The Unbearable Unseemliness of Partnership

Uncle Volodya says, "However, remember this: They hate you because you represent something they feel they don’t have. It really isn’t about you. It is about the hatred they have for themselves. So smile today because there is something you are doing right that has a lot of people thinking about you.”

Uncle Volodya says, “However, remember this: They hate you because you represent something they feel they don’t have. It really isn’t about you. It is about the hatred they have for themselves. So smile today because there is something you are doing right that has a lot of people thinking about you.”

Well, sometimes the faster it gets
The less you need to know…

The Tragically Hip, from “Blow at High Dough

Jim Hoagland, at The Washington Post, is upset. Not furious, or anything – it would never do to get angry at such a solid, reliable and inspirational ally as Germany. No, it’s more….miffed. The kind of vague disquiet you feel when a good friend suddenly reveals a side of themselves you didn’t know existed. It’s kind of like Germany got sloppy drunk at an international party and threw up on the carpet, or in the punch bowl. The kind of embarrassing performance that will probably fade with time, but good friends should step in immediately and set Germany straight, in case there’s a deeper problem that foreshadows, say, a precipitous descent into alcoholism. That’s kind of how Mr. Hoagland views Germany’s unseemly insistence that going into business on a pipeline deal with Russia is just a straight commercial arrangement (thanks for the tip, Warren).

Pardon me while I segue sharply away from this subject for just a moment, but I promise all will be made clear. In the sidebar to the referenced article, from the very same newspaper, is a piece entitled, “It’s Time to Curb this Widely-Committed Journalistic Sin“. The sin referred to is the contempt in journalism for the requirement that disputable assertions be backed by reasoned argument or reference to a reputable source. Use of the passive voice, such as “it is widely believed” is not good enough on its own and is often a cover for something the author would devoutly love to be true, but cannot prove is true. Curiously, the author goes on to assert, in the very next paragraph, that a statement such as “it is widely believed that MH17 was shot down by a surface-to-air missile fired by Russian-backed separatists” is an example of a reasonable statement…because almost everyone believes it. The author does not touch upon this widely-held belief being the direct result of a massive campaign of deliberate disinformation, and an investigation in which a major suspect was allowed unrestricted access to all of the evidence and a seat on the investigation.  But we can only do so much in one post, and we simply can’t take that one on right now.

Anyway, where I wanted to go with that is to appoint you all members of a sort of jury panel. We’re going to look at Mr. Hoagland’s piece, and I want you to watch for examples of occasions in which Mr. Hoagland makes a disputable assertion that is not backed up by facts – just an “ask anyone” kind of substantiation. Ready? Let’s go.

Oh; just a bit of stage-setting first – Mr. Hoagland is part of a growing lobby group which is putting pressure on Germany to back out of its deal with Russia’s Gazprom and other shareholders to twin the Nord Stream gas pipeline, which would double the available supply of Russian gas to Germany, making Germany a significantly more-important gas hub for Europe. It would also result in Russia sending only domestic supply through Ukraine’s pipeline network, for Ukrainians’ use so long as they pay in advance, and not subject to transit fees. Every article on the subject mentions that Ukraine reaps $2 Billion annually from Russia for transit fees for basically doing nothing except letting Russia use its pipes, and Washington and Brussels are becoming increasingly worried that this payment might be lost to the Ukrainian economy. This is at the heart of their objections to the new pipeline capability and the deal with Germany. The Anglosphere knows it is useless to appeal to Gazprom, and so is concentrating a full-court press on Germany.

While it’s true that Germany has earned the world’s respect for its overall performance since World War II, I’m going to draw the line at “repeatedly taking the moral and political high ground”. Is that so? Was the Siemens scandal, in which the company – which was German last time I looked – paid €2.5 billion in fines for bribery a good example of the moral high ground? How about Deutsche Bank’s £840,000 fine plus £1.5 million in compensation for funneling mortgage loans exclusively through mortgage brokers to people with poor credit history, and then wiping them out with made-up fees when they fell into arrears? I’m sure even those of us with the shortest memories can recall Volkswagen’s deliberate installation of test-cheating software in over 11 million cars which would sense when a test was being conducted and supply bogus emission figures which made it compliant with regulations, but otherwise would allow the engine to emit as much as 40 times the allowable pollutants – which have been linked to respiratory illnesses such as bronchitis and emphysema – in the interests of achieving better mileage. Pretty hard to see that as an example of the moral high ground, what? Nobody is dumping on the Germans, and every country has an element which is more interested in making money than just about anything else you can name, but Germany no more fits the mold of gilded saint than anyone else.

So why is Germany ‘risking its hard-earned reputation’? As an aside, that is kind of comical coming from the country which systematically blew the basement out of its international reputation in the past 5 years with its deliberate and open instigation of rebellions in countries around the world as an excuse to send in the western military to sack and ruin those countries – Ukraine and Syria are only the most recent examples. But let’s leave that for the moment. The implication – hell, it’s spelled out – is that if Germany persists with this deal, it will sacrifice its international reputation for decency. That’s not even close to true, and it is laughable for Hoagland to suggest the rest of Europe is going to look down its nose at Germany when it is Germany who underpins the European Central Bank, which bails out European spendthrifts and idiots who cannot manage their own money. Pack yer bags; we’re goin’ on a guilt trip! No, we’re not. Don’t even think about it. Yes, Washington will be pissed off to see its own efforts to control the European gas distribution network come to naught, but is that something that should keep Germany awake nights? Where’s the substantiation for his statement that “the vast changes in the global energy markets of the past year have made the Russian deal obsolete, as well as damaging to European unity”? Ukraine is not part of the European Union, and it is Ukraine which is squalling loud and long for Europe to help it because Russia is about to take it out of the gas-transit business. How is the ‘Russian’ deal (the pipeline is actually owned by five major international shareholders, of which Gazprom is one, and Gazprom itself is owned by the Russian state just to a sufficient degree to constitute a majority, 50.002%) ‘obsolete’? Is Europe now in a position to do without Russian gas? It certainly is not. What are Hoagland’s grounds for saying “the pipeline deal with Vladimir Putin is seemingly corrupt”? What is Putin’s involvement in the pipeline? Zero. What makes it “seemingly corrupt”? Ask anyone. Everybody knows it is. Lastly, why should the United States government get involved – at the Presidential level, no less – in a business deal between Germany and Russia to which it is itself not a party? Let me ask you this, Mr. Hoagland – is there anything, anything in the wide world that the United States considers not its business?

We have a pretty good idea why Washington objects to a new pipeline deal which will bring gas to Europe, and not even more of it (twinning Nord Stream will replace Ukraine’s transit, not augment it), which is the whole point – Washington and Brussels want Russia to be on the hook for subsidizing Ukraine to the greatest degree possible, because every dollar that doesn’t come from Russia has to come from the IMF or other western donors. Similarly, for so long as Ukraine is Russia’s buffer transfer zone between it and its European gas markets, Russia has to care to some extent for Ukraine’s well-being. It can’t let Ukraine fail. Whereas if Ukraine is no longer necessary to Russia’s gas operations, it is totally a western responsibility to heal the shattered country whose civil war the west cheered so enthusiastically, and no skin off Russia’s nose if it collapses into complete ruin. Also just by the bye, the United States government still nurtures a dream whereby it will itself become a major supplier to Europe of gas through LNG tankers and terminals. I’m not going to go into detail again on what a stupid idea that is, I did so here more than a year ago. Forcing Russia to continue supplying gas to Europe through Ukraine forces Russia to take an interest and an active hand in stabilizing and rebuilding Ukraine, although Europe means to keep it forever within its own sphere of influence.

Anyway, let’s get back to Mr. Hoagland at The Washington Post, before this turns into a book. Here we go again, with “Putin’s objective”. Is there any detail about the conduct of business in Russia that Mr. Putin does not run personally? Granted, producing far, far less of the resource you depend on to heat and light your homes, power your industries and a thousand other things means that you are going to have to come to terms with whoever has it for sale, and in Europe’s case it boils down to either Russia or the creaking Frankenstein’s monster the United States is trying to cobble together, which is a combination of ocean-transit LNG by tanker and a pipeline from devoted toady ally Qatar through Syria to Turkey, which the current stubborn clinging to the seat to which he was elected by Mr. Assad makes moot.

And at this point, my friends, Mr. Hoagland stepped off the edge of reason. Indulge me, for a second. Journalists regularly consult experts, it gives their copy authenticity. It seems reasonable they must have lists, in descending order of reliability. In the case of economists, the first page should be headed, “Reliable Economists”. Anders Aslund will not be found on this list. Page 2 could be headed “Less Reliable Economists”. Anders Aslund will not be found on this list. The third page could be titled, “Idiots Who Can Barely Add, But Who Are Nonetheless Convinced That They Are Smart”. Anders Aslund will not be found on this list. The last page could be headed, “Disturbed Whiny Attention Whores Who Are To Economics What The Reverend Jim Jones Was To Organized Religion”. Anders Aslund is on this list. More correctly, Anders Aslund is this list. Who is the economist Mr. Hoagland relied upon to underpin his case? I rest mine – Anders Aslund.

Anders Aslund tells Mr. Hoagland that the Nord Stream pipeline does not make economic sense. Why not? Well, because “Consumption of natural gas in the European Union has fallen by 21 percent over the past decade, and the existing Gazprom pipeline under the Baltic Sea is now operating at half capacity. And Gazprom is no ordinary state corporation. It pursues Russia’s geopolitical goals, cutting supplies or raising prices when the Kremlin wants.

I sometimes wish I were King Henry, so that all I had to do was shout “Who will rid me of this troublesome economist???”, and some knights would ride off to Georgetown University and hack off his head with a sword (although in light of its dense wooden composition, a bow saw might be more practical). Then his chowderheaded foolishness would be stilled forever. It seems that the bigger a coruscating DayGlo neon megawatt idiot you are, the more anxious journalists are to draw upon and broadcast your elitist ramblings, or perhaps he is the only one who will do it for free.

Yes, Anders, you bright spark, you – EU consumption of natural gas overall decreased; in 2014, by 10.7%. Does that mean the EU is importing less gas? Well, no, actually, you effing hammerhead, it does not – in fact, over the same period, reliance on imported gas increased 2.8%. How can those two realities coexist? Why, because EU domestic production fell by 10.6% in 2014. The decline in some countries was abrupt and dizzying; in France it dropped by 96.1%, in Spain the decline was 58.2%, in Bulgaria by 35.3%, a drop of 18.7% in The Netherlands and 14.3% in Germany. Only the Czech Republic and Romania increased production. The ‘energy boom’ in Norway – a major producer of EU supplies – passed its peak in 2009 and is in rapid decline. EU overall consumption may have declined, but not as rapidly as domestic production, which means the EU is more reliant on imported energy than ever. You can rearrange pipelines and delude yourself as much as you like, but you will not change that fact. Of course, it doesn’t impact your pontificating one bit, because you don’t see it. Aslund, lest we forget, is the author of “How Ukraine Became a Market Economy and Democracy“. Has been since 2009, apparently. Let’s skip over a few highlights, shall we? “Ukraine is today an undisputed independent state. It is a democracy and has transformed into a market economy with predominant private ownership.” I’ll say – 70% of its GDP is controlled by its oligarchs. “Ukraine’s postcommunist transition has been one of the most protracted and socially costly, but it has taken the country to a desirable destination.” I don’t quite know what to say to that. Not without resorting to the worst kind of profanity. In fact, Aslund’s vision is quite a bit like a hypothetical situation in which the west captured a former hardcore fascist country, didn’t change a God-damned thing except the leader, and then assured the citizenry that its former practices were actually signs of democratic progressiveness. A big feature – in terms of publication by Ukraine, not numbers of attendees – of the Holiday Season in Ukraine this year was torchlight parades celebrating the birthday of Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera. How many other European market democracies held similar celebrations? The idea that Ukraine is closer today to a desirable destination than it was in 2009 stupefies comment.

Why is Nord Stream operating at half capacity? Anders Aslund and several of his fellow dunderheads would have you believe it is because of a declining appetite for Russian gas, and they say as much. I guess that would be reflected by a decline in Gazprom’s exports to Europe. Uh, oh – I see a problem. Gazprom’s exports to Europe in 2012 were 149.9 BCm. In 2013 they were 172.6 BCm. That was the highest over a 9-year period – almost the decade that Aslund describes, in which the EU is allegedly consuming less gas. And it is: just not less Russian gas, and the reliance on the figure which shows declining consumption is a classic bait-and-switch. The EU is using less gas because it has less gas. You can also see why the UK is among the countries attracting hysterical western pushback for stonewalling on the Nord Stream deal; exports by Gazprom to the UK went from 3.8 BCm in 2005 to 16.6 BCm in 2013.

In 2014, Putin addressed a letter to the heads of Europe, in which he highlighted the growing unreliability of Ukraine as a transit country – this should have been seen as a direct warning that Russia intended to eliminate further risk of transit through Ukraine, as Gazprom has indicated on previous occasions. About 50% of Russia’s gas exports to Europe as a whole go through Ukraine. When Ukraine is taken out of the equation, not only will Nord Stream need every cubic centimeter of capacity, it will need more than the current pipeline can handle. And then there is the absurd European Third Energy Package requirement that any company which owns the pipeline cannot also own the gas that goes through it, and must reserve 50% of its capacity for “competitors”; the EU is okay for a single company to build a pipeline at its own expense, but then wants that company to give its competitors a free ride.  Gazprom got around that by forming an international consortium, which will build and own the pipeline. Gazprom is a shareholder. Nord Stream II should not fall under the Third Energy Package, as it is a supplement to an existing and already-approved line, although Donald Tusk continues to insist the pipeline must comply with every European regulation he can find plus whatever he can make up. The Poles, for obvious reasons, are very supportive of an independent and prosperous Ukraine – because they will be pressured to take a significant share of the economic refugees if it collapses. But the signal from Merkel – AKA “The Chancellor of the Free World” – looked pretty clear in her reply to Putin’s letter, which read (in part), “There are many reasons to seriously take into account this message […] and for Europe to deliver a joint European response. When we take all these steps, we can be sure that we have reached a joint response for the countries that face this problem because they are getting gas from Gazprom. European states would like to be good clients but we would also like to be sure Russian gas supplies are not interrupted.

But there’s another fly in the ointment, one that is not mentioned in polite circles: over 50% of Ukraine’s domestic gas supply comes from Russia, and Ukraine’s own supply peaked years ago. It has been in steady decline ever since. There was never a question of who would pay for that so long as Europe’s supply went through the same pipes. Ukraine regularly stalled on payment, argued over the price after it had already taken the gas, and when Russia said “no more for you until you pay”, just laughed and siphoned off gas intended for European customers for its own use. So long as European gas goes through Ukraine, Ukraine has Russia over the proverbial barrel, as already discussed. But it is important to note that once Europe’s supply no longer goes through Ukraine, Russia has no incentive to keep Ukraine from economic collapse. That means that if Ukraine can’t pay for its own domestic supply, up front, then it’s a hard old world, Ukraine. The latest western democracy project will be caught between the loss of its transit fees, loss of its tax-free preferred-trading-partner status with Russia as a potential member of the Eurasian Union (and with it, its Russian markets), a cratering currency, loss of a third of its tax base, and a partnership with a multinational entity that insists on reforms and the adoption of grinding austerity policies in exchange for lending it anything more than emergency starvation cash.

And Ukraine, indisputably, is an unreliable partner. Part of that is not its fault, because its western sponsors encourage it to hate and cheat Russia at every opportunity which presents itself, and it openly gloats over its achievements when it rips off Russians, rationalizing that they are all thieves themselves and too drunk to notice. Kiev protests that it only cheats Russians, and is otherwise as honest as the day is long, but it is easy to see that it considers anyone fair game who does not support their vision of Ukraine. The “Soyuz” main pipeline supplying natural gas to Hungary and Croatia from Russia via Belarus and Ukraine blew up a couple of days ago, inside west Ukraine, and there is good reason to believe it was a deliberate act of sabotage by Ukrainian activists, who have threatened before on repeated occasions to attack pipelines carrying Russian gas. If they were indeed responsible, it was a bit of an own goal, since that’s the line that is used to reverse-flow gas to Ukraine from Hungary. Ukrainian activists recently blew up some of the power pylons carrying nearly the entire electrical supply to Crimea, apparently frustrated by the country’s inability to achieve a military victory in the civil war against its own eastern regions.

From Brussels and Washington’s point of view, it is essential that Russia participate in the rehabilitation of Ukraine as a prosperous monument to NATO expansion. Because it frankly cannot be done without it. Russia is understandably unwilling to cooperate under those circumstances, the scenario being what it is. Ukraine will therefore be taken off the board as a transit country, and its entire livelihood is now in peril. The west is trying to rectify its enormous blunder by bullying Russia into continuing to send European gas through Ukraine, and it is not working. One of Ukraine’s greatest failings is its inability to see who is leading it into ruin, because it is so much fun to stick out its tongue at Russia and pull faces. Have fun, Ukraine.

Anybody want to sum that up in a couple of trenchant lines? Oh, look: Jarod Kintz, author of “The Titanic Would Never Have Sunk if it were Made Out of a Sink“, would like to.

“The only gift I have to give, is the ability to receive. If giving is a gift, and it surely is, then my gift to you is to allow you to give to me.”

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1,012 Responses to The Unbearable Unseemliness of Partnership

  1. Moscow Exile says:

    And the New Year fun continues!

    The fools! Don’t they realize that Russia is doomed!

  2. reinaldo says:

    ME
    Your great British humour is gaining with the acquisitioin of a Continental touch.
    I have a Italian friend who , like us refined gentlemen of good taste also likes eating pussies…not with spaghetti, though

  3. Warren says:

    How Russia’s relationship with Europe has evolved

    By James Sherr
    Chatham House

    Russia’s relationship with the countries it calls “Europe” (the EU and the European Economic Area) has evolved significantly since the dissolution of the USSR.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35154633

    • Drutten says:

      Oh, Putin destroyed everything that Yeltsin the Great had built up.

      I find it quite hilarious how they’re twisting things around like that. As if Putin didn’t try to maintain great relations with both the US and the EU, making concession after concession until he realized that neither the US nor the EU actually were interested in “partnership”.

      Good god, for how long did Russia under Putin kiss EU arse for a relaxing of the visa regime and so on?

  4. Moscow Exile says:

    Donald Trump’s hair and lug hole as part of a “Golden Spiral”:

    It ain’t what you see but the way that you see it?

  5. Moscow Exile says:

    There are some here who are outraged over why we are supplying gas to Genichesk. We are helping future Russian citizens.

    • PaulR says:

      There is possibly much less to this story than is being claimed. According to Gazeta.ru, Genichesk is not connected to the main Ukrainian gas system. It receives gas directly from a gasfield in Kherson oblast. In summer surplus gas is (or was before Crimea was annexed by Russia, i don’t know if it still was last year) pumped to a storage facility in Crimea, and then in winter the gas goes from the storage facility to Genichensk. So all Russia has done is restore this system of supply. http://www.gazeta.ru/politics/2016/01/05_a_8009993.shtml

      • PaulR says:

        Also, if this account is correct, then the Ukrainians can make a reasonable claim that the gas is Ukrainian, since it originates in Kherson province before going to the storage facility in Crimea.

        • Patient Observer says:

          Hmmm, Ukraine has cut off the water supply to Crimea and has essentially cut off electricity to Crimea affecting millions of people and threatening their lives and livelihoods. I don’t think Ukraine can make a reasonable claim to anything given their wanton disregard for law. The Crimean Russians have shown humanity which seems to be a value beyond the comprehension of many Westerners.

        • Lyttenburgh says:

          My, oh my! Turns out that debate about “annexation” vs “reunification” by parties involved (sans yours truly) is an old one.

          And I should probably quote Paul himself on this topic:

          “Mark is strictly speaking correct in narrow international legal terms – there was a reason for carrying out the process in two steps (declaration of independence, then unification), rather than one step (direct annexation from Ukraine). But, I am still willing to use the term ‘annexation’, as I consider it politically neutral and accurate in describing one country absorbing part of another.”

          So, basically, Paul admitted nearly a year ago that his tendency to stick with the “insistent terminology” is, basically, more out of a habit, but not of accuracy.

          • et Al says:

            “narrow international legal terms” have been the bugbear of the West since the end of the Cold war. They’ve done so well to redefine the conversation away from long standing and legally binding international treaties all the way to ‘responsibility to protect’ R2P for example.

            It is the sign of how bad untrammeled and unchallenged power corrupts. After all, if there is no opposition to stomping all over established law, why not just do your own thing?

            The worst thing is this has become widely accepted as ‘normal’.

            The EU trampled all over the 1975 Helsinki Final Act when they go involved in the Yugoslav conflict and started recognizing whomever and whatever they wanted despite the ‘narrow international legal terms’ and very clear requirements. iits all gone down hill since then.

            That the West has so flagrantly breached so many of these agreements is of no matter when they and their ever supporting Pork Pie News Networks can screech about ‘morality’ and ‘doing something’ even when they don’t have a legal leg to stand on.

            So in short, the law is a major inconvenience to the West’s goals unless someone holds their coals to the fire.

          • marknesop says:

            Well, that may be, but I must confess I never bothered to look up the actual definition of “annexation” – I just didn’t care for the way it was being used, as it was plain that western media sources like The New York Times and CNN considered it a synonym for “illegally appropriated” when there was nothing illegal about it at all, and it was instead the very essence of freedom as described by those same sources when the U.S. military or NATO, or both, had ‘liberated’ yet another new republic.

            “Annexation” as Paul describes it is fairly harmless, and “politically neutral” is an excellent description of the term I seek. I am happy for any parties to say that Russia annexed Crimea, so long as it is understood to mean no more than “incorporated Crimea within the boundaries of the Russian Federation”, because that indeed is exactly what happened. It is generally not mentioned that the latter action was initiated at Crimea’s written request, from its legitimate legal representatives, since it already enjoyed considerable autonomy from Ukraine.

      • Lyttenburgh says:

        Paul, once again – why are you insisting on terming Crimea’s re-unification with Russia as “annexation”?

        • Moscow Exile says:

          Because the Crimeans were forced to vote for secession at the point of a Kalashnikov of course, had previously had no intention of seceding, were perfectly happy with the status quo since 1954, and only obeyed the demands of the Russian invader in order to prevent more hideous slaughter meted out by th invader of the peninsula.

          That’s why he says the Crimea was annexed.

        • PaulR says:

          The answer, Lyttenburgh, is that annexation is accurate. Here’s how a couple of English dictionaries I have in my home study define ‘to annex’:

          Merrian Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary: definition no. 4 – ‘to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a state.’

          The Concise English Dictionary: ‘to unite to, to add on to; to take possession of (as territory’. Annexation = ‘The act of annexing’.

          Those definitions seem a pretty accurate description of what happened.

          • Lyttenburgh says:

            Then I expect the world of English-language academia, their Honest and Accurate Media, plus all Anglophonic politicians to use from now on such phrases as:

            – Annexation of the Eastern Germany by the FDR.
            – Annexation of Texas by the USA.
            – Annexation of the CSA by the USA.
            – Annexation of Hawaii by the USA,
            etc, etc.

            Because we are striving for the accuracy in all things, right? It would be so wrong to make an impression of double standards and cheap rhetoric as means to demonize some countries, agree?

            Besides, using a term “annexation” so, ah, “liberally” without paying heed to its primary meaning (as defined in the internationally recognized treaties) is a little bit… unbecoming.

            • marknesop says:

              Yes, that would be a very effective counter as well. Don’t forget the USA’s annexation of Alaska and Louisiana, the former bought from Russia and the latter from France. However, they were subsequently incorporated, which fits the strict definition of annexation. The western media is fond of the theme that Crimea was ‘annexed at gunpoint’, when there is nothing whatever to support it.

              • Lyttenburgh says:

                Then why did Germany (FDR, to be precisely) had so ordnungly-lavish celebration of the so-called “Germany re-unification” in 2014? I can’t recall anyone from the mainstream Porky-Pies-Network using the term “annexation”.

                But my comment is primarily aimed at Paul and others who are fond of using “Crimea’s annexation” meme. I sincerely want for them to be internally consistent and honest.

                Otherwise I reserve my right for smug gloating for a “Gotcha!” moment the second I see such discrepancy in what they say/write and what they preach.

                • marknesop says:

                  Yes, that’s quite correct, although it was referred to as a “reunification”. By George, I think you’ve hit upon the perfect example!! They were once one country; by a political process, they became one country again. Either both fit the definition of “reunification”, or neither does and both were actually annexations.

                  I am grateful for the topic being introduced, because I feel much better prepared to defend my position on the subject for it. I am satisfied the reunification of Crimea meets the definition of an annexation in its most benign description, but examples of such annexations abound.

                • Lyttenburgh says:

                  Another thing that should be also described – do this “sparated [parts of] states” have some sort of “expiration date”? When it’s time to say “Oh, it happened soooo long ago! This territory was part of this and not that country for such a long period, that your claims don’t stand!”.

                  For all those saying something along these lines in connection with RF and Crimea i have only one thing to say:

                  ISRAEL.

          • Patient Observer says:

            Not knowing the nuances of the situation, I suspect that Crimea may have essentially left Ukraine and joined the Russian Federation. Hence, it was not “incorporated” at all but rather took proactive steps to exit Ukraine and join the RF. The RF simply acceded to their wishes. So, by that description, annexation is an incorrect term.

            • Lyttenburgh says:

              As I wrote in my comment in Paul’s blog here, annexation (as internationally recognized political term) is:

              “the forcible unilateral incorporation of the entire State or just the part of it’s territory into another State.”

              Which cannot be applied to Crimea and Crimean referendum, simply because it was not:

              a) A forcible
              b) An unilateral

              incorporation within Russian territory. Time and again we had aptly examples of that, yes, Crimeans wanted to be part of Russia and still want that (e.g. “Electro-zrada”, Autumn-Winter 2015).

              • marknesop says:

                There seem to be various similarly-worded definitions, and indeed it is only the “forcibly” to which I object.

                • shargash says:

                  The formal definition of annexation is politically neutral, but it carries a strong connotation of force or illegality in common usage. I prefer the term “accession.” The difference is in who is the actor. Russia annexed the Krimea. Krimea acceded to Russia. I think the latter phrase is more accurate, and it does not carry the negative connotations of the former.

                • marknesop says:

                  I completely agree.

            • marknesop says:

              No, I’m satisfied it is the correct term, by the book definition. When somebody flecks me with spittle in future, shouting, “Putin annexed the Crimea!!!” I will just reply, “Yes, he did. And what of it? Do you know what annexation means?” and then go on calmly to point out it is only media stroking that makes it a synonym for “stole”. Khrushchev only gave it to Ukraine in the first place because he felt sorry for them that they did not have any nice beaches.

              Nobody can reasonably dispute that a solid majority of Crimeans wanted to leave Ukraine, and had in fact tried to do so before now, so that the rulers in Kiev had to pull all manner of political stunts to prevent it. Nobody reasonable, likewise, can argue they were frog-marched back to Russia at the point of a bayonet and forced to rejoin the Russian Federation. If there really was anything illegal about it, there would have been petitions amen to the international courts to order Russia to give it back. Even Kiev knows better.

              Speaking of double standards, I noticed in today’s paper that Canada is going ahead with its arms deal, for armored vehicles, with Saudi Arabia despite international condemnation of its public executions, including a Shiite cleric. Naturally, it is the biggest arms contract in our history, and that’d be a lot of money the government has likely already spent a hundred times in their heads. But I just thought I would point out the moral equivalency with the Mistral deal, and how the U.S. State Department phoned Hollande every day until he crumbled. Don’t hear a word out of them now, do you?

              • Moscow Exile says:

                The Crimea was not “given” to an autonomous state known as the Ukraine (Україна) in 1954, it was “given” or “transferred” for administrative purposes and under questionable legality to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic by the Soviet Union, which Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic was part of that Union: the “giving” of the Crimea to “the Ukraine” was a change of administration within an administrative body.

                In 1991 the UkSSR became independent of the USSR, as did the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, commonly known as “Russia”, and other former federal states of the USSR.

                Above, the RSFSR after 1954: The Crimea is shown as part of the UkSSR.

                Many forget about or do not understand the reality of the situation in 1991, namely that Russia itself declared its independence from the USSR together with other former member states of the USSR.

                What most Westerners forget or do not understand or even refuse to accept is that the present day Russian Federation or “Russia” is not a rump USSR, which behemoth the other Soviet Republics gladly ditched, and which still strives to achieve its former might and majesty and to gather in its errant former subject republics.

                The USSR is dead and buried, as are the administrations of its former republics. However, the various administrations of that territory of the former Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, which territory is now an independent republic known as “Ukraina” in Ukrainian, continued to administer, possess, own or what you will the Crimean peninsula until 2014 because they considered it — and, indeed, still do so — part of the “historic” so-called “Kievan Rus” that Svidomites fantasize over, refusing to accept that the territory of their Ukrainian republic was created and delineated by the hateful “Soviet Regime” and that they had received the “right” to administer the Crimea off that self-same Moskal “tyranny”.

                The Crimea and what is now the Black Sea shore and hinterland of the Ukraine was, in the last quarter of the 18th century, most definitely annexed at the expense of the Ottoman Empire, in the full military sense of the word, by the Russian Imperial Army and Navy — the latter organization with the help of a former British colonial subject and traitor, pirate and so-called father of the United States Navy, a certain John Paul Jones, who, having become unemployed in the United States, had sought and gained employment in the Russian Empire — after which annexation and after the newly annexed territory having been named Novorossiya, former subject Christian peoples of the Ottoman Empire were encouraged by the Russian imperial government to settle in that newly released from Ottoman rule territory.

                These immigrant peoples consisted of, amongst others, Serbs, Greeks, Bulgarians and Rumanians. And, of course, at the same time Russian imperial subjects were encouraged to migrate there from the the Russian empire; from the the north-east and east, from what is now the Russian Federation; and from the north, from what is now the Ukraine.

                And those who migrated there in the 1780s from what is now known as “the Ukraine” would have spoken an East Slav dialect similar to but different from that East Slav dialect spoken by the Slavs who migrated from the East and North-East. However, both dialects would have been mutually ineligible.

                And very many of those “Ukrainians” that migrated to Novorossiya at that time would most certainly have done so in order to escape Polish-Lithuanian subjugation in those territories that lie west of the Dnieper and which were then the last remnant of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth that existed before the third and final partition of “Poland” by the Russian and Austrian Empires and the Kingdom of Prussia.

                • marknesop says:

                  An excellent explanation; thanks for it.

                • Moscow Exile says:

                  In 1991 the UkSSR became independent of the USSR, as did the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, commonly known as “Russia”, and other former federal states of the USSR.

                  As a matter of fact, that above sentence of mine is wrong. The Soviet Republics were not federal states within the Soviet Union as are the states of the USA within the Union that is the United States of America, but was union of multiple subnational Soviet republics within the Soviet Union. The subnational subject states within the RSFSR, such as Tatarstan for example, were not federal states either, but federative ones.

                  The difference between federative and federal?

                  As adjectives the difference between federal and federative is that federal is pertaining to a league or treaty; derived from an agreement or covenant between parties, especially between nations while federative is uniting in a league; forming a confederacy; federal.

                  So the sentence I wrongly wrote previously and have repeated in italics above, should really read:

                  In 1991 the UkSSR became independent of the USSR, as did the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, commonly known as “Russia”, and other former subject subnational republics of the USSR.

                • yalensis says:

                  Yes, exactly, it was a purely administrative transfer!
                  And I can’t believe that I am defending Khrushchev, but believe it or not, there were actually rational reasons to have Crimea administered by the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic bureaucracy. And I honest don’t believe that it was a dark conspiracy, or that Khrushchev was a closet Ukrainian nationalist.

                  Think about it for a second: If your company undertook a big re-org and decided that the I.T. department should henceforth report to the CFO rather than the CEO (or vice versa), you might disagree with the decision, and it might even be a stupid decision, but bottom line is, somebody thinks this is a good idea and will produce more efficiency, and there is not necessarily anything nefarious going on.

                  And as events have shown, there WAS a logical reason, in fact several logical reasons, for Ukrainian rather than Russian SOVIET government to administer Crimea, most notably the network of gas pipelines, electrcity, water, other infrastructure, etc.
                  Makes economic sense, actually, since Crimea is connected by land to Ukraine, but only by water to Russia.

                  Of course, once Ukraine became independent, then Russia should have NEVER agreed to leave Crimea under Ukraine. That was HUGE mistake that was eventually rectified.
                  But, again, in Khruchshev’s time it was a different scenario.
                  Again, can’t believe I’m defending Khrushchev, but there you have it.

                • Cortes says:

                  Mutually intelligible (end of penultimate paragraph), I hope.

                • Moscow Exile says:

                  Cortes: “Mutually intelligible (end of penultimate paragraph), I hope” – refers to this:

                  .”However, both dialects would have been mutually ineligible”.

                  Yes, absolutely correct!

                  Why on earth I wrote “ineligible” I just cannot imagine.

                  I reckon I must have made a typo when writing “intelligible”, the auto correct underlined it and I allowed the typo to be corrected, but autocorrect corrected the typo to “inelegible” because that word was closer to the typo that I had written than “intelligible”.

                  Well, that’s my excuse and I’m sticking to it.

                  Either that, or I am becoming dyspeptic.

                  😦

              • Moscow Exile says:

                Nobody reasonable, likewise, can argue they were frog-marched back to Russia at the point of a bayonet and forced to rejoin the Russian Federation.

                Dave said that’s what happened.

                He said it in the House of Commons.

                He can’t have been lying.

                Dave knows what he’s talking about, you know. He went to Oxford, after all.

                • marknesop says:

                  My Dad had a Morris Oxford, when I was a child. Does that count?

                • Moscow Exile says:

                  I’m afraid it doesn’t count, old boy.

                  Sorry to have to tell you this old bean, but Morris cars were made in Cowley, a very proletarian suburb of that City of Dreaming Spires where posh-git Call-Me-Dave studied in between arsing around with the Bullingdon Boys and sticking his knob in a dead pig’s mouth.

                  Put it this way, old chap, former American stand-up comedian, social critic, satirist, and musician Bill Hicks stated that he had found the “Alabama of Britain” whilst attending a radio interview in Cowley.


                  Pig-fancier Dave: You can’t take the Bull out of a Bullingdon Boy!

                • marknesop says:

                  I am crushed that my time in the passenger’s seat of a Morris Oxford, gazing worshipfully at my father (whom I thought drove just like Steve McQueen) does not equate to an Oxford education. I guess I shall just have to believe whatever Dave says from now on, him being so much smarter than wot I am, like.

          • kirill says:

            No it is not accurate and you only discredit yourself by using it. I dare you to come up with a single example similar to Crimea where it is termed annexation. If you insist on using this NATO propaganda term, but accurately, then it was Ukraine that annexed the *autonomous republic* of Crimea in 1991. That was done against the will of Crimeans. Ukraine had no legal claim in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the fact that a collection NATO states and other irrelevant 3rd parties “recognized” it as part of Ukraine does not make it legal. The ICJ ruling on Kosovo backs up my point.

            • marknesop says:

              Well, the dictionary says what it says. The definitions provided for “annexation” which do not include any mention of force or hard coercion are relatively harmless, as that is pretty much what Russia did do – incorporated Crimea into the Russian Federation, at its written request.

              But that’s a very good point – by that definition, Ukraine also annexed Crimea first. It incorporated it into the Ukrainian state.

          • marknesop says:

            Yes, and they are. The problem with it is that the definition makes no allowances for said annexation being otherwise than an act of geopolitical looting and thievery, which it was not. But that is the way it is portrayed. However, thanks for pointing that out, because I think I will stop arguing that it was not an annexation, and change my responses to, “So what? An annexation means ‘to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a state.’ That can be done with the eager willingness of the annexed region, and so it demonstrably was. Stop trying to make it sound all booga-booga and scary.”

            • Lyttenburgh says:

              English has its fair share of words which are very… dicey to use, and then pretend that “I was actually using another meaning of that word!”.

              People are welcome to use such words as “punk”, “faggot” and “dyke” in conversation and then reap what they sow.

              • Jen says:

                Lyttenburgh: My two cents’ worth to this discussion is not to trust dictionaries either. My impression of the Oxford Dictionary (concise version) is that it’s just not as good as it used to be and definitions given seem much flatter and more one-dimensional. Good dictionaries should, where possible, give not just the academic definition but also show how the word is used in most contexts so that as much of the implied meanings behind the definition can be shown.

                • marknesop says:

                  Precisely. Does “annexed” have a negative connotation, or not? If it does not, I’m happy to use it. If it does, there were many, many geopolitical re-orderings previous to Crimea’s reunification which fit the definition.

              • Jen says:

                A couple of interesting definitions of “annexation” and “annex” at these links:
                http://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/annexation

                “If you’re a big powerful country and you want to take over a smaller country, or a piece of it, you can simply occupy it with your army, a process known as annexation.
                One of history’s most famous examples of annexation was the German occupation of parts of Czechoslovakia in 1938, which became one of the causes of World War II. Although the most common use of annexation is in the sense of a political or military takeover of territory, it can also refer to less major acts of acquisition. If you manage to steal your colleague’s much-coveted corner office at work, that too is an annexation.”

                http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/annex
                Full Definition of annex [transitive verb]
                1: to attach as a quality, consequence, or condition
                2 [archaic] : to join together materially : unite
                3: to add to something earlier, larger, or more important
                4: to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a state
                5: to obtain or take for oneself

                Oops, did I just upstage Paul’s earlier comment?

          • yalensis says:

            Why not just use the German word “Anschluss” ?

            • marknesop says:

              Many western sources frequently, and stridently, do.

              • Moscow Exile says:

                Because amongst non-German speakers Anschluss is now a loaded term that has sinister overtones as it was the Nazi propaganda term used to refer to the annexation of the Sudetenland and the referendum of the Sudetendeutsche for said Anschluss was “fixed”.

                But was it?

                I am quite sure that the Sudetenland Germans were more than willing to be incorporated into Greater Germany, that they did not wish to be citizens of the created in 1919 at Versailles Republic of Czechoslovakia. And I’m pretty sure that in many cases the Czechs came down heavy on those Sudeten Germans who were agitating for secession of the Sudetenland.

                Yes, many of these agitators were Nazi party members or sympathizers, but did that make their claim for unification with Germany less valid?

                As I often say: Hitler doubtless would have asserted that 2+2=4. Does the fact that Hitler would have made such an assertion automatically invalidate it?

                By the way, in context, according to Duden Rechtschreibung, the German noun Anschluss also means:

                1. a connection to a network
                2. a telephone connection
                3. a transport connection
                4. subsequent connections
                5. human connection, contact, acquaintances
                6. connection (to the front end — as in radio, computers)
                7. a first score, as in football
                8. an affiliation, a political association

                Scheiße! Ich habe den Anschluss verpasst means: Shit! I’ve missed the connection.

          • Lyttenburgh says:

            [handshakes ME for such full and thorough answer]

            One tid-bit that I’ve learned only recently here.

            1) During the so-called “Crimean transfer” of 1954 Sevastopol, even according to already crappy documents confirming Crimea’s transfer from the RSFSR to UkrSSR jurisdiction was not mentioned at all. Which makes this a 1954 annexation of the Republican City of Sevastopol by the UkrSSR.

            2) In January 20, 1991, Crimea had a referendum on “Recreation of Autonomous Crimean SSR as the subject of the USSR and as member of the Union treaty“. 81,3% of Crimea’s citizen’s participated in the referendum and 93,26% voted in favor of that motion. UkrSSR recognized the legality of the referendum.

            3) Nonetheless, just 12 Feb, 1991, Verkhivniy Soviet of the UkrSSR passed a low of re-creation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea… as a subject of the UkrSSR. This was a clear example of Crimea’s annexation.

            4) After the August Putch of 1991, on 24 Aug, 1991 the extraordinary session of the Verkhovniy Soviet of the UkrSSR adopted and “Act on proclaiming the independence of Ukraine”. The legality of such act must’d been verified at the republic-wide referendum to be held at 1 Dec, 1991, but… under the current at that time law “On the issue related to the exit of a Soviet republic from the USSR”, Article 3: “In the Soviet Republic which has within it autonomous republics, autonomous oblasts and autonomous regions, the referendum is conducted separately for each autonomy. For the peoples of the autonomous republics and autonomous entities retain the right to decide independently the question of staying in the USSR or in the seceding republic, as well as to raise the question of the legal status of their state. “.

            Even if we are to ignore the very first annexation of Crimea by the UkrSSR, which deprived it from its Union Status, there MUST have been an independnet referendum according the this law. Which was ignored by the UkrSSR – again. Which marks Crimea’s Second Annexation by the Ukraine.

            5) Third annexation of Crimea, which proclaimed its independence in 5 May, 1992, was at the hands of the brand new “Niezalezhnaya Ukrajina”. May 6, 1992, the Supreme Council of Crimea adopts Constitution of Crimean Republic. Supreme Council of Ukraine deemed such actions (oh, irony!) as “unconstitutional” and canceled them as well as a referendum planned on 2 August.

            6) Despite that, Crimea has been still fighting for its independence – using peaceful means exclusively, even when faced with the “trains of friendship” full of UNA-UNSO thugs. On 4 Feb 1994 Crimea elects its first and only president – Yuriy Alexandrovich Meshkov. The Supreme Council of Republic decides to hold a referendum on June 25, 1995, to decide the whether to resume the implementation of Crimea’s constitution of 1992 cancelled by Kiev unilaterally.

            7) When pro-independence rallies in Sevastopol hit a 200 000 mark, Kiev decided to occupy the peninsula with the National Guard units (and svidomites from UNA-UNSO). Under the pressure from Kiev referendum was canceled. Following this was the adoption of the law “On the abolition of the Constitution and some of the laws of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea”, the abolition of the post of the president of the Crimea and the renaming of the Republic of Crimea into the “Autonomous Republic of Crimea.” In November 1995, Crime was saddled with a new constitution, based on the Ukrainian law “On the delimitation of powers between Ukraine and the Crimea.” By the direct decrees of President Kuchma the authorities in Crimea became directly subordinate to Kiev. These actions of the Ukrainian authorities, according to all international legal norms, bear all signs of flagrant lawlessness and became the Third Annexation of Crimea by the Ukraine.

            • Moscow Exile says:

              I also recall when, during their annual summer NATO “Sea Breeze” naval exercises in the Black Sea, the United States tried to land US military personnel at Feodosia, the Crimea, in order to build a base there for US joint army exercises with the Yukie army on the peninsula.

              On 27 May 2006 the United States (U.S.) cargo ship “Advantage” anchored in Feodosia, bringing what Ukrainian Defense Minister Anatoliy Hrytsenko described as U.S. “technical aid”. Seamen offloaded construction materials to build barracks for Ukrainian sailors at a training range near the town of Stary Krym, not far from Feodosiya. Two days later, Feodosiya residents, mobilized by local chapters of the Party of Regions, the Nataliya Vitrenko Bloc, and the Russian Community of the Crimea, began to picket the port, displaying anti-NATO slogans written in Russian and blocking U.S. cargo from getting to its destination.

              Together with “Advantage” 200 U.S. Marine Corps reservists arrived to Feodosiya. Their mission was to take part in the Sea Breeze 2006 military exercise from 17 July. When the Marine reservists tried to reach the training facility that they were assigned to renovate, protesters surrounded their bus, rocking it and trying to smash the windows, eventually forcing the vehicle to head to a military sanatorium, where the reservists remained. Protesters reportedly harassed marine reservists if they stepped outside their military base. The marines were advised against going into nearby towns for fear of provoking noisy confrontations. On 4 June 2006 U.S. marines began leaving the Crimea. American and Ukrainian officials stated that this was because their contract was ending. Associated Press reported that no repair work had been done at the base they were assigned to renovate. On June 8, the Ukraine and United Kingdom postponed operation “Tight Knot”. On 20 July 2006 the United States cancelled “Sea Breeze”, “due to the situation in the Middle East”.

              Reportedly the group of protesters rarely consisted of more than a few hundred demonstrators. They accused NATO and the United States of seeking a foothold in the Ukraine. The Ukrainian defence ministry stated 2 June 2006 that the planned exercises were not connected with NATO — from Wiki.

              The Kiev government and the Western media said the whole protest was organized by Kremlin stooges and financed by the Empire of Evil.

              This all happened well before the present Ukraine fiasco, as were attempts by the US navy to buy property and buildings in Sevastopol, presumably for administrative purposes needed by the USN Black Sea Fleet (Sevastopol).

            • marknesop says:

              Not to mention that Khrushchev’s original and unilateral ‘gifting’ of Crimea to Ukraine was probably not even legal.

              • yalensis says:

                It wasn’t exactly “legal”, but as I commented above, it made some administrative/economic sense.

                However, Sebastopol was NEVER included in this deal, and the free city’s subsequent annexation by Ukraine was COMPLETELY AND TOTALLY illegal.
                And yes, the Americans desperately wanted Sebastopol, the Jewel of the Black Sea, for them this was what the Crimea Game is all about. And yes, the Americans started building infrastructure (mainly schools, clinics and the like) in the expectation of establishing a U.S. naval base with permanent personnel and the families stationed there.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        The reason why they could not pump their gas — their Ukrainian gas stored in a storage facility in the Crimea, Russia, was because the electrical energy supply had been cut off by the Ukraine, or persons whose criminal actions the Ukraine powers that be seem unable to curtail.

        Россия начала поставки газа в Геническ в ответ на обращение мэра города к Путину

        Russia has started deliveries of gas to Genichesk in response to an appeal from the mayor to Putin
        Genichesk in Kherson region during the first days of the new year was without gas; to solve the problem, the mayor appealed for help to Putin.

        Because of cold weather in early 2016, the gas pressure in Genichesk fell below a critical point. The pressure was not enough for local heating heating systems, resulting in about 2,000 residents being left without heat.

        The fact is that in periods of high gas consumption, Genichesk receives gas from the Crimea. This scheme continued to work after the Crimea had become a territory of the Russian Federation. However, after the Ukraine stopped deliveries to the Crimea electricity, the supply of gas in Genichesk was also interrupted.

        rossiya_nachala_postavki_gaza_v_genichesk_v_otvet_na_obraschenie_mera_goroda_k_putinu_7575.jpg

        On Monday, January 4, the press service of the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, reported that they had received a petition off the mayor of Genichesk that gas supplies be resumed in order to avert a humanitarian catastrophe. The Russian President instructed that the question of gas supplies be studied, and within a few hours, Russian Deputy Prime Minister, Dmitry Kozak, declared that gas deliveries from the Crimea to Genichesk had been resumed.

        Meanwhile, the Crimea still has problems with electricity, which have been caused by a new disruption of the electricity supply from the territory of the Ukraine. Despite the introduction of a new power bridge connecting the Crimea with mainland Russia, in many localities of the Peninsula electricity is only supplied intermittently. Especially difficult is the situation in rural areas, where in some villages only have light for 4-6 hours a day.

        The Genichesk news portal “New Visit” reports that the mayor of Genichesk, Alexander Tulupov, did not appeal to Putin. “Did I actually apply to the President of Russia?”, allegedly said Tulupov in conversation with the journalist of that publication.

        • Moscow Exile says:

          Bum link tomaap above.

          Again:

        • yalensis says:

          Yes. One must keep in mind that when the Cretins blew up the pylons which delivered electricity to Crimea, they also interrupted electricity to Kherson Oblast. An own goal. Well, Djemilev and his cronies probably just considered it “collateral damage”, since they don’t have to live with the consequences. The ordinary people of Kherson do.
          But bottom line, without electricity, pumps don’t work, and without pumps, the gas pressure fell below normal. So, as usual, regardless where the gas originated, this was a self-inflicted wound for Ukrainians.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Sehr elegant, nicht wahr?

      Only thing is, though, unlike the Yukie trollop posing above, the German woman in uniform was the real deal: SS-Hauptsturmführer Kirstin Fleischer, commandant of a King Tiger tank.

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      Don’t anyone be tempted. She may look alright now, but you can see from her face that she’s going to turn into Irina Farion before she hits 40.

    • Warren says:

      Oh I know where that photo was taken! Outside the Banderite, OUN-UIA themed restaurant called Kryyivka/Underground Bunker in Lvov/Lwow/Lviv/Leopolis/Lemberg/Banderstadt.

    • Jen says:

      Kinda looks like a Joy Division-themed bordello.

      • yalensis says:

        Nah, it’s just a cafe. Lviv attracts tourists to their Nazi and Bandera-themed restaurants and cafes. Believe it or not, a lot of bone-headed Russian tourists used to go, and thought this was pretty funny. Because it didn’t seem real, it was more like Fantasy Island.

        But that was before Maidan “Revolution”. After which, none of this was really funny any more, even to boneheads.

  6. reinaldo says:

    Blogs showing Obama, Kerry loughing their brais off with those KKK clowns of Saudi Arabia ….
    It is sad to watch leaders of a great nation sliding down a slimy tobogan like demented comedians straight to hell ….. God, am I disgusted!

  7. PaulR says:

    Russia 1-0 up after the second period in the World Junior Hockey final.

  8. Lyttenburgh says:

    Meanwhile in European Kiev, the capital of the Heart of Europe:

    Transl: “Damn, I’m sitting in my flat in fur coat! Without using the heater the temperature inside is only +10C, with the heater on +15-16C. This is unbelievable! Falks, how can I stay warm?”

    Commenters adwise her:

    – Start jumping.
    – Start burning car-tires.
    – Start getting ready for earth.
    – Drink 8 bottles of vodka.
    – Ask God – mayor Genyichesk did exactly that and now he has gas.

    And, no – this is not just one “separatist” spoiling the faaaabulous solidarity of the post-Maidan Kiev.

    “Kievans are complaining about the cold in their flats….Lyudmila said, that in her flat the temperature don’t rise above +15C”.

    In the halcyon time of my youth, my elder brothers have the foresight to teach me exactly appropriate teasing-chant? “Мёрзни-мёрзни, волчий хвост!”.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      My heart bleeds!

      Just as Karl earlier blamed every single one of the 293 million Soviet population of 1991 for their typically Russian spinelessness in allowing the Soviet Union to fold up without their being consulted, likewise I blame every single Yukie for creating the shit in which they now find themselves.

      Didn’t they think it was just great calling Russians not fit to burn and receiving ample praise for this off McCain and Nuland, and Obama and Biden and Merkel etc., etc., etc!

      And now? …

      Tough shit!

      • marknesop says:

        There’s still a lot of winter ahead. I thought (a) Ukraine could get gas cheaper off of Europe, which is why it declined further supplies of Russian gas, and (b) had been given money especially for that purpose; to buy gas. This is early days in the cold season, and if it is any indication of the Ukrainian government’s ability to guarantee reliable energy deliveries over its instinct for political piddling on Russia, I am not optimistic.

        • Lyttenburgh says:

          Mark, giving the Ukraine money with the caveat “and spend them on gas only, okay?” is like giving some lunch-money to a drug-addict and expect him to not to blow them on drugs. OTOH, the EU and IMF might be THAT stupid.

          • marknesop says:

            I think the politicians – as opposed to businessmen, politicians who have never had a real job and don’t have to worry about crashing the company by making some crazy investment – might actually believe all the twaddle they recite about the nobility of the Ukrainian struggle against the Russian oppressor-state.

      • Patient Observer says:

        I understand the 300+ million US citizens idly stood by as their democracy was eliminated:
        http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/princeton-experts-say-us-no-longer-democracy

      • Moscow Exile says:

        A balmy -10C (14F) in Kiev right now at 11:30 Moscow time, 6 January, 2016.

        In Moscow now it’s -16C (3F) and snowing.

        All together now, Yukies:

        Anyone who can’t jump up and down is a Moskal!

        That’ll keep you nice and warm!

        • Fern says:

          I have long suspected that Kiev wants a ‘Coldomor’ – as many people as possible dying of hypothermia and related conditions, all of which can be laid – for the benefit of the ‘international community’ – at Russia’s door.

  9. Lyttenburgh says:

    What can be worse than the “VICE NEWS” attempts at “hip reporting”? Only their “hip-analysis”. Remember the news piece about Japan from the previous page of comments? Well, now these sorry excuse for the journos are blowing it out of proportion:

    LICE NEWS: Here’s Why Japan and Russia Might Sign a Peace Treaty — 70 Years After the War

    “Where does that leave us today? Russian President Vladimir Putin has offered up two tiny islands in exchange for a solemn promise from Japan to shut the hell up about the Kurils already. But this is nationalist squabbling over borders, and compromise is hard to come by. So the Japanese said that the two islands (Shikotan and the Habomai rocks) would be a great first down payment, but they’d still be expecting to see the larger Kunashir and Iturup islands at a later date.

    On closer inspection, the location of the two tiny islands means that Putin’s offer may well be reasonably sincere and not absolutely crazy. Those two islands are on the Pacific side of the Kuril chain, and would still allow Russia to control access to the Sea of Okhotsk as long as it retained the two big islands, Kunashir and Iturup.”

    Oo-oh, oo-oh! I have a question, sir! Where and when did the Evil One “offered up two tiny islands” to Japan? ’cause you don’t give us any links to confirm that this offer ever happened and I, a citizen of the Northern Mordor, can’t quite recall it ever happeneing. And here you are talking about it as if it was (wait for it!) “Widely Known” ™.

    And thus, ladies and gentelmen, we have News Out of Nothing. “Western Independent Press Never Lies”.

      • Lyttenburgh says:

        Interesting. So, basically Japenese Foreign Ministry was (and still is) grasping for the straws while performing some linguistic tricks.

        Shamefur expray, Abe-san!

        Still, no indication that Putin is offering anything this time.

        • marknesop says:

          I’m confident Putin will not go further than the two smaller islands, because he knows he is on solid legal ground and that Japan clearly foreswore any claim to any of the Kurils. According to the article I referenced, the Japan-Soviet Joint Declaration of October 19th, 1956 promises the return of the two smaller islands. I have not seen the text and don’t have time to look it up right now, but I would hazard a guess that such an agreement is contingent on signing of a peace treaty between Russia and Japan – which, as we know, has never been done. Perhaps Abe is trying to get the deal sweetened in exchange for signing a peace treaty. If so, he will go home disappointed, because the business relationship between the two countries is strong despite the sanctions and signing of a peace treaty will not improve it to any significant degree. Russia does not need formal peace with Japan; it’s a nice-to-have, but demonstrably is not necessary to pursue a normal relationship.

          • Lyttenburgh says:

            Mmmmhm… What I’m trying to say here is that now, “post Crimea”, there is absolutely no way that Russian government will be offering to give away ANY part of Russian territory. Because this will set up a very dangerous precedent if nothing else.

            • yalensis says:

              Actually, I think Russian CAN give away tiny slices here and there if she wishes to.
              Just not under duress, and always in equal exchange for something else.
              Only just not important territory like Crimea, nor the jewel of the crown, such as Sebastopol. Such as can be ripped only from cold, dead hands.

              • Lyttenburgh says:

                A) Which means that Russia CAN’T give away any of its territory now, because how else will you describe sanctions by Japan and “the West” as not an attempt to put Russia under duress?

                B) Japan simply can’t (as in both “won’t” and “is incapable of”) give Russia anything worthy at the moment. Treaties are all too often not worth a paper they are written on, so who can guarantee that if we give them 2 islands now some future ultra-nationalist Japanese government wouldn’t demand the rest of Kuriles?

            • marknesop says:

              Unless there is already an existing agreement which covers the two smaller islands, contingent upon Japan signing a peace treaty. I’m just guessing, because I don’t know what that agreement says, but Putin has offered the two smaller islands before and I believe he would honour the agreement if that’s what it spells out.

        • kirill says:

          That’s Abe-sama to you. Know your place.

    • cartman says:

      The two tiniest islands next to Hokkaido have been on the table for over a decade. They are not strategically important, unless Russia wants to sell them to China.

      • Lyttenburgh says:

        “The two tiniest islands next to Hokkaido have been on the table for over a decade.”

        Define “were on the table”. Did Putin, or Russian Foreign ministry had ever exactly said in any of their official offers to Japan to return these 2 islands? Well, I can believe this be true for Yeltsin’s time, or even for Putin’s first term, But now? Noooooope!

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      http://www.donotlink.com/

      Recommend using this when compelled to link to Vicenews and the like.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      What’s wrong with the following reasoning:

      We won.

      You lost.

      Tough teddy!

  10. marknesop says:

    Russian military aircraft engines have long been a marvel, with the country formerly guarding its technology jealously against copying because it employed word-beating innovation. Domestic aircraft engines, sadly, did not achieve that standard, and a Russian-built airliner would have to rely on Pratt & Whitney or Rolls-Royce engines in order to acghieve the desired power, range and sustainability.

    Until now, perhaps.

    The new PD-14 seems to have impressed the Evil Dictator as satisfactory to equip a future family of medium and long-haul passenger aircraft. And when he thinks a product is shit, he usually says so.

    On a similar note, Russia appears to have identified a developer/manufacturer for a new heavy-lift helicopter engine, a contract which would previously have gone to Ukraine. So cross off another market which will likely never come back even if things return to ‘normal’. Russia claims the new helicopter, to be developed with China, will concentrate on export potential.

    • Patient Observer says:

      If Russia can produce rocket engines far superior to the best that P&WR can develop, it would only be a matter for time for them to apply similar expertise to all sorts of gas turbines (not that they don’t already have world class engines in certain categories).

      • kirill says:

        The PD-14 is already a world class high bypass jet engine. It is supposed to be the basis for a whole family of engines going up to PD-18, if I recall correctly.

        I recall all the liberast and western drivel about how the Sukhoi SuperJet was never going to reach production. The MC-21 is going to fly in 2016 and it will be a big step for the Russian aerospace industry.

        • marknesop says:

          This is the first I’ve heard anything about it, and the article makes it sound like a new development. How long has it been operational?

          • Patient Observer says:

            IIRC, there was a story regrading a big development in gas turbine technology in Russia perhaps 6 months ago – some out-of-the-box thinking. The story noted that the designers were all young engineers which is good news as the meme has been that there was no new talent to replace the old Soviet-educated engineers.

            Gas turbine efficiency is strongly related to the sustainable turbine inlet temperature as well as overall compressor and turbine efficiency. Presumably, breakthroughs were made in one or both of these areas.

            There has been talk of gas turbines using constant-volume combustion which has a potential higher thermodynamic efficiency but is mechanically much more difficult than the constant-pressure combustion used in virtually every gas turbine to date. If the Russians have been able to make CV gas turbines practical, that would be even a bigger deal..

          • kirill says:

            It is still being tested. It is mounted on an IL-76 right now. I was thinking of the specs. I can’t say anything about reliability. But Russian jet engines are not that trashy.

            • Drutten says:

              Russian jet engines have never been bad or anything, quite the opposite. They pioneered a whole lot of technologies too for that matter. What they’ve been lagging behind in is noise and pollution, when that suddenly became hugely relevant not that long ago. But that’s been dealt with now, too.

              On the military side of things, design philosophies were vastly different up until the 1980’s both as far as the engines themselves go and the planes that carried them.

  11. kirill says:

    Liar maggot Roth delivers:

    • Patient Observer says:

      I would call that progress. The next step is to remove ISIS as a choice.

    • marknesop says:

      Roth seems to be…awfully fucking political, for the head of what is supposed to be a non-partisan humanitarian agency. Maybe it’s time for a post on him.

    • yalensis says:

      I don’t get it. Who is Alloush? Was he Roth’s butt monkey, or something like that?

      • Jen says:

        Zahran Alloush (Rest In Purgatory) was one of the, erm, moderate Syrian rebels.

        Moon of Alabama already had a post on those Kenneth Roth tweets.
        http://www.moonofalabama.org/2015/12/kenneth-roths-schizophrenic-positions-on-zahran-alloush.html

        • Moscow Exile says:

          Purgatory?

          According to Dante, he should probably be in Circle 8 (9th subcircle) of hell together with all the sowers of scandal and schism:

          Consistent with medieval Christian thinking, in which the Muslim world was viewed as a hostile usurper, Dante depicts both Mohammed — the founder of Islam — and his cousin and son-in-law Ali as sowers of religious divisiveness … Dante creates a vicious composite portrait of the two holy men, with Mohammed’s body split from groin to chin and Ali’s face cleft from top to bottom.

          According to tradition, the prophet Mohammed founded Islam in the early seventh century C.E. at Mecca. Ali married Mohammed’s daughter, Fatima, but a dispute over Ali’s succession to the caliphate led, after his assassination in 661, to a division among Muslims into Sunni and Shi’ite.

          See: Circle 8, subcircles 7-10, cantos 24-30

          The first sinner Dante sees has literally been eviscerated, his body slit down the middle so we can see all his gooey insides. And to make it worse, the sinner reaches up with his hands to open his chest wide for Dante to see.

          This sinner introduces himself as Mohammed. He points out a fellow sinner, whose face is chopped in half. That’s Ali, the man responsible for splitting the Muslims up into the rival factions of the Sunnis and Shiites.

          So, says Mohammed, we’re all sowers of dissension here (read: we make brothers go for each others’ throats) so we’re punished by being cut in half.

          So the sinners walk in circles until they reach a point where a big bad demon with a sword slashes them in half, then they keep walking and dripping gore everywhere, eventually heal, then come back to be hacked again.

          But then Mohammed asks who Dante is that he’s allowed not to have his guts hanging out his body.


          After Gustav Doré

          Virgil answers that Dante is still alive, is on an educational field trip sanctioned by God, is getting a tour of Hell.

          Apparently it’s a big deal to the sinners because all their ears perk up suddenly and a hundred pairs of eyes scrutinize Dante.

          See: The sowers of scandal and schism: summary

          Waes hael!

          🙂

      • marknesop says:

        Alloush is the terrorist leader who was just killed in what was originally thought to be a Russian airstrike, but which I now see is claimed by Syrian government forces. Whatever the case, he was the CEO of Jaiysh al-Islam, an al Qaeda offshoot, and the western media is not struggling tortuously with describing him as a “prominent rebel commander” but not painting his death as a positive development. Because, to them, it’s not. Roth is just doing his bit to help the western narrative, suggesting that yeah, he might have been a bad egg, but it was Assad who first radicalized and then enabled him in the first place.

        • yalensis says:

          ACTION AND JETS :
          Gee, Officer Krupke, we’re very upset;
          We never had the love that ev’ry child oughta get.
          We ain’t no delinquents,
          We’re misunderstood.
          Deep down inside us there is good!

          ACTION :
          There is good!

          ALL:
          There is good, there is good,
          There is untapped good!
          Like inside, the worst of us is good!

          SNOWBOY” That’s a touchin’ good story.

          ACTION” Lemme tell it to the world!

          SNOWBOY: Just tell it to the judge.

      • astabada says:

        Alloush is the kind of guy who calls the Shiites “Rafidi” (a derogatory term meaning those who refuse) and the Iranians (and their true or alleged supporters) “Majous” (=Magi).

        He’s the kind of guy that orders Alawite (I meant, Rafidi) women to be caged on rooftops as human shields against Russian bombers.

        He’s the kind of guy that calls on the extermination of the Rafidi (as in men, women and children).

        He was a feminist, a progressive, a democrat, a moderate rebel.

        • yalensis says:

          DIESEL: In the opinion of this court, this child is depraved on account he ain’t had a normal home.

          ACTION: Hey, I’m depraved on account I’m deprived.

          DIESEL: So take him to a headshrinker.

          • marknesop says:

            Don Henley: “You drag it around like a ball and chain
            You wallow in the guilt; you wallow in the pain
            You wave it like a flag, you wear it like a crown
            Got your mind in the gutter, bringin’ everybody down
            Complain about the present and blame it on the past
            I’d like to find your inner child and kick its little ass”

  12. PaulR says:

    Ukraine accuses Russia of using malware to shut down electric power in Ivano-Frankovsk region. Empty Wheel blog wonders why this story got more attention in Western media than Ukrainians blowing up power lines to Crimea: https://www.emptywheel.net/2016/01/05/power-imbalances-in-ukraine/

    • kirill says:

      BS for technical illiterates. Nobody needs to connect powerplant systems to the internet. If they do, then they invite hacking. The question should be not why hackers did such and such, but why the plant managers are such retards that they would expose critical infrastructure to such risk. These idiots don’t even know that any high value secure site needs a hardware access key generator (portable card or key which streams continuously changing numbers) to even connect to the firewall. They probably have Windows PCs directly attached to the internet with just the software firewall. And they haven’t properly separated their LAN systems from the internet.

      • marknesop says:

        Good point. They could not have connected directly to the systems, and it is likely a cover for some municipal government incompetence or failure. The most they could have done is hacked into company administrative records, perhaps payroll (ha, ha – as if that would be very exciting now). But they would not have been able to power systems up and down.

    • marknesop says:

      I thought Ukraine was some kind of Nirvana for highly-skilled programmers and software engineers. And they lost an entire municipality to malware?

  13. Warren says:

    Ten Reasons Why I’m Optimistic About Ukraine’s Economy in 2016

    BY ANDERS ÅSLUND

    The outlook for the Ukrainian economy in 2016 is positive. Many important reforms were carried out in 2015. The necessary exchange rate adjustment has occurred and most required bank closures have taken place. The parliament has adopted tax changes and a decent budget for 2016. The debt restructuring deal has postponed foreign debt service. The current account is in approximate balance. Now is the time to move forward with more structural reforms.

    http://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/new-atlanticist/ten-reasons-why-i-m-optimistic-about-ukraine-s-economy-in-2016?utm_content=buffer0dd27&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

    • yalensis says:

      ÅSLUND: “And more good news, the human population has also declined to a more manageable level….”

    • Lyttenburgh says:

      I read “BANDERS ÅSLUND” 🙂

      “Coincidence? I don’t think so!” (c)

    • marknesop says:

      Not one important reform was carried out in 2015. It is farcical to describe all the panicky actions Ukraine took as a result of finding itself in a default situation as “reforms”. If Yats cut off his own head with a chainsaw, Aslund would find a way to describe it as not only deliberate, but shrewd and beneficial to the state. I suppose it would be the latter, so that’s probably not the best example.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      And they’re skint.

  14. Warren says:

    Ukrainians attempt to sabotage Nord Stream II, by filing a complaint. Watch how the Anglosphere Atlanticist propaganda media fails to mention that it was Naftogaz that originally filed the complaint and the European Community merely passed on the complaint to the European Commission. Anglosphere Atlanticist propaganda media will spin and misrepresent the story to appear as if the European Commission has launched anti-monopoly case against Nord Stream by itself with no Ukrainian involvement.

    05 Jan 2016 Secretariat transfers complaint against Nord Stream 2 project to European Commission

    Today, the Energy Community Secretariat passed on to the European Commission a complaint submitted by the Ukrainian National Joint Stock Company Naftogaz of Ukraine under Article 90 of the Energy Community Treaty. The complaint concerns the alleged violation of Energy Community law by the so-called ‘Nord Stream 2’ pipeline project. The complaint was transferred on the basis of Procedural Act No 2008/01/MC-EnC of the Energy Community Ministerial Council on the Rules of Procedure for Dispute Settlement under the Treaty, as amended. This provision requires cases concerning the alleged failure of EU Member States with EU legislation to be dealt with by the European Commission.

    https://www.energy-community.org/portal/page/portal/ENC_HOME/NEWS/News_Details?p_new_id=12082

    Energy Community Treaty

    Article 90
    1. Failure by a Party to comply with a Treaty obligation or to implement a Decision addressed to it within the required period may be brought to the attention of the Ministerial Council by a reasoned request of any Party, the Secretariat or the Regulatory Board. Private bodies may approach the Secretariat with complaints.

    2. The Party concerned may make observations in response to the request or complaint.

    https://www.energy-community.org/portal/page/portal/ENC_HOME/ENERGY_COMMUNITY/Legal/Treaty

    • kirill says:

      As I keep saying, Russia needs to outline the Nord Stream 2 plans in clear terms. No pipeline Russian gas will flow through Banderastan as of 2017. Period. The EU can decide what it wants in the winter of 2016/17. Russia must make sure that everyone on the planet hears this message so that the sick lying fucks in NATO don’t hoodwink them that it was some sort of “cut off blackmail”.

      • People constantly demand the Russian government to be tough and uncompromising, and these people are constantly disappointed.

        It’s just not going to happen.

        • btw, did Russia get a payment for it’s gas deliveries to Kherson from Crimea, or was it a pure gesture of goodwill?

        • marknesop says:

          Has Russia not made it clear enough for you that Ukraine will no longer be used as a transit country for Russian gas once the current contract expires? Because I can direct you to references. Do you believe they are just kidding, or that they will cave in to pressure and continue using Ukraine to transit European gas supplies? Because I don’t.

        • Patient Observer says:

          Like in Syria?

        • Lyttenburgh says:

          Wrong – you, Karl, is constantly demanding from the Russian government to be tough. Why? Why are you doing this? You are not Russian! If you want to become one – emigrate. Or start a separatist movement to re-unite Finland with Russia 😉

          Russia has nothing to prove to some loud-mouths within and beyond If the US of A must always prove their “allies and rivals” that they are not a collossus on a clay feet – let them!

          • yalensis says:

            There’s an idea!
            Karl can organize and lead the Karelian Peoples Republic (KPR) whose demand is to be “annexed” by Russia. KPR commandos will don their cross-country skis, rifles in hand, and force regular Finnish army into cauldrons.
            Karl will be a hero!

          • Patient Observer says:

            His main goal is to criticize Russia with strong implications that they have sub-human DNA. Russians are doomed to a hellish existence as the West cruises along in the endless summer.

  15. Warren says:

  16. Warren says:

    North Korea announces hydrogen bomb test

    North Korea says it has successfully tested a hydrogen bomb amid reports of a tremor near the main nuclear test site.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-35240012

    • Moscow Exile says:

      I helped a neighbour open the door to our house section entrance yesterday. He was in a similar condition and had returned from the supermarket with a bag of goodies, namely vodka, salted gherkins, herring and vodka. He was too pissed to open the door, and after I had opened it for him, he fell over trying to pick up his supermarket plastic bag that he had put on the floor. So I picked him up and his bag as well, then led him to his flat on the ground floor. That’s how I know what was inside of his bag. He thanked me most gratefully for the help that I had given him and invited me in to join him in his drinking session.I declined gracefully, whereupon he wished me a happy New Year.

      Russia is doomed, I tell you!!!!

      🙂

      • marknesop says:

        I’m afraid the Missus, who is usually a staunch supporter of Russia but fancies herself a realist as well – so that she is occasionally critical of it – takes a very dim view of it this year. Her reasoning is that the economy is not so solid that the government can afford to let the entire workforce bunk off for two weeks of lost production. Had she not been fated to be my plaything, she probably would have been a floor supervisor, or perhaps a prison guard. Anyway, I tried to counter with the argument that it is traditional, and once you start ceding perks for the common good there is no end to it; you find yourself working twice as much for the same pay, and your extra vacation will never come back even when times improve. In a way it’s like the same argument that insists we all have to give up a little of our personal freedom from surveillance so that we can have more security. Once security is theoretically established, do they ever unplug you and give you your freedom back?

        Anyway, she kicked my legs right out from under me by hotly contending it is not ‘traditional’ and only started a decade or so ago. So what’s the skinny on that?

        • Moscow Exile says:

          She’s right! This extended holiday is one of Boris the Drunk’s wizard wheezes. As I have said earlier, they were thinking of celebrating the Western Christmas holiday, namely 25th December and all that goes with it so as to “synchronize” with the West — they have a fixation on that Santa Claus bloke, came in the same package as McDonalds, Starbucks, Dunkin’ Donuts, pole-dancing etc.: they call him the “Western Dyed Moroz” and I tell them that that now contracted to the Coca-Cola creep is a Dutch/New Amsterdam tradition, that he is not “Santa Claus” in France, Germany etc, but to no avail — but in the end they decided to extend the New Year holiday forwards so as to include the Russian Orthodox Christmas on January 7.

          In the mid-’80s, when last I earned my bread by the sweat of my brow in Merry England, I used to finish my last shift on Christmas Eve, have Christmas Day and Boxing Day off, and returned to work on the 27th of December. I say I had Boxing Day off, but I played rugby on Boxing Day (local grudge match) every year. Furthermore, New Year’s Day only became a holiday in England after I had reached adulthood: it was a holiday in Scotland though.

          • Moscow Exile says:

            Which reminds me: today is Christmas Eve!

            I’ve not long been back from the centre, from the Central Children’s Store next to the Lubyanka, where Natalya Vladimirovna and I went to buy Christmas presents for my mixed-race progeny, who have reverted to Russian ethnicity after having received Christmas presents on Christmas Day, 25 December.

            So we trudged to our local metro station in the snow that has been falling all day and, having bought the presents, back again. It’s that light stuff that you don’t notice until you’re outside and which steadily builds up. It’s been snowing like that for almost all the past 24 hours and it will be -17C (1.4F) tonight.

            Christmas comes but twice a year in my home!

            So once again …

          • marknesop says:

            That said, then, is she right in her estimation that the country cannot afford to take nearly a fortnight off work when the economy is so shaky?

            • Moscow Exile says:

              I think not, for the Central Children’s Store that my wife and I visited at about 6 p.m. yesterday evening (it is now 00:05, 7 January), was packed to the rafters.

              We struggled in as folk were struggling out and 2 hours later, we struggled out as shoppers were still struggling in.

              The store has everything for children: books, clothes, footwear and toys, toys, toys….

              When going through the clothing department, I mentioned to my wife that a kreakl blogger had recently posted a photograph of empty store shelves in Russia with a sign reading: “No Footwear”, which photo must have been taken in the late ’80s/early ’90s.

              “But that’s not true!” she said.”There is no shortage of clothes and footwear. Why do they do this?” she aked.

              “Because they are liars who hate their own county”, I replied.

              “But why???” she asked again.

              Later, I told my elder daughter about the blog showing beaver sausage. She said: “So what! What business is it of theirs if some people want to eat beaver?”

              I told her that these same critics say that Russians are so hungry that they now eat hedgehogs.

              “Why do they say such things?” she cried out. “Why???”

  17. Warren says:

    Russian-German nur geschäft, or strategy for bypassing sanctions

    Throughout ongoing discussions over whether to extend EU sanctions against the Russian Federation, many people wonder whether the sanctions are actually effective.

    http://linkis.com/euromaidanpress.com/87BUR

    • marknesop says:

      What it boils down to is that Ukraine’s obnoxious behaviour and constant “MeMeMe” clamoring are beginning to have an effect, and it is not the one they were looking for. European businesses are looking at the cost-effectiveness of bringing an impoverished Ukraine which expects everything done for it into the fold, in exchange for alienating a wealthy Russia. There is no percentage in it for business, while there is considerable risk, and business is traditionally risk-averse. All this could have been seen coming a long time back, but European arm-twisters foresaw that Russia would have no choice but to cooperate in the stabilizing and rebuilding of Ukraine.

  18. Warren says:

    • marknesop says:

      “Sladkov’s account of previous fighting in east Ukraine suggested that DPR volunteers had repelled Kiev forces single-handedly. But there is now clear evidence that Russian regular forces played a decisive role in the hostilities.

      Moreover, at his annual press conference on 17 December, President Vladimir Putin told journalists: “We never said there were not people there who also carried out certain tasks including in the military sphere.”

      The studio discussion that accompanied Sladkov’s film saw a revival of the extreme anti-Ukrainian rhetoric that had dominated Russian state TV’s news and current affairs coverage during 2014 and much of 2015.”

      Time for a little honesty from the Westminster-controlled BBC. Is there really “clear evidence that Russian regular forces played a decisive role in the hostilities?” ‘Cause I’d like to see some. Show me where anything in Putin’s statement offers clear evidence that he is talking about regular forces of the Russian Federation – in fact, he has specifically said there were not. ““But that doesn’t mean there are regular Russian forces there. Feel the difference,” he added.”

      “…a revival of the extreme anti-Ukrainian rhetoric that had dominated Russian state TV’s news and current affairs coverage during 2014 and much of 2015.” Fuck off, BBC. And when you get there, fuck off some more. Russia regularly listens patiently to Ukraine’s self-centered squalling and cuts them deals on gas prices at least up to the point where they demand free gas, and has given them coal when the Ukrainian government’s breathtaking incompetence gets them into another situation that has “Whoops! I stepped on my dick” written all over it in a multilingual format. What has England done for Ukraine? Sweet fuck-all, is what. Maudlin rhetoric about ‘the brave, heartbreaking struggle’ does not put bread on the table, you inbred buck-toothed gits, and let us not forget the part British politicians played in leading Ukraine’s hardcore nationalist aspirants down the garden path with saccharine tales of European streets paved with gold – you didn’t hear any talk of austerity or reforms during the glorious Maidan. No, it was all, like, “Ukraine has made the European choice; welcome, Salo-brother” and bla-bla-bla like that. How many reporters does the BBC have inside East Ukraine? ‘War reporting’ for the BBC regularly comes from Kiev and Moscow, and Roland Oliphant and Shaun Walker plainly cannot tell an armoured column from as many shopping trolleys.

  19. Warren says:

  20. Jeremn says:

    Happy New Year everyone! I hope it will be a good one for you all.

    It hasn’t started so well for Eliot Higgins, aka Brown Moses. He has been caught out not knowing the difference between a fragmentation bomb and cluster munitions:

    You’d have thought he would know. He is an expert, after all.

    • marknesop says:

      Happy New Year, Jeremn!! There’s never any use in arguing with Higgins – he merely claims victory, says anyone who doesn’t agree with him is dumb, and changes the subject. He has his own little flock of followers, just like the U.S. state Department does, and the resemblance does not end there.

  21. About the World Junior Hockey final from yesterday. I think Finland was a little more skilled team, but Russia played a disciplined style of hockey and would have been as deserving a champion as Finland. And I have to admit that the referees did favor a Finland a bit and I don’t really blame that one Russian player (Kamenev) for getting angry with the refs in the third period. Those IIHF referees have screwed Russia a few times before as well. And Finland being a home team played a part in it as well.

    One thing that the Russian hockey needs to address is the fact that so many of their young players leave to play in junior leagues in Canada. They would be better served in developing in Russia instead like the best current Russian players have done. The Canadian junior leagues generally do a bad job of developing these Russian kids. Nowadays they keep leaving the country even at 16 or 17, and the youngest ones at 14.

    • marknesop says:

      We do end up with a lot of Russian players. Why do you think Canada does a bad job developing these Russian kids? Canada has won the World Junior Championship 16 out of 33 times. The next closest is Russia, which won 4 times as Russia, once as the CIS and 8 times as the Soviet Union. Admittedly, that doesn’t tell the whole story, and we didn’t do perfectly unless we won them all. But I’m curious what makes you suggest Russian players for Canada do not reach their full potential.

      Finland had a great team this year, and while home ice usually is an advantage to a motivated team, they were very skilled and deserved to win. Many Canadians feel vindicated by Finland’s victory, since they beat Canada. The Finns have won more often than any other nation except Russia and Canada.

      • “Why do you think Canada does a bad job developing these Russian kids?”

        Russian kids have been over to the three Canadian major junior hockey leagues (OHL, WHL, QMHJL) since the early 90’s. Pavel Bure’s younger brother Valeri was among the first to go there after the Soviet Union collapsed. The coach of the Central Red Army back then was the famous Viktor Tikhonov and he thought that the younger Bure was the better of the two. But the older brother, Pavel, ended up having a far better career. He became a superstar.

        Since then I believe around 200-300 Russian players have played junior hockey in Canada. None of them ended up having a great hockey career and most of them became busts. Players with lots of talent regressed there, returned back to Russia and were out of hockey in a few years.

        If you look at the current crop of the best Russians in the NHL – Datsyuk, Malkin, Ovechkin, Markov, Kuznetsov, Panarin, Tarasenko, Bobrovsky, Varlamov etc – all of them were developed in Russia and went to the NHL only after breaking through in Russia. Then you have highly touted prospects like Grigorenko and Yakupov who played in the Canadian junior system and became busts in the NHL. Yakupov was I think the 1st overall pick in the NHL Entry Draft and Grigorenko 3rd or 4th. They were supposed to be the next Ovechkin and Malkin.

        In Russia they concentrate more on developing skills at the age of 16-18 while in Canada they already play like professionals. I think the Russians generally are better off going through the whole development phase within their own system than switch to a completely different system at a young age. They can always learn the language, culture and other stuff later if they intend to come to the NHL.

        • marknesop says:

          I guess that makes sense. I wonder if we are training them the same as we do everyone else, though, who is Canadian-born? I would think so, and there must be something right with that training program if it has resulted in Canada winning nearly half the championships although it has a population to draw upon which is less than a quarter of Russia’s. Maybe some people just peak early. It would be worth studying the differences in the training programs, though.

        • Jen says:

          From Karl1haushofer’s description, it sounds as if Russians who play junior hockey in Canada are pushed into playing a style of hockey that emphasises winning and which forces them to specialise in a narrow skill set of highly technical plays and tactics at a very young age. Then when they return to Russia, they find they can’t play hockey because the system in Russia probably teaches players basic all-round skills, which need years of training that take players’ physical development and maturation into account, from which players come away with a deep knowledge of all the possible plays and strategies, which they can improvise on. This is how they can sustain long careers in their sport even after they pass their physical peak. The Western-trained players can’t cope with this and end up dropping out at an early age. They may be suffering from mental and physical burnout as well.

          • marknesop says:

            Mmm…that’s possible, but hard to imagine in view of Canada’s medal count in seniors hockey at the world championship level – Canada is second only to Russia included as a member of the Soviet Union, and Canada’s population is tiny compared just to Russia while it was miniscule compared with the Soviet Union. That’s just for gold medals, too – Canada’s overall medal count is unsurpassed.

            The Russian program might very well be superior in its holistic development of the whole player – I am perfectly willing to concede that, as I am to concede that the Russian educational system beats the western model hollow despite all the major-rated colleges and universities being in the west and mostly in the USA. But what is the objective? If it is to win championships, I can’t fault the Canadian program too much – it seems to be achieving the objective. If it is to turn out players who can play the game for longer at a mediocre level, perhaps another model would be the way to go.

            • I don’t think that the Russian program is necessarily superior to Canada’s. but it’s just more suitable for Russian players. I follow hockey quite closely and I know probably a dozen of good Russian prospects whose development took a big hit in the Canadian junior leagues. They were among the best players in their age groups in Russia, but never progressed but rather regressed in Canada. While their peers who remained in Russia had far better careers despite having less talent than the ones who went to Canada.

              There is currently a 15 year old hockey phenom named Andrei Svechnikov. He plays in Kazan and they say he is as talented as Sergei Fedorov and Evgeny Malkin. I sincerely hope he stays in Russia for at least three more seasons. His bigger brother, Evgeny Svechnikov, moved to play in Canada two seasons ago when he was 17. Evgeny was considered the best Russian 1996 born forward prospect back then.

              Evgeny played in the World Junior Championships and scored zero points in seven games. He was eventually dropped to the fourth line with very little playing time by the Russian coach. It was evident that his skills had been regressed by a lot in Canada. He was always considered to be a high scoring skill player, but here he played like an average grinder.

              Hopefully the little brother will not follow his footsteps.

          • There is a lot of truth in what you said. Good for someone who probably doesn’t follow much hockey?

            Another thing is that the style of play is completely different in Canadian junior leagues than it is in Russia. In Russia they focuse more on passing and skating while in Canada the game is more physical and they dump in the puck more.

            These kids never get to master one style of play. They become some sort of hybrids between the two styles, and don’t excel at anything.

  22. Warren says:

    • Warren says:

      Coca-Cola Crimea map move sparks Ukraine boycott calls

      Ukrainian social media users have called for a boycott of Coca-Cola after it posted a festive map of Russia that included Crimea.

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35245282

      • yalensis says:

        Google said on Tuesday that problems experienced by some users in translating terms into Russian from Ukrainian using Google Translate were the result of errors in its automated algorithms, Russian agency RBC reported.

        Earlier Ukrainian media had reported that the translation service was rendering “Russian Federation” as “Mordor”, a region in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings which is ruled by the evil character Sauron, and “Russians” as “occupiers”.

        google translate beset by Ukrainian trolls??? Who would’ve thunk it?

      • marknesop says:

        Ah, yes – “Ukrainian MP Mustafa Nayem”, the activist who was rewarded for being the “Father of the Maidan” with a seat in the Rada. I sometimes wonder if there is anyone in that body who got there by sheer ability and hard work, compared with how many bought their seat or were given it as a reward for displaying the right political attitude.

        I’m sure Ukraine’s carping won it a lot of friends among international businesses – which Kiev is trying so hard to attract as investors – with its hysterical reaction, like poking a wasps’ nest. It must be comforting to know that the first time they exhibit what is interpreted as “disloyalty to Ukraine”, nutty activists will be calling for a boycott of their product. It would be especially discouraging for anyone who was thinking of relocating business property, such as a factory, to Ukraine – Ukrainian nationalists would probably burn it down in a fit of temper if it were perceived that the company had insulted Ukraine.

        • Lyttenburgh says:

          There are conspiracy theories already why the Coca-Cola has been singled out, while Pepsi-Co did exactly the same thing:

          So, people right now discuss primarily one thing only – the amount of gesheft which Lyashko and Nayem got from Pepsi-Co for dissing their rival and sparing them.

  23. Warren says:

    • Didn’t Russia just declare that it’s own courts can overrule any decision by the ECtHR? This is exactly the way Russia should behave more often!

    • marknesop says:

      I see. So it is the fault of the Russian authorities that they did not provide the organizers of the protest with a PA system, so that the organizer who announced the protest action to be over “went unheard by most demonstrators”. It was at this point that riot police began to disperse the protesters. Bolotnaya Park was cordoned off from assembly because the Russian authorities know the regime-change playbook quite well by now, and know that one of its basic tenets is the establishment of a tent city – once the protesters are dug in it is practically impossible to shift them, and the western press immediatetely sets up a diversionary din that their rights are being trampled. Then some sugar-daddy like Berezovsky makes sure they have heaters and hot-soup kitchens and air mattresses and cots, and they settle in to wait the administration out. Pretty soon the rest of the citizenry gets pissed off about this big loud stinky hippie tent encampment in the middle of what’s supposed to be public land, and everyone blames the government – the demonstrators want the government to satisfy their demands, and the public wants the demonstrators gone, but any police attempt to shift them is trumpeted by the west as a crackdown on liberty. Come next election, the government is history, because it displeased everyone.

      The Russian government isn’t stupid – it knows how this game works. The verdict is hardly surprising – when was the last time any European human-rights court found in favour of the Russian government? I did not see any specific identification of who is supposed to pay the plaintiff, and if they do, €25,000 is cheap for the sort of precedent it sets and the mileage which can be gotten out of it in future protest actions in the EU. It’s getting so the police should be restricted to traffic duties only, and protesters are otherwise allowed to do whatever they like. Woe betide the next time a European protester is arrested, for basically anything except getting caught smashing windows, looting or torching cars. Because they all look innocent, and say “I weren’t doing nuffink, Guv!!”

      • kirill says:

        How about permits? Every freakin NATO member state requires permits for protests. It is illegal to protest willy nilly in any location of your choice. This is rather logical as the purpose of government and laws is for social order and for the economy to function and for average person to be able to engage in their daily life without disruption. The “rights” of protesters are limited by definition. I cannot come into your house and get on your kitchen table and start protesting about whatever. These rulings are pure kangaroo court theater.

        • marknesop says:

          The demonstration had a permit, and the authorities had cleared a route for it. But this ruling implies the authorities have a great many other responsibilities to safeguard the health and well-being of demonstrators which will provide rich fodder the next time someone is injured in a protest or demonstration in an EU country. Although the award was small and might be unenforceable (just because a European human-rights court awarded him damages does not mean he is going to get them – he probably will not as it would be an implicit admission of guilt), this is a benchmark ruling which can be used to apply to protest actions everywhere.

          • kirill says:

            There is no obligation to protect protesters if they refuse to follow the permit conditions. That is another reason permits are issued. This ruling is a joke because it establishes conditions for authorities in the same illogical vein as “prove a negative”. If the authorities see disorder they are fully free to act to suppress it. That there is collateral damage is par for the course and occurs in the heart of “freedom” the USA itself. Somehow nobody took the US to court for every instance of police “abuse” of demonstrators? How about the G8/G20 meeting in Toronto in 2010. The cops rounded up 1000 protesters and held them in a temporary concentration camp in the open for processing. The EHRC is a total kangaroo court.

            • marknesop says:

              It didn’t sound like the plaintiff had actually done anything wrong. He followed the route cleared for the demonstration, but when the crowd could not get into Bolotnaya Park (as some of the organizers had probably planned, and I’d love to know if many of them brought tents with them and had been briefed to set up a tent city in the park) it began to bunch up on the embankment. At some point one of the organizers announced that it was the end of the demonstration, but according to the evidence heard by the court, many did not hear. That likely means the plaintiff testified that he did not hear the order to end the demonstration. Whatever, the police understood the demonstration to be ended and told the crowd to move it along. But they were crowded together and some could not leave although they had no intent to disobey the police. They were arrested, and this seems to be the substance of the complaint, that he was arrested without cause; well, that, and he was driven around in a transit van all day without being given food or water. From this they made a case that the authorities had not made proper preparations for the possibility they might have to arrest and detain large numbers of people.

              Basically, they listened to what he didn’t like about the way he was treated, and then agreed with him that each of these peeves constituted a great wrong done to him.

              You’ll notice, though, that there was no international outcry to prosecute those who were filmed and photographed throwing stones and pieces of asphalt at the police, or those who attempted (this was during an earlier march, I believe) to break through the police cordon by force and march on the Kremlin, Saint Navalny among them.

              The police in the USA are allowed, and frequently exercise the privilege, to beat the fuck out of you if you resist in any way while being arrested, and plenty of video is available of them slamming people to the ground who can be heard protesting that they are not resisting and there is no need of such violent treatment. They are also openly antagonistic to the press, if they happen to be on scene, and to anyone attempting to film a violent arrest.

              I don’t think the Russian demonstrator did anything wrong. But the treatment he received, while it might have been unfair since he didn’t do anything, is routine for when police are dispersing a crowd, and was certainly not brutal. He just happened to make a big noise to a European court when they are looking for excuses to take a shot at Russia. But this ruling was well worth the money, just for the beautiful contrast it will provide to violent arrests in America – Russian demonstrator complains of rough treatment, gets 25,000 Euros; black man in New Orleans complains of being beaten up by a gang of cops, spends the night in the drunk tank for his trouble, gets fuck-all for compensation, cops get off.

          • Moscow Exile says:

            They were allowed to assemble on Bolotnaya Square: that was the area designated for the rally. (See below.)

            That is not the Moscow river to the left: it is the Vodootvodniy Kanal, a by-pass to the Moscow River, which leaves the latter (top left of the smaller picture above), where that monstrosity of a memorial to Peter the Great is visible. The river proceeds from there, flowing to the right of the picture and past the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour,whose golden dome can be seen, and thence past the Kremlin walls, which are off picture to the right. The river runs almost parallel to the canal here, where the photograph was taken, and is rejoined by the canal about a mile away from the picture, bottom right.

            In front of the two chimney stacks of the red Oktober Chocolate factory can be seen the arched roof of the “Udarnik” cinema, and running in front of the “Udarnik” is Serafimovicha Street, which proceeds to the top right and crosses the Moscow River by means of the Bolshoi Kamenniy Bridge.

            Now this is key: along Serafimovich Street was a police cordon and temporary barricade fences as the street was off limits: Bolotnaya Square was the designated assembly area as agreed with the organizers — and no further.

            In the larger picture above, the barricade is clearly visible, furthermore, there is a line of bowser trucks and other large vehicle parked parallel to the barricade in order to strengthen it. Clearly, beyond the barricade was a no-go area.

            In addition, across Serafimovich Street, at the foot of Bolshoi Kamenniy Bridge was another barricade.

            Why? Because I am certain that the police knew that there were certain elements who wished to leave the square and cross the river by means of Bolshoi Kamenniy Bridge.

            Having crossed the river by this route, one finds oneself right next to this place:

            The above photograph was taken from the Bolshoi Kamenniy Bridge. That’s the Kremlin “Water Pump Tower”.

            Proceeding past that tower, one then has access to Aleksandrovsky Garden (see below) by the north Kremlin wall:

            The Kremlin “Water Pump Tower” in the photograph above is bottom left in the above diagram; Aleksandrovsky Garden — part of the former filled-in Kremlin moat — can be seen top left. That’s where the camp was going to be, I am sure.

            And the cops were sure of this as well.

            Sobchak knew of this: that’s why she chickened out. She knew this because one of the organizers of the breach of the barricade was Yashin, whom she was living with at the time.

            Another organizer was that bastard and criminal and traitor Ilya Ponomarev, who was in the van with rest of the shits in front of the “Udarnik” fighting with the cops.

            That end of the Square was guarded and cordoned off because the cops knew what was afoot. They had reserves across the bridge because of this knowledge of theirs.

            The stage for the rally can be seen in the photographs above. That’s were that gobshite Navalny was and other shits.

            And when he realized that the shit had hit the fan, he buggered off — in the direction along which the march had come to the square, towards the bottomright of the above photographs, where a strong cordon of OMON parted to allow him through. They wouldn’t let others through so easily though, which is further evidence for many that Navalny works for the FSB.

            • marknesop says:

              Yes, that’s the protest I was talking about, but I’m not absolutely sure that is the same one the protester who took his case to the ECHR was involved in.

              • Moscow Exile says:

                I think it was. Although the pictures above are of an earlier, December 2011, Bolotnaya rally. However, what I have described above is that which happened at the May 6 rally of the following year.

                Russian authorities failed to ensure the right to protest during the 6 May 2012 Bolotnaya Square demonstration

                That’s from Middlesex University, specifically:

                May 6, 2012.

                At that rally, this sweet thing was arrested:

                She is pictured in court after her arrest — several months after her arrest, actually. She is a kreakl (though that term at the time was yet to be coined, I think) of the name Dukhanina — a “student” who was not studying and who, without any known means of support, was living alone in her parents’ flat in Moscow whilst they were abroad, seemingly permanently.

                And here is a photograph of her arrest, which photograph the bleeding liberal hearts all around the world made great play of:

                That picture had been taken just moments after she had lobbed a chunk of asphalt ripped up from the road surface at a cop’s face. There is/was a video somewhere of her doing it.

                In her defence, it was seriously put forward that chucking a lump of asphalt at someone is no big deal because asphalt is a comparatively soft material.

                Oh, and she just happened across the asphalt, as did other demonstrators in possession of other convenient pieces of stuff.

                In fact, they had come tooled up with missiles (later found dumped in trash cans) and tools to break up the road surface.

                You see, they like the way revolutionary Frogs do the same in Parisian streets.

    • marknesop says:

      In the first week of December last year, Moodys upgraded Russian government bonds from ‘negative’ to ‘stable’, based on ‘stabilization of Russia’s external finances’. The Russian government forecasts a return to economic growth this year, and even the IMF agrees although the Russian Economy Minister reckons their estimate is too conservative. We have discussed many times before the phenomenon in which some idiots can be wrong over and over again, yet they continue to publish in prestigious magazines and nobody ever seems to review their track record of never being right. The only possible explanation is that there exists a substantial audience that just needs to hear that Russia is collapsing. They don’t particularly care whether it ever really happens, they just like to hear that things are still shitty in Russia. And you can hardly blame a charlatan for catering to an audience of mooks who will fork over good money just to be cuddled and told that everything will be all right.

  24. Moscow Exile says:

    The Adidas site shows the Crimea as Russian.
    Tyagnibok has already called on all stylish gobshites* from all of the Kiev regions to change to using NIKE.

    * My translation of чётких пацанчиков , indicative an animate plural object of the verb taking genitive plural endings in the the text above, but in the nominative singular чёткий пацанчик , which type of person is illustrated below

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Above should read:

      …genitive plural endings indicating an animate plural object of the verb in the the text above…

    • marknesop says:

      That will surely be a big drop in sales for Adidas. I imagine this is the season when rich Ukrainians stock up on new sneakers. Whatever the case, Tinybonk gained nothing by sending business Nike’s way without checking. Nike’s “Store locator” also shows a Nike store in Simferopol, Russia.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        If I were the big bad Tsar of All the Russias now, I’d take a page out of head-banger Ivan Grozny’s book as regards these yapping poodles in the Ukraine and order that a sign be nailed onto Yatsenyuk’s and Tyagnibok’s and all the rest of like bastards’ foreheads, which sign read: “ЭТО — НАШ КРЫМ!

        The story goes that when an ambassador from the German Holy Roman Emperor presented himself to Ivan IV (“Ivan Grozny” – which does not mean “Ivan the Terrible”), he did not remove his hat. So Ivan let him go through all his credentials and so on, then when the German had ended his Spiel, asked why he had not removed his hat in his presence.

        Bold Fritz thereupon replied that he only removed his hat in the presence of his monarch and not before others. So Ivan, who must have been having one of his bad days, then ordered that the ambassador’s hat be nailed onto his head so as to make sure that it didn’t fall off and then to have him sent back to his monarch, who could help him take it off.

        • Lyttenburgh says:

          I pretty much doubt the veracity of this story, which sounds like a rip-off of Vlad Dracula and Turkish ambassadors story.

          Ivan Vasilyevich was rather courteous to ambassadors – less so the his “brothers and sisters” monarchs in his letters. Here is a painting of Grozniy receiving English ambassodrs and their gifts:

          The only time when he kicked the living hell out of some sort of envoy was when he received a vassal of the great dissident prince Kurbskiy (langushing in emigration in Poland), delivering his master’s response to Grozniy’s latter. This picture shows what he did first to this messenger:

          ‘cuase his master was totally “ye stinking dogge”

          • yalensis says:

            Ivan Vasilievich met with dignity the impertinance of the Tatar Ambassador from Kazan:

            http://vk.com/video62619290_169873826?list=7f0f0db28180fe350e

          • Moscow Exile says:

            Yeah, but old Ivan had a soft spot for the English, who then set up the Muscovy Company and did a roaring trade with Russia after having got their feet well under the table.

            They became most favoured persons in the Wild East and their trading post, as it were, still stands on Varvarka Street, which runs off Red Square right next St Basil’s. It’s a museum now: Stariy Angliiskiy Dvor – The Old English Yard. (Interesting nomenclature that, for Scotland Yard, London, was thus called because it was the site of a Scottish embassy before the Act of Union.) Betty Windsor visited the place when she was here to have a chinwag with darling of the West, Tsar Boris the Drunk.

            But then about 100 years after English merchants had set up shop in Moscow came the English civil wars in the mid-17th century and in 1649 Charles Stuart got topped in Whitehall, which put the Russians right off the English in Russia and the Romanov tsar ordered that they all be expelled forthwith. So wily old Fritz filled the vacuum created by the departure of the Muscovy Company sehr schnell and then enjoyed a generally cosy relationship business-wise with Russia for almost 200 years until, that is Wilhelm II, King of Prussia and Emperor of Germany, ballsed it all up.

            The Old English Yard or “Court” – it also served as a warehouse for matryoshki for export to England, and Gordon’s Gin that had been imported from London:

            Inside the museum. Actors replaying historic events. Below the English ambassador is depicted sending off one his Russian lackeys to Ye Olde Moscow Pizza Hut. The typically dumb Ivan is clearly having problems remembering the complex order:

            • Lyttenburgh says:

              “Yeah, but old Ivan had a soft spot for the English, who then set up the Muscovy Company and did a roaring trade with Russia after having got their feet well under the table. “

              Indeed he had – the year Good Queen Bess took the throne Ivan IV began the Livonian War, recapturing some towns and fortresses on the Baltic. England began selling to Russians arquebuses, fine powder, iron cannon, ammunition, fire oil and other “goods of strategic importance”, while getting back both the furs and ship-building materials.

              This “honey-moon” lasted till 1565 when Denmakr closed the Baltic for the Enlgish ships on the pretense that England was supplying Sweden (!) with weapons. Having to either smuggle or trade via Archangelsk really tanked Russo-English trade for a time.

            • Jen says:

              Is it true that Ivan the Terrible once proposed marriage to Good Queen Bess and that she rejected him?

              To think that everything went downhill from there over a proposition … the mind boggles.

              • Moscow Exile says:

                Yes. He proposed but she was indisposed. However, she packed off a lady-in-waiting to Moscow to see if she would keep the old goat happy. The woman only got as far as Gravesend on the Thames estuary, where she demanded to be put ashore or she would do herself in.

                The English only accidentally got involved with 16th century Muscovy. In 1553, an expedition from London to find a northeast passage to Cathay was hit by a fierce storm off the Lofoten islands. The squadron of three ships got separated and one of them, the Bona Confidentia under the command of navigator Richard Chancellor of Bristol, survived the storm, but the other two ships and their crews were less lucky: Russian fishermen found them much later beached and their crews all frozen to death.

                The Bona Confidentia then sailed into the White Sea

                … where the local fishermen were amazed by the great size of his Western-built ship. He reached the harbour of Nikolo-Korelsky Monastery on the Northern Dvina river (near the present-day Arkhangelsk, which would be eventually founded in 1584 to service the growing trade). The region had just recently been added to Muscovy, and when Czar Ivan IV heard of Chancellor’s arrival, he immediately invited the exotic guest to visit Moscow for an audience at the royal court.

                Chancellor made the journey of over 600 miles (over 1,000 kilometres) to Moscow through snow- and ice-covered country. He found Moscow large (much larger than London) and primitively built, most houses being constructed of wood. However, the palace of the czar was very luxurious, as were the dinners he offered Chancellor. The Russian czar was pleased to open the sea trading-routes with England and other countries, as Russia did not yet have a safe connection with the Baltic Sea at the time and almost all of the area was contested by the neighbouring powers of Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Crown of the Kingdom of Poland and the Swedish Empire. In addition, the Hanseatic League had a monopoly on the trade between Russia and Central and Western Europe. Chancellor was no less optimistic, finding a good market for his English wool, and receiving furs and other Russian continental goods in return. When he returned to England in 1554, he had letters from the czar with him, inviting English traders and promising trade privileges — Wiki.

                When I was a student in the USSR, there was a Richard Chancellor Scholarship for Russian studies. Since that time (almost 30 years ago!), the scholarship seems to have gone out of existence together with most of the chairs of Slavonic studies at British universities. These latter were already diminishing when I was a student. I think there are very few of them left now.

                See:

                Russian studies in UK universities

                The Linguistic Study of Russian in the United Kingdom

                European language degree courses abandoned by many UK universities

                Ignorance is bliss?

                Anyway, what’s the point? Like everyone speaks fucking English, innit? Know what I mean?

                • Cortes says:

                  Unfortunately ALL languages departments have taken a hammering throughout the UK. Very depressing indicator of dumbing down by the gentry emboldened by Thatcher and her wannabes like Bliar.

        • marknesop says:

          Oh, dear – the grossly disrespectful WorldTimeServer says that Crimea, Republic of is in Russia. The much more politically-correct timeanddate.com says it is still a part of Ukraine, though, and in case you are thickheaded, it points out that although Crimea was annexed by Russia, most UN members do not recognize it. That plays nicely into the theme of the west clinging to what it wants to believe is true rather than what actually is true, along with the whole devotion to the Russia-is-collapsing thing.

          RentalCars24H, an international company which works with more than 1000 rental companies including Avis, Budget, National, Hertz and Eurocar, says that Simferopol Airport is in the Russian Federation. Someone with time on his/her hands should google names of American international companies, followed by “Simferopol, Russia” and see how many recognize reality. Speaking of international American companies, they lost the top 4 spots in the Forbes list to Chinese companies in 2015.

  25. marknesop says:

    Bye-bye, Conoco-Phillips; don’t let the door hit you in the ass on the way out. Conoco-Phillips pulls out completely from Russia after 25 years.

    Being FT, it’s unsurprising that this piece would be slanted towards happy talk; Conoco Phillips decided to leave Russia because it succumbed to the lure of the booming shale industry back home in the good ol’ U.S of A. Is that so? Depends who you ask, I guess. According to OilPrice.com, not so much. “The EIA reports that in October, several of the largest shale gas regions will post their fourth month in a row of production declines. With a loss of around 208 million cubic feet per day expected in October, the four-month drop off will be the longest streak of losses in about eight years…While U.S. shale gas remained resilient through several years of low natural gas prices, the collapse in oil prices are finally putting an end to the boom.”

    According to another source, Conoco’s decision to get out was a major plus; no reason for that gold star is supplied. “Russia was a region where they said look, it’s not working; let’s get out,” said one person familiar with Conoco’s thinking. “It turned out to be a great decision.” One person familiar with Conoco’s thinking, huh? I get it. Well, somebody from Conoco should find that person and punch him right in the face. Was it a great decision? Only insofar as it might have contributed to the slaughter being not as bad as it might have been – Conoco stock lost 37% of its value over 2015. That certainly does not mean the end of the company, but it kind of makes “growing pull of investment in the shale boom at home” and “great decision” smell a bit bullshitty, and it’s hard to view that performance as success so much as it is a fight for survival.

    • kirill says:

      Even the stock market has more truth than the BS artists known as the western media. That is quite something all by itself.

    • marknesop says:

      Translation: Hey, Turks. How do you like that? Putin is wiping his ass on your Momma’s blouse. He acts like he can do whatever he wants.

      So…what’re you gonna do about it?

      This is as blatant an attempt as you would ever want to see of Washington trying to push Turkey into precipitate action, counting on hothead Erdogan to do something. I’m sure there is nothing that goes to Syria by sea that could not go by air, but that’s not the point. Outside forces are trying to push Turkey into closing the Bosporus to Russian ships. And if that happened, Turkey’s gas would be shut off in less time than it takes to say it.

      And closing the Bosporus to Russian shipping would not “choke off” the Russian operation in Syria. It would only make it more difficult to resupply.

  26. yalensis says:

    Poroshenko enjoyed a busy and productive year:
    He became a cosmonaut, a male porno star, a female fashion model, and even had his face carved onto Mount Rushmore!

  27. Lyttenburgh says:

    Because it was Christmas Eve, I decided to re-watch all-times Soviet classic, a screen adoptation of the novellete by racially Ukrian writer Mykolai Vasylich Gogol – “A night before Christmas”. This particlular adaptation had this absolutely timeless scene:

    Zaporozhian envoys before Catherine the Great.

    I wonder – is this movie already banned in Free and European 404aine?

    • et Al says:

      Flight Global: Next US Navy budget battle pits ships against strike fighters
      https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/next-us-navy-budget-battle-pits-ships-against-strike-420575/

      A recent directive by the US secretary of defence that pits strike fighters against ships in the navy’s next five-year spending plan will be a showdown to watch going into 2016, with increases in F-35C and F/A-18 spending coming at the expense of the Littoral Combat Ship…

      …While this reversal is good news for the aerospace sector, shipbuilders and LCS proponents won’t sink quietly. As one commenter notes, Carter’s stated objection to building past the navy’s 308-ship goal dismisses a 2014 national defence panel recommendation for between “323 and 346 ships,” and overlooks the long-term nature of funding and building vessels compared to fighters.

      “That story hasn’t ended yet,” cautions Deloitte aerospace and defence analyst Tom Captain. “The political process is now taking over, and there may be people lobbying to do something different. I don’t think it’s over yet.”

      Exactly how this budgetary saga will shape up depends on the final details of the service’s spending proposal – due out in late January or February – and the reaction of LCS advocates in Congress…

      • marknesop says:

        The LCS really isn’t a very good design, and as I discussed in detail here a couple of years ago, the Chinese built 83 400-ton trimarans for the littoral-combat role, equipped with a very capable anti-ship missile, for about $40 Million apiece. During the same period the USA built 2 ships up around 3000 tons, for about $600 Million apiece. The American designers can almost never overcome their instinct to go big and grand, when what you want for littoral combat is a lot of small, fast platforms. The American exception was the CYCLONE Class, which were just right for the littoral combat role, and could be equipped with a more capable missile.

        The LCS suffers from persistent corrosion problems, and really the USN convinced itself littoral warfare was the wave of the future to the point it wanted to spend crazy money on it – the LCS budget, originally, was $37.4 Billion, and they thought they were going to have 55 of these behemoths. I can easily see that program being drastically cut or eliminated.

  28. Patient Observer says:

    http://www.newsweek.com/2016/01/15/restless-russia-411530.html
    Stupid, stupid, stupid. But I found this interesting:
    “In December, the Russian Duma rushed through a bill that allows state security officers to shoot at women (except, bizarrely, if they “appear pregnant”), children and disabled people “in cases of a terror act or armed attack.” ”
    It was illegal to shot women and children before this law was passed? My god, they were so far behind the West. Why, we have been shooting women and children for decades just for looking at the police in a threatening way or waving a toy gun in an aggressive manner.

    Mark, you must have a discipline a Doctor to be able to wade such a nauseating brew of BS while keeping your wits.

    • marknesop says:

      What a pile of rubbish. Russia is still safe, though, so long as the western media continues to rely on Brian Whitmore – who croaks, “Dissent is not going away any time soon” mournfully on his ‘influential’ Power Vertical blog about as frequently as Dmitry Tymchuk tells his ‘brothers and sisters’ on the Kyiv Post that Ukraine is being invaded by Russia – and Mark Galeotti, plus all the usual retinue of pet dissidents, liberals and kreakly.

      I hope I can remember that link so I can make fun of them in the Spring when the Russian Spring fails once again to materialize. Who knows? By then Putin might have the place locked down so tight that you need permission from ‘the organs’ just to go to the corner store to buy cigarettes. If there are any, of course – the shortages, you know.

      Brian Whitmore can always be counted on to say The Revolution is just around the corner, the poor sad fool, just as Galeotti can always be counted on for a good soundbite about Putin’s “theatre of tyranny”. And the perpetual malcontents at Moscow State University will be bitching about how liberals should run the world according to the American model until the Judgement trump. Nothing new – just the same old protest crowd trying to make it appear fresh and new. If the Russian economy returns to stability and then growth in 2016 as it is forecast to do, Whitmore, Galeotti et al can moan and scream until they have some sort of fit if they like, and nothing is going to happen. So long as his health remains good, I expect Putin to stand for and win another term.

    • et Al says:

      What about Brazilians? The UK can trump their moral authority on that point having chased down and executed the entirely innocent Jean Charles de Menezes back in 2005. Remember, only a terrorist would run from the the velvet gloves of da law!

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

  29. Lyttenburgh says:

    “Johnson’s Russia List” is rather notorious for re-posting (read: stealing) nauseatically handshakable articles rabidly Russophobic authors and shit-papers. So ca you imagine my boundless suprise, when I stumbled upon such uncharacteristically balanced and interesting article:

    What is going on in Russia? The views and values of ordinary Russians

    The name of the article is actually wrong. The author of this article and the poll writes:

    “Now for the questions which I have asked Russians – hundreds of Russians from the Arctic to the Caucasus, from Smolensk across European Russia, across the Urals, to Siberia and on to the far east, to Vladivostok. I have been to all these places and I have talked. I have extensive notes. But I know that I can be biased as we all can, in what I want to hear. So I circulated about 300 university teachers of English with 8 questions, and asked them – entirely optionally – for their answers and those of their friends and relations. Later I turned the questions into Russian and asked especially for the opinions of men. As a result I have about 70 detailed answers from teachers, lawyers, engineers, IT specialists, business people, journalists, students, pensioners. Educated people – so not sociologically accurate BUT typical, it seems to me, in the range of answers and the kind of answers that they give.

    Some people would say that in their answers, these ordinary thoughtful Russians were unduly influenced by mass-media propaganda. To that I would say two things: a startlingly high proportion of Russians use the internet and watch foreign TV channels. They have access to many sources of information and misinformation – more than their British equivalents. And even more important, millions and millions of Russians including probably more than 50% of this sample have friends and relations in Ukraine whom they phone or write to or skype with, often daily. They are living in a complicated connected world. Of course their views are not just parroted

    […]

    Answers came from: Arkhangelsk, Barnaul, Belgorod, Blagoveshensk, Chelyabinsk, Chita, Khabarovsk, Kolomna, Krasnodar, Kurgan, Kursk, Magnitogorsk, Moscow, Naberezhny Chelny, Novgorod, Omsk, Perm, Piatigorsk, Rostov-on-Don, Samara, St Petersburg, Tomsk, Tula, Tver, Ulan-Ude, Vladivostok and Yekaterinburg.”

    >Ordinary Russians
    >Represenatives of various strata of intilligentzia

    Pick one, Karen!

    Still, even if this is a poll targeting the most “easily accessible” demographics for the Westerners, it still could be useful – if we won’t blindly extrapolate its results on the rest of Russians. Besides, it clearly shows what I’ve thought for a long time was and object truth – the existence of “stratas” within Russian intelligentzia (in itsellf a catch-all term for the intellectuals and some white-collar workers), divided, roughly speaking, on the “working intelligentsia”, artistic intelligentsia and pure academia (plus some mixes and sub-types of the three). They are further divided into “provincial” and “capital” intelligentzia.

    So, with such expectations about her target audience one can seriously expect the answers on her poll to sound like:

    “Russia has changed for the worse because of the active governmental propaganda: all those talks about ‘external enemies of Russia’, ‘Russian spiritual bonds’, and ‘greatness of Russia’ make me sick”

    ^Actual answer, btw. Thankfully, Russian “intellectual elite” proved to be much less shitty than one could hope (knowing all too well the famous quote by Grandpa Lenin, rotten intelligent and a noble himself).

    So – some excerps:

    __________________________________________________________________________
    “(1) Are you more or less satisfied with the annexation of Crimea? The vast majority, about 9 out of 10 approved of Crimea seceding from Ukraine. They objected to my word, ‘annexation’. The Crimea used to belong to Russia, its inhabitants had long wanted to return to Russia, they held a referendum and they voted to leave Ukraine and then – to ask Russia to accept the autonomous republic as part of the Russian Federation.

    Although Russian special forces popped up all over the place, no violence took place and no-one was killed. (I was surprised that my respondents did not make much more of the peaceful change of power)

    The Russians said ‘It was right to let them decide: they have decided.’

    A number complained that their own hard-earned salaries were being taxed to pay for economic aid to Crimea. This was not ideal for Russia and some of my respondents should be put down as ‘against the inclusion of Crimea’. But they did not doubt that it was a very good move for the people of Crimea.

    One or two pointed out that probably the main aim of the Russian government which was certainly active in the process, was to ensure the integrity of Sevatopol.

    As for the small minority of those who disapproved, they did not explain Why – except one who said that it was against international law. Perhaps the others felt the same objection, but they answered with a vigorous ‘No’, and left comments and explanations to those who supported what happened.

    I spoke at length to a thoughtfully sardonic Crimean teacher who said ‘Most of us voted to leave Ukraine and then to join Russia because we were terrified of becoming victims of violence like the wretched eastern Ukrainians. Even in those early days we could see what was happening as the Kiev government turned against the people in Donbass. And we said, No way! We must escape that. So thank you East Ukrainians for showing us what would have been our fate!

    She said the Crimean Tartars were worried at first, but after a year most of them have stopped being worried.”
    ________________________________________________________________________

    See why Russians are objecting to the use of the word “annexation”? And this is done not by a bydlo-like vatniks and zaputintsi – intelligentsia itself is riffled!

    ________________________________________________________________________
    (2) Would the Annexation of eastern Ukraine be a good idea. A large majority said, ‘Certainly not! What for? Russia has never sought to grab eastern Ukraine which belongs to another country – utterly unlike Crimea.’ This big majority insisted that this was an internal problem which Ukraine must sort out for itself. But of course this opinion, pure as it might be is difficult – remember my analogy with Scotland/Wales/Northern Ireland/Ireland. Many Russians frequently expressed pity for the victims. And many knew relations and friends in the Donetsk and Lugansk separatist regions who were hoping for some kind of support.

    A year ago, answers such as ‘It is nothing to do with us.’ ‘It is unimaginable that we would invade Ukraine’ were even more common. In April last year (2014) I met no-one who thought that Russia would or should invade eastern Ukraine. But my most recent responses have included some long and thoughtful ruminations on the problem. Only one said firmly, ‘Invade Ukraine and bring the civil war there to a quick halt!’ and one said ‘ so many people are suffering, so many civilians. Perhaps we ought to do something to avoid genocide.’ But there was more of ‘If the separatists think they can no longer live within Ukraine, after a year of fighting, what should Russia do then? If there is no hope for peace?’

    […]
    _______________________________________________________________________
    (5) What about the sanctions. Should they be lifted?

    Three months ago I was in a car with a lawyer aged about 60. The conversation had turned to sanctions. The lawyer was rapidly becoming apoplectic, not so much with rage as with the extreme frustration of the intelligent having to deal with the stupid. He kept taking his hands off the wheel, and I feared that we might be serious victims of this international device to make Russia ‘behave’.

    ‘Sanctions!’ said my friend. ‘What on earth have sanctions to do with us! We didn’t start the war! We are not prosecuting the war! The war is being fought on Ukrainian territory by Ukrainians against other Ukrainians. By what logic should the US impose sanctions on Russia which has nothing to do with the trouble that America itself stirred up. How are we to blame?’

    If in less vigorous terms, that view is almost universal. Even the strong anti-Russian-Government respondents think that the sanctions are illogical, ineffective, and causing unnecessary trouble to business trying to develop internationally. The pain to ordinary people has been the Russian government’s reverse sanctions in which food from the EU is barred from entering Russia. Interestingly no-one objected to this in the sense of saying that the Russian response should be abolished. Sanctions and counter-sanctions were part of the package.

    Almost nobody expected them to be lifted; people regularly pointed out that the US is not hurt by them, and wishes to go on hurting Russia, while the EU is hurt by them, and many European countries, let alone their businesses and producers would like to see them lifted, but the EU is America’s poodle. (This view is certainly drawn largely from Russian media and propaganda. It also happens to be true.)

    Given that they are here to stay, how have sanctions affected ordinary Russians. There was a distinct divide between the responses of people from Moscow and St Petersburg and those of the rest of the country. The people in the capitals miss the foreign cheeses, and chocolate and the doubling of the cost of foreign travel. Most of the rest of the country is less troubled: I couldn’t afford those foreign goods anyway. I always buy Russian food and there is plenty of it and it is good.

    Also, many people argued that the sanctions have thrown the Russian economy back on its own resources and productions. So there are more local businesses, more initiative, less dependence on imports generally. So the sanctions are actually improving the economy.

    Now that last point is certainly part of what the government tells the people. I don’t know how far it is true. Probably the government doesn’t know either, because Russia is a huge country. But one or two people mentioned specific new activities in their areas.

    Everyone said that prices had gone up – partly because of sanctions, partly because of low oil prices. But this was part of life. No financial difficulties were like the disasters of 15 years ago. A nuisance, a tightening of belts, a pulling-together.

    It’s strange but the fact is that sanctions imposed on Russia have united our country.

    […]
    _____________________________________________________________________
    One of the accusations levelled against Putin by ‘the West’ is that he has encouraged nasty kinds of nationalism; that in order to bolster up Russia he has given quiet support to various neo-Nazi Russian groups.

    I want to say something about this immediately. I do not doubt that there are unpleasant Russian ‘nationalists’, just as there are unpleasant British ‘nationalists’ quite a number of whom expect to see increasing attention to their views in this country. Russian neo-nazis have their websites, their anti-Muslim, anti-Semite, anti-Caucasian, anti-Ukrainian views. They have drunken fracas and they can be murderous. But I have never seen or heard any Russian approving of such groups – including the most fiercely patriotic and enthusiastic followers of official Russian propaganda. Of course I meet a selected number of people both in Russia and in Britain. I don’t meet extreme nationalists in Britain. But in both cases these people seem to be fringe groups, not welcomed at all by governments or officials.

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      ‘Russian neo-nazis have their websites, their anti-Muslim, anti-Semite, anti-Caucasian, anti-Ukrainian views’

      The Russian Nazis love Ukraine to death – it was a favourite slogan in their last mis-named ‘Russia March’: ‘Novorossiya can suck it – glory to Kyivian Rus’!’. Dmitry Demushkin’s rhetoric on Ukraine is barely distinguishable from Kasparov’s. Russian nationals far outnumber the other foreign scum in Azov.

  30. Moscow Exile says:

    Soon, few in Banderastan will be able to buy your sugar and water solution, you chump!

    • marknesop says:

      “Our mission is to refresh the world and spread optimism…”

      Jesus wept. I think whoever the writer was did show a tiny bit of spine, though – by pointing out how many Ukrainian employees Coca-Cola has (more than 1,500, they say), they implied there would be that many more jobless if the company had to pull out due to Ukrainian shenanigans. In fact, that should be all one word, like “Ukranigans”, they happen so frequently.

      • Patient Observer says:

        “Refresh the world and spread optimism” – Wow, just wow.

        There was a documentary video a few years back about how Coke was trying to close bottled water facilitates or otherwise restrict access to drinking water in several countries in Africa in order to increase the consumption of their product. I will try to find the link.

      • yalensis says:

        Man, don’t mock the Sacred Religion of Coke!

  31. Moscow Exile says:

    Christmas Day again!!!!

    An example of a Russian New Year repast:

    New Year’s Day. So that’s that!

    But it’s not over until the fat lady has sung!

    And the fat lady appears on 13/14 January as January 13 is Old New Year’s Eve.

    🙂

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Last night in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the Saviour there took place the long Christmas Night service, headed by chief russian sky-pilot, Patriarch Kirill.

      As usual, the service was transmitted live on TV and before the start of the liturgy the Patriarch addressed the viewers, emphasizing the necessity of “peace among people”, which should be “the target and reality” of those celebrating the birth of Christ.

      To the cathedral came the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation, Dmitry Medvedev.

      The Evil One, the Dark Lord of all he surveys, was celebrating the Christmas midnight service at the village church in the Tver region where his parents were baptized.

  32. Moscow Exile says:

    Standing room only — both literally and metaphorically — at the village church where the President attended the midnight service:

    No seats, pews, benches etc. in Russian churches, see.

    The Patriarchal divine service at the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, situated in Moscow, the Black Heart of the Evil Empire, in honour of the birth of Jesus Christ:

    It’s over 2 hours long!

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      счастливого Рождества

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Take a look at 1:20:40!

      Great voice from the priest who reads out from the Gospel of St. Mathew!

      Starting at 1:21:58, after having taken off his hat, he states the scripture that he is going to read from and then at 1:22:09 he says: “Listen to these words!” and then proceeds, reaching a crescendo at 1:25:00.

      Great stuff!

      And mind you folks don’t forget!

      This is live from the Empire of Evil!

    • et Al says:

      I’ve done four hours standing up. Once during Vidovdan. It was quite the experience. If there is one thing I truly dislike at various religious services of different denominations that I have experienced, its the overarching stinky smell of incense or whatever they’re burning that irritates and aggravates the nose. It’s an unnecessary distraction. Now if they had a subtle aroma of melted chocolate and beer with a hint of cheese, I’d be far more happy! 😉

      • Moscow Exile says:

        I’ve done 3 all nighters: two at Easter and one at Christmas.

        Never again!

        • et Al says:

          Nutter.

          • Moscow Exile says:

            You forget that I was indoctrinated by monks, and before that, nuns:

            Credo in unum Deum, Odinem omnipotentem,
            factorem cœli et terrae, visibilium omnium et invisibilium,
            Et in unum Dominum, Torum malleum de Deo …

            🙂

            • Jen says:

              Shouldn’t that prayer be in Anglo-Saxon? Do Woden and Thunor accept supplications in Roman Catholic Latin?

              • Moscow Exile says:

                I did not know that Latin was the language of Roman Catholics.

                Contrary to what many may think, Old English had adopted words from Latin long before assimilating words of Latin origin after William the Bastard, Duke of Normandy arrived in 1066, namely since the English speaking tribes were codded into accepting Western Christianity by the Roman monk Augustine and pals in the 6th century.

                Consider these OE words, followed by Modern English and the Latin:

                apostol — apostle — apostolus
                antefn — anthem — antiphona
                biscop — bishop — episcopus
                candel — candle — candela
                clerec — clerk — clericus
                deofol — devil — diabolus
                mæsse — mass – missa
                mynster — minster —monasterium
                munuc — monk — monachus

                I could have written the credo in Old English, but that would have been indecipherable to most, so I used the lingua franca of the Western Churches at the time when my forefathers spoke the Old English tongue.

                I mean, do you immediately recognize this:

                Fæder ure þu þe eart on heofonum
                si þin nama gehalgod
                tobecume þin rice
                gewurþe þin willa
                on eorðan swa swa on heofonum
                urne gedæghwamlican hlaf syle us to dæg
                and forgyf us ure gyltas
                swa swa we forgyfað urum gyltendum
                and ne gelæd þu us on costnunge
                ac alys us of yfele soþlice

                or this:

                Pater noster, qui es in caelis,
                sanctificetur nomen tuum.
                Adveniat regnum tuum.
                Fiat voluntas tua,
                sicut in caelo et in terra.
                Panem nostrum quotidianum da nobis hodie,
                et dimitte nobis debita nostra
                sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostris.
                Et ne nos inducas in tentationem, sed libera nos a malo. Amen.

                Ite documentum est!

                Sit semper Odin vobiscum!

                🙂

    • marknesop says:

      Yes, I mentioned this a couple of days ago, I saw it in the papers. That’s to be expected – it is the biggest arms deal in our history, money-wise, and the private sector would march on Parliament with torches and pitchforks if it were canceled. Watching the government squirm to condemn Saudi Arabia’s barbaric religious customs while preserving ‘the deal’ is delicious, although I have nothing against Trudeau. But this is much like the ECHR ruling the other day in favour of the Russian protester – the west is establishing legal precedents totally at odds with its expectations of Russia’s behavior, and it is just looking more and more foolish by the day. This is the standard, which must be enforced…oh, except when it is inconvenient for me.

  33. Another 6% drop in oil price yesterday. Wonder how low it can drop? We might see $20 oil price this year?

  34. Patient Observer says:

    Only in America:
    https://www.rt.com/usa/328125-los-angeles-emergency-gas-leak/
    A defective underground gas storage facility in Los Angeles, California, spews 62 million ft3 of natural gas daily (equivalent to 670 million m3 of gas annually) into a residential area.

    “In the press release announcing the state of emergency, Brown’s office said the order has come due to the “prolonged and continuing duration of the Aliso Canyon gas leak.”

    The leak at the Southern California Gas Company’s Aliso Canyon storage field, which began on October 23, has steadily leaked 62 million cubic feet of methane into the air daily, according to an estimate by the Environmental Defense Fund”

    And

    “In December, an LA city court ordered SoCal Gas to provide temporary housing for thousands of Porter Ranch residents sick from inhaling gas fumes from the leak for over two months. ”

    Seems like a stunning level of incompetence and disregard for the citizens.

    Uncontrollable release of gas is usually associated with Washington.

  35. et Al says:

    The American Conservative via Antiwar.com: The Distortion of Russia
    http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/why-do-we-hate-russia/

    One does not need to love Vladimir Putin to appreciate that Washington shares interests with Moscow.
    By Philip Giraldi • January 6, 2016

    With relations between Washington and Moscow at a low ebb, can simply talking to Russians provide hope that there might still be room for cooperation?

    I recently returned from spending a few days in Moscow, speaking at a conference hosted by RT International, Russia’s global television news service. One of the few major countries I have never visited, Russia proved to be quite a pleasant surprise. Moscow was modern, clean and far removed from its gray socialist roots, a very “European” city in every sense. As my wife and I were driven into the city from the airport, the road turned on a bend in the Moscow River and suddenly the Kremlin walls, surmounted by the golden domes of the churches within appeared bathed in late afternoon sunlight. It was a once in a lifetime vision combining place, time and context that can be unforgettable, like the first time one recalls Gibbon’s words while looking out over the Roman Forum…
    ####

    More at the link.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Fake!

      The bogus writer for the American Conservative (quoted above) gave the game away by not stating: “…hosted by the RT International, Russia’s Kremlin controlled global television news service.

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