Hello; I’m From the European Council on Foreign Relations – I Hear You Have a Bridge For Sale.

Uncle Volodya says, "Our great democracies still tend to think that a stupid man is more likely to be honest than a clever man, and our politicians take advantage of this prejudice by pretending to be even more stupid than nature made them."

Uncle Volodya says, “Our great democracies still tend to think that a stupid man is more likely to be honest than a clever man, and our politicians take advantage of this prejudice by pretending to be even more stupid than nature made them.”

Are you familiar with the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR)? No? Well, have a look at their website. Not to be a spoiler or anything, but let me quote briefly from it: “Inspired by the role American think tanks played in helping the US move from isolationism to global leadership, ECFR’s founders set about creating a pan-European institution that could combine establishment credibility with intellectual insurgency.”

Intellectual insurgency – now, there’s a phrase that should inflame your mental ganglia with mingled interest and suspicion, and you’re going to see an inspired example of intellectual insurgency in just a moment.

“The European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) is a pan-European think-tank which conducts research and promotes informed debate across Europe on the development of a coherent and effective European values-based foreign policy.” Having, hopefully, established its affinity for intellectual insurgency, I’d like you to take the next step with me, and think about the target of all this intellectual insurgency. The formation of a coherent and effective European values-based policy.

Once again, please expore the website and draw your own conclusions; I have no wish to apply undue influence to your development of a viewpoint – but might I draw your attention to the membership?

Oh, the hell with it. Timothy Garton Ash, obsessive non-participatory warmonger and the biggest, knobbiest Russophobic prick in a waving pink field of turgid Russophobic pricks? Carl Bildt, Psychotic Pswede of the year and compulsive tweeter of everything anti-Russian? Ivan Krastev, Mr. Moscow-is-trying-to-split-the European Union when the European Union gleefully colluded in the manipulation of Euromaidan which started the cycle of violence in Ukraine? Radoslaw Sikorski, who needs no introduction? Toomas Ilves, fourth president of Estonia, who thinks current Russian wages are close to what they are in Ukraine? Russian average wages are more than three times as high as Ukraine’s – assuming people are actually getting paid in Ukraine – when both are converted to a common U.S. dollar value. Heidi “The EU is not trying to extend its sphere of influence to its eastern neighbours ” Hautala? Do tell. Come on, for Christ’s sake – don’t you think people can read?

You might imagine from this that the ECFR’s delight in the appointment of a foreign leader would be directly proportional to how anti-Russian his policies are, and the extent to which he is an irritant to Moscow. And you would imagine correctly (thanks, Tim).

With that in mind, let’s examine the ECFR’s continuing moonie and swoony support for corpulent criminal Mikheil Saakashvili, which I frankly find incomprehensible through any filter except his value as an irritant. Can the ECFR actually believe he is a suitable candidate to fight corruption? Seriously? Using that standard of measure, such a think tank could reliably be expected to endorse Keith Martin, Europe’s fattest man, for Equestrian Jumping in the 2024 Summer Olympics. And that’s even allowing for the fact that he died last year, poor soul. Not to belabor the point, but Mikheil Saakashvili is about as ill-suited – by both his nature and his proclivities – to fight corruption as a cricket bat is unsuitable for cleaning your ears.

Holy Hannah; I’m torn between the urges to scream out the window in frustration, and guffaw like a Seinfeld laugh-track. Well, let’s look at it.

Immediately, the author indulges in wild supposition – one of the reasons, he says, that the Russians did not move on Tbilisi in 2008 was their assumption that the Georgians would finish off Saakashvili themselves. There is no reason at all to believe this, and Sharashenidze is the only person in the world who has ever postulated such a ridiculous theory – it is particularly ludicrous in light of the fact that Tornike Sharashenidze was one of the earliest voices to admit Georgia started the war by attacking Tskhinvali. He voiced his opinion at that time that Saakashvili had listened to dunces in his government and expected the United States to intervene on Georgia’s side. That’s hard to imagine, considering the U.S. Secretary of State visited him less than a month before, and told him he had to “put a non-use of force pledge on the table”  in negotiations wih the separatist provinces. No word on whether she winked broadly and significantly at him as she said it, but there’s no particular reason to imagine so. The Assistant Secretary of State and other American officials also reportedly warned him not to escalate the situation right up until just hours before the conflict went hot. Both Saakashvili’s response to direction and judgment must be viewed as reliable like a chocolate teapot. A brilliant choice for governor. I guess “loose cannon” was already filled.

Note the generous use of the passive voice in excusing Saakashvili’s more glaring failures – some people lost their jobs, some people were sent to jail, Georgian protesters were dispersed by force, the television station which backed them was raided. Nothing in there suggests Saakashvili directly participated in any of these things – they just… sort of…happened. Imagine such things just…sort of…happening in Moscow. The ECFR would scream as if it were being cooked in a giant microwave.

But the author contends confidently that Saakashvili stands a good chance of success in straightening out the situation in Odessa, in the complete absence of any reason to think so. And that is the most maddening thing of all.

Let’s take a stroll together down memory lane, shall we, and have a non-partisan look at Saakashvili’s previous corruption-fighting record. Beeeeeoooowwwowww (that’s supposed to represent a time-bending sound effect). Okay, here we are in Warsaw; March 4th, 2008. The OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission’s final report on the Extraordinary Presidential Election in Georgia on January 5th has just come out – you can smell the photocopier blistering from all the way down the hall, and the pages are still warm. Just before we open it, I want you to imagine two things – one, that the events and actions we read about  took place during a presidential election in Russia, and two, whether the ECFR would regard them as examples of corruption in those circumstances. Ready? Here we go.

Oh, dear. It doesn’t kick off very positively, I’m afraid. “The campaign was overshadowed by widespread allegations of intimidation and pressure, among others on public-sector employees and opposition activists, some of which were verified by the OSCE/ODIHR EOM. The distinction between State activities and the campaign of the ruling United National Movement (UNM) party candidate, Mr. Mikheil Saakashvili, was blurred.” Intimidation and pressure of public sector employees and opposition activists, in Moscow, benefiting Vladimir Putin and his party – examples of a corrupt and rotten government? What say you, ECFR? I think you know. “Opposition parties were underrepresented in managerial positions in Precinct Election Commissions, and the ruling UNM (United National Movement, President Saakashvili’s party) held a de facto majority“. Is that how Putin runs Moscow? Not on our watch, Sunny Jim. Is that a model for governance in Odessa? I guess it doesn’t need to be – regional governors in Ukraine are appointed, not elected – pretty democratic, I think you’ll agree.

Amendments to the election code were adopted only weeks before the election, and their meaning was sometimes subject to interpretation. “[G]overnment distribution of social benefit vouchers was perceived to overlap with the campaign of Mr. Saakashvili, and raised the concerns about an unequal campaign environment.” You could say that – vouchers for utilities and medical supplies were distributed by authorities ahead of the election to pensioners and the poor; a clear case of use of state funds to buy votes, especially as the vouchers were prominently marked as being from Mr. Saakashvili and incorporated his trademark “5” (He was number 5 on the presidential ballot). Some voucher recipients were asked by distributors if they planned to vote for Mr. Saakashvili and were asked to sign documents confirming their intention. How do you think that would go over at the ECFR kaffeeklatsch if it were benefiting Putin in a presidential election? Like a turd in a punchbowl, I suspect.

The last presidential election, held in January 2004, was won by Mr. Saakashvili with 96 per cent of the vote, in a largely uncontested race in which the main opposition figures did not stand.” Well, ‘pon my word; that’s democratic, surely, and just about as non-corrupt as…say…Zimbabwe. I can easily imagine a president elected on such a believable tide of national optimism turning into a finely-honed corruption fighter, especially when the same country issued a warrant for his arrest on charges of abuse of power.

As mentioned just a couple of posts ago, Saakashvili’s reign in Georgia coincided with record high unemployment and record low wages. You can shake and stir that as much as you like without ever being able to pour it out as success. He built himself a multi-million dollar palace that dwarfs the White House, while the Georgian per-capita GDP for a year was less than $6,500.00. His Defense Minister ran an offshore business for three years, right under his nose, that grossed nearly a Billion dollars in 2012. If all of that does not smell to you like c.o.r.r.u.p.t.i.o.n in three-part harmony, your stink-recognition rectifier may need replacement.

The efforts by this author, through “intellectual insurgency”, to repackage the Georgian Misfortune as  Georgiy Washingtonvili are insulting, sophomoric and deserving of nothing but ridicule. I am frankly surprised that even a parcel of pernicious partisan peckerheads like the ECFR would print it.

This entry was posted in Caucasus, Corruption, Economy, Europe, Georgia, Government, Politics, Rule of Law, Saakashvili, Vladimir Putin and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

2,017 Responses to Hello; I’m From the European Council on Foreign Relations – I Hear You Have a Bridge For Sale.

  1. Moscow Exile says:

    Therapy at the Funny Farm:

    PUTIN!!!!!!!

    • marknesop says:

      I think when they say it exploded and was completely destroyed, they mean when it hit the ground, which is not unusual in air crashes. The crew ejected safely and it landed in a deserted area – none of which sound like terrorism. I don’t think the Ukies could get access to one when it’s on the ground to plant a bomb.

      It’s an old aircraft, and its safety record is really remarkably good in view of the flight hours they have racked up.

  2. Moscow Exile says:

    The Supreme Russian Court has established that no international treaty or convention has precedence over national sovereignty, and decisions by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) should be upheld only when they don’t contradict basic Russian law.

    See: Constitutional Court rules Russian law above European HR Court decisions

    As regards no international treaty or convention having precedence over national sovereignity, is that not also the position held by the USA, namely that no law or agreement be recognized if it contradict the basic law of the land?

  3. yalensis says:

    In animal news:
    First youtube video shot by a seagull.
    This happened in Spain. A German tourist was shooting a video about a seagull, but mistakenly left his phone-camera lying on the ground.
    The seagull grabbed the phone, flew around with it, shooting some footage of the ocean cliffs and water, then returned the camera to the tourist, ending the clip with a narcissistic selfie.

  4. yalensis says:

    Another Ukrainian official defects to Donetsk Peoples Republic. Sergei Kucheruk, former Deputy Chief of Justice for Donetsk Oblast, announced that he is defecting to DPR, out of opposition to Ukrainian warlike policy, which targets his neighbours and relatives in Donbass.

  5. Warren says:

  6. yalensis says:

    This is interesting.
    Poroshenko, Avakov, and several other Ukrainian officials claim, that their Twitter were hacked into, and fake materials inserted.

    Among the alleged “fake materials”:
    -Porky issuing orders to “legally evaluate” Right Sektor’s withdrawal from the ATO front.
    -Avakov announcing that the General Prosecutor is preparing a case to relieve Dmitry Yarosh of his diplomatic immunity (as Parliamentarian).

    Now they are saying:
    “We didn’t say that! Somebody hacked our Twitters! It’s all a fake!”

    [yalensis comment: This is the lamest excuse I have ever seen, and I have seen many. Is clear now that Porky & Co are backing off from confrontation with Yarosh. Yarosh is actually winning! And I owe somebody some money, I lost a bet, because I had bet that Yarosh was a goner!]

    • yalensis says:

      And P.S. – does that mean “The Times” is a day late and a dollar short?
      They are warning that Kiev is “forced to fight its own fascist militias”.
      This (=Western propaganda shift) is one of the reasons I was sort of expecting a “night of the long knives”.
      But what if Yarosh already won, and they don’t know it??

  7. Jeremn says:

    Is there fighting in Lviv now? This seems to suggest so:

    https://twitter.com/ValLisitsa/status/620937635452841984

    • marknesop says:

      One of the commenters says it “appears to be bluster” and it looked the other day like when they speak of a “Battalion” they don’t have any concept of what it really means and are talking about less than 100 men, while a full-strength Battalion is normally more like 600. I doubt you could effectively control a city the size of Lviv with even a real Battalion, and they probably have only a handful of their nutjobs.

      But let them have it, by all means. Say, well done for stepping up. You’re now in charge of infrastructure, heating and food supplies for Lviv. Have fun with that. It’s Bandera Central anyway, so they won’t mind a little goose-stepping and swastikas. Typically all they know how to do is set up roadblocks and checkpoints and bully people. I just hope Curt’s all right.

  8. et Al says:

    Neuters: Georgia says Russia violating sovereignty with border markers
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/07/13/us-georgia-russia-border-idUSKCN0PN1VO20150713

    …Condemning the action, Georgia’s Foreign Ministry said part of the BP-operated Baku-Supsa oil pipeline was now in territory it regards as occupied by Russia…

    …”As the operator of the Baku-Supsa oil pipeline, BP has been delivering Azerbaijan’s oil in a reliable, efficient and secure way to the world market for over 15 years, and will continue to do so in the future,” Azeri news agency ANS quoted Tamam Bayatly, BP-Azerbaijan spokeswoman, as saying…
    ####

    LOL!

  9. Northern Star says:

    http://www.democracynow.org/2015/7/14/thisisacoup_greeks_denounce_bailout_deal_that
    Excellent and illuminating commentary from Michalis Spourdalakis, professor of political science at Athens University.
    If the Greek parliament refuses to ratify the “coup”…could Greece fall into serous social unrest, i.e revolt and/or civil war???

    • marknesop says:

      “…it seems to me that the European leaders undermined the fact or didn’t pay any attention to the fact that in Greece, that was the only country that there was a democratic response to austerity, while in every other—almost in every other European countries, probably with the exception of Spain and Ireland, the political rearrangement had—gave signs and gave room to the right-wing populist euroskepticism, and even neo-Nazism. And it seems to me that the European leadership, it’s more tolerant to these developments than the radical-left—however, democratic—response to austerity in Europe. And this is very disappointing. And this is another dimension of the coup.”

      A direct hit. Brussels – and Germany – are far more tolerant and indulgent of Ukraine’s alarming Naziism and continue to downplay it, but the clearly-expressed democratic will of the Greek people was a trigger for EuroLeaders to lean on Greece hard. If only they had ever held Kiev accountable for its hijinks. And it is hard not to notice the glee with which those same leaders fancied they were going to make Russian depositors take a haircut on deposits in Cyprus just about exactly 2 years ago today. You don’t see the same eagerness for depositor haircuts now. Because Russians won’t take the heat.

      An interesting conclusion in the referenced article, too, which I didn’t see when the crisis was ongoing – depositors got shares in exchange for their haircuts, which resulted in Russians controlling the Bank of Cyprus.

  10. marknesop says:

    The world’s 20 biggest banks have paid a total of about $235 Billion in fines in the last 7 years to settle multiple allegations of fraud. Just recently 6 of the big banks agreed to pay $5.6 Billion in fines for rigging the global foreign currency exchange market, and 4 of the 6 pleaded guilty to criminal behavior.

    • Tim Owen says:

      There must be a rule of thumb to figure out, based on some multiplier, how much a given bank made off with based on its settlements… Then again, the cases described below would suggest a revision:

      “To review the bidding, the LIBOR bid rigging cartel was the largest cartel in history, manipulating the prices of an estimated $300+ trillion in assets. That is a figure considerably larger than the world’s combined GDP. Here are typical statements by the Department of Justice (DOJ) about the LIBOR cartel.

      “For years, employees at Deutsche Bank illegally manipulated interest rates around the globe – including LIBORs for U.S. Dollar, Yen, Swiss Franc and Pound Sterling, as well as EURIBOR – in the hopes of fraudulently moving the market to generate profits for their traders at the expense of the bank’s counterparties,” said Assistant Attorney General Caldwell. “Deutsche Bank is the sixth major financial institution that has admitted its misconduct in this wide-ranging criminal investigation, and today’s criminal resolution represents the largest penalty to date in the LIBOR investigation.”

      “Deutsche Bank secretly conspired with its competitors to rig the benchmark interest rates at the heart of the global financial system,” said Assistant Attorney General Baer. “Deutsche Bank’s misconduct not only harmed its unsuspecting counterparties, it undermined the integrity and the competitiveness of financial markets everywhere.”

      Until recently, I called the LIBOR cartels the largest in history by at least three orders of magnitude. The rigging of foreign exchange (FX) “markets,” however, is so large that that I now have to say that they represent the two largest cartels in history by roughly three orders of magnitude. Both cartels consisted of most of the world’s largest and most elite banks. Indeed, UBS has admitted that after it signed its anti-prosecution agreement with DOJ for its massive LIBOR frauds it violated that deal by continuing to rig the FX “markets” as a member of a group that called itself “the Cartel.” Contrary to theoclassical ideology, both cartels persisted for many years and were ended only by (desultory) government action.”

      http://neweconomicperspectives.org/2015/07/libor-historys-largest-financial-crime-that-the-wsj-and-nyt-would-like-you-to-forget.html#more-9571

  11. marknesop says:

    Why does Canada’s Prime Minister keep cosying up to Kiev regardless the crazy antics going on there, and keep propagating the fiction that it’s all about freedom and democracy and prosperity?

    Here’s why.

  12. marknesop says:

    Ukraine’s honorary Consul to Turkey is dismissed from his position for wearing a T-Shirt featuring the image of Vladimir Putin in public.

    Unsurprising – look at him. Who wears a grey sports jacket with a white T-Shirt? And with a navy pocket handkerchief??!! Well done, Lyashko, for getting this fashion menace off the streets. It would only have been a matter of time before he was wearing checks and stripes together, or green with orange accessories so that he looked like a gay leprechaun.

    Seriously, this showcases the level of anti-Putin hysteria in official Ukraine. What a humiliating bunch of loose cannons.

    Hey, speaking of Turkey – remember that false-flag that Erdogan and members of his government were trying to set up so as to widen Syria’s war to include Turkey? Erdogan blamed opposition movements for setting him up, but didn’t cite his evidence. Well, guess who? Turkey will want to watch its ass these days, because Washington knows everything the Turkish government knows, as soon as they know it. In fact, everybody who knows anything worth knowing should assume they are being wiretapped by Washington. More to the point, the Snowden disclosures have not mitigated the USA’s hunger for confidential information in any way, and it has no intention of curtailing its spying on everyone.

  13. marknesop says:

    Well, well….look at that. Along with confirming the suspicions that Turkish Stream is not all that solid despite the ongoing construction of the first stage, look who is participating in the construction of Nord Stream II. Anglo-Dutch Shell, and 15% of gas transported via Nord Stream II will flow to the UK. So all the while Cameron is capering and posturing in the public eye and farting out flannel about standing shoulder to shoulder with Kiev and the Ukrainian people, a company incorporated in the UK is getting a cut from constructing the pipeline that will help Russia bypass Ukraine with Europe’s gas supplies. A couple of other fun facts in there – Nord Stream is exempt from the EU’s third Energy Package regulations. And Anglo-Dutch Shell (better known as Royal Dutch Shell) had 2013 revenues equal to 84% of the Netherlands (where it is headquartered) GDP.

    Here’s a fun little interactive graphic I stumbled across, illustrating the connections between UK government figures and the Finance and Energy fields. Check out Gregory Barker, Minister of State for the Department of Energy and Climate Change…and former heavyweight with Anglo-Siberian Oil (1998-2000) and head of International Investor Relations for Sibneft (1998). Or Robert Goodwill, the appropriately-named Government Whip and Lord Commissioner of HM Treasury…and shareholder in Gazprom and Lukoil. Wheeee!!! Somebody stop me!!

  14. Tim Owen says:

    Does it strike anyone else down here in the servants quarters that the Lord seems a little rattled about something?

    From the panicked Oligarch file:

    “Now that Pope Francis’ visit to South America has ended we can reflect on the Rupert Murdoch’s effort to slam Pope Francis and Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa using the pretext of the Pope’s recent visit here. The Wall Street Journal warned “Ecuador’s Correa Wants to Co-Opt Pope Francis: The pontiff risks leaving the impression on his visit that the church condones repression.” Given that Pope Francis is Argentine, the idea that the Murdoch’s minions needed to inform and warn the Pope about President Correa is very funny.”

    Err… I think the repression to which he is referring is the wildly popular (cough) protest against the inheritance tax… Yeah, I can see how that would get them riled up in the barrios.

    http://neweconomicperspectives.org/2015/07/murdoch-warns-pope-francis-about-ecuadors-president-correa.html#more-9573

  15. marknesop says:

    Chevron Ukraine pulls out of….well…Ukraine. That hapless country was counting on Chevron to invest $350 Million in the first phase of a production-sharing agreement with Nadra Olleskaya in the Olleskaya field in West Ukraine, over the next couple of years.

    Oh, but the United States stands shoulder to shoulder with Ukraine. Get your revolution on, people!! West Ukraine – until recently – was relatively safe, while American oil companies like to structure production-sharing agreements (PSA’s) so that the partner country assumes most if not all of the risk. PSA’s explored with Iraq (but never implemented) would have allowed American oil companies to pump “cost oil” until they had recovered 100% of their investments. This suggests (a) the USA side is alarmed by the recent violence and fears it will spread, perhaps into another and more wide-ranging revolution, or (b) the company has assessed the field would not be sufficiently profitable to warrant further investment.

    • et Al says:

      Oh, but the United States stands shoulder to shoulder with Ukraine.

      …until they notice a wandering hand in the US’ manbag.

  16. Northern Star says:

    A little off topic …but I think some of the posters have serious military hardware credentials (knowledge)…and the Batchelor-July 13- interview with Babin about the F-35 was fascinating..
    http://johnbatchelorshow.com/schedules/monday-13-july-2015
    http://sputniknews.com/military/20150713/1024535149.html
    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/jul/9/jed-babbin-the-deadly-f-35-strike-fighter/

    But here’s the thing..In the course of Batchelor’s immediately preceding discussion with Gordon Chang (Forbes), the idea of China not being able to afford all of her intended military and commercial projects came up.
    Anyway the notion of aircraft carriers and supersonic torpedoes came about…My question is
    aren’t all aircraft carriers-present and contemplated -obsolete …in view of supersonic torpedoes????

    • et Al says:

      Who knows for sure? For every measure there is or will be a countermeasure.

      I don’t think I’ve read about a supersonic torpedo, but the Russian ones clip along at a good 200 knots/370 km/h which is not far off. Guidance is one problem, the noise they create by traveling at speed using cavitation is surely detectable at a bigger distance too.

      As for aircraft carriers, there has been an interesting debate that it makes much more sense to have many more, but smaller carriers (half-size @50k tons or less) for flexibility but even without the supposed Chinese carrier killer ballistic missiles, the best thing to do is just make it more risky for a carrier & aircraft to get within efficient range of its targets. The further away a carrier has to launch its aircraft the easier it will be to detect and provide time for countermeasures whereas it will be much tougher for the approaching aircraft.

      Since Clinton sailed an aircraft carrier off Taiwan in 1996, China has built up a massive stock of missiles along its coast. It is certainly a lot cheaper to build them, upgrade them with better sensors and range than have an aircraft carrier.

      The US military has started talking openly recently about developing much longer range weapons (cruise/air defense/bombs) to try and deal with this problem. The Navy F-35 B&C are not particularly long-legged and hanging extra drop tanks on to what is supposed to be a ‘stealth’ aircraft is not really a solution. The FA18E/F’s don’t compare in stealth to the former but are much more practical.

      China is constantly pushing out and back aggressively against the USN, recently buzzing one of their new P8-A spy planes approaching 200 nm of Hainan Island.

      • marknesop says:

        This is all theoretical so far, and the Chinese throwing out a supersonic submarine is indeed merely an extrapolation of Russia’s Skhval torpedo. It can attain fearsome speeds by “flying” through the ocean in a self-generated column of its own bubbles – it exhausts through the nose and takes advantage of the lesser resistance posed by air rather than water.

        But there is still a need for aircraft carriers, because while a submarine might kill a carrier with such a torpedo, it might kill a carrier with any torpedo and the Skhval’s fearsome speed advantage is offset by its guidance – it doesn’t have any; it’s a straight runner, point and shoot. The submarine must be within 10 miles to use this weapon, and within 10 miles of a carrier is a hard place to get to and an uncomfortable place to stay. The most recent version is said to introduce maneuvering, but that’s not guidance – rather, it is a generated random avoidance maneuver to prevent the target from hitting it before it can reach the target.

        A carrier travels with a screen of escorts, and it is their job to find and kill submarines. A submarine that made itself fast using this technology would also be noisy, and a noisy submarine is a dead submarine.

        • Tim Owen says:

          Jesus that was informative.

        • Patient Observer says:

          Submarines seem to penetrate anti-submarine screens based on occasional news reports. For example, IIRC there were stories about Russian subs getting to the middle of US carrier groups undetected. However the biggest threat to carriers may not be torpedoes but rather anti-ship missiles launched from subs, aircraft, surface ships and land based installation. The Russian versions seem to be unstoppable due to speed (mach 3+ approaching the target), rapid maneuvering (making it physically improbable that an anti-missile system can respond in time) and a swarming attack (saturating the defense).

          Carriers may project power but only against countries or regions that are not equipped with such defensive systems. I think that the Brahmos anti-ship missile can be like the AK-47 or RPG. It levels the playing field to let smaller countries be heard and have a say in their future.

          • marknesop says:

            Yes, sometimes submarines do penetrate the defensive screen – concentration is focused on identifying and prosecuting them (what aggressively pinging them and vectoring friendly assets onto them is known as, which is all we do in peacetime) before they get inside the screen, because once inside there is so much self-radiated noise from screening units that you will not likely ever hear them, and the carrier itself has no sonar capability. No need; it’s almost never traveling that slowly and almost always making so much noise itself that it could never hear anything. I’ve mentioned before that it is somewhat of a sport for submarines to be able to gradually rise underneath a surface unit until there is enough surface light to take a picture of the ship’s bottom through the periscope, and then mail it to the Captain from the next port. It’s a real feat, because maintaining trim at slow speeds and so close to the surface requires real skill to keep from losing depth control. The example I like to cite is that of the VICTOR Class which lost depth control and struck the bottom of the carrier USS KITTY HAWK in 1984; the sub left a blade from its screw stuck in KITTY HAWK’s hull, and they had to go into Yokosuka to have it removed at the shipyard there.

            In order to launch whatever amazing missile or projectile at the carrier, you have to get within range, and the carrier has Combat Air Patrols (CAP) up all the time in a war zone, ranging out more than a hundred miles from the task group. It’s harder to get close to a carrier than you think, and its screening units have the muscle to stand off almost anything. The USA is the world leader at using air power to achieve its goals, and they are not going to give up the carrier capability while nobody has a credible challenge to it. If they lost a couple of carriers they might change their minds, but that’s harder to do than it is to say. But it makes their naval tactics predictable – since they revolve around carrier task groups – and who can say what might happen in the future?

          • et Al says:

            I have read that there are certain capabilities that are only revealed and used in peace time, and special ones for time of war. We don’t know what either side has up their sleeves.

            If I was a devil’s avocado in a carrier battle group, I would much rather have a sub sneak up on me in peace time (and gather data on it for future counter measures) than in war time. In the former there is no risk so why would you let the enemy know that you may well have been tracking them all the way when you can leave them with the false impression that their offensive capabilities are greater than your defensive ones?

            True, the US has only faced rather small opposition since the end of the Cold War, though the PPNN has always been very cooperative to big up the potential threat to US/NATO forces (Iraq/Yugoslavia) waaaay beyond any reasonable level, but despite the US’ magical mystery economy, cuts and either or choices still need to be made and if not, they may well affect other programs, sic:

            http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/top-usaf-official-warns-of-quotblowbackquot-if-congress-saves-a-10-414688/

            The problem with the US industrial complex is that profit is its most important base factor, so the more complicated and more expensive it is, the more chance manufacturers think they can squeeze cash out of the government when it inevitably goes over budget. Except there is less cash about. There is certainly no one-for-one replacement so less units need to do more. With modern computing and software, they can do a lot more not to mention the US investment in mini-bomb and missiles (SDB, APKWS & using one missile body matched with different sensors for differnet missions), but there really is no full replacement for quantity, which has a quality all of its own. The Chinese are doing both and close to home

            • marknesop says:

              It’s true that some secrets are saved for wartime, but that is usually confined to radar modes and capabilities, such as frequencies on which it has never been seen operating. That used to be easy, because most radars were crystal-controlled – which meant as soon as you knew the main operating frequency, you could mathematically figure out all harmonic frequencies as well as all theoretical operating frequencies in just a few seconds, iffen you had one of them newfangled calculators. So many radars – especially weapon control radars – are now frequency-agile across a broad operating range that it is easier to say “who cares?” about the radar and confine your research to the weapon it guides, its true operating range and any potential vulnerabilities it might have. All weapons offered for military purposes are tested, and it’s often fairly easy to get an observation – either first or second-hand – of the test, so you can see how the weapon did. You can tell if it hit the target or not, and physical size of the weapon gives you all you need to know about fuel capacity and warhead size and type.

              The first MiG-25 Foxbat shot down in combat fell to ground fire in Syria, and examination of its radar revealed that it had several wartime modes which were never used in peacetime. Electronic equipment probably still has a few surprises, but if you can build a search-and-lock jammer such as the equipment which demoralised the crew of the DONALD DUCK, you’re probably in pretty good shape. Electronics are so intuitive now that they can assess a signal they have never seen before and enact countermeasures against it based on its probable function and capabilities.

              If you were a submarine sneaking up on a carrier battle group, whether it was captained by an avocado or not, you would very likely know if you had been discovered, because the escorts would start to ping you with active sonar. Passive sonar indicates the presence of a probable submarine, but does not yield range or depth; the eternal anti-submarine problem. You can send your helicopters to drop sonobuoys, and using cross-fixes you can get a pretty good idea, but for a firing solution you usually need an active hit, because the submarine is approaching you in three dimensions; range, bearing and depth. You can also make a pretty fair guess of range through Target Motion Analysis (TMA), using what you know from your passive tracking and a mathematical formula known as the Double-Leg Ekelund.

              • et Al says:

                Thanks for that. Plus I think, at least one SSN usually sails with a carrier battle group, its job to listen out for enemy subs!

                • marknesop says:

                  It’s actually more like 3, for a real carrier battle group, and one puts up with the noise and stays inside the screen as a shortstop, just in case, while the other two range out ahead. It would not be less than that for a CBG in hostilities. Here’s an example, using the USS ABRAHAM LINCOLN Battle Group; this would be the photo-op done in the closing stages of RIMPAC, the Rim-of-the Pacific Joint Naval Exercise held in the Hawaii Opareas every other year. This one is not exclusively U.S. naval forces; on the left flank, astern, is the Canadian tanker HMCS PROTECTEUR, which was so badly damaged by a fire at sea last year (on RIMPAC 2014, which means the next one will be next year, in 2016) that she was decommissioned for scrapping this year; the ship was 50 years old anyway, but it leaves us with an obvious capability gap as she was the only fuel tanker on this coast. Nobody died, though, thank God. Out on the right flank, leading, looks to be one of the two Tribals, the DDH-280 class, although the definition is so fuzzy it’s hard to tell. Anyway, it’d be HURON or ALGONQUIN, the west coast units, and both of them are gone now, too, ALGONQUIN just a month or so ago. On either side of the carrier are TICONDEROGA class battlecruisers, the long-range air defense units, with the massive frequency-agile AN/SPY-1 radar (that big flat billboard phased array on the bridge face). I see what are probably a couple of Aussie frigates, and the tanker out on the right flank, astern, is likely from Oz as well. The Koreans usually send one or two ships, and the Japanese almost always supply a submarine because they are a little sensitive still about their participation and don’t care to be seen too much. They have sent surface ships before, though, and they are a wonder to behold – even old ships are so clean and well-maintained you would think they were just built yesterday; I’ve seen sailors hand-polishing the brass locks on upper-deck ammunition lockers.

                  Anyway, submarines. There are four in this shot, all out front because submarines on the surface never like to be too close to a carrier; always in tightly-controlled situations and always out front where they are sure they can be seen. HMAS MELBOURNE, the last Aussie carrier, was known as “The Can Opener” because she was involved in so many collisions (none with submarines, though). Two of these submarines are likely foreign, one Japanese and one Australian, and the other two American. That’s a guess, because the Koreans sometimes send a sub and once or twice we have as well.

  17. Tim Owen says:

    As is his trademark Alexander Mercouris comes out with an interesting, eminently sensible and unique perspective on Greece and – particularly on Schauble:

    http://russia-insider.com/en/politics/anatomy-greek-crisis-and-angela-merkels-disastrous-part-it/ri8723

    In his telling Schauble was at least NOT trying to square a circle, nor simply placating all the players and fooling (herself), being utterly indecisive etc. (Merkel’s role.)

    “Given that because of that decision Germany has been put in the position of appearing to stand as guarantor for the sovereign debt of every state in the Eurozone, it is easy to see how allowing a state like Greece to default on its bailout whilst remaining in the Eurozone would set a disastrous precedent which could cause well-nigh unlimited losses for Germany if it is copied by other countries. Understandably, Schauble is simply not prepared to let that happen.

    Schauble’s solution of a Grexit squares the circle, protecting Germany’s interests while allowing Greece time out to default and recover.”

    I have I think reached peak confusion, not so much on the economics but on the insanely complex interaction between politicians and the core economic issues over the last 5 years and who deserves the most blame. There are so many terrible moments where this interplay has produced – as Mercouris says – the absolutely worst possible outcome. It is like watching a high-speed train derailment filmed at an excrutiatinly ultra-slow speed so the mayhem unfolds over years.

  18. Jen says:

    In a comments forum that’s going off the topic a lot because there is only so much of Saakarkrashianvili we can stand (and he’s turning into a Georgian version of Porky Pig – a diet of cravats greased with salo fat isn’t doing him much good – plus he probably fancies with his open-necked shirts that the models who will supposedly be working as customs officers on peanut wages [when they don’t get out of bed for less than US$10,000 a day] will be swooning over him), I’m going off topic with interesting news about Schäuble the Foibler. The first paragraph of the article from Greek Reporter says it all.

    “German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble proposed on Saturday that 50 billion euros of Greek public assets be transferred to an external fund and privatized over time. The fund he used as a suggestion, the Institution for Growth in Greece, is owned by the German bank KfW, whose current Chairman of the Board of Supervisory Directors is Schaeuble himself.”
    http://greece.greekreporter.com/2015/07/13/institution-for-growth-fund-proposed-to-hold-50-bn-euros-of-greek-assets-is-part-of-german-govenrment-owned-bank/

    Looks like Schäuble Foibler has a history of Following The Money wherever it leads. He was outed for corruption in 2000 for his involvement in running a slush fund of undeclared election campaign donations for former Chancellor Helmut Kohl:
    http://conversations.e-flux.com/t/wolfgang-schauble-was-once-ousted-for-corruption/2070

    • Cortes says:

      There may be troible ahead…

    • Tim Owen says:

      FWIW I believe that the proposal that the Institution for German (cough) meant Greek Growth on whose board Schauble I believe serves – or chairs – did not end up in charge of that ridiculous “cache” of Greek public assets. (Which probably have a realistic market value of I think I read 3.5 billion Euro. Drop in bucket.) That this was even suggested as a possibility, apparently by Schauble himself, is insanely damning if true but still worth noting it didn’t come to pass, unless I am misinformed.

      The whole situation is labyrinthine because of the fateful collision between a) political jockeying to avoid being left holding the bag of the disaster that is the EMU on any country and on any timescale b) the growing disastrous weight of that bag c) the fact that the economic incoherency of neo-liberalism makes solutions completely out of reach EVEN on a logical level and without even taking into account the fact that the political power relations make any Damoscene conversion of European power brokers akin to their deciding to become a suicide bomber d) the fact that there has been no even intellectual insurgency in Europe in the numbers required to support Greece’s – to my mind – heroic stand against what I believe is an anti-human ideology. (As the bond trader Warren Mosler says: the levels of unemployment in Greece, especially among youth, is a “crime against humanity.”)

      I’m not saying I necessarily agree with Mercouris, but the fact that he disagrees with most of my gut reactions to what’s been going on gives me pause. Ditto Yves Smith’s take from Naked Capitalism.

      It strikes me as more than slightly analogous to the situation in Ukraine with respect to the “Putin as sellout” meme… discussion ( if you can call it that.)

      In that context it’s always struck me that in a crisis you need people who most of all recognize that you have to – first of all – breathe… and then think. That is particularly hard the closer you are to the crisis itself so it’s not surprising that this is a “partisan” type problem at its root. It’s a bit like learning the skill in aerobatics required to get out of a spin. It’s counter-intuitive and thus requires mastery of the fear that is inevitably part of the experience. On the ground it’s no doubt indescribably worse. All the things one cares most about there so the vulnerabilities are much vaster. So I will always forgive those suffering their outrage and righteous anger.

      But the point still stands: anger (righteous or profane) shouldn’t ever be confused with a strategy.

      • et Al says:

        Well said Mr. T. Still, it’s been almost seven years since the onset of the financial crisis. It looks like everyone had been breathing for themselves, willing to push their friend’s head in the swimming pool under if it means a few extra lungfulls of air for themselves (i.e. the euro project).

        I suspect that the EU’s has yet to reach its nadir. At some point, money talks, bullshit walks.

    • marknesop says:

      Ha, ha!! The U.S. government – which printed itself out of bankruptcy to the tune of $80 Billion a month in “Quantitative Easing” – said that Puerto Rico’s debt crisis results from “underlying structural problems”. Sometimes I don’t know what prevents their heads from just swelling up and exploding.

  19. yalensis says:

    Remember Oleksiy Pavlenko? He is the Ukrainian Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food , the guy who was mentioned in Senator Dick Durbin’s hacked (alleged) letter to Yats. Durbin mentioned Pavlenko in a positive light, as a keeper. Pavlenko should stay in his job, because of his helpful ties with American agri-business companies.

    On his webpage yesterday Pavlenko bragged that American agri-business companies are planning to (give?) Ukraine 1 billion bucks worth of technical equipment, to help collect the harvest.

    This sounds great! It’s like free money!
    (but what does America get in return?)

    Pavlenko is coming off a warm glow from a recent business forum in Washington DC.
    Ukraine is expecting lots of juicy investments from companies like Cargill (agribusiness), and lots of dough from “capital” investors such as Horizon Capital , which is a wonderful company with a wonderful history:


    History

    Horizon Capital was founded in 2006 by four founding partners Jeffrey C. Neal, Natalie A. Jaresko, Lenna Koszarny and Mark A. Iwashko. This team began their collaboration with Western NIS Enterprise Fund (WNISEF), a $150 million focused on Ukraine and Moldova and established in 1994.

    The success of WNISEF led to the launch of the $132 million Emerging Europe Growth Fund, LP (EEGF) in 2006, with a $25 million cornerstone investment by WNISEF and additional capital provided by global institutional and high net worth investors.

    The second fund, Emerging Europe Growth Fund II, LP (EEGF II), closed with $370 million in commitments in 2008, attracting numerous blue chip institutional investors investing in this region for the first time.

    Over the years, a deep pool of professionals have been developed and mentored first through WNISEF and Horizon Capital with alumni serving in leadership roles in companies, government and non-profit organizations throughout the region. In 2013, Mark A. Iwashko moved on to pursue other interests and at the end of 2014, Natalie A. Jaresko accepted an appointment to the Government of Ukraine as Minister of Finance, paving the way for Horizon Capital’s talented new generation of leaders to take the firm to the next level under the guidance of Lenna Koszarny as Founding Partner, Chief Executive Officer and Jeffrey C. Neal as Chairman of the Investment Committee.

    Meanwhile, though, some of the participants at the forum, including American Vice President Joe Biden, continued to be unduly negative, constantly lecturing Ukraine about the need to fight “corruption”.

    [yalensis: I keep getting the impression that this word “corruption” is a euphemism for something else that is bugging the Americans, but I can’t quite put my finger on it…. It’s almost as if they want some kind of ironclad guarantee that they get all the natural resources free and clear, with no legal entanglements, or something like that…]

  20. yalensis says:

    Even though the war continues, there appears to be some slow rebuilding of infrastructure in Donetsk and Luhansk.

    For example, some chicken factories have been restored in LPR. These factories produce chickens and eggs.

    The chicken factories have not yet achieved pre-war levels of production, but are slowly getting back on their feet. (so to speak)

    For example, the chicken factory in Chernukhin is right in the middle of the Debaltsevo cauldron, and every single chicken there was killed by the shelling from Ukrainian army.
    The Izvarin chicken factory similarly lost all but 15% of their stock.

    With Luhansk lacking in chicken meat and eggs, they had to be supplied by Donetsk.
    Donetsk not only supplied their brother republic with poultry, but also helped them rebuild their chicken factories. Which are slowly now coming back to life.

    • Hopefully every new infrastructure in Donbass is build far enough from the current front line.

      • yalensis says:

        Well, one of these chicken places is near Debaltsevo!
        What can you do – people need the eggs.

        • yalensis says:

          P.S. – that last bit was allusion to VERY VERY old Jewish joke…

          • Patient Observer says:

            I don’t get it, what’s the yolk?

          • Jen says:

            Is that the joke about the rabbi who discovers a tray of 3 eggs and $2,000 stashed under the marital bed? When he asks his wife about it, she replies that she puts away an egg every time he gives a bad sermon. He’s quite happy until she informs him that once he reaches a dozen eggs, she immediately sells the lot for $1.

            • yalensis says:

              Ha ha!
              But no… it’s this joke which I had in mind:

              Mrs. Rosenbaum brings her husband to the family psychiatrist.
              “Dr. Rabinowitz, my husband thinks he is a chicken.” (and the husband keeps going “cluck cluck cluck”)
              Dr. Rabinowitz: “How long has this been going on?”
              Mrs. Rosenbaum: “Almost 10 years now.”
              Dr. Rabinowitz: “Why didn’t you bring him to me sooner?”
              Mrs. Rosenbaum: “Because we needed the eggs.”

              • marknesop says:

                Sally is flying out to meet her boyfriend. She falls asleep on the plane and dreams about this gorgeous diamond ring he’ll give her. When she opens her eyes, she spots an even bigger diamond on the finger of Mrs. Goldstein, a matron sitting next to her. This is the mother of all diamonds, it is enormous, flawless, glittering…’My, that’s some diamond you’ve got there’, Sally says. ‘I’ve never seen anything like it.’

                Mrs. Goldstein sighs. ‘I know, my child. This is no ordinary diamond. It’s the famous Goldstein diamond. But it comes with a terrible curse.’

                ‘It does?’ Sally moves to the edge of the seat. ‘So what’s the curse?’

                Mrs. Goldstein sighs again. ‘Mister Goldstein.’

  21. UMN says:

    I am having trouble finding articles about the situation on the Ukr-Hungary border and Right Sektor’s meddling there, can anyone link me to one?

  22. Moscow Exile says:

    Another one bites the dust!

    На Донбассе погиб начальник разведки ВСУ

    12 июля 2015 во время выполнения боевого задания, в зоне проведения так называемой “АТО”, погиб начальник разведки управления ракетных войск и артиллерии управления оперативного командования “Запад” полковник Цисарук Юрий Николаевич.

    Ukraine Army Chief of Intelligence killed in Donbas

    On July 12, 2015, Colonel Cisauk Yuri Nikolaevich, chief of intelligence for the control of rocket troops and artillery at operational command “West”, was killed whilst undertaking combat missions in the so-called “ATO” zone.

    This “chief of intelligence”, a professional soldier seemingly acting on “intelligence” received, was responsible for directing fire at civilians who are his fellow citizens.

      • et Al says:

        But its it not Sarajevo! That counts. Donbass doesn’t.

        In case my point has been missed by anyone at al (not me), f/k the f/king western democratic , independent and impartial journalists and Pork Pie News Networks for their gigantic f/k hypocrisy.

        Firing artillery at Sarajevo = war crime according to the international tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, regardless of whether military units in Sarajevo have been using civilian cover like hospitals or schools. No war crimes tribunal here because the war in Donbass is in the West’s interests and the humanitarian legal warriors can’t give a
        s/t either.

        Firing artillery at Donbass wily nily is not a war crime according to the West and is met by total silence by those who claim to have special status as journalists and should be protected. You f/king morons, you are killing yourselves with your hypocrisy 0 but hey, a journalist needs to make a living…

        The moral & ethical institutional corruption in the West continues unabated. The only things that matter are spin and fine phrases. God forbid anyone who questions the absurdity of the West’s outright lying. Remember kids, there is no self-censorship in the West. Only the Communists and leftist do that (except the BBC of course)!

    • yalensis says:

      Still should get some points for a very cool family name: Tsysaruk.
      Never heard that one before.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        I think it might be Romanian or from one of those places that was originally situated in “Kievan Rus'” and which was tagged back onto the Holy Slav ground, the origin of true Slavdom, by the Moskaly Empire or Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic territory by those evil Moskaly Tatar Bolsheviks.

    • Looks like a decent guy. Too bad this war turns people into animals.

  23. Moscow Exile says:

    Освежить бы память украинским так называемым “партнерам”
    To refresh the memory of our so-called Ukrainian partners:

    In the Ukraine 334 places of human habitation were, together with their inhabitants, burnt down by German Nazis, yet you continue to believe this nonsense that the Nazis rescued you people from the Stalin regime.

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      What’s the problem? Patriotic Ukrainians recognise that they deserve to be wiped out, so they venerate the Nazis who tried to do just that, and curse Stalin who saved them.

  24. jeremn says:

    BBC really pleased with the new police in Ukraine. Glad that old officers got the sack and the new officers look like models.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-33432788

    The Revolution of Dignity in one easy image.

    But it says a lot. For the West, image is everything.

    No wonder colour revolutions are so easily sold to the masses.

    • yalensis says:

      And a popular coffee shop even offered free hot drinks to police officers …

      That’s how corruption starts. With the free coffee.
      I know that from reading that American novel “Serpico”.

    • marknesop says:

      Superficial glitter for the masses who are easily distracted with anything shiny. Cute chicks in uniform have an undeniable appeal, but it should be remembered that these are brand-new recruits with zero police experience, fresh out of class, and four-fifths of Ukrainians believe the fight against corruption is not working. Unbeknownst to them, there actually is no fight against corruption – not while the place is run by a billionaire who has yet to even sell his business, which grows ever more profitable. I wonder if they have an “Official Chocolate of the Ukrainian Armed Forces”?

      The western press is quick enough to pile on Putin when he announces a new reform and it has not yet achieved its goal a month later. But endless patience and do-overs for Poroshenko and his imaginary fight against corruption.

  25. Moscow Exile says:

    Яценюк заявил в Канаде, что Украина сражается за границы Европы

    Yatsenyuk announces in Canada that the Ukraine is fighting over the European borders

    “Вы знаете, это не только об Украине. Это не украинский проблема, а глобальный вызов. И Украина просто поле боя. Это поле боя за светлое будущее и на поле битвы против русской агрессии. Мы боремся против русских и мы защищаем европейские границы. Россия представляет угрозу для Канады тоже, и не только Канады, но и союзников по НАТО, – процитировали Яценюка иностранные СМИ.

    “You know, this not only about the Ukraine. This is not a Ukrainian problem, but a global challenge. And the Ukraine is just the battlefield. It is the battlefield for a bright future and the battlefield against Russian aggression. We are fighting against the Russians and we are defending the European borders. Russia presents a threat to Canada as well, and not only to Canada, but also to the NATO allies” – Yatsenyuk, as quoted in the foreign mass media.

    See also: Ukraine crisis a threat to Canada’s security, Arseniy Yatsenyuk says [Video]

    We are the country who is fighting against the Russian land terrorists and the Russian army and we succeeded in deterring Russian army…” – Yatsenyuk.

    Catch the wabbit! Catch the wabbit!

    • marknesop says:

      Well, if a shower like that lot has been successful in deterring the Russian Army, I don’t see why I should be worried about it. They’ll never make it this far.

      Yats is pretty transparent – we’re fighting your fight; give us money.

  26. yalensis says:

    Russian media reports that the Right Sektor bandits I mean patriots, are on the move. Slipping out of Mukachevo and melting into the forests, they are now stealthily creeping towards Lviv and, ultimately, the Polish border.

    Analysts believe they are currently hiding out in the foothill of a certain hill which is 20 km from Lviv.
    The leader of this robber band, which just completed their killing spree in Mukachevo, is a man named Alexander Sachko.
    In an interview with a reporter, Sachko made the following utterance:
    «Это может занять год и два? Ну, значит, так будет. Если кто-то думает, что ребята не могут жить в лесу столько времени, сколько надо, поверьте, есть достаточно возможностей для того, чтобы это подразделение увеличилось до нескольких тысяч человек», – сказал он.

    “You think this could go on a year or two? So be it. If somebody thinks that the lads cannot live in the forests as long as they have to, believe me, this unit can (thrive and) multiply, up to several thousands of men.”

    Meanwhile, the Slovaks and Hungarians are taking prudent steps to beef up their border controls. However, if above piece is correct, then the no-goodniks might be planning to slip across Polish border.

    • marknesop says:

      Living in the woods is still living in the woods, regardless what state they’re in. It was dead romantic in Robin Hood, but did you notice it was never winter in Sherwood Forest? Nope – green leaves and birdies chirping the whole year long. It must have been in the part of England that’s right next to Singapore. It isn’t that way in Poland, or Ukraine. They might have a jolly summer, camping with their friends and stealing like Pussy Riot to feed themselves, and I daresay they will smell amazing by fall if they have only rivers to bathe in and no soap unless they steal it, but the audience expects a certain pong from ne’er-do-wells.

      • yalensis says:

        Dear Mark:

        I do not appreciate your snarky and cynical comments about Robin Hood.

        Robin Hood and his Merry Men had the King’s royal venison to live on.
        Venison contains every protein and mineral needed by the human body.
        Also, they had Friar Tuck bringing them mead from the nearby monastery every night.
        Which is why they were called “Merry Men”.
        While dining on venison and drinking the delicious mead, they would listen enraptured to the lute playing and singing of Alan-a-Dale.

        As for bathing, I just assume they would compress the venison fat to make a high quality soap.
        When winter came, the Merry Men would use branches and leaves to build themselves a leafy bower. And hibernate until spring.

        • marknesop says:

          This sort of willful rose-coloured mischaracterization of reality is precisely what is wrong with journalism today. Englishmen of Robin o’ Locksley’s day hardly ever bathed, and venison is so lean that you would have to kill a dozen deer to get a bar of soap. Next you will be telling me they refined an Herbal Essence body wash out of leaves and flowers. The human circadian rhythm makes human hibernation impossible. Such reckless romanticizing of the lives of the Merry Men does them no service whatsoever.

        • Jen says:

          Of course once Maid Marian joined the happy party, then the merriment took on a different dimension. How did they all cope without women? Was there something more to a band of tree-hugger men in green tights?

          • Cortes says:

            She probably organised the gathering of edible fungi and production of conserves. A gay old time was had by most, no doubt.

            • yalensis says:

              Marian’s main job was to organize the nightly fairy frolicking:


              Hark! The dazzled laverock climbs the golden steep!
              Marian is waiting: is Robin Hood asleep?
              Round the fairy grass-rings frolic elf and fay,
              In Sherwood, in Sherwood, about the break of day.

              From Noyes, obviously.

              P.S. What’s a laverock?
              Never mind – I don’t want to know.

              • marknesop says:

                But you never see;

                Hark! the sleet comes driving down, and icy globules form
                Robin holds his morning whiz, ’cause Lincoln Green ain’t warm;
                The snowdrifts come up to your thighs, the roads are frozen ruts
                The wind leaves roses in your cheeks, and frost upon your nuts.

                ‘Cause it’s never winter in Sherwood, innit?

                • yalensis says:

                  Hey, that’s pretty damned good!
                  Did you ever think about becoming a professional poet?

                • marknesop says:

                  Why, thank you, Yalensis! No, I never did, although I am very fond of both poetry and music, which also relies (or a lot of it does, not all) on cadence and meter. Clumsy poetry concentrates exclusively on getting a rhyme, and ignores whether or not it makes sense or is artful in construct; in this it is not much better than Rap music.

  27. yalensis says:

    Meanwhile, Victoria Nuland suddenly arrived in Kiev on surprise inspection I mean visit.

    Vickie is expected to stay in Kiev for July 15-16. Her press service says she will visit with politicians, businessmen, and representatives of “civil society”. In other words, the usual rogues gallery.

    • yalensis says:

      P.S. – or maybe this has something to do with the Yarosh situation?
      Some time between today and Sunday, Pyatt and Vickie have to make that fateful decision, whether Yarosh is to be killed; or installed as Prime Minister!

      • marknesop says:

        “I think Yarosh is the one with the leadership experience, I think Poroshenko should just stay outside and do his homework, and Yarosh needs to be talking to Yatsenyuk and Tiahnybok (who I notice has been invisible for about a year now, is he even still alive?) and Klitschko three or four times a week. And fuck everybody”.

        • yalensis says:

          Uh huh. That’s pretty much what she said.

          But that’s not the end of the story. Porky found out that Vickie and the other 2 witches (Killery and Samantha) had predicted, that Yarosh would go on to found a dynasty of Ukropians that would last for 500 years.
          Porky’s wife Lady MacPorky convinced hubby to kill Yarosh, in order to thwart the prophecy.
          But they hadn’t counted on the fact that Yarosh had a son named Fleance, who escaped from the assassins.
          Later that night, Porky and Lady MacPorky convened a grand banquet in Vickie’s honor. But everybody was horrified when the ghost of Yarosh appeared at the banquet, all shaking his gory locks at the assembled revellers.

          • marknesop says:

            I think you might be mixing current events up with The Scottish Play. When you decide to give up drinking rubbing alcohol, it is often wise to taper off slowly, to preclude hallucinations.

            • yalensis says:

              Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything….

              • Jen says:

                Meanwhile Pravy Sektor and other battalions in army camouflage are advancing towards Porky and Lady Porky holed up in their Kiev mansion …

                • yalensis says:

                  Lady MacPorky: “Out! Out! Damned Spot!”

                  King MacPorky: “What’cha doing out there on the deck, honey-bun?”

                  Lady MacPorky: “I can’t get this damned dog to go into Birnam Woods for his nighttime whiz.”

                  King MacPorky: “That’s strange. Something in the woods seems to be spooking the poor old thing…”

    • marknesop says:

      Indeed she did, and almost immediately Kiev was able to report that she is very satisfied – “gave high assessment”, I believe is the wording – with the Rada’s work so far on reforms. Of course she is, because if the west’s big guns are unstatisfied with reforms the IMF cannot lend Ukraine money. Mentioned in particular was the Rada’s yeoman labour thus far on the decentralization of power, which in theory will grant a significantly greater autonomy to the rebel regions. I would be willing to bet no real work has been done on that at all, while Poroshenko still keeps blabbering about restoring them to Kiev”s control by force. So, there you go – the combined opinion of Kiev and the U.S. State Department is still that you (and I) are barely smart enough to breathe without assistance. Only yesterday Yats said in Washington that reforms would continue come hell or high water, despite the preponderance of “lunatics” among the Rada’s lawmakers, while the Globe & Mail argued last year that the EU doomed reform in Ukraine when it did not immediately make Ukraine a member state.

  28. yalensis says:

    And while this was going on Veruca was in Washington D.C. – well, technically, this was 2 days ago, July 13 — being scolded by Barack “Oh Bomb ’em” and Joe “Bite ’em”. Recall that Smiley Joe effusively praised people like Jaresko and Saakashvili, but damned Veruca with only very faint praise.

    (Reason for scolding: Veruca is not doing enough to fight “corruption”, whatever the hell that means — and believe me, it means something very different to the Rulers of the Universe than what that word would mean to an ordinary mortal like you or I…)

    but anyhow, I am burying the lede here. The lede is that, as soon as he was able to escape from the woodshed, Veruca, just like the Rabbit on the hot tin roof, plopped himself down on that sweltering D.C. sidewalk (second photo down) and lit up a cigarette.

    Veruca, no-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-!
    Smoking is bad for your health!
    But then, so too is getting THIS close to the jaws of the beast.

    • Jen says:

      If memory serves me correctly – I saw the film for the second time a few years ago – that was the blue-stick moment for Ripley. It returned positive.

      • yalensis says:

        Yep. The Beast was about to turn Ripley into her mid-day snack. But then she sniffed a cute wittle Baby Beast inside Ripley’s tum-tum. And so backed off. (These hive queens are very protective of their own.)

        That film was a complete travesty, anyhow. I command everybody to forget that it was ever made.
        They should have ended the saga with Part II, perfect ending and everybody lives happily ever after..
        But NO-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O….

        • bolasete says:

          obviously i missed something. when did the alien sub-thread start? or are you just off your meds?

        • Jen says:

          Neil Blomkamp (District 9 / Chappie director) is making a new version of Alien3 in which Hicks and Newt survive.

          • yalensis says:

            O thank the gods!

            It was such a travesty, that Ripley worked her ass off for 3 hours rescuing Newt, only to have III open with the casual exposition, “Newt Who? Oh, she’s dead. That brat was the weakest link – good-bye!”

            But how can they explain away the False III? Like it was just a bad dream, maybe?

  29. yalensis says:

    Ukrainian livestock situation: a boomerang of delayed effect.
    Back in January, Ukrainian government cut direct subsidies for livestock. Due to budgetary constraints, i.e., no money in the budget.

    But as consolation prize government de-regulated slaughterhouses. For example, not implementing a ban on indoor slaughter. Told livestock producers: “Just have at it.”

    So, how is that indoor slaughtering coming along, 7 months later?
    According to Rada Deputy Ivan Kirilenko, the livestock situation in Ukraine is reaching the catastrophic : In the past 6 months, the heads of cattle have reduced by as much as the preceding 2 years combined. [yalensis: but doesn’t give the actual number of cattle heads, unfortunately]

    As a result, Kirilenko predicts, the former “breadbox” Ukraine will soon be bereft of cattle AND milk.
    Instead of drinking milk, Ukrainians will have to drink palm oil.
    [yalensis: dubious. Palm oil is expensive too.]

  30. jeremn says:

    Anybody knows who owns or operates Свободная Пресса ?

    I see them showing up in the Guardian and the Independent, so they must be western friendly ….

    • marknesop says:

      I think it’s just a Moscow-based web portal, probably a special-interest news aggregator. They’re also cited by Moscow Times and Paul Goble’s awful “Window on Eurasia”, so I think it’s safe to say they are a kreakly-type site. But since The Guardian gets all moist over material which is printed in Novaya Gazeta, I think they will probably accept something they like the sound of, supposing it came from a talking cow in Russia.

  31. marknesop says:

    As I predict will surprise no one, Tsipras faces an uphill battle getting his “reforms” passed today, and it looks possible – if not likely – that his government will either fall or cut him loose in an attempt to save itself. He publicly denounces the deal and says he does not agree with it, but that he took it to save the country. I can’t imagine what it is going to do to the tourist industry, as it raises the tax on processed and restaurant food to 23% and removes the 30% tax discount for the Greek Islands.

    Greece is simmering, and it looks as if the banks will not be open for an incredible additional month. This looks bad.

  32. marknesop says:

    Here’s kind of an amusing piece, on the eventual disposal of the MISTRALs. Although the headline implies France has actually had an offer to buy them, from Brazil, you will soon see this is just armchair bullshitting, sort of a “This is what I think France should do with the MISTRALs” fantasy from Robert Farley – who, should you wonder, is an assistant professor at the Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce at the University of Kentucky. His mini-bio further reports “military doctrine” as one of his specialties, or perhaps it is just a hobby.

    Some of his thinking suggests so; the headline describes them as “Russia’s Lethal Mistral Ships” for what appears to be no reason whatsoever, as he later describes them as not particularly warlike and very well suited to a disaster-relief role. I particularly enjoyed the bit of inadvertent humour displayed in the folowing paragraph:

    “In this context, several analysts have proposed solutions, including sending the ships to the United States, China and Canada. The first two are obvious nonstarters (the United States will not spend its precious shipbuilding funds on a foreign-built capital ship, nor will it allow the export of advanced amphibious warfare technology to China), and while Canada makes a great deal of sense, the unwillingness of Ottawa to step up its military spending means that a deal is exceedingly unlikely.”

    The United States will not allow the export of advanced amphibious warfare technology to China? By France, which last time I looked was a sovereign nation that could do as it pleased? Sarkozy agreed to sell them to Russia, which has many times the naval experience of China, and the United States was apparently not able to bitch-slap France out of that deal. Hollande, though, proved to be made of softer clay, or perhaps dung.

    Selling them to Canada makes a great deal of sense? In what way, exactly? Has Canada ever had a national amphibious-warfare capability? Not to my knowledge. Baby carriers like the MISTRAL have no inherent self-defense capability beyond point-defense close range gatling guns or perhaps a point-defense missile system with an effective range of not more than 10 miles. All of its offensive capability is in its helicopters and the vehicles and troops it carries. That means it has to be escorted everywhere it goes beyond its own coast, except perhaps for a short peacetime cruise to a nearby American port. In the event of hostilities – which are kind of what warships are purchased for – it would need to be constantly escorted by a screen, because it would be a high-value unit bound to attract enemy attention given that its sinking would effectively scrap the entire mission.

    The same is true of Brazil, which had – and has – an aircraft carrier. But it carries fixed-wing aircraft and has a power-projection role. You can’t do that with an assault carrier and 30 helicopters. Meanwhile, Farley is hyping what a Godsend they would be for disaster-relief missions. If you want to buy a purpose-built ship for disaster relief, buy a hospital ship. That’s not a job for “lethal” ships. At least Brazil has a Marine Corps – Canada has none. The Brazilian navy does not have a stand-off anti-air capability, being purely defensive in that role with an envelope of about 25 km. Since the decommissioning of the DDH-280 Tribal Class in Canada, that nation has none either. That would mean a borrowed ship (probably American) with a stand-off air capability would have to be part of the screen, or an enemy would fly leisurely in and sink the high-value unit from 30 miles or so away.

    Maybe he should take up gardening.

  33. Northern Star says:

    http://www.theguardian.com/business/live/2015/jul/15/greek-crisis-mps-bailout-imf-debt-relief-alexis-tsipras-live

    molotov cocktails…running street battles in Athens…..

    I told ya’ so…….!!!!

      • marknesop says:

        Ha, ha!! The IMF is pressuring the EU to facilitate a 7 Billion “bridging loan” that will disappear immediately to pay debt, and the Greeks will have to pay it back. Sort of like using your Visa to pay your Master Card bill, although when individuals do it people say “You can’t do that”.

        And Germany is coming the heavy hammer, affecting to be unconcerned if Greece exits both the Eurozone and the EU. Tough tit. Except – as someone alluded here earlier, I think it was Tim – immediately after the war, Germany (the aggressor who was going to bring the world under its thumb) had half its debt canceled. Who helped facilitate that? Greece. Not only that, the country that aspired to a Third Reich that would last a thousand years was protected with “a clause that said West Germany should only pay for debts out of its trade surplus, and any repayments were limited to 3% of exports earnings every year. This meant those countries that were owed debt had to buy West German exports in order to be paid. It meant West Germany would only pay from genuine earnings, without recourse to new loans. And it meant Germany’s creditors had an interest in the country growing and its economy thriving.”

      • Northern Star says:

        If Greece devolves into political/economic/social chaos…..Then how can she be considered a credible -i.e. eligible-candidate for an ESM loan??

        • marknesop says:

          The Grauniad is surprisingly sympathetic to Greece, and condemnatory of the treatment it received. It doesn’t seem to have done Frau Merkel’s image any good, although it will of course make Brussels love her more and increase her chance of getting a cushy EU job.

    • marknesop says:

      Kind of sounds like the western media wants it to spin out of control, doesn’t it? Otherwise, they report that there’s a small collection of hotheads out there but nothing the police can’t handle, and that things are mostly calm. Bear in mind that the current bets say probably 80% will vote for the bailout no matter how humiliated and enraged they are by it, rather than drop the Euro or leave the EU.

  34. Lukoil has asked help from the European Commission concerning the seizure of its assets by Romania. Romania has already confiscated $600 million worth of assets from Lukoil and now Lukoil is about to lose $2,2 billion more of its assets in Balkan countries and in the EU states. These confiscations are done because Lukoil is allegedly guilty of “tax evasion” and “corruption”.

    This would be a huge blow to Lukoil that is a private oil company. Losing $2,2 billion worth of assets.

    So here we have further lesson for Russian companies and individuals. Do not invest in the West. Do not put your money in the West. Invest in Russia and put your money in Russian banks. Lukoil is now learning the hard way.

    • My guess is that this is done for two reasons:
      1. Just to punish Russia. Confiscate Russian property because it is Russian. There is nothing Russia can do about it since these assets are in the European Union.
      2. Get even with Russia after what Russia did with Yukos and Khodorkovsky. The West knows that it can never have access to former Yukos oil wealth that is now owned by Rosneft, so punish other Russian company instead. Lukoil is a good target since it is a Kremlin-friendly Russian oil company.

      How Russia will respond? Russia will probably do nothing since Russia likes to “act pragmatic” in these situation. Eye-for-an-eye is a Western method, not Russian. Russia will just take this loss and continue as if nothing happened.

      • yalensis says:

        Eye-for-an-eye is a Western method, not Russian.

        That’s totally untrue, where do you get these shitty generalizations, Karl?
        Western game is pre-emptive eye gouging.
        Russia generally follows a more conservative tit-for-tat game strategy that it inherited from Soviet Union.

        Tit-for-tat is the most productive game algorithm, IMHO.
        It works well 99% of the time.

        • cartman says:

          Romanian government can take refineries. But I can’t see Russia being crazy enough to supply them. I guess there is always that IGIL/ISIS oil.

    • marknesop says:

      Romania had best not get too cheeky; it is likely leveraging its lesser dependence on Russian gas since it expects to be energy-independent by the end of the decade. But it still imports 20%, and that’s an amount a country usually cannot find if it gets shut off just before winter. Mind you, Romania might be entirely right and perhaps they have evidence of tax evasion by Lukoil. It certainly wouldn’t be the first time for an oil company. We’ll see.

    • spartacus says:

      According to the Romanian prosecutors, the management of Petrotel-Lukoil România is investigated for making all sorts of manoeuvres to hide the company’s profit and turn it into a loss, in order to avoid paying taxes to the Romanian government.
      One of such manoeuvres is to have a preferential contract with an intermediate company that will sell overpriced oil to the Romanian subsidiary that, in turn, would take that oil, process it and then it would sell the resulting petrochemical products, at a price below cost of production, to other subsidiaries of the LukOil group.
      This is a tried and tested scheme that was widely used after 1989, by both foreign and domestic businessmen, to plunder key enterprises of Romanian industry and to avoid paying taxes to the Romanian government. This resulted in the bancruptcy of many enterprises and gave an excuse for their privatization for pennies. Incidentally, this is what happened to the Petrotel refinery (founded 1904) before being bought by LukOil in 1998 for about 53 mln USD. At that time the Romanian government also offered various tax exemptions and other incentives. To their credit, the Russians invested about 120 mln USD in upgrading the refinery’s installations in order to bring it to modern standards.
      According to the prosecutors, another method used by the management of Petrotel-Lukoil România was to take imaginary loans from the subsidiary’s owner Lukoil Europe Holdings Bvatrium, based in Holland, for various investments that were never implemented. The loan would exist only on paper, but Lukoil România would make payments to service that loan. The link below is to an article (in Romanian) about this case. Unfortunately, I was not able to find something this detailed in English.

      http://www.riseproject.ro/cum-a-spalat-lukoil-miliardele-de-euro/

      About the political motivation: in my opinion the case against the management of Petrotel-Lukoil România is legitimate. A couple of documents were “leaked” to the press and they appear to support the prosecutors’ case. There is, however, an angle. What they were (are) doing is common practice in Romania. Every multi-national corporation that has subsidiaries here is engaged in the exact same kind of practices. Why was just Lukoil singled out for prosecution? One of the reasons, I think, is because, at this moment, there is a scuffle going on in the Romanian politics between the newly elected President, Klaus Iohannis and the Prime Minister, Victor Ponta. Ponta has ties, through people in his entourage, to Lukoil. These people have companies that have lucrative deals with Lukoil and some of the money they gain makes it back to him as campaign donations. In return, Ponta makes sure that the Justice Ministry turns a blind eye to Lukoil’s unorthodox business practices. Iohannis is out to depose Ponta using any means that he can and this is one of them. I think that making Ponta stand trial for corruption is one of his wet dreams. He is allready charged with tax evasion, so a corruption charge would be a nice bonus.

      http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jul/13/romania-prime-minister-victor-ponta-questioned-corruption-inquiry

      More on the conflict between these two egg-heads here:

      http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/10c6488e-1c09-11e5-8201-bdb03d71480.html#axzz3g625zZ32

      On top of that, Iohannis is a firm supporter of EU’s and NATO’s current war on Russia and I think that, by pushing for this investigation, he is doing his part as a loyal lackey of the West with the added bonus of being able to bring down one of his political enemies.

      “Ponta did run for President in 2014 and it was expected that had he won he would have reoriented Romania more closely towards Russia and China, following in the footsteps of Hungary’s controversial Prime Minister Viktor Orban.”

      http://www.fpri.org/geopoliticus/2015/06/romania-and-moldova-political-crises-yet-again

      I also think that this investigation is also a means of killing two birds with one stone: inflict damage on a major Russian company and get rid of a politician who may not toe the anti-Russian policy line as closely as he is supposed to.

  35. yalensis says:

    Russians finally tired of all the bullshit:

    Chief Prosecutor Markin came out today and said, plain as black and white, that the Malaysian Boeing was shot down by an air-to-air rocket.

    Markin said his investigative committee is placing a lot of weight on the eye-witness testimony of Evgeny Agapov (the Ukrainian mechanic who witnessed the plane in question return without its rockets).

    Markin saying this is as good as Putin saying it: This is official Russian position now.

  36. yalensis says:

    Ukrainian children at risk from tetanus:

    According to Yury Pavlenko, a Ukrainian parliamentarian and former ombudsman for children’s affairs, Ukraine has no more tetanus vaccines.

    Formerly, according to Pavlenko, all children in the hospital were vaccinated against tetanus, but now there is no more vaccine. Ukraine does not produce the vaccine, it was always produced in Russia. But Ukraine has forbidden its import from Russia, as part of the economics sanctions.

    Pavlenko is worried that children will die from tetanus.

  37. yalensis says:

    More on the MH-17 shoot-down, and the Agapov testimony:

    KP is saying that the air-to-air rocket in question which destroyed the Malaysian Boeing, was a type “Python”, of Israeli manufacture.

    • marknesop says:

      Georgia was reputed to have the Python 5, although it was never confirmed. They supposedly got two SPYDER batteries. The catch there is that they would be surface-launched.

      You know whatever evidence Russia provides will be shouted down as fabricated or photoshopped. I hope they can provide at least enough tangible proof that some of the world will be convinced, but you can forget about the USA and UK. And it is frankly difficult to imagine given the west would not let Russia near the wreckage or give Russia any access to the investigation. The fix is in.

      • et Al says:

        Su-25KM Skorpion, israeli upgrade project of Gerogian Su-25s apparently can carry the Python (with its distinctive double delta foreplanes):

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_%28missile%29

        but the Su-25KM page makes no mention:
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukhoi_Su-25#Su-25KM

        At 2:56 & 3:00 shows a Python on a right wing pylon & a left wing of the upgraded demonstrator pylon:http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2s9epx

        And again here on its demonstrator in Le Bourget:
        http://www.waronline.org/IDF/Articles/industry/systems/su-25km/

        I’ve not found any photos operational Georgian Su-25KMs carrying the python though, only the standard R-73s.

        • marknesop says:

          I was thinking, afterward – how would Russia know it was a Python missile? Russia has not had access to any of the plane artifacts or the crash site. There’s no way they could know such a thing unless they got it from that Ukie mechanic. They must be extremely confident to put it out there, perhaps as a signal to Ukraine that the game is up and to stop with the bullshit. They have the mechanic, they have the name of the pilot (Voloshin, wasn’t it?) and Ukraine has already admitted to there being a pilot of that name in the Ukie Air Force, and inferred he flies the SU-25 since they didn’t deny it, although they used the childish denial that he was not flying that day. That from a government to whom lying comes as naturally as breathing.

          Still, the Python only has an 11-kg warhead. That’s small to have taken down such a big plane, no matter where it was hit. On another site I saw a picture of what they say is the pilot’s body (although it could be anyone), wrapped in plastic at the crash site so that you cannot see the face. His upper body is naked and 3 or 4 holes can be seen in his stomach. That’s the first photo I’ve seen anywhere which is purported to be one of the crew, and the first showing damage that looked to have been inflicted by a missile or gunfire. Doesn’t look like 30mm, though – that would have torn him in half.

  38. marknesop says:

    Ahhhhhh…there we go. That’s why Noodles is in Kiev – because the Parliamentary vote on the reforms that Noodles already professed herself more than satisfied with is tomorrow. She’s there to steer the vote and to make sure the reforms pass. Adhering to them, of course, is of no consequence: just as long as they pass.

    Ukraine lost 11 soldiers today and had another 16 wounded in what the Ukrainian Security Council describes – for no reason that I can see – as “proof of yet another attempt by Russia and its puppet to wreck the Minsk agreement and restart active military hostilities”. If Ukrainian soldiers are killed, it is automatically Russia’s fault. Because if it weren’t for Russia, the Ukrainian Army would have killed all the easterners, I guess is the message, which would apparently be a very satisfactory result.

    • yalensis says:

      If Noodles is in the Rada to steer the vote, then in essence she is the “Floor Whip”.
      Just like Dick Durbin!

  39. Tim Owen says:

    Useful point by point refutation of the War Party’s take on the Iran deal:

    http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2015/07/aipac-anti-iranian-propaganda-at-congress.html

    Don’t get me wrong. Like the apparent detente with Cuba I think it’s a Trojan horse for obvious reasons.

  40. ucgsblog says:

    My question for you guys: should the BRICS let Greece default and immediately step in to assist Greece after it defaults? If the Russians did it for Crimea, why not have the BRICS/SCO do it for Greece? Furthermore, since the first one-three months will be rough, why not hold training between the Russian Ministry of Emergencies and their SCO counterparts, and then send them to Greece in order to lessen the blow of the first three months? I’m just pissed off as to what Germany did to Greece, I mean – what the actual fuck Merkel? What is wrong with you?

    • marknesop says:

      Yeah….I was thinking just Russia, and that’d probably be a challenging bill for them. But I never thought of the BRICS as a group – they could do it. And Russia could say, take $1.3 Billion worth of their debt from France; that’s what they owe us for the Mistrals! Okay, I was kidding about that part, that wouldn’t happen. But sure; the BRICS could easily handle it, and it’d be quite a victory for them if they did. Brussels – and Washington – would be livid.

      • ucgsblog says:

        Making Brussels and Washington livid isn’t the goal; the goal would be BRICS getting a solid foothold in Europe, and have the ability to counterbalance Turkey in the Middle East. Furthermore, if Greece thrives as a result, other countries will follow the Greek Path, thus letting BRICS gain solid ownership of European assets. And then the BRICS could set up a system of global rules followed by everyone.

        The problem with Washington/Brussels, is that they keep on changing the rules, to the point where someone argued for the “right to self determination of Ukraine in favor of territorial integrity” or something like that. Having Greece on their side would enhance the ability to BRICS to set global rules for everyone to follow.

        • marknesop says:

          No, of course annoying Brussels and Washington is not the goal; that’s the essential difference between Russian and western politics – while both are often played for domestic and international advantage, Russian politics are seldom conducted simply for nuisance or annoyance value, while that is a staple of relations between the west and Russia from the western end.

          a BRICS “acquisition” of Greece, though, would unquestionably infuriate Washington because it would imply the NATO encirclement of Russia is being reversed and rolled back at precisely the time Washington is applying pressure to mop up the last independent nations on Russia’s borders. It would infuriate Brussels because it would cause consternation among EU voters that the EU had badly mishandled the Greek economic crisis and could have done much better. And that would not be a misinformed guess, either.

          • ucgsblog says:

            Oh, it would undoubtedly annoy certain factions in both capitals, but most people won’t care. Most Americans want to switch to the Moneyball Model of Foreign Policy, which leads to letting up pressure on Russia, and most Europeans are secretly rooting for Greece to win. But, as someone correctly predicted about Merkel/McCain, “haters gonna hate!”

    • Jen says:

      The BRICs could allow Greece to start with a clean slate and loan the country money over a period of, say, three years to pay pensions and maintain essential infrastructure and services but with conditions attached. Greece would have to trade exclusively with BRIC nations and not use any of the money lent to pay debts owed to EU governments or EU-based corporations. Any defence equipment or arms purchased must be from Russia or China. Greece would have to undertake to reform its taxation system and force its oligarch class to start paying taxes or face jail under similar conditions as Russia forced its oligarchs to pay tax and stop meddling in national politics.

      • marknesop says:

        There you go – why wouldn’t that work? But Greece first will have to default, and then ask. I think, though, that Greece has grown comfortable in Europe, like an old sweater you just can’t throw out, and it would be a hard, hard adjustment to make. And I doubt the EAU or the BRICS would make such an offer, because the west would squeal that they were luring Greece into irresponsibility. And of course they would heap most of the blame on Russia, and punish it even more. Mind you, they must be just about at the limit of what they can do without causing serious harm to themselves. I read something today about Poland’s banks…yes, here it is. The banks expect a deterioration in the second half of 2015. I’ve mentioned before that much of the profit-making machinery in Poland is foreign-owned, and indeed it is – two-thirds of its banks and most of its large retail networks. You might think about that the next time Radek Sikorski is beaking off about Poland’s LNG terminal might cost a fortune and gas to it might cost much more than pipeline gas from Russia, but at least they’ll be able to put a Polish flag on it. As if he didn’t know that Polish sovereignty extends just as far as its foreign stakeholders say it does, and no further.

      • ucgsblog says:

        I wouldn’t make the trading exclusive to BRICS; rather, I’d limit the non-BRICS trading to Drachmas only, so that Greece cannot fall into the pitfall once again. Greece would have to default for this deal to work, so no loans. And definitely Oligarchs must pay their taxes. The military equipment, eh, I’m not sure that Greece needs any more military equipment at all. Would that work?

    • Tim Owen says:

      That kind of brings to the fore the question of what’s “slouching towards Bethlehem to be born” so to speak…

      (I actually kind of hate most poetry for what it’s worth, but always thought that was a powerful image of impending, common fate.)

      Putting aside the completely damned fate of the Greeks (and that of the Southern European economist under the the EMU/EU…

      And then thinking about what the Russian stance – both internally and externally…

      If I squint a little bit I swear I see the aspirations of the post war social democratic ideal: basic social supports etc… The kind of concerns that tossed out Churchill after his remarkable service in WW2.

      They “had his number” back then. We’ve lost it for a generation or more.

      So now we’re getting schooled again.

      • ucgsblog says:

        The reason that the Red Army and the Red Navy were the most effective, was because they were born from the necessity of combat. Similarly, the Putin Administration had to rebuild Russia from a massive collapse, as did the Chinese Communist Party for China. As a result, Russia and China go by what works, not what was theorized, and when theory meets practice, the latter always wins.

  41. Moscow Exile says:

    MH17: Russian separatist leader sued for $900 million by crash victims

    Igor Girkin, the leader of Russian separatist forces in eastern Ukraine, was on Wednesday formally accused of orchestrating the shooting down of the Malaysia Airlines flight, MH17, in July last year.

    A writ filed in Chicago also alleges that Mr Girkin was acting with the blessing of the Kremlin when his forces fired at the Boeing 777 en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur.
    The case has been brought on behalf of the families of 18 of the passengers on board the aircraft, including six Britons.

    They are claiming a total of $900 million (£575 million).

    How long has Girkin been “the leader of Russian separatist forces in eastern Ukraine”?

    Why has the writ been processed in Chicago?

    How many of the victims were US citizens?

    Were any of them from Chicago?

    Floyd Wisner, the lawyer who has instigated the action, has used the US Torture Victim Protection Act, which can be used against foreign nationals, to bring a case against Mr Girkin in an American court.

    “It is not about money, it is about getting answers from Girkin and putting pressure on Russia to co-operate with the international tribunal,” Mr Wisner said.

    Since when has Russia refused “to co-operate with the international tribunal”?

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      Jewish lawyer sues Russian adventurer for Ukrainian air force shooting down Malaysian airliner with Israeli missile.

      This is how ThatJ would frame it, and for once he would have a point.

      • yalensis says:

        Except that he wouldn’t call Girkin a “Russian adventurer”, he would call him a “racially pure Aryan Russian nationalist”.
        And then throw in some side rant about “useful goyim” and “mooching migrant workers”.

        • yalensis says:

          And since we are channeling annoying people, let’s not forget Curt.
          Curt would label Girkin as “the only white meat who failed the taste test”.

          • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

            Passed the ‘killing Ukrainian scum’ test though – I don’t think anybody has humiliated the pure race of Kyiv quite so cruelly since Batu and Orda rode through the land.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        How do you know he’s a 4 by 2?

        My German “ex” was called Wiesner. She wasn’t a Jewess, but she was bloody murder! I think she was Hitler’s great grandaughter, the progeny of his alleged love-child.

        Russian girls are much better than German girls – according to my experience, anyway.

        🙂

    • et Al says:

      Because it is always all about America and their self-declared extra-territorial judicial writ. They don’t give a damn about anyone else.

      Flight Global: Malaysia continues push for MH17 tribuna
      http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/malaysia-continues-push-for-mh17-tribunal-414704/

      Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak says the country will continue to push for the establishment of an international tribunal to ensure an independent trial for the persecution of those behind the downing of flight MH17….

      …“A year on, the battle for truth and justice is far from over, and we continue to provide our full cooperation to – and work closely with – the Joint Investigation Team looking into this tragedy,” says Najib.

      “They now have a clearer picture regarding the possible cause of the tragedy, and are expected to continue their investigation into all possible scenarios until the end of 2015.”..

      …Malaysia has been pushing to set up an international tribunal to ensure an “independent and impartial accountability process”, despite resistance from Russia, which has said that the move is premature…
      ####

      It looks like Malaysia won’t stand for just some Western wolly bs report.

      • marknesop says:

        What??? He says, “…we continue to provide our full cooperation to – and work closely with – the Joint Investigation Team looking into this tragedy.” Which is being run out of the Ukrainian Prosecutor-General’s office in Kiev. The prime suspect is in charge of the investigation. Gee; I wonder what the verdict will be? That’s why the full-court press for an international tribunal – it won’t look so much like Ukraine found itself not guilty.

    • et Al says:

      Why has the writ been processed in Chicago?

      This, maybe?

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

      Article 1: Every state has complete and exclusive sovereignty over airspace above its territory.

      Article 3 bis: Every State must refrain from resorting to the use of weapons against civil aircraft in flight.

      The writ smacks of another Magnitsky List like arrow, designed to be championed by Russophobic US politicians for a similar result.

      We’ll see. Obama was ‘surprised’ by Russia’s cooperation on I-ran and some are squeaking about detente, but if this writ gains political backing and goes the same way, well….

      • yalensis says:

        At which point, Russia may have no choice except to whip out those satellite photos.
        In the interim, they have Agapov. He is sort of the stand-in for the satellite photos.

    • Jen says:

      The action can be instigated in the US under the 1991 US Torture Protection Act which allows non-US citizens to sue individuals who commit torture or extra-judicial murder on behalf of foreign nations.

      The action that Floyd Wisner has brought against Igor Strelkov must be in a civil court which means that compensation must be paid to the families of the victims on whose behalf Wisner is acting. My understanding is that any jury convened for the case only needs to deliver a majority verdict. This is not a criminal case.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        And if a US jury finds for the plaintiffs and Girkin, who certainly will not appear in a Chicago court as respondent, refuses to pay, what then? The Chicago judge orders the seizure of Girkin’s assets and bum bailiffs head of for Russia to enforce the judge’s finding?

        • Fern says:

          Well, one of the West’s main hobbies seems to be trying to steal Russian assets wherever and whenever possible. So I’d imagine that one of the main thrusts of any legal case would be to establish that Strelkov/Girkin was acting as an agent of the Russian state and then it’s game on. Any assets of the Russian state in the US/EU and, eventually, anywhere in the world, could then be seized.

          • Jen says:

            Fern, you hit the nail on the head. I didn’t think of that myself. This is one way of going after all Russian-owned assets and Putin’s billions (are we up to $400 billion worth of money and property assets?) anywhere in the world. That’s why it’s a civil action.

            After all, Abdelbaset al Megrahi and the other Libyan guy were tried in a criminal trial under Scottish law in the Netherlands, and that took several years to organise. I should think any proper trial regarding MH17 should be held as a criminal trial in a neutral country that did not have any citizens on the plane. Under whose law, I shudder to think: if we use the Lockerbie trial as a precedent, then the criminal trial would be held under Ukrainian law as it stood at the time of shoot-down and we don’t know how reliable it would have been then or how much it had been corrupted by Poroshenko or the Verkhovna Rada.

            • marknesop says:

              Interesting example, Lockerbie, because the CIA planted evidence in that case to implicate Libya, although they had good reason to believe it was another group altogether that was responsible. It just suited their geopolitical agenda for Libya to be blamed.

              • yalensis says:

                Good points, all.

                To recap: Following the Lockerbie model, the CIA will make sure that Russia is convicted (in civil court) of MH-17, and then go after all Russians assets abroad.

                Hopefully Russia learned some lessons from Lockerbie too:
                (1) Don’t wrongly admit guilt (as Gaddafi did, thinking that, if he pled guilty to a crime he didn’t commit, then it would get his persecutors off his backs),
                (2) Go on the offensive and prove that the other guy did it.
                (3) Start confiscating the other guy’s assets in retatliation for even bringing the case in the first place.

                It goes without saying that Russia has to defend Girkin as if he were the favorite son, and not the red-headed stepchild that he is. Russia MAY NOT throw Girkin under the bus, as Gaddafi did with Magrehi, that would be a fatal error. They simply have to defend him to the death.

      • yalensis says:

        Also, under U.S. law:
        In a civil case, as opposed to a criminal case:
        (1) Defendant is NOT considered innocent until proven guilty; and
        (2) Proof of guilt has a much lower bar than “beyond reasonable doubt” – it’s more like, if the preponderance of the evidence is anything over 51%.
        In other words, it is extremely easy to convict someone, even on very flimsy evidence.
        However, they still have the right to appeal.

    • marknesop says:

      “Since when has Russia refused “to co-operate with the international tribunal”?

      Since never, because there isn’t one. The west is, however, pressing to set one up, and is indeed pressuring Russia to cooperate with it. And Russia is, indeed, refusing to be part of it, because such a tribunal would be able to render a verdict and assign guilt and responsibility. It would be made up exclusively of westerners with a strong motive to assign such responsibility to Russia, as the media makes it clear it is determined to do, and it would also be empowered to impose punishment, which would open the door to enormous financial reparations. Russia wants no part of that, and is best served making its own case. This is extra-difficult, though, because it is being treated as a suspect and Ukraine is not – blowing the doors off all previous examples of investigative procedure – and Ukraine is allowed unrestricted access to the evidence, guardianship of it, in fact, while Russia is not even allowed to see it.

      Uncharacteristically clever move by the west, though, because it is easy to characterize Russia’s refusal to accept such a loaded situation as admission of guilt.

      • Fern says:

        I think the media reporting this request for an ‘international tribunal’ are conflating – probably deliberately – several strands of the story for the sole purpose of creating a smokescreen over Russia’s alleged ‘uncooperative’ attitude to hide the true uncooperative actor – the USA.

        My understanding is that the government of Malaysia, strongly backed by the Dutch, wants some sort of international tribunal set-up under the auspices of the UN Security Council to investigate the downing of MH17, assign blame and prosecute those suspected of being responsible. Vitaly Churkin, in response to this idea, has pointed out, quite correctly, that those who brought down the plane were guilty of a criminal act and that such acts are not the province of the UNSC. He also observed that there has been no similar demand in respect of other air crashes resulting from terrorist or criminal actions such as the downing of the Pan-Am flight over Scotland in the 1980’s and has queried why MH17 is being treated differently.

        Malaysia probably has reasonably good intentions is asking for this tribunal – it clearly (and rightly) distrusts the western investigation whereas the Netherlands and other NATO members see an opportunity to jump on a bandwagon that keeps the focus on Russia and will result in confirming to the world at large that Russian responsibility for the disaster is a given but cannot be proved.

        If any of the major players in Europe was really trying to get to the bottom of what happened to MH17, they would be calling for massive international pressure to be put on the US to disclose the data from its satellite that was immediately above MH17 when it was shot down.

  42. et Al says:

    AP: Testimony from Rosenberg brother released in famous spy case
    https://news.yahoo.com/testimony-rosenberg-brother-released-famous-spy-case-171355428.html

    The brother of Ethel Rosenberg, who was a star trial witness against his sister and brother-in-law in a sensational Cold War atomic spying case, never implicated his sister in an earlier appearance before a grand jury and said that they had never discussed her role “at all,” according to secret court records unsealed Wednesday.

    The revelation may heighten public suspicion that Ethel Rosenberg was wrongly convicted and executed in an espionage case that captivated the country at the height of the McCarthy-era frenzy about Communist allegiances….

    …Greenglass told the grand jury how Julius Rosenberg pressed him for secrets and discussed with him the construction and detonation of the atomic bomb. Historians believe Ethel Rosenberg was aware of her husband’s activities but that the government had insufficient evidence to convict her.

    Yet unlike his trial testimony, Greenglass offered no evidence to the grand jury of Ethel Rosenberg’s direct involvement in the espionage and instead said he never discussed such matters with his sister. Those statements suggest Greenglass may have perjured himself at the trial when he said she had an important role, one of her sons, Robert Meeropol, said Wednesday.

    “David Greenglass emphatically states that his sister was not involved. He states it under oath,” he said of the grand jury testimony….

    …Greenglass, who was indicted as a co-conspirator and was himself sentenced to 10 years in prison, said at trial that he had given the Rosenbergs research data that he had obtained while working as an Army machinist at the Los Alamos, New Mexico headquarters of the top-secret Manhattan Project to build the atomic bomb. In especially damaging testimony, he recalled seeing his older sister transcribing handwritten notes to give to the Soviets on a portable typewriter at the Rosenbergs’ New York apartment in 1945.

    But the grand jury records show no mention of the typing.

    Decades after the trial, Greenglass was quoted by a New York Times journalist as having admitted to lying at trial about his sister in order to protect his wife…
    ####

    Very interesting. But what’s missing?

  43. et Al says:

    Toilet Barf: Barack Obama praises Putin for help clinching Iran deal
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/barackobama/11740700/Barack-Obama-praises-Putin-for-help-clinching-Iran-deal.html

    Russian-American cooperation on the Iran nuclear deal could pave the way for an agreement on Syria, Barack Obama has said, despite the current confrontation between Moscow and the West over Ukraine.

    Mr Obama praised Vladimir Putin for his role in the agreement and said there could now be an “opening” for further detente in the worst crisis in American-Russian relations since the Cold War. ..

    …. Speaking to the New York Times Mr Obama said Mr Putin’s cooperation had “surprised” him, and that he was hopeful of an “opening” for further detente in otherwise fraught relationship between the two powers.

    “Russia was a help on this. I’ll be honest with you. I was not sure given the strong differences we are having with Russia right now around Ukraine, whether this would sustain itself. Putin and the Russian government compartmentalised on this in a way that surprised me,” he told the paper.

    “We would have not achieved this agreement had it not been for Russia’s willingness to stick with us and the other P5-Plus members in insisting on a strong deal.” ..
    ####

    What a two-faced shit. It has been the US and the West that has unilaterally damaged ties with Russia, with Russia saying that ties are always open but being continually rebuffed, particularly in public.

    As for agreeing with Russia on regime change in Syria, WTF? How much more can Obama pull out of his ass? Yet again, by cooperation he is saying that it means Russia agreeing with the West’s strategic objectives. Again. What a dishonest mofo.

    What I worry about is that now a deal has been signed on I-ran with the help of Russia, the US will take it that Russia has lost strategic leverage and Washington will try and take advantage of this rather than pressing forward on any detente which would be, of course, on Washington’s terms.

    • marknesop says:

      Well, you’re only hearing one side of the story on this issue – Obama’s side. When you hear Putin saying, “We’d like to thank the omnipotent American leader of the exceptional nation for noticing us”, you can worry about the USA exploiting a detente advantage. I see this as the USA deigning to throw Russia a crumb, and Russia likely ignoring it.

      Speaking of Russia and Iran, though, I see the two nations are in talks to sell Iran the Sukhoi Superjet. This site makes out Sukhoi is struggling for sales (after they just sold 100 Superjets to China), and implies that the lifting of sanctions means Iran will run sobbing with relief into the arms of Boeing or Airbus. I’d be surprised if they do, though, because anti-western feeling must be running pretty high owing to the extended sanctions and Iran being cut out of SWIFT upon pressure from Washington. Incidentally, EU courts twice ruled that was illegal, just in case you hear any more American blowhard lawmakers raving about let’s-do-it-to-Russia.

      Boeing and Airbus can be expected to lobby hard, though, so this will be an interesting one to watch.

      I doubt this is a serious fence-mending effort from The Exceptional Nation, and I doubt Russia would respond to it even if it was. Things are well past that now.

  44. et Al says:

    Neuters: Russia in talks with Iran over passenger plane sales – minister
    http://www.trust.org/item/20150715140536-qv3le

    Russia and Iran are holding talks over Russia supplying the Islamic republic with Sukhoi Superjet passenger planes, Russia’s Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov said on Wednesday.

    “Such talks are being held,” Sokolov told reporters. “And not only Superjets, but also other technology is being met with certain interest from our Iranian comrades.”…
    #####

    The SSJ has significant western content though…

  45. Jeremn says:

    Yats is in the UK, last leg of his Anglo-Saxon tour.

    In a week of drama over Greece he came up with the genius comment:

    “…. that Ukraine and the UK “have a lot in common.” Some time ago the Cameron Cabinet approved an austerity package, “and you made your economy truly prosperous and powerful,” Yatseniuk said. The Ukrainian Prime Minister underlined that the Ukrainian government had taken similar steps. He added that the experience of the two countries would help “make the world better, so that the EU stays united and so that the EU is a keynote [element] of support to the territorial integrity and independence of Ukraine.””

    http://en.interfax.com.ua/news/general/278225.html

  46. Jeremn says:

    More comedy gold, this time on energy … or rather transit difficulties ….

    Ukraine is interested in the purchase of natural gas from Kazakhstan and intends to work on the issue. “We’re ready to buy gas in Kazakhstan. We should return to the issue. There are difficulties with transit, but we should work on the issue,” Energy and Coal Industry Minister of Ukraine Volodymyr Demchyshyn said at the 12th meeting of the interstate Ukrainian-Kazakh commission for economic cooperation held in Kyiv. ….”

    http://en.interfax.com.ua/news/economic/278315.html

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