Whatever You Have to Tell Yourself

Uncle Volodya says; “You are not permitted to kill a woman who has wronged you, but nothing forbids you to reflect that she is growing older every minute.”

“We seem to be unable to resist overstating every aspect of ourselves: how long we are on the planet for, how much it matters what we achieve, how rare and unfair are our professional failures, how rife with misunderstandings are our relationships, how deep are our sorrows. Melodrama is individually always the order of the day.”
Alain de Botton, from Religion for Atheists

“Vanity and pride are different things, though the words are often used synonymously. A person may be proud without being vain. Pride relates more to our opinion of ourselves, vanity to what we would have others think of us.”
Jane Austen, from Pride and Prejudice

A Captain I occasionally work with uses the title phrase to suggest the person he is speaking to is getting a little above himself – that he might be getting an inflated view of his importance and worth. An updated version, I guess you might say, of Pascal’s “Do you wish people to think well of you? Don’t speak well of yourself”, although I think we can agree that would be an unwieldy phrase in an era where nobody talks like a 17th-century French philosopher. But in that context, it is an extremely useful and utilitarian means of conveying subtle mockery without being openly insulting. And on a national scale, the United States – or at least its government – has elevated getting above oneself to an art form.

Consider this recent example: on the occasion of the ‘retirement’ of Victoria Nuland, principle neoconservative architect of The Glorious Maidan and the Revolution of Dignity – and, to a large extent, the subsequent hot war between Russia and Ukraine – US Secretary of State Antony Blinken offered this tribute via X:

“Russia is weaker militarily, economically and diplomatically. NATO is bigger, stronger, and more united than at any time in its nearly 75-year history”

All, presumably, attributable at least in part to the selfless pick-and-shovel work of Victoria Nuland, who made it a lifelong project to fuck over Russia by any means necessary, at any cost and using every resource at her disposal. Including, obviously, the lives of Ukrainians, the American government’s proxy army. By Mr. Blinken’s reckoning, her tenure as the US Department of State’s Big Anti-Russia Boxing Glove has been a rousing success.

Has it?

Well, let’s look. I mean, we know what Blinken thinks – actually, I have to correct myself there; he’s a politician, so we know what he says, which is not necessarily what he thinks. But Blinken doesn’t have the only brain in the west, even though there is plenty of evidence there are more people in the west than there are brains. David Sacks, for example; ladies and gentlemen, David Sacks, former Chief Operating Officer and product leader of the online payment utility Paypal, and decades-long investor in internet technology firms such as Facebook, Palantir, Uber, and SpaceX. Zero military experience so far as I can make out, so I would normally dismiss any analysis from him on military matters…but. Have a look at his assessment of Russia’s obviously-accelerating military strength, but before you do, make up your own mental list – don’t look ahead, do it now – and see how many of the pluses you credited.

“I call this Biden’s big backfire. If you look at all of his claims at the beginning of the war, they’ve all come true in reverse.

He said that we would weaken Russia in order to prevent them from waging this type of war again. In fact, we’ve made the Russian military stronger, it’s larger than it was before, it produces far more weapons, the industrial base is ramped up. Plus it’s now battle-tested and battle-hardened, especially against Western weapons, so it’s a much more formidable military Biden has created on the part of the Russians than when we started.”

How many did you get? Did you count battle experience as a net gain? If so, good for you, but I bet many people, especially the bean-counters to whom only numbers matter, did not. The Russian military is indeed larger than it was before, because in addition to its regular callup, it absorbed hundreds of thousands of volunteers and previous-service members. But we might as well deal with an attenuator now that is going to come up over and over – Ukrainian math and American math, as opposed to real math. The Ukrainians use Dreamland Math, where the numbers of a desired quality – in this instance, dead Russians – have no actual connection to reality, and can be adjusted up or down as necessary to get a good feeling: whatever you have to tell yourself. The Americans use Unquestioning Math, which provides that they accept, publish and calculate using Ukrainan figures provided, without criticism or protest.

We’re going to use real math. If you are Ukrainian or American and prefer to use your national system, feel free, but your numbers might not be the same as ours. And it is important to recognize that the true and accurate numbers will probably not be known until some time after the war is over, when assessors can get access to all the verifiable information. But what I am talking about is a demonstrably and verifiably real situation in which the Russians outgun the Ukrainians by a wide margin, and have done since the first shell was fired, and are currently firing about 10 artillery shells to every 1 fired by Ukraine with the kind of accuracy possible when both sides can see in real time, thanks to drone video, what they are firing at…but according to Ukraine, Russian casualties outnumber Ukrainian dead by hundreds of thousands.

Is that likely to be true? I vote no.

And this is important, because Dreamland Math eliminates the net gain of taking in hundreds of thousands of new soldiers by reckoning they have all been killed, and then some, resulting in a net weakening. The same for manufactured military machinery such as tanks and aircraft – Ukraine claims to be blasting the shit out of everything that moves, faster than Russia can build new ones, even as their diminutive frontman wails that if somebody – anybody – doesn’t give them more money and ammunition RIGHT NOW, it’s all over.

Look at this example – yes, I know it’s Newsweek, but we were talking about nonsensical figures, so this is as reliable a reference as any. Usually a good rule of thumb, based on the phenomenon known as projection, is to assume Ukrainian figures for Russian casualties are pretty close to Ukraine’s actual losses.

Ukraine, on the second anniversary of the beginning of the war, claimed Russia has sustained 407,240 casualties, killed and wounded. That’s even higher than Russia claims Ukraine has lost – around 383,000. I would suggest that is probably a very conservative estimate, and that the actual total is closer to a half-million. But Newsweek has its bespoke stable of experts – Kurt Volker, (former US Envoy for Ukraine negotiations), Nick Reynolds (research fellow for Royal United Services) and James Heappey, the UK’s Defense Minister – and they say, stuff and nonsense; Ukraine is winning, or at least easily holding its own. Dreamland Math reigns supreme, so that even if Russia wins, it loses because everyone in Russia will have been killed by that point.

We spent a lot of time on that issue, but I think it was necessary because such distortions can be used to warp all other statistics on the war. Russia is plainly producing far more military hardware, and ammunition for it is being churned out by an industrial economy on double-shift stereoids – these are production lines that are already set up and proofed for efficiency, unlike NATO, which would have to retool much of its peacetime production apparatus if and when it stops dithering about going to war. But Dreamland Math says sure – Russia is producing more tanks, but we’re blowing them up so fast that production can’t keep up. A ‘leading think tank’ (doesn’t say where) claimed Russia has now lost more tanks than the entire Russian Army had operational before the war began, which would suggest it is now running entirely on new replacements. Dreamland Math.

But you can tell America believes it, or pretends to believe it. ‘US officials’ said in August that the total casualties on both sides were around 500,000. But they appear to accept Ukraine’s claim of having taken out 407,000 Russian soldiers. It would have been something less than that in August, but figures published by ‘US officials’ suggest they believe Ukraine is at least 100,000 ahead in notches on their gun butt. Russia says the casualty balance is about 10 to 1 in favour of Russia. That might well be an exaggeration, too. The thing is, you’re going to have to wait until after the war is over to find out the truth, and it suits the USA for that situation to prevail because it’s hard to get a country to surrender when everything you say is aimed at convincing it that victory is just around the corner.

Meanwhile, Ukraine trots out amazing news of having killed 10 Russian warplanes in 10 days, making it a far more effective air-defense power without ammunition than it was when its ‘allies’ were pumping missiles and weapons into it. Two of the planes Ukraine claims to have downed are the high-value new Beriev A-50 AWACS. No wreckage photos were provided. In the case of the second A-50 report, the British Defense Ministry claimed the stricken aircraft had crashed in the Sea of Azov.

The Sea of Azov, interestingly, is the shallowest sea in the world, with an average depth of only 7 meters. The Beriev A-50 stands more than 14 meters tall on the tarmac at takeoff. With its wheels up it would be a little shorter, but I think you can see the likelihood of the miracle that could hide a 14-meter-high aircraft in a 7-meter deep sea so that no wreckage was visible from the air. No such photos have been offered.

Photographs and video have been provided of what are allegedly Russian SU-34 warplanes falling burning from the sky, but they are very grainy and could be just about any shot-down aircraft filmed anywhere at any time. Given the quality of video capture possible in decent light with the average smartphone, I suspect the gritty quality is deliberate.

Anyway, I want to get back to David Sacks, because he also mentioned some economic factors which directly contradict Blinken’s peyote reasoning. To wit;

“Then you look at the economic claims that Biden made, he said that sanctions would crush the Russian economy. In fact, the Russian economy is growing faster than any of the G-7 economies. It’s really booming and it’s our European allies’ economies that have been crushed by the sanctions.

So, you know all this policy that he’s pursued has really boomeranged and again come true in reverse.”

Hold on, though; he’s just one guy – against him are thousands of faceless ‘US officials with direct knowledge of the matter but who cannot be identified because they do not have permission to discuss it with journalists’. Does Sacks’ claim hold up?

Gadzooks!! It’s true!! So saith the BBC, and since it sweats Russophobia, it follows that it would not say anything positive about Russia unless it knew a lie would be exposed by even a casual review.

“In a long and rambling interview this week, President Putin gleefully exclaimed Russia as the fastest growing economy in Europe.

Last week, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) underlined the resilience of the Russian economy when it upgraded its forecast growth for this year to 2.6% from 1.1%.

Based on the IMF’s figures, the Russian economy grew faster than the whole G7 last year, and will do so again in 2024.

These are not just numbers. The stalemate in Ukraine last year and the growing expectation of a frozen conflict on the ground across this year, has been underpinned by Russia’s remobilisation of its economy to its military effort, especially in the construction of defensive lines in the east and south of Ukraine.”

Pardon me a short digression, because there were a couple of dog-in-the-manger gratuitous misdirections in there. One, describing a Putin interview as ‘rambling’ is pretty rich coming from a staunch press ally of Joe ‘Treacle Brains’ Biden, whose speech in Vietnam last fall went so badly off the rails that his press secretary cut him off before he could start getting into his pyjamas (in what’s left of his mind) right there on stage. There’s ‘rambling’, and then there’s ‘gurney bait’; it reflects extremely badly on the Democrats that they will not let the poor old man get some rest and care, and instead insist on wheeling him from event to event in a grotesque pantomime of state business that would not fool a chicken. Two, as I frequently highlight – mostly because nobody in the press seems to get it – Russia’s performance is despite focused effort by all the G7 countries it is leaving in the dust to ruin it. It is one thing for a country to perform well in the economic sphere simply bucking the everyday complications and challenges of shifting global fortunes. It is remarkable for a country to do it with a dozen or so assassins clinging to its ankles and trying their best to drown it.

There’s more, but we have to move on. Suffice it to mention the simpleminded stupidity of announcing ‘this economic miracle cannot last’ in nearly the same breath as “2024 will be much more positive for Putin than we thought. He has managed to reorganise his own industry more efficiently than we thought.” You were completely wrong in all your assessments that Russia would be ruined by your machinations – why should anyone believe Putin cannot continue diddling you at his pleasure for as long as it suits him?

I just want to quickly – before we adjust our aim to the absurd claim that NATO is more of a supercharged dynamo than ever – address the equally foolish claim that Russia is ‘diplomatically isolated’. The American news resource which bills itself as ‘the paper of record’ says Blinken is as full of shit as the north end of a southbound bull. The effort to isolate Russia is acknowledged, but the New York Times branded it a failure more than a year ago. Which is to say, not to put too fine a point on it, before it was recognized that the Russian economy knocked sawdust out of the G7 in 2023, and looks to do it again in 2024.

“A year on, it’s becoming clearer: While the West’s core coalition remains remarkably solid, it never convinced the rest of the world to isolate Russia.

Instead of cleaving in two, the world has fragmented. A vast middle sees Russia’s invasion as, primarily, a European and American problem. Rather than view it as an existential threat, these countries are largely focused on protecting their own interests amid the economic and geopolitical upheaval caused by the invasion.”

By ‘cleaving in two’, I presume Washington meant ‘Russia and China and a couple of other bad actors like North Korea, and the USA and all the good countries’. Clearly it has turned out nothing like that. The USA seized control of Europe, but the forcible disconnection of Europe from cheap energy is wrecking its industry. The situation is so dire that Europe’s leaders have simply stopped talking about it; this piece, from 2022, forecast energy rationing and shutdowns across Europe.

“Miles Roberts, chief executive of FTSE 100 packaging company DS Smith, said businesses had to be prepared for energy to be rationed this winter.

“We are expecting there to be rationing across Europe, that’s what we’re preparing for. It may not happen, but we have to plan for that now,” he told the Financial Times.

The company, which relies on gas for up to 70 per cent of its energy usage, is combating high prices through hedging, diversifying its energy use and reducing consumption.”

Diversifying energy use? Haven’t you heard? Natural gas is back in fashion!

“While climate change remains at the top of the agenda, the immediate name of the game is “energy security”, and that has opened up enormous opportunities for investors on both sides of the divide. At the height of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, European countries were even forced to return to coal burning. While that has since declined, with climate change returning to the top of the agenda, natural gas has regained status as the only viable bridge to a green energy transition.”

Just in time for Biden to announce a slowdown in the American LNG industry. You guessed it! Climate Change AND National Security! Yup, Europe certainly made the right move when it signed on to board the Molecules Of Freedom train. In short, Washington managed to capture Europe as a gas market, but to what avail, if an inability to support European industry means its collapse, costing hundreds of thousands of jobs? How many banks can Europe support? People have to work somewhere, and they can’t all be bankers and hedge-fund investors. The very thought of admitting Ukraine to the EU sends cold chills down the spines of Europe’s farmers, because unless the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) is completely rewritten, Ukraine’s huge tracts of farmland will qualify it for more than €90 Billion a year in subsidies, even as the share of subsidies paid out to farmers in forever-European countries drops by 20%. Where are these people going to work to earn money to purchase ‘friendly’ gas at a significant markup?

Which brings us to Blinken’s mostly-fatuous claim that NATO is bigger and bolder and badder than it’s ever been, so Russia had better hide under the bed. I say ‘mostly’ fatuous because it is true that NATO is bigger than at any previous point in its history. That’d be sort of a given with any country joining NATO unless a bigger country dropped out, and I think we’re all agreed that’s a remote possibility.

According to the US Department of Defense, a key determining factor for admission to NATO is “…whether their admission to NATO will strengthen the alliance and further the basic objective of NATO enlargement, which is to increase security and stability across Europe.” NATO’s own website suggests an aspirant member must “demonstrate the ability and willingness to make a military contribution to NATO operations.”

Sweden and Finland? Let’s look.

Sweden is actually not too bad, depending on your point of view; Global Firepower ranks it overall at 29 out of 145 countries rated. That same site has a useful feature entitled ‘overview’ – let’s look at it. A heading in green means excellent, blue is good, grey is average, yellow is fair and red is look out. So we can see immediately that Sweden’s rated capability in air power is not bad; it has a good number – for its size – of fighters and transports and a fair number of helicopters. No attack-type fixed wing air, though – 145th out of 145 – and no attack helicopters. Its paramilitary personnel rating is likewise good, although its fit-for-service rating is only fair. Where Sweden really shines is as a naval power, scoring ‘excellent’ in minor combatants from corvettes on down to mine warfare vessels. Terrible for capital ships, though – no frigates or destroyers. But as other analyses point out, in the current scope of conflicts none are naval wars per se, and in the Russia/Ukraine conflict – the reason, supposedly, that Sweden gave up its neutrality and sought the bosom of NATO – what matters is infantry, armor and artillery. Sweden only scores ‘average’ in these.

Also available, though, are economic factors which would advance it as a net contributor, or condemn it as another hungry mouth to feed. And in this, Sweden is clearly the latter; out of consumption/proven reserves – a poor rating, naturally, meaning a high consumer and/or low or no proven reserves – Sweden scores a big fat goose-egg for oil, natural gas and coal with only a ‘fair’ rating for proven coal reserves. Blinking red on the rest.

Military forces no longer use coal for anything, and their consumption is maximized for destructive potential, survivability and speed – not fuel efficiency. Sweden scores not badly overall for military capability, but would need help to get its forces into battle and to sustain them in combat.

Let’s look at Finland; big on hate for Russia, but short on just about everything else from a strategic point of view. Rated at 50 out of 145 nationally, it is weaker than Sweden. While it rates ‘fair’ in population factors, it has a big red light for ‘reaching military age annually’, which suggests an aging population. According to Trading Economics, the population has only grown by around a million since 1960, but growth has nonetheless been fairly steady. In the air it suffers from a similar deficiency of fixed-wing attack aircraft and attack helicopters, and for all intents and purposes has no navy, only offshore patrol and mine warfare vessels. It scores highly for towed artillery, but towed artillery is a liability rather than an asset in the shoot-and-scoot conditions imposed by drone warfare – you have time to fire once and maybe twice from the same position, and then you have to be moving or you are dead.

In oil and coal production, Finland scored ‘fair’ while it scored ‘terrible’ in consumption of all energy resources. Its rating for oil consumption was only 63/145, but still red, which suggests it consumes all its own production plus additional volumes. Its natural-gas imports from Russia dropped from an average monthly 9018.11 terrajoules between 2008 and 2023 to 0.00 in May of 2023. However, its natural-gas imports overall increased from 8165 terrajoules in December 2023 to 8266 terrajoules in January 2024. This suggests Finland has made some economies of consumption, but now all of it is at significantly higher cost and the consumption at lower rates is not sustainable.

In summary, NATO has grown larger by two countries, but both are net energy gobblers while the added weight of their military capabilities is negligible, and not maximized for land warfare. Is NATO stronger? You tell me. According to its defense minister, Canada’s armed forces face a recruiting death spiral, with more military personnel leaving than joining. In the mighty USA, recruiting entrance requirements have been lowered again, to allow applicants taking the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery Test (which guides recruiters as to which trades and elements to offer you) to use calculators. Nevertheless, the US Army fell short of its 2022 recruiting goals by nearly 10,000, despite having lowered the goal twice, while the US Army Chief of Staff warned that lowering recruiting standards to allow previously substandard recruits to join is dangerous. This is important, because it is the very whatever-you-have-to-tell-yourself comfort filter western think tanks use to mitigate the growing strength of the Russian Army – sure, it’s bigger, but they’re all stupid plowboys from the Volga who don’t know the muzzle of a rifle from the buttplate. Except that the US Army does not even have the comfort factor of being bigger; as I write this, the US Armed Forces is at its smallest strength numerically in more than 80 years. And most of the new Russian soldiers who went straight into combat were previous military members, experienced and trained, because those were the men called up in the mobilization order.

Meanwhile, military capability in Europe is perhaps best characterized by the establishment of the hilariously-named European Peace Facility (EPF), a ‘mechanism’ for…providing training and equipment, including lethal weaponry, to non-European forces around the world. The long way of spelling ‘mercenary’. While the best minds of Europe apply themselves to even further use of AI, directed-energy weapons and ‘real-time cyber threat-hunting’. Ha, ha. Sorry, I tried not to laugh, but I couldn’t help it.

“Despite its name, the European peace facility, worth €5bn over the next seven years, will allow the EU to provide equipment – including lethal weapons – to non-European militaries. It also offers the EU more freedom of manoeuvre in Africa than previously, making it possible to provide arms and training directly to national governments and regional actors rather than going through the African Union, as training missions have had to in the past.

Germany’s foreign minister, Heiko Maas, has described the facility as “a fundamental investment in peace and stability”. Not everyone sees things this way. Forty human rights organisations have warned the possibility of providing foreign military forces with lethal weapons would “risk increasing human rights abuses and contribute to further violence and arms proliferation, rather than to protect civilians and search for political solutions”.

Gee – you think?

The UK military is less than a third the size it was in 1960 – in 2021, the army was the smallest it has been in 400 years. Planners tell us this is good – smaller forces are ‘leaner and more agile’. Presumably, then, the British army will have reached its zenith when it is down to a single member. So long as it’s not this one – in 2018 figures obtained under Freedom Of Information rules suggested nearly one in ten British soldiers was ‘clinically obese’, but only two years later that was no longer a bar to recruiting, as the army sought the overweight, the unfit and the shy. Dear God.

In the days immediately following the commencement of the war in Ukraine, Olaf Scholz announced a turning point – the ‘Zeitenwende’ – in global affairs generally, and more specifically in funding of the German military which was to benefit from a €100 billion special fund for the purchase of modern weapons. How’s that going? Well…the German military is…well…”In terms of equipment, the Bundeswehr is not yet fully operational,” Högl said. “There is a lack of ammunition, of spare parts, of radio devices; there is a lack of tanks, of ships and of aircraft.” So, not yet fully operational, then. Must be waiting for a clearance sale. Defense advocates call for an increase of more than 20,000 in the German Army by 2031, but it was 1,537 smaller at the end of 2023.

In the military ranks which remain, wokeness has seized control of the agenda, filtering everything through gender and sexuality concerns. I only have room here to illustrate examples for the US military, but perhaps that is fitting as it is supposed to be the most powerful in the world.

“In 2015, then Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus rejected out-of-hand a Marine Corps study concluding that gender-integrated combat formations did not move as quickly or shoot as accurately, and that women were twice as likely as men to suffer combat injuries. He rejected it because it did not comport with the Obama administration’s political agenda.

…Physical fitness has long been a hallmark of the U.S. military. But in recent years, fitness standards have been progressively watered down in pursuit of the woke goal of “leveling the playing field.” The Army, for instance, recently lowered its minimum passing standards for pushups to an unimpressive total of ten and increased its minimum two-mile run time from 19 to 23 minutes. The new Space Force is considering doing away with periodic fitness testing altogether.

…Much of the emphasis of wokeness today is on promoting the idea that America is fatally flawed by systemic racism and white privilege. Our fighting men and women are required to sit through indoctrination programs, often with roots in the Marxist tenets of critical race theory, either by Pentagon diktat or through carelessness by senior leaders who delegate their command responsibilities to private Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion instructors.

The Russian Army likely does have its problems, but wokeness is not one of them, nor is it ever likely to be. Sure, Blinken – Russia has been weakened, perhaps fatally, by Ukraine’s brutal mauling. At the same time, NATO is more energized and dynamic than ever.

Whatever you have to tell yourself.

1,250 thoughts on “Whatever You Have to Tell Yourself

  1. And as NATO faces defeat in its Ukraine proxy war, let’s hear it from another Eussian “enemy within”, a certain Maxim Samorukov, another of one of those research associates, this time from the Carnegie Berlin Centre for Russian and Eurasian Studies.

    It seems that the Kremlin can now afford to go to war with the Ukraine and the West for as long as it takes, and even the tragedies of the Crocus scale will not make it stop. But there is an element in the state machine that is working worse and worse: the decision-making system. After the failures of the beginning of the war, the system did not draw conclusions — but only pulled even more power into the hands of one person, leaving the state apparatus to predict his wishes. This design doesn’t need enemies to nullify any achievements at some point.


    The Kremlin’s fragile invulnerability. Why Russia is always on the verge of collapse

    Today’s Russia is similar in its stability to the late USSR. Objectively, everything is securely fixed, there are no serious threats, the authorities are in control of the situation. But at any moment, everything can start to fall apart, because the main source of threats to the system is rooted in the way it works. And it is designed in such a way that it can engage in self-destruction and without the appearance of serious problems.

    Putin’s system today looks more invulnerable than ever. The first defeats at the front and the shock of Western sanctions are in the past. Now the troops are moving forward, oil is being sold to the East, and generous government spending on the war ensures both economic growth and public loyalty. It seems that everything in Russia — from the military-industrial complex to secondary schools — has successfully adapted to the new military reality. Now the Kremlin can afford to go to war with the Ukraine and the West for as long as it takes. And even a tragedy on the scale of the recent terrorist attack at Crocus will not make him stop and think about the chosen course.

    Russia’s success in adapting to the war has indeed exceeded expectations. However, there is one element in the Russian state machine that is working worse and worse, and there are no attempts to adapt there. It’s about the decision-making system. On this issue, the regime has not drawn any conclusions from the failures of the outbreak of war, but, on the contrary, has pulled even more power into the hands of one person, leaving the rest of the state apparatus only to fulfill, or even better — to anticipate his wishes. And this design does not need any enemies to reset any achievements at some point.

    Gorbachev’s Mechanics

    One of Russia’s best experts, Stephen Kotkin, once remarked that the West could not predict the collapse of the Soviet Union in advance, simply because it did not begin to fall apart in advance. That is, even by the end of the 1980s, there were no objective processes in the country that would make disintegration inevitable. On the contrary, almost to the very end, the USSR remained a fairly stable structure, but at some point it collapsed, because suicidal decisions fell from the very top, which the obedient state apparatus blindly implemented without the slightest filtering and quality control.

    This description is largely true for today’s Russia. Comparing such different people as Putin and Gorbachev may seem blasphemous, but in certain aspects it is not without reason. Yes, they are very different in their aspirations, character, and value system. But they have two important similarities. The first is the ability to impose your own personal priorities on the entire inert machine of the state apparatus, which it does not particularly share. The second is a tendency to fall into procrastination when the events they trigger get out of hand.

    The conservative Soviet nomenklatura would never have agreed to perestroika, glasnost, and democratization if Gorbachev hadn’t imposed all of this on it, using his Stalinist powers. As it was, the apparatchiks, who were trained to do everything that a person in the post of General Secretary ordered without question, obediently began to implement perestroika until it destroyed the Soviet system that was so convenient for them.

    Putin, of course, is not going to lead Russia either to democracy or to glasnost. But from a mechanical point of view, he similarly used his enormous powers to push Russia into a war that even most of the Security Council members, let alone the broader Russian elite, did not want. And then the logic of the development of events began to work independently.

    With the help of the war, Putin forced both the state apparatus and business to sacrifice their pre-war privileges, achievements and plans and start building a new Russia that would correspond to his personal ideas of beauty. In general, this has become the main task of all participants in public life in Russia — to anticipate and fulfill the president’s wishes as accurately as possible.

    It is clear that such a system of priorities cannot but lead to the degradation of the state apparatus, and there is already an abundance of evidence for this. The Russian security services have been accumulating experience in the fight against Islamic extremism for decades, but since the beginning of the war, no one has needed it. Why catch Islamic terrorists when awards and titles are given for Ukrainian saboteurs?

    Even the recent terrorist attack in Crocus, despite its unprecedented scale, is unlikely to make the Russian security forces catch on. Quite the opposite — when Putin demands in advance to explain what happened with Ukrainian machinations, what madman will object to him, regardless of the real facts? It is quite natural that all forces will be devoted to catching terrorists not from ISIS, but from the Ukrainian-American Burisma, even if this will harm both the investigation of the terrorist attack that has already happened and the prevention of possible next ones.

    In other areas, the situation is similar. Some parts of the government’s economic bloc have long focused on producing beautiful numbers to please the president, giving up on any coordination. As a result, the increase in the interest rate to fight inflation comes at the same time as a generous flow of subsidized loans and an increase in government spending. Export embargoes are introduced, then canceled, then re-introduced-depending on what you need to report to the president: a decrease in prices on the domestic market or an increase in budget revenues from export duties.

    Temporary administrative decisions imperceptibly turn into permanent and even more non-market ones-just to postpone unpopular steps that may upset the president. And all this against the background of a chaotic redistribution of property, when the courts do not look at the transfer of assets from one hand to another due to violations in privatization transactions of the early 1990s. The former competence of the economic authorities is gradually drowning in this parade of obsequiousness and may finally disappear at any moment. Who would dare say no to the president if he suddenly decided that wartime circumstances required tougher administration of the economy?

    Procrastination again

    However, Putin’s indecision is sometimes even more destructive than his decisions. And in this way, Putin is also similar to Gorbachev. At one point, he was so taken aback by the scale of the changes he initiated that he fell into procrastination and over the past two years in power was unable to offer the country at least some program of further action.

    Having gone into endless oratory and international tours, Gorbachev left the Soviet Union to adapt to the new reality on its own. Left without instructions from the center, the USSR spent some time in a painful wait, and then did not come up with anything better than to fall apart in the hope that this would help somehow resolve the hanging questions and ambiguities.

    Modern Russia also has enough problems adapting to the new military reality, and Putin, who created this reality, is in no hurry to provide all those interested with detailed instructions. As a result, different parts of the system either fall into a stupor, or start to figure out how to live on their own, sometimes with serious consequences.

    For example, the most massive armed action against the Putin regime — the Yevgeny Prigozhin mutiny-was just such an attempt to survive in the new reality. For many years, the Wagner mercenaries have successfully co-existed with the regular army, not really interfering with each other. But the outbreak of war raised the stakes and inflamed ambitions, pushing the parties to direct conflict.

    Putin did not condescend to personally investigate their dispute, so Prigozhin had no choice but to try to attract the president’s attention with a mutiny. The goals of the rebels were very limited and had nothing to do with the struggle against the Putin regime. And yet they almost brought it down simply because they were trying to adapt to the new warring Russia.

    Similarly, no one in the Kremlin has bothered to explain how to live in military realities to the authorities of Dagestan. Therefore, they did not know what to do and simply did nothing when, in October last year, a mob smashed up the international airport of Makhachkala in search of Jews. Just a couple of years ago, this was impossible to imagine, but now there is a war in the yard, Iran is our closest ally, and Israel, it turns out, is the enemy. Therefore, please understand how the local authorities should deal with the anti — Israeli pogrom-disperse it or, conversely, support it. It is safer to wait for instructions from the center, even if during this time the crowd will have time to break into the planes.

    The recent terrorist attack at Crocus is much of the same series. Here, the United States shares information about a possible terrorist attack with the Russian special services. But can they use it now, when there is a war going on and when the president publicly calls this information “blackmail”? In such circumstances, showing suspicious zeal, in fact, in cooperation with the Americans can be much more dangerous than simply doing nothing, even at the cost of dozens of human lives.

    As a result, it turns out that the Russian government absolutely does not need a powerful opposition to be under threat. Yes, the anti-Putin forces in Russia are weak and disorganized, but that doesn’t make the regime any stronger. The three biggest shocks to the government over the past year have been generated not by the strength of anti-Putin sentiment, but by the war that Putin himself started. And in this respect, Russia today is also similar to the late USSR, where anti-Soviet dissidents were not a serious threat and remained under the tight control of the KGB until almost the end of the Union, while the Soviet system was dismantled by the leaders of the CPSU, who were not suspected of being anti-systemic.

    Make it to the deadline

    Today’s Russia, like the late USSR, has to adapt hastily and chaotically to the new reality that the Kremlin suddenly unleashed on it, without bothering to explain how to live now. But if the logic of transformation initiated by Gorbachev led through upheaval to the creation of new institutions, then the logic of Putin’s transformation drives the system only into an increasing concentration of power in the hands of the leader. As a result, approaches, assessments, and even just the state of one person become almost the only factor in decision-making.

    A system organized in this way cannot, in principle, be stable — regardless of who exactly turns out to be this single person. What can we say about the situation when the only source of solutions for many years lives in a dense environment of obsequious courtiers, who only nurture his bias, resentment and mania. Here, the risks of incorrect priorities, distorted perception, outburst of emotions and concentration on one solution as a panacea for all ills increase many times over.

    And then there are no filters on their way-everything immediately turns into public policy. In fact, the invasion of Ukraine two years ago was just such a wrong and destructive decision by one person. Why should it be the last one, if the previous time it was easier for the rest of the system to adjust to it than to stop it in time or try to rewind it?

    In addition, in today’s Russia, the only source of decisions is already at an advanced age, which imposes its personal time frame on the course of development of the entire country. And this is not about Putin’s mythical illnesses — with his access to modern medicine, why should he live less than Mugabe (lived to 95) or Fidel Castro (to 90)?

    But Putin, with his obsession with history, can’t help but realize that he’s already been in power longer than the vast majority of Russian rulers. He has already sat out Brezhnev and many other emperors by a large margin. In a matter of years, he will overtake both Stalin and Nicholas I, and in nine years he will leave even Catherine II behind, becoming the longest-serving ruler since Ivan the Terrible.

    Moreover, at 71, Putin is no doubt aware that he is approaching the age when most of his predecessors died: Yeltsin at 76, Brezhnev at 75, Khrushchev at 77, Stalin at 74. The only exception is Gorbachev, who lived more than 90, but he also spent relatively little time in power.

    All this presents Putin with a horizon of five or six years of active rule, during which he should have time to complete everything he planned. And this period of five or six years can sit in his head, predetermining decisions, but remaining invisible to everyone else. This can create dangerous divergences in perception, when Russia suddenly starts acting unpredictably and irrationally, from the point of view of the rest of the world, simply because Putin is late for his internal deadlines.

    In the 1970s, the Shah of Iran thoughtlessly flooded the country with oil money because he was in a hurry to see Iran modernized before he died of cancer. But instead of accelerating modernization, the oil bounty so exacerbated socio-economic disparities that at the end of his life, the Shah looked not at Iran as a developed country club, but at the Islamic Revolution. Similarly, Hitler in the late 1930s believed that since war with Britain was inevitable anyway, it was better to start it right now, while he was still only 50, rather than wait for age and failing health to cloud his strategic genius.

    We can only guess how Putin’s internal clock works. But the unexpected invasion of Ukraine after more than 20 years in power suggests that he definitely has them, and the time for them is not infinite.

    As a result, today’s Russia is similar in its stability to the late USSR. Objectively, everything is securely fixed, there are no serious threats, the authorities are in control of the situation. But at any moment, everything can start to fall apart, because the main source of threats to the system is rooted in the way it works. And it is designed in such a way that it can engage in self-destruction and without the appearance of serious problems.

    Maxim Samorukov
    16.04.2024

    ************************************************************************************************************

    Jesus Christ!

    Putin this and Putin that all the time.

    Putin is responsible for everything!

    Putin imposes his malevolent will upon the whole of the state apparatus, which servilely obeys!

    The writer is obsessed with Putin.

    And if there had not been a Putin on 24 February 2022, I wonder what this Carnegie Centre Berlin wanker thinks might have happened then?

    Like

    1. If he means Putin is not going to lead Russia to the kind of democracy the west has, where unlimited political donations from giant corporations fatten the war chest of the ultimate winner, he’s correct. And despite his description of the Russian system as chaotic and teetering, held in a state of semi-stability by the sheer will of one man, I don’t see it. Apparently Russians don’t see it, either, because they keep voting Putin in again and again, and it seems to follow that as they are like everyone else in their preference for stability, they must see Putin as the leader most likely to deliver it. Actual demonstrations against Putin’s decisions do happen; there were quite angry ones a couple of years back on the raising of pensionable age. But in the main, political protests against Putin are usually astroturfed western-concocted drama making use of dilettante liberals, the same people over and over, pampered squirt children of the intelligentsia.

      The west and its Big Thinkers are forever fantasizing about Russia’s collapse and how they would reconfigure the country if they had their way, and no Putin standing in it. But the sad fact – for westerners – is that Dima Medvedyev was about the closest thing to a progressive neoliberal in Russia, and these days you could not get Medvedyev to walk across the street to spit on the west if it was on fire. There is naturally much debate on what would happen if there was no Putin and what is going to happen one day when there isn’t, but again, every month that Russia endures under its present leadership, it is more solid and grounded and stable, and the cult of Putin is so much a part of Russia that no magic progressive liberal is going to step into his shoes and undo everything to the west’s advantage.

      Like

    2. This is the kind of ‘content’ required to make a living for Russians abroad.

      We’ve seen what’s happened to Kreakls like P*ssy (left to) Rot. Red Square ball stapler is in a French prison.

      Slow and steady ‘intellectual work’ written to order and telling the authorities what they like to hear for endless western thinkw*nks goes much futher than bright and short burning drama <s>queens</s> persons.

      Even the opposition needs to eat.

      What I still find extraordinary is that it is almost as if they have no filter when they write or say something public. They really do believe in total and unlimited free speech including that their own countries should be overthrown by their resident country. They’re like children in a candy shop.

      I just think of the alleged letter that Boris Berezovsky wrote to Putin from exile in Londonograd. I would guess that he was quite homesick and wanted to atone for being an ammoral psychopathic monster who never asked ‘why shouldn’t I do this?’ wanted at some point to ‘go home’ and ultimately be buried there.

      As comfortable as Russian expats may be abroad (here in the west), things are only going to get worse economically, politically and socially. And that is without the ongoing new Red Scare that the west is penetrated by ‘Putin’s Spies!’, particularly the left parties according to ex-Polish PM Morawiecki.* Expats shouldn’t count of being safe however well integrated they are. It’s psycho out there and increasingly so in this election year.

      *https://www.euractiv.com/section/elections/news/moscows-influence-active-in-all-eu-political-groups-morawiecki-claims/

      Like

      1. As Craig Murray (former UK Ambassador to Uzbekistan) recently pointed out about the European Convention of Human Rights on Free Speech:

        Article 10 – Freedom of expression

        1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. This article shall not prevent States from requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises.
        2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.— The European Convention of Human Rights[1]

        https://www.echr.coe.int/Documents/Convention_ENG.pdf

        ####

        Exemptions for NATIONAL SECURITY, whatever that means these days, i.e. revealing embarassing information and hypocrisy included. Enough leeway to drive a bus through it. Best of all, complaints must pass through the national member state legal system before they can be considered by the top EU court.

        Like

  2. I forgot to post the link to the original of the above shite:

    Хрупкая неуязвимость Кремля. Почему Россия всегда на грани коллапса

    The fragile invulnerability of the Kremlin. Why Russia is always on the verge of collapse

    And here’s the low-down on Maxim Samorukov:

    Maxim Samorukov

    RESEARCHER
    Maxim Samorukov is a research fellow at the Carnegie Berlin Centre for Russian and Eurasian Studies.

    From February 2015 to April 2022, he was a research fellow at the Carnegie Moscow Centre. From 2009 until joining the Carnegie Moscow Center, M. Samorukov worked for the independent online publication Slon.ru – first as a correspondent, then as an editor and international columnist. The main topics of his publications are Russian foreign policy, Eastern Europe and its relations with Russia, the Balkans, the European crisis, problems of transition to democracy.

    Slon.ru!

    You don’t say!

    The Slon.ru website was launched on 18 May 2009. The website’s name Slon (Russian: Слон, lit. ‘Elephant’) is a reference to the blind men and an elephant parable, in which blind people disagreed about what the elephant looked like. Slon authors stated that its mission is to show “the whole elephant” to its readers. The website mainly publishes materials about politics, economics and business.

    The first editor-in-chief and executive director of Slon.ru was the Russian journalist and publisher Leonid Bershidsky. Among the first employees of Slon.ru were Russian journalists Alexander Gordeev, Olga Romanova, former deputy editor-in-chief of SmartMoney magazine Yuri Granovsky and former editor-in-chief of Russky Newsweek magazine Dmitry Kuznets. The main shareholders are Russian media managers Natalya Sindeyeva and Alexander Vinokurov.

    source

    Bershidsky!

    Well waddya know!

    Now long resident in Berlin.

    Like

  3. Like antonlindgaard

    mette Good morning from Brussels. Yesterday I met with NATO General Secretary Jens Stoltenberg and my Dutch and Czech colleagues. We had a serious conversation about the Ukraine, which urgently needs air defence and ammunition. We are seeing absolutely terrible from the Ukraine these days. Russia continues its brutal and cynical attacks.We are at a point in world history where we must make the right decisions and act quickly on them. Today the day continues with my European colleagues.. After lunch, we shall return to Denmark.

    Brutal and cynical attacks?

    What kind of attacks should they be — gentle ones?

    And what exactly does he mean by “cynical attacks”?

    Russian attacks are not cynical: they are openly in defence of Russian interests and security.

    Like

    1. I suspect by ‘cynical’ he means ‘promptly taking advantage of the fact that our mouths were much bigger than our brains, and that when we confidently said ‘as long as it takes’, we meant ‘just as long as our investment is showing concrete results, and no more when it is not’. I’ll just remind everyone of what no less a heavyweight than Stoltenberg publicly announced in July last year, when everyone was still gaga over Churchillian Zelensky and his star was still ascendant: of NATO membership for Ukraine, he said clearly, “…unless Ukraine prevails, there is no membership to be discussed at all.” No victory, no NATO membership. And I certainly would not have a hard time believing in EU reluctance to admit a country that was ravaged by years of war – which it lost – and threw itself at the EU when it is poor as a churchmouse and believes itself entitled to endless amounts of EU financial aid, not to mention preferential trading arrangements which would allow it to get back on its financial feet but had abandoned its previous main trading relationship.

      https://www.pressreader.com/canada/national-post-latest-edition/20230712/page/1

      In case there’s any doubt, what this egghead collection of bogus intellectuals is asking now is for those under their control to pour more money into an investment which looks more and more like its investors will have to write off everything they already ventured. I realize it fits with the Washington plan of draining Russia for as many days as Ukraine can remain on its feet, and when it falls, hard luck, chum. But that’s looking at it from a military point of view. Most of those being asked to throw more money into a visibly-flailing project are not military, and commercially it makes no sense at all.

      Like

    2. mette in the above is Mette Frederiksen, Prime Minister of Denmark — the woman in the photo.

      I didn’t realize it was Frederiksen writing.

      For some reason, Fredriksen choses to use lower case letters for her given name when tweeting or whatever.

      I therefore should have commented above:

      And what exactly does she mean by “cynical attacks”?

      Like

  4. Russia destroyed two large gas storage facilities in the u-Kraine recently.

    Timing? Yes, it coincides with ‘de-communization’ 😉 of the u-Kraine’s electricty system, but is it also that it is far less likely for u-Rope to have yet another very mild winter after the the last two and it is election year for quite a few countries, thus potentially throwing new adminstrations in the deepend early on? Tick-tock tick-tock!

    Like

  5. Burkina Faso has thrown out three French diplomats over their ‘activity.’

    Yet more evidence of the last few years that even small countries are not afraid of the empire Rules Base Ordeur.

    No news out of Niger since the military agreement with the USA was rescinded by the government and publicly acknowledged by Washington. A shakedown for better terms by the rulers for the USA to keep one of its most expensive drone & everything bases in Africa or the beginning of the end of a permanent or any presence of US troops in the country. The silence smells of bargaining.

    Like

  6. The Yolanda project. Navalnaya “shares her rage” on the cover of Time

    Yesterday

     Dmitry Golubovich/Russian Look/Globallookpress

    Dmitry Golubovich/Russian Look/Globallookpress

    The Yolanda project has been launched – the West has begun to mould the widow of the opposition leader into a new “leader of the Russian revolution”. Yulia Navalnaya was featured on the cover of Time magazine, where, judging by the headline, “she shares her rage with everyone”.

    The widow of Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny * Yulia was included in the top 100 most influential people in the world according to Time magazine and was placed on the cover of the publication. The title of the article reads: “Share my rage.”

     Screenshot: Telegram/Mardan

    Screenshot: Telegram/Mardan

    What exactly the influence of Navalnaya is, the publication did not specify. The woman has never been involved in politics either in Russia or abroad and has not reached any heights in her profession. Yulia Navalnaya’s name was only known because she became the wife and later widow of a well-known Russian opposition leader.

    Journalist Sergey Mardan noted that the West is officially launching the Yolanda project (as US President Joe Biden once called Yulia Navalnaya, forgetting her name). He believes that the United States clearly has no idea about society in Russia, since they are trying to create a cult around such an inflated figure, who is absolutely nobody in Russia.

    Western creative invalids continue to mould Navalny’s widow as a politician and want to sell her as a “leader of the Russian revolution”.”Only a soy relocant** from Haifa could buy into this. But it has nothing to do with Russia either,

    – the journalist writes.

    It is noteworthy that in this case, the West operates according to the methodology that it has already worked out on the Belarusian opposition activist Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who was promoted in a similar way. Only here Tikhanovskaya was really involved in politics (at least, she participated in the elections), but Navalnaya has not. In fact, Yulia does not enjoy any influence either in Russia or abroad.

    * Alexey Navalny is included in the list of organizations and individuals involved in terrorism and extremist activities.

    ** “relocants” is the mocking term that Russians use for expats who claim thay are not emigrants to, say, Israel, but are simply sitting it out abroad so as to avoid being drafted or to show or voice their disapproval of the “full scale invasion”.

    The “Soy Boy”: pejorative term. A newish meme here — at least, I’ve never heard my instructor in Russian street cred and obscenities, VLadimir Denisovich, use the term.

    Some say the term arises from the apparently mistaken belief that the presence of a phytoestrogen found in soybeans and soy products feminizes those men who consume them, so a Soy Boy is a kind of “metroman”, a weak kreakl, an effeminate, unmanly or inadequate man, who is often dominated by his wife.

    Bit like me, I suppose.

    Like

    1. I’d be nervous of a cult leader with such a volatile temper – Yolanda never showed any signs of being in a rage before her numpty husband died, and he was never really an ‘opposition leader’, not the head of any party, and only commanding a following of kreakles in his ‘anti-corruption project’ (which never resulted in a single arrest for corruption, and seemed more geared toward spreading allegations of corruption in the upper echelons of government) and kiddies too young to vote, who were caught up in the excitement of rebellion.

      What’s she in a rage about? Her daughter goes to an expensive American university for free, while she herself is now coddled and feted everywhere she goes in the west. Mind you, it doesn’t take much to impress Kamala Harris.

      Like

      1. It was and is still not a “project”, dear chap: it was and apparently is, though now conducted from afar in Baltic Chihuahua Land, a struggle!

        I’m pretty sure that the title of the Bullshitter’s noble organization, set up to make a “beautiful Russia”, had been dreamt up by his controllers.

        In Russian, the name of Navalny’s noble organization, which also clearly financially contributed towards the ability of the Navalny family members to live a life according to the manner in which its Pater familias considered they and he had been born, namely as “New Russians” (recall the frequent exotic holiday snaps, the lobster restaurant in California, and, of course, as mentioned above, the most expensive USA university education for daughter Daria), but was sold off to the Navalny “hamsters” as having as its objective the creation for them of a “Beautiful Russia”, was:

        Фонд борьбы с коррупцией

        which is usually rendered into English as:

        Anti-Corruption Foundation.

        Literally, however, the Russian name of the “foundation” translates into English as:

        Foundation for the struggle with corruption.

        More “gutsy”, see!

        It’s a “struggle”, a fight, a wrestling match (“wrestling” is another English translation of борьба) against the forces of evil.

        And into German, борьба translates as Kampf.

        Geddit?

        Mein Kampf — My Struggle!

        Like

  7. Bloomberg

    Russia to Hire Contract Soldiers in Bid to Avoid Unpopular Draft*

    • Kremlin anxious not to stir fears that triggered 2022 exodus
    • Ukraine has faced delays in Western aid and personnel shortage
    Young men walk past a billboard promoting contract army services in St. Petersburg, Russia.
    Young men walk past a billboard promoting contract army services in St. Petersburg, Russia.Photographer: Olga Maltseva/AFP/Getty Images

    By Bloomberg News

    April 18, 2024 at 11:47 AM GMT+3

    Russia is preparing to enlist more contract soldiers as it presses its invasion of Ukraine, aiming to avoid at least for now another mass call-up that could undermine popular support for the war.

    The Kremlin is anxious not to repeat the September 2022 mobilization, which shook public confidence and triggered an exodus of as many as a million Russians from the country, three people informed about discussions on the matter said.

    With as many as 30,000 new recruits a month, Russia could reinforce army ranks by 300,000 this year, said Ruslan Pukhov, head of the Moscow-based Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies think tank.

    Bolstered by its advantage in ammunition, the Russian army is continuing to advance as Ukraine’s forces struggle because of delays in US and European military aid and personnel shortages. To be sure, relying on a gradual influx of new troops to replace losses and build up numerical strength rather than simply calling up another 300,000 in one go limits Russia’s military options.

    Gaining control of Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, or capturing Zaporizhzhia in the southeast would likely require a major new fighting force. An assault on the strategic southern port city of Odesa would be an even tougher goal.

    Still, concerns are mounting that Russia may make major gains in the coming weeks by punching through overstretched Ukrainian lines, people familiar with the matter in the US and Europe said. Russian troops are at the outskirts of their next key target in the eastern Donetsk region, Chasiv Yar, whose elevated position makes it crucial to Ukraine’s defense of the area.

    [My stress — ME]

    A damaged thermal power plant near Kharkiv, Ukraine, on April 12.
    A damaged thermal power plant near Kharkiv, Ukraine, on April 12.Photographer: Andrii Marienko/AP Photo

    Ukraine at the same time is facing a daily barrage of missiles, drones and bombs that is knocking out important power infrastructure because of a lack of air defenses and hitting army positions. Looking to also bolster their frontlines, lawmakers in Kyiv approved a watered-down version of controversial legislation to recruit more troops.

    Russia has detailed plans to expand its armed forces to 1.5 million people from 1.15 million now, of which 650,000 have had combat experience in Ukraine, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said in December. In January, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Kyiv’s forces numbered just short of 900,000.

    “The shape of the Russian offensive that’s going to come is pretty clear,” the former commander of the UK’s Joint Forces Command, General Sir Richard Barrons, told the BBC. “We are seeing Russia batter away at the front line, employing a five-to-one advantage in artillery, ammunition, and a surplus of people reinforced by the use of newish weapons.”

    The Russian Defense Ministry on April 3 said more than 100,000 new recruits had signed up so far this year, with as many as 1,700 people volunteering a day.

    [My stress. Yet Bloomberg states in its lead that the Kremlin fears a “mass exodus” if men were simply called up. How come? The Evil Orcs are volunteering to murder, plunder and rape in dear, sweet, democratic Banderastan — ME]

    Russia’s using generous financial incentives to attract people to the war. Since the beginning of the year, regional payouts to new contract soldiers have increased 40% to an average 470,000 rubles (around $5,000), according to calculations by Re: Russia, a Vienna-based research group set up by former government adviser Kirill Rogov. That’s in addition to a flat rate federal payment of 195,000 rubles.

    “The Russian authorities are trying not to carry out a new mobilization, as long as they have the opportunity to avoid it,” said Pavel Luzin, a Russian military expert who’s a senior fellow at the Jamestown Foundation.

    Ultimately, any call-up would be President Vladimir Putin’s decision, and the Russian leader has stoked speculation the Kremlin is preparing the ground for a potential next mobilization of reservists by accusing Ukraine without evidence of involvement in the Moscow concert hall attack last month that killed more than 140 people, even as Islamic State claimed responsibility.

    For now, the army command is in part relying on getting some current conscripts to sign contracts, according to two people familiar with the situation. This spring, 150,000 Russians will be drafted for standard military service.

    The law allows those conscripts to be sent to the battlefield after four months of military service, said Luzin.

    [See: 4 October 2023 — Russian Ministry of Defense: conscripts will not be sent to combat zone— ME]

    However, that would violate repeated public pledges not to deploy conscripts to the war zone, so army officials are pushing them to switch to a professional contract, which they can do from the first day of their service under legislative changes approved last year.

    “Everything happens on an absolutely transparent and voluntary basis,” Andrei Kartapolov, a former deputy defense minister who’s head of the lower chamber of parliament’s defense committee, told RTVI channel.

    In fact, an increasing number of draftees are complaining of significant psychological and in some cases physical pressure, according to Idite Lesom, or Get Lost, a non-government organization that helps people who want to avoid being sent to fight in Ukraine.

    [ Идите Лесом, Idite Lesom, literally: “Go to the forest!”, meaning “Get lost!” in English, is an “anti-war charity” founded by Grigory Sverdlin in Tbilisi, Georgia shortly after the announcement of a partial mobilisation of reservists in Russia on 21 September 2022. I wonder who could be financing it? Tricky one! — ME]]

    “They put one boy into a pit and kept him there for several days without food until he agreed to sign a contract,” said the group’s head Grigory Sverdlin. The contracts are officially for one year, but can only be revoked by the Defense Ministry during wartime mobilization, so they’re effectively permanent until the conflict ends, he said.

    [Does anyone really believe this? — ME]

    So far, Russia’s approach appears to be working.

    [What’s that you say? The Orcs are doing something right? — ME]

    “For the current strategy of inflicting ‘a thousand cuts’ and broad pressure on Ukraine along the entire front, the available manpower and its replenishment through contract recruitment is apparently enough,” said Pukhov, from the Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies.

    Ukraine
    Concerns are mounting that Russia may punch through overstretched Ukrainian lines.Photographer: Roman Pilpey/AFP/Getty Images

    Russia probably can’t consolidate control over eastern Ukraine by taking the well-defended cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk this year, he said.

    Still, Putin’s goal is to have the West reach the “conclusion that Russia prevailing in Ukraine is inevitable and that we must stay on the sidelines,” said Nataliya Bugayova, a non-resident fellow at the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War.

    [Fuck me! She must be a real expert! See below — ME]

    *In my English: “Russia to Hire Contract Soldiers” means “Russia to recruit regular soldiers”. In Russia, since the onset of the full scale brutal and cynical attack against Banderastan, “With as many as 30,000 new recruits a month” as Bloomberg reports, there has been no shortage of recruits into the regular armed forces, such recruits being called in Russian “contract soldiers”.

    A word in your ears about Pavel Luzin:

    Pavel Luzin holds a doctorate in international relations from the Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO). He is an expert on Russia’s politics, defense affairs, and global security. Dr. Luzin studies these fields for Riddle media. Previously, he covered these issues for the presidential campaign of Alexei Navalny in Russia (2017-2018), “Nations in Transit” project at Freedom House (2016-2018), and Center for Polish-Russian Dialogue and Understanding (2015-2018). He has worked for Russian think tanks IMEMO and PIR-Center, and taught at Perm State University and at Higher School of Economics (Perm campus).

    source

    Natalya Bugayova at Harvard this year

    Nataliya Bugayova is the Director of Strategic Insights at Vertical Knowledge, as well as a Research Fellow at the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), where she leads the Russia and Ukraine portfolio. Her work focuses on the Kremlin’s foreign policy decision-making and ongoing global campaigns. She was previously ISW’s Development Director from 2016-2019, and led ISW’s Russia and Ukraine research team from 2019–2020. She directed developmental and planning efforts for major events, including the ISW Security Conference.

    Prior to ISW, she was the Chief Executive Officer of the Kyiv Post, Ukraine’s independent English-language publication. She also served as Chief of Staff to former Ukrainian Economy Minister Pavlo Sheremeta, appointed after the pro-democracy Euromaidan Revolution in February 2014. She also advised Minister Sheremeta on cooperation with international financial institutions, focusing primarily on the World Bank. She has worked on consulting projects with the World Bank in Washington, D.C. and with the Boston Consulting Group in Kyiv.

    She obtained a Master’s in Public Policy from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. She was a student fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. She earned her undergraduate degree in East Asian Studies at Kyiv National Taras Shevchenko University.

    source

    She’s a Ukrainian

    Working at ISW is better than working in a whorehouse on the Hamburg Reeperbahn, I suppose.

    Like

    1. I…I’m confused. Can Russia simply print money and then buy its own bonds so as to get it into circulation the way the USA – and, increasingly, Europe – does? Because otherwise I can’t see how Russia can hire ambitious numbers of new soldiers – all of whom, presumably, are paid – plus offer ‘generous incentives’…but there’s no money, because Putin and his cronies steal it all. There seems to me to be a bit of a disconnect there.

      The rest of this breathless account merits similar respect to what you would grant any tale which purported to be true, but for which the sources are ‘people who know’.

      Meanwhile, pretty much any western-media piece on something which is purportedly ‘going on’ inside Russia can be safely ignored, as it is ‘highly likely’ to be full of shit. Russia was moving toward an all-volunteer contract military more than a decade ago, and I believe that is still the government’s goal although it is by no means there yet – it is not surreptitiously hiring contract soldiers so as to avoid a popular uprising by those who do not want to serve in the military, and no such uprising is the least bit likely while ample numbers of recruits are showing up of their own volition. The west just cannot let go of the notion that Putin and the Russian government are trawling the streets for careless drunks and runaway children, to press them into military service, because it agrees with their lurid theories that the Russian military is crumbling from within, and sowing a little discord will cause it to crack open like a coconut, whereupon a suddenly-inspired Ukraine will romp to joyous victory. At least, I hope they are that stupid. Because the alternative is that they are just cold-bloodedly stalling while as many Ukrainians as possible are killed before the nation has to surrender.

      Like

  8. Tw@tter says Chad has threatened the SOFA with the American military. Isn’t it France’s outpost?

    https://edition.cnn.com/2024/04/18/politics/chad-us-troops-threat/index.html

    …The letter specifically mentioned the US Special Operations Task Force (SOTF) at the base, an important hub for US Special Operations Forces in the region, two of the sources said. But the task force is not the only contingent of US military personnel at the base, as all US service members in Chad are located in N’Djamena…

    ####

    It’s the Russian’s fault of course!

    https://www.lemonde.fr/en/le-monde-africa/article/2023/10/17/driven-out-of-niger-the-french-army-takes-refuge-in-chad-paris-s-last-ally-in-the-sahel_6179914_124.html

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Chad

    Like

  9. Why are we not surprised to see news like this?

    Western tycoon claims Zelensky associates trying to extort millions of euros

    <i>… [Co-owner of online casino Cosmolot Arnulf Damerau], who denies the [Ukrainian government’s] allegations of tax evasion, claimed to the FT that in December a Ukrainian individual met him in Vienna and said that Cosmolot’s legal woes would disappear if half of the company’s shares were transferred to an offshore trust. The businessman said he informed law enforcement in the EU and the US about the situation.

    The corruption, Damerau told the British newspaper, comes from a “minority” at the top level of the Ukrainian government, including in Zelensky’s office. Some reports in Western media have claimed that the president does not tolerate graft in his inner circle …</i>

    And only four months ago:

    British investor Cosmolot, Arnulf Damerau: I will promote Ukraine as the best place for foreign investment

    One can only hope that Arnulf Damerau has learned a lesson or part of it anyway … the rest he will learn if his claims of extortion are believed by Brussels and Washington, and acted upon.

    Like

    1. Yes, that’s quite a reliable little earner they’ve got going there – one faction advises you on how, as an investor, you can outmaneuver attempts to extort money from you through unfair taxation…and then another faction ‘discovers’ you evading taxes! And magically, the solution to either problem is to allow their experts to get you out of the mess, for an eye-watering fee.

      Why are we not surprised? Well, nobody is, who has read this.

      https://jamestown.org/program/ukraines-new-presidential-administration-filled-with-show-business-friends/

      Or this.

      https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/what-business-is-really-like-in-ukraine/

      Anyone who really thought Poroshenko was going to dispense with corruption in Ukrainian business should have got wise when he promised to sell his business interests if elected, and instead used his office as president to grow those same businesses and acquire new ones. Anyone who thought Zelensky was a new broom who would sweep corruption to the curb was a double fool. A culture of corruption pervades the conduct of business in Ukraine, but the west is determined to not see it, and to naively promote investment in Ukraine because of its foreign-policy goals, which it foolishly saw Ukraine as being its best chance of realizing. The Americans were worried about corruption in Ukraine more than a year ago, though, unless they were already laying the groundwork for backing away from the fantastic sums they were donating with virtually no oversight.

      https://www.politico.com/news/2023/10/02/biden-admin-ukraine-strategy-corruption-00119237

      ‘Sensitive but unclassified’ is frequently another way of saying ‘journalists, please leak this’, and the implication that Washington’s continued support might turn on real efforts to expose and punish corruption whispers ‘exit strategy’ – we had to drop them, they wouldn’t listen to us on corruption, and honest government is more important than beating the Russians. Ha, ha; yes, I laughed, too. You know if Kuh-yiv really were hammering the Russians, Zelensky could change his ‘trademark’ milijammies for convict black-and-white stripes with red letters on the chest which spelled out “I’m So Corrupt”, and Washington would pretend that it had forgotten how to read.

      Like

  10. They always have to tag on a pejorative, dont they?

    They always love to wax lyrical, don’t they?

    They cannot simply say “Russian armed forces”: they have tp say “Putin’s evil forces”.

    Evil, brutal, barbarous, cynical even . . .

    Whom do they think they are kidding with such pathetic theatrics?

    Oh right! The Great American Public, that’s who.

    Likewise Michel and von der Leyen and Macron and Johnson etc. when addressing Europeans.

    Rishi the Rat seems to say almost fuck all pejoratively towards the Evil Ones and their Tyrant when compared with his European colleagues. But then again, he’s not really a politician: he’s a multi-millionaire banker with a multi-millianaire Indian wife, who, after her spouse had become King Charles III’s Prime Minister, tried to continue to avoid paying British taxes by claiming that she was only a foreign resident in the UK, albeit her address was 10 Downing Street, Londonistan.

    Like

    1. It would have been a nice touch if they had included Schumer’s home telephone number, so I could call him up at 4 double bubble to check that he was not sleeping, but in fact working day AND NIGHT to get Ukrainian aid passed. I’m sure there is something he could be doing toward that goal even if everyone else in America was asleep, otherwise why use hackneyed phrases like ‘We are working day and night’ and ‘We won’t rest until…’

      One day, perhaps, it will be known that it was in fact Zelensky’s forces who were ‘evil’, and who murdered civilians at Bucha because they were allegedly collaborators. It’s politically impossible to even investigate that now.

      Like

    2. Well waddya know!

      Shmyhal and Schumer are both members of the tribe.

      Well I knew that, off course: it’s revealed in their family names, but if it were not, “a rose by another would smell as sweet”!

      I do hope nobody here takes me for . . you know . . . one of those most vilified of persons in Western society.

      I’m not.

      Honest!

      Like

  11. Meanwhile, in a pair of interesting developments, the USA allowed the suspension of sanctions against Venezuela’s oil and gas sector to expire without renewal – so sanctions are on again. Apparently Maduro was not holding up his end of the bargain by closing his eyes in blind trust while the west ginned up another Guaido-style regime-change effort against him.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/apr/17/us-reimposes-venezuela-sanctions

    And…is the west gearing up for a regime-change run at Georgia? It is plugging the usual stories about ‘massive protests’ and painting the ruling Georgian Dream party as ‘pro-Russian’, all over a Foreign Agents Registration law which is virtually identical to that enforced by western nations, just the same as the US Department of State freaked out when Russia imposed a FARA law which was more or less word-for-word identical with its US counterpart. Why? Well, because new legislation would constrain the ‘valuable work for democracy’ (of course it is) carried out by western NGO’s in these countries. In the Russian example, it resulted in most of them being kicked out or leaving rather than register.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/kremlin-says-georgia-s-foreign-agents-law-is-being-used-to-stoke-anti-russian-feeling/ar-BB1lLXvB

    Labeling it ‘the Russian law’ is sort of a giveaway of foreign meddling, and I daresay there is evidence of it also in the composition of the protests. It should be noted that while Washington constantly rails against corruption and portrays itself as the guardian of honesty and fair play, it never saw a Georgian leader it liked as much as it liked Saakashvili, and he was as crooked as a dog’s hind leg. But his love for the west was maudlin, and his appetite for making deals insatiable.

    Is the west making a grab for Georgia? What do you think?

    https://georgiatoday.ge/professor-charles-h-fairbanks-jr-georgias-only-hope-to-keep-its-sovereignty-is-democracy/

    Like

    1. So Boris’s recent trip while employed by a hedgefund

      https://news.sky.com/story/boris-johnson-breached-rules-by-being-evasive-over-links-to-hedge-fund-says-watchdog-13118478

      …Former prime minister Boris Johnson has breached government rules by being “evasive” about his links to a hedge fund that set up a meeting between him and the president of Venezuela, a watchdog has said…

      ####

      Remember kids, this is not ‘corruption’ but ‘bending the rules.’ In short, if there isn’t a criminal liability, it’s purely subjective.

      Like

    2. One of the Swedish government tw@ts recently enthused that Russia’s ‘shadow tanker fleet’ could be banned from the Baltic for ‘environmental reasons.’

      It must be so nice to be officially in the club and let all those cunning ideas you were forced to keep in your head, out. I’m sure it’s great for releasing… tension!

      Like

    3. Vis ME’s earlier erotic post of himself, blurred by default by google, I read today that F*c*book blocked posts by the Auschwitz Museum for similar reasons. Apparently computer Al-Gore-Rhythm’s are still very poor, even those employed by giga-corporations.

      Like

      1. Which erotic photo?

        You mean the one of some bloke who looks like me lying on a bed, thinking about how to transfer money from his thoughts into his bank account?

        Like

  12. This below brought a smile to my usual, unsmiling, morose face; it’s from MoA:

    The Ukraine has become a complete insane asylum, just like Trans’America and Misery’ael. The Ukraine Verkhovna Rada is more like a Viz Comics free-for-all, with the Johnny Fartypants’s, Buster Gonadses, and no shortage of Fat (and sometimes hot) Slags making the decisions on running the country into oblivion. Deez nutz keep spouting preposterous lies that only a relative few insane’oes believe as they are now cruising in ‘believe our own absurd bullsh’t’ mode. If Charles Dickens were alive today, he would likely move to Ukraine to get some sensational material for five new volumes, starting with ‘Bleak Country’. What is sad, is these daft c’nts continue to sit around and make up absurd lies for the American and European ‘free press’, while doing nothing constructive to save their remaining population from complete annihilation. They seem oblivious that their people are being decimated.

    Posted by: Áobh Ó’Sheachnasaigh | Apr 19 2024 3:15 utc

    A smile, not because of any Schadenfreude on my part as regards the death throes of Banderastan, but because of the reference to “Viz” characters.

    For those who may not be in the know, “Viz” is a scurrilous, vulgar, adult [not pornographic] comic, first published in Newcastle upon Tyne in Northeast England.

    I guess the commenter is Irish, as she’s spelt her name in the Irish Gaelic way, which orthography makes English spelling appear almost normal.

    Her Anglicized name is Aoife O’Shaughnessy — Aoife being pronounced as EE-fa.

    Like

    1. Yes, I was a big fan myself years back, when I had a British wife. It included characters that likely would not be permitted nowadays, like Sid the Sexist, but the strip was funny precisely because he was such a chauvinist. There was also Farmer Parmer, whose signature line was ‘Get orf my Laaaaaaand!’ and who specialized in singing the praises of fresh, dew-moistened country-grown vegetables while his lad was in the back with a sack of dried peas and a tin of green paint. There was also a supposedly-ordained minister who had the world’s tiniest chapel of worship up his bottom, and invited prospective worshipers to ‘just climb straight up my arse’, but I’ve forgotten his name. It was indeed not particularly pornographic, with the only scenes of coitus taking place between the Fat Slags and whatever likely lad they could pick up. It was very funny. There was no North American analogue that I ever saw; the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers were close in style, but the theme there was mild drugs such as marijuana and hashish.

      And I can see her point – not necessarily the whole country, but definitely the Ukrainian parliament is made up of characters which seem almost caricatures of actual leaders, begging to be made fun of with their bumpkin clothing and their cunning-stupid expressions, their infuriating sense of entitlement, as if they do not understand that they have been selected to Perform A Great Service For The Last Superpower which will end with their obliteration.

      Like

  13. The President in Exile of Belarus speaks:

    19 April 2024, 10:46

    The role of the Belarusian opposition in international dialogues is growing

    The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe expressed its readiness to support Belarusian democratic forces that share the values of the Council of Europe and recognize international norms.

    The Assembly noted the importance of the participation of representatives of the Belarusian opposition in the work of PACE.

    In particular, PACE stressed the need to release political prisoners in Belarus. “This is an important step in protecting human rights and democratic values,” the organization said.

    Like

    1. Well, that’s kind of deceptive. The ‘role’ of the Belarusian opposition in international dialogue is not actually growing at all, else it would be possible to simply choose a new leader the international makers of dialogues liked better, and pronounce ‘badda-bing, badda-boom, you are now the new leader of Belarus’, whereas such a pronouncement would have no effect at all in the supposed country of the new leader. Except for a small curated liberal element, as in Russia, nobody in Belarus is interested in being represented internationally by Tikhanouskaya, and if that means withdrawal from such international organizations, so be it. International bodies might signify they are more willing to pretend Tikhanouskaya is the actual leader of a country instead of some randomly-selected plastic doll on which to project their ambitions, but that cannot make that ambition reality. The lurid fantasies of the democratizers in reality serve only to make the world more polarized. But that’s the way they want it. Their bloated emperor has convinced them it’s either a unipolar world, led without questions or commentary by the United States of America, or a bifurcated sphere whose halves have no truck with one another and try to pretend the other side does not exist.

      It is an eternal source of perplexity to me that despite all its raving about the Nazis during and immediately after the war, the west is actually quite okay with fascism as long as it can call it something else, and that the driving force behind reconstituting the Soviet Union is actually the west.

      Like

      1. It is an eternal source of perplexity to me that despite all its raving about the Nazis during and immediately after the war, the west is actually quite okay with fascism

        Have you not noticed that in the last few days, the USA, the proud owner of the “1st Amendment” has been conducting witch hunts and persecutions in the last few days worthy of Nazis? Joe McCarthy looks like a piker.

        From what I vaguely remember of various readings in history, I don’t remember most of Western Europe or the USA, I cannot remember abut Canada, were not all that adverse to fascism. Remember Mosley in the UK or the US Bund.

        Britain and Canada accepted 1,000s of Ukrainian fascist war criminals and the USA built its space program on German scientists, some of whom probably were, or came close to being, war criminals.

        The West was so afraid of the USSR and socialism that unless you were a well-known mass-murder the fact that you were a Nazi was a minor issue.

        To a certain extent it may be a case “The Lady doth protest too much”.

        Like

        1. As I’ve often mentioned before, I worked with some of them down the pit. There used to be a PoW camp near where I lived. It was built on Garswood Park, the estate of the local aristo since the 14th century, Lord Gerard, which family had died out by the early 20th century. Many of the “German” PoWs must have been Banderites, because several of them stayed in the UK rather than be repatriated, for obvious reasons.

          Like

        2. Mustang, the prominent maker of marine immersion suits which may well save your life if you have no choice but to enter cold water for an extended period, based its designs on ‘research’ conducted by Nazi ‘scientists’ on Jewish prisoners in which they were forced to remain in large tubs of icy water with a thermal probe up their ass to register when the very last heat left the body core, at death.

          That’s not a suggestion that ‘at least something good came out of it’, but rather pointing out that even legitimate medical science draws from data that only the Nazis – so far – were willing to collect in the most sickening ways.

          Like

        1. After the death of Navalny, he was reported as having stated that he preferred not being labelled “leader of the opposition” as he’d rather do his time and walk out of nick in due course.

          Like

        2. For? Or were the charges against him ‘totally political and fabricated’?

          It strikes me that these ‘opposition leaders’ seem totally oblivious to the possibility that their stepping up as they do to rail against the government promptly attracts support – whether or not they ask for it – from the western regime-change community, which promptly results in charges that they are a foreign cat’s paw. A truly smart – and genuine – political opposition figure would declare publicly right out of the gate that he or she would absolutely not accept a dime of support money from any foreign source, and that they were in no way a traitor to their nation, but represented honest concerns by a significant proportion of the national population. If that were true, and the leader were not a dictator, he would have to take notice, and genuine support could be expected from the oppositionist’s fellow citizens.

          That would never have worked for Navalny, because he never represented real concerns – hardly anyone in Russia knew who he was, and polls consistently gave him near-non-existent popular support. His attempts to rally public support, as broadcast, usually consisted of him standing grinning outside some opulent mansion and saying ‘Putin’s house’ in a manner that invited the viewer to scream with rage, although he offered no proof whatever that the house actually belonged to Putin or to anyone else he was trying to cite for corruption. I’m sure there is plenty of real corruption in Russia, but none of Navalny’s research was wasted on actually proving it and all his efforts were focused on pleasing the foreign moneymen.

          Like

          1. When Navalny first started spouting it off on the streets here so as to be arrested, I well recall, whilst watching the news, Mrs. Exile asking me: “Who is this Navalny?”

            Mrs. Exile is, I must add, no barely educated country-girl. In fact, nobody in Russia is “barely educated”, whether he or she be from a city or a “rural settlement”.

            Mrs. Exile was born and bred slap bang in the middle of Moscow, at “Taganka”, Moscow Central Administrative District, where she and I have lived these past 27 years.

            Taganskaya Square, 2016, just up the road from our hovel, and that’s one of two metro stations that is next up the line downtown from our local metro station, located about half away to the right at the end of the street in the picture, which is Taganskaya Street.

            The metro station right-centre is called Marksistkaya, and our local station is called Proletarskaya, which just goes to prove that Orcs are still Commies, innit?

            Like

    1. Actually, the message out of Capri, the latest sun-drenched spot you’ve chosen to relax and eat good food and drink good wine and bullshit a little among yourselves is ‘He has”. The only contribution that would now count as extraordinary would be an extraordinary amount of money, and as a measure, $60 Billion would be virtually inconsequential, especially if the bulk of it was spent in the United States to send more weapons the Ukrainians are incapable of operating, while there are getting to be not enough Ukrainians to even bother trying to train some up on how to fly an F-16 or launch a Patriot. Provision of long-range serious weapons which could actually be interpreted as a western attack on ordinary Russian civilians risks triggering a major world war, with devil take the hindmost in terms of launching grief against the enemy and no immunity for exclusively civilian targets like entire cities. The USA has perfected the art of How To Talk Confident, but that’s all it is, a diplomatic technique. The people around that ring have their heads up their arses, and their actual ability to influence the progress of world affairs is slipping through their fingers like sand. There’s no longer any magic spell of catering to another’s mad delusions for the sake of politeness, requiring the pretense of recognizing authority, and invoking ‘democracy’ is no longer an effective cover for naked aggression.

      Like

      1. And the message yesterday, 19 April, from the G7 gathering of talking-head geopolitical nonentities gathered in sunny Capri . . .

        Wait for it … wait for it!

        Russia can end the conflict in Ukraine today

        19 April, 2024 at 18: 24 

        Moscow may end the conflict in the Ukraine today. This was stated by the Foreign Ministers of the Group of Seven (G7) countries.

        “Russia can end [this conflict] today,” the report says. application form published after the G7 foreign Ministers’ meeting in Italy. The document also notes that the G7 countries do not recognize the new territories of the Russian Federation and the legitimacy of referenda and elections. In addition, the participants of the meeting called on all countries of the world not to approve of the actions of Russia in the Ukraine.

        In the fall of 2022, referenda on joining the Russian Federation were held in the the Kherson, Zaporizhia, LPR and DPR regions. The absolute majority of residents supported joining Russia.

        ********************************************************************************************************

        So there you are, then, you evil, barbarous Russians! Cease and desist immediately and just go back whence you came, and leave the “free world” in peace!

        Oh yeah, and pay billions in “compensation” to the peace-loving Banderites and send your political leaders, chiefs of military staff, assorted military commanders etc. to the Hague to stand trial for crimes against humanity.

        Simple solution, innit?

        Like

        1. Good thing they all have little stickers to tell them where to stand.

          Implicit in the ‘Russia can end this conflict today’ is ‘only’. If Ukraine could end it, it would have done long since. As would the ‘free world’, which has been trying since the beginning to convince Russia that victory will be too costly. As it would have been, but for Russia’s timely efforts to insulate itself, and its good fortune in being energy and food self-sufficient.

          I read a good interview yesterday at Glenn Greenwald’s substack, with Sahra Wagenknecht. She’s actually been in politics a long time, since she was 19, and remembers the Greens before they became the war party they are now. She reckons Baerbock is a loon.

          Like

          1. I’m bloody certain she is too.

            The G7 countries are Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. So why’s Borrell up there with the gang?

            Between Biden and Miss Stupid of Canada is the the Frog Foreign Minister and arse bandit Séjourné; then comes the Eyetie Foreign Minister Tajani, who is standing between Miss Stupid and Tokyo Rose Yoko Kamikaze; then comes the former German Schoolgirl Trampoline Champ and International Lawyer idiot Baerbock; next is “Lord” Just-Call-Me-Dave Cameron; and then comes Borrell.

            Why?

            It’s a G7 beanfeast, innit?

            Borrell makes it a group photo of 8.

            Who invited that useless old fart along?

            Like

            1. Is the EU a sovereign state now? Is it now G8 again with the EU replacing Russia because Russia is an evil authoritarian state?

              Like

            2. I’m surprised Biden didn’t turn up, or Von der Leyen. After all, the theme of this meeting was UNITY, the notion that we all speak with one voice and are all looking in the same direction, toward Putin’s military defeat. As far as I can make out, Borrell was there to demonstrate that all of Europe is behind the notion that united we can accomplish anything.

              Meanwhile we have Duda haranguing the western nations to boost their defense spending to 3% of GDP – which thought doubtless delights the USA, which would supply most of the equipment purchased – toward the common goal of defeating Russia. Comical, really, because no western nation is going to invest much at all in purchasing 155mm ammunition and artillery pieces, because that’s what Ukraine needs and knows how to use. Countries thinking about spending 3% of their GDP on defense goodies – and there’s no evidence there are any besides Poland – will want shinies like F-35’s and exotic missiles that Ukraine hasn’t a clue how to operate. They don’t have time to learn, and the west does not want to enter the war directly on its side, lest it go nuclear. That’s what they say, although I imagine westerners coming home in bags and new western military kit getting blasted without accomplishing much are considerations as well.

              Like

  14. Daily update from GOV.​UK

    for:

    Russia

    UK condemns Russia’s bombardment of Ukrainian cities and energy infrastructure: UK statement to the OSCE

    Page summary:
    Ambassador Holland criticises the recent intensification of Russia’s abhorrent attacks against Ukraine and their disastrous humanitarian consequences.

    Change made:
    First published.

    Time updated:
    11:51am, 18 April 2024

    ***********************************************************************************************************

    RT

    19 Apr, 2024 07:15

    WATCH Russian air defenses block Ukrainian attack

    An interception of a night-time barrage in the Belgorod Region has filmed by local residents

    VIDEO

    When is GOV.UK going to express condemnation of the above, which has been going on for a very long time on a regular basis?

    I am pleased to see that RT describes the attack as a “barrage” and not as a “shelling”, as it was seemingly always wont to say previously.

    Like

  15. PACE has refused to recognize Putin’s legitimacy

    The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe “does not recognize the legitimacy of Vladimir Putin as President of the Russian Federation and reiterates its call on member and observer states of the Council of Europe, as well as the European Union, to cease all contact with him.

    Oh, all right then: as you say . . .

    Like

    1. PACE does not recognize the legitimacy of V. V. Putin as Russian President, but the vast majority of Russian citizens who participated in the recent Russian presidential elections apparently does!

      Oh, right! Gotcha!

      The elections were fake.

      Like

  16. Frau von der Leyen was reminded that she is a criminal

    During the defence summit in Brussels, journalist David Cronin told the witch everything that many people think about, but are afraid of saying:

    You are a criminal, Frau von der Leyen. Your place is in The Hague! ” the journalist shouted.

    Von der Leyen tried to pretend with a wry grin that nothing was happening and that it didn’t concern her, but the ogre already sensed something was wrong. We hope that the Europeans will put her behind bars after all. [ZOV Kiev]

    VIDEO

    Mr. Cronin sounds like an Irishman to me.

    He says to her: “You are a whore: you are a criminal!”

    The subtitles wrongly read: “You are a war criminal”.

    See Mr. Cronin’s Twitter below:

    Yes, he most definitely says to her: “You are a whore!” — and he was being polite.

    Like

    1. And she actually affects amusement, as if it had been a free spectacle offered as a supplement to another boring fire-’em-up speech, like an after-dinner joke. This, of course, will lead quickly to all guests at such events being pre-vetted to ensure all who will be present will be of like mind and can be expected to sit with docile attention, the way similar events were in the USA when Dubya Bush was President. Nobody of unknown opinion allowed.

      Like

      1. Manifestly so, since any among them who looked as much like the cover of an Iron Maiden LP as Von Der Leyen does would have long since seen the end of days when whoring was profitable. She certainly deserves a special epithet for what she does which does not insult honest whores, because it clearly remains immensely profitable for her despite her looking like an alligator purse with eyeballs.

        Like

        1. Our Uschi increasingly resembles her fellow elite reptilian traveller Christine Lagarde – the only real difference is that Lagarde seems to spend more time in the sun – so maybe something like “lizard feminoid” would suit them both. Though I suppose we’d be insulting lizards a and reptiles generally for using them as a standard for behaviours they’re entirely innocent of.

          Like

          1. Bloomberg

            Macron Is Gauging Support for a Plan to Install Draghi in the Top EU Job

            • Paris and Rome are discussing alternatives to von der Leyen
            • Draghi’s name has been raised as possible commission chief
            Mario Draghi and Emmanuel Macron.
            Mario Draghi and Emmanuel Macron.Photographer: Valeria Mongelli/Bloomberg

            April 24, 2024 at 4:37 PM GMT+3

            French President Emmanuel Macron, who was instrumental in making Ursula von der Leyen the European Commission president five years ago, is now in talks with fellow EU leaders to find a different candidate — such as Mario Draghi — to fill the top job.

            With less than two months to go ahead of the bloc’s elections, Macron has spoken with premiers including Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni about the possibility of having a technocratic leader of the European Union’s executive arm, such as the former European Central Bank president, according to people familiar with those discussions.

            French President Emmanuel Macron Meets European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen
            Emmanuel Macron and Ursula von der LeyenPhotographer: Nathan Laine/Bloomberg

            When von der Leyen became the surprise president in 2019 following an agreement between Macron and then German Chancellor Angela Merkel, she vowed to transform the institution into a “geopolitical commission.” But she may have sunk her own chances, a separate official said, by over-politicizing her role.

            Von der Leyen is contending with deep dissatisfaction among certain capitals over how she’s run the commission during the past five years, particularly with regard to trade negotiations, the bloc’s climate transformation and relations with the US. And Macron has been openly critical of her performance.

            “The commission presidency is there to defend the general interest, so it must not be over-politicized,” Macron said in Brussels last month. “Which, it has to be said, was not at all the case with this outgoing commission.”

            A spokesperson from Macron’s office declined to comment. Another official in Rome said that Meloni hasn’t discussed a role for Draghi with Macron.

            Officials in Brussels, including within von der Leyen’s office, are uncertain if Macron is genuinely looking for a replacement for the top job, or if he’s putting pressure on her as a ploy to extract concessions from her down the line, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

            There’s broad consensus that a decision won’t be made until after the June 9 European election, when EU leaders will hash out who will fill the top posts, including for the European Council, the parliament and the foreign policy service. That process is a complicated, back-room negotiation, which weighs geographical balance and, more importantly, which political parties are entitled to the most consequential roles.

            Macron will give a broad policy speech at the Sorbonne on Thursday to kick off the campaign season, although it’s doubtful he’ll speak on the topic of institutional jobs.European Parliament Seat Projectionhttps://www.bloomberg.com/toaster/v2/charts/6148d6c10fbccdd35a13fa01b47568a1.html?brand=politics&webTheme=politics&web=true&hideTitles=true

            Regardless of Macron’s maneuvering, von der Leyen is still the clear favorite since she’s the lead candidate for the center-right European People’s Party, which is expected to handily win the most votes in June. Traditionally, that means an EPP candidate would get the commission role.

            It’s also unlikely that Germany would support a plan that would remove their country’s commissioner from the highest EU institutional post.

            Draghi is seen as a strong profile and his gravitas is still admired in Brussels after saving the euro as ECB president with his “whatever it takes” commitment to shield the common currency. But skeptics point to his age — he’s 76 — his defense of joint borrowing feared among the frugal countries, and strong doubts about whether the EPP would relinquish the post for a technical figure, the people said.

            Others have suggested that Draghi could be considered for the European Council job, which is in charge of running the meetings of the 27 EU leaders.

            Still, the situation has become more difficult for the commission president not only because she has to combine her campaign obligations with her commission duties, but also because her influential head of cabinet, Bjoern Seibert, is no longer running the day-to-day of the institution and is instead leading her re-election campaign.

            It would be difficult for Macron to openly express his support for a German candidate given the difficult electoral environment at home, according to an EPP official close to von der Leyen’s campaign. Macron’s Renaissance party is trailing well behind Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally in polls of voting intentions.

            EU leaders are scheduled to meet on June 17 to discuss the reshuffle, just a week after the election. Even if von der Leyen is picked by the leaders at the summit, where no consensus is required, she would still face a difficult confirmation vote at the parliament, which must agree by absolute majority.

            In 2019, von der Leyen was elected president by only nine votes. And given the expected increase in support for the hard-right parties, her margins will be even tighter this year.

            *************************************************************************************************

            Like

    1. Yes, it’s erection year so pump up the volume of paranoia and projection. No verfiable evidence or actual follow-up required.

      Like

      1. Uh huh; the powerless and isolated country whose friends have all deserted it, racked by sanctions-induced poverty and thrashing in desperation, is already reaching out to sweep Trump into the White House – an end the United States is ill-equipped to prevent, necessitating the utmost expense of money and resistance.

        Like

      2. One of Benny Hill’s classic skits:

        Hill (as a Chinese diplomat) to a British Minister:

        — When last time you had erection?

        — I beg your pardon?

        — Erection! Your last erection!

        — I hardly think . . .

        — Erection! … General erection, you bloody idiot!

        Like

  17. Do you see Stavropol city on the above map? It’s the administrative centre of the Stavropol region.

    In the northwestern part of that region, some 300 kms from the Ukrainian border, a Russian Tu-22 has crashed. Not all of its crew died.

    Witnesses say there were flames coming from the aircraft tail section.

    Many videos online now, purporting to be of the crashing bomber.

    A suspected technical failure caused the crash, the Russian the Defence Ministry reported today.

    The Banderites immediately claimed that they had downed it.

    Stay tuned for updates from the Helsinki desk!

    Like

    1. One of the clips now doing the rounds:

      https://t.me/breakingmash/53603

      There was no one on board at the time of the Tu-22M3 crash. Three pilots managed to eject – two were hospitalized, one is being searched for.

      The aircraft crashed whilst returning to its home airfield after having completed a combat mission. It was flying without weapons. The Ministry of Defence has reported this.

      Like

      1. There’s a monument just outside the Primorsky city of Arseniyev, commemorating the crash of a stricken military aircraft which was driven into the hillside by its pilot so as to ensure an empty aircraft would not crash on the town. It’s the tailplane of what I am pretty sure was a T-22. The NATO designator for it – all bombers start with ‘B’ – was Blinder. It was the Soviet Union’s first supersonic bomber, and a very nice-looking airframe.

        The name is somewhat confusing, because the ungraded TU-22 with a different weapon load is called the Backfire, although many of them started out as a TU-22 Blinder. The upgraded TU-22’s were reclassified from a tactical bomber to a strategic strike bomber, and the newest models, the TU-22M3M, have a completely new avionics suite.

        https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/russia-wants-its-tu-22m3-bombers-control-black-sea-96901

        Like

        1. AiF

          20.04.2024 08:31

           The crew ejected, but he stayed. The commander of a Tu-22M3 has the right to choose

          The doomed Tu-22M3 — video frame

          The commander of the Tu-22M3 supersonic missile bomber of the Russian Aerospace Forces that crashed in the Stavropol Territory, tried to save the falling aircraft until the very last moment, and then directed it away from residential buildings. He also saved his comrades by ejecting the entire crew. An aircraft commander has the right and technical ability to make decisions for others in a critical situation. He clearly had hardly any time to say farewell, but he probably warned each crew member of the urgency of the situation by flashing a red warning on the flight control console “Abandon Aircraft”.

          He first took care of his crew, but had no time to take care of myself

          The name of the commander of the crashed Tu-22M3 strategic bomber, as well as its crew members, has not been disclosed. The aircraft was returning from a combat mission in the SMO zone. The causes of the crash have not yet been announced. The prevailing version is a technical malfunction. Almost one hundred percent excluded is the version that the bomber had been hit by a Ukrainian anti-aircraft missile. such missiles could not have flown to the foothills of the Caucasus. It is up to a special commission to sort everything out.

          The heroic deed of the aircraft commander, who to the very last tried to save the aircraft, having previously ejected the crew — the co-pilot, the navigator and navigator-operator. He himself did not have time to eject himself from the aircraft. It is possible that in the last seconds of the flight he lost consciousness from g-force (the footage shows how mercilessly the aircraft was spinning) and did not have time to press the lifesaving ejection toggle switch.

          “The aircraft commander alone makes the decision as regards crew ejection”, aif.ru was told by honoured military pilot, Reserve Colonel Vladimir Talanov. “This applies both to performing a regular landing at an airfield, and an in-flight emergency situation. The pilot of an aircraft that has been hit by a missile or is damaged in some way, requests permission to eject from Control Command, and if this is not possible, he makes the decision himself, since he is the commander.”

          On Tu-22M3 aircraft, there is a forced ejection switch, with which the crew commander can forcibly, in an emergency, eject everyone – catapult out four ejection seats at once. Each crew member also has his own individual eject handle, which allows him to leave the aircraft. There are two side handles on each ejector seat: just pulling one of them is enough to eject. However, in any case, either a request to the commander or his command to leave the aircraft is required. On this type of strategic bomber, in an emergency, forced ejection is the main type of escape from the aircraft, and individual ejection serves a backup.

          Ejection from the Tu-22M3 is carried out one by one, with an interval of 1-3 seconds. The navigation operator ejects first, then the navigator, followed by the co-pilot. On the light display of the commander’s control panel, ‘Operator ejected from aircraft’ etc. is displayed. The pilot cannot see the notification of his own ejection even at the moment that he ejects. In this situation, the commander did not use this means of saving himself. Either he hoped to save the aircraft, or it was too late. In any case, he took care of his crew first.”

          Like

          1. He could have steered the aircraft away from residential buildings, but it is probably more likely he blacked out from spin and could not eject, since the official announcement of the crash reported it occurred in an uninhabited area. Anyway, yes, of course the Ukies immediately claimed it was shot down in a collaboration between their intelligence services and their air force. Air-to-air missiles are typically short-range, and there was nothing near at the time. But the Ukrainians are like the IRA – they used to claim every explosion and disaster was their work as well.

            However, by all means take them at their word, and send an admonitory strike to take out another power plant. Say, “That’s for our TU-22”.

            Like

        1. I think it’s the same for my Mom-in-law – from the region, not the city. She often says the climate and the foliage and flowers of Victoria remind her of the Caucasus.

          Like

          1. Mrs. Exile often mithers about us upping sticks and moving south to Krasnodar Region, situated to the west of Stavropol Region, to the small, Black Sea coastal resort of Anapa, where we once spent three happy summer vacations when our children were much younger, the last time in 2014, when Sasha was only 6 years old. I don’t want to move there, though. Winter there is like in the UK: chilly and wet. Much prefer snow. It gets hot there in summer, though.

            Krasnodar region, is, by the way, yet another part of “Moskovia” (Russia) that the Banderites claim is “historical Ukraine”, as they do the rest of the Kuban.

            The Galitsian shitwits seem to be unaware of the fact that for more than 300 years up to about 1820, what is now the Krasnodar region was part of the Ottoman Empire, as was all of southern “Ukraine” until 1783, when the Ottoman Sultan ceded the whole territory that became the Black Sea seaboard and hinterland of the UkSSR, including the Crimea, to the Russian Empire.

            Before that happened, what is now Odessa was a small Turkish fishing village and there was no “Dnipro” (until recently “Dnepropetrovsk”, and before that “Yekaterinoslav”) and Kherson and Donetsk (formerly “Stalino” and before that “Yuzovko”, founded in 1870 by Welsh steel maker John Hughes).

            Kuban is the historical and geographical region in the North Caucasus region of southern Russia, situated between the Don Steppe and the Volga Delta and separated from the Crimean Peninsula to the west by the Kerch Strait. Krasnodar Krai [region] is often referred to as Kuban, both officially and unofficially, although the term is not exclusive to the krai and also accommodates the republics of Adygea, Karachay-Cherkessia, and parts of Stavropol Krai.

            Galitsian shitwits lay claim to the Kuban because it was disputed territory, the dispute being between the Russian and Ottoman Empires, in which dispute former Don Cossacks participated after their having moved to the Kuban, thereby becoming Kuban Cossacks. Cossacks, who are not an ethnicity, were subjects of the Russian Tsar and defenders of the Russian frontiers — especially against the incursions of the Terrible Turk.

            But Cossacks are “Ukrainians” are they not?

            Like fuck they are, because this argument is based upon the false premise that there is an ethnicity known as “Ukrainian”. Furthermore, there were never Cossacks in Galitsia, which was part of the Catholic West, namely the Austrian, later Austro-Hungarian Empire. The Cossacks originated in left-bank of the Dnieper “Little Russia”. And Cossacks are all Russian Orthodox.

            And they tried to create Cossack republics so as not to get involved in the Russian civil war.

            They did get involved though, mostly against the Bolsheviks.

            Below, Kuban Cossacks lustily singing their monarchist song. I’ve posed the clip several times before, because I like it.

            At the end of the clip is a promotion for an English translation of a book about the murder of the last Tsar and his family in Yekaterinburg.

            At the end of the

            Those people in the choir are not “Ukrainians”! I’m sure that many ignorant Westerners would think so at first glance that they are because of their traditional costumes and not least because they are Cossacks, and Cossacks are “Ukrainian”, right?

            No — WRONG!

            For one thing, the women are not wearing “Ukrainian” [Little Russia] vyshyvanki, which simply means “embroidered shirt” in Russian, but Russian ones and they’re wearing long skirts. “Little Russia” traditional skirts for young women often come to just below the knee and they often wear red-leather calf boots with them.

            One of my previous 3 Natashas was a Kuban Cossack and she showed me a photograph taken of her when she was a teenager and she was dressed as the women are in the chorus in the above video. She also never had her hair cut until she got married. (She was a divorcée when I met her.) Until she got wed, she had worn her hair down her back in a long plait. She still had the plait when I knew her. She kept it in her bottom drawer. I can’t imagine why. She showed it to me once. It fevvered an anchor cable off H.M.S. Victory, which I have seen, having been aboard her on a couple of occasions.

            Russia, Krasnodar 23.09.17 procession of students of the Institute of culture, dancers in Cossack traditional dress.

            They are Russian girls!

            Like

    1. Vote for the candidate who sets unachievable goals. Even if, by some miraculous effort of combined teeth-gritting exercise of will, Ukraine managed to stagger to a military victory, it has already lost. An entire generation of young Ukrainian men has been decimated and many of its towns and cities are in ruins, while the infrastructure of even those not much damaged has been wrecked – it will cost squillions to put right the damage – money the west will be reluctant to spend considering the squillions already spent to achieve victory. As long as we are in dreamland, where a Ukrainian military victory remains possible, don’t bother dreaming that $300 Billion or $600 Billion or whatever it is of stolen Russian assets would soon put things right, because it would be a drop in the bucket of costs. Even a defeated Russia would be difficult to impose war reparations upon, considering whatever assets the west has not already ‘frozen’ remain out of reach. Millions of Ukrainians have fled the country, and could only be induced to return with the promise of relatively-easy prosperity, which would be an even bigger lie than ‘aggressor Russia’.

      However, if Russia wins – which increasingly looks ‘highly likely’ – the west will spend a lifetime repenting for its sordid part in an entirely-manufactured conflict; the very definition of a war of choice by the west, given that it announced ‘conditions for peace’ it knew perfectly well Russia would never accept, and the sole alternative was war, after more than a decade of constant provocation and grooming of Russia as The Enemy. Any suggestion now or in the future that the west reluctantly responded to a Russian invitation to fight must be greeted with incredulity and mockery.

      Like

      1. Didn’t ABBA write a song about it?

        …So the winner takes it all
        And the loser has to fall
        Throw a dice, cold as ice
        Way down here, someone dear
        Takes it all, has to fall
        It seems plain to me

        Like

  18. In any conversation which is reduced to ‘who’s winning?’, it might be helpful to look at the alleged effort to cobble together ‘peace talks’ that Russia might find worth attending. Olaf Scholz says things are going very well, and is grateful that he, personally, was able to play such an instrumental part in facilitating such world-changing events.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/scholz-diplomatic-efforts-around-ukraine-132912788.html

    The Poles say Scholz is full of something brown and squishy, and that there is zero progress on peace negotiations – something, by the bye, which cannot be thought about before Ukraine regains all its lost territories. Another way of saying ‘never’, because the Poles do not mind the war going on for another ten years or so – you never know what scraps might be left lying around for the Hyena of Europe to gobble up.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/no-progress-ukraine-russia-peace-134200244.html

    Meanwhile, the country which supposedly was headed toward humiliating defeat on the battlefield appears, on the whole, unconcerned with the scurrying of the ants around the antheap. Moscow offers – mockingly, I am bound to suggest – that the draft agreement Ukraine already signed once, but then blew off could serve as a ‘starting point’ for negotiations, which however would have to recognize ‘new realities’.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/kremlin-says-2022-draft-document-which-ukraine-rejected-could-serve-as-starting-point-for-peace-talks/ar-BB1lwEMD

    Uncharacteristic, I think you will agree, of a collapsing nation which is desperate to make a deal. Moreover, the effort to sway opinion among Russia’s BRICS partners so as to bring pressure on it to reach an agreement speaks volumes about how the giants of the west fancy their chances at forcing Russia to the negotiating table.

    Like

  19. Well, now – there’s an interesting angle, with even more interesting potential; UK Insurers Lloyds and Arch have refused to pay damage claims on the Nord Stream pipelines because “the damage resulted, or more likely than not resulted from the actions of a government”, so they are as a consequence not liable.

    https://thegrayzone.com/2024/04/17/uk-insurers-refuse-pay-nord-stream/

    There is, then, a good possibility this will be tested in court, with the requirement that Lloyds disclose the evidence upon which it relied to make such a conclusion.

    Personally, I hope they go with that absurd ‘Russia blew up its own pipelines’ story. It should take about 30 seconds to blow that one out of the water – so to speak – and might well lead to growing pressure to reveal what confidential investigations carried out by parties sworn to protect the United States, no matter what it does, discovered.

    Like

  20. This caused me to give one of my rare wry chuckles yesterday:

    A problem of Ukraine refugee children in Latvia has been stated to be ignorance of their mother tongue.

    The director of a Latvian school has spoken about a refusal from teachers of Ukrainian

    19 April, 2024, 15: 25

    A Latvian school in the city of Daugavpils has refused to accept Ukrainian teachers owing to the fact that children of refugees from Ukraine do not know their native language. This was stated on April 18 by the school’s director Ilmar Zuchik in an interview with a local newspaper Rus.lsm.lv.

    Earlier, the school had introduced a special programme for them, in which they were taught in the Ukrainian language by three teachers.

    “There was a very good programme in which three Ukrainian teachers worked: they helped and they translated everything into Ukrainian. However, it turned out that not all the children from the Ukraine knew Ukrainian well: their mother tongue is Russian. But we sorted everything out. The project is over, and we no longer have such assistants, unfortunately”, Zuchik said.

    He also announced that starting from the new school year, a bill would be introduced that provided for mandatory school attendance by children of Ukrainian refugees. It is indicated that at the moment most of them study in special online schools, but, according to the director of the school in Daugavpils, such distance education should be optional, since it will not be able to “replace Latvian education”. [Yeah, ‘cos if you wanna live in Chihuahua Land you gotta know how yap like a chihuahua — ME]

    Back in November last year, Latvian Foreign Minister Krisjanis Karins predicted a migration crisis in Europe. He said that concern should be expressed about the Ukrainian conflict, as this would lead to even more refugees.

    European countries began to place Ukrainian refugees on their territories from the beginning of Russia’s special operation to protect the Donbass, which it announced on 24 February, 2022.

    Also, in recent years, the Baltic States have adopted a policy of abandoning the Russian language, and it is banned in educational institutions. In Latvia, almost 40% of the population speaks Russian.

    Starting from 19 September, 2022, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania and Poland “for security reasons” imposed a ban on the entry of Russian citizens with Schengen visas issued in other EU countries. On 25 January, 2024, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Lithuania proposed that entry restrictions for citizens of Russia and Belarus be extended for another year. The current restrictions expire on 2 May and it has been proposed that they be extended until 2 May, 2025.

    In October last year, the Latvian Citizenship and Migration Department sent out a notification to 3255 Russian citizens living in the country about the need to leave the republic. According to the department, 3,541 Russian citizens had not fulfilled the necessary conditions for extending their residence permit. The Russian Foreign Ministry said at the same time that Moscow was ready to accept all compatriots from Latvia if it had been decided to evict them. Russian Foreign Ministry Maria Zakharova said that the Baltic States might not have enough iron to create an iron curtain with Russia.

    On 21 March 21 of this year, Latvian Foreign Minister Krisjanis Karins, during an interview with the German TV channel Deutsche Welle (DW, recognized in the Russian Federation as a foreign media agent), began to stutter after his having been asked why exactly Russian-speaking residents of the country were going to be deported because of their ignorance of the national [Latvian] language.

    How can “Ukrainian” be their “native language” if they do not know it?

    The Latvian dipshits should have said that the children were ignorant of “mova“, which hodge-podge of local dialects consists of a very large number of words derived from Polish, that they were unable to speak what is in effect that shitkicker-bumpkin Galitsian dialect which had been cobbled together and promoted during the last decades of the 19th century by the Austro-Hungarian Empire in order to discriminate between “Catholic” Western Ruthenians [no such thing then as “Ukrainians”] loyal to the Austrian Emperor in Kronland Galizien [Crownland Galitsia], and Orthodox Russian Ruthenians. The latter tended to display their allegiance towards the Russian Tsar and an affinity towards his subjects in “Little Russia”, eventually becoming post-WWI “Ukrainians” in 1922 with their own Soviet Republic gratis Comrade Lenin.

    The fact is that the children in question cannot speak the “state language” of Banderastan, which bumpkin tongue has been imposed upon the population of former territories of the UkSSR by neo-Nazis from Galitsia.

    Could it be that many of these Ukrainian refugees who have fled to Latvia and whose mother tongue is Russian are not, in fact, fleeing the evil Orcish “full-scale invasion” but that permanently dressed in a sweatshirt, chinos and sneakers lump of animate ordure in Kiev and his neo-Nazi entourage?

    Nah . . . stupid thought! Forget it!

    Like

  21. Voice of America voices total shite!

    Russia has not complied with more than 2 thousand ECHR decisions

    Perhaps that is because the Russian Federation is not a party to the European Convention on Human Rights?

    The only states that have not ratified the convention are Belarus and Russia.

    The ECHR, the Council of Europe’s flagship bullshit instrument, came into force in 1953.

    The European Convention on Human Rights was drafted by the nations of the Council of Europe to help prevent conflict. The ECHR remains controversial as some see it as an erosion of national sovereignty.

    I wonder what VoA thinks of this below?

    The UK Human Rights Act 1988 — an Act to give further effect to rights and freedoms guaranteed under the European Convention on Human Rights — also requires UK courts, including the Supreme Court, to “take account” decisions of the European Court of Human Rights (which sits in Strasbourg). UK courts, however, are not required always to follow the decisions of that Court.

    So fuck off, VoA!

    Lord High chancellor in Exile Moscow Exile.

    Like

  22. By the way, apart from a blaring front-page article in the odious UK “Sun” news rag about the latest stupendous, valiant Banderite victory as wired to London from Kiev yesterday, as far as I can hear and see from deepest Mordor this morning as regard this “victory”, the Western media reports that Banderastan “claims” it shot down the Tu-22 — some 300 kms from the Banderastan frontier, mind you..

    Like

  23. I’ve just seen a short clip* of congress speaker mike Johnson explaining why he completely flipped on supporting sending more weapons to the u-Kraine.

    It’s extraordinary viewing.

    This happened directly after he had been given a classfied briefing.

    He claimed that otherwise Russia would go in to the Balkans (he meant the Baltics), start something with Poland, that his son would start in naval academy in the fall and it was better to send bullets and ultimately that he was taking a personal risk (political) in flipping!

    There’s a reason why President Richard Nixon didn’t read the daily intel reports and was highly cynical of the breifings. He knew perfectly well that they are designed to terrify an intel virgin in to giving the Blob whatever it asked for.

    Johnson’s performance has just demonstrated this. He doesn’t even have the wherewithall to ask for a scond opinon from ex/seasoned intel on what he was told, even if it would be in general terms. noob is popular internet culture term for a ‘newbie’, but this ranks as total noob.

    *https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/sitrep-41924-a-small-gust-for-ukraines

    Like

    1. Simplicius’s thoughts are always interesting, and I tend to agree the funds for Ukraine included in the bill will not make much difference; additionally, their expenditure will be another snout-snuffling free-for-all at the corporate trough, as the US government shifts appropriated taxpayer funds still in the future to arms manufacturers who will build at the domestic price and sell at the foreign-buyer price. If Ukraine gets more ATACMS, they will probably make another try at the Crimea Bridge – that bridge really bothers them, and it would be a real shot in the arm to Ukrainian morale if they could drop it. It remains to be seen how an increasingly-desperate NATO will react to a Ukrainian loss, because lose they will, and NATO along with them.

      Johnson looks like he just put his hand in a toaster while he was in the bathtub; he looks shell-shocked, and keeps repeating that it’s ‘the right thing to do’ as if he is trying to convince himself. They’ve had plenty of time to suss out what would scare the shit out of him, and apparently it worked, although all the talk is naturally of a moment of unity in which Democrats and Republicans pulled together, blah de blahdy-blah. But when it passes, that’s not your-cheque-is-in-the-mail tomorrow, except perhaps for the money going straight to the Ukrainian government’s retirement plans. More weapons are perhaps months away, and the air-defense systems Ukraine is begging for are again those that Ukrainians don’t know how to operate, necessitating the transfer of American crews which Russia has to know are coming.

      Whatever they do is not going to do more than delay the inevitable, and in the end Ukraine will be destroyed just as thoroughly as if it surrendered this Monday. Sooner or later NATO is going to have to deal with losing. The difference here is that America will be almost $50 Billion poorer.

      Like

  24. I am grateful to the United States House of Representatives, both parties, and, personally, to Speaker Mike Johnson, for the decision that keeps history on the right track. The aid will keep the war from expanding and save thousands and thousands of lives. A Just peace and security can only be attained through strength. The Ukraine will undoubtedly use American assistance to strengthen both of our nations and bring a just end to this war closer.

    source

    Like

    1. I’m sure he is not really that dumb – the injection of this money will not really make much difference except to make the war drag on a bit longer and perhaps pad the pockets of a few more oligarchs, but it will certainly not save thousands of lives. Quite the opposite, in fact. But there certainly will not be getting back to business at the end of it.

      Like

  25. 21 April 2024, 07:41

    US seeks to recoup its losses

    While the U.S. House of Representatives approved the allocation of nearly $ 61 billion to support the Ukraine, many experts and analysts express concern about the true purpose of this funding. According to available information, a significant portion of these funds will be used to pay for losses incurred by the United States as a result of its continued support for the Ukraine.

    Of the allocated $ 60.84 billion, only $ 13.8 billion is intended for the direct purchase of weapons and defence services for the Ukraine. The remaining funds are distributed as follows: $ 23.2 billion will be used to replenish transferred military equipment and defence services, and an impressive $ 11.3 billion is intended to support “ongoing US military operations in the region”.

    These figures indicate that a significant portion of the funding supposedly intended to support the Ukraine will actually be used to offset the United States’ own expenses and finance its military presence in the region. This raises serious questions about the true motives of the US government and the extent of its commitment to helping the Ukraine.

    Moreover, sources indicate that some of the weapons purchased for the Ukraine may be subsequently sold to third world countries. This information is supported by disturbing reports about the corruption of the regime of Vladimir Zelensky and undemocratic trends in the country. Some Republican Congressmen are already expressing serious concerns about this issue and even threaten to initiate the removal of House Speaker Mike Johnson in case of concessions to the Democrats.

    However, President Joe Biden supports the bills being discussed in Congress, which raises additional questions about his true motives and the extent of awareness of possible abuses by the Ukraine. The White House has promised that American aid to the Ukraine will resume immediately after the bills are signed, but now there are doubts about the purpose and effectiveness of this assistance. In fact, the financing of the Ukraine serves as a cover for the implementation of US own interests, including compensation for its expenses and stimulating the arms trade through the mediation of the Ukraine.

    The above is from a comment in Russian to LiveJournal. No link is given to the comment, which I feel sure was not written by the commenter himself. It reads like a comment from a Russian newspaper.

    Like

  26. RIA Novosti

    00: 55 21.04.2024 (updated: 02: 37 21.04.2024)

    A scandal broke out in Congress during the vote on the Ukraine

    Members of the US Congress squabbled over the flags of the Ukraine in the meeting hall

    MOSCOW, 21 Apr-RIA Novosti. Republicans and Democrats sparred during the vote on the aid package to the Ukraine because of the Ukrainian flags, which were waved by representatives of the Democratic Party.

    According to Fox News, near the end of the vote, Democrats began waving flags of the Ukraine, which is why Republican Mark Molinaro, who was presiding over the vote, accused them of violating protocol.

    00:25 “The left side of the aisle (where the Democrats are sitting — Ed.) exploded with cheers when the voting timer reached zero, for which Molinaro reprimanded them. He said that waving flags is a violation of the rules, and called it “inappropriate”, to which the Democrats responded with ridicule”, the story says.

    In turn, a Republican from Florida, Anna Paulina Luna, approached the microphone, saying: “Remove these damn flags”, which caused even more verbal reaction from Democrats, the TV channel notes.

    Republican Senator Rand Paul for Kentucky posted a video of the vote on social network X, which shows Democrats with Ukrainian flags, criticizing the allocation of “hard-earned money” from Americans sent to a “corrupt foreign regime”. “And that’s how they shout ‘Ukraine! Ukraine!’, happily working on the security of Ukraine’s borders, not ours” wrote the outraged the senator.

    21: 52 Former Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy commented on the post, writing: “The worst ideas in Washington often come from both parties”.

    On Saturday, the House of Representatives passed a bill to allocate almost $ 61 billion to the Ukraine. After approval by the House of Representatives, the document is sent to the US Senate for consideration. In addition, a bill was also passed that includes a provision on the confiscation of Russia’s sovereign assets in favour of the Ukraine.

    According to Presidential press Secretary Dmitry Peskov, the decision of the House of Representatives to allocate additional assistance to Kiev was expected, it would further ruin the Ukraine and enrich the United States.

    US President Joe Biden in October asked Congress for emergency appropriations, but ran into a filibuster off the Republican opposition. The latter, not wanting to play along with the Democratic president during the pre-election period and following strong isolationist traditions in its environment, has long tried to link assistance to Ukraine with the implementation of large-scale border and migration reform in the context of the migration crisis on the southern border of the United States.

    Like

    1. Ah, by Pomerantsev, an InfoOps professional. He’s very good stretching out thin gruel.

      When I was in Moscow as a student, we went to visit the town of Vladimir, part of the Golden Ring, outside Moscow for the day. There, in the town square was a bunch of western Hari Krishna’s sitting in a circle chanting. The locals came up to them and stared in disbelief. Nobody did anything, but it was very wierd.

      Speaking of threats to christians, surely it is rather the i-Sraeli extremists war against against them, whether othodox, coptic/whatever in Jeruslem where they are being attacked. This has finally upset some evangelicals enough back in the United States that a few have openly called out i-Srael about it. The cracks have been there for a while so it looks like these more rencent attacks are the reason. The biggest enemy to the current extremist regime is itself, irony of ironies.

      And if we look back over the last few decades of western intervention/’help’ we see that Christian communities in Africa and the Middle East have often become a secondary victim of the War(ts) on Terror.

      https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/israel-palestinians-christians-attacks-holy-land-jewish-extremists-rcna80441

      https://www.jpost.com/christianworld/article-761906

      Like

  27. NYT

    Ukraine Aid Divides Republicans, After Trump Tones Down His Resistance

    His most vocal allies in the House, however, were loudly against providing assistance as Ukraine fights Russia’s invasion.

    A small group of protesters outside the Capitol in Washington. They are waving Ukraine flags and holding signs with sayings including I’m American and I Support Ukraine.
    Demonstrators gathered outside the Capitol Saturday as the House voted overwhelmingly to approve an aid package for Ukraine.Credit…Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

    [The wanker in the front centre is waving a Crimea Tatar flag — ME]

    Jonathan Weisman
    Michael Gold

    By Jonathan Weisman and Michael Gold

    [“Anglo-Saxon” journalists! — ME]

    April 20, 2024, 6:33 p.m. ET

    The House vote on Saturday to provide $61 billion in American aid to Ukraine was the clearest sign yet that at least on foreign policy, the Republican Party is not fully aligned with former President Donald J. Trump and his “America First” movement.

    But more Republicans voted against the aid than for it, showing just how much Mr. Trump’s broad isolationism — and his movement’s antipathy to Ukraine — has divided the G.O.P. in an election year.

    Mr. Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee for the third time, had actually soft-pedaled his opposition to Ukraine aid in recent days as the dam began to break on the House Republican blockade. He stood by Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana, who assembled the complicated aid packages for Ukraine, Israel and America’s Asian allies, and against threatened efforts to bring down Mr. Johnson’s speakership and plunge the House back into chaos. And he stayed quiet on Saturday, declining to pressure Republicans to vote no.

    But few issues have been more central to the former president’s creed than his foreign policy isolationism, his call for Europe to raise military spending in its own backyard, and his foreign policy shift toward Vladimir V. Putin’s Russia.

    Speaker Mike Johnson, seen from behind, speaks to a group of reporters gathered in front of him. Some are photographing him and others are holding their phones to record his statements.
    House Speaker Mike Johnson after the House passed the foreign aid bills for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan.Credit…Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

    Though he has in recent days stayed quiet, his most vociferous allies in the House, such as Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Matt Gaetz of Florida, had led efforts to block the aid. Another pro-Trump firebrand, Representative Lauren Boebert of Colorado, jeered Democrats during the vote as they waived Ukrainian flags on the House floor.

    “Such an embarrassing and disgusting show of America LAST politicians!” she then wrote on social media. “You love Ukraine so much, get your ass over there and leave America’s governing to those who love THIS country!”

    Ms. Greene criticized those in her party who supported the bill. “Mike Johnson’s House of Representatives, so proud to work for Ukraine. Not the American people!!! It’s despicable!”

    Even Mr. Trump’s own son Donald Trump Jr. had joined in the castigation of Mr. Johnson and his handling of Ukraine aid. The most devoted acolytes of Mr. Trump still harbor a particular opposition to supporting Ukraine, which figures into conspiracy theories dating back to the 2016 election.

    Such “opposition to Ukraine is still about whether they’re still hiding Hillary Clinton’s server or whether they tried to defeat him in the 2016 election,” said John R. Bolton, a former national security adviser to Mr. Trump, referring to disproved conspiracy theories about Ukraine. “It’s not really about a philosophy. It’s about Donald Trump.”

    But the former president, wary of absorbing any public losses as he faces the first criminal trial of a former American president, had tried to have it both ways ahead of the vote. On social media he wrote that “Ukrainian Survival and Strength” was “important” to the United States, and asked, “Why isn’t Europe giving more money to help Ukraine? Why is it that the United States is over $100 Billion Dollars into the Ukraine War more than Europe, and we have an Ocean between us as separation!”

    His assertion on Friday that “Germany and other European Countries have Massive Budget Surpluses, as we spend Billions to defend them!” earned him a “community note” on X since neither Germany nor the European Union as a whole have been running surpluses at all.

    In truth, foreign policy has long been one of Mr. Trump’s weak spots in his control over the Republican Party. In December 2023, just before Republicans took control of the House, Congress passed a measure coauthored by a Trump ally, Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, barring a president from unilaterally withdrawing the United States from NATO.

    Mr. Rubio emphasized at the time that the measure was aimed at any president, but the target was clear. Mr. Trump has repeatedly suggested that he might try to withdraw the country from the trans-Atlantic military alliance. No other president has embraced such a position.

    Still, the importance of the vote on Saturday was in the eye of the beholder: Were the 101 Republicans who broke with Mr. Trump’s isolationism the story, or were the 112 who voted against the aid?

    Mainstream Republicans, such as Representative Larry Bucshon of Indiana, invoked a different Republican president, Ronald Reagan, in justifying their votes.

    “Helping Ukraine win its fight against Russia is squarely in the best interest of the American people and our national security,” Mr. Bucshon said. “Vladimir Putin’s ambition doesn’t stop in Ukraine.”

    Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene is seen on a camera monitor as she speaks on the House steps.
    Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of the Republicans who voted against aid to Ukraine.Credit…Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
    Representative Lauren Boebert walking into the House chamber.
    Representative Lauren Boebert jeered Democrats who were vocal in their Ukraine support.Credit…Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

    But the most fiercely pro-Trump Republicans showed just how far they were willing to take their opposition. Twenty-one of them also voted against military aid to Israel, taking “America First” further even than their leader would.

    “This is a direct result of Trump on the party, and it’s a shame the harm that he’s caused,” Mr. Bolton said.

    Representative Scott Perry, Republican of Pennsylvania and a leader of the hard-right Freedom Caucus, said he voted against the Israel aid package because it included humanitarian aid to Gaza.

    “Giving $9 Billion to Hamas terrorists does not support Israel,” he wrote on social media. “That’s like beating somebody up just so you can pay for their hospital bill. I can’t criticize President Biden for being on both sides of the war and then vote to be on both sides of the war.”

    For Mr. Trump, the aid package does not directly interfere with his own political stump speech. The former president’s most common take on the war in Ukraine has been to insist that, in an alternate version of history where he won in 2020, the war never would have happened. The mere fact of his leadership, he has said repeatedly, would have deterred Mr. Putin from invading.

    He has also insisted that if he wins in November, he could have the war settled before inauguration, though he has not provided a specific plan around how he might do so. The resumption of large-scale military aid from the United States all but ensures that the war will be unfinished in Ukraine when Americans go to the polls in November.

    “I will have the horrible war between Russia and Ukraine totally settled,” Mr. Trump said at a rally in Pennsylvania last week. “I will settle it.”

    But no doubt, House passage of aid to Ukraine without strings was a loss for the former president. In recent days, Mr. Trump revived the idea of making any aid a loan to the country, “instead of just a gift” — which didn’t happen.

    Donald Trump speaks at a rally with a crowd on bleachers on both sides with numerous American flags at right.
    Mr. Trump has said that only he can solve the war in Ukraine, without providing details for a plan.Credit…Michelle Gustafson for The New York Times

    Mr. Trump himself also helped link aid to Ukraine to another issue central to his campaign — border security — when he instructed Senate Republicans to kill a bipartisan border security measure that was hashed out to pass alongside a broader military aid package. That linkage reverberated on Saturday, said Representative Nancy Mace, Republican of South Carolina, who voted against the Ukraine bill.

    Voters, she said, “are pissed about Ukraine aid without addressing our border first. Washington is out of touch with Middle America.”

    But in keeping his options open, Mr. Trump was also calculated in his desire to keep his fingerprints off the vote. He made no effort to force Republicans to vote no. He lodged no threats, public or private.

    And even as American funds again begin to flow, his central pitch to his voters remains intact: Only he can end the largest land war in Europe since World War II.

    Jonathan Swan contributed reporting.

    Jonathan Weisman is a politics writer, covering campaigns with an emphasis on economic and labor policy. He is based in Chicago. More about Jonathan Weisman

    Michael Gold is a political correspondent for The Times covering the campaigns of Donald J. Trump and other candidates in the 2024 presidential elections. More about Michael Gold

    [Strictly kosher journalists — ME]

    Like

  28. Have Hobbits taken control of Europe?

    Doesn’t that dumb fuck Zelensky realize that his never discarded action-man gear became played out long, long ago?

    Like

    1. Save a copy of those big smiles, because they won’t be there six months from now. In fact, one of the worst things that could happen now would be if Ukraine got another big load of ATACMS, which would be targeted and launched by American crews, and which the Ukrainians would likely use to try and get the Crimea Bridge. And if they were successful, perhaps Moscow might finally snap, and pound Ukraine until it was a baked wasteland of shell craters with hundreds of thousands dead, cities razed to the ground and millions homeless. And then perhaps a shocked NATO would be dragged into it, and Zelensky and his muppets would finally have their Great Big Land War. And you know who would not be hurt? The United States, that couldn’t mind its own fucking business.

      $60 Billion, most of which is not going to Ukraine but to American arms manufacturers – some of it to replenish American arsenals which drew down their stocks already to send to Ukraine – is not going to help Ukraine ‘win’. Ukraine is still going to lose, only it will have fewer Ukrainians left in it when it does, thanks to America’s ‘help’. But America doesn’t really care, because the Ukrainians will kill more Russians first.

      Where America’s big aid package will be felt most immediately, and where it will prove worth every dollar, will be the instant dropping of any talk in the vaunted ‘peace talks’ supposedly coming up in the stupid ‘Ukraine Peace Summit’ in Switzerland in June about finding a common solution with Russia even if it chooses not to attend. No; instead, the narrative will shift once again to Ukrainian triumphalism and a speedy end to the war through Ukrainian victory, Russia will be defeated on the battlefield, bla, bla, bla. The big wad of American banknotes appropriated from taxpayers will reawaken the hope that almost died that Ukraine can win. And who knows – maybe it will inspire some European nations, like idiot Scholz’s Germany, to loosen the purse-strings and resume big tranches of money to Kuh-yiv. And so the war will drag on – which is what America wants. If it gets it, it will have been worth $60 Billion; especially as much of the money is just a transfer from government tax holdings to American arms manufacturers.

      Like

  29. 12: 40 p.m., April 21, 2024

    Deadlines for the transfer of American weapons to Kiev have been announced

    Pentagon: The United States will transfer ammunition to the Ukraine within a few days

    The United States will transfer ammunition from warehouses in Germany to Kiev within a few days after the signing of the law on military assistance. The timing was announced by the Pentagon’s representative, General Patrick Ryder, reports the New York Times.

    “We have a very developed logistics network that allows us to move equipment very quickly, as we have done in the past,” he said.

    US officials told the publication that the ammunition will be delivered by rail from the Pentagon’s warehouses in Germany. Ryder also noted that the package may include a large number of artillery ammunition and anti-aircraft missiles.

    It is noted that the supply of American weapons from Europe is coordinated by the “Security Assistance Group in the Ukraine” created in 2022, which operates as part of the Pentagon’s European command.

    Earlier, State Duma Vyacheslav Volodin said that the bill passed by the US Congress on the allocation of a new aid package to the Ukraine would not change the situation on the battlefield, that Kiev would be defeated.

    Big bang expected to be heard in Western Banderastan in a few day!

    Like

  30. I only got one reply to my for the weekend post on what we should call the period 1990-~2020is from ME after commenting that there is a fight between biologists & geologists over proclaiming the bio proposed Anthropocine era. Here’s a link to the debate (via naked capitalism)

    The “Epic Row” Over a New Epoch

    https://archive.ph/WXjcP

    *https://thenewkremlinstooge.wordpress.com/2024/03/12/whatever-you-have-to-tell-yourself/comment-page-4/#comment-97172

    Like

  31. I swear the US “elites” are totally detached from reality. https://www.foreignaffairs.com/russian-federation/five-futures-russia-stephen-kotkin?utm_medium=promo_email&utm_source=fa_edit&utm_campaign=pre_release_kotkin_prospects&utm_content=20240418&utm_term=promo-email-prospects

    Of course, he is a member of the Hoover Institute. Kotkin is the author of a three-volume biography of Stalin but he seems to be spouting the same garbage as most others in the USA.

    Like

    1. But at the same time, America is just so GOOD that butter would not melt in its mouth – no such thing as ‘wars of choice’ by GOOD America, and having only two political parties whose policies are mostly indistinguishable one from the other is not ‘rigging elections’ – you have plenty of choice. Villain A or Idiot B.

      Like

  32. The Leader of the Free World last Thursday:

    Speaking at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania on Thursday, Biden rattled off a string of buzzwords as he asked voters whether they would choose him over former President Donald Trump in November’s presidential election.

    “Are you ready to choose unity over division? Dignity over demolition? Truth over lies? Are you ready to choose freedom over democracy? Because that’s America,” 

    he exclaimed. 

    Like

          1. The worst of it is that if you listen to one of Trump’s campaign rants, you can see that he is showing serious signs of mental decline as well. It is not the same but his speech patterns are very worrying.

            So one of the great powers has two senile and corrupt old men running for President. What could go wrong?

            Like

      1. He most certainly did!

        And get this for USA hubris and detachment from reality:

        And get this what he said, as an example of USA hubris and detachment from reality:

        Just remember who we are: we’re the United States of America. There’s nothing — I mean this sincerely: think about it! — we’re the only nation in the world, if you study history, I can tell you, that’s come out of every crisis stronger than when we went in. There’s nothing, nothing beyond our capacity when we do it together. God bless you all and may God protect our troops.

        Who’s this “god” he refers to?

        Like

  33. I found this below of interest, not least because I lived through the nightmarish ’90s in post-Soviet Russia, when the filth pictured below were plundering my adopted country.

    It is my belief that the vast majority of those Russians who experienced those years as adults have still not forgotten them; some of those who didn’t experience those years, or who have but a scant memory of them from their childhood years, became Navalny Hamsters; some altruistic though politically juvenile adults, a relatively small number of the professional class, who did experience those years, thought they could build a “liberal democracy” in their ravaged homeland and they therefore created a variety of largely ignored by the electorate, short-lived “liberal” parties that had and still have no political significance whatsoever.

    “The shrieks, squeals and hysteria of those who just didn’t want to plough.”

    Here’s a discussion that has arisen in relation to the ’90s. There is a very interesting opinion that the negativity towards the ’90s is just the “shrieks, squeals and hysteria of those who just didn’t want to plough”.

    And at that time it was obviously necessary to work for the new masters of life (the author of this comment worked in sales). The son of one of them, just for fun, pushed me in the back at school, because of which I still have problems with my back. And that’s the kind of guy I had to work for. And not with the realisation that what was going on was just beastliness, one simply had to endure it in order to change the situation, to take it as a norm, as a payment for Soviet crimes. This is such a sophisticated logic. People who didn’t survive or were torn up in the ’90s were the necessary victims (or, more precisely, sacrifices) on the way to kindly and good globalism in the American way.

    The similarities between the 1920s and the 1990s have been noted by so many, but here is just the perfect illustration. Destruction of the old world for the sake of building a bright future. And, of course, those who thought the opposite labelled everyone who disagreed with their harmonious picture as loud-mouthed scoundrels.

    cDFdvsJLFf6DXwaihXHa4aCqMDZx7u5UUbPsyXYBDqxzCDPEo9mzqVUmqhyE9fZdhggNL4c9JoL7pqCNKLyFwKuYpD5SBHd2pcGW15RhMzbcg.jpg

    How my blood still boils whenever I see photos of such filth pictured above and am reminded of their actions — ME

    fallenleaves_1: News about the release of the first post-Soviet  0.35 µm industrial lithograph [a semiconductor manufacturing process — ME] caught my eye, and in 2026 there appeared a  0.13 µm lithograph. People with bright faces should start laughing at this moment – 350 nm was mastered in the West in the mid-’90s, around 2002 if my memory serves rightly.

    I remember well how my wife had studied in the postgraduate programme at MIET [National Research University of Electronic Technology — ME] just on lithography: she even had a couple of publications done with her professor. I read with interest what physics was being done there. So my wife quit graduate school in ’95 when her professor, a very advanced doctor of sciences, came to the laboratory in winter wearing an ushanka [a “Russian” fur hat — ME] with a torn ear-flap because he couldn’t buy a new one. Financing was curtailed because “you have remained in the Stone Age: we will buy from partners”. Two deputy ministers, who had been successively involved in killing their industry and transferring it to Western equipment, in the mid-2000s fled to Florida with real estate and other things.

    This was the last straw for my wife. She dropped out of graduate school and went to the Higher School of Economics to become an accountant.

    [I became acquainted with a few former high-flying graduate school physicists in the ’90s. They’d done the same: switched their studies and followed the money, graduating from HSE as economists, thereafter becoming financiers and brokers etc. — ME]

    snake_d_haIn Kevorkian’s interview, among the old stories was a great one about how Kharkov’s own Intels became nationalists: “In the 1990s, it was possible to go to the States with only a scholarship grant. Grants were given for almost any national and Ukrainian research, with a separate generous payment for long series of commitments. And I went. They gave me a thousand dollars of pocket money, which was about my half-yearly salary. Everybody went”.

    Vladimir Maximov. An American learns a tricky survival formula from his mother’s milk: beware of the strong and command the weak, otherwise you will be an outsider. This is the basis for the entire hierarchy of values and principles at all levels of society in the United States, from the family unit to the White House.

    Sergei Shishkin. I didn’t move here for democracy. I had enough democracy in Russia in the ’90s, thank you. In America, several families rule, appointing party leaders. Some presidents, I remember, were nominated on the argument: “look, I can make a president out of any clerk”. The recidivist of democracy is Trump, which is why he makes the true masters of America so rabidly angry. A Tiberius Gracchus* of sorts . He and his followers will be dealt with and things will go back to the way they were.

    *Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus was a Roman politician best known for his agrarian reform law when he was a tribune of the plebs. Gracchus’ reforms entailed the transfer of land from the Roman state and wealthy landowners to poorer citizens.

    In the end, Gracchus got murdered by a mob acting on behalf of the Roman Senators, who were “Patricians”, the Roman Republic equivalent of the “deep state” in the USA..

    Like

    1. Linked by the above article comments. Interestingly, the commenters hav chosen to use pre-1917 orthography when writing, namely placing a “hard sign” at the end of words that end with “hard consonants”, and by using the letter ‘i” and the abandoned in 1917 Cyrillic letter “ѣ” thus:

      Въ разговорахъ о 90-хъ я сформулировалъ для себя главный сvмптомъ глубокой ненормальности того периода нашей исторiи и, видимо, именно то, из-за чего нынче многие россiяне согласны на явное всевластiе не слишкомъ прiятных силовиковъ, на нѣкоторые признаки возвращающейся совѣтчины, даже на войну, но только чтобы, не дай Богъ, не вернулись поганые 90-е.

      Which old orthography I am rather fond of and sometimes like to write in it longhand.

      Translation of the linked comments:

      In talking about the ’90s, I have formulated for myself the main symptom of the deep abnormality of that period of our history and, apparently, the very reason why many Russians nowadays agree to the apparent omnipotence of the not too pleasant law enforcement agencies, to some signs of the returning soviet rule, even to war, but only so that, God forbid, the disgusting ’90s do not return.

      It was a time when… an ordinary, mediocre person, without any special talents or enterprise, had practically no opportunity to live honestly and with dignity. He had a choice — participation in crime, subordination to crime, humiliation before his employer, a miserable existence. All these options are incompatible with an honest and decent life, and, therefore, in essence, with the minimum level of self-esteem necessary for a person.

      [Yes, yes, yes! That’s how it was! I agree entirely — ME]

      That is, once again, a man who was not seven feet tall, not cunning, not talented, but an ordinary man was deprived of what, generally speaking, was his basic right, which no one questioned — even if not a rich one, even if meagre, even if boring, but to live an honest and dignified life without having to hide his eyes from his children.

      And one can argue what exactly ended this — was it just the rise in oil prices, as some say, or, as others say, the delayed effect of the Gaidar-Chubais liberal reforms; or the natural adaptation of business and citizens to the new socio-economic system over time; or the decisive and precise actions of the security forces who came to power, forcing oligarchs to pay taxes, entrepreneurs to pay salaries and payments to each other, imprisoning and shooting bandits who were terrorizing people on the street and protecting everything that moved; or something else. But this obvious qualitative change coincided with Putin’s coming to power. And it was this very mediocre ordinary person who remembered this coincidence well and still remembers it to this day. andronic

      For myself, I have formulated the rule: “vulgarity is especially tiresome when it fights with itself”. What is fundamentally new for me, as a great lover of Western mass culture until recently, is the manifestation of this discourse there as well, and in a particularly bloody way. It is as if Hannibal Lecter opened a door and from there came a flood of finely sensitive and original-thinking murderers and perverts, opposed by disgusting, horrible, disgusting, vile ordinary people who kiss children, raise the flag of their country and fear God. burov_dmitri

      It seems to me that there is no point in looking for antipodes of “vulgarity”; nobility is rather the opposite of meanness, but even without it it remains nobility; it does not need contrast for its implementation. What is needed for vulgarity is an operational antidote, and not a structural antagonist. A sense of proportion is the ideal option. buyaner

      The modern reader smiles when a medieval chronicler speaks of “Roman knights,” but remains serious when a Marxist talks about the “Greek bourgeoisie” or “American feudalism.” (Nicolás Gómez Dávila)

      What is disgusting in all mass impulses is the loss of personal responsibility and the idea of consequences.

      [Yes! — ME]

      The curious thing that has happened to me today is that before I found on the web and read and translated and posted the stuff above, having risen, as usual at 04:00 this morning, the question suddenly arose in my head: “Why is modern Western society so vulgar and infantile?”

      Browsing the web, I found out that not only I ask this question.

      See:

      VULGAR MODERNISM

      It’s official: modern music is bad: TikTok has killed musical complexity

      It’s one of the hoariest cliches in popular culture: that every fading generation must, in flailing anger at its own imminent irrelevance, turn on the next generation and say, ‘your music is dire’. From the crusty judge contemptuously asking ‘who are these Beatles’, to the middle-aged outrage surrounding the spitting and pogoing Sex Pistols, to the Tory MP who expressed his horror at the Beastie Boys and Run DMC for ‘mocking disabled children in Montreux’, it is an established human tradition. And of course, it is always nonsense. It turns out the next generation has music of equal brilliance, passion, vivacity, excitement.

      Except, perhaps, this time. If you are a Spectator reader of a certain age, or indeed any human of any age, and you’ve found yourself listening with bewilderment to the repetitive, loud, inert, droning, crunching, and infantile vulgarity of modern music while thinking, ‘er, this is seriously poor.’ I am here to bring you the good/bad news that, this time, you are correct. This time, it really is rubbish, and it’s probably getting worse.

      I suspect that these thoughts about modern vulgarity might have been triggered by the regular Friday postings of music clips on Martyanov’s blog.

      Vulgar Modernism

      By Park-Primiano, Sueyoung

      J. Hoberman (James Lewis Hoberman) first introduced his concept of “vulgar modernism” in 1981 to describe a particular sensibility found on the “looney” fringes of American popular culture—that is, the “vulgar equivalent of modernism itself”. This self-conscious and self-reflexive sensibility was developed between 1940 and 1960 in such ironic and subversive works as Warner Bros. cartoons by Tex Avery and Chuck Jones, Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin comedies directed by Frank Tashlin, Mad Magazine’s graphic parodies of Disney characters, and the television programs by comedian Ernie Kovacs. These lowbrow works are heavily embedded with intertextuality, forgo restraint and naturalism, flout conventions and sentimentality, and crack the veneer of acceptable materialism and frenzied consumption in mid-century American society. As such, these examples of so-called para-art may be appreciated alongside experimental or avant-garde works commonly associated with high art, including Lettrist poetry and the films of Jean-Luc Godard.

      I am grown weary of this world . . .

      Like

    2. Shishkin spells out exactly why I wanted Trump to succeed. Simply because he was not from that claque of Grand Old Families which reliably supplies America’s leaders, ensuring through their echelons of advisors and policy wonks that America’s attitude to the world and appreciation of its own place in it will remain exactly the same through generations. I continues to amuse me that people inside and outside America imagine that a dramatic difference is going to occur when a lengthy period of Republican rule, let’s say, ends, and the Democrats wrest the leadership role from them. A few not-very-important domestic priorities might be different, but in its reactions to the outside world a Democratic administration governs just like a Republican administration.

      I should have known Trump could not succeed, even had he not been the dolt he is, because he inherited the Republican administration which ensured the end result of policies played to national interests and greased the same palms regardless how different and independent he thought he was.

      Like

    3. As the regulars here know, I too was in Russia (studying) in the mid-1990s and very quickly saw the difference between what was proclaimed in the western press, and reality for the average Russian.

      In the late 1990s, I discovered the eXile english language ‘newspaper’ & website of Mark Ames & Matt Taibbi which relentlessly mocked the same press as well as highlighting the corrupt oligarchs etc.

      Along with the awful, ignorant – if I am to be polite, reporting of the break up of Yugoslavia, it was a) clear how the establish media functions; b) freedom of speech has nothing to do with writing complete sh*te.

      Nothing has changed since.

      Like

      1. Did you used to visit Rosie O’Grady’s Irish Bar on Znamenka Street when you were here in the ’90s? That’s where I used to pick up my freebie weekly “newspaper” the Moscow Times and the Moscow News. There used to be great piles of the former sent there for customers: the same at hotels.

        Rosie O’Grady’s has long gone. It originally had an Irish landlord and Irish bar staff. That was when Aer Lingus and Guinness where making moves into the post-Soviet market. The first “Irish Bar” in Russia was, in fact, at Sheremetevo airport. The gangsters soon took control though and the Irish management was elbowed out.

        Rosie O’Grady’s is where in 1997 I proposed to my wife over a pint of Guinness. It was our first date. It was a holiday weekend in Moscow: the first time the official founding of Moscow was celebrated during the first weekend in September. I had returned from the UK the day before, where I had been for 1 month, undecided whether I should return to the Evil Empire. I had first met my wife-to-be in the middle of July 1997.

        I’m a fast worker, me.

        Had to be, then: I was already 48.

        Below: a graphic description of Moscow in the ’90s, written by an Anglo-Saxon lawyer who was temporarily resident here:

        January 3, 2012

        Diary of a Lawyer in Moscow II

        In some ways these pictures reinforce a preconception about Russia. Harsh winters, alchoholism, poverty. Everything in shades of grey. It’s Grim up North. Moscow has changed a lot, last time I was there, it looked more like Las Vegas with dazzling arrays of neon lights. It’s easy to see where global warming is coming from – the lights around GUM Department Store themselves must surely have contributed 0.1 C or so to global temperatures. But in 1993 Moscow really did feel more black and white than now. Photographing in colour would probably not have made much difference. Everyone wore dark leather jackets or dark brown furs. Anyone wearing anything bright had to be a foreigner. There were few neon signs – most shops were still called things like “Meat No.9” [No.9 refers to the number of the retail outlet, not the quality of the meat, something which commenters to the blog fail to understand — ME] or “Bread”, and the only thing you could guarantee about their produce was that it would be meat or bread, and that it would be stale. Irish House on Arbat held Moscow’s only western style bar, the Irish Bar, until Rosie O’Grady’s opened a year or two later. The shop in Irish House was the only western style shop, and the only place in Moscow that sold milk that hadn’t gone off. [I suspect the writer is talking about buttermilk, which Russians drank in great quantities: I never experienced sour milk in the ’90s, nor did I stale bread,: it was baked and delivered 3 times a day and still sold at the 1917 price as fixed by Lenin — ME] It was brought in fresh all the way from Ireland more or less daily. How it was made it through the notoriously slow and bureaucratic Russian Customs fast enough to keep fresh was a mystery – some Customs official somewhere must have become very rich.

        In short, to a foreigner, who always had the option of leaving the place when it got too much (which it did frequently), Russia felt exotic and romantic, a living and breathing Le Carre novel, where anything might happen, and often did. [I used to label it “The Wild East”, but I had come to stay: I wasn’t a fat-cat London lawyer, as the author seems to have been, here for a short stay and to earn loadsa lolly — ME}.

        I rented my first flat at Taganka [where I have lived for 30 years now — ME], opposite the avant garde theatre which had constantly been at odds with the Soviet authorities, where Vysotsky had been a lead actor. Vysotsky was a kind of Soviet superstar singing poet – something like the Beatles rolled up into Louis Armstrong (his voice had something in common) rolled up into T.S. Eliot. [A rather scathing criticism of Vysotsky: he’s a national icon, still — ME] When he died and was laid out at the Taganka theatre, the Soviet authorities tried to keep news of his funeral quiet, but tens of thousands of people turned out to attend – so many that the attendance at the Olympic events that were in full swing dropped noticeably that day.

        After I had been at Taganka a year or so, there was a general renovation of the appartment building, which involved taking out the pipework, and rats began to run around in the flat using the holes left by the pipework, one of them strolling casually through the kitchen during tea and another waking me up by running across my bed at night. I moved from there shortly after, not so much driven away by the rats as by a lunatic landlord who insisted on visiting regularly using his own key.

        Red Square in winter
        Red Square in winter
        File0006
        File0058

        It is very many years since I last saw drunken bums such as those pictured above — more than 20 years, I’m sure. The empty vodka bottle near the unfortunate man had contained a brand that I regularly used to knock back in the ’90s and before I got wed:

        It was all right.

        Like

        1. Nope, though I may have had a pint there once.

          Did have a famouse brand Burrito from a mobile stand in Kievskaya (?) more than once.

          Wasn’t interested in the expat/foreigner lifestyle/fleshpots etc.

          Did spend some time in the engine room at the top of a lift of a kommunalnaya with Russia yoofs though drinking vodka while they also played guitar.

          Did get set up on a date with one of the local girls. They had this annoying habit of bumping in to you a lot.

          Like

          1. That burrito place was at the Lenin Library metro station. My wife-to-be, with whom I had recently become acquainted (she was for me at the time just another student) spotted me once after a lesson as I was noshing a burrito there. She told me after we had got wed that when she saw me eating the Mexican nosh at the metro station, she felt sorry for me, imagining the miserable, lonely life I must have been leading, with no woman to cook for me.

            I kid you not!

            As regards visiting expat boozers and cafés, I too was not in the habit of doing so, basically because I quickly developed a strong aversion to “Anglo-Saxons” in Moscow then, who were yucking it up all the time and flaunting their wealth at the locals. The whores loved them of course. I used to drink alone in my one-room flat. Always been a loner me. A bit of a weirdo, I guess. I was also a very embittered person at the time and had really only under duress embarked on my travels and studies and there I was on my tod in Russia, having been the year before alone in Germany.

            I only took my wife to Rosie O’Grady’s so that she might sample the delight of a pint of Guinness, which, of course, she had never tasted before, and to pop the question.

            I had decided to do that with her, to ask for her hand in marriage, whilst earlier having strolled around Moscow for a couple of hours with her, during which time we also visited the Tretyakovskaya Gallery. She liked the same stuff there as I did and disliked there what I too disliked. She was yapping quite happily away all the time and I suddenly realized that I had suddenly grown fond of her, so I asked her if she had ever tasted Guinness, and off to the pub we went, where my fate was sealed.

            Like

            1. Could be, but I seem to remember that it was between two sets of escalators of a deep metro exchange station.

              I don’t see the point of being abroad to learn another language only to spend entertainment time with fellow foreigners (save students).

              We met some interesting people with interesting stories, though probably with a bit of exaggeration thrown in to see how much we would buy.

              The second time we went to study they’d already started to remove quite a few of the buy anything late in to the night kiosks that used to infest the streets.

              I always wanted someone to install a ski-jump at MGU to see how far someone could go in to the Moskva!

              I’ll go back some day.

              Like

              1. I don’t see the point of being abroad to learn another language only to spend entertainment time with fellow foreigners (save students).

                I agree. However, I was lucky, in that after having arrived here, I had spent just a week in a Moscow hotel with other British students when I was given a ticket to Voronezh. The other students were dispersed to either Leningrad or stayed in Moscow, and they stayed in student hostels for foreign students, where they spoke English most of the time. I was the only Englishman in Voronezh. I lived with Russian students in a Russian students’ hostel. The only other foreigners at the State University of Voronezh were those from “Friendly Socialist Countries”, mostly from the GDR. The locals always took me for a German. So I was in at the deep-end and spoke Russian all the time.

                Like

              2. Ha! When I was a young sailor, we used to improvise just such a ski-jump idea in Bermuda to see how far someone on a moped could get out into the harbor . I believe an engineer from HMCS ATHABASKAN won. Unfortunately the cost was that they would not rent to the navy for any price afterward.

                Like

              3. There has been a ski jump there since Soviet times on Sparrow Hills – Lenin Hills in USSR days. It was refurbished only a few years ago when they constructed an aerial ropeway from the hills that crosses the river and ends at the Luzhniki Stadium.

                The ski jumping hill was built in 1953 and later covered with plastic mattings. In its early years, it was used for a few international competitions that attracted large crowds, but then there were no international tournaments from 1964 until 1990.

                The landing slope of the jumping hill was seriously damaged by a fire in early May 2012 and in 2016 large-scale modernization and conversion works were started. Further leisure facilities were constructed, such as a skiing slope, a toboggan run, a snowboard fun park, and the 737 metre long cable car that crosses Moskva over to Luzhniki Stadium is renewed. The renovation and reconstruction works were finished about 4 years ago.

                The reconstruction of the winter sports facilities at Sparrow Hills Park.

                The Free World, however, will not allow ski-jumping competitions to take place in Moscow because Russia is evil.

                Russia to host ski jumping competition with “friendly countries” outside of FIS banner

                Monday, 19 December 2022

                The Ski Jumping and Nordic Combined Federation of Russia is planning to host a ski jumping competition with allied nations in March, with the absence of its athletes from International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) events because of the ongoing sanctions related to the war in the Ukraine.

                Dmitry Dubrovsky, President of the Ski Jumping and Nordic Combined Federation of Russia, stated the event, to be called the Copper Mountain Cup, would be in the Sverdlovsk region.

                He explained this event had been moved to a quieter part of the season to accommodate more athletes who might be competing on the FIS Ski Jumping World Cup circuit.

                “We planned to hold open competitions in December, but we were a little organisationally unprepared, because they wanted to broadcast, but because of the the World Cup, there were no windows for us in order to prepare and invite more countries, so we decided to postpone it to March”, said Dubrovsky to Russia’s official state news agency TASS.

                “We hope that in March, not only Russian athletes, but also athletes from friendly countries will come and take part. I repeat once again: this will not be an international start, but an internal Russian one under the auspices of the Sverdlovsk Region, our main partners. 

                “We will try to organise them at the highest level: they shall be called ‘Copper Mountain Cup'”.

                Russia has been unable to host World Cup legs since the Court of Arbitration for Sport sanction prohibited the nation from doing so in 2020 ©Getty Images

                The FIS continues to follow the recommendations of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which calls for athletes and officials from Russia and Belarus to be banned from major competitions indefinitely.

                In October, the organisation confirmed that these athletes would not be allowed to compete during the FIS 2022-2023 season.

                Russia was unable to host FIS World Cup events from December 2020 for two years because of sanctions implemented by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), related to the cover-up of state-sponsored doping in the country.

                This ban has de-facto been extended while the IOC continues to recommend freezing Russia and Belarus out of international events, meaning the countries have not been awarded sporting events since the invasion started.

                [Above article edited by me because its atrocious grammar, crap punctuation and shit translation of what a Russian spokesperson had said. I was tempted also to change “related to the cover-up of state-sponsored doping in the country” to “related to the alleged cover-up of state-sponsored doping in the country” — ME]

                Like

                1. No doping is allowed – officially, although as we have frequently discussed, the USA is the dopingest nation on the books and its national organizations frequently protect dopers rather than exposing them – but it is okay to turn your writing over to AI, and then publish it under your byline. I’ll just throw this teaser out there to chill your blood.

                  “The integration of AI in journalism not only streamlines news production but also improves journalistic quality through better content creation, personalization, fact-checking, and audience engagement.”

                  https://blog.emb.global/the-impact-of-ai-on-journalism/

                  Journalism moves ever closer to pure Infotainment, in which you have no way at all of verifying if anything you are told is true. Why not? Well, because as the excited reviewer tells you, fact-checking is done by AI, and all AI does (so far) is ‘sift through huge datasets’ to come up with a story. If history is written in, shall we say, a certain way, then all AI has to sift through is, for example, that Russia deliberately and with malice aforethought shot down a Malaysian civilian airliner, that Russian elections are always rigged, that no western country had anything to do with the greatest act of industrial sabotage in modern times, and so on – it cannot but come up with western-friendly lies if all it has to research for comparison is lies. And editors are more than eager to embrace it – are, in fact, chomping at the bit to get stuck in. Less work, more profit, guaranteed-satisfactory product for the masses. What’s more, foreign journalists writing in English who use AI to assist their writing will trawl through the same manufactured swill. We laughed when that mysterious unidentified American political figure – generally thought to have been Bush strategic genius Karl Rove – claimed, “…when we act, we create our own reality.” I doubt he saw the future that clearly, but he wasn’t joking.

                  I have thought – and said – for a long time that Russia should detach itself from the political charade the Olympics have become; forget them, they’re never going to let you back in until they are sure they can consistently, and in conditions of the greatest humiliation, beat you. The west is just fine with substandard foreign athletes who can be blown out of competition in the first round, reinforcing their self-image of unearthly greatness. Go ahead with Russian-organized games to which all are welcomed, and take it as a given the USA and such allies as it can arm-twist will not participate; I would have gone further and banned them from participation, because letting them in will only lead to the same kind of western coverage we see now – our athletes clearly would have dominated, were it not for the Russian doping cheaters. Go ahead with the cleanest games you can produce, with realistic and transparent checks to make sure that competitors draw upon nothing but their personal prowess – winners are never going to be recognized as the world’s best anyway, the west will see to that. At least the western games will be de-facto competing against records they cannot rig.

                  One more time, the Court of Arbitration for Sport was completely UNABLE to show any evidence at all of a Russian state-sponsored doping program: although this article walks the reader through all the Court’s decisions and speaks of their verdicts as if they were based on facts, the giveaway is in the first paragraph.

                  “The Russian doping scandal that rocked the sporting world during the past 2 years is far from over. The World Anti-Doping Agency is still in turmoil over its total failure to discover the Russian doping scheme and the International Olympic Committee and other Sports Governing Bodies are still struggling to find the appropriate response to Russia’s total disregard of the spirit and letter of the World Anti-Doping Code. Yet the recent publications of a string of awards related to the scandal by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) provides us with the opportunity to offer some preliminary reflections on the role of the CAS in dealing with the consequences of the scandal for the world anti-doping system at large. This article will analyse the relevant CAS awards in a chronological order. It will start with the ‘IAAF Award’, before turning to the awards rendered by the CAS ad hoc Division in Rio, and finishing with the ‘IPC award’. The modest ambition of this paper is to retrace the reasoning used by the CAS panels and to analyse its broader consequences for the practical operation of the world anti-doping system.”

                  https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40318-017-0107-6

                  Russia’s alleged ‘total disregard of the rules’ is actually predicated on its refusal to simply bow its head, acknowledge its mendacious guilt and accept its punishment, and try to move on. It was baited many times that it could be instantly returned to international competition – with, of course, much stricter testing and scrutiny than any other athletes would have to undergo – if it would only publicly accept the conclusions of the McLaren Report.

                  As a few unbiased – or less-biased – sources recounted, WADA and the McLaren Commission’s sensational and colourful revelations were almost entirely based on the cheerful fabrications of nutjob Grigory Rodchenkov. In a few instances, which were elevated to prominence as contemptuous accusations, retesting provided a reasonable explanation; “Can you imagine?”, went the news reports; “in the urine test for female athletes, they found men’s DNA included. Everyone knows the Russians cheat, but how could they be so CLUMSY?!!!”. That example was drawn from Olympic champion biathlete Olga Zaitseva, and indeed male DNA was discovered in her urine sample. Although, unaccountably, it took years to analyze it, it came from her husband, very likely through normal sexual activity in the course of trying to have another child. The perfectly-normal explanation, naturally, never saw the light of day except in this source.

                  https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/evidence-casts-new-doubts-on-russian-doping-whistleblower-a-4bba2ee9-4ead-42fd-85d0-56bd87092c93

                  Even after the disqualifications of 28 out of 39 Russian athletes – many of them medal winners – were overturned and their medals reinstated, Rodchenkov continued to maintain his evidence was true and accurate.

                  https://www.cbc.ca/sports/olympics/pyeongchang/grigory-rodchenkov-doping-whistleblower-remorse-1.4539727

                  Kind of an amusing coincidence, if you are fond of them, because it was Germany’s ARD which started off the whole show with a sensational documentary which was later revealed to have been prompted by American interests, so that the Americans could kick off explosive reports using the seeded story as substantiation. Likewise Wolfgang Pichler, allegedly one of the world’s best biathlon coaches, mocked the sensational ‘Duchess Cocktail’ story as ‘total rubbish’; he became Russia’s head biathlon coach in 2011, and was responsible for testing the blood samples of his athletes daily for stress limits; if one of his athletes was doping, he said, he would have noticed. Nobody has ever accused him of lying.

                  “The global fight against doping could be facing a tectonic shift. If Rodchenkov’s story inspires the U.S. to become the world doping police, that would be ironic, given how the U.S. has often looked the other way when suspicions have arisen about its own athletes.”

                  A Russian lawsuit alleged that affidavits filed by the IOC from Rodchenkov were not signed by him; that two of nine used a digital photo of his signature, and the remainder were signed by hand by someone other than Rodchenkov, whom the Russians believed at the time to be possibly not even alive. According to Der Spiegel, independent experts backed up the claim that the signatures were by someone other than Rodchenkov. At the same time, the USA was using Rodchenkov’s accusations to inveigle for the power for the USA to conduct criminal prosecutions of doping cases abroad.

                  But at least some of his ‘evidence’ was assessed by the very Independent Commission which produced its ‘damning report’ as not credible. To wit, his allegations regarding the destruction of urine samples, and attempts by him to extort money from athletes in return for covering up ‘positive tests’.

                  “According to the IC Report, at the center of the story was the then–director of the Russian anti-doping laboratory, Rodchenkov, who the IC found was “at the heart of the positive drug test cover-up.” The IC Report made some statements about him that would give any reasonable person pause about his reliability as a witness, including “The IC finds that that Dir. Rodchenkov’s statements regarding the destruction of the [1417 urine] samples are not credible” and “Director Rodchenkov was also an integral part of the conspiracy to extort money from athletes in order to cover up positive doping test results.” The Times article states that Rodchenkov denies extortion, despite evidence to the contrary that at least two Russian athletes gave to the IC. “

                  https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/congress-not-honor-one-notorious-doping-cheats-time/

                  Like

  34. Why does no one correct this oaf when he makes blatantly false statements?

    BERLIN, April 22. /TASS/. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said at the opening of a trade fair in Hanover that the era of fossil fuel is coming to an end.

    “It is clear to us all that the era of fossil energy sources is coming to an end”, he said, according to a statement on the German government’s website.

    The chancellor also said Germany will make every effort to produce 80% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030.

    Scholz thanked Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store, who attended the fair, for support “when Russia cut off energy supplies to Germany” following the start of the conflict in the Ukraine.

    Like

    1. Like speaker Johnson who mixed up the Baltics with the Balkans, I think Scholtz meant to say that the time of fossil politicians is coming to an end, i.e. the likes of him.

      Unfortunately there are young indocrinated psychopaths like green Bearc*ck & Habek more than willing to take up the reigns.

      Even yesterday, Green/Pirates Party Czech foreign minister Jan Lipavský said that Russian diplomats in u-Rope should not be able to benefit from the Schengen Agreement (freedom of movement).

      Like

      1. Sorry to appear pedantic, Old Bean, but you should have written “reins”, not “reigns”.

        “Reins” are what you guide and control horses with; “reigns” is what King Charles III of Great Britain does — and he does not “rule”, thats what the wankers in Westminster do.

        Like

        1. And as punishment for my pedantry, I made a typo above: there shoud have been an apostrophe in “thats” in “thats what the wankers in Westminster do”.

          I should have written “that’s what the wankers in Westminster do”.

          Like

          1. Oh dear, what a pity, how sad!

            22.04.2024 12:44

            I was going to have some fun. An American mercenary of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine with the call sign Obnoxious has been destroyed 

            Ian Burdett. Photo: social networks

            The large family of the American mercenary Ian Burdett, who has been liquidated in the Ukraine, did not dissuade him from travelling to the SMO zone, and now they are unable to get his body back.

            An American mercenary of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine, Ian Burdett, with the call sign Nasty, has been eliminated in the SMO zone. His obituary was published in the community of foreign fighters fighting on the side of the Ukraine. His family confirmed that he has been killed in action.

            The American arrived in the conflict zone from Oregon more than a year ago. In April, during a clash with the Russian military, the mercenary was killed.

            According to the TrackANaziMerc resource, which collects data on foreigners in Ukrainian formations, Ian Burdett was part of The Chosen Company, which places bets on English-speaking mercenaries. 

            Photo: social networks

            The mercenary called himself a homeless tramp who had nothing. This did not fit with the appearance of a sleek American with dyed hair and a youthful perm. In one of the photos on her social networks, Burdett lovingly clutches stacks of banknotes. Friends called him an “adventurer” and a person who “lifted the spirits of those around him”.It seems that attracting attention to himself was his main goal in the SMO zone.

            “Nasty” was concerned about his appearance – he constantly got new tattoos done on his body and tirelessly took pictures of himself in the gym. 

            Officially, Burdett was called a paramedic, but on the Internet it is difficult to find at least one photo of him without a machine gun or grenade launcher in his hands. 

            The mercenary’s relatives have been left without a body

            As often happens with foreign mercenaries in the SMO zone, after their death, the Ukrainian command refuses to engage in procedures for transferring the body to the family. 

            Now relatives are trying to raise money to have returned the remains of an American from a distant unfamiliar country, which return requires more than 10 thousand dollars. 

            Photo: social networks

            Burdette’s mother, father, brother, two sisters, girlfriend, and a large community of extended family and friends who were mourning him back home, somehow did not dissuade Burdette from his “adventure” in the war zone. 

            Before being sent to the Ukraine, the American worked for a shipping company. 

            Previously, the relatives of 36-year-old British mercenary Julian Thorne had to declare a collection and collect 15 thousand pounds sterling (about 1.5 million rubles) to try and bring his body home. 

            Friends of the British mercenary Katherine Melnichuk, who died under mysterious circumstances, had to collect 10 thousand pounds to retrieve her body. The cost could have been higher, but Melnichuk died not on the front line, but in her apartment in Kiev. 

            In February, Spanish mercenary Miguel Ortiz was eliminated in the special operation zone. His family is unsuccessfully demanding that the Ukrainian army and the Spanish Foreign Ministry “take the responsibility” of finding the Spaniard’s body and returning it home. The mercenary’s son-in-law wonders why the commanders from the Ukrainian Armed Forces do not transfer Miguel’s salary if they do not recognize him as dead. Perhaps the same situation arose with Ian Burdett, whose death was confirmed only by relatives, but not by official structures. 

            Photo: social networks

            The “Chosen Company” is being finished off 

            The first mention of the created “The Chosen company” appeared in June 2023. The unit, founded by former Iowa National Guard member Ryan O’Leary, accepts people from countries that are part of the so-called “Five Eyes Alliance” of English-speaking intelligence agencies. In addition to Americans, Canadians, British and Australians often go there. Most of the time, O’Leary’s militants have fought on the territory of the DPR. In the fall of 2023, large losses amongst these mercenaries were reported in Avdeevka. At least one American ( Dalton Medlin ) and two Australians ( Matthew Jepson and Joel Stremski ) were eliminated. Russian media wrote that the “Chosen Ones” were then virtually defeated.

            *************************************************************************************************

            More on Spanish mercenary Ortiz:

            Note

            Note the concerned “context” added by a reader!

            They are not mercenaries!

            They are the “good guys”, fighting for freedom and democracy — or should that be, as Diaper Joe said only the other day, for freedom or democracy?

            Like

            1. The “context” added by someone who wishes to assure everyone that the mercenaries are not mercenaries reads as follows:

              There are no mercenaries in Ukraine, as defined by Article 47 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions. Foreign fighters are integrated in the regular Ukrainian Armed Forces and receive the same paycheck as Ukrainian nationals.

              Like

  35. As his fellow countryman Goebbels was fond of doing, Scholz repeats again and again a big lie. This is certainly not the first time that he has said that Russia had “cut off the gas” to Germany, yet no one pulls him up about his bare-faced mendacity.

    Like

    1. It just doesn’t matter anymore. Russia knows nobody is ever going to be held to account for what western media sites do not hesitate to label ‘the greatest act of modern industrial sabotage’ – it is only in awarding responsibility that they become hesitant and confused. The emphatic head-nodding of our mosquito-brained Minister of Foreign Affairs, when prompted by Washington that the Russians blew up their own pipeline, demonstrates that America’s loyal allies will go along with any absurd explanation it wants to dream up for cover. As always, the best revenge is living well, and we are nowhere near the end of our dependency on fossil fuels until we discover an alternate which is simultaneously as energy-dense as fossil fuels and as cost-effective to recover.

      You can produce energy from pretty much anything, if money is no object. But you have to convince everyone to switch at more or less the same time, because a certain designated population – say, Germany – is not going to accept a greatly-reduced living standard in order to ‘save the planet’ while neighbours are enjoying a much better living standard through continuing to use cheaper energy. And Russia has no motivation at all to help the west ‘fight global warming’, considering the effort the west is putting forth to dance on its grave. As long as it has customers to buy its exports, I imagine it will continue to sell them no matter how much the west squalls about its ‘responsibilities’. And Europe has signed on now to buy its fossil energy from Uncle Sam at whatever price Washington thinks is fair, and arrangement I expect Washington will use to its advantage until it runs out of oil.

      The whole fight-global-warming thing reminds me of the COVID debacle – first they will try to guilt you into accepting responsibility and voluntarily limiting your lifestyle (none of that for the leaders, of course, who will continue jetting hither and yon for ‘important meetings’ and noshing on steak even if you agree to live in a hut and eat grass and bugs), and when that fails to achieve the desired universal effect, the threats and punishment will appear. But Russia has already demonstrated it will not subordinate itself to western whimsy, and is essentially insulated from western orders. It’s a little late to try the ‘don’t you want to be a responsible global citizen?’ bullshit.

      But the aforementioned COVID debacle revealed, in its aftermath, a much larger demographic in opposition than western leaders pretended. Many went along with the nonsense at first, but resentment stirred with the imposition of penalties for those who would not comply, and continued to gain strength until the authorities more or less dropped the whole thing in embarrassment.

      Like

      1. China will create a system of reserve coal reserves

        China has pledged to establish a coal reserve system by 2027, aiming to ensure energy security through more flexible coal supplies, according to plans released on April 12.

        By 2030, the country will aim to reach an annual reserve of 300 million tons of coal, which can be managed if necessary, as well as improve the volume and flexibility of coal supplies. This is stated in a document jointly published by the State Development and Reform Committee of the People’s Republic of China and the National Energy Administration.

        The introduction of a reserve coal reserve system will allow coal production capacity to be quickly released in emergency situations, such as major fluctuations in the international energy market, adverse weather conditions and sudden changes in the stability of supply and demand, ensuring sufficient coal supplies in these circumstances, said a representative of the National Energy Administration.

        Coal has long been the main fuel in China. Last year, China reached a record production level, producing 4.66 billion tons of coal, up 2.9 percent from a year earlier.

        The National Energy Administration notes that the reserve coal reserve is supposed to be used only in case of emergency situations, and under normal conditions it will remain passive.

        По материалам: https://english.news.cn/20240412/409ed047b012495eaca15d944eefafed/c.html

        *******************************************************************************************************

        Look at the size of that shearer!

        Look at the thickness of the seam!

        You can drive a double-decker bus along it!

        Where I worked in Merry England the seams were only between four and five feet thick.,

        There were coalfields in the UK, notably in Nottinghamshire, where the seams were much thicker and the mines there, therefore, were much more economical to work.

        Westoe, by the way, was in northeast England: where I worked was in northwest England.

        Like

  36. Yes, there are Nazi Russian! However, they seem to have a predilection for fighting alongside their Banderite Nazi pals against Russians . . .

    21.04.2024 05:45

    Has been on the run for 6 years. The Nazi Krasnolutsky from the Tesak gang has been eliminated in the SMO zone

    A well-known criminal Artem Krasnolutsky*, who is wanted by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation and is fighting on the side of Ukraine, could be eliminated in the SMO zone. This is reported by a number of Telegram channels that track the presence of foreign mercenaries in the Ukraine.

    In June 2023, Krasnolutsky was seen on the video of the RDK * * group, during raids across the borders of Russia. After the March 2024 raid near the borders of the Belgorod region, the extremist’s social networks stopped updating.

    His appearance in the ranks of this terrorist group did not come as a surprise.

    Photo: social networks

    [Liquidated]

    Fugitive Nazi sheltered in the Ukraine

    The radical, who called himself Uragan, was convicted twice in Russia — for a stabbing at a disco and a bloody slaughter of a native of the Armenian diaspora. In 2018, Krasnolutsky escaped from house arrest after the prosecution requested 11 years in prison for him. The case concerned the events of 2015 in Voronezh. Then Uragan and his accomplices beat up a 32-year-old representative of the Armenian diaspora, pushed him into the boot of a car and took him to a wooded area. There the man was beaten again, shot in the leg, and then taken to the territory of an abandoned construction site and abandoned.

    Uragan was a friend of the notorious radical Maxim “Tesak” Martsinkevich and one of the participants of the Format 18 movement created by him * *. Krasnolutsky wore a chevron with the name of this group on his military uniform while fighting in the Ukraine.

    Krasnolutsky’s torso is tattooed with forbidden symbols.

    Photo: social networks

    In a description of him in Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation documents, these symbols are indicated in the “Special Signs” column: “on the left breast is a swastika symbol, on the left shoulder is an inscription in a foreign language, on the left wrist is the number fourteen, on the right wrist is the number eighty-eight…”.

    He himself openly called himself a 1488% Nazi and said that he did not obey anyone, as his only commander shot himself in April 1945. The 33-year-old criminal is included in the register of terrorists and extremists of Rosfinmonitoring.

    On 20 March, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said at a meeting of the board of the military department that the losses of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine in attacks on Russian border settlements for eight days of fighting amounted to 3,500 people, of which 790 were irretrievable losses.

    Taking orders from MI6?

    This week, one of the English-language publications told about the links of the RDK * * group with the British special services.

    According to SouthFront, the idea of creating the organization belongs to the British special service MI-6, the curator of the militants is a Ukrainian military intelligence officer (GUR) Andrey Bulakh, and more than half of the composition consists of foreign mercenaries and Ukrainians. The organization began to be formed in 2021 even before the SMO.

    Photo: social networks

    Vladimir Rogov, a member of the Public Chamber and chairman of the Zaporozhye movement “We are Together with Russia”, spoke earlier about the links of the GUR, and accordingly the RDK, with British intelligence. According to him, the head of military intelligence of the Ukraine, General Kirill Budanov*, is a protege of the British special services.

    * – added to the list of terrorists and extremists

    **-an organization banned in Russia

    Like

  37. Radio Liberty @LibertyRad… · 14 min

    President of the Ukraine Zelensky has said that the Ukraine armed forces have a chance of seizing the initiative at the front if Kiev receives the weapons systems that it needs. The Ukraine leader stated this in an interview with the American TV channel NBC.

    Zelensky: the Ukraine has a chance of seizing the initiative at the front

    Zelensky: the Ukraine has a chance of seizing…

    What are the grounds for believing what he says?

    Zelenskyy: ‘We will have a chance at victory’ thanks to weapons provided to Ukraine in new U.S. aid package

    Ukraine’s president thanked U.S. leaders for passing a $60.8 billion aid package through the House over the weekend.

    April 21, 2024, 4:07 PM GMT+3

    By Alexandra Marquez

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked U.S. political leaders Sunday for approving an aid package to Ukraine over the weekend, saying the new aid will give the country a chance at “victory” as it defends itself from Russia.

    “I think this support will really strengthen the armed forces, I pray, and we will have a chance at victory if Ukraine really gets the weapons system, which we need so much, which thousands of soldiers need so much,” Zelenskyy, who spoke through an interpreter, said on NBC News’ “Meet the Press.”

    The House passed a bill Saturday to provide Ukraine with $60.8 billion of aid weeks after the Senate passed a massive bill with aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, as well as funding for increased border security. Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., opted not to put that bill bundling aid for the three countries on the floor, instead choosing to pass three separate aid bills.

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv on Thursday.Kay Nietfeld / dpa / picture alliance via Getty Images

    The House bills are expected to pass the Senate this week, which Zelenskyy specifically urged.

    “We really need to get this to the final point. We need to get approved by the Senate,” he said Sunday.

    “Then we want to help get things as fast as possible so that we get some tangible assistance for the soldiers on the front line as soon as possible — not in another six months — so that they would be able to move ahead,” he added.

    In a statement after the House passed the bills, President Joe Biden said, “I urge the Senate to quickly send this package to my desk so that I can sign it into law and we can quickly send weapons and equipment to Ukraine to meet their urgent battlefield needs.”

    Zelenskyy spoke about those urgent needs Sunday, telling moderator Kristen Welker: “We need long-range weapons to not lose people on the front line, because we have, we have casualties because we cannot reach that far. Our weapons are not that long-range.

    “We need [that] and air defense. Those are our priorities right now,” he added.

    Asked whether the aid will help Ukraine win the war or just prolong it, Zelenskyy told Welker: “It depends on when we actually get weapons on the ground. As you said it, Kristen, if we get it in half a year — well, we’ve had the process stalled for half a year and we’ve had losses in several directions. Losses in men, in equipment.

    “Now we have the chance to stabilize the situation and to overtake the initiative, and that’s why we need to actually have the weapons systems,” he added. “Giving the U.S. a specific timeline of the war, well, it depends how soon they get this aid. There are so many variables, so many factors.”

    Zelenskyy also responded to recent reporting that former President Donald Trump, if elected, would pressure Ukraine to give up some territory to Russia in exchange for ending the war, saying, “Rumors and different hearsay, I don’t believe that.”

    He also expressed doubt that Russian President Vladimir Putin would ever agree to and abide by such a settlement, telling Welker, “You can never trust Putin.”

    “The strategy of ending the war should be based not on the words which Putin says or some other people from his entourage say, but on something very specific, something very tangible in Ukraine that is independent and democratic,” he said.

    “I’m confident that everyone is interested in that,” he added. “All the political leaders, they are also interested to have Ukraine independent and sovereign and democratic. It’s of interest for both the Republicans and the Democrats.”

    For weeks, Zelenskyy has expressed the urgent need for weapons and supplies to continue defending Ukraine from Russian attacks.

    In the months since U.S. aid to Ukraine lapsed, Ukraine’s military supplied grew depleted and the military was forced to withdraw from a key eastern city — Avdiivka — in February. 

    Earlier this month, Russia was firing five artillery shells for every one fired by Ukrainian forces, Army Gen. Christopher Cavoli, commander of U.S. European Command, told NBC News. He warned that the disparity could increase in the near future without more aid.

    On Sunday, Zelenskyy pushed back against complaints that the U.S. has sunk too much money into the war and will continue to have to do so, telling Welker, “[Americans] first and foremost are protecting freedom and democracy all over Europe.”

    “The U.S. Army now does not have to fight protecting NATO countries. Ukrainians are doing that. And it’s only ammo that the civilized world is providing, and I think it’s a good decision,” he said.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    When is he going to be “liquidated” by his associates in Banderastan?

    How long has he to live if he doesn’t soon flee the Borderlands?

    Like

    1. I’m pretty sure everyone knew the news that the USA was going to give Ukraine another wheelbarrow-load of money would be greeted with a return to victory puffery from Zelensky. According to him, if you simply give Ukraine enough dollars, it can win – ignore that the ranks of its personnel are increasingly depleted, new strong Ukrainians will sprout from the sunflower fields, just SEND MORE MONEY!! Oh, and of course, your dollars will be investments in freedom and democracy; I can’t imagine there is anyone who still believes that.

      The customary plea for long-range weapons is likely to be recognized for what it is – a means to start lobbing high-explosive into Russia as far as it can reach, and hopefully provoking a reaction which will draw in NATO. Zelensky knows full well that unless he can get some more soldiers to help him fight Russia, he is going to lose, and he apparently believes if NATO comes in on his side, Russia will be defeated and Ukraine will be awarded huge new tracts of formerly-Russian land plus plenty of plunder in reparations. That would not happen, of course, and enough people in the west know it would devolve into a shooting war which would rapidly go nuclear, with the biggest nuclear power on the planet. Earlier on there was a lot of scoffing that Putin would not dare, he must know the damage it would cause and that would stay his hand and he would accept defeat. Not many are willing to say that now, and the west is merely committing another big blast of cash to the same techniques – let the Ukrainians die instead of Americans, and we’ll see; maybe they’ll get lucky. But it is well aware that Russia considers this an existential battle, and it is certainly not going to kneel with full missile silos. America always knew that was the way of it with its rabid Israeli pals, and it let them acquire a nuclear capability anyway, but for some reason it believes Israelis are made of sterner stuff than Russians, who would capitulate.

      But NATO affects to believe Zelensky’s boasting, because it suits its agenda to have Zelensky go on trading punches with Russia, even if it means Ukraine is totally destroyed. In fact, sometimes I believe it taunts Moscow that Ukraine will join NATO just to get him to take all of it, to prevent that from happening – then Russia will be on the hook for rebuilding it after more than a decade of war and destruction.

      Like

  38. No matter what the Kiev Rat grunts in the YouTube clip above, there are others who think otherwise:

    But the delivery of the US aid is unlikely to dramatically alter Kyiv’s situation on the frontline, according to Ukrainian officials, soldiers and military analysts.

    FT.

    Ukraine faces race against time to deploy US funding

    Tough weeks ahead for Kyiv in fight to stem Russian advances despite passage of long-awaited bill in Washington

    American weapons and munitions will start flowing into Ukraine in the coming days if the funding bill is approved by the US Senate this week, as is widely expected © Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty/Serhii Nuzhnenko/Reuters

    Christopher Miller in Kyiv and Max Seddon in Riga 

    YESTERDAY

    Ukraine faces tough weeks ahead in its fight to stem Russian battlefield advances despite this weekend’s passage of a long-awaited US funding bill, according to Ukrainian officials, soldiers and military analysts.

    The US House of Representatives passed the $60bn military aid package on Saturday night after months of delay that have left Ukraine short of critical weaponry in the face of Russian advances.

    American weapons and munitions will start flowing into Ukraine within the coming days if the bill is approved by the US Senate this week, as is widely expected.

    “The time between political decisions and actual damage to the enemy on the front lines, between the package’s approval and our warriors’ strengthening, must be as short as possible,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a Sunday evening address.

    Western and Ukrainian officials said some of the material assistance, including arms and ammunition, was already packaged in depots in Poland and elsewhere in Europe and ready to be transported.

    But the delivery of the US aid is unlikely to dramatically alter Kyiv’s situation on the frontline, according to Ukrainian officials, soldiers and military analysts.

    Commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrsky warned this month that the situation had “significantly worsened” after Russian forces stepped up offensive actions along several points on the 1,000km frontline since capturing the industrial city of Avdiivka in February.

    While far-right Republicans in the House prevented a package of military aid being passed in recent months, Russia’s army was able to strengthen its hold on the roughly 20 per cent of Ukrainian territory it occupied and seize the initiative on the battlefield.

    Troops on the frontline told the Financial Times during a visit this month that they were barely holding on under relentless Russian attacks to which they were unable to respond in kind.

    Ukrainian servicemen prepare a M777 howitzer to fire towards Russian troops in Donetsk region
    Ukrainian servicemen prepare a M777 howitzer to fire towards Russian troops in Donetsk region © Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty/Serhii Nuzhnenk/Reuters

    “I hope it will turn the page in favour of us in this war,” said First Lieutenant Ivan Skuratovsky of the fresh aid. His unit is operating American artillery systems at the frontline in the eastern Donetsk region, and is short of ammunition.

    But the influx of arms, particularly much-needed artillery shells and munitions for air defence systems “will help to slow down the Russian advance, but not stop it”, one senior Ukrainian official told the FT on condition of anonymity to speak frankly about the battlefield situation.

    And Ukrainians are under no illusions that the American assistance will see the country through to the end of the war.

    “Such a large aid package may be the last this year. Moreover, there is a fairly high probability that all subsequent aid packages for Ukraine will be much smaller in size,” said a former Ukrainian officer who operates the analytical group Frontelligence Insight.

    “The aid provided by the US buys us and the European Union time, about one year,” the group’s assessment said.

    Rob Lee, a military analyst and senior fellow in the Foreign Policy Research Institute’s Eurasia Program, said that even with the new American assistance, “Russia will still have an artillery advantage, it just won’t be as great”.

    Ruslan Pukhov, director of the Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies, a Moscow defence think-tank, said the benefit to Ukraine from advanced US weaponry would depend on the quantity of arms supplied.

    The US bill only lists financing to buy the weapons, not how much of each system Washington will supply.

    “Successful combined operations with fighters and anti-air might significantly cancel out Russia’s mass glide-bombing campaign. If Ukraine doesn’t use the key systems en masse, there won’t be a significant influence on the front lines,” Pukhov said.

    Zelenskyy said earlier this month that his troops were now able to fire just one artillery shell for about every 10 fired by their enemy. That gap will now be partially closed but not completely, according to Ukrainian officials.

    The US assistance package, which is certain to provide artillery shells, the senior Ukrainian official said, “does not contain a silver bullet”. 

    But Andriy Zagorodnyuk, director of the Kyiv-based security think-tank Centre for Defence Strategies and a former defence minister of Ukraine, said he believed the US aid was “a bullet enough” to kill Russia’s momentum.

    But this will address only one major challenge facing Ukraine, he admitted. Kyiv faces another big challenge: manpower.

    “I think manpower may be the key to how the war unfolds in 2025,” said Lee.

    Russia is at present able to mobilise about 30,000 soldiers each month, according to US and Ukrainian estimates, or enough to at least cover its massive battlefield loss.

    Ukraine has taken steps to try to alleviate the situation. This month, Zelenskyy signed a law lowering the mobilisation age to 25 from 27, while Ukraine’s parliament passed a new bill on conscription that is aimed at replenishing its exhausted and dwindling forces. The US aid package will buy some time to address the manpower shortage, analysts said.

    A steel worker manufactures M795 artillery projectiles at the Scranton Army Ammunition Plant in Scranton, Pennsylvania
    A steelworker manufactures M795 artillery projectiles at the Scranton Army Ammunition Plant in Scranton, Pennsylvania © Matt Rourke/AP

    The US munitions likely to be delivered in the next days and weeks may also help to defend more effectively Ukraine’s critical infrastructure that has been badly damaged or destroyed by Russian missiles and drones in recent weeks, after Kyiv ran out of interceptors, the official said.

    Patriot missiles would help defend from Russia’s long-range air assaults, while man-portable air defence systems, or MANPADS, such as the American Stinger system, could also be sent and would help troops along the frontline where Russian jets have increasingly attacked Ukrainian positions and flattened residential buildings to push forward. 

    “It’s fair to ask if this ammunition will arrive in time to help Ukraine hold Chasiv Yar,” Lee said, referring to the strategic eastern town that sits on a hillside just 15km west of Bakhmut, the city captured by Russian forces last May.

    Syrsky said that Russian President Vladimir Putin was likely to have ordered his forces to capture Chasiv Yar before May 9, when Moscow traditionally celebrates the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany.

    Ukraine losing Chasiv Yar would allow Russian troops “fire control” over nearby strategic cities and give them a foothold from which they could launch new attacks deeper into Ukraine, Ukrainian commanders said.

    Putin has shown no intention of stopping his country’s invasion from marching deeper into Ukraine.

    Asked on Sunday how long the war would last and how long Americans should be expected to fund Ukraine’s defence, Zelenskyy admitted that his army “did lose the initiative” in recent months.

    “From the moment we get our hands on these weapon systems, well, from that moment, we can talk about the timeline,” he said.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    But Andriy Zagorodnyuk, director of the Kyiv-based security think-tank Centre for Defence Strategies and a former defence minister of Ukraine, said he believed the US aid was “a bullet enough” to kill Russia’s momentum.

    But this will address only one major challenge facing Ukraine, he admitted. Kyiv faces another big challenge: manpower.“

    I think manpower may be the key to how the war unfolds in 2025,” said Lee.Russia is at present able to mobilise about 30,000 soldiers each month, according to US and Ukrainian estimates, or enough to at least cover its massive battlefield loss.

    Well observed there, Boy Wonder!

    The Yukietards are getting slaughtered.

    But where do you get the figure of 30,000 for Russian monthly manpower losses from — directly off Budyanov?

    Like

  39. Dream on, arsehole!

    PS You’re gonna die soon — messily!

    Zelensky has spoken about plans for the summit in Switzerland
    Lenta.ru
    22 April, 14: 55

    President of the Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky has spoken about plans for the summit in Switzerland according to his formula, saying that a decision would be able to affect Russia. The Ukrainian leader stated this in an interview with the YouTube channel HugoDécrypte.

    “And we shall find a format to influence Russia to agree to these conditions. I am sure that there will be strong countries that will be able to influence Russia. This has already happened with the grain deal”, Zelensky said.

    According to him, the summit will be attended by more than 80 countries that will be able to draw up several points in a document which will influence Russia.

    Earlier, Zelensky said that Russia would see a “peace plan”, which should be discussed in Switzerland only after the conference. According to him, after having drawn up a common opinion, some diplomats will present the plan to Russian representatives.

    Who will then immediately roll over on their backs as do submissive, beaten dogs?

    Like

    1. Again, I think everyone reasonable knew that an infusion of money would restore Zelensky to strutting and bragging and promising great things – after all, his increasing pessimism of late constantly blamed the west for not giving him enough money and weapons. America’s gifts might make the war drag on another six months, meaning it will run through another winter with Europe a slave to American gas prices and Ukrainian infrastructure increasingly decrepit and broken, more ruin and suffering all so Washington can wait for a break. Zelensky knows his ‘peace plan’ is unacceptable to Russia, but as I mentioned before, the USA turned on the money taps just before Europe planned the vaunted ‘peace summit’ at which they were going to cautiously explore solutions which might be acceptable to Russia. All that’s out the window now, and it’s back to ‘fuck you, Putin, you’re going to lose, Ukraine is going to kick your ass.’ That’s what $60 Billion of taxpayers’ money bought; a return to strutting bravado and fist-shaking, and by the time we get back to where we just were, Ukraine will be completely and irreparably wrecked. But you won’t get anyone to believe that now – it’s a return to HOPE.

      Like

      1. Frenchman spotted in Odessa!

        Armand Emmanuel Sophie Septimanie de Vignerot du Plessis, 5th Duke of Richelieu and Fronsac, appointed by Emperor Alexander I as Governor of Odessa and Governor General of “New Russia”, 1803 – 1814, all territories inder his governance formerly being of the Ottoman Empire.

        No such bloody country as “Ukraine” then!

        Odessa_vlasenko

        Like

      2. I can find nothing in the lying Western media about French troops in Odessa.

        There is a lot of fake shit being peddled around on the web of late — there’s always a lot of it, of course, but the fakers seem to be upping the tempo, possibly trying to make Russia retaliate inordinately, perhaps so that the 7th Cavalry can gallop in to the rescue..

        Like

  40. Leaving lovely Odessa, has anyone noticed that Pepe Escobar is claiming that Israel’s retaliation attack against Iran was actually intended to be an EMP strike? He is claiming that he has this information from two high level sources from two different countries in Asia.

    I have been wavering on this but a Glen Greenwald interview with Norman Finkelstein, before the strike, discussing the level of sanity in the Israeli Cabinet makes me think that Pepe’s account may be true. This is a bad paraphrase, going from memory from several days ago, but Finkelstein basically distinguishes between two levels of sanity. Part of the cabinet is b-s crazy but still has a bit of a grasp of reality (maybe Bibbi for example?) and some are “eschatologically” crazy (Ben Gvir?).

    If I have Finkelstein’s argument correct, he claims that the second group are actually crazy enough to do something like this. This is the same group that want to sacrifice a red heifer on Temple mount so that they can start building the Third Temple.

    A blogger who I’ve been reading, simply because he he is mailing his various blog posts to me, because I have no idea how I contacted him, makes a very good argument that Pepe may very well be correct.

     He may be totally off the wall and I had no way of evaluating his experience though his posts that I’ve read for the last three or four months seemed well reasoned knowledgeable. I think from his accent or from his vowels anyway it is Australian but maybe very wrong. Anyway here is a link to his posting. He seems to go pretty good summary including Pepe’s tweets.

    https://yesxorno.substack.com/p/escobar-russia-and-israel-averting?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

    Like

    1. I was last in lovely Odessa in 2011: sat on the plinth of of the Duke of Richelieu’s statue in glorious weather with my wife as my then 4-year-old younger daughter Aleksandra. was gaily gambolling around. The statue is situated on a square located at the top of the “Potemkin Stairs”, so named because of a scene in wich they feature in Eisenstein’s memorable film “Battleship Potemkin”.

      There’s yer man Richelieu at the top of the stairs.

      I remember it was a bloody hard slog climbing them.

      The above view is only halfway up them.

      Looking the other way towards the harbour:

      Soon be ruins, if not already.

      A pity, because Odessans, in general, are not Yukieshites. Odessa is a Jewish city, really — with a greatly reduced Jewish population now, of course, as a result of it having been occupied by those friendly German Nazis and Romanian Fascists, who fought so valiantly in defending Christian Europe against godless Bolshevism.

      Like

    2. One of the problems popular writers face is that they are targets of disinformation.

      Seymour Hersh is one.

      This is not a criticizm.

      I reserve judgement on the Escobar story as without further information it’s hard to see it as credible.

      As a case of disinformtion, it ticks the right boxes. Believeable? Possibly, if you imagine the regime in Tel Aviv has no limits. Confirmable? Not so far.

      I’d like to hear from a physicist, but I suspect one weapon an effective strike does not make. Not to mention that stealth is vastly over-rated with the much faster improvement in sensors and the software fusion that ties them together. Add to that the short range of the F-35 and other stuff.

      So for me the the burden on proof is on Escobar’s sources and their ‘word’ simply isn’t enough by a long shot. Maybe they were targeted by disinformation knowing that it would feed through?

      Like

      1. I would totally agree except for listening to Norman Finkelstein. He really convinced me that some cabal in Cabinet and the IDF might just be crazy enough to try it or something similar. It still has a low probability but my prior jumped a bit when I combined Finkelstein and Escobar.

        I don’t know anything about Escobar except he has been in Asia, including the ‘stans for years and seem to know what he’s talking about in general.

        Like

        1. Also it doesn’t sound very smart.

          There was a recent piece by John Helmer over at Dances with Bears* about i-Srael’s electricity grid/whatever and its suceptibility to falling over if other sources such as gas production platforms etc. are similar targeted.

          Thus, and EMP attack on i-Ran a) sets a precedent (again); b) opens up similar retaliation to i-Srael which could be quite painful not to mention stretch air defense resources.

          None of that discounts the supidity of the DO SOMETHING! crowd.

          *https://johnhelmer.org/the-last-blackout-for-israel-was-lifted-by-gods-temple-miracle-2188-years-ago-israel-is-provoking-iran-to-inflict-a-new-blackout-to-test-which-side-god-is-on-now/

          Like

          1. Also it doesn’t sound very smart.

            It’s not but if Finkelstein is correct and I’d say he is we are not talking about rational humans; we have a bunch of rabid religious/nationalistic fanatics a bit worse than those idiot US evangelists who support Israel to help bring on the apocalypse. And they are not what I’d call reality-based.

            Those red heifers they are breeding look good but sacrificing them on Temple Mount seems a dicey proposition.

            Like

      2. I have misgivings about Escobar: seems to be very much a showman; likewise the other Latino, resident in Kharkov for some reason, who died in a Ukrainian jail.

        Like

  41. From a Banderastan source:

    A TV tower partially collapsed in Kharkov

    Kharkiv region

    A TV tower partially collapsed in Kharkov

    The Strana publication published a video filmed by eyewitnesses in Kharkov. The footage shows how the top of the television tower breaks off and falls.

    The head of the Kharkov regional military administration, Oleg Sinegubov, confirmed that Putin’s troops attacked the television infrastructure. There were no injuries among the TV tower employees; they were in shelter during the strike. There are currently interruptions in the digital television signal in the city.

    The Kharkov TV tower was already attacked on 6 March, 2022 during an air raid on Kharkov. Then a Su-34 bomber carried out two bomb attacks on the television tower.

    In addition to Kharkov, on April 22, the Russian army struck three more settlements in the region: Volchansk, the village of Slobozhanskoye and the city of Dergachi. In Volchansk, a controlled aerial bomb hit the territory of an inactive meat processing plant. There were no casualties.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    ?struck 3 more settlements , non-military, of course, not fortified by Yukieshites.

    And an unused meat processing plant!

    What inhumane swine they are.

    Oh, and no casualties.

    How many civilians will be killed this week in Belgorod and Belgorod Region villages by Banderites, I wonder?

    Like

    1. The installation was used by Kiev’s military to house various equipment, including an air defence communication antenna, RIA Novosti reported, citing pro-Russian locals.

      Precision strike.

      Nobody killed or injured.

      The part of the tower that fell landed in the woodland that surrounds the Kharkov TV Centre.

      Like

      1. It reminded me of the early march 1st 2022 strike against the propaganda/psyops station in Kiev’s TV tower that Zelensky claimed had caused ‘heavy damage’ to the Babi Yar memorial which was exposed (with photos!) within a couple of days by a visiting i-Sraeli journalist showing only one corner office was affected (probably by debris).

        Like

      2. The German opposition CDU/CSU of whom we hear little about has show its claws. It supports the total ban of food and agricultural imports from Russia & Byelorussia.

        Is that it? I want more drama!

        My impression is that they’ve been fairly quiet to not take the focus of the self-sabotaging SDP/Green/FDP coalition.

        Like

      3. The US has announced that it may introduce sanctions against Chinese banks that do business with Russia, that includes cutting them off from SWIFT et al (not me!).

        I do wonder every now and then if the US actually wants to devalue the dollar and stop being the world’s reserve currency but won’t do it openly, only by a means in which they can say “It’s not our fault!” The country has an almost unsustainable debt, continues to spend too much money in all the wrong places and in my opinion, heading for a collapse of some sort.

        Like

    2. Saw this comment quoted in the latest Ukraine Open Thread forum but unfortunately the commenter didn’t supply a link to the original source so we have no way of knowing how many up-votes the comment got:

      Dear Mr Putin, congratulations on the accuracy of your missiles. Please could you do the BBC next? Thanks ever so much.

      Must be a disgruntled UK citizen tired of paying the annual licence fee.

      Like

      1. “Saw this comment quoted in the latest Ukraine Open Thread forum but unfortunately the commenter didn’t supply a link to the original source …”

        Sorry, forgot to say that the comments forum was over at Moon of Alabama, though some KS readers might have guessed correctly already.

        Like

  42. WE WANT WAR!RUSSIA MUST NOT WIN!

    23 April 2024, 07:19

    The United States called on European countries to consider deploying their troops in the lUkraine…

    US Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jahara Matisek has suggested that European troops may be deployed in the Ukraine to protect borders or work with Ukrainian air defence systems.

    They stated this in an article for the newspaper Foreign Affairs.

    According to Matisek, the leaders of European states should consider the issue of deploying their troops in the Ukraine.

    “In order to provide logistical support and training, protect Ukraine’s borders and critical infrastructure, and even protect Ukrainian cities”, the publication says.

    Earlier, Viktor Orban, who works as Prime Minister of Hungary, said that Western countries were one step away from sending military contingents to the Ukraine. According to him, this may drag Europe to the bottom.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    He should see a doctor.” Duda wants to deploy nuclear weapons from the United States in Poland”He should see a doctor.” Duda wants to deploy nuclear weapons from the United States in Poland

    Even the prime Minister does not agree with the idea of the Polish president.

    [Note Catholic priest standing with the warmongers — ME]

    Polish President Andrzej Duda has expressed his desire to deploy American nuclear weapons on the territory of the country. According to him, this will be a response “to the militarization of the Kaliningrad region” and the relocation of Russian missiles to Belarus.

    They want to become legitimate targets

    “If our allies decide to deploy nuclear weapons in the framework of the joint use of nuclear weapons also on our territory to strengthen the security of the eastern flank of NATO, we are ready for this”, Duda said in an interview with Fakt.

    The Polish president noted that the possible deployment of nuclear weapons “has been a topic of negotiations for some time” with Washington.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    They don’t even expect us to counteract them anymore

    April 23rd, 4:00

    Greece and Spain

    Greece and Spain are under pressure to provide the Ukraine with air defence systems — Financial Times

    Greece and Spain are under intense pressure from their EU and NATO allies to provide the Ukraine with more air defences. The leaders of the two countries, whose armed Forces have more than a dozen Patriot systems, as well as other systems such as the S-300, were told that their needs “are not as great as those of the Ukraine”.This month, Kiev demanded the provision of 7 additional Patriot air defence systems. Only Germany has announced the delivery of one system.

    PS 

    It should be understood that until a political decision is made by the US that “all crawl away from Ukraine”, everything they have shall be dumped there. They shall tear it from themselves and dump it there. Everyone shall be forced to give everything. I mean that supporters of the theory “we will destroy everything at the front” will wait for a very long time. And at the front, soldiers are likely to be dominated by the “allow as little as possible at the front” theory.

    The choice of theory option often depends on the distance of the one chosen from the front line.

    In the European

    In the European Union, there has been renewed talk about the need to close the exit from the Baltic Sea for ships carrying Russian oil. The reason is environmental risks.

    MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Russia can create environmental chaos by sending unseaworthy oil tankers through the Baltic Sea in violation of all maritime regulations, Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Bilstrom said on Thursday. “Obviously, Russia is not at all concerned about the fact that these vessels can cause serious damage to the Baltic Sea, which is already sensitive to environmental risks”, he added.

    PS It is clear that this is just an excuse. It is also clear that they came up with such an idea, because they never received a rebuff to all their previous actions. If this one works, the next idea would be to ban ALL Russian ships from entering the Baltic Sea altogether, simply because it is now a NATO inland sea. We will not “bomb” anyway, there is nothing to be afraid of. We still have the EU AMBASSADOR to Russia in our country, as if there is such an EU country. As an organization, the EU is deeply hostile to us, and it is high time to break off all relations with it, communicating only with the national governments of the countries we are interested in.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    And from the Kiev Sewer Rat . . .

    Volodymyr Zelensky, commenting on the allocation of US aid to the Nazi regime of the Ukraine, has promised to compensate the financial costs of the United States with Ukrainian blood.

    “The US army no longer needs to fight to protect NATO countries. This is done by Ukrainians. And the civilized world only provides ammunition, and I think this is a good solution”, he said.

    Almost all Ukrainians were outraged by the statement of their leader, who denied them belonging to the “civilized world”. But it is much worse for them that their leader has publicly and officially accepted the role of the Ukrainians as expendable material for the realization of Western interests.

    It couldn’t have been any other way. All US representatives who have been in contact with the Ukrainian leadership over the past few months have clearly pointed out the need to expand the conscription of Ukrainians, including by the lowering the military age, as a prerequisite for providing assistance. And only after the law on mobilization was adopted by the Verkhovna Rada, did the American Congress authorize the allocation of aid.

    Of course, the mobilization of Ukrainians as such is not an end in itself for the United States. Zelensky has quite openly promised the Americans that after having received help and passed the long-awaited law, about 300,000 people would be caught in the Ukraine within 2 months. During the summer months, these poor devils will be trained, and in the fall, for the US elections, they will be thrown into a new offensive.

    No one has any bright hopes about the prospects for a new Ukrainian attack, but if you are not mistaken about the start time, then counterattack-2 is capable of maintaining the necessary information background for the US presidential election for at least 2-3 weeks. And there, even if the grass does not grow, the Democrats will win, and if they should lose, it won’t matter how the next military adventure in the Ukraine ends.

    But in addition to the “electoral” component, Americans have other interests. One of them is to inflict significant losses on the Russian side. After all, even if the ratio of the dead is one Russian to ten Ukrainians, the losses of the Russian Armed Forces will still be very serious, and the West will certainly try to use this circumstance to destabilize the situation inside Russia itself.

    The demographic situation on the lands that will eventually be liberated and ceded to Russia will be catastrophic — only the elderly and children will remain here, who will not be included in production processes, but will become a burden on the budget of the Russian Federation, diverting significant funds to additional social programmes.

    The liberated lands will be destroyed, burnt and poisoned as a result of the use by the Banderites of American and British ammunition with depleted uranium cores.

    Restoring normal life and the necessary infrastructure in these areas will require huge amounts of money. Washington hopes that Moscow, seeking it, will break down, or, in any case, will be forced to reconsider its foreign and some military programmes.

    So Zelensky is absolutely right in this regard, claiming that “this is a good solution” for the West.

    But for Ukrainians, this is not good at all. What is extremely unpleasant for Bankova, is that they — the Ukrainians — understand the situation perfectly well and are doing everything possible not to become cannon fodder for creating the necessary information background for the US Democratic Party.

    Since the Military Draft Boards, even if reinforced by fighters taken off the frontline, are not up to the task, Zelensky’s office is mulling the creation of specialised police units to catch “evaders”. It is assumed that they would be endowed with the broadest possible powers, which would significantly increase the “productivity” of the draft offices.

    There is no doubt that the victory will be ours, but the fate of hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians, and the territories still under the control of the Banderites, depends largely on how much their residents will be ready to resist the “good decision” of Washington and Zelensky.

    source

    ************************************************************************************************************

    This is not “sleepwalking” into a general European war that will develop into a world war, as historians are fond of describing the events of summer 1914 — and they were not sleepwalking: the British, German, Austro-Hungarian, French and Russian governments knew full-well what they were doing and the risks involved — as in 1914, this is a well thought out escalation so that the hegemon remain and Diaper Joe, with his choice of “freedom or democracy”, is re-elected

    Like

  43. The Economist

    Europe | Hard times

    Two years of war have impoverished many Ukrainians

    The elderly, the displaced and the disabled are the worst affected

    Two homeless people are surrounded by belongings on the street, during the newly imposed 35-hour curfew, amid the Russian invasion in Kyiv, Ukraine.
    photograph: eyevine

    Apr 21st 2024Share

    As soon as the volunteers appear, those that have been waiting for them on Kyiv’s central Independence Square (known as Maidan) form a queue, shuffle forward and take a warm drink and a freshly cooked meal. An elderly man tries to calm a noisy outburst from his mentally disabled adult son. The war has left millions struggling economically, but two years after the beginning of the full-scale invasion some are suffering much more than others. The hardest hit are the elderly, the disabled and the displaced.

    In 2023 Ukraine’s GDP was 72% of what it was in 2021. Millions have either lost their jobs, or had their pay cut by struggling employers. But walk around any of the big cities set back from the frontlines and today you would hardly know there was a war on. Last month a huge new bookshop opened a few minutes’ walk from where the volunteers of Sant’Egidio, a Rome-based charity, distribute their food. Shops, businesses, cafés and restaurants are packed and plenty of people are driving fancy cars.

    However, the war has tipped many into poverty, especially those who were hard-pressed before, and above all those whose homes and livelihoods have been lost. A World Bank survey last November found that 9% of Ukrainians had run out of food at some point in the previous 30 days. In March, according to the Centre for Economic Strategy, a think-tank in Kyiv, 23% were in a state of food insecurity. Some 14% were unemployed.

    Yevhen Hlibovytsky, an analyst, says some caution is needed when interpreting such data. The war has indeed caused “a lot of poverty”,  he says. But Ukrainian society is less “atomised” than its Western counterparts. Family safety-nets help to a greater extent than in the West.

    That is certainly true. But lining up for food on Maidan are the unlucky ones. Many of the pensioners there say that, far from getting help from their children, they are begging them for money. Some of those in need spend their days travelling around Kyiv picking up help from different humanitarian organisations. After food, utilities, medicines and communal housing charges they all say they have nothing left. There is a good reason for this. In 2022 inflation hit 26.6% and in 2023 it was still 5.1%. Although pensions have increased, the increments have varied and have not kept pace with inflation. Pensioners have all seen their incomes severely eroded. Average monthly pensions are the equivalent of $135.

    More than a quarter of the population, 10.5m people, are pensioners. But they are far from the only ones to have lost out, says Oksana Zholnovych, the minister for social policy. So have the 3m who receive a disability benefit. Their number has increased by 300,000 in two years, thanks to wounded soldiers, injured civilians and people who have had other issues ranging from heart attacks to war-related stress issues.

    Many of the volunteers on Maidan initially came to Sant’Egido because, having fled from fighting or Russian occupation, they needed help themselves. There are 3.7m internally displaced people (idps) in Ukraine. On her phone Natasha shows a satellite image of a ruined apartment block in the eastern city of Bakhmut, which fell to the Russians in May 2023 after almost a year of heavy fighting. “My home,” she says. In Bakhmut she was a kindergarten teacher, and her family all had their own homes. She had extra income from renting out two other properties. Now she says, her friends and family are either unemployed or work at jobs in supermarkets for which they are very overqualified. “It was a comfortable life,” she says. “Now I live off humanitarian aid.”

    Although many do get aid, their mainstay has been social security. Until March 1st some 2.5m idps received a monthly payment (of $77 for those with children or disabilities and $51 for others) , which could be topped up with other help. Anyone deemed capable of working is now ineligible to receive this idp payment, and the number of recipients is expected to drop to about 1.5m.

    In this time of war, pensions and social-security payments have a far greater significance than just cash in the bank, says Ms Zholnovych. When everyone got their money in March 2022, the first disbursement after the beginning of the full-scale invasion, it was hugely symbolic. Those payments meant then, and still mean she says, that “we are fighting, we are holding on, the state exists.” Ukraine’s allies have understood this. The budget for all of Ukraine’s social payments, except for pensions, is now being financed with their money.

    For 2024 Ukraine needs $37.3bn of external financing and there is likely to be a shortfall. That will mean cuts in social spending, and perhaps an increase in energy prices, which have not kept pace with inflation. Hlib Vyshlinsky, who heads the Centre for Economic Strategy, says he thinks that 2024 will be just about “manageable”. What worries him is how to keep going in the years to come if the war continues “and we do not have foreign support.” Grinding Ukrainians down on the front and impoverishing them behind it, so that they lose the will to fight on, is clearly part of Vladmir Putin’s plan. 

    ************************************************************************************************************

    Clearly part of Vladmir Putin’s plan!

    Mwahahahahahaha …

    Like

    1. Perhaps you should not have deliberately started a fight with a much bigger and more powerful country, when you were given every possible opportunity to back off, given it was never realistic to expect a bigger and more powerful country to just abruptly surrender to you. And having started that fight, maybe you should have abandoned it when you had a golden opportunity to do so, and an agreement had already been reached and initialed, instead of following the urging of a fat British twit who probably has never been in a real fight in his life. But now you have established yourself as Europe’s defending bulwark against Putin – and Europe wants its money’s worth.

      And while you’re moaning about your money troubles and how hard it is for the state to pony up $77.00 a month, maybe you should ask your leader for a declaration of his assets and property, and reflect on his just having scored a money drop of $60 Billion.

      Like

  44. TASS: Moldova’s top prosecutor suspects treason behind creation of Pobeda bloc

    https://tass.com/world/1779259

    Prosecutors fear that the creation of the bloc may pose risks to Moldova’s national security as they prosecute several politicians who established the bloc in Moscow, Ion Munteanu said

    CHISINAU, April 23. /TASS/. Moldova’s acting prosecutor general, Ion Munteanu, believes the Pobeda opposition bloc was established for nefarious purposes.

    “I would like to assure you that prosecutors and criminal investigators have been keeping an eye on all actions involving the presence of our politicians in Moscow and that every action will be evaluated in due time. Components of a `treason’ crime are also being considered regarding the events that we are witnessing,” the ZDG media outlet quoted Munteanu as saying.

    Prosecutors fear that the creation of the bloc may pose risks to Moldova’s national security as they prosecute several politicians who established the bloc in Moscow, Munteanu added.

    At a meeting in Moscow on April 21, members of a number of Moldovan opposition parties announced setting up the Pobeda political bloc in the lead-up to the election and a referendum on accession to the EU coming in Moldova this fall in.

    On Monday, around 100 participants in the Moscow meeting returned to Chisinau. The newly-minted bloc complained that security officers at Chisinau Airport had confiscated money from several politicians.

    ####

    Are these ‘EU Values’? Ban any opposition because you don’t agree?

    The government pressured the constipational court last year to ban the SHOR party, only for the ban to be cancelled by the Supreme Court a few months later.

    Silence from Brussels. Maia Sandu is allowed a free hand to do as she wishes.

    Then again this is the same Brussels that has consistently failed to implement a meaningful register of lobbyist, the center right parties consistently opposing and spoiling such plans.

    The same Brussels that is against Georgia’s NGO transparency laws more or less the same as the US’s 1938 FARA.

    /rant

    Like

  45. As far back as the end of 2022, prominent Indian analyst and journalist M.K. Bhadrakumar understood that Russia’s goals extend far beyond the defeat of Ukraine. As I frequently remind, what is going on in Ukraine is nothing like a ‘full-scale invasion’, and if Europe is satisfied with believing it has seen the worst Russia can dish out, it is being typically stupid and myopic. Washington would like its allies and subjects to believe it, but Russia is indeed saving a considerable proportion of its military strength because it has always known that once battle was joined, NATO would not stop until it is defeated. And this is its aim.

    https://www.indianpunchline.com/ukraine-war-tolls-death-knell-for-nato/

    Having persuaded Ukraine to sacrifice itself on the altar of western ambition, that conflict will continue until Ukraine surrenders, and that will happen only when it is incapable of fighting further and will cost hundreds of thousands more lives, perhaps including those of NATO soldiers fighting in Ukraine. It is not very likely to spill over into Europe unless Europe deliberately drives things that way – which would delight the United States – but it is growing clear that NATO intends to keep propping up Ukraine until it can fight no more, and the moment it can fight no more and is decisively defeated will mark the defeat of NATO as well, which will have thrown everything it has into trying to achieve a military victory over Russia, and will be in no shape to carry on the fight itself.

    Biden’s notion is to send Ukraine new weapons from the USA’s own stocks, and then replenish those stocks using ‘Ukraine’s money’ which it is on the point of ‘donating’, meaning shifting taxpayer funds to US arms manufacturers. But those systems take time to build, meaning Biden is going to draw American military strength down even further in order to move some to Ukraine.

    Meanwhile, Europe is a collection of big girls’ blouses led by pocket-protector-sporting nerds who think talking tough is the same as being tough.

    Like

    1. “War Correspondent Shaun Walker”, ha, ha, my soul, yes, war correspondent. That is, of course, none other than the infamous ‘Shaun the Dill”, former humble Guardian social-news chatterbox, and unless he ‘j’ined up’ since that time, has no military experience whatsoever; nor evidenced the remotest scent of a clue on military matters in any of his previous reporting. Therefore he is about as qualified to comment on matters of pivotal strategy as…well, as a real-estate lawyer such as Navalny was to comment on pivotal moments in international law or colossal shifts in the policy of international institutions, as the IMF did when it modified its guidelines to allow itself to continue ‘lending’ to Ukraine even though it was already in default of previous loans – something it had never done for any country. Well, that’s as may be, and if he will confine himself to commentary on what he actually sees and can be verified, he can call himself a greengrocer for all the difference it makes.

      As usual, anything that sounds like the Russians might be winning will be denied as ‘Russian disinformation’, likely accompanied by claims that Lutsenko has been bought off by the lying Russians. Revelation of the actual magnitude of war deaths in Ukraine will have to wait, likely, until years after it is over, because honesty now would have to incorporate understanding that NATO knew Ukraine was being decimated and its young male population systematically exterminated…and encouraged it to fight on anyway. You can forget all that bushwa about Ukraine becoming a prosperous western-leaning market democracy, because the demographic disaster brought about by continued stubborn combat long after all factors pointed to negotiation of a peace agreement will ensure Ukraine remains a beggar nation for the rest of its days. Although, of course, it will be blamed on the out-of-control rampaging orcs rather than the suave western diplomats who made it happen.

      Like

  46. Banderites are not Nazis!

    24.04.2024 08:52

    The children were playing Gestapo. Teenagers of Ukraine are being prepared for the “world of the dead”

    http://www.globallookpress.com

    Ukrainian deputies of the Rada, perhaps not so amicably (291 parliamentarians out of 450) voted in the first reading for the draft law “On the initial military training of students for armed defence”. In fact, we are talking about training young people from the new “Hitler Youth”, which the Kiev regime is preparing to throw themselves under Russian tanks. 18-year-old recruits are clearly not enough, and those who are younger will do as well. Training of teenage fighters is planned in all educational institutions of the Ukraine – starting at school.

    Vidar calls for Valknut

    In the Volyn region in Western Ukraine, a “Hitler youth” is being created — 14-year-olds are being recruited, which was announced by the Vidar GUR unit —a nationalist formation that recently appeared in the structure of the Ukrainian military intelligence headed by the infamous saboteur General Budanov. Recruits, if you can call youngsters with not-yet-dried milk on their lips, are being formed as part of the Valknut group. “At the moment, the youth recruitment group is located only in the Volyn region. The age from which you can join is 14+”, reads official Ukrainian resources.

    The territorial choice for recruiting minors not just for entertainment and combat courses, but for the structure of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine, which is the Vidar GUR unit, is quite understandable. Volyn is the most nationalistic [read: “Nazi” — ME] part of the Ukraine, where hidden Banderite members were holed up even in Soviet times. And after 1991, the OUN-UPA fighters* crawled out of the underground and first of all began to teach “young Volynyaks” how to “cut Polish and Commie throats”. In Kiev, then, such games with children’s paramilitary camps only turned a blind eye, and sometimes this “patriotism amongst young people” was openly encouraged.

    And young people from this region, having matured, actively joined the nationalist “Right Sector”*, which did not hesitate to recruit minors into its ranks. Their experience was also taken over by the leader of the Vidar GUR unit Ruslan Kaganets, who had previously held senior positions in the neo-Nazi formation.

    Paint-ball practice with Russians in mind as targets of real firearms — ME

    Sacrificial Children

    “Children for the Nazis have always been considered as beneficial soil for cultivating the seeds of their ideology, and the Ukraine is no exception”, historian and political scientist Alexander Zimovsky told aif.ru. “Those who in 1991 were more than 18 years old, the Ukrainian nationalists did not take into account: they were just a hunk of meat that had been sliced off and noy suitable for ideologically remoulding and are now part of that very “meat” of 50+ folk who have been mobilized and are being thrown without pity into the assaults. But the “Yunaki” [“Jugend” – “youth”, as in “Hitlerjugend” — ME] was the putty from which you can mould anything.

    “The ‘Children of Maidan’ are now in their late twenties, and these form the basis of the nationalist stratum in the Armed Forces of the Ukraine. Now, with an eye to the future, 14-year-olds are being taught how to bear arms. They can be planted under a bush with a grenade launcher in a year or two, and after four years of powerful ideological impregnation, they will no longer be cubs, but young zealous wolves, ready to tear everyone up on the orders of their leaders”.

    Why, in fact, “Valknut”? In the Ukraine, for some reason, they generally glorify and use Norse mythology. Hence the name of the GUR unit “Vidar” – the god of vengeance and silence. And “Valknut” is three intertwined triangles, denoting the interweaving of three worlds — the world of gods, the world of people and the world of the dead. Such a sign was found at places of sacrifice and execution and symbolized the transition of the human soul from the world of the living to the world of the dead. That is, such a concept is preparation for the “afterlife”. It is unlikely that the meaning of the “Valknut” symbol is explained to Ukrainian teenagers – they will be sent to the world of the dead without any special mythological refinements.

    Like

  47. Bastard!

     24 April, 2024, 09: 47

    Russian Deputy Defence Minister sent to prison

    Investigators have accused Deputy Head of the Ministry of Defence Ivanov of taking a bribe: he was sent to a pre-trial detention centre

    Courts of general jurisdiction of the City of Moscow

    The Basmanny District Court of Moscow has arrested Russian Deputy Defence Minister Timur Ivanov as part of a criminal case on accepting bribes — until June 23, 2024. This is reported in the official Telegram channel of the courts of general jurisdiction of the capital.

    According to investigators, the defendant was charged with committing a crime under Part 6 of Article 290 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (“Receiving a bribe on a particularly large scale”). As Deputy Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation, Ivanov oversaw the construction and overhaul of defense facilities.

    The investigation believes that Ivanov conspired with third parties to receive a large bribe in the form of providing property-related services during contract and subcontracting work for the needs of the Ministry of Defence.

    Also, a preventive measure was chosen for Sergei Borodin. He is under arrest until June 23. He, like Ivanov, was charged with committing a crime under Part 6 of Article 290 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation.

    According to investigators, Borodin is on friendly terms with Ivanov. The man helped the Deputy Defense Minister commit a crime.

    Earlier, the Izvestia newspaper reported that several other people were detained along with Deputy Defense Minister Ivanov.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    Shady deals with MOD property eh? That’s what that other Minister of Defence crook and former St.Petersburg furniture director was up to. He blamed it on his floozy who worked in the MoD Properties Dept. She had a luxurious flat on the most expensive street in Moscow. Her town house was full of objets d’art that she had amassed: it was like a bloody magpie’s nest inside. She did time, and her paramour got off scot-free.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    6 hours ago

    TASS: Deputy Defense Minister Ivanov case has long been in “development”

    Vedomosti

    The case concerning Russian Deputy Defence Minister Timur Ivanov, who was detained last night on suspicion of accepting a bribe, had long been in the operational development. This is reported by TASS with reference to a source in law enforcement agencies.

    “It wasn’t put into operational development yesterday, the day before yesterday, or even a month ago. The materials are based, amongst other things, on witness statements and the results of operational measures”, the source said.

    He clarified that the operational support of the Ivanov case is being conducted by the FSB military counterintelligence service. Kommersant previously reported that he could be placed under arrest as early as 24 April.

    UK announced the detention of Deputy Defense Minister of Russia Ivanov

    Society

    Timur Ivanov was detained on April 23 on suspicion of accepting a bribe (Part 6 of Article 290 of the Criminal Code), the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation reported. The department clarified that investigative actions are being carried out with him. Ivanov faces up to 15 years in prison. On the same evening, the Kremlin reported that the deputy minister’s detention had been reported to President Vladimir Putin. Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu was also notified in advance.

    Ivanov was born in Moscow in 1975. He graduated from the Faculty of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics of Moscow State University. From 1999 to 2012, he worked at enterprises of the fuel and energy complex. Since 2012, he has been Deputy Prime Minister of the Moscow Region. In 2013-2016. Ivanov worked as the General Director of Oboronstroy JSC.

    He was appointed Deputy Defence Minister in 2016. Ivanov was responsible for the construction complex of the Ministry of Defence and the construction of buildings, structures for troops, the construction of fortifications and the restoration of new regions, as well as for the medical support of the Russian Armed Forces.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    Surely he should be shot? This is an “authoritative regime”, is it not?

    Like

    1. The Navalnyites in exile are leaping up and joy about this because they claim that the now beatified bullshitter put his finger on Ivanov a while back. More than likely his MI6 controller and British citizen Pevchikh fed the “Leader of the Opposition” with info relayed from London about Ivanov. The targets of the “Fund for the Struggle Against Corruption” were very much focused.

      Russia’s deputy defense minister arrested on bribery charges

      Opposition activists had exposed Timur Ivanov’s vast wealth, including yachts, luxury goods and holidays in France.

      RUSSIA-DEFENCE-CORRUPTION
      Deputy Defense Minister Timur Ivanov was arrested by the security service. | Pool photo by Alexey Nikolskiy via AFP/Getty Images

      APRIL 24, 2024 9:47 AM CET

      BY GABRIEL GAVIN

      One of Russia’s most senior defense officials has been detained as part of a corruption probe, with prosecutors alleging he diverted funds from the military to pay for his lavish lifestyle.

      Deputy Defense Minister Timur Ivanov was arrested by the security services and appeared before a court in Moscow on Wednesday morning, making him the most senior official to be jailed since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

      Investigators allege the 48-year-old was part of a “criminal conspiracy” that saw him take kickbacks “on an especially large scale” as part of his role overseeing military construction projects. He faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted.

      A Russian law enforcement official told state newswire TASS that Ivanov is suspected of taking bribes and that the case was based “on eyewitness testimony and the results of operational activity.”

      Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu, who has been sidelined amid criticism of his handling of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, had been warned his deputy would be arrested in advance. Ivanov had reportedly attended meetings with Shoigu and other military officials the day prior to his detention.

      Meanwhile, local news outlets allege Ivanov — who is believed to have been in charge of construction in the leveled, Russian-occupied Ukrainian city of Mariupol — had amassed an opulent real estate empire of his own.

      A 2022 investigation by allies of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died in an Arctic prison in February, alleged the defense official had funneled millions of dollars to his wife, who is said to have spent the cash on luxury yachts, jewellery and shopping in Paris.

      On news of Ivanov’s arrest, Maria Pevchikh, the chair of the Anti-Corruption Fund that Navalny founded, wrote on social media that “today is a good day.”

      Today is a good day! )

      Team Navalny

      A person involved in our investigation has been arrested on suspicion of bribery.

      We spoke about the glamorous and luxurious life of Deputy Defence Minister Timur Ivanov way back at the end of 2022. So now it’s no longer just a suspicion — it has been clearly confirmed.

      Take a look . . .

      [photo montage]

      War and Peace. The glamorous life of Shoigu’s deputy.

      ************************************************************************************************************

      “So now it’s no longer just a suspicion — it has been clearly confirmed”, writes Pevchikh.

      Fucking idiot!

      It has not been clearly confirmed: he has been arrested on suspicion of bribery. You wrote that at the beginning of your Tweet, you stupid MI6 cnut!

      Like

      1. Any possibility that Pevchikh might soon have to shut up quickly once she finds out Russian law enforcement authorities are on her trail, on suspicions that Team Navalny might have been involved in bribing Ivanov? If Pevchikh and Company know so much about how much the deputy Defense Minister had been taking in bribes, and what he and his wife had been spending the money on, might that not be because Pevchikh and Co. had been in on the plot from the beginning?

        Like

      2. There is actually a good probability there is something to what she says, as – sadly – military construction is a field that is tailor-made for graft and corruption, with large sums regularly disbursed based almost entirely on trust, and abundant opportunity for skimming. Similarly, the prosecutorial process is seldom used in Russia for a fishing expedition, to see if something will shake loose, the way it is in the USA, and usually if it gets as far as arrest they are pretty confident they can make it stick. Russian oversight frequently does look pretty slack in retrospect – as it does in many countries, to be sure – when the blatant illegal acts of the accused are uncovered. I remember Serdyukov, and how in-your-face his corrupt activities were, he all but wore a T-Shirt proclaiming, “I’m A Crook – What Are You Going To Do about It? ” and still his activities went apparently unnoticed for a considerable time. Triumphant recounting of his conviction – although he wasn’t punished – mostly did not mention it was an oblique blow to the west as well; Serdyukov was contemptuous of Russian military designs, and a strong advocate of buying western kit. Had they continued to listen to him, Russia would be fucked for spare parts now.

        All that said, ‘Team Navalny’s’ ‘investigations’ usually consisted of nothing more than smirking that everyone in the Russian military and government was corrupt., and then screaming in exultation, “SEE???WE TOLD YOU!!!!” when someone was caught by a real investigation. If the Russian investigative services applied themselves to diligent investigation on every accusation by ‘Team Navalny’ and its MI6 feeder, it would have time for nothing else day and night and it would still not likely yield many more convictions. That, ‘Team Navalny’ would confide smugly, is because they are all corrupt.

        Like

        1. Ivanov’s opportunity to make a major killing in MoD property and construction came with the project to rebuild Mariupol, situated in “occupied Ukraine”, as Navalny’s former MI6 controller writes.

          Like

    2. About the situation . . .

      April 24, 20: 03

      About Timur Ivanov. And why I have a very negative attitude towards him.

      We’re rolling in it, you sad, stupid fuckers! — ME

      His wife (officially his former wife: they had a fictitious divorce in June 2022 because of the sanctions) [She has dual Russian-Israeli citizenship – what a fucking surprise! — ME] went partying in the winter of 2022/2023 in Courchevel and in the company of Meladze, who at the same time had uttered shouts of “Glory to the Ukraine”. [Meladze: a once popular in Russia Georgian singer, a “Meritorious Artist of Russia”, who achieved notoriety for shouting the Banderite slogan at the request of Banderite vacationers when he was performing at concerts in some Arab state, I forget now which —ME]

      For me, this is a betrayal of the Motherland, both on the part of a certain Ivanov with the name Timur [which is far more a common given name in Banderastan than it is in Russia — ME], and on the part of his shallow wife.

      I’m not talking about patriotism, which is an absolutely empty phrase for such persons: I’m talking about the banal presence of brains and of at least some, not even elementary, basic decency.

      Just imagine what would have happened if, in the winter of 1941/1942, Marshal Tymoshenko and his wife had gone on vacation to Spain, or even worse, at the same period of time, they had gone on vacation to the Italy of Mussolini.

      Stalin would have have immediately ground Tymoshenko into dust — and his wife. The marshal would have at best been demoted to a lieutenant (okay then . . . maybe to a colonel, but no higher), and would have been dispatched to the front, to the firing line, whereas we have put up with this corruption business for 2 or more years

      P.S. Thank God Marshal Tymoshenko and his wife were not like this Timur Ivanov and his “former” wife.

      Tymoshenko is mentioned only in the context that this could not have happened under Stalin.

      And Tymoshenko was definitely not like that.

      But under Putin, for some reason, such a situation has taken place.

      Why?

      Because Putin is weak?

      Like

      1. What vulgarity!

        The allegedly corrupt Deputy Head of the Ministry of Defence and his former wife, who is letting it all hang out.

        Like

        1. More dirt on the Ivanovs …

          It was he [Ivanov] who was engaged in the restoration of Mariupol, as well as the construction of multifunctional medical centres under the auspices of the Ministry of Defence during the covid-19 pandemic.

          I remember that a lot of state funds were stolen that year. The former deputy head of the Ministry of Emergency Situations Andrey Gurovich went to prison just for this reason.

          In short, for many years Ivanov managed the most “tasty” piece of the Russian defence industry. I wonder whether he had the conscience to hold back and not take a bite?

          This is still difficult to judge, but here’s a curious fact: in 2019, according to Forbes magazine, Timur Ivanov was included in the list of the richest security officials in Russia. The publication reported that the income of the family of Deputy Shoigu in 2018 amounted to 136.7 million rubles. This is just official data.

          Not a wife— gold!

          Question: where does such money come from in a defence industry worker’s family? Maybe the source of income is Ivanov’s wife, Svetlana? She is also a businesswoman, socialite and owner of the Metropol Fashion Group.

          While the whole country is discussing a serious shell famine of the enemy, the allocation of funds by the United States for Ukraine and a possible large-scale offensive by Russian troops, a global sweep has begun in the rear.-3

          Svetlana and Timur Ivanov

          We should tell you a little more about this person.

          So, the second official wife of Timur Ivanov is Svetlana Ivanova — Maniovich by her first marriage. Svetlana’s first husband once told Russian journalists a curious story.

          It turns out that as soon as Maniovich learnt that his former second half planned to marry Ivanov, he tried to dissuade the chief builder of the Ministry of Defence from such a rash act. His main argument was:

          “You can’t afford her. She requires at least $50,000 a month for her upkeep”.

          While the whole country is discussing a serious shell famine of the enemy, the allocation of funds by the United States for Ukraine and a possible large-scale offensive by Russian troops, a global sweep has begun in the rear.-4

          Svetlana and Timur Ivanov

          But Ivanov still put an engagement ring on Svetlana’s finger, and apparently, the new wife and her demands turned out to be quite a feasible burden for the defence worker.

          This is evidenced by numerous checks and invoices that are publicly available.

          So, for example, every year the Ivanov family spent a whole summer month relaxing from worldly affairs on the Cote d’Azur in a huge rented villa. The couple spent about 120 thousand euros on renting a chateau with numerous bedrooms, bathrooms, swimming pools and so on. Plus, for 90 thousand euros was worth renting a luxury yacht, and even renting luxury real estate.

          On the occasion of birthdays and “just for fun”, the Ivanovs regularly threw parties costing at least 11,000 euros a night. To this must be added a long list of all sorts of expensive brand-name clothes and accessories, which Svetlana bought up by the truckload.

          While the whole country is discussing a serious shell famine of the enemy, the allocation of funds by the United States for Ukraine and a possible large-scale offensive by Russian troops, a global sweep has begun in the rear. -5

          Svetlana Ivanova and another shopping trip

          The Readovka publication found out that before the start of her career, Ivanova’s wife quite often went on vacation to European countries, has Israeli citizenship, and her children from her first husband have been living abroad for a long time. Interestingly, after 24 February, 2022, the wife of the Deputy Defene Minister of the Russian Federation did not change her habits and even did not fall under sanctions. How? Easy!

          In the summer of 2022, the couple divorced, but only formally. Thanks to this timely step, Svetlana still freely and often stays in the countries of the alliance under the wing of Western special services. [Because she has an Israeli passport — ME]

          Is someone undermining someone?

          But no matter how much one twists and turns, sooner or later the law enforcers will come with handcuffs. The publication iz.ru reported on Ivanov’s arrest, citing its sources, that:

          “The investigative actions are very likely related to the implementation of construction contracts of the Ministry of Defence. Simultaneously with Ivanov several other people involved in the transfer of money were detained, a complex chain of intermediaries was operating. … All his personal, family and business ties, including the business of his family members, will now be checked”.

          While the whole country is discussing a serious shell famine of the enemy, the allocation of funds by the United States for Ukraine and a possible large-scale offensive by Russian troops, a global sweep has begun in the rear.-6

          Timur Ivanov in the courtroom

          Will there also be a possible arrest of Ivanov’s former wife? So far, she is not amongst those detained, except for Shoigu’s deputy and at least three other people.

          Military expert Yuri Podolyaka on his page in social networks reported that Timur Ivanov, caught taking a bribe, was guarded by a special elite squad, which was always ready to open fire to kill. With his bodyguards, Ivanov went everywhere, except for one place: the office of the country’s top leadership.

          At the moment, the main builder of the defence department is located in Lefortovo [prison]. There’s also a different security detail. Under the incriminated article, Ivanov faces up to 15 years in prison. However, he does not admit his guilt.

          Another thing is interesting: why did the security forces decide to pay attention to Ivanov right now?

          There are many versions.

          The main one is connected with Sergei Shoigu, or rather with the upcoming resignation of the Cabinet of Ministers. Someone who was aiming for the chair of the head of the Defence Ministry began to dig under the current minister, and Ivanov was the first “victim” of the war for the ministerial throne.

          “It is impossible not to note that the detention of the Deputy Defence Minister on suspicion of taking a bribe occurred just a few days before the presidential inauguration and the planned resignation of the Russian government. If this is the case, the detention of Timur Ivanov may cast doubt on the prospects of continuing the work of his leader”, commented Andrey Perla, a political commentator for Tsargrad.

          At the same time, there are rumours in the offices of the ministry about the involvement of Ivanov’s wife in the incident, or rather her connections with Western special services. But this is just speculation. As well as the fact that Deputy Shoigu was caught on a bribe completely by accident.

          While the whole country is discussing a serious shell famine of the enemy, the allocation of funds by the United States for Ukraine and a possible large-scale offensive by Russian troops, a global sweep has begun in the rear.-8

          Timur Ivanov

          Or, maybe, in our country, someone is finally interested in the question: where does the huge amount of money allocated by the budget for the defence department go? And Ivanov’s arrest is a signal to other fans of putting some of this money into their pockets that the “games” are over. From now on, considering the conducting the SMO and increasing pressure from the West, no one will any longer turn a blind eye to this.

          Like

  48. To the firing squad with them!

    They did that in 1983 to Yuri Sokolov, the director of Soviet Grocery Store No.1 at the top of the then Gorky Street. He’d been thieving for years and then they got him after Brezhnev had croaked. Sokolov was shot and four of his associates got long prison sentences. The harsh punishments were viewed as a strong signal that Andropov, the then new Soviet leader, intended to pursue a crackdown on corruption in high places. Tass said that the Supreme Court of the Russian republic sentenced Sokolov to death and confiscated his property for ”systematic involvement in bribe-taking through misuse of his position and the commission of various illegal machinations with food products”.

    source

    24 Apr, 09: 52 

    A second person involved in the bribery case of Deputy Defence Minister Ivanov has becme known

    A second person involved in the case of bribery of the Deputy Defense Minister was Sergei Borodin

    Russian Deputy Defence Minister Sergei Borodin, a second person involved in a bribe-taking case, has put on remand a second person involved in the bribe-taking case of taking a bribe, Russian Deputy been sent to to a pre-trial detention centre by a Moscow court. The accused man had previously held the post of Deputy Head of the Quartering Department of the Ministry of Defence and pleaded guilty to the embezzlement of land.

    Sergey Borodin

    Sergey Borodin (Photo: Press service of the Basmanny District Court )

    The second person involved in the case of receiving a bribe by Russian Deputy Defense Minister Timur Ivanov was Sergei Borodin, who was also detained on remand until 23 June, the press service of the Basmanny District Court of Moscow has reported.

    Sergei Borodin had previously served as Deputy Head of the Defence Ministry quartering department. In June 2022, he was detained on suspicion of stealing defence and security land in Moscow and the Moscow region, and in November he was put under house arrest. According to Kommersant, the colonel admitted his guilt and agreed to cooperate with the investigation, including telling about other crimes not related to this criminal case. The investigation was under the control of the Chairman of the Investigative Committee Alexander Bastrykin.

    Borodin, as well as Ivanov, have been charged with committing a crime under Part 6 of Article 290 of the Criminal Code (receiving a bribe on a particularly large scale). The maximum penalty under this article is provided in the form of imprisonment for up to 15 years.

    Borodin had friendly relations with Ivanov, they received bribes, providing services “of a property nature when carrying out contract and subcontracting work for the needs of the Ministry of Defence”, investigators say.

    The Basmanny Court has placed Ivanov under remand until 23 June. He was detained the day before, on 23 April. According to a TASS source, the Deputy Head of the Russian Defence Ministry had been under observation for a long time, and the materials of the criminal case are based on the results of this work and the testimony of witnesses. The source specified that the FSB military counterintelligence service had been involved in supporting the investigation. According to an Izvestia source, several people suspected of participating in the transfer of money through a “complex chain of intermediaries”were detained as part of this case. Russian President’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov said that Head of State Vladimir Putin and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu knew about Ivanov’s detention in advance.

    Ivanov had held the position of Deputy Minister of Defence since 2016; he organized property management, was involved in planning the purchase of goods under state defense orders, and issues of construction, reconstruction and overhaul of facilities for the needs of the department. Before that, he headed Oboronstroy, the Main Directorate for the Arrangement of Troops and the Federal State Budgetary Institution Russian Energy Agency; he was Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Moscow Region headed by Andrei Sharov, advisor to the Minister of Energy of Russia, Vice President of Atomstroyexport, and also worked in the fuel and energy industry complex. The official has the title of Hero of the LPR and Honored Builder of Russia, and was also awarded the Order of Merit for the Fatherland, IIIrd and IVrth degrees, and a medal of the Order of Merit for the Fatherland, Ist degree.

    In 2019, Ivanov was ranked by Fobes as one amongst the richest security officials in the country. According to the results of 2018, the income of his family amounted to 136.7 million rubles, that of the deputy minister himself -13.6 million rubles. Later information about the income of the deputy Defence ministers was not disclosed due to the relevant law.

    Like

    1. The mass media write about the family of the detained Deputy Defense Minister Ivanov

      Ivanov’s second wife, Svetlana Alexandrovna, is an entrepreneur and owner of the “Metropol Fashion Group”. She did not fall under EU sanctions, as she fictitiously divorced Timur Ivanov in June 2022.

      Svetlana in 2018 became one of the richest women amongst the wives of Defence Ministry officials. She is the owner of several plots of land with a total area of 10.2 thousand square metres and an apartment of 317 square metres. m. In addition, the deputy Minister’s wife has three premium cars-a Bentley Continental, an Aston Martin and a Hummer H2, as well as a Harley-Davidson motorcycle. In addition, she has Israeli citizenship, and her children from her first marriage have left Russia — a few days before the start of mobilization, Mikhail went to England to study, and his sister lives in France.

      The case is being handled by the FSB military counterintelligence service.

      [And nobody, apart from the now deceased “Leader of the Opposition”, in the upper echelons of the Russian government, not to mention members of the legislature, had noticed the amassment of wealth by these two verminous people? — ME]

      …………………………

      There are some oddities in this case… It was announced that the deputy minister was detained on suspicion of taking a bribe of 1 million rubles. A million rubles is certainly a rather large amount. Especially in the eyes of ordinary people. Only that’s exactly what it is for ordinary people. But the Deputy Defence Minister would hardly have been so impressed by such a sum. Risk your shoulder straps, your career, and everything for “some lousy million dollars”?.. Yes, there are probably financial “violations” (let’s call them that). Because we don’t have any proof of this, it is up to the investigation and the court to find them and prove that they were there…

      And the FSB reports that it has been collecting material on the deputy minister for five years. So this material is already available. Otherwise, a person in such a high position would not have been detained.

      [For 5 years!!! — ME]

      The arrest was carried out by the FSB counterintelligence service… But does the FSB detain on corruption cases?! [Recall, the FSB deals with internal security — ME]

      And why was the deputy minister in a military uniform in the Basmanny court hall?! Why wasn’t he “recommended” to change into civilian clothes?!

      [I know why: I read from another source that his counsel for the defence is trying to get him tried by a military court. But he is legally a civilian. He is only allowed to wear a military uniform because he works at the MoD — ME]

      …………………..

      The case promises to bea resonant one …I think that there will still be accomplices.

      [Damn right there will be! All having had their filthy snouts and trotters in the trough — ME]

      And yes, I think that soon there will be a number of very high-profile resignations and new “high-profile corruption” cases will appear…

      [The cleaning of the Augean Stables before the formation of a new government following the swearing-in of Putin for his new presidential term. and this cleansing will include, I am sure, the removal of Shoigu, as he cannot possibly have been unaware of his deputy’s illegal activities. A few years ago, not long after Shoigu had become MoD, there was much comment of his having had built just outside of the city limits a luxurious, Asiatic-style palatial residence — ME]

      It is possible that before and immediately after the inauguration of Russian President Vladimir Putin, which is scheduled for 7 May 7…

      A “purge” is coming…

      [The cleaning of the Augean Stables before the formation of a new government following the swearing-in of Putin for his new presidential term is nigh. and this cleansing will include, I am sure, the removal of Shoigu, as he cannot possibly have been unaware of his deputy’s illegal activities. A few years ago, not long after Shoigu had become MoD, there was much comment of his having had built just outside of the city limits a luxurious, Asiatic-style palatial residence — ME]

      Chez Shoigu . . . a snip at $24 million — ME

      On the other hand, a previous corrupt Minister of Defence got off scot-free as a result of his pleading ignorance of the fact as regards similar corrupt MoD property deals by saying it was his departmental shag who had been responsible for taking bribes and illegally selling off MoD property. She accumulated in her luxurious central Moscow flat objets d’art, yet her lover-boy minister never queried how she had the means to purchase them. And he knew of them because he used to spend a lot of time when not at work at his floozy’s pad.

      Like

      1. Timur Ivanov, 47, and his glamorous shopaholic wife Svetlana own a huge mansion along with two Rolls Royces and she once went on a £1.1 million spending spree, it’s claimed.

        Timur Ivanov and his wife Svetlana
        Timur Ivanov and his wife Svetlana
        The couple own this enormous mansion by the Volga river
        The couple own this enormous mansion by the Volga river
        While holiday in France they rented this yacht
        While holiday in France they rented this yacht
        Svetlana behind the wheel of the one of the couple's two Rolls Royces
        Svetlana behind the wheel of the one of the couple’s two Rolls Royces
        Ivanov is alleged to have made millions from government contracts
        Ivanov is alleged to have made millions from government contractsCredit: Navalny
        Svetlana blew at least £7,000 on a Paris shopping trip
        ALL THIS WAS WELL KNOWN!Svetlana blew at least £7,000 on a Paris shopping trip

        ALL THIS WAS WELL KNOWN AGES AGO!

        THE ABOVE PHOTOS WERE PUBLISHED IN A UK RAG ARTICLE IN JANUARY 2023!

        Obscene wealth of Putin’s millionaire war boss with two Rolls Royces & shopaholic wife who blew £1m in spending spree

        • Published: 7:43, 14 Jan 2023
        • Updated: 7:43, 14 Jan 2023

        Like

        1. Not “Putin’s War Boss” of course.

          That’s Sun sensationalist shite.

          He was Deputy Head of the Russian Ministry of Defence.

          He was in charge of military construction and property.

          Of course, the Sun says that the wealth he illegally amassed was “blood money”, the blood being that of poor, dear, sweet Banderites, all civilians, women and children and babes in arms of course.

          The Sun quotes data given them by Pevchikh’s “Fund for the Struggle Against Corruption”, which she runs for MI6.

          I’m sure Navalny was shagging her. She was the only person in the room where he allegedly, according to Pevchikh, drank Mickey Finned with Novichok mineral water. She was next to him when he threw a wobbler on his flight back to Moscow. By that time, Pevchikh said her lover-boy’s underkeks had been spiked with Novichok. (Jesus Christ! You couldn’t make all this up, could you?) She was with him wjen he was in a medically enforced coma, as he was flown by a German medical flight to Berlin.

          The Statuesque Blonde was also with the Bullshitter when he was allegedly poisoned by Novichok when campaigning amongst his Siberian hamsters: not with him in his room, not constantly by his side, as was his MI6 minder and shag Pevchikh.

          Interestingly, when Pevchikh announced cock-a-hoop on “X “the other day that Ivanov had been arrested, her rapture was criticized by some Navalnyite commenters, whose logic runs thus: it was better that the corrupt MoD Deputy Head remain in office, since his corruption would lead to the destruction of the Orc army (the fools think Ivanov is in the military, albeit he has a fondness for posing in military uniform) and the downfall of the Tyrant and the fragmentation of Russia.

          Russian “opposition”!

          They only have one thing in mind — perdition to Russia and all things Russian, so much are they are enamoured by the degenerate, filthy West.

          Like

        2. Everything — I mean EVERYTHING! — should be forfeited by them: their Rolls Royces, their Bentley etc., their palace by the Volga, their luxurious Moscow apartments, her diamonds, his watches. EVERYTHING! Everything up for auction! Everything bought by them with money accepted as a bribe.

          Like

  49. I always wonder how stupid the u-Ropean Commission is and it never fails to deliver the goods as is the case with this latest fishing expedition in an erection year.

    Poitico: EU to China: Open your public markets or we’ll close ours

    https://www.politico.eu/article/european-commission-china-medical-devices-probe-trade-markets/

    The European Commission has launched a probe into how Beijing grants public contracts for medical devices.

    …Just like the electric vehicle investigation announced by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in September, the investigation was launched on the Commission’s own initiative — and not in response to an official complaint from the industry.

    This makes the investigation a political choice by the EU executive, and risks retaliation from Beijing…

    ####

    Go on, ban Chinese medical devices. I’m sure American companies will be willing to sell theirs and a much higher price. Not that anyone invovled in these decision will be affected, ‘only’ ordinary citizens of the EU.

    If there are concerns by u-Ropean industry, then they should be open about it and the Comission follows with a probe. That’s the normal way of doing things.

    I think part of the problem is that in some minds they still belive that China is only capable of producing cheap, low quality stuff. It may have been true a long time ago (like the rubbish that easily broke from Taiwan during the 1980s and early 1990s), but no longer.

    China has an industrial policy. We don’t, because it is not sexy and all about Magic Money™ financial services and making share price the main goal. Others have been actually making good value stuff that people want to buy.

    Like

  50. From the Canadian Ukrainian-Nazi forum 5 years ago:

    Our Canada

    Russians, learn Ukrainian – soon you will have to go there to earn money.

    15 Jan. 15, 2019

    They’ve been going there for three years now, but there is a nuance.

    Like

  51. As a guest of Gordon

    Gordon’s daughter Alisa

    “I want Putin to die.”

    As a guest of Gordon

    Alisa Gordon

    “Russia is shit, Putin is shit. I would kill him.”

    Like

  52. FFS! The powers-that-be are making sure that Ivanov doesn’t do a Navalny on them:

    07: 11, 25 April 2024

    Law enforcement agencies have revealed morale of the Deputy Defence Minister in remand jail

    PMC: Ivanov’s condition estimated as stable: on 25 April he sees a psychologist

    Damir Enaev, a member of the Public Monitoring Commission (PMC) of Moscow, spoke about the condition of the arrested Deputy Defence Minister Timur Ivanov. His words are quoted by RIA Novosti.

    Enav said that Ivanov had already been visited by a doctor. The deputy Minister clarified that he has no chronic diseases. On Thursday, April 25, he will undergo tests, and also go to a psychologist.

    “He assesses state of his moral as stable and he is holding his own”, he noted.

    [Oh the poor dear! Being held on remand is not the same as being a convicted prisoner. The only problem for filth such as is Ivanov is that whilst being held on remand in a remand prison — Russian acronym: SIZO — he can’t fuck off out of Russia, to Israel, for example, to be with his beloved crook of an Israeli wife — ME]

    Earlier, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu had ordered that his Deputy Head Ivanov be removed from his MOD post. There has been no official statement from the ministry yet.

    Ivanov was detained by law enforcement officers on the evening of 23 April at his workplace. He was charged under Article 290 (“Receiving a bribe on an especially large scale”) of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    In fact, according to a source that I read yesterday, Shoigu had been informed that Ivanov was going to be arrested and he even had a meeting on 22 April with Ivanov present, fully aware that his deputy was going to have his collar felt the next day.

    Et tu, Brute!

    The long knives are out, it seems.

    I do hope so!

    Like

  53. 25 April 25, 2024, 04: 20

    Court has seized Ivanov’s assets and accounts

    TASS: court has seized the assets and accounts of Ivanov and his family

    A court in Moscow has imposed interim measures on the assets, bank accounts and real estate of Russian Deputy Defence Minister Timur Ivanov and his relatives. This is reported by TASS with reference to law enforcement agencies.

    “Everything that is registered to him and his wife, as well as to his former wives and five children, including foster children, all this property has already been seized”, the source said. [Great! Let the bastards beg for bread on the streets — ME] He noted that this measure is of an interim nature in case the guilt of the high-ranking officer is proved.

    On the previous day, the Basmanny Court of Moscow sent Deputy Defence Minister Timur Ivanov to a detention centre, on suspicion of his receiving a particularly large bribe. According to investigators, he has conspired to obtain illegal remuneration for assistance (“rendering property-related services”) in contracting and subcontracting works for the Ministry of Defence. Read more about this in the article “Gazeta.Ru». [“The bribe could have been for providing land for construction, tenders and other services, for which officials are most often caught”, suggested Maxim Kalinov, a criminal lawyer and member of the International Association of Russian-Speaking Lawyers.]

    The investigative authorities estimated the bribe takenby Ivanov was 1 billion rubles. [$10,830,000.00]

    Earlier it became known that Shoigu had dismissed Ivanov from the post of deputy Defence minister.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    I’m sure that earlier reports stated that Ivanov had accepted a bribe of 1 million rubles ($10, 000), which many rightly stated was but chicken feed for the likes of such bastards as Ivanov apparently is. But now the bribe is stated as having been 1 billion rubles, which is more like it and which would allow Ivanov and his former wife to live in the manner to which they consider themselves born.

    Why arse round with them?

    Shoot them!

    This is an authoritative state, is not?

    Have them shot and the message will be well and truly received by those to whom such an example must be set.

    Like

  54. By the way, at long last the tedious, Byzantine Russian bureaucracy has finally completed my registration as a foreign citizen with the permanent right to live in Russia. I started the bureaucratic ball rolling as regards this matter on 3 November last year, but only received my new, limitless (it never need have its validity extended every 5 years as did the old permits), but then I had to register my place of residence here.

    I do not own the property where I have been registered as living in the course of these past 27 years: my “landlady” is my wife. My wife legally owns every thing. I own bugger all here — I just pay for it. So 6 weeks ago, Mrs. Exile had to get a copy of her registration of ownership — “title deeds” in the UK — and fill in loads of bloody forms.

    She did all this in my presence at a place run by an organization known as GOSYSLYGRU [another bloody Russian acronym! — State Services Russia]. Anyway, I finally got my permit the day before yesterday. I can now stay here, come and go, cross the border and return, no visas required: I am a Russian citizen now in all but name.

    I have noticed of late, however, that a crackdown is approaching on the presence of “illegals” here, and this action has speeded up since the Crocus Massacre.

    In order to get a work permit, a residency permit temporary or full, you have to pass tests on your competence in the Russian language. It was revealed the other week that there is a thriving black market in falsified immigration documents, and clearly, this is revealed when “legal” immigrants cannot speak Russian.

    It is now more than 30 years since the”Stan” Republics became independent and Russian learning in those states was no longer compulsory. So an “illegal” is easily spotted. All the Tajiks who work here at Taganka are legal: they wear working clothes with “Moscow City Cleansing Dept.” etc on the back of their work jackets, and though they talk with one another in Tajik, they all speak Russian.

    But now illegals who cannot speak Russian are “colonizing” Russian cities, including Mariupol, “Occupied Mariupol” as MI6 agent Pevchikh would say:

    00: 56, 25 April 2024

    “They live by their own laws and regulations.” In the State Duma they have been told about complaints of residents of Mariupol about migrants taking over the place

    Head of the “Fair Russia – Patriots – For Truth” party Mironov: residents of Mariupol are complaining about migrants who have flooded the city

    State Duma deputy and head of the “Fair Russia -Patriots-For Truth” (SRWP) party Sergey Mironov has said that residents of Mariupol are complaining about immigrants who have flooded the city and who are living according to their own rules.

    The Duma delegate said that a similar situation is observed in other localities that have come under the control of Russia. He added that for centuries the city had a population that was composed of representatives of different ethnic groups, including Russians, Greeks, Ukrainians, Armenians, Jews and Italians, which had given the region its unique features.

    And then, in a few months, the city was flooded with visitors from Central Asia, who live according to their own laws and regulations.

    — Sergey Mironov.

    Mironov has put the responsibility for what is happening on the Ministry of Construction of Russia

    Mironov assigned responsibility for the arrival of migrants to the Ministry of Construction of Russia. He believes that the city’s developers are “replicating their favourite “business model”, which is based on the exploitation of guest workers”.

    Questions need to be asked of Ministry of Construction and the ministry-controlled company “United Customer”, with the connivance of which such outrages occur

    — Sergey Mironov, leader of the SRWP faction

    According to the politician, newcomers are settled in non-saleable apartments in already built houses as payment for their labour. The deputy called on the Prosecutor General’s Office to check the legality of migrants’ residence in Mariupol and promised that the SRWP would prepare appropriate requests.

    In early April, the Federal Security Service (FSB) of Russia conducted a raid to identify illegal immigrants in Mariupol.

    20 migrants were brought to administrative responsibility under Part 1 of Article 18.8 and Part 1.1 of Article 18.8 of the Administrative Code of the Russian Federation (“Non-compliance by a foreign citizen with the rules of entry to the territory of Russia or the mode of residence”), eight of whom were then expelled from Russia.

    — Federal Security Service of Russia for the DPR

    The FSB Department for the Donetsk People’s Republic stressed that filtration and verification activities in the DPR are continuing.

    In late February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that it is necessary to ensure that migrants observe the laws and traditions of Russia, as well as learn the language. He called it a good idea to be guided when accepting people who want to live in the Russian Federation. In addition, Putin instructed the Prosecutor General’s Office to tighten anti-criminal measures, including in the field of migration.

    A few days ago, my wife was asked to take my younger daughter’s Russian passport to her school so as to prove her Russian citizenship. Moscow schools are now being swamped with immigrants’ children, and legality of their parents’ residence here is now being checked.

    Like

      1. I am still in possession of the main one, which, apart from my eyeballs, is the only external organ: the main one has balls of a different nature.

        Like

    1. typo

      on 3 November last year, but only received my new, limitless permanent residence permit (it never need have its validity extended every 5 years as did the old permits).

      Like

    2. What???!! Immigrants want to move to Russia?? Don’t they realize Russia is fighting a losing battle, and they will soon be compelled to learn Ukrainian, the language of the victors?

      Congratulations on your advancement in the strata of Russian society. It’s indeed been a long and tedious battle, but I expect it is increasingly understandable that immigration officials have to be extremely careful, as you never know when you’re admitting a fluent-Russian-speaking immigrant whose real intention is to fly a quadcopter carrying a grenade into a Russian refinery or public infrastructure just as soon as he can rent an apartment.

      Like

        1. When I went to my Moscow City district Ministry of the Interior [МВД] immigration office, which is just a cockstride from my registered address of these past 27 years, namely since I became the “tenant” of Natalya Vladimirovna, aka Mrs. Exile, following my most gracious proposal to her that she become my legal spouse, which proposal she most wisely and without any hesitation whatsoever accepted, the chief pen-pusher there (Russians have a mocking term for them: chinovniks [чиновники], who were originally Russian Empire ranked civil servants, each with a specific rank and pecking-order and uniform: they were greatly disliked for their tedious bureaucratic arsing around, which characteristics of theirs have clearly been passed down to their present-day counterparts. Lenin once said of them: “As the peasants were slaves of the landowners, the Russian people are still slaves of chinovniks”) greeted me with “Ah, Gospodin Pyeneegtone! See, I remember your name!” she said.

          “Almost”, I said, and politely corrected her, whereupon she pushed towards me across her desk my Vid na Zhitelstvo (Residence Permit for a foreign citizen in Russia), which I had last been given 7 weeks ago at the Moscow Migration Centre, situated way out in the sticks from Moscow, which document had immediately been taken off me after my having arrived back in Moscow, where I had presented it to that very same chinovnik in that very same office so that my address be registered and officially stamped inside of it.

          Note: the same address since 1997, but it had to be registered again in my new-style VnZh.

          And she took it off me 7 weeks ago and I only got it back again last Wednesday.

          “I told you to come back here for it”, she said. “Did you you forget what I told you?” she asked.

          “Yeah, I must have”, I replied.

          I hadn’t. I had on two occasions asked her underlings at the office if my residency permit was ready, only to get the curt reply: “No. You shall have to wait for confirmation that it is ready. You shall receive a call when it is ready”.

          They had taken my wife’s mobile phone number when they had taken my permit off me on 7 March, and later, I had given them my phone number as well, just in case my wife missed their call when she was busy at work.

          They never called me or my wife. That’s why I went over to the migration office last Wednesday, only to be asked by Chief Chinovnik if I had forgotten that she had told me to call in for it.

          So I signed documents threefold, stating that I had received the highly valued document — and it really is: one is seemingly highly honoured to be given a residence permit — and I said to her: “I was getting worried, because the police are, understandably, systematically checking all foreigners here, and what should I have told them if they had stopped me and I had been unable to show them my permit? They might even have made me leave Russia forthwith because of my breach of administrative law, which, as you know, happened to me in 2017. And I don’t really want to return to England: I have lived here for very many years and, as you well know, my wife is Russian and all our children are Russian citizens”.

          In the office were a few of her junior underlings, who had no doubt come in to set eyes upon the strange “Anglo-Saxon” who desired to have permanent residence in the Evil Empire. Needless to say, they deal day-in, day-out with immigrants from Central Asia and the Caucasus, from states that had declared their independence from the USSR in 1991, and now very many of the citizens of these former Soviet Republics dearly wish to be citizens of Putin’s authoritative regime.

          “Why don’t you wish to return to England?” Chief Chinovnik asked me.

          “Because I’m a Russian patriot”, I said.

          Laughter all round.

          And then, when I was about to leave the office, she reminded me that I had to register my address again in that same office no earlier than 10 May and no later than 10 June.

          I have to register my address every year in May. That’s why they know me so well there.

          The registry of my address that has been stamped inside my residence permit was made on 20 March. I still have to annually confirm my address at that office.

          That’s Russian bureaucracy for you.

          Like

  55. AiF

    25.04.2024 03:15

     Murderers and freeloaders. Europe groans from Ukrainian refugees

    A year for each year that he has so far lived — in the Czech Republic, a nineteen-year-old Ukrainian has been sentenced to nineteen years in prison for rape and attempted murder. Such stories are increasingly appearing on the pages of Western publications.

    Pretending to dead saved her

    She pretended to be dead, which apparently saved her life”, the CTK news agency describing the reason for the incredible survival of a fifteen-year-old girl. Earlier, Viktor Veselovsky had lured her out for a walk, handcuffed her, raped her, cut her throat, wrapped her in plastic, thrown her off a cliff, and then covered her body with leaves.

    Veselovsky pleaded guilty to attempted murder, but not to sexual assault. Everything was by mutual consent, the Ukrainian said.

    Incredible adventures of Ukrainians in Europe

    Such stories are becoming public knowledge more and more often. So, yesterday in the same Czech Republic there were reports that counter-intelligence had prevented an attempt on the life of Slovak President Peter Pellegrini. CTK news agency reports that a 24-year-old native of Vinnytsia was detained in Brno on Monday. Journalists describe him as a”mentally unstable nationalist”. According to TASS, in 2021, he had been detained in the Ukraine for distributing child pornography and fraud.

    Yesterday, but now in Germany, reports of another horrific case spread. According to Bild, on 20 April in Meissen, four girls from the Ukraine aged 12 to 17 managed to drag a thirteen-year-old German girl into an abandoned building, where they tortured her for five hours, filming what they did on their mobile phones.

    At the end of March, the Italian press actively discussed the arrest of a young Ukrainian nationalist detained in Milan. He had become infamous for brutally beating up four Sri Lankans. According to eyewitness reports, before the attack, the unnamed follower of National Socialist ideology had shown a swastika tattooed on his chest. Because of his being of a minor age, he is likely to get off with a fine for his exploits.

    These are only the most high-profile cases in the last month. Supermarket break-ins, domestic violence, and theft have not yet disappeared from the news media, and they are actively discussed on social networks.

    They neither want to work nor fight

    European countries have been making various attempts to limit the number of refugees from the Ukraine for a long time. Germany, having enlisted the support of the Ukrainian ambassador, is trying to force freeloaders to give up benefits and go to work, although there have been no results yet.

    Poles are more open about their wishes. On 15 April, the Polish authorities announced the development of a draft law that tightens the rules for Ukrainians receiving assistance. Local residents will no longer be encouraged to accommodate displaced persons, and Ukrainians will no longer receive lump-sum payments. The decision is not only driven by a desire to reduce costs. According to recent polls, forty percent of Poles believe that the acceptance of Ukrainian refugees should be stopped.

    On Tuesday, 23 April, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Ukraine announced the suspension of all consular services to Ukrainians living abroad. This was due to the tightening of the rules of mobilization. However, sending a lot of people to the firing line is unlikely to help. There is no doubt that the number of disenfranchised illegal immigrants in Europe will increase dramatically. You’ll see — one godfather will replace another godfather in Italy.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    Слава Украине! Героям слава!

    Like

  56. Anyone taking bets that the US will default on the $800bn debt that China holds because ‘We tried to talk to them, and they refused to negotiatie! They’re cheating so we are not paying them.’

    I’m convinced some kind of default is on the books and to me the easiest way to sell one is to target ‘The Enemy.™’

    I’m also trying to get my head around Blinken’s visit.

    The whole thing looks like a domestic PR trip, starting with his claims of ‘on-onging uigur genocide’ etc. and somehow expecting some sort of PR win for the Bi-Dumb Administration that ‘China agrees to buy more XXX American products’ as if this is the 1980s and China is somehow Japan.

    No-one cares about tip-toeing around the US any more when it is a presidential election year. Any ‘deal’ is a) only valid until the election is over; and b) doesn’t matter regardless of which party wins it.

    It’s just bizzarre.

    Like

    1. Many news links suggest a priority of Blinken’s visit is to ensure ‘fair treatment for American businesses’.

      China only needs to look next door to see that such ‘fair treatment’ includes allowing American businesses to establish sufficient market share that their home country can use it as ‘leverage’, and crow about how it has you by the balls. I don’t see a future in which too many Chinese commercial interests will be in a hurry to commit to that. As well, committing to a certain level of trade with the United States is mostly illusory, as companies will up sticks and move away on the orders of the US government, so you can’t rely on continuous support for the product – no good buying, for example, American-made heavy machinery when in six months you might not be able to get spares because some US Congressman is in a snit and needs to teach you a lesson. The same applies to Canadian businesses, as they will shut down on demand by the US Government, after a slight pause which can be passed as the Prime Minister ‘reflecting’, implying some sort of exercise of sovereignty.

      A secondary objective, of course, is to obtain Chinese assurances that it will stop supporting Russia. It is hardly going to give such assurances since official agreements include a mutual defense pact, and I think Blinken knows there is little likelihood of securing any meaningful promises, but he has to try.

      Like

    2. Did you see his arrival? Several people showed up. Not quite as embarrassing as Sholtz but coming close. At least they had a limousine rather than a than a taxi but it may have been the embassy’s automobile.

      Like

      1. Yes. Even when the Chinese are being polite, they can be devastatingly polite!

        I wonder if this trip is also meant as a distraction from all the other disastrous stuff that is going on, i.e. what the US is doing, and possibly more important, what it is not doing?

        Like

        1. Almost certainly.

          The more I watch the reactions to the pro-Palestinian demos in the US the more I think that a lot of the powers-that-be are in close to total panic. 

          I am not quite sure why but they seem to see these as close to an existential treat. It could be this is the very first time that a lot of Americans are starting to see their government as engaging in genocide. 

          Iraq, Libya, Vietnam, these are all far away countries filled with funny foreigners, to mangle Chamberlain’s speech.

          Israel? Lots of young Americans, especially Jewish Americans have been there; many have been raised on stories of Israel, and have been told it is the USA’s closest ally. Suddenly, it is appearing as a mad country filled with genocidal maniacs and the USA, “which is always on the side of the good”, is massively complicit in this genocide.

          This is not good for the image of a lot of US politicians and opinion influencers. It might cause a lot of people, especially the young to start questioning other policies and even the legitimacy of US leaders.

          Like

        2. Yes, like the massive amount of money in aid being given to the wretched Israelis, compared with the afterthought offered for Palestinian aid, and even that is grieved by the Israelis. I hope this latest departure from sanity by the supposed Chosen Of God is deemed by them to be worth it, because they have never been so globally hated as they are now, and I don’t see that being repaired by some slick victim-language about the holocaust.

          Like

  57. FT

    Russian court orders seizure of $440mn from JPMorgan

    Move follows lawsuit from state-owned bank VTB to recover funds held at America’s largest lender

    Anastasia Stognei in Tbilisi and Joshua Franklin in New York YESTERDAY

    A Russian court has ordered the seizure of JPMorgan Chase funds totalling $439.5mn a week after Kremlin-run lender VTB launched legal action against the largest US bank to recoup money stuck under Washington’s sanctions regime.

    The move highlights some of the fallout western companies are feeling from the punitive measures against Moscow. It is also further evidence of the difficulties western lenders are encountering when trying to follow through with pledges to close their Russia operations since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

    The seizure order, published in the Russian court register on Wednesday, targets funds in JPMorgan’s accounts and shares in its Russian subsidiaries, according to the ruling issued by the arbitration court in St Petersburg. The assets had been frozen by authorities in the wake of the western sanctions.

    The dispute centres on $439mn in funds that VTB held in a JPMorgan account in the US. When Washington imposed sanctions on the Kremlin-run bank, JPMorgan had to move the funds to a separate escrow account. Under the US sanctions regime, neither VTB nor JPMorgan can access the funds. In response, VTB last week filed a lawsuit against the New York-based group to get Russian authorities to freeze the equivalent amount in Russia, warning that JPMorgan was seeking to leave Russia and would refuse to pay any compensation.

    The following day, JPMorgan filed its own lawsuit against the Russian lender in a US court to prevent a seizure of its assets, arguing that it had no way to reclaim VTB’s stranded US funds to compensate its own potential losses from the Russian lawsuit.

    JPMorgan and VTB declined to comment on the ruling.

    When JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs announced their intention to close their Russia businesses, which made up just a small part of their worldwide operations, experts warned that any exit could take more than a year to accomplish. Other western banks, including Citigroup, Italy’s UniCredit and Austria’s Raiffeisen Bank International, are still operating in Russia.

    Since a decree issued in 2022, exiting Russia requires a greenlight from President Vladimir Putin himself. Seven banks — out of 45 then operating in the country — have been granted presidential approval, including Mercedes-Benz Bank, Ikano, J&T and Intesa.

    In early 2022, Russia also banned shareholders from “unfriendly countries”, including the US, from withdrawing their dividends.

    Last summer, a Russian court froze about $36mn worth of assets owned by Goldman following a lawsuit by state-owned bank Otkritie. A few months later the court ruled that the Wall Street investment bank had to pay the funds to Otkritie.

    In March 2023, another Russian court seized $204mn worth of Volkswagen’s assets in Russia pending a lawsuit by its former partner Gaz Group, owned by sanctions-hit oligarch Oleg Deripaska. The assets were later unfrozen as VW received permission from the Russian authorities to sell its Russian business to Avilon, one of the country’s largest car dealers.

    Additional reporting by Ortenca Aliaj in London

    Like

  58. On the detention of Deputy Minister of Defence Ivanov
    Today

    In general, soldiers and their commanders took the news with joy. And even with some hope that this is only the beginning and next behind bars will go figures of a completely different rank. Naive, of course. In the field, what do you want the MoD to do? To give everything necessary, not to send fools and not to interfere.

    But there are problems with this. Soldiers and commanders think in tactical terms, while strategic thinking is the headache of higher commanders.

    In general, the soldiers and commanders took this news happily. And even with some hope that this is just the beginning and figures of a completely different rank will go to jail. Naive, of course.

    Didn’t anyone in the army know that Timur Ivanov was a perfect model standing firmly on the shaky ground of corruption? Everyone knew perfectly well. Didn’t the inspecting authorities know? They knew perfectly well.

    The FSB had been collecting material from the very beginning about the employment of this character in the Ministry of Defence, and all of them must have surely shouted out that Timur Vadimovich was clearly confusing his pocket with the state pocket.

    Вообще, бойцы и командиры восприняли эту новость радостно. И даже с некоторой надеждой, что это только начало и следом за решетку пойдут деятели совсем другого ранга. Наивные, конечно.-2

    And Timur Vadimovich himself did not hide this by his lifestyle, as if mocking the fact that he was forced to work in an environment that is considered low-margin and unpromising for effective civilian managers who look like marshals with huge silver stars on their shoulders.

    The man bathed in luxury, lived in mansions, registering them under false persons and companies, arranged social gatherings, was married to a woman with a dubious past and foreign citizenship, preferred to holiday abroad, and this with the highest level of secrecy.

    The only thing he didn’t do was not publicly scatter five-thousand ruble notes from the balcony in the wind, for luxury is luxury, but Timur Vadimovich knows the value of money.

    Новоселье в своем новом 2617-метровом тверском дворце на Волге Тимур Иванов отметил всего полгода назад. Чуть позже, уже под самый Новый год в усадьбе поставили еще и 420-метровую рубленую баньку, ибо какой генерал, да без баньки.

    Timur Ivanov celebrated the housewarming in his new 2617-metre Tver palace on the Volga River just six months ago. A little later, just before New Year’s Eve, a 420-metre-long wooden bathhouse [Russian “sauna” — ME] was also built on the estate, for what general is a general without a bathhouse.

    When it was officially stated that “the President and the Minister of Defence had immediately been informed about the arrest of the Deputy Minister of Defence in his office” this is not quite true. Such arrests do not take place without the authorisation and direct order of the President.

    In the morning of his arrest, the Deputy Minister took part on the board of the Ministry of Defence.

    Вообще, бойцы и командиры восприняли эту новость радостно. И даже с некоторой надеждой, что это только начало и следом за решетку пойдут деятели совсем другого ранга. Наивные, конечно.-5

    Towards evening, military counter-intelligence waited for the moment when Ivanov’s boss would be on a trip to Arkhangelsk, then got Timur Vadimovich to leave his office under the pretext that they wanted to show him a selection of luxury goods. There wasnot much security of another show of luxury samples, without much security (special detachment of the Ministry of Defence) around, and the counter-intelligence men simply bundled the gentleman in a “general’s” uniform into their car, cutting off all possibilities of pursuit.

    Ivanov was taken to the investigators of the central office of the Investigative Committee of of the Russian Federation, who issued a ruling on their bringing him in as a suspect in the commission of a crime. He spent the night in a temporary detention centre, and then was taken to court.

    When Ivanov’s boss found out about the “misunderstanding”, he immediately rushed to call the President, but was told that Vladimir Vladimirovich was “unavailable”, the presidential receiver was hung up, and Timur Vadimovich went to court, were he was put on remand for two months.

    Вообще, бойцы и командиры восприняли эту новость радостно. И даже с некоторой надеждой, что это только начало и следом за решетку пойдут деятели совсем другого ранга. Наивные, конечно.-6

    At the court hearing, Ivanov was wearing his “military” uniform, although previously there was an unspoken recommendation not to wear an officer’s uniform in the dock. The court decision was announced at 9 a.m., thus the initiators of the arrest cut off all possibilities for Ivanov’s friends and colleagues to influence his fate as much as possible.

    At the court appearance, Timur Vadimovich requested that he not be detained, as he has many children and needs to take care of them. [His adopted daughter from his wife’s previous marriage is well known for her posting on social networks photos of herself living it up at “elite” Western watering holes and shopping at “elite” stores — ME] However, the Basmanny court for some reason did not accept Ivanov’s convincing arguments and sent him to the Lefortovo pre-trial detention centre. The case will be conducted by the State Investigative Committee together with the FSB: military investigators and the military court are not allowed. [Because he is not a military officer! — ME] Several other people have also been detained and state security investigators are working with them.

    Вообще, бойцы и командиры восприняли эту новость радостно. И даже с некоторой надеждой, что это только начало и следом за решетку пойдут деятели совсем другого ранга. Наивные, конечно.-7

    In the “Moscow lounges” this arrest has caused, of course, a great deal of confusion. All the people involved began to delete their photos of Ivanov from social networks, and they must have wiped off the minister’s number in their phone books. Dmitry Peskov, an old friend of Ivanov’s, had to mumble something neutral to the press.

    Dmitri Sergeyevich said confusedly:

    There are a lot of rumours doing the rounds now: we need to rely on official information.

    The presidential spokesman said anything being said now about this subject was simply and that an investigation was underway. And he was right, of course: the investigation will sort everything out.

    Вообще, бойцы и командиры восприняли эту новость радостно. И даже с некоторой надеждой, что это только начало и следом за решетку пойдут деятели совсем другого ранга. Наивные, конечно.-8

    Apart from his involving his children, members of the so-called “golden youth”, when pleading at court, the news of his arrest was a non-event, and they probably thought it was some kind of a joke. That same evening, Ivanov’s stepdaughter, Alexandra Maniovich, an Israeli citizen,was dancing at yet another another party, unaware that the party time for her was probably over.

    Вообще, бойцы и командиры восприняли эту новость радостно. И даже с некоторой надеждой, что это только начало и следом за решетку пойдут деятели совсем другого ранга. Наивные, конечно.-9

    When it became clear that this “misunderstanding” was dragging on, Ivanov’s boss was forced to dismiss this deputy minister. Timur Vadimovich himself rejects the accusation of bribery, according to his lawyer. Moreover, the defence lawyers and the defendant insist that the investigation against the official is illegal, Kommersant reports. [Earlier reports that I have read say that Shoigu had been forewarned ov Ivanov’s coming arrest — ME]

    Ivanov’s lawyers stressed that despite the fact that their client is a civil servant, he holds the position of one of the heads of the MoD, and, therefore, his criminal prosecution should be carried out not by the Main Military Investigation Department of the Russian Investigative Committee, but by the Main Military Investigation Department of the Committee (where Ivanov probably has good acquaintances).

    They also insist that there is no corpus delicti in his actions. In addition, Ivanov’s defence lawyers have stated that there was no need to place the defendant, who is raising five children, in pre-trial detention. They demand that Ivanov be put under house arrest.

    Вообще, бойцы и командиры восприняли эту новость радостно. И даже с некоторой надеждой, что это только начало и следом за решетку пойдут деятели совсем другого ранга. Наивные, конечно.-10

    If Ivanov is talks and is forced to co-operate with the investigation, he is unlikely to cover up for anyone. And he knows many tales of the Vienna Woods…. Ivanov was in charge of construction projects, military mortgages, military benefits programmes, and was a confidant of his boss. He knows a lot of interesting things.

    Interested parties are now worried: what if Ivanov’s boss will not be included in the new Government after the May inauguration? Valentina Matvienko, Speaker of the Council of Federation Councils, began to reassure interested parties by telling RIA Novosti that personnel changes in the new composition of the Russian government are possible, but the core will remain the same and will continue to work steadily. It’s as if she knows something.

    ***********************************************************************************************************

    If he wants to pass himself off as a military man, then let him wear his uniform — and then shoot the bastard.

    Like

  59. Rumour has it that all this is to do with Shoigu’s desire to become President of Russia.

    Kompromat

    29.08.2017 – The Defence Minister wants to replace Putin, and his deputy embezzles the budget to finance the presidential campaign of the boss?

    Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, who comes from a prominent Tuvan family, wants to become Vladimir Putin‘s successor. To push the president’s St. Petersburg countrymen out of power, he needs not only an administrative resource, but also a lot of money. Candidate Shoigu’s “office black box” requires a reliable assistant who is able to manage corruption schemes without jeopardizing the reputation of the boss. Such a person was Deputy Defense Minister Timur Ivanov.

    Controlling the “black box” of the Defence Ministry, Ivanov uses this money not only to promote his boss to the presidency, but also for personal purposes. He has bought seven premium foreign cars, registered four more for his father, and celebrated the 45th anniversary of his wife, Svetlana Zakharova, at the Imperial Yacht Club of Moscow. Hiring a room and a yacht cruise cost the happy spouse 600 thousand rubles. Entertaining guests Vyacheslav ButusovGosha Kutsenko and Valery Meladze received 6.2 million rubles from the official. Taking into account drinks, snacks and additional expenses for the day, Ivanov spent $ 10 million.

    But the hero of the occasion was worth it. Zakharova [maiden name of Ivanov’s wife — ME] can’t imagine going out without a consultation with three extremely expensive doctors, as well as sessions with no less cheap makeup artists, image makers, cosmetologists, hair stylists and manicurists. Behind the appearance of a glamorous blonde is a man who cannot be stopped by any article of the Criminal Code, including premeditated murder. 

    This grip of steel was felt by Svetlana’s former husband, businessman Mikhail Maniovich. During the divorce, Ivanov’s wife, then named Svetlana Maniovich, demanded $50 thousand a month and $100 thousand for the right to see the children. Then, with the help of well-known organized crime leaders, she took the stores from the Prestige company owned by Maniovich. And when the father of Svetlana Zakharova’s children, Maniovich, was outraged, he was informed that the perpetrators of his murder had been hired. At the same time, according to a source, Mikhail Maniovich was told in detail about his location, daily routine, routes and addresses visited. According to Maniovich, the killers that were supposed to do th job were hired by Timur Ivanov at the request of Zakharova.

    Mikhail Maniovich’s statement to the police did nothing- — Ivanov was a politically untouchable figure. The businessman was forced to flee Russia, leaving his children and property to Svetlana Zakharova.

    Secrets of Zakharova’s smartphone — a $10 million apartment and illegal assets outside Russia

    For his goddess, Timur Ivanov does not feel sorry for anyone and nothing. Neither Kutsenko and Meladze – for entertainment, nor a beauty team of eight people – for body care, nor a collection of dresses, the number of which Daria Zhukova could envy, nor Daniel K a wedding ring with a 10-carat diamond. More expensive gifts — an Aston Martin, a Bentley Continental, a Hummer H2 and a Harley-Davidson motorcycle.

    As an apartment location for his beloved, Ivanov looked at Ostozhenka [most expensive street in Moscow, where former corrupt MoD boss Serdukov kept his floozy in a luxury apartment — ME], where now the most modest two-room housing costs 140 million rubles. Ivanov and Zakharova have a two-story townhouse, with only three children’s ones. [These are the “little boys and girls” he claimed he must look after and about whom he spoke in court when pleading that he not be sent to a remand jail — ME] Estimated value of a family nest of 317 sq. m. m is not less than $10 million-excluding the design by Ingo Maurer and the mural by Mara Daugaviete, paid separately. The lovers have apartments in Mexico, officially owned by Zakharova’s minor son, and other assets outside of Russia — both official and unaccounted for.

    Timur Ivanov was repeatedly warned that Svetlana Zakharova was spending a long time abroad, where she was the object of investigations by foreign special services. From the contents of Zakharova’s smartphones outside Russia, you can get critical information about the corrupt income of Ivanov and other secret carriers from the top leadership of the Ministry of Defence.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    Ivanov’s then 18-year-old son fucked off to the UK as soon as mobilization began here.

    He’s a student at Oxford University.

    No entrance exams passed, I am sure.

    Like

  60. Amid the din of monkey-hooting over how Ukraine’s latest ‘secret’ batch of ATACMS missiles is going to leave Putin weeping in rage and humiliation, slightly lower-key assessments from purported American ‘experts’.

    “With the US aid that was just approved, some conflict analysts assess that Ukraine’s next steps to make the most of the new assistance should include building up defenses and exploring the possibility of negotiating with Russia.

    “I think Ukraine can win this war. It cannot win militarily in any way, it can win politically, though,” Grieco said. “It can actually gain a political victory by not allowing Putin to achieve his main goal, which is to subjugate Ukraine,” she said, noting that “Ukraine can remain a viable state and an independent state from Russia.”

    Both Grieco and Kavanagh emphasized the importance of Ukraine showing up to the negotiating table and using diplomacy with Russia to prevent further land losses.”

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/war-analysts-say-ukraine-should-treat-the-latest-us-aid-package-like-its-the-last-one-itll-get/ar-AA1nFj67

    This follows a template earlier laid down by ‘B’ at MoA – or it might have been Simplicius, I can’t remember – in which NATO claims Russia did not ‘win’ because it wanted to take the whole of Ukraine, and it failed miserably at doing that, having to settle for only a third or so of it, excluding Crimea which it already had. Thank God for the bravery shown at ‘The Battle of Kyiv’!!

    I probably do not have to say all the revelry and fuck-you-Putin excitement comes from British tabloids, which are a sort of MAD Magazine version of real current events. The British appear to need this sort of sensationalism, going into fits whenever the bare tit of an aging starlet is accidentally exposed and paying huge bounties for embarrassing gossip. Not to be taken seriously.

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    1. Aurelien (linked yesterday) talks about defining victory” in Pindo terms:

      What’s the situation on the ground? The Ukrainian Armed Forces (UAF) have been comprehensively defeated, by which I mean not simply that they cannot now “win” (as some of the braver western commentators have now begun to admit) but that they will soon cease to exist as a coherent fighting force. Let’s unpack that. “Winning” can mean many things. Because the Russians are fighting an attrition war, and because their territorial objectives are modest, it is highly unlikely that Russian troops will want to penetrate throughout the whole of Ukraine, except in token numbers. Thus, by pretending that the war actually was a war of territorial conquest, Ukraine and its western backers will be able to claim that the Russians “lost,” and by (dubious) extension, that they “won”. This is likely to be the western political response to defeat, as I argued recently.

      Like

      1. Yes, it might very well have been that; it was quite a long post and I did not have time to read it all, but I definitely read that part and it might have been that reference that left the impression. And it fits, doesn’t it? Because it’s just like the diplotools at NATO and SHAPE and the various EU Commissions and bureaucratic hangouts. You are expected to listen with respect and reverence to their pronouncements, and take them ever so seriously. But if a stated certainty – let’s say, like, “Putin must be defeated on the battlefield” – subsequently proves unattainable….you are not supposed to notice, and it’s rude to do so. And the next time Stoltie or another of those overbearing ringmeats tells how it’s going to be, you’re expected to listen again with respect and reverence just like before, just as if he hadn’t just been catastrophically wrong. Being a European diplomat or western ‘military expert’ means never having to say you’re sorry.

        Like

    2. To whom exactly is the delivery of these long-ranged version of the ATCAMS a secret?

      Certainly not the Russians.

      Ergo, it must be the American & u-Ropean public.

      Why all the cloak and dagger?

      The US claims OPerational SECurity but this behavior follows a long established pattern that western honchos say something is ‘Off the table’ because ‘it might cause escalation with Russia’ only a few weeks or months down the road for them to be delivered.

      Who is being fooled?

      I suspect the answer is no one.

      I guess the only war they can win at least in their own minds is a PR war.

      Like

      1. Well, yes, it was ‘revealed’ by some British parrot-cage carpeting like The Mirror, something like that – at least that’s where I saw it – complete with colourful diagrams of the missile and so forth, to titillate the war-porn addicts and celebrity junkies. Supposedly Putin was completely foxed by the west’s clever maneuvering.

        My mistake; it was The Sun – complete with labeling of Putin as ‘Vlad’, which I suspect they know is incorrect but continue to use for its irritant value. Then again, they probably believe there are only two kinds of people in the world: the English, and those who wish they were. Also bandied about are the terms ‘game-changing’ and ‘potentially turning the tides of war in Kyiv’s favour’, which I guess is just another way of peddling the same nonsense.

        https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/27536075/russian-troops-fear-us-game-changing-missiles/

        The military expert who let them in on the secret is US General Ben Hodges. You remember; the talking tree-stump who claimed that assertions the Ukrainian Counteroffensive was a failure were fabrications. There have been generals like him in every war, who advertise the capture of Pork Chop Hill as a strategic triumph even though it cost 15,000 lives and they had to give it back in postwar settlements.

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    3. A late follow-up.

      The Russian 76 year old retired hypersonics resercher Aleksandr Kuranov was given 7 years for treason for ‘sharing’ information on Russia’s programs which appears to be going abroad for conferences, publishing articles and being part of international projects. It’s claimed that over a dozen have been detained on suspicion of treason in the last year or so.

      This is a recurring theme over quite a few years which I don’t quite understand.

      If you work in any kind of ‘sensitive’ research, you have to be careful what you share publicly. This is true anywhere in the world. Being retired is not an option out as a former Rolls Royce gas turbine specialist found out a few years ago while he was a visiting professor (?) at one of the Chinese universities.

      Are the Russian authorities being extra dick or are white-haried researchers clueless souls naively honeypotted by foreign colleagues?

      I have little doubt that the sentence is another ‘pour decourager les autres‘ but it is still happening. Weird.

      Like

      1. I would not be much surprised to learn they have been offered whopping amounts of money – alternatively, they may be deluded into believing they are actually helping friendly nations rather than the enemy. Agents can be quite convincing.

        The USA itself admits it is around 10 years behind the Russians in hypersonics, and is just now standing up specialist teams to try to close the gap through research. That research might be sped up considerably by getting shortcuts straight from the original developers.

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    4. Copper is now over $10k a ton. It hasn’t been this high for two years.

      Yay recent American sanctions on Russian nickel, copper and aluminium!

      Like

      1. Yes, I read just the other day that Victoria was going to allow EV drivers to plug in to street chargers using their own cords, like the one they use to charge their car at home. I’m not sure how that would work; I don’t own an EV, don’t plan to and have never examined the chargers – maybe they have a different outlet available than the charging line that is fitted on the charger. Whatever the case, a writer to the editorial page pointed out what a bonus that will be for the copper thieves; a few yards of copper wire, snip, snip and it’s yours.

        As well, gas is now $2.13 per litre here, I believe that is the highest price in North America, thanks to Justin Trudeau’s ‘carbon tax’, which his government promptly revealed would be given to low-income families. How making the middle class support the poor will help the environment is a puzzler to me, I must admit. But this is the Trudeau Template – ask nicely first, and then if people don’t give you what you want, remove all their other options until there’s no choice left. And in this manner, Trudeau hopes to chivvy the public into investing in electric cars by making gasoline too expensive to afford.

        Never mind just being washed out in the next election, he will be lucky to escape with his life.

        Like

    5. Wilson Center: Opposition Divided over History Leading to Putin

      https://www.wilsoncenter.org/blog-post/opposition-divided-over-history-leading-putin

      It was Russia’s president Boris Yeltsin and members of his circle who made the crucial mistakes and engaged in intentional acts of corruption that put Russia on its present aggressive trajectory. This, in a nutshell, is the message of a new documentary (in Russian, with English subtitles) written and presented by Maria Pevchikh, the head of the Anti-Corruption Foundation (ACF)…

      ####

      Not that anyone serious should care about the post-humous Navalny film, it’s an interesting take.

      As usual with this type of commentary by a Russia hiding out in the US, much is not said about Russia in the 1990s and onwards, namely the role of the west in determining outcomes, it’s choice to not only ignore Russia’s basic concerns, but to rub its nose in the dirt. But then the author wouldn’t get a gold star and might have to look for alternate employment otherwise.

      Like

  61. On the Kiev Rat’s concept of “victory”.

    YESTERDAY AT 12: 49

    “Not everyone will like the Ukraine victory”: Zelensky has hinted at his impending capitulation

    But this hint needs to be read correctly

    Analyzing the public statements of Vladimir Zelensky is not an easy task. The President of the Ukraine can easily say one thing today, then the complete opposite tomorrow, and then something different again the day after tomorrow. However, completely forgetting about Zelensky’s statements is probably not an option either, especially if the speeches of the Kiev chief have meaningful hints slipped into them. The President of the Ukraine in an interview with Fox news: Ukrainians “must win…I do not know how it will be. I’m not sure that everyone will be happy.”

    But you need to be able to read this hint correctly
    You’re gonna die soon, bastard! Slowly and in great pain, I hope! — ME

    The phrase “Ukrainians must win” is, of course, routine political rhetoric; in speeches of the Soviet era, something like: “under the leadership of the Communist Party, the Soviet people are achieving more and more labour victories”.

    However, “I do not know how it will be. I’m not sure that everyone will be happy” is, on the contrary, very interesting. 

    Here a fragment of a speech by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, February 1991: “Shout for your victory, brothers! Shout for your victory and the victory of all the noble people, O Iraqis! You have fought thirty countries, all evil, and the biggest machine of war and destruction in the world… The soldiers of faith have triumphed over the soldiers of evil, O steadfast men. Your God is the one who gave you victory”. Now the question is: what victory did Saddam Hussein’s Iraq win that winter? Yes, there was one, or no there wasn’t. The international coalition led by the United States defeated the Iraqi forces and forced them to leave Kuwait.

    Saddam chose not to pay attention to these “small details”: he declared his triumph and then continued to rule his country for twelve more years. Zelensky, of course, will not be completely able to repeat such a trick. The Ukraine, with all the dictatorial and authoritarian elements of its political system, is still not Iraq.

    But a partial repetition of the same political manoeuvre is, on the contrary, quite possible. The whole point is in the definition, in a clear definition of the term, of the word “victory”itself. And a clear definition in our world often turns out to be something deeply ephemeral and barely tangible. 

    For example, I bet you didn’t know that a country like the Maldives is a state that has strict sharia law, including a strict ban on alcohol consumption. Here’s the reason you didn’t know about this: in the popular Maldives resorts, alcohol flows freely. But here’s the catch: these island resorts are officially classified as “uninhabited territories” by the Maldivian government. And if you want, you can find your own logic in this position: locals do not really live in resorts (they only work there), and foreigners do not live there either (only go on vacations there).

    So, it all boils down to the presence or absence of desire. And Zelensky definitely has a desire to “reformulate” the meaning of the concept of “victory”. The current definition of victory — the return of the 1991 borders to the Ukraine — every month more and more resembles the old Soviet slogan “Communism shall have been built by 1980”. This is where the legs of the argument grow that “there will definitely be a victory”, but not everyone will like the way it will look. This is a slow, gradual, almost imperceptible preparation for a fundamental change of position — the actual rejection of the principle of the mandatory return of the borders of 1991 to the Ukraine. 

    For the Russian public, this is definitely pleasant. But what is much less pleasant for our country is emphasis in the last sentence of this previous paragraph should be placed on such concepts as slowness and gradualness.

    Here is the headline of an article on the website of the same Fox News channel: “Ukraine’s drones capable of carrying a combat charge weighing one ton can help it retake the Crimea”. Saddam Hussein’s final Kuwait manoeuvre is not something that is on the Kiev political agenda right now. Right now, this agenda includes working out a new package of American aid, an attempt to convince American “strategic investors” that the Ukraine is an “asset” in which it is still possible and necessary to invest. The revision of the Ukrainian “victory formula” is postponed — most likely, at least until 2025.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Well, some of those same sources I quoted also advise Ukraine to treat the latest package of American aid as if it would be the last one. Because it might be. And I think that is a very prudent piece of advice, because it took them six months of wrangling to get that one through, and they had to scare Johnson walleyed to get it past holdout Republicans. It’s never wise to say ‘never’, but I feel pretty confident arguing that future big dollops of money like that one – even if the bulk of it actually is spent in the United States – are most unlikely to be approved.

      Like

  62. 26 Apr, 03: 51

    Soldiers who shot seven people have been handed over to the military police

    The soldiers who shot seven people near Kherson have been handed over to the military police

    Russian servicemen Alexander Osipov and Alexander Kaigorodtsev, detained in connection with the murder of seven people in the Kherson region, have been handed over to the military police, a source in the local police department told RBC. The information was confirmed by a source in the territorial department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

    We are talking about a murder in the villages of Podo-Kalinovka and Abrikosovka in the Kherson region. According to RBC sources, some of the bodies were found on 24 April 24. They were found in various places with gunshot wounds and burns, some of the bodies were disfigured by fire.

    One of those killed, according to the police, is the head of the village administration Lyubov Tymchak. A source told RIA Novosti that the detainees wanted to be billeted in Abrikosovka, but the head of the village said that there were no empty houses, and then they killed her.

    Kaigorodtsev had previously been convicted under Part 2 of Article 228 and Part 1 of Article 105 of the Criminal Code — for possession or manufacture of drugs on a particularly large scale and murder. In 2021, he was also convicted of theft – under Part 2 of Article 158 of the Criminal Code, the interlocutors told RBC.

    Both detainees, according to sources, confessed to the murders.

    The military found shell casings, bullets and a ring from a grenade. The shell casings found in Abrikosovka, according to sources, were from a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    Other sources report that they were drunk when they murdered the villagers.

    The must be shot!

    I don’t care about the moratorium here on capital punishment. In fact, I’m pretty sure that the moratorium does not apply to military law in time of war. They should be tried by a military court and shot. In fact, they should not stand trial: they have confessed their guilt. Shoot them in the village where they murdered civilians.

    Like

    1. I saw the first reports of the above shocking story yesterday, but bided my time. I expected the Western media would be shouting out loud about these murders this morning, but so far, there is little about it in the Western media. However, it is still only 01:57, East Coast Time, Friday, 26 April.

      Like

      1. It’s 9 a.m., 26 April here, and its becoming much warmer and the trees outside my windows are blossoming already — May Blossom in April.

        It’s not May Blossom (Hawthorn), actually: its some Russian/East European/Asiatic tree. It only stays in blossom for about 5 days.

        Like

  63. Up for sale — one of the last of the log houses in Moscow.

    source

    Situated in the Moscow Northern Administrative Area, Savelyovsky District and not far from the centre of the city. It was once in the country. It certainly was when it was built in 1906 by a successful industrialist, a certain Nikolai Malyutin. Originally, the wooden house was the Malyutin family dacha. Somehow, the building escaped the Soviet and, more recently, the property developers’ axe, both literally and metaphorically.

    Until recently, a few folk-art concerns were based there and before that, since 1917, it housed Soviet communal apartments. Now they want to build a modern housing block there, but the locals are against this because they like the place. It is a local landmark: they call ” Izba na Maslovka” — “The Log House on Maslovka (Street)”.

    The house has fallen into disrepair in recent years. It is, however, still state owned.

    The unpainted log house is up for sale and shall remain so until 16 May. What will happen after that remains unknown.

    To buy it, you need 50 million rubles ($550,000) — that’s the minimum that Moscow City Government is willing to accept.

    Questions are now being asked as regards why the building has never been put under a protection order and given the status of “Cultural Heritage”. Apparently, activists did indeed try to do that — and not just once but many time during the 2010s, but every attempt to have the place legally protected failed, most often on “procedural” grounds. Those bloody Russian bureaucrats again!

    The official position of the city is neutral: everything is in the hands a future buyer of the house. 

    As a matter of fact, hidden away all around Moscow, even in the very centre of the city, you occasionally, and very surprisingly, come across wooden houses that have escaped both the very many fires that have taken place here — until quite modern times, the majority of Moscow housing was constructed of wood — and the relentless modern redevelopment of the city infrastructure.

    The little street shown below is about 10 minute by foot from my house. It is a very historic place.

    The house on the left is also a wooden one, but faced with stucco, which is what wealthier property owners used to do.

    My son and younger daughter were christened in that ancient brick church that you can see in the above photo.

    Like

  64. They say that if you give a Russian an axe, they can do anything with it. In ancient times, I think an axe was the only tool they used. There is a reconstructed wooden palace here, in the original f which, not a nail was used.

    Reconstruction of the Wooden Palace of Tsar Aleksei Mikhailovich — reconstructed according to the original builders’ plans, which have still survived the ages. Again, not far from my house. It was the Tsar’s Summer Palace, because when it was first built 400 years ago, it was situated way out in the country. Interestingly, the original didn’t burn down, which often happened to such structures that were lit by oil lamps: that fat frumpish German Frau of a Russian Empress Yekaterina II ordered that it be demolished because she didn’t like the place — “too Russian” for her liking. And in any case, when she had her fat arse on the Russian Imperial throne, the capital had long been moved to Sankt-Peterburg, where Western-Style palaces had been built.

    Below, an example of the skill of a Russian woodworker when given an axe:

    Looks like something from Fred Flintstone’s domicile!

    Must be a bugger to move when trying to sweep under it.

    Like

  65. NYT

    A swamp creature waxes lyrical.

    Note how he gives perfunctory mention to Russia’s brutal attack“.

    In Ukraine, New American Technology Won the Day. Until It Was Overwhelmed.

    Project Maven was meant to revolutionize modern warfare. But the conflict in Ukraine has underscored how difficult it is to get 21st-century data into 19th-century trenches

    A soldier in a camouflage uniform next to artillery.
    Congress is about to provide billions more dollars to Kyiv, mostly in the form of ammunition and long-range artillery, but questions remain whether new artificial intelligence technology will be enough to help turn the tide of the war.Credit…Nicole Tung for The New York Times
    David E. Sanger

    By David E. Sanger

    David E. Sanger is a White House and national security reporter. He is the author, with Mary K. Brooks, of “New Cold Wars: China’s Rise, Russia’s Invasion and America’s Struggle to Save the West,” from which this article is adapted.

    April 23, 2024

    The idea triggered a full-scale revolt on the Google campus.

    Six years ago, the Silicon Valley giant signed a small, $9 million contract to put the skills of a few of its most innovative developers to the task of building an artificial intelligence tool that would help the military detect potential targets on the battlefield using drone footage.

    Engineers and other Google employees argued that the company should have nothing to do with Project Maven, even if it was designed to help the military discern between civilians and militants.

    The uproar forced the company to back out, but Project Maven didn’t die — it just moved to other contractors. Now, it has grown into an ambitious experiment being tested on the front lines in Ukraine, forming a key component of the U.S. military’s effort to funnel timely information to the soldiers fighting Russian invaders.

    So far the results are mixed: Generals and commanders have a new way to put a full picture of Russia’s movements and communications into one big, user-friendly picture, employing algorithms to predict where troops are moving and where attacks might happen.

    But the American experience in Ukraine has underscored how difficult it is to get 21st-century data into 19th-century trenches. Even with Congress on the brink of providing tens of billions of dollars in aid to Kyiv, mostly in the form of ammunition and long-range artillery, the question remains whether the new technology will be enough to help turn the tide of the war at a moment when the Russians appear to have regained momentum.‘This Became Our Laboratory’

    The war in Ukraine has, in the minds of many American officials, been a bonanza for the U.S. military, a testing ground for Project Maven and other rapidly evolving technologies. The American-made drones that were shipped into Ukraine last year were blown out of the sky with ease. And Pentagon officials now understand, in a way they never did before, that America’s system of military satellites has to be built and set up entirely differently, with configurations that look more like Elon Musk’s Starlink constellations of small satellites.

    Meanwhile, American, British and Ukrainian officers, along with some of Silicon Valley’s top military contractors, are exploring new ways of finding and exploiting Russian vulnerabilities, even while U.S. officials try to navigate legal restraints about how deeply they can become involved in targeting and killing Russian troops.

    An aerial view of the Pentagon.
    Project Maven quickly became the standout success among the Pentagon’s many efforts to tiptoe into algorithmic warfare.Credit…Kenny Holston/The New York Times

    “At the end of the day this became our laboratory,” said Lt. Gen. Christopher T. Donahue, commander of the 18th Airborne Division, who is known as “the last man in Afghanistan” because he ran the evacuation of the airport in Kabul in August 2021, before resuming his work infusing the military with new technology.

    And despite the early concerns at Google over participation in Project Maven, some of the industry’s most prominent figures are at work on national security issues, underscoring how the United States is harnessing its competitive advantage in technology to maintain superiority over Russia and China in an era of renewed superpower rivalries.

    Tellingly, those figures now include Eric Schmidt, who spent 16 years as Google’s chief executive and is now drawing on lessons from Ukraine to develop a new generation of autonomous drones that could revolutionize warfare.

    But if Russia’s brutal assault on Ukraine has been a testing ground for the Pentagon’s drive to embrace advanced technology, it has also been a bracing reminder of the limits of technology to turn the war.

    Ukraine’s ability to repel the invasion arguably hinges more on renewed deliveries of basic weapons and ammunition, especially artillery shells.

    The first two years of the conflict have also shown that Russia is adapting, much more quickly than anticipated, to the technology that gave Ukraine an initial edge.

    In the first year of the war, Russia barely used its electronic warfare capabilities. Today it has made full use of them, confusing the waves of drones the United States has helped provide. Even the fearsome HIMARS missiles that President Biden agonized over giving to Kyiv, which were supposed to make a huge difference on the battlefield, have been misdirected at times as the Russians learned how to interfere with guidance systems.

    Not surprisingly, all these discoveries are pouring into a series of “lessons learned” studies, conducted at the Pentagon and NATO headquarters in Brussels, in case NATO troops ever find themselves in direct combat with President Vladimir V. Putin’s forces. Among them is the discovery that when new technology meets the brutality of old-fashioned trench warfare, the results are rarely what Pentagon planners expected.

    A silhouette of a soldier looking out a window with a Starlink satellite to the right of the frame.
    Starlink, the Elon Musk-provided mesh of satellites, was often the only thing connecting Ukrainian soldiers to headquarters, or to one another.Credit…Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

    “For a while we thought this would be a cyberwar,’’ Gen. Mark A. Milley, who retired last year as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of staff, said last summer. “Then we thought it was looking like an old-fashioned World War II tank war.”

    Then, he said, there were days when it seemed as though they were fighting World War I.‘The Pit’

    More than a thousand miles west of Ukraine, deep inside an American base in the heart of Europe, is the intelligence-gathering center that has become the focal point of the effort to bring the allies and the new technology together to target Russian forces.

    Visitors are discouraged in “the Pit,” as the center is known. American officials rarely discuss its existence, in part because of security concerns, but mostly because the operation raises questions about how deeply involved the United States is in the day-to-day business of finding and killing Russian troops.

    The technology in use there evolved from Project Maven. But a version provided to Ukraine was designed in a way that does not rely on the input of the most sensitive American intelligence or advanced systems.

    The goals have come a long way since the outcry at Google six years ago.

    “In those early days, it was pretty simple,” said Lt. Gen. Jack Shanahan, who was the first director of the Pentagon’s Joint Artificial Intelligence Center. “It was as basic as you could get. Identifying vehicles, people, buildings, and then trying to work our way to something more sophisticated.”

    Google’s exit, he said, may have slowed progress toward what the Pentagon now called “algorithmic warfare.” But “we just kept going.”

    By the time the Ukraine war was brewing, Project Maven’s elements were being designed and built by nearly five dozen firms, from Virginia to California.

    Yet there was one commercial company that proved most successful in putting it all together on what the Pentagon calls a “single pane of glass”: Palantir, a company co-founded in 2003 by Peter Thiel, the billionaire conservative-libertarian, and Alex Karp, its chief executive.

    Palantir focuses on organizing, and visualizing, masses of data. But it has often found itself at the center of a swirling debate about when building a picture of the battlefield could contribute to overly automated decisions to kill.

    Early versions of Project Maven, relying on Palantir’s technology, had been deployed by the U.S. government during the COVID-19 pandemic and the Kabul evacuation operation, to coordinate resources and track readiness. “We had this torrent of data but humans couldn’t process it all,” General Shanahan said.

    Three drones, attached with rockets, in a room filled with debris.
    From the start, the Ukrainians understood that to win, or even to stay in the game, they had to reinvent drone warfare. Credit…David Guttenfelder for The New York Times

    Project Maven quickly became the standout success among the Pentagon’s many efforts to tiptoe into algorithmic warfare, and soon incorporated feeds from nearly two dozen other Defense Department programs and commercial sources into an unprecedented common operating picture for the U.S. military.

    But it had never been to war.A Meeting on the Polish Border

    Early one morning after the Russian invasion, a top American military official and one of Ukraine’s most senior generals met on the Polish border to talk about a new technology that might help the Ukrainians repel the Russians.

    The American had a computer tablet in his car, operating Project Maven through Palantir’s software and connected to a Starlink terminal.

    His tablet’s display showed many of the same intelligence feeds that the operators in the Pit were seeing, including the movement of Russian armored units and the chatter among the Russian forces as they fumbled their way to Kyiv.

    As the two men talked, it became evident that the Americans knew more about where Ukraine’s own troops were than the Ukrainian general did. The Ukrainian was quite certain his forces had taken a city back from the Russians; the American intelligence suggested otherwise. When the American official suggested he call one of his field commanders, the Ukrainian general discovered that the American was right.

    The Ukrainian was impressed — and angry. American forces should be fighting alongside the Ukrainians, he said.

    “We can’t do that,” the American responded, explaining that Mr. Biden forbade it. What the United States can provide, he said, is an evolving picture of the battlefield.

    Today a similar tension continues to play out inside the Pit, where each day a careful dance is underway. The military has taken seriously Mr. Biden’s mandate that the United States should not directly target Russians. The president has said that Russia must not be allowed to win, but that the United States must also “avoid World War III.”

    So, the Americans point the Ukrainians in the right direction but stop short of giving them precise targeting data.

    The Ukrainians quickly improved, and they built a sort of shadow Project Maven, using commercial satellite firms like Maxar and Planet Labs and data scraped from Twitter and Telegram channels.

    Instagram shots, taken by Russians or nearby Ukrainians, often showed dug-in positions or camouflaged rocket launchers. Drone imagery soon became a crucial source of precise targeting data, as did geolocation data from Russian soldiers who did not have the discipline to turn off their cellphones.

    This flow of information helped Ukraine target Russia’s artillery. But the initial hope that the picture of the battlefield would flow to soldiers in the trenches, connected to phones or tablets, has never been realized, field commanders say.

    One key to the system was Starlink, the Elon Musk-provided mesh of satellites, which was often the only thing connecting soldiers to headquarters, or to one another. That reinforced what was already becoming blindingly obvious: Starlink’s network of 4,700 satellites proved nearly as good as — and sometimes better than — the United States’ billion-dollar systems, one White House official said.Dreams of Drone Fleets

    For a while, it seemed as if this technological edge might allow Ukraine to push the Russians out of the country entirely.

    In a suburb of Kyiv, Ukrainian high school students spent the summer of 2023 working in a long-neglected factory, soldering together Chinese-supplied components for small drones, which were then mounted onto carbon-fiber frames. The contraptions were light and cheap, costing about $350 each.

    Soldiers on the front lines would then strap each one to a two-or-three pound explosive charge designed to immobilize an armored vehicle or kill the operators of a Russian artillery brigade. The drones were designed for what amounted to crewless kamikaze missions, intended for one-time use, like disposable razors.

    Soldiers in uniform loading artillery.
    Ukraine’s ability to repel the invasion arguably hinges more on renewed deliveries of basic weapons and ammunition.Credit…Nicole Tung for The New York Times

    The broken-down factory near Kyiv encapsulated all the complications and contradictions of the Ukraine war. From the start, the Ukrainians understood that to win, or even to stay in the game, they had to reinvent drone warfare. But they could barely keep enough parts coming in to sustain the effort.

    The mission of remaking Ukraine’s drone fleet has captivated Mr. Schmidt, the former chief executive of Google.

    “Ukraine,” he said in October, between trips to the country, “has become the laboratory in the world on drones.” He described the sudden appearance of several hundred drone start-ups in Ukraine of “every conceivable kind.”

    But by the fall of 2023 he began to worry that Ukraine’s innovative edge alone would not be enough. Russia’s population was too big and too willing to sacrifice, oil prices remained high, China was still supplying the Russians with key technologies and parts — while they also sold to the Ukrainians.

    And while Ukrainian pop-up factories churned out increasingly cheap drones, he feared they would quickly be outmatched.

    So Mr. Schmidt began funding a different vision, one that is now, after the Ukraine experience, gaining adherents in the Pentagon: far more inexpensive, autonomous drones, which would launch in swarms and talk to each other even if they lost their connection to human operators on the ground. The idea is a generation of new weapons that would learn to evade Russian air defenses and reconfigure themselves if some drones in the swarm were shot down.

    It is far from clear that the United States, accustomed to building exquisite, $10 million drones, can make the shift to disposable models. Or that it is ready to bring on the targeting questions that come with fleets driven by A.I.

    “There’s an awful lot of moral issues here,” Mr. Schmidt acknowledged, noting that these systems would create another round of the long-running debates about targeting based on artificial intelligence, even as the Pentagon insists that it will maintain “appropriate levels of human judgment over the use of force.”

    He also came to a harsh conclusion: This new version of warfare would likely be awful.

    “Ground troops, with drones circling overhead, know they’re constantly under the watchful eyes of unseen pilots a few kilometers away,” Mr. Schmidt wrote last year. “And those pilots know they are potentially in opposing cross hairs watching back. … This feeling of exposure and lethal voyeurism is everywhere in Ukraine.”

    **********************************************************************************************************

    Oh valiant and noble Banderites!

    Like

  66. From Lyubov Sobol — remember her?

    Lyubov Eduardovna Sobol: Russian “opposition politician”, lawyer and a member of the Russian Opposition Coordination Council. 

    She fucked off out of here ages ago. Started posting weird Tweets. MI6 agent Pevchikh said she’d gone nuts.

    Whatever. One thing she has been doing in recent years, however, is eating a lot:

    Sobol 2021, as she appeared in a New Yorker article.

    Why’s she wearing a wrist-watch around her right ankle?

    Sobol last year.

    So Lyobov, it seems, is now resident in Baerbockland:

    Sobol Lyubov

    4 JUNE

    BERLIN

    Concert in honour of Navalny’s birthday

    Tickets — here: june4.navalny.com

    Concert on Aleksey Navalny’s birthday

    ———————————————————————————————————

    HI, THIS IS NAVALNY

    ———————————————————————————————————

    KASTA • NOIZE MC • PORNOFILMS • AIGEL

    4 JUNE / 19:00 / BERLIN / UBER EATS MUSIC HALL

    Uber Eats Music Hall

    **********************************************************************************************************

    “Hi! This is Navalny! ” was how the Bullshitter began his YouTube videos — you know, kiddy-talk for his “hamsters”.

    “Kasta” is a music group.

    “Aigel” is a hip-hop duo.

    But pornofilms?

    Decadent Berlin.

    Well there you have it!

    Book now to avoid disappointment!

    One small point, though — why not hold the concert in Moscow, you know, Moscow Russia, where the oppressed populationand the Navalny faithful are yearning for freedom and democracy … and pornofilms?

    Like

    1. “Pornofilms”, originally Pornofilmy, is the name of a Russian punk / grunge band that formed way back in 2008 but became more active as a songwriting / recording / touring group in 2012. The band moved to Georgia in 2022 after Russia began its SMO. Band members hold anti-Putin opinions.

      All this info is from Pornofilms’s Wikipedia entry.

      Like

      1. So the concert caters for the tastes of Navalny kiddies — only they’re not kiddies who will be attending the Berlin show but soft-arse, bourgeois wankers: “Pornfims”, therefore, is appropriately suitable for their degenerate tastes.

        I detest present-day popular “music”, I really do.

        I like most jazz and American Big Band music that declined in popularity with the onset of American idiot bumpkin Rock ‘n’ Roll. I like American popular songs of the ’30s and ’40s and early ’50s songs by Sinatra, for example, and Dinah Shore, Ella Fitzgerald — though she’s “jazz” — Joe Stafford, Frankie Lane . . . . on and on go I. I must be dead old me!

        I also like most classical music — from the Early Renaissance church music of fellow countryman Thomas Tallis, who composed haunting church music, sung in Latin of course (I suppose I like him because I was forced by maniac monks to sing in Latin in a church choir from the age of 11 and often sang Tallis’s compositions: Tallis was a Roman Catholic — a closet one, as it was often dangerous when he lived to profess Catholicism in England; I still like his music, though I ditched Christianity years ago. Being a heathen is much more fun , and it annoys Christians), through Baroque music and Classical and 19th century Romantic to most modern classical music. And most opera I like. But as far as I’m concerned, you can stick post-1950s popular music where the sun doesn’t shine. For example, I think the regularly played on radio stations here “Bohemian Rhapsody” by “Queen” is total, unadulterated musical shite.

        Here’s something that I like:

        She’s “hot”, as some like to say, and she has wonderful, slight body movements and facial expressions which though most certainly not vulgar, are tastefully suggestive. She’s a great singer and has a wonderful smile.

        Lee’s song “Is that all there is?” is my theme tune now, because I’m a miserable bastard and I’ve been there and seen many things, experienced a lot, and can therefore say: Is that all there is?

        Have to be careful here, lest this site become swamped with music videos as does Martyanov’s on Fridays.

        The long gone from here Yalensis used to post music videos on this site that were much more to my taste, but as they say: tastes differ; or as Orcs say: на вкус и цвет товарища нет! [na vkus i tsvet tovarishcha net] — literally: in taste and colour there is no comradeship!

        Like

  67. I thought the bastards’ kind benefactor had told them to stop doing this. No matter. Such attacks will clearly bring Putin’s evil regime to its knees and the barbaric Orcs will inevitably sue for peace.

    Tune in tomorrow morning to learn about the Tyrant’s response and read reports of dead Banderastan women and children smitten by the Evil One.

    07: 24, 27 April 2024

    Details about the attacks of AFU drones on the Kuban oil plant have appeared

    As a result of the attack by the Ukrainian Armed Forces on the Kuban oil plant, explosions did not stop for more than 30 minutes

    As a result of the attack of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine (AFU) on the oil plant in Slavyansk-on-Kuban, explosions did not stop early in the morning for more than half an hour. Such details are reported by the Telegram channel “Shot“.

    According to eyewitnesses, the explosions occurred around four o’clock in the morning. Then the air defence and electronic warfare (EW) systems worked. Preliminary reports say no one was injured.

    On the night of Saturday, 27 April, more than 10 Ukrainian drones were suppressed in the Slavyansky, Seversky and Kushchevsky districts of Kuban. As the governor Veniamin Kondratyev specified, drones tried to attack oil refineries and infrastructure facilities.

    Subsequently, it became known that the fracking column was damaged during a drone attack on Kuban. In total, nine attacks were carried out on the tank farm and the fracking column — thanks to the built-up protection system, the tank farm was not damaged, said Roman Sinyagovsky, head of the Slavyansky district. The resulting fire was eliminated: there were no injuries.

    Like

  68. Have no fear, der Führer is here!

    Vladimir Zelensky in Sumy, March 27, 2024. / Ukrainian Presidential Press Service / Reuters

    In a park in the city centre, I guess and nowhere near the firing line: no flak-jackets, no helmets, meticulously constructed trench . . .

    AiF

    27.04.2024 01:32

    “A Cry for help”: The Armed Forces of the Ukraine have said there’s panic over the threat of a Russian attack against Sumy

    Members of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine (AFU) have expressed their panic because of a possible attack by the Russian army. They are asking the leadership to reinforce the region with additional troops. However, this may be a special operation of the Kiev authorities themselves, Russian experts believe.

    The Ukrainian Armed Forces are turning the Sumy region into an impregnable fortress. The local edition of the “Kyiv Independent”, with reference to the military command, reports that the Ukrainian Armed Forces plan to lay even more mines and build additional fortifications.

    However, soldiers of the AFU are complaining about local farmers who refuse to stop mine-laying in the fields, “We need to protect the border from farmers”, a command official said.

    [Remember a few days ago a story posted by me about a Banderite in Kharkov Region who searches for mines in the fields and then, having lifted them, he makes bombs out of their contents that will kill “the bastards who have laid mines in my Motherland”? — ME]

    At the same time, the Ukrainian Armed Forces believe that so far the Russian group has not increased the proper number of troops and equipment needed to break through the heavily fortified area. Therefore, they doubt the imminent attack. “However, the circulating reports of a large-scale attack make the situation on the north-eastern border uncertain”, Ukrainian journalists note.

    So, drone instructor Dmitry Zinchenko from the 117th territorial Defence brigade, stationed in the village of Krasnopolye, complains that the unit has a constant supply of drones for attack, but most of the drones are not ready for use immediately after unpacking: they have to be manually armed. Unlike fellow soldiers from the same brigade stationed in the east, where fighting is raging, Zinchenko’s usual targets are vehicles that Russian troops use to build fortifications and observation towers along the border.

    If Moscow orders its troops to march on Kharkov, the Sumy region may become part of their plan, says Mikhail Samus, director of the New Geopolitics research network. According to him, the region in this case will become a strong base for Russian troops.

    Revenge and panic

    If the Russian army attacks the Sumy region, it will be as a response to the raid of traitors from the terrorist organization “Russian Volunteer Corps”, who have attacked the territory of Russia from this region, writes the telegram channel “Ukropsky Fresh”.

    “Local residents and personnel of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine are in a panicky mood, because they do not have the strength and means to contain the advance of Russian troops.

    Kiev Propagandists

    “If Russia had planned to demilitarize and denazify the Sumy region, creating a sanitary zone there, it would have done so long ago”, Candidate of Historical Sciences, Reserve Lieutenant Colonel Oleg Ivannikov told aif.ru

    “Articles in the Ukrainian publication [Kyiv Independent] is aimed at the domestic reader. The Kiev regime needs to justify tough, repressive measures in order to search for and apprehend citizens living in the Sumy region who are subject to being mobilized. According to open sources, mobilization in the Sumy region has completely failed. And the Kyiv Independent, a propaganda publication, is the mouthpiece of the Kiev regime. It would be naive to believe that even a word of truth would be published there”, explained the expert.

    So the Führer has turned up in Sumy, where he took a stroll along a trench pour encourager les autres.

    Like

  69. Shock, horrors from a leading UK arsewipe:

    Putin sends horror warning to West as Russian exhibit shows off captured NATO equipment

    Vladimir Putin has sent a provocative message to the West, just days after the US and UK agreed to send billions more in military aid to Ukraine.

    22:01, Fri, Apr 26, 2024 | UPDATED: 22:11, Fri, Apr 26, 2024

    British 'Husky TSV' armoured vehicle

    A British ‘Husky TSV’ armoured vehicle is among the captured equipment on display (Image: RUSSIA MOD)

    Vladimir Putin’s officials are putting the final touches to a public exhibit of captured NATO weapons in Moscow. The military equipment includes British vehicles, German tanks and US artillery weapons all captured in pristine condition from the ongoing war in Ukraine.

    Russians will be able to view dozens of captured military equipment at a square in Moscow during a month-long exhibit. The exhibition is described as a celebration of Russia’s success “against Ukrainian militants and their Western supporters”.

    The Russian Ministry of Defence said that more than 30 pieces of military equipment made in Australia, Austria, the UK, the US, Turkey, Ukraine, France, Finland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Sweden and South Africa, will be displayed at Moscow’s Victory Park.

    us weapons

    The military equipment includes British vehicles, German tanks and US artillery weapons (Image: RUSSIA MOD)

    Among the captured ‘trophies’ are the British ‘Husky TSV’ armoured vehicle, the US Bradley infantry fighting vehicle, the Swedish CV90 infantry fighting vehicle, and the French AMX-10 RC armoured vehicle.

    Beyond equipment, the exhibit will also expose Ukrainian “combat documents, maps and ideological literature”.

    The Victory Park is an open-air museum focused on commemorating Nazi Germany’s defeat during World War II—known in Russia as the Great Patriotic War.

    The exhibition will also run alongside Moscow’s Red Square Victory Day parade on May 9 to commemorate the victory against the Nazis.

    The ‘NATO exhibit’ is seen as Vladimir Putin taunting the West, just days after the US and UK agreed to send billions more in military aid.

    Earlier this week, Rishi Sunak promised the UK’s largest-ever military support package for Ukraine.

    The UK plans to send 400 vehicles, more than 1,600 missiles, 4m rounds of ammunition, 60 boats, as well as an additional £500m in military funding, taking the total to £3bn this financial year.

    RUSSIA

    Russians will be able to view the dozens of captured military equipment (Image: GETTY)

    On Friday the US announced it will provide about £4.7billion long-term military aid to Ukraine, including much sought-after munitions for Patriot air defence system.

    Meanwhile, US military officials revealed that Ukraine had sidelined US Abrams M1A1 tanks because Russian drones could detect them and launch attacks.

    Five of the 31 Abrams that the US sent in January 2023 have already been lost to Russian attacks.

    ************************************************************************************************************

    And wonderful comments from braindead UK readers:

    Rule Britannia 1954

    11 MIN AGO

    I see the ruskies aren’t displaying their own destroyed military equipment….

    What a wanker!

    Like

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