Excuse Me; Is This the Bus to Wonderland?

Uncle Volodya says, "It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.
”

Uncle Volodya says, “It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.
”

Welcome to Wonderland
My God it’s half past eight
Who cares if you came late
We don’t care where you’ve been
You’re gonna fit right in
A little fun detour
A little crazy, sure
Don’t get all insecure…

It’s afternoon all day
There’s lots of games to play
Flamingo lawn croquet
So please enjoy your stay

Everyday it’s something new
Problems up the old wazoo
Rumors of a palace coup…

From the Musical, “Wonderland

Perhaps I should mention at the outset, for anyone just joining us and for those who rather anticipated an outing, we are not actually going on a trip to Wonderland. Not exactly. What I meant was that we are going to visit the Hall of Amusements where Gideon Rachman – English crazyman and sometime analyst, please don’t get too close to the cage, little girl – goes when he writes. So, no need for sandwiches and lemonade, we’ll do that another time. Nonetheless, prepare to be amazed, and fascinated, in that vertiginous way you are when the car in which you are riding passes a bad car crash, or an arrest in which the subject is drunk and fancies himself a comedian, and the police slam him up against the wall repeatedly for his smart mouth. You’re afraid to look, lest you be drawn in yourself, but you can’t look away because you sense it is an important moment that may shape future beliefs. About something.

It’s tough, every post, to come up with descriptive words for the crazy things people say, because it is essentially the same story every time, just with different players. And Gideon Rachman is very crazy indeed, so much so that he may even believe the things he says are true. But they’re not. They’re a fantasy, playing out in a fantasy world where a space-helmeted Rachman is at the helm of the starship “Sanctions”, and you better believe it is kicking ass and taking names. In the mind of Gideon Rachman, it is only a matter of weeks, perhaps days, before Russia crumbles, unable to take any more because a hundred or so of its people are no longer allowed to travel to western countries, assets they had which are long since withdrawn are subject to freezing (a nice word for “stealing”) and so are any they might be so foolish as to place in future in banks of countries where they can’t travel, and because its banks have lost access to western capital lending markets.

Let’s put that last bit in perspective, before we go any further; Russia has reserves which will enable it to last for two years, without having to endure starvation and suffering or any old babushki losing their pensions, and without having to start appropriating private wealth. Life as normal, more or less. And that’s without doing anything – just sitting tight and waiting for the west to get over its pique. Does anyone think Russia is likely to do that? No, indeed; it is paying down its debt to the west rather than default, and taking steps to extricate itself – to the extent it is possible – from western financing links. Should Russia’s measured, deliberate and cautious decoupling from the west for some reason fall apart or prove impossible to maintain, behind Russia lies the massive wealth of its neighbour and growing ally – China. China has already taken a stand against the western sanctions, and warned that if Russia gets into financial trouble it can’t handle, China will step in. Yes, that was a warning, and the west would have been wise to heed it. But it had the bit of stupidity and self-love firmly in its teeth, and it only galloped on toward ruin.

Not to put the conclusion first or anything – we haven’t even looked at the article yet – but what would lead Gideon Rachman and the millions like him to accept these fantasies as a true picture of the state of affairs? Short answer, because he is a fucking idiot. And he is. But more than that, the faith of these people in the western banking and financial empire and the overall superiority of western goods is such a teflon barrier to reality that they are unable to conceive of a world in which other countries can do business and trade with one another without having to go through or partner with the west.

Let’s look at Rachman’s  latest pearl of journalistic wisdom (thanks to et Al for the link!). Don’t take my word for it, I want you to read the whole thing; but I believe you will conclude – as I did – that Rachman was so tickled with that line “a contest between the television and the refrigerator” that he decided to build a whole story around it, and it would not have made sense without a bucketful of bullshit mixed in.

That’s the whole pretext of this shallow and fantastic piece from a shallow and delusional author; that there is a war on for the mind of the average Russian, and it is between the propaganda he sees on the television – exhorting him to support the Dear Leader in the country’s dangerous game with the mighty west – and the barren wastes of his empty refrigerator telling him, repent! Repent, and rise up in your masses and demand that the leader turn aside from this mad course, and take instruction from the west on how to help it achieve its objectives. Obey, or be starved into submission, which is a concept – coming from an Englishman – that is so eye-opening that I was quite taken aback by it, and readers will want to remember it for the next time that poxy git who is the current British Prime Minister gets up in Parliament and runs his chip-hole about this or that dictator being the living embodiment of evil cruelty.

But the refrigerator lowers the spirits, with its increasingly sparse and costly contents“, crows Rachman triumphantly. Let’s just dispense with this canard right now – the ruble is taking a shitkicking on foreign exchange, because it is the target in a currency war designed to force it downward until it’s worthless and so create a panic among the population when they have to take a wheelbarrowload of them to buy a loaf of bread, like the hyperinflation of the Weimar Republic in the early 20’s.  Like the unfortunate Germans did, the west is trying to force Russia into a cycle of crazy inflation and printing more and more money. Which isn’t happening. The ruble still buys more or less the same in domestic products as it did before. If you buy your milk from the Pepsi Company like Alexey Navalny does, the price has achieved escape velocity; too bad for you. But suggesting that Russians are now cut off from reasonably-priced food, and soon their shrunken bellies will force them into the streets, is lunacy. Lunacy that assumes Russians don’t know where milk comes from if they can’t buy it from an American company, don’t know what the ingredients are for cheese, are too squeamish to butcher a pig, and run farms for chickens which lay pebbles instead of eggs.

Don’t take my word for it. Check. These are market prices for ordinary foodstuffs and domestic household products in Moscow. As you can see, some have even been reduced, and those that have not are by no means unaffordable. For example, a 2 kg bag of flour in the Moscow market costs 49.90 rubles. Let’s work the prices out to a third denomination – U.S. dollars. That bag of flour would cost the Muscovite 79 cents U.S. at today’s exchange rate. By way of contrast, a 1.25 kg bag of McDougall’s Plain Flour at Sainsbury’s London Bridge will set a British consumer back 1.40, or $2.15 in U.S. currency. Quite a difference. How about milk? In the Moscow market, same as the flour, 49.90 rubles for 950 ml; which is 79 cents U.S. At Sainsbury’s in London, 1 litre of whole milk goes for 1.15, which is $1.77 U.S.

But I think I see the problem. There are lots of sites like DailyFinance.com, which purport to tell interested people the price of common food staples around the world, and how much others have to pay in comparison with Americans. According to them, people in Los Angeles pay the highest for a litre of milk among Americans sampled: $2.49. But the poor bastards in Moscow are paying $3.89! I suppose they get that price fed to them by Pepsi Co. or some other American retailer in Russia. But ordinary Russians don’t buy their brand unless they want to show off how much money they have. And prices in country stores outside Moscow are lower yet.

So it’s probably misinformation like that which is making Rachman rub his hands together in anticipation of Russia coming around tomorrow, maybe next week, scuffing the dirt with the toe of its shoe and mumbling “Guess you can have your way in Ukraine; not much I can do about it”. Ha, ha!! Dream on, Gideon, you fucking crazy bug-eating, paint-chip-chewing berk!!

Get it, Rachman? The Russians are not starving. They’re not looking longingly at the refrigerator, hoping food will magically appear in it. You can’t get your end away with some tasty Russian girl for a pound of sausage, like you couldn’t with an English girl for an orange during the war, although some foreign servicemen liked to think so. There are no food shortages in Russia owing to sanctions by God-fearing Englishmen and Those Who Stand Shoulder To Shoulder With Them, and if you were not such a fucking chump chowderhead you would be able to look these things up for yourself. Oh, I forgot – you are an academic. You just know.

To be sure, there are profiteers – I wish I could say the Russians are different from every other people on the earth, and do not try to profit from the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. But it’s not true. Some Moscow food stores have hiked prices by 130%. And what happens then? They’re reported to the Moscow Public Prosecutor, and an investigation is carried out. I don’t know what the penalty is which is imposed by the state, but the name of the store is published on a list of businesses being investigated, and I should think a word to the wise is as sufficient in Moscow as anywhere else – it is perhaps no coincidence that one of these stores is the only one in which prices overall have fallen lately. People have alternatives, and nobody needs to pay crazy prices if they do not want to. And once again, there are no shortages. Poland is not the only place in the world that apples will grow, and Russia rapidly shifted its procurement to countries which are not part of the sanctions regime. This has a very important knock-on consequence, down the road – Russia’s food-products countersanctions are only in place for a year, but that’s a century in retail and unless the west is prepared to offer unbelievable deals and assurances, those markets are gone forever. Because the west can’t be trusted, as it has been at great pains to establish.

There’s another reason Rachman’s cackling would be more appropriate at Bethlem Royal Hospital, and it is that he does not understand poll variables or how to establish cause and effect. He just throws a bunch of numbers out there and says, “There, you see. That proves it”. Proves what? For example, he cites recent results which suggest 44% of Russians now see Americans as enemies, from 4% before the conflict started. How that is a net positive in England is beyond my understanding. But, wait for it, though – only 19% now think that Ukraine should be part of Russia, compared with about 50% from last March!!!

Ummm….what do those polls have to do with one another? Is there any evidence, any evidence at all which suggests that if fewer Russians now believe “Ukraine” (presumably only the disputed area in the East of the country) should be part of Russia, it suggests a weakening of support for Putin’s position on the conflict? Far more likely fewer Russians want to get stuck with the enormous bill for rebuilding it, since the Ukrainian army has shelled it to bits. That’s certainly something to be proud of, isn’t it, old chap? Just because fewer Russians favour bringing Eastern Ukraine into the fold does not indicate that they wish for a western victory in the form of a Poroshenko triumph: what’s his approval rating in Russia?

But Gideon continues to chatter on blithely about supermarket food shortages – with absolutely no evidence except what his “friend in Moscow”, likely another expat, told him.

Mr. Rachman believes the economy is Russia’s weakness, its soft underbelly. And that continued tightening of sanctions and efforts to hurt the Russian economy are the best course to achieve the desired result – a Russian capitulation. Since that is a relatively harmless belief (to Russia), let us hope he continues to believe it.

Editor’s note: I originally – and incorrectly – attributed the subject article to Edward Lucas, and I must confess I did not notice any glaring indications from the author’s stated beliefs which would suggest it was not he. Nevertheless, I humbly apologize to Mr. Lucas for attributing to him idiocies that there is no proof – on this occasion – he believes, and statements he did not make.

This entry was posted in Corruption, Economy, Europe, Government, Investment, Politics, Russia, Strategy, Trade, Ukraine, Vladimir Putin and tagged , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

2,531 Responses to Excuse Me; Is This the Bus to Wonderland?

  1. dany8538 says:

    Ok this is really bad. This is called European Values.
    http://podrobnosti.ua/918036-v-niderlandah-arestovan-ukrainskij-zhurnalist-poluchivshij-ubezhische-v-litve.html
    Sharij has been arrested and they are trying to extradite him to Ukraine.
    Absolutely Disgusting

  2. ThatJ says:

    Conflict in Ukraine Increasing US Resolve to Arm Kiev- Former US Ambassador

    WASHINGTON (Sputnik) — The fighting that continues to take place in Ukraine’s eastern provinces is increasing US Congress’ resolve to provide lethal defensive military aid to Ukraine, former US ambassador to Ukraine John Herbst told Sputnik on Thursday.

    “There’s no question that the ongoing offensive in the east [of Ukraine] by the Russians is increasing support in Congress to make this happen and happen quickly,” Herbst said.

    Herbst coauthored a report in early February calling for the US to authorize $3 billion for training, equipment, and lethal defensive military aid to Ukraine over the course of three years.

    The funding request was introduced as legislation by the US House of Representatives on February 10.

    “We’ve briefed many people about our report, including on Capitol Hill,” Herbst said.

    Asked whether members of Congress were concerned about the consequences of US arms provisions, Herbst said the arguments against arming Ukraine are not that strong, and “the Congress, I would say, agrees with that.”

    The report, coauthored with former NATO commanders and US President Barack Obama administration officials, calls on the United States to provide Ukraine with anti-armor missiles, counterbattery radars, unmanned aerial vehicles, armored personnel carriers, and any necessary training. The report’s authors also call on other NATO allies to provide Ukraine with military equipment.

    http://sputniknews.com/politics/20150219/1018502569.html

    • marknesop says:

      What a laugh- “lethal defensive military aid”. How will they explain it when it is used in an assault on Donbas? We were “pre-defending ourselves”, because they were going to attack us one day – we just knew it? If it is defensive military aid, it should be ringing the Ukrainian cities to protect them, where dandelions will grow out the barrels before the east attacks them. That’s not what it’s all about at all, and the U.S. government knows it. Lockheed-Martin is just itching to test some of its toys on people.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        We were “pre-defending ourselves”, because they were going to attack us one day – we just knew it?

        That’s just a re-run of All Black Colin “Pinetree” Meades’ dictum: retaliate first.

        • Warren says:

          I think it was Willie John McBride who coined the phrase “get your retaliations in first” while touring South Africa in ’74: “99 call”

          Colin Meads had a well earned reputation of being one of rugby’s hardmen.

          Only Frik Du Preez is spoken in the same sentence or can be compared to Meads in tenacity and skill.

  3. ThatJ says:

    How Germany Is Blowing Up The European Union

    If Greece gives in, Germany will have won, but its bully status will come to bite it in the face. European nations don’t accept bullying, and certainly not from Germany. It’ll be a Pyrrhic victory: the beginning of the end. If Greece however stands firm in its demands, it’s also curtains for the EU. If Greece leaves, it won’t leave alone. Only the third option, Germany caving to Greek demands, can save the EU. But Merkel and Schäuble have prepped their people to such an extent with the wasteful lazy Greeks narrative that they would have a hard time explaining why they want to give in. The EU may thus fall victim to its own propaganda

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-02-19/how-germany-blowing-european-union

    It’s Official: Global Economy Back In Contraction For First Time Since 2012 According To Goldman

    After spending the past year deteriorating with each passing month, as global acceleration dipped decidedly in the negative camp, the only thing that kept the Goldman Global Leading Indicator “swirlogram” somewhat buoyant was that “Growth” measured in absolute terms had remained slightly positive. Not any more: according to Goldman’s latest global economic read, the world is now officially in contraction, following a sharp plunge in both acceleration and growth in February.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-02-19/its-official-global-economy-back-contraction-first-time-2012-according-goldman

    Russian Revenge – “Siberian Express” Blankets US In Record Cold

    Hacking – blame The Russians. Global geopolitical instability – blame The Russians. Stock market lower – blame The Russians. Extreme cold weather… guess who?

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-02-19/russian-revenge-siberian-express-blankets-us-record-cold

    Stunning Images Of The “Siberian Express” FreezeNado

    More than 100 million Americans are set to be impacted by the arctic blast known as the “Siberian Express” as record (low) temperatures are being broken across the eastern third of the nation. NBC News reports, Chicago is experiencing its coldest February since 1875 with roads in an “ice skating rink-like condition.” From ice geysers to snow-golf and frozen falls, we can only imagine the breath-taking impact this ‘polar-vortex’-esque weather will have on US GDP…

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-02-19/stunning-images-siberian-express-freezenado

    Ukraine Fighting Shifts To Mariupol Whose Capture Would Grant Russian Land Corridor To Crimea

    Yesterday, when we reported that the last Ukraine outpost in the rebel-controlled eastern territory, the town of Debaltseve, has fallen into separatist hands, we concluded that “perhaps the only question is whether fighting continues around Mariupol which would enable Russia to have a land corridor all the way to Crimea.” Moments ago we got the answer when Reuters reported that “pro-Russian separatists have launched mortar attacks on government-held positions near the coastal town of Mariupol in southeast Ukraine and are building up their forces there, local military reached by telephone said on Thursday.”

    Btw, Gorlovka and Donetsk are being bombarded as we speak. Not a peep from the usual suspects. Like the last ceasefire, Ukraine can do whatever it wants and the US and the EU will not blame it for violating the ceasefire. The US and the EU expect Russia and the rebels to surrender to their power grab in Ukraine. Failure to surrender brings sanctions and threats to Russia.

    It’s easy to determine where this is heading. Just look where the blame is placed and who is spared from any culpability. Lack of impartiality means there’s no compromise from the other side.

    Just read the statements coming from US officials. They never talk about what Ukraine does, only about what “Russian-backed” separatists do.

    • patient observer says:

      I think that the cold air mass originating in Siberia and sweeping down the US eastern seaboard strengthens Russia’s claim over natural resources all the way to Miami.

  4. et Al says:

    I have a question. If cossacks from Crimea are taking part in fighting against Kiev’s beautiful, lovely and well mannered troops, is that proof of Russian intervention? Have I just predicted the future?

    • james says:

      sign in as “et Alibaba” when you make a comment on mid east affairs, lol.. interesting suggestion though.. don’t want to give the west more ideas on how to get there boots on the ground and weapons into the hands of people crazy enough to want to continue to murder themselves off, but maybe peter pater can pass on the message to his superiors!

  5. et Al says:

    This is hilarious, but also raises the obvious question.

    The Daily Fail: ‘Putin is watching us’: MPs warn Cameron the military cannot cope with more defence cuts after RAF Typhoons are scrambled to intercept Russian bombers (while Moscow rages at ‘old’ and ‘stupid’ Tory ministers)
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2959849/Typhoon-fighter-jets-scrambled-intercept-two-Russian-Bear-bombers.html

    …However, a witness claims she saw the Russian planes flying inland in Cornwall while she was on a driving lesson yesterday afternoon.

    Sue Bamford, 45, from Bodmin, said: ‘I live in Cornwall and we see a lot of military aircraft around. But this was like nothing I had seen before.

    ‘They were flying really low through the St Mawgan valley and around Cornwall.

    ‘I am not an imaginative person in that way. I know what I saw – and I saw the Russian bombers flying over UK soil.’

    Her driving instructor Claire Brazil, from St Austell, added: ‘I am not an expert but they did look out of the ordinary for Cornish airspace. We leant up to have a look, they were definitely inland, not over the coast.’..
    ####

    I just love the thought that the locals in Cornwall are much more clued up than the government minister for defense. They are also quite hilarious. I do wonder though, would they accept the basing of Bears in Cornwall if they could tell Westminster to fk off?

    What I suspect was really said something like this:

    SB: ‘ear, does that look like a low-flying Tu-95MS strategic bomber whose engines are so powerful that the propeller tips go supersonic to you?

    CB: Well blow my pasties off, it be! Oh! Pilots, I’ll be changing my knickers when I get back!

    SB: It’s heading this way.

    CB: Fk me little socks! Where’s me camera?

    SB: It be a nice day for it…

    CB: Come baaack, come baaack! I fancied me some Russian rough too!

  6. patient observer says:

    Mark, thank you for another tasty serving of Western propaganda kebab seasoned with wit and insight! The west has invested decades in creating and propagating the meme of starving Russians so they just can’t let it go.

    • marknesop says:

      It’s my pleasure! Indeed, western journalists have a lot invested in the “they’re so poor” narrative, not to mention the notion that the western democracies need only shut off the flow of dollars, and they can bring anyone to his knees. In fact, there may be so much invested in that belief that now they find themselves unable to back away, and forced to carry through their threats. A lot of interested observers will be watching this contest of wills, and if the west loses big-time as I believe it will, that threat will be exposed for the toothless bluff it has been for some time.

  7. patient observer says:

    Back in the cold war days, every cold snap was the “Siberian Express”. Fast forward to around 2000, it was the “Alberta Clipper”, 2013 it was the “Polar Vortex” and I think the latest one will be called “Putin’s Polar Menace” .

    I can not recall a more prolonged cold wave… two weeks of near or sub-zero nights with a forecast for at least one more week of the same – a record low nearly every night. For tonight -14 to -18 F. Warm I suppose for Moscow Exile but for us it’s brutal.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      No, it’s become unseasonably warm again here: only minus 6C (21F) when I got up this morning.

    • kat kan says:

      Actually in some of Russia the snow has been so light this year, there is a danger of low yields from the wheat harvest — snow cover stops the plants from freezing and dying off. So stand by for starving again.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        That’s right. At this time of year the snow that the street sweepers clear away is usually banked up about 5 feet (1.5 m) high alongside the path that I walk along to work. The snow is only about 2 (0.6 m) feet high now.

  8. ThatJ says:

    http://www.osce.org/ukraine-smm/141871

    From 21:30 to 22:12hrs, on 18 February, the SMM heard distant explosions, consistent with outgoing artillery rounds. They were intermingled by sounds consistent with small arms and light weapons (SALW) fire. The sounds came from 5-10km to the north of the Tekstilshchik micro-district of Donetsk (11km south-west of Donetsk city centre).

    At 08:43hrs, on 19 February, the SMM heard powerful explosions, consistent with outgoing artillery rounds fired from the area to the north or north-west of the central part of Donetsk. The SMM was unable to determine the exact distance to the epicenter of the explosions. The SMM counted up to eight outgoing rounds.

    At 10:46hrs, on 19 February, the SMM heard explosions, consistent with outgoing artillery rounds presumably fired from the area close to the city centre to the west from the Donetsk Patrol Hub. The SMM could not determine the distance to the epicentre of the explosions. The SMM counted four explosions.

    At 11:36hrs, on 19 February, the SMM heard powerful explosions, consistent with outgoing artillery rounds. The SMM could not determine the distance to the epicentre of the explosions but presumed the rounds were fired from the area close to the city centre to the west from the Donetsk Patrol Hub. The SMM counted 11 explosions.

    At 11:44hrs, on 19 February, in Donetsk city centre, the SMM heard powerful explosions, consistent with outgoing artillery rounds. The sounds of outgoing artillery fire came at intervals of 15 to 20 seconds and were intermingled with sounds, consistent with SALW fire and one MLRS launch (at 13:25hrs). The SMM could not determine the exact distance to the epicentre of the explosions but presumes the rounds were fired from 5-10km to the north and north-west of Donetsk city centre.

    Sooo.. Outgoing artillery has ‘epicenters of explosions’ now. And not a single case of incoming artillery up to afternoon today? They must have really good hearing.

    (source: mp.net)

    http://www.pravda.com.ua/rus/news/2015/02/19/7059176/
    Divide and conquer – props to Poroshenko on this one.

    Looks like our favorite Ukrainian hero Donbass Battalion’s Semenchenko’s and Right Sector’s Yarosh’s plan to make that “parallel General Staff” is causing some division within the volunteer battalions. A bunch of battalions (including Dnipro-1, Kiev-1, Krivbas[!]) have said they do not support the idea and “are encouraging Semenchenko to do his job instead of engaging in self-promotion and PR.”

    (source: mp.net)

    DNR have said that, following a discussion with Kiev, they are not going to release any more figures on casualties other than civilian.

    (source: mp.net)

    [ThatJ: I don’t see why the rebels agreed here. Telling the truth and instigating fear into the hearts of the would-be recruits is a good way to keep the draft evasion numbers high.]

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  10. colliemum says:

    Hot off the press:

    Click to access 115.pdf

    The ‘Lords’ (mostly useless party politicians put out to grass by their ‘grateful’ parties) have spoken, and it’s all our fault because the civil servants in the FO and MOD are inept.
    Otherwise it’s of course Russia’s fault … because Putin is not willing to become like “The West”.
    Al Beeb’s spin here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-31545744

    All I’ll say as comment is using that old Irish answer to someone who asks how to get to a certain place: “If I were you, I’d not start from here …”.
    Wrong premises will make for wrong answers.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      “The EU’s relationship with Russia has for too long been based on the optimistic premise that Russia has been on a trajectory towards becoming a democratic ‘European’ country. This has not been the case. Member states have been slow to reappraise the relationship and to adapt to the realities of the Russia we have today.”

      That’s what milords reckon.

      ‘Tis a wonderful thing, this democracy: where do you find it?

      And Russia is not a European country, though they hoped it would become one!

      So not being a European country, or at least, not behaving like one (lot of talk of Russia and Putin’s “behaviour”) is something bad, inferior, poor quality, wrong, despicable, evil even?

      Third World Mafia State kleptocracy? More corruption than in Nigeria or Afghanistan?

      Snow niggers?

      From the Grauniad: UK guilty of ‘catastrophic misreading’ of Ukraine crisis, Lords report claims

      Bit of a mard lip there amongst the Noble Lords, methinks, because Call-Me-Dave was not invited to luncheon at Minsk.

      Love this comment though:

      Hey kids, guess whose birthday it is today!

      That’s right, it was one year ago that Right Sector thugs and gunmen hijacked the Maidan demonstrations, and in an orgy of violence, stormed the government’s buildings and overthrew its elected leadership, enabling a U.S.-backed group to seize power and install itself as an illegitimate and extreme anti-Russian government.

      Happy Maidan-versary to you!
      Happy Maidan-versary to you!
      Happy Maidan-ver-sa-ry dear Nuland,
      And Debaltsevo too!

      • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

        Hijacked, my arse. Ukrainian Europhiles and Ukrainian Nazis have always been like peas in a pod. They linked arms with UNA-UNSO in the 1990s to form the Ukraine Without Kuchma movement, and Euromaidan was in much the same mold.

        • Moscow Exile says:

          Not hijacked?

          Oh no, no, no!

          AP the statistics cruncher said those on the Maidan were your workaday Yukies. Why, he even had a cousin there who made an appearance on the square every evening on her way home from work, just to show her support for the great cause.

          No, the Nazis turned up one night and took everyone, all those nice, ordinary Yukies, by surprise, and started lobbing petrol bombs at the cops.

          Typical response off a British shitwit to the Independent story on my Noble Lords’ analysis:

          OSMIUMHALO 3 hours ago
          Let me get this straight. Russia is upset at being portrayed as a warmonger and it’s response is to fly bombers into British and other NATO country’s airspaces. Am I missing something here? I Britain flying Vulcan bombers into Russian airspace? Last I heard they were all decommissioned. Russia never changes.

          Yeah, seems like what you’re missing are your prefrontal lobes, like this bloke:

          • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

            Laugh if you want – his son was a dramatic evolutionary leap forward (at least in appearance),

            (former Agriculture Minister Ihor Shvaika. Noteworthy that as the ultras from Yatsenyuk’s original Kamikaze cabinet have been edged out, the Ukrainian regime has only intensified its campaign of repression, warfare and plain terrorism – proving that Tyahnibok and his colleagues were not just the fly in an otherwise charming ointment.)

          • Moscow Exile says:

            Irony indeed that the members of an un-elected house lecture Russia on democracy.

            Lady bloody “Gosh” Ashton, a member of the House of Lords, has never ever in her life won a democratically held election: she is an appointee like the rest of the Lords and EU commissioners.

            • et Al says:

              They forgot to say ‘Fk Tripoli!!!! Oh, yes, we did! One of the most advanced nations in Africa that dispensed tens of billions of dollars worth of development aid to dozens of other African nations and is now totally fk’d. But don’t worry, the EU will pick up the bill. The UK won’t.

              Not to mention another hotbed incubator for terrorists who will come to ‘Europe’ and convert us (in many pieces) to their cause. Yes, a stunning strategic victory for the British and the French!

              Have gun. Have foot. Now have no feet!

    • marknesop says:

      Well, the premise is right – the UK and EU badly misread Russia’s hostility toward their plans for Ukraine. but there all resemblance to reality ceases. As the Beeb would have it, the west’s plans for Ukraine were all benign, nothing strategic about it, and there was no “In your face, Russia!! Ha, ha – you lost, get used to it, suckers!!” kind of talk after the coup was successfully carried out; talk that might have led Russia to believe the west intended to use its new relationship with Ukraine to undermine and destabilize Russia. Talk, you might say, that made them nervous that the new neighbours might be chavs.

  11. ThatJ says:

    John Schindler is a strange man. He admires Russia’s conservatism as much as he despises the country. Russia, the reader is told, presents a greater threat than ISIS. For the West to defeat resurgent Russia, he argues, Westerners need to become more like the Russians.

    Why the West is Losing

    … Russia, however, is a different matter. The world’s biggest country, possessing thousands of nuclear weapons, and led by a man seething with hatred and resentment against the West, represents a potentially existential threat to the Western way of life — and countless lives. While Vladimir Putin does not seek a nuclear war, he is willing to gamble with hard power, with all its attendant risks, in a fashion no Western leader has countenanced in decades. In recent months, Putin’s embrace of duplicitous diplomacy backed by Special War and periodic outbursts of conventional combat, most recently at Debaltseve, another stinging — because needless — defeat for Ukraine, have delivered victory after victory for the Kremlin.

    Strategically speaking, none of this should be happening. Notwithstanding that Ukraine’s deeply flawed leadership, which has refrained from real mobilization much less reality-based war planning, has been a highly cooperative adversary for the Kremlin, Putin has been winning round after round of poker with Kyiv and NATO despite holding mediocre cards. Putin’s Russia, hobbled by sanctions and the collapse in oil prices, is no Soviet Union: in economic terms, it’s dwarfed by the European Union, while militarily, anything resembling a European war would be a disaster for Russia. Americans are advised to think of Putin’s Russia (143 million citizens with a per capita GDP of USD 14K) as basically Mexico (114 million citizens with a per capita GDP of USD 11K) with thousands of nukes and fiercely anti-Western leadership.

    Yet Putin’s streak of wins cannot be construed as anything but impressive, particularly considering how weak his cards really are. With his recent Minsk escapade, where he got terrified German and French leaders to sign off on a “ceasefire” in eastern Ukraine which Russian-backed fighters never honored at all, instead opting to push harder — with weapons, ammunition, intelligence, and skilled commanders coming from Russia, mind you — Putin demonstrated his contempt for the West, as well as how he plans to establish Russian hegemony over Eastern Europe, breaking NATO in the process, preferably without major war. …

    … Even before demographic demise [in Europe], the Russians are coming. The Kremlin, which is winning every diplomatic fight and battle in Ukraine, sees no reason to stop now. As Western sanctions inflict pain, doubling-down by Moscow seems a rational choice, as was evident months ago. Putin represents a drastically different vision of Europe’s future than what passes for received wisdom among Europe’s elites. Mired in old-think, including a downright nineteenth century take on force, war, and diplomacy, Putin represents an atavism, a crude, outmoded version of ourselves — the angry white male of liberal nightmares — that Western progressives believed had been killed off by the gender and social revolutions of the 1960’s. …

    … Analogies to Adolf Hitler are hazardous, but some appear obvious in the case of Vladimir Putin. In the first place, Hitler was shaped profoundly by the collapse of Imperial Germany in 1918, just as Putin was by the demise of the USSR in 1991. Both men viewed the state they served ambivalently — Hitler wasn’t much of a monarchist and Putin wasn’t a diehard Marxist either — but defeat was a life-changing ordeal that created new political and social realities which, in time, Hitler and Putin exploited masterfully. …

    … Anybody who has met actual Russians knows how little they, even the cultured ones, have been touched by post-modern Western mores on race, gender, and sexuality. They remain comfortable with the tough, ugly, dog-eat-dog world we have. I have tried on multiple occasions to explain “trigger warnings” to educated Russians, but they never believe me and burst out laughing. What causes this — Communism? Byzantinism? Tsarism? something in Russian water and/or DNA? — is debatable but that Russians simply live in a different mental universe than twenty-first century Westerners do is not.

    Besides, Russia’s return to atavism is more disturbing to Westerners than any ISIS madness. At a deep, if unstated level, Muslims acting like barbarians has been part of our script for so long that it fails to stir our fears except when it comes close, as in Paris recently. The only thing that’s shocking is how the madmen are capturing it all on YouTube now. But Russians are Europeans of a sort, they look rather like us, but they certainly don’t think and act like us, and this is disconcerting to Europeans, and many Americans, at a level that cannot be easily expressed. The white caveman of progressive nightmares is back, and his name is Vladimir Putin.

    A big part of why the West cannot seem to grapple meaningfully with the Russian threat, despite the fact that in any strategic sense NATO is holding most of the cards in this high-stakes game, is because he challenges not just what we have, but who we are. Putin and Putinism represent a direct challenge to the post-modern way of life that has become normative, especially among educated Westerners since the 1960’s. A worldview that prefers soft, feminine values to tougher masculine ones, that finds patriotism risible, that believes there is nothing worth dying for, has little to say when the monsters we firmly believed were safely behind the fortress walls, lurking hungrily, turn out to be on our doorstep, and the front door is unlocked.

    Full text: http://20committee.com/2015/02/19/why-the-west-is-losing/

    • davidt says:

      A few random thoughts. I suspect that one reason people hold such views as Schindler’s is that their views are so rarely challenged (in a face to face situation). Most people in authority very seldom allow themselves to be put in a situation where their ideas might be disputed- this, of course, is deliberate. On the other hand, too many “talking heads” in the media are lazy and dishonest, or ideologically committed, and are generally not keen to break from their constituency. (Remember the old joke: “Some of my friends are for it, some are against it. I am for my friends.”) They like to think that they are well informed on virtually anything when they reflect little more than the superficial prejudice about them. (To be fair, what can Joe Citizen do- she cannot go through life questioning everything. When Yugoslavia was breaking up I was busy and formed my opinion of what was happening there by what I read in the local media. In retrospect I think my views were wrong but…) Sadly,as a final comment, I wouldn’t feed most Australian academics who promulgate opinions on Russia. They seem altogether too happy to feed the most extreme views of the country and its people.
      Sorry for my little rant- I inadvertently just watched a few minutes of TV on the Ukraine.

      • marknesop says:

        That rings true to me, too. I made a similar leap of judgment on Serbia that was, similarly, completely wrong and believed that ol’ demonizin’ boogie about Milosevic from the MSM. It’s astonishing how people can just lie on command like that – I wonder what moves them to do it. It can’t be money, so it must be patriotism – they must be convinced that the Demon Flavor Of The Month is a threat to the country’s peaceful way of life and democratic freedoms.

    • Tim Owen says:

      That is an astonishingly transparent bit of establishment drivel completely free of any evidence of real contact with either the West or Russia as it is.

    • marknesop says:

      I don’t see why he is considered “edgy”; his reasoning is pure mainstream Republican.

  12. ThatJ says:

    I read that Porky’s family arrived in London and see what’s on the way to Kiev:

  13. peter says:

  14. peter says:

  15. peter says:

  16. peter says:

  17. peter says:

    • patient observer says:

      You task me Peter. Much of what you post is deeply flawed logically and the much of what is left is to obscure to bother with. But what about you Peter? Certainly there is something in that massive cranium that can dazzle and turn us toward the light. Or perhaps you are one of us and are testing our resolve before you let your guard down? Or perhaps you are lost in an intellectual maze of your own creation and need our guidance but are too embarrassed to seek assistance? What is it man! We want to help!

      • james says:

        my guess? – i think he suffers from a type of autism or asbergers – high functioning at posting anything from twitter or etc that negates russia, but incapable of sharing an individual thought on any of it at the same time..

  18. davidt says:

    Eric Draitser gives an eloquent argument as to why lefties should defend Russia:
    http://journal-neo.org/2015/02/20/5-reasons-why-leftists-should-defend-russia/
    His conclusion: “If it is true that Russia’s political elite have finally recognized their own global importance, the world will benefit. Hopefully, some of the so called Left will come to this realization. If not, then they should cease to call themselves anti-imperialist, and admit what they really are… the left flank of the Empire.” Very much to the point.

    • spartacus says:

      Yes, he pretty much nails it. I think the position that any self-proclaimed leftie takes regarding Russia’s actions in the present Ukraine conflict is a very good indicator of that persons’ real political views. This is one of those occasions when you can really separate the real left from the “left flank of the Empire”. I liked very much the organized and concise manner he used in order to present the arguments supporting this point, so I’m going to save this piece for further debates with those who claim that Russia is imperialist. Thanks for sharing this, davidt.

      PS. There are also a couple of things that can be added to Draitser’s list, namely that, normally, imperialism is based on the rule of monopoly capitalism and finance capital. Russia doesn’t score big points in neither of those categories. I have linked below a piece that I think makes this point very clear.

      Is Russia Imperialist?

    • Tim Owen says:

      Nice find and a helpful summary. I like Draitser, he’s got fire in his belly.

      Beyond the 5 points he proposes I wonder about another. To my mind there is a kind of viciousness lurking just underneath even the domestic politics of the west. Europe appears to me as a kind of economic horror show transpiring in an exquisitely curated cultural museum. The unemployment rates in the south, especially among youth, should properly be seen as a disaster of epoch making importance and yet they are simply shrugged off as if, like the weather, there’s nothing one can do about it.

      The irony of course is that this represents massive waste but does not appear as such even while the dominant ideology worships efficiency. Europe is basically starving while seated in front of a fully stocked table. They just can’t see it. It’s bizarre. To add to the comedy, they have, in the United States, living proof that their hard-money ideology doesn’t describe the world at all. The US can run massive deficits and the market remains entirely unperturbed, with the “bond vigilantes” a no-show for decades. Yet they persist.

      What this suggests to me is a fundamentally anti-social ideology at work. Not surprisingly it shows itself most openly in the business press. One telling example that comes to mind is from some years back. Early in Evo Morales’ government I remember reading analysis of his economic policies. His government was actually very effectively controlling inflation. Could he get any love from the business press for this? Nope. What did he get instead: criticism for raising pensions that would – surely – bankrupt the country, despite the fact that he had an entirely credible argument for how these increases would be sustainable. My point: what can you say about an ideology that insists grannies must eat cat food for the economy to thrive? There is something fundamentally sick going on here as in the example of Europe above. The fact that we seem entirely blind to this is worrying as it indicates how powerfully blinding the reigning ideology is.

      Getting to the point, I think somehow that Russia is not prone to this pathology. It could well be that the trauma of the 90s completely discredited anything with a laissez-faire tinge to it or that underneath the Soviet experience, with all its depredations, there was a core democratic ethos. I don’t know. But wherever it comes from, I think the fact that Russians seem by and large immune to this western sickness is actually their great strength at the current juncture.

      And yet the Russian economy is, nominally speaking, capitalist. What does THAT indicate?

      Some on this board identify themselves as Marxist. Yalensis for one and, I suspect, Spartacus would as well. I do not, mostly because I’m not really sure what this would entail. But I did run across what I thought was a very eloquent description of the viewpoint I’ve been struggling to articulate here that would suggest I am at least an “erratic Marxist”:

      “What has Marx done for us? Almost all schools of thought, including those of some progressive economists, like to pretend that, though Marx was a powerful figure, very little of his contribution remains relevant today. I beg to differ. Besides having captured the basic drama of capitalist dynamics, Marx has given me the tools with which to become immune to the toxic propaganda of neoliberalism. For example, the idea that wealth is privately produced and then appropriated by a quasi-illegitimate state, through taxation, is easy to succumb to if one has not been exposed first to Marx’s poignant argument that precisely the opposite applies: wealth is collectively produced and then privately appropriated through social relations of production and property rights that rely, for their reproduction, almost exclusively on false consciousness.”

      http://www.theguardian.com/news/2015/feb/18/yanis-varoufakis-how-i-became-an-erratic-marxist?CMP=ema_565

      It’s the last sentence that really hits home to me as it describes the ideology that has both surrounded and troubled me my whole adult life.

      On the other hand there are many on the right who find themselves in Russia’s camp and Putin himself is, ultimately, probably best described as a conservative. Certainly he seems to have a Burkean frame of mind at least in so far as he seems cautious if not contemptuous of radical change, a position I liken to the adage “first, do no harm”, which strikes me as deeply moral and mature, especially in an age dominated by empowered Neo-con juveniles intent on smashing the world up.

      In this context I wonder whether Russia actually synthesizes the two streams of thought most needed to defeat the neo-liberal mindset that is, to my mind, the greatest impediment to our future development. A recent academic proposed viewing Marx as the last Classical economist. This suggests that he might matter, not as Marx per se, but as the last in a line of economic thinkers – like John Stuart Mill and Ricardo – who practiced “political economy”, that is who viewed economics and politics (even ethics) as inseparable.

      (FWIW I don’t think a revolution’s of any use. I’d be happy enough with a return to industrial capitalism. It’s finance capitalism that’s the real problem.)

  19. Warren says:

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Liar!

      That’s what a Canadian Banderite woman used to scream at me (block capitals) long before this crisis occured and when I used to tell her unsavoury truths, such as that I had visited the Crimea on several occasions and that everyone whom I spoke to there said that the peninsula was not part of the Ukraine.

      She must have been Bohdan Zhopachenko’s mum or wife or sister or whatever.

      • Warren says:

        I wish Sasha Grey all the best in her new career as a mainstream actress.

        I use to lurk on La Russophobe blog back in the day, I would often read ridiculous comments by a character named Bohdan. He would forever rant, rave and rile at Russia and Russians labeling them “mongoloids”.

        • marknesop says:

          Very likely the same Bohdan – AKA Les and Elmer and VoroBey, his style was distinctive but he would nonetheless frequently use one of his alter egos to reply to his own comments and praise their perspicacity – who first referred to me there as a “Kremlin Stooge”, and gave this blog its name.

  20. Moscow Exile says:

    A little something for someone to chew over:

    And:

    The Russian ruble has been the best performing emerging markets currency in February, adding 12 percent since the beginning of the month.

    Record ruble rally on back of higher oil & Ukraine stabilization

    I ask this question again:

    Why does Peter seem to relish being the bearer of apparently bad economic tidings concerning Russia?

    Does he wish to see the collapse of the Russian economy?

    If so, why?

    Does he really believe that such a collapse will bring about a popular uprising against the present government that will result in its overthrow?

    And if all that were indeed to happen, who would he like to see form a new government?

    However, if all this came to pass, would there not be social unrest, mayhem, crime, misery, poverty, hunger and deprivation across the land? Would not mortality rise? Would there not be an increase in suicides, alcoholism and drug abuse amongst people who have suddenly become impoverished?

    In short, would there not simply be a re-run of the Nightmare 90s, the “Golden Years of Yeltsin” as Navalny wistfully once labelled them in public, a time when the mafia, in the sense of organised crime, really did run the show?

    Is this what Peter wants?

    It seems to me that he does.

    And if that happens, would Peter come scurrying back to Russia (for I feel sure he lives and works where he feels his extraordinary intellect is duly rewarded).

    Would Peter care to tell those interested here (and I am sure there are many) why he seems to wish that all that I have described above take place?

    Is he simply one of that breed that I have met here many times before, namely one who feels extremely peeved about the fact that 20 years ago he just missed out in not getting his snout into the trough with the rest of the criminal swine because he was born just a few years too late and, therefore, did not graduate quite at that time when believes he could have applied his enormous intellectual powers towards the goal of rapidly making himself obscenely wealthy?

    Is not this hatred for Putin based on the perception that that former KGB employee had turned out not only to be the Nemesis of a large number of those who had been raking it in during the ’90s, but also the reason why such a feeding frenzy by the idolaters of Mammon shall not take place again?

    Is not this hatred of Putin made even worse by the firm conviction, albeit without any evidence to support it, that Putin and his small clique are, in reality, amassing themselves fabulous wealth whilst denying others the opportunity to do so?

    Just wondering, like.

  21. Warren says:

    Euro Maidan supporters are now criticising Poroshenko, this trend should be closely watched.

    https://twitter.com/noclador/status/568781317917294593

    • kirill says:

      Another driveling retard. Those suppression troops are occupants. It is the locals who are fighting for their freedom. Donetsk is not Kiev or Lviv.

    • marknesop says:

      He should avoid that particular facial expression, it makes him look even more like a pig than usual. Not a baby pig, either, which is extremely cute.

      I would not take the Maidan supporters too seriously until they stop screaming about a “free Ukraine”. It was already free, and they want to enslave it to austerity.

  22. et Al says:

    Surprised, but not surprised:

    The Register: Joint NSA/GCHQ unit hacked SIM card maker, stole just about EVERYONE’s keys
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/02/19/nsa_and_gchq_hacked_worlds_largest_sim_card_company_to_steal_keys_to_kingdom/

    ‘Widest net possible’ reaches beyond UK and USA

    America’s NSA and Britain’s GCHQ hacked the world’s biggest SIM card manufacturer to harvest the encryption keys needed to silently and effortlessly eavesdrop on people without a warrant.

    That’s according to documents obtained by surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden and leaked to the web on Thursday.

    “Wow. This is huge – it’s one of the most significant findings of the Snowden files so far,” computer security guru Bruce Schneier told The Register this afternoon.

    “We always knew that they would occasionally steal SIM keys. But all of them? The odds that they just attacked this one firm are extraordinarily low and we know the NSA does like to steal keys where it can.”…
    ####

    But hey kids, don’t worry! Russia is the enemy!. So there is nothing to see, move on!

    So much for the House of Turds report UK Foreign Office institutional failure. There is quite a simple rebuttal for all those who spout ‘We reached out to ‘Russia’ but we were spurned’ bull shitters. If that was the case, then why was Russia only allowed to join the WTO in 2012 when Ukraine joined in 2008? China joined in 2001. And what about Jackson-Vanik?

    The good news is that all this waving and gnashing of teeth is meaningless. The same for all the propaganda spurted of the Pork Pie News Networks most prestigious organs. None of it changes the reality that the West has through its own hubris, been by far the largest factor in its own downfall and diminishment of global influence. Nobody made them do all the things they have done since 1989. It was all entirely voluntary.

    Cue Vicky Pollard from Little Britain:

  23. Warren says:

    Published on 5 Jan 2015
    The Putin Question: What’s the real story behind Putin’s aggressive international posturing, and what does it mean for the world?

    Subscribe to Journeyman for current affairs and science Mon-Fri: http://www.youtube.com/journeymanpict
    For downloads and more information visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=68145&a

    Following crises in the Crimea and Ukraine, Vladimir Putin’s political agenda has come under close scrutiny. In his quest to halt Western influence in Russia, how far will this head of state go?

    “Russia will always defend their interests using political, diplomatic and legal means”, declares Putin. Yet the world has been in outrage since flight MH17 was shot down over Ukraine, leaving 298 civilians dead. Meanwhile Ukrainians say their ill-equipped forces are “dying for their country” as Russian aggression continues. Before the inauguration of his third term tens of thousands took to the streets of Moscow in protest. What began as peaceful demonstrations led to bloody confrontations and show trials. “Just imagine the average Russian person living in a small village. They only receive pro-Kremlin channels. Sometimes 100% on how bad things are in Western Europe and the United States”, says one Russian commentator. Whispers of a return to old Soviet times are rife. With media that is critical of the regime now restricted to dark corners of the internet and those that protest declared traitors, Putin’s rule is based on a clear policy of the expansion of traditional Russian values. This insightful report explores the experiences of those living with Putin’s policies, defined by historian Lilia Shevtsova as “Close the doors, close the windows and consolidate the society on the basis of the enemy”.

    • marknesop says:

      “Yet the world has been in outrage since flight MH17 was shot down over Ukraine, leaving 298 civilians dead.”

      I beg to differ. That’s a polite way of saying “bullshit”. Not only has the world not been in outrage at all in 2015, western networks have stopped talking about it except for the most perfunctory mentions since the focus began to shift off of Russia. It is only this week that international inspectors got together for their first meeting; the aircraft crashed 6 months ago, and the western inspectors had to be prompted to come back and pick up pieces of wreckage located by rebel forces. They could not have appeared less interested, and the reference does not point out that it was the Ukrainian army that would not stop shelling the wreckage so that inspectors could get in right after the crash.

      Lilia Shevtsova knows whereof she speaks, because she is the enemy. Luckily she is also crazy, and it is good press for Putin to have crazy people spout how he is turning Russia back into the Soviet Union.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        I thought folk like Shevtsova were supposed to get shot in the head whilst waiting for the lift to their apartment – or summat like that?

        Why does such an obscenely rich and powerful tyrant that holds a nation of 143 million in fear through a system of terror allow people like Shevtsova to mouth it off so and allow such an organization that she works for to exist in his Empire of Evil?

        Hes a little squinty eyed shit!

        I hate him! I really do!

        I do!

        Honest!

  24. Warren says:

    Ukraine crisis: Poroshenko bruised by army retreat

    The question is not whether the fall of the strategically important road and rail hub of Debaltseve was a blow to Ukraine’s political and military leaders. It was.

    The question is how big the impact will be.

    President Petro Poroshenko is portraying the retreat of thousands of Ukrainian government forces as an “orderly” tactical withdrawal. However, initial reports indicate it may have been just the opposite.

    It is still possible that the retreat avoided a larger, more catastrophic defeat – something along the lines of the Ilovaysk debacle last summer, when Ukrainian forces were encircled by insurgents and possibly regular Russian forces, and were ambushed as they attempted to escape, with untold numbers killed.

    Much of the political fallout will depend on how big the Debaltseve losses were. So far, the government is saying at least 13 soldiers were killed, 157 wounded, 90 captured and 82 missing.

    But the actual figures might be much higher. Also potentially damaging could be the reportedly slapdash, chaotic manner in which the evacuation was carried out, with soldiers escaping on foot after their vehicles were destroyed, and large amounts of armour and ammunition left behind.

    Map showing the besieged city of Debaltseve in eastern Ukraine

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-31552773

    • marknesop says:

      How the fuck can you be ambushed when you are surrounded? Do journalists need a refresher course in military terminology? “Ambush: a trap in which concealed persons lie in wait to attack by surprise.”

    • Jen says:

      ” .. Why did Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel and France’s President Francois Hollande push so strongly for a peace deal, if it was already clear during the negotiations that Debaltseve would fall and weaken their ally, Mr Poroshenko? …”

      Duuh, British Bull-Crapping Corporation, they pushed for a peace deal because they knew the real situation on the ground (better than Poroshenko did) which was that nearly 3,100 Ukrainian soldiers were being slaughtered and the two Western leaders realised the whole Ukrainian Army was being annihilated.
      http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/02/19/398237/3088-Ukraine-troops-killed-in-Debaltseve

      If the deluded and desperate Poroshenko were to continue the war against Donbass, the EU and NATO would have to start supplying ground forces.

      And of course the situation has now come to Poroshenko having signed and the Verkhovna Rada having ratified the agreement to create a joint Polish-Lithuanian-Ukrainian brigade in 2015, and Poroshenko calling for EU peacekeepers in Ukraine.

  25. et Al says:

    British propaganda goes in to hilarious over drive. Is this ‘do something’? Don’t forget to look at the comments.

    The Daily Fail: A glimpse of the apocalypse: As Putin laps it up at home, shocking pictures emerge from devastated Debaltseve amid fears of new offensive on key port city of Mariupol
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2961406/Russia-sparked-Ukraine-s-revolution-Kiev-secret-agent-accuses-senior-Putin-aide-ordering-sniper-fire-protesters-triggered-bloody-uprising-year-ago.html

    Russian separatists accused of firing on Kiev forces 49 times in 24 hours
    U.S. senators have branded fragile peace deal a ‘delusional piece of paper’
    Call for U.S. administration to arm Ukraine troops to stop Putin’s advance
    Warn government-controlled city of Mariupol will be next target for rebels
    Intelligence chief accuses Vladislav Surkov of killing 77 protesters in Kiev
    Claims Surkov was in the Ukrainian capital directing shootings by snipers
    Comes as Ukraine commemorates the one-year anniversary of deaths
    Russian court jails Putin critic in time to stop him taking part in protest…

    ####

    It’s barely more than an English translation of something written by Kiev! I really like the ‘Surkov personally over saw the snipers on maidan’ – I guess this passes for humor!

    Even better in thie GUNS NOT JOBS piece.

    Daily Fail: Russia tensions could trigger all-out war: Britain’s top NATO commander warns Soviet-style tactics could pose ‘existential threat to our whole being’
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2961643/Russia-tensions-trigger-war-Britain-s-NATO-commander-warns-Soviet-style-tactics-pose-existential-threat-being.html

    General Sir Adrian Bradshaw said Vladimir Putin could use ‘hybrid-warfare ‘to seize former Baltic states
    He backed plans to set up Nato force integration units in eastern Europe to ‘send a strong signal’ to the Kremlin
    Comments echo those by Defence Secretary who claimed Russian aggression poses as great a threat as Isis
    Ukraine secret services accuse political aide to Vladimir Putin of directing the snipers in Kiev prior to the revolution
    RAF jets this week scrambled to intercept two Russian bombers capable of carrying nuclear missiles off Cornwall
    Tupolev Tu95 Bear aircraft streaked along fringes of UK airspace, prompting the deployment of two Typhoons
    Russian TV later screens footage of mid-air contact thought to have been filmed on previous interception
    Country ‘could not cope’ if Russia attacked because our defences have been ‘decimated’, say military chiefs
    David Cameron defiantly dismissed the incident, saying the Russians ‘are trying to make some sort of a point’
    But former air chiefs say number of British fighter squadrons has fallen from 26 at Cold War end to just seven…

    ####

    As somebody already mentioned on this board, the British forces have huge numbers of Admirals and senior officers, far beyond what is intelligently necessary.

    Maybe what the West needs is a military coup where it is run by NATO? That’s the only way most countries are going to spend 2% gdp on weapons whilst people don’t have jobs and even working families have to go to food banks because they can’t make it through to the end of the month.

    ТУ-95 footage of Typhoons, enter stage left at 00:33! The giant contra-rotating props look like they are slowly slicing up the jet. Call it a Bear Cocktail!

    • colliemum says:

      There’s one other aspect to these ‘articles’ by the DailyWail.
      UKIP and Nigel Farage are on record, as far back as a year ago, as blaming the EU/Brussels for the Ukrainian disaster, and warning that it is more than unwise to keep prodding the Russian Bear.
      As you know, there are elections on May 7th, and it is the aim of the MSM to keep UKIP down and out at all costs, no holds barred.
      These ‘articles’ will be used as proof in a short while that UKIP is full of Putin lovers, and we can’t have that lot in Westminster!

    • marknesop says:

      “…streaked along fringes of UK airspace” is the best reach I have seen yet to fool the reader into thinking the aircraft both exhibited threatening behaviour, and penetrated Britain’s defenses. I guess “proceeded at the sedate pace one might expect from aircraft powered by propellors and which have been in service for over 4 decades, while remaining outside Britain’s national airspace boundaries at all times” would have sounded so pedestrian. The TU-95 should be submitted for some kind of award for Value For Money – all they need do is fly it slowly up and down the airspace boundary of any NATO country to get loads of press that makes the ancient bomber sound like Battlestar Galactica.

  26. Moscow Exile says:

    Interfax.ru

    20 февраля 2015 года 15:46
    Порошенко санкционировал меры по борьбе с “российской угрозой”

    Poroshenko sanctions measures to combat “Russian threat”

    В решении также содержится предложение признать самопровозглашенные ДНР и ЛНР террористическими организациями

    The decision also includes a proposal that the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics be recognized as terrorist organizations

    Генеральному прокурору Украины предложено принять меры для признания самопровозглашенных Донецкой народной республики и Луганской народной республики террористическими организациями, в частности, начать процедуру обращения в Гаагский трибунал.

    It has been proposed that the Ukraine Prosecutor General take measures to have the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics declared terrorist organizations and in particular that an application process concerning this matter be started at the Hague.

    Instructions from Washington?

    Peace for our time?

    Doesn’t sound like it.

    Washington wants war.

    Well, have it your way then if you must …

    Cry ‘Havoc,’ and let slip the dogs of war;
    That this foul deed shall smell above the earth
    With carrion men, groaning for burial.

    Lay on, Fat Poof,
    And damn’d be him that first cries, ‘Hold, enough!’

    • kat kan says:

      This is a beat-up.

      It refers to activities on January 25 although it was not published on the Presidential website until February 14. Nothing to indicate they mean to go ahead with it. It was all in the news at the time, too,so noting new there either.

  27. et Al says:

    History being rewritten with the full compliance of the Pork Pie News Networks. Expect far more to come of ‘We reached out, but he refused because he is paranoid’ schtick.

    Warning! Usual suspects (McFool, F. Hill etc.) pop up in the piece below. If you are of a nervous disposition or easily vomit in reaction to bullshit, you should maybe avoid reading the piece below.

    Bloomturd Business: Obama Saw Too Late Putin’s Return Would Undermine Reset
    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-02-19/obama-putin

    The fractured relationship between U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian leader Vladimir Putin has reached a critical juncture in the conflict over Ukraine, with ties between the two nations more strained than at any time since the Cold War.

    Russia’s annexation of Crimea last year and its support for separatists in Ukraine’s east have soured Obama on Putin and prompted U.S.-led sanctions that have helped push Russia’s economy toward recession.

    The confrontation “will continue and could escalate pretty easily,” said Fiona Hill, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and author of “Mr. Putin: Operative in the Kremlin.” ..

    …It wasn’t long ago that Obama took a different view, beginning his presidency by offering Russia a “reset” and new era of cooperation. These days, he fulminates that Putin views the world through a “Cold War lens” of the past.

    The relationship frayed almost as soon as Putin regained Russia’s presidency in 2012. …
    ####

    The only message you get from the US is ‘Why can’t you simply have limp wristed leaders like Yeltsin or others who we can pull the wool over their eyes and be fooled by our pretty words?’.

    Quite delicious really.

  28. et Al says:

    Oink! Oink! Oink!

    Newsweak: Explosive Court Case Puts Ukraine’s Chocolate King in Dock
    http://www.newsweek.com/2015/02/27/explosive-court-case-puts-chocolate-king-dock-307920.html?piano_t=1

    The British architect smiled patiently. Having spent more than 25 years doing business on the eastern side of the Iron Curtain, he had become accustomed to aggressive negotiating techniques. Even so, Philip Hudson had hoped that working with a company called Roshen would be different.

    A Western-looking, progressive, multimillion-dollar confectionery manufacturing company, that had gone to great lengths to give back to the local community in its hometown of Vinnytsia, Roshen was supposed to represent the realisation of Ukraine’s business potential. Last week, Ukraine’s national stock and securities commission announced that Roshen had posted profits nine times greater than in 2013: $34.8m.

    Instead, its president, the oligarch Vyacheslav Moskalevskiy, was about to set off a chain of events that would lead, more than two years later, to Hudson taking on a company owned by the president of Ukraine in a Ukrainian court. “We believe in mafia management methods,” Hudson recalls Moskalevskiy telling him, “and we aren’t going to pay.”..

    …So when Hudson’s architecture firm, Jones East 8, files papers next week suing Roshen for $140,000 plus costs, they will find themselves up against the head of a corrupted state. The architects say that Roshen stole their design for the company’s milk processing plant in Vinnytsia. Roshen argue that they paid for Hudson’s initial sketches, giving them authorship rights. Roshen’s owner Petro Poroshenko, valued at $1.3 billion in March 2014 and known as the “Chocolate King”…

    • marknesop says:

      Oh, dear! Poroshenko is corrupt. Who would ever have foreseen that things would come to this – I mean, electing billionaire oligarchs to the presidency has always worked so well before! And nobody would ever have imagined Poroshenko was anything but a regular Joe, a man of the people? He and his family wear embroidered shirts and everything!

  29. patient observer says:

    Very good and fully expected:
    http://russia-insider.com/en/business/2015/02/20/3676
    Kudrin is an idiot BTW (just wanted to say it).

  30. Warren says:

    Profile of MH17 “Expert”: Eliot Higgins Cracked Nazi Enigma Machine Using Only YouTube and Google Earth

    The UK Independent drools all over much admired expert-on-everything Eliot Higgins, proprietor of “Bellingcat”

    According to The Independent, Higgins has “exposed” Assad and Putin, and will probably expose you next, so be careful

    We respectfully take issue with this immodest circle-jerk

    http://russia-insider.com/en/2015/01/19/2529

    • Moscow Exile says:

      But he’s an “expert”!

      Who was saying recently (or did I read this somewhere?) that the “free world”, the “liberal democracies” is now in thrall to a Zeitgeist, according to which everyone’s opinion is considered to be of equal value: everyone has the “right” to give his opinion and to be listened to; to believe otherwise, to only heed those who are acknowledged as experts, is to fall prey to “elitism”and to end up being controlled by smart-arses who think they know everything and can tell us what to do.

    • Tim Owen says:

      The New Yorker did a similar hagiography of the schmuck.

      It’s a matter of degree to be sure but papers that were once worthy of some respect – NYR, Guardian, The New Yorker – have over the last year or so cleaved hard to the establishment line.

      Granted I don’t read any of these regularly anymore but I was still shocked to see how shoddy Timothy Snyder’s pieces were in the NYR. There’s gotta be a story here about how these institution’s editors have been corrupted a la the revelation of what’s-his-face, the German ex-editor who went public about “Atlantacist” institutions grooming journalists.

      • colliemum says:

        That German is Dr Ulfkotte, and yes, the practically identical propaganda reporting by the Western MSM, starting literally in unison, with readers’ comments disabled everywhere, was striking. One doesn’t have to wear a tinfoil hat to suspect some hefty arm twisting behind the scenes.

  31. Moscow Exile says:

    Typically German propaganda lies and lexical tricks from “Bild”, a popular yellow-press publication:

    Hier lachen die Rebellen den Waffenstillstand aus

    Here the Rebels Laugh at the Truce

    [Are they really laughing at the truce, or are they laughing with relief and happiness after achieving victory?]

    Die Russen-Rebellen

    Kreml-Chef Wladimir Putin leugnet immer noch, die Männer in den Uniformen ohne Hoheitsabzeichen zu unterstützen. Die Wahrheit über die „grünen Männchen“ sieht aber anders aus.

    Treffen die Informationen zu, die der Vorsitzende der Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, Ralf Fücks, in seiner mehrtägigen Reise durch die Konfliktregion gesammelt hat, dann kämpfen die ukrainischen Regierungstruppen in Wahrheit bereits gegen die russische Armee.

    Nur noch zehn bis 15 Prozent der pro-russischen Rebellen stammten aus der Region, berichtete Fücks in einem Interview der Nachrichtenagentur AFP. Die anderen „Separatisten“ seien entweder russische Söldner oder reguläre russische Armee-Einheiten. Er berief sich dabei auf „Offizielle sowie ukrainische Soldaten“.

    The Russian-Rebels [Get it? Not former Ukrainian citizens who no longer to be citizens of Banderastan, but Russian rebels! They’re aliens see, Moskali Untermenschen, not real Ukrainians.]

    Kremlin boss [note: “boss”, not President of Russia] Vladimir Putin still denies supporting the men in uniforms without insignia. However, the truth about the “little green men” appears somewhat differentl. [Which little green men? The ones in the Crimea one year ago? Or are there now little green men in the rebellious Ukrainian eastern provinces as well? And without insignia? Really? They are not wearing DPR or LPR flashes, and other assorted insignia? Really?]

    Take the information that the Chairman of the Heinrich Böll Foundation, Ralf Fücks has collected during his multi-day trip through the conflict region, for the truth is that the Ukrainian government forces have been fighting against the Russian army.

    Only ten to 15 percent of the pro-Russian rebels came from the region, Fücks reported in an interview with the AFP news agency. The other “separatists” were either Russian mercenaries or regular Russian army units, according to information given him by “official” sources as well as by Ukraine soldiers”. [He does not refer to reports made by “neutral” sources though, such as OSCE, or to the Chief of Staff of the Ukrainian Army, who recently said that the Ukrainian government forces were not fighting against the Russian army.]

    So there you have it!

    It must be true!

    And his name really is Ralf Fücks– of the fucking Green Party no less!

    Der Geist von Goebbels lebt noch in Deutschland!

  32. Moscow Exile says:

    Ukrainian-Polish-Lithuanian Brigade to Become Operational in 2015

    Petro Poroshenko signed a law ratifying an agreement with Lithuania and Poland on the creation of a joint military unit.

    Fast reverse to the 17th century – when there was no such country as the Ukraine, but there was most certainly a Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth that ruled over what is now Banderastan to the west of the Dnieper and the Kiev and Poltava regions.

    The Polish-Lithuanian crack troops then, and amongst whose ranks there served many forefathers of present-day Khokhli, as did the fictive son of the fictive Cossack hero Taras Bulba, were called the Winged Hussars:

    • Moscow Exile says:

      17th century.

      A golden guinea to the man who first spies me the Ukraine! Arrgh!

    • Tim Owen says:

      Like the wings there Hussars. About as useful as these:

      • Moscow Exile says:

        All right for tickling your fancy, though.

        As regards the Winged Hussars, most military historians think that such ornamentation was only attached to saddles or the rider’s cuirass for ceremonial purposes as shown here:

        The horseman shown above is described as the Grand Standard bearer of the Crown of Poland (1605).

        That such “wings” would hinder a cavalry man in battle is clear to many and many 17th century etchings of Polish hussars in action indeed show the units as “wingless”.


        Battle of Klushino, 1610

        But below is portrayed a squadron of Winged Hussars making their entry into Cracow in 1605:

        See: The Winged Hussars of Poland

        The winged knight clad in armour and wild animal skin must have had the appearance of a superhuman creature, arousing a maelstrom of emotions in the beholder—panic, respect, hate, and admiration. But since in actual combat those long, clumsy objects rigidly fixed to the rider’s back could not have been very useful, we must conclude that hussars probably took the wings into battle only rarely if at all, reserving them rather for parade and ceremony.

        Written by Dr. Zygulsk , Curator of the National Museum in Cracow and Assistant Professor in the Cracow Fine Arts Academy.

      • marknesop says:

        This girl has insufficient wingspan for her body weight to actually achieve flight. Or is that what you meant? Great legs, though. She should just walk. She is very unlikely to replicate the achievement of the bumblebee.

    • marknesop says:

      “By many estimates, there are approximately 30 of these private armies fighting on the Ukrainian side.”

      All of which are strictly illegal in accordance with the Ukrainian constitution, which directs that only the government can raise military forces on the territory of Ukraine, and private military forces – unsurprisingly – are illegal.

  33. ThatJ says:

    Poroshenko says evidence shows Kremlin aide Surkov directed snipers in Kiev

    KIEV (Reuters) – Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said on Friday police evidence showed that a top Kremlin aide, Vladislav Surkov, had directed “foreign sniper groups” who shot and killed protesters in Kiev a year ago.

    A Russian foreign ministry spokesman dismissed the claims as “nonsense”, Russia’s Interfax news agency reported.

    Poroshenko made his comments at a meeting with relatives of some of the 100 or so people who were shot dead over a three-day period a year ago during protests on Kiev’s Independence Square (Maidan) against the Moscow-backed president, Viktor Yanukovich. Yanukovich subsequently fled to Russia.

    “Just a few days ago, the head of state security told me that, in questioning, special forces operatives gave evidence that the Russian presidential aide Vladislav Surkov led the organisation of groups of foreign snipers on the Maidan,” Poroshenko said, according to his website.

    Full text: http://news.yahoo.com/poroshenko-says-evidence-shows-kremlin-aide-surkov-directed-140817740.html

    [ThatJ: I think that even the Maidanuts won’t take his claims seriously after the “successful retreat” bs he’s been spewing since Debaltsevo fell.]

  34. ThatJ says:

    Situation critical for newly arrived migrants in Lampedusa, Italy

    http://news.yahoo.com/photos/situation-critical-for-newly-arrived-migrants-in-lampedusa-italy-1424373951-slideshow/situation-critical-for-newly-arrived-migrants-in-lampedusa-italy-photo-1424371037783.html

    The comments are telling.

    Europe will be done for in a matter of years as the global economy deteriorates and extremist groups supported by our hostile elites grow. Global hegemony, remaking the Middle East in the name of Israel, and bringing about the demise of Indo-Europeans all at the same time. It’s an impressive feat when seen from our hostile elites’ eyes. The third world, with its high birthrate and unstable governments & endless bloody civil wars, will be an excellent pretext for keeping our borders open in the name of “humanitarianism”, causing the number of people moving especifically to Western countries to increase every year, a development that has been going for some years already, but is getting worse as words spread around that you can go to Europe, get paid for your invasion and live in peace as the natives’ posteriority are sacrificifed in order to give you a comfortable life. You can even sue the natives if they oppose their “forced sacrifice” (genocide) in your noble name. The liberasts will continue welcoming these ever-increasing aliens and concerned Europeans will be demonized. Notice how the hostile media has over the years stopped calling them illegal immigrants, now they are simply “migrants”!

    They are coming from all fronts and their numbers are the equivalent of small towns popping up on a weekly basis.

    It’s as if there’s a conspiracy operating out of Washington and Brussels to abolish a certain people. The attacks have been restless.

  35. PaulR says:

    Anybody out there heard of this icon (from The Grauniad)?

    ‘Fighters and residents lined up to kiss a 200-year-old icon called the Tikhvinskaya rebel, which could make fighters invisible and cause enemies to kill each other, according to the Russian Orthodox activists who had brought it from Moscow.’ http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/20/pro-russian-victors-vow-to-ignore-deal-for-ceasefire-in-ukraine

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Just shows you how dumb the peasants are if they believe that crap, at least, that’s what the Grauniad’s man in Debaltsevo is trying to imply.

      More accurately, just shows you how dumb Russian army regulars are, because everyone knows that the victors in East Ukraine are not shitwit local farmers and coalminers.

      Тихвинская икона Божией Матери

      The Tikhvin Icon of the Mother of God

      The Tikhvin Icon of the Mother of God is, according to legend, one of the icons painted by the Apostle and Evangelist St. Luke. In the 5th century it was moved from Jerusalem to Constantinople, where the Vlakherna church was built to house it. In 1383, 70 years before the capture of Constantinople by the Turks, the icon disappeared from the church and appeared in a radiant light above the waters of Lake Ladoga. Borne miraculously from place to place, it halted near the town of Tikhvin. At the place where the icon rested was built a wooden church in honour of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin. Thanks to the diligence of Grand Prince Vasily Ivanovich (1505 – 1533), a stone church was built to replace the wooden one. In 1560, on the orders of Tsar Ivan the Terrible, a monastery was by the church and surrounded by a stone wall. In 1613 – 1614 Swedish troops captured Novgorod and more than once they tried to destroy the monastery, but through the intercession of the Mother of God the monastery was saved. It came about that one day,on seeing an approaching Swedish army, the monks decided to run away from the monastery, taking the miraculous icon with them, but they could not budge it. This miracle stopped the fainthearted, and they remained in the monastery, hoping to protect the icon of the Mother of God. The insignificant number of defenders successfully repelled the attack on the monastery by a far superior force. An approaching Russian army that had come from Moscow seemed to the invading Swedes to be some heavenly host, and they turned away and fled. After this miraculous victory over the Swedes, royal ambassadors came to the monastery and took the icon, which now had a long list of miracles to its credit, and went with it to the village Stolbovo, 50 miles from Tikhvin, where on February 10, 1617, peace was concluded with the Swedes. The ability of the Russians to make their pledge of peace was given to them by the miracle-working icon. Subsequently, it was brought to Moscow and placed in the Cathedral of the Assumption, and then, at the request of Novgorod, which was waging war against the Swedes, the icon was sent to Novgorod and installed in the Cathedral of St. Sophia. The devotion all over Russia to the Tikhvin Icon of the Mother of God celebrates the countless miracles of the icon and which have been established by the Church, namely its miraculous appearance and its overcoming of enemies through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin.

      And if you believe that, you’ll believe anything!

      No mention of the power to make one invisible though.

      Waes hael!

      • kat kan says:

        “sokay, they have the invisibility covered by Romulan cloaking technology, well trialled on tanks and other heavy armour this past 10 months.

        The “cause enemies to kill each other,” bit has been seen in numerous friendly fire incidents on the Ukie side, as well as the introduction of barrier squads. More to come in the Rada shortly.

        It works, see?

      • PaulR says:

        Why then does the Grauniad call it 200 years old???

  36. Moscow Exile says:

    “Glory to the Ukraine!” shouts Porky – and they whistle at him.

    Petro, there’s a lamppost on the Maidan waiting for you!

  37. Moscow Exile says:

    Hurrah! – Another long weekend.

    Monday is 23 February, Defender of the Fatherland Day and a public holiday.

    No wonder the economy is tanking!

    Too many holidays.

    What feckless, idle reprobates these Russians are!

    Above: Army officer checking out Honour Guard uniform at the Eternal Flame at Aleksandrovny Garden next to the Kremlin wall yesterday.

    Smart uniform, don’t you think?

    And they ain’t no chocolate soldiers either!

    • colliemum says:

      Yep – very smart uniforms, and no chocolate soldiers, I agree.

      Thing is – there are only a very few Armed Forces with exceedingly smart uniforms who are definitely not chocolate soldiers. You, dear M.E., can no doubt guess which one in particular I have in mind …

      😉

      • Moscow Exile says:

        Lovely wool, that which their hats and collars are made out of.

        Mrs. Exile has an ankle length winter coat made out of black astrakhan wool. Lovely and warm it is.

        • colliemum says:

          I do envy Mrs Exile – wish I could have a winter coat made from wool – Astrakhan or, in my case, Alpaca (which I can’t afford anyway).
          The weather being what it is down here though, woollen coats are no good: one soaking and days to dry. Even the so-called ‘waterproofs’ get so drenched they take hours to dry out inside.
          That stuff is rain, the Kairdiff variety thereof: very soft and innocent looking, no more like a bit of drizzle – but after ten minutes in it one might as well have climbed straight into a bath, fully clothed.
          Why am I out in it?
          Heh. Collies love it …

          • Moscow Exile says:

            Yeah, permanent drizzle such as I experience for two-thirds of my life. Basically, it’s cloud level at chimney pot height – for days. The South Wales valleys and the climate there reminds me very much of that which one witnesses in the Pennine mill towns. Same in North Wales, in Snowdonia.

            Where I lived, we used to say, if you can see the Pennines – it’s going to rain; if you can’t see them – it’s raining.

            There are advantages to the damp climate of the UK, though. Mrs. Exile and other Russian women of my acquaintance have always told me that their hair and complexion have never felt and looked as good as when they have been in Misty Albion.

            In Russia, though, It’s really dry. When it rains, the heavens open and there are huge summer storms because it gets very warm in summer, but there are long dry spells in Russia, which results in it being really dusty. When driving along country roads in the summer, you throw up clouds of dust.

            • colliemum says:

              Mrs Exile and her friends are spot on, in regard to female beauty concerns. My hair always looks like straw when the wind comes from Siberia for any length of time.
              Serious rain here is when you can’t see the rugby goal posts any longer, fifty yards away, and when it comes at you horizontally at 100 mph. Collies (the present one always excepted, four-legged princess that she is!) don’t mind, not even when their tails are blown by the gales to stand at 90º to their bodies. That type of weather sorts the kids from the adults: only mad collies and their mad owners are to be found outdoors in it.
              🙂

    • marknesop says:

      He is popping the soldier’s head off like a bottle cap because of some dress infraction.

  38. Tony Blair is hired by the Serbian government as an adviser. Blair was one of the western leaders who decided to bomb Serbia in 1999. Wonder what the Serbian public is thinking about this move?

    • One Serbian poster in Russia-Insider had this to say:

      ************************************************************************************
      Yes, it is. My country has 15% of it’s territory occupied by Nato forces and I’ sure that current government would not exist without the full compliance to the West. In this moment because of the fifth column it is not possible for my country to turn to it’s true values . Without the full support of the Russia and possibly China my country will be occupied for a very long time and with that it will gradually make it’s way to Nato membership.

      All the media are heavily censored and show only pro west point of view. Pretty much all of the media are owned by the Germans, Poles and Americans. The biggest cable tv and internet provider who holds 70% of the market was owned by Soros. He recently sold it to the former chief of CIA David Patreus, his company also bought two tv stations and news station.

      Thank god , Russia launched sputnjik news website but without tv station that would give us a different point of view the media situation is not looking good.

      But my people did not forget its roots and the history with the west and the Russia. Only thing we got from the west was bombs, destruction and death and the more they push us, the more we will fight. 98% of the population supports free world without nazi scum in Europe and in America.
      When the time comes and it will be soon the people will rise like they rose against Hitler in 1941.

      If some of you are interested to see how the Serbian people see Russia see this link
      ************************************************************************************

      It is both surprising and sad what he has to say about his country. Seems Serbia has been “taken over” by the West. Hopefully there is some resistance on the ground roots level of the population.

    • et Al says:

      Blair is on the roll of advisers paid for by the UAE, so it is though them. Emirates has also bought 49% of AirSerbia and has other deals in the offing.

    • marknesop says:

      I think one of the things I hate the most about Blair is his continuing success and accumulating wealth, not to mention international recognition, despite what a morally bankrupt piece of offal he is. If there were really any truth to the Christian religion he would have ridden a smoking-hot luge to the chambers of Beelzebub shortly after the Iraq War.

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