

    Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has said that the United States has repeatedly told Russia about its readiness to cooperate and there are many areas for joint work between the two countries.

    “We have repeatedly stressed that we want to cooperate with Russia… We must work together in many areas… whether it’s climate change, coronavirus or the impact of new technologies”, RIA Novosti quotes Blinken as saying on the German TV channel ZDF.

    He noted that NATO has repeatedly extended a hand to Russia to build transparent and positive relations, but was refused.

    Earlier, Blinken said that he does not expect big breakthroughs following the meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Geneva on January 21.

    “I don’t expect big breakthroughs”, RIA Novosti quoted the American diplomat as saying.

    He added that many intensive negotiations had been held with the Russian side recently. According to Blinken, this time it would be possible to see what conclusions Russia and the United States have made for themselves.

    “I hope that we will find out whether Russia is really interested in resolving differences through dialogue and diplomacy or not”, he said.

    The US Secretary of State also expressed the United States interest in working with Russia to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, address climate change and new technologies.

    At the same time, the new draft of US sanctions provides for the recognition of Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism.

    Which planet does Blinken live on?

    Or does “readiness to cooperate with Russia” mean that the USA will cooperate with Russia if Russia does what the USA demands that it do?

    Like

    1. We are ready to cooperate with the lately-recognized state sponsor of terrorism? How does that work? Russia will give the USA advice on how to do state terrorism? Where did the policy go that the United States does not negotiate with terrorists?

      Doctorow’s piece reported that a television panel in Russia had agreed Blinken is a fool who probably believes the propaganda his mouth constantly churns out, and Nuland a liar.

      Like

      1. It’s all about projecting to the rubes that the USA and the west are STRONK! and negotiating from a position of power and authority. It doesn’t matter if it is true or not, only that voters believe it, much like new lies are invented to ignore the old lies that have been exposed.

        Again, this is for a domestic audience. It is quite hard not to ignore though. I would expect the USA to make threats if it does not get what it wants like expanding bases in Ro & Bg I I would expect Russia to say “Go ahead punk, make my day” because it would be Bg & Ro politicians, parties and public who will be on the sharp end very quickly simply because they are American allies. US threats are empty and Russia knows it which is why they are well prepared already to walk away if the talks are dragged out or they are given bs.

        Like

  11. January 20, 2022, 20:14 pm
    Moldovan President addresses nation amid gas crisis
    Moldovan President Sandu called on citizens to use energy efficiently amid the gas crisis

    Moldovan President Maia Sandu has appealed to the country’s citizens to use energy rationally in times of crisis, as the government cannot fully compensate for the increase in tariffs. This is reported by RIA Novosti.

    “The increase in gas prices and, consequently, other energy supplies is a heavy burden on domestic consumers, the economy and the state, andwe are completely dependent on market prices in the region, and the market situation today is far from normal. We need to learn how to use energy more efficiently, we need thermal insulation of the houses where we live, we need to save energy in public institutions”, Sandu said, adding that such actions will reduce the cost of heating and light.

    The President of Moldova noted that the country’s authorities cannot refuse to import energy supplies, and the former leadership of the state “ignored the need for investment in renewable energy”. In addition, the government cannot fully compensate for the increase in tariffs, as it may be left without funds for other needs, she explained.

    “Recently, we have a lot of various specialists in the energy sector and in conducting negotiations. Let’s not allow ourselves to be deceived by populists and corrupt officials who suffer from the loss of power. Rich countries are not those that spend a lot, but those that spend rationally”, Sandu said.

    In Moldova, a state of emergency has been declared against the background of the “gas crisis”, which will be valid for 60 days. The decision was supported by 58 deputies (out of 101) from the ruling Action and Solidarity party. At the same time, opposition parliamentarians did not support the proposal of the Moldovan authorities.

    On January 20, Moldovagaz repaid its current debt of $34 million to Gazprom after being warned about a possible gas supply cutoff.

    At the beginning of the year, the company faced difficulties due to an increase in the purchase price of gas from $450 to $646 per thousand cubic meters. Head of the company Vadim Cheban wrote that they have to work “at a loss”.

    Funny that! They’re partly up shit creek because the didn’t invest in “renewable energy”, and Germany is partly up shit creek because it did just that and now stymies the operation of NS2 at the behest of the USA the Greens.

    How about importing some “freedom molecules”, Sandu, from the land where you did your training to be a foreign agent studied?

    Like

    1. Yes, always more emphasis on renewables would have saved the day; if only we had known. Bet those old long-term contracts are looking pretty good now. To everyone except those who make money when gas prices jump.

      Like

  12. Even if they got guarantees in writing which met their terms, do they really think the US would keep to the agreement? After all, Iran got an agreement in writing and it was torn up when the ink was barely dry. “Legally binding” guarantees presuppose there is someone around with the ability to enforce them.
    I guess the most likely scenario is that they know they won’t get any agreement, so it just remains to be seen what the consequences of that will be.

    Like

    1. A treaty would include ‘verification measures’ that would be like previous ones such as under the abandoned Open Skies Treaty, sic having facilities out in the open and not hidden, or allowing foreign inspectors to come with 48hrs notice etc. The treaty will only be useful to Russia if it is bullet proof and it will not accept something that isn’t. I may be completely wrong but that is what I imagine to be ‘logical.’

      Like

      1. Yes, I understand that, but “sine poena nulla lex” – any law or treaty is worthless unless there is a penalty for transgression, and someone to enforce that penalty. Who would enforce a treaty obligation on the US and how? In the final analysis it all comes down to whether the US thinks Russia is bluffing or not and whether they could achieve their objectives by military force if that became necessary.

        Like

        1. That’s a good question and your guess is as good as mine but Russia is not i-Ran.

          I think Russia has stated on more than one occasion that no cards are off the table if the US pulls a fast one, including (I think they said) previous treaties. There could be a clue there.

          Like

        2. I am sure that Russian diplomats are fully aware that without any punishment clause, legislation is null and void, but the payback from getting the hegemon to sign written agreements is that if it breaks them, as break them they most certainly will, then Russia will be able to occupy the moral high ground, in that the duplicity and mendacity of the USA as regards its “rules based” world order that it polices will be exposed.

          The USA has always maintained that it acts in the name of all that is right and good in the world — or should be — and in doing so has firmly ensconced itself at the heights of moral rectitude, whereas in reality, American policies are firmly founded, as are those of all states, on furthering its own interests. However, these US interests are sugar coated with a load of bullshit that they like to call the furtherance of “freedom and democracy” and “American values” throughout the world..

          Like

    2. You know, that is really the key to the USA being regarded as ‘not agreement-capable’ by Russia and others who are less willing to voice that opinion – it has no arbiter over it. There is nobody to make it abide by the terms of any agreement it might strike with anyone, although for some time America claimed to be proud that its word was its bond and that it honoured its commitments once it had entered into them. But for many years now America – or at least Washington – does not even care; its leaders have convinced its people that everyone hates America and is against it. Not for anything it has done wrong, of course, but because they are jealous of its freedoms. But that results in America being in an existential battle where victory means truth, justice and the American Way can go on serving an undeserving world. Defeat is too awful to contemplate. And so Americans who believe this propaganda consider themselves martyrs.

      As it is, if America even confided to its European allies, on the question of putting pressure on Kiev to honour its signed commitments under the Minsk Agreements, “I think you should do it”, they would. Because they look to Washington for orders. It doesn’t really matter to them if Ukraine is influenced by Europe or by Russia, and they would probably be glad to have the problem off their plates, especially financing it, and hopeful that they could go back to trade as it was. But America tells them to behave in a manner which is against their interests, and they do it. There is nobody with that kind of control over America.

      I still think it would be harder for Washington to go back on a written deal in which Lavrov and Blinken were filmed signing it and the text was quickly and broadly released, provided the terms were sufficiently specific to prevent loopholes being exploited. However, you are right that having its signature on a document does not overly trouble America when it is determined to pursue destabilization of an enemy. It merely funnels weapons and ammunition and money to one of its proxies, and gives them the green light.

      I don’t think Russia has any chance of breaking the USA, even if it won a military victory, short of destroying the whole country. But China has both the military strength – supported by Russia – and the economic clout. China could do it.

      The bottom line is Russia would not claim it is ready to fight if it is not – Moscow knows perfectly well its statements will be assumed to be a bluff, and will be tested. So we will see.

      Like

      1. I think you are overestimating a US President’s willingness to stick to an agreement made by a predecessor (or himself?) Or that the US Congress or Senate will respect it. Many people in the USA, not just politicians, seem to think that only a signed contract or treaty is even slightly binding. And if there is any wriggle room, you take it.

        Things like verbal promises have no weight. I had not realized just how striking this was until I read “Winning through intimidation” by Robert Ringer. It convinced me that doing business with someone in the USA was a dubious idea.

        To have any hope an agreement is respected by any US politician it must be a treaty. And even then it is dicey. The USA has earned the adjective недоговороспособный (not agreement capable). Note the apparent violation of NAFTA 2 with the US proposed subsidies to US electrical vehicles. Canada and Mexico are already protesting this.

        @ ME : is that spelling of недоговороспособный correct?

        Like

        1. Yes, it is.

          недоговороспособный (adjective): from неспособный {adjective: “unable”) and договариваться (reflexive verb: “to agree”)

          Like

  13. I enter the following in to evidence:

    Euractiv mit neuters: Finland’s PM says NATO membership is ‘very unlikely’ on her watch
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/global-europe/news/finlands-pm-says-nato-membership-is-very-unlikely-on-her-watch/

    …Marin said it is “very unlikely” that Finland would apply for a NATO membership during her term of office…

    …Marin said it is “very unlikely” that Finland would apply for a NATO membership during her term of office….

    …“Nobody can influence us, not the United States, not Russia, not anyone else,” she added….

    …Finland would need to demonstrate substantial public support for joining NATO to be granted membership.

    In a recent poll by Finland’s largest daily Helsingin Sanomat, 28% of respondents wanted Finland to join NATO, 42% were against, and the rest were unsure..
    ####

    to this:

    Euractiv: Finish PM forced to defend NATO membership comment
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/finish-pm-forced-to-defend-nato-membership-comment/

    …Describing her comments to Reuters as “realistic” and ones that had been “over-interpreted” Marin emphasised the importance of a thorough parliamentary discussion over NATO between parties….
    ####

    So you see that Finland refuses to be bounced in to ant-Russian actions despite the great noise being made by NATO hawks and the ever complians Pork Pie News Networks.

    Then this:

    Euractiv: Survey shows Swedes divided on NATO membership
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/survey-shows-swedes-divided-on-nato-membership/

    …According to the recent survey, 37% of respondents said yes to NATO membership, while 35% said no. However, a full 28% remain undecided. In 2017, 32% said yes to NATO, while 43% opposed it when asked the same question.

    “The yes side has gained considerable momentum compared to 2017. But about a third can’t answer the question and are left to weigh up the options, and that’s really where this issue is decided,” said Novus CEO Torbjörn Sjöström…
    ####

    So also those in ‘neutral’ Sweden who want to push their country to formally join NATO are using the current fake crisis to scare people (sic my post on the previous threat about the Swedish military scaremongering about a handful of Russian landing craft transiting the Baltic Sea which could be used to invade the Ukraine ), but the numbers don’t work, as in Finland. At the end of the day it is for the politians of those countries and their voting public that they are responsible to, not Washington, London or whatever.

    And that’s not all, France the great friend of Russia, is flip-flopping loserville:

    Euractiv: French troops in Romania a bid to clarify ‘misunderstandings’
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/all/short_news/french-troops-in-romania-bid-to-clarify-misunderstandings-experts-say/

    France’s plan to possibly deploy troops on NATO’s Eastern flank as fears rise of a Russian attack on Ukraine can be seen as a bid to clarify the ‘misunderstandings’ created by French President Emmanuel Macron, who recently called for the EU to forge its own security pact with Russia, experts say.

    …US military presence in the country could also potentially expand after US President Joe Biden said on Wednesday that Washington would “actually increase troop presence in Poland, in Romania, et cetera, if in fact [the Russian president] moves because we have a sacred obligation in Article 5 to defend those countries. They are part of NATO”…
    ####

    In this case France is yet again trying to have its cake and eat it. “We’re your allies in u-Rope! But, we’ll also threaten you defensively of course.” Is €µ stupid? France is no ally. Once it joined NATO the ‘besties with Russia’ went out of the window but Paris has maintained this figueleaf for feather preening purposes. The irony here is that what €µ initially said and intoned is fundamentally true: there can be no u-Ropean security without Russia involved. But this was rejected when NATO expanded, the primary goal to contain Russia. The whole basis for NATO 1990+ is not based on reality but France recognizes this, takes part and perptuates it!

    The other flaw, sic Sweden & Finland is for the EU to have a ‘common position’ on everything and even in foreign affairs. That is impossible which is why u-Rope cannot be taken seriously. Rather than accept a ‘coalition of the willing’ and that some states aren’t interested Brussels & image morons have spent thirty years trying to bang a square peg in to a round hole.

    That’s two funamental strategic flaws that the west has insisted on.

    As for Bi-dumb’s & €µ comments on sending troops to Romania/whatever, they sell that as ‘defensive’ which is completely tone deaf to what Russia has said very clearly ‘We don’t believe any of your promises unless it is in treaty form.’ As others have pointed out, whatever the claims of NATO being ‘defensive’, it’s complete BS (Serbia 1999). There is no trust yet the west claims it wants a negotiated solution and violence is not the answer. So why mention sending troops to Romania?

    All in all the messaging is all over the place like a small child throwing its food from its high chair and giggling like a lunatic.

    There must be much pleasure in Moscow over the west’s howling.

    I’ll finish this post with the following item, yet again to highlight u-Rope’s divisions that have nothing to do with Russian actions:

    Euractiv: Slovak economy minister against prolonging Crimea sanctions
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/slovak-economy-minister-against-prolonging-crimea-sanctions/

    Like

    1. Public opinion means little to the USA when it is determined to add some more beads to NATO’s rosary. It simply insists the issue go to public referendum, and then frames the question so that there is realistically only one answer. Poles were unsupportive of joining NATO when referendum questioning included spending more to support NATO’s military aspirations, and the sweet spot was reached by framing the decision as a choice between prosperity and subsistence.

      Like

      1. But even a pro-American goverment balked at funding the t-Rump super base. Which means that like the rest of u-Rope and regardless of all the honking and braying coming from Wa$ington, they look very closely at the €€€. Again, we always look for the difference between what is said and what is actually done.

        As for joining NATO it is essentially synonymous with joining the EU, even though it is not and cannot be a legal requirement criteria under EU ‘Rulz.’ When it comes to foreign policy it is only Switzerland that does it by referendum. For the rest of u-Rope the rubes are kept far away from meddling in such affairs as it is the preogative of pompous mps in their home states in part because it allows all of them extra time in the limelight propounding their moral superiority while taking money from industry, foreign states/whatever for their expertize.

        Like

  14. Blinken plays Goebbels in Berlin:

    January 20, 2022, 20:11 pm
    Blinken appealed to the Russians and asked them not to attack the Ukraine
    US Secretary of State Blinken urged Russians not to participate in the invasion of Ukraine

    US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has publicly appealed to Russian citizens and urged them not to participate in the invasion of the Ukraine. A video from the speech in Berlin was posted on the official YouTube channel of the United States Department of State.

    Blinken stressed that Russian citizens deserved a safe and dignified life, just like all people on Earth. At the same time, no one, neither the Ukraine, nor NATO nor the United States, was trying to put the rights of Russians at risk, the Secretary of State claimed.

    But what really threatens your security is a senseless war with your neighbours, with the Ukraine, with all the accompanying consequences that it will bring. Most of all, it can affect young people who will risk their lives, and perhaps even lose it. Is a violent conflict what you want?! And it will probably be delayed. Will it make your life safer, promote your prosperity, and open up more opportunities?! Just think of what a great country like Russia can achieve if it directs its resources, especially its outstanding talents, its people, to fight the most important challenges of our time,

    Blinken said.

    He added that the United States and its partners in Europe would welcome this.

    Earlier, Blinken had called the situation around the Ukraine “a crisis with global consequences”.

    The phrase “Russia, give up”, however, did not sound out, but in general, his style of speech vividly reminded those who are interested in history of the skills of the propaganda ministry of Joseph Goebbels.

    Texts of propaganda leaflets of the Wehrmacht

    Don workers, men and women!

    [This document in German is kept in the archive fund of the 54th Army Corps of the 11th Army of the Wehrmacht (GA “South”), date not specified]

    Your false propaganda is trying to convince you that Germany, which is waging a war of liberation from Bolshevism, is supposedly a country of black reaction, that the Hitlerites are carrying with them a system of exploitation of the working masses, disenfranchisement for the proletariat, and suppression of human freedom. This, of course, is 100% false! Germany is a cultured country with many social benefits for workers. Hitler is one of your own people [meaning, I think, the lazy bastard was from the working class, whereas he never did a stroke in his life, feckless, idle bastard that he was! — ME], and his main concern is the welfare of the working masses. A 7-or 8-hour working day, sufficient vacation time, earnings that guarantee a decent life, social insurance for sickness and age, an extensive housing programme, free schools for young people, ample opportunities for capable students, regardless of their social origin, to continue their education in universities and technical schools, rest homes, free access to cultural institutions – theatres, museums, cinemas – all this is only part of the National Socialist programme. A fair Labour Law reliably protects the employee from arbitrariness and injustice of his superiors. The workers have all the rights of an equal member of our society and are held in high esteem by the people. All these benefits are brought to you by our victorious soldiers. When you see them, you will see for yourself that they are not representatives of some dark force – as your propaganda portrays Hitlerism – but conscious free citizens of a happy country. And you, too, will become such: Equal citizens of a free Russia, free from international science fiction writers, parasites, scammers and criminals.

    Russian blog source

    Like

    1. Moscow. January 21. INTERFAX. The United States has promised to send written responses to Russian proposals for security guarantees next week, which should be facilitated by a meeting in Geneva, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Friday.

      I wonder what the answer will be?

      Hmmm . . . tough one!

      Like

      1. I don’t think it will be ‘No” straight out, although it will also not agree to do anything Russia demands unless it is an easy satisfier and can be spun as just throwing them a bone – American policymakers and political figures in particular will be alert for anything their domestic enemies could spin as ‘caving in to Putin’. It remains to be seen what attempts will be made to wiggle away and get a delay, because as I said, Russia’s demands are bold and permit little wiggle room. Most are ‘will you do it? Yes or no?’.

        Like

        1. Well waddya know!

          03: 41, January 22, 2022
          The United States asked Russia to refuse to publish a response on security guarantees

          WP: US asks Russia not to publish Washington’s written response on security guarantees

          U.S. officials have asked their Russian counterparts not to publish Washington’s written response to the proposals.Moscow on security guarantees. This is reported by The Washington Post (WP), citing its sources.

          According to the American newspaper, Washington has asked representatives of Moscow to keep the document secret. At the same time, an unnamed employee the State Department acknowledged that the Russian authorities may act differently.

          The Washington Post also notes that the US response will not be consistent with Russia’s proposals. However, the White House believes that the provision of a letter that the Russian president will be able to read “makes sense”, the publication emphasizes.

          Earlier, the White House had promised to respond in writing to Russia’s proposals for security guarantees next week. US presidential press secretary Jen Psaki said Washington would put on paper serious concerns about Moscow’s actions, as well as ideas on how the countries could strengthen each other’s “sense of security”.

          Like

    2. I don’t think his message is aimed at ‘Russian people’ but at westerners. It’s all about image and the west being morally correct, reserved and peace seeking. It’s also misdirection by not actually responding to Russia’s demands in any detail. The most important thing is that the west is more moral than anyone else. The plus of this is that when it goes to war it doesn’t want to and does so with a ‘heavy heart’. It’s doing it for humanity, like Hiroshima and Nagasaki, eh?

      Like

  15. On RT this headline to an article:

    Human eyes hold key to predicting imminent death

    and alongside it, this photograph to the lead story:

    What do Blinken’s eyes tell us?

    Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds?

    Like

    1. Wynken Blynken & Nod’s eyes only come alive when someone sticks the USB dongle with the instructions on what he has to say for the day in the back of his neck.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh that smart Liz Truss, Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for Defence, has revealed her in-depth knowledge of “the former USSR” and “Ukraine” and the trials and tribulations that that none-country has suffered through the ages:

      Russia’s Zakharova Nudges UK’s Truss Over Remark About ‘Invading Forces’ Faced by Ukraine
      4 hours ago


      Truss and twat

      On Friday, British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss delivered a speech at independent think tank, the “Lowy Institute” in Australia, elaborating on how nations such as the United Kingdom and Australia should respond to threats to freedom, democracy and the rule of law.

      A speech delivered by Liz Truss on Friday in Australia seems to have impressed her opposite numbers in the Russian Foreign Ministry, particularly spokeswoman Maria Zakharova. However, the impression itself has turned out to be questionable.

      During her speech, Truss happened to mention that the Ukraine, “a proud country with a long history”, has weathered a lot of invasions – “from the Mongols to the Tatars”. The British Foreign Secretary did not specify whether she referred to the Tatar-Mongol Yoke that took place in the 13th century or any other kind of invasion by these peoples.

      Responding to Truss’ statement, Zakharova wondered exactly how many years the foreign secretary believes passed between the two invasions – that by Tatars and another one by Mongols. The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman was also curious about why Truss omitted other misfortunes weathered by the Ukrainian people.

      Did [Liz Truss] not mention the sufferings of Ukrainians from fascism because they were insignificant, or because until the Forties of the 20th century, the British crown not only supported German Nazism, but hard warm feelings towards it?

      Zakharova wondered in a Telegram statement.

      She concluded her statement by questioning “what educational institution” gave Truss her degree.

      Truss delivered her speech in Australia on Friday, pondering how the UK and Australia can respond to “threats to freedom, democracy and the rule of law”. Despite her ambiguity when it came to the historical references, she accused the Kremlin of failing to learn “the lessons of history”, speaking about the tense situation on the Ukrainian border.

      [The Ukrainians] suffered through a state-sponsored famine. Their resilience runs deep. If they have to, Ukrainians will fight to defend their country,

      Truss said, proceeding to recall Afghanistan and Chechnya.

      Invasion will only lead to a quagmire, as we know from the Soviet-Afghan war or the conflict in Chechnya,

      She also announced a new package of weapons offered by the UK to support the Ukraine, and said that London is “pushing for alternatives in energy supply, so that nations are less reliant on Russia for their gas”.

      As a matter of fact, Truss is yet another one of those PPE graduates (Philosophy, Politics and Economics, Merton College, Oxford) that infest Westminster.

      PPE: the Oxford degree that runs Britain

      Oxford University graduates in philosophy, politics and economics make up an astonishing proportion of Britain’s elite. But has it produced an out-of-touch ruling class?

      More than any other course at any other university, more than any revered or resented private school, and in a manner probably unmatched in any other democracy, Oxford PPE pervades British political life. From the right to the left, from the centre ground to the fringes, from analysts to protagonists, consensus-seekers to revolutionary activists, environmentalists to ultra-capitalists, statists to libertarians, elitists to populists, bureaucrats to spin doctors, bullies to charmers, successive networks of PPEists have been at work at all levels of British politics – sometimes prominently, sometimes more quietly – since the degree was established 97 years ago.

      She’s dead clever, see.

      Like

        1. The astonishingly ignorant statement about the Ukraine by Britain’s foreign minister, who certainly did not get the job because of her knowledge of history and foreign policy, is not a mistake at all: it is a new pattern. It can be explained simply by the absence of a coherent picture of history and the clichés and ideologemes in their heads. It is enough for them to repeat a set of clichéd phrases and to chant liberal mantras. Education was one of the first victims of the neoliberal revolution in the West,

          Russian parliamentarian Alexei Pushkov wrote in his Telegram channel.

          The senator added that he “would not be surprised if Truss really believes that the Ukraine existed during the Mongol-Tatar invasion”.

          source

          Like

      1. Everybody knows those Tatars were late risers and often were late at the battle. Subutai used to complain about having to delay the attack all the time.

        Like

    2. She’s dead right that it is a violation of the constitution of Ukraine to use the military of the country against the Ukrainian people to police them or to control their behavior, except in an emergency such as a riot.

      Like

  16. Asia Times: Epidemic of insanity strikes America’s leaders
    https://asiatimes.com/2022/01/epidemic-of-insanity-strikes-americas-leaders/

    Biden administration is sleepwalking America into wars it can’t feasibly win against Russia and China

    by Spengler

    It must be a hitherto unreported side-effect of the Omicron strain, perhaps a malignant protein activated by the rays of the full moon. America’s political class, Democrat and Republican alike, appear to have gone babbling, barking mad, starting with President Joe Biden, but afflicting his political opponents as well…
    ####

    I have to disagree. I think the US is not a military/media/whatever industry, I think it has simply become an Entertainment Industry. It is to entertain at home, regardless of quality great content, and to do the same abroad. It’s a long standing TV show that has gone off the rails but somehow is not cancelled and keeps truckin.’ Entertaining is its ultimate goal and all roads lead to it.

    Like

  17. Yukie morons again!

    SUGS suckers!

    17:42 21.01.2022
    In Ukraine complaints about the expiry date of weapons from Britain
    Ex-employee of the SBU Mulyk pointed out the expiry date of British weapons in the Ukraine

    MOSCOW, January 21-RIA Novosti. Ex-employee of the SBU Vladimir Mulyk has complained on the air of the TV channel “The first independent” about the expiry date of weapons that Britain has delivered to the Ukraine in order to “deter Russian aggression”.

    “It turns out that the storage period of this (anti-tank — ed.) complex is 20 years. That is, we have actually been sold such things with storage periods that end this year”, he said.

    According to him, this suggests that these weapons should be used before they become unusable.

    The UK has supplied the Ukraine with several thousand light anti-tank missiles. This was announced on Wednesday by the Deputy Minister of Defence of the Kingdom, James Hippy.

    With a bit of luck, they’ll detonate whilst being handled by Yukie armed forces murderers “at the front”.

    Like

    1. Inventory reduction of slow moving or obsolete stock is an accounting objective. The stock will be assigned some ridiculous value and be called “good will” or “customer satisfaction”.

      Like

      1. Nothing says I love you more than obsolescence. Remember the ancient Humvees the yanks gave them a few years ago? (A question I don;r see anybody in the Western propaganda complex asking is what happened to the gigantic heap of weaponry that Ukraine inherited from the USSR?)

        Like

    2. Quite a bit like those ancient Saxon infantry vehicles the UK ‘gave’ Ukraine (actually Ukraine bought them, albeit at a super-discount and perhaps they even obtained a ‘loan’ to do it). Some sources chided the British for ripping off the Ukrainian bumpkins, but then said the Ukrainians loved them.

      https://defence24.com/armed-forces/useless-saxon-vehicles-surprisingly-useful-in-ukraine-kiev-benefits-from-the-cost-effect-ratio

      They supposedly repurposed them, using them for battlefield ambulances and shooting them up in ballistics trials. But others reported they were promptly offered for sale by the receivers.

      http://ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/peace-and-prosperity/2015/february/16/uk-supplies-saxon-apcs-to-ukrainewhich-promptly-sells-them/

      I read they also flogged the American rations that were donated by the US government.

      https://time.com/45253/ukraine-corruption-tymoshenko-kiev/

      Opportunists, to say the very least. They want cash, not junk, but they are perfectly happy to take free junk and sell it to someone even stupider, or someone who wants a Saxon as a collector’s item but didn’t want to pay what the British entrepreneurs were asking.

      Like

  18. Spaceflight Now: ULA’s first launch of 2022 to debut unflown variant of Atlas 5 rocket
    https://spaceflightnow.com/2022/01/20/ulas-first-launch-of-the-year-to-debut-unflown-variant-of-workhorse-atlas-5-rocket/

    …“We call it the ‘Big Slider’ because if you watch the launch, you’re going to see it kind of power slide off the pad because of this asymmetric torque,” Bruno said in a video posted on YouTube by ULA. “A lot of you wonder how do you fly that. That nozzle (of the solid rocket booster) is canted to pass through the average center of gravity, and the RD-180 has tremendous control authority with its thrust vector system, and it can overcome that and compensate for it, and this is just the right amount of energy to carry these two payloads to their very cool mission of space surveillance.”…

    …ULA is developing the upgraded Vulcan Centaur rocket to replace the Atlas and Delta rocket families.

    There are 26 more Atlas 5 rockets remaining in ULA’s inventory, …
    ####

    So 26 more flights using the Russian engine until I guess they’ll be using their own all American rockets. So when someone asks “What has Russia done for US?” You can answer “Lifted your $1b+ spy satellites in to orbit for over two decades because it is far better than anything you’ve produced.” Good website. This one too so I’ll post the link to the ISS Nauka mis-firing incident:

    https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2021/07/nauka-docking/

    Like

  19. Russian blogpost:

    Military equipment

    olga1982a
    January 22nd, 10:17

    At the Smolensk railway stationan unusual accumulation of military equipment, the correspondent of the channel “We can explain”. Trains with dozens of BMD-2s (amphibious assault vehicles), tanks (presumably T-72B), ZILs for transporting infantry and medical unit vehicles were stationed here from about noon. In total — about a hundred pieces of equipment on three railway tracks.

    In the evening, the military began moving towards the western border. The Smolensk region borders Belarus, where the largest military exercises in recent years will start in February, including paratroopers. Western politicians and media suspect that these exercises may be a prologue to the beginning of the invasion of the Ukraine.

    Yes, Olga.

    And it could also be a prologue to exercises in in the Smolensk Oblast, couldn’t it — but you don’t know!

    Like

    1. The beginning of ‘the’ invasion of Ukraine. You know, ‘the’ invasion that everyone knows is going to happen, worst-kept secret in the world. And what preparations, pray, are being made across the border in operationally-ready Ukraine to meet this wall of metal? Wouldn’t it be sort of inexcusable to be surprised at this point?

      She just said major exercises are scheduled in and near Belarus in February, which it almost is, and they are headed that way. But people have learned to not be deceived by appearances and denials.

      Like

    2. Over many years, I have seen military trains trundling along the line past my dacha territory southwestwards towards the Chihuahua lands or Poland or Berlin even, or in railyard sidings that I pass on my way to our country retreat.

      As far as I am aware, since I have lived here and have been noticing such trains, Russian armed forces have never invaded those aforementioned countries.

      Like

      1. https://vk.com/wall-163061027_1721107

        https://vk.com/video-163061027_456257243?list=51e6010dd5aecea61a

        Oh shit!

        The balloon must have gone up!

        Readovka
        Jan 18 at 2:34 pm

        In the Moscow region a train with tanks has been noticed.

        A Russian has posted a video on tiktok showing a train loaded with tanks. The woman explained that the video was made in the Moscow region.

        Foreign and domestic commentators were divided into two camps: some wrote that in this way military equipment was being sent to Kazakhstan, others to the Ukraine.

        Alexander Lukashenko said yesterday that Russian troops and equipment are already on the territory of Belarus for joint military exercises that would take place in two places: on the western outskirts of the country, not far from Poland and Lithuania, two NATO member countries, and along the border with the Ukraine. According to the Belarusian dictator, such measures were a reaction to “the ongoing militarization of European countries”.

        Like

  20. 13: 46 22.01.2022 (updated: 14: 33 on 22.01.2022)
    The US and NATO have launched a “toxic” campaign against Moscow, the Foreign Ministry has said
    Foreign Ministry: The US and NATO have launched a toxic campaign with false accusations against Russia

    MOSCOW, January 22-RIA Novosti. In response to Russia’s proposals for security guarantees, the United States and other NATO members have launched a “toxic” campaign with false accusations against Moscow, the report says.

    Instead of pausing and focusing on answering the substance of the questions raised in the Russian documents, the White House and its Western allies have launched an extremely toxic information and propaganda campaign that presents our country as an ‘aggressor’, an ‘enemy of civilized Europe’ and a ‘threat’ to international stability,

    the ministry said.

    They noted that since December 15 last year, when the draft agreements were officially handed over to the American side, Moscow has mostly seen “obvious attempts to delay the discussion of specific parameters” and formats of the treaty.

    The diplomats also recalled that earlier the State Department had distributed a “collection of facts” with “debunking” theses on this topic. Head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov has stated that these documents are “impossible to read”. According to him, it is enough to open any page of the text at random so as to realize that the content did not stand up to any criticism.

    “And the very fact that the State Department published such ‘guidelines’ immediately on the eve of the talks between Foreign Minister of the Russian Federation S.V. Lavrov and US Secretary of State E. Blinken in Geneva can only be called an outright provocation”, the ministry added.

    Russia demands that NATO provide legal guarantees against further expansion of the alliance to the east, against the Ukraine joining the bloc and against the establishment of military bases in post-Soviet countries.

    On 10 January, the Moscow proposals were discussed at the strategic stability dialogue in Geneva. This was followed by a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council in Brussels and consultations at the Vienna platform of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

    Like

    1. First the USA shite:

      Now the Russian response:

      The Russian Federation Ministry of Foreign Affairs
      Press Service / Publications and Refutations / Refutations / Examples of Publications Replicating Inaccurate Information about Russia

      22 January 2022 00:27
      Response to the US Department of State’s fact sheet Facts vs. Fiction: Russian Disinformation on Ukraine

      It begins thus:

      ❌ “Fact” cited by the US Department of State:

      False statements from the Putin regime blame the victim, Ukraine, for Russia’s aggression. Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014, occupies Crimea, controls armed forces in the Donbass, and has now amassed more than 100,000 troops on the border with Ukraine while President Putin threatens “retaliatory military-technical” measures if his demands are not met.

      ❗ Reality:

      The blame for destabilising the situation in Ukraine lies entirely with the United States and other NATO countries, which supported the coup in February 2014, resulting in the toppling of the duly elected president and nationalists coming to power. Fearing for their own safety, residents of Crimea and Donbass chose not to live under the government of the followers of Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych. As a result, Crimea reunited with Russia, the Donetsk and Lugansk regions declared independence, and Kiev unleashed a civil war against Donbass, which continues to this day.

      and continues further.

      Like

      1. The Foreign Ministry has analyzed in detail all the facts from the State Department’s publication, which it considers false.

        On the causes of the crisis in the Ukraine
        The State Department said that Russia invaded the Ukraine in 2014, occupies the Crimea, controls the armed forces in the Donbass and “continues to foment conflict” in the east of the country.

        In response, the Foreign Ministry said that the United States and other NATO countries were initially completely to blame for the beginning of the conflict in the Ukraine. They supported the 2014 coup d’etat, “which overthrew the legitimately elected president and brought nationalists to power”. In order to flee from the new government, the residents of the Crimea and the Donbass wished to secede from Ukraine.

        Thus, the war against the Donbass was unleashed not by Russia, but by Kiev itself, and NATO is indirectly to blame for it, the Foreign Ministry concluded.

        Now, the Foreign Ministry notes, “the Ukrainian authorities and the West playing along with them “are trying to make Russia a party to the conflict in the Donbass. However, the ministry explained that Russia is not a party to the conflict. This is recorded in the Second Minsk Agreement, which was agreed in 2015 by the leaders of Germany, France, the Ukraine and Russia. The agreement defines Kiev, Donetsk and Luhansk as the parties to the conflict in eastern Ukraine. Russia is recognized as a mediator in resolving the crisis.

        On the persecution of Russian speakers in the Ukraine
        The State Department notes that there are no reliable reports that any ethnic Russians or Russian-speaking citizens are under threat from the Ukrainian government. At the same time, the United States considers credible reports of persecution of Ukrainians in the Crimea and the Donbas. According to the American side, in the Crimea, Russia is forcing Ukrainians to take Russian citizenship. Those who peacefully protest against the Russian government are arrested, tortured, and their homes searched. “Religious and ethnic minorities [in the Crimea] are being persecuted as ‘extremists’ and ‘terrorists’ “, the State Department added.

        The Russian Foreign Ministry, for its part, points out that violations of the rights of the Russian-speaking population in the Ukraine have reached “monstrous proportions”.

        “The country’s authorities are adopting discriminatory laws on language, education, and so-called ‘indigenous peoples’, forcing the Russian language out of all spheres of life”, the Foreign Ministry said.

        The Russian Foreign Ministry also recalled the “xenophobic” statement of the Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky, who, as the Foreign Ministry clarified, in August 2021 publicly suggested that ethnic Russians “get out of the country”.

        Probably, they are talking about Zelensky’s speech on August 5 last year, when he said that the territories of Donetsk and Luhansk regions not controlled by Kiev would never be Russian. Zelensky urged residents of the Donbass who consider themselves Russian to leave for Russia.

        “I believe that if you live on the territory of the temporarily occupied Donbass today, and you believe that ‘our cause is just’, and we joining Russia as we are Russians, then it is a big mistake [for such a person] to stay in the Donbas. I believe that such persons should understand that in the name of their children and grandchildren, they should already be looking for a place to live in Russia”.

        The Russian Foreign Ministry found it strange that the United States does not notice such Russophobic statements and other harassment of Russian speakers in the Ukraine.

        “It is amazing why the United States, which usually cares about human rights, refuses to notice the open discrimination of Russian-speaking citizens of the Ukraine. Maybe this is due to the fact that they do not consider Russians as people? ” the Foreign Ministry asked.

        As for the residents of the Crimea, the Foreign Ministry pointed out that the situation of national minorities in the region, on the contrary, had improved after the region became part of Russia. “We are convinced that the West is deliberately spreading disinformation about alleged problems in the Crimea in order to distract the international community’s attention from the blatant human rights situation in the Ukraine”, the ministry explained.

        On the gathering of troops near the Ukrainian border
        The State Department reiterated that Russia is allegedly, “without any plausible explanation”, deploying troops, “including battle-hardened formations and offensive weapons”, along the borders of the Ukraine. According to the State Department, Russia is not simply just rotating the deployment of its troops on its territory, but id threatening the sovereignty of the Ukraine.

        The Foreign Ministry responded by pointing out that Russia regularly organizes military exercises on its territory. The United States itself undermines European security by deploying its weapons in foreign countries. In addition, the Foreign Ministry pointed out that the United States encourages Kiev’s aggression against the Donbass, since it supplies the Ukraine with weapons and its specialists.

        On Russia’s behaviour as a global aggressor
        This is not the first time that Russia has undermined the sovereignty and territorial integrity of its neighbouring countries, the State Department said. Thus, the department has pointed out that in 2008, Russia invaded Georgia and partially occupied it. Also, Russia had not yet withdrawn its troops and ammunition from Moldova, although the Moldovan government does not agree to this.

        The Russian Foreign Ministry said that Russia did not occupy the territory of Georgia. Abkhazia and South Ossetia have become independent states, and Russian troops are stationed there legitimately in accordance with bilateral agreements with these countries to prevent “Georgian aggression”. As for Moldova, Russia will withdraw its troops when the conflict between Chisinau and Tiraspol is resolved, which is recorded in OSCE documents, adopted with the participation of the United States.

        The Foreign Ministry noted that the United States itself uses disinformation as a pretext for a military invasion of independent states. NATO, the ministry added, is not a defensive alliance, since its member countries invaded Iraq and Afghanistan, and destroyed Libya.

        “NATO is pursuing an extremely aggressive partnership policy, actively developing the territories of Finland and Sweden, the Ukraine, and Georgia, and making attempts to gain a foothold in the countries of Central Asia. It is creating objects in post-Soviet space that are dangerous from the point of view of a biological threat”, the ministry concluded.

        source

        Like

  21. And now the latest wheeze from Londonistan:

    22 Jan, 2022 13:25
    UK to accuse Russia of working to install pro-Moscow leader in Ukraine – leak
    Numerous former Ukrainian politicians have been cooperating with Russian intelligence services, according to London

    An embargoed UK Foreign Office release to media outlets, which has been seen by RT, claims that Britain has exposed a plan by Moscow to install a pro-Russian leader in Kiev as tensions continue to mount over an alleged threat of “invasion” by Moscow.

    “We have information that indicates the Russian government is looking to install a pro-Russian leader in [Kiev] as it considers whether to invade and occupy Ukraine”, reads the correspondence, which was sent to media representatives on the Foreign Office mailing list on Saturday. No evidence was included to back up the assertions.

    Obviously timed to top the Sunday newspaper agenda, recipients were ordered not to carry the details until after 10.30pm London time the night before.

    Got you rumbled, Ivan — eh, what?

    You can’t easily pull wool over John Bull’s eyes doncha know already!

    Like

    1. A recent YouTube video from Alexander Mercouris highlighted the confusion and panic in NATO and EU over the Russian demands – tough/aggressive speeches being canceled at the last moment and replaced with begging for an extra week to provide the written response. There are hints that the Western Empire will back down and accept the core demands while doing chest pounding (sorry, that is not woke unless done by a female), threatening Russia over an invasion that will never come, etc. The slightly less insane leadership in the west understands that Russia has waited, accepting NATO’s expansion and Western sanction while building up its military and economic resiliency until it can draw red lines that can not be crossed.

      The remaining gambit for the West is a Ukraine false flag or attempted invasion of the Donbass. Some think that Russia may stop the invasion (highly likely) and allow the rebellion to spread to everywhere east of the Dnieper river (a possibility that may not be within the control of Russia). The remainder of Ukraine would fragment and be absorbed by bordering countries after much haggling. The upside for the West is that Ukraine will no longer by a liability for NATO and EU. Speculation for sure.

      Like

      1. I kind of thought Ukraine was going to be the west’s ticket out of this mess; that after getting all kinds of political mileage out of the fabricated invasion, the west would announce that it is backing down just a little – nothing major, mind, but just meeting some of Russia’s demands – to save Ukraine. Otherwise, Putin was definitely going to invade. And you better believe we could have punched his ticket, the jacky prick. But instead, we swallowed our pride, and stood down…because the loss of innocent life in Ukraine would have been too great a risk. Seriously, he was going to kill everyone. He bragged about it.

        Wouldn’t it be beautiful? They used Ukraine to goad Russia into reacting, used Ukraine as the foundation of a huge international PR campaign to whip up fear and hatred against Russia, and then they could use Ukraine again as an excuse for not going to war against Russia.

        We’ll see how it shakes out. But I am confident about one thing – the west either is sure that Russia is not really going to invade Ukraine, or is going to make no attempt whatever to stop it. Aside from heartstring-tugging pictures of the brave civil defense forces drilling with wooden cutouts of guns – if that wasn’t the most pathetic propaganda I have ever seen, it was definitely in the top five – Ukraine is not apparently making any redeployments of armor or troops or calling up the reserves or anything you would expect a country to do which was bracing for an imminent military invasion. And that goes double for the west; no round-the-clock touch-and-goes of Stratolifters from the west landing western troops and armor to counter Putin, not even any western forces placed on 48-hour standby to move.

        I am sure in my own mind that the Russian forces marshaled on the other side of the border with Ukraine were there to serve as a tacit warning to Kiev that Russia is watching, and if it had any ideas about overrunning the Donbas and restoring it to Ukrainian control by violence, it had better reconsider. It stands to reason; Zelensky’s popularity is all but gone because he is so ineffective and has not really accomplished anything, the nationalists are spoiling for some action and Zelensky’s promises of peacefully restoring Ukraine’s former sovereign territory have come to nothing, and there is growing feeling that Ukraine’s support partners regard Zelensky as a clown and the country as a beggar. Zelensky needs a distraction that culminates in a success, and probably his advisors have told him the Donbas would be a pushover so long as it was taken by surprise.

        Like

    2. It seems based on a fairly simple formula, to me. Always believe Ukraine, no matter how far-fetched it sounds. Never lend any credence to anything Russia says, no matter how sensible or even verifiable it may be. Of course ‘former Ukrainian politicians’ – probably someone like Parubiy – are full to bursting with stories of Russian intrigue and aggression, like the SBU is full to bursting with damning intercepts of Russian radio intercepts which prove they are plotting to assassinate Zelensky, poison Kyiv’s water supply and steal the moon. But there’s just something about Ukraine – perhaps what a lucrative market it is for whatever is cluttering up the UK defense junkyard this week that the government wants to get rid of – that makes gullible yokels of the British. Mind you, they are probably shown tons of ‘evidence’ which ‘proves’ what the Ukies are telling them beyond all doubt. Just like all the proof they were shown that Russia shot down MH-17.

      Like

  22. Euractiv: Second investigation into Abramovich citizenship launched
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/second-investigation-into-abramovich-citizenship-launched/

    Portuguese public prosecutors have opened a formal investigation into granting Portuguese nationality to Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich under the Nationality Law for Sephardic Jews, the office of the attorney general said on Wednesday.

    …The granting of Portuguese citizenship to Abramovich, best known for his ownership of English Premier League football club Chelsea, resulted from a process overseen by Porto’s Jewish community in the framework of the Nationality Law for Sephardic Jews, who were expelled from the Iberian Peninsula in the 16th century during the Catholic Inquisition.

    Under the scheme, to obtain nationality, an applicant must prove that they belong to a Sephardic community, regardless of the country of current residence. However, the final decision and legal certification of the documents are the responsibility of the state registry and the justice ministry….

    …The Abramovich case drew criticism from Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who wrote on Twitter that the Russian tycoon, considered close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, “has finally found a country where he can pay some bribes and make some semi-official and official payments to end up in the European Union (EU) and NATO”.

    The Portuguese government refuted Navalny’s criticism. Granting Portuguese nationality to Abramovich is in accordance with a 2014 law, which “thousands of people” have already made use of, said Foreign Minister Augusto Santos Silva…
    ####

    I hope Abramovich takes him to court and cleans him out.

    Yes, Navalny is a very nasty guy, but as we know anyone who is against Russia is a hero even if they are racist, bigoted, nazi, jihadi or some other type of extremist. The European Parliament must be proud of supporting such an a-hole.

    Like

    1. Surely Abramovich is Ashkenazi? His family name has the typically indeclinable Belorussian suffix
      “-ovich” added onto “Abram”.

      Sephardic Jews usually have Latinate family names, e.g. D’Israeli, Da Costa.

      Ashkenazi often have German sounding family names such as Blinken, Nudelman, Apfelbaum, Gessen, Epstein . . .

      Like

        1. If you look up the conditions for claiming citizenship it includes other stuff so the requirement is not simply that you have an ancestor. Also that you have no serious criminal convictions etc..

          Like

    2. He probably does not have much, but it would be worth it to take him to court where he would probably defend himself – he’s a lawyer, you know, just like Annalena Baerbock – and a real lawyer could stitch him up like a souvenir pillow. He should be made to prove his allegations in court – that Abramovich is in the habit of paying bribes and that he did so to gain European citizenship, and to whom the bribes were paid, and in this way the number of people lined up against him to sue his worthless ass into next week would grow and grow. We all know Navalny is a liar, but he should be held up to the world as the liar he is until even the chowderheaded Europeans must acknowledge that he was caught lying over and over.

      Like

      1. To my knowledge, Navalny has never won a case off his own bat. He defended himself once, yonks ago, and lost. Interestingly, though, the ECHR always finds for him.

        How strange!

        Many here may not be aware of the following expression, but almost 40-odd years ago, former UK prime minister Thatcher was rather fond of repeating ad nauseum that “the law is sacrosanct”. Well in my humble opinion, that’s just a load of dog’s bollocks: the law is an instrument of state, to be used to help fulfil government policy. The “law” is not immutable, carved in stone or bloody sacrosanct, as is the “law” of nature, according to which, for example, every living thing dies and nothing can change that fact and most certainly, no law can be passed against dying.

        Interestingly, when that bitch Thatcher was mouthing it off continuously about the holy nature of the law, she and her government were in breach of law, in that the Ministry of Education had broken a contract with university lecturers and was undergoing a long legal process instigated by the professional society of academics or whatever it is called in the UK. However, the majority of oiks think that “the law” solely involves criminals and their arrest by your friendly British plod, so a “lawbreaker” is somebody to be reviled by all the good, decent folk in society.

        I remember when, during the year-long British miners’ strike of 1984-1985, after the then British government, Thatcher’s government, had passed “laws” against “secondary picketing”, a BBC journalist approached me whilst I was doing just that, namely secondary picketing away from the place of my employment: he was a real smarmy bastard and approached me with a mic and asked” “What does it feel like to break the law?”

        I replied: “What does it feel like to be a cunt?”

        I don’t think my brief interview with that arsehole was broadcast.

        Like

  23. A major fire in California has been named the “Colorado fire”. I suppose the next fire may be named “Putin’s fire”, or “Free Crimea Fire”. I wonder if the government sells naming rights to wildfires

    Like

    1. How about “Latynina Fire”?

      You know, after her who once said that huge forest fires that cause loss of life and damage to property only happen in 3rd-world shitholes, such as is “Putin’s Mafia State”.

      Like

      1. Yes; it could become an instantly-adopted natural-disaster term, like ‘heat dome’ and ‘atmospheric river’, both of which are now firmly ensconced in modern western weather reporting, despite both resulting for someone unimportant’s efforts to describe them rather than any peculiar scientific characteristic.

        Like

        1. A term around here is “polar vortex” associated with a prolonged cold spell. I first noticed the term is 2014 or thereabouts introduced by TV weather people. Turns out the biggest draw in local news is weather hence the focus on amping up new, dramatic and scary terminology.

          Like

          1. BBC and UK newspaper favourites are “Snowmaggedon” and “Thundersnow” and “Beast from the East”.

            But the most used term in the UK for inclement winter weather is “Arctic conditions” — meaning minus 1C and sleet.

            By the way, we’re having a normal Moscow winter here this winter: Moscow has been under snow since the end of November. On 2 December last year, I had great difficulty tramping from the country railway station through deep snow to our dacha. I remember thinking that a sled and a team of huskies would come in handy. In recent years, we have experienced some exceptionally warm winters. I think it was about 5 or 6 years ago when there was no snow or frost at New Year. Bloody awful!

            But this past month we have had record snowfalls and snowdrifts in Moscow are now 80% above the average for January and they may exceed the record year of 1956. They say the snowfall that we have had all last week and right up to this afternoon will at last peter out this coming week, but at the same time it will freeze to minus 24 degrees Celsius.

            Like

            1. The winter in the upper Midwest of the US started mild, then became cooler and drier than normal and now turning downright cold and snowy. I prefer snow on the ground as it brightens the mood and covers the blight. Today’s snow is powdery and with little wind – simply gorgeous.

              Like

            2. We had the “Siberian Clipper” for a severe cold wave but then the terminology changed to the “Alberta Clipper”; probably because the cold air mass originated from Alberta – a rare nod to accuracy on the MSM.

              Like

  24. A rather good video on the prospects of the Russian economy linked below. The commentator also makes the astute observation that Russian nuclear and conventional military forces will forestall the West’s use of military violence to stop non-compliant countries.

    Like

  25. Patrick Armstrong’s latest Russia Sitrep is quite good, including the usual smorgasbord of delicacies. Among them, that the ICAO quietly agreed with Belarus that there was nothing shady about the diversion of the Ryanair flight carrying dissident weasel Roman Protasevich. Remember his frantic squealing that the whole thing had been about him?

    https://patrickarmstrong.ca/2022/01/20/russian-federation-sitrep-20-january-2022/

    Curiously – or perhaps not – there is no record of the receipt of the bomb threat or of the decision to divert to Minsk on the plane’s flight deck recorder. Nope; the ‘careless’ flight crew left the recorder on when they landed, and all that potentially very useful information was overwritten.

    Nary a word about hero Protasevich, I notice, since he claimed to have come to understand some of Lukashenko’s decisions in a whole new light.

    Like

    1. The story in the MSM is still that the plane was forced to land by a fighter jet, despite the ICAO report proving otherwise.

      Like

      1. Yes, as the saying goes, a lie is halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its boots. But I can think of no explanation but malice for continuing to report something which has been finalized otherwise.

        Like

        1. But I can think of no explanation but malice for continuing to report something which has been finalized otherwise.

          Laziness, why do late fact checking especially if the original story is a better seller? I’m not discounting malice too.

          Like

  26. https://www.rt.com/russia/546858-german-admiral-resigns-comments-crimea/

    Germany’s Navy chief, vice-admiral Kay-Achim Schoenbach, has vacated his post on Saturday evening – just a day after he said that Crimea “will never come back”, and that Putin and Russia “probably deserve respect.”

    Schoenbach asked Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht to “relieve me from my duties with immediate effect,” with the minister accepting his resignation, according to a statement cited by Reuters.

    Speaking at an event organized by an Indian think tank in New Delhi on Friday, the vice-admiral dismissed as “nonsense” the notion that Russia was “interested in having a small and tiny strip of Ukraine soil and integrating it into their country.”

    Schoenbach went on to claim that what President Putin wanted was the West to “respect” Russia, adding that “it is easy to give him the respect he really demands — and probably also deserves.” Addressing the issue of Crimea, the German Navy commander opined that the “peninsula is gone” and “will never come back — this is a fact.”

    Heresy! Walk the plank!

    A warning to all other dissenting voices it would seem. But, his view may represent the majority of Germany’s military officers.

    Like

    1. The impudent, oh-so-full-of-it Yukietards in Kiev DEMANDED that the German government apologize for what that former German admiral had said, even though he had made it clear that he was expressing his personal opinion and not that of the German Ministry of Defence.

      More and more I want to say the following to those Galitsian maggots that have long been running the show in Banderastan: “Don’t you people ever STFU?”

      Like

      1. I suspect Germany feels the same, or at least many who run it. Ukraine gets more and more entitled by the day, they’ve already been onto Canada, demanding to know why Melanie Joly only gave them a bit of money but did not announce the transfer of any weapons, which of course are ‘desperately needed’.

        Like

    2. Yes, the west always suggests in such cases that while the freedom of speech is beyond question in the western democracies, you must also assume responsibility for what you say.

      Unless you are a politician, of course, in which case you just say “I misspoke” or “my remark was taken out of context”, and it’s as if it never happened. Look at that idiot Sikorsky and his transparent lie that he was present when Putin said in his hearing that Ukraine was not a real country. No penalty at all for lying, and still eking out a living in politics, ecstatically respected in some quarters. Or that wasted fuck Ferguson who brought the whole COVID foolishness down on us after a track record of wildly overestimating the death toll for virtually every illness in the decade before that, but still advising the British government.

      Like


  27. German Mister of Defence, Frau Lambrecht, German Social Democratic Party (SPD), a 56-year-ld lawyer.

    Former German Vice Admiral Kay-Achim Schoenbach, who had had the temerity to state publicly his opinion that the Crimea “will never come back”, and that Vladimir Putin and Russia “probably deserve respect”, asked Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht to relieve him of his duties with immediate effect.

    Lambrecht accepted his resignation, according to a statement cited by Reuters.

    This woman visited German NATO troops in Lithuania on 20 December 2021, where she stated:

    We need to tell Russia clearly that it has no right to dictate to NATO partners on how they should behave.

    Ahead of her visit to the Chihuahua State, Lambrecht had called for harsher sanctions against Russia over its troop deployment.

    “Those responsible for any aggression had to face ‘personal consequences’, she told German weekly “Bild am Sonntag”, adding that Germany and its allies should put Russian President Vladimir Putin and his entourage “in our sights”.

    Tough talk from a minister of an occupied state!

    Like

    1. I’m sure Lord Vlademort and his minions are quavering at the thought of being banned from going shopping for running shoes in a ritzy shopping mall in Milan and going for coffee at a Starbuck’s outlet there in the next lot of sanctions that Lamprecht proposes.

      Like

  28. Ukrainian Ambassador to Germany Andrey Melnyk has commented to the”Die Welt” newspaper on the resignation of the commander of the German Navy, Vice Admiral Kai-Achim Schönbach, who had previously stated that the Crimea would not return to the Ukraine.

    According to him, the Ukrainian side welcomes Schönbach’s decision to resign. The diplomat also added that the incident “seriously calls into question the international credibility and reliability of Germany”.

    Melnyk noted that the words of the German commander plunged the entire Ukrainian public into a deep shock.

    https://www.gazeta.ru/politics/news/2022/01/23/17180149.shtml

    The “Die Welt” article referred to above:

    “German arrogance and megalomania” – Ukrainian ambassador not satisfied with Schönbach’s resignation


    Prima Donna Andrey Melnyk, Banderastan ambassador in Germany

    In the Ukraine, the statements of the former navy chief Schönbach have been received with horror. The resignation of the vice-admiral is not enough for the Ukrainian ambassador Andrij Melnyk – the German government must adjust its policy. The scandal has left “a shambles” in its wake.

    The Ukrainian ambassador to Germany, Andrij Melnyk, has described the resignation of Vice Admiral Kay-Achim Schönbach as insufficient and called on the German government to fundamentally change its position in the Russian-Ukrainian conflict. “We welcome the fact that Mr Schönbach has offered his resignation”, Melnyk told WELT on Saturday evening. However, the scandal has left “a shambles” and “massively questions Germany’s international credibility and reliability – not only from the Ukrainian point of view”.

    Schönbach had previously come under massive criticism for, amongst other things, expressing during an appearance in India sympathy for Russian President Vladimir Putin. “What he really wants is respect on an equal footing. And – my God – showing respect to someone costs almost nothing, costs nothing. So if you ask me: it’s easy to give him the respect he demands – and probably deserves”. He also stated that the Ukraine had lost the Crimea.

    Melnyk further said WELT that Schönbach’s statements had “sent the entire Ukrainian public into deep shock”. He drew a comparison to the time of National Socialism: “With this condescending attitude, the Ukrainians felt unconsciously reminded of the horrors of the Nazi occupation, when the Ukrainians were treated as subhuman”, said Melnyk.

    The statements speak of “German arrogance and megalomania, with which one of the highest-ranking heads of the Bundeswehr dreams of a holy alliance with the war criminal Putin and of a German-Russian modern crusade against China”. Melnyk spoke of a “cynical trivialization of the illegal occupation of Crimea” and a haughty questioning of the sovereignty of the Ukraine.

    Attaboy, Andrey!

    You tell ’em how it is!

    But if the prick is “not satisfied” with Schönbach’s resignation, what does he think should be done with him?

    Like

    1. The resignation could be start of a “me too” tsunami if other mentally abused military officers step forward! ha ha ha

      Like

    1. How could anyone doubt the sincere and peaceful intention of the US military – Admiral Kirby oozes friendliness and gosh-I-just-want-to-help. Or, he could be a sociopath who can ooze as needed.

      At first I thought that German admiral was a Russian because he was not smiling.

      Like

      1. I am not a Russian and I seldom smile — though I might occasionally smile at small children and amusing animals such as kittens. I most certainly do not smile at strangers or at those to whom I am introducing myself or am being introduced. I mistrust those who walk around with a fixed smile and say “Hi!” to everyone (I never say “hi” either: it sounds so childish to me, it being a contraction from “How are you?” through “How are ya?” through “Hiya!” to “Hi!”)

        What I have written above is absolutely true: I am not being cynical.

        I have no friends either, only those people who are fortunate enough to have been recognized by me as my acquaintances. I don’t want any friends: never have done. I think friends can be burdensome.

        Again, I am being absolutely serious in what I have just written.

        The only person whom I could describe at a push as being my friend is Natalya Vladimirovna, but she’s my wife, and I shouldn’t wish to get over friendly with her. (Now I am being a little sarcastic — but only a little)

        Like

        1. I have few friends and mostly spend time with my brother whom is of like mind with me if not working. A lot of people know me because of my position in the business community but I do not know them. I do not belong to business groups, or country clubs or civic organizations. I do smile as it is a good defense and draws little attention. I tell my son he only should have a few friends that he can rely on, any more would be overhead. Sometimes, I do feel like smiling to be clear, especially after a few drinks.

          Like

          1. My married son, who is now 22 years old, is at present kind of transforming from being my son into being my friend and I am not only his father but his friend as well. I only realized this a few weeks ago when he called round and only I was at home and we had a long chat.

            Like

        2. @ ME: Friendships among men are very different from friendships among women but Western societies these days attribute too much importance to the way in which women maintain friendships (perhaps because the people who write about the nature of friendship and how to maintain friends in the media, literature and perhaps academia tend to be women) and undervalue the way in which men maintain friendships. It’s very likely that you have more friends than you realise but it is not necessary for you to maintain those friendships the way most women do or are expected to do.

          When I observe the way my mother talks with her friends either face to face or via phone, and how many of her interactions with these friends seem to resemble manipulation of one sort or another (wanting sympathy or picking her brain, controlling her life by telling her to update to the latest technology or adopt fad diets), plain bullying, and (especially during the current COVID-19 pandemic) hysteria, I’m glad I don’t have very many “friends” either. It’s enough for me to catch up with people now and again a few times a year perhaps to see how they’re faring.

          Like

          1. Social media has redefined what a “friend” is – more like an audience member who likes your performance, posturing etc.. Social media is destroying naturally formed friendships based on good and bad shared experiences. I have more friends than I may be able to list but I sometimes wonder what their motivations are to be my friend. I tend to be overly generous as a defensive move so they go away. As I age, I am becoming more friendly – go figure.

            Like

              1. On the other hand, unlike you PO, I am becoming more unfriendly, in that I often isolate myself at the dacha. And these past 2 years of shamdemic have been a boon to me in that respect, as I have been able to live as a recluse in the sticks, enjoying there only occasional visits from my wife and younger daughter, without suffering the scorn of Mrs. Exile, who previously, when I escaped to the sticks alone, used to accuse me of avoiding my responsibilities in Moscow.

                Like

                1. There is a considerable difference between politeness and friendliness, just as there is a considerable difference between courtesy and respect. It is customary between North Americans to exchange polite smiles, but that does not mean we go around all day grinning like Hallowe’en pumpkins. I know that is regarded with suspicion in eastern Europe, where they perhaps suspect that smiley people are going to hit them up for a loan if they smile back, but there typically is no more to it than if they had murmured “good morning” in the country’s native language.

                  I would say, then, that while I remain as polite as ever, I am a lot less friendly as well, because of the new knowledge that about 80% of the people with whom I share the country affect to believe it is okay to impose additional taxes on me because I and my kind – meaning the unvaccinated, which I would still be if the talking penii at Transport Canada had not flung about orders to get vaccinated or lose your livelihood – ‘overburden the medical system’, that we are ‘stupid’ because we would not take vaccination when it was offered free, just as if taking everything that is free were the mark of the true intellectual, and that we should pay out of our pockets for our medical care while our taxes continue to furnish free care for the smart people who are vaccinated. There is no implicit warmth in politeness as there is in friendliness.

                  Like

          2. On the subject of women’s friendships, one of the most fascinating books I ever read was Kate Filion’s “Lip Service; the Truth About Women’s Darker Side in Love, Sex and Friendship”. Told as a series of vignettes using fictional characters whose situations paralleled real but unnamed subjects, the book examined flawed relationship dynamics such as the woman who assured her friend that the presentation she would give to senior executives at her company the next morning was perfect. In fact it was riddled with errors and she got torn apart – but her friend reasoned that what she had needed to hear was support, not criticism. I’m sure I’ve mentioned the book before, because it was one of the most influential I ever read.

            The biggest difference I have noticed in friendships between women and between men is that when there is a disagreement, even if it turns into a fight, if men say ‘Forget it’, they mean it. It probably will never be mentioned again, but more significantly, neither man will be nursing a sense of grievance and betrayal. ‘Forget it’ means it probably will disappear from both their minds by the end of that night. When women say ‘Forget it’, whether it is to a man or another woman but especially if it is to a man, it means, “Not only will I never forget it, I will remember the shirt you were wearing when you said that, the advertising pitch on the poster behind your head, what color nail polish you were wearing (if it was a woman) and the ambient temperature.” Women never forget a slight, or something they interpreted as a slight. Whether it affects their feelings about you for life depends largely on their personality, but ‘Forget it’ is just a warning.

            Like

  29. The BBCpar excellance!

    Compare and contrast:

    Do Ukrainians and Russians believe a full-scale war is possible?
    Published 1 day ago


    I love the ukraine

    Analysis by James Waterhouse, BBC Kyiv correspondent
    “You can’t interview me I’m kind of famous in Ukraine ha ha!”

    OK, I confess I didn’t know who the woman was, but her thoughts didn’t exactly seem preoccupied by a possible invasion on her country.

    Her mood is matched by many at the snowy Kyiv food market we cross paths in, which wouldn’t look out of place on a Christmas card.

    “Russia can do anything thanks to Putin, who is unpredictable,” says Volodymyr, who’s less concerned about his celebrity status.

    “As long as Putin is there, risk will always remain.”

    And that’s a sentiment echoed across Ukraine. Since Russia annexed Ukraine’s southern Crimea peninsula and backed militants in the eastern Donbas region in 2014, there’s been no real let-up in fighting, cyber-attacks and misinformation.

    Anastasia is more optimistic, saying: “I’m not worried because we have good authorities and our president. I think they can manage it. They protect us, that’s why we elected them.”

    Viktor isn’t worried either, but does get basic military training at his university, which is common in Ukraine.

    “We’d like it not to happen, but if needed, we’ll be ready to properly resist the aggressor,” he says.

    So would he and his friends would be willing to fight?

    “Yes, there are no doubts about it,” he replies.

    “Because we need to defend our country, our independence, and most importantly, freedom.”

    Her mood is matched by many at the snowy Kyiv food market we cross paths in, which wouldn’t look out of place on a Christmas card.

    How sweet! Christmassy scenes in Kiev to set the mood. And yes James, it does tend to snow in Kiev in January, unlike in the UK.

    But what the fuck has the twee, snow-bedecked Kiev market to do with the coming “invasion”?

    No mention of snowy scenes here, though, in the report from Moscow:

    Carrie Davies, BBC News Moscow correspondent

    Oh look! Communist Party supporters and red banners on Manezh Square with Marshal Zhukov’s equestrian statue clearly visible. And although its snowing, its most definately not a Christmassy scene.

    In Russia, state-run newspapers and media outlets blame the West for aggression, mirroring the Kremlin’s language.

    While the defence alliance, Nato, and the US warn of an imminent invasion, many people are still unconvinced that war will happen or that it would be to Russia’s advantage.

    In central Moscow, some think that the threat has been exaggerated by the West.

    “Every year, according to them, Russia plans to invade Ukraine,” said 24-year-old Andrei.

    “Meanwhile, we all sit here and listen to the news with eyes wide open and think: ‘Really? Again? Weren’t we supposed to invade last year?’ I think the West is just using this issue for their own interests.”

    Olga was adamant that America was to blame for the tension and didn’t see the need for war.

    “What do we need Ukraine for? Leave them alone. I could understand it, to produce goods, if we had a need for more markets, more fields, but we have so much space here. We have access to the seaside. So what is it all for?”

    America’s proposed sanctions worry some, like Alexei.

    “The rouble (Russia’s currency) will fall and people will have it really bad. So this must be avoided. It is not people’s fault, but it will be ordinary people who will be hit,” he said.

    Analysts, journalists and politicians are still arguing about what President Vladimir Putin’s long-term intentions really are.

    But many in Russia would be taken by surprise if war was to start soon.

    Right at the very start, so as to set the mood:

    In Russia, state-run newspapers and media outlets blame the West for aggression, mirroring the Kremlin’s language.

    No state-run media in Banderastan, of course, where media in the Russian language is now forbidden and where the leader of the opposition party is under arrest. A beacon of democracy is Banderastan!

    Like

  30. “Phew!” says Putin, wiping his brow, “that’s saved our bacon!”:

    Dominic Raab has said it is “extremely unlikely” that troops will be sent into Ukraine in the event of a Russian invasion – but stressed there will be “severe economic consequences” for the Kremlin.

    The deputy prime minister also assessed the threat of an incursion by Russian forces as “very significant”, as he urged the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, to “step back from the brink”.

    Source: The independent

    Like

  31. Via a guest blog from the Saker:

    “Russia plans to engage its nuclear weapons not against those countries where it was launched against Russia, but against the mastermind cities where the decisions were made. To be exact, it is Washington, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and other American cities. Please fully understand, in case American nuclear weapons are launched from, eg. Taiwan, or Poland, the response will hit New York or Washington.” Russian Duma deputy, Yevgeny Fyodorov.

    Going straight to the big boss brushing aside the minions, ignoring the receptionist I see . This should be an end to Western strategies regarding tactical nukes.

    Like

    1. And a few days after the ‘declared’ nuclear powers stated together that ‘nuclear weapons must never be used.’ There is no ‘lower threshold’ that Washington has wet dreams about that it can claim to get away with.

      Like

  32. As correctly predicted yesterday, the leaked story that the British were going to allege that Russia was plotting to have installed a “Russia-friendly” Ukraine president has appeared in the Sunday UK rags.

    23 Jan, 2022 08:46
    Russia responds to British ‘coup’ allegations
    Russia has urged the UK to cease spreading false stories

    The Russian Foreign Ministry has dismissed a claim by the UK government that Moscow is plotting to install a puppet government in Kiev, calling on London’s Foreign Office to stop spreading “nonsense” and “disinformation.”

    The UK government sent a press release to media outlets on Saturday titled “Kremlin plan to install pro-Russian leadership in Ukraine exposed.” As previously reported by RT, it accused Moscow of seeking to install a more friendly government in Kiev as part of a supposed plan to “invade and occupy Ukraine.”

    British media outlets, including the BBC and the Financial Times, dutifully published the allegations in the middle of the night, adhering to the advised embargo. Only a handful of news outlets expressed some skepticism over the claims. The Guardian acknowledged some “confusion” as the claim “comes with scant detail,” while the AP conceded it was “unclear what means Britain believes Russia might use.”

    Despite the lack of evidence, the UK’s claims were almost immediately boosted by Washington, with a spokesperson for the White House’s National Security Council, Emily Horne, saying “this kind of plotting is deeply concerning.”

    Russia’s Foreign Ministry soon responded to the allegations with a statement of its own, shooting back at the UK government by accusing it of intentionally escalating tensions in Ukraine.

    “The disinformation spread by the UK Foreign Office is yet more evidence that it is NATO countries, foremost the Anglo-Saxons, who are escalating tensions around Ukraine,” it said. The ministry further called on the Foreign Office “to end its provocative activity, stop spreading nonsense and concentrate on studying the history of the Tatar-Mongol yoke,” in an apparent dig at Foreign Secretary Liz Truss’ recent speech.

    How it pisses me off to see that term “Anglo-Saxon” used when the correct terminology should be “Anglophone”!

    The UK is not “Anglo-Saxon”. There are plenty of Celts in the UK as well, together with descendants of the the Germanic Angles and Saxons — not to metion the Frisians and Jutes.

    And a very large number of folk in Australia and New Zealand and Canada are of Irish and Scots descent. Furthermore, over 25 years ago, for the first time in Australian history, the number of Australian citizens not descended from UK immigrants exceeded the number of those descended from “Whinging Poms”.

    But what really pisses me off is the labelling of the “Jew S.A.” as “Anglo-Saxon”. And “Jew S.A.” it most certainly seems to me to be, albeit that only 2% of the USA population describes itself as Jewish: the power that those people wield in the USA far exceeds what one would expect when considering their number.

    Perhaps the population of British North America that became the USA in 1783 was, by and large, Anglo-Saxon up to the 1840s, but after that, massive emigration to there from Europe changed the ethnic character of “White Americans”, most of whom (over 80%of the population) now being descended from immigrants who emigrated from what became the German Second Reich (1871-1918).

    This nonsensical term “Anglo-Saxon” as used in politics irritates many others, it seems, and not only me — witness this translation that I made long ago of an InoSMI article, the link to which I have unfortunately misplaced, deleted or whatever …

    Hurrah! Just found an English translation (not mine: mine was a translation of a Russian translation of the French original that appeared in InoSMI ).

    The French original: Par pitié, arrêtez de dire «les Anglo-Saxons».

    Here is my translation of the introductory paragraph in the Russian translation of the article that appeared in InoSMI:

    In France, they like to use the term “Anglo-Saxons” to describe the English-speaking countries. The term, probably, in the past really reflected the realities of British colonization, but does it still have any meaning today? The author acquaints the reader with the attitude to this concept of the “Anglophones” themselves.

    And here is the English translation of Par pitié, arrêtez de dire «les Anglo-Saxons» [For pity’s sake, stop saying “the Anglo-Saxons”].

    Please stop saying “the Anglo-Saxons”
    October 22, 2020

    They are ubiquitous and you haven’t even noticed them. They feed our fantasies, our fears but also our desires. Who? The Anglo-Saxons, of course. Not a day goes by without an article talking about “Anglo-Saxon model”, without a philosopher worrying about the importation of an “Anglo-Saxon” concept, without politicians opposing the French integration model to that, necessarily communitarian, of the “Anglo-Saxons”.

    Just writing these few lines pissed me off. Because nobody knows exactly what “Anglo-Saxon” means. Go ahead, give me a precise definition. I wait. Nothing? Normal. The truth is, there aren’t any: the Anglo-Saxons are sometimes the British, sometimes the Americans, sometimes the English-speaking world and sometimes an Anglo-American axis. The meaning of this expression is nebulous.

    Moreover, it is no coincidence that the term is hardly ever used by English-speaking people. “I hate that the French use it so much”, a former Franco-Canadian colleague recently confided to me. Its untimely use even tends to drive the British, Americans and Canadians who live in France a little crazy. I still remember the look my former colleagues at RFI English made when I used the expression in an editorial conference …

    Dear reader, read on via the link!

    By the way, I am Anglo-Saxon — the real deal: Anglo-Saxon family name from an eponymous Anglo-Saxon village in an Anglo-Saxon shire, where my family has lived for 1,000 years or more.

    I kid you not, though my Anglo-Saxon genes have been leavened somewhat by those of my Irish grandma.

    Waes hael!

    Like

    1. What made me laugh was there was a story earlier in the day that the Defense Minister Ben Wallace wanted ‘talks with Russia’ to whit Russia said ‘OK, but can you come here?” Quite clever really as the Brits had expelled lots of Russian diplomats so a senior UK minister coming to Moscow would show who is more desperate to get some PR face time.

      Then the above story you wrote about broke, pumped by the Foreign Office (or does ‘FO’ mean something else?).

      Either the UK government is incompetent and one hand doesn’t know what the other is doing, or it doesn’t care in particular the latter which looks like it is a story to take Boris’s regular work parties off the front page, or it was to kill any trip by any minister to Moscow.

      Either way, it looks and sounds stupid, which is about right.

      Like

      1. Well, it seems to me that the problem in the UK is the same as that in the US. Different factions in government have different agendas, and with no-one in overall charge, they just act independently. Really, it adds a whole new meaning to not agreement capable, yeah?

        Like

        1. Sometimes I suspect that is the plan so there is no single source to blame, just ‘accident.’ Much like the supposed differences in the United States where they wipe their own slate clean every two years or when the party objects. In part I can believe it is about domestic politics but also it’s hard to belive it is not by design because the USA doesn’t have to follow the rule as it is the Exceptional Notion.

          Like

    1. “… Tested in two hot wars, and during the Cold War, the RAND method for gauging the intention of the adversary predicts this about Blinken – he wants war with Russia; he has no mind for any alternative.”

      We might well ask if Blinken has a mind of his own at all. All he does is repeat as if everything he knows was learned through rote memorisation and constant repetition will reinforce the memory.

      Like

      1. We’ve seen his type before; although he was much smarter than Blinken, Colin Powell displayed the same apparent incomprehension that the United States itself would absorb any damage from a war fought far away. At least Colin Powell would have once had to go and fight this war himself. Blinken has no military experience, and is in fact a career politician and diplomat except for a bit of dabbling in law. He is courting a war he will never have to do any fighting in, from the standpoint that it can all be done through proxies and the United States will emerge from it stronger than ever.

        Remember my mentioning Biden’s sponsorship of the proposal to divide Iraq into three ethnic mini-states? Which, I need hardly point out, would have been tailor-made to set to fighting against one another whenever the mood took their manager. Anyway, guess who helped Biden put that proposal together? That’s right – Blinken.

        Also, remember Robert Maxwell; British publisher, father of the now-infamous Ghislaine Maxwell, and embezzler of nearly £ 1 Billion from the pension funds of Mirror Group? Guess who was his lawyer? Samuel Pisar – Blinken’s stepfather. Wheels within wheels. It would be a miracle if he was not a sociopath.

        Well, nothing lost, really; Russia did not expect any movement from the United States, whose ‘negotiating team’ was assembled not to negotiate security arrangements, but to put Russia in its place. It seems incredible that Washington is going to march the world straight into a major war which will in all probability destroy Europe, as well as large parts of Russia. But that’s the way this is headed. All Russia has to look forward to is increased and relentless encirclement until NATO is rubbing up against it on every side except China. However, I’m pretty confident China realizes this, too, and is no more interested in the triumph of American brinksmanship than Russia is. And all the while, people like Blinken are convinced Russia is ‘bluffing’, acting out of fear and worry. He is oblivious to danger.

        I’m glad the biggest American city I live within radiation-cloud range of is Seattle. I can’t think it is much of a concern for Russia or China.

        Like

        1. One of the regular commenters on Moonofalabama (Karlofi1) who apparently lives in the US Pacific NW was wishing nuclear strikes on the Clyde a few weeks ago…

          How lovely.

          I’d like to think that properly targeted weapons took out the decision makers. In their “refuges” and “boltholes”. And if you’re reading, Karlof1, your crib.

          Like

        2. Remember my mentioning Biden’s sponsorship of the proposal to divide Iraq into three ethnic mini-states?

          The ‘Never President’ Hillary Clinton openly supported that too.

          Vis America4war, maybe that is built in to the Russian strategy. The more insane Washington behaves, the further u-Rope distances itself (or at least has the excuse to). Sure, the pygmy hamster u-Ropean states would be happ for war with Russia, but not so much those who pay the bills. Which reminds me of this whining ‘It’s not fair when they do the same as us’ piece I read yesterday:

          Politico.eu: Germany’s pivot from America
          https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-pivot-from-america/

          To outward appearances, Berlin is far from AWOL on Ukraine. But when the cameras are turned off, Germany’s tone changes.

          ####

          Looking at the headlines on Politico you see ‘US orders diplomats’ families to leave Ukraine, urges Americans to depart’ & ‘EU diplomats’ families to remain in Ukraine amid Russia crisis.’
          I thought the ‘West is one’ and ‘on the same page’ etc. etc. The seams are starting to split. Decisions long put off will have to be made in the near future.

          Like

  33. “While respecting the right of foreign states to ensure the security of their diplomatic missions, we consider such a step by the American side premature and a manifestation of excessive caution” the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said.

    source

    Oh come on, Yukietards: I thought you were telling the world that Banderastan was under threat of an imminent Orc invasion!

    So the invasion is not imminent and your buddies from the other side of the world are acting prematurely in evacuating some of their diplomatic staff and families in Kiev, where the USA has been running the show for you morons these past 8 years or so?

    Like

    1. It seems to be pretty much a characteristic of the Ukrainian ruling class to insist on having one’s cake and eating it as well. The Ukie movers and shakers are perfectly happy for western media to broadcast the most bloodcurdling warnings about ‘the coming invasion’; the more hair-raising the better, and best of all when the imagery of the slavering hordes is contrasted with the inspirational bravery of the civil defense forces drilling with their pathetic wooden guns. They must hug each other with delight at the success of their manipulation.

      However, when the manufactured imminence of the threat reaches a certain pitch, and certain actions must be taken to protect foreigners in the country or it would look odd, then that’s a big disappointment. Where you are goings, America? Is still very safe here, yes! What is wanted, you see, is not for foreign non-military personnel to flee the country, what is wanted is for the foreign countries to bring their military forces to Ukraine, to defend their non-combatants, and just coincidentally to defend Ukraine as well. If an attack never materializes, I daresay one could be arranged via false flag, if it meant foreign military forces could be maneuvered into fighting the Russians, while the Ukrainian government and its American advisors simply managed the overall effort.

      But everyone bugging out and apparently abandoning Ukraine to its fate suggests the scary talk has been too effective, and sends all the wrong messages to friend and foe alike.

      Like

      1. Dr Johnson famously said that the prospect of being hanged concentrated a man’s mind. And that is what the Russian ultimatum is doing: gradually people realise that Putin & Co are not joking and that Russia has the hammer in this situation. NATO is coming to understand that it’s no longer making pompous speeches and bombing little guys far away. It’s not so funny now.

        Like

      2. Invasion?

        What invasion?

        Everything under control in Yukiestan!

        Western BBC headlines:

        BBC: Ukraine: US troops on high alert over stand-off
        5 hours ago

        Panic stations!!!

        But hold anon!

        BBC Russia:

        Секретарь СНБО Украины Алексей Данилов: война с Россией идет давно, повода для паники нет
        24 января 2022

        NSDC Secretary Oleksiy Danilov: the war with Russia has been going on for a long time, there is no reason to panic
        January 24, 2022

        The Ukrainian authorities are rather restrained in their response to the statements of Western partners about the threat of a Russian invasion of the Ukraine: President Zelensky advises that people remain calm, and Foreign Minister Kuleba, that they “not be fooled by horror stories.”

        Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council of the Ukraine (NSDC) Oleksiy Danilov, in an interview with the BBC Ukrainian Service, said that Kiev was well aware of Moscow’s plans and intentions.

        “We understand the Russian’s plans and intentions; we don’t need to scream with fear”, Danilov said. “The number one task for Russia is to undermine the internal situation in our country. And today, unfortunately, they are very successfully doing that. Our task is to do our job in a calm and balanced manner”.

        Oh right! Then no “Red Alert” in Banderastan?

        Tell that to the marines, you Ukrainian oaf! The US Marines!

        There’s gonna be a war and were gonna kick some goddam Commie ass!!!

        Like

        1. But….but what about the wooden guns? What about drilling for hours in the snow with fake guns because you don’t have enough real ones (or the civil defense force is made up of mental defectives who cannot be trusted with a real gun under any but the most desperate circumstances)? What about the masses of Russian troops gathering in the fields, visible from the schoolhouse windows? I was given to understand, as I think at least some of you were as well, that the thousands of Russian troops ‘massing on Ukraine’s border’ constituted an immediate and imminent threat! So dangerous that western pundits had it narrowed down to two months – a period in which we are now at the middle – in which the bear would have to lunge, or be mired in the gloopy mud of spring! Now you are telling me…it’s been going on for years? Really? Years? Because the supposed trigger of incipient panic, the thousands of Russian troops ‘massing’ in their own country near to Ukraine, has not. There was a terrific panic a year or two ago in almost the same circumstances, enthusiastically stoked by Ukraine, which came to nothing. And now you say “We understand the Russian’s plans and intentions; we don’t need to scream with fear”?

          Is that so? Well, then, why the panic-stricken demands for weapons and money, and more and more sanctions against Russia? Just so you can swagger and look tough and exclaim – toughly – “We are accustomed to this”? If Russia is seeking to undermine the country internally, and that’s the principal threat – and they are ALREADY SUCCESSFULLY DOING IT – then what makes the situation desperate for your western backers? Why do you need more anti-tank weapons to fight internal undermining? Aren’t they a little dangerous to use in government and in keeping civil order? Wouldn’t you rather have more laptops and barrier tape and firewall software?

          As usual, the joint fabrication between Ukraine and the western intelligence services – and the western media, mustn’t leave them out – is flaking under the strain of maintaining it. Bullshit from the very first. Well, now that Russia has finally had enough and called your bluff (hey, that rhymed; gimme a beat and I could do rap), the operation has become far too real, hasn’t it? Not as much of the Great Game about it now, is there? Because the logical place for the powder-keg to blow, if it’s going to, would be right about where the ‘invasion’ was supposed to start. Over Ukraine, and thence into Europe.

          Of course, that could all be avoided by signing a few documents which essentially affirm the bedrock fundamentals of NATO. That it is entirely a defensive organization that treats its neighbours with respect. That it has no intention of attacking anyone unless it is first attacked, and then fighting only until its own safety is secured. That it takes in new partners if and only if doing so materially strengthens the defensive capability of the North Atlantic Alliance. But that won’t happen. Because NATO is determined to preserve its freedom to mock and threaten in order to advance the corporate interests of constituent states, and to ‘level the playing field’ to a decidedly western tilt by keeping the threat of military force always in the equation.

          As it does now.

          Like

  34. Oh look! Monkey see, monkey do!

    11: 09 on 24.01.2022 (updated: 11: 53 on 24.01.2022)
    Great Britain has begun to withdraw part of its embassy staff in Kiev
    The British Foreign Office has announced the beginning of the withdrawal of part of the staff of its embassy in Kiev.

    LONDON, January 24-RIA Novosti. The United Kingdom has begun to withdraw some of its embassy staff and their families in Kiev amidst the alleged possible aggravation of the situation in the country, according to a recommendation from the British Foreign Office.

    The Embassy will continue to work. The mission will perform core functions, including providing consular assistance to British citizens in the Ukraine.

    Like

    1. According to Professor Robinson in Ottawa, 80 or so days have already passed since the first ominous declarations of an Orc invasion of Banderasstan were made.

      Why are they taking so long?

      Typically indolent behaviour of the Russians.

      Couldn’t organize a piss-up in a brewery!

      Like

      1. Well, all the pundits assure us they have to move now, because in the spring it will be too muddy. They much prefer to attack when they have their ally – General Winter – with them; everyone knows that.

        But the timeline is of less consequence now, because the reasons for not attacking have already been established. Uncle Sam smacked the Russian dog on the nose and said firmly, “No! No!”, and the Russian dog cowered in fear. Were it not for the might of the great United States, Ukraine’s goose would have been cooked for sure – all the signs were there. Game, set and match, Mr. Putin.

        Like

    2. Again, they could hardly do otherwise considering the lavish and detailed coverage of the gathering hordes of Mordor menacing the country – people would ask, why aren’t you doing anything to protect non-combatants under such dangerous circumstances? The game must look real, or fewer will buy it.

      Like

  35. I’m sure this has already been posted here but I’ve not been able to access John Helmers site for many months from here in north u-Rope.

    RACE HATRED OF RUSSIA, THE BATTLE OF STALINGRAD AND THE AMERICAN WAR IN UKRAINE
    http://johnhelmer.net/race-hatred-of-russia-the-battle-of-stalingrad-and-the-american-war-in-ukraine/

    ####

    I read the book at the time and was amazed about the wealth of detail. I didn’t really see any further depth to it except for Beevor’s access to Soviet war archives. But, as Helmer writes elsewhere and if you know your history, the u-Ropean empires have a long history of sticking it to Russians. This is even to the point of perpetuating slavery, massacres etc. against christians – the wrong sort of course. No need to mention the original Crimean War which has the same underlying and entirely self-serving hypothesis of fight them over there so we don’t have to fight them over here to what I have mentioned before, France & GB saving the Ottoman Empire from bankrupcy in the mid-19th century and to keep it tottering on and increasing its cruelty, as many Armenians bitterly know. And that’s barely scratching the surface.

    Like

    1. I have to access Helmer’s blog from the search page; if it is linked here, the site will show up in the Preview pane, but when you click on the link you get one of those smarmy ‘Oops, that page is not available; you could try spinning on your head and chanting, “Zizzi, Zizzi ZUK!!” or maybe try again later’ pages. It is plainly the object of diversionary interference, ‘cuz it’s DISINFORMAYSHUN, innit?

      Like

    2. I ran into problems accessing Helmer’s site with Firefox and still do but I have no problems with other browsers.. Chrome, Opera and Yandex all work well. It might be worth trying a couple of different browsers.

      Like

  36. Vis ‘de-russification’ of the Ukraine as pushed by the Banderites since the coup which western PPNN/pols/whatever skate over this because it is too tricky to address or least of all dismiss it as overrated.

    Wouldn’t it be useful to put it in to terms that even westerner’s couldn’t ignore, say for example (considering the Canuks here), sic Ottawa deciding that english be the only language legally acceptable and f/k the Quebequois? What other easy to express examples would my fellow New Kremlin Stooges like to submit that would also provide outrage?

    Like

    1. The one I like is Scotland goes independent, then bans the English language, barbecues a building full of English speakers, then invites Russia to set up bases on the border with England, complete with Zircon and Iskander missiles targeting London (similar distance as Eastern Ukraine from Moscow). I’m sure if that happened the MOD would at least think about rolling their few remaining tanks and infantry battalions over the border.

      Of course in reality this would never happen because the people advocating “independence” for Scotland only mean independence from England, not from Brussels, and certainly not from Washington.

      Like

    2. Why stop there? Advise ‘Pride Week’ – oops; I forgot, we have Pride MONTH now – that anyone who cannot speak English well enough to achieve a tested level is not allowed to be gay. That’s a distraction from your English lessons.

      Like

    3. Any Canadian hearing of Ukrainian language laws freezes.

      Mark where were you last referendum? I was living in Hull QC.

      Three or four days before the referendum a new CBC announcer, presumably from Windsor, reported about 07:00 that traffic on the “international bridges” was moving well!

      Like

      1. I have lived here in Victoria, at addresses within 10 km of each other, since 1987. For the first one (1980), to decide if the provincial government would be granted a plebiscite to negotiate sovereignty-association, I was in Halifax.

        I was posted to Quebec briefly, in 2005, for about 3 months after I completed the year-long French course; I lived on the base at Valcartier. I liked Quebec very much, and found the people mostly friendly and good-humored. It is true, though, that there were large green-and-white standard highway-pattern signs entering Quebec City from at least two directions which read, “Welcome to the Nation’s Capital”, and probably still are. Let’s have a look.

        https://www.google.ca/url?sa=i&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pinterest.com%2Fpin%2F157696424425534639%2F&psig=AOvVaw1mrP8diz73EVUhd92gzDtc&ust=1643164229942000&source=images&cd=vfe&ved=0CAgQjRxqFwoTCLjC8Pnty_UCFQAAAAAdAAAAABAD

        Okay, they look a bit different than I remember, but yes, it looks like they’re still there.

        I didn’t meet any ardent nationalists myself, although some exhibits at the Museum of Civilization suggest a certain degree of hostility toward the English.

        https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/a-headless-statue-of-queen-victoria-the-flq-and-quebecs-fractious-relationship-with-the-monarchy/article35074360/

        Like

        1. Ah the bombs, etc. were back in the good old days of the FLQ. A few years later they tried to blow up the Westmount town hall. I don’t know if the bomb even went off. Montreal used to be an exciting city. Bombs, Exp’67, the occasional student riot back in the 12970’s, .

          I lived in Hull for 10 years and enjoyed being in Québec.

          Like

          1. The middle part (“Journeyman”) of Tom Gallacher’s excellent Bill Thompson is set in the Montreal of Expo67, though I don’t recall it featuring too much. On the other hand, one of Lawrence Block’s Evan Tanner Series is set squarely in the Expo, with enough Québécois revolutionary frenzy for a dozen spoof novels.

            Like

  37. BBC
    Published 40 minutes ago

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson has warned Russia that invading Ukraine would be “disastrous” and a “painful, violent and bloody business”.

    Speaking as the Foreign Office pulled some embassy staff out of Ukraine, the PM said the situation was “pretty gloomy” but war was not inevitable.

    He said the UK was “leading on creating a package of economic sanctions” against Russia and was supplying defensive weaponry to Ukraine.

    Nato is putting forces on standby.

    It says this is to reinforce its defences and for the purposes of deterrence and is also sending additional ships and fighter jets to member states in eastern Europe as a response to the continuing build up of Russian forces.

    Russia has denied plans for military action, but an estimated 100,000 troops have amassed on the border with the head of Nato warning of a risk of fresh conflict in Europe.

    The Kremlin has accused Nato of escalating tensions with the move. Russia considers the alliance as a threat, and is demanding legal guarantees that it will not expand further east, including into Ukraine. But the US has said the issue at stake is Russian aggression, not Nato expansion.

    Mr Johnson said: “The intelligence is very clear that there are 60 Russian battle groups on the borders of Ukraine, the plan for a lightning war that could take out Kyiv is one that everybody can see.

    “We need to make it very clear to the Kremlin, to Russia, that that would be a disastrous step.”

    Mr Johnson added that the UK stood “four-square with the people of Ukraine”.

    Nato is putting forces on standby???

    Is the Ukraine a NATO member state now?

    Johnson: “… the plan for a lightning war that could take out Kyiv is one that everybody can see”.

    Yes, Boris: the whole world can see the dastardly plan of the Orcs!

    Like

      1. Like

    1. Ha, ha!! The UK is ‘supplying defensive weaponry to Ukraine’. As previously posted here, the UK is sending light anti-tank weapons to Ukraine whose rockets will expire this year, suggesting the gesture is intended more to score political points than provide any actual defensive capability. But a few sources are nervous that most of the weapons will never reach the battlefield, even if there ever is a battle – instead being sold on to whatever group can pay the asking price.

      https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidhambling/2022/01/21/why-sending-anti-tank-weapons-to-ukraine-may-end-badly/?sh=369ef2727e6c

      The article reminds readers of the debacle which ensued when the USA gave Stinger missiles to the Afghan Mujaheddin (under one Osama bin Laden) and then had to later try to buy them back for millions, owing to fears they would fall into the hands of terrorist groups. Did I mention they gave them to bin Laden? Anyway, sources which track the traffic in weapons internationally report there are four times as many illegal weapons in Ukraine as there are weapons which are legally registered and accounted for. A lot of weapons sent by western countries are promptly diverted and sold to organized criminal groups or foreign terrorists.

      Like

  38. Bloomturd: Europe’s Exposure to Russia Leaves Economy Sweating on Sanctions
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-01-24/europe-s-economies-have-more-at-stake-than-u-s-in-russia-clash

    …“Sanctions have the best effect if they are efficient,” German Foreign Affairs Minister Annalena Baerbock said last week. “It’s about sanction which really have an effect, not against oneself, but rather against Russia.”

    By contrast, Russia is “well prepared” to weather any sanctions after taking steps to insulate itself from measures the U.S. might impose, said Viktor Szabo, fund manager at Aberdeen Asset Management in London.

    “It will be difficult to inflict such a pain that would be felt,” Szabo said. “It wouldn’t push Russia to the edge.”..
    ####

    This seems to be the latest thing which is doing the rounds in the last few days that looks to be justifying in advance why the west cannot impose ‘SANCTIONS FROM HELL’ on Russia. What’s that? A self-licking icecream! Or is it pushback against the Hawks?

    It could also be part if a twofer so in addition to making the excuse above, making an excuse to the u-Ropean consumer why their energy prices have gone through the roof, i.e. “It’s not our fault” and of course no mention of Brussels’ efforts to kill long-term energy contracts in return for an ‘efficient energy spot markt.’ It would also serve to prepare consumers for permanently more expensive energy because may u-Rope might decide (ho ho ho) to buy American LNG at a regular markup, at least when Asia doesn’t offer a higher price…

    Finally, and as usual also by lies of omission, failure to publicise the cost to u-Ropean economies. I seem to recall that one of us posted a figure about this sometime in the past? Does any one remember what it was?

    June 21, 2019:
    https://www.russia-briefing.com/news/sanctions-russia-costing-eu-businesses-us-240-billion-increasing-putin.html/

    6 Oct, 2017
    https://www.rt.com/business/405905-eu-russia-sanctions-cost/

    Like

  39. US and UK escalate Russia war fever, but NATO splits over Ukraine emerge
    Jan 24, 2022

    The Grayzone

    The US and UK are ramping up threats to Russia over Ukraine by sending more weapons, vowing more sanctions, and lodging evidence-free claims of a Russian plot to install a pro-Kremlin leader. But comments by Germany’s navy chief that Russia “deserves respect” — leading to his resignation — underscore that not everyone is on board with Washington and London’s war fever. Scholar and author Richard Sakwa discusses the latest in the Ukraine crisis.

    Guest: Richard Sakwa. Professor of Russian and European politics at the University of Kent. His books include “Frontline Ukraine: Crisis in the Borderlands” and his latest, “Deception: Russiagate and the New Cold War.”

    Like

  40. Russia’s Buildup Near Ukraine: What Are Canada’s Interests and Options?
    Streamed live on Jan 14, 2022

    Institute for Peace & Diplomacy

    The Institute for Peace and Diplomacy and NATO Association of Canada are co-sponsoring a panel discussion titled, “Russia Buildup Near Ukraine: What are Canada’s Interests and Options?” scheduled for January 14, 2022 from 11:00 AM to 12:15 PM (EST).

    Russia’s military buildup near the Ukrainian border has triggered talks on the future of European security. Concerns have been raised that the Biden administration may strike a deal with Moscow at the expense of the interests of some of its European allies. At the same time, it is unclear whether Russia’s continued exclusion from the core of Europe’s security architecture can produce a stable continental order over the long term.

    As a fervent defender of Ukraine’s sovereignty and a leading participant in NATO’s Enhanced Forward Presence, Canada has a direct stake in the future of these talks. With tensions running high, what are Canada’s interests and policy options? How can Canada contribute most constructively to the ongoing process? And after decades of NATO-centrism in Canadian foreign policy, could greater mutual accommodation between Russia and the West open up space for a Canadian strategic pivot to the “Indo-Pacific”?

    Moderator:

    Zachary Paikin: Research Fellow, Institute for Peace & Diplomacy and Researcher, Centre for European Policy Studies – Brussels

    Panelists:

    Alexander Lanoszka: Assistant Professor of International Relations, University of Waterloo

    Paul Robinson: Professor of Public & International Affairs, University of Ottawa and Senior Fellow, Institute for Peace & Diplomacy

    Yuliia Ivaniuk: Coordinator of the Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies, University of Manitoba

    Anatol Lieven: Senior Research Fellow, Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft

    Like

  41. The US stock market continues to sink for multiple reasons. Tesla stock is dropping faster than the battery charge on a Model Y on a cold winter day. Tesla stock has dropped 25% from its all-time high and over 7% today. Still has a long long slide ahead.

    Like

    1. The ruble has taken a hit, though. It was 95 for £1 when I last changed some pounds before Christmas: now it is 105 to £1.

      Which is good for Russian exports.

      Pity that the Orcs don’t make anything and export Sweet Fanny Adams, innit?

      Like

  42. Follow up on a previous post.

    NASA spaceflight: ULA’s Atlas V launches satellite-inspection mission for Space Force
    https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2022/01/ussf-satellite-inspection/

    ….The GSSAP (Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program) is a US Space Force project using small satellites to inspect other spacecraft operating in geostationary orbit. Friday’s launch, which is designated USSF-8 (US Space Force 8), is carrying the fifth and sixth satellites in this series.

    With the deployment of these two satellites, the Space Force is continuing a program which has given them a new capability in recent years to study foreign satellites and monitor their operations in orbit. This likely builds on the earlier experimental MiTEx (Microsatellite Technology Experiment) satellites which performed an array of experiments including satellite inspections during their time in geostationary orbit in the 2000s…
    ####

    You may recall much hyperventilating in the Pork Pie News Networks in the last few years about Russian/Chinese small manoeuvering satellited that may be used as weapons in space and that it is a very naughty thing to do! So, the above shows that the Great White Knight (GWK) USA! has been doing almost a couple of decades ago! The PPNN are unsurprisingly quiet about this, by accident not self-censorship / oversight.

    Like

  43. RT: Ireland protests about Russian warship plan
    https://www.rt.com/russia/547206-dublin-condemns-naval-exercises/

    Ireland’s says it cannot stop the drills, which are to take place in its exclusive economic zone
    ####

    To misquote Father Ted speaking to Dougal in the caravan, “These ships are small. That ship is far away.”

    Who says Russia doesn’t have a sense of humor? Like a cat toying with a live mouse that it has no intention to kill…

    Like

  44. From your friendly neighbourhood foreign propaganda agency in Russia.

    Apart from the fact that hardly anybody in Russia gives a flying fuck about him . . .

    The world premiere of the film “Navalny” will take place on January 25 at the Sundance festival

    The world premiere of the documentary about Alexey Navalny, produced by CNN Films and HBO Max, will take place on January 25 at the Sundance Festival, which takes place in virtual mode in Salt Lake City, USA. This is reported on the website of the American Independent Film Festival.

    The director of the film “Navalny” is a young documentary filmmaker Daniel Roher. One of the executive producers of the film was a member of Navalny’s team Maria Pevchikh.

    On the completion of filming of the documentary about the poisoning of Navalny, his treatment in Germany and returning to Russia, it became known on January 13. The film was shot in complete secrecy.

    Those Mormons must really love the Bullshitter!

    Oh, and look! British agent Pevchikh has also lent a helping hand in producing the “documentary”.

    Like

    1. Just like that ‘Icarus’ flick that attempted to make an heroic rascal of ‘Doctor’ Rodchenkov. And such ‘documentaries’ are often very successful in the west, from a commercial standpoint, because they reinforce stereotypes that fit in the comfort zones of the ignorant.

      Don’t hear a word about him now, though, do you? Oh, the United States worshiped him so much that it gave him his own law – doubtless championed by Travis Tygart – called The Rodchenkov Act, but it’s not international. And the first person charged under it is obviously not international, either; a ‘naturopathic’ therapist from Texas who allegedly supplied performance-enhancing drugs to Olympic athletes. Plural. The only one named is Florida-based Nigerian sprinter Blessing Okagbare, although there are apparently other ‘unidentified’ athletes involved with this supplier.

      https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/winter-olympics/first-charges-brought-in-us-under-new-anti-doping-law/ar-AASHXd1

      And of course all American reporting on the ‘Rodchenkov Act’ provides that it was “a law introduced in the United States in 2020 in the wake of Russia’s state-backed doping scandal.” The Russian state-backed doping scandal that was so solidly substantiated that Russian athletes who had their medals stripped had them reinstated and the scandalous Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) was also reinstated. Note that WADA took it upon themselves to assess that Russia was ‘publicly accepting the core findings of the McLaren Investigation’ which WADA had always held out as a condition of reinstatement – admit you are a guilty doping state, and then we’ll let you back in – see how easy it is?

      https://www.wada-ama.org/en/news/wada-executive-committee-decides-reinstate-rusada-subject-strict-conditions

      But you will probably also note that this admission was ‘considered to have taken place’ because the Russian state “fully accepted the decision of the IOC Executive Board of 5 December 2017 that was made based on the findings of the Schmid Report.”

      If you read that carefully, Russia accepted the DECISION of the IOC Executive Board, not the findings of the McLaren Investigation, the provisions of which were included in the Schmid Report. The ‘decision’ was as follows:

      After discussing and approving the Schmid Report, the IOC EB took the following decision:

      To suspend the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) with immediate effect.

      To invite individual Russian athletes under strict conditions (see below) to the Olympic Winter Games PyeongChang 2018. These invited athletes will participate, be it in individual or team competitions, under the name “Olympic Athlete from Russia (OAR)”. They will compete with a uniform bearing this name and under the Olympic Flag. The Olympic Anthem will be played in any ceremony.

      Not to accredit any official from the Russian Ministry of Sport for the Olympic Winter Games PyeongChang 2018.

      To exclude the then Minister of Sport, Mr Vitaly Mutko, and his then Deputy Minister, Mr. Yuri Nagornykh, from any participation in all future Olympic Games.

      To withdraw Mr Dmitry Chernyshenko, the former CEO of the Organising Committee Sochi 2014, from the Coordination Commission Beijing 2022.

      To suspend ROC President Alexander Zhukov as an IOC Member, given that his membership is linked to his position as ROC President.

      The IOC reserves the right to take measures against and sanction other individuals implicated in the system.

      The ROC to reimburse the costs incurred by the IOC on the investigations and to contribute to the establishment of the Independent Testing Authority (ITA) for the total sum of USD 15 million, to build the capacity and integrity of the global anti-doping system.

      The IOC may partially or fully lift the suspension of the ROC from the commencement of the Closing Ceremony of the Olympic Winter Games PyeongChang 2018 provided these decisions are fully respected and implemented by the ROC and by the invited athletes and officials.

      The IOC will issue operational guidelines for the implementation of these decisions.

      See anything in there about ‘accepting the conclusions of the McLaren Investigation’? I didn’t, either.

      https://olympics.com/ioc/news/ioc-suspends-russian-noc-and-creates-a-path-for-clean-individual-athletes-to-compete-in-pyeongchang-2018-under-the-olympic-flag

      Like

  45. BBC

    Biden has had a teleconference with his grovelling European curs:

    Ukraine: Western leaders declare unity against Russia threat
    1 hour ago

    US President Joe Biden has said there is “total unanimity” with European leaders over Russia’s troop build-up on the border with Ukraine.

    President Biden held a video call with European allies on Monday as Western powers aim for a common strategy against Russia’s actions.

    The UK has warned Russia of “swift” and “unprecedented” sanctions if an incursions takes place.

    Russia denies plans to invade Ukraine, despite massing some 100,000 soldiers.

    Joining the US and UK on the call were the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Poland and the EU. Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg also dialled in.

    “I had a very, very, very good meeting – total unanimity with all the European leaders,” Mr Biden said afterwards.

    What a relief!

    Unity against something that has not happened, yet has been these past 80 days predicted to happen.

    Hurrah for NATO!

    Like

    1. In a follow up to my post further up:

      Euractiv: Spanish government asks coalition partner not to undermine relations with NATO
      https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/spanish-government-asks-coalition-partner-not-to-undermine-relations-with-nato/

      Left-wing party Unidas Podemos (United We Can) is being asked to show “containment” in its statements on the situation in Ukraine and not jeopardise Spain’s relationship with NATO, government spokesperson Isabel Rodríguez of the ruling socialist party PSOE said on Monday.

      …Meanwhile, Pablo Casado, leader of the largest opposition party, centre-right party Partido Popular (PP), accused Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez Monday of “overreacting” to the crisis.

      The PP had initially expressed its political support for the Spanish military contribution to the NATO-led mission, but Casado criticised the fact that his party was not informed before the decision was taken…
      ####

      So as I said, pols are also keeping an eye on their re-electability and do see a downside of fools rushing in all together as NATO. This is true in othe ru-Ropean countries. Those Hawks who have outed themselves will be left high and dry when all this calms down.

      Like

  46. Sikorsky whining away:

    01/24/2022 18:03 (updated: 01/24/2022 20:36)
    Poland recognized the victory of Gazprom with Nord Stream 2
    Polish diplomat Sikorsky announced the victory of Gazprom over Warsaw

    MOSCOW, January 24 – RIA Novosti. The incompetent heads of Polish state-owned enterprises appointed by the authorities punished the country by losing the fight against Gazprom, former foreign minister of the republic Radosław Sikorski told Biznes Alert.

    Speaking about Nord Stream 2, the diplomat accused Russia of using an “energy noose” against the Ukraine and Germany, of neglecting the interests of Eastern European countries for the benefit of their own industry. Sikorsky recalled that under the previous government, an LNG terminal had been built in the country in order to diversify gas supplies and “not be afraid of blackmail” when signing contracts for the purchase of Russian fuel.

    “We wanted prices in long-term contracts to decrease, and our colleagues from Law and Justice (the current party in power – Ed.) went to the casino and decided to play on gas quotes”, the ex-minister said.

    He said that because of the rise in spot gas prices, the country had lost four billion dollars in a year and a half, and blamed the Polish oil and gas concern PGNiG for this. According to Sikorsky, Poland received fuel for the needs of private consumers from domestic sources, while the industry was forced to use imported raw materials. The diplomat urged to buy it where it was profitable, regardless of the country of production, and accused the ruling party of being unable not to politicize this issue.

    “When people in state-owned companies are selected not by professionalism, but by the criterion of loyalty to the authorities, we get the result that we see. Gazprom masterfully beat PGNiG”, the former minister explained.

    [He is in effect saying that Gazprom is an instrument of state that puts Russian state interests first and not those of its customers, notwithstanding the fact that the shitwit and his fellow Ukrainian shitwits regularly state that they do not wish to buy gas off the Orcs, nor do they need it any longer, nor the fact that the Yukietards also state that they are at war with Russia. Now Sikorsky is saying that Gazprom should serve the interests of Poland, whose governments constantly spit bile and venom at Russia. He deserves a kick in the balls off Russia, I think.]

    Gas prices began to rise sharply in late summer and early autumn, reaching a maximum of almost $2,200 per thousand cubic metres on December 21. Experts attribute the rise in prices to several factors: the low level of occupancy of European underground storage facilities, limited supply from major suppliers and strong demand for liquefied natural gas in Asia.

    The authorities of European countries have repeatedly accused Russia of provoking the energy crisis. Vladimir Putin called these statements nonsense. The Russian leader recalled that he offered Brussels to leave long-term contracts for the supply of raw materials. However, the European Commission insisted on the market pricing of the energy carrier, which eventually led to a crisis, he stressed.

    Sikorsky is not a diplomat: he is a politician and journalist who is a member of the hot-air plant known as the European Parliament.

    He accuses Russia of “neglecting the interests of Eastern European countries”. Since when should a state prioritise the interests of foreign states? Surely, a state should first and foremost pursue what it perceives as its own interests.

    That hackneyed phrase of Churchill concerning Russia, namely that Russia is a “riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma” is seldom given in full and recognizes that a state pursues its own interests.

    What Churchill said in this instance in full was:

    I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma; but perhaps there is a key. That key is Russian national interest. It cannot be in accordance with the interest of the safety of Russia that Germany should plant itself upon the shores of the Black Sea, or that it should overrun the Balkan States and subjugate the Slavonic peoples of south eastern Europe, That would be contrary to the historic life-interests of Russia.

    W.S. Churchill, BBC Broadcast, London, 1st October 1939.

    Like

    1. Ah ha ha haha!! Sikorsky is wasted in politics – he has obvious talent as a standup comedian.

      Speaking about Nord Stream 2, the diplomat accused Russia of using an “energy noose” against the Ukraine and Germany, of neglecting the interests of Eastern European countries for the benefit of their own industry. Sikorsky recalled that under the previous government, an LNG terminal had been built in the country in order to diversify gas supplies and “not be afraid of blackmail” when signing contracts for the purchase of Russian fuel.

      “We wanted prices in long-term contracts to decrease, and our colleagues from Law and Justice (the current party in power – Ed.) went to the casino and decided to play on gas quotes”, the ex-minister said.

      He said that because of the rise in spot gas prices, the country had lost four billion dollars in a year and a half, and blamed the Polish oil and gas concern PGNiG for this.

      One of the standup comic’s tools of the trade is irony – to be able to say something outrageous without changing his facial expression, so as to imply he believes it is a true representation of the facts or the state of affairs when the audience knows it is not, and laughs at his assumed gullibility.

      Germany is “…neglecting the interests of Eastern European countries for the benefit of its own industry”, is it? Because why, again? Oh; because it sold gas to the aforementioned Eastern European countries at a markup, reflecting overall higher costs in the market? Well, what would you have done if you were in charge?

      I realize Sikorsky was the driving force in getting an LNG terminal built in Poland, and even if I didn’t know that years ago, I would now, because he never shuts up about it. And what difference does that make when prices are crazy high throughout Europe? I’ll tell you: none. Does anyone think gas vendors will say “Gas is bringing record prices everywhere in Europe. Oh, but wait: Sikorsky had the forethought to build a terminal in Poland – let’s go there, and sell it to Poland for much less!!”? And as for the apparent altruism he attributes to everyone but the greedy, grasping Krauts:

      https://oilprice.com/Energy/Natural-Gas/US-LNG-Cargoes-Flock-To-Europe-Amid-Record-High-Gas-Prices.html

      Let me ‘splain you something, Radek. See that subheading where it says “Another ten LNG cargoes have been diverted from Asia to Europe as European LNG prices are now much higher than the prices in Asia”? Well, in that sentence, the word ‘as’, between ‘Europe’ and ‘European’ is a stand-in for ‘because’. ‘Because’ implies a cause-and-effect relationship between the qualities or states it links. American LNG cargoes were diverted from Asia to Europe BECAUSE European LNG prices are now much higher. See it now? America sent more LNG to Europe BECAUSE it could make more money, not BECAUSE it was anxious to help out Eastern European countries at its own cost.

      In case doubts persist, “At least 30 tankers with liquefied natural gas from the United States are headed to Europe, where the gas and energy crisis has pushed regional LNG prices way above the Asian LNG benchmark and 14 times higher than the U.S. Henry Hub price, according to shipping data compiled by Bloomberg”.

      I know it’s hard to attribute anything other than concern for Eastern European customers’ bottom line to American businessmen and investors. But if you look at the situation impartially, you’ll see they are actually motivated by profit and opportunity. Try not to be shocked.

      Is that still the situation? Well, you tell me. PGNiG actually looks pretty good now, though, doesn’t it? If it has any sense at all, now is the time to secure imports for the Radek Sikorski All This I Built Myself LNG Terminal in Poland.

      https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-01-21/europe-s-lng-glut-leaves-jetties-full-of-discounted-cargoes

      Look at that!! Why, who would have thought?? I’m…I’m starting to feel like this might be a principle! This is very exciting; when a thing costs a lot of money, various suppliers of that thing send as much as they have available for sale to that place where they pay high prices for it. But then – and this is the interesting part – when there gets to be so much of that thing at that place that the sense of urgency dissipates, fewer people want to buy so much of it. And the price goes down! Like it? I’m too modest to name it after myself. So I think I’ll call it “The Law of Supply and Demand”. Because, you see, the greater quantities of a thing you can SUPPLY, the less the DEMAND for it. And PRICE is tied to the balance between the two.

      Europe is perfectly capable of securing adequate gas supplies to stave off crisis IF IT IS PREPARED TO PAY HISTORIC HIGH PRICES. It is no more complicated than that. Pipeline gas is historically cheaper because of the security of supply – storms at sea, for example, do not interrupt it the way they might interrupt the arrivals of LNG cargoes by ship – and because there are no interruptions in supply the way there are in the interval between cargoes arriving by sea when the price is just above break-even, because ships do not sprint to their destinations careless of the cost of fuel they must pay for themselves.

      I’ve always been skeptical of claims of block-ethnic stupidity. But if this guy is supposed to be one of their brightest intellects….

      Like

  47. I’m reading on al-Beeb s’Allah that the Australian Open has reversed its ban on political t-shirts in response to outcry after people wearing ‘Where’s Peng Shuai?’ were told to change or leave.

    But only a few weeks ago ago the same Australian Open officials were making supporters wearing pro-Djokovic t-shirts change or leave! The irony is that Djokovic has previously stated support for the WTA’s ‘questions about Peng Shuai.’

    You have to marvel at the professional hypocrisy, incompetence and stupidity of Australian officials at all levels. Gotta spade? Nah mate, gotta buy a bigga one!

    Like

    1. He must be daft, because he sounds like he comes from my home county or even my home town for that matter, and everyone’s daft who comes from there.

      I must be daft as well, because I feel much the same as he does.

      I reckon he lives in Russia and has a Russian wife, and that’s one observation about Russia that he fails to mention: Russia is paradise because of Russian women!

      Like

      1. Well one thing that did strike was the forests. One of my French teachers back in the 1990’s was from Moscow. She and her husband seem to have left Russia during the worst of the 1990’s meltdown and ended up in Paris. She shuddered when talking about NO Forests.

        She was a lot happier in Ottawa where one could be in the Gatineaus in 30 minutes by car.

        Like

        1. In the forests around Moscow, and in particularly in the area where my dacha is, the wild boar population has been reported to have been increasingly entering villages and dacha gardens, because of the deep snow, under which they have to snuffle around with their snouts for grub in winter. The wild boar, not being daft, know it’s far more convenient to go rooting amongst garbage in human settlements. Local game wardens have told folk not to feed them, because although they are omnivorous, giving them treats that they would certainly not find in the wild, could upset their digestive systems.

          There was a Tik-Tok clip posted the other day, shot in a garden near where I used to live before I got wed, a place called Mytishchi, situated some 12 miles as the crow flies from my flat in central Moscow, in which clip a whole gang of the creatures was rooting around in a garden at night. They approached the person shooting the video, though not aggressively, in the hopes of cadging some food.

          So that for me is a touch of paradise, because when I live at my country plot surrounded by pine forests and listen to nightingales singing and see the wild life around me, I am extremely contented with my lot and can put up with the hunger and poverty that I have to endure in this tyrannical regime.

          Like

          1. We don’t have wild boars but the white-tailed deer are a traffic hazard.

            Other animals are optional.

            A few years ago I was having a beer with a young Yorkshire man who was here visiting his fiancée. He was in a bit of shock. He had offered to take out the garbage but his girlfriend said it was better to wait so that the bears did not get it.

            He kept saying that he lived in the country and expected foxes but bears?

            Like

            1. Oh, the bears have been rampaging here for the past 2 years since this damned “epidemic” started, as many folk have had travel restrictions imposed upon them because of their age. I had my social card blocked because I am over 60 and refused to be vaccinated, but before it was blocked, I had scampered off to the country, where I was as happy as larry all summer 2020. A large number of “dachniki” are pensioners, as indeed I am, but I’m still working, so lots of dacha territories have been near uninhabited and for that reason deer, bears and boars have been having a field day on them. The bears are especially happy, I think, because quite a few Russians are beekeepers, so I guess there was honey up for grabs for them because the beekeepers had not gone to their dachas.

              Like

          2. And it really is deep snow here this winter as well!

            As I may have already posted, snow drifts this winter are already 80% higher than the norm and their height is heading for breaking that of the record snowdrifts of 1965.

            So why doesn’t “Vlad” give the order to launch a winter offensive so as to start his war to regain lost Soviet territory?

            After all, “General Winter” is the drunken, incompetent Russian military’s best friend, ain’t that so?

            Like

          1. We had some relatives from Iceland (where my mother is from) visit us many years ago, and they joined us for a walk in the Canada Forest.

            They were not impressed.

            One of my cousins told me that they felt a little claustrophobic, and all those trees and mountains blocked the view of nature…

            Like

    2. Mmmm…yes, that’s pretty funny, I can see why you posted it. There’s a subtle undertone of sarcasm implicit in the suggestion that London and Paris are somehow not real, or that they have been fantasized out of all proportion by the droves of Russians who want to leave for ‘something better’.

      Could someone substantiate for me that this sullen mass of inverse patriots exists? Because the UN can’t. In fact, nobody I could solicit for information was able to back it up with any real statistics. For example, Russian migration in 2021 was a net DECLINE of 12.69 percent over the previous year. Russian migration in 2020 was itself a net DECLINE of 11.18 percent over the previous year. The present rate is a net DECLINE of more than 14 percent, although of course the year has barely started and the figure will likely change significantly when all annual data are in. But most reasonable people would note the repetition of the word ‘decline’, as opposed to the word ‘gain’, which would appear if migration from Russia were accelerating. Demonstrably, it is not.

      https://www.macrotrends.net/countries/RUS/russia/net-migration

      The levels at present are comparable to the early 90’s, prior to the arrival on-scene of western ‘democratizers’ anxious to do Russia a huge solid and bestow upon them their own prized system of government and civil institutions.

      Thanks for pointing that out.

      Like

  48. The “Independent” bang on form again!

    Ukraine news – live: Russian ‘advance force’ already in country, UK warns as US troops poised to deploy
    Follow for live updates
    4 minutes ago

    Parts of a “Russian military advance force” are already inside Ukraine, a UK defence minister has warned.

    Writing in The Sun newspaper, armed forces minister James Heappey said: “We are becoming aware of a significant number of individuals that are assessed to be associated with Russian military advance-force operations and currently located in Ukraine.”

    His warning comes as around 8,500 US troops have been put on alert for possible deployment to eastern Europe, according to Pentagon spokesman John Kirby.

    US officials have warned that Russia could launch an imminent invasion of Ukraine.

    The “bulk of” the thousands of troops placed on heightened alert are planned to bolster the 40,000 multinational Nato troops already in a number of eastern European countries near the border with Russia, Mr Kirby said.

    But he stressed that no final decision to deploy the troops had been made.

    Nato allies have said that they are putting forces on standby and sending additional ships and fighter jets to eastern Europe.

    Two reader’s comments:

    UnitedJock
    16 min ago
    A story in a paper owned by a former KGB agent who became a billionaire when the USSR collapsed about Russian expansion sourced from the Sun, well that’s got credibility written all over it.

    nigel69
    1 hr ago
    How did the UK Defence Minister know about advanced Russian military in Ukraine when the Ukrainians have never mentioned it….like is the Britain trying to make itself important in this squabble?

    Like

    1. Doubtless based on Breaking News from the ever-reliable and trustworthy SBU on the discovery that Russian-speakers are present in Ukraine.

      “Ukraine is perhaps unique in displaying a wide discrepancy between declared ethnicity (Russian, Ukrainian or other), and actual language use. In 1995, Dominique Arel (1995: 598) wrote that Ukraine is a basically a bi-ethnic state, with 37.4 million inhabitants describing themselves as Ukrainian, and 11.4 million as Russians. In 2002, he commented that:

      Any visitor to Kyiv or heavily urbanized Eastern Ukraine can attest to the fact that the Ukrainian language is seldom used in the streets. Reliable survey opinion polls conducted throughout the past decade have indicated that approximately one out of three ethnic Ukrainians in the whole of Ukraine prefers to use Russian at home. In Eastern Ukraine, the proportion is nearly one out of two (Arel 2002: 238).”

      The 2001 census showed that between the Soviet census of 1989 and the Ukrainian census of 2001, Ukraine’s population declined from 51,706,600 to 48,457,020, a loss of 2,926,700 people or 5.7% of the 1989 population. Of these, 37,541 693 described themselves as Ukrainians, and 8,334,141 as Russians. Of the ethnic Ukrainians, 31,970,728 reported that Ukrainian was their ‘native language’ and 5,544,729 reported that it was Russian. Of the ethnic Russians, 7,993, 832 reported that Russian was their ‘native language’, and 328,152 reported Ukrainian (State Statistics Committee of Ukraine). As I show below, this is not a report of actual language use. More than half the population of Ukraine use Russian on a daily basis. It is the experience of this author that many people switch from one language to the other without hesitation or even conscious decision.”

      From “The Russian Language in Ukraine”. The author, Bill Bowring, is a scholar of many years and legal expert for the EU, Council of Europe and OSCE with respect to Ukraine. He describes his own linguistic scope thusly:

      “I start this chapter with a brief account of Ukraine’s linguistic complexity, followed by a summary and critique of some key legal provisions. My approach is based on my experience over many years as a scholar and legal expert – for the EU, Council of Europe, and OSCE – with regard to Ukraine (see Bowring 1998, 1999, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008). While I am fluent in Russian, and Russian is my home language, I confess to a much lower level of competence in Ukrainian: I can understand TV news by focusing hard, and can read Ukrainian with the aid of a dictionary. But I could not carry on a conversation. Fortunately I can use Russian with almost all interlocutors, preceded of course by an apology for my lack of Ukrainian. The languages have many similarities, but are quite different.”

      Probably a Russian spy.

      Like

  49. The “Daily Mail”:

    Russian soldiers are ALREADY in Ukraine, warns UK defence minister as he likens Vladimir Putin’s belligerence to the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939 – while the US mobilises thousands of combat troops and Western leaders threatening sanctions


    James Heappey said a’ significant’ number of Vladimir Putin’s soldiers were already operating behind the lines.

    Britain has already supplied Kyiv with thousands of anti-tank weapons and Mr Heappey likened the situation to the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939 that triggered the Second World War.

    Writing in the Sun he said: ‘To be British is to go to the aid of others and defend those who cannot defend themselves.

    ‘That’s why we went to the aid of Poland in 1939. That’s why we were one of the founding allies of Nato after the Second World War … we are being tested again.’

    Russia has been warned it will be swiftly hit with an ‘unprecedented package of sanctions’ in the event of a fresh incursion in Ukraine after Boris Johnson joined Joe Biden and world leaders to present a united front to combat a feared invasion.

    Like

    1. Probably a bid to get the ‘sanctions from hell’ rushed through as an emergency package, following which they will be left in place as a matter of course because their intent was good, and rolled over every six months like clockwork, just as the existing and utterly-useless-as-a-disciplinary-instrument sanctions package is. Bring it on, Sissies.

      Like

  50. Retired senior British Army officer and member of the House of Lords, former Chief of the General Staff from 2006 to 2009 Lord Dannatt believes ‘the Ukrainians will fight and fight hard’, and that would mean Russian fatalities and casualties.

    He told Times Radio: ‘He is very powerful but he does not have universal popularity. There is quite an opposition movement to him.

    ‘If Russian television screens get filled with body bags and casualties coming back from a bloody incursion in Ukraine, that will damage his popularity and damage his standing as opposed to boosting his position – so he has got a calculation to make.’

    No universal popularity? Who in government has ever had universal popularity?

    Quite an opposition?

    Call in the leader of the opposition!

    No, not Zyuganov of the CPRF, you idiots!

    The Bullshitter!!!

    Like

    1. Hmmm…I’m getting a big whiff of desperation here. The permanent war faction’s narrative is definitely getting crumbly, don’t you think? What’s next – Russians using their mysterious microwave energy machines on valiant Ukrainian soldiers?
      Also, I think our boy Lyosha is way past his sell-by date, btw, so I’m guessing the talent search is on. Maybe they could make it a TV show – “Who wants to be a dissident?” Brought to you by the NED, Tuesdays at 9

      Like

    2. Dannat talking about Putin above, of course, when he says: “‘He is very powerful but he does not have universal popularity. There is quite an opposition movement to him”.

      Like

    3. And that “when the body bags start coming home” meme is very popular amongst such pundits.

      However, though there were neither black, plastic body bags nor TV screens in 1941-1945, there were 23 million dead bodies as a result of the Great Patriotic War and the Soviet peoples knew full well about them: barely a family in the USSR was not touched by the loss of one its members KIA in that war for survival.

      One of those fallen was of my wife’s great-uncle Stepan, who fell in 1942 and nobody knows where his body is. We have an old studio portrait of him here, taken when he was in his Red Army uniform.

      When the body bags come home, Dannat?

      Then the Russians will fold up?

      Russians are made of far sterner stuff than you might think, Lord bloody Dannatt!

      You know sweet fuck all about Russia and Russians!

      Like

    4. If anything could be funnier than an arse-over-tits rush to impose more sanctions which studiously avoid energy imports, but throttle any remaining European business interests in Russia, it would be such a crusade in the name of The Bullshitter. Call it the Alexey Navalny Sanctions Package of 2022. That will certainly solidify his burgeoning support in Russia.

      Like

  51. A theme seems to be developing amongst western security and defense corresponedents, namely ‘Putin resurrects/saves/rescues NATO!‘ It’s bs of course and counting chickens before they are hatched but mere facts never get in the way of a good meme, particularly by journalists (of the type mentioned) who by the nature of their job have to ‘get along’ with their official sources.

    Like

    1. Read this for a laugh, full of projection:

      Politico: Good work, Volodya! Putin resurrects NATO
      https://www.politico.eu/article/vladimir-putin-resurrect-nato-russia-ukraine/

      Saber-rattling over Ukraine puts US-led alliance center stage, downgrading EU.

      ####

      It’s the lazy (thinking) having cake and eating it which pops up too, such as the phrase ‘…For one, he has boosted the appetite for NATO membership — or at least the determination to keep that option open — in Sweden and Finland…‘ Nowhere has it been said in either country that there was an interest in the opposite, i.e. ‘closing the option of joining NATO’ so the author’s argument falls flat. He also ignores that Sweden despite being technically neutral has been exercising militarily with NATO for years, not just since 2014.

      Neither does he address who will pay for all of this or that the Americans are far more interested in their efforts to contain China, one reason they have been ignoring u-Rope because even Washington recognizes is cannot maintain the attention, let alone the resources for both to be anywhere near effective. He also mistakes ‘offers of support’ as something substantive, but all in all it is a slapdash lazy piece of analysis by a supposedly seasoned defense reporter. But that’s not the point, it’s a short term ‘Win’ and anything however poor will do.

      Like

      1. Politico: EU maintains unity on Russia — but only just
        https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-foreign-ministers-russia-debate-weapons-training-ukraine/

        EU also splits with US over evacuation of diplomatic personnel.

        …Meanwhile, the EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, insisted that the 27 member states and their allies were completely in lockstep on the need for a package of high-impact sanctions to be imposed on Russia in the event of an attack on Ukraine. But that cohesion was largely made possible by not discussing any specific details about the draft measures — delaying potentially fierce disagreements.

        Borrell said that the secrecy was a strategic effort to keep Moscow guessing.

        “Part of the deterrence is not to give information,” Borrell said at a news conference following the meeting. “So don’t worry, the measures will be taken and implemented at the appropriate moment — if it comes.”..
        ####

        I’ve change my opinion of Borrell. I think he’s actually a comedian. It’s not his intention, but deep down there’s a clown trying to get out and we really only get to see the tip of clown hat when he speaks!

        I forgot to add in my previous post my comment to the journalist’s claim ‘…Putin will only have himself to blame if we end up with a new Cold Warrior at NATO HQ for the next four years…‘ and just like that the giant strategic error of expanding NATO right up to Russia’s border is erased! Because Russia finally reacted. They’re not supposed to do that. It’s not fair!

        Yet again there is a whole cadre of officials, journalists and the what not who’s whole professional life (now in senior positions) occurred during the last 30 years of the west’s doing whatever it liked regardless of the consecutively disastrous consequences (coz it happened mostly ‘over there’). It is an aberration. Plenty are still in the denial stage of the Five Stages of Grief. Hence their reactions to events and desperation to feel vindicated, however weak.

        There can be no stable u-Ropean security without the inclusion of Russia. Exclusion and containment has got us to this point. Or is it preferred ‘If it’s broken, don’t fix it’?

        Like

        1. “Borrell said that the secrecy was a strategic effort to keep Moscow guessing.”

          Mmmm…yes, I see: kind of like ‘Double Secret Probation’.

          NATO’s motto is “If it ain’t broke…break it”.

          Like

      2. At least they know enough not to refer to the President of the Russian Federation as ‘Vlad’, like dead poor-little-rich-boy John McCain did. And I imagine you will see plenty of other efforts to paint this debacle as a ‘big win for NATO’. What’s worse than embarrassment? Failure?

        Like

  52. On the one hand:

    Britain is prepared to deploy troops to protect Nato allies in Europe if Russia invades Ukraine, Boris Johnson has said in a Commons statement.

    He also warned that President Putin would face “ferocious” Ukrainian resistance and “many Russian mothers’ sons will not be coming home”.

    The UK and its allies would also respond swiftly and “in unison” with “severe” economic sanctions, he added.
    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-60123328

    But on the other hand:

    With tensions growing on the border between Russia and Ukraine, Croatian President Zoran Milanovic has announced that Zagreb will pull its troops out of NATO contingents stationed in the region should the situation spiral into a full-scale conflict.

    Speaking on Tuesday in a televised address, the leader said he sees “reports that NATO – not a separate state, not the US – is increasing its presence and sending reconnaissance ships.”

    He insisted that Zagreb’s authorities “have nothing to do with it and we won’t have anything to do with it, I guarantee you that.”

    NATO announces major new deployment
    Read more NATO announces major new deployment
    “Not only will we not send the military, but if there is an escalation, we will recall every last Croatian military man,” Milanovic said. “This has nothing to do with Ukraine or Russia, it has to do with the dynamics of American domestic politics, [US President] Joe Biden and his administration, which I supported.”

    https://www.rt.com/russia/547307-croatia-withdraw-nato-troops/

    And then there’s this:

    US officials appear to have backtracked on claims that Moscow could be on the verge of ordering an invasion of neighboring Ukraine, while warning that the risk of escalation remains high.

    Speaking to reporters at a press briefing on Monday, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said that “obviously we’re mindful of things that the Russians could do that would potentially give us indications of some sort of imminent incursion.” However, he went on, “we’re not there yet, but we are watching for those indicators very, very closely.”
    https://www.rt.com/russia/547265-pentagon-russia-ukraine-invasion/

    From the former USN Rear Admiral who didn’t get sacked.

    Like

  53. This video is a tribute to the Russian Russian Airborne Forces or VDV (Vozdushno-desantnye voyska Rossii: Russian: Воздушно-десантные войска России, ВДВ) soldiers who rushed to get to Kosovo and Metohija from their station in Bosnia. They managed to capture and hold the only airport in Kosovo and Metohija and thus halted the rapid influx of NATO troops.

    Like

  54. Full steam ahead at the BBC:

    Ukraine: How will we know if war has started?
    Published 7 hours ago

    All the obvious questions are being asked. Will Russia attack? Is President Vladimir Putin determined upon war come what may? Or can diplomacy secure peace?

    But we cannot see inside President Putin’s mind.

    So here’s another question – how will we know when hostilities commence?

    The answer to the headline question?

    It already has!

    But the Russian military has articulated a sophisticated doctrine that sees war and peace as a continuum where different tools are applied at different stages, sometimes in sequence, sometimes together, though with the same strategic aim.

    And that ultimately is why the conflict has already been joined. The only question is how far along the “grey zone” continuum President Putin is willing to go.

    Like

    1. Actually, the only question is “How long will NATO let the present state of nothing-apparently-happening prevail before announcing that war has been declared so the audience does not look away out of boredom, and escalate by implementing the sanctions its leaders are dying to get on the books?”

      Like

  55. In the name of freedom and democracy and mom’s apple pie . . .

    January 25, 2022, 21: 11
    “We’ll start at the top and stay there.” What sanctions Washington threatens Moscow with
    The US is ready to impose sanctions at the same time, bringing down the Russian economy

    The White House intends to simultaneously introduce a package of tough sanctions against Russia in the event of an escalation of the conflict in Ukraine. The new restrictions will have “huge consequences” for the Russian economy, the US believes. What sanctions are being prepared for Moscow – “Gazeta.Ru” reports.

    “Immediate powerful strike”
    The publication Fox Business, citing the words of senior White House officials, reported that the US sanctions imposed in the event of a “further invasion by Russia in the Ukraine” will have an immediate and visible effect on the day they are implemented” for the Russian Federation.

    We are ready to impose sanctions with large-scale consequences that we did not consider in 2014. This means that there will no longer be a phased approach. This time, we will start at the very top and stay there,

    a senior US administration official, who requested anonymity, said during a telephone briefing with reporters.

    According to him, the United States, together with its European allies, intends to “deliver an immediate powerful blow” that will have “huge consequences” for the Russian economy, making it “fragile”. Thus, Western states want to “hobble the desire” of the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin’s “influence on the world stage”.

    “Blow to ambition”
    “When in 2014 we imposed sanctions that were much less severe than the ones we are considering now, restrictions on foreign capital in Russia led to its record outflow, depreciation of currency up to 50%, and the Central Bank was forced to use 25% of its reserves to protect the ruble”, RIA Novosti quotes the White House representative as saying.

    The official added that in addition to financial sanctions, the United States is ready to introduce “new export controls”, Fox Business reports.

    “We are using it to ban the export of goods from the United States to Russia and possibly some foreign-made products subject to U.S. export regulations”, the official said, pointing to the “global dominance” of software and technology made in the United States.

    According to him, the export control options that the United States is considering together with its allies and partners will “hit Putin’s strategic ambitions quite hard” to industrialize the economy and “damage important areas for him, whether it’s artificial intelligence, quantum computing, defense or aerospace”.

    Another senior White House official said Biden administration officials are working with European countries to try to identify areas where Russia can use energy as a weapon in its “aggressive strategy” against the Ukraine.

    “In the event of a Russian invasion… they (the Russians ) are trying to destroy the world order, damage infrastructure, or block supplies and markets in response to sanctions or other countermeasures”, he said.

    Therefore, the US is trying to ensure the “security of supplies” and “mitigate the impact of price shocks affecting the American people and the global economy”. Both US officials warned that the disruption would “most severely affect natural gas markets in Europe” and said they were working with allies to identify additional volumes of non-Russian natural gas from regions around the world.

    “We are in talks with major natural gas producers around the world to understand their ability and willingness to temporarily increase natural gas production and distribute these volumes to European buyers”, said one White House official, noting that if Russia decides to use its natural gas or oil supplies as a weapon, it “will not be without consequences for the Russian economy”.

    Journalists of the German newspaper Bild, in turn, suggested that the damage from sanctions for Russia could amount to $50 billion.

    The Russian authorities have repeatedly stated that they do not plan any invasion of the Ukraine. According to Moscow, Western countries are spreading such rumours in order to increase the troops of the North Atlantic bloc near the borders of the Russian Federation.

    Like

    1. The USA is trying to talk its way into a war that will be fought in and over Europe, by making Europeans complicit in a sanctions package they obviously intend to action regardless what happens…and Europeans are going along with it. The reward for success will be a devastated Europe and a USA that pops up like one of those rubber inflatable boxers with a weight in its base, full of beans and with a freshly-wiped economic slate. Well done, Europe.

      Like

      1. Frog wannabe Prez Eric Zemmour has said today that it is the USA that is using the Ukraine crisis to divide u-Rope to keep it weak and under US influence…

        In other news Pootie-Poot will talk to €µ on Friday. Now it is always a fool’s (can’t think of the word/s) to judge from the past, but just ask P gave Sarko the role of the EU/US diplomatically exiting the Georgia cluserf/k, is it at all that unlikely that P will again chose France as the medium for a facesaving? Not really, except for the previous point about Zemmour and appealing to the Gaullist, independent thinking French. Very smart if true. Even smarter if it works. Something we will only know a few years down the line…. Politico also reports that P. is holding a video call with Italian industrialists tomorrow but journo cherry picks source and pooh-pooh’s the attempt (though France still more likely):

        Putin serenades Italy Inc. amid Ukraine crisis
        https://www.politico.eu/article/vladimir-putin-russia-italy-business-ukraine-crisis/

        But he won’t get the same love from Rome that he did in 2014.
        ####

        It’s amazing to watch Russia’s gameplan in action.

        Asked about ‘what’s next’ by journalists, Russian PR/whatever said ‘we can’t say yet. When we get the USA’s written response to our concerns will will then formulate a response.’ It’s like a TV soap’s end of each episode cliff-hanger, all directed from Moscow.

        “Oh, Chad what will do we do about the gardener?

        -“He’s from the Ukraine so we will support him.”

        “Whatever the cost?”

        -“Mmmm, half a bottle of Chateau Neuf-du-Pape reserve. Or a two bottles of Johnny Walker Red and half a smoked Monte Cristo.”

        Will Chad quit to fight with H88 in the Donbass with all his heart or will the pay-check of his employer’s over-ride his Banderite passion for a pure Ukraine?

        Tune in next week to find out what happens next.

        Like

  56. The first stage of creating a digital twin of a new generation marine engine has been completed
    https://vpk.name/en/537713_the-first-stage-of-creating-a-digital-twin-of-a-new-generation-marine-engine-has-been-completed.html

    31.08.2021

    ….”This will be a basic model that will allow you to quickly create new instances based on the digital platform. The work is distinguished by high productivity. Digitizing the product means reducing the time and cost of creating marine gas turbine engines. We can say that today this is our flagship project, ” said Alexey Borovkov…

    …The project is planned to be completed by October 2023…
    ####

    Another canard of western defense journalists circlejerk doing the rounds recently is that Russia is somehow unable to produce marine turbines to replace the ones traditionally build in the Ukraine, the pop-journos like pointing to the two or three very large ones delivered for major projects in the last couple of years. To that they add a host of non-Russian sourced stories about corruption, stagnation and general bollox.

    We’ve covered this before on this blog and it is not hard to check, namely that projects like this are years in the making but also those same jounos miss the point that in the meantime Russia is rapidly building many much smaller patrol and larger vessels which a) there are sufficient engines; and b) armed with the likes of Zircon/heavy/long-range missiles which means Russia can still project significant force from seaborne resources and is not solely reliant on the big boys. The days of giant missiles that can only be carried by large ships are well past, a bit like excitable defense journalist’s opinions.

    The other point they make is that Russia is losing markets because of this. This is in part true, but as we see with the case of India neither has pulled the trigger as the current Project 11356 (updated Krivak IIIs of which two were bought mothballed and four are being locally built) frigates ships are being built there with ‘Russian assistance’ and then equipped with Ukranian turbines.

    But they do not ask the following: when was the last time the Ukraine build and delivered a large surface warship? I’m not including ‘joint production.’ They haven’t. Instead they are also building a lot of smaller patrol type vessels but also buying similar and larger vessels from the likes of the UK/France/Denmark/whatever and in future those produced in Turkey but with Ukranian made marine turbines. So not made in the Ukraine. It currently has one ancient Krivak III.

    Russian shipbuilding has face serious issues over the years yet it has progressed particularly with civilian vessels (atomic icebreakers, LNG carriers etc.) and is still far ahead of the Ukraine which in the short term relies on forieign partners and according to recent news is looking for technology transfer for the 2022-2030 shipbuilding program to reduce reliance on foreign production.’ So they’re not winning orders against Russia and rather an uncomfortable symbiotic relationship remains as we see with India. But you won’t read that in the defense journalist ‘Russia is stuffed’ crowd. Professional? As usual, when it comes to official enemies any old bs is acceptable.

    Like

    1. Ukraine to Supply Propulsion Systems for Indian Navy Frigates
      https://www.navalnews.com/naval-news/2021/09/ukraine-to-supply-propulsion-systems-for-indian-navy-frigates/

      …Over the past two weeks, Zorya-Mashproekt, Ukraine’s designer and manufacturer of marine and industrial gas turbine plants, has signed contracts with Indian customers totaling about 100 mln USD…

      …On November 20, 2018, Rosoboronexport signed a contract with Goa Shipyard Limited (GSL) worth about $ 500 million to assist in the construction of two Russian Project 11356 frigates at GSL shipyard for the Indian Navy, with the transfer of licenses and technologies by the Russian side. This contract was in addition to the $ 1.2 billion contract signed in October 2018 by Rosoboronexport for the construction of two Project 11356 frigates in Russia at the Yantar shipyard in Kaliningrad for the Indian fleet….
      ####

      Correctly as in the article above, the Indian navy already operates six, these are two follow on ships!

      Like

      1. Saw this in passing.

        Философия “Тойоты” по-русски: как внедряется бережливое производство в российском судостроении
        https://flotprom.ru/2022/%D0%9E%D0%B1%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%BA%D0%B01/

        Бережливое производство (БП) – один из столпов современной производственной культуры, который при рациональном подходе может определить конкурентоспособность предприятия. Флагманом внедрения БП среди госкорпораций России считается “Росатом”. С недавних пор Объединенная судостроительная корпорация (ОСК) инициировала подобную работу на собственных предприятиях и предприятиях-поставщиках. Редакция Mil.Press проследила за ходом процесса, который осложняется спецификой судостроения и военных заказов.
        ####

        Like

  57. 2020-0102-5-25 7:02 EST
    CBC reports that Biden says that he would sanction Putin if Russia invades Ukraine.

    It is not clear who is more oblivious to the irony, Biden or the reporter.

    Like

    1. Yeah, just seen the BBC story (06.40 Moscow time as I write) on the incontinent hair-sniffer’s statement and posted a link to said British state broadcaster’s article above.

      All these threats with the codicil: if Russia invades.

      For almost 3 months now Russia has been about to invade!

      It’s like religion — otherwise known as “myth” or “fantasy” or simply “lies”: Thou shalt have life everlasting after death . . . if there is a god!

      And for 2,000 years now, Jesus has been about to return.

      And they, the dolts of the world, who want, amongst other things, to believe in fairies and unicorns and hobbits, believe, just as they believe that the the “Russians” are “the Other”, the “Forces of Darkness”.

      Like

  58. Well I just can’t speak!

    26 Jan, 2022 07:25
    Ukrainian general names possible date for ‘Russian invasion’
    Earlier predictions that Moscow could be poised to stage an assault have been pushed back

    Russian tanks and troops could be just weeks away from rolling across the Ukrainian border and sparking an all-out conflict in Europe, one of Kiev’s top generals has alleged.

    In an interview published in British newspaper The Times on Saturday, Lieutenant-General Alexander Pavlyuk said that the incursion could be staged in the days following the Winter Olympics, due to be held in Beijing next month. February 20 “is a date that concerns us,” he went on, arguing that Russian President Vladimir Putin would likely want to avoid offending China by overshadowing the games with a war.

    In addition, the date marks the end of planned Russian-Belarusian joint military exercises on the border with Ukraine.

    Pavlyuk, who served in the Soviet Armed Forces in the final years of the USSR, said he is confident in his troops’ ability to fight against Russia, despite the larger nation’s greater military capabilities.

    We have about half a million people who went through a war in this country in which they have either lost someone or something. Half a million who have lost the blood of a relative, lost their homes or lost their friends, and they are ready to tear apart Russians with their bare hands.

    If our intelligence manages to predict the direction of the main Russian hit, after the first big losses they won’t go further. Putin realizes that after heavy casualties his army may stop by itself. You cannot trust intuition in this. It is about cold calculation.

    My, that’s some fighting talk — arsehole!

    Like

    1. Meanwhile, during a TV address to the nation of dipshits, from the clown-president’s mouth itself:

      There is more hype about it now

      and from the secretary of Kiev’s National Security Council:

      The buildup of Russian troops isn’t as rapid as some claim.

      Like

    2. Ahhhh….memories. Remember Dmitry Tymchuk, Kuh-yiv’s perennial doomcrier and military think-tanker? I guess actually he prefers to be called ‘Dmytro’, because patriotic Ukrainians cannot use the same names as the hated aggressor. Cast your memories back and back, to August of 2014…

      https://marknesop.wordpress.com/2014/08/21/how-full-of-shit-would-you-have-to-be-to-be-more-full-of-shit-than-dmitry-tymchuk/

      Dmytro was reliably informed by his close-hold sources at the centres of red-hot Ukrainian intelligence, and predicted so many Russian invasions that if they had all taken place, Russia’s military leadership would have had to declare a country-wide stand-down so the troops could rest before resuming their butchery of innocent Ukrainians.

      Amazingly, Dmytro survived wave after wave of Russian invasions, and is still alive and still spouting his alarmist bullshit, apparently still to eager listeners. Just three days ago, for example, the Aggressor State’s servants attempted a breakthrough – which, of course, failed as all attempts to advance through the iron ring of crack Ukrainian forces are doomed to fail.

      https://www.kyivpost.com/article/opinion/op-ed/dmitry-tymchuks-military-blog-kremlin-backed-rebels-try-to-create-conditions-for-the-further-advancement-of-insurgent-groups-378206.html

      We have entered an age in which skepticism is ordered to submit to simulation, quite a bit like the way the onerous restrictions under which we live – to protect ‘our community’ from The Dreaded Coronavirus – are based on ‘modeling’, which is not science. But science fell by the wayside, because it is clunky; in science, you have to prove stuff. Modeling is so much more liberating – you control the input, and thus also the output, vary the one and you vary the other, and you never have to prove anything! You just say ‘this could happen’ with an appropriately-grave expression, and screaming organizers run to do your bidding.

      Likewise, Ukrainian generals and think-tanks announce that ‘the invasion’ could commence on such-and-such a day in the future, and then lie back on their professional qualifications. You are supposed to believe that since General so-and-so is staggering under the weight of battle decorations and ribbons, he must know. When the promised date comes and goes, nobody thinks much about it or ridicules the forecasters. So many factors could have influenced the change. Nobody speculates about how much Ukraine pocketed by scaring the shit out of Europe and positioning itself as the tripwire over which Russia must pass in its initial assault.

      Like

  59. KP.ru

    January 25, 2022 17:26
    How Zelensky’s “war” will be similar to Saakashvili’s “blitzkrieg”
    All recent conflicts unleashed during the Olympics ended not in favour of the enemies of Russia

    Just for the record: the war in South Ossetia in 2008 started on the opening day of the Beijing Olympics – on the night of 8 August.

    Today the feeling is that the world is on the brink of war again. And on 4 February the Olympics start again in the Chinese capital.

    Déjà vu?

    Back then, too, all the power of Western propaganda persuaded everyone that big, prickly Russia had attacked small, proud Georgia.

    It took an EU Special Commission a whole year to find out who had unleashed the conflict in South Ossetia. The answer was unambiguous — Mikhail Saakashvili had given the order to fire “grads” at sleeping Tskhinvali. And Russia responded. And it responded, according to the EU Commission, “disproportionately harshly”. That is to say: Moscow was still to blame, but at least it was not the aggressor.

    And in February 2014, the Olympics were spoiled by Russia.

    It is easy to imagine that this time too, Vladimir Zelensky — with a push from Washington — will arrange a “war” in the Donbass. Come the Olympics, Putin will fly to Beijing. How not to seize the moment?

    So it is worth reminding Zelensky that the peace enforcement on Georgia in 2008 ended not only with the recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but also with the restoration of their territories to within their [former] Soviet borders.

    The DPR and LPR today occupy only a “rump” — that is to say only 1/3 — of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.

    Followed by a comment, very likely from either a Yukietard or a Russian “liberal”:

    And why do they need a war if they don’t have an army? So, guerrillas. But the whole world will stand up for them. Let’s see who gets punched in the face.

    Yes, let’s do just that!

    Let’s see the whole world stand up for plucky little Banderastan!

    Glory to Banderastan! To the arseholes, glory!

    Like

    1. I think everyone remembers the same sort of tough talk leading up to the disasters at Ilovaisk and Debaltseve, when demoralized and confused Ukrainian soldiers were encircled in a cauldron from which they could not escape, and looked to be for the high jump. Until Russia intervened, and proposed safe-exit corridors through which the beaten could depart, otherwise they would have been wiped out. Not many of them looked to be very interested in ripping apart Russians with their bare hands, although they say that opportunities abounded.

      Russia’s reward for that was global reports that the cowardly Russians had fired on the retreating Ukrainians after they laid down their weapons, and killed them.

      Ukrainians are quite good at ripping apart Russians when they can capture one and he is a prisoner of several. As one military formation against another, with similar equipment, training and numbers, not so much.

      Like

  60. Prepare for howls of anguish from the West! A hunt for Navalny’s brother is on:

    11: 55 a.m., January 26, 2022
    Law enforcement agencies
    Grounds for search for Alexey Navalny’s brother revealed


    Ya can’t pin that rap on me!

    Oleg Navalny, brother of FBK founder (included by the Ministry of Justice in the register of organisations acting as a foreign agent, recognised as an extremist organisation and banned in Russia) Alexei Navalny, has been placed on the wanted persons database by the Interior Ministry following an inspection by the inspectorate. The reasons for the search were revealed to Interfax by lawyer Nikos Paraskevov.

    According to him, according to the report, Navalny did not get registered, so the inspection came to his home to check on him. At the same time, the opposition leader’s brother was not found at home and was then declared as “wanted”, the lawyer said.

    The fact that the Interior Ministry had put Oleg Navalny on the wanted list became known earlier on January 26. The Russian appeared in the ministry’s database as wanted under one of the articles of the criminal code.

    On January 25, the Federal Penitentiary Service requested that Oleg Navalny’s one-year suspended sentence be replaced with a real one in the “sanitation case”. [When the FBK had urged protests during a “sanitation” period, namely when quarantine restrictions had been imposed — ME.] A submission to this effect was sent to the Lublinsky court in Moscow by the penitentiary inspectorate.

    According to the verdict, because of calls [to protest publicly] from Oleg Navalny and others involved in the case, people, including those with COVID-19, came to an unauthorised rally on 23 January last year, “creating a threat of mass disease”. Amongst the protesters were 19 citizens who had tested positive for the coronavirus and were supposed to be on self-isolation at the time.

    On 25 January, Rosfinmonitoring added Alexei Navalny to its list of terrorists and extremists.

    Like

  61. 12: 01, 26 January 2022
    Latvia will spend 350 million euros to protect itself from Russia
    Latvian Defense Ministry to ask for 350 million euros for protection from Russia

    The Latvian Defence Ministry will ask the state for an additional 350 million euros because of the growing threat to national security, in particular, from Russia. This was stated by the head of the department Artis Pabriks, RIA Novostireports.

    The Defence Ministry wants to follow the example of neighboring countries. “And we also have seen that Estonia has allocated additional resources to its armed forces, as well as a little bit on internal affairs, in order to promote the faster development of its armed forces”, Pabriks said.

    In his opinion, the challenges facing the ministry, especially from Russia, “will not disappear overnight”, and therefore in the next few years an additional 350 million euros will be needed to be spent on protection against external threats.

    Earlier, Latvian Foreign Minister Edgar Rinkevich had called for strengthening the NATO presence in Eastern Europe because of the number of Russian and Belarusian troops near the borders.

    At the same time, the Latvian Prime Minister said that a war between Russia and the North Atlantic Alliance was unthinkable. In his opinion, this would be the worst outcome in the current situation, but he is confident that NATO is ready for confrontation.

    Glory to the Chihuahuas!

    Like

  62. 08:00 26.01.2022
    Ukrainian soldiers dream of ripping up Russians with their bare hands

    As part of the aggravation of the situation around the Ukraine by Washington and London, as well as the world media controlled by them, official Kiev is behaving most inconsistently. Representatives of the Ukrainian authorities in recent months have regularly been making mutually exclusive statements and chaotic decisions: from allegations that Kiev sees no Russian intentions to invade, to ranting about specific dates for an invasion or the distribution of weapons to the so-called territorial defence forces.
    The last few days have been no exception. After a meeting of the National Security and Defence Council (NSDC), Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council Danilov, President Zelensky and Prime Minister Shmyhal announced that there was not the slightest reason for panic, an attack was not expected, and the Ukraine itself generally takes the position of “peace to the world” . Later, Defence Minister Reznikov said the same.

    But just a few hours earlier, during a meeting with employees of the Foreign Intelligence Service on the occasion of “Foreign Intelligence Day”, Zelensky had unleashed a very bellicose statement: “Ukrainian intelligence has always played an important role in countering external threats. It is time not only to deter effectively, but also to launch offensive actions so as to defend the national interests of the Ukraine”. This can also be interpreted as a call to carry out aggressive (e.g. terrorist) actions on the territory of the enemy, which Ukraine has explicitly, including on the legislative level, defined exclusively as Russia. And Lieutenant General Pavlyuk, commander of the Ukrainian United Forces in the Donbass, on the same day not only named February 20 as the date of the planned invasion, but also promised to “tear apart the Russians with his bare hands”.

    Of course, in view of the massive propaganda attack by the Anglo-Saxons [Anglophones FFS!!! — ME] and the inarticulate signals from their own government, Ukrainian society is increasingly sinking into a state of mass psychosis and the collapse of the economy is only accelerating.

    Interestingly, official Kiev has been stubbornly claiming for months that it is the Kremlin that is conducting a disinformation campaign about the attack, and accordingly the “aggressor country” is also fomenting panic in the Ukraine. These statements have been made against a backdrop of endless publications in the Washington- and London-controlled media that have been pouring in since late October, and equally endless statements by representatives of the US and UK authorities and their satellites. This is being done against the background of the partial evacuation of embassy staff and the families of diplomats announced this week by the same United States, Britain and those of Australia and Japan that have joined them. At the same time, the Russian side has denied its intentions to attack all this time, and the Russian media did not and still does not take seriously the hysteria blown up on this occasion, discussing only the topic of possible provocations from the Ukrainian side.

    But amidst claims by some in Kiev that there are no prospects for war (Reznikov even said that Russia has not created a single strike force), the Ukrainian authorities are demonstratively taking measures to increase escalation. Troops are being brought to the line of contact, weapons and ammunition are being brought to the line of contact. An attempt to enlist women en masse in military service was in the same vein, but it seems to have failed. After a purely negative public reaction to the decision to put them on the military register, Zelenski gave up and instructed that the decision be reconsidered. On the other hand, Kiev has not given up on the creation of so-called territorial defence forces and the distribution of weapons to them in the regions bordering on Russia. Whilst this decision itself is also perceived ambiguously by society — especially by that part of society which has something to lose.

    The fact is that the territorial defence forces are recruiting outright rabble, including former criminals (Hi 2014!). It is possible that this rabble could somehow be used in provocations against Russia. But it is even more likely that it will turn into what it has to turn into: armed gangs that will rob wealthy compatriots. And if the Ukraine goes into a state of even greater ungovernability, they could form the backbone of “peaceful protesters”: like the ones who frolic in Alma Ata.

    Yes, the Ukrainian government decided on 25 January to withdraw from the Verkhovna Rada the cannibalistic draft law on the so-called transition period, introduced back in the summer. It spoke of a “beautiful Ukraine of the future” that would control the Crimea and all of the Donbass, smash and brainwash the local population, and build up territories with countless monuments and memorials in honour of the “peremogi” [victory] over Russia. But the current withdrawal of the bill should not be perceived as a sobering up of the Ukrainian authorities or a goodwill gesture on their part. The move was one of Russia’s conditions for organising a meeting at the advisory level of the Normandy quartet leaders to be held in Paris today. And since such events are a certain fetish for Kiev and, and besides, Germany and France also opposed the bill, this was a completely acceptable concession on the part of Zelensky and the head of his office, Yermak — which will not affect the de-escalation, let alone the implementation of the Minsk agreements.

    In this whole situation, the psychosis into which Ukrainian society is increasingly sinking has so far played into the hands of the Kiev authorities. It overshadows the numerous economic problems. And it allows Shmygal to make astonishing statements: for example, that the hryvnia is falling as part of economic stability. But in fact the commercial borrowing market is closed for the Ukraine today. Not only financial speculators are fleeing the country, but also their own businesses, which are more concerned with taking their families to the West, have stopped investing in anything. The energy crisis is also in full swing — on 25 January Kiev again asked Minsk for emergency supplies of electricity because of the emergency shutdown of two nuclear power plant units at once. And all these problems are sucking the Ukraine in like a vortex. And it is absolutely unclear how the Ukrainian government is going to get out of it. The main thing is not to have a serious escalation in the Donbass, which will benefit certain powers in the West, but could have the most serious consequences for the Ukraine.

    Like

  63. The man who would “tear Russians apart with his bare hands”:


    Ukraine Joint Forces Commander Oleksandr Pavliuk

    When we put our flags at the border, this will be a victory

    Key point!

    The very fact that they cannot do that is why they refuse to follow the Minsk agreement. They want free rein in the separatist areas, they want them closed off from Russian support, they want the present DNR and LNR borders with Russia hermetically sealed, and then — let the retribution begin!

    Death to the Vatniki!

    And, I daresay, Oleksandr will be there, busily ripping the Russians apart with his bare hands.

    Note how in the above linked article it states that Pavliuk was a “participant of the Russian-Ukrainian war. From 2017 to 2020.

    More than the two following ways of transliterating the bastard’s family name into the Latin alphabet: “Pavlyuk” or “Pavliuk”. No standard Cyrillic – Latin transliteration system, see

    Like

  64. And here’s another arsehole who likes to make accusations and threats against Russia:

    Dickhead!

    Next to him is Priti Sushil Patel, British Home secretary, born in Londonistan of Indian parentage, and in front of him is the Prince of Wales, born in a bed, I suppose and of multi-ethnic parentage, mostly German and Danish.

    His dad’s family was a member of the German-Danish Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg clan of aristos. The heir to the UK throne touts “Windsor” as his family name. His great-grandfather, King George V, had changed the Royal “family ” name from “Saxe- Coburg and Gotha” to Windsor during WWI, which gave rise to his cousin, Kaiser Wilhelm II of the German Reich, saying, on learning of this name change, that henceforth in his Reich, Shakespeare’s play “The Merry Wives of Windsor” should be called “The Merry Wives of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha”.

    Quite a wag was Kaiser Bill.

    Like

  65. Euractiv mit Neuters: Lithuania considers modifying Taiwan representation name to defuse row with China
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/china/news/lithuania-considers-modifying-taiwan-representation-name-to-defuse-row-with-china/

    …Modifying the Chinese version of the representation name to refer to “Taiwanese people” rather than to Taiwan, was last week proposed by Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis to President Gitanas Nauseda as a way to reduce the tensions with China, sources said…

    The President’s office refused to comment. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not reply to a request for comment….

    …Chinese tabloid newspaper the Global Times published an article on Saturday (22 January) saying that “it will take much more than just renaming the office” for Lithuania to mend its relationship with China.

    “Lithuania needs to make substantial adjustments to its overall China policy, rather than completely follow the US’ agenda,” …
    ####

    Who do they think they are kidding? Rowing back from ‘a position of strength’ (sic proclaimed $1b Taiwanese chip investment – however unlikely that is) or ‘feeling the heat from other EU states’? Or maybe they think they are the United States and belive that they can wipe their own slate clean whenever they feel like it?

    Too little, too late.

    Like

  66. Euractiv: Sweden doing everything to keep ‘out of war’, says foreign minister
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/sweden-doing-everything-to-keep-out-of-war-says-foreign-minister/

    Cooperation with NATO remains close and deep, and Sweden is doing everything to stay out of war, said foreign minister Ann Linde after meeting NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

    …The foreign minister did, however, strongly criticise Russian so-called “security guarantees” against any further eastward expansion of NATO, describing them as “completely unacceptable”….
    ####

    But Sweden is ‘neutral’ and not a member of NATO? Or is it (secretly all these years)? What a high opinion they have of themselves. Probably due to being very clever!

    The concept of ‘security’ for all is an alien concept, but for myself and my friends. Spend less time at the smorgasbord and more time boning up on basic strategic concepts that make the adult world turn, not one run by cartoon children.

    Like

    1. Why is any mention of curbing NATO expansion ‘completely unacceptable’? NATO is a military alliance, not in any way commercial or trade-related, and there are no objections to those. How much of the planet does the western military have to incorporate before it feels ‘safe’, especially when it ranks Russia and China as ‘geopolitical enemies’ and the former has enough nuclear destructive potential to obliterate the planet? When there’s nothing left but Russia and the rest of the earth’s surface is NATO, it would still not be ‘safe’, although by then I daresay it would feel safe enough to attack on some pretext. That’s the only reason for NATO to get bigger – to get big enough to attack and feel reasonably sure of success. It’s not a ‘defensive alliance’; did the UK have to ‘defend itself’ against Libya? Did France?

      Like

  67. Politic: Lawmakers want to step up fight against foreign meddling in EU affairs
    https://www.politico.eu/article/lawmakers-want-to-step-up-fight-against-foreign-meddling-in-eu-affairs/

    New report urged the Commission to fight foreign influence and disinformation.

    …“Those who speak about Ukraine as a foreign affairs issue don’t understand that there is a much broader offensive by Vladimir Putin against the very core of European democracy,” French S&D MEP Raphaël Glucksmann told POLITICO. Glucksmann, who heads the foreign interference special committee, said Putin is “engaged in hybrid warfare with the European Union.”

    Glucksmann said it was crucial for the EU to come up with a coherent approach to deal with insidious online and offline maneuvers from countries including Russia, China and Turkey.

    “The EU has behaved as if it had no enemies, no strategic adversaries, and now for years European democracies and institutions have been under threat and [there are] attacks from foreign actors with hostile intentions, from cyberattacks to elite capture to financing of political parties,” he said.

    While nonbinding, the report is the result of an 18-month inquiry assessing foreign interference threats faced by Europe and the bloc’s potential responses. ..
    ####

    It looks like broad censorship rules for ‘Opinions we don’t like,’ this from so-called liberals. It also leaves u-Rope and their bloviating MEPs to continue to extensively meddle in other countries internal affairs. These mentally obese politicians still don’t get it, but that is what self-declared superiority is all about.

    Like

    1. Until 2014, Glucksmann, born of Ashkenazi Jewish parents from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was married to Georgian and Ukrainian politician Eka Zguladze and from 2005 until 2012 inclusive, Glucksmann was an adviser to former President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili.

      Quelle fucking surprise!

      Like

      1. ‘foreign interference special committee,’

        Isn’t that just code for sexual adventures (outside one’s own relationship) in Brussels? A bit like that Hungarian MEP who was at a sex party during lock down and went down the drainpipe naked before being spotted by the cops?

        Maybe the other point about such numerous ‘committees’ is to mop up the crazies and keep them in one place where they can howl at the moon, i.e. far away from everyone else?

        Like

  68. Neuters via Antiwar.com: U.S. Should Consider ‘Safe Harbor’ From Russia Sanctions for Some Companies – Trade Group
    https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2022-01-25/u-s-should-consider-safe-harbor-from-russia-sanctions-for-some-companies-trade-group

    ….he Biden administration and Congress need to “get the details right in case they must follow through on the threat of sanctions,” Jake Colvin, president of The National Foreign Trade Council told Reuters.

    “Those details should include consideration of safe harbors or wind-down periods to enable companies to fulfill existing contracts and obligations, as well as carve-outs for lifesaving medicines and other humanitarian considerations consistent with longstanding U.S. policy.”
    ####

    Does Washington think Moscow will continue to accept its salami-slicing sanctions tactics when it has expressly said ‘the gloves are off’? I can imagine Boing would be first, just the announcement of suspension of titanium supplies, followed by a company favored by the UK such as BP. They could then explain at leisure why exiting Russia it is ‘worth it’ for Britain. There’s so much other stuff that no-one is talking about.

    Like

  69. “Not painful, but politically destructive”: Russia reacted to Biden’s words about possible sanctions against Putin
    January 26, 2022, 16: 03
    Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov, commenting on the words of Joe Biden, who allowed the possibility of introducing personal sanctions against Vladimir Putin in the event of an “escalation” around the Ukraine, has said that such an approach is “politically destructive”. Meanwhile, State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin believes that American restrictions are hostile and indicate Washington’s dissatisfaction with Russia’s independent policy. The Federation Council, in turn, has pointed out the inappropriateness of the sanctions rhetoric.

    The introduction of sanctions against any senior official, including Vladimir Putin, is not painful, but it is politically destructive. This was stated by Russian Presidential press Secretary Dmitry Peskov, commenting on the words of US President Joe Biden, who allowed the possibility of introducing personal sanctions against Russian leader Vladimir Putin in the event of an “escalation” around the Ukraine.

    It’s not painful: it’s politically destructive,

    Peskov said.

    According to him, the restrictions will also not be a painful blow for Russian government officials at the highest level. He pointed out that congressmen and senators who talk about freezing assets, bank accounts, and real estate of representatives of the Russian leadership do not have sufficient expert knowledge.

    “The fact is that according to our law, it has long been forbidden for representatives of the top management and officials [to have foreign assets, bank accounts real estate (officially, at any rate!) — ME]. Therefore, of course, such a statement on this issue is absolutely not painful for any of the representatives of the top leadership”, the Kremlin official stressed.

    The United States does not like the fact that Russia has become strong and independent, State Duma Chairman Vyacheslav Volodin wrote on his Telegram channel.

    “Everything has fallen into place. Finally, the US leadership has openly stated what it wants: Washington wants a loyal and controlled Russian president. The United States is not satisfied that under President Vladimir Putin, the Russian Federation has become strong and independent”, Volodin said.

    According to him, such actions of the American authorities are hostile to Russia.

    “In the understanding of the citizens of our country, these are sanctions not against Putin, but against the choice of the people of the Russian Federation”, Volodin concluded.


    Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin at the Geneva summit in June 2021 RIA Novosti © Michael Metzel

    [In my opinion, the Russian president is looking at Biden rather bemusedly and somewhat condescendingly, as though he were thinking: “Is this really the best the USA can choose as POTUS?” — ME]

    Earlier, the head of the White House, Joe Biden, admitted the possibility of introducing personal sanctions against Vladimir Putin. According to him, he had “made it clear” to the Russian leader that in the event of an “invasion” of the Ukraine, Moscow would face harsh consequences, including significant economic restrictions and an increased NATO presence on the eastern flank.

    [This gets me! That twat Stoltenberg also talks about the “eastern flank of NATO”. So where is the NATO “western flank” — the United States eastern seaboard, perhaps? I think perchance there is a Freudian slip when these bastards talk about the “eastern flank”. How about “Ostfront”, you bastards? You know, the term the Nazis used during their heroic crusade to rescue European “civilization” from the perceived onslaught of the Tatar-Mongol-Slavic “Untermenschen” from eastern vastness? — ME]

    “If he invades — and he can do that, whether it’s an entire country or on a much smaller scale — it will have serious consequences for Russia, and not only economic and political. But it is also fraught with serious consequences for the whole world. If he throws all the forces available there at it, it will be the biggest invasion since World War II.

    [Bigger than the UN “Incheon Landing” in 1950, during the Korean War, that involved some 75,000 troops and 261 naval vessels? — ME]

    After this, the world will not be the same again”, the US president added.

    On January 12, the US Senate introduced a bill called the “Law on Protecting the Sovereignty of Ukraine 2022”, developed by a group of Democrats led by the chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, Robert Menendez. It refers to a “cascade of mandatory sanctions” against the Russian political and military leadership (including against Vladimir Putin), financial institutions, extractive industries and Nord Stream 2 .

    On January 19, Republican Member of the House of Representatives Jim Banks introduced a bill to Congress called the ” Putin Accountability Act.” The document mentions the possibility of imposing sanctions against a number of Russian officials.

    In addition, the possibility of imposing sanctions against the Russian leadership was announced by British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss.

    [Always quick on a follow-up act is Truss! — ME]

    “We are already providing assistance to Ukraine, providing it with defensive weapons, and providing economic support. And we urge Russia to refrain from invading. We express our position very clearly: if it does this, it will face extremely heavy economic costs, extremely heavy sanctions. We are working together with our friends and allies”, she said on Sky News.

    “The US is becoming more sophisticated in inventing new methods of influence”
    First Deputy Chairman of the International Committee of the Federation Council Vladimir Dzhabarov believes that the American leader has once again made an erroneous statement.

    “Let’s remember that infamous question regarding Putin that shocked everyone. [The question about whether Biden considered Putin to be a murderer, to which the US president answered in the affirmative — ME] After that, by the way, he apologized at a meeting scheduled in Geneva. I think this is all follows along the same line of reasoning”, Dzhabarov said in a conversation with RT.

    The senator pointed out the inadmissibility of sanctions pressure.

    “By imposing sanctions against the head of state, he imposes sanctions against the whole country, against the whole people. I think this is unacceptable”, the senator concluded.

    “Unprecedented” sanctions against Russia were not enough, now they want to use economic measures against the president, said Dmitry Belik, a member of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs.

    “The actions of the US leadership once again confirm the fear that the United States has of our country, of the firm position of our national leader. And the reason is again the alleged “invasion” of the Ukraine by Russian troops. Washington is failing to make Russia manageable: neither sanctions, nor groundless statements, nor numerous provocations — nothing helps; so the U.S. political elite is trying to invent new methods of influence, which, like all previous ones, will not succeed in pressuring Russia”, said the RT interlocutor.

    Like

    1. The EU is expanding its military presence in the Indo-Pacific, you know for peaceful purposes like Freedumb of Navigation. It’s not a ‘sphere of influence’ rather a ‘sphere of effluence’ as u-Rope is happy to deficate on its borders, near abroad and far abroad. Being pretentious twats, the don’t even bring biodegradable bags to pick up their own s/t and dispose of it properly. They just leave it there.

      Like

      1. The comical part is the constant insistence that NATO is acting in the public good; it HAS to be allowed to expand and expand again, and anyone who would restrict it is evul. The west is uncomfortable unless it can clothe itself in the robes of sanctimony and rectitude.

        Like

    2. In the photo, Biden is throwing his famous ‘geriatric jab’ slow-motion punch at Putin. It’s tricky, because you never know when it’s going to land. If you’re far away, Biden has to rest a bit before finishing off the slick move.

      Like

  70. 26 January 2022, 19:45
    US Ambassador to Moscow John Sullivan has arrived at the Russian Foreign Ministry

    According to TASS, the car of the head of the American diplomatic mission drove up to the Foreign Ministry building at about 19:30 Moscow time.

    How about handing over a declaration of war, Sullivan, because that’s what you shits have basically done?

    19: 58 26.01.2022 (updated: 20: 22 26.01.2022)
    WASHINGTON, January 26-RIA Novosti. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg will hold a press conference against the background of reports about the transfer of answers from the United States to the Russian Federation on security proposals.

    “Stoltenberg will hold an online press conference at 19.00 Central European time (21.00 Moscow time – ed.)”, the press release reads.

    Like

      1. Very sly – they tell Russia not to reveal what is in the responses

        Then steal the advantage by holding a press conference

        It would seem to me that whatever is in these responses should be published.

        You don’t ask others – your enemies – to guarantee your security.

        As I have said before in previous posts – what was the point of all this. ?

        Every time Russia engages with the USA it ends up with sanctions and threats.

        Now this build up to war – was this part of the plan?

        Was this calculated as a possibility when the security guarantees were sought from the west?

        Like

    1. Neither is in the EU, which by and large (sic not the lo-land of Po-land & the Baltic chuihuahaus) are none to interested in confrontation over bs.

      Like

  71. Zhirinovsky in his ususal style today in the Duma:

    The LDPR leader compared January – February 2022 with the pre-war period.

    “Today is epochal ! Right now it is like May-June 1941! What will happen on June 22? We know! It is not yet June 22, but the troops are coming, the tanks are coming, the missiles are coming, the headquarters, everything is already planned”, Zhirinovsky bluntly said about military preparations in the Ukraine and around it.

    Naturally, the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party believes that Russia should decide the issues of war not with the Ukraine, but with the United States and NATO.

    “I’m not saying that something will happen tomorrow, but they are ready for war, although they don’t want to fight. They are afraid”, said Zhirinovsky, hinting at politicians, generals and diplomats from the West. “And I have given Lavrov some advice about how to talk to them. “We don’t want to fight either, but we can! We need them to understand that we can! And they will be afraid; they will retreat, because they have a well-fed life, fattened and contented – and suddenly they will fight. You (Russian diplomats) should stand up and say: ‘Well, when do we start?’, so as to make them afraid!”

    source

    Like

  72. January 26, 2022, 21: 46
    NATO urges Russia to withdraw troops from the Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova

    The North Atlantic Alliance called on Russia to withdraw its troops from the Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova. This was stated by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg at an emergency press conference after the Russian side had been given a response to security requirements, TASS reports.

    On Wednesday, January 26, US Ambassador John Sullivan handed over to Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko Washington’s written response on security guarantees.

    US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken later confirmed the transmission of the written response, saying the United States was ready to negotiate with Russia in the event of a de-escalation. At the same time, he said that Washington would not make the document public because it “leaves room for confidential negotiations”.

    On January 22, U.S. administration sources reported that Washington had asked Moscow not to publish a future U.S. response to Russian demands for security guarantees. According to one of the officials of the State Department, the Russian authorities may, contrary to this desire, disclose the contents of the message. White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the document would set out the United States’ “concerns” and ideas to strengthen “a sense of mutual security”.

    In December, the Russian Foreign Ministry handed over to the American side drafts of a treaty between Russia and the United States on security guarantees and an agreement on measures to ensure the security of Russia and NATO member states. In the document, the parties undertake to eliminate all existing infrastructure for the deployment of nuclear weapons outside their territory, exercise restraint in military planning and during exercises to reduce the risks of possible dangerous situations, and not take actions that affect each other’s security.

    So where’s the “transparency”, Blinken?

    Thought that was a buzz-word amongst you mendacious creatures.

    Note that Sullivan didn’t meet the organ grinder at the Foreign Ministry.

    Hope they made him use the tradesman’s entrance and made him wait.

    Like

  73. Late getting here Mark. Much to comment on but I’ll limit my remarks to women (not from the LBGT + alphabet culture) would make dynamic urban combat soldiers if men were to hump the ammo. Separate barracks, separate mess halls, separate combat training and no opportunities playing footsies. It could be done.

    In Vietnam the courage of the women could not be questioned:

    https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/181623

    It’s getting interesting as today ‘the written response’ was delivered

    Like

  74. In it’s never too late.

    Russia bserver: RUSSIAN FEDERATION SITREP 20 JANUARY 2022
    https://patrickarmstrong.ca/2022/01/20/russian-federation-sitrep-20-january-2022/

    ####

    As much as I’d like to take credit for the ascention of Gilbert Doctorow by the Blogosphere (since I posted his stuff in Francophile media @ http://usforeignpolicy.blogs.lalibre.be/ a while back), I’m not enough of a d*kwad. He’s a professional, a realist and an expert. His time has come and it has f/k all to do with me (unfortunately)! 😦

    Speaking of which, the cracks were apparent in the last couple of years or so where the Pork Pie New Media deemed it ‘not risky’ to start quoting anyone who was not 100% in-line with Washington on Russia in the ‘acceptable media’ aka in the common parlance that the line from Washington had seriously jumped the shark.

    My attention is on senior reporters. Who will finally engage their brains and who will continue to copy/paste the Washington/London/whatever line. They’ve had 30 years of easy. As Martynov said in his most recent post (more or less), ‘up there with still looking for Saddam’s chemical weapons.’

    Like

    1. On the plus side, in my opinion Washington knows exactly what is going on but as I have said before this is ‘optics’.

      Russia, unlike the west is not interested in rubbing the west’s failure in its face (aka PR wankathon. Results will do. So, as a fool that is making a prediction, Moscow will have not problem with the Bi-Dumb Regime declaring ‘Victory’ (sic ‘our threats of sanctions stopped Russia from invading -the- Ukaine) if the results are satisfactory.

      Which leads us to this question. If neither wants further bs, then a conspiracy is in play. That is not to say that Russia will dump or not continue to co-ordinate with China. The most important factor as I can see is that it is in everyone’s interest’s that the situation is de-escalated and the USA retains its pride, warrented or not. I’m not sure we are there, but I’m just a regular joe.*

      Otherwise, the BDA is too dumb to take the off-ramp at this opportunity. But in favor Baby Face Kirby has ‘rowed back’ on the ‘imminet invasion of the Ukriane by Russia’, and this is going to go in to extra-time. In which case I’m not sure there is enough popcorn and diapers for everyone who gives a s/t.

      * Powered by Zubrowska vodka.

      Like

  75. The US response:

    NO to Russian “red line”, i.e. refusal to cease eastwards expansion to present Russian border, considers Russian demand that Banderastan not be part of NATO unacceptable.

    But why the demand from the USA that this refusal be kept secret?

    And why, if NATO considers that it shall ever expand, does this organisation label itself as “defensive”?

    Answer to last question: because NATO is an instrument of USA foreign policy whose task is to encircle and contain the “world island”, principally Russia and China. The USA already controls and occupies the western peninsula of Eurasia.

    Like

    1. Stream of ordure:

      Blinken spokes sic about the broad outlines of the US replies. The Americans won’t make them public and are urging Russia to do the same. The US says the response isn’t a formal document but a set of ideas for further discussion, if Russia wants to continue dialogue.

      “There’s no doubt in my mind that if Russia were to approach this seriously, and in a spirit of reciprocity, with the determination to enhance collective security for all of us, there are very positive things in this document that should be pursued,” he said.

      Washington says the ball is now in the Russian court and it’s now up to Moscow to choose discussions or a confrontation. The response has been coordinated with US allies and Ukraine.

      If there is failure in negotiations, then it is the fault of the Russians, according to Washington, whilst at the same time refusing point blank to change its position vis-à-vis NATO eastern expansion and the accession of dear little Banderastan to the “defensive alliance”.

      Defensive against whom?

      The malevolent Orcs, of course, who are bent on world domination — goes without saying, unlike the hegemon, ‘cos it does that already.

      source

      Postscript:

      The US will continue to supply weapons to Ukraine, the secretary of state said.

      Like

    2. It goes hand in glove with the EU’s Ever Expanding Union. Both organizations play fast and lose with the international rules and redefine their own rules to their own benefit. It’s ‘choice’, but of the kind you are given.

      Recently Fabulous Clown Borrell said there ‘No place in EU for genocide deniers, supporters of war criminals’ in reference to only Serbs!* Croazia is already in and they still do their best (along with their allies) to play down their genocidal role in World War Two (particularly to anyone Serb, Gypsy or non-Jewish). Other memberstates and senior politicians have been openly questioning their country’s roles in the past ‘It wasn’t us. We were forced to do it’ blah blah blah. In relation to Bosnia it can be seen as direct support for the last Viceroy’s act of making ‘genocide denial’ a criminal act before he scooted back to Vienna and left everyone else to clean up the mess. So either Borrell has compounded that mess by lazily speaking or it is now an official EU position that the law stays in place and in co-junction with US sanctions against the Republica Srpska and its pols, it is increasing threats rather than de-escalating. Kind of the opposite of what is being said about the Ukraine situation.

      So yes, Borrell is still FoS but that is not the point. It is the imposition of ‘conditions’ by the EU/NATO whatever because they are STRONK! Not because they are being fair, equitable, balanced or anything else. Because they can. Unfortunately for them Russia is not ‘weak’ like the Serbs. It literally is the law of the jungle.

      * https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/borrell-no-place-in-eu-for-genocide-deniers-supporters-of-war-criminals/

      Like

    3. But the consensus for several years now has been that Ukraine is not ready to join NATO and its ascension is not imminent. That’s because although Washington is hot for Ukraine to join NATO, it would become part of Europe and Europe is not all that keen to have another huge poor country dumped in its lap – especially not one which, if its track record is anything to go by, would immediately start squalling for money. NATO just will not accept Russia telling it what it can do, even right on Russia’s border. NATO has to be left free to make choices, even if they are terrible for NATO’s own membership. It will not accept anyone’s authority.

      It is possible it made a secret deal with Moscow, something like, “Look, we can’t have you telling us what to do in public. Tell you what; Ukraine is not going to be asked to join NATO. But that’s between you and me. In public, I am going to turn on the outrage and say your conditions are unacceptable. Deal?” But I would rate that unlikely, because Russia knows full well that America is not agreement-capable; Russia coined the phrase. So no matter what it promised, as long as it got Russia to agree not to ever reveal it publicly, it left itself the wiggle room to go back on the ‘agreement’.

      Like

  76. Go Canada!

    It’s “boots on the ground” time again!

    Canada announced on Wednesday that it would extend its mission to support the Ukrainian Armed Forces by three years and would provide an extra 60 soldiers, with the possibility of raising boots on the ground to as high as 400.

    While 200 Canadian military personnel are already stationed in Ukraine, another 60 will be deployed in the coming days, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced.

    “The biggest contribution that Canada can make to Ukraine right now is people,” claimed Defense Minister Anita Anand, who revealed that the country had “trained over 30,000 Ukrainian soldiers.”

    “We should not underestimate the importance of this training mission,” she said.

    Former Canadian minister for the Ukraine chuffed to death!

    source

    Like

    1. I doubt the former Canadian Foreign Minister for Ukraine is chuffed at all, because her real countrymen are not all that chuffed. They really wanted weapons, not people, because if they don’t have any immediate or forecast use for the weapons they receive, they will sell them and get money. Money and things they can sell for money are Ukraine’s primary interests. I know they asked for the Canadian training mission to be extended, and it’s better than nothing, but they are pretending to be delighted because it prevents any rapprochement between Russia and Canada, and cements Ukraine’s status as a ‘special friend’. They also got $120 Million, cast as a ‘loan’ although I’m sure nobody expects to get it back.

      The funny part is that when there is no ‘invasion’, the west will crow that it put the fear of God into ‘Vlad’ Putin; that he fully intended to invade, but the combined might of the righteous west made him reconsider. Just like when they can’t make coronavirus last another minute, they will announce that it was defeated by the vaccines.

      Like

  77. “Nord Stream 2 AG has founded a German subsidiary Gas for Europe GmbH. The new company is to become the owner and operator of the 54-kilometre section of the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline located in the German territorial waters and the landfall facility in Lubmin, as an independent transmission operator in accordance with the German Energy Industry Act (EnWG),” according to the statement.

    source

    Cue Baerbock!

    More to the point: cue her controller at the US Department of State.

    Like

  78. Wallace intends to shoot shit in Moscow.

    LONDON, January 27. /TASS/. British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace has confirmed his intention to pay a visit to Russia and to meet with Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu, Times daily reported.

    “I want the Russians to understand the Ukrainians will fight and Russia risks its economy, it risks being isolated, and that is not a legacy [Russian] President [Vladimir] Putin wants to be remembered for,” the daily quoted Wallace as saying.

    “There is a chance it could be stopped but I’m not optimistic,” the British top military official added.

    Wallace also said that considering tensions in regard to Ukraine the United Kingdom in cooperation with NATO “could definitely deploy more forces in land, sea or air.”

    Shoigu will have a field day with the cretin.

    Like

  79. Don’t forget to close the door when you go out!


    US Ambassador to Russia leaves the Russian foreign ministry yesterday.

    MOSCOW, January 26. /TASS/. US Ambassador to Moscow John Sullivan arrived in his car at the Russian Foreign Ministry at about 19:30 Moscow time on Wednesday, a TASS correspondent has reported.

    CNN reported earlier that the US intends to hand Moscow written responses to proposals on security guarantees as early as Wednesday.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told the State Duma earlier in the day that Russia would not publish a US response on security guarantees, if asked, but would disclose the general meaning of the answers.

    On December 17, 2021, the Russian Foreign Ministry published draft agreements on security guarantees that Moscow expects from Washington and NATO. The two treaties – one with the US and the other with NATO – stipulate that NATO would halt its eastward expansion, deny membership to Ukraine, and introduce limits on the deployment of serious offensive weapons, including nuclear ones.

    And what Sullivan handed over was sweet FA.

    And the request that the Orcs not tell anyone about the content of the reply.

    Sullivan is a typically American ambassador, an appointee, not a diplomat, who is a lawyer and former senior advisor in four presidential campaigns. He did not meet Lavrov, but his second-in-command at the foreign ministry.

    Like

  80. Stoltenberg was a sight to behold making his speech yesterday and waving his arms about:

    What shites these NATO general secretaries are!

    Here’s former NATO General Secretary (1999 – 2004) “Lord” George Robertson, former British Labour Party MP, now a member of the House of Lords, entertaining an honoured guest at that seat of democracy, at the “Mother of Parliaments” in Westminster in October, 2015:

    Robertson’s beaming guest in the above photograph is out-and-out Yukie Nazi Andriy Parubiy (image on Facebook page of Andriy Parubiy)

    And Parubiy can be seen in the photograph below:

    Now, Robertson might well not have known Parubiy’s form when he welcomed him as his guest at the House of Lords. But if not, then why not?

    What Robertson certainly did know at the time, though, I am sure, was that Parubiy was a fighter for Ukraine independence and democracy, and most importantly, that he was a fighter against Russian tyranny and attempts by Russia and the Evil One to stifle the independence of the Ukraine, so that was good enough for “Lord” Robertson, it seems.

    Nice one, George, you stupid cnut!

    Like

    1. He almost certainly knew Parubiy is a Nazi, but the enemy of my enemy is my friend. Aka divide and rule which has been the British Empire’s playbook for centuries.

      It does not preclude stabbing current allies in the back when the wind changes. That’s another perfected talent the Brits have. One must always consider such relationships as transitory and transactional, particularly the latter as if it costs too much money, bye bye, not a misty tear in sight!

      Like

  81. The Independent

    On the front line: Inside the Ukrainian border city with strong ties to Russia
    Kharkiv lies just 25 miles from the Russian border and many there have sympathies with their neighbouring ‘brothers’, World Affairs Editor Kim Sengupta reports from inside the city

    [It’s Kharkov, you twat! Few there would say “Kharkiv”. The city was the capital of the Ukrainian Socialist Soviet Republic (1919-1936), which became the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1936-1991) created by the Soviet Union in 1922.]


    Reservists of the Ukrainian Territorial Defence Forces listen to instructions during military exercises at a training ground outside Kharkiv

    [Women and children first?]

    “It is unthinkable for me and my friends to pick up a gun and start fighting the Russians. We have lived together all our lives and now there are people who are trying to turn us into enemies and start a bloodbath,” declared an angry Kiril Semenov.

    As the diplomatic options to prevent a new war in Europe appear to fade away, Ukrainians are preparing for what they fear are dark and violent days ahead. Thousands have rushed to join volunteer groups vowing to resist an invasion ordered by Vladimir Putin, one they believe may be imminent.

    But there are others who hold that a conflict is being created by the behaviour of the government in Kiev, encouraged by the west, goading Moscow into a war which will end in disaster for Ukraine.

    It is not a popular view in much of the country which sees a force of more than 100,000 Russian troops massed at the border and the Kremlin going through the motions of talking to the west before launching an offensive.

    But, standing in Freedom Square in Kharkiv, Mr Semenov was expressing views which are held, to lesser and greater extent, by a sizeable number of the Russian-speaking population in this city.

    “This war is being brought about by the Americans and Nato telling the people in Kiev not to compromise, using Ukraine again as their proxy,” held the 48-year-old electrical engineer. “And if the fighting does start, will Nato come here to fight the Russians? Of course not, they have already said they would not.”

    Kharkiv is just 25 miles from the Russian border and 150 miles from Donetsk and Luhansk. Some of the vicious strife that led to those two cities becoming separatist republics eight years ago was also present here.

    Around 74 per cent of Kharkiv’s 1.4 million population are Russian speakers. Last week Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, claimed that Moscow may try to seize the city under the pretext of “protecting” these people – an act which “will be the beginning of a large-scale war”.

    Kharkiv is also the home base of Yevhen Murayev, a former Ukrainian MP who was named by the British government as Putin’s chosen leader of a puppet regime following invasion and occupation.

    That claim, however, has been met with wide scepticism. Mr Murayev himself has threatened to take legal action against the UK government and has invited it to show evidence supporting the allegation.

    The Russian links to the city, however, have been there for a long time.

    Viktor Yanukovych, the pro-Moscow President whose overthrow in the Maidan protests led to the 2014 conflict, and the dismemberment of Ukraine, briefly planned to set up a base in Kharkiv after fleeing the capital. But he soon left for Crimea and then disappeared into exile in southern Russia.

    “There was a lot of trouble here in 2014 you may remember, like the cities in the Donbass. That calmed down a bit, but there is a lot of tension now with talk of war. And, all the time, there’s all this unnecessary divisive stuff,” said Mr Semenov, waving at a forces recruiting tent with photographs and inspiring quotes from Winston Churchill, Charles De Gaulle, and caricatures of Putin and Russian leaders from Soviet times.

    As Mr Semenov spoke, a woman trudging through the snow, stopped to have her say: “They try to create an impression that Kharkiv is an anti-Russian city, we are not. The Russians are our brothers and will never do us harm, even less attack us. All this is propaganda from the US and Nato. Ukraine should be lucky to have a leader like Putin.” She refused to give her name.


    Ukrainian serviceman Anastasia (21) rests in a shelter on a front line near the Russian border

    [FFS “independent!!! Anastasia is a woman!]

    Mikhail Petrovich Godunov, director of the Kharkiv Society of Eastern Slavs, an association of Russian speakers, was of the view that “Zelensky created a lot of tension by what he said, it led to people becoming afraid about the future.

    “There has been a lot Russophobia and xenophobia in the last two months. There are things like the language laws under which a shop assistant must first speak to a customer in Ukrainian rather than Russian, why create such divisions?”

    Mr Godunov, a retired lawyer, does not believe there will be war.

    “I do not think there will be an invasion. Putin is a smart man: he is not going to do something so risky. They are talking about 100,000 troops across the border from here, but you’d need a million troops to invade Ukraine.

    “The problems of civilians in the in the east of the country are not being addressed,” he said. “These people in the grayzones (front lines) and the republics ( Donetsk and Luhansk) cannot live normal lives, even movement is difficult because of checkpoints, there’s resentment because of this… But as for Kharkiv, there shouldn’t be any trouble here, there would be no violence.”

    Nicolai, a 26-year-old in the construction business, and a Russian speaker, was not so sure.

    “There are a lot of people who are fed up with the way they are treating Russian culture here. Don’t forget this used to be the capital of Ukraine once, we are aware of our identity.”

    Nicolai, who did not want his family name made public, said he took part in the confrontation in 2014 “with the fascists” and has no regret for doing so. “I am older now with a family and don’t want to get into any trouble, but I would not like any provocation to start a war with Russia,” he said.

    The city’s mayor, Igor Terekhov, insists everything is under control.

    “I want to assure everyone that we are ready to give a firm rebuff to a potential invader, we have all the forces to defend Kharkiv,” he said in a public message, asking for “calmness”.

    Not everyone can stay calm. Viktoria Palmarchuk’s family fled from Crimea after it was annexed by Russia in 2014 and she is very familiar, she says, with the feelings of fear which lead to people uprooting themselves.

    “I know the situation is not the same here as it was in Crimea. But I also remember how quickly things changed there for all of us. Everything suddenly became polarised and things changed for those who were not loyal to Russia, I remember how much more Russian our neighbours suddenly became and we became outsiders,” said Ms Palmarchuk.

    “It’s a precaution really, but we are thinking about moving to Kiev or maybe Lviv until this situation is resolved. Both my husband and I work in IT, and we can work from anywhere, that helps. But we can’t help worrying.”

    Kharkiv is an industrial city which has been home to aircraft, tank and tractor factories. It has in recent years, however, become a technology hub, with more than 50,000 people employed in IT, with ambitions to lead the region into becoming Ukraine’s Silicon Valley.

    “It is strange to think that here we are in an advanced, sophisticated sector and at the same time we have to face something as primitive as war,” reflected Andryi Yurchenko.

    Sitting at a bar in the city centre, the 26-year-old software engineer said he would have to watch his drinking because he had started doing extra training classes in the government’s volunteer force.

    “I do not think war is a logical way of solving problems. But we have a man in Moscow, Mr Putin, who is not a very logical person, and what he does affects all our lives. We don’t know what’s going to happen, this city is pretty mixed, let’s hope there are no divisions,” said Mr Yurchenko.

    At the snowy border post between Ukraine and Russia, two old friends were also hoping that the communities do not fracture. Sergei Gretsov, Russian, and Sergei Svetocech, Ukrainian, both 62, have known each other for 40 years ever since they met at college.

    “We have been crossing the border to come over with our families, with all our other friends to eat, drink, go shopping without any problems”, said Mr Gretsov. “We’d like to think this would continue for our children, but we are concerned by all that’s happening.”

    Like

  82. Tass: Washington’s threat of possible departure of Russian Ambassador from US serious — Kremlin
    https://tass.com/politics/1393923

    According to Russian Ambassador to the US Anatoly Antonov, the US Department of State said that the Russian Ambassador would have to leave the US by April if Moscow didn’t fulfill a number of Washington’s conditions on issuing visas to the bodyguards of the US envoy to Russia

    …At the same time, according to the Russian diplomat, “there are no advancements either in regard to the diplomatic property, or in regard to the issuance of visas or in the development of relations.” He noted that he saw “only a trend towards a worsening” of the situation. “Everything that has been going on over recent months on this track only indicates the hardening of the line of the United States of America with regards to our presence,” the ambassador emphasized….
    ####

    USDoS motto should be ‘Dum and Dummer.’

    Like

  83. Euractiv: PM Andersson refuses to call defence committee on Ukraine situation
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/pm-andersson-refuses-to-call-defence-committee-on-ukraine-situation/

    Social Democrat Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson has declined to convene a Defence Committee – a forum for consultation between the government and parliamentary party representatives on security and defence policy – over Ukraine despite calls from several opposition parties. She called the ongoing talks a “side issue”.

    ####

    Cat got your tongue? So after a lot of braying, Stockholm has slipped on its favorite socks and is staying in to watch TV.

    Euractiv: Bulgaria will not just be a ‘benefactor of security’ in Ukraine crisis
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/bulgaria-will-not-just-be-a-benefactor-of-security-in-ukraine-crisis/

    While Bulgaria will not just benefit from other’s security, Sofia de facto refused an additional presence of NATO forces on the country’s territory in connection with the Ukraine crisis and committed to resolving it diplomatically.

    …“For the first time, our main priority is to have Bulgarian troops, under Bulgarian military leadership with Bulgarian command. Our army must have full combat capability in its defence. We have also informed our NATO allies,” the PM added…

    …“No Bulgarian soldier will take part in any kind of conflict or operation on the territory of Ukraine or another country, without the decision being made in the National Assembly or the Council of Ministers,” said Defence Minister Stefan Yanev from the parliamentary rostrum. He said Bulgaria is counting on the continuation of diplomatic efforts…
    ####

    Big words from slippery country.

    If Uncle Sam squeezes its balls just enough it will fall in to line, just as it did when it killed South Stream.

    While Romania remains a most loyal Chihuahua:

    Euractiv: Romania wants increased NATO and US presence on its territory
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/romania-wants-increased-nato-and-us-presence-on-its-territory/

    ####

    As long as it doesn’t cost them!

    And lastly.

    Euractiv: Hungary: Kyiv’s minority rights stance ‘limits’ any support in conflict
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/hungary-kyivs-minority-rights-stance-limits-any-support-in-conflict/

    If Ukrainians do not back down from their anti-minority policy, it will very much limit the Hungarian government’s ability to provide any kind of support, even in this conflict, Foreign Affairs Minister Péter Szijjártó said in an interview with pro-government Magyar Nemzet outlet on Wednesday (26 January), Telex reported.

    … blah blah blah…

    …Szijjártó later said that foreign policy should be conducted based on national interests.

    The Hungarian interest is clearly to maintain a pragmatic, normal relationship with Russia based on mutual respect, he added.

    ####

    We know about the EU and minority rights going all the way back to the breakup of Yugoslavia. They will take the word of their favorites that they will be upheld even though they know they won’t. The most perfect current example being the Ukraine where Brussels has effectively kept silent about Kiev’s direct legal discrimination against Russian speaking Ukranians which even before hand was the reason Crimean residents came out in protest which then spiraled until Crimea was free of Kiev.

    Like

    1. Classic case of divergence of opinions in Europe: the Croatian president said no way was Croatia going to get involved in this Ukraine business, so the Yukietards, as is their wont, started whining, and the prime minister of Croatia then completely contradicted what the president had said, apologized and gave a gung-ho, we’re with you load of bollocks rto the Galitsian vermin.

      I think the Croatian president might be a Serb.

      Croatia would in no way get involved in the Ukraine crisis if it escalated, nor send its soldiers if that were the case, said President Zoran Milanović after visiting the Kraš chocolate factory on Tuesday.

      Ukraine does not belong in NATO, the Croatian head of state also said, adding that the EU had triggered a coup in the country in 2014 when pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted.

      The ongoing crisis has nothing to do with Ukraine or Russia, it is connected with the dynamics of US internal policy led by President Joe Biden and his administration, said Milanović, adding that “matters of international security reflect inconsistencies and dangerous behaviour” by the US administration.

      https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/president-croatia-will-not-be-involved-in-ukraine-crisis/

      Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic has apologized to Ukraine after President Zoran Milanovic said it was one of the most corrupt countries in the world – and that Croatia should withdraw its soldiers from there, even though no Croatian soldiers are actually stationed there.

      On Tuesday, Milanovic said: “Ukraine is one of the most corrupt countries in the world, it is economically stagnating and hasn’t gotten anything from the EU”.

      He added that Croatia “has nothing to do” with the escalating conflict between Ukraine and Russia, and that if the situation there escalates, Croatia will withdraw “every last soldier”.

      “As far as I know, there are no Croatian soldiers in Ukraine,” PM Plenkovic responded, adding that a contingent of Croatian soldiers recently got back from Poland. He called Milanovic’s statement unreal and offensive. It also looked as if “it was said by a Russian official”, Plenkovic added, news outlet N1 reported.

      “In the name of the government of Croatia, I would like to apologize to people of Ukraine, one of the first countries to recognize Croatia,” the Prime Minister said, adding that parts of Ukraine are currently occupied by Russia, just as parts of Croatia were once occupied during Croatia’s own struggle for independence in the 1990s, Croatian news agency HINA reported.

      https://balkaninsight.com/2022/01/26/croatian-pm-apologises-for-presidents-outburst-on-ukraine/

      Like

  84. It looks like Blinken’s response according to what has been stated is yet more compartmentalization. Without the text being made public it may be equally the case that what is written does not correspond to what is being said. The US has form for this.

    I’m stocking up on popcorn.

    Like

  85. A brief and very precise economic explanation of the present situation based on historical experience.
    Milliardäre, Inflation und der Drang zum Krieg (Billionaires, Inflation and the Urge to War)

    deepl translation

    Prices are rising. This may be due to the supply chain problems triggered by the Corona pandemic. But it may also be a sign that the speculative bubbles are bursting and that the bill is now being paid for the money printing since 2008. If so, the West is running out of time.

    by Dagmar Henn

    Ever experienced hyperinflation? The generation that consciously witnessed it in Germany in 1923 has since died out. I had the pleasure in Brazil in 1988. Going to the supermarket became an adventure; you could never know beforehand what goods you would buy and at what price. Whenever you got your hands on money, you tried to turn it into things as quickly as possible. The wealthy fled to the dollar, and more expensive goods such as cars were no longer even offered in the local currency. The currency changed names once in the one year I spent in Brazil, with the deletion of three zeros. There were hardly any coins, because the metal value immediately exceeded the monetary value.

    Hyperinflation is a crazy condition. Because wages constantly lagged behind price increases, there were three general strikes that year and constant labor disputes somewhere. Since then, however, I have also known that transfers from one bank to another can go much faster than was the norm here, because they took no more than half an hour across Brazil – not days, as is still the norm here.

    But a simple observation makes it clear that the inflation we are currently experiencing is unusual. As the example of Brazilian hyperinflation shows, money normally changes hands faster during inflation; the higher the inflation, the higher the velocity of circulation. There are, of course, statistical values that capture this. They go by the designations V2 or V3, and are each calculated by dividing the gross domestic product by the money supply M2 (for V2) or M3 (for V3). One can easily find both the money quantities and the velocities for individual currency areas on the Internet and will find that the money quantities have increased massively at the latest since 2008; however, not in the area of cash, but in that of virtual money. Except for the end of last year, when the M1 money supply in the U.S.A. suddenly increased significantly. At the same time, however, and this is the amazing thing, the values for V2 and V3 decreased; V2 has really crashed in the USA.

    Noticeable inflation and slowing money in circulation? That’s a strange and entirely new combination. It is only partly based on the fact that households have spent less money because of Corona. The money available to households of ordinary, living people is mostly found in M1. However, M3 has grown massively. This is money that banks generate themselves; for instance, by buying government bonds, then depositing them with the central bank as collateral and lending them. It is this virtual money that has made possible the rise in stock prices since the 2008 financial crisis and thus, because stock prices are also included in GDP, the fiction of an economic recovery.

    The enormous amounts of money created by the banks since 2008 have for the most part never reached the real economy, despite the almost insane speeds of circulation generated by high-frequency trading on the stock exchanges.

    There are two explanations for inflation. The first relates to the real supply of goods; prices rise when goods become scarcer. That certainly plays a role in the current trend. The disruption of supply chains triggered by the Corona measures around the world in 2020 have not been resolved to date and are having a massive impact on supply. Rising energy costs are also affecting it, but they are not included in core inflation, at least in Europe. However, the CO₂ tax will have contributed its mite to the current price development.

    The other explanation for inflation relates to the development of the money supply. Money, once it has no material value itself (which concerns everything above coinage), is only a proxy for value. When the quantity of money is increased, logically more units of money account for one unit of value. This then corresponds to rising prices.

    The inflation that prevailed in Germany in 1923 was actually the result of expanded money production. At that time, the government had an interest in devaluing its own currency because it could get rid of internal debts from the First World War, on the one hand, and on the other hand, because it could exert pressure for renewed negotiations on the reparations from the Treaty of Versailles. Not a pleasant experience for the population. However, some notorious speculators like Stinnes or Quandt were able to further gild their noses in the process.

    The example of the 1923 inflation highlights yet another factor that plays a role in inflation. On a smaller scale, the targeted devaluation of one’s own currency was and is often used to support exports. German industry, with its extreme export orientation, derives its main advantage from the euro in this way. Since the exchange rate between two currencies usually reflects the economic performance of the two states, but that of the euro relates to the performance of the entire euro zone, not that of Germany, it is pleasantly undervalued from the German point of view. This is, of course, an advantage limited to the export economy; ordinary consumers have more disadvantages than advantages as a result. But German export products are offered more cheaply outside the euro zone in this way than would have been possible with an exchange rate in deutschmarks.

    Brazil’s hyperinflation, like Germany’s in 1923, was also a product of external debt; the currency has plummeted relative to others, especially the U.S. dollar and the mark, driving up the prices of all imported goods. Only economically strong countries with balanced to positive trade balances can afford to play games with inflation.

    After all, the eurozone had a trade surplus of 234 billion in 2020, while the U.S. had a trade deficit of 975 billion. But they have a huge advantage that prevents this trade deficit from translating into correspondingly massive price increases for imports – they own the world’s reserve currency. Yet. However, that may change abruptly with the shift in the global balance of power. Worse, with threatened measures such as Russia’s exclusion from SWIFT, which would activate the alternative system already in place, they are considering steps that would hasten the end of the dollar as the currency in which global trade is conducted.

    The fact that many commodities are traded in dollars forces more or less all countries to hold foreign exchange reserves in dollars. This is the factor that has kept the dollar and the U.S. economy stable despite industrial decline. So far, the U.S. has been able to prevent the dollar from being replaced, including through military intervention. (France is similarly attached to the CFA franc, which allows colonial conditions to continue, and has also already overthrown governments that tried to escape the CFA franc.) However, if Russia and China were to move completely out of the dollar zone, the U.S. would not be able to prevent it. The result would be a baseless crash of the U.S. dollar.

    More. The enormous amounts of money that have been used since 2008 to maintain the illusion of a functioning economy are not really harmless. In places where some of it has flowed into the real economy, on the real estate market, for example, or even on the market for farmland, it has inflated prices tremendously. The same applies to stocks. The immense fortunes of the billionaires who are so influential have long since consisted mainly of air. In all these areas, a fall of the dollar would burst the bubbles, and the super-rich in particular would suddenly become much less rich. For it is only the balance of power that still keeps the currencies of the West stable. The relationship between the virtual money supply M3 and the real existing values becomes reality at the moment when the power factor disappears from the relationship of the dominant Western currencies, the U.S. dollar and, somewhat weakened, also the euro, to the other currencies of the world. Then the potential inflation generated by these money supplies becomes a very real one.

    Basically, it was clear to anyone who watched the bogus resolution of the 2008 financial crisis that this was a play for time and that the returns from real production could not be replaced indefinitely by inflating stock prices. Corona was an excellent way to mask a real economic slump on the one hand and to create a new speculative field at least temporarily on the other. But this maneuver, too, seems to have just burst.

    Now the idea of potential inflation turning into real inflation is bad enough, but there is a factor that is even worse. For the temptation to take refuge in a physical destruction of real values is high, and increases the more likely the bursting of the myriad bubbles becomes. For this, one has to look back to the years after 1929.

    The Great Depression, which began in 1929, did not end until 1945. Even the massive interventions of the New Deal in the USA, which included raising the top tax rate to 95 percent, were not enough to restore the economic performance of the period before the crisis began. It was not until the massive destruction of goods caused by the war that the crisis was subsequently overcome. At the same time, large-scale government investments took place after 1929, not only in the U.S., which laid the foundation for the industries that would dominate in the future, electricity and road networks (the plans for the highways that were built after 1933 had been in the drawers for years). It was not enough. The wave of speculation before 1929 had created far more fictitious capital than could be invested. It was not until the tremendous destruction of World War II that the economy of the West was brought back into balance.

    Even then, war was the last resort of billionaires to maintain their wealth and power at the expense of the rest of humanity. The crisis of 2008 had the same quality as that of 1929, only this time there were no plans in the drawers, and the political power of the top layer of the owners of capital had grown so much (and the resistance from below so weak) that even other political measures in the direction of the New Deal were not possible. Rising inflation may be a sign that the policy of printing money has come to its end. The U.S. empire is not only tottering militarily.

    The West is, simply put, running out of time. It must take refuge in war before the abysses of 2008 open up again. The crash of Pfizer alone could be enough to make that happen. And once again, it is the interests of the Krupps that oppose those of the Krauses, those of the billionaires that oppose those of the millions.

    (Note: Krupp was the leading German armaments company even before the First World War; the name Krause, which is widely used in Germany, is emblematic of the working class, which always has to pay the blood toll in wars.)

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  86. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters that the American response to Russian proposals for security guarantees did not respond positively to the main issue.

    “As for the content of the document, there is a reaction there, which allows us to count on the start of a serious conversation, but on secondary issues. There is no positive reaction on the main issue in this document. The main issue is our clear position on the inadmissibility of further NATO expansion to the east”, Lavrov said.

    The Russian minister noted that to Russia in the 1990s “they swore not to expand NATO east of the Oder River”. “Now that this topic has begun to be discussed very sharply, we have first been told that these assurances were oral, then told that they were not entirely serious. Not at all in an adult way, they explained their line on the reckless expansion of the alliance”, said Lavrov.

    As the minister noted, the 1999 Istanbul Declaration and the 2010 Astana Declaration say that states should not strengthen security at the expense of others. “This principle is deliberately hushed up by Western countries”, Lavrov said. “We shall focus on explaining the crafty policy of our Western partners”, he added.

    According to Lavrov, during the talks with Blinken, he asked why Western countries consider the OSCE documents as a menu from which they choose what is palatable for them. “Tony Blinken didn’t give me an answer to that question. He shrugged his shoulders and that was it”, the minister said.

    To these Russian questions, answers from the United States and NATO were given yesterday at the Russian Foreign Ministry by the United States Ambassador to Moscow, John Sullivan. After that, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken made a statement in which he listed the main provisions of the document provided by Washington: the NATO “open door” principle, readiness for negotiations in case of de-escalation, commitment to a diplomatic way of resolving the situation, and readiness for cooperation in the areas listed by the American side.

    After the transmission of the NATO response to Russia, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg named three areas in which progress was possible. These are the Russia-NATO relations, the discussion of Russian concerns on the principles of the EU and the conduct of [military] exercises. Stoltenberg stressed that the North Atlantic Alliance would maintain the principle of “open doors”, although entry of the Ukraine into it still looked unlikely.

    source

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      1. What isn’t the USA saying? So far they are only saying that they won’t change their stance on NATO’s ‘Open Door’ policy but very little on anything else.

        What have they given ground on? I can imagine that is a reason why they want their responses to be kept secret because compromise & negotiating at an equal level is considered as ‘weakness’ and in the run up to the US mid-term elections may be used to beat the Democrats around the head with.

        As has been said many times before, the US is Not Agreement Capable. Whether by accident or design it certainly always works in its favor.

        On the other hand i-Ran has said that it is willing to talk directly with the US and the US has said it is not against it. In that case I can see BDA wanting a win over JCPOA before the mid-terms so it can ‘focus on China.’

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  87. Tass: Russia proposes US returns American nuclear weapons from NATO countries stateside
    https://tass.com/politics/1394065

    According to Vladimir Yermakov, “currently there are about 200 American nuclear air bombs of the B61 family” in five non-nuclear NATO countries

    …According to the diplomat, “currently there are about 200 American nuclear air bombs of the B61 family” in five non-nuclear NATO countries. Thus, the alliance is capable of rapidly deploying nuclear weapons able to reach strategic targets on Russian territory. “[NATO countries] also retain the infrastructure ensuring rapid deployment of these [nuclear] weapons capable of reaching Russian territory and striking a wide range of targets, including strategic ones,” he pointed out….
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    I’ll give myself a pat on the back then. I’ve been banging on about this threat for quite a while (not that it was hidden, just ignored by the PPNN and other hamsters). Dial-a-yield nukes that can be launched from any F-35 using software, not a limited number of old school aircraft specially wired for nukes.

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