Seeing More of the Big Picture in Ukraine

Uncle Volodya says,

Uncle Volodya says, “Disaster is not necessary; the better world could be achieved through reason and common sense and a sense of fellowship — but most of the present human world is dead set against us.”

They whisper still, the injured stones, the blunted mountains weep
As he died to make men holy, let us die to make things cheap
And say the Mea Culpa, which you’ve gradually forgot
Year by year
Month by month
Day by day
Thought by thought

-Leonard Cohen, from “Steer Your Way”

A comment on the previous post reminded me of how informative it can be, particularly in the (mine)field of geopolitical analysis, to go back a year or two from the present, following a significant event, and enjoy the confident predictions of kingmakers and hacks – which could now not be much further from the situation which actually prevails.

In that spirit, let’s roll the counters back to September 18, 2013 – almost exactly three years ago.  Just before, of course, the glorious Maidan which freed Ukrainians from the oppressive yoke of Russia. At that moment in history, western analysts were trembling with eagerness to vilify Yanukovych, but were still hopeful that he would stick his head out of his shell long enough to sign the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (DCFTA) with the European Union. Washington maintains a kind of ongoing paternal affection for revolution – which is always less painful and noisy when it’s a continent or two away – but is practical enough to accept an easy victory if that’s the way it plays out.

It didn’t play out like that, of course, and an American-backed coup ensued in which Yanukovych offered to give the revolutionary political figures everything they had asked for – early elections, a provisional coalition government with the egghead among the revolutionaries as Prime Minister, the works. They were a little taken aback at how easy it was, and then decided it wasn’t enough – Yanukovych must  be holding back something if he gave in that easily, and therefore he must be tricking them, since the script called for the dictator-president to cower in fear and to be flung into the street in disgrace. So they went ahead with the traditional revolution, gaining nothing at all thereby except the ushering-in of a self-appointed revolutionary junta, and the empowerment of fervent fascist nationalists who had previously had to keep their admiration for the Nazis on the down-low.

It is worth mentioning here – because whenever it is brought up, the response ranges from amnesia to outright denial it ever happened – that the pre-revolutionary government went into it with its eyes wide open and a good working awareness of the probable consequences. Yanukovych and Azarov, at least, were briefed that cutting off trade with Russia, which Brussels and Washington insisted upon, would likely be disastrous for the Ukrainian economy. Deputy Prime Minister Yuriy Boiko announced that Ukraine was not blowing off the deal entirely; it was just suspending it until the state could be sure that increased trade with Europe would compensate for the loss of the Russian market. Before that, Yanukovych and Azarov tried energetically to broker a triumvirate coalition of Ukraine, Russia and the EU, to sort out the trade issues that Brussels insisted made such an arrangement impossible. Not to put too fine a point on it, Russia and Ukraine proposed a tripartite forum which would see Ukraine as a bridge between the Eurasian Economic Union and the European Union. Brussels emphatically rejected it, confident that it could pry Ukraine away from Russia, because the initiative was always strategic rather than economic.

The government of the day in Ukraine saw fairly clearly what was likely going to happen – and so did we, didn’t we? Yes, we did, as detailed here. We pointed out that nearly half those Ukrainians who answered a survey that they wanted Ukraine to join the EU did so because it would strengthen and grow the Ukrainian economy, but that it was difficult to see how that would come about considering 60% of Ukraine’s trade was with the former Soviet market, and highlighted the unlikelihood that Europe was going to pick up 60%-plus of Ukraine’s trade, resulting in prosperity. We pointed out that only half as many people who responded to the survey that Ukraine’s relations with Russia were characterized as ‘friendly’ said the same of relations with the EU. So, you could kind of see how (a) a failure to see rapid economic benefits as a result of signing the agreement, coupled with (b) the opposite effect, a precipitate drop in trade, plus (c) severing of relations with a country nearly a quarter of Ukrainians considered a friend, in exchange for a necrophiliac relationship with a trade union few cared much for except for the usual percentage of lapdog dissidents, was very likely to result in widespread dissatisfaction and an explosive situation. Did it? It sure did.

Anyway, as much fun as tooting our own horn is, that’s not exactly what I wanted to talk about. I want to review, in exquisite detail, the panorama of failure that is Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s (RFE/RL) feelgood graphic presentation for the rubes and dimwits on how association with the EU was going to be better than sex in warm chocolate for Ukraine. And that forecast has turned out to be about as accurate as a prediction that Justin Bieber would be nominated UN Secretary-General by popular acclaim.

But let’s not leave it at that. Because you know that if those who forecast disaster for Ukraine – based on, I think, the ability to read and to add – had somehow been wrong, and Ukraine had sprinted into double-digit economic growth and taken over the role of driving engine of the European economy, we would never have been allowed to forget it. Turnabout, then, being fair play…

1. The cream-skimming oligarchy, accustomed to riding to wealth on the backs of its panting workforce, will be out – swept away by a new era of small-business confidence.  Did that happen? Hardly. The President Ukraine eventually elected was fingered for starting up a new offshore shell corporation even as his troops were being driven into a disastrous encirclement at Ilovaisk. The same old oligarchs continue to control more than 70% of Ukraine’s GDP. The Anti-Corruption Committee appointed by Poroshenko, unsurprisingly, declined to investigate him for corruption. Now more than two years into his presidency, Poroshenko still has not sold his assets as he promised to do if elected, and his businesses continue to fatten his personal bottom line in direct contravention of Ukrainian law and the Constitution. Never a peep of protest about that, though, from Poroshenko’s International Advisory Council, which includes former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, former Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, former Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski, former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt, former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili and make-believe-economist wooden-head Anders Aslund. This council continues to advise the President of what remains the most corrupt country in Europe.

2. The boss at the company where you work will have to learn different ways to lead, because screaming and ranting are not acceptable in Europe. In many European countries, the boss is just a senior worker who you can call by his first name.  This sort of rolls into the first point, but it seems sort of self-evident that if Ukrainian companies do not do more business with Europe and replace their lost Russian markets, and the same oligarchs still own the same companies, little will change about employee-employer dynamics. According to Eurostat, Ukraine’s trade with the EU was down sharply in 2015 in both imports and exports. A decrease in imports is not particularly surprising – Ukraine is living on handouts from the international community while it continues to pour funding into its armed forces so that it can pursue the game of civil war, and hasn’t any money. Not to mention thousands of Ukrainian working stiffs are employed by Roshen, owned by the President, so I wouldn’t be trying out, “Morning, Petro – how’s it hanging?” on my tongue any time soon if I were you. The new Prime Minister, Vladimir Groysman, is unlikely to be ‘Vova’ to very many workers, either. He’s quite wealthy in his own right, at least part of that wealth shunted from EU development funds to his father’s cement and asphalt company. However, as an unnamed Ukrainian politician is said to have quipped to a Ukrainskaya Pravda reporter when Groysman received his new appointment, “Do you know what the difference is between Groysman and Yatsenyuk? When Volodymir [Groysman] will start stealing, he will steal off the profit. Yatsenyuk was doing it off the loss.” It’s good to see Ukrainians haven’t lost their sense of humour.

3. As the standard of living improves in Ukraine, people will begin to trust each other. In Yanukovych’s Ukraine, people tended to trust only their own small circle, but in the New Ukraine, the doormat will be changed from “Beat It, Shyster!” to “Come On In, Friend!” I’ll let Thomas C. Theiner take over on the subject of trust in Ukraine, post-Maidan. A committed Atlanticist neoconservative and former cheerleader for Ukraine, Theiner lived in Kiev for 5 years, and has the advantage of personal knowledge. In his assessment, if you are the type who likes to throw away money, go to Vegas instead of Kiev – that way, at least there’s a chance you’ll see a return. Thomas?

“Even today, it’s impossible for a foreign businessman to start a company in Ukraine without being harassed for bribes. If you pay, they just demand more; if you don’t pay, you won’t succeed at all. The only way out is to hire a local to help you navigate the bureaucracy and grease the correct wheels. But whomever you hire will charge a 400-500 percent premium. Hiring a foreign law company with offices in Kyiv, which charges Western prices, is the only alternative.”

Expectations of a dramatic change were not realized, and the changing of the guard only brought in different crooks. No significant progress has been made on corruption. If your company is successful without the correct palms being greased, an expedient will be found for getting you out of town for a few days. When you come back, the company will be under new ownership, and like George Thorogood in “Move it on Over”, your key won’t fit no more. Move over, little dog, a big ol’ dog’s movin’ in. All puffickly legal, as well, by Ukrainian courts.

4. Without gross, horrible, corrupt Yanukovych in charge, trust in the police will rise and pretty soon they will be rescuing kitties from trees instead of taking bribes and roughing people up. Just last month, at least three police officers in  western Ukraine beat Oleksandr Tsukerman and shot him dead in front of his relatives, including his mother. Around 200 local residents gathered in front of the police station, and uniformed officers had to keep them back when the detained police officers who are accused of the crime were brought out. In case you were thinking the dead man was a violent criminal who somehow invited his own death, the Ukrainian Police Chief ordered the entire station disbanded. A group of people in the same region were beating up passers-by right in front of the police, and officers involved in a wrongful death and four officers who raped a woman and fractured her skull were not dismissed from their jobs. Call me a pessimist, but that doesn’t sound encouraging to me.

5. The difference in social status between the very wealthy and the middle class will gradually disappear, and rich people will no longer be VIP’s. It’s pretty easy to show this one up for the epic piece of optimistic stupidity it was. The President of Ukraine is also an active businessman and multimillionaire, while per-capita GDP adjusted for purchasing power, for the ordinary folk, has collapsed and the unemployment rate is leaping upward in great jagged peaks. Yet according to the State Statistics of Ukraine, wage growth has been  steady and touched a record high in July 2016. A month later, a Ukrainian miner on live TV set himself afire at a press conference to protest wage arrears. This desperate protest is alleged to have taken place after industrial action and hunger strikes failed to move the government. How can these two realities co-exist? I guess it’s easy for wages to be at a record high if you don’t…you know…pay them.

6. Women’s rights; in the European Parliament, a third of the members are women. In the Verkhovna Rada under jerky Yanukovych, only 10% were women. Well, folks, the glorious Maidan was not for nothing. The current Rada is 12.02% women – only 87.98% are men. The gain is mostly illusory, as only 416 seats of the Rada’s statutory 450 are occupied due to the banning of certain political parties. But a third of 416 would be 138 women rather than the current 50, so women’s rights groups should not relax just yet, as some work obviously remains to be done.una_unso_ukraine_lviev

7. In Yanukovych’s Russia-friendly Ukraine, intolerance was the rule and blacks and homosexuals mostly stayed hidden. Most Ukrainians would not vote for a Jewish presidential candidate, and even fewer for a black one. How things have changed! Now Nazi symbology in public is commonplace in Ukraine, whilst the government ostentatiously banned Communist symbology and recognized Nazi-era collaborators as Freedom Fighters. As best I recall, the Nazis were not known for their tolerance. How many Ukrainians in the new Europe-ready Ukraine would vote for a black or a gay presidential candidate? A Gay Pride march in Kiev scheduled for 2014 was canceled when authorities refused to police the event and said they could not guarantee the participants’ safety from homophobic violence. At another attempt in 2015, international supporters from Canada had to cross three lines of police to get to the meeting point, and were given a list of things to not do: Don’t wear bright colours. Don’t kiss or hold hands. Don’t speak to the police unless spoken to. The bus company which was approached by Kiev Pride to take the marchers to and from the march allegedly refused, saying, “We’ll take the diplomats, we’ll take the journalists, but we’re not taking any faggots.” Clearly, tolerance not only has not improved, but is in full retreat and is not a priority for the new government.

8. Life expectancy. In 2010, the year Yanukovych was elected president, it was 70.2 years. In 2016, it’s 69.6. I’m having a hard time seeing that as an improvement.

9. Health. Sports clubs encourage a healthier lifestyle. Most of Ukraine’s sports clubs and facilities were inherited from the Soviet Union.  A search for “Poroshenko opens new sports club” yielded nothing much except the news – I guess I shouldn’t be surprised – that he owns one: (search for “Poroshenko’s allies show up on website listing tax-haven firms”) Fifth Element, at 29A Electrykiv St. in Kiev. That’s also the registered address of Intraco Management, owned by deputy head of Roshen Sergey Zaitsev. Intraco Management showed up in Mossack-Fonseca’s records, which came to be better known as the Panama Papers. Meanwhile, health care in Ukraine remains deplorable and there has been no noticeable improvement.

In fact, although you can find the occasional bright spot if your business is finding bright spots and spinning them into a tapestry of success, Ukraine is a nation in free-fall. The currency is trading at 26.33 UAH to the US greenback, slowly edging up to that truly scary record spike of 33.5 to the dollar in February of last year. Pre-Maidan, the rate was about 7 hryvnia to the dollar. When Poroshenko assumed his present office, it was 12 to the dollar. The president’s approval rating has corkscrewed down to around 10%. Believe it or not – and I frankly find it incomprehensible there can  be an electorate anywhere, whose fingers must be nothing but scar tissue now from being burnt so many times, that so adamantly will not change its ways – the current leader in the polls is… Yulia Tymoshenko. Yes, indeed; if anything can save the floundering country, it’s another stinking-rich oligarch. Yulia Tymoshenko, multi-millionaire. Ukrainian family living wage, 9,950 UAH per month, about $383.00 USD. Per month. And the reduced price for gas for households was canceled in May, as an anti-corruption measure.

By the benchmarks set in the happy-time graphic, Ukraine is failing catastrophically in every metric, gasping for breath like a fish on the kitchen floor with someone standing on it. There is zero chance of any kind of peace deal this year, since Poroshenko arbitrarily decided to reverse the agreed-upon terms and announce no moves toward autonomy for the east could take place until Russia returned control of the border to Ukraine – causing Russia to withdraw from the Normandy format, since negotiations with such a fucking blockhead are a complete waste of everyone’s time.

To be completely fair to RFE/RL, they did not originate the graphic; that came from the highly-imaginative Institute of World Politics in Ukraine. But it fits perfectly with RFE/RL’s style; it’s hard for a one-time CIA-funded leopard to change its spots, and many of its columnists seem to rely far more on imagination themselves when they are writing their material. So they can own it.

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

1,214 Responses to Seeing More of the Big Picture in Ukraine

  1. et Al says:

    The Daily Caller: Former DC Bureau Chief: Clinton Surrogate Pitched Me ‘Birther’ Story In 2008
    http://dailycaller.com/2016/09/16/washington-bureau-chief-clinton-surrogate-pitched-me-birther-story-in-2008/

    Hillary Clinton surrogate Sid Blumenthal personally pitched a reporter on the President Obama “birther” story when she was campaigning for president in 2008, a former Washington reporter said Thursday….

    …But former McClatchy Washington Bureau Chief James Asher has backed up Trump’s version of events, saying he was personally pitched the story by a Clinton surrogate in 2008.

    Clinton had tweeted: “President Obama’s successor cannot and will not be the man who led the racist birther movement. Period.”

    And Asher replied: “@HillaryClinton So why did your man #sidblumenthal spread the #obama birther rumor to me in 2008, asking us to investigate? Remember?”…
    ####

    BOOM!

  2. Patient Observer says:

    Remember peak oil? Apparently, it will be back in a hurry and the end of the dream for American Energy Independence. Bakken and Eagle Ford fields are well into decline, Regardless of oil prices, recoverable oil is simply running out. My take is that oil prices will go crazy in a few years.

    http://peakoil.com/production/the-death-of-the-bakken-field-has-begun-big-trouble-for-the-u-s

    • marknesop says:

      But you can’t tell people. You try, but they just laugh and say you’re jealous of American prosperity and you are a Putinbot. So let them carry on yukking it up in their massive thyroidal Chevy Tahoes for another couple of years. But the attitude described in the article is American to a “T” – deny there is a problem until it’s such a calamity that nobody can deny it any longer, then about-face and say this is no time for pointing fingers, nobody could have known this would happen, and now we all have to work together to solve the problem that people they wouldn’t listen to 5 years ago warned them would happen.

      • Patient Observer says:

        The economic catastrophe could have been mitigated if fewer wells were drilled. Those wells may have been able to produce long enough to recover their costs. But, zero cost money, gold rush mentality and sunshine patriotism turned a decent windfall into a economic and political albatross.

        • kirill says:

          This aspect is totally missed by even many peak oil believers. Some of them think that future cumulative production after the peak (whenever it occurs) is going to be larger than before the peak. This is based on assuming that the extraction rate never varies with demand and that future production evolution will be a time-mirror process after the peak as if demand will decline in the future symmetrically to how it increased in the past. Of course such assumptions are total nonsense.

        • marknesop says:

          Very well put. But in order to show rapidly-rising production, they had to drill, baby, drill. If they had been more selective they would have had to show declining production or a figure that was obviously struggling to stay stable, and that wouldn’t fit the super-optimistic narrative, because they drilled all the most promising blocks first and were then forced to drill two wells in the less-productive areas for each one of the low-hanging fruit already plucked.

          • Patient Observer says:

            As you said earlier, the shale bubble should have surprised no one. This article is from several years back.

            http://shalebubble.org/#intro

            The linked article was predicting peak production for Eagle Ford and Bakken to be in the next year or so and to decline to negligible levels in the relatively near future. Turns out even they were overly-optimistic as the decline has already begun; perhaps accelerated by recent low oil prices.

            The email promoting this link included a typical overblown BS Time magazine cover – a picture of a rock with the tag line “This rock could power the world”. There is a lot of good info at the link.

            • marknesop says:

              Production would probably recover somewhat if prices came up, because a lot of rigs are shut down due to the fact that they can’t recover their costs at these prices. If the price came up to, say, $60.00 a barrel, more rigs would start up again and American production would come up again. But the very nature of shale drilling is that the sweet spots are drilled first, and wells come in hard but play out fast. So you have to keep drilling and drilling to keep the pace of production up, and as you move to the less productive areas you have to drill even faster because they don’t yield as much, and by and by you hit a point where you can’t stay ahead without new finds. They’ve increased overall recovery with horizontal drilling and made the industry much more efficient than when it started out, but you’re still dealing with that point when drilling can’t be done any faster but production is not increasing.

    • kirill says:

      After this analysis piece was posted peakoil.com got hit with a massive DOS attack. You will also see a whole load of shill comments touring the tight oil cornucopia in the comment section. This is abnormal as well as usually only a small number of comments are posted. Apparently this information is dangerous to the bubble of delusion maintained by US politicians and their MSM mouthpieces.

    • Cortes says:

      No need to worry: the doomsters at Kunstler.com cluborlov.blogspot.com etc are and always have been and will be just plain wrong. Cold fusion, telepathic downloading of energy from Rigel or Betelgeuse, synchronised twiddling of thumbs on astrologicallly propitious nights of the faithful Moon’s phases will substitute for the old fashioned oomph of hydrocarbons.
      Or something.

  3. marknesop says:

    Move along, folks; nothing to see here, there’s no story, TUE’s are routine and totally not cheating….oh, wait.

    Except the first British man to ever win the Tour de France is suddenly struggling to ‘splain himself after revelations that he not only received TUE’s for drug regimens just before his major target race for each season from 2011 to 2013, but actually got a triamcinoline injection for preventive reasons when he wasn’t even showing any symptoms just before his historic 2012 win.

    The whole WADA house is starting to shudder, and soon it will collapse. How many more info-dumps can international sport survive?

    How do you like that, Travis T. Tygart, you dick? How do you like that, Beckie Scott, you ‘this is an outrage’ clean-sports harridan? Can you feel it?

    Wiggins may have received his TUEs from Dr. Geert Leinders, who was banned for life for doping offenses which occured while he was team doctor of the Team Rabobank cycle team between 2001-2009. Strikingly similar to Doctor Dope Grigory Rodchenkov, except he is a cosseted witness for the Team McLaren prosecution. The reaper is coming, WADA and IOC. A hell of a lot of you are going to be looking for new jobs this time next year. Not likely in the USA, though. Because there it’s not cheating; it’s exceptionalism.

  4. kirill says:

    In the past, when human decency mattered, they would feel shame. Unfortunately, today they are brazen and think their lying and slander are right and proper. We good, them bad. Society is showing signs of decay.

  5. marknesop says:

    Whoops! There go Petra Kvitova and Bethanie Mattek-Sands’ WADA records. Is anyone else curious about why so many asthmatics end up in Olympic-level competition, considering only about 10% of the developed world’s populations are asthma sufferers? We just saw British cyclist Laura Trott is asthmatic. Now it transpires that Kvitova also suffers from asthma that only courses of prohibited substances can control. Mattek-Sands received TUE’s for hydrocortisone and even had one for an anabolic steroid – DHEA – approved by the International Tennis Federation (ITF, Dr. Stuart Miller again) although WADA revoked it. Mattek-Sands’ doctor is former bodybuilder Eric Serrano, who has previously advocated the use of performance-enhancing supplements and is the founding medical director for supplements-maker MusclePharm. ‘Nuff said about that, I think.

    Dr. Stuart Miller twice approved a TUE for a testosterone precursor for Mattek-Sands, only to have it turned down by WADA. But people take Miller seriously when he reassures them that there is nothing funny going on with TUE’s.

    According to Science Daily, the percentage of athletes who suffer from asthma is about 8%, right in line with the global developed population, and is the most chronic disease among athletes, thought to be aggravated by intense training. However, the same site pointed out that claims of asthma have risen steadily in every Olympics since the 1970’s and that in 2004, 21% of Team Great Britain claimed to be asthma sufferers while the prevalence in the population was around 8% then, too. The site claims there is no evidence to suggest inhaled asthma drugs improve performance, and then only a couple of sentences later cites a 2011 study which found asthmatic athletes have consistently outperformed healthy athletes at every Olympic Games since 2000.

    • Chinese American says:

      It would be interesting to find out the percentage of medal winners with TUEs, in comparison with the entire Olympic team.

      • marknesop says:

        It would indeed, considering the British study found that asthma sufferers outperformed those who did not have asthma in every Olympics since 2000, and asthma sufferers most often have a TUE. It therefore stands to reason that most medalists have a TUE of some sort. I wonder how common that is in Russia? But western analysts would argue the Russians do not need TUE’s as they have a state-sponsored doping program.

        • yalensis says:

          So, it’s pretty clear to everybody by now what is really going on:
          Westie docs feed their athletes some medical drug, like an asthma drug, or Ritalin, only the med is spiked with steroids. But the other substances in the cocktail somehow mask the steroid from being detected.

          Very clever! [sounds of rhythmic sarcastic clapping]

          • Jen says:

            Asthma drugs themselves are steroids and the beauty of these is that they are inhaled and so any performance-enhancing chemicals they might have can pass directly into the bloodstream through the lungs. Traces might still end up in urine later but probably at concentration levels too low to detect with conventional drug detection methods. In addition the drugs enhance lung capacity and encourage more efficient oxygen uptake which benefit people in sports that emphasise endurance (like marathon cycling events).

            Guide to asthma medications including … ahem, prednisone and prednisolone:
            http://www.webmd.com/asthma/guide/asthma-control-with-anti-inflammatory-drugs

            • yalensis says:

              But from my limited medical understanding, I was led to believe that the “prednisone” type steroid just makes people fat; whereas the anabolic steroids make people muscular. (?)

  6. marknesop says:

    A comic turn from The Daily Fail. Fully 53 of Great Britain’s athletes at Rio had TUE’s in effect, of 366 total.

    Why on earth does this parody of an anti-doping authority body appear to dole out Therauptic Use Exemptions like sweeties to children? Fifty three athletes in the Great Britain team at the Rio Olympics (out of a 366-strong squad) have current or previous TUES… and that’s only the Brits.

    Unless they were able to breathe properly, poor old Wiggins and Froome would be incapable of riding their bikes up French mountains with sides as steep as the Empire State Building. Nor would any of their fellow members of the mighty Sky team, which is called The Train by its jealous opponents.

    According to one report the blame for this jaundiced attempt at blackening their characters belongs to Lord Coe who, as president of the IAAF, is deemed by the Ruskies as responsible for the exclusion of their athletes from Rio and for which they seek revenge.

    • kirill says:

      Anglisky cheats.

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      Going to just go ahead and guess that Rowdy Roddy Rodchenkov’s testimony was a completely accurate account of practices in Britain and North America, with the details changed to make it applicable to Russia.

      • marknesop says:

        Except for the opening and resealing of the Berlinger sample bottles, which is critical to McLaren’s case. Speaking of that, I see he has asked for more time to finish his ‘Final Report’, and nobody really knows when it will come out – maybe November, maybe not. But he didn’t need more time for the Interim Report – no; although he complained that it was all very rushed, he stepped up like a trooper and got that baby ready just in time to fuck up the Olympics for Russia. Needs must when the devil drives, right, Rich?

        He looks a little sweaty in the photo. I would, too, if I were in his shoes.

  7. marknesop says:

    Ah! Another piece of the puzzle falls into place. Why the recent move by the Ukrainian government to bring both Ukrtranzgas and Naftogaz under the direct control of the Economy Ministry, I asked myself? And the answer came – because Ukrtranzgas and Naftogaz have recently become profitable thanks to the government’s raising household gas rates to market levels as demanded by the IMF program; something which the west has long sought but no Ukrainian leader had the stomach to carry through.

    So, I invite you to ask yourself; what is the relationship between ‘profit’ and ‘the Ukrainian government’, and why would Ukraine’s creditors be upset about this move?

  8. marknesop says:

    Oh, noes! A meeting with Putin, and the leader of Slovakia – holder of the rotating EU presidency – is talking like some kind of Putin fanboy.

    “When speaking about the implementation of the Minsk agreement, it needs to be said clearly that both parties are violating it. Actually, if we were to do an inventory of how Ukraine is meeting it, you would have to say Ukraine is meeting it even less than Russia,” Fico told Reuters in an interview.

    Russia is actually not even mentioned by name in the Minsk agreement and it has no formal specified obligations, but that\s a common mistake, so we’ll let it slide for now. But i can imagine Washington being a little pissy with that remark. And it did not get less personal, I’m afraid;

    “With the Minsk agreement (to bring peace in Ukraine), it is necessary to take stock. It is not true that Ukraine is the good guy and Russia is the bad guy,” he said.

    Oh, Fico, you crazy Slovakian, you. But then, he went too far.

    Fico said on Saturday the sanctions had done nothing to change Russian policy. “Sanctions are harming the EU and Russia and they help the United States. I reject them but at the same time I won’t break the unity of the EU on that,” he said.

    You can see what happens when some European leaders are allowed to visit that isolated country whose leader is an illegitimate international pariah with no influence left. There’ll be no more of that.

    Say…isn’t Slovakia where Ukraine gets most of its reverse-flowed Russia-cooties-purified gas?

  9. Moscow Exile says:

    According to TASS, on 19 Sep, at 1:43 UTC+03, 19 September, 2016:

    ПОСЛЕ ОБРАБОТКИ 35% ПРОТОКОЛОВ ЕДИНОРОССЫ НАБИРАЮТ 52,51% ГОЛОСОВ

    AFTER COUNTING 35% OF VOTES CAST THE UNITED RUSSIA PARTY HAS WON 52,51% OF THE VOTES

    The Communist party at the moment has 14.43% of the votes, LDPR — 14.36%, “Fair Russia” is gaining with 6.29%

    No other party has overcome the five-percent barrier.

    Little wonder that the “liberals” have been spurned once again when one considers their policy as regards the Crimea!


    We need to give the Crimea up …

    But hold! What is this I see? A courier hath arrived breathlessly from Banderastan! ….


    The real results of the Russian elections. Putin has ordered their falsification. Observe the count, and if the result is significantly different to that of exit polls — then everyone defend democracy!!!

    • et Al says:

      I don’t understand. Didn’t the liberal opposition parties tell their supports to boycott these elections as they will be falsified anyway? BTW, vis the above supposed results, what is the sample size and at which polling stations were they taken? I guess we’ll never find out.

    • marknesop says:

      Oh, I see how it works!! How could I have been so blind? You simply choose a number you think your party should have received, in a just world and taking into account your own personal estimation of the value of your party’s platform! Apply a 10% bonus if a member of your party was murdered under suspicious circumstances which the western press blamed on the Kremlin, and then round up to the nearest 10, and that gives you your percentage of the vote. Well, that certainly is revolutionary.

      PARNAS 34%, ha, ha. Not even in a birdcage. And this time there’s nobody left to pay for sticky buns and coffee to get the flighty college students to come out and march up and down while Navalny rants about taking the Kremlin. ‘Cause most of the NGO’s are GON. It’s a hard life if you don’t weaken. But if you do, it’s no life at all.

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      Are you quite sure that isn’t a parody?

    • Pavlo Svolochenko says:

      http://globalinterests.org/2014/07/28/ukraine-crisis-a-hot-reflection-of-the-cold-war-interview-with-volodymyr-bondarenko/
      (ignore the name in the link)

      If this is the same Konstantin Bondarenko (note that he’s using the Russian form of the name, not the Ukrainian one), then I’m certain the image is a parody (and quite a clever one – putting in the Poroshenko bloc is the one thing that gives it away).

      • Moscow Exile says:

        It must be a parody, but I’m sure there are plenty in Banderastan who think it’s true. And his name is spelt as a Russian would, but his opinion is written in Yukie. Big bad Mama Farion would not like that at all!

  10. Moscow Exile says:

    ДЕД ПРЕЗИДЕНТА ПОЛЬШИ ПОГИБ В РЯДАХ УПА ПОД БОЛЕХОВОМ


    A Banderite descendant for President of Poland

    The grandfather< of the Polish president died near Bolekhiv in the ranks of the UPA

    This information has for some time not only become a “byword” in the Carpathian town of Bolekhiv, but also in social networks. Anyway, leaflets have been distributed in the Bolechowska region and there is talk on the Internet …

    • yalensis says:

      Wow!
      Interesting tidbit from that piece: Предполагаю также, что последний бой борца за Украину Михаила Дуды заслуживает отдельного разговора. Замечу лишь, что к его гибели под Болеховом причастен известный англо-московский агент Ким Филби.
      Says that English-Soviet spy Kim Philby had something to do with the death of Mikhail Duda near Bolekhiv.
      I did a quick google, and found this bit :
      Soviet infiltration of British intelligence also meant that MI6 help in training some of the guerrillas in parachuting, and unmarked planes used to drop them into Ukraine from bases in Cyprus and Malta, was counter-acted by the fact that one MI6 agent with knowledge of the operation was the traitor Kim Philby, and working with Anthony Blunt, he alerted Soviet security forces about planned drops. Ukrainian guerrillas were intercepted and most were executed.

      Bravo, Kim! Helped remove a few Banderites, including President Duda’s grandpa!.

  11. Moscow Exile says:

    Yep! Russia is isolated when you consider its global debt figure and compare it with those of the free, democratic world under the leadership of the Exceptional Nation.

    🙂

  12. Lyttenburgh says:

    I’m finally “back” on KS. I still have lots of past comments to read, but decided to break my silence and resurface.

    Indeed, what have happened to the Ukrainian Democratic Dream v. 2.0.? How, just how could it happen that the most glorious event in the millennia long history of Rus-Ukrajina, brought to life by these people:

    utterly failed to deliver any of its promises (except the gay pride parade)?

    Putin – this “Judas who stepped down from the heaved” (c) – is certainly to blame. By his machinations and aggression, the Ukraine lost Donbass and Crimea – populated by a lesser breed, way below Racial Ukrs, and depressed funds sucking doughpits too boot. It’s is due to the nefarious leader of Mongolo-Katsaps, that Ukraine had to pour billions of easily embezzled and stolen credit money into their armed forces. Now Ukrainian Army is THE BEST in the Europe! Thus Sprach Poroshenko, after all. It’s is the best – but needs even more money, training and foreign made offensive weapons (for purely defensive reasons). It needs more shit from the West – but Ukrainian arms export is top of the world! Confused? Check yourself – you might be closeted separatists and colorad.

    The Western narrative of “Crussionalism” proclaims – Russia is (always) on the verge of collapse. Any time now. Juuuuust wait for it. The Ukraine, OTOH, must be lauded as the unprecedented success story – even if there is nothing to brag about. Nothing good happens in the economic sphere? Don’t worry your little head – just write about Kiev’s hipster scene. What else points out to country’s prosperity than aping of the Culturally Superior West?

    I’d like to conclude my come-back rant with a clip by Anatoly Shariy (eng subs) titled “Petro Poroshenko does not booze”. It dissects the (in)famous visit of shanovni pan prezident to a newly opened kindergarten and his speech at the opening ceremony. Now, wherever you are – imagine your own head of the state spending any significant time of his or her schedule attending such a ceremony – and not during the election cycle.

    You know why it was such a big deal in the Ukraine so that Petsya Po decided to drop by? The kindergarten in question was the first one to be open in this oblast since the glorious peremoga of the EuroMaidan.

    P.S. Damn… All these months away from the KS – and kar- the-butthurt-Finn is still shit-posting here?!

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Hey, Lyttenburgh!

      How are you?

      Have you had a ride on the Moscow Central Ring yet?

      Times are hard here, though, as you and I well know: well, hard for you, at least, because you are a native, whereas I am a Western Übermensch, but I feel for you as I do for all Russkies, except Mrs. Exile, because she had the nerve to tell me last night that she had voted for LDPR yesterday. So my son and heir then asked me which party I would have voted for if I had been able to do so, and I told him for the CPRF, which caused my rap-singing son to go lulu.

      I am afraid I have sired a kreakl.

      Where have I failed in Vladimir’s ubringing?

      🙂

      • Lyttenburgh says:

        Hi, ME!

        No, I didn’t tested this 8th wonder of the world, known as “surface metro”. Had no reason to, neither the time for idle travell.

        Yesterday I voted very early – at 9:30, the hour when one can expect to find at the polling station only hipsters coming from the after-party and babushkas. In my neck of the woods there were no hipsters – only a busload of military cadets (“Yiiiiiiiiii! Carouself voting!”). We had posh hi-tech automated ballot boxes there:

        Some handshakable commenters already complained to the foreign press, that the Bloody Regime deliberately tried to make the turnout lower – by not informing the people of where the polling stations are and, most dastardly of all, by not having caffeterias open at the stations!

        Well – that’s kinda not true. For the last month my postboxhad been regularly stuffed with various agitation material, including “neutral” one, urging me come to elections and informing where can I fulfull my civic duty. As for not having a cafeteria – honestly, can’t recall when it’s been done last time. Somewhere in the 90s?

        I voted for KPRF, given that Nikolai Starikov’s ПВО was not allowed to run.

        • Moscow Exile says:

          МЦК: как в Москве начал работать новый вид транспорта

          MCR: how in Moscow there began a new means of transport

          Free tours of the Moscow Central ring (MCR) will be held for passengers on weekdays until 10 October 2016. The tours at begin at 16:00 at the Transport Hub “Luzhniki”.

          Registration on the website mosburo.ru/mcc by phone: +7 (495) 637-70-05.

          Thanks to Ayrat and the project “Moscow through the eyes of an engineer” and mosblog for a great tour of the MCR)

          All together now!

          Third-world shit-hole!

          Third-world shit-hole!

          • et Al says:

            ME, on behalf of all the non-Russia resident stooges here, we done doff our hats to you!

            You have presented exemplary bravery, fortitude and cheese eating skills in face of a barrage of of near insurmountable obstacles.

            We salute you for going over the top, in suffering the slings and arrows of an outrageous political system, let alone expats, and support you as daily venture forth in to the fold of the Bear’s nest, so we don’t have to. Hip Hip! Huzzah! 😉

            • Moscow Exile says:

              Cheese?

              Did you say cheese????

              I dream of cheese — real cheese, I do!

              I’m worse than poor old Ben Gunn, I am, who was stranded by Cap’n Flint’s scurvy crew and had not eaten a morsel of cheese for years and years!

              “I’m poor Ben Gunn, I am; and I haven’t spoke with a Christian these three years … Marooned three years agone and lived on goats since then, and berries, and oysters. Wherever a man is, says I, a man can do for himself. But, mate, my heart is sore for Christian diet. You mightn’t happen to have a piece of cheese about you, now? No? Well, many’s the long night I’ve dreamed of cheese–toasted, mostly–and woke up again, and here I were.”

              • cartman says:

                Cheese – you mean the purification of animal milk. Most Asians think it is repulsive. The EU is never going to be able to export the stuff to most countries.

              • Moscow Exile says:

                Which reminds me: today is (almost “was” here as it is now 22:45) “International Talk Like A Pirate Day”, me hearties!

                So splice the main-brace, ye swabs, an’ get some o’ this ‘ere Nelson’s Blood down yer throats!

            • Jen says:

              ME is also to be saluted for continuing to worship his ancient Anglo-Saxon god Wotan in his secret grove in the farthest reaches of his country estate despite his wife’s (?) attempts to have him baptised in the Russian Orthodox Church; and for his stoicism in subsisting on fish-heads and stale cabbage as dietary staples.

              • Moscow Exile says:

                The last Russian sky pilot I spoke to here did indeed say straight to my face that I was not a Christian and must be baptized before I wed Mrs. Exile in church, which annoyed me somewhat and as a result , I turned to the god of my forefathers, the Wise One, Woden.

    • Fern says:

      Yay! You’re back – I think I speak on behalf of all Stooges when I say we missed you greatly and were worried we’d never see you again.

      • Lyttenburgh says:

        Hi Fern! Don’t worry – I was taking a vacation from late July till late August, and when I cam back found out that in the meantime big rainstorms somehow damaged optic cable to my house. And then I forgot to pay for the I-net so it ran out. I’m still playing big “catch up” with the Internet and my usual places.

    • marknesop says:

      Welcome back, Lyttenburgh!! Thanks for the Shariy clip, he cracks me up.

      Poroshenko is such a buffoon, he seems to forget who he is speaking to, or perhaps he has a one-speech-fits-all kind of delivery. But speaking to kindergartners has an undeniable advantage – few of them will call you out for your bullshit numbers on how much is spent on roads, because they haven’t learned to add and subtract yet.

    • yalensis says:

      So, wha’ happened, Lyt? Why the long silence? Dish it out!
      I hope it wasn’t something I said…

    • Cortes says:

      Depressing video, but thanks for sharing.

      Great to have you back!

  13. Lyttenburgh says:

    Mega-post on Duma Elections – later. Now tl;dr version:

    “Do you realise, what you’ve done?!”

  14. Moscow Exile says:

    А Гриша-то, Гриша не унимается! Один процент голосов получил всего-то!

    Ah Grisha, Grisha! He just does not let up! One percent of votes received altogether!

    Grigory Yavlinsky, who heads Yabloko the list in the elections to the State Duma, has declared that he may take part in the presidential campaign as candidate for the presidency.The politician told journalists of this at the party headquarters.

    “Our party is going to take an active part in what is called a presidential election — possibly with me as a candidate… As regards now, at least, I am the Yabloko Party presidential candidate. It is my duty now to be that candidate”, Yavlinsky was quoted by the news Agency as having said.

    Following the processing of half of the ballot papers, it is known that the Yabloko list has not overcome the five percent barrier for representation in the duma and has won 1.04 percent of the votes; “United Russia” is leading with more than 53 percent of the vote; the Communist Party has 14.1%, with the Liberal Democratic Party having 0.1 per less than that, followed by Fair Russia with 6.2%. Other parties that participated in the elections managed to enlist the support of less than five percent of the electorate …

    • Eric says:

      Yabloko had the extra benefit of having PARNAS around…to make them appear the most sane out of the liberal parties ..and daily exposure on television….and they could not get past the 2 per cent mark!

      Moscow Exile, can you explain to me why ..some are saying that the September vote will bring less to the voting booths than in the previous votes in December?

      • Moscow Exile says:

        I’ve been puzzling over that question myself. School starts everywhere in Russia on September 1st every year. There is a big migration back from the dachas or foreign watering holes for the start of the academic year. So if anything, there is an upsurge of population in the urban areas in September as Russians return home to their registered domiciles.

        As regards December, that’s a full working month with no long Christmas holidays starting on or around December 25: Russia shuts down officially on (or just before if New Year is at the weekend) December 31, though some book off work a couple of days before 31st December.

        So again, peak population in December, meaning people are then living at their registered addresses and near their registered polling stations, just as they are in September.

        • gencha says:

          Not quite, September is still dacha season and while most people do live at their registered addresses during that time, they still go to their dachas on weekends (and all elections are held on Sundays) and a trip there could be a few hours’ drive + traffic (mostly in Moscow, St. Petersburg and other large cities) so they leave early before the polling stations open and come back late after they close. Voter turnout also depends on the region, this year it ranged from a little more than 16% (in St. Petersburg) to almost 80% (Kemerovo, Tyumen and Chechnya). Despite all the calls on their supporters to come and vote – who probably did vote – the opposition parties that the west likes so much – Yabloko, Parnas, etc. – won less than 1-2% of votes. What I personally find interesting is that the Party of Growth, a new party advocating the rights of entrepreneurs and business, got only 1.28% of votes despite a lot of talk in the media about how businesses are pressed by the state. I thought they would do better, may be even pass the 5% threshold.

          • Moscow Exile says:

            We were at our dacha at the weekend as well, but my wife voted on Sunday evening after we had come back to Moscow from the country.

            We travel by commuter tain and metro as we have no car. The journey door-to-door takes 2 hours.

            I have never had a car: never learnt to drive.

            I must be one of the last of the English peasant class!

            🙂

          • Lyttenburgh says:

            1) There is still an option to use “открепительное удостоверение” (aka “absentee ballot”).

            2) I really doubt that the typical electorate of the liberasts has dachas 😉

            3) I’m not suprised by the Party of the Growth in the slightest. If you proclaim loudly “we are for bourgeoisie!” in Russia, you won’t get votes neither from the “commoners”, nor from your intended electorate.

            • Moscow Exile says:

              Yes, dachniki on the territories where our plot, Litertyurnaya Gazeta, is are either Soviet old codgers (Hell’s bells, I’m an old codger too, but not Soviet!) or people with school kids, which is what my wife is (she’s not an old codger, though, and most think I’m my kids’ granddad), and definitely no kreakly in sight.

  15. Moscow Exile says:

    Dima, what a fucking prick you are!

    (Or words to that effect!)

  16. Moscow Exile says:


    FAREWELL, PARLIAMENTARY IMMUNITY
    oil on canvas, 2016

    Because he would have got a “Go Straight to Jail Card” if he had said in some countries what he has said in the State Duma whilst enjoying parliamentary immunity.

  17. Patient Observer says:

    Is it no obvious that Putin was behind the recent bombings in the US? He is angry and jealous over Obama’s legacy. Blowing up the SpaceX rocket was not enough. The pattern is obvious. He started in Florida and is working his way up the East coast. Miraculously, he will turn up in New York just in time for the UN meeting.

  18. Patient Observer says:

    The allegations that the Russian government wanted a low turnout to strengthen its position is contrary to what is said regarding US elections. The thinking here is that the minority party, being more motivated to vote, will do relatively better as voters for the majority party tend to more complacent. I agree with this assessment. So, in the case the of Duma elections, a low voter turnout favors the minority parties.

    • gencha says:

      Exactly. The turnout this year was almost 50%, compared with 60% in 2011. Interestingly, five years ago United Russia won a smaller percentage of votes, with the number of parties in the election being half of that this year.

  19. et Al says:

    Moon of Alabama: U.S. Allies ‘Volunteer’ To Share (Implausible) Blame For Deir Ezzor Attack
    http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/09/us-allies-volunteer-to-share-blame-for-deir-ezzor-attack.html

    The U.S. is trying to distribute the blame for its air support of ISIS against the Syrian Arab Army in Deir Ezzor.

    The facts, not put into doubt by any U.S. statement, via the Russian military report after Saturday’s incident:…

    …It is very doubtful that this was not an intended attack. Even Human Rights Watch recognized Saturday’s mass murder as “signal” to the Syrian government (before deleting its tweet*)…

    * https://twitter.com/ShoebridgeC/status/777575133141688320/photo/1
    ####

    More at the link.Is this another “Take one for being an ally of the United States”? They really don’t know when to stop digging, this being a particularly poor PR response. F/kwits.

  20. Patient Observer says:

    One can imagine these headlines:

    Only 26% of Russian support the government!

    50% of the potential voters abstained in silent protest fearing KGB reprisals!

  21. kickingtoes says:

    In case of interest re Ukraine (Phil Howard studies bots and Computational Propaganda) https://twitter.com/pnhoward/status/777484867361726464

  22. Moscow Exile says:

    Когда вам в следующий раз будут говорить о 86% поддержки власти – показывайте эту диаграмму

    When next they speak of 86% support for the powers that be, show them this diagram

    http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/47175/35931700.15c/0_e19ae_dbf3a870_orig
    (large grey area: 64.2% — They stayed home)

    And then they might inform you, shit-for-brains, that yesterday’s vote was for the election of State Duma deputies and some regional duma ones as well and some regional governors and not for the president, who enjoys over 80% support of Russian citizens.

    The State Duma is the legislature, as are regional dumas, and governors are members of provincial executives.

    The president is neither the government nor the powers that be: he is the chief executive of the state, and, unlike the president of the USA, is elected directly and solely by popular vote.

    And he’d get over 80% tomorrow if presidential elections were to be held then.

  23. Moscow Exile says:

    Rats!

    Didn’t close the next last link above correctly.

    Here is the above again:

    Well then, sonny! Did your
    Poles help you?

    Washington — Moscow, September 19 (Noviy Den’, Anastasia Smirnova).
    According to the Washington polling station voting results for the State Duma elections, the present deputy in the lower chamber of parliament, Dmitri Gudkov, won almost three times more votes than did his chief rival in a single member district, the former head of Rospotrebnadzor, Gennady Onishchenko.

    See also: News from Russia

    Opposition politician Dmitry Gudkov, representing Yabloko in the single member Tushino district of Moscow, was able to circumvent his main rival from United Russia, Gennady Onishchenko at a polling station in the Russian Embassy in Washington. Here he scored 604 votes, and the former head of Rospotrebnadzor only 230 votes. The representative of “Rodina”, Igor Korotchenko, obtained 133 votes and took third place, reports TASS.

    Russia’s last dissenting voice in Parliament stands up to strongman Putin ahead of election

    There is only a single politician in the Russian Parliament left who is willing to stand up to the might of Russia’s strongman president, Vladimir Putin.

    For four years, at great personal risk, Dmitry Gudkov has fought the political excesses of the Kremlin and his country’s docile Parliament.

    Soon Mr Gudkov, 36, should know if he will serve another term as the sole survivor in the 450-member Duma (the lower house) who takes an independent stand.

    Meanwhile, back in the real world of the Tushino district, Moscow, and not Russian polling station at the Washington Embassy, the Washington poster-boy lost yesterday:

    Дмитрий Гудков рассказал, что станет делать после Думы

    Dmitri Gudkov has said what he is going to do after the duma

  24. Northern Star says:

    Somehow I don’t think Crimea will be returned to Ukraine in the forseeable future:

  25. Lyttenburgh says:

    To no one’s particular surprise, Mordukhai Khodorkovsky called the people of This Country to the barricades , promising, that he will “do everything possible for this happened soon”. Amateur pornstar Misha “2’’” Kasyanov (saddened by the block of PornTube and PornHub in the Northern Mordor) proclaimed, that “chances for constitutional peaceful transfer of the power became lower”. Just imagine – Kasyanov and Khodor on white horses storming into the Kremlin and all the following democratic lustrations, re-educational camps of liberty and victory parade of the 6th fleet personnel!

    Stuff like this just shows that both Kasyanov and Khodorkovsky are impossibly “far away from the people” – both the “sovok bylo”, who are just not worth the right to vote, and the tight ranks of hipsteriat, who (o, zrada!) prefer to catch pokemons, hang out in anti-café, to “veiperit’” in hacker-spaces while drinking smoothie and eating meatboli. They still don’t realize, that their exalted elves (a core of the liberal voting base) are cowards and/or bunch of lazy loosers.

    Anyway – “it was already in “The Simpsons””. (c)

    This is a final verdict to the proponents of the “inner emigration”, who instead of “cozy dissident kitchen” are now “buggering off” to the safe space of their own design, one giant (and cardboard) Ark of “Virtual Reality”. All across the world we see time after time how the so-called “Generation Y” fails utterly to mobilize itself and influence the real-world politics in democratic way.

    Tl;dr – No, kiddies! No virtual democracy for you!

  26. Special_sauce says:

    Peter Lavelle breathing fire on Crosstalk Bullhorns in Combat.

  27. marknesop says:

    A fairly unbiased look – from the standpoint that it assumes it has actually been proven there is an all-encompassing state-sponsored doping program in Russian sport, while castigating WADA for the useless and self-righteous tumor it is – at the recent disclosures from Fancy Bear, which organization is assumed to be Russian although that has never been demonstrated with anything like evidence. More of “The Russians don’t like us because they are jealous of our freedoms, so it must be them”.

    Here’s my favourite quote:

    “Though the athletes are the ones being publicly embarrassed, the hardest light rightly falls on WADA (the World Anti-Doping Agency). That wretched and increasingly pointless agency has mastered a real management trick – its actual function is in direct opposition to its stated mission…What is the point of a banned-substances list if the right person with the right connections to the right doctor can obtain and then legally use them in secret?

    If your answer is the one Stuart Miller gave this week – “Anybody who is an athlete and is subject to an antidoping program, like the Williams sisters, is subject also to getting ill and having medical conditions” – there’s a simple solution for that: don’t compete.”

    • Jen says:

      Interesting that the article linked mentions that a cyclist was taking medication for asthma which also has the effect of enhancing lung capacity. That could well raise the question of whether that guy’s asthma is for real or whether he has some other milder condition that got bumped up to “asthma”. We would have to know the cyclist’s full medical history to find out if he had asthma before he took up cycling or it was discovered only after he decided to compete at elite level or came into contact with certain doctors or sports doctors.

      • Cortes says:

        No need for Paralympics, then.

        Bilateral osteoarthritis in the hips? No problem: here’s your TUE for using your mobility scooter in the 10k Sir Farah…

        Singling that arsehole out for being “too busy” to appear at the Commonwealth Games in 2014.

  28. marknesop says:

    Oooooooo…..the Syrian High Negotiating Commission – comprised of the failures who would like very much to lead Syria but would have to be appointed because they could not get elected, like so many of the ‘political dissidents’ of the world – which is supported, of course, by the west, has announced its vision for a peaceful government transition. This should take about a year and a half, they say, and start with the departure of President Assad and ‘his clique’. If you’re not familiar with that term, it means ‘and everyone who is loyal to him’.

    Good luck with that, boys (they are mostly boys, although they saved a seat for that perennial cipher Basma Kodmani). They chose a good name for themselves – it certainly sounds as if they are high. All of the west’s ‘solutions’ for Syria start with Assad stepping down, as if he is going to fight for, what, five years now, and then just when the momentum shifts his way, hand over power to some western stooge who is only there to sign a pipeline deal with Qatar.

    • Jen says:

      One of the bigwigs on the Syrian High Negotiating Commission of the Syrian “opposition” is a Dr Riad Hijab. Hijab (to me anyway) seems a strange surname for a Syrian or an Arab. I Googled “Hijab” as a surname and found that as a first name and a surname, it’s most commonly used by people of Indian subcontinent background and is of Urdu (ie northern Indian / Pakistani) origin. While this information is of academic interest and may have no bearing on Dr Hijab’s background, it’s something to keep in mind.
      http://www.namespedia.com/details/Hijab

  29. TruthSeeker says:

    As Fancy Bear investigative team releases more and more files of criminal outfit known as WADA, US media scrambles to contain the damage. USA Today just published this gem pooh-pooing the whole thing.

    http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/rio-2016/2016/09/19/wada-hack-raises-questions-therapeutic-use-exemptions-security/90702420/

    However, while desperately trying to minimize the outrage, it managed to somehow slip in this precious nugget:
    “Lance Armstrong was able to obtain a TUE retroactively — a process which is allowed under WADA rules — to cover up doping”.

    WHAT!?!?
    Anyone knew of this?
    Are these WADA clowns for real?
    This is Bizarro world writ large – up is down, white is black, cheating is honesty, and so on….
    Unbelievable.

    • Cortes says:

      The MSM deservedly gets stick.

      In defence of the “poor bloody infantry” who, after all, have mouths to feed and shit to endure from on high, I provide no examples in order not to identify them: increasingly there are inserted in MSM reports tongue in cheek reportages of what stooges might describe as “the real world.” Walking around in their shoes for a moment or two (not everyone can be a Snowden, an Assange or a Manning) to paraphrase Atticus Finch might lead us to appreciate the increasing bravery of those inside the machine.

    • marknesop says:

      There was mention made right after the first dump of information, about Simone Biles and the Williams Sisters, of someone getting a retroactive TUE, and I presume it was one of them. A retroactive TUE would occur when someone took a supplement and then later asked for permission, and got a doctor to sign off that it was okay. I imagine ‘later’ means that it came up in a scan or some kind of drug test, or you were afraid it would, because if nobody ever knew you took it, why would you bring it up?

      I know I keep using this example, but Yulia Efimova was reviled and tormented by a mannerless mob at Rio, and the papers seized on it joyfully as a manifestation of how internationally disliked the Russians are, all because she took an over-the-counter nutritional supplement, which contained the banned hormone DHEA (the same one Stuart Miller twice wrote a TUE for Bethanie Mattek-Sands to take legally, but WADA shot it down). Efimova’s other offense was meldonium, and while I agree it’s unlikely so many Russian athletes have heart problems, it was not a banned substance until this year and Russian doctors advised athletes to take it because it was beneficial and not prohibited. It is extremely likely that WADA banned it precisely because they think it might give Eastern-European athletes an advantage of some kind, but they can’t prove it does and the company that makes it maintains it is not performance-enhancing in any way. Meanwhile the western and international organizations blubber on about all the health problems their own athletes have, and how there’s absolutely nothing wrong with taking even a banned supplement so long as you need it to keep you healthy!

      If it happened to transpire that Lilly King had a TUE to take a performance enhancing substance on the banned list, she might as well get used to never coming out of her house again.

    • Moscow Exile says:


      WADA has allowed an American chessplayer to use a computer
      because he has attention deficit syndrome and weak mindedness


      WADA has allowed an American swimmer to use a motor boat
      because he does not know how to swim and is scared of water

      • marknesop says:

        Ha, ha, ha!!!!! Those are great!!! Here’s mine, only I don’t know how to add the text:

        WADA has allowed a British pole-vaulter to use a jet pack because he has rheumatoid arthritis in his knees, and flat feet.

        • Jen says:

          Soon to come … WADA has allowed a retro-70s psychedelic tribute rock band to use LSD because all the members have colour blindness.

          • Lyttenburgh says:

            Sounds legit, Jen!

            Not everyone knows yet, but Sid Vicious took heroin due to WADA’s prescriptions.

            • marknesop says:

              Western reporting’s constant theme on the WADA leaks is (1) releasing athletes’ confidential medical records is criminal and reprehensible, (2) this is not doping, and the athletes have done nothing wrong, and (3) any attempt to equate this behavior with Russia’s well-known and proven state doping program is ludicrous.

              But reading between the lines, reporters allow that some champions are now scrambling to defend their records, such as Britain’s Wiggins, who set himself up as an icon of clean sport and claimed never to have taken a needle which was not an IV or a vaccination. That was a lie, and there’s no other way to say it.

              The cited article above says four core members of Canada’s medal-winning Olympic soccer team in the 2008 Beijing Olympics were granted TUE’s within a week of each other, for salbutamol – surprise!! an asthma treatment. In 2002, the IOC began demanding that those who were given a TUE for it prove that they have an asthma condition or medically-certified breathing problem. Then…poof! In 2011 it was taken off the banned list altogether, and they started testing for concentration. So they say.

              “If they had a TUE back then, the thinking at the time was that there was no beneficial effect in terms of performance enhancing, and that all you were doing by taking that inhaler was levelling the playing field in terms of your capacity to breathe,” McKenzie said. “It wasn’t until we started to see that asthmatic athletes were outperforming the non-asthmatic athletes that people started to wonder if there’s more to this. That’s where we’re at now. It’s quite a contentious issue.”

              The four were given TUE’s to administer the banned substance via inhaler, all within a week of one another, for a year.

              So it’s absolutely not doping, nothing to see here, and any attempt to expose it is reprehensible and criminal behavior, although by the admission of researchers it remains a contentious issue, and nobody can explain how supposedly asthmatic athletes taking medication for it can outperform non-asthmatic athletes. Yet Russia absolutely without a doubt has a state-sponsored doping program approved by the government and its athletes are all dopers, although none have seen the actual evidence against them and the final report will not be out until probably December. While its author called his primary witness a probable liar in the preliminary report and a credible witness in the interim report, which was rushed out in time for the Olympics. No hurry now, though.

              Here’s an article which was extremely interesting to me, since it seems to ask if the Olympics should be discontinued altogether– which, as you know, is exactly my position although my reasons are different. I have grown to despise the Olympics because it has become almost entirely political.

              But this author’s perspective is that they are a money pit for corruption and an excuse to make infrastructure changes which exclusively benefit those with money in their pockets. His primary source for the article points out that the IOC rakes in billions from sales of broadcasting rights and corporate sponsorships. When it visits the host city, the IOC expects to be treated like royalty; its imperious list of expectations to Oslo (a finalist which withdrew its bid in 2014) included being received by the King before the opening ceremony, a lavish runway welcome reception, Coke products in all minibars, specific room temperatures and a separate traffic lane for IOC officials, if you can believe it.

              More to the point, though, the Olympics are a money-loser for the host city. Montreal’s bid in 1976 went over budget by 720% and bankrupted the city. Sochi cost 289% more than budgeted, which is actually not bad and fairly close to the average cost overrun of 156%. But you still have ridiculous spectacles like the UK’s Sports Minister patting the city of London on the back because its costs in 2012 came in under budget – £8.77 Billion against a budget of £9.3 Billion. He left out the fact that the original cost estimate which secured support for the bid was £2.4 Billion.

              Brazil used its hosting as an opportunity to run the poor out of a sprawling hillside neighbourhood in Rio, for subsequent gentrification and rebirth as Porto Marvahila – Marvelous Port. In this effort up to its neck was Odebrecht, a construction firm whose chief executive, Marcelo Odebrecht, was just handed a 19-year prison term for his role in the Petrobras affair. He also bankrolled the campaign of Michel Temer, to the tune of $1.8 Million in illegal funding. Imagine that.

  30. Patient Observer says:

    This is too much. Just saw a CBS news story about the complete collapse of the Syrian ceasefire. The reporter then said Russian and/or Syrian air strikes accidentally hit a convoy of Red Crescent trucks carrying aide to Aleppo. The reporter, with a straight face, said that trucks erupted into fireballs after the strikes. The video did indeed show some serious fireballs from trucks purportedly transporting humanitarian aide. Since the air strike was at night, I suspect it was the Russians using precision weapons. The humanity!

  31. Patient Observer says:

    The Gerald R Ford aircraft carrier suffers numerous and serious system failures:

    https://sputniknews.com/military/20160919/1045485464/uss-ford-turbine-explosions.html

    “With the benefit of hindsight, it was clearly premature to include so many unproven technologies [on the vessel],” Frank Kendall, the Pentagon’s top weapons buyer, wrote in a memo, according to the Japan Times.

    But new revelations show that the power problems may prevent the Ford from even leaving port. An electrical explosion occurred in the ship’s second main turbine generator (MTG) in June. While US military officials insist there was no fire, the incident was enough to fling debris into the turbine. One month later, a similar explosion occurred on the first MTG.

    Pentagon sources speaking to Defense News claim that the cause has been traced to faulty voltage regulators. Repairs are expected to cost at least $37 million. This is the latest in a series of setbacks that has forced a delay in delivery of the USS Ford.

    Also, every LCS (all six) have had significant failures and all are currently undergoing repairs.

  32. Patient Observer says:

    I am willing to put on a tin foil hat from time to time:

    The video provides some interesting observations.

    • yalensis says:

      In addition to being in poor health, Hillary seems to be an introvert. Most people are either introverts or extroverts. The difference is that extroverts gain energy from being around other people. Introverts, on the other hand, feel their energy draining when they have to be around other people. They regain their energy by being by themselves.

      Most politicians are extroverts. Introverts can make good leaders, if they are allowed to have their quiet time away from other people. But the “people” part of political life would be a burden to anybody with an introvert personality.

  33. Northern Star says:

    Roots…ME style

    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/05/syria-civil-war-explained-160505084119966.html
    http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/09/17/the-dirty-politics-behind-the-syrian-conflict/

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2000/06/assa-j16.html
    “The history of Syria and the entire Middle East has demonstrated, in the negative, the correctness of the Marxist theory of Permanent Revolution, as elaborated by Leon Trotsky. In countries with a belated capitalist development—even those possessing vast oil wealth—the native bourgeoisie is organically incapable of leading the workers and oppressed masses in overcoming the legacy of feudal backwardness and colonial subjugation. Its interests are fundamentally linked with and subordinate to those of the imperialist powers—economically, politically and militarily. Above all, it is concerned with suppressing the internal political threat to its rule posed by the working class”

  34. Patient Observer says:

    Just musing – one can expect a massive air assault by the Russian Aerospace Forces on ISIS and its minions involving heavy bombers, cruise missiles, thermobaric warheads, Russia special forces setting up kill zones, intense aerial reconnaissance and destruction of every fucking jihadist this side of hell. The SAA, Iran and Hezbollah will be quite busy as well doing their part.

    And what is the US going to do about it?

    • kirill says:

      I really hope they pound these jihadi terrorist vermin to Hell. The US attack on the SAA was coordinated with the jihadis who have seized the initiative and are making gains. The whole cease fire was a scam that eased off SAA pressure on the terrorists. The same scam as the Minsk ceasefires that Kiev totally ignores and only served to prevent Kiev’s punitive suppression forces from being routed.

    • et Al says:

      …And what is the US going to do about it?
      ####

      They’ll collect the fragments to analyse the capabilities of Russian weapons and then feed that back in to their military operational training and strategic plans. I suspect that Team USA likes it when Russia uses its shiny shinies precisely for this reason, though I also suspect that Russia a) uses them sparingly (not only because they are expensive); b) they use the older generation and certainly not the latest models (otherwise the old ones just gather dust and have to be scrapped anyway). That’s the genius of using the SVP-24 system for dropping dumb bombs – the useful stuff is in the aeroplane, not the bombs.

  35. marknesop says:

    Turkey also plans to build, with participation and assistance from Rosatom, three nuclear power plants in Mersin, in addition to the Turkish Stream pipeline. Permits for the initial phase of construction under the sea have been issued, and once complete the system will consist of four lines with a total capacity of 63 BCm, the same as South Stream would have carried.

    Don’t make any plans for those transit fees, Poroshenko.

  36. marknesop says:

    Oh, now the US is ‘outraged’, now that an aid convoy has been hit. The UN says portentously, if it was found to be deliberate it ‘could amount to a war crime’. Of course Russia and the SAA are accused, and the US blubbers angrily that they might have to rethink their whole cooperative arrangement with Russia.

    Conspicuous by its absence is a statement from Russia. Are they going to acknowledge responsibility? According to the article, the convoy’s destination was known to the SAA and Russian Federation. If there really is a joint operations centre and that wasn’t just a joke, you’d think the position of the convoy would be plotted and airborne patrols advised of its location.

    This report appears to blame Syria for the strike. So far the reports I’ve seen suggest it was a missile strike, although many of them rely on local activists or the bogus Syrian Observatory of Human Rights for their information. Let’s just wait and see if it is reassessed to have been a bombing attack, because I would just like to remind everyone of the large consignment of Russian bombs Qatar bought from Ukraine, although it has no aircraft which could carry them.

  37. marknesop says:

    A good and logical breakdown at Grey Falcon’s site on why the Deir ez-Zor attack was not likely to have been an accident. Particularly telling, for me, and something I should have thought of, is that the A-10’s are ground attack aircraft which would likely have been hitting from low altitude and against targets which were probably visible to the pilots.

    • Patient Observer says:

      Yes, and hitting targets where there was no reason to have prepared for possible air strikes. It was like shooting fish in a barrel except that the fish were soldiers fighting ISIS. I wonder how the pilots feel about what they did.

  38. Moscow Exile says:

    From the BBC:

    Syria conflict: UN suspends all aid after convoy hit


    SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENCE WHITE HELMETS/AP
    Activist from the Syrian Civil Defence White Helmets shows area said to have been hit by attack

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group, said the attacks were carried out by either Syrian or Russian aircraft.

    Totally unbiased sources.

    • marknesop says:

      The whole thing smells like a setup.

      “The strikes, which witnesses say came from the air, came hours after Syria declared a week-old US-Russia brokered cessation of hostilities at an end.”

      They really seem to be trying to nail down this point. But still no statement from Russia or the Syrian government. Odd. As if it might not have been an air strike at all, but somebody wants it to look like one. We’ll see.

      • Fern says:

        Well, I’m no expert on military stuff but I can’t help wondering what’s happened to eyes in the sky. Surely the US, UK and Australia together with any and all EU countries whose militaries, in one form or another, are active in Syria operate aerial survellience? Don’t they know exactly who is flying where to do what?

        • marknesop says:

          It’s quite possible the western ‘coalition’ had some sort of air asset, perhaps a drone, airborne at the time but it would only be in their interests to release the footage if it backed up their story. Russia or Syria may have had something up and may just be waiting for Washington to go too far before revealing it, but we’ll have to wait and see. The despicable part is that if it was a setup pulled by the White Helmets or another activist group, it was probably done with western collaboration. We should be suspicious whenever the propaganda campaign seems all ready to go. Considering how long it takes for anyone to ‘know’ anything when there is a major incident, and considering any mistake made by the allies is usually written off to the ever-present ‘fog of war’, the UN had a snappy statement all ready to go within a couple of hours of the aid convoy getting hit, and the accusations of Russian or Syrian culpability were almost instantaneous. It’s just too neat, like a package.

          But something like 12 UN drivers were murdered. Where were they from? Are they Syrians? If so, it will probably be no skin off the west’s nose. If they’re even dead – they could have been part of it as well, and just bunked off and let the vehicles be burnt. This casts again in a suspicious light the UN’s querulous complaining that the Syrian authorities insist on seeing the paperwork for aid convoys and checking out the contents. But nonetheless, the whole ‘that’s it – we quit’ thing from the UN is also suspicious. They only do that when they can pretend they are up against implacable evil, against which no man can succeed. Otherwise they are bragging how tough they are in adversity, and that nothing can stop the forces of goodliness.

          It is certainly no secret that the west is determined to have Assad gone no matter what it costs, but now that Russia has committed to Assad’s side, they cannot allow such a victory by the west or it will have all been for nothing. If free and fair elections are held in a peaceful atmosphere, Assad will win easily – so the west cannot allow that scenario to play out, or it will have all been for nothing from their viewpoint. Taken together, a recipe for endless war until Assad is either killed or flees the country, at which point the west would pursue him gleefully for ‘war crimes’.

  39. Moscow Exile says:

    Anti-Maidan activist (“terrorist in the Yukie media) shot dead in Moscow restaurant yesterday:

    В Подмосковье расстреляли врага Майдана

    Here’s the Banderites’ take on the murdered man:

    Who is Evgeny Zhilin: The well-known leader of “Oplot”

    • yalensis says:

      В подмосковном элитном поселке “Горки-2” застрелен бывший сотрудник управления по борьбе с организованной преступностью УМВД Украины в Харьковской области, известный общественный деятель, создатель украинской организации “Оплот” Евгений Жилин. Убийство произошло в понедельник вечером на глазах у посетителей местного ресторана “Ветерок”.

      По данным правоохранительных органов в ресторан зашел неизвестный в черном плаще и широкополой шляпе, и заказал кофе “Американо”. После этого мужчина в солнцезащитных очках выхватил пистолет, и расстрелял сидящих за столом Евгения Жилина, и его собеседника Андрея Козырева. Жилин погиб на месте, а Козырева госпитализировали в ближайшую больницу.

      После убийства киллер скрылся на такси “Nissan” желтого цвета. Следом за ним от ресторана отъехала иномарка темного цвета.

      Сотрудники полиции ввели в столичном регионе план “Перехват”, на месте работают следователи СК России.

      Известно, что ранее Евгений Жилин был объявлен украинскими властями в розыск.

      TRANSLATION:
      Evgeny Zhilin was shot and killed in the elite Moscow suburb “Gorki-2” . Zhilin, a former officer of the Ukrainian Organized Crime Unit for the Kharkov Oblast, was also a notable social activist, and the founder of the Ukrainian organization “Oplot”. The murder took place Monday evening right in front of customers in the local restaurant “Veterok”.
      According to police records, a unknown man walked into the restaurant wearing a black rancoat and a broad-brimmed hat, He ordered a coffee “Americano”. After this, another man [actually, it is ambiguous from the sentence if this is the same man or another man] wearing sunglasses grabbed a pistol and shot two men sitting at the table: Evgeny Zhilin and his dinner companion Andrey Kozyrev. Zhilin died on the spot, whereas Kozyrev was taken to the nearest hospital.
      After the murder, the killer fled in a yellow-colored “Nissan” taxi. Right behind him a foreign car of a dark color also sped away.
      Police put into play in the suburban region an alert called “Capture”. Investigators from the Federal Investigation are working the case.
      It is known that Evgeny Zhilin was previously declared as “wanted” by the Ukrainian government.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        So what does the Western media have to say about this?

        Crickets did I hear?

        Right!

        So what is that noise I hear whenever a Russian national is murdered outside of Russia?

        Right!

        Putin ordered it!!!!!

        Former KGB chief Putin orders assassins to liquidate enemies of the state wherever, whenever!

    • marknesop says:

      Bla bla bla Russian failure bla bla bla insurmountable difficulties bla bla bla brutal working conditions bla bla come to the west where all is milk and honey and good wages.

  40. et Al says:

    ZeroHedge via comment on Moon of Alabama: Moscow Denies Russian, Syrian Planes Struck Aleppo Aid Convoy

    http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/09/us-allies-volunteer-to-share-blame-for-deir-ezzor-attack/comments/page/2/#comments

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-09-20/moscow-denies-russian-syrian-planes-struck-aleppo-aid-convoy

    …The Russian Defense Ministry said Russian and Syrian aircraft did not carry out any airstrikes against a UN humanitarian aid convoy near the city of Aleppo.

    “No airstrikes were carried out against a humanitarian aid convoy in a southwestern suburb of Aleppo by Russian or Syrian aviation. Seeing as the convoy’s route lied through the territories controlled by militants, the Russian reconciliation center monitored its passage yesterday via drones,” Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said Tuesday.

    According to the general, the monitoring finished when all humanitarian aid was delivered at around 10:40 GMT.

    “Further movements of the convoy were not monitored by the Russian side. Only the militants controlling this area know details of the convoy’s location,” Konashenkov added. The examination of video footage reveals no signs of an ammunition strikes on the convoy, he said.

    “We have carefully studied videos by so-called activists from the site and found no signs of any ammunition striking the convoy. There are no shell holes, cars’ bodies are not damaged and there are no construction faults from the bust wave. All shown on the footage is a direct consequence of the cargo being set on fire. The fire strangely coincided with a major offensive by militants in Aleppo.”

    The ministry emphasized that the perpetrator of the fire, as well as his goal may be known by members of the “White Helmets” organization that has connection to al-Nusra Front terrorists who have “accidentally” been at the right time and in the right place with cameras.

    According to the official, al-Nusra Front terrorist group carried out an artillery attack on the southwestern suburb of Aleppo using multiple launch rocket systems….

    Posted by: Zu | Sep 20, 2016 8:31:42 AM | 168

    • Chinese American says:

      Sounds like another MH17, then.

      • et Al says:

        One UN guy O’Brien said that an attack on the aid convoy, if deliberate, could constitute a ‘war crime’! Really?! When UN officials start spouting off like this and especially when they know nuffink, then you really know that they should stop employing comedians.

        • kirill says:

          NATzO has hijacked many key parts of the UN including various world organizations (e.g. WADA). They use these Trojan horses to push NATzO’s global agenda (actually Washington’s) and smear any country that does not obey.

          The UN needs to be purged of NATzO derived personnel from key positions and moved from New York to anywhere outside of NATzO. Not to Switzerland for sure since it is part of the NATzO west one way or another. Perhaps an international territory could be created carved out of some existing state or states to base the UN headquarters.

          I know the claim will be made that NATzO will ignore any UN that is not based in the US. Too bad for NATzO that it cannot replace the UN no matter how ludicrous are its ambitions. Any attempt to pull such a tantrum will only serve to isolate it from the 90% of the world that is not part of it.

          • marknesop says:

            Actually, the Bush administration referred contemptuously to the UN as a ‘debating club’, and would not have been at all sorry to see it out of the USA. Washington regularly laughs at the UN…except when it needs it as a fig leaf of internationalism for something naughty it is up to. It points proudly to the UN as the living, breathing embodiment of international law when the UN backs something the US wants to do, and ignores it when it will not grant its approval.

            I would like to see WADA out of Canada – not that it would make any difference to its politically-motivated maneuvering, but at least people would not associate it with this country as if it were a national institution, which it isn’t. They may find themselves greatly changed in both personnel and procedures by the time the dust of this latest mess settles. If it turns out – as I hope – that they are to be greatly changed, a change of location would be just what the doctor ordered.

    • marknesop says:

      Aha! Pretty much as I thought. But they’re going to have to come up with more than just eye-witness reports from activists and militants. And I wonder why they keep hammering on it having been an air strike if all they did was kill the drivers and set the convoy afire. There will be no evidence of an air strike at all. What I have been expecting them to do is line the roadway with Russian bombs (from Qatar) and detonate them as the aid convoy passes by, then claim the Russians did it with an air strike. Except for the planes, the scene afterward would look pretty real.

      • et Al says:

        The West is reaching for anything to draw attention from their deliberate airstrike against the Syrian army, now the US claims it wants to keep the cease-fire, i.e. either way its a propaganda win for the US. How dumb they are.

    • kirill says:

      This convoy was not checked by Syrian government officials. The UN cannot send “humanitarian” aid convoys willy nilly from Turkey into Syria. Russian aid convoys to the Donbas are checked by Kiev regime border guards. Aside from the obvious fact that this is a pathetic setup job designed to deflect attention from the US and minion attack on the SAA, without verification the convoy is a legitimate military target. Also, it is inside Syria and assisting anti-government held territory. That is, we do not know that civilians are actually getting anything and even if this is civilian goods being transported they may be used to support Daesh, Nusra and other terrorists. So any way you slice it this convoy is a legitimate target for the SAA if no guarantees as to its content and use are provided.

  41. et Al says:

    Euractiv: Russian MP: ‘We will buy Bulgaria, we already bought half of the coast’
    http://www.euractiv.com/section/europe-s-east/news/russian-mp-we-will-buy-bulgaria-we-already-bought-half-of-the-coast/

    A statement by a Russian parliamentarian has sent shockwaves through Bulgaria, as the country begins to realise that the many Russians who bought real estate in the country may sooner or later become a powerful political force.

    …Bulgaria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Daniel Mitov, called Tolstoy’s statement “arrogant, categorically wrong and in no way helpful for the development of the bilateral relations”.

    Mitov added that the statement was not in line with Russia’s official positions, adding that he would appreciate if Russia’s official institutions distance themselves from it..
    ####

    Storm in a teacup. I don’t see why the RF Foreign ministry ‘needs to distance itself’ from his statement as that would only elevate the matter. The best way is not to play. The same is true of trolls. I don’t really know why anyone would take anything seriously from the most corrupt country in the EU, PM Borissov being the perfect example of being his own country’s worst enemy by blocking South Stream, something that would have benefited Bulgaria to 500 odd million euros in free transfer fees per year, just to please Brussels and even though every single other territory that South Stream was to cross told Brussels to F/off! If Bulgaria doesn’t know what its own interests are, then maybe they should ask Russia for help? 😉

  42. Patient Observer says:

    Corruption for everyone; not just the one percenters:

    https://www.rt.com/usa/359947-wells-fargo-customers-employees-blew-whistle/

    (emphasis added):

    Last week, federal and California regulators reached a $185 million settlement package with the US’s largest bank [Wells Fargo] by market capitalization after investigating its practices that led to the opening of more than 2 million fake accounts.

    About 5,300 Wells Fargo employees were fired in connection to the allegations.

    “This is the place that absolutely refused to clean up its house and, by the way, while it was firing over 5,000 employees, the people who were being coerced and not only encouraged but demanded and praised Wells Fargo managers to cheat. The person who was in charge of the entire consumer banking division was allowed to retire. Praised as the model of what a banker should be, by the CEO and given millions of dollars with absolutely no claw-back for the abuses,” Black told the Real News.

    Black said employees held public protests outside Wells Fargo branches to try and warn the public of the practices.

    No one goes to jail and the ring leader retires with bonuses. The in-your-face corruption could not have been more blatant reflecting a culture of corruption so deeply entrenched that it was viewed as normal business.

    The small-time accomplices (some coerced into the scheme?) were fired and probably will be unemployable in other financial institutions (could be a good thing as they may now get an honest job).

    • Jen says:

      The culture at Wells Fargo Bank that led to the abuse is one that is widespread in the banking industry in most countries. Australian bank industry employees have protested about this obsessive sales-focused bank industry culture as well. Bank clerks are set weekly or daily sales targets to meet: they have to open X number of new bank accounts each week or day or snag Y number of new clients each week or day. If they fail to meet their targets they are read the riot act and if they still fail to meet their targets they are shown the door. Even if they do meet their targets, once the day or week is over, it’s history and the workers have to jump through the hoops again. One common way of meeting sales targets is to push bank products onto existing customers, McDonalds “you want fries with that?” style: every time the customer asks for a loan, the sales clerk has to push a credit card or some other fancy useless bank product onto him or her as well.

      As you can imagine, this practice drives customers away so the bank has to find new ways of drumming up business and in this predatory culture the temptation to set up fake accounts in other customers’ names without their knowledge or consent (as Wells Fargo Bank was doing) by going through the database and seeing which customers have what accounts is strong.

      • Patient Observer says:

        I’d rather pick tomatoes.

        The article on Wells Fargo described exactly what you indicated. If I understood correctly, they created 2 million accounts for existing customers often without even informing the customer. These accounts involved customer charges so, in essence, the bank was robbing the customer.

  43. Special_sauce says:

    https://www.rt.com/on-air/360001-un-general-assembly-debates/ live! Interesting for what these manque’ “presidents” leave out.

  44. et Al says:

    Moon of Alabama: Deir Ezzor Attack Enables The “Salafist Principality” As Foreseen In The 2012 DIA Analysis
    http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/09/deir-ezzor-attack-enables-the-salafist-principality-forseen-in-the-2012-dia-analysis.html

    Two recent attacks against the Syrian Arab Army in east-Syria point to a U.S. plan to eliminate all Syrian government presence east of Palmyra. This would enable the U.S. and its allies to create “Sunni entity” in east-Syria and west-Iraq which would be a permanent thorn in side of Syria and its allies.

    A 2012 analysis by the Defense Intelligence Agency said:

    THERE IS THE POSSIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING A DECLARED OR UNDECLARED SALAFIST PRINCIPALITY IN EASTERN SYRIA (HASAKA AND DER ZOR), AND THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT THE SUPPORTING POWERS TO THE OPPOSITION WANT, IN ORDER TO ISOLATE THE SYRIAN REGIME …

    Note that the described plan mentions exactly two cities – Hasakah and Deir Ezzor…
    ####

    Much more at the link.

    The only thing that upset such a plan would be a massive operation in the region, but the SAAF doesn’t have endless supplies of men, though Russia could provide very heavy bombardment. In such a case, you can bet all the cash in your pocket that ISIL/ISIS/DAESH/Whatever will choose to strike a different part of Syria in a coordinated operation with the sic ‘moderate rebels’, probably also the Kurds and the Turkish army.

    Maybe this is also an attempt to draw Russia in more deeply and cause them serious trouble, a weak point that the US would exploit, a damned if you do and a damned if you don’t choice. But, if Russia can spread enough FUD towards the Kurds & the Turkish army, then it wins. InSultin’ Erdogan thinks Russia won’t do anything now that permits have been given for Turk Stream. He’s wrong. Russia can wait. The US without allied ground forces in the region to back it up is f/ked. That’s what Russia needs to do.

  45. Northern Star says:

    http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/a22930/drone-footage-crimea-bridge-progress/

    “Despite the footage of the bridge’s progress, there is some serious doubt as to whether the project will be completed on schedule due to weather delays and engineering oversights. Construction director Leonid Ryzhenkin told NPR that storms in June prevented workers and construction boats from getting to the bridge sites for days. There is also a deep channel along the route of the bridge that has made it difficult for engineers to reach the sea floor and establish a solid foundation. And just touching the bottom isn’t enough; some of the pilings need to be driven as far as 300 feet into the sea bed. Civil engineer Georgy Rosnovsky, who has designed other bridges in the country, told NPR that the current location leaves the bridge vulnerable to mud volcanoes on the sea floor and earthquakes.”

    Hmmm….mud volcanoes and earth(sea)quakes..now that sounds potentially foreboding!!!

    Could this technology be spliced into some of the bridge route over the troublesome parts??
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evergreen_Point_Floating_Bridge

    • marknesop says:

      Possibly – the Black Sea has no significant tides.

    • Jen says:

      I wasn’t aware that the area around the bridge was so tectonically active that the Russians could have built a geothermal power station in Crimea way back in Soviet times. Most of the major tectonic activity in the Black Sea region is on the Turkish side in the south because Turkey itself is where the African tectonic plate pushes against the Eurasian and Arabian tectonic plates.

      • Cortes says:

        You’re overlooking the BS outlier advance element of the tectonic plate, Jen: just happens always to impact deleteriously the RF, whether N, S, E or W.. International law, innit?

        • Jen says:

          Not to mention the fact that the Ukrainians scooped out the soil in the Black Sea basin during the period they were fighting mammoths, I had forgotten that.

          • marknesop says:

            Well, prominent Ukrainian academics now say that nobody Ukrainian ever said that, that it’s a myth. The part about scooping out the Black Sea, that is. We know some Volunteer-Battalion Nazi said his ancestors fought mammoths, because I cited it here a long time ago, I’ve just never been able to find it again since.

  46. Moscow Exile says:

    Обама посоветовал России не вмешиваться в дела соседних стран

    Obama has advised Russia not to interfere in the affairs of neighbouring countries

    President Barack Obama gave advice on Russia’s conduct of foreign policy. The words of the American leader that were delivered during the session of the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, September 20, were reported by Yahoo News.

    “The Age of Empires is in the past, but Russia is trying to restore its former glory by force”, said the American President. “Russia’s intervention in the affairs of its neighbours may be popular inside the country, may support the fire of nationalism, but over time it will only weaken its borders and reduce the level of security.”

    The West and other countries accuse Russia of meddling in the conflict in Eastern Ukraine, where separatists have declared two republics independent of Kiev: the LPR and the DPR. Moscow categorically denies its involvement in the conflict.

    On the other hand, it seems that the involvement of the USA in the affairs of non-neighbouring countries is just fine and dandy — not that it does not involve itself in the affairs of neighbouring countries as well.

    • marknesop says:

      I think a lot of people just tune Obama out as soon as he starts to speak, because what he says is all high-flown rhetoric without any substance at all. His critics were dead right – he’s just an empty suit who makes pretty speeches, as long as he has rehearsed them sufficiently and has his teleprompter handy. He probably can’t remember anything he said a half-hour after he says it.

      • Cortes says:

        Toom Tabard as Robert the Bruce dubbed his rival back in the day.

        • Cortes says:

          From entry in Wiki on John Balliol eponymously Dreaming Spires college founded by Devorguilla:

          Name Edit

          In Norman French his name was Johan de Bailliol,[2] in Middle Scots it was Jhon Ballioun, and in Scottish Gaelic, Iain Bailiol. In Scots he was known by the nickname Toom Tabard, usually understood to mean “empty coat”, with the word coat referring to coat of arms.[disputed ]

    • kirill says:

      Obummer should shut the fuck up. The only meddling Russia has been doing is in places it has moral and legal grounds. This includes Syria and the Donbas. Crimea is not even open for discussion since Kosovo has established the precedent and no amount of “special case” bleating by NATzO stooges will make it a one off case. In fact, the recognition of Crimea as part of Ukraine in 1991 was illegal so the Kosovo case does not even need to be applied.

      • marknesop says:

        Also they are regional. Look at some of the places the USA has dragged its coattails through in the last decade or two. Iraq. Libya. Syria. What have they all in common? They’re one hell of a long way from the nearest US state.

  47. Moscow Exile says:

    Porky crowing about another Yukie victory:

    Biden guarantees $1 billion loan to Banderastan.

    США готовы предоставить Украине новые кредитные гарантии на $1 млрд
    21 сентября, 3:53 UTC+3

    US ready to give Ukraine a new loan guarantee for $1 billion
    21 September, 3.53 UTC+3
    During 2014 and 2015, Ukraine has already received from the US loan guarantees of $2 billion

    KIEV, September 21. /TASS/. Vice President Joe Biden during talks with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, which took place on the sidelines of the 71st session of the UN General Assembly, pointed out that Washington was ready to provide Kiev credit guarantees for $1 billion, reported the press service of the Ukrainian President.

    “Vice President Biden informed about the readiness to provide the Ukraine with $1 billion in loan guarantees as the Ukraine has fulfilled all necessary conditions”, is said in the message. In this context, Poroshenko noted the importance of granting the Ukraine the third tranche of the IMF and stressed the determination to continue reform.

    The White house confirmed plans to provide financial assistance to the Ukraine. “The Vice President congratulated Poroshenko with the completion of the IMF survey, and also informed him that all the political steps to provide the third package of U.S. loan guarantees of up to $1 billion had been made,” said a statement by the American administration.

    The two sides also discussed the situation in the Donbas and the implementation of the Minsk agreements. Poroshenko and Biden agreed to intensify diplomatic efforts in this direction.
    In early September the Minister of Finance of the Ukraine, Alexander Danyluk, reported that before the end of the month Washington may give Kiev credit guarantees for another $1 billion. Over 2014 and 2015, the Ukraine had already received from the US loan guarantees of $2 billion.

    Last week, after a long pause that amounted to more than a year, the IMF Board of Directors resumed its lending programme for the Ukraine in deciding on the allocation to Kiev of the third tranche of $1 billion. Kiev expects to receive from the IMF before the end of the year, another tranche, amounting to $1.3 billion.

    Money to burn?

    I’m sure US taxpayers will be pleased with this news.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Where does this money go, one may ask.

      I should imagine that it certainly does not contribute to improving the lot of impoverished Yukies.

      Serves them right, anyway!

      Most likely, after Porky has spread it out amongst his oligarch chums and sidekicks in banks, and he has the biggest and most (only?) “profitable” one in Banderastan, and having taken his cut and sending it off to Panama, the money goes to servicing long standing debts that the Ukraine owes to Western financial institutes.

      None of it goes to repaying what the Yukies owe Russia, though.

      And the money keeps rolling in — and out.

      • marknesop says:

        Well, according to Poroshenko, it is recognition that Ukraine is making the right reforms, pressing the right buttons and heading in the right direction.

        “The positive decision by the IMF is evidence that the world recognises that reforms are happening in Ukraine, that real and positive changes are happening in Ukraine, and that the country is moving in the right direction”, President Poroshenko declared.

        The KGB-owned Independent is not so sure, and in between Groysman complaining about the size of his rod and describing Anders Aslund as an eminent Swedish economist who played an important role in reforming a number of former Warsaw Pact economies, it expresses a few quiet misgivings.

    • marknesop says:

      That will make up for the loss of Ukraine’s transit fees; no reason, I guess, that the USA cannot just keep ‘loaning’ Ukraine $2 Billion a year for as long as it takes.

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