
Uncle Volodya says, “If black boxes survive air crashes, why don’t they just make the whole plane out of that stuff?”
There’s a temptation to believe the world is spinning faster now on its axis, as events which we would once chew over for months, worrying the juiciest meat off the bones first, are now shoved aside in only days by the next consecutive Richter-scale happening. For instance, it was only a couple of months ago that many – and I include myself – thought Radek Sikorski was a shoo-in for NATO Secretary-General. This was somewhat worrying, since Sikorski is not only a Russophobe of the first rank, he is married to another just like himself, The Washington Post‘s Anne Applebaum.
But Sikorski was passed over in favour of colourless nonentity and lifelong politician Jens Stoltenberg, and we breathed a sigh of relief. Before we could even take a close look at Stoltenberg, Radek Sikorski shit the bed in such spectacularly colourful and dramatic fashion that he immediately sucked all the air out of the Troposphere, confiding to U.S. website Politico that he had been present when Vladimir Putin told Donald Tusk that Ukraine was an artificial country (the west loves that one, and repeats it brainlessly although Putin has never, ever said anything of the kind), and proposed that Poland and Russia divvy it up. Naturally – so went Sikorski’s narrative – the honorable Polish politicians put him straight right away, and told him they would never be involved in anything so parvenu and underhanded.
Well, that’s not quite what happened. Some analysts suggest that Sikorski was actually floating a trial balloon, to see what world reaction would be to the suggestion that Ukraine be divided, so that maybe Poland might end up with some of it before Putin systematically took it all back in his typically businesslike fashion. I have no idea if that’s what was actually in his head, but if that was his plan, the response must have made him think he fell asleep in the bath and put his wet hand into a toaster. When a little quick checking revealed the bilateral meeting he described had not taken place anywhere around the time he said it did, this “passionate and articulate” politician said he had “become confused”, that his memory had failed him. He apologized to Mr. Tusk and to the preceding Polish Foreign Minister for any embarrassment he might have caused them – pointedly not apologizing to Mr. Putin – and said the exchange had actually taken place in Bucharest in 2008, and that Mr. Putin might have been “only joking”. By then it was obvious he was only thrashing about and doing what he should have done in the first place – Googling to find out when this meeting that only occurred in a dream in his head might have taken place, based purely on the principals being in the same place at the same time. He would have been forced to say he heard Putin and Tusk discussing it in the Men’s room while he was disguised as a shoeshine boy if it had gone much further, but since he is so well-connected, the press took pity on him and the whole thing just went away. But political damage has a way of sticking with you for so long as your rivals are alive, and although a dramatic comeback is possible for Sikorski, it’s just about as likely to happen for J.J. Cale.
Anyway, all of that caused us to take our eye off the ball, the ball being Stoltenberg. A former Prime Minister of Norway, you might think his being chosen reflected a desire for better relations with Russia, since Norway and Russia have pursued a fairly pragmatic relationship in modern history.
Not a bit of it.
Once that might have been true. His sister, whom he claimed was influential upon his entry into politics (into which he was born, actually, his father having been an ambassador, defense minister and foreign minister and his mother serving as state secretary in several governments during the 1980’s), was a member of the Marxist-Leninist group “Red Youth”, and Stoltenberg himself was leader of the Workers Youth League. Once he settled down and decided to get a job – working for Statistics Norway as well as working part-time at the University of Oslo – he became friendly with a Soviet diplomat…whom the Norwegian police at some point advised him was a KGB agent.
In 2010, Prime Minister Stoltenberg and President Medvedev signed an agreement which settled a long-standing marine border dispute between their two countries, an arrangement which replaced a controversial temporary agreement that had been brokered by Jens Evensen and Arne Treholt, and I be go to hell if the latter was not also a Russian agent, who assisted the Russians in securing the agreement. So on at least two occasions, Stoltenberg has had firsthand acquaintance with Russian treachery. Throw in a little seasoning like the contention that his first cabinet as Prime Minister was modeled after Tony Blair’s New Labour, his government oversaw the most widespread privatizations in Norwegian history and his foreign policy favours increased defense spending, and you begin to get a feel for where he might want to take NATO. And, more to the point, why he was chosen for the position.
But that’s a story for another day.
What I wanted to talk about today is the emergence of a disturbing meme – that whenever aircraft of the Russian Air Force conduct sovereignty patrols or reconnaissance flights, they endanger civil aviation. This notion has been floated by several sources lately, and it is bullshit.
The first I noticed it (more accurately, it was brought to my attention) was almost a month ago, at the end of October. NATO, U.S. Army Chief of Staff General Ray Odierno and Pentagon spokeswoman Vanessa Hillman all voiced what they described together as a “troubling trend” (and which Odierno referred to as “Russian aggression”). Russian aircraft – frequently the Tupolev TU-95 “Bear” bomber, a favoured Soviet reconnaissance aircraft which first flew in 1952 and entered service in 1956 – flying in international airspace now have NATO’s panties in a bunch, because they might be a danger to passing civilian flights. “We have been keeping track of incidents and have noticed an increase in Russian flights close to NATO airspace since the start of the Ukraine crisis,” said Lt. Col. Hillman; “We don’t think those flights help de-escalate the current situation at all.”
Close to NATO airspace. Which means not in it. Russian aircraft flying in international airspace should clear their flight plans with NATO and the Pentagon beforehand, so that those authorities could lecture Moscow on flight safety. Anything else is “escalation”. I’m sure you can imagine what the reaction from Washington and Brussels would be if the Kremlin announced it wanted to be consulted before any NATO aircraft conducted reconnaissance patrols in international airspace. Yeah; that’ll happen.
Next up was a mention of Russian carelessness in the crowded skies by The Independent. Owned by Russian oligarch Alexander Lebedev, The Independent frequently runs virulent anti-Russian pieces, while it is generally approving to the point of cheerleading of capitalistic moneymaking, as you might expect of a paper run by an oligarch. Nobody in the west calls him that, though, or goes on about his having been a KGB agent. All forgiven, all friends together now, since Lebedev lives in London. The British press playfully soft-pedals Lebedev’s KGB activities as having been no more harmful than reading the British newspapers every day, ho, ho, how sinister, my dears!! Vladimir Putin did essentially the same in East Germany for his KGB stint, but you would think from those same press sources that he had slit more throats than Edward Teach, better known as Blackbeard.
The Independent tells us, “The European Leadership Network (ELN) said Russia is risking military escalation across Europe with Cold War-style military “brinkmanship”, following 39 “near-misses” involving its planes and ships where military confrontation or the loss of life was narrowly avoided.”
More about that in a minute – who is the European Leadership Network? Well, they’re a “non-partisan, non-profit organisation based in London and registered in the United Kingdom. The network is led by its Director, Dr. Ian Kearns, and the Chair of the pan-European Executive Board, Lord Browne of Layton.”
That Executive Board is stiff with former Foreign Ministers and Defense Ministers, including those of Turkey, Denmark, the Czech Republic, Latvia, Lithuania, and Russia. The Russian – Igor Ivanov, was Russia’s Foreign Minister before Sergei Lavrov, and since 2000 has worked for The Moscow Times. Here’s a sample of Director Dr. Ian Kearnes’ work: “Sanctions Are Not Enough“. An excerpt from it: ” …the West should make it unequivocally clear to Putin that any incursion on to the territory of a NATO member state will be viewed as an attack on NATO as a whole and will be met with a military response. This statement should be backed up with more forward basing of NATO forces in Eastern Europe to re-assure allies in the region. Ambiguity is the friend only of miscalculation in a crisis. A line has to be drawn, and Putin needs to be clear as to where it is.”
Uh huh, sure: that sounds non-partisan to me. The report , entitled “Dangerous Brinksmanship” includes incidents in which Canadian and American warships are dragging their coattails up and down the Russian coast in the Black Sea, and Russian aircraft which pass close aboard are “acting aggressively”. You want to see passing close aboard? Remember the former Turkish Foreign Minister, on the Board at ELN? Here’s a Turkish F-16 passing over the heads of observers at the Waddington Air Show, just this year. Is that passing close enough for you, Mr. Foreign Minister? I see Poland’s former Defense Minister sits on the Board as well – remember the head-on collision at the Radom Air Show in Poland in 2007? Nobody killed but the pilots, but the show remains the most popular of its type in Poland, doesn’t it?
But those are air show crashes, right? Although the pilots are among the best-trained and most highly skilled flyers in the world, accidents do happen and the audience must know that. We’re talking here about commercial aircraft, and Russia playing fast and loose with safety. Incidents abound recently, and civil aviation has every reason to be scared, right?
Of who? According to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the ultimate authority for commercial pilots of the world, the Russian Federation is quite responsible in the air. In its 2013 report on the State of Global Aviation Safety, North America and Europe are almost tied for the highest number of accidents. Ahhh, but Europe probably includes the Russian Federation! Yes, it does – so lets look at who had the most accidents. You’ll find that information in Appendix II (2012 accidents) and Appendix III (2013 accidents), starting on page 41. For 2012 – accidents involving aircraft of: The United States of America (24), the United Kingdom (10), and the Russian Federation (3). While the greatest number of fatalities resulted from Controlled Flight Into Terrain (CFIT), as might be expected, the majority of accidents in 2012 were attributed to RS, Runway Safety. Patrolling aircraft of the Russian Air force are hardly likely to contribute to accidents in either case. The only category in which they might be presumed to have an effect – LCIF, or Loss of Control In-Flight – is by far the lowest accident category.
In 2013, accidents were as follow: aircraft of the United States (6), the United Kingdom (2) and the Russian Federation (1). The report appears to have been produced during the 2013 year, so that only accidents up to June of 2013 were recorded.
Stop twisting things, Chapman – you know very well we’re talking about the danger to civil aviation caused by Russian aircraft: we have it on no less an authority than Jens Stoltenberg, the NATO Secretary-General. Yes, just a few days ago the Secretary told us “Russia’s growing military presence in the skies above the Baltic region is unjustified and that its aircraft regularly fail to file flight plans or communicate with air controllers, and fly with their transponders off, posing a risk to civil aviation.” As substantiation for this, he cited an incident in which a Russian Ilyushin-20 surveillance aircraft flying in international airspace came within 300 feet of a Scandinavian Airlines jet taking off from Copenhagen airport. The Russian aircraft was flying without its IFF transponder turned on.
Copenhagen is in international airspace? Gee, I’m pretty sure it’s not. Oh, wait – thank God we have ELN’s report to clear things up. It tells us the incident happened 50 miles southeast of Malmo. Wait – the plane was still taking off from Copenhagen airport, 5o miles southeast of Malmo? That’s, like, 70 miles from Copenhagen airport! The report says the plane was carrying 132 passengers: were they Rush Limbaugh and 131 clones of him? Seems like it must have been quite a load if they still weren’t at cruising altitude 70 miles away. And how does Copenhagen know the IL-20 did not have its transponder on? It wasn’t even in Danish airspace. Maybe Sweden reported it, just like that Russian submarine that was crippled off Stockholm and firing off distress calls a couple of weeks ago. Uh huh.
Listen, Mr. Secretary. Military aircraft do not file flight plans with enemy countries; you’d think information like that would not come as a surprise to the NATO Secretary-General. They file a flight plan with the base or station they take off from, and that’s it, unless they plan to land at a different airfield on completion of their patrol – NATO aircraft, too. Was that the Norwegian Air Force’s practice when you were Prime Minister – file a flight plan with Moscow when they intended to test Russia’s surveillance capability? Please don’t embarrass me in front of the Russians by saying such stupid things. They don’t turn on their transponders unless they are part of an exercise, or flying in a civilian air corridor, which they typically do not do, because it’s dangerous, and because they don’t conduct probes at 35,000 feet where early-warning radar can see you hundreds of miles away with your transponder on. Russian military aircraft can reach the Baltics without flying in any civil air corridors, provided they avoid the Riga/Moscow route. The ELN report also cited instances in which Russian fighters responded to probes by NATO surveillance aircraft in the Russian Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) as examples of the Russian Air Force “behaving aggressively”, when it is NATO’s standard practice to do the very same when Russian surveillance aircraft are detected in international airspace, but near a NATO country. What a bonus – Russian surveillance aircraft are misbehaving when they test NATO surveillance capability, and then Russia is misbehaving again when their Air Force responds to NATO doing the same thing to them – I guess they’re just a naturally aggressive people, whereas NATO can be trusted to go wherever it wishes and do whatever it likes. There is no reason for Air Traffic Controllers to be contacting Russian aircraft which are outside their control zone in international airspace, and therefore no reason for such aircraft to reply.
I recommend the ELN’s report be re-titled “Dangerous Dinkmanship”, and that it carry pictures of the report’s authors and nothing else. Maybe a nice photo of Stoltenberg on the cover.

Great article. I have been watching this blog since 2008 or so. At least now, for the first time, I am the first commenter, 🙂
Little satisfaction in life in a dark and miserable World…
Great post. I feel like I’ve been waiting for someone to write this exact thing for weeks.
Of all the bullshit in the media right now about the evil Russians coming to get us, the crap over the grave danger posed by Russian flights near NATO airspace is probably the most hypocritical and laughably ridiculous.
Thanks so much for your support and encouragement, Danielle!! Indeed, it was Stoltenberg’s comments about filing flight plans and driving around with IFF transponders on that finally tipped me over the edge. NATO air forces never do that when their objective is to test Russian air surveillance capabilities and when they intend to remain in international airspace, what a patently ridiculous suggestion, it just makes him look stupid. Might as well ask Moscow to telephone the nearest NATO airfield when they’re taking off and provide their altitude and approach course. It’s just embarrassing.
Entertaining and highly informative. I learned quite a bit about air safety, the actual version. Thank you Mark!
Thanks very much ucg, for your support! NATO relies heavily on the ignorance of the listening audience, and attempts to influence their belief that Russia really is delinquent in following practices that nobody follows. The surest way to get noticed as an air surveillance patrol or a probing flight to test enemy defenses is to fly in nice and high where the civvy aircraft are – long-0range radar follows them faithfully whenever they are near the coast or in overflight, how stupid would that be. You come in low to try to get under the radar envelope – your objective is exactly opposite to that of civil aviation, they want to be seen. If you make it all the way to the limits of their national airspace without any visible evidence of having been detected, then you pull up and go high. After that, even if that country sends out a fighter escort to ask you WTF, your mission was a success. You were noticed only when you took pains to be noticed, and there is good reason to believe you were undetected during your approach. You will never, ever succeed driving in at FL 35 with your IFF transponder on unless you deliberately mimic an airliner, and that’s illegal.
Additionally, fighter pilots and the pilots of surveillance aircraft are constantly on the lookout for other aircraft, because their lives would depend on it in war. Their radars are maximized for target acquisition, not navigation, and when they are trying not to be seen they usually do not have them turned on as they are likely to be intercepted by electronic warfare equipment of the enemy.
Finally finished up the short blogpost that I rarely had time to work on: http://ucgsblog.wordpress.com/2014/11/23/uzhe-pozno-a-u-vas-eshe-serrano/
Before we could even take a close look at Stoltenberg, Radek Sikorski shit the bed in such spectacularly colourful and dramatic fashion that he immediately sucked all the air out of the Troposphere..
My colon rattled when I read that.
…the response must have made him think he fell asleep in the bath and put his wet hand into a toaster.
I just want to make the point that doing that is not as rare as it seems….
A great piece! Chapman should be renamed ‘Chipman’ because he seems to have a giant chip on his shoulder whenever a Russian airman farts in the sanctity of his own aircraft.
If it wasn’t the ELN, it would have been another interestingly funded w*nk tank where people go because they can’t be employed anywhere else without getting sacked in short order. In fact, it’s a whole other channel for the governments to broadcast their views though with the patina of expert authority where even the Pork Pie News Nework can report it straight, otherwise government’s would have to solely rely on unnamed sources and former ambassadors.
As for Stoltenberg, he had also won a reputation as a steady hand at the UN and in the Balkans, though I never believed Sikorski would get the runner up prize after failing to replace Baroness Catherine ‘Gosh!’ Ashton as EU Foreign Affairs Spokeshole and the NATO job to him was a gibbon – I meant that – it really is a job for a monkey.
I think what is shows is that what really counts in such organizations is that they do not go off script which is Sikorski’s fatal flaw, even though I have to admit I do like him despite being a bit nuts. All this ‘don’t rock the boat’ politics makes for very boring news.
For what it is worth, I think that the real target should the democratic, freedom loving and well balanced Pork Pie News Network that has simply repeated Verbatim everything that comes out of NATO’s many, many colons, by one means or another. NATO is a well known and understood quantity. The PPNN are simply failing or refusing to do their job which should be as ‘journalists’ to hold persons of authority to account and raise issues that are in the public interest. Not only do they not do this, but they ably assist the flinging russophobe chimpanzee poo as if they were characters from Madagascar, the movie.
On the plus side, the German public simply aren’t buying the bs and are actively saying so. As it is Germany who counts in Europe, this is far more significant.
Chapman is me, actually – I was talking to myself in the article. But I will consider changing my name.
“Flinging Russophobe chimpanzee poo” made me laugh out loud, but really it’s true, and truth is often stranger than fiction. Not literally, of course, there’s no real poo, but the nonsensical narrative the west is trying to get accepted is just far, far beyond belief. It has to be clear to even the barely conscious that western media now pins every single undesirable or upsetting thing that happens on Russia. And it has to, because otherwise people would question the wisdom of ever-tightening sanctions even though everyone is paying a price, not just Russia.
That explains what was bothering me when I wrote it! I’ll stop playing with stick lest I poke myself in the eye with a red hot poker again. Sorry! I think my fingers were far ahead of my brain when I wrote the comment. Do I get any points for the joke and when an airman farts in his flight suit, can he actually smell it???
While poo is worthy of attention (because it is difficult to avoid), it is – forgive me – it’s stickiness that counts. Flinging poo is easy and flicking a lot is the usual method in the hope that some of it sticks, but less and less of it is.
Further to my response to Kirill on the other thread about his comment that media consumers are retards, I think in fact they have become much more savvy and now automatically don’t take the first thing they see as ‘true’. I’m not saying that they won’t use it when it comes to a discussion at dinner, because people will grasp at anything, but it is much more easily neutralized with better information.
Face it, people are like cats. Curious. In the bad old days, if you looked something up on the internet (I refused to use the ubiquitous verb beginning with ‘g’ and ending in ‘e’ any more), you would have to go through two pages to get a decent result. These days you are almost guaranteed to get a quality result in the top two to four. It is simply no longer a painful and time consuming process to look something up, even if it is Wikipedia.
What a coincidence that this post is about the so-called Russian airspace “incursions”. Fresh from ZH:
NATO Jets Surrounding Russia: Before And After
Based on the following “before” and “after” the Ukraine crisis pictures of NATO warplanes located just off the Russian border…
Before:

After:

… one can almost understand why Victoria Nuland was so eager to tell the EU to “fuck off” in her successful attemp to foment Ukraine unrest leading to the overthrow of ex-president Yanukovich, and destabilize the region, giving NATO a pretext for a major arms build up on the other side of the Russian border.
Per CNN, “There used to be only four jets ready to intercept Russian planes that crossed into European airspace. Now there are 18.” And rising.
As for what the US response would be if Russia were to park a few squadrons of Mig-35s in Cuba, Canada and Mexico, we leave that to the reader’s imagination.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-23/nato-jets-surrounding-russia-and-after
War Street Journal (stub): Israeli Cabinet Approves Nationality Bill
http://online.wsj.com/articles/israeli-cabinet-approves-nationality-bill-1416773122
Move Could Further Inflame Tensions With Arab Israelis and Palestinians
###
Well that’s a good way of making even more enemies was going to say JFC! but then HFM occurred to me.
The Americans are at it again:
Cnet: Stealth malware found spying on telecoms, energy sectors
http://www.cnet.com/uk/news/stealth-malware-found-spying-on-telecoms-energy-sectors/
Regin’s complex nature suggests a nation state is behind the cyberespionage tool’s development, Symantec reports.
“…The malware’s targets are geographically diverse, Symantec said, observing more than half of the infections in Russia and Saudi Arabia. Among the other countries targeted are Ireland, Mexico, and India…
…Symantec said the multi-stage architecture is reminiscent of Stuxnet, a sophisticated computer virus discovered attacking a nuclear enrichment facility in Iran in 2010, and Duqu, which has identical code to Stuxnet but which appeared designed for cyber espionage instead of sabotage…”
###
So another piece where the journalists don’t have the *$&”(g guts to say that it’s probably the US/Israel behind it, but reading between the lines, i.e. the STUXNET reference which everyone thinks is US/Israeli creation, says it passively. Are tech reporters that terrified that they will not say ‘probably’ or ‘most likely xxx’?
I recall that long time ago that a VIP Boeing jet was bought for the President of China Jiang Zemin in 2002. It was delivered and then during test flights before it was put in to service, the Chinese picked up strange emissions coming from it. Yup, the USA was stupid enough to think it could bug the President of China and they’d never notice!!!
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/delta-skymiles-pre-worldperks-merger-closed-posting/53012-chinese-presidents-ex-delta-jet-bugged.html
Best in class snark as always. Made my afternoon.
Thanks, Oddlots!! I value your opinion.
I forgot to post this by Pepe Escobar:
Asia Times Onlne: Washington plays Russian roulette
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/CEN-01-211114.html
…Washington loaded the gun long before Vladimir Putin accused the United States of provoking him to pick it up – and long before most watching the game of Russian roulette could identify the weapon as caliber Cold War 2.0. With the bullet marked once for “Eurasian integration” and twice to target “regime change”, Barack Obama is holding tensions high. When Hillary Clinton seizes the day, all bets will be off….
Can we call Jens Stoltenbeg, Jens Stollen Berg – because he is dry and should only be listened to with a stiff drink at hand?
On second thoughts, maybe not. I actually like Stollen.
Cue Bill Hicks:
Recommend that everyone watch this priceless video of Jens Stoltenberg in a former life as Norway’s Prime Minister trying out his stand-up comedian routine … oops, I meant to say trying to give a speech while clearly sozzled after “a few drinks”:
Then here’s the time he went undercover driving a taxi and picking up paying passengers (only on Friday afternoons, not on the Friday or Saturday midnight shifts):
The first one makes him sound like his brain is sitting in about four inches of Aquavit. I started to like him. In the taxi, the only one who gave him any useful advice was the old lady who said the salaries of the bosses are too high, and his response was “It’s hard to stop it. They push each other”.
I have to give him due credit. It’s not everyone who would so bravely acknowledge the failure of government as to admit the place you were most likely to hear people speaking their mind is in a taxicab.
I’m not sure Stoltenberg sees the taxicab confessions in quite the same way.
Everyone recognized him before they started talking, so what was the point? It was no different than talking with him in parliament, or at a town hall meeting. There’s nothing magic about a taxicab. The discussion could only be truly non-partisan if they didn’t know who he was.
At least he could have worn a fake beard.
If he’d chosen to drive the weekend midnight shifts and picked up his passengers outside pubs and night-clubs or in Oslo’s red light district, he might have heard a few home truths about his leadership!
Good post, Mark. We are clearly on the same wavelength, as earlier today I tackled the misinformation about the ELN report and the supposed incursions of Russian nuclear bombers into NATO airspace in a new blog post of my own, http://irrussianality.wordpress.com/2014/11/23/silence-of-the-cows/
Thanks, Paul! I liked your post, a real quality piece of work. InterpreterMag is the Weekly World News of the western publications, complete with crazy stories like Putin creeping into children’s rooms at 4:00 AM to run his hand under their pillows and steal their tooth money.
ELN – European Liebensraum Network? I.e. a Russia only filled wit hthe right kind of Russians (you know what I mean).
Regardless, Russian GDP is going to see positive growth for 2014. In what sense is the economy wounded? That it does not have 10% growth. This is utter retardation of the Wall Street variety where a company’s performance is measured in terms of “enough” profit and not just profitability. If some company sees a 1% profit increase or no increase and is still making a profit it is deemed a “failure” and its stocks get trashed.
The Economist and the rest of the western wankers can keep on barking while the Russian caravan moves along. A good remedy for all the drivel spewed by western media liars is sdelanounas.ru. New factories are being opened in Russia all the time. Major roadworks are happening around the country. Modernization of infrastructure is real and impressive. If there was stagnation and decline, as in the rabid hate fantasies of the wishful thinking brigade from the west, none of this would be happening.
Just think of the massive stimulus from the military modernization program alone. Of course, the western media liars will claim it is being siphoned by corruption with a shred of proof. But you can judge for yourself as new submarines roll out of production in short periods of time (e.g. new project 636.3 boats are being produced in under two years). The same goes for the civilian economy. If it was being drained by corruption projects would be stalled for years.
I would not use the Economist to wipe my ass even if I ran out of toilet paper.
I hope that you are right but it is apparent that the US led West is going to do everything possible to damage Russia and its economy. If Russia didn’t have nuclear weapons and if China was not such a big economy I wouldn’t like its chances. Everybody is being pulled into line in the West- can you imagine BNE publishing this February 2014 article by Ben Aris today?
http://www.bne.eu/content/story/moscow-blog-economist-takes-biscuit-worst-coverage-russia
It’s worthwhile playing this short video of Lavrov a couple of times and listening very carefully to what he says. (The Europeans have taken Russia for a ride and business as usual with Europe is over. Once the lessons are learnt, we will have a new foundation to build our relationship…)
http://deepresource.wordpress.com/2014/11/23/lavrov-the-west-wants-regime-change-in-russia/
An old The eXile Classic:
Press Review: The Economist’s Three Stooges
http://www.exile.ru/articles/detail.php?ARTICLE_ID=8518
Kirill I must disagree, I would use the Economist to wipe my ass – that is the only thing it would be good for.
In addition to your examples, Russia is introducing a new armored vehicle system configurable as a number of combat vehicles. The “Armata” tank version sports an unmanned turret and the crew of three are isolated in a separate armored compartment, It is powered by a 1500 hp diesel delivering far better fuel economy (hence longer combat range) than the Abrams gas-turbine powered tank. The US can not afford to develop a new tank and are planning to use the dated Abrams design for several more decades.
This article has interesting info (just ignore the mandatory snarky comments)
http://nationalinterest.org/feature/the-russian-armys-secret-weapon-enter-the-armata-program-11711?page=2
Odd, the US has as GDP allegedly 8 – 10 times that of Russia yet can not upgrade its military despite the central role military power plays in US foreign policy.
This link provides a critical overview of the M1 Abrams.
The video is divided in 6 chapters, and each chapter is split in parts.
Video omnium est divisum in partes sex. quarum divisa pars in partes quisque est.
Impressive command of Latin!
I suppose Adomanis must mean exactly the kind of articles he’s been profitably filing in The Moscow Times for the past year?
Thanks for producing another great article. Too bad it is so depressing to see the stream of idiocy from the west. What happened to the war on terror? We are back to the big bad Russian bear scaring poor little western children. Do the western elites to expect a in like in 1991? They could nudge the Soviet system into collapse, but it collapsed through its own internal failings. What are they going to nudge now? Russian self identity? They can pull the Banderite card in Ukraine but no such thing exists in Russia. Russians aren’t going to hit the streets to stage a revolution over western BS about corruption. They can see the level of corruption with their own eyes.
The west should get over itself. No intelligent human would sacrifice everything just to move to some suburban shack with a two car garage. The artificial deficits of consumer junk in the USSR are no longer a factor in Russia.
Thanks, Kirill – it’s funny to think how adversarial we were when we first met on Anatoly’s blog. I understand your frustration. There is no substantiation for the current western assault on Russia – it has simply decided, among its ‘leaders’, that now is the time for another of history’s great existential battles. It is going to hurt everyone and set us all back years, but it will not hurt those who are driving it on because they are already wealthy and comfortable.
“Do the western elites to expect a in like in 1991? They could nudge the Soviet system into collapse, but it collapsed through its own internal failings. What are they going to nudge now? Russian self identity?”
That’s a great point. Sadly I think it would go over the heads of our betters in government over here. Yes, they are just that stupid. The media covers this unrelentingly if also unwittingly.
Patrick Armstrong has a great contest going over at Russia Insider, in which contenders vie for the Porcelain Cup by submitting entries for the very worst piece of reporting on Russia. There are some lulus there, I think you will agree, but I feel quite safe with my entry – the Michael Weiss piece featured at Paul Robinson’s “Irrusianality”
http://russia-insider.com/en/media_watch/2014/11/22/09-29-42am/porcelain_cup_award_worst_piece_russia
Check it out: it’s a crowded field these days, but some pieces of ordure really stand out.
On the subject of Russia Insider there’s a newish bright light there that has had me in stitches since I happened upon him:
https://bitly.com/a/bitlinks/1Fe06Yo#
https://bitly.com/a/bitlinks/1qP8VVG#
https://bitly.com/a/bitlinks/1qPn2dE#
The most ridiculous thing ever written about Russia? http://www.amazon.com/The-Guns-August-2008-Caucasus/dp/0765625083
It’s a collection of the dumbest dung that Neocons came up with, nicely summarized in one “book”. Calling it fiction would be nice; willful and blatant ignorance is more like it. Those “brainiacs” cannot even do PR right:
“This book is designed to present the facts about the events of August 2008 along with comprehensive coverage of the background to those events. It brings together a wealth of expertise on the South Caucasus and Russian foreign policy, with contributions by Russian, Georgian, European, and American experts on the region.”
And the first “unbiased” review: “Brief AND well managed chapters, especially Chapter 1 for those who want to get the historical perspective in the nutshell…but super interesting facts”
It’s, uhh, like, so super comprehensive, it has like super interesting facts in a, uhh, super nutshell, like and such as…
Other reviews are equally, erm, “stellar”: “This is a very well researched and documented study. The arguments advanced in the book are supported by factual evidence which is mostly unknown to western media.”
You heard it there folks! The Western coverage of the Ossetian War wasn’t pro-Georgian enough! And Putin simply bought Switzerland, so that he could have the Swiss confirm that Saakashvili started the unjustified war.
The Porcelain Cup should be like the Oscars if only because there will be such a shit-storm of nominations. If Russia Insider had the time and inclination, the Porcelain Cup could have the following categories:
– Most Abusive Piece against Putin
– Most Consistently Biased Journalist
– Most Consistently Biased Media Outlet
– Worst Cartoon
Oddly enough, in the sphere of classical music (!) there’s already a contender for the Porcelain Cup – a strange and twisted man named Norman Lebrecht.
For the past year or more (since his site was relaunched – longer, if we reckon-in his earlier ravings) Lebrecht has been mounting a hate-campaign against Russian conductor Valery Gergiev… based on Gergiev’s alleged closeness to Vladimir Putin. The postings have consistently attempted to trash Gergiev’s reputation, and wreck his career. Since Gergiev is under contract to take up a new post in Germany soon, much of Lebrecht’s schtick has been directed at spiking Gergiev’s German career before it begins.
This week came a new low in Lebrecht’s bile – he began an assault on Gergiev’s sister, Larissa Gergieva. In Russia, LG is renowned in her own right as a vocal coach (one of the finest in the country), and as the casting director for singers at the Mariinsky Opera in SPb.
http://slippedisc.com/2014/11/gergievs-sister-will-judge-tchaikovsky-competition/
This week Lebrecht attacked Larissa Gergieva, claiming she had obtained a seat on the Jury of the Tchaikovsky Competition merely because she is the sister of her “Putin pal” brother. Also written-off as Putin stooges are such world-famous musicians as Vladimir Ashkenazy, Peter Donohoe, and Denis Matsuev.
Lebrecht has previously typed furious tirades about the way female Russian musicians have been allegedly sidelined. He doesn’t draw a line against doing this himself, however.
Readers will be unaware that the Stalinist Lebrecht deletes and bans all comment which doesn’t coincide with his own New World Order ravings.
Lebrecht sounds like a reincarnation of the Beaumarchais character Don Basilio, ironically a music teacher, whose favorite weapon against other people is “slander” :
Then why is he a “Stalinist”. I know Stalin threw many babushkas into the snow and ate their babies, but I never heard about all the slanderin going on. Tell me more.
What you talking ’bout, Max?
I didn’t say Lebrecht was a Stalinist. I said Lebrecht reminded me of Don Basilio from “The Barber of Seville”.
Twas Neil who said he was a Stalinist.
You’ll have to ask Neil what he meant by that.
argggg, I hate it when people spoil my apropos opera clips….
I didn’t mean to spoil it ;( Neil brought up Stalin, The Evilest Man Evah, true, but I wanted to tie up both comments into a tidy package. Didn’t work, quel dommage!. But I enjoyed the clip. I liked how the orchestra was below and surrounded by the stage with a promenade in front and how the camera shot from behind Don Basilio into the audience.
No worries, Max, I was just joking around.
Anyhow, this particular staging of “Barber of Seville” was done by Metropolitan Opera in New York. It is a wonderful production, with the finest singers, and audiences are raving.
Not only did the stage director put the singers in 18th-century period costumes (gasp! a revolutionary idea for the Met, which seems determined to stage every single opera as if it were happening in the 1920’s!), they came up with this great idea of the promenade. During big arias and solos, they had the singers cross right over the orchestra pit, walk right up to the front of the stage, as if they were addressing the front row of the audience, and belt out their big show numbers.
There was even a funny bit at the end, during the final bow. The Figaro character, sung by baritone Christopher Maltman leaned down to the people in the audience, and started handing out his “business cards”, which presumably read something like: “Figaro the Barber, provides the following services: Shaves, Haircuts, the finest wigs, applying of leeches, surgery, tooth extractions, enemas, etc. etc. Works all hours of the day and night, and provides only the best quality products!”
Thanks for putting this issue in the proper perspective. I suspected as much but its much better to have the facts.
A great post, Mark. From a broader perspective it will be a shock to most Europeans captive in the EU to realise just how the western narrative is twisted by the corporate media, a realisation that will only become real if the mushroom clouds begin to form. It is ironic that Russia now has a leader who is open to dialogue and has so far got nowhere with it. Have a read of Paul Craig Roberts two posts of yesterday, 23 Nov.
Thanks, Jim! I was going through my links yesterday, checking to see who is still active and who hasn’t made a post in 6 months so I can clean up the blogroll and eliminate dead blogs, and I was on your site poking around. You have some very interesting recent material I hadn’t seen, and some of the links you cited took me to some interesting places as well. Where your own opinion is cited, your analysis seems very solid and well-substantiated.
Thanks, Mark, good to know.
🙂
Stoltenberg is a loony of no lesser dimensions than Rasmussen. In fact just a month before his inauguration as High Commander of the Death Star, he organised a piece of national panic-making in his own country. An unspecified “emergency” situation had thousands of Norwegians packing their cars and driving to Sweden for the weekend to avoid it. Mysteriously, no details of this national alert ever came to light later.
Stolty was very likely to have been the source behind the “Swedish submarine scare” too – aimed at cajoling Swedes to join NATO.
“High Commander of the Death Star”, hyuk, hyuk. Good one!
Some disturbing news from the war zone:
English reporter Graham Phillips was wounded near Donetsk by fragment of exploding mine. The fragment pierced his armoured vest and entered his back, in the area near the kidney. He is being treated in hospital in Donetsk.
Phillips was wearing vest and helmet with word “MEDIA” prominently emblazened. People think he was targeted deliberately by the mine-launching soldiers. As evidence for this supposition, just a couple of days ago it was leaked to media that Valentin Nalivaychenko (head of Ukrainian SBU) issued an order to target Russian journalists. In the case of Phillips, he is English nationality, but pro-Russian in his reporting.
Here’s Phillips’ wound:
See: Британский журналист Грэм Филлипс ранен под Донецком
British Journalist Graham Phillips Wounded Near Donetsk
Ранение жизни не угрожает, но все равно неприятно.
The wound is not life-threatening but, all the same, it is still unpleasant.
At least one other news source claims, however, that Phillips’ condition is serious:
Грэм Филлипс находится в тяжелом состоянии в больнице Донецка
Graham Philips in Serious Condition in Donetsk Hospital
Wounds caused by penetration (of bullets, shrapnel or mine fragments) near the kidney would be serious as there might be the risk of bullet, bone or other fragments penetrating the kidney. Sharp objects entering the body at speed can ricochet, hitting bone and going into vital organs, although their paths can’t be predicted because they’re moving around in soft tissues. So even though Philips might not be in critical condition, there is a possibility he could risk losing the kidney and getting an infection if the injury is serious and he doesn’t get the appropriate help in time in the conditions he is working in.
Ball bearing pack mine? Poor bugger!
Could be much worse. A ball bearing typically does not deform much when its charge fires them in all directions, because it is designed to take pressure. So it still stays more or less round and does not tear the hell out of everything it goes through like a nail or a fragment of cast iron would from a shaped charge. I certainly am not suggesting it is a sissy wound, I’m just saying if he had to be hit, this is best-case. Unless it was a styrofoam or foam-rubber mine. But you hardly ever see those.
Outstanding post, Mark. A lot of useful research!
Thank you, Yalensis! I learned a lot of useful information myself; some I knew, but a lot I didn’t.
On the war front:
Video from yesterday of Donetsk residents whose houses were shelled by Grads:
Link:
When is this going to end? Will the junta still be shelling Donetsk five years from now? There needs to be a solution.
Can’t recall where it I saw it but the Russian are providing counter-fire radars which track artillery and mortar shells back to the exact firing location making precise counter-fire fast and effective. That should do the trick if indeed the radars are setup and operated by trained personnel (likely Russia Russians).
I think that’s what the arsenal for democracy has said the Yukies can have because it’s not used for offensive action.
I saw that too. So both sides will have counter-fire radars. Then there will be radar jamming and then anti-radar homing missiles and then SS-25. As if things were not ugly enough. Ukraine is becoming even more of a hot mess.
I saw this analytical piece which in on-topic, and provides a slightly different point of view.
SUMMARY:
Flights of strategic aviation of Russian Federation – are a blow to the pocket of NATO countries.
Increase in flights of Russian strategic aviation near the borders of NATO countries have brought forth a furious reaction (from those countries).
Quotes Jens Stoltenberg on how unacceptable this is.
Is a danger to civil aviation, since the Russian pilots don’t bother to register their flights with civil dispatchers, etc.
Putin has retorted that the flights are a reaction to the activities of USA around Russian borders.
In Soviet period, there were many more flights than nowadays, but no incidents involving civil aircraft were registered. On the other side of the coin, at least 2 NATO destroyers were lost when they attempted to intercept Soviet TU-95.
Which leads to the surmise that the flights have a consequence (intended or unintended), which is to cost NATO money by forcing them to fly their rigs. Every time those things go up in the air, it is wear and tear on the aging motors.
Another interesting detail: whereas strategic aviation such as TU-95 is built to last for many years, and for long flights and long distances; whereas the interceptors have shorter lifespan. A NATO F-16 is built for 8000 hours of life. An F-18: 6000 hours. [hence, the supposition is that forcing these things into the air over and over will wear them out quicker].
For example, Canada, which has recently been “terrorized” by Russian flights of TU-95 and TU-160, possesses a total of 79 destroyers of the type CF-18. And these CF-18’s are no spring chickens. Every time one of these tubs has to heave itself up into the air, especially when they have to go into hyperdrive [? – с использованием форсажа двигателей], and also in conditions of cold weather – well, each of those conditions shortens the life of the plane.
In summary, the writer of this piece postulates that this Russian reaction is aimed to wear away at the pockets of NATO countries.
“Hyperdrive” likely means running the afterburners and/or exceeding the speed of sound (less likely). The F-35 will not change the situation for the better.
Yes, I am sure “Hyperdrive” means “afterburner”, which is essentially a controlled explosion as raw fuel is dumped into the tailpipe. It’s hard on any aircraft and on pilots. The F-35 is probably a well-built aircraft, the Americans are good designers and good engineers, but it is hopeless to try and design a stealth fighter-bomber which will do everything. The west is in love with multirole, and as the old saying goes, you end up with jack of all trades, master of none. We have not bought the F-35 yet, and I am still hoping we will buy the Super Hornet instead as a stopgap until a better design comes along. Of course my ideal would be the PAK FA T-50, but that will never happen no matter who is Prime Minister, because our defense procurement process must answer the question, “How can we best support our closest allies?” rather than “How can we obtain the best fighter for our money?”
In the linked piece, also, “destroyer” obviously means “fighter”.
It’s the opinion of Air Power Australia that Australia should also be buying Sukhoi Flankers and the PAK FA T-50, not least because Indonesia is buying both planes, and Australia and Indonesia often conduct military exercises together. Also the Sukhoi jets cover very large distances and do not need as much air-tanker support as the F-35s. (Something that Canada also should consider.) But military aircraft and ship procurement isn’t the preserve of those who actually have to operate the machines; it’s left to the bureaucrats who decide on the basis of Australia’s loyalties, not on the country’s actual defence needs or what it can afford. The same surely applies to Canada and other NATO countries.
http://in.rbth.com/blogs/2013/04/08/why_australia_should_scratch_the_f-35_and_fly_sukhois_23629.html
Peter used to love to make fun of Carlo Kopp and APA, but I dug into it a bit and his qualifications seem solid, while his analysis of engine dynamics and electronics performance is among the most comprehensive and detailed in the business. He seems to give credit where credit is due, and he loves the F-22, but agrees it is crazy expensive and technologically finicky. And there just are not many of them, while they require special air-conditioned hangars so they are sometimes not deployable everywhere, although they are indeed a technological marvel. The F-35 is a dog. They tried to shoehorn too many missions into it, and even present American tactics envision it going in as a light bomber after an escort of air-superiority fighters.
But obviously, Australia shares with Canada the imperative of propping up allies by buying their kit rather than buying the best fighter available, for political reasons. Both countries remain stubbornly committed to the F-35, although Canada has not taken delivery of any yet. Political analysts and the opposition speculate the announcement of the decision – which has already been made in all but name – is deliberately being delayed so it will not influence next year’s election.
Yes, thanks, I made a couple of mistakes in my translation:
Russian истребители should be translated as “fighters” or “fighter jets”.
Russian с использованием форсажа двигателей should be translated as “with use of the after-burner”.
I didn’t know about “after-burners”, sounds like the unfortunate pilot will get quite a jolt when he turns it on!
They don’t build them like they used to!
Long, long before the advent of computer aided design, most airplanes were built eXtra strong. Sure, this makes them much heavier than their modern equivalents, but they just keep going. Speaking of ancient Tu-95’s who’s propeller tips scrap the speed of sound and whose motors are so loud that ‘escorting’ NATO fighters generally don’t get too near, its US equivalent, the B-52 is slated to remain in service until well in to the 2040s and is now receiving its first radar upgrade in decades. They are also replacing the comms systems and othersand now there is talk of replacing its eight very thirst turbojets.
http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/us-air-force-again-seeks-to-upgrade-b-52h-radars-404306/
http://www.wired.com/2014/05/boeing-b52-bomber-upgrade/
The USAF calls it the “BUF”, for “Big Ugly Fucker”.
I think you missed out F for ‘Fat’ – BUFF! 😉
I’ve never seen a B-52 up close but I have seen a Tu-95 and I can tell you, it looks like the world’s longest pencil! If you are looking off-center, it looks big, but nose on there’s almost nothing there. Those massive Kuzentsov engines with the contra-rotating props are amazing. Just imagine how useful they would be in the kitchen as an all purpose blender!
Yes, you’re right; I did. There should be two F’s.
I don’t know what the drawbacks are to contra-rotating props – I imagine there must be some – but I don’t know of anyone else who uses them and to my mind they are brilliant. The contra-rotation compensates for the tremendous torque of a propeller engine, and the Russians’ use of the same principle in some helicopter models has allowed them to dispense with a tail rotor, which is a known and inherent vulnerability of the infantry-support helicopter. If you can take out the tail rotor – and armoring that section is not really practical due to weight considerations – the main rotor basically stabilizes itself due to torque while the body of the helicopter spins crazily until it crashes.
The principle has commercial applications, too; there are a couple of ex-Russian Kamov helicopters out at the Victoria airport that belong to a logging company, which uses them for selective logging, the alternative to clear-cutting. You can get into a forest clearing and snake out a cut log a hell of a lot easier when you’re not looking over your shoulder all the time worrying about running your tail rotor into a tree.
I’ve never seen the TU-95 up close, but I’ve seen a TU-16 jet bomber not only up close but flying up close, close enough to see the pilot. Like most jet aircraft, all the noise is behind it and when it is approaching it’s eerily quiet. It looked well-maintained and solidly constructed, as well as admirably suited to its role.
Counter-rotating props also have higher efficiency due to elimination of energy losses associated with swirl that is inherent in single prop operating. The second prop is designed to accept flow from the first prop which has swirl and effectively de-swirl the flow. IIRC, this savings is about 10% relative to props of the same thrust that are not counter-rotating.
yalensis, that’s very interesting. I have been wondering about this myself – every time Russia puts a military plane in the air, NATO scrambles an awful lot more of its hardware. A more expensive game for NATO than Russia – you can’t help feeling that’s exactly what Russia intended.
Yeah, it’s a pretty foolproof game. When NATO sees the Russian plane, they HAVE to scramble their jets. It’s a SOP in their book, and they can’t just say, “Oh, we won’t bother this time.”
Showdown at the CNN corral:
CNN’s Amanpour show edits out criticism by visiting RT host
Wow. Anissa pounded the shit out of Amanpour. I almost stood up and cheered because it was such a pleasant surprise after the vomit-inducing toadying by Kasyanov. You could so tell that he was coached beforehand to help Amanpour push a message, and the message is this – the United States and the European Union speak with one voice on Ukraine. There may be a number of small grumbles, but on the broad-brush issues they are absolutely united and solid as a rock. That is the message. Mikhail Kasyanov should be commended for his ability to speak more than one language, but his English really is not that good. Yet he whipped out that phrase “transatlantic unity” like he had been rehearsing it for a week. That was the message a chastened, frightened Putin was supposed to take home from the G-20 – transatlantic unity is absolutely indivisible.
And that’s the message the U.S. government wants Russia to hear, wants everyone to hear. That’s the message Julianne Smith hammered home to Congress in April of this year: the United States of America and the European Union are firmly united on this, there are no cracks, and this is an opportunity to regenerate NATO as a peacekeeping force rather than let it fall apart as it should due to an expired mandate. In other words, Russia has deliberately weakened itself by letting go of its former Warsaw Pact allies, but rather than react in kind, we are going to keep our joint military power, and expand it if we can.
“It will be absolutely critical in the coming weeks and months for the transatlantic partners to show continuing resolve, enhance their efforts to date and ensure that they don’t provide President Putin with an opportunity to drive a wedge through NATO or the transatlantic relationship more broadly…The core challenge for the transatlantic partners will be to prevent their differences on the ground forces request and other related issues from leading to policy paralysis that would only boost Putin’s confidence and unnerve skittish NATO allies in Central and Eastern Europe. Looking ahead, Europe and the United States should focus on the following:
Present a united front even when there isn’t consensus. It is clear that there are already cracks in transatlantic cooperation, particularly in regard to reassuring allies in Central and Eastern Europe. When that happens, it is important that the two sides of the Atlantic avoid airing their differences in public (as they did on the utility of sanctions during the first few days of the crisis), which gives Moscow the satisfaction of feeling like it has the upper hand. As Europe and the United States look at additional measures to pursue in Central and Eastern Europe, in Ukraine or vis-à-vis Russia, they must keep in mind what is at stake and what lessons other corners of the world might draw from their perceived inaction or indecisiveness. The Ukraine crisis is not a short-term hiccup in our relationship with Russia but a wake up call about the importance of transatlantic unity and resolve in the long term. This crisis will require additional measures using a wide variety of economic, diplomatic and military tools, which at times will test the transatlantic partners both economically and politically (especially as they begin to look at ways to reduce Europe’s reliance on Russian oil and gas). Accepting and committing to that reality is an important first step.”
There’s lots more, I recommend everyone read it all, rather than me simply reproducing it here. And Julianne Smith has the background for this sort of statecraft: fluent in German, she was a Robert Bosch Foundation Fellow employed as the senior analyst on the European security desk of the British American Security Information Council and in Germany at the Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, worked at the German Marshall Fund as program officer for the Foreign Policy Program and director of communications for the Project on the Role of American Military Power, served as the Principal Director for European and NATO Policy in the Office of the Secretary of Defense in the Pentagon (in that capacity, Ms. Smith acted as the principal staff assistant and advisor to the Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs for all matters falling within the broad spectrum of NATO and European policy.) She’s also author or co-author of several books, such as “Alliance Reborn: An Atlantic Compact for the 21st Century” and “America and the World in the Age of Terror”. I don’t imagine it is difficult to see her moving behind the scenes to use individuals like Kasyanov to bolster the unity message. We don’t want Putin to get ideas. Unless he sees us all singing from the same song sheet – I’m looking at you, English-speaking media – he will.
Click to access CNAS%20Testimony_JulianneSmith_041014-1.pdf
http://beaconglobalstrategies.com/team/julianne-smith/
And in at least this limited arena, Anissa Naouai fucked that message all up. Or would have, if CNN hadn’t cut it. But I guess she should consider herself lucky – if it had been FOX, they not only would have cut her off, they would have retouched her image to add 20 pounds, turn her teeth yellow and put big dark circles under her eyes to make her look like a madwoman.
Finally! I have waiting forever for somebody to take down that war-mongering CIA bitch, Amanpour.
P.S. – next I hope to see Anissa unleashed against Anderson Cooper!
That would make a lovely present for the New Year.
Just got out of a talk by Kasyanov here at University of Ottawa two minutes ago. Basic message, the West mustn’t compromise with Putin in any way. I may post more on my blog. But my gut reaction was that he isn`t a serious political actor – nobody who calls for foreign countries to sanction his own country is going to get many votes!
Did he ever address the provable fact that he is one of those awfully corrupt Russian politicians with his own nickname “Misha 2 percent”?
Be fair now, two percent is pretty civilised. The Zardaris take twenty, and Lazarenko always took fifty.
Transatlantic unity sounds like a sinister ideology.
“transatlantic unity” or “transatlatic eunuchry“?
Here’s Amanpour in her own words on the Bill Clinton Interview from Sarajevo in 1994:
See this interview with her about her Bosnian ‘impartiality’:
There are so many things in this interview to make one feel sick including her view that it was genocide (from the beginning of course) and her self-serving circular reasoning about dumping impartiality, not to mention how it show that after it all, she still remains totally ignorant and arrogant about it all.
What am I doing? Giving her the oxygen of publicity? OTOH, maybe we really need to be reminded every now and then how absolutely awful she and her like minded ‘journalists’ are in light of their strident accusations of the reporting coming out of Russia.
Anissa Naouai was superb and absolutely on the money. Amanpour has pushed the US State Department’s line in every conflict since the 1990’s. I loved the way this interview was clearly set-up to ambush Anissa – she was meant to fold when faced with an aggressive Amanpour accusing her of being a Kremlin propagandist and Kasyanov being there to offer confirmation of Putin-as-Hitler/Stalin-clone and yet she turned the tables on Amanpour most effectively – the biter bit.
Femen goes topless in Strasbourg Cathedral to protest upcoming pope visit:
http://www.20minutes.fr/strasbourg/1487047-20141124-strasbourg-femen-proteste-seins-nus-cathedrale-contre-venue-pape
###
Of course, this being France, it will be met with a garlic shrug rather than outrage.
Although you are right on the money, cuisine-wise, I imagine you mean a “Gallic” shrug. Suck it, Strasbourg!! This is the wages of supporting Femen when they were cutting down Orthodox crosses, and the screeching Pussy Riot when they were profaning an Orthodox church.
Definitely ‘garlic’! Language is there to be abused for comedic purposes – turned inside out, twisted and finally salted like Viennese pretzels! Some times it falls flat, but that’s not an excuse to give up as there is inherent comedy in failure or just simply being plain bad!. Schadenfreude, innit?
Well, the “garlic” bit actually fits.
But you have to hand it to Femen, everybody assumed they were just Western project to demean Russia; but if they are profaning Catholic symbols and institutions as well, then maybe they are actually sincere in their anti-clerical views??
They didn’t start out to demean Russia, though: their first target was the alleged misogyny of the Khokhly.
FEMEN AND THE (sic) PROTEST
There are many takes on FEMEN. I have heard older feminists saying that this is not what women have fought for: to go bare our bodies, even if for political aims. I have heard many more, particularly younger feminists, lauding the bravery of these Ukraine-based women, whose protests were born out of the normalised misogyny that underpins Ukrainian society. Confront your tormentor with the focus of such torment: your female body.
FEMEN was started by a Ukrainian man who wanted to get some of these “weak bitches.”
Getting a Grip on Sex Tourism in Kyiv
That’s a good point, but I don’t credit them with any deep ideology – they’re just attention junkies only one step removed from Voina.
The Independent: France ‘blocks’ Russian sailors from boarding a warship
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/france-blocks-russian-sailors-from-boarding-warship-9869984.html
President Hollande has been under pressure to deny Putin access to two €1.2 billion helicopter carriers over the Ukraine crisis
…On Monday, the regional French newspaper Ouest-France reported that 400 Russian sailors due to board Vladivostok for training were refused access at the request of the Paris authorities.
Russia’s Interfax agency has since reported that the sailors in the port city of Saint Nazaire were allowed to board the vessel on Tuesday, citing a military source. ..
###
Is this what the British call Health and Safety???
Porky’s twin sister gives him guns to play with.
Lithuania agrees to supply Ukraine with military aid, Poroshenko says
Does tiny Lithuania produce military hardware? I don’t think so.
Call me a cynic, but if her statement is true, then to me it means only one thing: NATO is using Lithuania as the middleman to supply Ukraine.
ThatJ, I suspect you may be right about NATO channelling weapons through Lithuania. Stoltenberg has been there recently no doubt to relay US instructions to the Baltic chihuahua:-
Meeting with President Grybauskaite, Foreign Minister Linas Linkevičius and Defence Minister Juozas Olekas, Mr Stoltenberg discussed current security challenges and the implications of Russia’s continued aggressive actions in Ukraine. He outlined ongoing work to implement the Readiness Action Plan agreed at the NATO Wales Summit, stressing that “this plan is the key to ensuring we are capable to deal with the challenges that we face.”
Mr Stoltenberg thanked Lithuania for its operational contributions in Afghanistan and Kosovo, as well as for its leadership on energy security. He welcomed Lithuania’s commitment to increase its defence spending. “In these turbulent times, this commitment is more precious than ever,” the Secretary General said.
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2014/11/24/lithuania-nato-chief-stresses-war-readiness-in-northeast-europe/
As others have suggested, Ukraine’s problem is not weapons, it’s trained soldiers. That’s why it relies so heavily on its civilian Banderite haters in the punishment battalions. Ukraine was a weapons exporter for years. They probably would love to have some of those fancy Abrams tanks, but those would be, first of all, immediately identifiable as American armor (and then it’s gloves off), and also would require Americans to either drive them or train Ukrainians to drive them. So what they will likely get is some guns which will be thrust into the hands of conscripts, and they will not even be fancy western guns because a large supply of them would free up Russia to supply the east in earnest. The west knows the rules of the game, and it’s only weapons the Ukies could conceivably have obtained themselves. And that, again, is not their problem.
Grabbaskate must be buffing her legacy, since she is in her final term; Lithuania allows only two consecutive terms, and she was just re-elected this year in the second round of voting.
Ha, ha!!! I love it!! “The country’s first female president added that Vilnius was prepared to give Kiev pointers on how to bolster energy security and how to create an open and transparent energy market in Ukraine.”
Russia should test Grab-a-skate’s resolve and overall Gas-Goddess chops by shutting off Lithuania’s gas for two weeks. Because Lithuania gets 100% of its gas from Russia, and all the “energy-security” foofarah is about this, Lithuania’s first floating LNG terminal. Touted as the straw that broke Russia’s back, Lithuania loves to swagger and talk tough. Russia should take them at their word, shrug and say, “Guess you won’t be needing this, then”, and shut off their gas. You would soon see how effective their floating LNG terminal would be at supplying the country’s needs.
Nobody seems to be thinking how the LNG is going to get there, or about the risks inherent in manhandling those massive gas bombs around in restricted waterways, or of how tight the schedules have to be to ensure the next tanker is leaving as soon as the one in port has offloaded, regardless of what the weather is. Or that LNG is more expensive this way than that delivered by pipeline. The Lithuanians and the usual crowd of American shit-stirrers are just so getting off on strutting around with big euphoric LNG boners over their touted “energy independence”. It is a genuine pity Mr. Putin is such a softie, because I would shut off their gas right now, and then watch them lose that LNG tumescence in a hurry.
So US Secretary of Defense Hagel is resigning over disputes with the Obama administration:
http://rt.com/usa/208383-obama-asks-hagel-resign/
The article suggests that Hagel was not hawkish enough – he was brought in to wind down wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, not to start new ones. Guess he had his fill of neocon insanity.
They will replace Hagel with a rabid hawk. More wars, suffering and mass exodus of refugees and opportunists, many of whom will take this chance and selfishly flee to Europe where a hostile, US-beholden elite will gladly accept them (the MSM which is an integral part of this elite will help the government get away with it by demonizing critics and creating sob stories to induce guilt in the goyim). Israel doesn’t welcome any of these people, even if they are closer to the “Holy Land” and inhabit the same continent, nevermind the fact that these wars are first and foremost Israel-firsters’ wars.
A RT reader commented:
There’s more to these resignations than meets the eye. It seems the puppet masters are upping the stakes and these military men don’t want to comply.
I fear the Zionists are up to something. Whatever they have in mind, it won’t do Christian Europe or Islamic Middle East any good.
I agree, the US military seems to be last refuge for sanity in Washington. Time for a purge and let the real leaders take charge! Go Hilary! Deploy Pussy Riot, Engage all NGOs!
The “soft power” option in Russia is greatly diminished in the wake of events in Ukraine. Pussy Riot and the “gay pedo rights” issue was a flop in Sochi and it has zero chance to rouse anything now.
The west is stuck with inflating tired, small demonstrations by the usual malcontents.
Michele Flournoy has been touted as Chuck Hagel’s replacement for the post of Defense Secretary.
Read her profile here and make sure you have plenty of hankies to hand:
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/profile/flournoy_michele
The USA is in an arms race with itself, and if it is not careful it will go the way of the Soviet Union, spending its way into unsustainability. How much defense spending is too much defense spending? Is there even a ceiling?
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-24/massmutual-senior-vice-president-found-dead-stabbed-chest-apparent-homicide
I don’t see the western media talking about a gangster’s paradise in the USA. Such incidents in Russia always produce a deluge of liberast “analysis” claiming they are evidence of the “failure of Putin’s Russia”.
The western media chorus should stick to covering its own domestic problems before running around faking them up elsewhere.
Yes, this is your problem. Westerners aren’t hearing enough of your propaganda.
I’m sure that an influx of Borat Sagdiyevenko is just what is needed to convince people of the nobility of the Ukraine’s struggle.
Pingback: RUSSIA & UKRAINE: JRL 2014-#243 table of contents with links :: Monday 24 November 2014 | Johnson's Russia List
Interesting piece in VZGLIAD about current Abkhazian politics.
SUMMARY AND PARTIAL TRANSLATION
On Monday 24 November, Putin met with President of Abkhazia Raul Hajimba, in Sochi. The two leaders signed a new treaty about strategic partnership between Russia and Abkhazia.
Putin promised to double the amount of economic aid from Russia to Abkhazia. In the coming year, Russia will allocate 5 billion rubles, and subsequently an annual allocation of 4 billion. Hajimba noted that this money will help to solve social problems as well as economic development of his country.
At the same time, in Sukhum (the capital of Abkhazia), there were demonstrations by both supporters and opponents of the friendship treaty with Moscow. The Oppositionist party “Amtsakhara” organized the protest demonstration and brought approx. 1000 people onto the street. They express no-confidence in Hajimba, and accuse him of harming Abkhazian sovereignty.
Seeing this, the government organized its own “pro” demo, and brought approx. 2000 people onto the street. Vice President Vitaly Gabnia explained that the government usually does not organize demonstrations, only Opps, and President Hajimba himself used to be an Opp. However, Gabnia was concerned that Western press sees a few people on the street and assumes they have mass support; so he wanted to show, that the government has more support than the Opposition.
In addition, Hajimba pointed out that the treaty with Russia was published and discussed openly in society and the press. He went for maximum transparency, since that was one of his own demands, when he was in the Opposition.
Gabnia asserts that a majority of Abkhazians do not believe that Russia is trying to swallow up Abakhazia. He says that is a cliche that Western governments promulgate. “Due to many reasons, Abkhazia finds herself in the sphere of influence, either of Russia or of Gruzia.
Pundit and blogger Roin Agrba points out, that the same Opps who now say they oppose the treaty, were in power in 2009 and signed a similar treaty with Russia. He thinks they are just flexing their muscles because they didn’t like the last elections [which brought Hajimba to power]. In other words, this is nothing like a Western-induced colour revolution, it’s just internal grumbling and a desire to distinguish themselves. Agrba adds that every element in Abkhazian society, even the Opposition, accepts the security component of the treaty.
[yalensis: To put in a nutshell, and this is my understanding of Abkhazian politics as well, there is no such thing as any pro-Gruzian side. All political parties support Abkhazian sovereignty and independence, not all parties are “pro-Russian”, but all recognize that they need Russian support to survive in a hostile world.]
Another element in the economic component of the treaty is a proposal to re-establish railroad connections between 4 ex-Soviet republics: Russia (Moscow) – Abkhazia (Sukhum) – Gruzia (Tbilisi) – and Armenia (Erevan). Putin is very interested in restoring this old Soviet railroad network, which broke down due to the various wars in the Caucasus. The negotitions to renew the railroad have broken down, time and time again, because the Abkhazians (who are very proud of their independence) insist on being represented at the meetings as an independent country; and that totally gets the Gruzians goat, since they regard Abkhazia as one of their prodigal provinces.
Gabnia says Abkhazia will never back down on this point, no matter how badly Russia wants the railroad; but he hastens to add that Russia has never put any pressure on Abkhazia either.
Last year, Gruzian P.M. Ivanishvili indicated, that he was amenable to re-establishing the railroad. But current Gruzians officials seem more lukewarm to the idea, not seeing as the project brings that much benefit to Gruzia, but seems more designed to benefit (landlocked) Armenia.
So Tbilisi doesn’t see an opportunity for Gruzia to benefit from being a transit point in the railway project between Sukhumi and Yerevan? Not even in collecting local tolls and tariffs and using the railway to transport the country’s own goods to and from these endpoints? Do Gruzians want to be like the Banderites and have no infrastructure?
Oh I forgot, Saa-Karkrashian-vili is advising Porky Pig. He must have a few acolytes still in Tbilisi.
But current Gruzians officials seem more lukewarm to the idea, not seeing as the project brings that much benefit to Gruzia, but seems more designed to benefit (landlocked) Armenia.
So the point is not that the railroad does not benefit Georgia, but that it benefits Armenia more than it benefits Georgia.
And I thought the two countries were on amicable terms.
Let me translate that whole “railroad” section in full, in case my quick summary led to some confusion. This whole “railroad” issue appears to be a touchy subject, I don’t want to promulgate anything incorrect, especially about sensitive issue such as Gruzian-Armenian relations. And I don’t think the Gruzians quoted were actually dissing Armenia per se.
Here is the section right after the paragraph where the Abkhazian Vice President insists that Abkhazia must be represented (at negotiations involving the railroad) as an independent state, otherwise no deal:
В Тбилиси тоже пока не уверены в скором возобновлении железнодорожного сообщения с северным соседом. Госминистр Грузии по вопросам примирения и гражданского равноправия Паата Закареишвили заявил газете ВЗГЛЯД, что вопрос «может быть изучен и обсужден в политической элите Грузии». Он признал, что «впервые за долгое время Россия озвучивает этот вопрос в таком контексте». Но от дополнительных комментариев воздержался.
А пожелавший остаться неназванным источник газеты ВЗГЛЯД в экономическом блоке правительства Грузии заявил: «С экономической точки зрения восстановление этой дороги Грузии не принесет больших выгод, на нее нужно столько денег! А товарооборот большим не представляется, значит, и окупится она через десятилетия, а вот для Армении она намного более привлекательна».
Глава Института развития Грузии Гиа Хухашвили призвал даже не обсуждать пока целесообразность проекта. «Подписание Россией с Абхазией этого договора является настолько негативным для Грузии, для отношений Москвы и Тбилиси, что предлагать после этого нам интеграционные проекты – это только насмешка, это дополнительная пощечина, – отмечает аналитик. – То есть как будто ничего не происходит, давайте работать. Но это не так».
Бывший премьер-министр Грузии Тенгиз Сигуа тоже предрекает, что подписанное в понедельник соглашение приведет к тому, что Тбилиси вовсе откажется обсуждать вопрос железной дороги. «Это более всего ударит по Армении, которая более 80 процентов грузов получает через порты нашей страны, остальное – через Иран. То есть железная дорога через Абхазию удешевила бы доставку в Армению, – сказал экс-премьер газете ВЗГЛЯД. – Нам же эта дорога в экономическом плане особенно и не нужна, мы получаем товары в основном морем через Поти и Батум».
TRANSLATION
In Tbilisi, for the time being they are not convinced that railroad connections might soon be re-established with their northern neighbour [Russia]. Paata Zakareishvili, (Gruzian) Minister of Reconciliation and Civil Rights, told the newspaper VZGLIAD, that the issue “will be discussed and analyzed among the political elite of Gruzia”. He admitted, that this is the first time in a long time that Russia has brought up the issue in such a context.” Then he abstained from further commentary.
Another source in Gruzian government, who deals in economy, and who prefers to remain anonymous, told this to VZGLIAD: “From an economic point of view, the resurrection of this railroad line will not bring all that much benefit to Gruzia, and consider how much money we would need to spend on it! The amount of trade in goods is not that much, it would take decades to return on investment; whereas (on the other hand), it is much more attractive (idea) for Armenia.”
[yalensis: and this is where, in above comment, I inserted my own thought that Armenia, being landlocked, could surely benefit from a railroad line. In other words, I don’t think this anonymous Gruzian official is saying he doesn’t want the railroad because it would benefit Armenia, he is just saying that, objectively speaking, Armenia has more to gain from it than Gruzia.]
The head of Gruzian Development Institute, Gia Khukhashvili advised against even discussing this project for the time being. The signing of this treaty between Russia and Abkhazia is such a negative thing for Gruzia, for relations between Moscow and Tbilisi, that it is simply a joke at this point to propose any integrated projects to us; and not just a joke, it is a supplementary slap in our faces. It’s as if they (the Russians) are saying, Let’s pretend nothing happened, let’s work together. I don’t think so.”
Tengis Sigua, former P.M. of Gruzia, also foresees, that the signing of the treaty which happened on Monday (between Moscow and Sukhum), will have the consequence, that Gruzia will refuse to get involved in the railroad project. “More than anything, this (refusal) will harm Armenia, which receives over 80% of its products through the ports of our country; the rest, via Iran. In other words, a railroad via Abkhazia would bring down the price of delivering products to Armenia. We, on the other hand (Gruzians), don’t really need this railroad, for any purely economic reasons, we receive our products, in the main, by sea, via our ports Poti and Batum.”
END OF TRANSLATION
yalensis:
In other words, Gruzians in these interviews are not dumping on Armenia, they are just pointing out that the railroad project is designed more to benefit Armenia; they themselves don’t need it, it would just be a wasteful expenditure
Plus (I believe I am accurately channeling their POV here): Gruzians are pissed off by the Moscow-Sukhum treaty that was signed yesterday, they think that Moscow is trying to pull a fast one: forcing them to de-facto recognize Abkhazian independence, while at the same time tricking them into investing in a project that brings them no ROI.
Hi yalensis, thank you for claryfing this point.
The head of Gruzian Development Institute, Gia Khukhashvili advised against even discussing this project for the time being. […] it is simply a joke at this point to propose any integrated projects to us; and not just a joke, it is a supplementary slap in our faces. It’s as if they (the Russians) are saying, Let’s pretend nothing happened, let’s work together. I don’t think so.”
Dear Khukhashvili, what are the Abkhazian supposed to think, when Tbilisi talks about reintegration of the former province under its control? “Look, we tried to bomb you into submission – how stupid on my part, eh? But outside there’s such a lovely weather. could you resume paying taxes to us?”
Now that‘s what one calls “pretending nothing happened”.
I know, it’s really sad how so many Gruzians are still in denial about Abkhazia. They will NEVER get Abkhazia back. They need to let go of it, and just get on with their lives.
This guy Gia sounds like he can really hold onto a grudge until judgement day. A lot of people are like that.
… “More than anything, this (refusal) will harm Armenia, which receives over 80% of its products through the ports of our country; the rest, via Iran. In other words, a railroad via Abkhazia would bring down the price of delivering products to Armenia. We, on the other hand (Gruzians), don’t really need this railroad, for any purely economic reasons, we receive our products, in the main, by sea, via our ports Poti and [Batumi].”
One way to interpret this paragraph is to suggest that Gruzia benefits from the current arrangement by charging Armenia for the use of its ports and warehouses that it would not otherwise be able to charge if Armenia used rail to import and export goods to Russia and elsewhere. Nice one, Gruzians!
Also the Gruzians view the railway link in a narrow way, as solely a conduit to transport goods from Sukhumi to Yerevan. The possibility of using it to transport passengers, commuters and tourists from Gruziya to Armenia and back seems alien to them.
The attitude is one not likely to encourage warm relations between Tbilisi and Yerevan. I believe that Armenia depends heavily on Russia economically and militarily so the motivation behind Gruzian refusal might be to isolate Armenia and pressure the country into severing its ties to Moscow.
That’s a very good point, Jen, I didn’t think of that. (About Gruzia benefitting from Armenia’s predicament and having to pay Gruzia port-shipping costs.)
I have to mention, also, that under Saakashvili (I don’t know if it’s still true under new Gruzian government), ethnic Armenians were treated with disrespect, and there was a certain amount of ill-will between these two ancient Caucasian peoples.
Not sure if that is still the case…
As regards the argument that in the Ukraine the “tail”, in the shape of a minority of Banderite shitkickers in the West, wags the “dog” that is the rest of the Ukraine; that the “tail” maintains that Ukrainian and only Ukrainian is the language of the Ukraine; that Russian, the tongue of the nauseous Moskali, should not be used in writing as a means of communication by state and education institutions anywhere on that hallowed ground that is the inheritor to “Kievan rus'”, a belief that the “tail” immediately tried to implement legally on its seizure of power in Kiev and its illegal ousting of Yanukovich, which action spurred on Russian speaking Ukrainian citizens in the east to seek at first devolvement from central government in Kiev and now independence from the Ukraine, take a look at this:
This poster was displayed for a day-and-a-half on billboards in Kiev whilst “the most intelligent people in the world” never realized what was written on it.
For Russian speakers: “I talk with cows and pigs in Ukrainian”.
I must admit, though, that one-and-a-half days is not too long a time for the complaints to come in and be acted upon. In any case, many people just do not read notices most places.
The thing that intrigues me is that somebody took the trouble to manufacture these posters and have them stuck up around Kiev and never suffered any dire consequences for doing so.
Maybe it was the work of a Spetsnaz team wearing their Harry Potterr invisibility gowns?
Ha ha! that’s pretty funny act of sabotage!
I think this is the best way to bring down Kiev junta: via mockery.
(That, plus destroying their armour and driving their punitive battalions into cauldrons.)
So Michele Flournoy, Hagel’s potential replacement, is a “liberal interventionist” who has a bachelor of arts degree in “social studies” and is married to a certain Scott Gould. The Goulds of this world that I came across in the internet are almost always Jewish, although this surname is not Jewish in origin.
Notably, in 2005 Flournoy supported an advocacy campaign aimed at increasing the size of the U.S. military that was spearheaded by the now-defunct neoconservative activist group the Project for the New American Century (PNAC). PNAC was notorious for its efforts in the wake of the 9/11 attacks to promote a U.S. invasion of Iraq “even if evidence does not link Iraq directly to the attack.”
And
Numerous neoconservative actors also promoted Flournoy’s candidacy because of their opposition to leading nominee—and Obama’s eventual choice for the position—Chuck Hagel, a former Republican senator known for his bipartisanship as well as his criticism of one-sided U.S. support for Israel.
And
Flournoy’s apparent supporters now include the Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol (who essentially argued that she wouldn’t be as objectionable as Hagel), former George W. Bush administration Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, and [Mitt Romney] foreign policy adviser Dan Senor.
Kristol, Wolfowitz and Senor are all Jews.
She’s a Democrat, a “social liberal” (i.e. she basically subscribes to the Trotskyite-influence New Left) and yet the neocons preferred her nomination over the Republican Hagel’s?
Here I see that the description of the neocons by TOO is spot on, again. Amazing.
It all boils down to this:
1) Trotskyism/New Left and its never-ending attack on Western societies
2) Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East and our greatest ally
3) We must intervene wherever human rights and democracy are in peril
Social and cultural rot, Jewish nationalism and endless wars. The “neocon” redux.
On a side note, Victoria Nuland’s family ties: The Permanent Government in action
From Asslund’s Twitter feed:
My bad, it was actually re-twitted by Jamie Kirchick:
https://twitter.com/jkirchick
Another one from his feed:
From the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR — does this name ring a bell?) website:
EU solidarity abandoned on Mediterranean shores
Where has good old Britain gone?
So this is what “European values” and “Pan-Europeanism” are all about? I’ll let it pass, thank you.
Bla bla bla mounting Russian aggression bla bla bla. “Mounting Russian aggression” – another modern theme – is merely Russian pushback against being rolled, which it most certainly will be if there is no resistance. If we patrol up and down their coastline, “showing the flag”, we are just keeping the Russian bear in his cage. If they patrol our coastline, they’re showing their aggression, being provocative and endangering civil aviation. What rubbish. The meme all boils down to our motives can be trusted because we’re good, and theirs cannot because they’re bad.
From today’s Grauniad:
Germany dodges recession thanks to rise in private consumption
The German economy turned out to be stable in a difficult global economic environment:
If in that article “German” and “Germany” were replaced with “Russian” and “Russia” respectively, would the Grauniad sing a different tune?
Russia GDP Annual Growth Rate
Russia GDP Growth Beats Expectations
The Russian economy advanced 0.7 percent year-on-year in the third quarter of 2014, down from a 0.8 percent expansion reported from April to June, according to the preliminary figures from the Federal Statistics Office. The number came well above market expectations and the central bank estimate of 0.2 percent.
So the German economy is “stable” whilst the Russian one is in deep recession?
Is that how it is?
All part of shoulder-to-shoulder transatlantic unity, don’t you know. No negative stories in English on the German economy, because it is the EU’s honeypot and we support our friends.
Ferguson In Flames, Shots Fired, Police Car Destroyed, Tear-Gas Deployed, Looting; NYC Brooklyn & Triborough Bridge & LA Freeways Blocked
Protests have gone nationwide
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-24/ferguson-grand-jury-decision-live-feed
—
Deutsche Bank’s Modest Proposal To Central Banks: “Purchase The Gold Held By Private Households”
From the bank that a few days ago informed us that “People Are Talking About Helicopter Money And Debt Cancellation Being The End Game”, comes the logical next step. Here it is, without commentary and the key section highlighted…
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-24/deutsche-banks-modest-proposal-central-banks-purchase-gold-held-private-households
—
Mapping Recent “Incidents” Between Russia And NATO
Having previously shown the dramatic build-up of NATO fighter jets around Russia’s border, we thought mapping the rising number of “incidents” – which are worse than during the cold war – between NATO and Russia this year would be useful…
It appears Finland and Sweden are the most at risk of a major ‘incident’.
Source: The Washington Post
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-24/mapping-recent-incidents-between-russia-and-nato
“It appears Finland and Sweden are the most at risk of a major ‘incident’.”
As the pointed map key “NATO countries” and “Countries not part of NATO” is at pains to point out, highlighting a herd of bears and a dense thicket of “incidents” around the lonely island of light grey. The inference is clear – if you were part of NATO, your new friends would help you keep the bears off the doorstep – you don’t see them messing with us, do you?
I see they are calling that “Copenhagen incident” (that took place more than 70 miles from Copenhagen, although they made it sound like the IL-20 crossed the airliner’s flight path as it was rotating off the runway at Copenhagen) a “high risk” event. The description said it came within 300 feet. That’s how much Dnipro tower ordered MH-17 to lose in altitude as they directed it over a hot war zone. And it’s all right for demonstrations at air shows to fly over the heads of the crowd at less than a third that distance. When you write the rulebook, you can do anything you want, and anything bad that happens is “unfortunate”. Unless you’re Russian, in which case it’s “evil”.
Yes, I see what WaPo did there.
Sweden and Finland are not part of NATO, therefore the Russians are picking on them. If they were in NATO, Russia wouldn’t dare such a feat. Solution: join NATO!
#BBCtrending: Rapping for Putin
25 November 2014 Last updated at 00:26 GMT
“Go Hard Like Vladimir Putin”, a rap track by two African immigrants living in Russia, has been viewed over a million times. Many Russians are uploading their own versions to social media.
There have been concerns in the past about how African immigrants have been received in the country, with groups like the MPC Task Force Against Racism reporting that although racial violence has decreased it’s still a part of everyday life. But the two MCs behind this video say that’s a thing of the past and Vladimir Putin is a role model for hard work and diligence.
Video journalist: Neil Meads
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-30153955
Nope. What crap! “I go hard like Vladimir Putin” x ?, 100? “Vlad-i-mer Put-in”. Syllables aren’t words. How fornicatin infantile! Mindless doggerel, forced rhymes, all backed by monotonous repetitive thumps, er, music. Zero melody. It’s recitative, not singing. .
There have been concerns in the past about how African immigrants have been received in the country, with groups like the MPC Task Force Against Racism reporting that although racial violence has decreased it’s still a part of everyday life.
It’s not the first time the BBC mentions this NGO and its criticism of the Russian people. From 2009:
Africans working or studying in Moscow rarely feel safe with many of them avoiding public transportation for fear of racial assaults, according to a BBC report citing a study by the Moscow Protestant Chaplaincy (MPC).
http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/104899.html
This criticism amounts to the pathologization of the very existence of the Russian ethnos: to defend your people’s right to exist and safeguard their posteriority is hateful. Only by being swarmed by aliens and embracing them — at the expanse of your historical nation, which to me sounds intuitively anti-evolutionary — can your loving nature be proved. This view is taken as prima facie throughout the West.
As usual, the BBC considers only those NGOs — either in Russia or in the West — that are hostile toward the native population and their skepticism about the benefits of becoming a minority within their own countries. As long as you are hostile to this natural feeling, the Western MSM will be all ears. If you are of the opposite belief, i.e. that these people shouldn’t be coming to Russia because it’s not in the interests of the Russian population, then not only are you not listened to by the Western MSM, you’ll be demonized by expressing a popular belief. MPC, I never heard of this NGO, but I can see that the BBC likes it a lot. Its funding and intentions should be closely monitored by the Russian authorities. Such a hostile opinion as this one reported by the MPC is not shared by the vast majority of the population yet the BBC gives these nobodies the status of some kind of authority on this matter?
One of these black guys is Simon (Саймон) I think, judging by his voice. He’s a pretty well known and popular radio show host in Moscow, actually.
And as far as racism or perceived racism (towards black people, should be clarified as Russia is extremely multi-ethnic as it is, and that’s not a problem) goes… It’s such a cheap card to pull when talking about a huge country where most people up until recently never saw a person of sub-Saharan African descent in real life. Furthermore, that racism of this kind remains prevalent in the US with ~13% Afro-Americans should be reason enough to take it easy with the generalizations.
Yeah, no, it ain’t Simon. He’s a far better rapper, much more flow-y.
Another BBC piece belittling Russians, this one from 2006. Here the Beeb asked correspondents what they think about the Moskali’s unwillingness to be racially displaced:
Racism in Russia: Your views
Reports of racist attacks in Russia have become disturbingly regular in recent years.
Is the claim of racism against Africans in Russia exaggerated?
Russian President Vladimir Putin has admitted that his country was not doing enough to protect foreigners, while Amnesty International, the human rights group, described the situation as “out of control”.
What do you think about the situation?
***
We are all to be blamed – ourselves, the government and even the old people that talk in the streets. These killings will never stop until we all change our attitude about it. Our government must deal with it as strongly as possible.
Alexei, Kiev
We have to look at what causes this racism in Russia. It did not appear out of nowhere. How do non-Russians behave? They despise Russians. Also, the police are corrupt and so this is why young people have to deal with this problem themselves.
Olga Safronova
I used to be nice to them and thought that all people were brothers but now I am a member of the white race movement at our university. We are struggling with illegal immigrants flooding to Moscow. We are not alone. The USA is also cracking down on illegal immigration.
Natasha, Moscow
[ThatJ: Natasha is wrong about the USA acting decisively on illegal immigration. Bush did little to stop and reverse the problem. Let’s not start talking about the current amnesty debacle…]
The USSR was a county where racism flourished at all levels, from government to ordinary people. There was an idea that Soviet people were the new dominating race. Everything we have now is a result of that Soviet propaganda.
Petr, Israel
I studied in the Moscow in 1992 for nine months as part of my Russian language programme. I met some wonderful Russians and had the best of times. I went back twice in the mid 1990s on holiday and still enjoyed it. Then in 2003, I was in Moscow for five days but did not recognise the people. I was racially abused six times, even from the police. I was refused entry into a night club because black people were not welcomed. I heard so many horror stories from foreigners. After that trip I swore never to return.
Jay, London
He hit me and I tried to hit him back, but another one struck me from behind
Mukhtar Ahmed Osman (Somali blood on Moscow snow)
I was one of those who asked Mr Putin about these attacks on his web show recently, and his response was instructive. His retort was that there had been an influx of people of different cultures, who don’t always obey the laws. What further evidence does anyone need, indicating that these attacks are sanctioned, or at the very least, condoned by those in authority? Yet, my fellow Africans would rather die studying there. What use is a PhD to someone who is seriously injured, or dead?
Akpan, UK/Nigeria
Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5173458.stm
Motherboard.Vice.com: How the Pentagon’s Skynet Would Automate War
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/how-the-pentagons-skynet-would-automate-war
Pentagon officials are worried that the US military is losing its edge compared to competitors like China, and are willing to explore almost anything to stay on top—including creating watered-down versions of the Terminator.
Due to technological revolutions outside its control, the Department of Defense (DoD) anticipates the dawn of a bold new era of automated war within just 15 years. By then, they believe, wars could be fought entirely using intelligent robotic systems armed with advanced weapons.
Last week, US defense secretary Chuck Hagel announced the ‘Defense Innovation Initiative’—a sweeping plan to identify and develop cutting edge technology breakthroughs “over the next three to five years and beyond” to maintain global US “military-technological superiority.” Areas to be covered by the DoD programme include robotics, autonomous systems, miniaturization, Big Data and advanced manufacturing, including 3D printing…
…the NDU study warns that while accelerating technological change will “flatten the world economically, socially, politically, and militarily, it could also increase wealth inequality and social stress,” and argues that the Pentagon must take drastic action to avoid the potential decline of US military power: “For DoD to remain the world’s preeminent military force, it must redefine its culture and organizational processes to become more networked, nimble, and knowledge-based.”…
… The main challenge to such robot institutionalization will come from a “political backlash” to robots being able to determine by themselves when to kill.
To counter public objections, they advocate that the Pentagon should be “highly proactive” in ensuring “it is not perceived as creating weapons systems without a ‘human in the loop.’ It may be that DoD should publicly self-limit its operational doctrine on the use of such systems to head off public or international backlash to its development of autonomous systems.”…
… Perhaps the most disturbing dimension among the NDU study’s insights is the prospect that within the next decade, artificial intelligence (AI) research could spawn “strong AI”—or at least a form of “weak AI” that approximates some features of the former.
Strong AI should be able to simulate a wide range of human cognition, and include traits like consciousness, sentience, sapience, or self-awareness. Many now believe, Kadtke and Wells, observe, that “strong AI may be achieved sometime in the 2020s.”…
…There is no soul-searching, though, about the obvious risks of using AI to automate such core elements of military planning and operations, beyond the following oblique sentence: “One negative aspect of these trends, however, lies in the risks that are possible due to unforeseen vulnerabilities that may arise from the large scale deployment of smart automated systems, for which there is little practical experience.”…
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Creepy. As the author point out at the beginning, whether by hubris, fantasy or desperation, how far would the US go down this rabbit hole?
What this study does tell us is that there is still this almost unlimited belief that technology will get the US out of trouble. The problem is that they have consistently over-estimated how well it will work when/if it eventually arrives, under-estimated how long it will take to come to any usable form. And of course cost, almost always under-estimated. That got the US military in to a lot of trouble in places like Vietnam where their belief of natural total superiority got them in so easily only to discover that the enemy wasn’t so simple nor obliging. The military-industrial-complex was so arrogant that they designed the F-4 originally without even a gun and it flew like a brick because they bought lock, stock and barrel manufacturer’s claims that missiles would do the job and make dogfighting passé. I won’t even mention the M-16’s suitability. Ooops, I did!
The study seems to be yet another piece of ‘Poo Sky Thinking’ (it’s like Blue Sky Thinking except it guarantees that you will end up in the poo) that only looks a the issue in a relatively confined way to the exclusion of many other domestic factors, let alone the rest of the world who are not simply sitting on their own hands. Such a study could simply be the precursor of a future military-industrial state, formally known as the USA. The resources have to come from somewhere so would American citizens be more than happy to starve in order to keep the US’sposition as the preeminent global military power?
Washington’s Toast: Younger military veterans are angered by budget cuts to their pension benefits
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/younger-veterans-outraged-by-budget-cuts-to-their-pension-benefits/2013/12/30/c43cbbec-6f02-11e3-b405-7e360f7e9fd2_story.html
After 25 years of service, including a combat tour in Afghanistan, Lt. Col. Stephen Preston retired from the Army and began collecting a pension of nearly $55,000 a year. The money made it possible for Preston to go back to college, get his MBA and embark on a second career in corporate strategy.
So it happened that Preston was sitting in his new office shortly before Christmas when he heard on the radio that he had become the latest target in Washington’s war on spending.
“I’m not an angry man, but I was very, very angry,” Preston, 51, said in a telephone interview from his home in Tampa. “This is a pact between the greater population of the United States and the fraction of people who served and sacrificed. If you didn’t want to pay us what you promised us, then you probably shouldn’t have promised it.”…
…The cut is small — a one-percentage-point reduction in the annual cost-of-living increase — but it has provoked outrage among veterans, some of whom argue that the country is reneging on a solemn pact…
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Need I say more?
Neuters: Lithuania protests after Russia blocks its cars and trucks
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/24/us-lithuania-russia-idUSKCN0J81NR20141124
he ex-Soviet republic of Lithuania accused Moscow on Monday of blocking its vehicles and goods at the Russian border, and summoned its ambassador to protest…
…However, ties are under strain. Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite promised on Monday to give Ukraine military aid to help in its fight against Russian-backed separatists, after last week branding Russia a “terrorist country” for refusing to identify troops operating in east Ukraine as Russian…
Well President Grubby’s Katy, this should be your song!
Hey, Grubby – when life hands you a lemon, make lemonade! This could be another beautiful opportunity in disguise, whereby you can wean yourself off Russian trade just like you weaned yourself off Russian gas with your floating LNG terminal! Simply sell your goods to your EU friends instead! Profits? Of course there’ll be profits! There’s no advantage to trading with Russia; how could there be? If there were, you wouldn’t shoot your big fat stupid mouth off the way you do.
The slime, they support the butchery of Russians in the Donbas and demand access to Russia’s market. In a fair world they would be bombed in retaliation together with Kiev.
France 24 Cats: French President François Hollande delayed indefinitely on Tuesday his decision on whether to deliver the first of two Mistral helicopter carriers ordered by Russia citing the “current situation” in eastern Ukraine.
http://www.france24.com/en/20141125-france-suspends-mistral-warship-russia-navy-business-contract-ukraine/
The President of the Republic considers that the situation in eastern Ukraine still does not permit the delivery of the first BPC (helicopter carrying and command vessel),” said a statement from the president’s office.
“He has therefore decided that it is appropriate to suspend, until further notice, examination of the request for the necessary authorisation to export the first BCP to the Russian Federation.”..
…However, Russia’s Deputy Defence Minister Yuri Borisov told RIA news agency on Tuesday that Russia would not pursue claims against France over non-delivery, but expected the contract to be fulfilled.
“We’ll wait patiently… So far we are not filing a claim anywhere,” Borisov said. “Everything is written in the contract. We will act according to the wording of the contract, like all civilized people.”
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Looks like Moscow is cutting Paris some slack. Very pragmatic indeed now that the Eurohawks are on the back foot.
To misquote Nilsson:
Putin bought a coconut, he bought it for a dime
His sister had anudder one she paid a quarter lime
She put Hollande in de coconut, she drank ’em bot’ up
She put Hollande in de coconut, she drank ’em bot’ up
She put Hollande in de coconut, she drank ’em bot’ up
She put Hollande in de coconut, she call de doctor, woke ‘im up
I’d have to see the actual contract in order to grasp why Moscow is stalling, but if it were up to me I would announce the French were in breach of contract – if in fact they are – and suspend the deal as well as insisting on return of all monies paid so far (most of the cost) plus take them to court for the penalty, which I understand is about a quarter-billion euros.
The workers at STX, prime contractor for the ships, reportedly expressed “amazement and outrage”, according to Britain’s state-sponsored media.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-29060398
Now would be the time for Lavrov to make a trip to India. He wouldn’t even have to do anything, he could just take a few days off and sleep. Hollande and Fabius would still be overtaken by spontaneous pants-wetting, convinced he had gone to lobby the Indian government to cancel the Rafale sale, which is absolutely vital to France – the Rafale has not been sold at all outside its own country.
Unbelievably, Hollande also reportedly said the transfer of the second ship, the SEVASTOPOL, would “depend on Russia’s attitude”. There you have it, folks – if you buy something from France under contract, and pay up front, they can still shut the whole deal down because they don’t like your attitude; more specifically, your compliance with American foreign-policy objectives. I don’t know how much clearer it needs to be.
I beg to disagree old chap(man)! 😉 Though I normally think of you as a ‘nesop’ from your blog url!
a) Russia is not desperate for the Mistrals;
b) It’s the gift that keep giving. As long as the Mistrals are in France, the Kremlin and friends can make a comment about ‘commitments’ and ‘reliable partners’ at will;
c) It’s fun;
d) Cancelling the contract negated c) & b) and removes a useful PR pressure point for the Kremlin. Keep on milking it until it is dry.
My other thoughts about this are that the statement coming from Hollande is basically open to interpretation. It is completely open ended time wise and fully open to subjective interpretation. It gives the appearance of being tough whereas in fact it is pure PR fluff and spin. It is neither legal language nor in any way definite.
Another point is, if the ‘indefinate’ really is ‘indefinate’, then what is the point of having all those Russian sailors there still training? Did Hollande announce that the training was over? No. If Russia is not recalling those sailors then that also keeps the pressure on the Elysée.
If anything, this is a gift from Paris to Moscow. Putin can’t loose.
As for the Indian contract, the Indians (as far as I have understood), are their own worst enemies. Yes, French kit is very expensive and there’s no point exporting it if Dassault cannot make a decent profit and help relieve some bugetary pressure back home, but the Indians are trying to have their cake an eat it. Sure, they would be paying serious money for it all, but they simply cannot be relied upon to manufacture Indian made Rafales to French standards and expect the French to take legal and financial responsibility for Indian institutional failings. The state aircraft conglomerate HAL, is a dinosaur. Even if the French sent over kits and technicians to train them to put them together, then why should France be ultimately responsible for the Indian guys once they are trained? That, I think is one of the major sticking points.
That’s my trade group; NESOp is Naval Electronic Sensor Operator.
Once again I am having to post my comments in little fragments, pausing often to “save the changes”, because the computer is acting up. It’s very capricious sometimes, I think I mentioned before that it’s an old Toshiba Satellite laptop that I inherited after other family members were done with it. It’s almost as if it has a mind of its own, and it has three main party pieces. The one that causes the most grief – and what just happened – is that it generates a random screen called “View Archive”, with a list of nicks below and who commented. That is usually preceded by you typing but no letters appearing for three or four letters, then it comes up. If you see it come up, and cursor somewhere else and click, it will disappear, and you can proceed. If you are looking down at the keyboard and don’t notice, and if you type even one more letter, peeeowwww!! Your whole comment disappears.
Another is when the cursor arrow stealthily creeps over to hover on the “back” button, so that if you are careless you will find you have gone back one screen, and also wiped out everything you typed.
Last, and mostly just irritating, it sometimes randomly starts a new sentence in the middle of text you’ve already typed, often in the middle of a word. Then you have to cut and paste to make it make sense. Oh, well, it’s got personality.
Anyway, if I can recall what I said, I agree Moscow can use France’s continued intransigence to make it look unreliable and indecisive, far from the sort of dependable partner you want when you are fronting a billion or two for weapons purchases. In my opinion, though, it pales beside the strong message the U.S. government gets to send out – we decided Putin ought not to have those ships, and we stopped him from having them.
It’s true they are not a high priority, and Russia’s military modernization will not suffer for lack of them. However, if Moscow let it be known that it intended to sue, and that a lot of workers on the project were likely going to get laid off because of the large sum France would have to return, I bet they could kick off strikes and perhaps even protests which would end in Hollande being unseated. That’s what I’d do – providing the contract is that solid and there’s no way the French could squirm out from under it.
Alles Klar, NESOP Kommissar! At the risk of repeating myself from a longtime ago, 0ne of the times I was studying Russian in Moscow, my old landlord used to be a SIGNIT officer with the Pacific Fleet, spending all his time listening to the Americans and translating it in to Russian. He couldn’t (wouldn’t?) speak a word of English! At the time he was making good money using his skills to translate IBM manuals in to Russian..
For the Mistral saga, I would say it is all about timing. We all know that Putin waits, and strikes at the most opportune moments – when possible.
On the tech side of things, there’s a browser extension called ‘Lazarus Form Recovery’ that saves comments automatically (Chrome/Safari/Firefox): http://getlazarus.com/
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/lazarus-form-recovery/loljledaigphbcpfhfmgopdkppkifgno
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/lazarus-form-recovery/
It’s important to look in the options to set how long you want to keep the forms for too!
And while I’m here, http://www.ghacks.net is a really, really excellent website for free and useful stuff. Despite it’s name, there is nothing dodgy about it at all and is run by he excellent Martin Brinkmann guy.
As for your old lappy, I can only recommend the following free and small programs that will help to squeeze out as much performance out of an old machine, a disk defragmenter like Auslogics DiskDefrag (with ‘system files at beginning of disk’ option), cleaned out the junk with something like CCleaner, minimized the necessary autostarting programs with autoruns, run a disk check with something like CheckDiskGUI, and used a disk space clearing program like Wise Disk Cleaner to remove unnecessary parts of the system and old patches. Registry cleaners are overrated and for people who have a bit of OCD!
On my limited portable, I only use Microsoft’s defender antivirus with Malwarebyte’s anti-Exploit. Malwarebyte’s Anti-malware I run once a week or so for updates and a system scan.
If you are running Vista or above and the machine has a memory card slot or spare usb port, you can use the memory card/memory stick as extra memory – not as fast as ram, but a hell of a lot better than a slow hard disk. The option is called ReadyBoost:
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/products/features/readyboost
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/ff356869.aspx
I’ve also seen other people recommend a lightweight linux distribution like Mint for old machines but I’ve never tried it of been anywhere near Linux.
Linux has had this from the start. It’s called “swap”, and is a way of formatting any drive, or part of one, to simulate RAM.
Thanks for the tips! My wife’s computer already has Malwarebytes, CC Cleaner and Microsoft Defender, but I only have the latter. There doesn’t seem to be too much loading down the drive, it’s just that the computer is old. But it’s mine, and I use it to write all my posts, so I don’t have to share computer time with anyone else.
I don’t know if that Lazarus thing would work – does it save your comments as you’re typing them, or just when you have finished and hit “send”? I’ve also lost comments before when I completed them and selected send, only for there to be an interrruption in connection or the login had expired or some such fool thing, so that the “Internet Explorer cannot display the webpage” came up, and once the problem was resolved the comment was still gone. No big deal if it was just “Oh, yeah? Well, you suck”. But infuriating if I had done a systematic, point-by-point refutation complete with substantiating links. Whenever that happened I would undergo a brief period of typing the whole thing out in Word – where at least if you hit the wrong sequence of keys (which is usually my mistake, I am not a good typist), it will ask you if you are sure you want to exit without saving – and then copy-pasting it to the comment window. But that never lasts because it’s too awkward and time-consuming.
From the website: “Lazarus auto-saves web-forms as you type…”.
It’s saved my ass/arse several times.
Yup, though the novelty with ReadyBoost is that it allows the swapfile/caching of most used files on flash based media which is an very easy and cheap way of boosting really old machines with slow disks and low ram where every little bit helps. Of course, if you have anything less than usb 2, forget it and flash media can become corrupted and cause problems. For XP there’s a pay for program called eBoostr but with current specs and the very cheap prices for SSDs, it is almost obsolete.
I clearly have the slowest brain in the world.
USB stick+apps = Portable apps. I can highly recommend this site:
http://portableapps.com/
The PortableApps.com Platform launcher is very good too.
From TASS:
MOSCOW, November 25. /TASS/. Ukrainian hackers claim they have gained access to classified documents of a US official in the entourage of US Vice-President Joseph Biden during his visit to Kiev on November 20-21.
“We, Cyber Berkut, have already warned of the impermissibility of Washington’s interference in the internal affairs of our country. Also, we have said more than once that we reject the anti-popular policies of the authorities in Kiev, who have made Ukraine dependent on the United States. During Joseph Biden’s visit to Kiev on November 20-21, we gained access to US Department of State’s confidential files stored on a mobile gadget of one of US delegation members,” the Cyber Berkut website says.
Ukrainian hackers claim they have obtained documentary evidence Ukrainian military receive huge cash transfers from the United States to their personal bank accounts.
“After studying some of the files, we got the impression the Ukrainian army is a subdivision of the US Armed Forces. The amount of financing is really stunning. So is the degree of Ukrainian troops’ degradation. In the meantime, hundreds of thousands of dollars are transferred to the personal accounts of Ukrainian military and used by some officers for their private needs,” a statement published on the Cyber Berkut website runs.
Here is link to CyberBerkut hacker story.
Story is in Russian, but the screenshots are in English, so most people should be able to read the purloined letters.
Lord Biden arriving in his vassal state state capital, 20 November 2014.
Western media simply can’t get enough of Mark Galeotti’s conspiracy theories.
Flight Global: <bANALYSIS: How Iran's aerospace dream began and ended with the licence-built IrAn-140
http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/ANALYSIS-How-Irans-aerospace-dream-began-and-ended-with-the-licence-built-IrAn-140-406044/
When the sole airworthy HESA IrAn-140 turboprop crashed on take-off from Tehran in August, Iran’s hopes of becoming an aerospace-manufacturing nation appeared to crash with it. The decade and a half following Antonov’s decision to licence production of its An-140 to Iran has seen no more than a dozen IrAn-140s roll off the assembly line, no fewer than four accidents involving the type and a regulatory ban on all flight operations by the aircraft….
…But US political pressure on Ukraine led Antonov to stop supplying spare parts for the IrAn-140, resulting in the grounding of half of Sepahan’s fleet.
###
Even weak states have their use…
Hacked US Documents Said To Reveal Extent Of Undisclosed US “Lethal Aid” For Ukraine Army
It has been half a year since it was first revealed that the US has been sending non-lethal aid to the Ukraine: recall that it was in early June when Obama announced he had approved $5 million in body armor, night vision goggles and additional communications equipment for the Ukrainian military.
[…]
As Sputniknews reports, “according to the hackers, the information was obtained during the visit of US Vice President Joe Biden to Ukraine last week, when they were able to access confidential State Department documents via a mobile device of a US delegation member.”
“After examination of just a several files there is the impression that the Ukrainian army is the branch of US Armed Forces. The volume of US financial assistance amazes with its scale. They also show the highest level of degradation of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. Besides, thousands of dollars go on personal accounts of military personnel and used by certain officers in personal needs. What will the American taxpayers say?” the statement published on the official CyberBerkut web page said. …
…Other documents published by the hackers indicate that Washington is ready to supply Ukraine with “400 units of sniper rifles, 2,000 units of assault rifles, 720 hand grenade launchers, nearly 200 mortars and more than 70,000 shells for them, 150 stingers and 420 anti-tank missiles.”
[ThatJ: See the leaked documents in the link below.]
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-25/hacked-us-documents-said-reveal-extent-undisclosed-us-lethal-aid-ukraine-army
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Caption Contest: Kerry Confusion Edition
“Isolated?”
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-25/caption-contest-kerry-confusion-edition
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Forget Ferguson, 244 Teenagers Have Been Shot In Chicago Since Michael Brown Died
While the events down in Ferguson play out, back in Chicagoland, HeyJackass reports that the same old bullshit continues day in and day out with nary a peep. In the 107 days since officer Darren Wilson shot and killed 18 year old Michael Brown – 12:03pm, Saturday, August 9th – the following stupidity has taken place in Chicago:
• 155 homicides (74% black males)
• 725 shot & wounded
• Six (6) 18 year olds killed: Kawantis Montgomery, Kamaal Burton, Tony McIntos, Alexandra Burgos, Rayvon Little, Johnathan Cartwright
• 59 18 year olds shot & wounded
• 29 teenagers (13-19) killed
• 244 teenagers (13-19) shot and wounded
• 10 shot (5 killed) by the CPD
Brutal, yet incredibly asinine and absurd to say the least.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-25/forget-ferguson-244-teenagers-have-been-shot-chicago-michael-brown-died
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Ferguson Fatality: Black Male In 20s Found Burned & Shot Dead In Trunk Of Car
Multiple sources overnight reported gun fire around Ferguson and while one police officer was reported shot in the leg, this morning, the night’s first fatality has been discovered. As NY Daily News reports, police found a body inside a car parked near the Canfield apartment complex in the St. Louis suburb, close to where 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot dead in August. The victim, a black male in his 20s, was shot and burned in the trunk of a white Pontiac car with the driver’s side window shot out.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-25/fergsuon-fatality-black-male-20s-found-burned-shot-dead-trunk-car