Oh Lord, Please Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood

Uncle Volodya says, "The liar was the hottest to defend his veracity, the coward his courage, the ill-bred his gentlemanliness, and the cad his honor."

Uncle Volodya says, “The liar was the hottest to defend his veracity, the coward his courage, the ill-bred his gentlemanliness, and the cad his honor.”

Baby, do you understand me now?
Sometimes I feel a little mad
But don’t you know that no one alive can always be an angel
When things go wrong I feel so bad.

I’m just a soul whose intentions are good
Oh Lord, please don’t let me be misunderstood

Nina Simone

Michael McFaul wants you to know that he is hurt. The Russian outlook has not been so anti-American (and anti-EU) since before 1990 – perhaps since never (thanks for the graphic, Kirill). The United States of America is hated – hated – in Russia in a way it probably was not even during the cold war. And why? Well, because of Putin, of course. Putin the paranoid nutjob, who believes the United States government is trying to overthrow his government and replace it with some supplicant liberal who will allow America a free hand to dabble and meddle to its heart’s content. Which America could not be less interested in doing – that’s all in Putin’s head. Quoth McFaul; “But the more I listen to him directly and the more I saw the activities of his government – they have a paranoid view about American intentions. They believe that President Obama and the CIA want to overthrow Putin’s regime and want to weaken Russia and some would even say, dismember Russia. It’s totally crazy. I want to emphasize that. There is no policy of regime change in Russia. Unfortunately, however, I think that is Putin’s view.” (Thanks for the link, Peter)

A paranoid view about American intentions. There is no policy of regime change in Russia. Hmmm. Forgive me if I find that a little hard to believe.

Probably because it’s…what’s the word I’m looking for? Oh, yeah – horseshit.

Michael McFaul is an educated man, and the educated man has a weakness – he can seldom resist being seduced into showing off his worldly education, the payback for those years with his nose in the books instead of going fishing, chasing skirt or hanging out down at the pool hall. Michael McFaul is not made of wood, and when he is asked to give the folks back home in Teaneck, New Jersey or Boring, Oregon or Cranky Corner, Louisiana the benefit of his worldly experience and that fine Oxford schoolin’, why, he sings like a canary.

Such as: “And, as before, the current regime must be isolated. The strategy of seeking to change Kremlin behavior through engagement, integration and rhetoric is over for now. No more membership in the Group of 8, accession to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development or missile defense talks. Instead there must be sanctions, including against those people and entities — propagandists, state-owned enterprises, Kremlin-tied bankers — that act as instruments of Mr. Putin’s coercive power. Conversely, individuals and companies not connected to the government must be supported, including those seeking to take assets out of Russia or emigrate…Mr. Putin’s Russia has no real allies. We must keep it that way. Nurturing Chinese distance from a revisionist Russia is especially important, as is fostering the independence of states in Central Asia and the Caucasus.”

Even, some would say, dismember Russia. Wasn’t that what you just said, above, in tones of “do you believe anyone could think something so crazy?” No sanctions on individuals and companies not connected to the government, including those “seeking to take assets out of Russia, or emigrate”. Those must be supported. Meanwhile, “fostering the independence of states in Central Asia and the Caucasus” is “especially important”. Who says so? Michael McFaul, in whose innocent mouth butter would not melt, said so, not even a year ago.

The United States, Mr. McFaul will have you know, is just misunderstood. The more it tries to help people – well, certain people, anyway, such as those receptive to American global leadership – the more it is accused of low-down, sneakin’, backstabbing regime change. The injustice of it!! Why can’t the world just accept that American motives are guileless and straightforward, and that America means Russia no harm?

Gee, I don’t know…maybe because of stuff like this: “American Efforts at Promoting Regime Change in the Soviet Union and then Russia: Lessons Learned“, by Michael A. McFaul. How ’bout that, Michael? Cat got your tongue? Want to take a look inside? Oh, let’s do.

Well, we’re off to a great start. “For much longer and with much greater capacity than Saddam Hussein’s regime, the Soviet regime threatened the United States. The destruction of the Soviet regime and the construction of a pro-Western, democratic regime in its place, therefore, was a major objective of America foreign policy. Some presidents pursued this goal more vigorously than others: Nixon cared less, Reagan more. Yet, even during the height of Nixonian realism, Senator Jackson and Congressman Vanik made sure that the human rights of Soviet citizens were not ignored.

Mmmm…interesting. The Jackson-Vanik Amendment – which was actually signed into law by President Ford, after President Nixon was taillights, so that it was never in effect during “the height of Nixonian realism” unless we presume it outlived his presidency and carried on after he was gone – pertained only to Soviet Jews. In that context, “making sure the rights of Soviet citizens were not ignored” is painting with a little bit of a broad brush, it seems to me.

At the time the whole argument – replete as usual with sound and fury – was going on about repealing the Jackson-Vanik Amendment so that Russia could join the WTO and maintain the same trading relationship with the USA it would maintain with other members, it escalated into a bitter partisan battle by groups who did not know the first thing about it, only that the honour of Old Glory was at stake. In fact the amendment was inserted into the Soviet-American Comprehensive Trade Agreement, and basically gutted it unless the Soviet Union allowed free emigration to its Jews. Among that group were many who had received a free superior education at a state school of higher learning, and who wished to take it with them to America or Israel to make a pile of money. The Soviet Union said sure, you can go – just as soon as you pay back the state for your education, which is only free if you are going to use it to benefit the state that gave it to you. Unreasonable? You tell me.

The Soviet Union sent a delegation to the USA, to explain its position to the business community; implementing the amendment, it said, would elevate anti-semitism in the Soviet Union, and the 90% of Soviet Jews who did not want to leave would suffer for American meddling, as the rest of the Soviet Union’s citizens perceived American favouritism. And it almost worked. Enter Soviet Jewish activists, like the kreakly of today, the group America has never been able to resist – they’re just so smart. And they swayed opinion back the other way, and the amendment passed. And stayed in effect until Obama repealed it in 2012, long after it had outlived its usefulness and just in time for it to be replaced by the Magnitsky Act so the United States could go on treating Russia differently than it treated every other nation on the planet, and have a law that said it could.

For the record, Nixon preferred to take the path of “quiet diplomacy” where the Jackson-Vanik Amendment was concerned, and was satisfied with Moscow’s concession that it would not implement the “diploma tax”. You could call that “Nixonian realism”, if you want, but it sounds like “we got what we asked for – why be jerks?” So more or less everything McFaul tells you there about the Jackson-Vanik Amendment is self-serving blather, bullshit and boilerplate.

As to the “capacity with which the Soviet Union threatened the United States”, a study prepared by George Washington University’s National Security Archive and released in 2009 revealed that the Pentagon and others deliberately exaggerated the Soviet threat out of all proportion, departing on wild flights of fancy to justify ever-larger defense budgets and ever-more-costly weapons systems; “as recently as 1986, the CIA reported that the per capita income of East Germany was ahead of West Germany and that the national income per capita was higher in the Soviet Union than in Italy. Several years later, the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact collapsed, and former CIA director Stansfield Turner wrote that the “corporate view” at the CIA “missed by a mile.” So, less writing and more reading for you, Mr. McFaul, if you don’t mind a bit of free advice.

Although the United States is the most powerful hegemon in recent history and maybe ever, the U.S. government has seemed ineffective, weak, and unable to foster democratic development in Russia. This apparent impotence is especially striking when one remembers the strategic importance of democratic development in this country still armed with tens of thousands of nuclear weapons. It was democratic regime change inside the Soviet Union that ended the Cold War and made the United States more secure. It will be autocratic regime change that will once again animate a more confrontational relationship between the United States and Russia. And yet, the United States government has not developed an effective strategy either to foster Russian democracy or to help it survive.”

It sure sounds to me like you are advocating regime change there, Mr. McFaul.

What should come first, founding elections or a constitution? Which is better for Russia, presidentialism or parliamentary system? What should be the strategy for dealing with communists and their NGOs—engagement or destruction?”

Uhhhh…were you planning to ask the Russian government about any of this? Or was it just going to be between you and the excited business and cultural elitny who always thought the running of the country should have fallen to them? The elitny who, not to put too fine a point on it, would throw their shoulders against the great wheel of American global hegemony?

At times, however, officials representing the U.S. government and representatives from the non-governmental organizations clashed regarding appropriate engagement with Russia’s “revolutionaries.” These American NGOs vigorously defended their independence from the U.S. government and occasionally engaged in domestic“meddling” inside the U.S.S.R. that contradicted Bush’s pledge of noninterference. Most of the time, under the steady stewardship of Ambassador Matlock, these nongovernmental worked closely with local U.S. officials. Matlock himself was an active promoter of engagement with Russia’s revolutionaries. He hosted dinners and discussion groups with these anti-Soviet leaders and groups at Spaso House, the ambassador’s residence in Moscow, including a luncheon with human rights activists with Ronald Reagan in May 1988. These events gave symbolic but important recognition to these new political leaders.”

Certainly must have been inspirational, because Ambassador McFaul did just the same thing as soon as he arrived in Russia in 2012 – he had barely presented his credentials before he was hobnobbing with opposition leaders, many of whom had well-documented ties to the U.S. State Department, including Evgeniya Chirikova (NED -funded “Strategy 31”), Lilia Shevtsova (NED-funded GOLOS) and Lev Ponomaryov (NED-funded Moscow-Helsinki Group). Mr McFaul was incensed at the criticism he received from the Russian government and Russian social media for it – regime change? Perish the thought – this is just a meeting of friends, and meeting with the opposition is routine, harmless. Just keep eye contact and continue talking in a soothing, low voice, and the rubes will fall for it, every time. Given the opinions expressed in the referenced text, can there be any doubt that the objective was to pave the way for revolution?

Michael McFaul is as two-faced as a halibut; when he shakes your hand, check to see if you still have your wristwatch when you get your hand back, and it might not be a bad idea to count your fingers. When he says the government he represents is not interested in regime change in your country, a wise man would inspect all the riot-control equipment and get it laid out so it is ready to hand.

The USA never speaks in a conciliatory fashion when it is winning – ever notice that? It’s too busy waving the flag and trumpeting about exceptionalism and feats of can-do. Therefore, when it does speak in a conciliatory fashion, it is possible it has realized it is losing. And it doesn’t do losing well. A word to the wise is sufficient.

 

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1,868 Responses to Oh Lord, Please Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood

  1. Warren says:

    I think the “international community” should condemn the Harper regime for the brutality his security forces have inflicted on peaceful protesters.

    • Warren says:

      • marknesop says:

        What a disgrace. Explain yourself, Mr. Prime Minister.

      • Jen says:

        That’s terrible. But I’m not surprised. Australian police are becoming more and more violent too.

        I don’t know if it’s true – I only heard it as rumour – but Australian police get their training manuals (as they do their uniforms, boots and baseball caps) from the US and some senior police were alarmed at the level of violence the most recent imported manuals were recommending. Canada may have the same problem.

    • james says:

      you’ll be waiting a long time for that to happen.. the ”international community” as reflected in the political leadership of the west is completely incapable of doing anything other then saying yes to a 21st century police state… harper is one of there people, happy to lick the boots of google executives when he is not supporting all sorts of rabid political ideologues of all the wrong persuasion..

      • Warren says:

        Harper is Dubya on steroids, he has really changed Canada and how the rest of the world perceives Canada.

        The “international community” is a euphemism for the United States and its coalition of the willing.

        Russia, China, or anyone the US does not like are not part of the “international community”.

      • marknesop says:

        Hopefully he will not survive the next election, but I will not be voting in any case because I do not believe in voting for a fool just because the fool currently in power is worse. There is no choice for me in the current lineup, and nobody whom I could in good conscience endorse for leader.

        People like to say, “If you don’t vote, you have no right to complain”. That’s probably not the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard, but it’d be in the top five. I should vote for somebody in whom I have no faith as leader and help him or her to become the leader just so that I can assume the right to complain about what a predictably shitty job he or she does as leader. Uh huh.

        • james says:

          it’s a tough voting environment mark.. i have always felt a voting option for ”none of the above’ or ‘none of them’ would be an important part of a democratic system.. it could also be set up whereby if the number of people voting for ”none of them” reached a particular threshold, the political party would have to find alternative choices.. that would be more of a real democracy in action.. as it presently stands we aren’t given this option.. we don’t really have much of a democracy as i see it.. just more of the same bs..

  2. Warren says:

    • et Al says:

      I read about the famous PQ17 convoy. A 69% loss rate with 24 out of 35 ships lost to uboats. J.F.C!

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convoy_PQ_17

      • Patient Observer says:

        This was another example of British treachery meant to sabotage aid to the Soviet Union. Eisenhower described British actions as a betrayal of the allied war effort. The US Navy refused to conduct joint missions with the Royal Navy for the remainder of the war.

        Those sailors deserve recognition for their suffering and their bravery. If I am not mistaken the British government continues to deny them such recognition. The US acted honorably, the British rulers showed their true colors.

        • marknesop says:

          One of the references I cited provides that eligible British sailors may now apply to receive the Arctic Star. There are men and women of integrity in every society at every age, including Ukraine in the present.

        • et Al says:

          When Russia announced the Ushakov medal for British convoy sailors in 2012, the British government said that they rules did not allow them to accept medals from foreign governments.

          Yet a year later, they changed their minds.June 2013:

          Ushakov medal for Arctic convoy veterans
          http://www.fleetairarmoa.org/news/ushakov-medal-for-arctic-convoy-veterans

          On 17 June in a written statement to parliament, the Foreign Secretary William Hague said:

          I am pleased to announce that formal approval has been given to a recommendation for an exception to the rules on the acceptance of foreign awards to allow eligible British nationals to accept and wear the Russian Ushakov Medal.

          In May 2012 the Russian Government requested permission to award the Ushakov Medal to British veterans of the Arctic Convoys. Under the current rules on the acceptance of foreign awards, permission could not be given for the medal to be accepted as more than five years had passed since the events in question and there had already been British medallic recognition for this service.

          Although under these rules permission could not be given for the Ushakov Medal to be accepted, Her Majesty’s Government have always been appreciative of the Russian Government’s wish to honour these brave men.

          In light of that appreciation of this service, a recommendation was therefore made to exceptionally allow the Ushakov Medal to be accepted and worn. President Putin presented the first medals during his visit to London on 16 June 2013.

          Applications and eligibility for the Ushakov Medal will be a matter for the Russian authorities.

          This follows the presentation at Downing Street, on 16 June 2013, of Arctic Star medals to veterans by the Prime Minister along with Ushakov medals presented by Russian President Putin.

      • Fern says:

        Jeremy Clarkson who’s just been sacked by the BBC for punching out his producer fronted a very good documentary on PQ17. It is one of the rare half-decent programmes on TV about Russia with Clarkson pointing out how the country has always honoured the men who took part in the Arctic convoys – the graves of those who’re buried in Russia are always well-tended, medals have been awarded etc.

    • Tim Owen says:

      My uncle Harry was a radioman on those runs and survived. Never quite regained his nerves I suspect.

      May he RIP.

    • marknesop says:

      A colleague of mine received the Arctic Star on behalf of his father. I’m sure he earned it, too. Here’s what it looks like.

  3. Warren says:

    • marknesop says:

      There has to be something wrong with those stats. The Japanese are less industrious than Britons? Come on.

      • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

        Long hours ≠ productivity

        • marknesop says:

          So the Japanese are actually less productive than the British? I find that awfully hard to believe given how little Britain actually makes any more, unless we are referring to British workers stooging away in the banks that are the backbone of Britain.

          • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

            That would account for it. Whether your business is making automobiles (goods) or providing expert financial advice to drug cartels (services), you’re producing GDP.

        • yalensis says:

          I have found that to be 99% truth, in my business, which is software engineering.
          With only a few exceptions to this rule: The people who know what they are doing, can just bang out the work and go home at a reasonable hour.
          Whereas the people toiling at their desks for long hours are the ones who are struggling with the work. Maybe they lack the experience, or were put in the wrong job.
          (I am not talking about special situations or emergencies, just about normal routine workdays, it goes without saying.)

          • Jen says:

            It’s often the culture of the organisation, rather than the actual workloads, that determines whether people put in long hours. In the law and accounting firms where I’ve worked in corporate records, the idea of lawyers and accountants working long hours (and on weekends as well, and even the odd public holiday – I know of a case of someone who worked on Boxing Day) was considered par for the course, especially for younger legal or accounting staff keen to make senior associate or partner level. If a partner or senior associate puts in long hours, the people who work for them might feel some pressure to log in as much work-time as their superiors do, because they’re all part of the same little hierarchy within the firm. It’s possible the structure of law and accounting firms, based on the notion of partnership, encourages this kind of culture and thinking.

            Also with regard to Japan, in some firms, when employees are doing “overtime”, what they’re actually doing is having to “socialise” with their bosses and co-workers at restaurants and hostess bars. Opting out of these get-togethers is not an option for these people if they want promotion or good work assessments, or be seen as good team-players.

            • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

              If you don’t match the boss drink-for-drink, you’re not a company man.

              And if you’re not a company man, before long you’re out of the job and contemplating your many failings as you take your final, solemn stroll through suicide forest (still wearing your suit and tie, following the habits of a lifetime).

              Not all is black though. As you tie the rope and prepare to jump to eternity, you’ll console yourself that at least you won’t have to endure one more synchronised sidewalk screaming session with your colleagues.

            • colliemum says:

              Interesting!
              I’ve had experiences which were similar in one way, the opposite in another.
              When I earned money ages ago as typist in an office, where we were typing what was dictated on dictaphones, I got the ‘nudge-nudge, wink-wink’ treatment by others in the office, not to work so hard and type so fast, because then they’d all have to work harder.
              So that was definitely production lowering.
              OTOH, working in a lab, we all ‘knew’ that working 8 hours on the ‘free’ Saturday was regarded as proper behaviour for budding scientists, and the Boss always knew who was in and who was not, and remarks on Monday were made when results weren’t as expected.
              However, working on an Sunday was very much frowned upon, since the Boss belonged to the Plymouth Brethren, a pretty strict protestant sect. Shoulda worked harder on Saturdays …
              IMHO, work culture is very much set by those on top.

              • yalensis says:

                These are all very good points.
                Namely, that the attitude of the company brass determines the culture surrounding work time.

                Re. Jen’s point about legal and accounting firms:
                I read a Grisham novel, in which he laid it out how the junior associates at a law firm have to work insane hours, they are pruned if they don’t; but the underlying reason is so the company can bill the clients for more hours.

                Re. colliemum’s point about the lab: that surprises me, because I never thought of scientists as being workaholics. In my experience, I find workaholics to be mostly incompetent people. That’s why they have to put in so many hours: because they don’t know what they’re doing.
                But in the case of the lab, probably it was the Boss who was the incompetent jerk, and the rest of the scientists and technicians just had to follow the rules that he laid out!

                • colliemum says:

                  Ah no – the Boss was a top notch scientist himself.
                  The thing is, in science labs of the biological/medical variety, experiments take a given time (reactions which can’t be speeded up, for example), and the preparations for said experiments, tedious and time-consuming, have to be put in first, meticulously, or else no experiment. And then there are the endless possibilities of something going wrong, or having gone wrong, which must be analysed and corrected, else the next experiment will be a waste of time. Never a dull moment … and of course stacks of literature to be read during waiting times.
                  Heh. Do I sound oppressed? It was the best time of my life!

                • yalensis says:

                  Okay, that totally makes sense now!

                • Jen says:

                  But at least with working in a lab and working on experiments, you know what to expect, you know that results can be slow and take time, and you have to be very meticulous in designing the experiment properly to test your hypothesis (which itself has to be precise) and collecting and interpreting the results. All this is very important work that has to be done and made available to other researchers when the experiment is written up and presented before a board of peers because it is part of the practice of science to be open and transparent.

                  Whereas some of the work that junior lawyers and accountants or paralegals do is filing papers or photocopying and storing stuff that should be kept on disc or on firm computer hardware instead.

                • yalensis says:

                  Dear Jen:
                  Yes, exactly. In the Grisham novel (I don’t recall the title, he wrote so many, but I am sure you have read it), he made the point that most of this was unnecessary busy-work.
                  In fact, the senior partners would even add purely hazing chores: They would make the associates stay up all night putting together a binder, and then tear it up and laugh in their faces, when it was finished.
                  But still bill the clients for the hours.
                  I know it’s a novel, but Grisham made it clear this was his actual experiences in a New York law firm.
                  After reading this novel, I was like, “I could never be a lawyer.” Yeah, ‘cuz I need my sleep!

      • Patient Observer says:

        Britain includes sex workers who receive a very high hourly rate.

      • Jen says:

        I’ve heard there’s a lot of hidden unemployment in Japan, in the sense that companies dump middle-level managers and employees into menial jobs that normally would be taken by entry-level employees, rather than sack these people as might be expected during prolonged recessions (and Japan has been in a very long recession since … the 1990s). That goes some way (but not all the way) towards explaining why Japan’s economic performance has been bad but people are still working long hours and the overall unemployment level remains low.
        http://rudlinconsulting.com/hidden-unemployment-in-japanese-companies/
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underemployment

        • yalensis says:

          Anyhow, I thought the standard formula for calculating “labour productivity” was not just a function of hours spent on the job, but also the skill of the labourer, and the machinery used, etc.
          I remember from reading (or trying to read) Marx, something like:
          a basket-weaver can sit for 12 hours and weave one basket.
          This guy works long hours but is not very productive.
          whereas a guy tending a machine can crank out 100 baskets in one minute.
          Or something like that….

  4. Warren says:

    Is Mozgovoi now a Tsarist, perhaps Strelkov has influenced his political thinking?

  5. Moscow Exile says:

      • Moscow Exile says:

        ‘Great Wall Of Ukraine’ Is ‘A Priority,’ Petro Poroshenko Says: Donbas Defense Construction Set For April

        Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko confirmed Thursday that the nation’s government still plans to build its so-called Great Wall of Ukraine across a 1,250-mile stretch of its border with Russia, according to a report. Ukraine will reportedly set aside 300 million hryvni (US$12.8 million) to begin engineering work on border defenses this year.

        But the pension fund’s gone bust…

        Popcorn anyone?

      • marknesop says:

        I’m not sorry for much that is happening in Ukraine these days because the squalling and blatting from the activists and the fascists with their stupid “Putin Huilo” beer and their torchlight parades makes me nearly incapable of pity. But I’m sorry about this, and sorry for the elderly who counted on their government to look after them at the end of their lives with a reasonable standard of living and dignity. Uncle Sam must be so proud – just another day in foreign-intrigue land.

        • yalensis says:

          On that topic, Boyko points out the obvious truth that no nation in the history of the world has ever “gotten better” from an IMF loan.

          • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

            How is it that former Vice Premier Yuri Boyko walks at liberty when Sergei Abruzov, Vitaly Zakharchenko, Viktor Pshonka, Dmitry Tabachnik, Alexander Klimenko, Eduard Stavitsky, Raisa Bogatyrova, Nikolai Prysyazhnyuk, Yuri Kolobov and Olena Lukash have all been driven into exile?

            • yalensis says:

              That’s a good question, I wish I knew the answer.

              By the way, Sergei’s family name is ARBUZOV – his friends call him “Mr. Melons”! Good guy, though.

              • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

                Argh, my mistake. Don’t know if I’d call him good, but even if all that is said against him were true he would still be a living saint compared to anybody who serves the Maidan regime.

                While I don’t the answer either, I very strongly suspect that Boyko sold out to Kiev, albeit in some more subtle way than Dobkin or Kernes did.

          • marknesop says:

            True dat, in much the same sense that austerity has never worked for the purpose to which governments try to bend it. There’s nothing wrong with reducing blatant waste and inefficiency, but austerity has become a mantra that governments insist their electorates adopt although they seldom take any kind of reduction in the way they live their own lives. Instead, austerity is used as simply another tool to control the population without any appreciable positive effect on the economy, and sometimes a marked negative one.

  6. PaulR says:

    Greetings from Kansas, where I am travelling at present. Here’s a link to another good article from Nicolai Petro, amazingly enough in The Guardian: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/mar/27/ukraine-russia-solve-nicolai-petro

    • Warren says:

      Nicolai Petro’s stock has risen rapidly, I wonder if Petro will have any more time to be interviewed by the Real News Network?

      April 9th 2014

      May 6th 2014

      May 18th 2014

      Petro’s suggestion that Ukraine must recognise the cultural and linguistic identity of Russophones and citing Canada as an example of how a bilingual state functions echoes my own thoughts.

      Conference Talk

      If you don’t mind me asking, what are you doing in Kansas?

      • Tim Owen says:

        That is an excellent snapshot of what alternative news outlets are doing and there are a lot of them:

        Paul Jay’s – The Real News Network
        Robert Perry’s – Consortium News (he’s a Pulitzer Prize winner)
        Yves Smith – Naked Capitalism
        Russia Insider

        Others might be:

        Club Orlov
        RT

        I gave up on listening to MSM circa 2005 and am much better informed listening to better informed talking heads as above.

        As Clay Sharky says, “here comes everybody.”

        Take the money you are wasting on establishment channels such as NYT subscriptions, cable etc. and simply transfer it to to honest journalists like the Real News Network and we might make a dent on the fabulously dishonest “5th estate” of our time.

        Thank you for your time.

      • PaulR says:

        Kansas is for an academic conference.

    • marknesop says:

      I would feel better about it if it did not cite Yushchenko – one of the worst leaders Ukraine ever had, and one who should thank Yulia Tymoshenko for distracting people’s attention from that fact with her histrionics – and did not assume the invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops and the occupation of Crimea by same.

      “With a candour that only a former politician can afford, Yushchenko acknowledged that Ukrainians live in two distinct countries. There are parts of Ukraine today where, he said, “our language practically does not exist, our memory is nonexistent, our church is absent, our culture is absent.”

      The article cites as a reference another of Petro’s articles in which he quotes Yuschenko, referring to the notion that Ukraine is divided along language lines as “fairy tales”.

      Have a safe trip, Paul. I hope to see you the next time I am in Ottawa. It’s not in the forecast at present, but even if duty does not take me there I would like to visit for a vacation. I am fond of Ottawa. Did I ask you if you have ever met Patrick Armstrong, of Russia, Other Points of View? He lives in Ottawa, I believe, and sounds like he would be a fascinating dinner companion.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Asked what had been the three most significant developments in their country over the past year, it found little consensus between respondents in western Ukraine and those in Donbass:

      …More than 31% of western Ukrainians and fewer than 13% of those in Donbass included the invasion of Russian troops into Donbass.

      The invasion of Russian troops into the Donbass is an undisputed given, I see.

      I wonder if that fewer than 13% of Donbass residents mentioned above actually chose to use the term “invasion of Russian troops into the Donbass” or was that the turn of phrase used in a question asked them or on a questionaire given them to fill in?

      • james says:

        the questions are set up beforehand by the owners of the ”’poll”’ or ”study” or whatever the fuck they want to call selling folks a line of bullshite and hoping they are stupid enough to believe it was just some random question/s being asked… consensus is just another word for mind fuck… words don’t mean anything anymore..

  7. et Al says:

    REF/RL via Slashdot:

    RFE:RL : One Professional Russian Troll Tells All
    http://www.rferl.mobi/a/how-to-guide-russian-trolling-trolls/26919999.html

    More and more, posts and commentaries on the Internet in Russia and even abroad are generated by professional trolls, many of whom receive a higher-than-average salary for perpetuating a pro-Kremlin dialogue online.

    There are thousands of fake accounts on Twitter, Facebook, LiveJournal, and vKontakte, all increasingly focused on the war in Ukraine. Many emanate from Russia’s most famous “troll factory,” the Internet Research center, an unassuming building on St. Petersburg’s Savushkina Street, which runs on a 24-hour cycle. In recent weeks, former employees have come forward to talk to RFE/RL about life inside the factory, where hundreds of people work grinding, 12-hour shifts in exchange for 40,000 rubles ($700) a month or more.

    St. Petersburg blogger Marat Burkhard spent two months working at Internet Research in the department tasked with clogging the forums on Russia’s municipal websites with pro-Kremlin comments. In the following interview, he describes a typical day and the type of assignments he encountered….
    ####

    The only reason I post this is because it shows the circular logic of the Pork Pie News Networks and government funded news agencies like RFE/RL, i.e. because there are more anti-west/anti-western position comments that can only be because they are using troll factories because everything that comes out of the West is pure platinum and if such peasants were a) educated; b) not brainwashed; c) not foreign, then they would understand that we are always right.

    The article above shows how they take what could possible be one fact, and string it out exponentially to cover all comments that don’t agree with Western policy.

    But, we know from the Snowden/Greenwald leaks that the Western intelligence services also use technology that allows one person to control multiple personalities across a number of fora. This is of course defensive. Everything that they have been accusing others of doing for years, they have been doing themselves.

    The Groping Man and other members of the Pork Pie News Network collective buy in to this wholesale, like a flock of sheep. You would have thought that consensus would be a dirty word in journalistic circles, but no.

    Even the recognition of the world as it is, the English language becoming the lingua franca and being learned by many, many more people who all have access to the internet and then comment on news items that they do not agree with, is a concept the PPNN refuses to accept, hence as I think MosowExile commented on before, the Censorship is Free forum of the Guardian simply block IP’s from countries that they consider hostile. Not to mention the rest of the PPNN who take an even easier route (here’s looking at you Finnish owned Moscow times), simply removing all commenting at all. I suspect that those such as the latter case is done because otherwise they actually have to pay someone to read shitloads of moronic comments and filter them.

    What is undeniable is that the West’s exceptionalism extends to freedom of thought and speech, in direct contradiction to those same principles that they hold up publicly to the world as to why the West is the Best and should be emulated. Basically, the rest of you are a bunch of morons!
    /rant

    • et Al says:

      It is important to know how propaganda works. a) by whatever means, they have to arrive at your conclusion; b) you need to tick boxes – particularly ones that tick emotional responses; c) you need to sound reasonable; d) you need to distinguish between those who are ideologically sold, those who are forced and those who don’t care and do it for money… etc. lots of other points, but if you don’t know, you don’t know.

      • marknesop says:

        Those who come up with these heartwarming human-interest stories about the perennial victim under assault by the Liars From Russia never mention that the simplest way to refute trolls is to provide substantiation that what they say is not true. “How much is Putin paying you, Comrade?” is not a refutation. Pussy Riot being whipped by actors dressed as Cossacks is not substantiation. Photos of Russian army columns rolling into Georgia sold as photos of Russian army columns rolling into Ukraine 6 years later are not proof.

        • davidt says:

          Mark, do you have a reference/link for your statement that the Pussy Riot were whipped by actors dressed as Cossacks? I know that a convincing argument was made that this was the case on, I think, the “Da Russophile” blog, possibly by one of the commenters, but, unfortunately, I was unable to find it when I tried to retrieve it. Thanks.

          • yalensis says:

            Here is one link , there are lots of others.

          • Moscow Exile says:

            In Russian, but there are video attachments showing the “Cossacks” and the rest of the crew together with the star performers approaching the scene of their event together:

            http://www.vitaliy-andr.ru/archives/2602

            • Moscow Exile says:

              No, they’ve deleted the video, but the stills are still there.

                • Moscow Exile says:

                  Here’s the deleted RT clip from the other links:

                  https://vk.com/video-11028402_170243953

                  Note how Tolokonnikova gets sprayed straight in the face with “pepper spray”and barely stops her squawking? She just says “Ooh!” and carries on with her daft dance.

                  No way that was pepper spray.

                  And they’re holding back the lash and juts flicking at them.

                  When Tolokonnikova falls so hamishly to the deck, one “Cossack” very kindly covers her with a coat before he begins to “whip” her.

                  There’s a little diddy “Cossack” who manhandles one of the “girls”, who shows spirited “resistance” before performing her screams for the cameramen.

                  And in he stills above and in this video as well, you can see the cameramen – and there are many – crouching close to the performers so as to get good shot.

                  And all the while, Pedo Pete is there and does sweet FA to help his wife, but gets “roughed up” by a “Cossack”.

                  The shooting stops and everyone hangs around. One bloke has little nose bleed.

                  Total bullshit!

                  Did you see how the Canadian cops acted the other day?

                • davidt says:

                  Thanks, and to Yalensis, for the links. (My, admittedly unreliable, memory is that I saw video of the protagonists mulling about before the “assault” and some discussion of approaches to the actors to play the roles of the Cossacks.)

                • yalensis says:

                  You have to remember that Pussy Riot are “performance artists”, and their history is to stage these mini-plays, like little medieval pageants. It’s all about “good versus evil”.
                  In earlier times, “Pussy Riot” was “Voina”, they were a bigger, and much better art collective, they even won a prize in 2011 from the Russian Ministry of Art, for their “works”.

                  Their political “works” always symbolized “good versus evil”.
                  For example, their piece “Hang a Guest Worker” in 2008, was a reaction to homophobic and anti-Central Asian guest worker comments made by Moscow Mayor Luzhkov.
                  Luzhkov had made some blustery statement about “hanging” gays and migrants in the center of Moscow, something like that.

                  To satirize and protest this, Voina performed a play in which several homosexuals and Central Asians were “hanged” in the center of Moscow. The point is that they recruited actors exactly fitting the types, then strung these actors up with harnesses. Fortunately, nobody was actually hurt by these dangerous antics.

                  This is just an example of the fact that they always use paid actors.
                  To play the role of the Cossacks, they would have recruited actors who looked like Cossacks and wear Cossack dress. These actors would have been paid for their work in “whipping” the girls.

                • yalensis says:

                  Correction:
                  Voina’s performance art piece was entitled, “Hang a Tadjik”.
                  And they hired actual Tadjiks to play the role of Tadjiks!
                  If you scroll down this piece , the fifth photo down shows one Tadjik actor being “hanged”.

                  The recklessness of this stunt is breathtaking, considering that this “artist” collective did not employ professional stunt actors nor special effects technicians. They are just a bunch of no-talent amateurs, basically.

    • cartman says:

      “That Western officials would extend this crackdown on Russian-backed narratives from traditional to social media is not surprising. What is worth noting is that the media routinely downplays or under-reports what such a plan would entail—namely, the use of sockpuppet or fake social media accounts that would be used to counter these so-called false narratives. As the Guardian revealed in 2011, the Defense Department has been developing such technology for some time:”

      “The US military is developing software that will let it secretly manipulate social media sites by using fake online personas to influence internet conversations and spread pro-American propaganda…”

      “The Centcom contract stipulates that each fake online persona must have a convincing background, history and supporting details, and that up to 50 US-based controllers should be able to operate false identities from their workstations “without fear of being discovered by sophisticated adversaries”.”

      The multiple persona contract is thought to have been awarded as part of a programme called Operation Earnest Voice (OEV), which was first developed in Iraq as a psychological warfare weapon against the online presence of al-Qaida supporters and others ranged against coalition forces. Since then, OEV is reported to have expanded into a $200m programme and is thought to have been used against jihadists across Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Middle East.

      http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/natos-creepy-new-plan-infiltrate-twitter-and-facebook

      So yeah, look over there at those Ruskies…

    • Moscow Exile says:

      The brainwashed are those from the West – or better said, there seem to be far more brainwashed there than here.

      Very recently, one such defender of freedom and democracy and all that is good in that Exceptional United States International Community, which is something like the World Series in that the “world” of the series is principally the USA, and who posts lengthy diatribes on Russia Insider about how the USSR has never died, its barely concealed existence being proven, he maintains, by the numerous signs and symbols of the Soviet Union that are still displayed in Russia, and who adds numerous photographs of such Soviet artefacts to prove his point, on learning from me that I had lived in Russia for 22 years, responded: “What are you living in Russia for? Are you a Marxist…? Did you not notice anything strange there?” (That last question a dead give away to the fact that he is probably a US citizen: use of past tense instead of present [perfect] that I would have used.)

      So I asked him if he had noticed anything “strange” when he was last here.

      He has never been here, of course.

      Also, before I was banned from making comments to the Grauniad, on many occasions I had been accused of being a Russian troll and it was even suggested by Tintin himself, when he once deigned to comment on CiF, that I was being paid by the FSB.

      The most amusing comments that I have received from those dedicated to seeking out and exposing Russian trolls in the Grauniad comments sections have been those that have been of an inverse-complimentary nature, in that they have somewhat begrudgingly acknowledge that my standard of English is “quite good” and better than that of other FSB hirelings whose sub-standard English immediately reveals that they are Russians.

      • kat kan says:

        Yahoo or gmail emails are available for $5 to $8 per 1000. A simple bot to create accounts on ONE media is around $25. One capable of multiple social media goes from $70 to $400, the top one capable of reading more than 100 types of Captcha.

        The cheapest cannot log in to an account — it must use it as soon as it creates it. The fancier ones can log in. All of them can select what to answer based on keywords, returning either a set text or a choice from a list based on keyword and other rules, including optionally quoting or incorporating some of the previous comment.. Most are also capable of voting (thumbs up/down or likes).

        To make realistic accounts with history of course takes time. Facebook is the hardest, as it needs photos and personal stories. Straight text like Twitter is easily automated. It is cheap to run a bot an hour a day to make heaps of these, for eventual resale in bulk, or on contract to one Alphabet organisation or another.

        The only expensive part in the whole setup is getting a botnet so the IPs are varied and hard to trace. IP anonymity services are relatively inexpensive, aimed at “marketing” (email spam) providers..

        $200 million? should be a good % of profit in that.

        • yalensis says:

          I didn’t know these bots had cracked the “Captcha” barrier.
          How do they do that, I wonder? Some kind of devious pattern recognition software?

      • marknesop says:

        It is often those whose English is below standard who most delight the Defenders Of The Land Of Virtue, as they pretend to be baffled and unable to understand the clumsy speech or make mocking corrections to their spelling. The people having a high old time at their expense can often speak only one language – English – but nonetheless congratulate themselves on their mastery of it, obviously superior beings, while they cannot speak a word of their foe’s native tongue.

        They rarely accuse anyone who is not on a level playing field of being a troll – they enjoy having such opponents because they can best them easily. If they trot out the old “How much is the Kremlin paying you?” chestnut, it generally means they sense a change in the dynamics of the argument.

  8. yalensis says:

    Just a few comments ago, I wondered what had happened to my Nazi sweetheart, Vita Zaverukha.
    Maybe I shouldn’t joke around about that mental case, because I just saw this video from Shariy.
    It shows Vita gratuitously shooting a rocket into the village of Shirokino, just for LOLZ and target practice. Let’s hope this violent schizo didn’t hurt anybody.

    • yalensis says:

      Shariy’s caption at the end:
      “Who gave her a weapon, and who gave her the right to kill?”

      Vita, who is clearly mentally ill and belongs in an inpatient facility for violent paranoid schizophrenics, serves in the Aidar Battalion.
      Instead of being medicated with Zyprexa or Clorazil, she roams freely and has access to rocket launchers.

  9. Warren says:

    Published on 27 Mar 2015
    Media wars have entered new territory: Secretary of State John Kerry, members of the EU and the military alliance NATO all have singled out this television station – RT – as some kind of security threat. Since when is holding and broadcasting a different opinion or narrative a threat to global media freedom?

    CrossTalking with Anthony Salvia, Martin McCauley, and Don DeBar.

    • marknesop says:

      The west can tolerate dissent only when the state is in a strong position to influence public opinion, which is to say it has had a fairly long and unbroken stretch of telling more or less the truth and has built up a reservoir of trust. When it openly and publicly cracks down on media without offering any proof at all that it is peddling lies, or fabricates proof in a desperate attempt to discredit it, it is a measure of how thin public trust has worn.

      An example I keep coming back to is the incident in which the irredeemably nutty Westboro Baptist Church picketed the funeral of Matthew Shepard – a gay youth murdered horribly by gay-baiters who beat and tortured him and left him to die, which evidence suggested took hours – tormenting his grieving family by carrying placards which read “No Tears For Queers” and “Gay Matt Burns In Hell” as well as drawings of stick figures engaged in a variety of sexual positions. A lawsuit by the family against the “church”, which is mostly a fucking squirrel’s nest of religious-fundie nutjobs, was unsuccessful when it ran up against the wall of free speech – as sacred to American values as Mom and apple pie.

      Except when people don’t trust the government line being peddled. Then the government will decide if what you say has “national security implications”. How could it, if what the source says is easily-discreditable hogwash?

      • yalensis says:

        Yep. It’s pretty much a Forest-Trees type thing.
        The Deep State decides the overall layout of the Forest.
        The rubes are allowed to quibble among themselves about the positions of individual tiny trees. So long as they dont’ question the overall plan.

  10. Warren says:

    Russia keeper Akinfeev hit by flare in abandoned Montenegro match

    Russia goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev was struck on the back of the head by a flare as their Euro 2016 qualifier with Montenegro in Podgorica was abandoned.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/32096292

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      You might expect some of her comrades to take issue with that – many of the Ukrainian nationalists purport to be Orthodox (Parubiy, Yarosh, Sashko Biliy).

      • Moscow Exile says:

        And she chose to write “Death to the Orthodox [believers]” thus:

        Смерть православных

        and not thus:

        Смерть православних

        I suppose she wrote it in Russian for propaganda purposes so that any Russian speaker who sees the photograph will be left in no doubt concerning those who were her intended target.

        Of course, she, being a true Slav from Rus’, does not speak the tongue of those deracinated Moskali-Tatar-Finno-Ugric filth.

        • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

          Is there anywhere else in the world where people will kill and die for the sake of a language they can’t speak?

          • Moscow Exile says:

            Speak French: Be clean.

            Southern France – at a school in the Languedoc region where Occitan is/was spoken.

            I don’t think the French speakers kill those who speak Occitan, though – well not these days they don’t: there are very few of them around now.

            Be Civilized, Don’t Speak Catalan or Taiwanese

            The thing about the Ukraine, though, is that very few there cannot speak Russian: they may pretend they don’t, but they do. And very many Russian mother-tongue speakers in the Ukraine can at the very least get by in Ukrainian: after all, they all had to learn Ukrainian at school.

            Timoshenko, on her own admittance, only began to speak Ukrainian in her 30s, namely after she had undergone her metamorphosis from being a “businesswoman” and turning into an ardent Ukrainian nationalist “politician”. She learnt Ukrainian at school in Dnepropetrovsk, but spoke Russian as her mother tongue – and it literally was her ethnic Russian mother’s first language.

            I am sure I have mentioned this before, but several years ago when staying at a Sanatorium on the Black Sea coast at a place almost in Romania, my family and I shared a table with a Ukrainian woman whose mother tongue was Ukrainian, or at least she indicated that she preferred speaking Ukrainian. Whenever we were all present at the table in the huge sanatorium dining room, we all conversed in Russian: no problem. However, when only I was at the table with her, usually at breakfast and before my wife had managed to drag our children out of bed, she had the annoying habit of telling me what the Ukrainian was for the Russian I was speaking – sort of correcting me.

            For example, I remember saying to her: “We’re going back to Moscow at the end of July”. The names of the Russian months are taken from the Latin calendar, as indeed they are all over Europe, but the Ukrainians have their own charming Ukrainian names for the months. So in Ukrainian, “July” (июль – “ee-yule” in Russian”) is called липень (leep-en) – maybe from the Slavic root “leep” for linden tree, which possibly blooms in that month. Whatever. But she at once said to me: “We don’t say ‘ee-yule’: we say ‘leep-en’!” And thus it went on.

            At first, I was interested in this breakfast instruction in Ukrainian, but in the end, it all got rather tiresome. So after a few days of this instruction, I had to say to her: “I’m sorry, but I don’t speak Ukrainian and unfortunately I have too little time now to learn it, although I certainly would like to – and Polish as well”.

            I got a funny look off her for saying that. I think it was because I spoke about the Polish language in the same breath as I spoke her mammoth-slayers one. I wasn’t bothered anyway: she was heading off home the next day, no doubt into deepest Galitsia and probably only a few kilometres from the Polish border.

            • marknesop says:

              Generally the two are sufficiently similar that a speaker of one can follow simple conversation in the other, or so I’m told by native Russian speakers. Our Ukrainian friends are from the heart of west Ukraine, Ternopol and Chernihiv, and when we gather together they speak Russian. When they speak to their young children, around our daughters age (8), they speak Ukrainian and I understand them, because that is about the level of my Russian. On the occasions that strangers met by chance insist on speaking Ukrainian to my wife she can understand it but must respond in Russian.

              Last year we had a large gathering at the home of one of the west Ukrainians, at which guests appeared that I had never met before nor seen since. I presume they were mostly Ukrainians as well, and a lady who was there by herself said how much she enjoyed Ukrainians and Russians getting along together. I asked her why should they not, and she made it clear right away that she despised Putin but thought Russians were more or less okay. She sounded to me like someone who got all her news from mainstream or state media and I did not pursue the point.

              A good example is the lengthy speech made in perfect Russian by the mayor of Lviv – in which, to his credit, he tried to mend fences – on the occasion the drunk-with-new-power self-appointed junta under Turchynov announced the bill to remove the status of the Russian language in Ukraine, right after that barnyard performance known as Maidan.

        • yalensis says:

          Not quite, Moscow Exile.
          What Vita wrote is “Смерть православным” (dative plural) –
          “Death TO THE Orthodox”.
          (not “Death OF the Orthodox”, which is what the genitive plural ending would give).

          Vita’s scribbling is grammatically correct, if appalling sentiment.

          BTW, Vita has recently “reinvented” herself as a “girl jihadi”.
          Her VKontakte page eliminated (mostly) the swastika symbolism, replacing with iconography of Vita in what she considers Muslim headgear, etc.

          Vita did NOT actually convert to Islam, it goes without saying. With Vita, it’s all about posturing, and with Vita it’s all about Vita, and her murderous fantasies. Everything in the world is just grist to her mill. This is an 18-year-old girl who is a violent schizophrenic.

          • Moscow Exile says:

            I couldn’t quite make out the last letter of the word православным, but the point I was making was that she used “ы” in its spelling, whereas in Ukrainian I’m sure that the dative plural of “orthodox” is православним – no letter “ы”, likewise nominative singular православный in Russian and православний in Ukrainian.

            In short, the Yukie psychopath writes in Russian.

      • Warren says:

        I was under the impression that Muzychko was Greek Catholic/Uniate!

        I say this because:

        1. Muzychko was from Rovono in Volhynia.

        2. His funeral service seems to have been conducted in a Catholic church and a Catholic priest, judging by the uniforms of the priests. Orange and white sashs of the priests.

  11. yalensis says:

    On MH-17:
    Interview with Robert Parry . He says his sources in the CIA don’t want to release more info about MH-17, because it “exonerates” Russia.

    Reading between the lines, sounds like CIA believes the plane WAS shot down by a BUK. Maybe just not a rebel BUK.

    • Warren says:

      Poles indulging in conspiracy theories and mental masturbation over alleged Russian underhand foul play in the 2010 Smolensk plane crash.

      The Polish war time leader General Sikorski also famously died in a plane crash in 1943.

      http://www.fpp.co.uk/History/Sikorski/Times040703.html

      • marknesop says:

        I hope they’re not going to rake over all that old muck again – I did a post on the crash here, way back when, and information available at the time (some of the references might be dead links by now) reported investigators had confirmed the visibility was down to 200 meters and the pilot had been told conditions were unsafe for landing and that he should divert to another airfield. Kaczynski had not been invited, was not expected and was determined to make a showy entrance for political reasons at an airfield which was not expecting his plane, his flight team had been assembled only weeks before and had never undergone simulator training as a team, the Polish Air Force Chief of Staff was in the cockpit haranguing the pilot and the pilot had turned off his Terrain Avoidance Warning System (TAWS) – the only known crash of a plane so equipped, but it kind of presupposes you will leave it on and listen to it – while the crew of a Polish plane on the ground that had earlier brought in journalists was coaching the pilot of the presidential plane to not listen to the Russians and attempt a landing. It would have been a miracle if the plane did not crash.

    • kirill says:

      That’s fucking rich. Those flight controllers told the Polish plane to land elsewhere due to poor landing conditions (high surface winds). It was Kachinsky who refused to contemplate landing in Minsk and driving to Smolensk. He ordered the Polish captain to land at the military airfield.

      Poland should charge Kachinksy posthumously for being a retard who killed a plane load of people. But that would make Poles and Poland look bad. These people are truly inadequate.

  12. yalensis says:

    Kiev paper «Зеркало недели» has scoop on the behinds-the-scenes of Kolomoisky’s resignation.

    SUMMARY
    Benny’s resignation was preceded by 10 hours of negotiations, involving Kolomoisky, Poroshenko, Boris Lozhkin (Porky’s guy), and Gennady Bogoliubov (Benny’s guy).

    Porky was prepared to go all the way and have Benny physically liquidated, however, it never came to that.
    Porky was backed by the West. Joe Biden himself intervened and personally spoke with Yatsenuk. Yats was actually an ally of Benny’s, and it took the might of Joe Biden to convince him not to back the losing side. Avakov was also brought into the loop, in similar manner, and turned against his old friend, Benny Kolomoisky.

    In the end, Benny understood, that the game was over; and he was given a “golden parachute”.
    The package includes:
    -Benny’s PrivatBank will be re-capitalized from the IMF tranche.
    -Benny’s TV channel (1+1) will start to be more loyal to President Poroshenko
    -Porky’s guys will take over management of UkrTransNafta oil company, with implication that the upcoming audit of previous periods (when Benny was in charge) will not be excessively “pedantic”.
    -Management of the other company UkrNafta also a big deal, and how much taxes this will pay to government.
    -Also at stake: Whose company will deliver coal from the ATO zone – those close to Porky or to Benny?
    -What job will be found for Dmitry Yarosh
    -What will be the fate of Benny’s other friend Igor Palitsa, and will he continue to be the Gubernator of Odessa Province?

    All these questions were discussed intensively.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      This is what Psaki says, as I posted 3 days ago after seeing an article about the Dozhd TV interview in Komsomolskaya Pravda:

      I thought Sobchak had fucked off, anyway, because her life is in danger – allegedly: I wish she would.

      Джен Псаки: Смещение Путина не является нашей целью, мы хотим изменить курс России

      Jen Psaki: The ousting of Putin is not our goal: we want to change the direction that Russia is taking

      Extracts and précis:
      ——————————————————————————————————————————The official U.S. state Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki is soon to go on maternity leave and will quit her post, which has become famous even in distant Russia. But before doing that, on Wednesday night Jen gave an interview with Ksenia Sobchak in a live “Dozhd” transmission.

      Psaki: We cooperate with Russia on many issues, but we have serious disagreements about the Ukraine. About a year ago, Russian separatists invaded the Ukraine, and we had serious differences of opinion about this. We have drawn different conclusions as regards whether this action meets international standards.

      Psaki then said what would happen following the U.S. Congress request that Obama begin arms shipments to the Ukraine:

      Psaki: Congress gives authority for the president to act, but it is up to him to decide whether to take any action. Of course, our goal is to make Russia and Pro-Russian separatists in the Ukraine strictly comply with the Minsk agreement. We are not going to wage a proxy war with Russia, but we are considering different options depending on what is happening. We are only talking about defensive weaponry, but weighing all the facts, we are trying to understand what decision will bring a resolution to the conflict in the Ukraine. There are many other levers: the introduction of new sanctions, negotiations with our external partners. The USA has a lot of options…

      Russia and Pro-Russian separatists have encroached into Ukraine territory. There are Russian troops there, so there are good reasons for what Congress has recommended.

      Asked by Sobchak if she thought Putin was a dictator, Psaki answered:

      It is a pity that he seems to have ignored the economic decline of the country, which is having a direct impact on the Russian people, and is focusing on unlawful interference in Ukrainian affairs. Political leaders in America would be prosecuted if they chose such a path.

      Sobchak: Is the purpose of the US to oust Putin?

      Psaki: No, that is not our goal. Our goal is to stop the illegal invasion by Russia and pro-Russian separatists of Ukrainian territory. This is not about changing the leadership of the country. This should be the choice of the Russian people. But Russia is taking action specifically in Ukrainian matters, and Russia has the opportunity to change its course of action.

      Psaki was very careful to avoid answering questions about what role the US played in the Ukrainian coup, but sometimes her answers were extremely cynical as, for example, in the case of the expulsion of Yanukovych.

      Psaki: We tried to work with Yanukovych, but he left the country. There was chaos, and we are reminded of this today- and with deep regret.

      Sometimes Psaki clearly deviated from the general line of the US leadership. For example, she apparently forgot how Obama had recently boasted to Congress that because of US sanctions, the Russian economy was in tatters. She said:

      We do not consider Russia as an opponent. We wish you success and prosperity.

      Psaki did a lot of talking about cooperating with Russia – over both achievable and desirable goals. However, the sincerity of her statements did not lend itself to be very much believed.
      —————————————————————————————————————————

      End of excerpts and précis.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        And she’s still in Russia, as far as I know. I saw another news article about her arsing around in Moscow yesterday.

        A couple of weeks ago she was saying she’d been advised by the FSB to make herself scarce as her name was on a hit-list.

        • Moscow Exile says:

          Yes, it was yesterday: it seems she’s an actress now:

          Жениться – так с Собчак!

          Getting Wed – Sobchak style!

          Premiere of “Marriage” in the Theatre of Nations – as proof of the immortality of Gogol and the acting talent Ksenia Sobchak

          (“Marriage – or An Absolutely Incredible Event in Two Acts” – a play by Gogol, 1842)

          So she has no fear of anyone attacking her while she’s prancing around in a theatre.

          • marknesop says:

            “Militants backed by Russian troops”, once again a given, common wisdom, no proof necessary. Riddle me this – why don’t the Russian troops just take over the fight themselves? Are they always there in the background, just cheering the “separatist militants” on? And if the militants can do the job without help, why is the Russian army there? Stupid myths that the Ukies must tell themselves to avoid admitting the shape their army is in, and which the wide-eyed west believes without question.

        • marknesop says:

          Obviously she will not bow to terror.

          She’s not afraid of prison, because she carries her own food supply with her.

      • Warren says:

        Ksenia lives off her father’s name, if she was not Anatoly’s daughter she would be an underemployed проститутка.

      • kat kan says:

        About a year ago, Russian separatists invaded the Ukraine, and we had serious differences of opinion about this. We have drawn different conclusions as regards whether this action meets international standards.

        Hmmm…. good question., What ARE international standards about people living where they live? When does living in your own house turn into an invasion?

        • colliemum says:

          When someone else wants to have your house?

        • marknesop says:

          So the USA would be fine with Moscow backing a coup in Canada and installing a Kremlin-friendly government there, and making noises about its joining the Russian Federation? Would it consent to “international standards” and do nothing to interfere as the part of the population that resisted the advance of Canada’s military retreated to St. Catherines and began flying the American flag and asking for American help?

      • marknesop says:

        Only defensive weaponry. I presume, then, that if you attempt to fire it at civilians or in a situation in which you are not the defender, it will not fire?

    • james says:

      interview with ”’voice of america”’, LOLOL… now what does american propaganda have to say about russian propaganda? lol.. inquiring minds want to know – NOT!

  13. Warren says:

    Russia: MPs find love across the political divide

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-news-from-elsewhere-32087591

  14. Moscow Exile says:

    I don’t know whether anyone has noticed how a while back a Yukie TV channel thought it had made a scoop of sorts with this dead-beat 76-year-old Russian actress hamming it up for all it was worth over Savchenko’s then hunger strike.

    Liya Akhedzhakova, a People’s Artist of Russia no less, expressed her admiration for the Ukrainian “pilot” and for her courage and loyalty towards her Mother Country. In her over-the-top performance, the old bag asks “Nadya” to stop fasting, saying that such a patriot as she is must live and be an example for the growing younger generation. She said she was outraged by the behavior of the Russian police, who had groundlessly detained Savchenko.

    Here she is (note: the studio presenter introduces her to viewers in Ukrainian, albeit that the geriatric actress spouts forth in Russian): she should have been awarded an Oscar for this performance:

    Nadya, my dear: I admire you! I am not capable of such a confrontation. How can you control yourself in such circumstances?

    It’s despicable … vile … despicable that you were driven in handcuffs across the border and are now being stitched up with a criminal case for illegal border crossing. I just cannot find words to say. The whole world should have risen up over this! [pregnant pause – sotto voce] … But it didn’t.

    Nadechka, I only have one wish for you: that you live! Please live! This is really important! It is is really important that you live!

    But you are with us yet whilst according to somebody’s vile plan the Ukraine has been robbed[pauses, turns away slightly, then turns back] …and fired upon! [pregnant pause]…

    You are a kind of symbol for the Ukraine. Please… [finger sternly raised as though in admonition] you have to live, just as the Ukraine has to. You have your whole future in front of you! Please … live, my dear!

    [grand climax – makes sign of the cross] May the Lord protect you!

    The reaction on the Russian blogosphere has, predictably, been one of outright mockery at such a performance.

    The Public Prosecutor of the Crimea labelled the performance as being shameful for a Russian to make.

    This is not the first time that the old bat has mouthed it off though: earlier she had said that the Maidanites had given the Russians a lesson in civic activity and courage.

    See: Лия Ахеджакова назвала летчицу Савченко символом Украины

    Pilot Savchenko is a Symbol of the Ukraine – Akhedzhakova

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Some examples of the Russian blogosphere piss-taking of the great actress’s performance:

      Fascists – forgive us!!!

      Forgive us, Mongols!!!

      Forgive us, Ukrainians and Germans, for attacking you!

  15. Warren says:

    Russian Imperialism Will Unleash New Yugoslavia
    By Vladimir Ryzhkov
    Mar. 24 2015 18:32
    Last edited 18:33

    The annexation of Crimea, the war in eastern Ukraine, the recent large-scale military maneuvers by the Russian armed forces, the continuing increase in military outlays despite the deepening economic crisis, President Vladimir Putin’s stated readiness to use nuclear weapons — and all of this against the backdrop of record approval ratings for the president — make it increasingly likely that a Yugoslavia-like scenario will play out on the territory of the former Soviet Union.

    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/russian-imperialism-will-unleash-new-yugoslavia/517977.html

    • kirill says:

      NATO unleashed Yugoslavia and has done the same in Ukraine. The Kiev regime is greenlighted by Washington to wage war against people who do not recognize the legitimacy of the NATO installed coup regime in Kiev. Washington gave Izetbegovic the green light to ignore the 1992 Lisbon accord, which led directly to the BiH civil war. NATO actively undermined Yugoslavia and promoted secessionist movements in its republics.

      This article is yet another pathetic attempt to dump the responsibility onto countries other than NATO and the USA in particular. Crimea has nothing to do with Kiev’s butchery in the Donbas. In addition, it was Washington, the entity this clown is fellating, that promoted the secessionists in Kosovo and recognized its break away from Serbia.

    • marknesop says:

      Yes, we’re all familiar with Vladimir Ryzhkov and his bitter mockery, like when he made a big joke about Russia preparing for a potential invasion of South Ossetia by Saakashvili, what a joke by people who are nothing but a joke, as if that is ever going to happen. Another self-loathing liberal who is doing his penance for being born Russian by remaining in Russia instead of leaving for the land of milk and honey.

  16. Warren says:

    Let’s Make Putin’s London Cronies Sweat
    EDWARD LUCAS

    April 2015

    Vladimir Putin’s mysterious disappearance from public view for 11 days last month came just as a belated consensus was emerging in Western capitals that his regime presents us with a serious problem. In truth—surprising as it may be to our diplomats—the problem long predates Putin, and will continue even after his re-emergence scotched speculation about the Russian President’s political and physical survival.

    Back in 1994 the late Estonian President, Lennart Meri, made a prophetic speech at a conference on Baltic Sea cooperation in Hamburg, decrying the trend in Russian foreign and internal policy since the collapse of the Soviet Union. He highlighted Russia’s self-proclaimed right to intervene to protect “compatriots” abroad. Russia’s delegation (including a greyly unmemorable official from St Petersburg who later became president of Russia) walked out. Even earlier, in 1993, a brilliant Russian émigré called Viktor Yasman had published a prescient academic paper outlining a sinister new ideology, Eurasianism, based on anti-Westernism, Soviet nostalgia, nationalism and extreme Orthodox religiosity. More recently, opposition leaders such as my friend the late Boris Nemtsov told the West in the bleakest terms that Russia was heading towards dictatorship, that it was prepared to use force at home and abroad, and that our financial system was a vital part of the regime’s money-laundering.

    We ignored these abundant and accurate warnings; instead we patronised and belittled their authors. We preferred the warm glow of the end of the Cold War, the prospect of Europe seemingly whole, free, and at peace—and making money in the “emerging market” of the ex-Soviet empire. In truth, the new Russia was a sham democracy awash with corruption. It skated over the Stalinist legacy, ignoring, not atoning for, the crimes perpetrated in captive nations in past decades. Indeed, it retained a belief that these places were destined—whether they liked it or not—to be Russia’s sphere of interest. Nor was the terror-machine of the KGB uprooted. It had merely mutated.

    The arrival of an ex-KGB officer in the Kremlin in 2000, and since then of hundreds of billions of dollars in oil and gas revenues to the national treasury, has stoked Russian revisionism to the point that even Western foreign policy experts can see it. Repression at home and aggression abroad are now the dark stars by which the Kremlin sets its course. They obscure the real story of the Putin years: waste, incompetence, pomposity and—above all—colossal theft.

    Though the emerging consensus accepts that Russia now a menace, not just a nuisance, it is still too complacent. It believes that sanctions are working, that problems are essentially confined to Ukraine, and that a combination of diplomacy and patience will win the day. It fails to ask three crucial questions. What does Russia want? Why is it winning? And what can we do to stop it?

    The Putin regime is more than just the personality of its leader. He may be toppled or sidelined, but the criminal-capitalist business model that has taken root during his reign is all too durable. Clans may fight each other—a row between his Chechen satrapy and securocrats in Moscow began boiling up during his absence.

    But for all its feuds, the regime wants above all to stay in power. It does not want to be toppled by a popular revolt stoked from abroad or to be constrained by a rules-based international order enforced by a united alliance of other countries.

    Its first priority is therefore to create a cordon sanitaire on its borders, in which (in the words of a senior Russian who once confided in me) “nothing happens we do not know about, and nothing happens that we do not like.” That does not mean military conquest. It means creating a soft hegemony based on the use of corruption, propaganda, economic dependence, divide-and-rule tactics, subversion and sabre-rattling. Though Russia is no longer a global superpower, it is still able to bully any individual country on its western and southern borders.

    That is a springboard to the other objective: to end the era of Western dominance in world affairs, and particularly in European security. Russia sees (and stokes) growing anti-Americanism in Europe. It notes the Obama administration’s disengaged and timorous foreign policy, and the growing impatience among American policymakers with European ingratitude when it comes to defence. Nato is hollowed out; the European Union divided and distracted.

    The looming target for Russia now is the Baltic states. Unlike Ukraine, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are core members of the Western alliance. If one or more of these frontline states can be humiliated with impunity, it will be the end of Nato. That could happen with startling speed: imagine that one morning Russia stages a provocation—say involving a train in transit across Lithuania to Kaliningrad. In the afternoon it declares a no-fly zone to stop Nato bringing in reinforcements, and in the evening announces that it has loaded its battlefield nuclear warheads onto their delivery systems and will use them if provoked. Would President Obama respond in kind? If he doesn’t, Nato is over by breakfast.

    That dismal prospect is still ahead. But Russia is already systematically testing our willpower and finding it wanting. Russian warplanes repeatedly violate Baltic airspace. A senior Estonian official, Eston Kohver, was kidnapped and is now hostage in Moscow. Mendacious, vicious propaganda spews over the border, portraying the Baltic states as fascist, friendless failures.

    Russia is winning because it is strong-willed, not because it is strong. Unlike the West, the Putin regime is prepared to take risks, accept economic pain, threaten the use of force (and on occasion carry out those threats), and use a brazen and well-financed propaganda machine to cover its tracks. It has already proved that it can destabilise Ukraine, perhaps fatally, and get away with it. The European security order, dating back to the Helsinki Final Act, and consolidated in the Paris Charter of 1990, is in shreds. Russia has shown that might is right. Big countries do the deals they can. Small countries do the deals they must. The dire consequences of that are still sinking in.

    The West’s response should not focus too much on the Baltic states or Ukraine. We cannot expect our weakest allies to shoulder our burdens. Their woes are symptoms of the problem, not its source. However many weapons we deliver to Ukraine, we are only delaying that tormented country’s military defeat. Even if we build a Maginot Line in the Baltic, we cannot make those three brave and beleaguered countries credibly defensible in isolation. The only way to assure their freedom and ours is to focus on Russia—and on our own weaknesses.

    Russia’s tactics shift seamlessly between statecraft, the dark arts and commercial pressure. But we in the West prize our separation of powers. Our intelligence and security services like secrecy. Our journalists like independence. Our businesses put their shareholders first. Our judicial system detests political interference. Those boundaries are admirable in their way—but they hamper our response to an adversary which ignores them.

    When I investigated Anna Chapman, the Russian spy arrested in America in 2010, I found that she had run a company in London using the stolen identity of a Kent electrician, Steve Sugden. Her company seemed to be involved in both money-laundering and intelligence work. But neither the police, nor MI5, nor Companies House, nor our financial regulator thought it was their job to clear the matter up, and repair the damage done to Mr Sugden. “Our job is catching spies, not criminals,” a spook told me with some asperity. But what if the spies are also criminals? And perhaps playing other roles too, as propagandists, business people or energy traders? During the Cold War we did practise better teamwork. We realised then that we faced an existential threat. We need to realise that we are again in ideological competition with an adversary who wants to bend us to his will. This time the threat is not Communism, but authoritarian crony capitalism.

    We could do a lot more with visas: not just the members of the Russian elite, but their spouses, siblings, parents and offspring should be barred from visiting North America and Europe. They cannot have it both ways: if they preach and practise anti-Westernism at home, they cannot expect to frolic, shop, save and study in the decadent hellholes of London, Paris, Berlin and New York.

    Next, freeze their assets. Hundreds of billions of dollars have been looted from the Russian people. If we can freeze the assets of drug barons and warlords, we can do the same to the phonies and cronies of the Putin regime. America has made a commendable nibble on both visas and assets, but we could do far more. It would help us recover the moral high ground, defend our public life from the pernicious effects of foreign money, and terrify the Kremlin.

    But most of all we need to go after their pinstriped accomplices: the lawyers, bankers and accountants who have been instrumental in stashing the Kremlin’s ill-gotten gains in the West. It should be a matter of lasting shame that we—especially in Britain—prostituted our financial and legal system to our enemies. America is now bringing the might of its criminal justice system to bear on a notorious company with close Kremlin ties which I cannot mention for legal reasons. This is causing an outbreak of nervous sweats among the deeply compromised British financiers who helped it to gain a seeming respectability.

    We should do likewise. It will be embarrassing and painful. But it is better that our bankers shed sweat and tears now than that we and our allies shed blood later.

    http://www.standpointmag.co.uk/node/5987/full

    • kat kan says:

      This guy is stuck in the Distorting Mirrors house at Coney Island. Have to feel sorry for him.

      • et Al says:

        Not if he has his trousers around his ankles at the same time. An insane asylum would be better but as they cannot legally section him in the UK, how about a whole insane country to himself? Estonia!

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Russia’s tactics shift seamlessly between statecraft, the dark arts and commercial pressure.

      The dark arts?

    • Tim Owen says:

      So let me get this straight Ed, the threat is from “authoritarian crony-capitalism.” Errr… in what possible world would that pose a threat exactly. Let’s concede that your “butter wouldn’t melt” self-worshipping image of the west is reality-based, what will happen if we fail to heed your earnest warnings? Will we suddenly start doing crooked deals and rubbing out our competitors? I suppose if one can export democracy one can export “authoritarian crony-capitalism.” But you can no more do the former than the latter now can you.

      Clown.

    • marknesop says:

      “Russia’s tactics shift seamlessly between statecraft, the dark arts and commercial pressure. But we in the West prize our separation of powers. Our intelligence and security services like secrecy. Our journalists like independence. Our businesses put their shareholders first. Our judicial system detests political interference. Those boundaries are admirable in their way—but they hamper our response to an adversary which ignores them.”

      We get it, Ed. You really, really hate Russia. Why don’t you write about chocolate or bunnies or Estonia – you know, something you like, it’ll be better for your liver.

      “Our intelligence and security services like secrecy.” Sure they do. Until the CIA tells them they are not being secretive enough.

      “Our journalists like independence.” Well, I suppose they like the idea of it. In the abstract, like. They just don’t practice it. Say, remember the British papers the day after MH-17 was shot down? We saw all kinds of independence then.

      “Our businesses put their shareholders first.” Indeed they do, if you mean accumulation of profits means more than staff and customers, according to 72% of respondents surveyed. Were you offering that as a virtue?

      “Our judicial system detests political interference.” It might; we don’t know its secret feelings. But the important thing is that it bows to political pressure regardless how it feels about it.

      Yes, why don’t you go after the wealthy British banks who enabled the oligarchs? That’s a great idea, Ed. Keep it up, and you’ll be the target of a hit by The Pinstripe Gang.

  17. Warren says:

    Published on 28 Mar 2015
    Otto Fisher is 102, Spartak Moscow’s oldest fan, and recently lost his life savings when he was robbed in his own home.

    But his favourite team rose to the occasion – fans and players donated half a million rubles to him, which is almost 9 thousand dollars.

    • kirill says:

      That’s why Washington was able to stage a coup, right. Porosyuk is spewing BS that servers his masters in Washington and himself. The coup was really a people power revolution, you see.

      • kat kan says:

        Now to be safe, and make counting easier, the CIA has been given its own floors in the SBU headquarters, and their own flag outside.

        • james says:

          these ukee folks in power at present aren’t very good liars.. that and they don’t have a clue how to lead either.. quite a sad kettle of fish actually..

  18. yalensis says:

    Comment with amusing video on militaryPhotos.
    Putin is at a press conference in Austria. He is speaking in German. Subtitles are in Russian, and some other language.
    Some Austrian raises a point about bits of Ukraine belonging to Austria in the past.
    Putin starts clowning around.

  19. Tim Owen says:

    Putin can be funny in German? That’s almost impossible isn’t it?

    Can a German speaker explain the joke?

    • colliemum says:

      He asks the speaker what he means with the Ukraine having been part of Austria – and then gently takes the mickey, speaking like the proverbial communist KGB officer: ‘what are your proposals’, with his facial expressions indicating the opposite (grinning). Then he says ‘I am already fearful of what he (the speaker) will say next’, again his words being totally subverted by his mimics and body language. It really is screamingly funny.
      Hope that helps!
      😉

  20. yalensis says:

    Good news for Russian figure skating:
    Elizaveta Tuktamysheva has won the World Championship in Ladies Individual Figure Skating.
    The competition is taking place in Shanghai.
    Silver medal was won by Satoko Miyahara of Japan.
    Bronze by Elena Radionova of Russia.

    Here is video of Tuktamysheva’s skating program:

    • et Al says:

      Russian. Born in Udmurtia:

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

      “he Udmurt language is a member of the Permic branch of the Uralic family, which originated in the late Stone Age in the Ural region. Proto-Udmurts diverged from the Permic group at the end of the first millennium CE. Originally, the Proto-Udmurts lived in the middle Kama River region, then began to settle around the mouth of the Vyatka River.[citation needed]

      On November 4, 1920, Votsk Autonomous Oblast was formed.[3] On January 1, 1932, it was renamed Udmurt Autonomous Oblast,[citation needed] which was then reorganized into the Udmurt ASSR on December 28, 1934.[3] During World War II, many industrial factories were evacuated from Ukraine and western borderlands to Udmurtia….”
      ####

      Not many people know that. I didn’t, but when I saw her name I had to look it up!

      • yalensis says:

        That’s fascinating!
        Just based on Elizaveta’s facial features, she looks like she is half Russian and half something ethnic.

        The entry on Permic languages say that there is now some controversy as whether or not the Permic languages are related to the Finnic languages.

        Here is more info on the Udmurt language. They estimate 550,000 people still speak this language as their native tongue, out of a total ethnic population of 750,000.

        For this fact, they must thank Bolshevik nationalities policies, which nurtured native languages and cultures. The key to helping a language survive, is to create an alphabet and publish written works. Which is what the Bolsheviks did, thanks to Lenin.

        As for Elizaveta, I have no idea whether or not she speaks the Udmurt language.
        Either way, she is a fantastic skater!
        She is one of only a handful of female skaters in the world (another one being America’s Tonya Harding) who has ever performed a triple-axel jump on the ice.

        I don’t believe she attempted this in Shanghai, though: Too risky, and she was able to rack up enough points with her other elements, without taking the risk of falling and the consequent deduction of points.

        • XI says:

          Yeah she did do the 3axel in the short program. This girl is bad (as in good), Incredible athleticism and some of the purest jumping technique you’ll ever see.

          • james says:

            that was really incredible.. interesting choice of music to skate along to for a russian – ravels bolero..

          • yalensis says:

            Wow! Thanks for that.
            I had not seen her short program. Quite amazing.

            It’s even more astounding that she just knocks the triple-axel off right at the beginning of her program.
            That takes nerves of steel!
            Her spins are also exceptionally good, very tight and centered, no travelling at all.

            • colliemum says:

              Well, I still adore Yulia Lipnitskaya, who sadly didn’t qualify this year.
              That’s all.
              😉

              • yalensis says:

                I like Lipnitskaya too, and was disappointed that she didn’t qualify.
                Figure skating is that kind of sport: the fortunes of one individual go up and down, from season to season.
                Don’t worry, Julia will be back next season, I am sure. In the meantime, it’s nice that Russian figure skating has such a deep bench.

        • Jennifer Hor says:

          Tuktamysheva outside the skating rink:

  21. Warren says:

    OK I’ll try again…..

    Published on 27 Mar 2015
    This week, the United States delivered a shipment 10 Humvees to the Ukrainian government — the first installment of a $75 million aid package of non-lethal equipment that is meant to assist the fight against Russia-backed rebels in the country’s east.

    But despite the overwhelming adoption of a resolution in the US House of Representatives urging President Barack Obama to provide Ukraine with lethal arms, his administration has yet to send such materiel. Debate on this issue centers on whether outfitting the country with lethal aid will serve only to escalate the conflict and trigger a regional arms race between the government and eastern separatists. A question that has received less attention is whether Ukraine’s army is even capable of effectively using the weapons it wants.

    VICE News correspondent Simon Ostrovsky visited rebel-held areas and the capital of Kiev to explore whether it would be wise for the US to arm Ukraine’s poorly trained military with advanced weaponry.

  22. et Al says:

    Lots of space news.

    КГБ Lebyedev’s Independent: Russia and the US will build a new space station together
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/russia-and-the-us-will-build-a-new-space-station-together-10140890.html

    Nasa and its Russian equivalent Roscosmos today announced plans to build a new space station for when the International Space Station (ISS) is retired in 2024.

    According to RT*, after talks in Russia’s cosmodrome in Kazhakstan, the world’s foremost space programmes agreed to both prolong the life of the current ISS by four years – it was due to expire in 2020 – and collaborate on the next edition.

    Roscosmos chief Igor Komarov told journalists: “We have agreed that Roscosmos and Nasa will be working together on the programme of a future space station.”

    The countries will create a new, unified set of space programme standards and systems, which Komarov said is “very important to future missions and stations”.

    The Associated Press quotes Komarov as saying: “Roscosmos and Nasa will work on a programme for a future orbiting station. We will think about discussing joint projects.”…

    * http://rt.com/news/244797-russia-us-new-space-station/
    ####

    Unfortunately, I don’t see this happening as this is down to politics and cash. Still, a joint Russian-Chinese space station with western countries begging to be part of it would be much, much better (like a space version of the Asian Investment Bank – looks neutral, but it firmly in hand).

    Sputnik via Space Daily: Cost of Russian Space Projects Grows by 27 percent
    http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Cost_of_Russian_Space_Projects_Grows_by_27_percent_999.html

    Russian space projects have risen in price on average by 27 percent due to the current economic situation, Yuri Koptev, a representative of the Russian Space Agency Roscosmos said Tuesday.

    “All this [economic situation] has led to a 27-percent price jump on average for every space project,” Koptev said at a press-conference. The ministry of economic development had expected a lower level of inflation, Koptev said.

    According to Koptev, many issues considered from the perspective of 2014 are now looking different, “as we are experiencing significant change in the price of money.”…

    Two curious stories about the UAE courting both sides of space expertise:

    Sputnik: UAE Moves to Purchase Russian Spacecraft Launch
    http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20150324/1019940920.html
    ###

    This I kind of understand because the UAE is practically on the equator which means you can lift more kgs with the same fuel. I’m surprise Bahrain doesn’t have a space port.

    But this too:

    Sputnik: US to Strengthen Space Security Cooperation With United Arab Emirates
    http://sputniknews.com/military/20150321/1019808626.html

    US State Department stated that Washington and Abu Dhabi agreed to enhance bilateral collaboration in space security….
    ###

    I would hazard a guess that if an actual deal with I-ran is going to be signed with the US, this is an attempt to mollify the Gulf States with spy satellites and boosted military capability.

    And this last one:

    UPI via Space Daily: NATO country orders tactical radios
    http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/NATO_country_orders_tactical_radios_999.html

    An unidentified country belonging to NATO has ordered secure tactical radios for its military from the Harris Corporation of the United States.

    The order is worth $25 million, Harris said, but no details were given as to the number of units to be supplied or their delivery schedule.

    Harris Corporation said it will provide the customer with two variants of its Falcon III communications systems — Falcon III AN/PRC-117G manpack and AN/PRC-152A handheld radios. Both feature the company’s adaptive networking wideband waveform, which enables military forces to leverage advanced battle management applications such as collaborative chat, streaming video and intelligence collection….
    ####

    It may be nothing but why is it an unidentified NATO country and why would it be so important that it is not named? The lo-land of Poland for example who may passed on encrypted NATO standard radios to Kiev as this is exactly the kind of thing that has been reported recently that Kiev lacks in its campaign of terrrorism and murder against its own citizens in the south and east of the Ukraine.

    2+2=?

    • et Al says:

      I should have watched Warren’s post from Vice News above. At 6:32, the guy says:

      “We need radio systems. We need the new generation of radio systems because we should always think the enemy’s listening to us.”

      If that doesn’t match the news item I posted above, then I don’t know what does.

  23. et Al says:

    How could I forget this?

    Sputnik: Cosmonaut Leonov Marks 50 Years Since Mankind’s First Spacewalk
    http://sputniknews.com/russia/20150318/1019662337.html

    Alexei Leonov was the first human to exit, float free and then reenter an orbiting spacecraft, during the Voskhod-2 spacecraft mission on March 18, 1965…

    …Leonov, who will turn 81 in May, was the first human to exit, float free and then reenter an orbiting spacecraft, during the Voskhod-2 spacecraft mission on March 18, 1965.

    “Seven emergency situations happened during the flight, which had never been described anywhere. The most serious of them […] when the navigation system failed,” Leonov told journalists….

    ####

    The world’s biggest balls.

    http://sputniknews.com/photo/20150319/1019725917.html

  24. marknesop says:

    Hey, remember all that flap about South Stream, and how jubilant the EU was when it was able to bring construction to a standstill – how Bulgaria swaggered and strutted in the glow of EU approbation, and then looked like somebody had showed an ice screw up its ass when Russia canceled it? Well, that situation is still percolating away, so here’s an update.

    First, it is a tried and true, road-tested Brussels crisis-management strategy to do absolutely fuck-all about the problem until it balloons into a crisis – why do you think they call it crisis management? So although Russia has warned Europe to get cracking on building infrastructure so as to collect its gas from Greece rather than Ukraine, the EU prefers to approach the situation as if Moscow is bluffing, while Kiev smirks and postures about forcing Putin to lower the price it pays for gas, using its leverage as a transit country as if it is forever. Consequently it is more than likely that the EU will have built nothing by the time Ukraine is taken out of the gas-transit business. I’m calling it here and now – it will be Moscow’s fault.

    Moscow is not bluffing.

    “If the European Commission wants to get gas from Turkey by 2020, then it is high time it starts building infrastructure – in full accordance with the “Third Energy Package” or any other legal restrictions that the Europeans deem necessary. Otherwise, Brussels will be left with a dubious asset on its balance sheet, in the form of a Western fragment of Ukraine (the European equivalent of what Somalia was in 2009), which will have to be subsidized using various ploys for semi legal “reverse flows” of Russian gas purchased through Turkey.”

    Although the headline is “Ukraine to Disappear from EU Energy Picture by 2019”, the key word there is “by”. It could be well before that, as Russia plans to be sending gas through the Turkish pipeline in December 2016. The current contract with Naftogaz Ukraine expires in 2019, at which time they can cut up the pipelines for scrap metal, but any shenanigans after 2016 could result in an early shutoff.

    The Jamestown Foundation agrees worriedly that Putin is not just jacking around. Moreover, after being assured some time ago by Ankara that TANAP had priority – thus reassuring Brussels and getting the world’s biggest circle-jerk going over the mythic Southern Gas Corridor, that priority appears now to have been reversed. Too late to stir up a revolution against Erdogan – he’s been on the western side of that game too often already, and knows every trick in the book, can see them coming a mile away and knows the antidote.

    • et Al says:

      I’ve read somewhere very recently that Brussels has offered 200 million euro to Serbia for gas infrastructure projects, particularly an interconnetor to Bulgaria.

      I think Brussels is slowly starting to get its ass in to gear but as you pointed out, with much huffing and puffing. The money is there so there is no conceivable excuse for the EU not to be prepared for the cut off.

      This is from last December:
      http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-10-238_en.htm

      • kirill says:

        It is critical for Russia to impose its own schedule on gas deliveries. I can see the EU-tards trying to drag out the development of gas delivery infrastructure on their end to force Russia to keep sending gas via Ukraine. Russia should respond that it is not responsible for such technicalities and the EU-tards will only have themselves to blame if they are not ready by 2017.

        • marknesop says:

          Russia has made that crystal clear already, several times and in several prominent fora. There is no excuse for not knowing Ukraine will cease to be a transit country for Russian gas not later than 2019, and it is on borrowed time after 2016 under terms whereby if it does anything to violate the terms of the contract, that’s it that’s all. Brussels has been told in no uncertain terms that it should be starting immediately to develop gas infrastructure to replace getting it via Ukraine, whether it is from Russia at the Greek border or from some other supplier. Brussels will arse about for about 75% of the time remaining, pretending it is developing the Southern Gas Corridor, and then panic when knowledge which is widely available right now sinks in that, even if it is completed successfully, it can supply only a fraction of Europe’s needs.

  25. davidt says:

    Paul Greiner has written a very interesting article “Distorting Putin’s Favorite Philosophers”, which is a timely defense of three of Putin’s “heroes” Berdyaev, Vladimir Solovyov and Ivan Ilyin. (The three, especially, Solovyov and Ilyin, are discussed in Paul Robinson’s 2012 article in The American Conservative. Solovyov is frequently thought of as Russia’s greatest philosopher.) The criticisms that have riled Greiner were written by Maria Snegovaya, a doctoral student at Columbia, Paul Galeotti and David Brooks. Greiner writes: “Up until these articles of March-April of 2014, I do not recall a single negative assessment of any of these Russian thinkers, at least not among Western specialists, not a single one accusing them of being hostile to the West, nor a single one suggesting that they are friendly to Russian chauvinism or nationalism.” Greiner’s article is a scholarly one, in rather sharp contrast, it seems, to those of the three cited critics. It is worth reading if one has the time and one wants to get some comprehension of the philosophers, or Putin for that matter. (I admit to some visceral satisfaction in seeing Galeotti and Brooks “exposed”.)
    https://consortiumnews.com/2015/03/27/distorting-putins-favorite-philosophers/
    To quote Greiner’s final paragraph:
    “And yet, in light of the above review of an important part of the Russian tradition, there is something we are now in a much better position to point out: Russia has also taken the trouble to have ideals.”

    • kirill says:

      The west is a collection of pathological narcissists who wallow in execptionalism and self-entitlement. The whole world if not the universe is partitioned into pro and anti-west. So if someone legitimately attacks the west for being bloody imperialists with a trail of genocide around the world in their wake, they must be “anti-west” and therefore to be dismissed out of hand. Better yet demonized for being “anti-west”.

      Most normal humans with knowledge of history and current activities of the west would be “anti-west”.

  26. Moscow Exile says:

    And you had doubts that Banderites were already in Minsk?

    • yalensis says:

      This is a very good piece, a warning that Americans will try to build a new Maidan in Minsk, using local fascists as well as Ukrainian Banderites.

      In the last segment of the video, about the Belorussian Khatyn massacre (not to be confused with Polish Katyn), KHATYN is the one where Ukrainian Banderites helped Nazis to slaughter Belorussian peasants to get even for death of German soldiers — narrator makes a very good point:
      The fact that there are even a handful of Bandera supporters “jumping” in the center of Minsk today, is an indictment of the Soviet educational system. Some of these idiots shown in the video grew up not knowing what really happened.

      Namely, in Soviet times, as the narrator notes, there was excessive “political correctness” in the textbooks.
      Instead of naming the actual actors and ethnicities involved (in something like the Khatyn massacre), the Soviet textbooks either named some vague “fascists”, or just blamed everything on the Nazi invaders, without mentioning that the latter had recruited numerous collaborators from the local populations, especially Ukrainians and Balts.
      It is obvious why the Soviet textbooks felt they had to deal with this in such a ticklish way, because all these ethnicities were still living together in the same federation and had to at least pretend to get along.
      But now it is time for the textbooks to start being more clear, and teaching children what really happened.

  27. Moscow Exile says:

    What lovely people!

    The monument shown in the picture immediately above is at Przemysl, Poland, a city just across of the present Ukrainian border and situated some 55 miles (90 kms) WSW of Lvov.

    Fascists?

    Where?

    I see no fascists!

    • Moscow Exile says:

      It mustn’t be forgotten, however, that the “Austrian” army was multi-national. I am sure that I read somewhere that the majority of troops garrisoning the Przemysl fortifications were Bohemians – we call them Czechs now – who were disaffected with the k und k state in which they were subjects.

      Just a little over 100 years ago (March 29, 1915) Przemysl fell to the besieging Russian imperial forces, which was a defeat the Austro-Hungarian Empire never recovered from, albeit that the fortified city was retaken by the German Imperial forces on the Eastern Front a few months later: over 117,000 surrendered at Przemysl to the Russians, including 9 generals.

      Very little is known – in the West, at least – about that forgotten war. I read Stone’s book on it almost 40 years ago. At the time, that was the only book in English that I could find on that theatre of WWI.

      • Warren says:

        One of the blog’s contributors wrote about that battle recently.

        Russian victory

        The Austro-Hungarian army as you right pointed out was a multinational army. With some nationalities being more loyal to the Habsburg monarch than others.

        Regarding the Czechs or Bohemians as they were called, I remember reading that assassinated Archduke Ferdinand wife was Czech and that he was very sympathetic to the Czechs and Slavs in general, Catholic ones that is.

        • Moscow Exile says:

          How mistaken of me to say that the great victory for the Entente against the Central Powers at Przemysl was a Russian one: clearly the victors must have been Ukrainians, not Moskaly, what with Lvov just 50 miles away down the road.

          Hang on, though, it wasn’t Lvov, then, nor was it Lviv: it was Lemberg and was situated on the territory of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and had been since the first partition of Poland in 1772.

          Those Moskaly took Lemberg in September 1914, in the second month of WWI.

          Russian expansion again and seizure of the territory of a sovereign state as per bloody usual!

          Those darned Russians must be contained!

          When will Europeans ever learn?

        • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

          The guide at Prague castle joked that with people fighting in the Habsburg, Russian and French armies, the Czechs knew that they would win the Great War whatever happened.

        • Jennifer Hor says:

          I read Jaroslav Hašek’s “The Good Soldier Švejk” (English translation) some years ago which was based on the author’s experiences as a soldier in the Czech-speaking regiments in the Austro-Hungarian army during WW1.

          Statue of Švejk in Przemysl in

          Incidentally I know someone called Przemysl: it seems to be a popular boys’ name among Polish people.

          • Warren says:

            Przemysl is a majority Ukrianian/Galician town and area I do believe.

            The Poles defeated the Western Ukrainian People’s Republic at the Battle of Przemysl in 1918.

            Churchill contemptuously described the Polish-Ukrainian War of 1918-19, no sooner had the war of the giants has ended, the war of the pygmies begins.

            Poles have recently campaigned against the glorification of Bandera and the UNO-UPA in Przemsyl.

  28. colliemum says:

    ICYMI: http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/03/29/uk-runs-largest-air-defence-war-game-since-cold-war/
    Yup, the RAF is doing a war exercise, because – you guessed it! – PUTIN!
    Actually, it’s about showing the politicians that they’re still here, are now needed because: PUTIN! and need more money.
    Heh. Fat chance of that – and if Labour gets in, flights will be cancelled to save the environment …

  29. Moscow Exile says:

    Come again?

    They’re trying to find out whether the Ukraine debt to Russia is official before the IMF lends them any more money because the rule is: no loans to a state that is in debt to another state…and the Ukraine might not be officially in debt to Russia so it might qualify for another loan???

    • marknesop says:

      Are they fannying about with that “odious debt” thing again?

      I think they are too wary of the light in which many, many debts to the west might be cast if they do that. If any debt which places one at a disadvantage is “odious” and therefore unenforceable, well, then, they had better think of a new word for debt.

      • james says:

        that is what the imf does – lends… and it is always odious! i am sure the imf as a front for the western banking system, is trying to figure out a way it can screw russia while giving the money to kolomoisky or whoever they think ought to get it.. it sure won’t be going to ordinary ukrainians and if they can help it, russia will get none either.. that is the game being played as i understand it.. lend money you know will unlikely ever be paid back, but try to profit off the mess regardless..

      • Tim Owen says:

        FWIW I think it’s not a bad proposal to come up with a new word for debt… Or perhaps half a dozen.

        The problem starts to become clear when one considers the fact that in a fiat system if you eradicated all public debt you wouldn’t have any currency to transact with. Equally though there is actually no functional reason why the government needs to borrow to issue currency or spend – it could simply “spend” the currency into circulation as was done under Lincoln with the original greenback so it’s doubly confusing if not triply. In other words, you can call these things – bonds – public debt but it really is misleading in the extreme, especially as the government can literally print these things at will. (And no, I don’t think that is an unalloyed evil at all.)

        Then there’s the whole recurrent problem with the “household analogy.” That is, the argument that governments need to stay “within their means” in a manner akin to a – crucially – voting household. Not when there’s a massive output gap and massive unemployment there ain’t. In such a case the better analogy might be to a small agricultural town being told to watch its output rot in the fields because there’s no money to “pay” anyone to harvest it.

        Finally, there’s the odd fact that bankruptcy and restructuring is dealt with quite rationally in thousands of courts in every capitalist jurisdiction in the world everyday. In each case the court’s function is to enable the best outcome for all debt holders while trying to avoid needlessly destroying an enterprise that might be viable if some relief is offered. In none of these is the “sanctity” of debt given any thought (with the possible exception of its privileged position Vis a Vis equity.) In all these cases contracts are treated as voluntary agreements between adults who are equally responsible for their own expectation, acts and covenants.

        Strangely it is only when these debts are made between public entities and private interests that suddenly this common sense becomes unreachable somehow and the sanctity of debt can be raised without laughter ensuing.

        I wonder why.

      • Tim Owen says:

        But more to the point I can’t think of a better definition of “odious debt” than what the IMF has been foisting on the Ukraine.

        Think about it.

        I don’t mean in legalistic or policy terms because, after all, to quote a favourite Mitchell and Webb sketch: “… these are just words really.”

        I mean in substantive terms.

        The IMF is funding a regime that is apparently committed to systematically destroying the economic and social infrastructure of a region that contributes ~ 30 percent of the GDP of an already entirely bankrupt country.

        That is debt more odious than anything I’ve seen in the South American context for instance. And by a country mile.

        So why are they doing it?

        I think this might be helpful:

    • Jennifer Hor says:

      Isn’t a large part of Ukraine’s debt a $3 billion Eurobond done as English-law contracts and traded on the Dublin Stock Exchange? So if the IMF were to declare this Eurobond unofficial, isn’t there a possibility the Russian government or the Irish government could dispute this in an English court of law?

      • kat kan says:

        The whole official or not argument is designed to pressure Russia into accepting a restructure, otherwise known as a “haircut” which Russia obviously doesn’t want to do. The way that loan was written is very unusual, with the default clause tied to GDP debt levels, and they did that on purpose, knowing which way Ukraine was headed.

        • marknesop says:

          Precisely. And now the chickens have come home to roost and the debt level has gone past that specified to trigger foreclosure by even the most optimistic estimates, the west seeks a way for Ukraine to squirm out of it.

          They are wasting their time – no way they have kicked around in their strategy meetings would be legal, and their “odious debt” threat would result in most debts to western institutions also qualifying as odious, in that they were taken on by the country because it was in a desperate situation; quite a few countries borrow under those circumstances, and the west is no less likely to take advantage of them.

          What they might better be thinking about is how to get Ukraine making at least some money again without being able to sell to the Russian market, and once they are no longer a gas transit country and able to charge large fees simply for having Russian gas cross their land. The west arrogantly assumes it is the only one who can impose “consequences”.

  30. Warren says:

    Crucible of Empire: The Spanish American War

    • Warren says:

      Spanish-American War: Trial Run for Interventionism

      U.S. Secretary of State John Hay called the Spanish-American War of 1898 a “splendid little war.” Superficially, the description seemed apt. After the battleship Maine mysteriously exploded in Havana Harbor — an incident then blamed on Spain — America went to war, our citizens urged to free Cuba from Spanish rule as well as avenge the Maine. Largely a naval war, an American squadron under Commodore George Dewey destroyed the Spanish squadron at Manila; likewise, the U.S. Navy crushed Spain’s Caribbean squadron off Cuba’s port of Santiago. In each engagement, the United States suffered only one fatality. Things went tougher for American troops in Cuba, where malaria and yellow fever proved as daunting as Spanish bullets. But American schoolchildren would thereafter thrill to tales of Teddy Roosevelt and his “Rough Riders,” and of the famed charge up San Juan Hill. Defeated on land and sea, Spain sued for peace. The war lasted less than four months; our fighting forces distinguished themselves with valor; and the United States, acquiring territory from Puerto Rico to the Philippines, emerged as a “world power.”

      http://www.thenewamerican.com/culture/history/item/12338-trial-run-for-interventionism

  31. Pavlo Svolochenko says:

    http://fortruss.blogspot.ca/2015/03/dmitry-yarosh-to-poroshenko-we-toppled.html

    More nonsense from a scruffy vagrant. His admission that his goons act like WW2 blocking squads is welcome though.

    • marknesop says:

      “But we are doing everything according to NATO standards”.

      Which is not the same thing as doing everything according to the morals NATO claims to live by. But aside from that, never a truer word was spoken, Dmitry.

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      This is no more than Defence Minister Mikhailo Koval was saying in May.

      Once again, there is no meaningful difference between ‘Nazi extremists’ and ‘Pro-European liberals’.

      • Warren says:

        Yarosh comes from the same town in Dniperpetrovsk Oblast as the ultimate Sovok Leonid Breznev. I am under the impression that Yarosh cannot even speak Ukrainian, that Russian is his mother tongue, how on Earth did Yarosh become such a freak? And why are there so many pseudo johnny come lately Banderite freaks from Dniperpetrovsk (city and region)? The city was built under the reign of Catherine the Great, there is very little Ukrainian about Dniperpetrovsk/Yekaterinoslav.

        • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

          A theory: Dnepro was a centre of research and industry under the USSR. You might even say it was THE Soviet city.

          What has she been since the USSR’s demise? A city in continual decline, with that crumbling, unfinished skyscraper looming in the background as a symbol of her decay and failure.

          Perhaps to somebody growing up in such a place, Ukrainian nationalism seems a path to rebirth, renovation. That’s my bit of amateur mass psychology – I feel it is as good an explanation as any other.

      • Tim Owen says:

        Exactly.

        And the chilling parallel is to the way German liberals sleep-walked into Nazi dictatorship, laughing maybe a little shrilly about the absurd captain or whatever that f’ers rank was in WWI while finding his anti-communism convenient but certainly still assuming they would maintain their position at the top of the heap and in control.

        I thought I did but I actually don’t “get” Europe. How could one possibly be so obtuse as to repeat such a fateful mistake? Of all things.

        • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

          It makes sense if you look at the shit these establishment types write in the Guardian. Of course, one thinks is ‘this is just a smokescreen, they don’t really believe this drivel’.

          But what if they do? What if they really do believe that Yarosh, Biletsky et al are of no account, that Nazi ideology has no influence in Ukraine, and anyway the Swastika tattoos and Dirlewanger Battalion glyphs are all just ironic fashion statements?

          If one believes that, then of course there’s no problem. We’re not partnering up with Hitler right? If there were a Hitler we’d see him coming; we’re much smarter than those stuffy Weimar dustfarts – just look at our Netflix and our Iphones and our Grindr profiles! No way some scruffy bumpkins who don’t even follow gluten-free diets could be a threat to us.

          (I know, I’ve said before that the current crop of Ukro-Nazis haven’t the minerals to be more than servants to power. Well, that could change. It took Ukrainian nationalism the better part of twenty years to go from Dmitry Dontsov ranting about world conquest to an audience of nobody to Dmitry Klyachovsky sawing people’s heads off while smoke from burning villages spread black streaks across the sunset. Biletsky’s strategy of sitting out the war in Mariupol, raping women from the local prison to pass the time may prove wiser than Grishin’s strategy of ‘LET’S CHARGE IN THERE ALONE SO WE CAN FEEL BIG AND BAD AND WHOOPS! I’M DEAD! HOW DID THAT HAPPEN?’)

        • colliemum says:

          That man, A.H., was a corporal, not a captain.
          Regarding Europe slithering back into the same situation: that’s easily explained. The ‘elites’ in politics, the media, the arts and education always have assumed that they know best, that they are the true ‘elites’, while of course vociferously denying that such a thing as ‘elite’ actually exists.
          So if someone flatters them and confirms them in their beliefs, they’ll follow, without ever taking a step back and take a closer, cold-eyed look at what that presumptuous ‘leader’ or ‘leaders’ are actually proposing.
          Those who do so are vilified, denounced, and their civic existence threatened. Nowadays, one doesn’t need to hint at KZs or GULAGs: a quickly created mob on social media is all that is needed to destroy someone.

  32. Warren says:

    Putin letter to Arab summit triggers strong Saudi attack

    By Yara Bayoumy and Mahmoud Mourad

    In a rare move, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi announced that a letter from Putin would be read out to the gathering in Egypt, where Arab leaders discussed an array of regional crises, including conflicts in Syria, Yemen and Libya.

    “We support the Arabs’ aspirations for a prosperous future and for the resolution of all the problems the Arab world faces through peaceful means, without any external interference,” Putin said in the letter.

    His comments triggered a sharp attack from Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal.

    “He speaks about the problems in the Middle East as though Russia is not influencing these problems,” he told the summit right after the letter was read out.

    Relations between Saudi Arabia and Russia have been cool over Moscow’s support for Assad, whom Riyadh opposes. The civil war between Assad’s forces and rebels has cost more than 200,000 lives in four years.

    “They speak about tragedies in Syria while they are an essential part of the tragedies befalling the Syrian people, by arming the Syrian regime above and beyond what it needs to fight its own people,” Prince Saud said.

    “I hope that the Russian president corrects this so that the Arab world’s relations with Russia can be at their best level.”

    The Saudi rebuke may have been awkward for summit host Egypt, which depends heavily on billions of dollars in support from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab allies, but has also improved ties with Moscow.

    In February, Putin received a grand welcome in Egypt, signaling a rapprochement.

    (Writing By Shadi Bushra; Editing by Michael Georgy and Raissa Kasolowsky)

    http://news.yahoo.com/putin-letter-arab-summit-triggers-strong-saudi-attack-124059771.html

    • Tim Owen says:

      Thanks for that. FWIW one of the most elegant takedowns of mainstream economics and its “convenient” proficiency for assuming equilibrium comes via Irving Minsky rather than Fischer. Minsky basically pointed out that if your economic theory is incapable of accounting for the hallmark of capitalism in its classic “laissez faire” form in the 1800s – that is, its recurrent, sawtooth, boom and bust cycles – then what you’ve got hold of is not a model of capitalism.

      Game, set, match.

  33. Warren says:

    • et Al says:

      “…Here’s video, from the 16th – where I ended up spending some time with them after my cat locked me out of my car at that time, and I enlisted their help –..”
      ###

      What further proof is there that cats are only in it for themselves, including Graham’s cat ‘Katya’ locking him out of his own car? See post for videos…

  34. Warren says:

    • yalensis says:

      Hmmm…
      Okay, so I ALMOST agreed with Goble’s article about Kolchak. Right up until the last paragraph. Goble lost me when he called Stalin a “proto-fascist”.
      That is a completely wrong class analysis.
      Stalin was more the like the “Bonaparte” of the Bolshevik Revolution, the guy who survived (and came out on top) both Revolution and partial counter-Revolution.
      Stalin presided over a socialist economic system (no capitalist class to speak of, especially after de-kulakization and elimination of NEP), all major industries and even most SMALL businesses owned by the state. That does NOT describe a fascist economic system. Fascism is basically a cultural/political topping to a capitalist cake.
      We must be clear about our terms here. Goble is being either muddle-headed or intentionally deceptive. He confuses culture with economics. Probably intentionally.

      Trotsky’s definition of fascism remains the best one still:
      Fascism is a (cultural and political) MASS movement [which is where Trotsky diverged, and polemicized against the Stalinists and Comintern, who believed that fascism was NOT a mass movement, and was basically a elite conspirary of the top capitalit circles] of the PETTY-bourgeoisie. Petty-bourgeoisie being a class which hates communism, loves capitalism, but THEIR kind of capitalism, doesn’t mind big business running everything, so long as they get their slice too. Oh, and also has some ethnic ideology too…

      P.S. Putinism is NOT fascism, by anybody’s definition.

      • yalensis says:

        And here is some background on Trotsky’s polemic against the Comintern, re. the definition of fascism.
        Trotsky wrote this brief fable about fascism (link to this is in above comment):
        A cattle dealer once drove some bulls to the slaughterhouse. And the butcher came night with his sharp knife.

        “Let us close ranks and jack up this executioner on our horns,” suggested one of the bulls.

        “If you please, in what way is the butcher any worse than the dealer who drove us hither with his cudgel?” replied the bulls, who had received their political education in Manuilsky’s institute. [The Comintern.]

        “But we shall be able to attend to the dealer as well afterwards!”
        “Nothing doing,” replied the bulls firm in their principles, to the counselor. “You are trying, from the left, to shield our enemies — you are a social-butcher yourself.”

        And they refused to close ranks.

        In this fable, the butcher is th fascist; the dealer is the regular capitalist or “bourgeois democrat”. The bulls are the proletariat (obviously), who have been duped by Manuilsky and the Comintern.

        An interesting analysis of the Stalin/Trotsky polemic (in its earlier phase) can be found, in all places, in this introduction to the literary work “The 12 chairs” by Ilf and Petrov.
        This extremely interesting intro is entitled “The Legend of the Great Combinator, or Why Nothing Happened in Shanghai”.
        It reads like somebody’s thesis and brilliantly describes the political context in which Ilf/Petrov wrote their masterpiece about the lovable rogue, Ostap Bender.

        The middle section of this intro (“Политический контекст”) discusses the fierce Communist Party factional struggle which took place in the spring of 1927 (Stalin/Bukharin vs. Trotsky); how the events in Shanghai affected this factional fight, which ended with Trotsky’s expulsion from the Communist Party. How all of this affected the writers and the publication of their work.

        The China events were directly related to the later polemic surrounding the definition of fascism.
        And hence, the fable about the bulls and the slaughterhouse.

      • Warren says:

        Goble is typical of Western hacks, who throw all kinds of and contradictory terms towards Russia and Russian figures past or present.

        Putin is called both a Stalinist and a Tsarist, Putin is accused both of trying to revive the USSR and the Russian Empire by Western hacks, analysts and politicians.

        Kolchak could have been a Russian Francisco Franco, a military man that fought Communists and eventually became Dictator of the country. But there is no reason to believe that Kolchak had any intention to rule Russia for a long time. I believe had he and the Whites defeated the Bolsheviks in the Russian Civil War, he would’ve conceded power back to the Boyars and petty bourgeoisie that made up the Duma and the previous Kerensky Provisional Government.

        Here is the movie The Admiral its a biopic of Admiral Kolchak. It is interesting to note that the 2nd Ukrainian Regiment/Division betrayed Kolchak and defected to the Bolsheviks, thereby allowing the Bolsheviks to capture Omsk, that the capital of Admiral Kolchak’s Russian Republic.

        Skip to 1:08:00

        It is also important to note that reason the West recognised and supported Kolchak’s government, was that the Kolchak’s government would honour Russia’s debts, Western contracts with and property rights in Russia. On a side note – English actress Helen Mirren’s grandfather was a Russian nobleman who was in England to sign an arms deal on behalf of the Russian government when the Tsar abdicated and political turmoil erupted in Russia.

        http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-470030/Helen-Mirren-reveals-joy-meeting-Russian-relatives.html

        • PaulR says:

          In the Admiral movie, Kolchak, after his initial heroism, turns out all weak and flaccid, just sitting in his train awaiting his fate, seemingly more interested in his girlfriend than the fate of Russia. It’s a kenotic, Boris and Gleb, willfully accepting one’s fate, sort of story, thus all the religious imagery in the film. And yet not completely false. Kolchak was, as historian Jonathan Smele put it in his 600 or so page long history of the Civil War in Siberia, a ‘dictator who didn’t dictate’. This hardly makes him a fascist. If you wanted a tough White dictator model, the Black Baron (Wrangel), would work better.

          • Warren says:

            Admiral Kolchak at least had the courage to accept his fate and die in his homeland, rather than run away as emigre in Riga, Belgrade, Paris or Harbin. An emigre is just a euphemism for a refugee. Rather than live as a pauper and die in a foreign country like so many other White figures. Kolchak accepted death with courage and dignity in homeland at the hands of his enemies.

            Kolchak was betrayed by the French General Maurice Janin. the Czech Legion and the Ukrainian Regiment who defected to the Bolsheviks precipitating the fall of Omsk. Kolchak was a tragic hero.

            I try to purchase Smele’s book on Admiral Kolchak and the Civil War in Siberia.

        • Jen says:

          I remember reading somewhere (but can’t find the link where I read it) that Yuri Gagarin’s grandparents were serfs who worked for the Mironov family on their Smolensk estate.

      • marknesop says:

        Paul Goble is a dink who is a typical darling of the American think-tank set, in that his articles appear like set-piece one-act plays in which reliable cues expressed as labels appear at comfortable intervals for the audience. It reduces any event or philosophy to a template piece in which Goble reassures his readers that it is fascist and typical of Russians and Putin. They are comforted by being left with the belief that they can spot the signs themselves.

  35. et Al says:

    EU Observer: Polish airport used by CIA obtains millions in EU funds
    https://euobserver.com/investigations/127927

    A small airport in north-eastern Poland used by the CIA to fly in kidnapped detainees for torture at a nearby intelligence training camp has received over €30 million in EU funds.

    The EU money is part of a larger €48.5 million sum to turn the former military airstrip into an international commercial airport known as Szymany.

    The Brussels-executive has no oversight because the amounts taken from the European regional development fund are too small for it to have a direct stake.

    It is instead administered and managed by regional authorities who diverted all the funds into a company they set up after obliging a local Polish-Israeli businessman, who had been instrumental in securing the EU grant, to hand over the airport’s lease…

    …Her former boss Jerzy Kos chaired a managing board for the airport when the Americans were landing Gulfstream jets and Boeing 737s in the middle of the night back in 2003.

    Around a year later, he was abducted by Iraqi insurgents in Baghdad and then saved in a dramatic rescue by a special US Delta force team.

    Jacek Krawczyk, the former chairman of the board of directors of LOT Polish National Airlines, said the whole project makes no economic or operational sense.

    “This is going to be a monument for the local authorities that they have been able to spend European funds,” he told EUobserver.

    “Why on the earth do you want to insist to build your own airport in a region that has absolutely no capacity to generate any meaningful demand for air transportation, this I cannot comprehend,” he said…

    …The town is strategically placed between the airport and the Polish intelligence training centre, Stare Kiejkuty, where the Americans committed their alleged crimes…

    …“The project suffered from major delays due to organisational and formal difficulties encountered by the regional authority,” an EU commission spokesperson told this website.

    Meanwhile, the military airport stands of the cloud of CIA renditions, the secret illegal transfers in 2002-2003 by US intelligence services as part of Washington’s war on terror…
    ####

    Does terror pay?

  36. Warren says:

    Professional Neocon Russia-Basher Advances Saudi Sectarian Agenda

    Neocon Michael D. Weiss and his buddies take a break from demonizing Russia to carry water for the Saudi invasion of Yemen – but what’s in it for them?

    http://russia-insider.com/en/2015/03/27/5035

    • Jen says:

      If Saudi Arabia is able to dominate Yemen and eliminate the Houthi rebels, the kingdom would be able to control the Bab el Mandeb strait, together with the US through its naval base Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, between the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean. This is where oil tankers carrying Persian Gulf oil would enter to go up the sea and through the Suez Canal in Egypt to enter the Mediterranean.

      Just the other day I heard that Iranian warships successfully foiled a pirate attack on an Iranian oil tanker in the Gulf of Aden. So the Iranian navy must be sending out ships to accompany oil tankers in that area as a routine matter.
      http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/03/25/403346/Iran-Navy-saves-oil-tanker-from-pirates

      If the KSA and the US can control the southern end of the Red Sea, then they can stop Iranian ships from coming through and force them to go all the way around Africa to supply oil to Europe. This would make Iranian oil more expensive and less competitive against KSA oil which can be loaded onto tankers at Jeddah and then sent through the Suez Canal with no fuss. It also makes Egypt more dependent on the KSA to send oil tankers through the canal because the Suez Canal is a major money-earner for Cairo. The Egyptians would be forced to think twice about not supporting the KSA against Iran in any dispute.

      The neocon support for the KSA against Yemen’s Houthis (they’re Shi’ite Muslims and pro-Iranian) is really about supporting the Saudis against Iran and ultimately against Russia. Russia and Iran have worked together in the past, especially on Iran’s nuclear energy program.

      • marknesop says:

        Great analysis, Jen! In fact, pirates attacking oil tankers have extended their range far, far out from the coastline to the point that tankers are not safe, practically speaking, anywhere. The promise of huge ransom for a tanker loaded with oil drives pirates to superhuman feats, and although tankers have taken to driving any waterway they must traverse which is within 100 miles of land at the best speed of which they are capable, still pirates are able to come up alongside with a fast craft at night and monkey up a pole which is laid against the hull to the upper decks and seize the ship. It is not practical to send ships through individually with a warship as escort for each, and they may have to come up with some modified fast convoy system.

        You have a real eye for geopolitical implications. I envy your talent.

    • marknesop says:

      That infuriates me. Especially Tyler Moss beaking off that “Russia is a great country, but it’s got to sort itself out” because the economic data are “appalling”. Does nobody make any allowance for Russia being the target of an economic war designed to crush its economy? Everybody – even that British prat who was otherwise sympathetic but broadcast the propaganda that supermarket prices are “soaring” and up by 50%. Sure, if you live on imported products which are indexed to the prices importers have to pay for them.

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