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.

1,784 thoughts on “Whatever You Have to Tell Yourself

  1. Scholz has spoken about peace talks in the Ukraine

    Scholz: a number of countries at the level of security advisers discuss peace in the Ukraine

    Berlin, 28 March, 2024, 09: 02 — Regnum News Agency. A number of countries are discussing the prospects for peace in Ukraine, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said in an interview with the Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper.

    “Some countries, including Ukraine, are currently discussing at the level of security advisers what might look like what could lead to a peace process,” he said.

    At the same time, Scholz added that “peace is possible at any time”, for this, Russian president Vladimir Putin “needs to withdraw troops and end the conflict”.

    As reported by IA Regnum, Russian President Vladimir Putin on 13 March 13 once again stated that Moscow was still ready for negotiations on the Ukraine. At the same time, he stressed that negotiations should be based on the current realities, including the recognition of the reunification of four regions with Russia in 2022.

    A spokesman for the Russian leader, Dmitry Peskov, noted on 12 March that Kiev consistently denies the possibility of holding any negotiations, both de facto and de jure.

    Earlier, Harrison Kass, a columnist for the American National Interest magazine, noted that the Kiev regime should start negotiations with Moscow as soon as possible, since the termination of US aid will lead to a deterioration in its negotiating positions.

    ***

    Russian president Vladimir Putin “needs to withdraw troops and end the conflict”.

    Forget it Arschloch!

    Russia determines the terms and conditions for and end to hostilities, not you and the rest of the EU wankers, and most certainly not Banderastan.

    So fuck off, will ya!

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  2. MOM, WHY AM I A MORON?

    Because you are a Banderite.

    The above is in mova, by the way. Don’t know whether a Yukie made it.

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  3. A US government-funded news outlet has come to the defense of one of the alleged perpetrators of last week’s concert hall massacre near Moscow. The man, who is accused of taking part in the killing of 140 people, has been described in a Radio Free Europe article as “very compassionate.” 

    Muhammadsobir Fayzov was caught by Russian security forces near the Ukrainian border on Friday and formally arrested at a Moscow court on Sunday. Along with three other Tajik nationals, Fayzov is accused of carrying out a mass shooting at the Crocus City Hall, a concert venue northwest of Moscow, on Friday. As of Wednesday, the attack has claimed at least 143 lives.

    Although Fayzov was allegedly responsible for the deadliest terror attack on Russian soil in two decades, he has been portrayed by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Taijik branch as a kind and caring young man.

    “He was the best kid in the family. He was very compassionate,” Fayzov’s mother told RFE/RL. “He loved his cousins. He loved his friends’ weddings. He danced with the boys at parties. He was a funny boy, but no one complained at school. He actively participated in school activities.”

    “He was afraid of hurting someone, and someone probably set him up,” his mother claimed.

    source

    I recall when an evil bitch blew herself up with a suicide bomb here on Lubyanka metro station, killing and maiming very many people who were going to work, one of which victims might very well have been me, because just 5 minutes before she detonated that bomb, I had just left the Lubyanka platform so as to change to another line.

    That bastard Harding of the Guardian then scurried off to Dagestan to interview the suicide bomber’s parents and reported how they had described their daughter as a lovely, kind person.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. As well as the chap here in BC, years ago, who was discovered to have been keeping a young girl for I forget how long, but I believe years, in a disused and covered-over grease pit under the floor of his garage, which he accessed through a false back in a cupboard for tools and such. His wife came into the garage and caught him climbing out, else who knows what would have been her eventual fate, but she was rescued. Neighbours approached for comment thought him the least likely to have ever done such a thing, and in fact the quiet guy who keeps to himself is a stereotypical murderer and pervert. It is extremely unlikely that, on meeting your new neighbour, he will confess to past murders, speculate on the potential for future ones or admit bizarre desires. Those things people tend to leave for you to discover on your own. Likewise, neighbours and family members do not make very objective witnesses against the accused – in the case of neighbours, if they responded “I KNEW there was something bent about that guy; he was as skeevy as you can possibly imagine!”, the immediate response will be “Really? Well, then, why didn’t you pass along your suspicions?”

        Similarly, the United States and organizations it funds do not make very objective analysts of Russian legal situations, since they clearly believe the entirety of the Russian government should be in jail, while no Russians who are actually in jail owing to Russian verdicts deserve to be there, all of them being misunderstood dissidents and those unjustly imprisoned to silence their political views.

        Okay, I found that original story and it was not exactly as I remembered from newspaper accounts at the time; the girl – Abby Drover – was actually held for 181 days before being found. That certainly is a long time, must have been eternity for her, but it’s not years. Also, his wife did not catch him – she couldn’t find him although she knew he had gone into the garage, and feared he had killed himself, and police she called caught him emerging from his secret entrance.

        https://bc.ctvnews.ca/b-c-man-who-held-girl-in-dungeon-for-181-days-dies-1.835120

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        1. When I was a guest of the late, lamented and sadly miss Her Majesty Elizabeth II, I had the great misfortune of having to deal with paederasts who had been sent to the corrective establishment where I had been imprisoned: my job there was to issue out their prison garb.

          And the thing that I immediately noticed about them was that they all looked “normal”, not freaky, dirty old men, but young and — well, “normal”.

          Like

    1. It’s a common ploy among the MSM: as soon as a mass shooting or other massacre occurs, and the perpetrator/s is/are arrested, reporters ask those people (relatives / friends / neighbours / school or work acquaintances) about the killer/s and the responses are nearly always favourable to the culprits: always quiet, always friendly and kind to animals, wouldn’t hurt a fly.

      Like

  4. More lumps of Azov shite sentenced to life imprisonment . . .

    An “Azov” member has been sentenced to life in prison for the murder of Mariupol residents

    28 March, 2024, 16: 26

    Photo: Prosecutor General’s Office of the Russian Federation

    A court in the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) has sentenced Alexander Sykylynda, a 28-year-old member of the nationalist Azov battalion (recognized as a terrorist, banned in the Russian Federation), to life imprisonment for the murder of five civilians in Mariupol. This was announced on 28 March by the press service of the Prosecutor General’s Office of the Russian Federation.

    It is established that in March 2022, while at an observation position, together with other servicemen, he was ordered to fire a machine gun on Arkhip Kuinzhi Street in Mariupol at a car with the inscription “Children” on it. As a result, a man, a woman and a child traveling in the car died on the spot.

    In addition, in April of the same year, on the orders of his commander, he shot at a car with two Mariupol residents inside on Primorsky Boulevard, because of which both passengers died on the spot.

    “He was found guilty under paragraphs “a”, “b”, “g”, ” l ” of Part 2 of Article 105 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (“Murder of two or more persons, a minor, committed by an organized group, motivated by political or ideological hatred”), Part 1 of Article 356 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (“Cruel murder of a minor, a minor, committed by an organized group, motivated by political or ideological hatred”). treatment of the civilian population in the occupied territory” the ministry said in a statement.

    Earlier, on 25 March, the Supreme Court of the DPR also sentenced to life imprisonment an “Azov” soldier, Pavel Gusev, for the murder of two civilians in Mariupol. It was reported that he had fired at least 10 shots from an AKS-74 submachine gun at two men walking down a street.

    Prior to that, on 22 March, the court sentenced 10 Azov militants. The defendants were found guilty of committing crimes involving ill-treatment of the civilian population, the use of prohibited weapons, attempted murder committed by a group of persons, as well as intentional damage to other people’s property.

    No doubt RFE/RL will soon declare what gentle people these people are and how their behaviour was completely out of character.

    And their mothers love them and said they were all good boys.

    Glory to Banderastan! To the killers — Glory!

    Like

    1. While they’re at it, perhaps some Banderastan residents will publicly recall how their current President – who claims there can be no peace with Russia until it returns everything it has stolen from Ukraine, submits to trial for war crimes and pays every ruble it possesses to Ukraine as reparations – was elected by the Ukrainian voters because he promised he would make peace with the Russians. With whom they at the time were not at war. I’m afraid I would have to award him a very low score for keeping his campaign promises.

      Like

  5. This below is from either a Russian citizen, a kreakl, a bourgeois whinger, or more than likely, from a Banderite or a Banderastan ministry, The “blogger” who posted it calls himself “Staatssicherheit”, which is German, curiously enough, for “State Security”.

    A day of war for the Russian Federation costs > $ 300 million.

    ***

    Translation:

    WSJ: The war against the Ukraine costs Russia 300 million dollars a day

    28.03.2024, 11:16

    [I am sure the blogger has written the date as it is written in European format, namely DDMMYYYY — ME]

    Every day of the war waged against the Ukraine by the Aggressor State Russia costs $300 million. This amount does not take into account the large-scale re-armament of the RF and sanctions from the West.

    ***

    For understanding and clarity, what is $ 300 million?

    – this is about 20 new modern schools for 1.5 thousand students, built “from scratch” (PER DAY)

    – this is two state-of-the-art infectious disease hospitals, literally the best possible, and also built “from scratch” (PER DAY)

    – in 2020, the Ministry of Construction stated that urgent repairs and replacement of 30% of all heating systems in Russia are needed. This could be implemented for just 10 days of the war budget.

    – for the war budget of just one day (!) you can now build 148 kilometres of a four-lane highway of the highest category “from scratch”

    – in Russia as of today there are about 2.5 thousand WWII veterans who are still not provided with housing. For the budget of one month (!) of the war, each of them could buy an apartment in the skyscrapers of Moscow City with an area of more than 150 square metres and with complete renovation.

    Putin: “A new “Hitler Youth” is being created in the Ukraine.

    Well, in Russia there has long been a Putleryugend and nothing else.

    Above left:

    Filthy Fascists make soldiers of the future out of innocent children.

    Above right:

    How sweet, how patriotic they are.

    The blogger wants a “beautiful Russia”, as did Navalny.

    And couldn’t give a fuck about what the Banderites planned for those separatist, filthy Moskals in the south east of the former UkSSR.

    Fifth columnists in Russia should be sought out and eliminated.

    Like

    1. What does every day of war cost Ukraine’s western backers? In Russia’s case, as it keeps trying to point out, this is not a war of choice – that possibility died when Washington arrogantly rejected its security demands, and green-lighted Zelensky’s military push to re-take the eastern regions. Remaining passive and trying to talk their way out of the situation would have resulted in the emergence of a powerful military enemy right on their border, supported by the combined economic weight of the NATO countries. And it still might, if NATO were so foolish as to take in rump Ukraine when it’s all over. But it’ll be a lot smaller.

      Like

  6. Lavrov making a cnut of Rosenturd a while back. Granted, not that difficult to do.

    Found the clip on posted 4 hours ago today Martyanov:

    Unfortunately, Lavrov, as do most foreigners, believes that being a British citizen means that that citizen is “English”. Several times, he asks Rosenberg if he is English. Rosenberg is not English, and interestingly, he does not reply to this question. In fact, he continually refuses to reply to Lavrov’s questions.

    The twat Rosenberg apparently thinks that Russian claims that NATO is enlarging is patent nonsense: “Why do people in Russia often talk about ‘five waves of enlargement of NATO’?”

    Yes indeed, Rosenberg, why do they do this, because clearly this is not true?

    And for Christ’s sake — granted that this interview took place 2 years ago — Lavrov says: “With all due respect to our colleagues in NATO” (9:33)!

    And the slimy cnut Rosenberg, repeatedly excuses to answer Lavrov’s questions by arrogantly stating: “I’m doing the interview”.

    The first time Rosenberg said that, why didn’t Lavrov just leap up right then and flop the cheeky little cnut?

    And I wish Lavrov and the rest of the world’s politicians would stop saying “Anglo-Saxon” when they mean “Anglophone”.

    Rosenberg is neither Anglo-Saxon nor English, but his mother tongue is English and he is a British citizen, born in Epping, East of London, to a family whose forebears were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire.

    Rosenberg came here in 1991 and taught English in Moscow until 2006. Whilst teaching in Moscow, he got a start with CBS News in the Moscow bureau of that network, where worked for the next six years, first as a translator, then as an assistant producer, and then as a producer. In 1997, Rosenberg also became a producer in the BBC Moscow bureau. In 2000, he was appointed as a reporter for the BBC in Moscow. Three years later, he became its Moscow correspondent. 

    And as I have pointed out before, he seems to be living and eating rather well in “Putin’s Mafia State”, as he has piled on weight in recent years.

    Like

    1. There but for the grace of God go I …

      I started teaching English in Moscow around the same time as Rosenberg did. Never entered my head to work for CBS or the BBC, though, or, as the case may be, for those two propaganda organs to approach me with offers of employment.

      Like

      1. Same as Fiona Hill, North of England coalminer’s daughter and long-time adviser on matters Russian to the great and good in Washington. She studied in the USSR at about the same time as did I and probably at the same university. However, when she was an undergrad here, she was also an intern with NBC. Sights already set, it seems.

        Like

  7. Report from the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation

    Chairman of the Investigative Committee of Russia heard the progress of the investigation of the criminal case on the terrorist attack in KrasnogorskMarch 28, 2024

    17:45

    The Chairman of the Investigative Committee of Russia held an operational meeting and listened to the report of the investigative team on the progress of the investigation of the criminal case on the terrorist act in Crocus City Hall.

    Investigators reported on the active work being carried out to recreate the full picture of the crime committed both at the stages of preparation and planning, and the commission of a terrorist attack on unarmed citizens.

    The initial results of the investigation fully confirm the planned nature of the terrorist actions, careful preparation and financial support from the organizers of the crime.

    As a result of working with the detained terrorists, studying the technical devices seized from them, and analyzing information about financial transactions, evidence of their connection with Ukrainian nationalists was obtained.

    The investigation has confirmed that the perpetrators of the terrorist attack received significant amounts of money and cryptocurrencies from Ukraine, which were used in the preparation of the crime.

    Another suspect involved in the terrorist financing scheme has been identified and detained. The investigation will ask the court to choose a preventive measure in the form of remand in custody against him.

    The above linked site can be read in both Russian and English.

    Like

  8. Happy Friday, Banderastan!

    29 March, 08: 26

    Ukrenergo reported damage to thermal power plants and hydroelectric power stations in the center and west of the country

    AP Photo/ Yevhen Titov

    The company noted that in the Dnipropetrovsk region at the moment there are emergency power outages, and in Kharkov there are schedule hourly blackouts.

    MOSCOW, March 29. /tass/. Thermal and hydroelectric power plants were damaged in the centre and west of the Ukraine. This was announced by the company “Ukrenergo” in its Telegram channel.

    “Thermal and hydroelectric power stations in the central and western regions were damaged”, the report says.

    Ukrenergo did not provide any other details.

    In addition, according to the company, there are currently emergency power outages in the Dnipropetrovsk region, and hourly blackouts in the Kharkov region.

    And crickets from the Helsinki desk.

    Like

    1. Yes, I saw this a day or so ago, and the thrust seemed to be that while a few buildings were damaged at the surface, the gas itself – which is mostly stored gas belonging to the EU – is perfectly safe, being stored deep underground.

      Ukraine has made much of its usefulness as a gas-storage depot for Europe’s resources, and hopes to greatly increase its current holdings this year.

      https://ukranews.com/en/news/993756-naftogaz-to-increase-volume-of-gas-from-european-traders-to-ukrainian-usf-by-60-to-4-billion-cubic

      Ukraine acknowledges that DTEK, the country’s largest generator of electrical power, has lost about 50% of its capability. However, the simple fact that Russia has broadened its attacks to target gas storage sites in Ukraine might concern Europe, just as Ukraine is hoping to convince them to increase its holdings of their resources.

      “The news that a gas storage site has become the target of an attack might cause concern in Europe after the EU started sending extra gas to Ukrainian storage sites after its own filled up. This began last year, with the Ukrainian state energy company making available 10 billion cu m of capacity. This represents a third of the country’s total storage capacity.

      Last year, according to the Kiyv Independent, foreign energy traders made use of some 2.5 billion cu m of that capacity and this year they started filling up the storage capacity earlier than usual, Naftogaz said this month. The company is hoping to see 4 billion cu of capacity utilized by European energy traders this year.”

      https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Russia-Attacks-Natural-Gas-Storage-Site-in-Ukraine.html

      Critically, at least one site I saw – which I don’t have time to search for right now – claimed from some bigwig, Zelensky or someone high up in NAFTOGAZ – that the stored gas was ‘important for Ukraine’s energy security’. That’s the part that would make me nervous if I had gas stored there, considering the way Ukraine used to just help itself from Russia’s pipeline supplies.

      Like

  9. 29 MARCH, 2024, 11: 46

    Zelensky’s regime is based only on terror

    Everything that is happening in the Ukraine now is a consequence of 2014 and the cruel and immoral, in other words, terrorist traditions that were laid down at that time.

    Under the guise of slogans about justice and dignity, people were tied to lampposts on Euromaidan. When in 2022 Ukrainians organized lynchings and flogged their fellow citizens, they put into practice the traditions laid down by the Maidan. But this was only the beginning, as the rioters revelled in their impunity and the opportunity to decide the fate of others. I remember terrible images: protesters gouged out the eyes of a Berkut fighter, and “democratic” journalists began to justify them, saying that he had served the Yanukovich regime, so it was his own fault that he had brought people to this. These “people” burnt alive in the office of the Party of Regions one of the employees working there, and then mockingly included his name in the list of the so-called Heavenly Hundred. On the day of the coup, the rioters fired automatic weapons at unarmed Berkut soldiers, who had only batons and canisters of gas. Then there was the terror against those who did not agree with the coup, which culminated in the burning of people in the House of Trade Unions in Odessa. Adherents of the Maidan regime have never hidden their belief in violence as the main tool for achieving the goal. The essence of this is the aphorisms of the leaders of the Maidan regime that have already become memes.

    The first is the phrase of the current mayor of Dnepropetrovsk, Boris Filatov, who in 2014 said about the residents of the Crimea:”You can promise them anything, but we will hang them later”. The second is the words of ex-President of the Ukraine Petro Poroshenko that children in the Ukraine would go to schools, and children in the Donbass would sit in basements.

    In 2022, Zelenskiy refused the Istanbul Accords and peace because the then British Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised to help him win. That is, Zelensky chose the path of violence instead of negotiations, the path of war instead of peace.

    And here he was walking along a well-trodden path. Illegally appointed Acting President of the Ukraine Oleksandr Turchynov refused to talk to residents of the Donbass: instead he announced a punitive operation against people in the region. So the war began.

    Poroshenko, when he came to power, was confident that he could quickly destroy the LDPR. But it didn’t work out that way. It is noteworthy that shortly before the signing of Minsk-2, Poroshenko opposed the introduction of peacekeepers in the Donbass, as he still believed in the victory of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine in Debaltseve. But after defeat and signing of the second Minsk agreements, Poroshenko became the most ardent supporter of the appearance of peacekeepers in the region. But not to end the war. In the Ukraine, they hoped to arrange a “Croatian scenario” in the Donbass, to repeat the success of the Croatian army, which in 1995, as a result of the betrayal of UN peacekeepers, was able to destroy the unrecognized Republic of Srpska Krajina. And the Minsk-2 agreement itself was signed by Poroshenko and representatives of France and Germany in order to give the Ukraine time to rearm and resolve the Donbass issue through violence and terror.

    Ukrainian artillerists are trying to kill as many civilians as possible and destroy as much of the city’s infrastructure as possible by shelling the cities of Donbass and, starting from 2022, the Russian border towns. In the military sense, they have no need whatsoever to do this: they simply want to sow fear. This is all that terrorists want.

    But it is especially necessary to highlight the terrorist actions in the Belgorod territory before the presidential election. Special forces of the Main Directorate of Ukraine Intelligence (GUR, ГУР), the military intelligence service of the Ukrainian government under the flag of the Russian Volunteer Corps (an organization that is recognized as a terrorist organization and banned in the Russian Federation) wanted to capture border settlements in the Belgorod and Kursk regions, firing rockets at Belgorod itself.

    Therefore, it is not surprising that the subhumans who killed so many innocent people in Crocus City tried to enter the territory of the Ukraine.

    Within Zelensky, Budanov, each of the participants of the Maidan regime dwells his own little bloody maniac who needs blood and fear. Having become the leaders of a regime for which terror is the basis, they themselves have turned into monsters.

    And we, in Donetsk, in Belgorod, and in any other city in Russia, repeat again and again: the Ukraine is a terrorist state. And it is our duty to eliminate this threat.

    Like

    1. But the strikes reported above were not a couple of days ago: they were last night, namely in the early hours of this morning. There were other such strikes earlier this week.

      I just cannot understand why there are no reports about this from Helsinki.

      29 MARCH, 2024, 14: 28

      Russian Armed Forces hit energy and air defence facilities of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine with a group strike

      On Friday night, the Russian Armed Forces launched a group strike on energy and air defence facilities of the Ukrainian army, the Russian Defence Ministry has said.

      The strike was carried out by high-precision long-range air, sea and land-based weapons, the ministry said in its Telegram channel.

      Among other things, hypersonic Kinzhal missiles and drones were used for the strike.

      Strike targets are reached, and all assigned objects are hit.

      Ha, sez you! We all know that the valiant Banderashites swat them out the night sky as though they were flies.

      From РБК:

      29 March

      Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said earlier that last night the strikes hit power grid facilities in Dnipropetrovsk, Vinnytsia, Ivano-Frankivsk, Lviv, Cherkasy and Chernivtsi regions.

      From РИА НОВОСТИ:

      29 March

      At night, an air alert was announced in the Ukraine. The media reported explosions in Dnepropetrovsk, Khmelnitsky, Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Cherkasy regions. 

      German Galushchenko, the country’s Energy Minister, said that generation facilities were under attack.

      The National Energy Company Ukrenergo said that after the explosions, power plants in the centre and the west of the Ukraine were damaged. Later it was reported that critical infrastructure facilities were damaged in the Lvov, Dnipropetrovsk, Cherkasy and Ivano-Frankivsk regions, as well as in the Kiev-controlled part of the Kherson region. In response to attacks by the Ukrainian Armed Forces on civilian targets, the Russian military regularly strikes Ukrainian infrastructure: energy, defence industry, military administration and communications. 

      Presidential press Secretary Dmitry Peskov stressed that the army does not target residential buildings and social facilities.

      From our Helsinki desk — crickets.

      Like

      1. Latest reports suggest NATO is rushing a shipment of Anti-Debris Missiles to Ukraine, to help out with that pesky problem that even when Ukraine shoots down more missiles than were launched, debris from the failed missiles frequently lands on and destroys the targets.

        Like

            1. “Ask any Icelander in Iceland for more information.”

              Or i could just ask my mother.

              The pagan immigrant from Iceland….

              Like

  10. AiF

    29.03.2024 12:31

    Half of the hydroelectric power stations on the Dnieper River is missing. Russia’s missile strike has sent the Ukraine into darkness

    The nighttime Russian strike with cruise missiles and Geran UAVs on military, energy and logistics facilities in Ukraine is described by the Kiev media as the largest in two years of the conflict. According to experts, the Ukrainian energy sector will not be able to get out of the crisis.

    We are starting to count what was destroyed overnight

    The Ukraine began to burn this morning. It was fires at military bases and explosions of warehouses and ammunition trains that lit up the Ukrainian sky. Then came the turn of energy infrastructure facilities that supply electricity to defence enterprises. Machine tools, production lines and metallurgical enterprises operating on behalf of the AFU were stopped. So let’s check out the damage.

    There are power outages in Cherkasy region. According to the Telegram channel “Vzor Partizan”, a large electrical substation of the Polyany substation was hit there. Military units and local businesses have been de-energized. Hits to the turbine room of the Kanevskaya hydroelectric power station have been noted. This is the second stage of the hydroelectric power station of the Dnieper cascade. The station activity has now been suspended. The dam has not been destroyed.

    In the Poltava region, two substations — the Mirgorod substation and the Kremenchuk substation —were partially destroyed and have stopped working.

    In Zelenodolsk, rocket hits were recorded in the turbine halls of the Kryvyi Rih thermal power plant. A large cloud of smoke or steam rises over the station because of emergency pressure release in the boilers.

    Three rockets hit the turbine hall of the Srednedniprovskaya HPP, which is the fourth stage of the hydroelectric power station on the Dnieper. Previously, the station was called Dneprodzerzhinskaya, as it was located in the city of the same name, renamed Kamensk as part of the “decommunization” in Ukraine.

    In Ivano-Frankivsk, the Burshtyn thermal power plant was partially destroyed. It is one of the largest in the Ukraine. “From the remaining machinery, 1-2 blocks will be assembled in a few months”, experts note.

    Half of Ukraine’s power grid in ruins

    According to information held by military expert Yuriy Podolyaka, more than half of the country’s entire energy system has stopped functioning in the Ukraine.

    Earlier, the Dnipro hydroelectric power station was damaged; today the Srednedniprovskaya and Kanevskaya hydroelectric power stations stopped. Taking into account the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric power station blown up by the Ukraine, this is half of all hydroelectric power stations in the Dnieper cascade.

    “Many substations have also been put out of action (those that connect the Ukrainian nuclear power plants and consumers. We can’t hit nuclear power plants), but they can be repaired”, Podolyaka notes. “However, but if such strikes are systemic, then sooner or later there will be nothing left to repair them with.”

    link

    Like

  11. Just found this at Martyanov‘s blog

    Axe is a right tosser, typical of so many “experts” in the West. He knows fuck all about fuck all, but he writes about the military with confidence and contradictions. He must be retarded if he can’t realize what a complete cnut he makes of himself at Forbes.

    Axe’s education: a bachelor’s degree in history in 2000; then studied medieval history before transferring to and graduating from the University of South Carolina with a master’s degree in fiction in 2004.

    A fucking mater’s degree in fiction!!!

    You couldn’t make it up — unless, of course, you had a degree in fiction.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Stock up on candles and a good mood, Yukies…

    Ukrainian Truth

    Zelensky has spoken about how the USA has reacted to Ukraine attacks against Russian oil refineries.

    [“Ukrainian Truth”! Surely an oxymoron — ME]

    President Volodymyr Zelensky said that the United States had not responded positively to drone strikes on oil refineries in Russia, but since we are talking about Ukrainian drones, no one can prohibit the Ukraine from hitting Russian refineries.

    Source: Zelensky in an interview with The Washington Post columnist David Ignatius

    Zelensky was asked about the US response to Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian oil refineries.

    Zelensky:

    The US response was not positive…

    We used our own drones. No one can tell us that we can’t…

    If there is no air defence to protect our energy system, and the Russians are attacking it, my question is: Why can’t we respond? Their society must learn to live without gasoline, without diesel, without electricity. … That’s fair enough”.

    Details: It is noted that Washington cannot limit the Ukraine from deploying its own weapons and deter similar attacks on energy facilities inside Russia.

    The publication notes that Zelensky feels that he has no other choice but to strike back at the Russian energy sector, in the hope of creating a deterrent system.

    According to the president, the Ukraine can stop Russian attacks on the Ukrainian energy system by forcing Russia to pay a similar price, and “when Russia stops these steps, we will stop”.

    In addition, Zelensky said that the Ukraine lacks air defence systems: “This is true. I don’t want Russia to know how many air defence missiles we have, but in principle, you are right. Without Congressional support, we shall have a large shortage of missiles. That’s the problem. We are increasing our own air defence systems, but this is not enough”.

    Commenting on the situation at the front, the head of state spoke about the shortage of ammunition, according to him, the Ukraine has to make 8,000 shots a day, but only makes 2,000 shots daily.

    Then the front line has to be shorter: “If it breaks, the Russians can advance to the big cities”.

    According to him, the Ukraine is “trying to find some way so as not to retreat”. So, after the taking of Avdeevka by the Russians in February, we managed to “stabilize the situation thanks to reasonable steps taken by our military”.

    He believes that if the front remains stable, the Ukraine will be able to arm and train new brigades in the rear to conduct a new counter-offensive later. Because if not the Ukraine, then the Russian Federation itself will go on the offensive.

    Zelensky: “If steps are not taken to prepare a new counter-offensive, Russia will do it. This is what we have learnt in this war: If we don’t do it, Russia will”.

    A reminder:

    Deputy Prime Minister for European and Euro-Atlantic Integration Olga Stefanyshina said that from a military point of view, oil refineries on the territory of Russia are legitimate targets of the Ukraine. According to her, in this case, the Ukraine is acting according to NATO standards.
    The Financial Times has learnt that the United States has allegedly called on the Ukraine not to hit Russian oil refineries and other energy infrastructure, as it worries that this could lead to higher energy prices and an even greater
    escalation.

    It seems that it is a widely held belief that these Yukietard drone attacks against Russian oil refineries result in their destruction, as indeed our Helsinki correspondent has occasionally gleefully announced. They do not. These drone attacks made by Khokhol retards are nothing more than PR exercises so as to squeeze out billions more dollars from the USA. On the other hand, Russian attacks against Banderastan, allegedly in retaliation for these Ukrainian shitwit drone attacks against Russian refineries, hurt Banderastan in a big way. Many Banderastan cities and regions are now without electrical power: no light, no heating, no pumps working in sewage works, no electric locos working. et., etc. That is not the case in Mordor, however, Yukietard drone attacks against Russian oil refineries notwithstanding.

    Kharkov the other night. Glory to Banderastan!

    Like

    1. As someone on MoA has pointed out, no need to lose thousands in taking Kharkov: no electricity there, which means no clean water, no functioning sewage pumping system, no heating (communal central heating has to have pumping stations for the distribution of hot water, no communications. The comforts of modern life grind to a halt. The city will depopulate itself.

      Like

    2. Realities are that despite its claimed status as world’s largest energy producer, the USA cannot control global energy prices, and fears the impact of high gasoline prices on Joe Biden’s re-election prospects rather than further escalation. Zelensky asserts Ukraine’s independent right to do as it pleases, but admits that if it does not have American help it will collapse. Ukraine can continue to launch headline-stealing pinpricks with quadcopter drones carrying an RPG grenade, but it has no control over the skies and one FAB bomb can do more damage than ten of its quadcopter attacks. Zelensky can talk tough all he likes, but all he is achieving with his tough talk is a hardening of American resolve to get out of this mess and concentrate on other priorities. This bizarre you-can’t-stop-us-from-doing-as-we-think-best-but-we-cannot-succeed-without-your-help narrative just will not play, and if the USA is looking for a face-saving way to back off, the loony talk from Zelensky offers it – they loved him when he was a modest flag-waver for American greatness, but the longer he keeps up the bravado that Ukraine is doing it basically alone while America is just a supplier and cheerleader, the further he edges out on thinner ice.

      Like

  13. Zelensky hamming it away whilst giving a CBS interview amidst ruins.

    28 March

    CBS Video

    What an obnoxious little lying bastard!

    Zelensky says ready for talks with Russia

    Zelensky spoke for the first time about negotiations with Russia before [the Ukraine] reaches the 1991 borders

    Kiev, 30 March, 2024, 03:46 – Regnum news agency. The head of the Kiev regime, Volodymyr Zelensky, has said for the first time that Kiev is ready for negotiations with Russia before the Ukrainian army reaches the 1991 borders. He reflected on this in an interview with the CBS TV channel, suggesting that Russian President Vladimir Putin would go for dialogue if the AFU reached the borders of 2022 – namely before the start of the special operation.

    Zelensky also believes that his army will not have returned all territories exclusively by military means.

    In the opinion of the Ukrainian leader, the Ukrainian Armed Forces need supplies of Western weapons and a “complete trade blockade” of Russia to reach the [1991] borders.

    It is well known that Volodymyr Zelenskyy has repeatedly said that he will not negotiate with Moscow until the AFU approaches Ukraine’s 1991 borders with the Crimea, the DNR, LNR, Kherson and Zaporizhzhya regions.

    As Regnum news agency reported earlier, President Vladimir Putin said in March 2024 that Russia was still ready for negotiations on the Ukraine, but they should be based on reality.

    The Kremlin and the Foreign Ministry have previously repeatedly noted that Russia is ready for a peaceful settlement of the situation in the Ukraine provided that all the requirements set before the start of the SMO are fulfilled and provided that the new territorial realities — the return of the four regions to Russia in 2022 — are recognized, stressing that otherwise the SMO shall be continued.

    Zelensky’s so-called “peace formula”, which is supposed to be discussed at a conference on the settlement of the Ukrainian conflict in Switzerland, is “alchemy”, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said on 29 March.

    [I should imagine that one would say in English “hocus pocus” instead of “alchemy — ME]

    Earlier, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said that talks between Moscow and Kiev might take place between the second and third “peace summits” in Switzerland, where the so-called Zelensky’s “peace formula” is supposed to be discussed. The talks should also be based on the said “formula”, which can be adjusted during the discussion without Russian representatives, Kuleba said.

    The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry’s statements about possible negotiations with Russia contradict Zelensky’s earlier ban on talks with Russia, and attempts to impose “rules” on Russia for holding such talks are unacceptable, Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

    The little Kiev funny man really is a laugh a minute!

    And as regards that wanker Kuleba’s suggestion that Moscow might enter discussions with Kiev at the “peace summit” in Switzerland, Zakharova has told him to go and get fucked.

    Well, not in so many words, because she’s a lady.

    Like

    1. Why hold an interview amidst ruins?

      Oh right! To squeeze out sympathy from stupid Western bastards.

      How amateurish!

      There should have been dead babies and dead pregnant women lying around and corpses with their hands tied behind them and a bullet hole in the back of their heads Bucha-style.

      Or maybe the interview really did take place on what was Bankova?

      Like

    2. What the little shit is saying is that peace talks between Moscow and Kiev could begin even without Ukraine having had the 1991 border re-established, namely the former UkSSR/RSFSR border before the separatist breakaway in the Lugansk and Donetsk provinces.

      A return to the former borders of 1991 has long been an immutable condition of the Banderites: they want the eastern border of the Ukraine as it was created, ironically, by the filthy Soviet Moskals in 1922 as a sop to “Ukrainian” nationalists, thereby creating a Soviet Republic on territory that had formerly been known as “Little Russia” and “New Russia”.

      In the Kiev Rat’s opinion, the Russian side will be “ready for dialogue” should the state of Banderastan only succeed in re-establishing its former eastern borders of 2022, that is to say, the border as it was before the shit hit the fan on 24 February 2022 and from the Banderastan side of which the neo-nazi Banderite scum had been relentlessly bombarding civilian areas of breakaway Ukraine territory since 2014 in their so-called Anti-Terrorist Operation.

      A defeated party trying to dictate conditions for negotiating and end to hostilities.

      Sort of like Nazi Germany in 1944 offering the USSR a cessation of hostilities if the borders of the Greater Reich be returned to as they were before 22 June, 1941.

      Like

      1. Some are mistakenly thinking that when Zelensky stated that peace talks between Moscow and Kiev could begin even without the Ukraine having had the 1991 border re-established, that indicated that the Bandera regime was now ready to give up the Crimea and Donbass.

        However, the filthy little lying funny man is not making compromises.

        What Zelensky actually meant was that if the Ukrainian army beats the Russian army, beats it back, making it retreat back to the SMO start line of 2022, then Russia would immediately become more compliant for negotiations.

        The little shit has not changed his desire to go to the border of 1991, including the repossession of the Crimea: he just believes that this return to the 1991 border will happen, on condition that the USA and the EU and the UK give him as much money and weapons as possible.

        Like

      2. And, don’t forget, these peace talks could go ahead and conditions be struck without Russian participation, although presumably Russia would be expected to abide by the conclusions of these learned and dignified proceedings. Expect away, Quislings.

        Just by way of an addendum, the Kyiv Funny Man is already preparing the ground for ‘victory’ to mean ‘economic triumph when our friends and allies rebuild us’.

        “Zelensky underscored the multifaceted nature of achieving victory, emphasizing that Ukraine’s triumph would not solely rely on military might but also on economic strength and global political support.

        “To win is to help Ukraine succeed economically, be strong on the battlefield, and secure political support. We won’t need to de-occupy all our territories solely by military means,” Zelensky articulated, shedding light on the comprehensive strategy envisioned by Kyiv.”

        We won’t need to de-occupy all our territories solely by military means. It’s going to be soooooo good in the new rebuilt Ukraine that residents of the occupied zones will pretend they are just going out for cigarettes to fool the occupiers, and then secretly move to the New Ukraine. Hey, here’s a thought: why not just do a bulk purchase of flush toilets, and then leave them just over the Russian border. When all the katsaps flock to claim their share of the booty, simply re-occupy the border and shut them out.

        I can’t imagine the hardcore Azov types buying Zelensky’s glib explanation that you don’t really have to win to…well…win.

        https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/zelensky-s-strategic-shift-opening-door-to-peace-talks-without-pre-1991-borders/ar-BB1kN8t7?cvid=c2484cdd003b4008a814f0fb0366e3d8&ei=7

        And while we’re on the subject of reconstruction, underneath the patter of happy-talk about spending a Trillion or so and biggest-rebuilding-project-since-World-War-Two is the bedrock of reality – these visions are only on paper, because nobody knows what the overall size of the country will be at war’s end, or ‘where people will opt to live’.

        “However, according to Bloomberg, every person responsible for the reconstruction projects in Ukraine currently cannot know the size of the country’s territory after the war concludes.

        “The map of Ukraine will depend on how much of that territory is taken back by Kyiv, and when and where more than a quarter of the country’s prewar population will opt to live. About 18% of Ukraine is currently occupied by Russian forces,” the agency writes.

        It is also unknown how to guarantee that after a peace agreement, Russians will not reoccupy the regions and areas where reconstruction work has been carried out.”

        And just look who is the ramrod for the State Agency for Infrastructure and Reconstruction Development of Ukraine: Mustafa Nayyem, as I live and breathe – how could any project falter or fail with The Father Of The Maidan at the helm? Well, yes, okay, Euromaidan failed. But except for that.

        https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/world/rebuilding-ukraine-western-companies-develop-post-war-reconstruction-plans/ar-BB1jCOpQ

        Like

  14. Word out is that the evidence that the IS allegedly has which links the Crocus terrorists to the Kiev Banderite regime is that the cryptocurrency payments made to the terrorists and that the blockchain of those payments leads to Banderastan.

    Like

  15. MOSCOW, March 29. /TASS/. The ninth defendant in the Crocus City Hall attack case has pleaded partially guilty, his lawyer Margarita Khoreva told TASS.

    “He has pleaded partially guilty. I can’t tell you any more than that because I have signed a pledge of secrecy,” she said.

    Partially guilty?

    Sort of like a rapist claiming that he is only partially guilty because he did not achieve full insertion?

    Like

  16. Who put the lights out?

    Thermal power plant destroyed in Ukraine’s Kharkov Region

    All units have been destroyed, auxiliary equipment has been damaged

    MOSCOW, March 30. /TASS/. The Zmievskaya thermal power plant has been destroyed in the Kharkov Region in Ukraine, Centrenergo, the country’s major electric and thermal energy-producing company, said in a statement on its website.

    “All units have been destroyed, auxiliary equipment has been damaged. The extent of damage varies from complete to substantial,” the statement said. The company added that there are no deadlines for the potential restoration of the power plant.

    On March 22, the Russian Defense Ministry reported a massive strike with long-range precision weapons and drones on the facilities of the energy sector, military-industrial complex, railway hubs, arsenals, and places of deployment of the Ukrainian military and foreign mercenaries. According to the ministry, “all the goals of the massive strike have been reached.”

    Like

  17. MILITARY OPERATION IN THE UKRAINE

    29 MAR, 16:33

    Russia’s massive night strike hammers Ukrainian energy, air defense sites — top brass

    Russian forces repelled four Ukrainian army attacks in the Kupyansk area, eliminating roughly 30 enemy troops over the past day, the ministry reported

    MOSCOW, 29 March. /TASS/. Russian forces delivered a massive night strike by long-range precision weapons, including Kinzhal hypersonic missiles against Ukrainian energy facilities and air defense sites over the past day in the special military operation in Ukraine, Russia’s Defense Ministry reported on Friday.

    “Last night, the Russian Armed Forces delivered a combined strike by air-launched, seaborne and ground-based long-range precision weapons, including Kinzhal aero-ballistic hypersonic missiles, and also by unmanned aerial vehicles against energy facilities and air defense sites of the Ukrainian army. The goals of the strike were achieved. All the targets were struck,” the ministry said in a statement.Russian forces repel four Ukrainian attacks in Kupyansk area over past day.

    Russian forces repelled four Ukrainian army attacks in the Kupyansk area, eliminating roughly 30 enemy troops over the past day, the ministry reported.

    “In the Kupyansk direction, Western Battlegroup units repelled four attacks by assault groups of the Ukrainian army’s 95th air assault and 123rd territorial defense brigades near the settlement of Terny in the Donetsk People’s Republic. The Ukrainian army’s losses amounted to 30 personnel and 2 motor vehicles,” the ministry said.

    Russian forces also destroyed a Polish-made Krab self-propelled artillery system, an Akatsiya self-propelled artillery gun, a Giatsint-S self-propelled gun, a D-20 howitzer and a Gvozdika motorized artillery system in the Kupyansk direction over the past 24 hours, it specified.Kiev loses over 300 troops in Donetsk area over past day.

    The Ukrainian military lost more than 300 troops in the Donetsk area over the past day, the ministry reported.

    “The Ukrainian army lost more than 300 personnel, 5 armored combat vehicles, including an American-made M113 armored personnel carrier, and 3 motor vehicles. In counter-battery fire, the following targets were destroyed: two D-20 howitzers, a D-30 howitzer, a UK-made L119 howitzer, a Nota electronic warfare station and three field ammunition depots of the Ukrainian army,” the ministry said.

    Russia’s Battlegroup South units took better positions and inflicted casualties on personnel and military hardware of the Ukrainian army’s 28th, 54th and 93rd mechanized, 81st airmobile, 5th assault, 79th and 80th air assault brigades near the settlements of Belogorovka in the Lugansk People’s Republic, Andreyevka, Antonovka, Kurdyumovka, Krasnogorovka, Nikolayevka and Chasov Yar in the Donetsk People’s Republic, it specified.Russian forces repulse eight Ukrainian attacks in Avdeyevka area over past day.

    Russian forces improved frontline positions and repulsed eight Ukrainian army counterattacks in the Avdeyevka area, eliminating more than 305 enemy troops over the past day, the ministry reported.

    “In the Avdeyevka direction, Battlegroup Center units improved their forward edge positions in active operations, inflicted casualties on enemy formations and repulsed eight counterattacks by assault groups of the Ukrainian army’s 25th air assault, 24th, 47th and 59th mechanized brigades near the settlements of Pervomaiskoye, Novgorodskoye, Tonenkoye and Berdychi in the Donetsk People’s Republic,” the ministry said.

    The Ukrainian army lost “more than 305 personnel, 3 armored combat vehicles and 4 motor vehicles,” it specified.

    In counter-battery fire, Russian forces destroyed a German-made PzH 2000 self-propelled artillery system, two D-30 howitzers and a Bukovel-AD electronic warfare station of the Ukrainian army in the Avdeyevka area over the past 24 hours, it said.Russian forces eliminate 90 Ukrainian troops in south Donetsk area over past day.

    Russian forces eliminated roughly 90 Ukrainian troops and an enemy electronic warfare station in the south Donetsk area over the past day, the ministry reported.

    “In the south Donetsk direction, Battlegroup East units improved their tactical position and inflicted damage by firepower on personnel and equipment of the Ukrainian army’s 58th motorized infantry, 102nd and 128th territorial defense brigades near the settlements of Malinovka in the Zaporozhye Region, Makarovka and Urozhainoye in the Donetsk People’s Republic. Near the settlement of Priyutnoye, they repelled a counterattack by an assault group of the 127th territorial defense brigade,” the ministry said.

    The Ukrainian army lost as many as 90 personnel, two motor vehicles and a Nota electronic warfare station in the south Donetsk direction over the past 24 hours, it specified.Russian forces strike four Ukrainian army brigades in Kherson area over past day.

    Russian forces inflicted casualties on four Ukrainian army brigades in the Kherson area, destroying roughly 70 enemy troops over the past day, the ministry reported.

    “In the Kherson direction, Dnepr Battlegroup units inflicted damage by firepower on formations of the Ukrainian army’s 65th and 118th mechanized, 35th marine infantry and 121st territorial defense brigades near the settlements of Rabotino in the Zaporozhye Region, Zolotaya Balka and Ivanovka in the Kherson Region,” the ministry said.

    The Ukrainian army’s losses in the Kherson direction over the past 24 hours amounted to 70 personnel, two tanks, two infantry fighting vehicles and two pickup trucks. In counter-battery fire, Russian forces destroyed a Gvozdika motorized artillery system and a D-20 howitzer of the Ukrainian army, it specified.Russian forces wipe out Ukrainian S-300 radar over past day.

    Russian forces destroyed a radar of a Ukrainian S-300 anti-aircraft missile system and struck enemy personnel and military hardware in 131 areas over the past day, the ministry reported.

    “Operational-tactical aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles, missile troops and artillery of the Russian groupings of forces destroyed a radar station of an S-300 surface-to-air missile system and struck the Ukrainian army’s manpower and military equipment in 131 areas,” the ministry said.Russian air defenses destroy 175 Ukrainian military drones over past day.

    Russian air defense forces destroyed 175 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and shot down 21 rockets of the US-made HIMARS and Czech-made Vampire multiple launch rocket systems over the past day, the ministry reported.

    “During the last 24-hour period, air defense capabilities destroyed 175 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles and shot down 21 rockets of the HIMARS and Vampire multiple rocket launchers,” the ministry said.

    In all, the Russian Armed Forces have destroyed 577 Ukrainian warplanes, 270 helicopters, 17,658 unmanned aerial vehicles, 489 surface-to-air missile systems, 15,642 tanks and other armored combat vehicles, 1,256 multiple rocket launchers, 8,573 field artillery guns and mortars and 20,343 special military motor vehicles since the start of the special military operation, the ministry reported.

    Like

  18. Arrested so far . . .

    What connects those accused in the terrorist attack? IC

    citizen of Tajikistancitizen of the Russian Federationage at time of arrest

    Shamsidin Fariduni, 25 years old

    He worked at a parquet factory in Podolsk. Contacted by Telegram those who ordered the attack. Before the Crocus attack, he had flown to Turkey.

    Saidakrami Rachabalizoda, 30 years old

    Unemployed. Stayed with Fariduni in an Istanbul hotel.

    Dalerdzhon Mirzoev, 32 years old

    Until January, he worked as a taxi driver in Novosibirsk. He was driving the white Renault in which the the accused terrorists had tried to escape after the terrorist attack.

    Muhammadsobir Faizov,19 years old

    He worked as a barber in Ivanovo and later moved to Moscow. He shot a first-person-view video of the shooting at Crocus.

    Also arrested:

    the Islomovs

    Dilovar Islomov, 24 years old

    Taxi driver. Former owner of the white Renault. He went to the local police himself so as to tell them about this.

    Aminchon Islomov, 24 years old

    Dilovar’s brother. Bus driver. Went himself to the investigators.

    Isroil Islomov, 62 years old

    Aminchon and Dilovar’s father. Went himself to the investigators.

    Alisher Kasimov, 32 years old

    Owner of the Chaikhan café. Rented an apartment to Fariduni in the Moscow region through an ad on [Russian classified advertisement site] Avito.

    Nazrimad Lutfulloi, 24 years old

    Unemployed. Lived in a Moscow hostel. The IC has not reported his connection with the other accused.

    Source: gazeta.ru

    Like

  19. I can just imagine, the KS Helsinki desk is speechless with joy at all this good news of Russia not being so weeeaaakkk after all. That surely must be why we’re only hearing crickets from that direction.

    Like

    1. Nah, only a nuclear strike will satisfy him, preferably against a defenceless city as a lesson and a warning of future wrath.

      Now who could have actually done that already . . . ?

      Hmmm…..

      Tough question!

      And not once but twice. Second time to hammer the point home.

      And van der Leyen has even warned that Russia was thinking of doing the same, though it had never done it before.

      Like

  20. Zakharova offered to buy Annalena Baerbock a map and a history textbook

    Moscow, 30 March, 2024, 17: 16 — Regnum news agency. German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock needs to buy a map and a history textbook, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on 30 March.

    Ich bin dumme Fotze

    Zakharova commented on Baerbock’s statements that Russian President Vladimir Putin allegedly wants to draw NATO into a war with Russia and that is why he allegedly refuses peace talks on the conflict in the Ukraine.

    “I should like to ask Baerbock whether she is aware that it was not Russian bases that have surrounded NATO countries, but NATO that has been expanding eastwards along the perimeter of Russia? Buy Annalena a map, a history book and chewing gum in order that she say less of this kind of nonsense”, Zakharova told RIA Novosti.

    As reported by IA Regnum, in her statement, Baerbock also said that if Russia won in the Ukraine, then security in Europe and international order would allegedly be at risk. At the same time, she spoke out against sending Western troops to the Ukraine.

    Trying to accuse the Russian president of refusing to negotiate on the Ukraine, Baerbock wants to shift the blame for the failure of the negotiation process to Russia, Georgy Fedorov, head of the Aspect Center for Social and Political Research, said in an interview with Regnum news agency.

    Western statements about alleged plans of Russia to attack Europe after the Ukraine are nothing but nonsense, Vladimir Putin noted earlier. Moscow and the EU countries had no territorial claims to each other, and Russia was interested in constructive relations, the head of state said.

    In March 2024, the president noted that Russia had never abandoned negotiations on the Ukraine and was still ready for them, but such negotiations should be based on reality.

    The reality being that Russia is going to negotiate from a position of strength, namely that of a victor, whereas the Ukraine will be vanquished and prostrate.

    VAE VICTIS!

    As a matter of fact, Estonia persistently makes territorial claims against Russia, which is laughable, because the Russian Empire legally bought the territory that is now Estonia off the Swedes. For centuries, the Estonians had been vassals to the Swedes, as had indeed been the Finns, but after the end of the 20-year-long Great Northern War, the Swedes flogged off Estonia to Russia and abandoned their Baltic Empire dreams. And of course, the dimwits in Banderastan claim that large tracts of land in the Black Earth region of Russia and in the Krasnodar region are historically part of a country that never existed until 1922, and then only as a subject republic of the USSR.

    Like

    1. Maria Zakharova makes too many assumptions about Annalena Baerbock being able to read a history book and a map (right way up) while chewing gum at the same time (and not swallowing it).

      Like

  21. WaPo

    Opinion  Zelensky: ‘We are trying to find some way not to retreat’

    March 29, 2024 at 1:53 p.m. ED

    Star Prick Zelensky, after speaking to Post journalists on May 1, 2023, in Kyiv.

    KYIV — President Volodymyr Zelensky delivered a stark message to Congress in an interview on Thursday as Russian missiles were pounding southern Ukraine: Give us the weapons to stop the Russian attacks, or Ukraine will escalate its counterattacks on Russia’s airfields, energy facilities and other strategic targets.

    Zelensky spoke in a sandbagged, heavily guarded presidential compound that seemed nearly empty of its old civilian workforce after more than two years of war. The security was so tight, I had to surrender my plastic felt-tip pens. But Zelensky appeared as animated and pugnacious as when he made his defiant stand in the courtyard when the war began.

    Zelensky, the actor who became a wartime president, now totally inhabits this role. He wore his habitual dress of a Ukrainian military sweatshirt and combat pants. He looked less haggard here on his home ground than he had about a month ago at a security conference in Munich. He seems to relish being the symbol of a nation at war.

    The congressional delay in approving a $60 billion military aid package has been costly for Ukraine, Zelensky said. The military has been unable to plan future operations while legislators squabbled for nearly six months. He warned that hard-pressed Ukrainian forces might have to retreat to secure their front lines and conserve ammunition.

    “If there is no U.S. support, it means that we have no air defense, no Patriot missiles, no jammers for electronic warfare, no 155-milimeter artillery rounds,” he said. “It means we will go back, retreat, step by step, in small steps.”

    To describe the military situation, Zelensky took a sheet of paper and drew a simple diagram of the combat zone. “If you need 8,000 rounds a day to defend the front line, but you only have, for example, 2,000 rounds, you have to do less,” he explained. “How? Of course, to go back. Make the front line shorter. If it breaks, the Russians could go to the big cities.”

    “We are trying to find some way not to retreat,” Zelensky continued. After the Russian capture of Avdiivka in February, he said, “we have stabilized the situation because of smart steps by our military.” If the front remains stable, he said, Ukraine can arm and train new brigades in the rear to conduct a new counteroffensive later this year.

    Zelensky summed up the zero-sum reality of this conflict: “If you are not taking steps forward to prepare another counteroffensive, Russia will take them. That’s what we learned in this war: If you don’t do it, Russia will do it.”

    When I asked whether Ukraine was running short of interceptors and other air-defense weapons to protect its cities and infrastructure, he responded: “That’s true. I don’t want Russia to know what number of air-defense missiles we have, but basically, you’re right. Without the support of Congress, we will have a big deficit of missiles. This is the problem. We are increasing our own air-defense systems, but it is not enough.”

    As Russian drones, missiles and precision bombs break through Ukrainian defenses to attack energy facilities and other essential infrastructure, Zelensky feels he has no choice but to punch back across the border — in the hope of establishing deterrence. An example is Ukraine’s drone strikes against Russian refineries over the past month. I asked Zelensky if U.S. officials had warned against such attacks on energy facilities inside Russia, as has been rumored in Washington.

    “The reaction of the U.S. was not positive on this,” he confirmed, but Washington couldn’t limit Ukraine’s deployment of its own home-built weapons. “We used our drones. Nobody can say to us you can’t.”

    Zelensky argued that he could check Russian attacks on Ukraine’s energy grid only by making Russia pay a similar price. “If there is no air defense to protect our energy system, and Russians attack it, my question is: Why can’t we answer them? Their society has to learn to live without petrol, without diesel, without electricity. … It’s fair.”

    “When Russia will stop these steps, we will stop,” he said.

    What Zelensky wants urgently are long-range ATACM-300 missiles, which he said could strike targets in Russian-occupied Crimea, especially the airfields from which Russia launches planes with precision-guided missiles that are doing heavy damage. These missiles recently hit Odessa and several other targets.

    “When Russia has missiles and we don’t, they attack by missiles: Everything — gas, energy, schools, factories, civilian buildings,” Zelensky said.

    “ATACM-300s, that is the answer,” he continued. He said he wanted to use the longer-range missiles not to attack Russian territory but those airfields in Crimea. “When Russia knows we can destroy these jets, they will not attack from Crimea. It’s like with the sea fleet. We pushed them from our territorial waters. Now we will push them from the airports in Crimea.”

    Zelensky recalled that in Munich in February, he took out a map of the targets the ATACMS could hit. “I showed them military platforms like airports, air-defense systems and other sites,” he said. When I asked whether the ATACMS are on the way, as is rumored in Washington, he laughed and said: “I can’t share with you this information. Sorry.” He said that the missiles “are not in Ukraine” now.

    Zelensky touted his program for a domestically produced “army of drones, including some that can reach 1,000 kilometers or more into Russia.” But he cautioned that “drones are not enough for winning the war. … We could use naval drones to push their fleet out of our territorial waters and the entire western part of the Black Sea, yes. But it’s not enough to win. These are drones, not missiles.”

    I asked Zelensky whether he thought President Biden was too cautious in supplying weapons, as hawkish critics sometimes charge. “I think he’s cautious about nuclear attack from Russia,” Zelensky answered. His own view is that Vladimir Putin wouldn’t risk a nuclear exchange, but he conceded that the Russian leader is unpredictable: “He’s crazy. There is nobody in the world who can tell you 100 percent what he will do. That’s why Biden is cautious.”

    The lesson of war for Zelensky, after two years of brutal fighting that has killed many of the best officers and soldiers in the Ukrainian army, is that Putin should have been stopped sooner.

    President Barack Obama “was not strong against him” when Putin seized Crimea in 2014, Zelensky said. “Europe wanted to have security on the border and big trade with Russia. That opened the way to war with Ukraine.”

    “He captured Crimea, and there was no reaction at all. Nobody pushed him back. Nobody stopped him.” When I asked whether he would have allowed Biden to send U.S. troops into Ukraine to deter the February 2022 invasion, he said simply: “Yes.” In hindsight, that show of force might have been the only way this terrible conflict could have been averted.

    Zelensky offered a chilling characterization of his adversary. “Putin is cunning, but he’s not smart,” he said. “When you fight with a smart person, it’s a fight with rules. But when you fight with a cunning person, it’s always dangerous.”

    Looking ahead, Zelensky said Ukraine’s options depend on what Congress decides. Until Ukraine knows it has continuing U.S. support, “we will stay where we are now in the East.” He said Ukraine might conduct limited offensive operations, but “to push them out, we need more weapons.”

    “We lost half a year” while Congress bickered, he said. “We can’t waste time anymore. Ukraine can’t be a political issue between the parties.” He said critics of aid for Ukraine didn’t understand the stakes in the war. “If Ukraine falls, Putin will divide the world” into Russia’s friends and enemies, he said.

    Zelensky has been the X-factor in this war, mobilizing his country and much of the world to resist Russian aggression. I wish members of Congress who balk at aiding Ukraine could have listened to the Ukrainian leader talk about the price that Ukraine has paid for its defiance — and the risks ahead for the United States if it doesn’t stand with its friends.

    What a stupid shit!

    He would have allowed US troops to land in the Crimea had he been president when the Crimea was lost to the Banderites, would he? And they would have been allowed to do so? On the peninsula where the Russian Hero City of Sevastopol is situated? And where several years previous to the Russian “annexation”, residents of Kerch had told US forces that had tried to undertake joint exercises there with the UAF to sling their hook — and they did too!

    That was when the little funny man Zelensky was earning money, often in Moscow, clowning around and dancing and singing — singing in Russian, by the way: he couldn’t speak mova then.

    Like

    1. I wonder what Zelensky’s assessment of his own smartness would be. He’s full of aphorisms, but Russia is winning and Ukraine++ is not, so Putin must be smarter than Zelensky.

      The USA and its friends have already divided the world – but they are coming to realize that they are losing friends while Russia is gaining them. Russia has no need to force its will on Europe; if it keeps to the course it sails now, it will be a bankrupt colony of the USA with no real potential for trade anyway.

      Like

  22. Vis the current denergization of Bandarstan, I wonder if Russia is already in the process of producing replacement parts? Is there any point? Remember the story about Siemens gas turbines in Crimea, though Russia has projects to produce some of its own (I’ve not looked this up recently), maybe the reported buying of units from i-Ran as u-Kraine replacements might be an option?

    As we know, Russia has a Day After plan, unlike us in the west who seem to make it up day by day and always months late and as we have seen with reconstruction crews moving in to places like Mariupol, they are very organized. Once upon a time being competent was nothing special. That was a long time ago…

    Like

    1. denergization of Bandarstan

      Well, if Russia takes the city of Zaporizhzhia it has the largest European manufacturer of large transformers in its control. Russia may have the main manufacturing sites of Soviet-style generating machinery in its control, I don’t know.

      Rebuilding the losses will be a big job but Russia may figure they can do it for the new Russian oblasts if they are hurt. For the remaining Ukrainian oblasts , tant pis.

      Like

  23. Totally OT but I have always wondered how fluently Maria Zakharova spoke English. A rather devastating interview in English.

    Like

    1. She’s a smart lady, and her English is actually very good – as she goes on, her accent even seems to become less noticeable. Whoever Georgian food belongs to, the Georgians would not likely agree with her characterization, but they are very passionate about their cuisine and in fact it is hard to find an ethnic restaurant in Tbilisi (except for fast food like pizza, which is everywhere) because Georgians prefer Georgian food. And it certainly is good.

      I disagree with her in principle that Russia never had slavery; Russia had nobles who owned large estates worked by serfs, and serfs were slaves in all but name. I imagine the British nobles who maintained large estates in Ireland, and allowed the Irish to be indentured servants in their own land likewise did not consider them slaves, but again, they were in all but name because the nobles owned everything. Russia did not have slavery as the United States did, where people were marched to the auction block to be pawed and dehumanized and sold like farm animals, but servitude is servitude.

      I look forward to Ms. Zakharova correcting me.

      Like

      1. I disagree with her in principle that Russia never had slavery; Russia had nobles who owned large estates worked by serfs, and serfs were slaves in all but name.

        I am afraid that you have been conditioned by Western histories and opinions concerning society in Imperial Russia, and, in this respect, not least by the erroneous opinions of Karl Marx himself and his Marxist-Leninist disciples here.

        Firstly, Russian “serfs” were not feudal serfs in the Mediaeval European sense of the word. Marx said they were so as to fit Russian history into his theory concerning the lineal progression of society from “primitive” through “feudal” and “mercantile” and “capitalistic” and ever onwards to the heady heights of “socialist”. That’s why Marx never envisioned a class-based revolution taking place in Russia in his time because Russia was still then “feudal”, only having a tiny proletariat and bourgeoisie. On the other hand, Germany and the UK, in Marx’s opinion, where fully developed, with the their large and educated proletariat champing at the bit, ready to overthrow their capitalist oppressors. And of course, Max scribbled away in the British Museum Library his notes on “Capital”, which he never completed: his pal Engels did that for him. Marx did his economic research in the land where capitalism was invented and he wanted to find out how that system ticked.

        His theory was, therefore. modelled, on the history of Western European societal development. and of England’s in particular.

        Firstly, Russian “serfs” were not chattel slaves: they were not owned by a master, as were negro slaves in the USA; they were not bought and sold on slave markets, though they were often ‘gifted” or “inherited”. Most noticeable, however, is that Russian “serfs” paid tax to the state, something which USA negro slaves certainly did not do.

        Negro slaves in the USA were as livestock, bought, owned and sold by a man, usually a white man, but not always And cows and sheep etc. do not pay tax. Russian “serfs”, however, were obliged to work on land owned by another man, a landlord, who was granted such ownership only by the absolute “Landlord” of Russia, the Tsar himself, who could also deprive Russian landlords and nobility of the ownership of “their” property.

        The fact that Russian peasants were “tied” to certain territory has a simple explanation: in Russia there is land a-plenty, but only a very small population density. In fact, the “serfdom” in Russia as imagined by Western Europeans as “slavery” only really took hold from the end of the 17th century onwards. Peasants in general stayed put, as they did most everywhere.

        Secondly, Russian male “serfs” were obliged to do military service for the state when demanded to do so. Negro slaves in the USA were certainly not obliged to do military service for the USA and were only first conscripted/allowed into the military during the United States Civil War 1861-1865.

        Interestingly, negro slaves in the USA were only liberated by presidential decree in 1862, one year after Russian “serfdom” was abolished, and then only in the secessionist states, where de facto USA federal law was not worth the paper it was written on. Negro slaves in the non-slave states of the USA were only liberated at the end of the civil war, which liberated slaves included those of President Lincoln’s soon to be widowed Kentucky-born wife and also the wife of General Ulysses Grant. General Lee of the CSA, however, liberated his slaves before the secession of the Commonwealth of Virginia from the USA. A quota of Russian serfs was rounded up each year in the Russian Empire and those drafted were obliged to serve in the military for 20 years. Those drafted seldom returned to their home village — not that most of them would have wanted to do so, I should imagine.

        Russian peasants in Imperial Russia worked the land to which they were tied and also land allocated to them for their and their families’ sustenance. Their villages were governed by committees of elders — all men, of course — and land distributed by such committees (called миръ [mir] in Russian (old-style orthography), commonly translated as “peace” or “world” in English, but it also means “society”), which were self-governing communities of peasant households that elected their own officials and controlled local forests, fisheries, hunting grounds, and vacant lands. There were also state “serfs” on state lands, mostly in northern Russia.

        In Imperial Russia there were , of course, good landlords (Count Leo Tolstoy being one of them) and bad ones — and some downright wicked ones as well. The wicked ones got all the publicity in the West, sort of like that notorious and fictitious Simon Legree in “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”, who were wont to flog recalcitrant Russian peasants.

        Servitude is servitude?

        None of my forebears were enslaved, but they were, for at least 300 years, since the start of the Industrial Revolution in England, wage-slaves. They were free to walk away from their employer, however: free to starve, that is. And the term for an “employer” in England was, right up to the 1920s “master”. Also, well into the 20th century, English aristocrats were in the habit of referring to their peasant or working-class “inferiors” as “my man”.

        During my childhood, such an attitude of one’s “betters” was in the living memory of my parents and grandparents: my father was born in 1918, and my grandfathers were born in 1869 and 1899.

        Interestingly, the decline in the use of the second-person singular informal personal pronoun, possessive adjective and possessive pronoun, namely “thou”, “thee”, “thy”, “thine” respectively, came about because that’s how “superiors” addressed their “inferiors” and servants, employees, serfs, idiots, children and animals in English, as well as one’s friends and relatives.

        When speaking to one’s equal or superior with respect, one said “you”.

        However, the second person singular informal personal pronoun, possessive adjective and possessive pronoun is still used in a few English dialects, most noticeably in my native dialect, though I should imagine that it is now in rapid decline. Then again, maybe not. I hope it isn’t.

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        1. The last thing I wrote above brings to mind what I read many years ago by the former editor of “The Times” (I think) in his biography. Can’t remember his name now, but he had the usual background: upper bourgeois London family, expensive “public”, ie. “private”, school for boys, the oldest, if I rightly recall, namely Winchester College, followed by Oxford University.

          Interestingly, in his maturity, this former Times editor had become “left-of-centre” as a result of the behaviour of the “privileged” class in the UK that he had witnessed.

          I remember his description of his first day back at school in September 1945 after the end of WWII.

          Bear in mind that at that time, as promised by him, Churchill had called a general election immediately following the end of hostilities in Europe, and the British Labour Party thereupon had won a landslide victory in July 1945, partly because soldiers, sailors and airmen still overseas had been allowed to vote.

          The war leader of the National Government was an out-and-out Conservative of the old school (though he had “crossed the floor” at the beginning of the 20th century and then returned to the Conservative fold so as to further his political career) and was most certainly from the privileged class of English layabouts: an aristo, although he never took an aristocratic title (bad for his image), albeit his father had been Lord Randolph Churchill, third eldest son of the 7th Duke of Marlborough no less. And he was well and truly voted out of office as Prime Minister in 1945. The British public had wanted no return to the pre-war depression years and government by the Conservatives again.

          So here’s this privileged upper-class whipper-snapper who has just arrived at Winchester by steam train from Waterloo Station, London. He is standing there on the platform with his trunk beside him and, catching the eye of a porter, says to him: “Bring my trunk to a taxi, my man!”

          The porter replies: “Those days of talking like that are long gone, sonny. Ask me again — and politely”.

          The porter must have been a Commie.

          Like

          1. The Russian word for “slave” is раб [rab], hence the verb работать [rabotat’] — “to work”.

            Slavery [рабство — rabstvo] was abolished by Peter I in 1723. The status of agricultural workers, the vast majority of the Russian population, had, however, been changed in 1679 to that of workers tied to the land. These tied workers are erroneously labelled as “serfs” by Western historians and Marxist-Leninist theoreticians.

            Russian serfs could be bought and sold, but only as part and parcel of the land on which they worked. They were not chattel slaves. And most importantly, Russian “serfs” “were persons not things: they paid tax! And they were all subjects of the Tsar.

            There were, however, from ancient times (from the time of the so-called Kievan Rus’ as Banderastan arseholes claim to have existed) kholops [холопы], unfortunates who, according to the ancient Russian law code Russkaya Pravda, were perceived as tools, instruments, non-persons and whose status could be described as slavery.

            Kholops were either prisoners of war or people who had sold themselves into slavery so as to live, people who had had insurmountable debts and who, with their families, faced starvation.

            And here’s the key point: kholops did not pay taxes. They were the goods and chattels of their owners. Russian “serfs” as I have said, paid taxes but had limited rights. They were also baptized Christians all.

            Landlords represented their serfs in legal matters. The landlords collected the peasants’ taxes, but those who withheld their peasants’ money could be deprived of serfs completely (after 1742). In 1721, Peter the Great banned selling individual serfs and the splitting up of families; in 1771, Catherine the Great banned auction blocks for selling serfs.

            Compare and contrast!

            A far cry from Uncle Tom’s Cabin!

            Source: Why Russian serfdom was not slavery

            I wish I could post here a photograph of my wife’s apparently “wealthy” peasant great-grandparents with their sons, one her grandad, whom she remembers well, and her great-uncle.

            The photo was taken in a studio about 1895. Her great grandparents would have been what the Bolsheviks called “Kulaks” — peasants who were thrifty and saved and had some livestock and were not idle drunkards.

            Mrs. Exile’s great-grandpa in the photograph is wearing good calf-boots and his sons are wearing Western-style shoes and suits, and they have Western haircuts, not traditional basin-haircuts. Her granddad has a very long and luxuriant beard, sort of like those sported by US Civil War generals.

            In 1911, my grandfather was working as an 11-year-old in a coal mine with his father and 16-year-old elder brother. My grandfather was a “drawer” for his collier father, namely he loaded little railway wagons (tubs) with coal that his father and elder brother had hewn from their “stall” on the coal face. He then pushed the tubs to the main haulage roadway, where they were hauled my an endless-rope haulage system to the pit bottom. My grandfather returned to the face with empty tubs.

            My grandfather was working with his father and brother when the latter was killed by a roof fall.

            My grandfather, however, was a free-born Englishman and not a slave.

            Like

              1. He had 11 brothers and sisters, by the way. Each child was an investment for the future.

                However, in 1911, the beginnings of the British welfare state were laid when the National Insurance Act 1911 came into force and provided health insurance for industrial workers in Great Britain based on contributions from employers, the government, and the workers themselves.

                The act was one of the foundations of the modern British welfare state, which is now, I believe, pitifully underfunded and in decline. The act also provided unemployment insurance for designated cyclical industries.

                The National Insurance Act 1911 was part of the wider social welfare reforms of the Liberal Governments of 1906–1915 and of which Churchill was a member. He was a Liberal then and in 1911 the Home Secretary.

                Like

                1. Yes, that’s an interesting concept; a child is an investment for the future. It helps explain why in some cultures they have such huge families, just one child after another until the mother reaches the end of her ability to bear children. I was often told this is common in cultures that have no or only rudimentary welfare systems to support the elderly, so couples have tons of children in the expectation that at least a couple of them will survive and thrive to keep them when they can no longer work for a living.

                  My stepfather was the eldest brother in a family of 9 children. He did not discover until around a decade before he died that his surname was technically not even legal, as his father and mother had never married yet he bore his father’s name. I’m not sure how they ever worked that one out, but I imagine the Common Law applied, as his mother and father cohabited and lived together as man and wife throughout his lifetime. Anyway, he worked all his like to support the family, from the time he was 14 until he left to strike out on his own, and never retired – he worked until he died of a heart attack, on the ice while curling, when he was 4 years younger than I am now.

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            1. typo

              Her great-granddad has a very long and luxuriant beard.

              Her granddad in the picture is about 12-years-old and had just started an apprenticeship in St.Petersburg as cabinet maker. Her paternal great-grandparents were, however, not from St. Pete but from Penza Province, some 850 miles southeast of the former imperial capital.

              Like

          2. Ah, but was he a “stout bitter porter” like the guy in Beckett’s Watt?
            (To many people in Canada, that joke would have to be explained.)

            Like

        2. “I am afraid that you have been conditioned by Western histories and opinions concerning society in Imperial Russia, and, in this respect, not least by the erroneous opinions of Karl Marx himself and his Marxist-Leninist disciples here.”

          Well, not exactly; first, I have never read anything by Marx unless it was accidental, such as a single quote, something like that; my fondness for Russia is not shaped by an identification with socialist philosophy (although if I were forced to make a choice, I really am not fond of capitalism although, like most systems, there are good and bad concepts and it is the abuse of the latter which gives it a bad name), but by my time spent there and the people I know from there. And, of course, every time I visited Russia, I was on vacation with none of the pressures of getting up at 5:00 AM to go to work, or the necessity of dealing with everyday dickheads in order to earn enough for supper. I suppose the missus was right to be cautious of marrying, and to want to test-drive the relationship, so to speak, because you don’t really know a man until he runs up against a problem or a situation that puts him out of sorts – on vacation is an unlikely environment to see that. And all of my information about Serfing USSR came from War and Peace (rated to have been Tolstoy’s greatest work, in a dead heat with Anna Karenina and Dominic Lieven’s Russia Against Napoleon. The latter discusses the conditions of serfdom only peripherally and mostly in the context of the composition of the Tsar’s armies, while the former was quite lavish in its detail.

          I thought I was quite specific in differentiating between serfdom and slavery in the sense of the one not being exactly like the other, but that the condition of servitude – if we can agree it comprises having to work all your working life for a single ‘master’ or members of his family for negligible compensation, being ‘paid’ by having a roof over your head and adequate food to keep you alive – was common to the two. With the greatest respect, being accorded the privileges of paying taxes and fighting for the state in time of war would not likely be hot motivators for a man with a choice, and denying those to American negro slaves likely was not their primary concern.

          Still, there’s not much fundamental difference – and it grows less over time – in being a serf and being a ‘wage slave’ who will go under in a month or two if he’s out of work. You can own property, but it’s not really yours – the final say, for most of us, comes from the bank or the landlord – and if you did not have a regular salary coming in, you would not be able to hold on to that property. Unlike a serf, you would not likely die in destitution were that the case, but you would have to throw yourself on the mercy of friends or state institutions, and accept the limitations of poverty. Comparing our own situations with that of serfs is a stretch, I know, but perhaps the essential difference between serfdom and slavery is that in the case of the former, you are treated more or less like everyone else as long as you can keep up – whereas, if you are a slave you are treated as an inferior regardless your personal situation. If you are wealthy – like a noble – there is a whole system which, if obeyed, protects you from getting into trouble as a result of your own foolishness with money, a safety net which exists only in the abstract for ordinary wage slaves.

          Like

          1. I think the issue with serfdom in Russia up until the early 1860s was that serfs needed permission from the landowner of the estate where they worked to move about, especially if they wanted to move away from the estate and go somewhere else. Once Alexander II emancipated the serfs in 1861, then they no longer needed their landowners’ permission, and this is when people started moving to Moscow and St Petersburg and other major cities where there were factory jobs, to Siberia to establish new farms and communities, and even overseas (to both North and South America in particular).

            Like

            1. As regards Russian serfs, a major, and indeed a frustrating problem for sociologists and historians is that there is almost absolutely no knowledge, no written records, no memoirs concerning the way of life of the vast majority of the Russian population, the so-called serfs.

              Although Russian literature suddenly bloomed in the 18th century and developed into its “Golden Age” [Pushkin, Turgenev, Gogol, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov et al.] and at the turn of the 20th century there occured its “Silver Age” [mostly poets such as Blok, Akhmatova, but there were also writers such as Gorky, Bunin, Bely], and notwithstanding the fact that serfdom was only abolished in 1861 at the very peak of the “Golden Age”, Russian writers wrote almost only about aristocrats, merchants and the clergy: they wrote practically nothing about the everyday life of a peasant, his family or his village.

              There is only one notable work of literature written about the life of Russian serfs: in 1790, Aleksandr Radishchev had privately printed his “Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow”. It was a searing indictment on the lot of a Russian peasant who was tied to the land.

              Having read the book— she was its first reader, mind you — Empress Katherine II ordered that all 850 copies be confiscated and destroyed. Radishchev got 10 years in prison and his book was only legally published more than a century after he had first published it.

              It seems that amongst Russian 19th century writers there was a general indifference towards the peasants — pace Tolstoy and Turgenev, which latter occasionally mentioned the life of serfs, as did did the poet Nekrasov and one or two other men of letters. However,the serfs they referred to were mostly house servants, whose life was somewhat untypical of the great peasant masses. Compare the life of a “house nigger” and a “field hand” in the ante-bellum USA south.

              The fact of the matter is that the great Russian novelists wrote great works of literature about the nobility, the intelligentsia, petty officials, merchants, clergymen — about everybody except 90 percent of the Russian population.

              I personally think that this attitude simply came about because those who were not peasants just didn’t see them: the peasants were the faceless ones, always there, always working, living mysterious lives in their communes, but unseen by the ruling class, bureaucrats, aristos etc.

              My mother, who as a 15 year old girl began to work as a house maid until she became “liberated” by finding work in 1943 as a munitions worker, used to tell me that the wealthy family of minor aristos that employed her and gave her bed and board, simply “looked through her”: for them, she didn’t really exist as a person exists, but was always at their beck and call, flitting around the their large mansion like a ghost when a bell summoned her from “downstairs”.

              Like

  24. Zelensky’s clever plan. Putin shall be forced to give up everything himself…

    We shall not have to liberate all our territories solely by military means (frame from CBS interview with the Kiev shithouse rat Zelensky — ME)

    Zelensky said that he was ready for negotiations with Russia. Moreover, he no longer says that Russia should return all the territories of the Ukraine that belonged to it up to 1991. He also agrees on the borders of 2022. Oh, my! I wonder if he’s going to rescind his own order to himself, which forbids him to negotiate…or already and most likely his masters are forcing him to voice new options, owing to changed conditions…?

    Zelensky has a “zitry plan” [“зитрый план”: play on the Russian “хитрый план” (khitry plan), meaning “sly plan” — ME], which he voiced in a conversation with a CBS News journalist:

    …We need not have all our territories returned by militarily means. I’m sure when Putin moves back to the 2022 borders (apparently under the treaty he hopes to sign), he will immediately lose support both in the world and at home. And then he will give all the other territories to the Ukraine….

    [video clip of CBS interview]

    That’s the kind of “cunning plan” Zelensky has. And he speaks it out it in all seriousness….

    And just look at the surroundings he chose: sitting on chairs amidst ruins and rubble…

    ……………………….

    Only he has already been answered…

    Peskov responded to Zelensky’s statement about possible negotiations:

    …The geopolitical reality has changed dramatically since the beginning of the SMO: the borders of both the Ukraine and the Russian Federation have changed. We have four new subjects* and this cannot be ignored. This is the new reality, which, of course, everyone shall have to reckon with…

    And whilst Zelensky is voicing his “cunning plans” there is the possibility that the Ukraine will lose something else and the realities of the situation will change for the Ukraine again….

    And it is also unlikely that Moscow will negotiate with the current Kiev clique….

    *meaning “subject republics” of the Russian Federation — ME

    Like

  25. FSB head Bortnikov: special services know by name the organisers of terrorist attacks in Russia

    31 March 2024 at 14:30

    Russian special services know by name the organisers of terrorist actions in the Russian Federation. This was stated by the Director of the FSB Alexander Bortnikov.

    “There are those who … organised combat units [in the Ukraine], there are those who intended to do this. All law enforcement agencies and special services of the country have been actively engaged with them … We know by name those who are the organisers of the preparation and the undertaking of actions on our territory”, Bortnikov said in an interview with Pavel Zarubin. The video is published in the journalist’s telegram channel.

    The head of the FSB emphasised that the special services would do everything necessary “to find these wretches and punish them”. This is how he commented on Zarubin’s words about the statement by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who demanded to “name the names of the Vlasov traitors”.

    Not hard to guess who the leader is.

    Mister Nice-Guy himself.

    Like

      1. Nay, that photo of him above is from a while back — from 4 years ago in fact.

        He’s developed a double chin since then. Must be scoffing pork lard all the time deep down in his Kiev bunker. Or maybe in his Lvov bunker.

        Below,

        Ukrainska Pravda

        20 June, 2023

        Or maybe he is snorting coke deep down in the bunker with his little chum, who has also gone all puffy-faced?

        I first saw that above photo in January of last year.

        Like

        1. He’s eating so much pork lard that he’s turning into a porker himself.

          Just look at his piggy-eyes!

          I should imagine he’ll squeal like a stuck pig if Spetsnaz gets its hands on him.

          Like

  26. The White House

    A Proclamation on Transgender Day of Visibility, 2024

    On Transgender Day of Visibility, we honor the extraordinary courage and contributions of transgender Americans and reaffirm our Nation’s commitment to forming a more perfect Union — where all people are created equal and treated equally throughout their lives.  

    I am proud that my Administration has stood for justice from the start, working to ensure that the LGBTQI+ community can live openly, in safety, with dignity and respect.  I am proud to have appointed transgender leaders to my Administration and to have ended the ban on transgender Americans serving openly in our military.  I am proud to have signed historic Executive Orders that strengthen civil rights protections in housing, employment, health care, education, the justice system, and more.  I am proud to have signed the Respect for Marriage Act into law, ensuring that every American can marry the person they love. 

    Transgender Americans are part of the fabric of our Nation.  Whether serving their communities or in the military, raising families or running businesses, they help America thrive.  They deserve, and are entitled to, the same rights and freedoms as every other American, including the most fundamental freedom to be their true selves.  But extremists are proposing hundreds of hateful laws that target and terrify transgender kids and their families — silencing teachers; banning books; and even threatening parents, doctors, and nurses with prison for helping parents get care for their children.  These bills attack our most basic American values:  the freedom to be yourself, the freedom to make your own health care decisions, and even the right to raise your own child.  It is no surprise that the bullying and discrimination that transgender Americans face is worsening our Nation’s mental health crisis, leading half of transgender youth to consider suicide in the past year.  At the same time, an epidemic of violence against transgender women and girls, especially women and girls of color, continues to take too many lives.  Let me be clear:  All of these attacks are un-American and must end.  No one should have to be brave just to be themselves.  

    At the same time, my Administration is working to stop the bullying and harassment of transgender children and their families.  The Department of Justice has taken action to push back against extreme and un-American State laws targeting transgender youth and their families and the Department of Justice is partnering with law enforcement and community groups to combat hate and violence.  My Administration is also providing dedicated emergency mental health support through our nationwide suicide and crisis lifeline — any LGBTQI+ young person in need can call “988” and press “3” to speak with a counselor trained to support them.  We are making public services more accessible for transgender Americans, including with more inclusive passports and easier access to Social Security benefits.  There is much more to do.  I continue to call on the Congress to pass the Equality Act, to codify civil rights protections for all LGBTQI+ Americans.

    Today, we send a message to all transgender Americans:  You are loved.  You are heard.  You are understood.  You belong.  You are America, and my entire Administration and I have your back.

    NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim March 31, 2024, as Transgender Day of Visibility.  I call upon all Americans to join us in lifting up the lives and voices of transgender people throughout our Nation and to work toward eliminating violence and discrimination based on gender identity.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-ninth day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-four, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-eighth.

                                 JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

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

    And a Happy Easter Sunday to you all!

    PS As regards “inclusivity”, Mr. Biden, which “Lord” is 2024 a year of?

    Heill Óðinn!

    Like

    1. I look forward to National Day of Visibility of Those Who Have Overcome Poverty, and National Day of Visibility of Those Who Have Survived the Death of a Spouse, both to me more eponymous of ‘extraordinary courage’ than a decision that you must ‘identify’ as a member of the opposite gender you were born. Although, on reflection, it must take courage as a not-particularly-attractive man to decide to join a gender which prioritizes good looks, having abandoned one in which it is a great deal less important.

      Others have pointed out the incredulous spectacle of women ‘cheering on their own destruction’, at least in the arena of professional sports. Like here, where a ‘trans-identifying male’ melted the women’s powerlifting record by a new gap of an incredible 200 kg.

      Not all natural women feel this way, of course, or are ready to jump, cheering, onto the transgender-glorification train. Take Chelsea, Mitchell, for example, who lost more than 20 times in athletic competitions against biological males who ‘identified’ as women, and who sued the state of Connecticut for forcing biological women to compete against biological men on a level playing field.

      How about a National Day of Visibility for Women Forced to Compete Against Bigger and Stronger Men Who are Awarded No Handicap for Their Advantage? That takes extraordinary courage, surely? Remember David and Goliath?

      Like

  27. Ukraine’s fresh existential threat – from the polling booths of the European Parliament elections

    Potential success of hard-Right parties in June voting poses risk to Continent’s supply of weapons and aid to war-torn nation

    James Crisp, EUROPE EDITOR ; Joe Barnes, BRUSSELS CORRESPONDENT and Henry Samuel, 30 March 2024

    Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine's president, and Vladimir Putin, his Russian counterpart, will view the elections with interest
    Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, and Vladimir Putin, his Russian counterpart, will view the elections with interest

    Ukraine is facing a fresh existential threat this summer – not from Russia, but from Europe.

    A small but significant and highly vocal bloc of hard-Right parties are on the march across the Continent and are set to perform strongly in June’s European Parliament elections.

    They have posted record results in Portugal and the Netherlands or are already in government in places such as Hungary, Finland and Italy. They are poised to win looming national elections in Austria and Belgium or win European elections in France and Poland.

    And many of them think Europe should no longer supply weapons and aid to Ukraine.

    Some even want Europe to appease Vladimir Putin, end sanctions against Russia and push Ukraine into peace talks.‘Really, really worried’

    On their own, parties such as the German Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), Hungary’s Fidesz and the Freedom Party of Austria have little geopolitical heft, but together they can wield vetoes on EU foreign policy decisions.

    Some experts suggest they could form the third-largest bloc of parties in Brussels and Strasbourg, the two seats of the European Parliament.

    Ukrainians have a number of reasons to feel “really, really worried”, Kira Rudik, the MP and leader of the liberal opposition Holos party, told The Telegraph.

    She claimed some of the parties may have received financial backing from the Kremlin or been targeted by Moscow to undermine the narrative of unified European support for Kyiv.‘Endless flow of American treasure’

    At the top of the pro-Kremlin pack is Viktor Orban, the Hungarian prime minister.

    The long-serving conservative leader was one of the few in Europe to congratulate Putin for his recent election – despite it widely being decried as a sham. He also signed an energy deal with Moscow after the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

    Even more worryingly for Kyiv and those who back it, Mr Orban has built a strong alliance with Donald Trump, the Republican presidential front-runner.

    Mr Trump has threatened to halt what he calls the “endless flow of American treasure” to Ukraine if he wins the White House in November.

    Some in Europe dismiss that as bravado.Game-changing

    “Donald Trump is known for his expressiveness and controversial statements, but this is his way of doing politics,” Mateusz Błaszczak, the chairman of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, told The Telegraph.

    “As president, however, he has proven that he takes US commitments to both Nato and Europe seriously.”

    As Ukraine’s biggest weapons donor, even with $60 billion (£47.5 billion) of military aid frozen in Congress, the end of the US’s support would be game-changing.

    To replace it, Europe would have to double its current level and pace of arms assistance, the Kiel Institute in Germany said.

    But Europe’s aid to Ukraine is technically even bigger – and many on the hard Right want to put a stop to it.Not ‘one more penny’ to Ukraine

    The EU as a whole has outstripped the US on aid, although only €77 billion (£66 billion) of the €144 billion (£123 billion) committed has been allocated and most of that is financial, rather than military.

    Mr Orban agrees with Mr Trump. After a recent dinner with the US politician at his Mar-a-Lago residence, he declared he would not send “one more penny” to Ukraine.

    He is now inspiring other European leaders to take a similar stance.

    Herbert Kickl, the leader of the far-Right Freedom Party of Austria, describes Hungary as his “model”.

    If he becomes chancellor in elections this autumn, he has vowed to veto EU funding for Ukraine, any moves to let Kyiv join the EU and “harmful” sanctions against Russia once in place.

    Mr Kickl has been leading the polls since 2022. His party is also predicted to win in the European elections.Eurosceptic parties set to fare well

    Similarly, last weekend saw a boost for the ruling Russian-leaning camp in Slovakia, whose prime minister, Robert Fico, has questioned Ukraine’s sovereignty and called for peace with Putin.

    Slovakia was the first country to send Mig fighter jets to Ukraine but, rocked by a cost-of-living crisis, elected Mr Fico as prime minister last year on a promise to end military aid to Kyiv.

    His agenda may soon be bolstered by his ally Peter Pellegrini, who is competing in a presidential run-off next month after winning 37 per cent of the first-round votes last weekend.

    Polls predict that Eurosceptic parties will win the European Parliament elections in nine EU member states: Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and Slovakia.

    They are expected to score second- or third-place finishes in a further nine countries: Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Portugal, Romania, Spain and Sweden.‘Our opponents want to destroy Europe’

    The expected success of the hard Right has raised speculation that Ursula von der Leyen’s centre-Right European People’s Party could be tempted to forge a broad conservative coalition with more moderate parties to shut the Left out of power.

    The European Commission president draws a direct parallel between the Euroscepticism popular on the hard Right and its support for Putin.

    “We must be clear that our opponents, Putin and his friends, whether they are from the AfD, or whether it’s Marine Le Pen or [Geert] Wilders or other extremist forces… want to destroy Europe,” she said last month.

    Both Ms Le Pen, the French National Rally figurehead, and Mr Wilders, the Dutch Party for Freedom leader, have officially distanced themselves from Putin in the wake of the Ukraine invasion in 2022.

    Yet many believe their former pro-Moscow sympathies still linger, particularly given their calls to stop aid to Ukraine.‘Terrible dictator’

    After his shock landslide win in Dutch elections last November, Mr Wilders called Putin a “terrible dictator” but he has not changed his opposition to sending weapons to Ukraine, even as coalition talks continue.

    Ms Le Pen has strongly condemned Russian aggression since the war began.

    But the National Rally abstained from a recent resolution supporting a French-Ukrainian security agreement and has opposed Ukraine joining the EU and sending Kyiv long-range missiles.

    A leaked report last year found the party has served as a “communication channel” for Russian power, with Ms Le Pen’s statements on the annexation of Crimea echoing “word for word the official language of Putin’s regime”.

    As a result, Emmanuel Macron’s allies have branded her, and Jordan Bardella, her lead candidate in the European elections, Putin’s “foot soldiers”.Ambiguity around Putin

    The kind of ambiguity around Putin peddled by Mr Wilders and Ms Le Pen can be heard throughout Europe.

    Matteo Salvini, the deputy prime minister of Italy and leader of the hard-Right League, couldn’t resist observing that “when people vote, they are always right” after the Russian president won his latest election two weeks ago – with almost 88 per cent of the vote.

    Tom Van Grieken, the youthful leader of Vlaams Belang, may well be the next prime minister of Belgium.

    Less than three months before Belgium’s general election, his party is at the top of the polls, while the more traditional Christian Democrats are polling at a record low. Belgium votes in the European Parliament elections on the same day in June.

    Members of his party are known to have developed close ties to the Kremlin since 2010 and Mr Van Grieken once said of the Russian leader: “Putin is not black or white, but 50 shades of grey.”

    Now, however, he admits he and many of his Right-wing compatriots were wrong about the Russian leader.‘He’s an imperialist’

    “Putin is a real b—— invading another sovereign country. He really did something terrible,” he said.

    “He’s not a patriot, he’s an imperialist.”

    Yet Mr Van Grieken still believes Belgium and other Western nations should halt arms shipments to Ukraine in order to end the bloodshed.

    The only thing stopping the situation being critical for Ukraine is the fact that those views are not echoed throughout Europe’s hard Right.

    Voters for Poland’s Law and Justice party (58 per cent) and the Sweden Democrats (52 per cent) were supportive of EU backing for Ukraine, according to a European Council on Foreign Relations report this week.

    Backers of Chega, now Portugal’s third-largest political force after elections this year, and Spain’s Vox were moderately in favour.

    At the other end of the spectrum, supporters of Hungary’s Fidesz (88 per cent), the Freedom Party of Austria (70 per cent) and the AfD (69 per cent) believed Europe should push Kyiv towards a negotiated settlement with Putin.‘The Left has no proper answers’

    For Maximilian Krah, the lead European elections candidate for Germany’s AfD, this split is getting in the way of a major shift in European politics.

    The AfD has grown in popularity despite accusations of being a neo-Nazi party, which it denies.

    It is currently outperforming all three parties in Germany’s coalition government in the polls and predicted to come second behind the centre-Right Christian Democratic Union in the European elections.

    Mr Krah claims that traditional conservative parties are now adopting critical views of immigration and net zero championed by parties such as his.

    “The Left is losing because it has no proper answers to the challenges of our time,” he said.

    “The climate voodoo destroys the welfare of the middle class and immigration destroys Europe culturally and demographically.”‘Foreign policy is dividing us’

    However, the issue of Ukraine stands in the way of a broader Right-wing coalition.

    Mr Krah added: “There is one major topic that is dividing us and this is foreign policy.

    “You have the very much pro-transatlantic, anti-Russian approach with the Right that would like to be in Ukraine and is preparing a war in Taiwan.

    “On the other hand, you have parties like AfD, which believes that the Western dominance of the world is over, that the future will be much more shaped by the Global South, and that it’s time to rethink foreign policy. It is the only issue that divides us.”Rise of the Right

    Those on the Right hope that such differences can be put aside to form a super bloc that can advance an agenda they feel is long overdue.

    “Consolidation and the formation of alliances of European conservatives are essential to stopping harmful changes in the European Union,” Mr Błaszczak, Poland’s PiS chairman, said.

    Mr Bardella, the head of National Rally and lead candidate in the European elections, echoed that view.

    He told The Telegraph that Europe had changed with the rise of the Right.

    “We have the opportunity to create this blocking minority in the European Parliament,” he said. “The cards are completely reshuffled.”

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

    Europe is fucked!

    Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, and Vladimir Putin, his Russian counterpart, will view the elections with interest.

    The Kiev Rat no doubt will, but the Evil Russian Tyrant couldn’t care less about what happens in Europe because it is now a hopeless, incurable case of incompetence, mismanagement, bad governance, and an unfounded sense of racial superiority and arrogance: it’s finished, powerless, clapped out.

    Von der Leyen, Scholtz, Habeck, Baerbock, Johnson, Cameron, Gunga Din, Shapps, Macron, Michel, the whole parcel of Baltic chihuahuas, Meloni, Borrell, Sikorsky, Duda . . . need I go on?

    Like

    1. The day is fast approaching when the designated unelected leaders of Europe will no longer be able to frighten the children with dark hints that this one or that one is ‘in league with Putin’ or ‘receives support from the Kremlin’. And if Ursula von der Leyen wants to get a good look at who is ‘destroying Europe’ she should start looking in small circles around her own desk.

      Probably too late to make any real difference, though, as you suggest. Russia is moving on past Europe.

      Like

  28. As I was saying about Europe:

    FT: Frontline Finland’s Finest Supports France’s New Napoleon

    Hawkish Macron finds favour in Nato’s frontline states

    French president rebuilds ties in Baltic region with vow to defeat Russia

    Emmanuel Macron stunned his allies in February when he said he might be willing to deploy combat forces to thwart a Russian victory over Ukraine © Yoan Valat/EPA-EF

    Ben Hall and Richard Milne in Helsinki

     2 HOURS AGO

    French President Emmanuel Macron was right to keep Russia guessing about the limits of western support for Kyiv when he floated the possibility of sending troops to Ukraine, Finland’s foreign minister has said.

    Elina Valtonen told the Financial Times: “Now’s not the time to send boots on the ground and we are not even willing to discuss it at this stage. But for the long term, of course we shouldn’t be ruling anything out.”

    Valtonen’s remarks, echoed by leaders and officials in the Baltic states, underscore how Macron has found favour with Nato’s frontline members after his recent pivot on Russia and his warnings that Moscow’s defeat in Ukraine is paramount to Europe’s security.

    For decades, France was viewed with deep suspicion in much of central and eastern Europe for ignoring the region’s security interests in its courtship of the Kremlin.

    Even after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine and evidence of widespread war crimes, Macron said Russia should not be “humiliated”.

    He has since concluded Russia poses an existential threat to the EU and to French security.

    Elina Valtonen: ‘Why would we . . . disclose all our cards?’ © Mauri Ratilainen/EPA-EFE

    The French president stunned his allies in February when he disclosed he might be willing to deploy combat forces to thwart a Russian victory over Ukraine. He said he was trying to re-establish “strategic ambiguity” towards Moscow.

    However, Germany, the US and UK swiftly ruled out troop deployments, which Macron’s critics said negated the ambiguity he was trying to create.

    Valtonen said it was not at all a mistake to keep Russia guessing about what Ukraine’s supporters would be prepared to do.

    “Why would we, especially not knowing where this war will go and what happens in the future, disclose all our cards? I really wouldn’t know.”

    Ingrida Šimonytė, prime minister of Lithuania, has also spoken favourably about Macron’s attempt to create “strategic ambiguity”.

    “What I liked about two recent announcements of President Macron is that he said that actually why should we impose ourselves red lines when Putin basically has no red lines?”

    “In the absence of Churchillian thinking, [Macron] is making the wisest move, said Žygimantas Pavilionis, head of the foreign affairs committee of Lithuania’s parliament. “He hears us. He understands us.”

    Estonia’s foreign minister Margus Tsahkna said Macron’s intervention had “woken up a bit the leaders of Europe — instead of putting boots on the ground it is safer to send weapons and money” to Ukraine.

    “It makes Putin concerned about what Europe can actually do. This out of the box thinking is useful.”

    Finland and the Baltic states are also coalescing around traditional French ideas for the EU to play a bigger role in joint military procurement and defence industry collaboration, with a budget to back it up.

    Macron has credited Estonian prime minister Kaja Kallas for spearheading calls for the EU to issue common debt for defence. Even Finland, a traditional frugal state opposed to EU borrowing, appears to be on board.

    “We don’t have anything against it,” Valtonen said. “If we decide that we want to spend €100bn collectively on ramping up our defence and we want to issue a bond to fund it then it’s got nothing to do with frugality.”

    But there are still big differences. The Baltic states remain sceptical about beefing up the EU’s role in defence at the expense of Nato despite doubts over the US commitment to the alliance should Donald Trump return to the White House.

    “Rhetoric coming from European leaders that we can’t rely on the Americans just gives additional material to Trump,” said Rihards Kols, head of the foreign affairs committee of the Latvian parliament.

    Valtonen said EU defence industry collaboration should be open to all Nato members and not just EU countries, a red line for Paris.

    Baltic and Finnish officials say France is regaining the confidence of the region through its more robust support of Ukraine as well as its troop presence in Estonia and Romania. Paris has sent long-range Scalp cruise missiles to Kyiv and powerful AASM smart bombs. It also pressed for Ukraine to be given a clearer path to Nato membership but was rebuffed by the US and Germany at the alliance’s summit in July last year.

    But officials and diplomats questioned whether France could be doing more in practical terms to help Ukraine. A European ambassador to the Baltics said he admired Macron’s “grande geste” to Ukraine but questioned whether France always followed through on its rhetorical promises. Several Baltic officials said they had more confidence in Germany’s growing contribution to regional security than in France or Britain’s.

    One Baltic military official said Macron had created the “first strategic dilemma for Russia” but that his statement was “thin” and that, it appeared, France had not thought through the next steps.

    “The momentum is there to declare Ukraine must win. But it begs the question after two years: what are you going to do about it?”

    “France and Macron really have a mountain to climb in terms of regaining credibility,” said Tomas Jermalavičius, a research fellow at the International Centre for Defence and Security in Tallinn.

    “We like the new spirit of Macron . . . but dealing with our own instinctive distrust towards French collective instincts about Russia will take time.”

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

    Another cupid stunt!

    Like

    1. Holy moly … the KS Helsinki desk must now be apoplectic in fright at the possibility of all these nations, his own included, on the first steps towards forming a new Grande Armee against Russia, which may be why we’re still hearing crickets from his direction. Or else he’s looking for replacement “e” and “a” keys on his laptop.

      Like

      1. To be pedantic in the extreme, one should add a grave accent to the first letter “e” in the Froggish for “army” , thus:

        La Grande Armée.

        À bientôt, ma petite!

        😊

        Like

        1. Ha! The curse of pedants: to make an error whilst being pedantic!

          Not a grave accent, but an acute one.

          I had grave accent on my mind because I was flummoxed trying to find one on the Froggish keyboard for the capital “a” in “À bientôt”.

          Like

    2. Anyone who characterizes Macron as ‘making wise moves’ and ‘thinking outside the box’ is looking to have the rug pulled out from under them. They must have a pretty low inspiration threshold.

      Like

  29. The British back-scratching honours system never ceases to amaze me!

    I have just learnt the following . . .

    Get this:

    The above is Evgeny Alexandrovich Lebedev, born in Moscow and son of this person:

    Alexander Yevgenievich Lebedev, former officer in the First Chief Directorate (Foreign Intelligence) of the KGB and later, an officer in one of the successor-agencies of the KGB, the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), who in the Yeltsin years metamorphed into an oligarch, real-estate owner, newspaper owner, bank owner, namely he is one of those many dedicated former communist stalwarts turned capitalist with knobs on. (As an aside: the FSB is NOT the successor of the KGB! I get sick of reading this in the Western media. The FSB did NOT “inherit” all the functions of the KGB, e.g. the SVR is not part of the FSB.)

    Evgeny Alexandrovich Lebedev, being the son of a “New Russian” (read “criminal”), was from the age of 8, when his father was posted to the Soviet Embassy in Londonistan, raised and educated in the UK. He now has dual Russian-British nationality. He is a property owner and newspaper owner. One of his rags is “The Independent”. He’s a pal of that odious fat fucker Boris Johnson and has maintained his friendship with him since the late 2000s, Lebedev’s London “Evening Standard” having endorsed the fat fool Johnson as the Mayor of London. Johnson has been reported to have attended vodka and caviar parties hosted by Alexander and Evgeny Lebedev in the UK and Italy throughout the 2010s.

    Evgeny is also an art lover, art collector and rumoured arse-bandit.

    Evgeny Lebedev was nominated for a life peerage by his big buddy turned British prime minister Boris Johnson for philanthropy and services to the media, a move that drew much criticism at the time. Lebedev was appointed to be a crossbench (no political party) life peer in the House of Lords as Lord Lebedev, FFS in November 2020.

    So Evgeny Lebedev now sits (or is allowed to sit) in the House of Lords.

    And this is what gets me . . .

    Evgeny Alexandrovich Lebedev’s full aristocratic title is Baron Lebedev, of Hampton in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames and of Siberia in the Russian Federation.

    I wonder if Russian citizens living in Siberia are aware of this?

    Who in Russia gave the British political class permission to label one of their popinjay nancy-boy “barons” as “Baron of Siberia”?

    And by the way, only a couple of days ago, the Tory Party, the party of British government in Westminster, under the leadership of the Hindu midget banker Rishi Sunak, handed over to the Kiev terrorist regime another £1.5 Billion of UK tax payers money.

    Like

    1. Yes, we’ve discussed before how Putin’s time in the KGB turned him into a soulless blood-drinking monster, while Lebedev’s KGB duties mostly consisted of reading the British newspapers, which overall had a benign and beneficial effect upon him and created his nose for money-making opportunities.

      Like

  30. The real president has resigned. Americans exposed Zelensky

    01.04.2024 – 6:00

    The real president has resigned. Americans exposed Zelensky | Russian Spring

    Readers of the American edition of the New York Post have reacted to the recent reshuffle in the office of Vladimir Zelensky, suggesting that this is due to his dictatorial tendencies and the resignation of US Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland.

    Earlier, the President of the Ukraine dismissed a number of advisers and assistants, including Serhiy Shefir, director and founder of Kvartal-95 studio. Also under the “redundancies” were advisers Oleg Ustenko, Sergey Trofimov, Mikhail Radutsky and a number of others.

    “I am not surprised by this action of his. Now he will be able to pocket all the money that was supposed to go to their salaries. I’ll bet he has an account worth a tidy few billion dollars in some Swiss bank”, reads one of the most popular comments.

    “He probably isn’t happy with the way the billions of our dollars that are still being sent to him are being distributed”, another commenter complained.

    “If there is a need to fire so many people at once, it suggests that the problem was not the performance of their official duties at all”, said a third.

    “He is a new dictator. Dismisses them all (I would execute them, but I can’t do it in front of the whole world). Probably, they all disagreed with him on some of the strategies”, one commentator suggested.

    “This was to be expected after the real president of Ukraine (Victoria Nuland) resigned a few weeks ago”, another reader sneered.

    Zelensky’s press secretary Serhiy Nikiforov said that the personnel changes in the presidential office were dictated by the “optimization” of staff.

    Like

  31. Unexpected details of the clearing of Zelensky’s entourage revealed

    01.04.2024 – 1:00

    Unexpected details of clearing Zelensky's entourage revealed | Russkaya Vesna

    Volodymyr Zelensky fired his first aide and longtime associate Serhiy Shefir because of his flight from Kiev at the beginning of a special operation, according to the Ukrainian newspaper Страна.ua with reference to sources.

    “Shefir has been a close friend and ally of Volodymyr Zelensky since the president’s youth. Since Zelensky came to power, Shefir has played a major role in the overall design of public administration”, the publication points out.

    Their close relationship is also evidenced by the fact that the Zelensky family transferred their corporate rights to Ukrainian and offshore companies to Shefir’s relatives, which is why he was called the “president’s wallet”, claims Страна.ua

    According to a source close to Zelensky’s office, after the start of the Russian special operation, Shefir’s influence declined sharply.

    “The president did not forgive him for the fact that in the first few days (of the SMO — ed.) Shefir hastily left Kiev. After that, his resignation was a matter of time”, he said.

    At the same time, another source familiar with Shefir told Страна.ua, that he had left on his own initiative.

    “Serhiy is very skeptical about what is happening in the Ukraine. So he decided to, to so to say, “get on his skates”. The whole question is whether he shall be allowed to leave”, the source added.

    According to open sources, Shefir has held the position of Zelensky’s first assistant since 2019. He is also a TV series producer, director of the Kvartal-95 studio, thanks to which Zelensky got his ticket to enter big politics.

    Zelensky previously also dismissed a number of other advisers — Oleg Ustenko, Sergey Trofimov, Mikhail Radutsky. His press secretary Sergey Nikiforov said that the personnel changes were dictated by the” optimization ” of the staff.

    Like

  32. “Difficult months”: ex-Foreign Minister made a statement on the future of the Ukraine

    01.04.2024 – 0:30

    "Difficult months": ex-Foreign Minister made a statement about the future of Ukraine | Russian Spring

    Former Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin believes that the next four months will be difficult and decisive for the Ukraine against the background of the delay in military assistance by the West, and mass personnel changes are also associated with this. He stated this live on air on the Rada TV channel.

    Earlier, Volodymyr Zelensky dismissed a number of advisers and assistants, including Serhiy Shefir, the director and founder of Kvartal-95 studio. Oleh Ustenko, Serhiy Trofimov, and Mykhailo Radutsky were also made “redundant”; Alena Verbytska, adviser to the “Presidential Commissioner for Ensuring the rights of defenders of the Ukraine”, and Natalia Pushkareva, “Presidential Commissioner for volunteer activities” were also dismissed.

    “We are well aware that the next four months, more or less, may become, if not critical, then in many ways decisive… Indeed, the coming months will not be easy”, Klimkin said.

    According to Klimkin, the difficulties in the country are related to the delay in military assistance from the West.

    At the same time, he called the upcoming events as “a new stage of the war”, for which Ukraine needs a new team of personnel”, and the latest personnel changes in the country are part of this story”, the former foreign minister stressed.

    Earlier it was reported that Vladimir Zelensky had told CBS News that the Ukrainian Armed Forces were not ready for defence in the event of a major Russian offensive, the Ukrainian troops had almost no artillery left, and the commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian troops, Alexander Syrsky, had said that the situation on the battlefield was difficult and required that the Ukrainian military exert maximum force.

    CIA Director William Joseph Burns said earlier that without additional military assistance from the United States, the Ukraine would be forced to go to peace talks on Moscow’s terms in a year. In his opinion, the lack of American support would result in further retreat and loss of territories for the Armed Forces of the Ukraine.

    As the newspaper “Mundo” reported with reference to the Ukrainian military, Kiev would lose if the Ukraine did not receive ammunition from the West in the near future. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, in turn, said that the European Union would not be able to provide the Ukraine with enough financial resources that would allow it to win a military victory in the conflict with Russia.

    Russia believes that arms supplies to the Ukraine hinder the settlement, directly involve NATO countries in the conflict and is “playing with fire”. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that any cargo that contained weapons for the Ukraine would become a legitimate target for Russia.

    According to him, the United States and NATO are directly involved in the conflict, including not only by supplying weapons, but also by training personnel in the UK, Germany, Italy and other countries. The Kremlin said that pumping the Ukraine with weapons from the West did not contribute to negotiations and would have a negative effect.

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

    Remember Klimkin?

    “Don’t you touch my ass again, ya little runt!”

    Like


  33. varlam_volkov

    31 März 2024, 22:57

    An ultimatum to the clown and bloody killer drug addict Zela and his Nazi pack….

    Russia has demanded that the Ukraine hand over all those involved in the Crocus terrorist attack.

    1. The investigations carried out by the Russian competent authorities indicate that the traces of recent terrorist attacks lead to the Ukraine

    2. Russia has sent a request to the Ukrainian authorities to arrest and extradite all those involved in the Crocus terrorist attack.

    3 Russia demands that Ukraine arrest the head of the SBU Malyuk, the Foreign Ministry has said.

    4. Violation of Ukraine obligations under the anti-terrorist conventions will result in liability.

    5. Russia demands that the Kiev regime immediately stop any support for terrorist activities and compensate the victims for the damage caused

    (c) Ministry OF Foreign Affairs OF THE Russian Federation

    Thus, Russia has officially charged the Ukraine with organizing a terrorist attack in the Crocus City Hall.

    And what do the good Russian people think of this ultimatum?

    Does this gesture sound like a preface to future tough and decisive actions by Russia?

    How long will the Kremlin delay recognizing the Ukrainian authorities as a terrorist organization?

    What else should the Bandera Nazis blow up in our country and how many more good Russian people should they send to the next world?

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

    Don’t know who Varlam Volk is, but he’s in Germany. The date of the blog that I have copied and pasted is in German.

    Like

  34. RT

    Wine supplies from the EU to Russia have fallen by almost 40%

    Wine supplies to Russia from the European Union from 1 August, 2023 to 31 January, 2024 decreased by 37.2% (compared to the period 2022-2023), such data are contained in the statistics of the General Directorate of Agriculture and Rural Development of the European Commission.

    РБК has studied the EC data. The publication notes that deliveries in the six months since the beginning of the marketing year have been the smallest in the last five years.

    The leading countries in terms of wine supplies to Russia have not changed, but their volumes have fallen. Latvia, which was the largest supplier, reduced imports by 44.3%. Exports from Lithuania fell by 32.3%, and from Italy-by 29.5%.

    In early March, the Association of Winegrowers and Winemakers of Russia called on the Russian authorities to introduce import duties of 200% for wine from NATO member states.

    On hearing this news, surely the oppressed bydlo here will rise up against the regime and overthrow the Tyrant, who, no doubt, has ample supplies of imported plonk stashed away in the wine cellars of his vast palaces that are scattered around Mordor?

    How come Latvia and Lithuania export wine to Russia? There are no vinyards in those shitholes of depopulated countries.

    I guess they import wine from Frogland, Italy and Germany and Spain and Portugal, and maybe California, Chile, South Africa and even Australia, which has been shipped there, where it is bottled and then sent to the Orcs.

    Like

    1. Traditionally, that’s true – as Lithuania itself points out, its climate is not conducive to the growing of grapes. But they do have a fairly substantial wine-production facility, Voluta, and much of their production is from alternative fruits such as apples and berries.

      https://www.itinari.com/wineries-in-lithuania-the-nordic-style-of-wine-producing-2rvt

      But you’re right that their domestic production would not currently support exports on such a scale, and it is quite likely the Lithuanians and Lats are relabeling European wines to get them across the border. Russia should shut them down simply because they are such wretched haters, but it would also be wise to remember that in virtually every country there is a loud minority of haters who imbue the entire country with the reputation of Russophobes, while businessmen are almost-invariably pragmatic and merely want to grow their business. An acceptable compromise would be to establish much more stringent import/export inspections, and to turn back all wines which could not be verified to have been produced in Lithuania/Latvia. Those which passed inspection could be let in duty-free. As various sites have discussed, a sea change in governments in the western sphere of influence is coming, and inflexibility means death.

      Like

  35. Happy April, or should I say “May”?

    Abnormally high temperatures here for the next 3 days, the warmest 1st of April since 1983. It’s now plus 18 °C here at 12:15 Moscow time.

    The Stalinesque “wedding-cake-style” Central Pavilion or Pavilion №1 at VDNKh [ВДНХ— Выставка достижений народного хозяйстваVystavka dostizheniy narodnogo khozyaystva] — The Exhibition of National Achievements of the Economy — with cherry trees blossoming.

    The spire and statues are gold plated.

    And tovarishch Lenin’s statue is still firmly planted in front of the building.

    Have these Orcs no shame???

    You don’t see statues of Hitler in Germany, so why are there statues of Lenin in Russia?

    And you still see Hammer-and-Sickle symbols everywhere here!

    I mean, that’s like having swastikas all over the place in Germany, innit?

    Proletarskaya (“Proletarian” FFS!) metro station, Moscow — “my” metro station, has these monstrosities on its tile walls:

    Killery is right!

    Poo’n wants to resurrect the USSR.

    Like

    1. All of Germany’s behavior under the Nazis has been concentrated in Hitler, and it is perfectly true that not only was he the leader, but it was likely his grandiose visions and whackjob leadership that lost the war for Germany – the feebleminded west was certainly not defeating him. But this setting-up of Hitler as the ultimate symbol of human evil has allowed the whitewashing of Nazism in general and permitted the west to co-opt Germany as a close friend and ally, even as it repudiates the ally that made the victory over Germany possible. Germany, demonstrably, is pliable and responsive to American demands, God, the only character more pliable than Scholz must be Gumby. Russia is not manageable and there is now considerably less hope that it ever could be, with liberalism a shameful taboo in Russia, while Germany can be easily kept under the American thumb.

      Like

  36. I kid you not about gold-plated statues in Moscow. There’s plenty more of that stuff where it came from — and other precious/semi-precious metals and diamonds and semi-precious stones and minerals.

    Take titanium, for example.

    This 12-tonne statue dedicated to the memory of Yuri Gagarin is made entirely of titanium, ‘cos it’s a key component in rocket engines, see.

    12-tonnes of titanium for a statue!

    I know it’s 1 April today, but I kid you not.

    Anyroad, it’s gone midday here already, so “April Fool is dead and gone”, as kids used to say in England on 1 April after midday if someone tried to “April Fool” you then:

    April Fool is dead and gone!

    You’re the fool, I’m not one!

    Like

  37. America has no Ukraine Plan B except more war

    US foreign policy establishment blindly intent on beating Russia on the battlefield and crushing its economy. Neither will happen

    By DAVID P GOLDMAN

    MARCH 25, 2024

    Somewhere last weekend a few dozen former Cabinet members, senior military officers, academics and think tank analysts met to evaluate the world military situation. 

    I can say that I haven’t been so scared since the fall of 1983, when I was a junior contract researcher doing odd jobs for then Special Assistant to the President Norman A Bailey at the National Security Council. That was the peak of the Cold War and the too-realistic Able Archer 83 exercise nearly set off a nuclear war.

    Now, the US foreign policy establishment has staked its credibility on humiliating Russia by pushing NATO’s borders to within a few hundred kilometers of Moscow, while crushing Moscow’s economy through sanctions. 

    It has pulled every chit it has with European governments, mobilizing its legion of journalists, think tankers and stipended politicians to promote the Ukrainian proxy war, with the intent of degrading Russia’s armed forces and ultimately forcing regime change in Russia.

    The messaging from the most distinguished participants – former Cabinet members with defense and national security portfolios – is that NATO is still determined to win at any cost. “The question is whether Russia can generate strategic reserves,” one rapporteur said, “Its officer corps is at 50% strength and it has no depth of non-commissioned officers.”

    “The Russians are taking massive losses of 25,000 to 30,000 a month,” the former official added. “They can’t sustain the will to fight on the battlefield. The Russians are close to a breaking point. Can they sustain their national will? Not if the rigged election [of Vladimir Putin this month] was any indication. Their economy has real vulnerability. We need to redouble sanctions and financial interdiction of supplies getting to Russia. The Russians have a Potemkin portrayal of strength.”

    All the above is demonstrably false and known to be false by the rapporteur in question. The notion that Russia is taking 25,000 to 30,000 casualties a month is ludicrous. Artillery accounts for about 70% of casualties on both sides and by every estimate Russia is firing five or ten times as many shells as Ukraine. Russia has carefully avoided frontal assaults to preserve manpower. 

    The most important fact about Putin’s re-election is that 88% of Russians voted, a much higher turnout than in any Western democracy. Russians may not have had much choice of candidate but they had a choice of voting or not. The massive turnout is consistent with Putin’s 85% approval rating according to the independent Levada poll.

    Putin’s Approval or Disapproval Rating in the Levada Poll. Source: Statista

    Instead of collapsing, Russia has become the focal point for a reorganization of global supply chains and their financing, and its economy is growing, rather than shrinking by half, as President Biden promised in March 2022. 

    Ukraine is running out of soldiers and can’t agree on a new conscription law. One prominent military historian expostulated, “Everywhere you go in Ukraine you see young men hanging around and not in uniform! Ukraine refuses to go all in.”

    Russia produces anywhere between four and seven times more artillery shells than Ukraine. Ukraine’s air defenses are exhausted as its old Soviet-era anti-aircraft missiles have been fired and NATO’s stocks of Patriot missiles are dwindling. 

    Russia has an inexhaustible supply of Soviet-era large bombs fitted with cheap guidance systems, fired accurately at Ukrainian targets from Russian aircraft standing 60 miles (96.5 kilometers) off. With five times Ukraine’s population, Russia is winning the war of attrition.

    Another rapporteur at the weekend meeting denounced Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz and other European leaders for worrying too much about the “nuclear threshold” – the point of escalation after which Russia might use nuclear weapons. He demanded that Germany supply its long-range Taurus cruise missile to Ukraine, with a 1,000-kilometer range and a two-stage warhead suitable for destroying major infrastructure.

    Senior German air force officers last month discussed using 20 of the Taurus missiles to destroy the Kerch Bridge linking Crimea to the Russian mainland, in a conversation covertly recorded and published by Russian media. The conversation also revealed the presence of hundreds of British and other NATO personnel on the ground in Ukraine.

    Taking the war to Russia’s homeland and destroying major infrastructure is one way to transform the proxy war with Ukraine into a general European war. Another is to deploy NATO soldiers in Ukraine, something that French President Emmanuel Macron has broached (but almost certainly does not intend to do).

    Remarkably, not a word was said about a possible negotiated solution to the conflict. Any negotiated outcome at this juncture would award Russia the Eastern Ukrainian oblasts that it has annexed and probably give Russia a buffer zone reaching to the east bank of the Dnieper River – followed by a normalization of economic relations with Western Europe. 

    Russia would emerge triumphant and American assets in Western Europe would be degraded. The impact on America’s world standing would be devastating: As several attendees observed, Taiwan is watching carefully to see what happens to American proxies.

    The rules of the meeting prevent me from saying much more but I am free to report what I told the gathering: Sanctions against Russia have failed miserably because Russia had access to unlimited amounts of Chinese (as well as Indian and other) imports, both directly and through a host of intermediaries including Turkey and the former Soviet republics. 

    But Russia’s economic resilience in the face of supposedly devastating sanctions is only one reflection of a great transformation of world trade. China’s exports to the Global South doubled during the past three years and China now exports more to the South than to developed markets. China’s unprecedented exporting success, in turn, stems from the rapid automation of Chinese industry, which now installs more industrial robots per year than the rest of the world combined.

    This is evident, I added, in China’s newfound dominance in the world automotive market but it also has critical military implications. China claims that it has automated plants that can make 1,000 cruise missiles a day—not impossible given that it can manufacture 1,000 EVs a day, or thousands of 5G base stations. 

    The implication is that China can produce the equivalent of America’s inventory of 4,000 cruise missiles in a week while American defense contractors take years to assemble them by hand.

    No one disputed the data I presented. And no one believed that Russia is taking 25,000 casualties a month. Facts weren’t the issue: The assembled dignitaries, a representative sampling of the foreign policy establishment’s intellectual and executive leadership, simply couldn’t imagine a world in which America no longer gave the orders. 

    They are accustomed to running things and they will gamble the world away to keep their position. 

    Liked by 1 person

  38. Check out the comments!

    Summary: Russia lies — always! The USA and its satraps never lie!

    Check out the comments.

    e.g. US debt 150% of GDP, Russia 16% of GDP. US trade and budget deficit. Russia, trade surplus and very small budget deficit.

    Like

  39. INOSMI EVENTS IN THE WEST

    POLITICO: AN INVESTIGATION HAS BEEN LAUNCHED AGAINST URSULA VON DER LEYEN

    The publication Politico reports that an investigation has been launched against the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, in a case concerning the purchases of coronavirus vaccines from Pfizer. The publication refers to its sources who are directly involved in the investigation of the case. It is reported that the investigation has been going on for several months. At the moment, investigators are studying an audio recording of von der Leyen’s conversations with the head of Pfizer.

    The audio recordings may and most likely contain the intention of the head of the European Commission to enrich herself with the purchase of vaccines. It is reported that on the ‘phone of the head of the European Commission, which is used for official purposes, the fact of deleting SMS messages was recorded. They, in turn, can shed light on conversations with the head of a pharmaceutical firm. SMS messages will be restored.

    URSULA VON DER LEYEN HAS STARTED HAVING PROBLEMS
    At the moment, no official charges have been filed against Ursula von der Leyen. It is now known that Hungary joined the investigation of this case and filed a complaint about the influence of von der Leyen during the covid-19 period. It was she who literally forced all EU countries to buy Pfizer vaccines, despite the fact that they had not not passed a number of medical tests. A similar complaint was filed by Poland, but after the arrival of Donald Tusk as Prime Minister, the complaint was withdrawn. In general, Poland’s anti-EU rhetoric has greatly weakened, as Tusk is considered a man who acts according to European diplomacy.

    Recall that the European Commission in 2021 signed a number of contracts for the supply of 3 billion vaccines to EU countries. The contract included 6 companies, one of which was the pharmaceutical company Pfizer. The investigation reports that a contract was signed with this company on behalf of Ursula von der Leyen. However, at that time, Pfizer’s vaccines had not yet been tested. This may indicate the personal benefit of the head of the EC. As well as harming the health of EU citizens, which is much worse.

    Perhaps the head of the EC had a hand in the fact that thousands of people died using the von der Leyen vaccine. The investigation continues, and von der Leyen has disappeared from the political field of view.

    Above is Russian translation of foreign news

    Below, from the horse’s mouth:

    Politico

    European prosecutors take over Belgian probe into Pfizergate

    European Public Prosecutor’s Office looking into texts between Ursula von der Leyen and boss of Pfizer.

    BELGIUM-EU-HEALTH-VIRUS-VACCINE
    Frédéric Baldan’s complaint centered around an alleged exchange of text messages between von der Leyen and Pfizer boss Albert Bourla in the run-up to the EU’s biggest vaccine deal at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, in an affair dubbed “Pfizergate.” | John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

    APRIL 1, 2024 6:00 AM CET

    Top European prosecutors are investigating allegations of criminal wrongdoing in connection with vaccine negotiations between European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and the CEO of Pfizer, according to a spokesperson from the Liège prosecutor’s office.

    Investigators from the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) have in recent months taken over from Belgian prosecutors investigating von der Leyen over “interference in public functions, destruction of SMS, corruption and conflict of interest,” according to legal documents seen by POLITICO and a spokesperson from the Liège prosecutor’s office. While EPPO’s prosecutors are investigating alleged criminal offenses, no one has yet been charged in connection with the case.

    The probe was originally opened by Belgian judicial authorities in the city of Liège in early 2023 after a criminal complaint lodged by local lobbyist Frédéric Baldan. He was later joined by the Hungarian and Polish governments — although the latter is in the process of withdrawing its complaint after the election win by a pro-EU government led by Donald Tusk, a Polish government spokesperson told POLITICO.  

    Baldan’s complaint centered around an alleged exchange of text messages between von der Leyen and Pfizer boss Albert Bourla in the run-up to the EU’s biggest vaccine deal at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, in an affair dubbed “Pfizergate.”

    The New York Times, which first revealed that the exchange had taken place as the two leaders hashed out the terms of the deal, has launched a parallel lawsuit against the Commission after it refused to disclose the content of the messages following an access to documents request.  

    News that EPPO is now investigating the case risks putting further scrutiny on the Commission president’s role in the mega vaccine deal, which had an estimated value of over €20 billion. EPPO leads pan-European investigations into financial crimes, and in theory could seize phones and other relevant material from Commission offices or in other countries in Europe such as von der Leyen’s native Germany. 

    The development comes at a delicate moment for the EU’s chief, as she navigates the transition to what Brussels observers expect will be a second term at the head of the Berlaymont. 

    The Commission has so far refused to reveal the content of the text messages, or even confirm their existence.

    The deal, negotiated at the height of the pandemic in 2021, was originally seen as a triumph for von der Leyen. But the sheer amount of vaccines purchased has since raised eyebrows, with POLITICO revealing late last year that there were at least €4 billion worth of wasted doses. The vaccine contract with Pfizer has since been renegotiated. 

    Transparency campaigners and some political opponents have sought to put pressure on the Commission to discuss the case, but von der Leyen has so far avoided addressing it. In a reply to a direct question put to her by POLITICO about missing text messages, von der Leyen said: “Everything necessary about that has been said and exchanged. And we will wait for the results.” 

    In 2022, EPPO announced it was looking into the EU’s vaccine procurement more generally, but this is the first time that the office has been linked with Pfizergate explicitly.

    Trading legal barbs 

    The case now being looked at by EPPO brings together several different legal, political and financial strands — and it intersects with lawsuits that pharmaceutical giant Pfizer brought against Hungary and Poland. 

    Last year, Baldan, a 36-old Belgian lobbyist with ties to vaccine-skeptic group Bon Sens, lodged a criminal complaint in Belgium in connection to von der Leyen’s role in the vaccine negotiations with Pfizer over what he alleges were acts of “interference in public functions, destruction of SMS, corruption and conflict of interest,” according to legal information provided by his lawyer. 

    The addition of European governments to his complaint adds weight to what might otherwise have been seen as a personal crusade. Hungary, led by Viktor Orbán, a steadfast opponent of von der Leyen, also filed a complaint in connection to the Commission president’s role in vaccine negotiations with Pfizer, according to two insiders with knowledge of the case, speaking on condition of anonymity because of its sensitivity. 

    Poland lodged its own complaint last November, a Polish government spokesperson confirmed. However, following the election of Tusk in December, “the new government is working [to] withdraw Poland from these proceedings,” the spokesperson said. 

    The details of the case are not public but the insiders said that while the complaint brought by Hungary is distinct from Baldan’s, it centers on the same text message exchange. Poland’s complaint was along the same lines, the two people familiar with the details of the case said.

    Both Hungary and Poland are also being sued by Pfizer over missing payments for vaccine doses after stopping deliveries, citing oversupply and the financial strain of the Ukraine war.    

    A European Commission official said the Commission had no knowledge about possible proceedings other than from press articles.

    The Hungarian government didn’t reply to a request for comment. Pfizer and EPPO declined to comment.

    Like

    1. Ha, ha!!! “EPPO leads pan-European investigations into financial crimes, and in theory could seize phones and other relevant material from Commission offices or in other countries in Europe such as von der Leyen’s native Germany.”

      Good one!! Didn’t anyone learn ANYTHING from previous experience with Von der Leyen as Defense Minister of Germany? When the Bundestag ordered that her phone be held as evidence, the defense department claimed they didn’t have it. Then they claimed only VDL had the password to unlock it. After months of stalling, by the time the investigators got their hands on it, it had been professionally wiped and there was nothing recoverable on it. She’s no fool, and you will never catch her that way.

      Suddenly everybody ‘knows’ that the COVID-19 event was a monstrous scam, and thousands upon thousands who were completely taken in are pretending they were wise to the tricks from the start. Too late, you hoodwinked boobs, you don’t fool me or anyone else who were opposed to the tidal wave of ‘do it for your community’ bullshit from the start. And now there is no community, and people wonder what happened to that nice-guy country that has turned into something like Detroit. Funny, just today I was talking with one of my shipmates who also had a long career in the Canadian military. He claimed that he would never fight for Canada now, and I agreed with him, appending that whoever took it over could not possibly fuck it up any worse.

      Like

  40. From a Banderite blogger:

    The photo was taken in 1935 in the Eastern Alps, that is, in Galitsia, as it was called by the Poles n the interwar period. [Not only called by the Poles, it was in Poland and had been since 1919. And before that, since 1798, it had been in the Austrian Empire, when it was called “Kronland Galizien” — ME] I saw a mention somewhere that the photo may have been taken in Stanislav [the Polish nane for an ancient Polish city, now called by “Ukrainians “Ivano-Frankivsk” — ME]. But there is no confirmation of this. We only know that this is definitely Galitsia [which was not in the Ukraine in 1935! — ME].

    Look at this couple. Beautiful, happy and stylishly dressed young people. He’s wearing a top-of-the-line suit, his jacket buttoned up, his hands behind his back, with the determined look of a confident man.

    She is a feminine and beautiful woman in pants, which was a problem at the time. A beautiful hairstyle, a charming smile, a woman’s or man’s watch on her hand.

    She smiles at the photographer, and her face deliberately makes a half-serious face. It’s a game. Of course, this is a game that was captured forever by a photographer.

    Take these people anywhere in the world and they will be among their own kind wherever they may be. Typical representatives of the modern world. Imagine that Wall Street is behind them, and this man is in the courtyard of 1928. Now they’re going to get into their Buick and go to Carnegie Hall to listen to the New York City Opera. [Ah yes, Banderite! New York, New York — Its a hell of a town! It bloody wasn’t in 1935, you dumbass! — ME]

    Or maybe she’s a real estate salesperson in London and he’s an engineer at Auto Union somewhere in Ingolstadt. [But of course! In London, favourite place for Banderashites, Or in Ingolstad, Bavaria. Bavaria! The birthplace of the National Socialist and Workers Party of Germany — ME]

    Or maybe she is a teacher in Ternopil, and he is one of the first Ukrainian racers to win the Grand Prix in 1930 at the Lviv Triangle circuit in Lviv? [Only Lviv, was then known by its Polish name “Lwów” — ME]

    Who are these people? We shall never know.

    The only thing that we can see for sure is that these are ordinary representatives of human civilization.

    1935. the rest of our country is recovering from our biggest disaster, the Holodomor. [The rest of “our country”. You mean the UkSSR? But you’re speaking about Galitsia, aren’t you, when referring to the “rest of our country”? Surely, “the rest of our country” from a Galitsian 1935 point of view was Poland? And “our biggest disaster, Holodomor”? There was no “Holodomor” in Galitsia 1935! In fact, there was no fucking Holodomor, if by that term you mean genocide by starvation —ME]

    The nation [do you mean “Ukrainians”, Poles, Ruthenians — ME] is like a dead man, barely pushing its bony arm out from under the wet ground and clinging to life. Shakes off the remnants of Ukrainian identity and takes the first step into a new and bright socialist future. But what it doesn’t know yet is that it owes the commissar its soul for the opportunity to live. {Here we go! Enter the Moskals — ME]

    Ahead of 1937, black companies, penal battalions and Bykovnya. Vorkuta, Kengir and Sandarmokh are ahead. Executed revival and humble birth. They kill everyone, from the laborer and Pavlik Morozov to the playwright Kurbas and the neoclassicist Zerov. Those who are not patient shoot themselves in the forehead like Volnovoy. [Now it starts! The evil Moskals destroy their beautiful world — ME]

    And only then will they tell us what progress and science have brought us. They taught us how to build hydroelectric power plants and metallurgical plants. With our hands and brains, of course.
    And we also sent them into space for this.
    [So why didn’t you build the Dnieper cascade hydroelectric power plants yourselves, or sink the Donbass shafts, or build the Azov steel plant? Why no Yukietard cosmonaut before Gagarin? The Moskals forced you to accept new technology, to build new industries and in doing so picked your shitwitted brains did they? — ME]

    Biological garbage came and destroyed everything [Ho ho, now we have it! Ukrainian racial superiority as opposed to Russian “biological garbage”. Straight from the Nazi racist handbook! — ME], then we rebuilt everything with our own hands and they said that they gave us all of this, and we are ungrateful people. And if it weren’t for them, we’d still be living in the woods, hunting wolves and eating the contents of deer stomachs. Well, thank you of course.

    They wanted to destroy us, but it didn’t work out. [Oh really? You think you’re fucking winning??? —]

    Now it’s our turn. {To do what exactly? — ME}

    Victor Datsko

    Chief Psychologist Dr. Moscow Exile’s diagnosis:

    One fucking humongous inferiority complex of one shitwit “nation”.

    Too much pork lard and too little iodine and inbred low IQ.

    Like

    1. What a pile of sensationalist crap. I want to see this fuckhead’s bank statement, so I can verify for myself that the only luxury he allows himself is enough to pay his internet bill – the rest of his disposable income goes to Ukraine. The ridiculous myth persists that if Ukraine just had enough MONEY, it could win. What it would have is a bunch of incredibly-rich greedy people booking out to the Canary Islands or wherever, while the rest of the country was overrun. The USA has already considered the unlimited-money scenario and discovered the rest of the world that still listens when it cracks the whip cannot make armaments fast enough to match Russian industrial production, and the OTHER obvious solution – give Ukraine western inventories – would leave all those countries stripped of self-defense capabilities, while they would have to provide pilots and technicians and programmers and all that themselves because those new weapons would be completely foreign to Ukrainians. Might as well just formally declare total war and be done with it. And if you do, the nukes will fly and then the gold will be fucking melted out of everyone’s mother’s mouth. It infuriates me beyond reason when stupid agitators draw parallels between the Russians and the Nazis that way, considering the numbers of its citizens Russia burned to save the world from Nazism. Of course it was primarily defending itself, and I doubt such altruistic goals as saving the world were much on its mind – but Russia has stood firm in remembering the real animals who broke gold out of Jews’ mouths, not to mention collecting warehouses full of their personal effects before sending them naked to be gassed…while the west has totally forgiven them and makes Germany a cheek-to-cheek chum in its deliberations on how to wipe Russia out once and for all.

      Jurgen Nauditt is Managing Director of the Mortimer English Club,

      https://www.xing.com/profile/Juergen_Nauditt

      a global language-instruction company.

      https://www.mortimer-english.com/en/company/

      I expect he makes pretty good money for his management efforts, and I’m equally confident he donates all except for bare and reasonable living expenses to Ukraine, so that it can ‘win’. Has anyone spared a thought for what the future world might look like when Ukraine has the world’s largest military and has sucked the west dry of money? Such stupidity and stubbornness is depressing, it really is – why can’t you just say it? We can’t bear to lose.

      Like

  41. Russian forces current denergization campaign cannot be lost on NATO planners. What is possible in th u-Kraine is also possible elsewhere. It’s the kind of messaging professionals and the curious understand but you don’t see with Notional Security reporters (aka state sponsored poodles).

    Is there a reason the Pork Pie News Networks aren’t reporting this but prefer the new nebulous ‘evidence’ that Russia is behind Havana Syndrome attacks? I guess that is easier to sell than NATO has no defense against Zircons taking a good chunk of u-Rope’s energy production offline. They’ll quickly see how far environmentally produced electricity lasts too.

    Again, what is not said is often as important as, if not more important than what is said.

    Like

  42. 07: 08 am-Drugs taken by terrorists
    When the examination revealed a psychotropic substance in the bodies of all four terrorists that changes the perception of reality, it was not a big surprise.

    In the gruesome videos from Crocus City, the terrorists acted without fuss, methodically-they worked like robots designed to kill. After all, even for a born villain, such an action is extremely stressful. And when they were caught the next day, they looked very different. They were pathetic, shaky humans, not supermen at all. When you see such a dramatic change, it immediately comes to mind that they were drugged with something before the terrorist attack.

    According to Mikhail Bogomolov, a psychoendocrinologist and president of the Russian Diabetes Association, the use of combat drugs by perpetrators of the terrorist attack in Crocus City was almost mandatory. This is what he tells aif.ru.

    “The terrorists in Crocus City acted coolly and calmly. An ordinary person is not capable of such a thing. This is how those who have had very good physical and psychological training can behave. But it takes a lot of time and money to make such killer machines out of a person. And of course, those who prepared this terrorist attack saved on this. It is much easier to achieve this with the help of combat drugs. It seems to me that, most likely, they could have used drugs of two groups.”

    “There are so-called short-chain peptides that stimulate the production of enkephalin, endorphin and neuropetide Y in the brain,” says the expert. Similar drugs have been developed in many countries, including Russia.

    Such drugs have one drawback, they do not last long, from 15 minutes to 2 hours. And the terrorists hardly took them, because, judging by their actions, they needed stimulants that work for a long time. After all, they planned to escape to the Ukrainian border, which took them almost all night. After that, they still hid in the forest, ran, climbed trees. All this suggests that they continued to have the effect of stimulants.

    Most likely, it was ordinary amphetamine or other substances close to it. They work for a long time, at least 4-6 hours, increasing endurance, efficiency, giving a sense of aggression and confidence, easing fear. But amphetamine is very toxic. Even after a single application, it can cause the development of addiction and severe withdrawal symptoms-withdrawal syndrome. You can think about its development by the behaviour of terrorists in court — you can see that they feel bad, as if they are experiencing withdrawal, and that this is the most important thing for them at the moment. That’s why they were so indifferent and passive. The realization of what they really have to go through will come to them later.”

    And Western propagandists repeatedly say that the “Kremlin” alleges that these specimens of human filth were the Crocus killers, whereas in fact all four who were arrested on their way to the the Ukraine have confessed their guilt.

    Like

  43. Mister Nice-Guy has spoken!

    Budanov threatens terrorist attacks on the railway in new regions of the Russian Federation 

    Today, 05: 13 1

    Head of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ukraine Kirill Budanov * threatens Russia with terrorist attacks on the railway that will pass through new Russian regions. According to him, the Ukrainian Armed Forces will be able to cope with the land section [the route has to have several bridges in order to enter the Crimea peninsula — ME], as “we have experience in this”.

    This (railway construction-ed.) can pose a serious problem for us. But I hope that we will somehow manage with the land section of the railway. Everyone has experience in this. And this is much easier than the issue of the Crimean Bridge“, he said on the telethon.

    On March 25, the head of the SBU, Vasyl Malyuk, admitted that the agency had conducted two successful attacks on the Crimean Bridge, and also indirectly confirmed the involvement of the special service in the murders and attempts on a number of Ukrainian and Russian politicians and public figures on the territory of the Russian Federation.

    We will not officially admit this in any way, but at the same time I shall give you some details“, he said.

    The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation officially accused Kiev of involvement in the terrorist attack at “Crocus”, referring to the investigation, which has established the connection of the Ukraine with the terrorists. The Foreign Ministry reminded that as a result of such crimes, war correspondent Vladlen Tatarsky had been murdered, writer Zakhar Prilepin wounded, and five civilians murdered during the terrorist attack on the Crimea Bridge.

    The Ministry demanded that the Ukrainian authorities arrest and extradite all those involved in these crimes. In particular, the head of the SBU Vasily Malyuk*, who confessed to organizing the terrorist attack on the Crimea Bridge.

    * – added to the list of terrorists and extremists by Rosfinmonitoring

    Подробнее https://tehnowar.ru/470282-Budanov-ugroghaet-tera

    Like

    1. Yes, this is huge and has the potential to make NATO shit its pants – Russia has demanded the extradition of a slate of terrorists associated with the Crocus terrorist attack. I have not seen the actual list of accused terrorists and facilitators, or the actual demand, but gossip suggests this is really serious and that if delivery of the accused is not forthcoming, there will be quite stiff consequences. If Zelensky’s government was involved – as Russia seems very confident it can prove it was – we may well see a hard push that could tip Ukraine over.

      Like

      1. Several days ago I posted above a link to a statement made by the RF Foreign Ministry as regards demands for the extradition of suspected terrorists from Banderastan.

        31 March 2024 18:52

        Press release on Russia’s demands for Ukraine under the International Convention for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings and the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism

        589-31-03-2024

        The brutal terrorist attack committed in Krasnogorsk on March 22, which shocked the whole world, is far from the first act of terrorism targeting our country in recent time. The investigative actions carried out by the competent authorities in Russia indicate that the trails of all these crimes lead to Ukraine.

        Other barbaric bomb attacks took the lives of journalists Darya Dugina and Maxim Fomin (Vladlen Tatarsky), seriously injured writer Yevgeny “Zakhar” Prilepin and killed his driver, Alexander Shubin; five people were killed by an explosion of the Crimean Bridge, and 42 were wounded in an explosion in a café in St Petersburg. The killing and mutilation of civilians, including children, was accompanied by raids by the terrorist organisation known as Russian Volunteer Corps.

        In this regard, the Russian Foreign Ministry has put forward a demand for the Ukrainian authorities, under the International Convention for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings and the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism to immediately arrest and extradite every person implicated in the above terrorist acts.

        One of the demands is to arrest head of the Security Service of Ukraine, Vasily Malyuk, who cynically admitted on March 25 that Ukraine was behind the bombing of the Crimean Bridge in October 2022 and revealed details of the organisation of other attacks in the Russian Federation.

        The fight against international terrorism is the responsibility of every state. The Russian side demands that the Kiev regime immediately cease any support for terrorist activities, extradite the perpetrators and compensate for the damage caused to the victims. Ukraine’s violation of its obligations under the antiterrorist conventions will entail international legal liability.

        Like

    2. Gotta love how these people say they refuse to admit any culpability and then in the next breath they all but sign their own death warrants by cheerfully blabbing details that only the true perpetrators of such crimes could know.

      Like

  44. Going off-topic: this bombshell news has leaked out on Yahoo.com.

    King Charles’ Funeral Plans Unveiled After Monarch Is Given 2 Years to Live With Pancreatic Cancer

    Truth be told, the funeral plans, codenamed Operation Menai Bridge, were put in place after Betty Windsor’s funeral. Still, if the news turns out to be true, and the King’s sons and their spouses are still unable to deal with their own crises and quarrels, we may very well be seeing the demise of the British monarchy in our lifetimes.

    Like

  45. “The main reason for the Second World War was the aggressive policy of the USSR…” What was written earlier in history textbooks?

    Many people are now asking the question” “How did it become possible that a whole generation has grown up that not only does not know its history, but also distorts it in every possible way, perceives it as it is presented by Western propaganda?” After all, what does modern youth think? The Second World War was started by Stalin, and Hitler was a good artist, and in general he was a talented artist. We won only thanks to the fact that we attacked en masse, and even then, we had the the benefit of Americans helping us at Stalingrad, otherwise we would not have been victorious. However, there were, in fact, no Americans at Stalingrad — at least not within artillery range. About that very same Stalin, they say that he almost participated in all the shootings and similar things. But okay, in our country, at least not everyone believes in this nonsense: there are also adequate people here. But in countries on the territory of the former USSR, these things are taught in schools. They have been taught for a long time, as a result of which a generation of those who know a completely different story from what it really has been raised.

    Caricature from a Ukrainian school history textbook

    Cartoon drawing from a Ukrainian school history textbook

    “One of the main reasons for the Second World War is the aggressive policy of the totalitarian regime of Germany and the USSR. For many years, the prevailing view was that Nazi Germany was the main aggressor and instigator of war against the USSR, but many facts show that it was Stalin who was actively preparing for an attack on Germany. In order to defend Germany and Europe as a whole, Hitler had to get ahead of him and attack first. It was for this reason that Stalin ordered tanks to be concentrated in the western border areas and ordered that bridges be mined. The Red Army was preparing a surprise attack on Germany on July 6, 1941.

    ..In 1945, Stalin occupied many European countries because Moscow wanted to increase its influence in them.”

    Many people now wonder how it became possible that a whole generation has grown up that not only does not know its history, but also distorts it in every possible way, perceives it as it is presented...-2

    This is written in the history textbook for Latvian schoolchildren. But there is a caveat – if earlier I published articles about what is now taught in schools in the former USSR, then in this example it is about what was there 20 years ago. This history textbook was also included in the Latvian school curriculum in 2002, but now it has been slightly changed and those who fought on the side of the Nazis are presented more heroically. And then, 20 years ago, young people were told what I have written above.

    Many people now wonder how it became possible that a whole generation has grown up that not only does not know its history, but also distorts it in every possible way, perceives it as it is presented...-3

    “The beginning of World War II was preceded by the conclusion of the Soviet-German non-aggression pact on August 23, 1939. The secret agreement between Germany and the USSR illustrated the imperial nature of the two states, as well as their cynical disregard for the generally accepted principles of international relations in the civilized world. On September 17, by agreement with the German leadership, the Red Army crossed the Polish-Soviet border. The Cheka took many prisoners of the Polish army, most of whom were Ukrainians. In April-May 1940, in the Katyn forest near Smolensk, and even earlier near Kharkov and elsewhere, more than 15 thousand officers of the Polish army were shot, most of whom were Ukrainians. The new government has brought brutal political terror to Western Ukraine. The documents show a huge scale of repression: in Western Ukraine, between 1939 and 1941, more than 10% of the population was arrested without trial.”

    The above is also from a history textbook, only from the Ukraine of 20 years ago. Now there is a different story as well, which also glorifies fascists, such as Bandera or Shukhevych. By the way, there is one interesting point here – in Katyn, in fact, not Poles were shot, but Ukrainians. This is the first time I’ve ever heard this in my life. This version has never been promoted by even the most ardent defender of the Katyn Memorial. By the way, I have been to Katyn, and I didn’t see a single flag of any country other than that of Poland.

    Many people now wonder how it became possible that a whole generation has grown up that not only does not know its history, but also distorts it in every possible way, perceives it as it is presented...-4

    “In November 1941, 3.6 million soldiers and officers were prisoners in Germany, of which 1.3 million were Ukrainians. The Soviet authorities tried to ensure order in the rear, first of all, with the help of force and brutal terror in the spirit of a totalitarian regime. From the first day of the war, mass arrests of suspicious and unsavoury people who had already served their sentences during the repressions, as well as people on whom the state security agencies simply had dirt – usually anonymous denunciations-began in areas that could become the scene of military operations. In the first weeks of the war, up to 100 thousand groundlessly arrested citizens were killed as a result of internal terror.

    With the beginning of the German occupation in the Ukraine, the consequences of the ideological propaganda of the Bolsheviks were neutralized. Thanks to documents declassified by the Germans, the tragic facts of forced collectivization, the artificially created famine of 1932-1933, as well as mass repressions of the NKVD in the Ukraine were made public through the media. Mass graves of innocent victims of Stalin’s repressions were discovered in many cities. At the same time, the Germans began to carry out agrarian reform, the free development of Ukrainian culture, and the return home of soldiers. Most of the Ukrainian prisoners were also released from concentration camps and sent home by the Germans.”

    Many people now wonder how it became possible that a whole generation has grown up that not only does not know its history, but also distorts it in every possible way, perceives it as it is presented...-5

    Now do you understand why we have what we have? Because that’s what they were teaching there exactly 20 years ago. And now a whole generation has been brought up with this. Stalin is equal to repression and a totalitarian regime. But the Germans acted well: they didn’t touch anyone, they released prisoners from concentration camps, and they also began to carry out reforms. Documents were declassified, people were told the truth. What about your Khatyn or Auschwitz? All this was also Stalin’s idea, there was no such thing…

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

    Too much lard.

    Too little iodine.

    Like

  46. Ukrainophobia – the fate of the losers
    2 April, 2024 at 17:25

    The further this goes on, the more videos appear online, recorded by indignant Ukrainians, complaining that those Europeans who had received them “like gods descending from heaven” in 2022 have changed their attitude; and from hints that “our dear guests are now probably missing home”, they have moved on to increasingly and aggressively pushing them back to their homeland.

    Ukrainians complain about the ingratitude of the Europeans, whom they have supposedly been protecting from a “Russian invasion”; they reproach them for their deceit: they promised to stand shoulder to shoulder with us against Moscow, but now they give us neither money nor weapons. And now Ukrainians themselves are being kicked out of the “European paradise”. As a result, Ukrainians are threatening Europeans with all the punishments from heaven. No matter how funny this may sound, the main threat of the “defenders of Europe” is that “if this is so, that we are being forced to return to the Ukraine, then we will unite with the Russians and invade you, you ungrateful wretches”.

    The Ukrainians, however, have forgotten to ask the Russians whether they were going to “take over Europe”. Ukrainians, as the Europeans had done earlier, decided everything for everyone. Earlier they decided that the Europeans had dreamt of a victorious march to Chukotka and Kamchatka, and if they, the Ukrainians, helped them in this, they would become equal members of the European “family of nations”.

    When it turned out that what Europeans were most of all concerned about was that no one would interfere with their enjoyment of life in their shiny toytown kingdoms, the Ukrainians were offended because the “lazy, cowardly and greedy” Europeans had destroyed their dream. I have no doubt that immediately after the Ukraine capitulates, thousands of former Russophobes will begin to wonder when the European campaign will finally begin. They will be very surprised and then upset when they find out that it never will.

    Ukrainians are gradually beginning to realize that no one loves them; moreover, that they are despised even by those who are taking advantage of them. But they can’t understand why this has happened.

    In fact, the problem lies with the Ukrainians themselves. They are the number one losers. We shall not delve into history, we shall simply note that since the 17th century, since the time of Bogdan Khmelnytsky (when the name “Ukraine” did not even exist and being a Ukrainian meant being border settlement troops, and was not a definition of ethnicity, the national character has not changed. If in the Middle Ages future Ukrainians were those who had decided that Rus’ had ended after Batu [Khan, grandson of Chingis — ME] and began to “Europeanize”, becoming Poles (mostly), less often Hungarians, and very rarely even Volokhs (future Romanians), and then, after the collapse of the USSR , they, [East Slav] Russians then declared themselves to be Ukrainians, having decided that their own Russian civilizational project had died and it was time to become Europeans – to join someone else’s, successful society.

    Their Russophobia was caused precisely by the fact that they had renounced Russia and their justification should have been that the choice in favour of “universal human values” would have been made by the entire former Russian society, or at least the majority.

    Then it turned out that they were in the minority, that their “rightness” could only be confirmed by the absolute success of their new project. But this success did not depend on them – it was the Europeans who decided whether to accept or not to accept them “into civilization”. The only thing they could do was to try to undermine the success of the Russian project itself, which they had abandoned. Against the backdrop of someone else’s disaster, even your own failure seems like a success.

    But that didn’t work out either. It’s not that there weren’t enough resources. If used wisely, the resources that the Ukraine inherited from the USSR were quite sufficient to block the successful development of Russia or at least seriously slow it down. But the very refusal of the Russian project and the attempt to jump into someone else’s was an attempt to escape from the difficulties of the transition period (to change from the losers, which they felt themselves to be, into the winners that they dreamed of joining), to avoid strain, to change from a tired horse to a fresh one, to move on effortlessly. Therefore, even the work to undermine the Russian project, which seemed to be Ukraine’s own initiative, should, in the opinion of the Ukrainians, have been done by Europe.

    That is, Europe had to, on the one hand, provide its self-proclaimed “relatives” with a sweet life without the need of putting any effort into organizing it, and on the other hand, put pressure on Russia in order to provide Ukrainians with a sense of superiority. America was entrusted with the responsibility of protecting this entire “European garden.” Moreover, “protection” was also perceived in a special way – also as oppression of Russia, but no longer financial and economic, but military-political.

    Let me emphasize that the scheme was entirely born in Ukrainian heads, as a response to the late Soviet and post-Soviet crisis of the ’80s-’90s. Nobody specially developed it. It was born as a spontaneous response of part of a relatively prosperous late Soviet society to difficulties and the desire to avoid them without putting in much effort, and anger at those who had chosen an independent, albeit difficult, path.

    Naturally, when it turned out that the “path to Europe” had completely failed, and Russia, which the Ukrainians had already buried in their thoughts, suddenly, like a Phoenix, rose up from the recent chaos as an island of new prosperity, the Europeans were to blame, who had “worked poorly” on the implementation of their goals and tasks as set for them by Ukrainians. Russians did not become more loved. On the contrary, those who had switched from Russians to Ukrainians could not recognise the wrongness of their choice, so in their interpretation, the Russians were just lucky because the Europeans had badly followed Ukrainian instructions.

    The reversal that is now emerging is not final; it simply temporarily reverses the places of good and evil. The Europeans were at fault because they could not (in the Ukrainian legendary interpretation “they did not want to,” because the West can do whatever it wants) defeat Russia in the interests of former Russians who had redesigned themselves as Ukrainians. They (Europeans) must be punished. We need to show them how they underestimated Ukrainians, what benefits they have lost, what risks they have exposed themselves to.

    For this, Ukrainians, confident that Russians are only thinking about how to conquer Europe and kill all Europeans, and settle in their houses (with water closets and European-quality renovations) are intimidating Europe with the theoretical unification of “mighty Ukraine” with Russia so that Europeans recognize the coming threat and come to the Ukrainians with a guilty face (and at the same time with money, tanks, guns, planes and national contingents, which they are ready to send to help Ukraine against Russia).

    Naturally, the Ukraine is not going to fight against Europe under any circumstances. It’s the same as cutting off your own ears to hurt your neighbour. Ukrainians sincerely consider themselves Europeans, cultural traders, whose task is to civilize “wild Russia”, and those who cannot be trained are killed. In their picture of the world, there cannot exist a Europe that is subordinate to Russia, or simply friendly towards it.

    At the same time, Ukrainians consider themselves cunning enough to intimidate the insufficiently warlike Europeans with the Russian threat (which the Ukraine will no longer “contain” and force them to fully take up arms against Russia.

    This is why they are not loved everywhere. Think for yourself who will love poor beggars who, through their own stupidity, have twice lost their homeland, but with enviable energy they intrigue against the owners of the house that sheltered them, even threatening to take away the house “for bad behaviour” and drive the owners out onto the street. Even if the owners do not believe in the seriousness of their intentions, it is still unpleasant.

    Besides, the owners remember very well (it was only yesterday) how Ukrainians happily humiliated and destroyed Russians, from whom they themselves had just checked out – the ink on their Ukrainian certificate was not yet dry – and they fear that at some point Ukrainian migration may become more dangerous than Asian and African migration combined.

    A crazy relative who wants to set fire to your house is not liked by many people, and are most just tolerated. But Ukrainians are not relatives of Europeans, yet they themselves have renounced their Russian roots. The surrounding nations do not face the problem of how to love them, but rather how to neutralise them quickly and without major excesses and forget about them as does one a frightful nightmare.

    Like

    1. There is something to this thinking that because the great triumph over Russia did not happen, it is the fault of Europeans because they did not try hard enough and fumbled their delivery of support for Ukraine; in this, if that’s they way they truly think, they are right. What they have only grasped in the abstract so far is that it was never really more than a long shot to succeed, and that before the first shots were fired the west was prepared to write off Ukraine as a loss – it was always expendable, and in fact that might be the ideal solution in some minds. Recall again that Ukraine was once second only to Russia in the scorn and contempt heaped upon it by the west, and its people are Slavs. Westerners indeed have a high tolerance for ‘good’ Russians and Ukrainians, like those oligarchs who have moved to the UK to spout liberal propaganda and make and spend huge amounts of money – these are people who have ‘seen the light’, and their ethnicity ceases to matter, they join the ethnicity of the rich. But generally speaking, Europe would not be greatly disappointed if Ukraine were absorbed by neighbouring nations, and there was no longer a ‘Ukrainian homeland’. Instead, dissident pockets can be nurtured in countries to which the Ukrainians flee, and turned into movements and cells against Russia. So it’s really a no-lose for the west. Tremendously expensive, but it’s only money – like Lindsey Graham the Fat Republican Poofter was wont to say, best money we ever spent. The Ukrainians received that judgment with great approval and satisfaction, but they decided too soon, and did not allow time for the realization that their own extinction was simply part of the bargain for the west. The only part of the operation which was a failure, in western eyes, is that a valuable pawn was yielded without resulting in the checkmate it sought.

      I certainly hope that bit about ‘If you are not nicer to us, we will join with Russia and invade you!’ was just a joke, because Ukraine is bottom of the list of likely trusted partners of Russia in any future endeavor in our lifetimes.

      Like

  47. Moscow Exile will be thanking his lucky stars Wotan only requires libation offerings of beer, beer and more beer now and then after seeing this news:

    Russia says explosives sent from Ukraine via EU countries seized

    The explosives were found hidden in Orthodox Christian religious icons that had gone the scenic route from Kiev through Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, Poland and Lithuania to Latvia. The truck carrying them was stopped at the Latvian-Russian border and it was then that the icons were found to be carrying explosives. What, border control guards all along the rest of the way fast asleep at their posts while the truck was rumbling through?

    Like

  48. Meanwhile, in the Evil Empire:

    08: 05, 3 April 2024

    The Ministry of Defence has announced an increase in the number of people willing to serve under a contract in Moscow

    Moscow Region: the number of people willing to enter the contract service has increased in Moscow

    In Moscow and other cities, the number of people who want to enter military service under a contract has increased. This was reported in the Ministry of Defense, reports TASS.

    According to estimates of the Defence Ministry, since the beginning of 2024, more than 100 thousand people have entered the military service, 16 thousand of whom have signed contracts in the last 10 days.

    The main motive of those who wanted to serve in the ranks of the Armed Forces of Russia under a contract recently was the intention to avenge the victims of the terrorist attack in Crocus, the ministry said.

    On 22 March, four armed men broke into the ” Crocus “before a concert of the band “Picnic”, opened fire and set fire to the building. Subsequently, the attackers fled by car, they were detained in the Bryansk region. The victims of the terrorist attack, according to the latest data, were 144 people, 134 of whom were identified. Another 695 people were injured.

    Like

  49. Ukraine loses territories, the Ukrainian Armed Forces command is forced to make difficult decisions — White House (VIDEO)

    03.04.2024 – 9:51

    Ukraine loses territories, the Ukrainian Armed Forces command is forced to make difficult decisions — White House (VIDEO) | Russian Spring

    The US authorities recognize the obvious: Ukraine is losing territory in the Donbas, the Armed Forces of Ukraine are making difficult decisions about which positions to maintain, and which weapons to use, and which not.

    This was stated by the coordinator for strategic communications at the National Security Council of the White House, John Kirby..

    Earlier, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that Washington opposes sending ground troops to Ukraine, since such a step would bring a direct conflict with Russia closer.

    https://t.me/RVvoenkor/65255

    The final countdown?

    Like

    1. Not according to Evelyn Farkas, who sees ‘evidence’ that Ukraine’s situation is not as dire – or anywhere near – as Russian disinformation portrays it. Mind you, she also assesses in her think-tanky way that soon Putin will probably make another effort to achieve the coveted land bridge to Crimea, a goal he has not yet achieved. Either Farkas is enamored of the phrase ‘land bridge’ and likes to use it as often as possible in conversation, does not know this was accomplished in, what, 2022? or believes Russians have really, really big feet.

      https://www.moonofalabama.org/2024/04/ukraine-when-opining-war-experts-cant-read-maps.html#more

      It’s hard to say if US-government-affiliated officials really are as ignorant as they appear, actually do listen to and internalize Ukrainian happy-talk, or are cynically milking Ukraine’s agony for as long as there are westerners stupid enough to believe and keep pressing for more, more funding to keep the war tottering on a little longer so that a few more Russians will be killed. If the latter is the case, it will eventually come out because it is just too big to stay hidden, too tempting a political target for elements who were in opposition while the colossal failure was ongoing, and the west’s veneer of moral superiority (tattered as it is) will be melted away forevermore.

      It’s worth noting, in the short Kirby video, that he implies that passing of ‘the supplemental’ – the held-up $60 Billion – would have averted the situation in which Ukraine finds itself. It’s not hard to believe from where I’m sitting that this is some kind of deal between the Democrats and Republicans which gives America the offramp it seeks – we could have won, but infernal politicking prevailed and the chance was lost. What IS hard for me to believe is that Biden cannot avail himself of some executive power to simply appropriate the funds on his own authority; Bush did not make it his life’s work to increase executive power in the US government only to have a Democratic president give it all away, and Bush never gave a tin weasel what the constitution said or what the laws were – he just went ahead and did it, and wrote a ‘signing statement’ to the law which retroactively granted him the authority to do whatever he did. I find it hard to imagine the President of the United States is so hobbled by a single Republican that he is helpless to do what he swears is clearly the right thing.

      In the short term, $60 Billion might as well have been so many canary feathers, because there isn’t the ammunition to buy and the USA is anxious to divert attention from that reality. Purchase of future weapons stocks would probably not make any significant difference in the time that remains and would not in any way alter the eventual conclusion unless the USA is prepared to directly engage in another World War, one which would be on the brink of going nuclear the moment it flashed into being. Sticking with the kind of battle which is ongoing, with conventional arms and such western weaponry that the Ukrainians can operate immediately plus the help of whatever forces the west can covertly sneak in without official imprimatur, Ukraine will lose, and the longer it drags on, the less will be left of it. Zelensky will be remembered not as The Churchill Of His Time, but as The Man Who Destroyed Ukraine, because he entered office on a promise to fix the impasse peacefully, even if they had to ‘temporarily’ relax their possession of some territories. And he did the opposite, committing to the war (or, more accurately, to his role) with even more zeal than Poroshenko, who was content to be a murderer only so long as it was just ethnic Russians and their sympathizers who were being murdered.

      Like

      1. Yeah read that MoA piece of Farkas’ fantasy. And in the comments it was revealed that Farkas, who is a polyglot who allegedly speaks fluent Hungarian is — surprise, surprise — the progeny of Hungarians who fled to the USA following the 1956 uprising in Hungary.

        So Farkas has been making a living in Washington throwing shit at Russia.

        And the US descendants of a host of Jews who fled pogroms in the Russian Empire do the same.

        And hero Ukrainians who fought against the USSR — on the side of the Nazis, mind you, but no matter — and their descendants have as their metier the endless throwing of shit at Russia.

        And a host of dyed-in-the-wool German Nazis who fought to save Europe from Bolshevism also, through “Operation Paperclip”, settled down in the “Good Ol’ USA” and made a decent living there in the continuation of their noble struggle against the Evil Communists, who, by the way, started WWII in Europe.

        Like

        1. The Hungarian Uprising which the USA stoked, as it is so fond of doing, with stirring blabber about freedom and democracy and independence, and implied it would totally be onboard a revolution if only someone would be so bold as to start the ball rolling…and then totally disavowed the whole project and left the mutineers hanging. It’s true that everything old is eventually new again, and at least equally true that people never learn anything. If they did, there’d be a hell of a lot less optimism, and what there was would be firmly grounded in measurable substantiation.

          https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Betrayal+%22made+in+the+U.S.A.%22%3a+fifty+years+ago%2c+Hungary%27s+people+made…-a0154691163

          Like

      2. What is $60bn? The number means nothing to me. We all know that the US military industrial complex comes with significant mark ups and we also know that without actual details (tanks/AFVs/missiles/electronics/repair kits/support vehicles/parts etc.) that this number is meaningless. Lies, damned lies and statistics.

        Like

        1. That’s perfectly true in a reality in which the United States merely prints some more money whenever it needs more, and buying its own weapons direct – for the foreign-sales price from inventory purchased at the domestic government rate – is a nice little earner. I understand the dilemma for Biden: on the one hand, he could snaffle another $60 Billion off the taxpayer and feed it to his hungry arms-sales industry. On the other, it would not bring victory, and confidence in both America’s manufacturing/technical prowess and its ability to manipulate global affairs would suffer as a consequence, not to mention the re-ignition of Ukrainian clamoring for more money just as it is beginning to drown in bitterness. Better to be able to say, I did my best, but my hands were tied – we have rules, you know, and sometimes they get in the way of what we want to do. Ukraine will know in its secret heart that there aren’t any rules the USA cannot break if the incentive is large enough, but it will also know it could never sell that because nobody would listen. When all efforts have failed to achieve the objective, it’s time for law and order to save face.

          Like

  50. 03.04.2024 07:45

     I was eager to join “Azov”. Ideological 19-year-old Nazi killed in DPR

    Dimwit Nazi with tattooed face. He should have emigrated to Canada. Would have got a standing ovation if he had turned up in the visitors’ gallery at the Ottawa parliament.

    Near Avdeevka, the Russian military has slain Nazar Yankevich, a 19-year-old fighter in the 3rd Assault Brigade, created on the basis of the national battalion “Azov”*. This has been reported by the Ukrainian media.

    Since childhood for”Azov”

    Yankevich was recently buried in the town of Khodoriv, Lvov region. However, the combatanthad been eliminated on 12 February during the liberation of Avdeeevka.

    According to the Ukrainian press, a member of the Nazi unit had been fighting since 2023 in the Bakhmut area, where he was an artillery intelligence officer and a UAV operator. Later, he transferred to the assault brigade, in which he met his death.

    Yankevich had been twice wounded, but he returned to the ranks. The combatant had received state awards, in particular the Ukrainian “Cross of the Brave”.

    Yankevich’s sister Maria told the Lvov media that her brother had wanted to join “Azov” from an early age. And at the beginning of the SMO, he had even allegedly wanted to go to the front line, but they didn’t take him as he was under-age. As things have turned out, the Nazi has fulfilled his dream.

    Battalion of the Dead

    In the battles for Avdeevka and during the retreat from it, the vaunted “Azovtsy” suffered significant losses. So, in February, it became known about the elimination of Azov combatant Vadim Prokopchuk. At the time of the beginning of the SMO, he had been studying at the National Music Academy in Kiev, but decided to defend the regime with weapons, taking the call sign “Maestro”.

    Some time after the liberation of Avdeevka, the death of Azov member Egor Voloshin became known. Interestingly, this combatant had managed to get out alive from the ruins of the “koksokhim” (Avdeevka coke/chemical plant), one of the most fortified areas of the town. But four days after the liberation of Avdeevka by Russian troops, Voloshin was killed to the west of the industrial settlement.

    And on 2 April 2, Russian forces eliminated platoon commander of the 3rd Assault Brigade Vseslav Frolov. He was known for having personally received from the hands of the President of the Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky two of the country’s highest awards: the “Golden Cross” and the “Cross of the Brave”.

    Recall that the head of the Russian Defence Ministry, Sergei Shoigu announced the taking of Avdeevka on 17 February. When fleeing from there, the Ukrainian army and the” Azovites ” lost up to 1 thousand people killed and captured.

    The situation has reached such a point that the Ukrainian command is being forced to plug the holes in the ranks of the “Azov” with soldiers of the territorial defence, who have practically no combat experience. The life span of such “warriors” is calculated in days.

    * Banned in the Russian Federation and included in the list of terrorist and extremist groups.

    Like

    1. Got wounded twice, the third time was obviously the charm. You can’t say Weird Naz Yankevich didn’t try hard to be a martyr.

      Like

      1. No fresh shags every day in paradise for him though: he’s a “Christian” — of sorts — very likely Ukrainian Greek Catholic: so for him only eternally chanting: “HolyHolyHoly Lord God of hosts. Heaven and earth are full of thy glory. Hosanna in the highest!” and similar shite.

        Much more fun in Valhalla!

        Like

  51. Just got this from Aurelien:

    I’ve been reading Emmanuel Todd’s new book La Défaite de l’occident (“The Defeat of the West”)  over the last few weeks. I’ve taken a bit of time over it because, whilst it’s not a particularly long book, it is quite dense and packed with data, charts and tables.

    If you read French and can get hold of a copy you should: Todd is one of those polyvalent figures French intellectual life occasionally throws up (or used to), and he works at the intersection of anthropology, demography, sociology and economics, with a good dash of politics thrown in. He’s best known for having predicted the fall of the Soviet Union fifteen years before it happened, based entirely on official demographic data. Now, nearly fifty years later, he takes a look at the West, and especially the United States, and doesn’t like what he sees. Needless to say, the book has been greeted with screams of rage in France, not least because it is explicitly written in the context of the Ukraine War, and provides data-based explanations for western failures, as well as for the remarkable staying power of the Russians, and for that matter the disunity of the West itself.

    Malheureusement, je ne peux pas lire Froggish.

    Well, I can little, but not a whole damned book such as is Todd’s.

    Like

    1. Well, I can often manage La Presse newspaper but I doubt if I have a chance with highly academic French.

      I was rather interested in Aurelien’s discussion of educational history. From the little I know about it, I’d say we are seeing mid-twentieth century Anglophone storytelling in action.

      Like

  52. 3 Apr, 2024 14:53

    ‘Zelensky Vodka’ project fails

    The company that launched the product, aimed at raising funds for the Ukraine, has gone bust

    The project that launched a vodka named after Ukraine’s President Vladimir Zelensky has failed, Russian news outlet Octagon has reported. The Swiss-based startup aimed to raise funds for Kiev, but sales in Europe and the US proved disappointing.

    Authorities in Switzerland decided last September to dissolve the company operating the Zelensky Vodka brand, according to an entry in the commercial register of the Canton of Zug. DrinkForPeace AG is to be liquidated in accordance with the provisions on bankruptcy, the entry states.

    Octagon reported that DrinkForPeace had reached an agreement with authorities to suspend the dissolution process as it tries to sell leftover stock.

    There’s been a “Putin” vodka for over 20 years now. I recall drinking it with the old bloke and his wife after Mrs. Exile and I had agreed to buy his dacha in 2004. When I said we’d buy, we shook hands and he brought out a bottle of said vodka and we drank to the deal. His wife and Mrs. Exile joined in.

    It’s called “Putinka”.

    Four years later, on 31 January 2008, I packed in drinking.

    Like

  53. He’s better off sniffing than talking

    3 April, 22: 01

    So Zelebobik can’t compare two dates (1949: the foundation of NATO and 1955: the foundation of the Warsaw Pact)? The Nitwit’s brain has completely rotted away.

    By Soviet aggression, does he mean the liberation of Europe from fascism? 

    Aggression of the USSR against “peaceful” fascist Germany?

    According to the overdue president of the Ukraine, in response to the capture of Berlin by the Russians NATO was created?

    Furthermore, should this this fool be reminded about “Plan Totality” and “Plan Dropshot”? Perhaps Zelensky will tell you what they were and in what year they began to be developed?

    Plan Totality

    Plan Totality was a disinformation ploy established by US General Dwight D. Eisenhower in August 1945 by order of US President Harry S. Truman after the Potsdam Conference. The plan was for a nuclear attack on the USSR with 20 to 30 atomic bombs.

    The plan was for a nuclear attack on the USSR with 20 to 30 atomic bombs. It named 20 Soviet cities for obliteration by a nuclear first strike: Moscow, Gorky, Kuybyshev, Sverdlovsk, Novosibirsk, Omsk, Saratov, Kazan, Leningrad, Baku, Tashkent, Chelyabinsk, Nizhny Tagil, Magnitogorsk, Molotov, Tbilisi, Stalinsk, Grozny, Irkutsk, and Yaroslavl.

    However, this plan was actually a disinformation ploy. After the two atomic bombings of Japan during August of 1945, the United States government did not have any nuclear weapons ready for use. It had depleted all its fissile uranium in the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and a large amount of its plutonium. There was enough plutonium to build one more atomic bomb in August of 1945. They were expecting it to take until some time in October to get six more bombs built. By 1946, the United States still had only nine atomic bombs in its inventory, along with twenty-seven B-29 bombers capable of delivering them.

    Plan Totality was part of Truman’s “giant atomic bluff” intended primarily to misinform the government of the USSR.

    Operation Dropshot was the United States Department of Defense code name for a contingency plan for a possible nuclear and conventional war with the USSR and its allies in order to counter the anticipated Soviet takeover of Western Europe, the Near East and parts of Eastern Asia expected to begin about 1957. The plan was prepared in 1949 during the early stages of the Cold War and declassified during 1977. Although the scenario included the use of nuclear weapons, they were not expected to play a decisive role.

    Like

    1. “Bobik” [Бобик], by the way, is the name of a small, mongrel mutt in a popular Soviet cartoon series here.

      Like

    2. It is not realistic to discuss ‘friendship’ with a country for whom everything is seen through the filter of ‘leverage’. The American formula for ‘friendship’ is ‘YOU do something for ME, and then I’ll decide if I’m going to let you live’.

      The Warsaw Pact was actually formed in response to Russia’s attempt to join NATO, which was firmly rebuffed, whereupon it perceived – correctly – that it had been volunteered for the role of sinister enemy.

      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/jun/17/russia.iantraynor

      As usual, The Grauniad is full of manufactured sensationalism – Russia’s proposal to join NATO, while not well-known, was never a secret, Soviet or otherwise. Moreover, that was not the only such overture: Putin proposed it himself around 2000, although of course any British source is going to characterize it as an attempt to bully his way in.

      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/nov/04/ex-nato-head-says-putin-wanted-to-join-alliance-early-on-in-his-rule

      Like

    1. I looked up “Bobik” online: it’s Polish, Czech, Slovak and Slovene for a small bean. Often used as a nickname (for a bean-grower or someone tall and thin) or as a term of endearment for a child (especially one named Robert). And of course it’s a popular name for a dog.

      “Bobek” on the other hand means a rotund person or a small poop.

      So there’s a misspelling in that subheading in the original article.

      Like

      1. No, not a misspelling. the Kiev Rat is often referred to as “Zelebobik” here by some:, because he is a stupid little mut.

        Network: “Zelebobik in despair” – Shoigu reacted to Zelensky’s statements

        TIMUR KONDRATIEV August 6, 2021

        In response to statements of Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky that the Crimea shall be Ukrainian, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu decided to comment by means of an Odessa joke, in which a visitor to the Crimea asks:: “And was there a fountain here?” To which the resident of Odessa responds to him: “Why was? There is and will be”, has become an occasion for discussion on the Internet. Citizens expressed their attitude on 6 August 6 in the social network “VKontakte”.

        “Zelensky, leave the Crimea alone! It’s not yours anymore! Calm down and leave the peninsula alone!”  – says Sergey V.

        Many users came to the conclusion that Zelensky is trying to hide the obvious fact that the Crimea has returned to Russia forever.

        “There will always be dissenters. But still, the overwhelming majority of Crimeans supported the annexation of the Crimea to Russia. This is a fact and no Zelensky can prove otherwise” – notes Agatha Ts.

        Some commentators note that the reaction of the Russian Defense Minister to the statements of the Ukrainian president indicates the extreme degree of fatigue of the Russian leadership from the nonsense pouring out of Kiev.

        “If I were Zelensky, I would already be tense when the Minister of the Armed forces of Russia answers you, and not some diplomat. They’ve already completly lost with the planet”– points out Nonna Yu.President.gov.uaVladimir Zelensky

        Some people believe that Zelensky is in a very difficult situation and expects the chair under him to start shaking in the near future.

        “So zelebobik has given it away in desperation. After all, he feels that he will not serve more than one term, and maybe even the first one will not finish”- suggests Marsel M.

        A number of users point out that the Crimea was never in the Ukraine. It had just temporarily ended up in the hands of the Ukrainian elite.

        “Crimeans have never considered the Crimea a Ukrainian territory! What does Nezalezhnaya Square have to do with the Crimea? Did those on the Maidan fight for it? In 1954, during the time of Khrushchev, the Crimea was illegally annexed to the Ukrainian SSR! The Crimea returned home after illegal tenency in the “Independent” Ukraine. We should have returned the Crimea immediately after the collapse of the USSR!” – Vladimir B. shared his opinion.

        Some commentators point out that Crimea is historically the most important territory of Russia, for which a lot of Russian blood has been shed.

        As regard the Shoigu joke, it’s impossible to translate it into English as it is a pun in Russian.

        “And did a fountain spout here?” — «А здесь бил фонтан?»

        The verb бил is the preterite of бить — literally “to beat”, poetically “to spout” when referring to a fountain.

        However, был is the preterite of быть — “to be”, and means “was”.

        The two preterites бил and был sound similar when spoken with a Ukrainian accent.

        Russians pronounce бил as “beel” and был as “byl” — sort of.

        Yukietards say “byl” in both instances, so “Did a fountain once spout (бил) here sounds to an Odessian like “Was there a fountain once here?”

        Like

  54. The Crimea is a centuries-old fortress of Russia, caressed by Catherine the Second. And the mistake of Khrushchev, who gave Crimea, albeit temporarily, to the Ukrainian Republic, was stupid and illegal, he allegedly gited the peninsula. Putin’s great merit lies in the fact that Crimea was returned with small forces, bloodlessly. If the main tasks in the country were solved in the same way, Russia would soar! “ – believes Galina M.

    Ivan Aivazovsky: Russian squadron in the Sevastopol roadstead, 1846

    Like

  55. Again, Zelebobik:

    Наркофюрер зелебобик посетил кладбище во Львове. Его всё устраивает.

    Narcoführer Zelebobik visited a cemetery in Lviv. He’s happy with everything.

    Like

  56. From an uninformed Russian blogger:

    The taste of their food and the appearance of their women made the the British the best sailors in the world.

    I don’t think British food is awful.

    I don’t think that all British women are unbelievably ugly.

    I don’t think that the British are the best sailors in the world.

    And I don’t think Irishwoman Powers would take too kindly to being labelled as “British”.

    The blogger also adds:

    This made them “faggots”.

    Total garbage!

    Like

  57. Conman criminal liar Shapps mouthing it off again:

    The head of the Ministry of Defence of Great Britain has announced a transition to the pre-war period

    The post-war period in the world has been replaced by a pre-war one, British Defence Minister Grant Shapps has written in an article for The Daily Telegraph. 

    Today, we must once again urgently reflect on the future of the Alliance. We have moved from the post-war world to the pre-war world”, Shapps said. The Minister also touched upon the 2014 agreement of the alliance member states to increase defence spending to 2% of GDP. But some countries are still not able to reach even 2%, Shapps pointed out.

    Which war?

    The Cold War or WWII?

    Pre-Cold War was WWII!

    So it’s back to 1939 is it, when there was no NATO?

    Like

    1. Sunak threatened to withdraw Britain from the ECHR
      Maria Ivanova
      04 April, 09: 23

      British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak admitted that London will withdraw from the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), as immigration control and border security are “more important than membership in any foreign court” , he stated this to “The Sun”.

      According to Sunak, Britain may denounce the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) for the sake of a bill allowing asylum seekers to be deported to Rwanda. The authors of the initiative expect that this measure will deter refugees from crossing the British border by boat.

      The UK Supreme Court ruled at the end of 2023 that the deportation bill to Rwanda is illegal. The bill is opposed by the opposition Labour Party.

      In 2024, the President of the European Court of Human Rights, Siofra O’Leary, said that the bill contradicts the convention. Many of Sunak’s right-wing supporters want Britain to withdraw from the convention and pursue an independent immigration policy.

      “I believe that our scheme, including its Rwandan part, all our plans to combat illegal migration, comply with all our international obligations, including the ECHR”, Sunak told reporters.
      If the ECHR does not agree with this, border security will become more important for Britain than membership in the ECHR, the British prime minister stressed.

      The UK helped draft the European Convention on Human Rights, which came into force in 1953.

      And Sunak is a Cockney, born within the sound of Bow bells, I suppose.

      Like

      1. And all of this…this…discord is taking place in an organization that bragged about its closeness and unity and the extent to which its policies and procedures were harmonized, and was constantly pressing for more of this ‘harmonization’, so that in theory you would eventually hardly even know what country you were in whilst traveling about the EU. And now it is crumbling and fragmenting in a welter of backbiting and arguing. The slow-motion collapse has taken place during the tenure of pretty much the same governments and multinational ‘leaders’ like Stoltenberg and Von Der Leyen…but they are completely unable to feel any sense of responsibility, judging by their pronouncements and recommendations. The former is busying himself trying to gird Europe for another World War, in an environment where one of the most energy-expending enterprises there is – the production of ammunition, armored vehicles and war materiel – has ground to a standstill and much of the formerly-existing inventory has been given away to the flailing Ukrainians. Germany gave Ukraine the Iris-T Air-Defense system before it had even been issued to German forces. The ten-year graph of gasoline prices in the USA most certainly does not suggest the nation is enjoying a biggest-supplier-in-the-world dividend, considering prices at the pump are the highest they have been in a year, nearly $3.00 per gallon, and this is an election year in which Biden is desperately trying to wrestle the price down long enough for him to get re-elected.

        https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/gasoline

        “Gasoline futures in the United States rose above $2.78 per gallon in April, the highest in nearly one year, amid persistent supply concerns and some momentary traction in US demand. The latest data from the EIA pointed to a 4.26 million barrel draw in domestic gasoline stocks on the week ending March 29th, well above market expectations of a 0.82 million decrease, and roughly in line with the sharp declines compiled by the API in late March. The developments magnified increasing concerns of low gasoline production in Russia as refinery attacks from Ukraine magnified a capacity crisis ahead of higher seasonal demand in the Summer. Additionally, oil prices extended their increase after OPEC+ members agreed to extend voluntary output cuts of 2.2 million barrels per day until June. On the demand side, the EIA report showed that gasoline product supplied, a key gauge of demand, rose by more than half a million barrels in the latest week to return above 9 million weekly barrels.”

        No relief in the forecast, either, for those who are not blinded by faith.

        “Gasoline increased 0.65 USD/GAL or 30.77% since the beginning of 2024, according to trading on a contract for difference (CFD) that tracks the benchmark market for this commodity. Gasoline is expected to trade at 2.79 USD/GAL by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 3.05 in 12 months time.”

        Remember Condi Rice touting America’s ‘bountiful supplies’, when Washington was slavering over the prospect of being energy-supplier Soo-preme to the Yurrupean Union? And it probably does have, as long as price is no object, although I’m pretty sure the Europeans did not figure on that clause when the likes of Stoltenberg and Von Der Leyen and Baerbock and Habeck and the rest of the Talking Shithead Battalion dragged them into their present extremely-uncomfortable alliance. Consider: this reference reflects what Europe knew, or thought it knew, in 2022.

        1. A global surge in wholesale power and gas prices means households across Europe face much higher energy bills this year and beyond, with the region’s most vulnerable exposed to fuel poverty, consumer groups say.
        2. Just before the war started, the German government halted the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that would have doubled the amount of Russian gas shipped to Europe and Russia in July reduced volumes pumped through Nord Stream 1 to 20% of capacity, citing maintenance issues. The German government said this is a pretext used by Moscow to hit back against Western sanctions imposed over the Ukraine war.
        3. Benchmark European gas prices at the Dutch TTF hub have risen by nearly 350% year on year, while German and French front-year power contracts have leapt by 540% and 790% respectively.
        4. Many gas market analysts expect prices to remain elevated for the next two years or more.
        5. Global competition for gas and coal this winter is expected to prevent prices from falling. Any more disruption to Russian gas supply, such as a full stoppage through Nord Stream 1, would support prices.

        A little more than a month after the above was written,

        https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/why-europe-faces-climbing-energy-bills-2022-08-15/

        the Nord Stream II pipelines were blown up in what The Atlantic described as ‘the most consequential act of sabotage in modern times’, and a mystery nobody seems to want to solve.

        https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2023/12/nord-stream-pipeline-attack-theories-suspects-investigation/676320/

        An equally-puzzling mystery, to me, is how ‘leaders’ like Stoltenberg start their car in the morning without unconsciously flinching at the potential explosion that will send him through the roof of both car and garage. Put more simply, you couldn’t fuck things up more effectively if you were following a plan. Perhaps he is.

        Like

        1. Cupid German stunt speaks:

          Baerbock urges that air defence systems for the Ukraine be found

          4 April, 2024, 18: 44

          I’ve got a Master’s in International Law, I have. Honest!

          Berlin will once again call on its allies to check the availability of air defence systems that could be given to the Ukraine. This was announced on 4 April 4 by German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock.

          “After a strong request from the Ukrainian Foreign Minister [Dmytro Kuleba], we shall call on Europe again — everyone should check where their air defence is located, what they can provide to the Ukraine”, she said after a meeting of the Ukraine – NATO Council. She posted a joint video with Kuleba on the social network X (formerly Twitter).

          Earlier in the day, Kuleba had again asked the alliance for the Patriot air defence system.

          Earlier, on 28 March, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Kiev needed to receive five to seven Patriot systems from the United States.

          Military Watch Magazine wrote on 19 March that the depletion of air defence systems in the Ukrainian army would further change the strategic balance of forces in the conflict in the Ukraine in favour of Moscow. The publication noted that the Russian air force has begun to use high-precision guided bombs more often, for the dropping of which aircraft must fly much closer to enemy positions than when using air-launched cruise missiles.

          Like

          1. Ummmm….probably not important, but…didn’t the NATO Secretary-General just get through saying Europe must prepare for war? War which will…uh…involve itself. The last time I checked, air attacks were still playing a pretty important part in modern war, not only attacks by manned aircraft carrying glide bombs, but by missiles, rockets and – increasingly – drones. So making sure you have enough air defense to defend yourself is also pretty important. That’s why they call it ‘defense’, you see. If Europe shifts all its air defense to Ukraine and it all gets turned into scrap metal the way things have gone so far…what is Europe going to use to defend itself from the red horde?

            And there’s no use saying sure, like that would ever happen – everybody knows Putin is not interested in attacking Europe unless he has to to defend Russia against it. Obviously ‘everybody’ knows nothing of the kind – the NATO Secretary-General does not know it, and deems it sufficiently important that NATO must immediately start chucking boodle at its arms manufacturers, to beat more ploughshares into swords. Does it make any sense, any sense at all, to make yourself defenseless so you can spend crazy money to update your defenses?

            Like

  58. “The Ukraine can count on NATO support both now and in the long-term.”

    #NATO Foreign Ministers have agreed to move forward towards the planning of a greater NATO role in coordinating aide to the Ukraine.

    Whatever you say, you stupid prick!

    Like

        1. 30 years past its sell-by date. I wonder how many rue the attempt to replace it with the WEU (Western European Union, formally killed in 2011).*

          Every time u-Rope tried to do anything for itself Washington would throw a tantrum. If you recall, back in 2003 the EU tried to set up a ‘European planning office’ for u-Ropean military affairs, without US involvement of course.**

          *https://www.britannica.com/topic/Western-European-Union

          ** https://www.dw.com/en/germany-backs-down-on-eu-military-hq/a-1031174

          Like

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

    In a coffin in a white dress: the Ukrainian nationalist liquidated on the eve of wedding 2 days ago

    Ukrainian servicewoman Nadezhda Voitsishin was killed by Russian forces in the Zaporizhia direction. Her death was reported by the Ukrainian media.

    A marriage made in heaven? — ME

    Ukrainian servicewoman Nadezhda Voitsishin has killed by Russian forces in the Zaporizhia area. Her death was reported by the Ukrainian media.

    At the beginning of the military conflict, in 2014, the AFU member left her hometown – Popasna, Luhansk region. She decided to settle down with her family in Western Ukraine.

    Voitsishin fought with her fiancé. As volunteers told Ukrainian journalists, the couple planned to officially marry after the end of the war: the Ukrainian woman had even managed to buy a wedding dress.

    “They wanted to have a wedding celebration. Now her wedding dress, along with vyshyvanka y are waiting for bride to be placed in a coffin”, the volunteers write in social networks.

    [No Ukrainian shitwit would be seen dead without a vyshyvanka! — ME]

    Alexey Samchuk, a serviceman of the Air intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine with the call sign “Karkade”, did not live to see his own wedding. In the special operation zone, he was eliminated on 11 March.

    Ukrainian servicewoman Nadezhda Voitsishin was killed by Russian forces in the Zaporizhia direction. Her death was reported by the Ukrainian media. -2

    It is known that earlier Samchuk worked as a cinematographer, and in 2023, immediately after having finished school, he went as a volunteer to the SMO zone. As specified by the Ukrainian TV channel TSN, Samchuk served in the aerial reconnaissance of the 12th brigade of the nationalist formation “Azov”*.

    At the end of March, Anastasia Maryanchuk, a combat medic of the 1st rifle battalion of the 67th separate Mechanized Brigade, a student of philology at the Shevchenko National University of Kiev, was also eliminated during the SMO. She was known in the Armed Forces of the Ukraine by the call sign “Troy”. This information was confirmed by the educational institution.

    So-called medic “Troy” – with a gun — ME

    The first female tanker, Inna Stoiko, has also been destroyed. She served in the 3rd Separate Tank Brigade of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine.

    Ukrainian servicewoman Nadezhda Voitsishin was killed by Russian forces in the Zaporizhia direction. Her death was reported by the Ukrainian media. -3

    [SENIOR SOLDIER INNA STOIKO – 1985-2023]

    * The nationalist Ukrainian battalion “Azov” is included in the list of terrorist and extremist groups, its activities are prohibited on the territory of the Russian Federation.

    They’ve gone to a better place — better than being here, anyway.

    Like

    1. I guess you can get a sense of how precious each soldier is to the state and its armed forces by the apparent fact that each individual soldier has his/her own ‘callsign’. Kind of like, if it was in our military “Troy, this is Dark Star – I want you to take Mopdog and Susie and Starlight and Pencil and Digger and Princess and Searchlight and work your way around the enemy’s left flank for a surprise attack. I’m afraid I don’t know their names, but it doesn’t matter – they’re the enemy.” Must make for awfully cumbersome radio transmissions. On the bright side, if they get wasted the whole of the Ukrainian forces will know exactly who got taken out.

      I think what they mean is that this is a nickname by which they are known to a small circle of intimates within their unit, and the writer is torn between making it sound military and making it sound personal. But if that’s the case, it’s not a ‘callsign’, which is how military members address you in radio communications, and in which soldiers are typically just faceless units that make up a whole.

      Like

  60. NATO

    Doorstep

    by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg ahead of the meetings of NATO Ministers of Foreign Affairs in Brussels

    03 Apr. 2024 | Last updated: 04 Apr. 2024 16:02

    (As delivered)

    Doorstep statement by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg

    Good morning.

    Foreign Ministers will meet today and tomorrow to mark NATO’s 75th anniversary, and to prepare for our Summit in Washington in July.

    NATO was founded on a single, solemn promise: an attack on one Ally is an attack on all. 

    From that foundation, we have built the most powerful and successful Alliance in history. And over the past 75 years, NATO’s Open Door has helped to spread democracy and prosperity across Europe.

    As we celebrate NATO’s achievements, we do not rest upon them. 

    Europe now faces war on a scale we thought was resigned to history. 

    In recent days, the Kremlin has launched new major attacks, striking Ukrainian civilians and infrastructure. 
    And Russia continues to press along the frontlines.

    So we must stand firm in our support to Ukraine. 

    And I welcome that Allies continue to make major deliveries of weapons, ammunition, and equipment.

    But Ukraine has urgent needs.  

    Any delay in providing support has consequences on the battlefield as we speak.

    So we need to shift the dynamics of our support.

    We must ensure reliable and predictable security assistance to Ukraine for the long haul. 

    So that we rely less on voluntary contributions and more on NATO commitments.

    Less on short-term offers and more on multi-year pledges.

    therefore Ministers will discuss how NATO could assume more responsibility for coordinating military equipment and training for Ukraine anchoring this within a robust NATO framework. 

    We will also discuss a multi-year financial commitment to sustain our support.
    This ministerial will set the stage for achieving consensus on these issues as we prepare for the Washington Summit.

    NATO Allies provide 99 percent of all military support to Ukraine.

    So doing more under NATO would make our efforts more efficient, and more effective.

    Moscow needs to understand that they cannot achieve their goals on the battlefield and they cannot wait us out.

    Tomorrow we will hold a meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council.

    With Minister Kuleba, we will address the current situation and Ukraine’s needs both now and for the future. 

    We are transforming NATO’s comprehensive assistance package into a multi-year programme of assistance. 

    We are helping Ukraine move closer to NATO, NATO standards on everything from procurement to logistics.

    And we are supporting Ukraine’s reform efforts to bring Ukraine ever closer to the Alliance. 

    Ukraine will become a member of NATO. 

    It is a question of when, not if. 

    Tomorrow, we will also meet with our Indo-Pacific partners: Australia, New Zealand, Japan and South Korea. 

    Together with the European Union.

    We know that our security is not regional – it is global.
    The war in Ukraine illustrates this clearly.

    Russia’s friends in Asia are vital for continuing its war of aggression.

    China is propping up Russia’s war economy.

    In return, Moscow is mortgaging its future to Beijing.

    North Korea and Iran are delivering substantial supplies of weapons and ammunition.

    In return, Pyongyang and Tehran are receiving Russian technology and supplies that help them advance their missile and nuclear capabilities.

    This has regional and global security consequences.

    So like-minded nations around the world need to stand together. 

    To defend a global order ruled by law, not by force.

    Tomorrow we will discuss how best to work together towards this end. 

    We also have much to gain from practical cooperation – including on technology, cyber, and hybrid threats.

    As well as support to Ukraine.

    All of this matters for European security.

    And for Indo-Pacific security.

    Countering rising global threats requires sustained spending.

    A record number of Allies will meet NATO’s 2 percent of GDP spending target this year. 
    And I look forward to further progress. 

    At our ministerial, we will also discuss how to address instability in our southern neighbourhood. 
    Including the continuing threat of terrorism.

    We will also agree a new policy on Women, Peace and Security.

    Because our societies are stronger and safer when we draw on the contributions of all our people.

    And with that, I am happy to take some questions. 

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

    Whatever you say, dickhead!

    Like

      1. “Moscow needs to understand that they cannot achieve their goals on the battlefield and they cannot wait us out.”

        What was that saying ?

        In 1814 we were invited to Paris.

        In 1945 we were invited to Berlin

        This year Brussels?

        Like

    1. “NATO was founded on a single, solemn promise: an attack on one Ally is an attack on all. “

      I’m sure that plays well with the dullards and halfwits among the electorate, but in fact NATO was founded on a bunch of solemn promises, and article 5 never intended to bind all NATO members to militarily come to the aid of a designated proxy as soon as it got in over its head. Ukraine actually used to be considered an enemy of NATO and a Russian ally, and NATO would be in a hot war every other week if it was committed to drop everything and go fight the enemy of every US proxy. Like in the Middle East, right now.

      https://en.as.com/latest_news/why-isnt-israel-a-member-of-nato-geopolitical-reasons-for-the-exclusion-n-3/

      Israel has a permanent mission to NATO Headquarters since 2017, and while NOT A MEMBER, it is as close as one can get and enjoys the undisputed status of ally to the NATO membership. Why isn’t NATO attacking Palestine? After all, Jens told us himself that NATO made a solemn promise to go to the aid of any ALLY who was attacked. Well, CNN rationalizes it that Israel is outside the geopolitical area and has nothing to do with the North Atlantic region. Uh, Russia’s on the Atlantic, and it applied for membership – what’s the problem? Oh, that’s right – your membership must enhance North Atlantic security. So….membership of the world’s biggest nuclear power would not enhance North Atlantic security? It can’t be that NATO was afraid Russia would drag other countries into its wars of conquest, because the USA…well, I see I don’t need to go any further with that.

      Say it. NATO countries (excepting the founding powers) are admitted on the basis of their political and geopolitical usefulness to the founding powers in getting at their enemies and achieving greater power for themselves.

      CNN – an official mouthpiece of the US government – is clear that Ukraine is NOT A NATO MEMBER, and simply being an ally is not enough: the USA as well as other NATO members is not obligated to go to Ukraine’s assistance if it is getting the shit kicked out of it, not even when it was NATO who pushed it into the ring.

      ” Since Ukraine is not a member of NATO, the US is not compelled to protect the country the same way it would if a NATO member nation was attacked. But many of Ukraine’s neighbors are NATO members, and if a Russian attack extended into one of those countries, Article 5 could trigger direct involvement from the US and other NATO members. “

      https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/07/politics/what-is-nato-article-5/index.html

      That’s why the USA has set up its artillery-repair shops in Poland, and envisions flying Ukraine’s F-16’s out of Polish airfields – because it would just love for Russia to take a swing at Poland, and in fact it has contrived to stage incidents in the past to imply Russia had attacked Poland.

      Something Jens may want to keep in mind is that Vladimir Putin has successfully sold the war in Ukraine to the Russian people as an existential battle against NATO – probably wasn’t hard, because it is plainly true, there have been any number of public pronouncements by NATO’s highest officials that Russia must be defeated on the battlefield and NATO cannot allow Ukraine to lose. NATO is fully invested in Russia losing to Ukraine, but that’s not happening right now and it does not look like it is ever going to happen so long as the current conditions prevail. Therefore, QED, it is perfectly reasonable to assume NATO will step up its support with actual combat troops, given the alternative is to back down. If Russia backs down, it will be disposed of according to NATO judgment because NATO itself has made this winner-take-all, and the obvious rationale for that is it believed without doubt that it would win. Hardly an ideal position from which to back down, is it? Russia will not, and NATO is talking itself into a position where it can’t.

      Be so careful, Jens, you simpleminded oaf, because if you do opt for war, there is not a hope that you will get a low-intensity conventional war in Europe which will end satisfactorily for Europe, after just enough damage that it can point to it with pride as its battle-scars. You will get your ass kicked hard and lose, ignominiously and undeniably, or else it will go nuclear and the scale of deaths will be unimaginable. Playtime is over, and continued strutting and chest-beating is serving no purpose. You cannot keep escalating with your mouth alone, or people will just stop taking you seriously, and if you escalate much further for real, you are going to find yourself in a war that will have a considerably faster tempo than the one you and your mates started using your proxy.

      Like

      1. I’m sure that plays well with the dullards and halfwits among the electorate, but in fact NATO was founded on a bunch of solemn promises, and article 5 never intended to bind all NATO members to militarily come to the aid of a designated proxy as soon as it got in over its head. 

        Yeah, this article 5 shite is regularly trotted out by such wankers as the former mayor of Oslo as such noble “all for one and one for all” crap!

        It’s all a load of bollocks, if it means that joining in the fray with Uncle Sam, who is on the other side of the Atlantic, results in Western Europe being turned into glass.

        Article 5 of the North Atlantic Terror Organization:

        Article 5 provides that if a NATO Ally is the victim of an armed attack, each and every other member of the Alliance will consider this act of violence as an armed attack against all members and will take the actions it deems necessary to assist the Ally attacked.

        “… all members and will take the actions it deems necessary to assist the Ally attacked.”

        DEEMS NECESSARY!

        And what actions might be deemed necessary by the member states? Will they all be identical and joint?

        Or will each member-state take such actions that it deems necessary to take in defence of its own interests, its primary interest, indeed the primary interest of any state, being the maintenance of its very existence.

        Like

  61. Zelebobek’s next addition to his property portfolio must surely be Camp David.

    Rishi Sunak must be jealous, that he was outbid at the secret auction.

    Like

  62. “Hundreds of thousands”: the US revealed what Ukraine will lose because of Washington

    05.04.2024 – 0:30

    "Hundreds of thousands": the US revealed what Ukraine will lose because of Washington | Russkaya Vesna

    We-can-kill-Russians-any-time-any-place Budanov — ME

    A new US aid package would only lead to huge losses of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and deprive the Ukraine of territories, said American economist Jeffrey Sachs in an interview with Judging Freedom YouTube channel.

    “This will lead to the death of tens or even hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians. In addition, as a result, Ukraine will lose even more territory, because Russia will continue to advance until we sit down at the negotiating table. The longer we delay, the more Ukraine will lose”, he said.

    Sachs also stressed that only American arms manufacturers woud benefit from such a decision, while Ukraine will only lose its cities.

    As reported by the media, the United States had exhausted the possibilities of helping Kiev, having transfered the last package of weapons in December last year. This year, only one aid package worth $ 300 million was transferred. Congress has yet to agree on a new Biden administration request for $ 60 billion for the Ukraine.

    Against a background of uncertainty with the bill on the allocation of money to Kiev, which has been going on for several months, Republicans in the House of Representatives have prepared their own version of a plan to help the Ukraine in the form of loans or “lend-lease”, and not gratuitous aid, as it has been until now.

    Russia believes that arms supplies to the Ukraine hinder a settlement, directly involve NATO countries in the conflict and are “playing with fire”. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov noted that the United States and NATO are directly involved in the conflict not only by supplying weapons, but also by training personnel in the UK, Germany, Italy and other countries. The Kremlin said that pumping the Ukraine with weapons from the West does not contribute to negotiations and will have a negative effect.

    Like

  63. He just doesn’t get it, does he?

    4 Apr, 2024 19:44

    The Ukraine ‘will become a member of NATO’ – top US diplomat

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken has insisted that Kiev will be allowed to join the Western military bloc

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks at a NATO press briefing on Thursday in Brussels. © Getty Images / Omar Havana

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has capped a meeting of NATO diplomats by doubling down on an issue that helped trigger the Russia-Ukraine conflict: allowing Kiev to join the Western military alliance.

    “Ukraine will become a member of NATO,” Blinken told reporters on Thursday in Brussels. “Our purpose at the summit is to help build a bridge to that membership and to create a clear pathway for Ukraine moving forward.”

    Blinken made his comments as NATO foreign ministers completed a two-day meeting to rally more international support for Kiev. He spoke at a press briefing alongside Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba, who argued that Ukraine “deserves to be a member of NATO.” The Ukrainian diplomat added, “This should happen sooner rather than later.”

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned for the better part of two decades that NATO’s eastward expansion undermines Russian national security and that moving the bloc’s forces into Ukraine would cross a “red line.” NATO-Russia relations have deteriorated so much amid the current Ukraine crisis that the alliance is now in “direct confrontation” with Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday.

    The determination of NATO members to back Ukraine remains “rock solid,” Blinken said at Thursday’s press briefing. “We will do everything we can; allies will do everything that they can to ensure that Ukraine has what it needs to continue to deal with Russia’s ongoing aggression.”

    The top US diplomat also urged Congress to approve $60 billion in additional aid to Ukraine. The proposal has been stalled by rising opposition from Republican lawmakers since last fall. The administration of US President Joe Biden has already burned through $113 billion in previously approved Ukraine funding.

    US Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene said in an interview on Wednesday that the latest aid bill is likely headed for passage when Congress goes back into session next week. The Georgia Republican argued that Washington’s escalating “proxy war” in Ukraine is making Americans less safe and pushing the world closer to World War III.

    Reacting to Blinken’s statement on Thursday, Greene reminded her 3.2 million followers on X (formerly Twitter) that under the NATO charter, an attack on one member is considered an attack on all. “Making Ukraine a member of NATO means that the US will be going to war against Russia, as mandated by Article 5,” she wrote.

    Well not necessarily so, according to Article 5, which states that if “a NATO Ally is the victim of an armed attack, each and every other member of the Alliance will consider this act of violence as an armed attack against all members and will take the actions it deems necessary to assist the Ally attacked”.

    So the USA will deem it necessary to wage war against Russia if this conflict is still going on when the Ukraine joins NATO, as Blinken assures the world that it most certainly will?

    Like

    1. Well, Jens told us it was ‘just a matter of time’, which is kind of misleading. How about the twelfth of Never, Jens – is that good for you? The west could hold out forever, claiming Ukraine was going to be admitted ‘very soon’ without ever doing anything serious about it. As I’ve said before, I hope they do – NATO and Europe need the helpless dependency of a large, desperately poor country like a chicken needs oven mitts.

      Like

      1. Small point: as far as I am aware, no state that is at war or involved in a territorial dispute may join NATO before the end of said hostilities/settlement of said dispute.

        Perhaps the territory of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire Kronland Galizien will end up as a NATO member state, sort of like Montenegro and just as unimportant. Only problem is that Poland considers Galitsia its own patch, and it was too, from 1919 until 1939.

        Like

        1. That IS actually what the law says, but as we have seen many times in the recent past and totally at odds with its protests that it worships the law with unswerving piety, the west merely re-interprets or re-frames the law when its rigidity gets in the way of something it wants to do. Exemplary of that policy was the IMF’s rewrite which took the law which said ‘the IMF may not issue further loans to any country which is in arrears on its payments of a previously-issued loan’, and basically removed the word ‘not’, something it did specifically for Ukraine so that it could continue pissing money down a dark hole without any realistic hope of recovery, because it believed its cheerleaders when they yelled they were almost there, don’t stop, just a little more will get ‘er done.

          Like

  64. “I don’t want to spoil NATO’s birthday celebrations, but give the Ukraine ‘Patriot'”, demands Kuleba.

    “The salvation of Ukrainian cities depends on the presence of Patriot and other defence systems. We speak about Patriot because it is the only system that an intercept Russian missiles. The allies have plenty of Patriots. This will be my main topic today.

    “I don’t want to spoil the birthday party . . . “

    Zelensky was offended about his partners not giving Kuleba “Patriots” at the party in honour of NATO’s birthday:

    “It is absolutely incomprehensible why so many countries in the world are still thinking about how to counter terrorism, when all that is needed are a few political decisions and several air defence systems which could fundamentally change the situation.”

    They don’t want to help you and the rest of the scum in Banderastan because you’re finished, idiot.

    And you are a dead man . . .

    Like

    1. I suspect the real reason the USA does not want to give Ukraine any more Patriots is twofold; if it did, observers would expect an immediate cessation of Russian hits on Ukrainian targets, and when things proceeded pretty much as they are doing now, would conclude Patriot had made no significant difference – and, American crews would have to go with the system to operate it, and they would almost certainly be killed there. Too many people are now aware of the hush-hush presence of western military personnel in Ukraine despite the absurd fairytales of Ukrainian geniuses ‘tweaking’ American missile systems to make them achieve performance completely outside their design envelope, like turning a spoon into a typewriter. Additionally, too many people are getting wise to that ‘we shot down all the missiles, but some debris fell on the target and mostly destroyed it and killed an old man’ story, and it is becoming a joke.

      Like

  65. NYT

    NATO Wants to Show Support for Ukraine, but Only So Much

    Admitting Kyiv is a nonstarter as long as the war with Russia is raging. But the member nations want to show they are supporting Ukraine “for the long haul.”

    Lara Jakes

    By Lara Jakes

    Lara Jakes writes about weapons and military aid to Ukraine.

    4 April, 2024, 5:35 p.m. ET

    When NATO’s leaders gather this summer to celebrate the 75th anniversary of their military alliance, the last thing they want to see is a resurgent Russian military marching across Ukraine because Europe was too weak to provide Kyiv with the support it needed.

    What Ukraine wants, ultimately, is a formal invitation to join NATO. But alliance officials agree that is not going to happen at the festivities planned for Washington in July. NATO has no appetite for taking on a new member that, because of the alliance’s covenant of collective security, would draw it into the biggest land war in Europe since 1945.

    That has sent NATO searching for some middle ground, something short of membership but meaty enough to show that it is backing Ukraine “for the long haul,” as Jens Stoltenberg, the NATO secretary general, put it this week.

    What that will be has so far proven elusive, according to senior Western diplomats involved in the discussions.

    Proposals put forward this week at a meeting of foreign ministers in Brussels to give NATO more control over coordinating military aid, financing and training for Ukraine’s forces were immediately met with skepticism. The United States and Germany remain opposed to offering Ukraine a start to membership negotiations in Brussels as they did at last year’s summit in Vilnius, and they want that issue off the table in July, despite a similar process at the European Union that was approved last winter. But they do want to provide Ukraine with specific commitments they can deliver on. Efforts to clearly define what conditions Ukraine needs to meet to begin talks with NATO have yet to move forward.

    An enormous meeting room in which delegates sit around a very large oval table, with more people seated in back rows.
    At a NATO-Ukraine Council meeting on Thursday in Brussels. Proposals this week to give NATO more control over coordinating military aid, financing and training for Ukraine’s forces were met with skepticism.Credit…Omar Havana/Getty Images

    And none of these things may matter by July if Russia continues to gain ground and Ukraine looks in danger of losing the war — a prospect that has become all the more real with each month that Republicans in Congress continue to block a $60 billion aid package to Kyiv.

    “The situation on the ground may look a lot worse than it is today, and then the real question becomes, ‘How do we make sure that Russia doesn’t win?’” said Ivo H. Daalder, a former American ambassador to NATO.

    “That can change the whole nature of the debate. We can all think that the NATO summit is going to take place as if it’s the same as today, but it won’t,” said Mr. Daalder, president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. “The last two months have not been good for Ukraine, and there’s nothing in the offing that it’s going to get any better.”

    Last year, at a NATO summit meeting in Vilnius, Lithuania, Ukraine was assured once more that it would be given full membership into the alliance — someday — after it made certain changes to improve democracy and its security. The vague promise dismayed Kyiv and its most fervent supporters in the Baltics, the Nordic states and Eastern Europe.

    Nine months later, Ukraine is grappling with the aftershocks of a military counteroffensive that burned through precious artillery ammunition and other weapons while failing to gain appreciable territory from Russia. The country remains in dire need of arms, particularly for air defense; its foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said on Thursday that Ukraine was hit by 94 Russian ballistic missiles in March alone.

    “I didn’t want to spoil the birthday party for NATO, but I felt compelled to deliver a very sobering message on behalf of Ukrainians about the state of Russian air attacks on my country, destroying our energy system, our economy, killing civilians,” Mr. Kuleba said Thursday at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

    Mr. Kuleba said he had “listened carefully” to his fellow diplomats discuss how NATO might address Ukraine’s place in the alliance in Washington this summer and had responded carefully in kind.

    “It is up to allies themselves to decide on the form and the content of the next step toward Ukraine’s membership in NATO,” he said. “We will be looking forward to the outcome, but, of course, we believe that Ukraine deserves to be a member of NATO and that this should happen sooner rather than later.”

    Soldiers and tanks.
    A NATO military exercise in Poland last month. A proposal would make NATO rather than the United States responsible for coordinating donations and delivery of weapons to Ukraine.Credit…Wojtek Radwanski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

    Mr. Stoltenberg sought to bridge the gap by floating two proposals at this week’s meeting to continue support for Ukraine that he said he hoped could be approved in time for the meeting of NATO heads of state in Washington in July.

    The first, to make NATO rather than the United States responsible for coordinating donations and delivery of weapons to Ukraine, drew objections from Hungary and other allies for its potential to pull the alliance more directly into the war. It is also opposed by the United States, Mr. Daalder said, although the Biden administration so far has been careful not to criticize it publicly. On Thursday, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken addressed the issue only by praising the current, American-led process for its “extraordinary results.”

    The other, to give Ukraine $100 billion in aid over five years, was met with confusion, since it is unclear how NATO could compel its member states to contribute — especially given budget or political constraints like the one in the U.S. Congress that has held up $60 billion for Ukraine.

    But Mr. Stoltenberg said such plans were vital to ensure Ukraine would continue to receive enduring NATO support rather than piecemeal donations. (He did, however, applaud recent shipments of drones, missiles, armored vehicles and ammunition from Britain, the Czech Republic, Finland, France and Germany.)

    Mr. Stoltenberg added that NATO’s top military commander, U.S. Army Gen. Christopher G. Cavoli, had been asked to design a blueprint for providing dependable, predictable aid to Ukraine for years to come.

    “If NATO allies deliver what we should, then we are absolutely confident that the Ukrainians will be able to make new gains,” Mr. Stoltenberg said. “That’s the reason why we must deliver more, why allies need to dig deeper and provide more military support faster and why we also need stronger and more robust structures for the long haul.”

    Jens Stoltenberg and Antony J. Blinken on a stage whose background has a NATO logo, standing with an American flag.
    Jens Stoltenberg, the NATO secretary general, right, with Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken on Wednesday in Brussels, said this week that NATO was backing Ukraine “for the long haul.”Credit…Omar Havana/Getty Images

    An undercurrent to the urgency is NATO’s desire to “Trump-proof” — as it has been called in recent months — Western support for Ukraine should former President Donald J. Trump be re-elected in November. Mr. Trump has long disdained NATO, deriding its members for not paying a “fair share” of security costs and, in February, suggesting that if a European member of the alliance were attacked by Russia, he would not help defend it if it had not been paying its share.

    In Brussels on Thursday, Mr. Blinken said he heard “from ally after ally” that “our commitment, our engagement, is indispensable for this alliance” and its support for Ukraine. He said Ukraine was working on the government and security changes needed to join NATO, and he noted without detail various efforts within the alliance to offer the war-weary country new assurances when leaders meet in Washington in July.

    It seemed clear from his comments, however, that the world should not be expecting a sharp departure from the status quo.

    “These conversations over the last couple of days have been focused on exactly what we’re going to do at the summit,” Mr. Blinken said. “We’ve begun a process among all the countries and with all the experts to flesh that out. We’ll be using the time between now and the summit to do exactly that.”

    Steven Erlanger contributed reporting from Berlin.

    Lara Jakes, based in Rome, reports on diplomatic and military efforts by the West to support Ukraine in its war with Russia. She has been a journalist for nearly 30 years. More about Lara Jakes.

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

    Well waddya know! A woman reporter based in Rome who writes about weapons and aid to Banderastan.

    l tell you what bugs me: this load of bullshit below:

    Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky (L) and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speak to the media on the second day of the 2023 NATO Summit on July 12, 2023 in Vilnius, Lithuania. ©  Sean Gallup / Getty Images

    The now seemingly de rigueur bullshitting pose taken when one speaker is gasbagging and the other gazes on attentively at at him/her.

    I’m sure that before Hollywood-style USA bullshitting took off with USA “politicians”, such as the endless finger-pointing at no one in particular in a crowd, when one was standing at a lectern alongside another at lectern, when not speaking, one did not stare in appreciation or, as the case may be, disdain at the other speaker.

    See what I mean? 6 March, 2024, Berlin. Maybe he’s thinking: “What’s that stupid fucking cow talking about?”

    And maybe behind her beaming smile, she is really thinking: “You are one fucking useless English arsehole, Cameron!”

    And just take a look at these two:

    Perhaps she’s thinking: “You are one fucking boring old Spanish fart, Borrell!”

    And here Borrell might really be thinking: “What a fucking wrinkled old German broiler she is!”

    But this one below is really over the top:

    The Kiev Rat: “Fuck me! I think think he’s got a hard-on!”

    Like

    1. A couple of significant implications in there – one, the Democrats have a real fear that Trump will win even after their frantic scrambling to put him in jail before the election. Two, the Israeli operation against the Palestinians could not have happened at a worse time for America’s righteous morality – it must shriek in overdone grief about Russian ‘murder of civilians’ even as it holds Israel’s coat while it murders thousands upon thousands of civilians in Palestine.

      Not a good look.

      I’m sure you noticed also Kuleba’s anguish that Ukraine had been struck by 94 ballistic missiles in March alone. How many did they admit had gotten through Ukraine’s Majik Air Defenses? Eight? Yeah, that’s what I thought, too. And what kind of ‘ballistic missiles’ were these? Time was, one ballistic missile was enough to take out a city, not a building, and Russia certainly has that sort of ballistic missile, while a true ballistic missile is not something you employ for a surgical strike operation where you want to obliterate a power-generation complex, but leave the shopping mall across the street standing. I suspect that as well as the obvious given that a lot more missiles are hitting Ukraine than it will ever admit, most of them are being incorrectly classified and are in fact cruise missiles. A ballistic missile is unguided and is fired at pre-programmed geographic coordinates. But ‘ballistic missile’ sounds scarier, although the Tochka is a ballistic missile and the Ukrainians fired a bunch of those into Eastern Ukraine without any fainting-couches having to be dragged out for the western press.

      Like

  66. Black Mountain Analysis: Shooting Down the Stealth Fighter [i]

    https://bmanalysis.substack.com/p/shooting-down-the-stealth-fighter

    The final story of the legendary downing

    ####

    For any amateur airnerd, the shooting down of F117A ‘stealth fighters’ (which are actually strike/bombing aircraft!) is very interesting. It goes to show that even back then, nothing matches up to its marketing hype (‘invisible’) and underestimating the resourcefulness of the enemy is stoopid@

    Like

    1. It is always, ALWAYS easier and cheaper to devise a work-around to a new technology, and to extend that rule a little, those who operate a new technology ALWAYS become overconfident about its magical properties. We are the most voracious consumers of our own bullshit.

      Like

  67. 4 APRIL, 2024, 13: 08

    Bulgakov predicted the fate of the Kiev regime

    Bulgakov predicted the fate of the Kiev regime

    The most famous writer born in Kiev has become an object of hatred of the Kiev regime. The author of “The Master and Margarita”, Mikhail Bulgakov, has been declared a “Ukrainophobe” and an “imperialist”. How did the writer really feel about the Ukraine and Kiev and why are there parallels with what is happening now in his work?

    “— Your novel has been read”, Woland said, turning to the Master, “and they said only one thing: that unfortunately it is not finished”.

    There is no need to explain where this phrase is taken from and whose pen it belongs to. A new reason to remember Bulgakov’s immortal text is that the Ukrainian Institute of National Remembrance (UINR) has suddenly read it and decided to organise a belated trial over the book. The Small Sanhedrin of the UINP officially declared the writer a Ukrainophobe, taking up “… the positions of Russian imperialism, the White Guard … Russian communism, [as well as] to the current ideologues of Putinism”.

    But why now and why Bulgakov?

    The most likely reason was the release of Mikhail Lokshin’s film “The Master and Margarita”, based on Bulgakov’s novel. And if the Master’s novel was read, Lokshin’s film was watched. Despite all the blockades and bans, even Russian television can be watched in the Ukraine if you want to. What is to be said then of Russian films.

    One can remember the hysteria that Ukrainian politicians and the entire Ministry of Culture had after last year’s premiere of the Russian TV series “The Word of a Boy” . It was condemned, criticised and banned. Teachers in Viber groups persuaded parents: “Talk to your children, so that, God forbid, they not watch it”.

    The result is simultaneously funny, sad and predictable: the graffito YKK [one the gang symbols of the many hooligan boy gangs in Kazan portrayed in the series — ME] has appeared in lifts and on the walls of houses in Kiev. And this is in Kiev, in the third year of the SMO.

    The producers of the series gave it excellent publicity, but the best (and free) regional advertising campaign was conducted by the Ukrainian authorities. Therefore, of course, they could not avoid the new film adaptation of “The Master and Margarita”. And since there is no Ukraine and nothing Ukrainian in the film itself (not even Misha Berlioz’s uncle in Kiev), it was decided to be proactive. It is possible to make the writer himself an imperialist and Ukrainophobe. This immediately simplifies the dialogue with Ukrainian consumers of Russian content. Do you watch films based on the novel by the Ukrainophobic Bulgakov? Or maybe you are a Ukrainophobe yourself?

    In short, quite in the spirit of the critics Latunsky and Lavrovich: “…to strike and strike hard at Bulgakovism and those Ukrainophobes who have decided to drag it into the Ukrainian cultural space”.

    You see, with minimal edits it works again.

    Moreover, it is not for the first time. Back in 2022, the National Union of Writers of the Ukraine proposed to abolish the Bulgakov Museum, creating instead a museum of composer Alexander Koshyts. The parallels are so transparent that one can only envy the genius of the Russian writer: haters automatically turn into heroes of Bulgakov’s works.

    In this case, do not be offended by the comparison of two such dissimilar cultural objects: the series “The Word of a Boy” and the novel by Mikhail Bulgakov. For the Kiev regime this is a phenomenon of the same order.

    The value of any work is largely measured by its audience. Russian cinema has this audience. Even in the Ukraine. Even among those who can hardly be considered loyal to Russia and the Russian world. Like Pelevin: they spit on it, hate it, but they watch it. If only because if everyone is talking about it and you haven’t seen it, you won’t be able to maintain a conversation. While Ukrainian cinema is, to put it mildly, a niche thing. So the Kiev authorities have to keep a close eye on what Ukrainians are watching. And then go and methodically ban it.

    As for Bulgakov’s “Ukrainophobia”, this accusation is best described by a famous witticism:

    — Why do you hate everything Ukrainian?

    — Why do you call everything I hate Ukrainian?

    Firstly, Bulgakov was a satirist and a merciless scourger of vulgarity. In all its manifestations, including ethno-cultural ones. Secondly, to be any kind of -phobe, one must first have the object of one’s alleged antipathy in front of one’s face. Whereas Bulgakov was born in imperial Kiev, lived in military Kiev, then in revolutionary Kiev. And after that, in Soviet Kiev.

    Today, the Kiev regime can pamper its ego as much as it likes by glorifying the UPR [The Ukrainian People’s Republic 1917-1920 — ME] as the first Ukrainian state. For Bulgakov and his contemporaries, the UPR was just one of the many gangs trying to establish themselves as a power in his Kiev after the revolution. “The City” as he called it in “The White Guard”: capitalised and without further explanation.

    At this point we come to the more important reason for UINR’s dislike of Bulgakov. It’s not just the popularity of Russian films and TV series. Bulgakov’s Kiev and UINR’s Kiev are two completely different Kievs. In Bulgakov’s case, it is an imperial southern Russian city, part of something Big. Much bigger than Kiev itself, despite its status as an ancient capital. And for the Kiev regime (current and the Kievc that was contemporary to Bulgakov), Kiev is also the capital, but of something small. And not a part of anything.

    Not to mention the fact that all types of the then Ukraine (UPR, Hetman’s Ukraine, the Petliura Directory) existed only virtually, as an imaginary value, relying on the strength of the German army. Germany ended, and after its end, so did the “independent” Ukraine end. That “sovereign Ukraine” existed approximately in the same way as the present Ukraine seems to be sovereign and self-styled, relying solely on the support of Western allies. And the West itself has been persistently repeating the same thesis for the past few months: the end of this support will mean the end of the Ukraine in its current form: the end of the Kiev regime.

    Therefore, of course, Bulgakov is not a Ukrainophobe. He is the one who time after time brings us back to 1917-1919. And following the hero of his novel he can repeat time after time: “Oh, how I guessed right! Oh, how I guessed everything right!”

    It was not they who have gathered to judge Bulgakov. It is he who has gathered them to judge themselves. The wretched shadows of evil caricatures from revolutionary Kiev a century ago. Parallels are drawn even from the time of year when we are discussing all this right now: on the eve of “…the spring month of Nisan”. So we can say that the history of relations between Kiev and Bulgakov is not over yet either. And it is being written on the margins of the SMO right now.

    Like

  68. Interesting items from Twatterland:

    https://x.com/ArmchairW/status/1776121221882736946

    The pattern of recent Ukrainian drone attacks in the Russian interior has convinced me they’re coming from third countries. Let’s investigate.⬇️

    Rybar attempted a weak debunk on this on the occasion of a drone attack earlier this week that struck an industrial park in Tatarstan. The attack accomplished very little (it hit worker housing for a Russian luxury automobile manufacturer and injured a few people), but far more interesting was its location – some 1200 kilometers from Ukraine but just over the border from Kazakhstan – and the means used, general aviation aircraft stuffed with explosives.

    ####

    Plenty more at the link.

    It’s an interesting theory and considering the Kiev has no limits to what it does with a ‘Nudge, nudge, wink, wink’ from the west, it’s certainly very plausible, not to mention keeping such things under wraps by Ru & Kz.

    Like

  69. Armchair Warlord also has an interesting theory about the Black Sea drone attacks

    How do you destroy an attack network?

    Notice that I didn’t say military unit. A military unit has assigned equipment, a defined area of operations, and clear lines of communication. Attack networks – generally but not always terroristic in nature – are far more amorphous, relying largely on a web of key people (leaders, technicians, financiers, “fixers,” smugglers, system operators and expendable dupes) to create custom weaponry and deploy them in an asymmetric manner for maximum effects.

    During the war against ISIS we saw terrorist attack networks coalesce into military units that fought – and had to be fought – conventionally. In Ukraine we’ve seen the reverse: the devolution of military operations into terrorist-style attack networks difficult to destroy through conventional targeting of critical nodes simply because those nodes don’t exist.

    ####

    Very interesting. In short, using expendable assets (old ships) as decoys to gather intel.

    I did question a while ago whether Russia was deliberately holding back vis the drone attacks to deny Kiev/the West intel/capablities best left for a full war and whether that would mean sacrificing assets in the process (the sort of stuff military planners manage).

    Like

    1. 05.04.2024 16:57

       Consequences of the arrival of drones in Kursk on the night of April 4-5, 2024

      Last night Kursk was attacked by drones. Miraculously, there were no casualties. According to the governor, four drones were destroyed over the city.

      After that, there was a fire near the Central Market. Also, two pavilions were damaged at the market, and the goods of entrepreneurs were destroyed. Glass was broken in the security room. In the Central District, the windshields of two cars and windows in two apartment buildings were damaged.

      There was a fire in the building of the Regional Centere for the development of creativity of children and Youth. The fire was extinguished quickly.

      In the Railway district, a house and garage completely burnt down. Residents miraculously escaped, there were no injuries. The victims of the fire were provided with temporary housing. Windows of cars, residential and non-residential premises, as well as fences of residential buildings were damaged in the district.

      The authorities continue their patrols. Kursk residents will be helped with the restoration of damaged property. Residents are reminded that it is not allowed to approach or touch the UAV wreckage. It is dangerous. To report a find, call 112.

      That attack must have seriously upset the Orc war effort and stemmed greatly the Orc fervour for the Tyrant.

      Glory to the Banderite Heroes!

      Like

    2. That IS interesting. In the case of the most recent attack, the Kazakhs ‘vehemently’ denied that it came from Kazakhstan. A more responsible answer would have been that it might have, but how would you guard against such attacks without promoting ratlines and ‘watch your neighbour’ policies such as often attend a breakdown of society based on paranoia and suspicion? There’s nothing particularly difficult about flying a quadcopter over a refinery and using a simple release mechanism to drop an anti-tank grenade on it, and under ideal circumstances for the attacker, it’s only in the air for about a half-hour at most, while all the guidance equipment required can be hidden under a jacket while you’re running through the streets. Loading up a Cessna with remote controls and Semtex is merely an advance on that. But as even western networks have pointed out, terrorism is the weapon of the weak. Sorry, Karl.

      Like

      1. The “Moscow Times” Friday news roundup that I received yesterday gleefully announced a drone strike in Kazan, situated some 1,000 kms from the Banderastan border.

        Gee whiz! What technology and daring these Yukietards have!!!

        And when the strike had actually happened, I read a similar gushing out of comments in admiration of the Yukietard success and at the same time ridicule of the Orcs, in that a drone could fly all the way from Banderastan undetected by the Orc dimwits.

        It never enters these brain-dead twats’ heads, because they haven’t a clue where Kazan is (or the Ukraine for that matter), that it is far more likely that some Banderite “nationalist”, resident in Tatarstan, who looks like a Russian, talks like Russian, walks like a Russian, but who is not, God forbid, a Russian, but of a totally different ethnic group to that of the Orcs, albeit he lives, together with many others of his “ethnicity”, in the Autonomous Republic of Tatarstan, a subject Republic of the Russian Federation, launched the drone in his own Tatarstan backyard.

        Like

      2. the Kazakhs ‘vehemently’ denied that it came from Kazakhstan

        Are you talking about the drone strike in Kazan, the capital of Tatarstan?

        Are you confusing the word “Kazan” with “Kazakh”?

        Like

            1. There are Banderites in Kazakhstan, of course. An ethnic Russian woman (Russkaya) whom I know, though not a Russian citizen (Rossiyanka) — she was born and raised in Uzbekistan and has lived and worked for very many years in Kazakhstan and is a citizen of that republic — tells me that her sister-in-law is a Banderite Yukietard, born and bred in Kazakhstan and a citizen of that country. Needless to say, my Russian acquaintance has nothing to do with her sister-in-law, nor has she anything to do with her. Oh yeah, and her sister-in-law does not speak мова.

              Like

            2. It’s his theory, not mine, and Russia apparently did question Kazakhstan quite closely. 400 kms is a lot shorter than 1,200. And according to that author, Ukraine did explore earlier using a drone-ized version of exactly that type of aircraft. If I could let a bit of my own thinking creep in, such a target might pass some surveillance because its type is what is classified as LSF in warfare terminology, a Low, Slow Flyer. These are a specialized-engagement target for automatic weapons like the CIWS guns because the target speed is well below the minimum engagement speed set in the system to nudge the targeting radar that there is something out there.

              Those parameters are usually programmable and the threshold could likely be lowered – but then you start to pick up all kinds of spurious ‘targets’ such as flocks of birds, the speed threshold acts as a sort of filter, as in ‘ignore everything which is moving at less than 250 knots’. Ordinary surveillance and early-warning radars such as are used by Air Traffic Control should have picked it up, though. But what is light-plane traffic typically like in the region? And another parameter considered when building a threat picture is Point Of Origin – if it came from Ukraine, it might well be automatically prioritized where something flying out of Kazakhstan would not.

              It’s still nothing but a theory, but Armchair Warlord’s reasoning is sound.

              Like

  70. Against the background of problems with alcohol, Yulia Navalnaya is preparing her daughter for the role of leader of the non-systemic opposition

    April 5, 2024, 13: 30

    As RT has learnt from sources close to the wife of the founder of FBK* Alexey Navalny, Yulia, foreign curators are considering the candidacy of Navalny’s daughter Daria as the new head of the Russian non-systemic opposition. The decision is due to her greater controllability, as well as problems with alcohol in Yulia Navalnaya.

    На фоне проблем с алкоголем у Юлии Навальной на роль лидера несистемной оппозиции готовят её дочь

    According to sources in Yulia Navalnaya’s entourage, with whom RT has spoken, the issue of replacing her as opposition leader is being actively discussed amongst the political curators and sponsors of FBK [Fund for the Struggle Against Corruption — ME]. The wife of the founder of FBK cannot cope with this function — Yulia prefers social events organized by opposition sponsors to active political activities. Trust in Yulia is also reduced owing to her problems with alcohol, according to people familiar with the situation.

    Sources emphasize that Navalny’s daughter Daria seems to be a more favourable candidate for the role of leader of the Russian non-systemic opposition. She graduated from Stanford University in the United States, is linguistically and culturally more integrated into the Western political community, manageable and predictable. Sources do not rule out that a scenario for her nomination in one of the districts in the upcoming Moscow City Duma elections may be developed to start her political career.

    At the same time, according to RT, Navalny’s former associates, Maria Pevchikh** and Leonid Volkov**, who are in conflict with each other on the basis of leadership in FBK, are not ready to consider anyone from the Navalny family at the head of the organization and are consulting with curators in the United States and Great Britain related to alternative projects of the opposition leadership.

    As RT reported earlier, in the environment of the Russian non-systemic opposition, after the death of Alexey Navalny, the contradictions between the leaders of the main groups have significantly worsened: the confrontation is in the struggle for financial flows and grants from Western curators.
     
    * The organization is recognized as extremist and its activities are banned on the territory of Russia by the decision of the Moscow City Court of 09.06.2021.

    ** Recognized as foreign agents by the decision of the Ministry of Justice of the Russian Federatio

    Vote for Daria!

    Like

  71. From a so-concerned Russian 5th columnist I suspect

    Why Macron is not afraid of coffins from the Ukraine. And the French aren’t afraid either

    Simpering French fucker! — ME

    The news, of course, is disturbing. [Who says? — ME] After the North Atlantic Alliance in Brussels had announced the creation of a “NATO mission for the Ukraine”, which will enter either Lvov or Kiev, Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said (as quoted by Polskie Radio 24):

    “It is important that Putin understands: we are planning well, and this is for several years. Putin can’t win in a few months, or even in a year or two. As NATO, we are 20 times richer than [Russia] is, and we can afford a prolonged conflict.

    [Sikorsky speaks and the world trembles! — ME]

    The idea of the Ukraine Support Fund is that the Alliance will coordinate the supply of weapons to the Ukraine from the United States and will oversee the training of Ukrainian military personnel. So far, NATO has been reluctant to openly intervene and has relied on Washington to avoid giving the impression that the Alliance is a party to the conflict. Now we have no such concerns.”

    It is not so much the Mission itself that is dangerous [Who says? — ME], but what it means for the further development of the situation. More than 2 thousand people took part in our survey [Whose survey? — ME] on this issue, and the overwhelming majority of readers (68%) chose “The precursor to a large-scale NATO troop surge” as the answer to the question what they thought the most important thing was.

    There is no doubt [Who says? — ME] that the French will make up the shock fist of this “Mission”, to which Dmitry Medvedev has already responded in the style of “no return of bodies and you will see everyone in coffins”. Undoubtedly, this is a message for Macron, who, probably, according to Medvedev, can still stop.

    But this is unlikely…

    It’s all about Macro’s plans to send (or he has already sent) his most capable forces – the “French Foreign Legion”. This is the so-called special military formation in the French Land forces. Remember the movie “Legionnaire” with Van Damme, when he enlists in this very “Foreign Legion”?

    Oh, a movie clip showing how fearsome the Frogs are! — ME

    This legion consists of 11 regiments totaling 9,000 men. The peculiarity is that almost all of these people are not French, that is, not French citizens.

    People from all over the world, from more than 100 countries, are gathered there. Mostly – poor countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Many people there don’t even speak French properly.

    That is, the “Legion” as such is a legalized mercenary activity. Something like a private military company, only on state support. The formation has existed since 1814 and participates in foreign missions for France. [And historically gets its arse kicked — ME]

    The “Legion” has already fought against Russia – in the Crimean War of 1853-1856. Also during the Second World War, part of the “Legion” fought on the side of Hitler.

    [Oh, I’m scared!!!! I really am! — ME]

    The Legion reports directly to the President of France, that is, in the current situation – to Macron. It’s like his personal guard. Therefore, the “Legion” does not need any permission from any other French authorities, Macron’s order is enough.

    And do you think Macron will particularly regret the deaths of “some” Moroccans, Peruvians, Vietnamese and Albanians?

    And in general, will the French regret that people who simply do not have any relatives in France are dying? Unlikely. They won’t even know that someone died there.

    So it’s really useless to scare the French with “black bags”. These packages will not affect them in any way.

    [Right!Got you! So Dimka’s comment about body bags returning to Froggieland means fuck all to the Frogs — ME]

    Scary! — ME

    And, by the way, about the number of 9,000 people… This is data for 2018. There is no doubt that now the “Legion” has significantly increased (in the past, it was also 50 000 soldiers). [Yeah, they’re just flocking to join the Froggie Foreign Legion — ME]

    In addition, there is nothing to prevent France from organizing a constant flow of recruits. After all, it is not for nothing that they have driven Africa into poverty, where men for 3,000 euros are ready to do anything to feed their families. There are a great many such men there.

    So I should not underestimate this threat. Macron theoretically has a resource at his disposal that he will feel no more sorry for than the Ukrainians.

    I am not speaking theoretically, because there is also such information. Many people talk about it, but it seems to me that it was best formulated by the Ukrainian expert Andrey Zolotarev on the air of the Ukrainian News Live channel:

    “If you look at Europe, the same Britain, economically, militarily, it is completely unprepared. 80 thousand in its land forces — this is about nothing; homeopathic doses of military production —also about nothing. This is well understood both in Germany and in France, but the problem is that the consumer society, which was nurtured by individualism, does not fit well with sacrifice in the name of war. And the ideals of tolerance, multiculturalism, and LGBT culture do not fit well with patriotism.

    The prevailing view was that contract armies were needed. Yes, as long as extreme athletes, adventurers, and military enthusiasts went there, everything was fine. But as soon as they smell gunpowder, what do we see? In France, contract soldiers are being laid off, and in Britain there is also a shortage of personnel. They are not eager to serve in the Bundeswehr either. So far, only Poland has realized the upcoming threats earlier than others and has begun a large-scale increase in the armed Forces from 100 to 300 thousand people and a large-scale modernization of the Armed Forces.”

    [A Yukietard “expert” has spoken on the only government media channel —ME]

    Or, for example, a participant in a special operation with the call sign “Ghost”. He said this on the air of the TV channel “Crimea 24”:

    “Those mercenaries who are now against us in the Belgorod region, they have always been there. I used to hit them near a coal mine back in July 2022 – these Polacks, Romanians, Germans, they were all there. They just weren’t talked about much. And now they have started to get fucked up, now there are, in general, moments captured on video.

    Therefore, there are fables that say that France is ready to send troops, Spain is ready to send troops. I got a call from a friend in France. Do you know what’s going on in France? The troops are being dismissed, and the French are being dismissed en masse.

    That’s not good either. If only these military men had stayed — intelligent, developed, understanding what is involved, but now who will be recruited? Nationalists, migrants, all the rabble will join this army, both in France and Spain. And they will be here, and they will find a grave here. We have plenty of land” [where they can be buried].

    However, now is not loke 1853 and 1942. This is the Internet age. And even this potential “French rabble”, as the “Ghost” says, can read for itself what awaits it in Odessa, what “Kalibres” they will enjoy and what Dmitry Medvedev has personally promised all of them…

    Subscribe like) I shall be very grateful to you.

    Alexander Bochkarev

    https://absolute-rating.mirtesen.ru/blog/43835951819/Pochemu-Makron-ne-boitsya-grobov-iz-Ukrayinyi-I-frantsuzyi-tozhe?utm_referrer=mirtesen.ru

    Like

    1. Ah, ‘BJ’ Sikorski again. Didn’t he learn from last time in office that pleasuring the US doesn’t pay dividends?

      Apparently not, as being part of the GC (Genius Class), doing the same thing over and over again, however many times it has failed, just might work this time!

      At some point in future when the penny drops, he can reduce his US services to handjobs. It is hard to beat an addiction though.

      Like

      1. Cristina Odone, lucky wife of British beefcake intellectual and political hopeful Edward Lucas, used to enthuse lustily over what a moist-making good-looking man Sikorski was. I guess she has not seen him lately. He’s beginning to look like a cross between his mother and a Ling Cod. Convenient, I suppose, since one of the tenets of western politics is whosoever has the largest mouth shall command the most attention.

        Like

  72. DW in Russian

    Lithuania will purchase for the Ukraine about 3,000 drones . The Lithuania Ministry of Defence plans to allocate 2 million euros for the acquisition, said Prime Minister Ingrida Šimonytė, expressing her hope that the drones would end up at the front lines this year.

    And kill Russians.

    NOTE: Lithuania is not at war with Russia.

    Oh look! A woman first minister!

    Thank god the prime minister of Lithuania is not a loathsome Alpha-male!

    Bear in mind, in my opinion, Ingrida does look a little “trans”.

    Ingrida Šimonytė , by the way, is now 49 years old, unmarried, no children. She has stated that she does not oppose the introduction of same-sex civil unions to Lithuania, which attracted the support of LGBT rights activists. Additionally, Šimonytė has stated that while she would never have an abortion herself, she would not condemn women who choose to do so.

    Just sayin’ — and I hardly think that at this stage in her life, it is highly unlikely that Šimonytė should ever have to face the stressful decision over whether to abort a pregnancy.

    Like

    1. By the look of her, at any stage in her life, pardon the unkindness. The west and its acolytes seem to have seized on drones as ‘something we can do’, and it looks like a substantial purchase because drones are cheap, so a little money will buy a lot of them. Consider, though; if you use them for surveillance you can probably get several flights out of them, but if you use them to drop a bomb they can probably only be used once, like an artillery shell. But an artillery shell causes many times the damage of a typical load which can be carried by a quadcopter, can be accurately fired in the dark or in high winds, and Ukraine would burn through 3,000 artillery shells in two days at most, if it had them. Lithuania and other cheerleaders know the typical uses by Ukraine for drones are in attacks on refineries – which Uncle Sam is begging Ukraine to stop doing because it is driving the global price of gas up, which hurts Biden’s already-shaky re-election prospects – and terror attacks on non-military civilian population centres like Belgorod. And as already pointed out, terrorism is the weapon of the weak. Drones have unquestionably changed the makeup of land and sea war, and Russia has accelerated its own purchases and production of drones. But drones alone will not win the war for Ukraine, and it is increasingly clear that nothing currently available will, except nukes. And so far nobody is willing to take that step. My concern is that NATO will take that fatal step and commit its own troops to battle…and then resort to nukes when it becomes clear it cannot win and will be defeated.

      Like

      1. Double negative above:

        I hardly think that at this stage in her life, it is highly unlikely that Šimonytė should ever have to face the stressful decision over whether to abort a pregnancy.

        I should have not negated “think” with “hardly”; I should have written:

        I should think that at this stage in her life, it is highly unlikely that Šimonytė should ever have to face the stressful decision over whether to abort a pregnancy.

        Like

  73. Helmer:

    Ukraine plan of Crocus City Hall Attack to Start Ethnic Pogroms, Civil War in Russia

    As I have already said many times before, all the street sweepers, snow shifters, janitors etc. here at Taganka, Moscow, are Tajics. Many of the cashiers in the supermarkets are as well, one of whom in particular always being friendly with me and my wife, albeit he bugs me by calling me “Granddad”. I was talking to him the other day, in fact, when he finally and very politely asked me my nationality. He was gobsmacked to learn that I am one of those loathsome Anglo-Saxons whom many bloggers seem to like to rant on about. He thought I was a Georgian. (That bugged me an’ all, bloody stupid immigrant!) I told him that like him, I was an economic immigrant, which statement he found very funny.

    I saw last week a frightful photo in a news story here in “Moskovskiy Komsomolets” that showed a terribly wounded former SMO soldier with his mother. That photo still haunts my memory. The unfortunate man had lost both his forearms and had been blinded.

    He is a Buryat.

    Like

  74. TASS

    6 APR, 03:14

    Kiev asks EU to shut its airspace to Russian passengers

    Similar measures should target Belarussian nationals as well, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denis Shmygal said

    MOSCOW, April 6. /TASS/. Ukrainian Prime Minister Denis Shmygal has called on the European Union to shutter its airspace not only to Russian and Belarusian flights but also to passengers from the two countries.

    “Our idea is to prevent Russian businesses and Russian tourists from using the EU skies comfortably,” the Ukrainian PM told a telethon audience. “The EU sky is closed to Russian airlines, but we have also discussed closing transit to any flights to and from Russia with our partners,” he said, adding that similar measures should target Belarussian nationals as well.

    Kiev will insist on such sanctions and work toward imposing them with the European Commission, Shmygal underscored.

    The EU banned all Russian flights after the start of the special military operation in Ukraine in February 2022. The bloc imposed similar restrictions on Belarusian carriers in the spring of 2021.

    Kiev telling the EU what it should do?

    As far as I am aware, Banderastan is not an EU member state.

    Like

    1. EU airlines have been complaining to the u-Ropean Commission recently that it is unfair that they cannot over fly Russia while the likes of Chinese and other airlines can. They think maybe Brussels can ‘investigate’ the issue. Morons. It’s nothing to do with ‘anti-competitive behavior’, rather self-sanctioning by the Genius Class.

      Like

    2. Go ahead – make my day. Something will be devised to cause such an initiative to backfire on the west the way the airspace ban has. Pundits chortle that Russia is losing out on about $420 Million a year in airspace transit fees just from Europe – but Japan Airlines is paying as much as $20,000 extra per flight in added fuel charges on the Tokyo-London run.

      https://thepointsguy.com/news/russia-bans-uk-airlines-from-airspace/

      I’d be very surprised to see the west take up the Ukrainian request, however; it comes at a time when everyone outside Ukraine and Russia is growing weary of Ukraine’s ongoing whinging, especially as it grows increasingly clear that it cannot win the war and so effort expended in extra punitive measures is essentially punishing Russia for winning a conflict in which the dice were heavily loaded against it – again, not a good look for an outfit which pumps itself up as a champion of fairness. Additionally, singling out individuals for their citizenship is directly against the principles the west advertised from the first – this is a war of wills between us and the Russian government, and not the Russian people.

      However, Ukraine is welcome to try; a reciprocal measure by Russia might be the announcement that it is sending back to Ukraine all Ukrainians who do not currently have Russian citizenship. The Ukrainian government might welcome such an initiative for the shot in the arm it would give its recruiting efforts for cannon fodder for the front lines, but I anticipate a considerably less-enthusiastic reaction from Ukrainian refugees sent back to a country which lives on international handouts and struggles to keep the lights on.

      Like

  75. Kaboom!!!

    That explosion above was not the result of an attack made by a Russian drone.

    02: 43, 6 April 2024

    AFU ammunition depot hit in Kharkov

    The pro-Russian underground has reported the destruction of an AFU warehouse in Kharkov as the result of missile strikes

    An ammunition depot has tentatively been hit in Kharkov. This was announced by a representative of the pro-Russian underground Sergey Lebedev, reports TASS.

    “00: 20 [Moscow time], two strikes in the city, very loud and voluminous,” he said.

    On 26 March, a Russian missile strike on Odessa hit a sanatorium for employees of the Security Service of the Ukraine (SBU) and a large ammunition depot of the armed forces of the republic (AFU).

    Earlier it was reported that a drone of the Russian Armed Forces had saved seven Russian soldiers from an attack by ramming a Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicle. It is specified that the incident occurred in the south-Donetsk direction.

    Like

    1. In addition to the above . . .

      “One of the strikes caused a large detonation, which half of Kharkov listened to for more than an hour. Local authorities are trying to pass off the arrival as an attack on supermarkets”, the source said, referring to his colleagues.

      Lebedev noted that the strike hit an ammunition depot located in open fields. There are several supermarkets located in this area: Metro, Karavan, Epicenter and City Mall. None of them has worked since February 2022.

      On 3 April, Lebedev reported that near Kharkov, in the area of the Merefyansky mechanical plant, a place was hit where there are assembled and stored UAVs of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine .

      source

      Lying Yukietrash claim that the Evil Orcs had made an attack on supermarkets!

      What?

      Really?

      Just as Yukieshites regularly do in the Donbass and Belgorod?

      More news now coming through about that Evil orc attack againsts supermarkets near Karkhov:

      06 April 2024, 09: 18

      It has became known what the destroyed AFU warehouse in Kharkov had been used for.

      Underground coordinator Lebedev: Vampire rockets were stored in the Ukrainian Armed Forces warehouse in Kharkov

      An ammunition depot of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine (AFU), which was located in Kharkov and was destroyed by the Russian military, had been used to store rockets used in Vampire multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS). About this, with reference to his colleagues, the coordinator of the Nikolaev underground Sergey Lebedev informed RIA Novosti.

      According to the news agency, on the night of 6 April, the Russian Armed Forces attacked a Ukrainian ammunition depot in Kharkov. Russian troops successfully completed the task, hitting their given target.

      “Our agents from Kharkov are sure that Vampire rockets for an MLRS, which are supplied by the Czech Republic, were stored there”, Lebedev said.

      He added that the soldiers of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine actively use such ammunition in the bombardment of the Belgorod region.

      On the morning of 6 April, the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation reported an operation of the air defense systems in the Belgorod region. According to the ministry, 10 rockets from a Vampire MLRS were at once shot down in the sky over the region. They had been launched from the territory of the Ukraine.

      Earlier, in the Kharkov region, the Russian military hit an assembly point of foreign mercenaries of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine.

      I wonder how many , if any, defenceless Russian villages Yukieswine targetted last night?

      Like

  76. Dedicated to you-know-who . . .

    AiF

    05.04.2024 21:56

    “Coffins” fall from the sky. Russia’s missile and bomb attack has given the Ukraine hell.

    It is unlikely that the Ukrainian air defence system expected such a massive repeated Russian strike. They didn’t have time to trumpet the absolute destruction of all the Russian missiles and drones as they again arrived in the Ukraine. The light disappeared in Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhia, Kirovohrad, Poltava, and Sumy regions. In Zaporozhye, the blow fell on the workshops of the Motor Sich plant and the locations of units being prepared for sending to the front line. In Kharkov, newly restored transformer substations were destroyed again: several districts of the city were left without electricity. The substation that provides electricity to the Malyshev tank Factory has failed again. Military facilities in the Odessa and Kherson regions are burning and exploding.

    Kharkiv is on fire, but without light

    According to Ukrainian media, after the latest Russian strikes against Kharkov and the surrounding areas, almost half a million users of electrical power were de-energized. The Kharkov city administration is talking about a possible complete blackout in some areas of the city, taking into account the current crisis situation. Electric transport has been suspended in the city.

    As Ukrainian Prime Minister Denis Shmygal said in an interview with Estonian television, there are practically no entire thermal power plants left in the Ukraine now.

    “80% of Ukrainian thermal power plants have been destroyed. Russia continues to hit our energy facilities, destroy transformers and generators”, the Ukrainian minister said.

    A few hours ago, Kharkiv Mayor Igor Terekhov said that in addition to cruise missiles, objects in the city had been attacked with “smart” high-explosive aerial bombs. There is significant damage to administrative buildings.

    The dragon’s teeth were popping out like champagne corks

    According to information from Kharkov partisans, in addition to the equipment grounds at the Kharkov Military Tank School, barracks and dormitories housing personnel and instructors had been destroyed.

    “Large fabs are not used for small targets”, said Air Force Major General, military expert Vladimir Popov. “If a FAB-500 or even a FAB-1500 has hit home, then the military target was really important.”

    Particularly noteworthy is the strike on the city of Merefa located in the immediate vicinity of Kharkov. There are several large industrial enterprises there that produce products for the Armed Forces of the Ukraine. One of the strikes of the FAB-1500 with UMPC* hit the reinforced concrete splant, which manufactures concrete defensive structures. According to eyewitness accounts posted on social media, the explosion caused concrete dragon’s teeth to fly around the place like champagne corks.

    By the way, Ukrainian soldiers and Russian high-explosive aerial bombs (fabs) are called “coffins”.

    “Many people go crazy from waiting for the arrival and explosions of coffins”, combatants write in Telegram channels,”There is simply no escape from them”.

    Iskanders visited Zaporizhia in the late afternoon

    Vladimir Rogov, head of the public movement “We are Together with Russia”, has spoken about the arrival of Russian missiles at the workshops sites of the Motor Sich plant.

    “Arrivals of two Iskander-K OTRK missiles. At the very least there has been a hit on the industrial site ‘Motor Sich'”, he wrote in his Telegram channel.

    The Zaporozhye plant is currently assembling engines for military aircraft, repairing various military equipment of the Armed Forces of the Ukraine that arrives from the battle zone. A few days ago, Russian missiles were already arriving at its workshops. The townspeople heard four powerful explosions, two of which were followed by repeated detonations.

    Now the explosions in Ukraine have subsided. But the fact that the night will be calm, no one promises…

    A “smart” FAB-1500 aerial bomb

    *UMPC Unified Set of Planning and Correction Modules — is a set of equipment designed to convert free-falling aircraft bombs into planning guided (homing) ammunition.

    FAB-500-M62 with a set of UMPC, suspended from an Su-34 bomber. One of the first published photos. For the dumb Orcs, a quantum leap from using shovels as weapons. The circuitry for the UMPC, however, comes from looted Banderite automatic washing machines.

    Like

    1. Ha. ha!! Shovels! I had forgotten that particularly-egregious propaganda chestnut. Yes, that was back when Russia was trembling on the edge of being out of ammunition altogether, and was looking like having to resort to stones and clubs with nails in the end (like at the Glorious Maidan, nudge, nudge). No use trying that on now, I’m afraid; Russia is pretty clearly able to keep up with its ammunition demands. Sadly, when it’s all over nobody will remember what a comical laugh riot for information the British Intelligence services were, and memories will once again turn to their sexy clipped accents and how professional they sound.

      Like

      1. No doubt the kit looks relatively unsophisticated to western eyes who are used to weapons looking sleek and sexy, but it gets the job done and its very good value, not to mention liberating those huge stocks of FABs for action. Yet again, How many divisions does the Pope have?

        Like

      2. TASS: Turkey resumes visa regime for citizens of Tajikistan

        https://tass.com/world/1771425

        The decision comes into force from the moment of publication

        ANKARA, April 6. /TASS/. Turkey has canceled the visa-free regime for citizens of Tajikistan holding regular foreign passports, according to a decree by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan published on Saturday in the official state paper Resmi gazete.

        “A decision was made to cancel the visa-free regime for citizens of Tajikistan holding ordinary foreign passports when traveling to Turkey,” the document said.

        The adopted measure was based on the Law on Foreigners and International Protection. The decision comes into force from the moment of publication.

        Like

  77. A hit, a very palpable hit!

    A successful Banderite drone strike against a shop in a Belgorod housing block.

    That shop had been giving the Yukieshites a lot of trouble recently, but now it has been eliminated.

    Like

  78. Get ready for a so-concerned posting from you-know-who!

    The Main Intelligence Directorate [of Banderastan] has announced a pipeline rupture by means of an explosion in the Rostov region. According to Ukraine intelligence, this happened during the night of 6 April near the village of Azov. Through this pipeline were pumped oil products into tankers at the “Azov Sea Port”. The Russian authorities have made no comment on the situation.

    My, that should stop the Agressors dead in their tracks!

    Like

    1. More likely Russia will simply surrender, as these relentless acts of sabotage will never cease until Banderastan is victorious. Might as well get it over with, and kneel to Churchilensky.

      Alternatively, the Russian investigative services could catch a couple of these saboteurs, and then the Russian judicial system could order them publicly hanged. Works quite well in some countries.

      Like

  79. Yep, Banderastan has taken on responsibility for an alleged targetting of a civilian target on Russian territory:

    Ukrainian intelligence took responsibility for blowing up an oil pipeline in the Rostov region

    Today, 15: 32

    In the Ukraine they say that an oil pipeline was blown up in the Rostov region near the city of Azov, which was allegedly used for military purposes.

    In particular, the Main Intelligence Directorate (GUR) of the Ministry of Defence of the Ukraine has actually taken responsibility for this sabotage, writing about it on its Telegram channel.

    Another military facility is on fire in Russia. On the night of April 6, 2024, a pipeline was blown up near the settlement of Azov (Rostov region)

    – says the GUR message.

    According to Ukrainian intelligence, this oil pipeline was used to pump oil products from a local oil depot to tankers in the Azov port. At the same time, it is not specified how the oil pipeline was blown up – whether it was a blow up by a or sabotage. The GUR message about the explosion at the oil pipeline is accompanied by a short video, in which it is absolutely impossible to understand what is happening.

    In Russia, there have been no official reports confirming the rupture through an explosive device of an oil pipeline in the Rostov region.

    However, last night several dozen Ukrainian drones attacked the territory of the Rostov region, but according to the Russian Ministry of Defence, they were shot down by air defence systems (44 UAVs). Damage was reported to one of the electrical substations in the Morozovsky district of the region.

    According to the governor of the Rostov region Vasily Golubev, as a result of the detonation of an explosive device on one of the fallen drones, eight people were injured.

    US Congress! Send more money! We’re winning!

    Like

  80. Wall Street Journal

    Ukraine’s ‘Mad Max’ Trawls Swamps and Minefields for Shells

    Kyiv’s ammunition shortage is so acute that a soldier who hunts for Russian shells—and makes his own bombs—has become an important supplier for some units

    Part scavenger, part backyard bomb-maker Max Polyukhovich estimates he has supplied at least 14,000 shells to troops in Ukraine’s east.

    Part scavenger, part backyard bomb-maker Max Polyukhovich estimates he has supplied at least 14,000 shells to troops in Ukraine’s east.

    By Ian Lovett and Nikita Nikolaienko | Photographs by Serhii Korovayny for The Wall Street Journal

    April 5, 2024 11:00 pm ET

    KAMYANKA, Ukraine — At the edge of a stream in this decimated village, Max Polyukhovich dug through the mud with his hands in search of an elusive grail. After a few moments, he pulled out a smooth gray hunk of metal, several feet long: an unused Russian artillery shell. 

    Ukraine is so short on ammunition that Polyukhovich, a 36-year-old soldier, has become an important source of shells for brigades across the eastern front. 

    Weapons deliveries from the U.S. are held up in Congress, and the shortage has driven Kyiv to resort to shoestring solutions—such as explosive drones and leftover Russian shells—to try to hold back Moscow’s forces. 

    Part scavenger, part backyard bomb-maker, Polyukhovich has dived into swamps and hiked for miles through minefields in search of the unused munitions Russian troops left behind when they retreated. Some of what he finds can be fired by Ukraine’s artillery right away; some of it he takes back to his makeshift laboratory, where he reshapes the explosive into ammunition for attack drones.  

    Known by the call sign “Mad Max,” he has supplied at least 14,000 shells to brigades across Ukraine’s east, plus 4,000 munitions for aerial drones to drop on Russian troops and vehicles, he estimates.

    Polyukhovich survived an injury last summer and has made finding and making ammunition his full-time job since.

    “Commanders’ appetite is increasing,” he said. “If I send 100 rounds, they call the next day asking for more ammo.”

    Officers in Ukraine’s 92nd Assault Brigade, which is fighting around the destroyed eastern village of Andriivka, said the shortage of artillery shells is so critical that even when drones spot Russian targets, the brigade can’t always fire at them.

    “If the Russians made a large-scale attack later, we’d be out of shells,” said a major from the brigade, who goes by the call sign Angel. “We’re in constant economy mode.”

    [Clearly USA journalists have problems with English grammar; I really do think that what the Banderastan major said, should have been translated into English thus: “If the Russians had made a large-scale attack later, we’d have been out of shells” — if had been talking about a hypothetical past event. However, if the major is quoted as talking about the future, about a hypothetical situation after the time of his quoted utterance, about a hypothetical future, and so he should have been quoted as saying in English: “If the Russians made a large-scale attack later [i.e. after now, later today, tomorrow, next week etc.], we’d be out of shells”. I am sure he was not hypothesizing about the future, simply because it is hardly likely that the Russians would in the future cease fire because of a shell shortage, which is the whole point of the article and what the major said: the Yukietards are suffering from a munitions shortage, the Russians are certainly not — ME]

    Though Polyukhovich’s contributions help, they can’t compensate entirely for Kyiv’s huge deficit in shells, with commanders estimating Russia fires around five times as many a day.

    A hulking figure, with an unruly dark beard and bright green eyes, Polyukhovich has been fighting for eight years in eastern Ukraine, where the war has been raging since the covert Russian invasion in 2014. 

    Polyukhovich has dived into swamps and hiked through minefields in search of the unused munitions Russian troops left behind when they retreated.

    Some of the shells can be sent to front-line troops right away, others Polyukhovich repurposes to be dropped from Ukraine’s attack drones.

    Though he worked mostly as a de-miner, he sometimes joined assaults in the first year of the full-scale war [There’s that compulsory for Western presstitutes “full scale war” meme again! — ME], which began in February 2022. Then, last summer, he was shot. His body armor saved him from major injury, and he saw the growing hunger for shells during his recovery. Since then, he has turned finding and making ammunition into his full-time job. 

    He concentrates his searches on areas that Moscow occupied early in the war. Just from the swamps around Izyum, in the northeastern Kharkiv region, he said he has recovered 2,500 usable shells, which the Russians dumped into the water before fleeing [Did they really “flee”? I thought it was a well executed withdrawal of what was mostly LPR/DPR militia, during which withdrawal Banderite losses were very high. However, the official “narrative” is that the Kharkov [Russian spelling, unlike Ukrainian shitwit dialect spelling as used by Western presstitutes — ME] the Region advance by the Banderites was an outstanding “victory”, because “taking territory” is a USA military obsession — ME] in September 2022, when Ukraine retook the area during a lightning offensive [for which the opportunity was offered to Yukieshites whilst the Russians created a land bridge for the Crimea as far as the left bank of the Dnieper — ME]

    Before dawn, Polyukhovich scours the no man’s land between Russian and Ukrainian lines gathering unexploded or abandoned munitions.

    The water didn’t damage the shells, he said. But if he finds even a tiny dent on the body of one, he throws it away. The dent could change the shell’s trajectory, putting artillery teams at risk of accidentally hitting their own troops. 

    A collection of mines in Polyukhovich’s compound, which he sometimes uses to craft bombs for drones.

    While his job was mostly to disarm mines, Polyukhovich also joined the fighting following Russia’s invasion in 2022. [The WSJ sub-editor failed to notice that the term “full-scale invasion” had not been used ! — ME]

    The dangerous work has seen a member of Polyukhovich’s team killed when trying to deactivate an antipersonnel mine.

    On a recent afternoon, The Wall Street Journal accompanied Polyukhovich to Kamyanka, a village in the Kharkiv region, where Russian forces had set up several artillery positions early in the war. The roofs on all but a few homes had been blown out. Only a handful of locals remained in town. 

    Polyukhovich had already made dozens of trips to the village, searching every home and recovering about 1,000 shells.

    When he arrived, two local women greeted him with a plate of meat-filled pancakes. “I found something near the stream,” one of the women, Svitlana Kordyenko, said. “Go look.” 

    Wooden boxes used to transport shells littered the bank. Polyukhovich soon pulled a shell out of the mud. 

    But he was looking for a larger bounty—the sites where Russian forces kept their shells during the occupation. From talking to locals, he knew the Russians had three artillery positions in the area.  

    “There have to be more shells,” he said. “Given the amount of artillery guns they had, there should be 10,000 shells in this village.” 

    In a field, near one of the artillery positions, he found a few wooden planks in the ground.

    “There could be more underneath,” he said. He decided he would need to come back with excavating equipment to look.

    Polyukhovich is known among the few residents left in the Kamyanka area, who help point him in the direction of abandoned Russian shells. [The two women look like Yukie Tatars to me — ME]

    Polyukhovich often focuses his search on the region’s swamps — a popular dumping spot for retreating Russian soldiers.

    After searching Kamyanka, Polyukhovich headed back to his laboratory. His wife lives not far from the village, but he said he didn’t have time to visit her. He had seen her only a few times since the full-scale war began. His ex-wife and son have left the country — he’s not sure where they are. [I bet his former wife and son are in Russia! Kamyanka, a little to the south of Izyum, is about 70 miles as the crow flies from the Russian border — ME]

    During his last vacation, he spent one of his two days off looking for shells. 

    “How can I explain to my wife that she’s not the most important thing for me right now?” he said. 

    Officers from the 92nd Brigade said Polyukhovich had supplied them with more than 8,000 shells. Still, Polyukhovich’s stocks don’t compensate for the drop in deliveries from the West. Ukrainian forces are now firing about 2,000 shells a day, down sharply from last summer.

    Polyukhovich mostly finds 152mm caliber shells, which work with Soviet-era artillery guns. Ukraine is also increasing its production of 152mm ammunition, the officers said. 

    But the brigade’s Western artillery pieces take 155mm shells, and the supply of such ammunition from abroad has dwindled. 

    “The problem is we have three times more 155-caliber pieces than 152-caliber,” Angel said, adding that the 155mm shells were also more accurate. As a result, most of the brigade’s guns are sitting idle. 

    [And those previous four paragraphs concern the nitty gritty of the artillery ammunition situation in Banderastan, the efforts of swamp-searching Banderastan nationalist notwithstanding — ME]

    In addition to searching for Russian shells, Polyukhovich has set up an operation to make bombs for drones, which have become increasingly important in recent months, as Western ammunition has been depleted. 

    Polyukhovich is usually up by 4 a.m. “I don’t sleep well,” he said, adding that when he does doze off, “I see the horrible things I’ve witnessed in this war.”

    Before dawn, he often drives toward the front line, then walks into the no man’s land between Ukrainian and Russian positions.

    He carefully steps through the fields, disarming Russian antitank mines and taking them with him. By the time the sun is fully up, he is bringing the loot to his lab.

    “Max” is scrawled on the rusted gate outside Polyukhovich’s compound, along with a spray-painted skull and crossbones. In the courtyard, he steps around piles of antitank mines and artillery shells. He sleeps in one of the houses. The other he has turned into a bomb factory. 

    He cuts open the antitank mines and empties the explosive powder into slow cookers. A mask of Guy Fawkes, who plotted to blow up the English Parliament in the 17th century, hangs from a beam above.

    “I’m the head chef here,” he said.

    Once the explosive is liquefied, he and a few assistants pour it into homemade shells. He held up one of his creations: a plastic sheath, filled with explosive and duct-taped to a ball of shrapnel, which a drone could drop onto infantry. 

    “These bastards cover my motherland with their f—ing mines,” Polyukhovich said. “We collect them, reassemble them, and then send them back.” 

    A mask of Guy Fawkes hangs in Max Polyukhovich’s workshop.

    As the shortage of artillery shells has grown more acute, some brigades have sent their de-miners to learn Polyukhovich’s methods.

    As the shortage of artillery shells has grown more acute in recent weeks, brigades have started sending their de-miners to Polyukhovich, hoping he’ll teach them how to find more ammunition.

    It is dangerous work. Several months ago, while Polyukhovich was out, his team tried to deactivate an antipersonnel mine, which is more sensitive than the antitank mines they normally work with. It went off, killing one of them and pockmarking the side of Polyukhovich’s house. 

    “I’ve become the kind of person who can’t comfort someone as he’s dying,” Polyukhovich said. “I prefer to just turn away. It’s impossible to forget the eyes of a dying person.”

    For now, he has taken on one protégé, a 40-year-old sergeant who goes by the call sign Tikhy, meaning quiet. He lives with Polyukhovich in his house and helps him run the lab. 

    In the past couple of weeks, Polyukhovich has started to let Tikhy come with him to collect mines. Recently they have also found downed Russian surveillance drones, which Ukrainian commanders had been looking for, so they can analyze and find a way to jam them. 

    Though Tikhy has been trained as a de-miner, Polyukhovich keeps an eye on him as they step through the fields. 

    “I worry about him too much,” Polyukhovich said. “He’s too kind, too polite. It’s not the attitude you need in war.” 

    Polyukhovich’s protégé, a 40-year-old sergeant who goes by the call sign Tikhy, which means ‘quiet,’ helps run his lab.

    And sooner than later, there will be a loud bang at Polyukovich’s little workshed, and all that will be left of him will be lumps of soggy, bloody flesh scattered all around and hanging from the rafters — if the roof is still there.

     

    Like

    1. They likely need more 155mm stuff, and have more 155mm artillery pieces because American shops in Poland can re-barrel them. They are gradually running out of 152mm pieces because they have no replacement barrels left. And those are not ‘slow-cookers’ the bomb-maker is using, they’re pressure cookers.

      https://rotex.ua/en/multi-cookers/

      Like

      1. Yes, I thought that too. Referring back to an earlier conversation of said cookers, I forgot to mention that what look like programmable pressure cookers that are on sale here are what the WSJ’s hero of the moment uses to cook explosives in his little bomb-making shed.

        And again, the Banderastan link above is blocked here, perhaps so as to piss Orcs off and make them rise up against the tyrant. Or maybe Putin’s authoritative regime has blocked it. No matter — I can use a VPN on Chrome (I use Yandex as my default browser) to have a look at what’s on offer, but usually, if any site is a “We Stand By Ukraine” blocked one, I think “Fuck you then — I’m not interested!”

        Like

          1. Technically, it’s a ‘multi-cooker’, so it IS able to function as a slow-cooker, and that’s perhaps the mode the bomb-maker is using; it stands to reason that explosives and rapid temperature rise/increased pressure are a bad mix, and I remember way back when terrorists were using innovative bomb tricks to try to get explosives on American airliners (like the shoe-bomber, the underwear bomber, and so on), somebody did a lengthy and quite scientific breakdown of how complicated it actually is to mix two liquids together to generate a volatile explosive. The whole point of it was to discredit the inane do-something security policies which saw airport security confiscating bottles of water, shampoo, all liquids in a container of a certain size. The article was very interesting, and in that case the liquids had to be kept very cold in order to render them safe enough to handle, but the important point was slow, deliberate work and no rapid temperature changes. The individual in the Ukrainian article is allegedly cooking down explosives in order to liquefy them or render them pliable enough that they can be repurposed, and I imagine a slow-cooker function would fit the bill there.

            I’m not familiar with the Rotex brand, but I bought my Instant Pot for $85.00 Canadian back when they were a brand-new idea. They went up in price after that for a year or two, and then gradually back down, so the price you quoted seems quite competitive. I never use mine as a slow-cooker – I have an actual slow-cooker for that – but the pressure-cooking capability has certainly proved useful. It makes that function accessible to people like me, because I was always terrified of my mom’s pressure-cooker – it had this wobbly thing on the top which was some kind of pressure release, and I was always afraid it would explode because it used to creak alarmingly.

            Like

            1. Yeah, the wobbly thing was a safety valve, to which you could add or remove weight by screwing on or screwing off steel rings which had stamped on them how many ounces they weighed. And there was a small, fail-safe safety valve in the lid, in a rubber grommet that would pop-up and release the steam pressure if, for some reason or other, the big adjustable valve in the centre of the lid had not lifted when under too high a pressure. 

              When whatever you are cooking is ready in such a pressure cooker, you’re supposed to let the pressure fall by itself, but I used to take the safety valve off, whereupon the high-pressure steam used to blast out of the vessel just like steam used to do from steam loco safety valves. When I did this, it reminded me of my childhood when I was at railway termini, and the safety valves of locos, standing at platforms with their trains, suddenly and regularly used to “pop”, followed by a thunderously long blast of deafening steam from the loco-boiler.

              God, I’m old! I have described above the sound heard at railway termini in the 1950s.

              The pressure cooker that I had in the UK was what is now an old-fashioned one, I suppose, a “Prestige”:

              Exactly as above.

              For example, I often used to bang a whole quartered chicken into such a pressure cooker with noodles and vegetables and water and spices so as to prepare a whole lot of chicken broth.

              Like

              1. Yes, the modern ones excel at producing top-quality meat broth from meat scraps and vegetable trimmings, in about an hour. Recipes usually specify either a ‘natural release’ (waiting for the pressure to drop with natural cooling) or a ‘quick release’, by simply shifting the valve toggle to one side and letting the steam blast away as you have described. The current technology has simply added programming functions and a timer, so if you put all the materials for chicken broth in it and leave the house, it will turn itself off (actually, enter a ‘keep warm’ mode) after an hour and not cook the contents any further.

                Like

              2. Yes, “Instant Pot” available here in the Evil Empire, sanctions notwithstanding:

                From OZON, a distribution point of which is right facing our house entrance.

                From what I have read, “Instant Pot” was developed in Canada by two colleagues who had worked at Nortel, Ottawa.

                I wonder if you can cook that Froggie-Canadian dish that I should so much like to try and the name of which I have forgotten but if I rightly recall it sounds like “Putin” in French.

                Just remembered!

                Poutine — and not “poutain”.

                😊

                Like

                1. Yes, that’s true; it was developed by two Canadians who discerned almost from the second the prototype sounded its first ‘beep’ that the place to manufacture it in order to realize the most profit would be China. So industrious Chinese make them, Canadians just designed them. The idea caught on rapidly, and it became The Must-Have Kitchen Appliance for about two years. Then Air Fryers took over the spotlight. So Instant Pots began to undergo panel changes, adding more buttons and functions until the one in the picture you sent looks like it would take a NASA technician to operate it. Mine is a Lux model, quite basic, like this:

                  ‘Pressure Cook” is the default on this one, so the only buttons on it I have ever used are ‘Manual’ and the +/- signs to adjust the cook time up or down. Every Instant-Pot recipe I have says ‘cook on high pressure for X minutes’, which is adequately addressed with the buttons I just mentioned. When you finish adjusting the time to your satisfaction – the longest time I have ever put it on for is 60 minutes – it gives you about 3 seconds to change your mind, then it starts and reads ‘On’. It stays that way until it reaches a high-enough internal pressure that the valve shuts, then it reads whatever number you programmed it for, and starts counting down in minutes. When it reaches 0 it beeps, and switches to keep-warm until you press the red ‘cancel’ button, or unplug it.

                  A lot of recipes instruct you to do everything in the pot, including searing the meat in just some oil and an empty pot using the ‘Saute’ button, but I have found it not very effective for that, it tends to have hot spots and to burn the meat if you are not attentive; I use a cast-iron skillet for that, and then proceed with the recipe from that point. I’m sure I don’t use it to anything like its potential, like I don’t most appliances; I am not interested in using my stove to contact the Space Shuttle. When I hit on a technique that works, I just do it that way every time – at least where cooking is concerned.

                  Poutine is just french fries with dry white cheese curds – often called ‘squeakers’ – scattered over them and the whole dish withal bathed in beef gravy. You could make the gravy in the Instant Pot, but it’s not really suitable for frying potatoes, and cheese curds come ready-made.

                  Like

  81. Still below zero here at night, but next week, they say, real spring weather will set in at last. I should like to be at the dacha before the end of April . . .

    Roll on the shashlyk season!

    Chicken skewers

    It’s not even snowing yet. Marinade: salt, pepper, garlic, homemade adjika, ketchup, mayonnaise, a drop of liquid smoke. Very tasty, but spicy.

    The shashlyk above has been cooked too close to the charcoal. If I do shashlyk like that, Mrs. Exile complains like bloody hell! What you do to stop it burning is to spray it with water from one of those things used for spraying big leaves on potted plants.

    But hold anon!

    A doctor has warned about the dangers of shashlyk

    Doctor Belyaeva: crust on overcooked shashlyk contains carcinogens

    5 April, 2024, 07: 08

    General practitioner Maria Belyaeva has warned that the crispy crust on shashlyk is a serious threat to health.

    In an interview with the portal “Podmoskovye Segodnya” on Thursday, 4 April, the specialist noted that excessive heat when cooking shashlyk is fraught with the appearance of serious ailments. She advised to remove the burnt crust from shashlyk, as it contains carcinogens. It is also important to ensure that the meat is not raw, as it may contain parasite larvae.

    Belyaeva noted that it is better to avoid overeating, especially such heavy food as shashlyk, since most often this dish is prepared from meat with a high fat content. This is harmful to the metabolism and blood vessels, and also dangerous for people with gastrointestinal diseases during an acute period of such sicknesses. For cooking shashlyk, the doctor advised choosing the least fatty meat, poultry or fish. It is also better not to get carried away with sauces and spices, a kp.ru. site writes. According to Belyaeva, it is worth serving shashlyk with a large amount of herbs and vegetables.

    In other words, don’t burn the pork , don’t eat undercooked pork, and cut off excess fat.

    But everybody does that!

    Well prepared shashlyk should be soft and juicy.

    And always eat it with herbs and vegetables?

    Everybody does that!

    With dill, parsley, basil, tarragon, mint, coriander, spring onions, tomatoes, gherkins, garlic — all of which grow in our garden/greenhouse.

    That doctor is a dickhead!

    Like

    1. Below one of the cut and pasted pictures from the Russian web, it reads:

      It’s not even snowing yet. Marinade: salt, pepper, garlic, homemade adjika, ketchup, mayonnaise, a drop of liquid smoke. Very tasty, but spicy.

      Well, it was sleeting here again this morning. Adjika is very spicy Georgian dressing. Very tasty. God knows what “liquid smoke” is!

      Found it!

      Liquid smoke is a water-soluble yellow to red liquid used as a flavoring as a substitute for cooking with wood smoke while retaining a similar flavor. It can be used to flavor any meat or vegetable. It is available as pure condensed smoke from various types of wood, and as derivative formulas containing additives.

      Well that sounds carcinogous! Why use artificial smoke flavour? You get that wood smoke flavour off the charcoal.

      Like

      1. Liquid smoke is used to give that smoky je-ne-sais-quoi to foods – almost exclusively meats – that are cooked by other means than over an open fire or charcoal. I have a great recipe for baby back pork ribs cooked in the Instant Pot (a programmable pressure cooker) in which the only ingredients are a cup of water, the ribs, the barbecue rub of spices and 1/4 teaspoon of liquid smoke. In this instance the hype was not a lie; they are ready in about 45 minutes, and when I grabbed the end of a rib bone with the tongs to lift them out, it pulled right out of the meat – they truly are fall-apart tender. Then you just put them under the broiler in the oven for a couple of minutes to crisp them up a bit. The alternative is to cook them all day in a smoker or some more-authentic traditional fashion. But this is done in a wink, and I promise you could not tell the difference. The Instant Pot is a wonder for making tough cuts of meat fall-apart tender and it has many, many uses. It’s probably my most-used kitchen appliance. Here’s that recipe.

        https://iwashyoudry.com/instant-pot-baby-back-pork-ribs/

        Try to disregard the author’s borderline-hysterical football-Mom sincerity; I can take it but it needs to be in small doses. Her timing is all over the map, too, in the beginning she says ‘in only 25 minutes’, the cook time on the recipe is 35 minutes, and at the end she says ‘all in 45 minutes’. I put them on for 40 minutes, and because the Instant Pot is a pressure cooker, it takes some minutes for it to come up to pressure, so 45 in total – exclusive of meal prep – is probably accurate.

        I no longer concern myself with jabbering that this or that is carcinogenic, if it happens to be something I like a lot, such as barbecued meat or bacon. How long do you want to live, anyway? And we are serviced by a medical community which suppressed the opinion of doctors with equal qualifications who said COVID was nothing to get excited about, and which once counseled pregnant women to take up smoking as a means to keep their baby-weight gain down. Yes, that was a long time ago, but advances in medicine where diet is concerned seem stubbornly focused on making you eat broccoli – nobody in a white coat ever claims broccoli will give you cancer.

        Like

        1. I want one! An “Instant Pot”, I mean.

          Back in my bachelor days in the UK, a pressure cooker was my chief cooking utensil too.

          Unfortunately, in order to safeguard “our democracy” [“our” meaning that of the USA] and Western freedoms, I am denied access to the recipe site, the link to which you have included above.

          A Soviet pressure cooker — скороварка [skorovarka].

          Like

        2. I no longer concern myself with jabbering that this or that is carcinogenic, if it happens to be something I like a lot, such as barbecued meat or bacon.

          What you above and what follows is exactly what I think too and have thought for almost all my adult life.

          I realized long ago that it seems to be a cosmic rule amongst medics which runs: If you like it, it’s bad for you!

          Like

    2. Adjika!!! That’s the word I was trying to remember!! When I saw it it was boosted as Georgian; it may not be, I’m not sure of its origin, but it is a dense brick-coloured paste made of peppers and other stuff which is typically served on the side with Georgian cuisine, and it is marvelous; really, really good. This recipe

      https://nofrillskitchen.com/adjika-recipe/

      claims it ‘hails from the western Samegrelo region of Georgia and Abkhazia’, and a quick search of the term gives about equal attribution to Georgia and Abkhazia.

      Like

          1. Anyone who has been to the balkans knows about their analogue version (though without nuts), Ajvar.

            I’ve been on the lookout for a decent one for a while.

            Croatia’s Hina make one but it is industrial, Serbia’s ‘Mamas’ brand is very good but expensive.

            But the Northern Macedonians make the best one, which I found in the Polski Sklep (the spicy one, that is) and reasonably priced too!

            https://rolnik.pl/oferta/rolnik-premium/mediterana/pasty/

            Like

  82. Первый Новостной

    The restless trampolinist Annalena Baerbock is now looking for air defence systems

    Today

    photos from the site gazetametro.ru

    photos from the site gazetametro.ru

    Annalena Baerbock’s entire career as German Foreign Minister is like jumping on a trampoline – the poor woman is thrown from one extreme to the other, unless, of course, after another somersault, she is stuck in the ceiling or on floor.

    Then Annalena is trying to get the whole world to support the feminist foreign policy that she has personally invented. However, what it is, no one can really understand yet, since even the 80-page brochure written by the German minister does not give clear answers.

    And now Annalena has started teaching everyone how to live and what to do.

    Anya-Lena just found out about air defense (photo from the site bangkokbook.ru)

    Annalena has just found out about air defence (photo from the site bangkokbook.ru)

    I think everyone remembers the episode with Sergey Lavrov. Back then in New Delhi, Baerbock ignored the agenda of the G20 foreign ministers’ meeting and the host country’s wishes, and lashed out at the Russian minister with demands that Russian troops be withdrawn from a country that isn’t.

    Apparently, Annalena considers herself a part-time German defence minister. However, she can consider herself anything, even the queen of the seas if she should wish to do so.

    But this time Annalena surpassed herself and is not concerned about just anything, but about air defence systems.

    And it would be fine if she declared this within the walls of the German government, but she is ringing her opinion out all over Europe.

    Which is just all so very interesting.

    When exactly did Annalena’s head hit the ground so hard that she was driven to military exploits?

    All the other European foreign ministers are modestly quiet, as they have no trampoline and hardly any opportunities to stick their heads into the ceiling plaster.

    I assume that after air defence systems, Annalena will then either deal with tanks or will be concerned about the prospects for winter crops. Who can work out who or what she is?

    photos from the site mk.ru

    photos from the site mk.ru

    Have your say in the comments!

    I’ll be glad to hear them. Ready to discuss and argue.


    Subscribe to the channel, like, share with friends and comment on what you read – your opinion is very valuable.

    Like

    1. The solution has been staring her in the face and even then she didn’t notice.

      Trampolines. Install them over all sensitive u-Kranian equipment and they will bounce all Russian weapons back to their origin! Maybe she could do a demonstration? 😉

      Like

  83. Ukrainians are tired of war, but there will be no compromises with Russia — head of Zelensky’s office

    06.04.2024 – 20:30

    Ukrainians are tired of war, but there will be no compromises with Russia — - head of Zelensky's office | Russian Spring

    Remember this bitch? What a sweet girl! Wonder if she’s at the front? — ME

    Ukrainians are tired of war, but there will be no compromises with Russia, head of the Presidential Office Andriy Yermak has told Politico.

    “People may say they are tired, but if you ask them if they want to compromise with Russia, they will emphatically say no. And the fact that people are staying in the Ukraine with their families is confirmation that, in general, the mood of the people is still strong”, the head of the Presidential Office said. [Notwithstanding the fact that millions have fucked off — ME]

    At the same time, he said that “people complain, and we hear about this from the regional governors and from the people themselves”.

    “Of course, it is quite natural that people are tired: two years is a long time”, Yermak said. But, as he believes, “people still believe in our victory”.

    As an example of such faith, he cited his 77-year-old mother, who has a tattoo with a trident on her shoulder. According to Yermak, “The Ukraine is as brave as his mother is”. [And shall soon be as dead as will be as well — ME]

    However, as the newspaper writes, “the question of shaky morale permeated the extensive interview with Ermak”.

    According to the head of the Office of the President of the Ukraine, a deal with Moscow is now completely impossible and the Ukraine will not make any compromises on territorial integrity with Moscow.

    “The Russians are not interested in any negotiations. They want the Ukraine to capitulate. But this will never happen — all of us who are in the Ukraine will not accept any compromises regarding our independence, our territorial integrity, our freedom. And this president will never accept anything like the Minsk agreements or a frozen conflict. No, I’m sure of it”, he added.

    At the same time, according to Yermak, Zelensky realizes that a new large-scale mobilization does not have the support of the people. According to him, Syrsky “believes that additional troops on the front line can be provided by transferring rear personnel to the front”.

    “However, some senior Ukrainian military officials doubt this proposal and argue that the Ukraine needs a large-scale draft”, adds Politico.

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    1. According to The Washington Post, the rhetoric has shifted from ‘as long as it takes’ to ‘it can’t go on like this’.

      “Nobody wants to really bear the responsibility at this point,” said the diplomat, who was not authorized to speak publicly. “But it will have to be done,” the diplomat said. “I mean, you cannot go on like this. I hear about people who are at the front who just can’t take it anymore. And then when they come back here on leave and they see all these young guys who could be there, I would be resentful of that. So you get social tensions surrounding that as well.”

      https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/with-no-way-out-of-a-worsening-war-zelensky-s-options-look-bad-or-worse/ar-BB1la5uq

      It took the thick end of six months, though, for the west to officially acknowledge that the Great Counteroffensive of 2023 was a failure, as western journalists and think tanks struggled for ways to imply Ukraine had actually re-taken territory, and tried to bury retreat under tales of derring-do and glorious courage. Why? Anybody’s guess, I suppose, but one reason might have been that the Great Counteroffensive was underpinned by donated western equipment, and the west does not like to admit its armor and air-defense systems are not magic. While shouting and finger-pointing that Russia was sacrificing huge numbers of troops to take Avdiivka, Ukraine sacrificed huge numbers of troops to hold it, and lost it anyway. Now we have the doomed-to-failure ‘strategy’ of ‘providing additional troops on the front line by transferring rear personnel to the front’. Who are you kidding, Syrskiy? The Ukrainian line doesn’t have that kind of depth, and it won’t be long before what was the front IS the rear, with nothing more left.

      The amazing thing is that Ukraine keeps staggering on, because at a certain point it is no longer glorious courage, but stubbornness on the part of the leadership that will not allow the line troops to stop fighting in order to save their lives – no, they must all be burnt up in a blaze of glory, the future heroes of ‘geroyim slava’.

      The writer obliquely acknowledges that the F-16’s will not be ‘a game-changer’ – but only because they will be provided in limited numbers. Presumably if Zelensky had access to all the F-16’s he wanted, say, 800 of them, he could win – although Ukraine has only a handful of pilots. We have gone far past where authors read what they are writing and ask themselves, “Does this sound stupid?”

      “Previously approved modern fighter jets — the U.S.-made F-16 — are expected to enter combat later this year — but in limited quantity, meaning they will not be a game changer. NATO countries are still exercising restraint in their assistance, evidenced by the recent uproar after French President Emmanuel Macron said European nations should not rule out sending troops.”

      You’re not listening, NATO – if you don’t go all-in, Ukraine will lose. Although if you DO go all-in, you’ll both lose. The author says, without a hint of irony, “So how long can Ukraine withstand being at war? The Ukrainian lawmaker said the country will not survive the status quo for another 10 years. Others, however, think the fight could go on even longer.” Are you kidding me? The country will not survive the status quo for another 10 months. I don’t think there is anything the west could inject now that would prolong the conflict past this year.

      The thing is, though, will anybody learn anything? Russia has learned a lot, certainly, about western perfidy. But it is notoriously difficult for other countries to see themselves in Russia’s place – to think, “That could be us”. Ukraine will learn a thing or two about how America props up a proxy fighter until he can’t raise his gloves anymore – but it is questionable if enough Ukrainians will remain in a generation or so for the lesson to make any difference. Everybody else just seems to think, “Yeah – but America never did like the Russians. They like us. We’re friends. They would never do that to us.” And they probably never will – so long as you don’t cross them, and so long as you do what you’re told. If Russia had not built extensive self-sustainability into its fiscal and social policies, due almost entirely to western sneering and unfriendliness, it would have had to give in under the pressure of sanctions and isolation, and capitulate. There are currently not many countries that could stand on their own the way Russia can.

      Learn from that, for fuck’s sake.

      Currently Zelebobik Churchilensky is running behind even Budanov in terms of popularity, with the most trust vested in the Ukrainian military and in Zaluzhnyi in particular. But Zelya’s popularity will take a dive if he tries to overstay his term and hold on to power beyond the point the people could, in theory, boot him out. There’s not much time left for him to make up his mind.

      https://news.yahoo.com/poll-shows-zelenskyys-approval-dips-172000884.html

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      1. However, one can regularly find stuff on the web similar to the following, posted by a troll, or from Langley, or from a World at War PC game fan:

        The SMO is almost over and 98% successful. Russia has won.

        Laughable.

        98% over? Russia only controls 20% or so of Ukrainian territory!

        If you’re talking about “days”.

        The war has been going for 774 days.

        774 days is 98% of 790.

        I’ll be generous and make that 800 days.

        You expect Russia to declare victory in this month of April with Ukraine destroyed?

        Your belief is completely DELUSIONAL.

        I’ll give you a tip – this Russia war against Ukraine will continue beyond April.

        The above is a posting at MoA.

        Obsessed with possession of territory.

        And there is often made the claim by some commenters that the Banderaretards have won back more territory from the “occupiers” that the latter have so far taken from them!

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        1. That winning-back claim is based on the so-called Kharkov “victory”, when mostly LDPR militia withdrew from most of Kharkov oblast, inflicting at the same time high losses on the Banderastan heroes. The latter “won back” a big empty space (empty of “occupiers”) gifted to them by the Orcs, who meanwhile advanced to Kherson, to the left bank of the Dnieper in the south, thereby establishing and securing a land bridge to the Crimea. Since then, the Banderites have won back four-fifths of fuck all.

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          1. Recent western-media articles acknowledge that Russia has ‘occupied’ more than 20% of Ukraine, although earlier media coverage downplayed it as Russia holding just crumbs of the rim of Ukraine. The recent piece I cited from the Washington Post also stipulates it is difficult to imagine any scenario in which the AFU will recover any of what Russia now holds, never mind cokehead Zelensky’s narcotic fantasies of getting all of it back including Crimea. Which begs the question why, knowing this, Ukraine’s ‘western partners’ (‘our colleagues’, anyone?) continue to encourage it to fight on rather than try to strike a deal which would see them keep what is left. Russia is most unlikely to give back any territory for which it paid in Russian lives, while continued fighting is likely to result in it taking more. Despite the claims that Ukrainian soldiers home on leave see loads of layabouts who should be in uniform, I think most of those eligible for service have already been grabbed and hustled off to the front. Those who enjoy any immunity now are likely under an exemption for good cause, and even at that they have to endure the hissing and contempt of those whose husbands, sons and fathers have been dragooned off to fight. Ukraine complains constantly that it does not have enough men, enough planes, enough armor or artillery or ammunition, and it is struggling to hold on to the remains of the country it still controls. Who sees that as a formula for winning? And if winning is not possible or even realistic, what kind of allies insist on continuing the struggle?

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            1. I noticed a good while back that Putin, Lavrov, Dimka, Shoigu and the delectable Zakharova had ceased calling their Western counterparts “partners”.

              As regards Ukrainian citizens — both men and women — who are eligible for being slaughtered at the front, whenever I see clips of Yukietards pissing folk off now in Western cities, there seem to be many amongst them who qualify as cannon fodder.

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        2. These are often the same people who insist that Russian incompetence and weakness are the reason it has so far been unable to wrestle Ukraine into submission, and that a slow pace of operations, selective targeting and efforts to minimize civilian casualties are just ‘copium’ that Russophiles tell themselves to make excuses for that incompetence and weakness. According to them, Russia is bringing the maximum force to bear that it is capable of focusing, and it still can’t beat a third-rate military power like Ukraine is.

          There’s not really anything you can tell those people – Karl is the same, really, he just frames his contempt as unfulfilled wishing that Putin would get serious and really unleash the fury – and only the gradual unfolding of events will quiet them. It is obviously not clear to the Ukrainian leadership, either: it keeps insisting a ceasefire is out of the question, because ‘Russia will use the opportunity to rearm and reinforce’. Rearm and reinforce for what? To hold off the powerful Ukrainian counterattacks? If Ukraine was capable of that sort of campaign it would not need to resort to terror attacks to try to distract. The west acknowledges Russia’s stepped-up production and capability to easily replace its current ammunition expenditure, and there has been no silly talk from the delusional British defense department opining that Russia will run out of missiles in a week for ages. Ukraine plainly is getting weaker and weaker, while an increase in Russian pressure is plainly achievable. It simply chooses not to for reasons of its own, likely avoiding any appearance of escalation which might inspire some NATO hothead to take the plunge.

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