Largest military parade in Russian and Soviet history since WW2 (full video): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYRuFAJMGZo
Праздничный концерт «Дороги Великой Победы» на Красной Площади: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=53DyhoxqB48
Five years ago Western powers reluctantly partook in the 65th anniversary of the same parade. After the Western defeat in Georgia in 2008, Washington, led by a new administration that had presented itself as peace-oriented, had embarked on a campaign of rapprochement with Moscow. Washington's reset in relations was essentially meant to keep a Russia that had grown increasingly defensive due to Western inroads into former Soviet territory engaged with Western powers. The Western effort needless-to-say proved very short-lived essentially because it was not genuine. While Western officials were publicly speaking about cooperation and partnerships, they were privately plotting ways to undermine Russia's growing stature in international politics. Anglo-American-Jewish officials were in fact plotting ways of pulling Ukraine out of Russia's orbit as a last ditch effort to sabotage Moscow's fledgling Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) as well as to permanently sour Russia's increasingly good relations with European nations.
Simply put: Western powers could not sit back and allow Russia to become a major competitor and a global power.
The fear and disdain many European nations feel towards Russia is not new. Let's recall that every time Russian power or influence has been on the rise, European powers - be it the Vatican, Sweden, Poland, Germany, France, Britain, or more recently the United States - have plotted against it. We saw this throughout the middle ages; we saw this during the Napoleonic wars; we saw this during the Crimean war; we saw this during the First World War; we saw this during the Bolshevik revolution in Russia; we saw this during the Second World War; we saw this during the Cold War; and we have been seeing this during post-Soviet years. For the past twenty-five years Western powers have been diligently working on containing, isolating and/or fragmenting the Russian nation with hopes of turning it into yet another failed state or Western dependency. They have pursued their agenda against Russia by: using proxies in the Middle East and Central Asia to support the Islamic insurgency in southern Russia; expanding NATO and EU into eastern Europe and into former Soviet territory; setting-up anti-missile installations around Russia's periphery; using global media levers to disseminate anti-Russian propaganda. More recently, they have begun using economic/financial warfare to bring Russia to its knees.
After Moscow's unexpectedly harsh reaction to the Western sponsored armed coup that took place in Kiev during the winder of 2013/2014, Western powers more-or-less ended their charade: All pretenses were dropped and diplomatic niceties were shelved. As we saw by their despicable coverage of the Winter Olympics in Sochi, it was to be a very ugly and persistent onslaught against the Russian Federation and President Putin. After coming to the conclusion that Russian power and influence around the world is on the rise - and that they will not be able to stop it by conventional means - Western powers have taken on an overtly hostile posture that is multi-pronged and relentless.
Uncle Sam's most recent move against FIFA is basically the continuation of the Western world's effort to subdue - or punish - the Russian nation. The recent move against FIFA is absolutely an act directed specifically against Russia.
We all know that "corruption" of all forms is endemic in all governmental bodies, major corporations and organizations worldwide. In fact, the world's most criminally corrupt entities comfortably reside in places such as Washington, New York, Brussels and London. Therefore, when it comes to "corruption" FIFA is no exception. Moreover, it should also be pointed out that wrongdoings in FIFA has been well known and it has been known for decades. Which begs the question: Why did Uncle Sam suddenly decide to target FIFA now? The answer: To sabotage the upcoming 2018 World Cup games scheduled to be held in Russia. Therefore, instead of moving against egregious corruption and criminality that regularly takes place in Wall Street and in Washington, the self-appointed policeman of the world is courageously going after FIFA officials - to punish Russia.
There is another aspect to this that not many people are noticing: Ok, I admit that FIFA is corrupt-to-the-core and needs a good shakeup. But by Uncle Sam? Is Washington's move against FIFA a lawful act? Is forcing or blackmailing Swiss authorities to arrest FIFA officials legal from the perspective of international law? Should Uncle Sam be playing the role of globocop?
As we can see now, while Moscow was flexing its muscles on May 9th, US officials were busy preparing to flex their muscles on May 27th. Make no mistake about it, the action against FIFA is indeed muscle flexing by Uncle Sam. US officials want the world to know that US power and influence has a very far reach. US officials want the world to know that US officials can bring charges against people and have them arrested, even if those targeted are foreign citizens and reside thousands of miles away. No one is raising an eyebrow at any of this essentially because Washington has for decades been using its power and influence to impose its will on sovereign nations worldwide. Uncle Sam acts like the alpha and the omega of the universe and sheeple are conditioned to simply accept it as the natural order of things. In my opinion, Washington's actions against FIFA is a blatant act of aggression and yet another example of American imperial hubris. The degree of meddling in the domestic affairs of sovereign nations by US officials is unprecedented in human history. The recent ordeal involving FIFA should therefore be a reminder to us all that the US government has become an out-of-control monster that needs to be reigned in.
As I have alluded to on countless previous occasions: For the past seventy years they have meticulously and systematically set-up the playing field, as well as the rules of the game. Regardless of who you are, if you want to play, you have to play on their turf and under their terms. They have you already speaking their language, using their financial institutions, trading in their currency, studying in their educational establishments, listening to their news, wearing their clothes, entertaining yourself to their pop culture... They already have you conditioned. Once you are operating within their system and living within their paradigm, they control you. You are therefore vulnerable. You are thus forced to play the game obediently, or else. In short: We live in their world. They see the world as their playground and they see us as their possessions.
Never before had any political entity had this much power and influence over human society. The situation at hand is unnatural, very dangerous and therefore must be ended. And one of the scariest aspects to Uncle Sam's recent move against FIFA is that the action was made possible by "antiterrorism" legislation Washington has signed with various nations in recent years. Again, we are seeing the events of September 11, 2001 being exploited for imperial interests of the Anglo-American-Jewish political order. Make no mistake about it: US has become a global threat, an arrogant monster who's tentacles now reach into the far corners of the world. President Putin spoke out about this -
Putin accuses US of meddling into FIFA affairs: http://news.yahoo.com/putin-accuses-us-meddling-fifa-affairs-093647908--spt.html
Russia is perhaps the only power on earth that is capable of eventually organizing successful opposition against the political West, which is why Anglo-American-Jewish powers are working day and night to stop Russia's rise. Therefore, it was only natural that the Anglo-American-Jewish political order and its lackeys around the world would stay away from Victory Day celebrations in Moscow. But those that were present in Moscow on May 9th do suggest some fundamental changes in global affairs. The world's two most populous nations, China and India, and the world's largest nation, Russia, have in recent years grown very close. Looking at the spectator's bleachers on Red Square one could in my opinion see the fledgling face of a newly emerging global order. Russian, Chinese and Indian troops marching together for the first time on the historic cobblestone pavement of Red Square heralds the dawning of a new political order. The East is rising despite the West's best efforts to curtail its rise.
Also seen marching for the first time in Moscow were Serbian troops. It was wonderful seeing the Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic in both Yerevan and Moscow in recent weeks. There is no doubt that the great Serbian nation is looking east. The Russian sphere is where the Serbian nation naturally belongs within and it is where Serbia - along with Kosovo - will eventually be returned to. Other notable guests in Moscow during the Victory Day celebrations were Egypt's President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi and Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades. In my opinion, the only nations that were unfortunately not adequately present in Moscow on May 9th were the still occupied nation of Germany, bankrupted Greece and the embattled state of Iran. I really hope to see Germany, Greece and Iran get their act in order and begin closely cooperating with Russia.
Since we are on the topic of Victory Day celebrations, I would like to add that the victory over Nazi Germany was not just a Russian victory but also a victory of Soviet peoples.
Armenia, a nation of barely over a million people at the time, lost nearly three hundred thousand of its sons and daughters in the war effort. Over one hundred Armenians were awarded the title of "Hero of the Soviet Union", the highest military honor bestowed by the Kremlin. Over sixty Armenian generals served in the Soviet military during the war. Armenian 89th Tamanyan tank division was one of the finest Soviet tank divisions of the war, and it was also amongst the very first military units to fight its way into Berlin in spring of 1945. Hovannes Bagramyan was the first non-Slavic officer to be given the title of Marshal, as well as being the first non-Slavic officer to be given command of an entire front. Two other Armenians, Hamazasp Babadzhanian and Sergei Khudyakov also became Marshals during the war. Ivan Isakov was the second Admiral of the Soviet navy. Aeronautical engineer Artem Mikoyan first began designing his world famous "Mig" warplanes during the war. One of the Soviet Union's top combat pilots of the war was Nelson Stepanyan. Finally, we must never forget Gevork Vartanian, the legendary Soviet-Armenian agent who single-handedly thwarted the assassinations of Joseph Stalin, Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill in 1943. Gevork Vartanyan's exploit in Iran most probably prevented the collapse of the allied war effort. Despite its size and obscurity, the Armenian nation contributed greatly to the final Soviet victory. Armenians in fact gave more to the allied war effort than they could afford to give. This is why May 9th is also a major holiday inside Armenia. May 9th is actually a double holiday for Armenians worldwide for also on that date in 1992 the historic Armenian city of Shushi was finally liberated by Armenian forces. The liberation of Shushi on May 9, 1992 became the turning-point of the war in Artsakh.
Nevertheless, the Victory Day military parade in Moscow showed the world that the Russian Federation will not be subdued. The military parade showed the Anglo-American-Jewish political order that their efforts - be it financial, political or military - have failed to deter Moscow from pursing its interests. The military parade showed the world that Western aggression is pushing Russia and China ever closer. In my opinion, the military parade also sent a clear signal to all that Russia is not afraid of Western powers and that it will continue backing pro-Russian separatists in Novorossiya.
Featured below this commentary is comrade Zoravar's latest blog contribution titled: The Battle for Novorossiya.
Zoravar's work is essentially composed of two parts: A fascinating narrative about the historic struggle taking place within Novorossiya and an expert's assessment of the military hardware displayed during Moscow's Victory Day military parade on May 9th. I urge all my readers to make time and read his lucid work. For added perspective, I also urge you to please read his previous blog contributions listed below as well -
The East-West Balance and the Strategic Importance of Crimea (April, 2014): http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-military-balance-between-russia-and.html
Syrian Conflict: A Brief Military Analysis (June 2013): http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2013/06/syrian-conflict-brief-military-analysis.html
A Call to Arms (November, 2011): http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2011/11/call-to-arms-november-2011.html
Russia Military Update (December, 2010): http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2010/12/military.html
Prologue
The moonlight revealed a dozen or so human silhouettes moving frantically around a few trucks parked abreast of each other on a sunflower field caressed by a mild and refreshing mid-summer breeze. In an atmosphere that sounded very tense, the men were moving around haphazardly. Their pace was often quick. Sometimes they paused only to hurry again. Although there was no one for miles, they were speaking to each other in whispers. Clearly they were up to something important and they did not want to be seen or heard.
Momentarily, a better glimpse was obtained when one group member used a flashlight to read from a sheet of paper some numbers that sounded like coordinates …
This was happening in the Donbass region of Ukraine. The field was not an ordinary field, it had rich and fertile (chernozyom) topsoil and coal mines buried deep under. The men were no ordinary farmers or miners, they were rebel militants fighting for a free Novorossiya. The trucks were no ordinary trucks, they were “Grad” multiple rocket launchers of legendary fame. The date was in the summer of 2014, but it was a déjà vu scene; similar scenarios happened in the same place many decades ago during the period of history that the locals refer to as the “Great Patriotic War”.
Suddenly, the readiness reports coming from the vehicles successively pierced the dark night:
- Pervye Gatov (First unit ready)
- Vtaroi Gatov (Second ready)
- Tretye Gatov (Third ready)
It was the moment the battery commander was waiting for. With slow movements of his right hand he crossed himself in the traditional Russian Orthodox manner, took a deep breath and yelled as loud as his lungs could master:
- Battarey … Trista-Tritset-Tree (Battery … Three hundred-Thirty-Three).
The “fire” command was given in the traditional Russian manner, but the last “three” was never heard because the first rockets had already left their launch tubes and were screeching their way towards the unsuspecting Ukrainian troops camped near the village of Zelenopolye…
Disaster in Kiev
By February 2014, with the full support and backing of the political West, a group of Ukrainian Russophobe oligarchs and ultra-nationalists had organized and successfully executed a “Maidan” revolution in Kiev which resulted in the overthrow of the democratically elected but weak and indecisive president Viktor Yanukovich. The authority was now illegally seized by people who hated everything Russian and were clearly stating their sinister aims of joining NATO, disassociating Ukraine from everything Russian and even banning the Russian language from school programs.
The eastern and southern regions of Ukraine that are traditionally pro-Russian were in such a state of shock that neither the people nor the politicians knew how to act. The true colors of Yanukovich’s own Party of Regions started showing off when many of its members were just easily “bought” by the other side…Suddenly, there was no political party or entity that could fight back the “Maidan” revolution.
Dawn of the “Russian Spring”
With no political party and no leadership to look to, the millions of Russian speaking Ukrainians had a tough time trying to figure out what to do. They are known to be the real workers and producers in Ukraine, while their Western compatriots are more known for being lazy, unproductive, jobless and poor. What were the Pro-Russians supposed to do? Leave their jobs, families, responsibilities and fight back? Or just let it be?
Someone had to take the lead… Crimeans decided to act, and they acted very effectively. Prompt and massive demonstrations started a rapid chain of events that started in electing much needed leadership and culminated by the return of the whole peninsula to Mother Russia. These events were covered on this blog in the past.
The population of the South East did not stay idle. Energized by the success of their compatriots in Crimea, they took to the streets in Donetsk, Lugansk, Kharkov, Odessa and in every other major city in those regions. Their mass demonstrations dwarfed the pro-Ukraine or pro-West gatherings in those areas and gathered momentum every passing week. However, these self-organized demonstrations lacked proper leadership and had diverging aims: some were asking for reunification with Russia, others were demanding federalization, yet others were just content on asking just for freedom of Russian language. The whole thing was a recipe for failure…
Dilemma in the Kremlin
The Maidan freak show happened at a time when the Russian leadership was busy making sure that the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi end up being a tremendous success that would have enormous positive effect on the average Ivan’s and Natasha’s national pride, feelings and psychology. Despite the successes of the Russian sportsmen and women, the Kremlin was keeping a worried eye on the developments in Kiev and was of course appalled by the brutality of the fascist and Nazi rioters, the swiftness of the events and the ineffectiveness of the Ukrainian President. Although they understood the gravity of the situation that was arising, the turn of the events in Kiev caught the Kremlin leaders off balance. Certainly, Vladimir Putin and his close associates in the government contemplated their options which can be summarized as follows:
-Staying in friendly terms with the new regime in Kiev by doing nothing on the ground: But Moscow knew too well the Maidan coup initiators who were coming to power. Nothing good would come out by trying to deal with these Russophobes in a friendly and respectful manner.
-Military intervention and restoration of President Yanukovich into power: That would not only lead to a full-fledged cold war with the West, but it could also get Russia involved in a protracted and very costly Iraq-style insurgency war that it could ill afford. Furthermore, it would mean that Russia would have to support and sustain the “bottomless barrel” called Ukrainian economy. That would set Russia decades behind.
-Disrupting Kiev’s (and the West’s) plans and maintaining leverage: Russia is ruled by consensus, not by an iron fist (as the West likes to portray it). There are various factions in the Kremlin ranging from the siloviki to the liberals and from the nationalists to the business-minded. Putin is like a father/patriarch figure who listens to all the opinions and has to find the right consensus. It was this third option that the Russian leadership opted for as it was flexible enough to lead to maximum gains while minimizing costs and losses. It could potentially deny Kiev the liberty to do as it pleased by maintaining as much as possible leverage that Russia has in cultural, financial and trade terms. In other words, Moscow decided to accept the defeat it sustained in Kiev, but positioned itself in such a way to extract a few victories out of the monster’s jaws.
The first two immediate decisions were to send an airborne team to rescue the beleaguered president Yanukovich and to do whatever was necessary to ensure that the Crimean peninsula returns to Russia. As we know, both of these aims were successfully executed to the dismay of Kiev regime and the West. With these immediate objectives achieved, the Kiev regime was dealt a couple of heavy punches. It was time to let diplomacy, the business ties, the declining economy and the general discontent in the south-east to do the rest: make sure that Ukraine does not join NATO and/or the EU…at least, that was the idea. That plan was pushed forward by the Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov on the diplomatic front as “federalization of Ukraine”.
Washington (and the political West) would have none of that. Watching their easy victory in Kiev not only come to nothing but also to cost the West dearly in financial support of the “free and democratic” Ukraine, the West’s leaders decided not to let “Putin” have his way. At that point, they started to aggressively push their plans to integrate Ukraine into NATO and the EU.
The Strelkovtsev
On the 3rd of March 2014, Dmitry Zhukov disembarked from a crowded bus in Simferopol (Crimea). His friends knew him by the call sign “Kedr”. As an anti-Maidan activist from Kiev, he had worked hard to fight back the coup in his native city. By the end of February, he realized that the battle was lost and that it was not safe to stay in the capital. He decided to move to Crimea and continue the struggle from there. The passengers on the bus were activists like him and also a few “Berkut” riot police officers fleeing Kiev. The Crimean greeted the new comers with applauses and chants of “Berkut – Berkut” and “Spa-si-ba, Spa-si-ba”. In that crowded and noisy square, Kedr barely heard someone calling his name. He turned to his right and instantly identified a middle aged tall man with a thin mustache dressed in a suit and tie. That man was a contact he was given, it was Igor Strelkov.
Little is known about Igor Vsevolodovich Girkin (Strelkov). It is believed that he worked for the Russian FSB for a number of years. He had participated in a number of wars were Russia’s geopolitical interests were involved: Transdniestra, Bosnia and the two conflicts in Chechnya. For the last couple of years he was living a more “civilian” life dedicating himself to re-enacting famous historic battles. During the early stages of the turmoil in Ukraine, he relocated to the Crimean peninsula were he took part in the events that happened there. It is said that he was managing the personal security of some key Crimean leaders.
Strelkov predicted that the peaceful anti-Kiev demonstration would lead to nowhere. The events that happened in the next few weeks proved he was right. Several thousand neo-Nazi Right Sector and ultra-nationalist Svoboda party thugs sent by Kiev crushed the Odessa movement and burned dozens of unarmed demonstrators in the Trade Union building. Soon after, the same thugs were sent to Kharkov to beat the protesters there. The unarmed and peaceful anti-Kiev movements were fizzling out. Only Donetsk and Lugansk were still active where the local populations had captured some local administration buildings and thus far had managed to beat back the Kiev Junta’s thugs. But it was doubtful they could hold their stand for much longer.
The conversation between Strelkov and Kedr was brief and to the point. It was all about defending the “Russian World” to which Kedr volunteered. They knew that the peaceful anti-Kiev demonstrations all over the South-East were doomed to fail. The new rulers in Kiev and their backers in the West were not interested in public opinion and fairness. They wanted to encroach further into the Russian zone of influence. They wanted a Ukraine that was anti-Russia. They wanted brother Slavic people to be at each other’s throats.
-They had many contacts in Slavyansk who could join them there immediately.
-Strelkov wanted a medium sized city (population 100,000) that was sympathetic to the Russian cause and deeply anti-Kiev. A city, were rule of the people could be easily and quickly established.
-Slavyansk is located on the western side of the Donetsk region and thus, is ideal because it would be barrier that would shield the Donetsk capital until it organized itself for the confrontation with Kiev.
Strelkov and his men were armed with light weapons, they had personal radios for communication and were wearing fresh uniforms. They looked very professional. Upon their covert arrival in Slavyansk, the Strelkovtsev were met by their contacts who boosted their ranks and soon went into action. On the 12th of April, they captured the local police station and the Ukrainian security building. The overjoyed civilian population helped in erecting barricades at the city entrances. A new mayor was designated and almost overnight Slavyansk became the focus of the clash against the Kiev junta. Fresh local volunteers were armed with the weapons confiscated from the police building and Strelkov was now in command of a force that had quadrupled in numbers. A few days later, he sent a group of 28 Terek and Don Cossacks to capture the neighboring city of Kramatorsk to the great delight of the local population there. One very charismatic and photogenic Cossack warrior by the call sign “Babai” became so popular that many people lined up to be photographed with him.
At this stage, I invite all the esteemed readers of this article to watch the following clip about Babai and his colleagues in Slavyansk and Kramatorsk. Us Armenians, we call this kind of brave people “Fedayees”. The song in the clip is the famous Cossack song “Kagda My Bili Na Vayne” (“When We Were at War”).
The popular seizure of Slavyansk and Kramatorsk energized the Donbass masses who seized virtually every administration in every city and town in the two Oblasts of Donetsk and Lugansk. They were no longer afraid, they had seen the successful events in Crimea, they now had weapons they had seized from various police stations and Ukrainian state security offices and most of all they had the Strelkovtsev. The reaction to the violent Maidan coup in Kiev had begun. Anti-Maidan was brought into the geopolitical and military equation. Anti-Maidan can be seen as an anti-poison that stops the spreading of the venom through Ukraine’s body. But, let’s go back and analyze this whole Strelkov expedition for a moment. Who was backing and financing them? According to Strelkov himself, the Kremlin neither sent them nor supported them. They had to buy their arms and equipment themselves. Could that be true? Let’s contemplate all the possibilities:
- One distinct possibility is that the Kremlin directly (or through intermediaries) provided Strelkov with his orders, finances and weapons. The Kiev Junta and the West accuses Russia of doing exactly that. Naturally, Russia denies the accusations. If it is indeed true that the Kremlin is managing Strelkov, then this is one of the most audacious large-scale covert operation conducted in recent times; something that modern Russia has never done since the break-up of the Soviet Union.
-Another possibility is that it was some hawkish circles within the Kremlin who sent Strelkov there without the approval of Putin or the government. It would be absurd to think that the FSB or the government did not know about it. They just turned a blind eye or looked the other way. If the operation succeeded, it would be a “win” for Russia. If it failed, they had plausible deniability and could even blame some scapegoat. Remember the saying: “Victory has a hundred fathers, defeat is an orphan”.
-Finally, the most unlikely but still plausible scenario is that Strelkov and his men acted on their own. Strelkov is a devout Monarchist; a movement that is lately on the rise in Russia. Monarchists are very patriotic, nationalistic and believe that a Tsar should rule Russia. In all his interviews, Strelkov never lauded the Kremlin or President Putin. On the contrary, he often delivered veiled criticism aimed at the Russian leadership for not helping him and the Donbass fight the Kiev Junta.
Unfortunately, I don’t have an answer to which of the above possibilities is the correct one. Is Strelkov a 100% FSB agent or is he a ready to die “fedayee” who believed that his ideology was sufficient in leading Donbass to victory. I hope one day the truth will be made public and I certainly hope that I will live long enough to see that day.
First Battles for Novorossiya
Russian media revealed that on the 12th of April CIA chief john Brennan secretly visited Kiev to meet the then active president and parliament speaker Viktor Turchinov as well as Petro Poroshenko who had not been elected president yet. The Anti-Terrorist Operation (ATO) was launched soon after his visit.
Continuously, the USA supplied the Kiev Junta with lumps of cash under the allegation that it was helping a “democracy and freedom loving brave country”. Each lump sum consisted of several dozen millions of Dollars that were not intended to support the Ukrainian economy or the population; rather they were to be used to prep up the armed forces that Kiev needed to subdue the rebelling Donbass region.
At that time the junta’s military headquarters managed to get the 25th air mobile brigade move into Kramatorsk. That brigade, considered to be the elite of the Ukrainian Army, has its base in Dnepropetrovsk (a region of Russian speakers) and a large proportion of soldiers from that region. Their mission was to enter Kramatorsk and chase the Russian “terrorists”. The first column of BMD armored vehicles entered Kramatorsk and reached the city center. The weaponry of the Strelkovtsev consisted of only AK-74 assault rifles and other hand held light weapons. They had no chance against this force. Yet, that day was meant to be a day were miracles happen. The civilian population descended on the streets, surrounded the BMDs, talked to the soldiers, argued, yelled, pestered, badgered and eventually convinced them to give up the mission. Furthermore, six of BMDs defected and joined the rebellious population; the rest just left the city. The Russian speaking soldiers from Dnepropetrovsk had realized that it was their own kin, their own brothers and sisters that they were sent to fight and crush. It was a bloodless victory for the Strelkovtsev whose ranks swelled further and now had at its disposal some armored vehicles, heavy machine guns, anti-tank weapons and most of all their first artillery piece in the form of a BMD based NONA self-propelled gun-mortar.
First blood was drawn soon after when a group of ultra-nationalistic fanatics in four SUV vehicles approached a road block at one of the entrances of Slavyansk and opened fire killing 3 people. The defenders retaliated and burned two of the vehicles. Things got uglier with time. The junta’s attacks got stronger and more fearce. Attacks were mounted with armored personnel carriers, later on with tanks and eventually with artillery and aviation.
The Russian Spring period witnessed the emergence of a number of self-defense units. Strelkov and his group got the most publicity, but they were not the only one. In Donetsk region, another Russian national by the name of Igor Bezler (Bez) created a unit in the city of Gorlovka. The Vostok battalion was assembled in the city of Donetsk itself and was led by Khodakovsky (a Ukrainian). The Oplot unit was led by Alexander Zakharchenko who later became the head of the DNR (Popular Republic of Donetsk). In the Lugansk region, the Cossacks established themselves in Pervomaysk and Alchevsk while Alexander Mozgovoy’s “Prizrak” battalion took up the defense of northern Lugansk. There were other self-organized groups as well, but the ones I mentioned are the most noteworthy. The number of fighters in these rebel groups varied from a few dozen to several hundred. Of course, the largest anti-Kiev fighting force was Strelkov’s group garrisoned in Slavyansk. At its peak, Strelkov commanded a group whose ranks were in excess of 2000 soldiers.
With most of the Donetsk and Lugansk regions now under the control of these various groups, the leaders of the two regions organized referendums on the 11th of May 2014 in which the population overwhelmingly supported self-determination for the two regions. Just like the population, the various rebel groups did not exactly share the same political views and had diverging plans. Also, cooperation with each other on the battlefield was lacking. The only thing that united them was the fascist regime in Kiev that was trying to subjugate them. Thus emerged two tendencies in the Donbass:
The first one consisted of the hardliners who wanted to take the battle all the way to Kiev and wanted to establish a new Republic (Novorossiya) that encompassed the entire Eastern and Southern parts of Ukraine. Strelkov and Mozgovoy were among them. The other rebel groups’ ambitions were less grandiose; they were more interested in establishing self-rule for their regions. They certainly rejected the Kiev Junta and considered themselves as a counter-revolution; they preferred to find a political solution rather than march onto Kiev. Zakharchenko was among those.
Whether intentional or circumstantial, this divergence of view among the rebels worked very well for the Kremlin grossmeisters and their strategy in Ukraine. Depending on the situation, they could let things escalate or deescalate as they pleased by backing and supporting one or the other category of rebels. But, for the time being, the Western masters of the puppet regime in Kiev were in no mood for diplomacy or peaceful political solution to the Ukraine crisis. It was no longer a matter of getting Ukraine only, it was a matter of confronting, weakening and beating Russia in its own backyard. It was war time.
Voentorg and the Clipping of Wings
As the Ukrainian armed forces attacks on Slavyansk were getting fiercer every day, Strelkov and his men needed help which could come only from Russia. But how could the Kremlin send weapons there. Diplomatically, the Russians were denying any links with Strelkov and thus could not be caught helping him. Yet, Strelkov’s arsenal of weapons, ammunition and equipment was getting replenished more or less consistently. That phenomenon is known among Russian speakers as “Voentorg” which roughly translates into English as “Military Shopping”. The goods were getting smuggled into Slavyansk via bunches of volunteers and enthusiastic supporters. Many Russians contributed donations for the funds to purchase whatever was necessary to help the Strelkovtsev. A lot of stuff such as military style uniforms, boots, binoculars etc. can be purchased openly in the Russian market, but when it comes to arms… The way Strelkov was getting RPG rockets is “as clear is mud”. Suffice to say that all the weapons that were ending up in Slavyansk were also to be found with Ukrainian Army. Russia could not be incriminated, plausible deniability was always there. Officially the Russians always denied supplying arms to the rebels.
At first, when the Ukrainian army was ill prepared, Voentorg was providing the necessary light weapons, ammunition, uniforms, first aid kits and other stuff to keep the Ukrainians at bay. When tanks started being used, almost immediately anti-tank weapons showed up with the rebels. When artillery started pounding Slavyansk, Strelkov suddenly had in possession a few more mortars.
Retreat from Slavyansk
By the end of June, as the race for more power and supremacy on the battlefield continued and the losses on both sides were mounting, it slowly became clear that the rebels were not going to win this one. While Ukraine was mobilizing its entire population and reactivating its stored (Soviet era) weaponry, Strelkov realized that it could not keep up with it. Sure, his army in Slavyansk had swelled to 2000 soldiers and had some heavy equipment in the form of some tanks and other armored vehicles. But he was now getting surrounding by over 10,000 Ukrainian troops and hundreds of armor.
Furthermore, due to the murderous artillery shelling, the Slavyansk population was paying a heavy price. Many of them had already left and the prospects looked dim.
He fully realized that Slavyansk was shielding the capital and other population centers until they organized themselves well enough to fight back Kiev and win. But, he was not happy the way things were proceeding elsewhere in Novorossiya: too many warlords, too many heads, too much chaos. The much needed referendum and the battles around Slavyansk did not energize the Donbass population well enough: there simply were not enough volunteers taking up arms. It seemed that everybody wanted independence from Kiev but was not willing to fight for it. As if everybody hoped that Russian troops will come one day and do the hard job for them. While Slavyansk was burning, people were carrying on their daily routines in the other cities.
Eventually Slavyansk got completely surrounded and Strelkov had to choose to either fight to the death or to break through and retreat to Donetsk. For a variety of reasons, he chose the later and abandoned Slavyansk and Kramatorsk.
In the first days of July, Strelkov ordered all his men and families to assemble and carried out his audacious breakthrough and succeeded in getting the vast majority of his men to the capital Donetsk.
Since Strelkov’s 2000 strong army dwarfed all the other rebel groups in Donetsk, he established himself as the chief warlord. He was already the Defense minister of the Republic and embarked on the immensely challenging task of getting together all the various rebel groups in expectation of the inevitable Ukrainian onslaught against what was left of Novorossiya that was free from Kiev’s control.
The God of War
The GRAD battery commander watched the last rockets blast through the night sky and, greatly relieved, thanked God for being able to carry out his mission as intended. Earlier, Rebel reconnaissance units and Russian Unmanned Aerial Vehicles had located the positions of the 72nd and 79th Ukrainian Brigades that were tasked to capture the last stretches of land that connected Novorossiya with Russia.
The battery commander with graying beard and an orange and black St. George ribbon around his left arm fully understood that this strike would be crucial for the history of the Donbass region. He had received his orders directly from top command. The Ukrainians were about to cut them out from Russia, surround them and crush them. If his mission failed, he and his men would probably end up dead. His family and friends would be at the mercy of bloodthirsty Russophobe sadists.
The salvo was right on target. It caught the sleeping Ukrainian troops by complete surprise. The rockets spread death and destruction to every corner of the camp. In a spread of a few tens of seconds, tents got vaporized, vehicles were torn to pieces, ammunition dumps blew up creating even more carnage, the whole place was burning. The following video shows in graphic detail the aftermath of the bombardment on the Ukrainian camp in Zelenopolye that night:
From that date on, the above scenario would get regularly repeated in various places in the Donbass region.
In 1944, Joseph Stalin had said in one of his speeches that the artillery was the “God of War”. Exactly 70 years later, his words couldn’t have been more correct. Throughout the summer months and until the Minsk agreements, artillery became the largest single cause of death in the Battle for Novorossiya. The Ukrainians used artillery against cities to kill civilians and destroy infrastructure. The rebels used their guns and rockets in a more professional manner: They relied on reliable reconnaissance and spotting information provided by recon units, spies, informers and UAVs (some of them Russian) and possibly even satellites to deliver accurate strikes against Ukrainian positions. Never in my life as a military enthusiast have I seen a war in which the artillery had such a disproportionate impact on the outcome of a war. “God of War” indeed.
Northern Wind
Right after Crimea’s unification and throughout the spring of 2014, the Kremlin adopted a “soft” approach by distancing itself from the rebels as much as possible, providing only the minimum amount of support as much indirectly as possible as discretely as possible. The Kremlin also stopped short of accepting the referendum results in Novorossiya. The Russian leadership tried its best to keep all diplomatic channels open.
What they received in return was sanctions, media war, demonization and the dispatch of US tanks right to Russia’s border. The West’s leaders were not interested in diplomacy; they were going in as hard as possible thus revealing their ultimate objectives. They wanted to militarily defeat Russia in its own backyard, decimate the Russian economy, weaken the Russian leadership and cause dissent and discord among the Russian population. They were in to defeat their arch enemy: Russia.
Once upon a while there were three sisters living in the Slavic house: Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. Then, one day, the middle sister (Ukraine) went on the path of prostitution. She started accepting the West’s money… The big sister (Russia) could not accept that. So, she gently and softly tried to talk her out of it. The middle sister did not listen and became increasingly arrogant. That’s when the big sister decided to slap her.
Novorossiya was on the verge of military defeat. That would mean that Russia would completely and forever lose Ukraine and have no leverage on this traditional Russian land. The birthplace of Russia (Kievian Rus) would become an anti-Russia entity. That sort of mortal defeat was deemed unacceptable by Putin and his colleagues. The West was crossing the red line. It was time for a slap on the face.
The destruction of the two Ukrainian brigades in Zelenopolye was just the beginning. The following days and weeks witnessed the systematic destruction of the Ukrainian armed forces in the Donbass. A massive counter attack had begun. Ukrainian troops that earlier had conquered most of the border areas now got surrounded, destroyed or pushed back all the way to the outskirts of the coastal city of Mariopol. During those days, countless numbers of pictures and videos revealed the massive destruction of the Ukrainian army in places ranging from Staraboshevo to Ambrovieska and from Saur-Mogila to Illovaisk. Later on, Ukraine’s president Poroshenko admitted that 65% of his army’s equipment was destroyed in the Donbass. Although he never admitted it, all sources believe that the death toll among Ukrainian servicemen was in the thousands.
The Kiev junta and their Western puppet masters accused Russia of using Russian troops. Naturally, the Russians and the rebels denied all those allegations despite the fact that some fancy new equipment showed up in Donbass during the counter offensive. Those could have come only from Russia. The most obvious ones were T-72 tanks of the B3 version, BTR-82 personnel carriers and MSTA-S self-propelled artillery.
The “phenomenon” that sliced through the Ukrainian forces, changed the military balance on the front and made it clear to the whole world that Russia will not allow a defeat of Novorossiya is referred to as “Northern Wind”. The West’s plans were stopped in their tracks. It was time for diplomacy to work out a solution. This website compiles all the equipment losses in Ukraine during the conflict: http://lostarmour.info/. Anything that is not documented by a photo or video is not included in the lists. The Ukrainian material losses are massive.
The Kremlin Takes Control and Reshuffles
With Kiev beaten back, it was time for the Kremlin to make sure that the Novorossiya house was in order. The time of the warlords commanding independent units was over. Novorossiya needed to have a central command and effective leadership. First to be removed from command was Igor Strelkov himself. He was “politely” asked to resign and return to Russia. Strelkov’s removal was necessary for a variety of reasons:
-Strelkov is a Russian citizen after all. A non-Ukrainian citizen still holding a leadership position just does not look right.
-Strelkov is a staunch Monarchist and is not a fan of Putin and the Kremlin leadership.
-Strelkov is too independent-minded, he decided to retreat from Slavyansk when his superiors had not authorized that move.
-Strelkov is great in commanding a small force. He did everything right in the beginning but, as the scale of the conflict and the size of the opposing forces grew, he was no longer as effective. He is an excellent leader for a company or battalion sized force tasked to conduct a specific mission. Hit and run tactics, covert operations, subversive missions and short duration expeditions are his forte. Leading a brigade sized force in a more conventional style positional warfare scenario is not exactly his cup of tea.
Strelkov had done what he was supposed to do. He was no longer useful in the current situation. He simply had to be withdrawn. He could be an asset again in the future in a different place and under different circumstances. Shortly afterwards, other pro-war rebel leaders were removed; Bez, Khodakovky and others were gone one by one. One lesser rebel leader (Batman) who refused to go was killed in vague circumstances. Recently, the very prominent and well known leader of the Prizrak battalion, Alexander Mozgovoi, was also mysteriously assassinated.
Hardliners in the Novorossiya camp were not happy about these moves and even accused Russia of abandoning Donbass to the Ukrainians. Their views were not correct of course as Russia had saved them from defeat on the battlefield. It was time for the diplomats rather than the guns to do talking now. The hardliner’s time was over; it was the time for the moderates.
Diplomacy
It was the time of Alexander Zakharchenko who just a year ago was an unknown electrician working for a mining company. When the war came to Donbass, he quickly rose in the Oplot militia ranks and became the leader of the group. Well-liked by his men, a positive thinker, a family person who cared about others, charismatic, assertive and soft spoken at the same time, he became the chosen person by the Kremlin to lead the Donetsk region. The population overwhelmingly approved this choice in the local elections. Zakharchenko was now the head of the Popular Republic of Donetsk (DNR), while Igor Plotnisky became the leader of the LNR. From that moment, the hardliner pro-war party took a back bench in Novorossiya. Even the Novorossiya project was frozen since it was a pro-war thing. It was now all about the DNR and LNR staying in the Ukraine as autonomous, independent and self-governing entities. By keeping them in the Ukraine, Russia maintained its influence and leverage over Kiev. The Kiev-junta had now their hands tied and could no longer do as they pleased. This kind of structuring of the Ukrainian nation is reminiscent to present day Iraq where an autonomous Kurdish entity in the north of the country limits the abilities of the central government in Baghdad.
This way, Moscow was keeping a foot in Ukraine without having to financially support its faltering economy and without having to subsidize gas and without having to buy any Ukrainian made goods. This way, Moscow was letting the West bleed by providing loans and grants to the failed nation. This way, Moscow was providing the hate-filled, sadistic, dictatorial, fascist, Russophobe oligarch Kiev junta enough rope to hang itself. This kind of regime can survive in times of war. In peace time they will turn on each other.
The first diplomatic breakthrough was achieved in the Minsk negotiations. A ceasefire was agreed upon and a shaky framework was established in which the DNR and LNR were to remain in Ukraine but have wide-ranging autonomy. Hard liners and pro-war elements on both sides would be sidelined and time would allow the wounds to heal. The Donbass camp, with its pro-war elements now sidelined, went along with the Minsk-1 agreements. The Kiev junta signed the documents but did not comply with what was agreed upon. They had other plans.
The role of moderates in the West camp was played by Germany and France. These two nations were suffering the most from the war because the EU sanctions were backfiring on them. Now that it was clear that Russia will not be beaten and that it will not allow Donbass to be crushed. Merkel and Hollande started to push for peace and discretely applied pressure on Kiev. But peace was not a good alternative for the blood thirsty regime in Kiev. Their authority was standing on the ultranationalist and fascist thugs. Sidelining or eliminating them was not in their favor. Thus, the Kiev junta remained pro-war. They found support among the hawks in Washington and did not pass the necessary laws to allow the agreed autonomy to the Donbass. They also neglected the ceasefire and continued the shelling.
Eventually, the ceasefire together with the whole Minsk agreements collapsed when in January 2015 Kiev forces launched an attack on the rebel controlled parts of the Donetsk International Airport. Zakharchenko’s reorganized units were ready for them. His two most experienced field commanders “Motorola” and “Givi” with their battle-hardened “Sparta” and “Somali” battalions not only repulsed the attack, but went on the counteroffensive and dislodged all the Ukrainian units from the rest of the airport. This latest Ukrainian defeat was not only tactical but also a morale one. Things got exacerbated even more when rebel units conducted several “recon in force” missions on the southern Mariopol axis. The junta commanders took note of the rapid tactical moves: The rebels were now a well-organized, well led, well-motivated, well trained, well equipped force with high morale.
The junta’s supporters in the West also took note of Kiev’s latest failure. Somehow an agreement was made between Washington, Berlin and Paris to de-escalate things and put things back on the path of peace. The high ground was now occupied by Vladimir Putin. Both Merkel and Hollande had to swallow their pride and fly to Moscow to come to terms with the Kremlin.
Collapse in Debaltsovo
Thus was born the Minsk-2 agreement which now had the backing of all sides. Yet Kiev was delusional. When it came to the nitty-gritty, they kept on negotiating on what they already had lost. A most sore point was the Debaltsovo pocket from which they stubbornly refused to withdraw. Night-long negotiations eventually produced an agreement. But the Debaltsovo matter was left in limbo. Kiev did not want to yield the pocket and had reinforced it in such a way that the rebels could not close it and create a cauldron.
To the surprise of most military experts, the Donbass rebel forces did not even attempt to close the pocket at its mouth. Instead they attacked head on through Uglegorsk and took Debaltsovo in a matter of days. Apart from huge personnel losses, the Ukrainian army left behind almost 300 tanks and other armored vehicles, most of them in good condition.
Kiev was now beaten fair and square. Support for the pro-war elements was vanishing. Peace was given a chance.
The Dust Settles
Currently, the Minsk-2 ceasefire is not being fully respected on the ground. But the scale of hostilities is at a much reduced scale. We are now in a phase that can be called: no war and no peace. However, the peace brokering countries (Russia, Germany and France) are against the resumption of hostilities and they are exerting enormous pressure on the pro-war factions of both sides. The US administration’s pro-war attitude has also subsided after the Debaltsovo fiasco. Unless some new parameter comes forth, I do not expect a major resumption of hostilities. A slow and gradual improvement on the ground is what should occur. There can be some minor firefights for at least the short to medium term. The Kiev junta has learned its lesson: They will not be able to beat the Donbass rebellion. Russia will not allow that to happen. The Western powers, particularly the European ones, will not support it. The Anti-Maidan is here to stay. The junta will have to live with it. Lately, the president of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko took some limited action to diminish the power and influence of some of the most pro-war elements in his country. He had the Aidar and Donbass battalions disbanded. He removed the notorious Jewish oligarch Kolomoisky from his post hence neutering his Dnepro battalion and he gave a government position to the neo-Nazi Right-Sector movement’s leader Dimitri Yarosh in order to keep him close. Poroshenko’s moves are designed to centralize the power in his government and avoid having insubordinate pro-war military groups in the country.
On the Novorossiya side, it is the moderates that are now prevailing. The pro-war supporters of a free Novorossiya have been sidelined for the time being. The Kremlin has political, economic and military control over the Donbass region. By mid-May, and with John Kerry’s visit to Sochi, the peaceful discussions have gone up a notch with the US and Russia talking directly to each other about Ukraine – even Victoria Nuland is involved.
Thus, in my humble opinion, we have a frozen conflict in Ukraine. The area may remain peaceful for any amount of time, but there is always the possibility of things flaring up upon any serious shift in the prevailing delicate geopolitical equation. Only the future can tell us.
So, now that the dust is settling, who won this geopolitical conflict? Of course, there is no party who got all it wanted without losing anything. Likewise, there is no party that got crushed and lost everything. The following analysis reveals who won or lost the most:
-The State of Ukraine that was created in 1991 following the breakup of the Soviet Union stands to be the biggest loser in this conflict. They lost Crimea forever and have also lost control over regions of the Donbass that are only nominally still in the country. Ukraine’s economy is now flirting with bankruptcy, living standards have fallen drastically and millions of Ukrainians have left (and are still leaving) the country. The nation is now politically divided and resentful. All these sacrifices happened for virtually no gain. Their EU membership hopes are as bleak as ever. NATO membership is out of question.
-The ruling pro-West junta consisting of Russophobes, fascists, neo-Nazis, ultra-nationalists and oligarchs who successfully came to power via their Maidan revolution remain in their seats to get personally richer. However, they can stay in power only with an iron hand (their thugs) because the majority of the population does not trust them as much as they did during the Maidan days. I don’t see them fixing the many things in Ukraine that need to be fixed. If there is no fresh popular revolt against them, most of them will be gone at the first free and fair elections.
-For all intents and purposes, Novorossiya is now an independent entity. The Donbass people achieved freedom from Kiev. However they are not an independent country and their territory encompasses only a portion of the actual Donetsk and Lugansk regions. Furthermore, the other pro-Russia regions (Kharkov, Zaporozhe, Kherson, Dnepropetrovsk, Nikolayev and Odessa) are still under the grips of Ukraine. The DNR and LNR economies and infrastructure have been heavily damaged by the fighting. They remain very dependent on Russian help.
-No matter how events developed, the USA had little to lose and possibly could get a lot from the conflict. Their main objective was to integrate an anti-Russia Ukraine into NATO and replace the Russian bases in Crimea with American ones. Moscow successfully blocked these plans. Washington retaliated by exerting every tool in its hands to isolate Russia and inflict huge damage to its economy. Those measures mostly failed as well. What the USA got out of the conflict is a West-friendly Ukraine who can be useful in their imperial quest for world domination. On the other they have now a more resentful Russian leadership and population. Washington’s policies in Ukraine also caused an accelerated rapprochement between Russia and China. They also contributed in creating a wedge between the Russophobe nations of Europe (UK, Poland, Baltics etc.) and the more pragmatic ones (France, Hungary, Austria etc.).
-Europe is a clear loser in this conflict. Their Russia sanctions caused significant and lasting damage to their own trade with Russia. Europe is now divided into countries that strictly and blindly follow Washington’s orders and countries that want to conduct foreign policy based on their own interests. Also, now they have to fix what they have broken. The European Union also has to support the faltering Ukrainian economy at a time where there is economic turmoil in some of its own members. In addition, EU’s own silly policies and procedures inflicted self-damage to their own members; one good example is the cancellation of the South Stream gas pipeline project and its diversion via a Turkish route.
-Russia got back the Crimea (the most worthwhile part of Ukraine), thus securing it’s strategically positioned bases and added the Crimean population and economy to its own. Russia also established a pro-Russia area in the Donbass. Call it Novorossiya, call it Donbass or call it DNR/LNR, this heavily militarized and motivated nation is now Russia’s powerful “hammer” in the Ukraine. Moscow can and will use this heavy tool whenever it finds it appropriate to do so. Furthermore, the battle for Novorossiya puts an end to any hawkish Western plans of encroachment into the Russian sphere. The West learned its lessons by finally understanding that Russia will fight back until it gets a solution it is satisfied with. The sanctions imposed on Russia precipitated a much needed realignment of the Russian economy. On the one hand, Russia pivoted east towards China and made all kind of energy, infrastructure, monetary and trade deals with that most important rising economic powerhouse. On the other hand, Russian economy is now taking all kinds of measures to minimize imports and maximize self-dependency. The economy is now directed towards less depending on energy and raw materials exports and finished goods imports. With my limited Russian language skills, I do watch Russian news channels whenever possible. “Importzamishenya” (import substitution) is now one of the most common words used on the Russian media. In a few short years, among other sectors, Russia will turn into a major foodstuff exporter… but that will be the subject of a whole new article.
In brief, the political West threw lemons at Putin. Putin grabbed the lemons and made lemonade.
Sure, Russia did sustain some losses too. Some might say that it lost most of Ukraine. I respectfully disagree. Russia lost Ukraine back in 1991. Since that date, most Ukrainian presidents and governments were not Russia-friendly. Remember the Orange revolution during the last decade? Ukraine’s fortunes and population’s mood swing widely. I expect change for the better in a matter of years. In fact, anti-Russia sentiment in Western and central Ukraine can’t get much worse than it is right now.
The sanctions imposed by the west coupled with the drop of the price of oil did and still will cause some damage to the Russian economy in the short to medium term. But, throughout history, the following saying applies: “what does not kill you will only make you stronger”. I don’t have to be an expert to be certain that the Russian economy will get stronger.
In short, I believe that after sustaining some losses, Russia ends up being the nation that came up on top in the Ukraine turmoil. I received a strong confirmation of my belief on the 9th of May on the Victory Day celebrations.
This year’s 9th of May marked the 70th anniversary of the Victory over Germany. The events and festivities that marked that day were majestic and very well organized. The military parade was extremely impressive as expected. Apart from the new equipment that was put on display (more about that later), three of the day’s events left a deep emotional impression on yours truly.
-The first was a short symbolic act performed by the Russian Defense Minister who made the sing of the cross on himself publicly at the start of the parade. That act symbolized the fact that Russia has faith in God, in itself and in victory. It means that Russia and Russians are not afraid of the evil and are ready to confront it. It means that Russians will rise up and march whenever the need arises.
I know that the esteemed readers are expecting from me to comment and analyze the new weapon systems that were revealed during the military parade. I will try my best to not fail to meet their expectations. So, let’s get started by clearing some misconceptions:
-Second, there is no such thing as an Armata tank or Kurganets troop carrier or a Koalitsya self-propelled artillery. These names are the assigned names for platforms or chassis or turrets. For example there is a T-14 tank based on the Armata chassis and a T-15 Infantry combat Vehicle (IFV) based on the Armata chassis. More about that later.
Third, the Russian Army structure is changing. There will be 3 kinds of units/brigades: Heavy, Medium and Light. The vehicles of the heavy brigades will be based on the Armata platform. The vehicles of the medium brigades will be based on the Kurganets platform while the vehicles of the light brigades will be based on the Boomerang platform. The independent airborne units (VDV) will use their own airdrop able vehicles. There will also be special units that use Typhon-U and Typhon-K type Mine Resistant (MRAP) vehicles.
Armata platform: What we saw during the parade were the T-14 tank and T-15 infantry fighting vehicles. In the future, there will also be other vehicles/weapons based on this Armata platform including a recovery vehicle. This platform can have the engine in the rear (e.g. the T-14 tank) or up front (T-15). Heavily protected with the latest types of armor, these vehicles also boast Active Protection Systems (APS) that detect incoming anti-tank rockets and kill them with a projectile that explodes in its path. The vehicles also have devices that disrupt the guidance systems of incoming guided missiles.
These vehicles use a multitude of advanced optical, thermal, laser and radar sensors to look around and have accurate/complete situation awareness. No crewman sits in the turrets anymore. The crews are placed in heavily armored capsules providing maximum protection. So, a tank can have its turret blown up and still be able to drive back home, have a new turret placed and go back to the front. The turret of the T-14 tank contains a new 125 mm fully automated gun. A 152mm gun will be available later. The T-15 has the “Epoha” turret that encloses an automatic 30 mm cannon as well as a quartet of the latest version of the Kornet anti-tank guided missile with a range of up to 10 km. The weight of these vehicles is undisclosed. Estimates vary between 48 to 55 tons.
Kurganets platform: Two vehicles based on this platform were revealed at the parade. There will be many more including some SAM missile carriers. The IFV version has the same Epoha turret and APS systems as the T-15. The Armored Personnel Carrier (APC) version has a 12.7 mm KORD machine gun and does not have APS, but is simpler and can carry a few more troops. At around 25 tons, these vehicles are lighter than the Armata based vehicles. Their latest generation armor is of course thinner. But these vehicles are fully amphibious and can swim across rivers and other water bodies.
Boomerang platform: This is a wheeled platform (8x8) that will be the basis of all the vehicles in the very mobile light brigades. The only version that was shown is a modern day replacement of the popular BTR series of wheeled APCs. At around 22 tons, this version is equipped with the same Epoha turret of the more heavy platforms.
Koalitsya turret: This is a self-contained and unmanned turret that contains a fully automated 152mm long range gun. It can be mounted on tracked or wheeled heavy platforms/chassis. The version that was paraded was on a T-90 tank chassis. In the future, it is expected that it will be mounted on an Armata platform, a heavy Kamaz truck chassis and even on ships. The details that have been disclosed make this gun very impressive. First of all it is super accurate because it has a system that communicates with the outgoing shells that are already in the air. Fuse setting is done remotely (there is no one in the turret). It has the longest range in its class: up to 70 km with some types of advanced shells.
These impressive new weapon systems are of a new generation and outclass whatever the rest of the world has currently or is expected to adopt in the near future. We also know that what was shown is just the tip of the iceberg. Apart from other versions of the aforementioned platforms, Russia is close to introducing new SAM systems (S-350, S-500, MORPHEI and others). New MLRS systems replacing the current Uragan and Smerch rockets are coming soon too. New fighters, bombers, warships and submarines are on the way too. A whole new Russian Army is on the rise. A more peaceful world can be seen on the horizon.
Zoravar
May 2015
A million men under arms. Thousands of new tanks and planes. A hundred new satellites. Next-generation weapons. Inside Vladimir Putin's $755 billion plan to restore Russian might.
One of the distinguishing characteristics of Vladimir Putin’s presidency has been his commitment to revitalizing Russia’s military. Putin, who has noted that Russia’s perceived weakness makes it vulnerable to external pressure and internal disruption, is pushing for increased funding to transform the Russian armed forces from the debilitated remnants inherited from the old Soviet superpower military machine into a smaller, but more modern, mobile, technologically advanced and capable twenty-first century force.
Introduction
What are Russian conventional military capabilities?
As part of defense reforms, most Russian ground forces are to be professionalized and reorganized into formations of a few thousand troops for low- and medium-intensity conflicts. But for the foreseeable future many will remain one-year conscripts with limited training (military service is compulsory for Russian men aged eighteen to twenty-seven). The Airborne Assault Forces, which comprises about thirty-five thousand troops and whose commander answers directly to Putin, is Russia's elite crisis-reaction force. A Special Operations Command, also a reserve of Putin, was created in 2013 to manage special operators outside Russian borders.
Paraded uncovered for the first time on 9 May in Moscow, Russia's new range of armoured vehicles represent not only the biggest change in the country's armoured vehicle families since the 1970s but also a new design ethos. While the vehicles' designs partly involve radical rather than revolutionary innovation, the scale and ambition of the change they embody is nothing short of a revolution. Together, the Armata, Kurganets, Boomerang, and Koalitsiya and other vehicles on show will replace nearly all Russia's existing vehicle families as, remarkably, Russia is attempting to replace all its main armoured fighting vehicle (AFV) families at the same time.
Additionally, the new vehicles display radical changes in design ethos and incorporate multiple previously unseen active protection systems (APSs). The reported weight and the apparent size of all the vehicles indicates a shift in armoured vehicle design philosophy away from the Soviet emphasis on manoeuvrability and low vehicle profile towards the Western focus on armour protection and crew survivability. While many details of the vehicles had already been known, and were covered in depth by JDW in April, the full unveiling of the vehicles has revealed many fascinating new details and added greatly to our understanding of the vehicle family designs.
T-14 Armata main battle tank (MBT)
The T-14 is Russia's first truly new tank design since the T-72, designed in the early 1970s. Based on the Armata Universal Tracked Platform, the T-14's most attention-grabbing feature is its unmanned turret, with all of the MBT's three crew (commander, driver, gunner) seated in a well-protected crew compartment at the front of the hull.Seven T-14s took part in the parade and the type is slated to replace the Russian Ground Forces' T-72M3 and T-90 main battle tanks (MBTs) currently in service. Notably, the unveiled turret dispels suggestions the MBT would be armed with a coaxial 30 mm cannon, in addition to its 2A82A 125 mm main gun. Indeed the pre-production vehicles paraded by Russia feature neither a 30 mm cannon nor a coaxial machine gun (MG) armament as expected, although the production vehicles might eventually feature the dual 30 mm cannon/7.62 mm MG.
Although the T-14's turret features a large bustle, it remains unclear whether this features the autoloader/weapon-handling system for the MBT's main gun or serves another purpose (meaning the T-14 would retain the vulnerable hull-mounted carousel system present in previous Russian MBTs). Some reports also indicate Russia has not entirely abandoned its ambitions to arm Armata with a 152 mm main gun. If this is the case, it could explain why the T-14's unmanned turret has an unusually high profile relative to the position of the 125 mm main gun, with the turret possibly designed to incorporate growth potential up to the 152 mm calibre.
T-14 is armed with a remote-controlled turret (RCT) armed with a 7.62 mm PKTM MG, with the unit also functioning as the commander's independent sight. The gunner's sight is mounted to the left side of the main gun and shielded by a two-piece armoured door to protect it from small arms fire. A barrel reference unit is mounted above the base of the 2A82A main gun, which notably lacks a fume bore extractor (which would be superfluous given the turret is unmanned). Metrological, satellite communications, GLONASS, datalink, and radio communications antennae are fitted on the roof of the turret.
The MBT's turret is literally covered in a variety of launcher and sensor systems understood to be linked to a new APS system, which some reports call 'Afghanit'. At the base of each side of the turret are five large and fixed horizontally arrayed launch tubes covering the 120° frontal arc of the turret. These bear a strong resemblance to the launchers for the earlier Drozd and Drozd-2 APS, which fired a hard-kill 107 mm unguided projectile armed with a high-explosive-(HE) fragment warhead to defeat incoming anti-tank guided weapons (ATGWs).
The T-14 is also fitted with four sets of smaller-calibre launchers, with each unit armed with 12 launch tubes. Two horizontally trainable launcher units are fitted on either side of the top of the turret, while two apparently fixed and vertically facing launcher units are recessed into the top of the tank's turret.
It is unclear whether this second system fires hard-kill (ie warheads) or soft-kill (ie anti-infrared/laser-obscuring smoke) munitions, or a combination of the two. It is also unclear if the vertically mounted units are fireable, or simply storage for reload units for the two trainable launchers. One limitation of the Drozd systems were that they provided no protection against threats emanating from above the tank, so mounting the fixed launchers vertically could be one way to provide protection against top-attack threats.
Providing warning and guidance for the APS system are two types of sensors mounted around the T-14's turret. Two large sensors, believed to be electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR)-based laser warning receivers, are angularly mounted on the front of the turret providing 180° coverage, while four smaller sensors (covered but believed to be radars) are mounted around the turret providing 360° coverage.
Armata features a notably different hull design to the T-72/90. One striking difference is the road wheels, which are of a different design to the T-72/90's, while the Armata features seven road wheels, to the six of the previous MBT designs, with the drive wheel at the rear. This is similar to the T-80 MBT family, which also has chassis with seven smaller road wheels.
It is not known whether Armata is equipped with a gas-turbine or a diesel engine, but the T-14's powerpack is mounted at the rear of the MBT, with two internal fuel tanks mounted on either side, and exhausts also mounted on either side. Day/night cameras are mounted around the T-14's turret to provide situational awareness, while a forward-looking EO/IR (FLIR) system is mounted on the front of the hull for the driver. The driver's hatch has no periscopes. When driving buttoned-down, the driver may be in a reclined position, using a set of periscopes mounted on a second hatch directly behind him.
NII Stali is understood to have designed a new form of steel armour for the Armata family. Speaking to TASS, a NII Stali representative said the "steel armour alloy, named 44S-sv-Sh [44S--], is approved by the Armata's developer. The alloy's operational testing has been started and it can be used in prospective vehicles' parts". The use of the 44S-sv-Sh steel in Armata is intended to provide protection at a similar level to STANAG 4569 (first edition) Level 5. The high level of 44S-sv-Sh's protection is ensured by the short-grained material structure, the optimised legation process and the special heat processing. The steel has also been designed to maintain its characteristics in very cold conditions.
The Armata design is also understood to utilise explosive reactive armour (ERA) within its base design (rather than the appliqué ERA tiles seen on previous Russian MBTs), with views from above the MBT showing a distinctive tiled pattern indicative of ERA on the top of the vehicle's chassis and turret. Although what appear to be ERA tiles are present on the turret roof, much of the sides of the turret appears to be just a thin cladding covering the various APS and sighting systems rather than armour. Appliqué armour (unclear if passive or ERA, or both) is fitted to the forward two thirds of the T-14's sides, while the rear third is protected by bar armour to provide clearance for the T-14's exhausts.
T-15 Heavy Infantry Fighting Vehicle (IFV)
Also based on the Armata universal platform and fully unveiled during the 9 May parade is the T-15 Heavy IFV.For the creation of the T-15 the Armata chassis has been reversed in its entirety to create a compartment to accommodate dismounts at the rear of the IFV. Accordingly, the T-15's powerpack is mounted at the front of the vehicle, with the drive wheel also at the front and the exhausts now on the forward sides of the vehicle. This swap has necessitated relocating the vehicle's fuel tanks, while to protect the normally weaker armour of the rear of the Armata chassis a distinctive arrowhead-shaped armour package extends around the forward sides of the vehicle. To accommodate the vehicle's exhausts the side armour is overhanging rather than arrowhead. The overall effect of this is to give the vehicle an odd, bulbous appearance. The top of the vehicle's chassis appears to be protected by integrated ERA tiles.
The T-15 is armed with a KBP Instrument Design Bureau Epoch Almaty-designed RCT at the rear of the vehicle equipped with a 30 mm 2A42 cannon, 7.62 mm coaxial MG, and a bank of two Kornet-M ATGWs on either side. The RCT features a gunner's sight to the right of the main gun and an independent commander's sight on the top of the turret on the left-hand side. The heavy IFV is also fitted with an advanced armour package on the side of the vehicle. The T-15 appears to feature the same APS sensors and launchers as seen on the T-14, although mounted on the hull of the vehicle rather than its turret. A three-man crew (commander, gunner, driver) are located in the centre of the vehicle, behind the engine, with the rear of the vehicle's hull raised to accommodate the troop compartment and turret. Egress from the crew compartment is made via a power-assisted door at the rear of the vehicle. The front/underside of both the T-14 and T-15 is fitted with what appears to be a small entrenching/counter-mine system.
Kurganets-25
The lighter, 25-tonne, Kurganets-25 was present in two variants at the 9 May parade: IFV and armoured personnel carrier (APC). The new vehicle family appears significantly wider and taller than BMP series of vehicles it is slated to replace.The IFV variant is armed with the same 30 mm cannon/Kornet ATGW armed turret as the T-15. Uralvagonzavod has also created its AU-220M turret armed with a 57 mm cannon, which is understood to be in contention to be fitted to the IFV variant, although this was not fitted to the Kurganets-25 IFVs taking part in the parade. Much like the Armata vehicles, the Kurganets-25 IFV appears to feature two types of APS sensor and effector, although these appear subtly different to those on the Armata vehicles. Fixed launchers are placed all around the vehicle hull, providing 360° coverage. While these resemble the launches on the Armata vehicles, they appear to be of a much smaller calibre. A two-part sensor system, similar to the laser-warning receivers on the Armata vehicles, is also located around the hull. Oddly, three sensors are located on the left-side of the vehicle, but only two on the right-side. Given both sets of sensors and effectors are located on the hull, it would appear the two systems are linked.
Three two-part sensors (covered during the parade) are also mounted around the turret, along with four sets of effectors on the front of the turret and two mounted sidewise on the rear of the turret. It is unclear what these effectors are, but they appear similar to an unknown system seen mounted on the turret of the earlier T-95 (Object 195) prototype MBT. On the IFV, each set has a pair of what are either round windows or frangible covers. If they are windows, this system could be a new APS interference emitter similar to a greatly slimmed-down version of the soft-kill Shtora system present on the T-90. Alternatively, each set could contain two of the effectors from the smaller-calibre launchers on the Armata vehicles. Given that the coverage provided by the location of the effectors appears to intermesh, the latter option seems more likely.
The APC version, meanwhile, is fitted with a much smaller RCT armed with 12.7 mm MG. The APC lacks the hull-mounted sensors or effectors seen on the IFV variant, and instead features solely the second APS type present on the Kurganets-25 IFV. While the sensor configuration is the same for this APS on both the APC and IFV variants, the configuration of the effectors differs. On the APC vehicle, the effectors are located only on the front of the turret and instead of six sets of paired effectors, there are four sets of paired effectors, and four sets of single effectors.
Both the APC and IFV variants are otherwise identical, with a forward-mounted powerpack and seven road wheels. Commander and driver's hatches are present in front of the turret, with access to the troop compartment via a rear door. Unlike in previous Russian IFV designs, there are no other hatches for troops carried inside, apart from the rear door. Neither variants feature any obvious ERA, although ERA has not typically been fitted to Russian IFVs. Both feature a large appliqué kit to the sides of the vehicle, although whether this is principally for armour or flotation purposes is unclear. Amphibious capability has been designed into the Kurganets family, with both featuring a bow plane and waterjets installed within the rear of the hull.
Boomerang
The Boomerang 8x8 vehicle also made its full debut at the 9 May parade, and is intended to replace the BTR-family of vehicles, the most recent variant in Russian service being the BTR-82A.The 8x8 is armed with the same turret as both the T-15 and the Kurganets-25 IFV, although the examples taking part in the parade were fitted with no APS systems. An APC variant fitted with an RCT with a 12.7 mm MG is also understood to be planned.
Boomerang's powerpack is located in the front right-hand side of the vehicle, with the driver at the front-left side of the vehicle. Neither the vehicle's commander nor gunner have their own hatch, although unlike the Kurganets vehicles there are two roof-hatches for the troop compartment. With the engine located in the front of the vehicle, troops can egress via a door at the rear of the vehicle, unlike the awkward side doors of the BTR series (which had their engine at the rear). Also designed to be amphibious, Boomerang is equipped with a bow plane at the front of the hull and shrouded propellers at the rear of the 8x8.
Koalitsiya-SV
Also shown off on the 9 May parade was the 2S35 Koalitsiya-SV (Coalition-SV) self-propelled artillery (SPA) system, which will replace the 2S19 MSTA-S SPA in Russian Ground Forces service.This is understood to feature a new 152 mm ordnance utilising a modular charge system. This main gun features notably different muzzle brake and recoil dampeners to the earlier SPA. An RCT armed with a 12.7 mm MG is mounted on the roof of the turret. There are two bundles of 902B Tucha smoke grenade launchers mounted on either side of the cabin and no other APS effectors, although four warning receivers are located on the SPA's turret. The main turret, understood to be unmanned akin to the T-14's turret, is significantly longer than the 2S19's.
Although Koalitsiya-SV was slated to be based on the Armata universal chassis, the pre-production vehicles appear based on a modified T-72/90 chassis. The general layout and roadwheels appears to be identical to those on the T-72/90 chassis, although the front of the chassis has been heavily modified to create positions for the commander and gunner on either side of the driver. Unlike on Armata, where the driver is located on the right side of the vehicle, the driver on Koalitsiya is located in the centre of the vehicle (as seen in the T-72/90 and 2S19).
According to Georgy Zakamennih, chief director of TsNII Burevestnik, the developer of the 2S35, Coalition-SV has a maximum range of 70 km when firing advanced shells. He added that its ammunition load is larger than Western analogues. There is a unified command-and-control panel on which all the actions are displayed. The system's pneumatic loader is billed as increasing Coalition-SV's rate of fire. 2S35 can automatically choose the appropriate type of shell and fire it. Coalition-SV is therefore not a classic self-propelled gun but an innovative robotised complex, autonomous to a high extent, he said.
Background:
The $3 billion “National Warship” Project, known by its Turkish abbreviation MILGEM, seeks to upgrade the Turkish fleet by replacing and augmenting its older foreign-made warships with eight domestically produced Ada-class anti-submarine warfare corvettes and subsequently four intermediate-class TF 100 frigates. After gaining experience from the building of the slightly larger but more lethal TF 100 anti-air warfare frigates, Turkey then intends to build a series of TF 2000 frigates. Double the size of the TF 100, the TF 2000 anti-air warfare frigate will significantly advance the Turkish fleet’s transformation into a blue-water navy.
Aside from being an intermediate phase for the development of the TF 2000, the TF 100 frigates are of present vital importance as replacements for the German-made Meko 200 frigates that form an essential component of Turkey’s force projection in the Black Sea. The TF 100 frigates will be the first Turkish vessels to carry the American-manufactured RIM-162 Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile (ESSM) system capable of countering the current generation of supersonic anti-ship missiles.
Prior to Russia’s annexation of Crimea, the head of Turkey’s Undersecretariat of Defense Industries Murat Bayar publicly acknowledged the need to replace the Meko 200 frigates with the ESSM-equipped TF 100s by 2020.
However, in September 2013, upon the commissioning of the TCG Büyükada, the second of MILGEM’s eight Ada-class corvettes, the Turkish government abruptly canceled RMK Marine’s contract to build the remaining six corvettes. A subsidiary the Turkish conglomerate Koç Holding A.Ş., the cancellation of RMK Marine’s contract appears to be part of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s political vendetta against the Koç family for providing assistance to anti-Erdogan protesters from a Koç-owned Istanbul hotel during the summer 2013 Gezi Park demonstrations.
The next two corvettes will be produced by Turkey’s national shipyard while the government evaluates bids for the building of the four remaining corvettes. Despite Undersecretary Bayar’s optimistic forecasts that the government’s cancellations will delay the production schedule for the Ada-class corvettes by only one year, the cascade effect of the production stoppage in setting back the building of the TF 100 frigates, as well as the subsequent TF 2000s, has created a four- to eight-year window of vulnerability for Turkey in the Black Sea vis-à-vis a resurgent Russia.
Turkey’s strategic vulnerability was not anticipated because of the view in Turkish policy circles that Turkey enjoys a relative parity with Russia in the Black Sea. However, the approximate parity exists only when Russia’s Black Sea Fleet is matched against all the major assets of the Turkish navy. Prior to the Crimean conflict, Russia’s Black Sea fleet consisted of 24 major surface combatants and one diesel submarine while Turkey’s major naval assets consist of approximately 24 surface combatants and 14 submarines. The parity is illusory as it is unlikely that Turkey would be able to deploy all or most of its naval assets in a Black Sea conflict.
Turkey’s ability to deter Russian assertiveness in what Moscow regards as its greater Black Sea sphere of influence, including the eastern Mediterranean and the Caucasus, was already questionable. As Russia’s Black Sea Fleet disposed of Georgia’s miniscule navy during the 2008 Russo-Georgian War, Ankara passively watched the Russian military destroy Turkey’s infrastructure investments in Georgia. Turkey’s supposed naval parity did not afford Ankara any significant policy options.
Indeed, Ankara revealed its reluctance to provoke Moscow into challenging the Montreux Convention, the 1936 treaty granting Ankara exclusive control over the Bosphorous Straits and the Dardanelles and restricting the transit of heavy warships through this strategic Black Sea-Eastern Mediterranean access corridor.
Implications:
With the annexation of Crimea, Turkey faces a stronger and bolder Russian naval power in the Black Sea. Russia now possesses the Ukrainian navy’s submarine and several, if not most, of Ukraine’s 11 major surface combatants. Even without the Ukraine’s naval assets, Russia’s own new additions to its Black Sea Fleet will enable Moscow to dominate the region. Russia recently put to sea the first of its six Admiral Grigorovich-class frigates. All six frigates are designated for service in the Black Sea Fleet.
Larger and more advanced than Turkey’s four modified Meko 200 Barbaros-class frigates, each of the six Admiral Grigorovich-class frigates will be the first vessels equipped with the state-of-the-art, supersonic Shtil-1 Surface-to-Air Missile (SAM) air defense system. Moscow expects all six frigates to be in service in the Black Sea Fleet by the end of 2016. Turkey’s now delayed TF 100 frigates, slated to carry the ESSM system, would be the only Turkish vessels with a comparable SAM capability.
Within the same 2016 timeframe, Russia will also add six newly improved Kilo-class diesel-electric submarines to its Black Sea Fleet ahead of Turkey’s deployment of an equivalent number of Ada-class anti-submarine corvettes. These two Russian procurement programs alone will quickly tilt the balance of naval forces in Russia’s favor, giving Russia a significant strategic advantage for a window of four to eight years depending on the pace of Turkey’s resumed production schedule.
In addition, Russia is in the process of acquiring two French-made Mistral-class amphibious assault ships, to be named the Vladivostok and Sevastapol, the latter being the namesake of the Russian Black Sea Fleet’s base in Crimea. The amphibious assault ships are helicopter carriers that can accommodate 16 attack helicopters as well as 13 battle tanks and 450 combat soldiers.
A Mistral-class helicopter carrier in the Black Sea Fleet would provide Russia with unprecedented power projection capability in its greater Black Sea region. Russia’s recent announcement that it has no plans to deploy either of the helicopter carriers in the Black Sea may simply constitute a temporary measure by Moscow to assuage French sensibilities in order to ensure that France does not rescind the sale as a result of Moscow’s annexation of Crimea. Turkey cannot discount the likely possibility that the Sevastapol will serve at the Black Sea Fleet base after which it was named.
Russia’s reassertion of naval power in the Black Sea has already been accompanied by Moscow’s first action to change the status quo in relation to Black Sea energy exploitation. With the formal annexation of Crimea, Ukraine’s Black Sea Oil and Gas company, ChronomorNaftohaz, was made into a whole-owned subsidiary of the Russian state-controlled joint-stock company Gazprom. Between the acquisition of ChronomorNaftohaz itself and Gazprom’s now exclusive license for all offshore energy development in Crimea’s continental shelf, the Russian energy giant has acquired an estimated $50 billion in capital assets.
Turkey’s national oil and gas company TPAO has itself spent $2.5 billion on offshore energy exploration in Turkey’s continental shelf. Current estimates predict Turkey’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the Black Sea contains 10 billion barrels of crude oil and two trillion cubic meters of natural gas. However as ultra deep-water wells are drilled in the region, more hydrocarbon resources may be discovered. Even if Russia, whose continental shelf now projects from Crimea and therefore closer to Turkey, does not attempt to dispute the demarcation of Turkey’s EEZ, Turkey’s drilling platforms can no longer be defended as easily from Russian warships.
Of greater concern for Ankara is the more likely possibility that Russia may use Turkey’s window of vulnerability to alter the status quo in relation to the transport of natural gas through Russia’s “South Stream” gas pipeline. The Russia-to-Bulgaria pipeline had been routed through Turkey’s territorial waters to avoid the Ukraine’s EEZ. Russia’s annexation of Crimea renders this longer and more expensive route unnecessary and may lead Moscow to abrogate this very lucrative agreement for Turkey.
Moreover, Moscow may seek to affect the development of the Trans-Anatolian Pipeline intended to transport Azerbaijani natural gas to Europe via Georgia and Turkey. To prevent the breaking of its stranglehold over gas exports to Europe, Russia may resume its simmering conflict with Georgia or even expand the use of military pressure to Azerbaijan. Ankara would have fewer options to block such an exercise of Russian power, as Turkey is now in a weaker relative position than during the time of the 2008 Russo-Georgian war.
Conclusions:
The politically motivated stoppage of the MILGEM’s production schedule has created a window of vulnerability in Turkey’s Black Sea naval defenses in the face of rapidly rising Russian naval power. The delayed production of the Ada-class anti-submarine corvettes will put Turkey at a disadvantage relative to Russia’s imminent deployment of a new fleet of Black Sea submarines. Russia’s Black Sea Fleet will also possess six Admiral Grigorovich-class frigates capable of countering supersonic anti-ship missiles while Turkey will lack the comparable capability because of the setback to MILGEM’s four TF 100 frigates.
Until Turkey can build and deploy these naval assets, Ankara’s deterrent capability has eroded and Russia will dominate the Black Sea. Exercising sea control, Moscow can more easily deploy its newly acquired Mistral-class helicopter carrier to stage amphibious assault operations against other Black Sea littoral states including Georgia and Azerbaijan.
Having taken control of Ukraine’s offshore oil and natural gas operations, Moscow will likely attempt to alter regional energy transport arrangements in Russia’s favor while Rusia still enjoys naval dominance. With Moscow’s annexation of Crimea, Russia no longer needs to route its “South Stream” gas pipeline through Turkish waters to avoid Ukraine’s EEZ. Moscow may attempt to cancel its agreement with Ankara and reroute the pipeline through Crimea’s continental shelf, resulting in a considerable revenue loss for Turkey.
Until Ankara can rectify the gap in naval capabilities created by MILGEM’s delays, Turkey will not be able to defend its national interests adequately as Russia attempts to reestablish its sphere of influence in the greater Black Sea region. The author is a Fellow at the Shalem College, Jerusalem, and at the Middle East and Asia Units of the Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace at Hebrew University. Dr. Tanchum teaches in the Departments of Middle Eastern History and East Asian Studies of Tel Aviv University.
This article was first published in the Turkey Analyst (www.turkeyanalyst.org), a biweekly publication of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program Joint Center.
Hundreds of new Russian aircraft, tanks and missiles are rolling off assembly lines. Russian jets roar through European skies under NATO's wary eye. Tens of thousands of troops take part in war games showing off the military's readiness for all-out war. The muscle flexing suggests that Russia's economic woes so far are having no impact on the Kremlin's ambitious military modernization program.
Another surprise for the West came a few weeks later, when well-organized groups of gunmen took over local government offices and police stations in several cities across Ukraine's mostly Russian-speaking eastern industrial heartland, triggering a rebellion that evolved into a full-scale war that killed more than 5,300 since April.
As fighting escalated in the east, the Russian military showed its agility by quickly deploying tens of thousands troops near the border with Ukraine. Ukraine and the West said that thousands of them crossed into Ukraine, helping turn the tide in rebels' favor. The Kremlin denies that, although it has acknowledged that Russian volunteers have joined the insurgency.
Unlike the past, when the Russian military was filled through unpopular conscription, the force has grown more professional and motivated. Relatively high salaries have attracted an increasing number of contract soldiers, whose number is set to exceed 350,000 this year from 295,000 in 2014. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said that by the end of this year all battalion tactical groups — the core units in the Army, the Airborne Forces and the Marines — will be manned entirely by professional soldiers.
Another key priority for the military is the Arctic, where global rivalry for major untapped oil and gas reserves is intensifying as polar ice melts. The military has restored long-abandoned Soviet-era airfields and other bases in the region after two decades of neglect. It formed a separate Arctic command to oversee its troops in the region.
Russia's weapons modernization plan envisages spending 20 trillion rubles on new weapons in 2011-2020. It produced some highly visible results last year, with the military receiving the highest numbers of new planes, missiles and armor since the 1991 Soviet collapse:
Russia to deploy fifth-gen fighters, S-500 missiles in 2016
The newly-developed equipment is capable of deactivating the radio electronics of UAVs and the warheads of precision weapons, according to a representative of the corporation. The equipment, informally named the microwave gun, has been developed for the needs of Russia’s Defense Ministry and will be demonstrated during the closed part of Army-2015, an international event organized by the Russian Defense Ministry, the Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) and state technology corporation Rostec, which will be held on June 16-19. The UIMC representative has not revealed all the technical characteristics of the equipment but has mentioned that the impact range of the equipment is ten kilometers and that its defense perimeter is 360 degrees.
“The new system is equipped with a high-power relativistic generator and reflector antenna, management and control system, and a transmission system which is fixed on the chassis of BUK surface-to-air missile systems. When mounted on a special platform, the ‘microwave gun’ is capable of ensuring perimeter defense at 360 degrees,” the representative said. The system is capable of out-of-band suppression of the radio electronic equipment of low-altitude aircraft and the assault elements of precision weapons. The gun is able to deactivate the equipment of aircraft and UAVs, and neutralize precision weapons. There are currently also plans to use the system for testing Russian military radio electronic systems against the impact of powerful super-high-frequency emission.
Source: http://sputniknews.com/russia/20150615/1023369522.html#ixzz3d8BtpalS
Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/russia-buy-least-50-tu-160-blackjack-bombers-production-likely-complete-ahead-time-1941450
Special attention is now paid to Syria and the weakened regime of Bashar al-Assad in the face of a new armed assault against Damascus. The attempts to trade the support of Syria for a number of concessions on Ukraine and Crimea allegedly made by John Kerry failed. Then Americans attempted blackmail, which is the strategy of choice for Washington in the countries that resist its dictate. On May 19 the Russian embassy in Syria was shelled by militants, presumably Jaysh al-Islam, which resulted in one of the shells exploding in the main building of the diplomatic mission. Fortunately, there was nobody there in the room destroyed by the explosion. Immediately after the attack the State Department swiftly condemned this act of terrorism. But we all are well aware of the fact that the “southern front” operating in the suburbs of the Syrian capital is controlled by Jordan with a certain amount of US assistance, unlike the “northern front” guided by Turkey and Saudi Arabia. The shelling of the Russian embassy – is clearly a signal to Russia that it should abandon its support of the Syrian regime.
The White House continues to exploit the Iranian theme to dissuade Moscow supplying the Islamic Republic with S-300 air defense systems. But America didn’t even try to propose a fair exchange. Yet, Washington think tanks are well of aware of the fact that Moscow will no longer buy any of America’s fraudulent tricks, as happened a few years ago with the introduction of sanctions against Iran and the freezing of the contract to supply the S-300s. The US goal is clear and simple – to sow doubts in Tehran about the principal position of Russia on Iran, thus pushing Iranians to unnecessary concessions in discussions on the Iranian nuclear program.
Another old trick has been the alleged desire of the GCC countries, including Saudi Arabia, to launch a full-scale cooperation with Russia, particularly in the coordination of global oil prices. The emissaries of the Arabian monarchies one by one have been visiting the Russian capital with handfuls of promises. Naturally, none of those were planned to be implemented, as they are designed to lure Russia’s leadership into a trap. But this lesson has already been learned as well, especially in the times when the former Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and Saudi Prince Bandar were eager to promise billions of dollars of investment in the Russian economy, the purchase of Russian weapons, and lucrative contracts, yet no concrete steps followed.
Now a new player is being used – Turkey, which seems to be seriously offended by Russia’s position on the Armenian Genocide. Turkey, for which the question of recognition or non-recognition of the genocide is the most painful of all, instantly responded to the fact that on 24 April, Vladimir Putin visited the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial, built in memory of the genocide victims of 1915. Turkish officials said that there could be no justification for this visit, three days later, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan “remembered” events regarding the Crimea. The Turkish leader said that Russia should account for their actions in Crimea and Ukraine before condemning the massacre of Armenians by the Ottomans in 1915.
Washington was eager to request even more anti-Russian statements from Turkey, including those relating to the Crimea, that followed one after the other. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, said that the recent unofficial Turkish delegation that was visiting the Crimea, found signs of human rights violations. Such an assessment on the situation on the ground from Cavusoglu looks rather strange, since they contradict statements made by members of the delegation themselves. On April 29 the head of the unofficial delegation Mehmet Uskyul said that he is satisfied with the treatment of Crimean Tatars on the peninsula. Even more dramatic statements were made by Turkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu on May 14 at a meeting of NATO Foreign Ministers. According to this Turkish official “The illegal annexation of the Crimea can not be tolerated”. The Turkish prime minister also urged NATO states to support Ukraine so it could better ensure the security of its own people. Ahmet Davutoğlu went as far as stressing that NATO states should not forget about the suffering of the people of the Crimea…
Ankara canceled a regular meeting of the Russian-Turkish Cooperation Council and the arrival of Sergey Lavrov to Antalya that was scheduled on May 16. Formally – under the pretext of difficulties caused by the forthcoming parliamentary elections, after which a new government will be formed. But all that buzz can negatively affect a project of fundamental importance for Russia – the “Turkish Stream”, which couldn’t make the United States any more happier.
Another front of this anti-Russian campaign was opened in Macedonia. The United States is actively advancing a possible regime change in Skopje to counter Russian influence. It’s also important to note that the “Turkish Stream” would stretch across Macedonian soil. That’s what Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said last week about those events: “Objectively speaking, the events in Macedonia are unfolding against the background of the government’s refusal to join the policy of sanctions against Russia and the vigorous support Skopje gave to the Turkish Stream gas pipeline project, to which many people oppose, both in Brussels and across the ocean. So we can’t help but feeling that there is some sort of connection here.”
In fact, Washington has tried to stage a “color revolution” by organizing mass demonstrations launched by the local opposition. Even the country’s Albanian minority, which has nothing in common with Macedonian opposition came out to the streets to support rallies in the capital, Skopje. For Moscow this looks all too familiar. Events are moving in the same direction as they were in Ukraine in 2013 and 2014, when the corrupt regime of Viktor Yanukovych was ousted during mass demonstrations organized by the United States and Poland.
So the latest maneuvers of American diplomacy – is nothing but a smokescreen designed to hide the true intentions of the Obama administration. Washington’s strategic goal remains the same – to weaken Russia by all means necessary and break it apart from those countries which are engaged in cooperation with Moscow. Therefore there’s no trusting US promises or even reaching deals with them. All this smooth-talking is a mere trap in the hope that Russian pro-Western liberals might convince President Putin that the White House is sincere. But US think tanks have missed one thing – “Ukrainian lessons” have not been lost on the Kremlin.
Moscow’s denials of involvement in eastern Ukraine are, of course, absurd: It is clear that the separatists in Donetsk and Luhansk are equipped, reinforced and trained by Russians. That said, if Vladimir V. Putin had tried sending unmarked commandos to set up sham republics in western Ukraine, where anti-Russian sentiment runs high, his men would have been returned to the Kremlin in body bags. Yes, Mr. Putin is brewing unrest in the east, but he is brewing with local ingredients. He is connecting with the population using a language they speak and a symbolism they understand.
The unpalatable reality is that a significant portion of eastern Ukrainians — the very people on the ground living and suffering through this conflict — distrust Kiev and the West and at least tacitly support Russia and the separatists. And frankly, that isn’t surprising.
Last month the Ukrainian president, Petro O. Poroshenko, decided to freeze government pensions and cut off funding for schools and hospitals in the eastern provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk. Unfortunately, the separatist thugs fighting there don’t rely on food stamps to buy weapons — they get them from Russia. All that Mr. Poroshenko accomplished was giving Mr. Putin the “proof” to tell the starving pensioners of the region: “See — the West doesn’t care if you die.” This is a sentiment that is growing stronger and stronger, according to reports coming out of the region.
Equally awful is Kiev’s decision to maintain a relationship with the Azov battalion, an ultranationalist paramilitary group of around 400 men that uses Nazi salutes and insignia. To anyone familiar with eastern Ukraine’s bloody history during World War II, allowing the Azov battalion to fight in the region is a bit like sponsoring a Timothy McVeigh Appreciation Night in Oklahoma City. It does nothing but infuriate the local population and provide Mr. Putin with yet another opportunity to shed the mantle of invader and position himself as a protector.
The impact of World War II, or, as most people there call it, The War, on eastern Ukrainian consciousness cannot be understated. My childhood in the northeast city of Kharkov (now called Kharkiv) in the 1980s was surrounded by The War, 40 years after it ended. Every family — Russian, Ukrainian, Roma, Jewish — had ghost relatives who had vanished or perished. One of my earliest memories is of asking my father where the mortar holes pockmarking the outside of our apartment block had come from; one of my father’s earliest memories is of fleeing Kharkov mere hours before the Nazis invaded the city. Eastern Ukrainians today, especially the older generations, respond to swastikas and wolfsangel runes — Nazi symbols now used by Ukrainian ultranationalists — about as well as African-Americans respond to burning crosses.
Washington and the Western media have largely ignored the negative ramifications of Kiev’s actions. The State Department has said nothing about the pension freeze’s effect on the local population of eastern Ukraine; reports of the Azov battalion’s use of Nazi insignia have not been addressed in any meaningful manner. Mr. Putin’s greatest weapon of all may be the West’s refusal to speak directly to the people of eastern Ukraine. When I talk to family friends still living in Kharkiv, they ask me, “Why does the West label us as enemies?”
It seems the West has forgotten the lessons of its own history. At the end of the Cold War in 1989, Communism collapsed, leaving unrest and uncertainty in its wake. In that moment of chaos, the people of Eastern Europe turned their gazes westward. This happened not by accident, but because of decades of public diplomacy — from “Ich bin ein Berliner” to “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall” to nightly broadcasts by Voice of America and Radio Free Europe, which constantly reassured those behind the Iron Curtain that the West had not forgotten them. That year my family was one of many that fled eastern Ukraine for Vienna, and later the United States.
In 2014, the people of eastern Ukraine find themselves in an exponentially more horrible and deadly situation. They will turn to whoever provides them with bread and security and respect for their language and culture. They are looking, and more and more it seems they’re turning, eastward.
The fact is that both the Russians and objective thinkers do not believe that Moscow is seeking to build a new Soviet Empire. Putin regards NATO's Open Door policy as a violation of the promises given to them following the break-up of the Warsaw Pact. The Russians therefore think that Russia has a natural and legitimate right to protect itself and the surrounding area against the plan to surround Russia by way of Georgia, Ukraine and the Baltic countries and to isolate it. In a statement in the early days of the Minsk negotiations, Putin said that their aim was not to wage war but that they would not accept a world order in which the U.S. was the only leader.
The crisis in Ukraine has reached an impasse. The cease-fire signed in Minsk, Belarus, in September never really took hold, but at least it provided a cover for efforts to reduce the level of fighting and focus on stabilizing and reforming the Ukrainian economy as a prelude to a serious, long-term search for a resolution of the crisis. Now even the fig leaf of cease-fire is gone. Russian armored vehicles are rolling into eastern Ukraine — disowned, of course, by Moscow.
Gunfire is exchanged constantly in and around Donetsk, and Kiev has basically disowned residents of territories claimed by separatists by cutting most government services, benefits and pensions. And though elections to the Ukrainian Parliament on Oct. 26 brought in a new, pro-Western legislature, Kiev is still far from forming a government or producing a viable program of reforms.
There is no question that by annexing Crimea and arming separatists in eastern Ukraine, Mr. Putin has done great damage to East-West relations — and to his country, which finds itself isolated and in economic trouble. The decision on Monday by the European Union to add more separatist leaders to the list of Mr. Putin’s allies barred from Europe may be largely symbolic, but along with the cold reception in Brisbane, it does let the Russian leader know that the West is not about to let him off the hook.
That said, it is important to acknowledge that officials in Kiev, and more specifically President Petro Poroshenko and Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, have responsibilities they must live up to. Ukraine has been plagued by corruption since it became independent, and the current crisis has made it even more imperative for the leaders to form a government and come up with a credible economic and political strategy.
The Ukrainian economy is in terrible shape — the currency has lost almost half its value against the dollar in 2014, the industrial centers of Donetsk and Luhansk are in separatist hands, coal mines have shut down. The International Monetary Fund has provided emergency aid, but the hard fact is that the European Union and the United States cannot be expected to make substantial commitments until Ukraine provides a clear reform plan and priorities for outside investment. Johannes Hahn, the new European Union commissioner for enlargement, is right to insist that the union will not hold a donors’ conference without this.
In addition to an economic strategy, Kiev needs to prepare a plan for loosening central control in a way that might satisfy residents of the eastern provinces. The decision by President Poroshenko to cut government benefits and pensions to residents of areas under the control of Kremlin-backed separatists, though understandable in the circumstances, has left those unable to flee feeling betrayed by Kiev, creating a vacuum for Moscow to fill.
There is no question that ordering painful reforms when a country is already on its knees is asking a lot. That is why it is imperative that Western leaders make clear that they will give Kiev substantial assistance only after it embarks on a serious program of economic and political reform. After all, that was what the Ukrainians who took to the streets in December 2013 fought for.
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/20/opinion/ukraines-slow-collapse.html?_r=0
As Russian forces consolidate their gains in Ukraine over the flat protests of Western leaders, the specter of Russian revanchism is keeping much of Eastern Europe on edge. But lumbering tanks and legions of insta-separatists aren’t the only concern. Ukraine isn’t Russia’s only target. Perhaps most alarming are the warning signs going off in Georgia, a steadfast Euro-Atlantic partner where a pro-Western political consensus has long been a foreign-policy calling card. A long-standing opponent of Russian military adventurism, Georgia sought escape velocity from Russian regional dominance by courting membership in Euro-Atlantic structures and earned a reputation as an enthusiastic and credible Western partner. But
The texts of the treaties are already in the Russian State Duma, and, according to Chernov, “the institution of bilateral treaties may become a new tool of Russian foreign policy allowing Russia to meet its objectives in the South Caucasus without unnecessary complications in international relations.”
“Russia has two such basic tasks in the region and they are closely related to each other. The first one is to prevent the creation of NATO military infrastructure in Georgia. The second objective is to ensure a reliable direct transport link with Armenia,” the Russian expert says. Besides, control of the Russian Federation over transport communications will provide full functioning of the Russian military base in Armenia. The mechanism has also been devised. It turns out that on October 31 Vladikavkaz, the capital of Russia’s republic of North Ossetia hosted a congress of the International Public Movement called “The Supreme Council of the Ossetians”, which was also attended by former president of South Ossetia Eduard Kokoity. He raised the question of Trusovsky gorges and Kobin hollow being part of Ossetia. Presence in Kazbegi region will make it possible to control a small section of the strategically important Georgian Military Highway – the shortest route from Russia to Armenia.
“At the same time, Russia is more interested in the development of the Trans-Caucasian Highway. The ‘western’ route to Armenia passes through the Gori district, bypasses Trialet Ossetia, where a considerable number of Ossetians lived before the early 1990s, as well as the Armenian-populated Samtskhe-Javakheti region,” Chernov writes.
He hopes that if by some chance in Georgia on the basis of the current political crisis Maidan-like events start, Russia may introduce troops into Georgia for the “protection” of Ossetians and thus open up its route towards Armenia. In an interview with Newspost former defense minister of Georgia Dimitri Shashkin said: “Alarm should be sounded over the document relating to the Tskhinvali region, which officially entered the [Russian State] Duma. Russian experts have already started openly speaking about the threat that concerns Russia’s big desire to create a direct link with its base in Gyumri (Armenia).”
America’s new nightmare: India, China plus Russia
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi travelled to China on Thursday May 14, for negotiations with President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China. As part of the three day visit Modi hopes to achieve a breakthrough in relations with China, which have so far been hindered by a boundary dispute and territorial claims from both parties. Judging from indirect indicators, the visit might be a game changer in relations between New Delhi and Beijing. The program for Modi’s visit to China has been designed so that the Indian Prime Minister will be received by China’s highest officials. Breaking protocol, the Chinese President travelled to his native city Xi'an, and personally met Modi, not only for a summit-level meeting which lasted over 90 minutes, but also for an informal tour of Xi’an’s major Buddhist historical sites. This is the first time Xi has received a leader outside Beijing. The gesture is being viewed as a serious attempt to reduce bilateral differences and “improve trust” between the two countries. President Xi was also reciprocating a similar gesture made by Modi when the former visited India last year in September. Modi had received Xi in his native Ahmedabad city.
Source: http://in.rbth.com/world/2015/05/15/americas_new_nightmare_india_china_plus_russia_43123.html
Source: https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blog
Victory Day and the evolving Global Order
Source: http://in.rbth.com/world/2015/05/12/victory_day_and_the_evolving_global_order_43049.html
The establishment of the SCO development bank and special account to advance regional economic development was an important part of economic agenda. Gradual transition to national currencies settlements and financing joint projects is a great step forward on the way to gradual economic integration. The member states agreed to enhance cooperation in transportation, energy, telecommunications and agriculture. They also believe it is necessary to promote cultural and educational exchanges and expand people-to-people contacts and social interaction.
The Iranian President’s attendance at the summit was an important contribution. Defying the US and EU sanctions over Iran imposed to punish it for nuclear activities, the SCO asks for “negotiated solution” of the problem and is strongly opposed to unilateral actions in the Middle East. It finds the use of force against Iran "unacceptable". The summit’s statement on Syria also calls for a "peaceful resolution of the Syrian problem through political dialogue".
Defense and security cooperation is a really an important part of the SCO agenda. The armed forces of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization members will hold the "Peace Mission 2012" drill in Tajikistan from June 8 to 14 involving more than 2,000 servicemen from China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The scenario envisages joining forces in an anti-terrorist operation in mountainous areas against the background of a regional crisis caused by terrorist activities. The SCO summit emphasized the organization holds regular meetings of defense chiefs. The member states have already held eight large-scale anti-terrorist drills, five security forums and have made personnel exchanges and joint training a routine matter. The SCO training activities have evolved from company-level tactical training events to large-scale joint combined exercises over the last decade.
Wrap up
Judging by the outcome of the summit the Shanghai Cooperation Organization is in for major changes. The crises in the Middle East triggered by the Arab Spring, the withdrawal of ISAF from Afghanistan, the growing number of hotbeds in different regions - it all calls for the intensification of the SCO efforts to strengthen regional security. The summit confirmed the intention to jointly counter the challenges. A new mechanism to do it will be launched as early as next month, right on the eve of an international conference on Afghanistan slated for June 14 in Kabul. The CSO has a very important role to play in managing the situation. Of course it would be wise to unite efforts with NATO to tackle the problem jointly, though until now the Alliance has stubbornly refused to act together with either the SCO or the CSTO. The decisions on the CSO expansion is a momentous event. Now the organization has clearly grown beyond the scope of regional problems. The fact of mentioning the US missile defense outside the national territory in the declaration is a bright example. A consolidated SCO position on the issue may become a significant counterweight to NATO’s plans. Bringing in Turkey, a NATO member, is the confirmation of the rising global influence. The main summit result is that the SCO has significantly varied and deepened the cooperation process in all fields and enhanced its international clout. It’s a win-win result for those who oppose a unipolar vision of the contemporary world.
Obama’s September 24 speech at the UN is the most absurd thing I have heard in my entire life. It is absolutely amazing that the president of the United States would stand before the entire world and tell what everyone knows are blatant lies while simultaneously demonstrating Washington’s double standards and belief that Washington alone, because the US is exceptional and indispensable, has the right to violate all law. It is even more amazing that every person present did not get up and walk out of the assembly. The diplomats of the world actually sat there and listened to blatant lies from the world’s worst terrorist. They even clapped their approval.
The rest of the speech was just utter bullshit: “We stand at a crossroads,” “signposts of progress,” “reduced chance of war between major powers,” “hundreds of millions lifted from poverty,” and while ebola ravages Africa “we’ve learned how to cure disease and harness the power of the wind and the sun.” We are now God. “We” is comprised of the “exceptional people”–Americans. No one else counts. “We” are it. It is impossible to pick the most absurd statement in Obama’s speech or the most outrageous lie. Is it this one? “Russian aggression in Europe recalls the days when large nations trampled small ones in pursuit of territorial ambition.”
Or is it this one? “After the people of Ukraine mobilized popular protests and calls for reform, their corrupt president fled. Against the will of the government in Kiev, Crimea was annexed. Russia poured arms into eastern Ukraine, fueling violent separatists and a conflict that has killed thousands. When a civilian airliner was shot down from areas that these proxies controlled, they refused to allow access to the crash for days. When Ukraine started to reassert control over its territory, Russia gave up the pretense of merely supporting the separatists, and moved troops across the border.”
The entire world knows that Washington overthrew the elected Ukrainian government, that Washington refuses to release its satellite photos of the destruction of the Malaysian airliner, that Ukraine refuses to release its air traffic control instructions to the airliner, that Washington has prevented a real investigation of the airliner’s destruction, that European experts on the scene have testified that both sides of the airliner’s cockpit demonstrate machine gun fire, an indication that the airliner was shot down by the Ukrainian jets that were following it. Indeed, there has been no explanation why Ukrainian jets were close on the heels of an airliner directed by Ukrainian air traffic control.
The entire world knows that if Russia had territorial ambitions, when the Russian military defeated the American trained and supplied Georgian army that attacked South Ossetia, Russia would have kept Georgia and reincorporated it within Russia where it resided for centuries.
Notice that it is not aggression when Washington bombs and invades seven countries in 13 years without a declaration of war. Aggression occurs when Russia accepts the petition of Crimeans who voted 97 percent in favor of reuniting with Russia where Crimea resided for centuries before Khrushchev attached it to the Soviet Socialist Republic of Ukraine in 1954 when Ukraine and Russia were part of the same country.
And the entire world knows that, as the separatist leader of the Donetsk Republic said, “If Russian military units were fighting with us, the news would not be the fall of Mariupol but the fall of Kiev and Lviv.”
Which is “the cancer of violent extremism”–ISIS which cut off the heads of four journalists, or Washington which has bombed seven countries in the 21st century murdering hundreds of thousands of civilians and displacing millions? Who is the worst terrorist–ISIS, a group that is redrawing the artificial boundaries created by British and French colonialists, or Washington with its Wolfowitz Doctrine, the basis of US foreign policy, which declares Washington’s dominant objective to be US hegemony over the world?
ISIS is the creation of Washington. ISIS consists of the jihadists Washington used to overthrow Gaddafi in Libya and then sent to Syria to overthrow Assad. If ISIS is a “network of death,” a “brand of evil” with which negotiation is impossible as Obama declares, it is a network of death created by the Obama regime itself. If ISIS poses the threat that Obama claims, how can the regime that created the threat be credible in leading the fight against it?
Obama never mentioned in his speech the central problem that the world faces. That problem is Washington’s inability to accept the existence of strong independent countries such as Russia and China. The neoconservative Wolfowitz Doctrine commits the United States to maintaining its status as the sole Unipower. This task requires Washington “to prevent any hostile power from dominating a region whose resources would, under consolidated control, be sufficient to generate global power.” A “hostile power” is any country that has sufficient power or influence to be able to limit Washington’s exercise of power.
In his speech, Obama told Russia and China that they can be part of Washington’s world order on the condition that they accept Washington’s hegemony and do not interfere in any way with Washington’s control. When Obama tells Russia that the US will cooperate with Russia “if Russia changes course,” Obama means that Moscow must accept the primacy of Washington’s interest over Russia’s own interest. Clearly, this is an inflexible and unrealistic position. If Washington keeps to it, war with Russia and China will ensue.
Obama told China that Washington intended to continue to be a Pacific power in China’s sphere of influence, “promoting peace, stability, and the free flow of commerce among nations” by building new US air and naval bases from the Philippines to Vietnam so that Washington can control the flow of resources in the South China Sea and cut off China at will.
As far as I can tell, neither the Russian nor Chinese governments understand the seriousness of the threat that Washington represents. Washington’s claim to world hegemony seems too farfetched to Russia and China to be real. But it is very real. By refusing to take the threat seriously, Russia and China have not responded in ways that would bring an end to the threat without the necessity of war.
For example, the Russian government could most likely destroy NATO by responding to sanctions imposed by Washington and the EU by informing European governments that Russia does not sell natural gas to members of NATO. Instead of using this power, Russia has foolishly allowed the EU to accumulate record amounts of stored natural gas to see homes and industry through the coming winter. Has Russia sold out its national interests for money?
Much of Washington’s power and financial hegemony rests on the role of the US dollar as world reserve currency. Russia and China have been slow, even negligent from the standpoint of defending their sovereignty, to take advantage of opportunities to undermine this pillar of Washington’s power. For example, the BRICS’ talk of abandoning the dollar payments system has been more talk than action. Russia doesn’t even require Washington’s European puppet states to pay for Russian natural gas in rubles.
One might think that a country such as Russia experiencing such extreme hostility and demonization from the West would at least use the gas sales to support its own currency instead of Washington’s dollar. If the Russian government is going to continue to support the economies of European countries hostile to Russia and to prevent the European peoples from freezing during the coming winter, shouldn’t Russia in exchange for this extraordinary subsidy to its enemies at least arrange to support its own currency by demanding payment in rubles? Unfortunately for Russia, Russia is infected with Western trained neoliberal economists who represent Western, not Russian, interests.
When the West sees such extraordinary weakness on the part of the Russian government, Obama knows he can go to the UN and tell the most blatant lies about Russia with no cost whatsoever to the US or Europe. Russian inaction subsidizes Russia’s demonization.
China has been no more successful than Russia in using its opportunities to destabilize Washington. For example, it is a known fact, as Dave Kranzler and I have repeatedly demonstrated, that the Federal Reserve uses its bullion bank agents to knock down the gold price in order to protect the dollar’s value from the Federal Reserve’s policies. The method used is for the bullion banks to drive down the gold price with enormous amounts of naked shorts during periods of low or nonexistent volume.
China or Russia or both could take advantage of this tactic by purchasing every naked short sold plus all covered shorts, if any, and demanding delivery instead of settling the contracts in cash. Neither New York Comex nor the London market could make delivery, and the system would implode. The consequence of the failure to deliver possibly could be catastrophic for the Western financial system, but in the least it would demonstrate the corrupt nature of Western financial institutions.
Or China could deal a more lethal blow. Choosing a time of heightened concern or disruptions in US financial markets, China could dump its trillion dollar plus holdings of US treasuries, or indeed all its holdings of US financial instruments, on the market. The Federal Reserve and the US Treasury could try to stabilize the prices of US financial instruments by creating money with which to purchase the bonds and other instruments. This money creation would increase concern about the dollar’s value, and at that point China could dump the trillion dollars plus it receives from its bond sales on the exchange market. The Federal Reserve cannot print foreign currencies with which to buy up the dollars. The dollar’s exchange value would collapse and with it the dollar’s use as world reserve currency. The US would become just another broke country unable to pay for its imports.
Possibly, Washington could get Japan and the European Central Bank to print enough yen and euros to buy up the dumped dollars. However, the likelihood is that this would bring down the yen and euro along with the dollar. Flight would occur into the Chinese and Russian currencies, and financial hegemony would depart the West.
By their restraint, Russia and China enable Washington’s attack upon them. Last week Washington put thousands of its NGO operatives into the Moscow streets protesting “Putin’s war against Ukraine.” Foolishly, Russia has permitted foreign interests to buy up its newspapers, and these interests continually denounce Putin and the Russian government to their Russian readers. Did Russia sell its soul and communication system for dollars? Did a few oligarchs sell out Russia for Swiss and London bank deposits?
Both Russia and China have Muslim populations among whom the CIA operates encouraging disassociation, rebellion, and violence. Washington intends to break up the Russian Federation into smaller, weaker countries that could not stand in the way of Washington’s hegemony. Russian and Chinese fear of discord among their own Muslim populations have caused both governments to make the extremely serious strategic mistake of aligning with Washington against ISIS and with Washington’s policy of protecting Washington’s status quo in the Muslim world.
If Russia and China understood the deadly threat that Washington presents, both governments would operate according to the time honored principle that “the enemy of my enemy is my friend.” Russia and China would arm ISIS with surface to air missiles to bring down the American planes and with military intelligence in order to achieve an American defeat. With defeat would come the overthrow of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Egypt and all of the American puppet rulers in the area. Washington would lose control over oil, and the petro-dollar would be history. It is extraordinary that instead Russia and China are working to protect Washington’s control over the Middle East and the petro-dollar.
China is subject to a variety of attacks. The Rockefeller Foundation creates American agents in Chinese universities, or so I am informed by Chinese academics. American companies that locate in China create Chinese boards on which they place the relatives of local and regional party officials. This shifts loyalty from the central government to the American money. Moreover, China has many economists educated in the US who are imbued with the neoliberal economics that represents Washington’s interests.
Both Russia and China have significant percentages of their populations who wish to be western. The failure of communism in both countries and the success of American cold war propaganda have created loyalties to America in place of their own governments. In Russia they go by the designation “Atlanticist Integrationists.” They are Russians who wish to be integrated into the West. I know less about the Chinese counterpart, but among youth Western materialism and lack of sexual restraint is appealing.
The inability of the Russian and Chinese governments to come to terms with the threat posed to their existence as sovereign countries by the neoconservative insistence on American world hegemony makes nuclear war more likely. If Russia and China catch on too late in the game, their only alternative will be war or submission to Washington’s hegemony. As there is no possibility of the US and NATO invading and occupying Russia and China, the war would be nuclear.
To avoid this war, which, as so many experts have shown, would terminate life on earth, the Russian and Chinese governments must soon become far more realistic in their assessment of the evil that resides in what Washington has turned into the world’s worst terrorist state–the US.
It is possible that Russia, China, and the rest of the world will be saved by American economic collapse. The US economy is a house of cards. Real median family incomes are in long-term decline. Universities produce graduates with degrees and heavy debts but no jobs. The bond market is rigged by the Federal Reserve which necessitates rigging the bullion markets in order to protect the dollar. The stock market is rigged by the outpouring of money from the Federal Reserve, by the Plunge Protection Team, and by corporations repurchasing their own stock. The dollar is supported by tradition, habit, and currency swaps.
The American House of Cards continues to stand only as a result of the tolerance of the world for vast corruption and disinformation and because greed is satisfied by the money made from a rigged system. Russia and/or China could pull down this House of Cards whenever either country or both had leadership capable of it.
The naval drill, to include live-fire exercises in the strategic sea connecting Europe, Africa and the Middle East, is seen by Western media as a signal being sent to Washington of a powerful new alliance emerging “in the very backyard of Western Europe”. “While only two Chinese warships are joining the Mediterranean exercises, their deployment reflects China’s desire to help Russia counter American power”, the New York-based National Preview magazine wrote in a comment. “The enmity that defined Sino-Russian relations during much of the Cold War has long faded. In its place, an evolving China–Russian alliance is rising against American and international security. This alliance has a profound security component”.
The import of the ten days of maneuvers that got underway Monday was not lost on The Los Angeles Times either.
“The point is lost on no one: A powerful new alliance of eastern giants is flexing its muscles in the very backyard of Western Europe — much as China has done on its own in the Pacific", the newspaper wrote on Monday. The Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger wrote about the friendship between Moscow and Beijing going beyond purely political and economic considerations. “They are forging an alliance also in the military field as a counterbalance to the US and its European and Asian allies”, the paper warned.
“Though small scale, it is a signal of growing defense ties between Beijing and Moscow and a demonstration that China's maritime horizons are broadening", the BBC said in a report Monday.
“What is going on in the Mediterranean is hard proof of military might aimed against Washington”, the German Der Spiegel wrote, adding that Russia and China were drawn together by the presence of a common enemy – the United States. “The joint Russian-Chinese drill hints to Washington that a new rivalry is now in the making in the Mediterranean Sea”, the magazine wrote. The Sea Coopeeration-2015 exercise will run until May 21. A total of nine ships from both sides are taking part in the first drill of its kind to happen in the Mediterranean. The drills' goal has been stated as deepening friendly cooperation between China and Russia and strengthening their combat ability in repelling naval threats.
Enter the China led BRICS alliance and its New Development Bank and now China’s other investment bank entry AIIB. Simon takes liberty in his interpretation of Britain and Europe’s bold rebellion after decades relegated to being a mere puppet of the US Empire:
Meanwhile, NATO Supreme Commander US Air Force General Philip Breedlove fashions himself to be a Dr. Strangelove incarnate, making repeated bogus claims and lies of Russian army presence inside Eastern Ukraine in a vain yet persistent attempt to foment war. Having such a deluded and deceitful warmonger in charge of the NATO nuclear arsenal poses a calamitous threat to the entire world. Yet his commander-in-chief Obama has chosen not to relieve him of command. Instead German leaders have openly criticized Breedlove and the European Union wants to replace NATO with its own continental army. This very public geopolitical conflict over such widely differing Western approaches toward Ukraine seriously undermine American Empire’s global influence and power, again underscoring simultaneous developments around the world that indicate consistent across the boards US foreign policy failures and from the broader context, a rapid US decline as the sole global hegemonic superpower.
Putin advisor Sergei Glazyev nailed it when he said:
The offensive led by Anglo-Saxons (USA, UK and Israel) for world domination continues on two lines simultaneously: both the creation of the “Greater Middle East” by attacking simultaneously Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Palestine, and separating Russia from the European Union through the crisis they organized in Ukraine.
In this sprint, it seems that Washington wants to impose the dollar as the single currency in the gas market, the energy source of the twenty-first century, the way it imposed it on the oil1 market.
The Western media hardly cover the war in Donbass and their population is ignorant of the scale of the fighting, the US military presence, the number of civilian casualties, the wave of refugees. On the other hand, Western media have a delayed reaction to events in North Africa and the Levant, presenting them either as the result of a so-called “Arab Spring” (that is to say, in practice, a takeover by the Muslim Brotherhood), or as the destructive effect of a civilization which is inherently violent. More than ever, it is necessary to help the Arabs who are incapable of living peacefully in the absence of Western settlers.
Russia is now the leading power capable of leading the resistance to Anglo-Saxon imperialism. It has three tools: BRICS, an alliance of economic rivals who know they can not grow up without one another, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a strategic alliance with China to stabilize Central Asia and finally, the Organization for Collective Security Treaty, a military alliance of former Soviet states.
At the Fortaleza Summit (Brazil), which was held from 14 to 16 July, BRICS took the plunge and announced the creation of a monetary reserve fund (mainly Chinese) and a BRICS Bank as alternatives to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, the dollar system2.
Even before this announcement, the Anglo-Saxons had established their answer: the transformation of the Al-Qaeda terrorist network in order to prepare unrest among all Muslim peoples of Russia and China.3 They continued their offensive in Syria and spilled over the borders both in Iraq and in Lebanon. They failed, however, to expel part of the Palestinians to Egypt and to destabilize the region even more deeply. Finally, they keep away from Iran to give President Hassan Rohani a chance to weaken the power of the anti-imperialist Khomeinists.
Two days after the announcement of the BRICS, the United States accused Russia of destroying Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over the Donbass, killing 298 people. On this basis, purely arbitrary, they forced the Europeans to enter into economic war against Russia. Situating itself as a court, the Council of the European Union tried and convicted Russia without any evidence and without giving it an opportunity to defend itself. The CEU issued “sanctions” against its financial system.
Recognizing that European leaders are not working for the interests of their people, but for those of the Anglo-Saxons, Russia has gnawed at the bit and refrained from going to war in Ukraine. It supports the insurgents with arms and intelligence, and hosts more than 500'000 refugees, but declines to send troops into the fray. It probably will not happen until the vast majority of Ukrainians revolt against President Poroshenko, even if it does not enter the country until after the fall of the People’s Republic of Donetsk.
Faced with economic warfare, Moscow has chosen to respond with similar measures, but in agriculture, not finance. Two considerations guided this choice: first, short-term, other BRICS can mitigate the consequences of so-called “sanctions”; on the other hand, medium and long term, Russia is preparing for war and intends to completely rebuild its agriculture to go it alone.
Moreover, the Anglo-Saxons have planned to paralyze Russia from within. First by activating, via the Islamic Emirate (EIS), terrorist groups within its Muslim population, and organizing a media challenge in the municipal elections of 14 September.4 Large sums of money have been distributed to all opposition candidates in the thirty largest cities involved, while at least 50'000 Ukrainian agitators, mixed with refugees, are regrouping in Saint Petersburg. Most of them have dual Russian citizenship. This is clearly to reproduce at the provincial level protests that followed the elections in Moscow in December 2011 – with the addition of violence; and engage the country in a color revolution process to which certain officials in the ruling class are favorable.
To do so, Washington has appointed a new ambassador to Russia, John Tefft, who had prepared the “Rose Revolution” in Georgia and the coup in Ukraine. It will be important for President Vladimir Putin to be able to trust his prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev, whom Washington hoped to recruit to overthrow him.
Considering the imminent danger, Moscow would have been able to convince Beijing to accept the accession of India in exchange for that of Iran (but also those of Pakistan and Mongolia) to the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. The decision should be published at the summit in Dushanbe (Tajikistan) on 12 and 13 September. It should put an end to the conflict which has opposed India and China for centuries and engage them in military cooperation.
This reversal, if confirmed, also would end the honeymoon between New Delhi and Washington who was hoping to distance India from Russia in particular by giving access to nuclear technologies. The membership of New Delhi is also a bet on the sincerity of the new Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, despite the suspicion that he encouraged anti-Muslim violence in 2002 in Gujarat when he was the leading Minister.
In addition, the accession of Iran, which is a provocation in the face of Washington, should give the SCO precise knowledge of jihadist movements and ways to counter them. Again, if confirmed, it would reduce Iran’s willingness to negotiate a lull with the “Great Satan” that led it to elect Sheik Hassan Rohani to the presidency. It would be a gamble on the authority of the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Indeed, these memberships would mark the beginning of the shift in the world from the West to the East.5 Still, this trend must be protected militarily. This is the role of the Organization for Collective Security Treaty (CSTO), formed around Russia, but to which China does not belong. Unlike NATO, this organization is a classic alliance, consistent with the Charter of the United Nations since each member retains the option to leave if it wants. So it is based on this freedom that Washington has tried in recent months to buy some members, including Armenia. However, the chaotic situation in Ukraine appears to have cooled those who dreamed of US “protection”. Tension is likely to increase in the coming weeks.
Source: www.voltairenet.org/article185074.html
Regardless of interpretation details, the reaction of the Western media to the integration project unveiled by the Russian premier was uniformly negative and reflected with utmost clarity an a priori hostility towards Russia and any initiatives it floats. Mao Zedong, though, used to say that facing pressure from your enemies is better than being in such a condition that they do not bother to keep you under pressure.
It helps to understand why, at the moment, Cold War-style headlines are constantly popping up in Western media and what perceived threat the West discerned in Putin's recent Eurasian integration. The obvious explanation is that, if implemented, the plan would come as a geopolitical challenge to the new world order, to the dominance of NATO, the IMF, the EU and other supranational bodies, and to the undisguised US primacy. Today's increasingly assertive Russia suggests and is ready to start building an inclusive alliance based on principles providing a viable alternative to Atlantism and neoliberalism. It is an open secret that these days the West is putting into practice an array of far-reaching geopolitical projects, reconfiguring Europe in the wake of the Balkan conflicts and against the backdrop of the crises provoked in Greece and Cyprus, assembling the Greater Middle East based on serial regime changes across the Arab world, and, as a relatively novel design, implementing the Asia project in which the recent disaster in Japan was an active phase.
In 2011, the intensity of geopolitical dynamics was unprecedented since the collapse of the USSR and the Eastern Bloc, with all major countries and international bodies contributing. Moreover, the current impression is that military might somehow became a legitimate instrument in international politics. Just days ago, Moscow drew avalanche criticism after vetoing the UN Security Council resolution which could authorize a replay of the Libyan scenario in Syria. As a result, US permanent envoy to the UN S. Rice slammed Russia and China over the veto, while French foreign minister Alain Juppé declared that “it is a sad day for the Syrian people. It is a sad day for the Security Council”. During the heated UN security Council debates on September 5, Syrian representative lambasted Germany and France, and charged the US with perpetrating genocide in the Middle East. After that, S. Rice accused Russia and China of hoping to sell arms to the Syrian regime instead of standing by the Syrian people and stormed out of the meeting, and French envoy Gérard Araud opined that “No veto can clear of their responsibility these Syrian authorities that have lost any legitimacy by murdering its own people”, leaving an impression that murdering people, as in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya, should be a NATO privilege.
Moscow's Western “partners” are outraged whenever Russia, in concert with China, puts obstacles in the way of the new world order. Syria, albeit a regionally important country, only fleetingly tops the agenda, but Putin's ambitious plan for the whole Eurasia - “reaching a higher level of integration – a Eurasian Union” - had to be expected to evoke deep and lasting concerns in the West. Moscow openly challenges the West's global dominance by “suggesting a model of a powerful supranational union that can become one of the poles of today's world while being an efficient connecting link between Europe and the dynamic Asia-Pacific Region”. No doubt, Putin's messages that “the combination of natural resources, capital, and strong human potential will make the Eurasian Union competitive in the industrial and technological race and the race for investor money, new jobs, and advanced production facilities” and that “along with other key players and regional institutions such as the EU, the USA, China, and APEC, it will ensure the sustainability of global development” sounded alarming to Western leaders.
Neither the collapse of the USSR and the bipolar world nor the subsequent proliferation of pro-Western “democracies” marked a final point in the struggle over global primacy. What followed was an era of military interventions and displacements of defiant regimes with the help of information warfare and the omnipresent Western soft power. In this game, Eurasia remains the main prize in line with John Mackinder's geopolitical imperative by which “Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland; who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island; who rules the World-Island controls the world”.
In the late XX century the US became the first-ever non-Eurasian country to combine the roles of the world's top power and the final arbiter in Eurasian affairs. In the framework of the new world order doctrine, the US and the West as a whole see Eurasia as a zone of key importance to their economic development and growing political might. Global dominance is an openly stated and constantly pursued goal of the Euro-Atlantic community and its military and financial institutions – NATO, the IMF, and the World Bank - along with the Western media and countless NGOs. In the process, the Western establishment remains fully aware that, in Z. Brzeziński's words, „America's global primacy is directly dependent on how long and how effectively its preponderance on the Eurasian continent is sustained”. Sustaining the “preponderance”, in turn, takes control over Europe, Russia, China, the Middle East, and Central Asia.
Untamed Western hegemony in Europe, Central Asia, and, to an extent, in the Middle East and even Russia used to count as an unquestionable outcome of the past couple of decades, but at the moment the situation appears fluid. Western, Chinese, and Russian watchers alike are predicting an imminent failure of the neoliberal globalization model embedded in the new world order, and the time is coming for the political class to adopt the view.
By opening up opportunities to shield original models of national development from Atlantist pressure and to maintain real international security, Putin's new integration project holds a major promise for Russia and its allies, and thereby presents Russia's foes with a serious problem. Neither Russia nor any other post-Soviet republic can survive in today's world single-handedly, and Russia as Eurasia's key geopolitical player with economic, political, and military potentials unparalleled across the post-Soviet space can and should stake a bid for an alternative global architecture.
The West's allergy to Putin's plan is therefore explainable, but, regardless of the opposition the project is bound to run into, of the weakness of some of its elements, and of the potential difficulty of putting it into practice, the Eurasian integration project grew out of the life of the post-Soviet geopolitical and cultural space and is consonant with current global trends. Surviving, preserving the economic and material foundations of national existence, keeping traditions alive, and building a secure future for the children are the objectives the Eurasian nations can accomplish only if they stay aligned with Russia. Otherwise, isolation, sanctions, and military interventions awaits them…
Source: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=27015
Why is the whole Western foreign policy establishment so afraid of Putin?
Because Putin is standing up against Western aggression – not only in Ukraine, but also in Syria and Iran. Ongoing Western attempts to destabilize these and other countries are just the most recent examples of a decades-old pattern of aggression. The long-term goal: Total destruction of traditional nations and values, and the creation of a New World Order global dictatorship.
Putin is stopping New World Order "creative destruction" in Syria and Ukraine. He is part of a growing coalition opposing the NWO – not just religious traditionalists, but also progressive anti-globalization forces, including Hugo Chavez inspired anti-imperialists in Latin America. We are facing an epic struggle between those who espouse sacred values such as justice and decency versus those who wish to destroy all values.
God bless President Putin, who is putting the fear of God into the New World Order.
Putin’s comments came after Prime Minister Erna Solberg on Friday said that Norwegian involvement in Nato’s Missile Defence System was “necessary”, committing her country to taking a role in the network, a move certain to irritate Russia, which sees the system’s role out as an act of aggression.
In his interview, Putin denied that Russia was becoming more aggressive, instead suggesting that a growing Nato presence in Norway and other countries on Russia’s borders was forcing his country to respond.
“We are not expanding anywhere,” he said, “It is Nato infrastructure, including military infrastructure, that is moving towards our borders. Is this a manifestation of our aggression?”
He singled out Nato’s missile defence system for criticism.
“The United States unilaterally withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, which was to a large extent the cornerstone of the entire international security system,” he noted, pointing to George W Bush’s unilateral decision to withdraw in December 2001 in order to build a predecessor of the Nato system.
The Russian president also complained that the much-reported increase in the number of flights by Russian military aircraft in the Baltic Sea, and near the US borders off Alaska, was intended only to match Nato’s existing flight programme.
“Sometimes I am asked about our airplanes flying somewhere far over the Atlantic Ocean,” he said. “Patrolling by strategic airplanes in remote regions was carried out only by the Soviet Union and the United States during the Cold War. In the early 1990s, we, the new, modern Russia, stopped these flights, but our American friends continued to fly along our borders. Why? Some years ago, we resumed these flights. And you want to say that we have been aggressive?
He pointed out that while Nato was still active in Norwegian waters close to Russian territory, Russia had long-since closed down its own missile bases in Cuba. “We dismantled all of our bases in Cuba a long time ago, even the non-strategic ones,” he said. Finally, he made a powerful argument that Russia’s growing military spending still left it far behind Nato.
“US military spending is higher than that of all countries in the world taken together,” he said. “The aggregate military spending of NATO countries is ten times, note – ten times higher than that of the Russian Federation.”
“Russia has virtually no bases abroad,” he added, pointing to the base in Armenia and another in Kyrgyzstan. “I invite you to publish the world map in your newspaper and to mark all the US military bases on it. You will see the difference.”
“Everything we do is just a response to the threats emerging against us,” he continued. “Besides, what we do is limited in scope and scale, which are, however, sufficient to ensure Russia’s security. Or did someone expect Russia to disarm unilaterally?”
Source: http://www.thelocal.no/20150608/us-subs-off-norway-can-hit-moscow-in-17mins-putin
Excellent piece of commentary by Zoravar, it touches rather nicely on Novorossiya.
ReplyDeleteRegarding the FIFA scandal, there might be another angle on that: as you may not know, Israel was a possible suspension of its membership when Palestine made that proposal because of how its players were treated. It's not the first time Israel was expelled from a continental football association (the AFC in this case). I believe that America had launched its arrest of the FIFA football officials at Israel's instigation. Of course, Americans and Jews are always working together to eliminate nations that refuse to bow to its hegemony.
On my other posting, the recent American spat with China in the West Philippine/South China Sea has led me to give this post:
"I'm just nitpicking on what will happen to my country in the event that China and America go to war with each other. As all of you are aware, the Philippines rely too much on the US for its security needs as our own military is sub par. However, from a military strategic point of view, taking out the Philippines will endanger the US Pacific Fleet based in Okinawa and Japan, plus it will endanger Australia and New Zealand because the shipping lanes between Japan and those two states go through the Philippines. As Japan, Australia, and New Zealand are island nations, they are more likely to be net importers. Thus a Chinese attack on the Philippines will severely affect those shipping lanes."
The Eurasian Silk Road will lessen Chinese and Russian reliance on shipping lanes that are controlled by Japan and the Philippines, both nations with US bases and have the capability to blockade Chinese coasts in the event of war. With America's defeat in Asia, China has acquired access to SE Asia. However, this will affect me personally as my family who remain the Philippines will witness first hand what a Chinese occupation will look like should China actually invade the Philippines in a war against the USA.
Jerriko, I don't think the Israel factor had anything to do with Uncle Sam's move against FIFA, although it certainly didn't hurt the effort.
DeleteI think China has better things to do than militarily occupy entire nations. I don't think a Chinese invasion of the Philippines is a realistic scenario. If there is a major war in the region and your nation is turned into a major military staging ground by the US, the most China might do is strike at the island with missiles. But I don't think it will come to that. China is a giant and the US will not risk a war with it.
I was listening to NPR recently and I caught part of an interview of a Filipino about the US-China spat. He said something along the following: With so much muscle flexing by China, more-and-more Filipinos are beginning to ask if it's time to breakaway from the US and begin cooperating with China. I said to myself, I wonder if that was Jerriko?
PS: The Eurasian Silk Road can effectively end Western control over global commerce - as well as strike a death blow against the US Dollar. The Eurasian Silk Road therefore holds massive potential for China and Russia, which is why Western powers will do everything they can to derail the project along the way - similar to what they have been doing with the Eurasian Economic Union.
I can assure you that I didn't speak on the radio of NPR.
DeleteIt is quite amusing to see the west bleed itself financially by providing aid to Ukraine since they're digging themselves a bit too deep.
As usual, a lot of good material to ponder. I was left with more questions than answers regarding the idea of Russia getting access to Armenia. Of course, it may just be a move to force Georgia to give better access, something we can be sure NATO is fighting. So what territory from Georgia would make a difference?
ReplyDeleteWhen it comes to the Ukraine, there are a dozen ways to look at things, and this was certainly a good overview. Perhaps the best thing from a Russia point of view is that it is uniting Russia, and, perhaps more importantly, uniting most of the elite. A lot of Russia's problems over the last 25 years came from being weak, but just as many came from being unsure of what stands to make and the entanglements of their oligarchs. They should have made deals with China earlier, and it is criminal that they left so much of their financial system open to such drastic blackmail.
It seems to me that a big card in Russia's hands is the ability to turn the Ukraine into a failed state. This will be painful for Germany and Poland, very painful. Something that many would argue that I didn't notice in the article was that the US wanted to break the Ukraine and Russia wanted to keep it together sans Crimea. This may not have been a good strategy for Russia, but, in any case, it is now likely that the Donbass can't be put in a united Ukraine. Thus, the US achieved that goal and it forces Russia to consider alternative visions of what to do. Similarly, one can make the case that the shelling going on today is simply to make Kharkov not want to rebel. If life is miserable in the Donbass, nobody will rebel.
On the weapons front, those look impressive. Still, I wonder how relevant they will be for Russia's coming fights. Syria was ready for a tank war in the desert or Golan Heights. Big mistake. Who is ready for thousands of bird drones attacking with explosives? Add some GPS or other beacons, and you could have a thousand take different routes and reach one destination at one time.
Eurasian
Eurasian,
DeleteWhen you hear Russian officials or experts publicly making statements about punching through Georgia to link up with the 102nd base, it's primarily meant for Georgian consumption. So, yes, it is a threat against Tbilisi... but that does not mean it's a bluff. If push comes to shove (i.e. if there is a major war in the region and Armenia or the 102nd base is threatened) Russian forces will move south from South Ossetia and create a land corridor with Armenia.
Regarding Ukraine: As you said, there are many ways of looking at the crisis. Yes, the war in Ukraine awakened patriotism in Russia and forced the country's West-leaning liberals into indefinite hibernation. Collectively, Russians are in a defensive, fortress mood and more-and-more of them are beginning to hate the political West. And that's good. Also, the recent crisis has forced Russians to reconsider their post-Soviet, Western inspired financial/banking system and begin seeking ways to make it less vulnerable to Western manipulation. More importantly, the crisis has really forced Russians to abandon all hopes in the West and instead look East. I cannot think of a time when Russian-Chinese (and Indian) relations and cooperation was this good. All this is a direct result of the war in Ukraine and Western aggression against Russia. All this is a strategic setback for Western powers.
I have spoken extensively about Ukraine in previous blog commentaries. In short: Moscow would have preferred Ukraine to remain whole but fully within the Russian orbit. But since Western meddling took that option away in the winter of 2013/2014, Moscow did the next best thing: It took Crimea and turned the eastern Ukraine into a battle zone thereby effectively derailing Kiev's membership in NATO and the EU. The best case prognosis for Ukraine now is that it will be a poor/desolate buffer zone between Russia and NATO. And Novorossiya has effectively been "Karabakhaized". Novorossiya may not be absorbed into Russia just yet but it surely wont go back under Kiev either.
Although the West did succeed in driving a wedge between Moscow and Kiev, Moscow has extracted the best out of a terrible situation by annexing Crimea and Karabakhizing Novorossiya. Although the West has succeeded in driving a wedge between Moscow and the EU, Moscow has responded by fully turning East.
How does any of this benefit the West? In the short term, Russia will hurt somewhat as a result of the mess created by the West, but in the long term the West will be the real loser in all this.
Regarding the weapons you saw during the Victory Day military parade in Moscow: They are primarily meant to be Russia's insurance against a theoretical/potential war against NATO. Also, from a military perspective, the new, revolutionary weapons Moscow is procuring is encouraging the development and evolution of new war fighting technologies for the 21 century - as well as supporting the nation's military industrial complex.
For other war scenarios, don't worry, a bulk of Russia's military hardware will be Soviet era weaponry for a long time...
PS: What the public was shown during the military parade is only the tip of the iceberg.
I suspect Russia has a good strategy in talking about linking up with Armenia. The argument in favor or NATO and the EU has been full of unrealistic promises, just as was the case for Kiev. By saying, "The real world is a tough place, and Georgia will suffer badly if it makes the wrong choice.", Russia puts all the pragmatists who like the West in a big bind. Particularly as NATO hasn't been willing to actually protect them.
DeleteA similar situation might be taking place in Azerbaijan, but you would likely have a much better idea of that. Russia can remind Baku that they live in a brutal neighborhood, and a few weapons from Israel or NATO won't change that.
On the weapons front, there is no question that Russia is undergoing quite a renaissance. I still have my doubts about robot tanks, but they are clearly impressive. I happen to spend a bit of time on some of the many Russian blogs that cover military matters, and one guy I follow had a piece on how he thought what we could see was largely a front to hide the actual preparations for war in the background. He argues that there has been a plan to move some or most of Moscow's important functions to the Urals and that a lot of the PC crap in the West, such as women in special forces, is just theater while the war preps are feverishly taking place in the shadows.
If the West's Operation Barbarossa has shown anything, it is that Russia has to get rid of the Western financial and economic system. If you use MasterCard, don't complain that all the spending by those working in military affairs are examined by the US. Find a guy with financial problems and there goes a rocket. Unfortunately, Putin has been reluctant to go after the neoliberal foundation of things.
As for your question of how the war atmosphere against Russia and China helps the West, well, that is the big question. My guess is that the secret weapons and fear about China developing its own high-tech complex force matters. The West can't afford to wait ten years at this point. Just a guess, of course.
Eurasian
" As I have alluded to on countless previous occasions: For the past seventy years they have meticulously and systematically set-up the playing field as well as the rules of the game. Regardless of who you are, if you want to play, you have to play on their turf and under their terms. They have you already speaking their language, using their financial institutions, trading in their money, studying in their educational establishments, listening to their news, wearing their clothes, entertaining yourself to their pop culture... They have you conditioned. Once you are operating within their system and living within their paradigm, they control you and you are vulnerable. You are thus forced to play the game obediently, or else. In short: We live in their world. They see the world as their playground and they see us as their possessions."
ReplyDeletePowerful words Arevordi.
Don't hold your breath for Germany, it is beyond redemption. If it is to be free again, it will first have to be totally destroyed:
ReplyDeletePaid as a Pro-Kremlin Troll: 'The Hatred Spills over into the Real World'
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/interview-with-ex-russian-internet-troll-lyudmila-savchuk-a-1036539.html
Being free wouldn't cure them of their desire to dominate Eastern Europe and steal Russia's resources. It is something Germans just can't cure. Then add on top of that the Anglo-Zionist control since WWII and it is not a pretty sight. And Russian elites have been remiss in not recognizing that they simply can't join the West as some kind of big Germany.
DeleteIt might be more realistic to see Japan break free of the Empire, but that, too, is a big question mark.
Eurasian
The problem with Japan breaking out of US influence is that without American "protection" the Japanese would have to increase the size of their military, and given their past actions during WWII, that is something China is adamantly against. Unlike the Philippines which has a weak military, Japan has a formidable military but they're not a formal military force due to Article Nine which forbids them from having an army in the first place.
DeleteZoravar, thank you for the excellent article about Novorossiya. Strelkov is a enigma. I didn't know the movement started with a truck load of volunteers. Do you think the movement will spread to Odessa?
ReplyDeleteRe: Armata tanks. I was expecting it have a low exposure gun turret. Why is it so bulky?
I also want to thank Zoravar for his captivating narrative about the war in Novorossiya.
DeleteYou actually asked a very good question about the Armata tank. All previous renderings of it showed the turret with a highly slopped armor. I'll let Zoravar explain why the final product looks the way it does but in my opinion it has to do with the robotics that went into the design.
The Armata is revolutionary concept in armored combat vehicles in that it is a weapons "platform" and has the potential to go fully robotic in the future. Due to the way it is designed, many different variations of the vehicle can be put together merely by interchanging parts. Moreover, if the tank turret gets knocked out in combat, a new turret can be installed. And the fascinating part here is that due to its design it all can be done on or near the battlefield. Also, perhaps for the first time in its history, the design clearly shows that Moscow is taking crew comfort and survivability very seriously. All in all, a very impressive and revolutionary weapons platform. Just when we thought the concept of the main battle tank is dead, it is alive and well.
(Part 1 of 2)
ReplyDeleteUkraine plans to seize Russian foreign property to compensate for ‘lost’ Crimea
http://rt.com/business/264173-ukraine-russia-crimea-lawsuit/
I would like to state loud and clear that the law and everything about it is absolute bullshit. These western legal institutions are completely illegitimate and politicized. In fact, other than politics and the make-believe world of the entertainment media, the legal systems of western countries are where the single greatest concentrations of liars and their filthy lies - or as Arevordi likes to say "reptiles in suits" - come together. The only difference between the law versus other manifestations of bullshit is that attorneys and judges do a slightly better job of maintaining a false veneer of "respectability".
Of course the western legal system can occasionally serve its people. For example, if you are a nobody and you have some minor grievance against another nobody, or if you are a nobody but you have a grievance against a powerful somebody who also just happens to be the target of other powerful forces, then you may end up getting some redress for your cause of action in western legal systems. But that's not saying much; you would have the same protection in a country like Armenia or Russia. The fact is that western legal systems almost never punish the rich and powerful, and certainly never punish the true powers behind the governing elite, like the heads of the corporation which are currently raping their own nations. This is because at its core the western legal systems reach levels of corruption that make FIFA look like a well-oil machine run by angels. How else, for example, could anyone explain how the highest body of US judges whoring themselves out to the powerful, exemplified by ridiculous decisions like "corporations are people" or the recent Citizens United case (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC). Only rarely due to inter-elite rivalries or emergency situations do some powerful people get punished, either as scapegoats (like bernie madoff) or as a losing faction (like dominique strauss kahn).
I focus on this topic because "the need for legal reform" and "corrupt, non-independent judges" are some of the more common allegations leveled against Armenia. These accusations often come from big-mouthed, small-dicked "Armenians" in the diaspora who are always badasses when it comes to shit-talking against Armenia while they themselves like in Glendale or Washington. But these very same worthless "Armenians" are oddly silent when the "fair and balanced" courts of the "land of the free" demonstrate corruption and issue rulings which obviously were ordered from the top echelons of power, like when they essentially tell told Armenians to shove their Armenian Genocide reparation demands up their own asses, as was recently the case with the federal courts in California (Ninth Circuit), a decision which the almighty US Supreme Court made clear that it had absolutely no problems with by refusing the even hear an appeal on the Ninth Circuit's anti-Armenian decision. (see http://www.anca.org/press_releases/press_releases.php?prid=2287)
(Part 2 of 2)
ReplyDeleteWhile we're on the topic, somebody ask the democracy now(!) scum who keep bitching and moaning about democracy, how effective "democracy" is in the US when a group of nine unelected judges, who are almost completely out of touch with the average American (not to mention out of touch with the times, technology, the real world, pretty much anything that they cannot immediately experience inside the ivory tower they work in), have the power to completely reject rules made by "elected officials" or through direct votes (like California's prop 8 which banned homosexual "marriage")..... Oh well I guess we all know that asking any of the democracy now(!) activists to actually explain democracy is the same as asking a toddler to explain complex trigonometric theorems - you're just expecting too much.
Anyway, back to the article. I hope the article. I actually hope the Euro court votes against Russia. It will only highlight the fact that the west is anti-Russian, which will serve the purpose of rallying Russians behind their flag and their great President, and it will further squeeze the remaining liberals inside Russia. In fact, such a decision would only set the Euro court on the path to its own destruction.
Spydell, a Russian blogger, had a nice piece on how the Russian elite's pleas against the unfairness of the world over the last twenty years of Western abuse have been absurd. Courts, fairness, and all the things the West talks about only exist when power is aligned so that it is in the interests of the more powerful to agree to limiting his power. There are no courts or fairness for Nigeria or most of Africa. The West does what it wants or can.
DeleteRussians of a pro-Western bent have been masters at failing to see the obvious. The systems used in the West are only fair when they want them to be, such as when one under their control has a dispute with another. So a dispute between Spain and Portugal requires some sense of law. A dispute between Russia and Italy is an entirely different matter, as they don't own Russia. The Western financial oligarchs, that is.
All the pleas of the weak are hard to understand. Russia didn't complain about a coup in Honduras, so what is the complaint with one in Kiev?
Eurasian
This may be off topic, but can some who understands economics please explain to me how and why a tiny country such as Greece would have such an effect on US stocks, as its being purported in the news?? Why is Greece always in the news and cited as a factor in US economy and stocks? I mean I could clearly understand how a deterioration in the Russian economy could affect Armenia immensely, (yet not the other way around), but Greece affecting the US economy?? c'mon...
ReplyDeleteShofer
Shofer, I am not an expert in the field of economics but in my opinion the danger Greece poses to the US is primarily political. If Greece goes bankrupt and defaults on its commitments to the Western financial system, it will then have a dire effect on the US. This is a major danger because the Western economic/financial system (i.e. the Bretton Woods paradigm) is a fancy house-of-cards. The system in question looks very stable and pretty but it has no firm foundation, it lives only because it forces nations to borrow money from it, hold reserves in its currency and trade in its currency. Once you have a serious break in the system, the hype fades away and the flaws/vulnerabilities become apparent. There is a danger that this may have a domino effect in other part of the world that operate within the Western system. This is not to say that a Greek default will not have any direct effect on the US economy. There is substantial amounts of US assets in Greece that may be lost. But the major concern is political. My opinion.
DeleteShofer,
DeleteIt's about a) making sure that the cockroach theory doesn't hold, i. e. that the Latin countries of Europe do not follow. b) it's all about the first leg of NWO, that is, that the EU in conjunction with the fiat Euro currency doesn't fall apart, which would be a huge setback to their plan of destroying the Nation-States and Nations for the benefit of the Anglo-American-Zionists.
BTW the people's bank of China is part of the NWO Central Bankers club. One of the key things I'm looking for is clarification of whether Putin can break out of the SWIFT system on the way to taking full control of Russia's Central bank. He is the ONLY one left who is dedicated to keeping his nation independent of the Imperium, which means being independent of its Currency System and Its Central Banking System.
Observer
Greece is kaput economically and demographically. Greece is the latrine of the mediterranean. The turks vomit all the pseudo refugees, illegals, and other thrild world flotsam, passing through turkish territory, onto the Aegean islands and the Evros, and the putrid government of the maoist-marxist-squalid socialist Syriza lies supine and smiles. The nationalists , the leadership cadres of the nationalists are all in jail under spurious charges which the Zionist gang of Samaras-Venizelos brought upon them and the Tsipras gangsters continue holding them under lock and key. The best thing for Greece is to get out of the EU gulag, kick out all the refugees and illegals from the land and regain their sovereignty. Out of the Euro and into the drachma, a three year old currency. When the nationalists come out jail and get control of the government they can bring about a close approchement with Russia. There is a lot of zionist control in Greece, the government gnomes are just marionettes who dance to the tune of "Hava Nagela". The Tsipras government is planning to hand out travel documents to the invaders, so that these sham refugees cum criminals of the invasion force can be funneled throughout the EU gulag. The game plan is population replacement, and the mediterranean basin , Greece and Italy and Spain , are becoming huge concentration camps for the invasion army. In 1993 President Turgut Ozal pronounced that Turkey does not need weapons or army to take care of Greece; they will overrun Greece through muslim immigration/invasion. Tsukras
DeleteAnti-Armenian British PACE Rapporteur Gets Turkish Citizenship
ReplyDeletehttp://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/27048132.html
Hey everyone, look at another fine example of a golden Englishman doing what they do best: getting on their knees for Turks. There are so many things I could say here, but I will limit it to just saying that I am extremely happy to know that, demographically-speaking, the garbage English race and their crappy country which produce scum like Robert Walter, is doomed to total bastardization and eventual/inevitable collapse. It is an ironic form of justice that while the elites of England are whoring themselves to Turks, the Muslims in England are literally kidnapping, raping, and whoring the underage daughters of the English... There are some Armenians who are degenerate Anglophiles - these people need to be isolated from Armenian society, and further committed to mental institutions where psychosurgery can be performed to cure their illness.
Also take a note of the biased reporting by the CIA's "azatutyun" service. They whitewash the British asshole's actions, and minimize the damage done to Armenia. Being handed Turkish citizenship personally by anti-Armenian extremist Mehmet Cavushoglu, and defending Azerbaijan's dismal human rights record in discussions regarding Artskah are inherently anti-Armenian actions, there is no justification for azatutyun to put quotations around the words "Anti-Armenian" in its title. Too bad Armenians are so easy going and passive, I kind of wish a large group of "peaceful protestors" would bring "freedom and justice" to azatutyun's offices in Armenia, as was the case in Ukraine and Syria. I think it could happen if some the Yerevan or Moscow focused more on establishing and funding their own variety of "civil society"... And while I'm on Cavushoglu, let's all remember how happy the western-funded oppositionist whore Zaruhi Boz-stenchian made him when she attacked Armenia's President (figuratively beheaded Armenia's President in the style of the self-destructive peasantry who Mkhitar Sparapet who 285 years old suffered the same tragic fate literally).
Also, here is the EU for you. It's corrupt to high hell and overflowing with Turkophile scum. So I don't even pay attention to Armenians who want to join the EU anymore, because that ship has sailed; and if any Armenians (like the homos and the half-Turkic one) are unhappy with Armenia under the Eurasian Union then they can fly to Sweden or France and apply for refugee status, the local Muslim majorities will "take care" of them. Instead, I find it more offensive when I hear Armenians talk about "shared European values". What values? Denying or whitewashing the Armenian Genocide? Getting on their knees in order to suck out every last drop of oil and gas from Azerbaijan? Arming and supporting terrorists in Syria so that Kessab and the other Armenian communities there are subjected to massacre? Whoring themselves to Turks? Atheism? Extreme bigotry and (when possible) outright ethnic cleansing against Orthodox Christian peoples like Serbs in occupied/Turkified Kosovo or occupied/Turkified Northern Cyprus? Debt-slavery and austerity? Holocaustiantiy as a state religion, protected be anti-heresy laws? Militant feminism? Childlessness and voluntaru extinction? Homosexual propaganda aimed at children? Open-borders? Mass-immigration of genetically and culturally incompatible peoples, topped off with forced integration as that clown Sarkozy demands? Interracialism? GMOs? Sorry, but those "values" are the exact opposite of Armenian values, and the two are mutually exclusive. There is just no way to reconcile the two systems - one is right and one is wrong; one must be destroyed so that the other prevails and there is no way that the two systems can be "complimentary". As an Armenian who respects my heritage, let me make it clear and borrow a line from Nuland: Fuck Europe and their degenerate values.
The Europe we shared values with is no longer with us. Everything you described about Europe today is accurate. Europe has decayed beyond recognition. But let's also recognize that it's a by-product of a continent suffering seventy years of Anglo-American-Jewish occupation.
DeleteWhat I'm saying is, don't hate the sick, hate the sickness.
Sarkis and Arevordi,
DeleteThe trick is to not catch the sickness yourself, not to simply hate it. Even better, have a healthy society. For example, are there young people wearing clothes with the death's head on them? That is popular in many countries now.
In other words, the sickness is really a spiritual one. And Europe has turned into a cesspool. They even have animal bordellos, or at least it seems so.
Eurasian
Arevordi, I understand your point. The west of the past is dead. The reason I made the general statements attacking the west is because I've had to radically reexamine my views on the potential of the west today. Without the emotional filters it becomes easier to hate them. Most of the smaller Catholic or Protestant European countries are outright useless (Czech Republic or Hungary), while most of the larger European/western countries are downright enemies (Britain, France, Germany, the USA). Despite whatever achievements these countries may have had, they've easily done and are continuing to do more damage to Armenia and the other eastern/Orthodox heirs of the Byzantine Empire than have the Jews, Turks or other Muslims. And their role would not change even if the Jews, corporations, and corrupt wealthy elite could be extricated from western countries. So I really find it hard to feel anything else for the continent.
DeleteNow, I wouldn't have any strong feelings for them if they did not pose an existential threat to Armenia, just like I don't have any strong feelings for Japan or Chile or Zimbabwe (despite the fact that I personally find Japanese culture and achievements fascinating, while I personally look down at Zimbabwe. But unlike the Africans, Asians and South Americans, the west continually produces scum like robert walter and continues its psych-war against Armenia. So hatred, while admittedly ugly, is only a natural reaction to this situation. I actually hope that most Armenian patriots feel the same way , even if they do not express it openly like I just did.
From my point of view: A century ago there was a situation where western Armenia had two, mutually exclusive potential futures: either Armenians would win and populate and dominate the region, or the Turks and Kurds would win and populate the region. It was obvious the two could not exists together in the same space much longer. We know what happened there. Today there is a parallel battle for mutually exclusive values which is being fought in Armenia, and actually all around the world as well. One set of values will have to prevail, the other be destroyed. The borders and battle lines are clearly drawn, the states of the world have mostly been drafted into either camp (places like Ukraine are still up for grabs), and no amount of wishful thinking is going to lead to any sort of national liberation movement or renaissance in western countries like Germany or even Greece.
Besides, westerns themselves often use Social Darwinism to justify claims that they are superior to all others, including Armenians. The current facts on the ground indicate that their smug confidence was unjustified.
‘We Will Wage War': Ukraine's Right Sector Announces Mobilization
ReplyDeletehttp://sputniknews.com/europe/20150604/1022933905.html
I know these queers are mere puppets controlled by the Anglo-American-Zionist Alliance, but I simply cannot understand the level of stupidity of the individuals involved. There reasoning goes something like:
"Heil Hitler. White Power... Now let's go eat out Nudelman/Nuland's ass"
You can easily prove that not all Jews are bad. One occasionally runs across good Jewish folk, individuals who are more or less normal and helpful, or at least not hate-crazed war-mongers. Yet somehow these "nazis" manage to get on their knees for the likes nuland, mccain, bob menendez, and other neoconservatives aka ultra-extreme zionists - the absolute worst type of scum in the world.
It has been said before and it bears repeating: ukrs are nothing more than filthy animals. It would be interesting to know exactly how many of these filthy ukr animals were fighting on behalf of the Azeris in 1988 - 1994, how many were captured and put out of their misery by the Armenian freedom fighters.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/jun/3/norma-zager-us-actions-toward-allies-evoke-disbeli/
ReplyDeleteThe author is a kike bitch... every time I say something nice about kikes they always remind me why I hate the great majority of them... The actions of their majority strongly overwhelms any positive energy created by the handful of decent jews that exist.
Most of them are scum as usual. I was on facebook once posting something critical of israel and one of its scum agents reported me to the admin on facebook.
DeleteThe question is whether the deracination policies of globalization, multiculturalism can be arrested and reversed. This is particularly important for the few outstanding pockets of nation states , of which Armenia is one. Multiculturalism, mass movement of races acros the planet, open borders , is sweeping races and nations into oblivion. We must ensure Armenia does not become engulfed in this destructive process. We have not preserved our identity for centuries in order to succumb now to globalization, multicultural infusion and modern day ethnocide. Piper
ReplyDeleteThe process of globalization, multiculturalism, interracialism and the mass movements of races across borders will only be arrested or reversed when the Anglo-American-Jewish political order is defeated by the likes of Russia and China. For humanity to preserve its natural diversity, Western global hegemony has to be toppled.
DeleteWhen the money is worth nothing, the idea will be worth just as much. They have fucked the dollar to death, yet still going around the world dancing. The very same ideas used to topple countries all over the world are breading like cancer on home turf. Hubris, a lower level of disaster, as it has not manifested itself fully yet, but spread it's roots like a cancer. The pot calling the cattle black, does not change the fact that they are all born of fire.
DeleteGlobalization is nothing new, let us not take for granted that prehistoric man had a global trade network. Globalization is not the enemy, the use of the word globalization is a misnomer. The printing of unending dollars to buy everything on gods earth we equate to globalization, this is a mistake. The dollar has been used and excepted for face value till this point. The dollars use is waning and waning hard, no longer can empire be kept by merely putting some green ink on paper. All the ills that have come from the misuse of empire can't simply be blamed on globalization. We have always been global, let us not throw the babe out with the bathwater.
By way, that ink, that green ink was created by an Armenian.
Vahram
Vahram, what you are describing is not Globalization but cross-cultural fertilization, cross-border trade, international relations, mercantilism, peaceful coexistence, etc. The word "Globalism" or "Globalization" was coined by modern day Marxists/Socialists (i.e. George Soros types) to essentially mean the fusing all nations into one racially mixed, Godless, nation-less, gender-confused, English speaking breed of humanoids living under the mercy of the Anglo-American-Jewish world order. Globalism or Americanization or Westernization IS the enemy.
Deletehttp://asbarez.com/136580/gazprom-to-take-over-iran-armenia-pipeline/
ReplyDeleteWhy this? I'd like to hear some thoughts on this matter. Why is it that every major state institution needs to be either run, overseen, or outright bought by foreigners? Hydro dam, US purchased it, don't know why. Postal service just went private. Now this. To my knowledge this pipeline was the brainchild of Iran/Armenian efforts, that is why there was a limitation set on imports due to its diameter. Why was this sale necessary, this was not a leftover vestige of the Soviet era, yet it seems somehow our current administration cannot seem to get actual Armenian humans to run these places, so they sale them at a bargain. I'm no Russophobe by any measure, I value our strategic alliance, yes I know Russia is consolidating power, but seriously though, there needs to be a soft ceiling here, sale of all these major services makes us look like incompetent jackoffs on our own land and state.
There is talk about Iranian gas reaching to Europe and at least one possible route is via Armenia and Georgia. Armenia-Iran gas pipeline was sold to Gasprom a while ago, the urgency to complete the deal now i think is connected to above mentioned reason. Gasprom wants to be part of the negotiations between Iran and EU.
DeleteWe are pretty much tangled in Gas wars between Russia and EU. That said I think Armenia got something for yielding control of that pipeline. These type of strategically important stuff do not change hands for nothing.
Sasounci Davit, I agree with TK. I think the sale is geopolitical in nature, it has nothing to do with greed, corruption, treason, ect. We need to sober up and understand that right now the stakes in the region are too high. It wouldn't be stretch of the imagination to say that Russia and the West are on the verge of a war. For Russia, natural gas production and distribution - especially to Europe - is as important as their nuclear deterrence. Gas supplies to foreign nations has been Moscow's most effective strategic weapon in recent years. I therefore do not expect them to change their approach to "pipeline politics" for Armenia's sake. Genocide recognition for Armenia's sake is one thing, this is a whole different ball game. With that said, had Armenia been a powerful and wealthy nation - or perhaps a nation less inclined to flirt with Western powers - we might have expected Russians to allow us more control over such matters. But Armenia is not powerful, not wealthy and in the eyes of Russians - official Yerevan is not very reliable. The best we can expect at this juncture is for Yerevan to at least negotiate a good transit fee or some other benefit for the country. Anyway, the following article Robertik posted several days ago is quite revealing of the serious concerns Russians have towards Yerevan's "complimentary politics" -
DeleteUS Trying to Pry Armenia out of Russia's Orbit: http://russia-insider.com/en/politics/us-trying-pry-armenia-out-russias-orbit/ri7606
The West and Russia are in a war hotter than the old Cold War, and the US regularly uses bribes and violence to have leaders sell their countries down the river. So Russia can only rely on her army, navy, and Gazprom.
DeleteIf Armenia wants more independence, she needs to get rid of all the Western agents and assets. Then Russia wouldn't be so paranoid.
As for things like privatizing the post office, was that to crush civil servants or what?
Eurasian
Like I said before, developing countries need large, state-connected conglomerates to manage their infrastructure. Armenia's government is too small, indebted, and frankly not qualified to run something like an energy distribution system, so it will have to be managed from Moscow, just like during the relatively stable Soviet era. Yerevan would have eventually sold the pipeline anyway, I'd rather that is be safely under Moscow's supervision than owned by the west or by Iranians.
DeleteAs for haypost, it has been working with foreign (European) companies for a long time. It has had European managers. It was in terrible shape after the Soviet collapse and needed massive restructuring. Armenia's government simply lacked the resources and expertise to get the job done. Privatizing it was more of a business decision than anything else. Again, large businesses will be state run. Until Armenian society reaches a level of evolution and maturity where it creates officials and a government which is competent enough to run large business ventures, large state owned assets will have to run by private organizations. Armenia's best hope is if those private corporations are actually state-owned Russian enterprises, as was the case in the past.
Armenia also sold Armenian Railways to Russia's state-owned railways around 2008, since then there has been a decent repair and modernization program. Same with its aluminum production industry. And its telecom industry. I'm looking forward to the time when, with Russian support, many of the idle Soviet-era factories in Armenia are refurbished and brought back to full production; I think the Eurasian Union is the best chance for this to happen.
Ukrainians Dispossessed, Americans are next
ReplyDeletehttp://www.paulcraigroberts.org/2015/06/04/ukrainians-dispossessed-americans-next-paul-craig-roberts/
"Notice that this is a yank of the blanket from under the elderly in Ukraine. “Useless eaters,” they are assigned to the trash can. How do the deceived Maiden student protesters feel now that they are culpable in the destruction of their grandparents’ support systems? Do these gullible fools still believe in the Washington-orchestrated Maiden Revolution? The crimes in which these stupid students are complicit are horrific. "
Great commentary, thank you both Arevordi and Zoravar.
ReplyDeleteAlways enjoy reading about military matters. With all the advances Russia is making anglosaxons have no chance in a fight with Russians. Whenever i am browsing TV channels in the evening i come across some reality or other shows to see someone crying. Americans are crying literally about everything, either their dad changed his orientation, either their girlfriend cheated on them, etc. Seriously i cannot imagine them fighting with Russians, American nation has lost any honour, bravery, respect or toughness. I guess this is why they need to make new enemies for Russia so they could do the fighting for them.
T.K. you have a very good point. I don't know how often the audience here has a chance to interact with teenage and twenty-something Americans or to view the pop culture which is specifically directed at them, but they are all totally screwed up. Pop culture gets more decadent and degenerate every year, things that were unthinkable even as late as the 1990s or early 2000s are now promoted as normal and in fact desirable. Homosexuality and interracial marriage was being pushed a few years back, now they have moved on to mainstreaming transsexualism and other mental illnesses. I was watching a movie on tv earlier this morning, a commercial break came on and the television network ABC was promoting a new show about a family "everyone is becoming somebody; the daughter is becoming a wife, the son is becoming a soldier or whatever; Charlie (the father) is becoming Carly (a tranny faggot)". This is literally one out of hundreds of examples; and it is especially damaging because most westerners are so dumbed-down and drugged-out that they cannot compehend that what they see on the media is not reality, instead most westerners model their behavior and values on whatever they learn from the media.
DeleteI don't see how such a rotten society can expect to remain on top of the world for another generation. Psychotic people may be dangerous when you give them guns and unleash them against civilians in defenseless third-world countries, but they lack the courage and discipline to take on a competent foe like Russia. The west is declining and degenerating very rapidly, internally and at its core. For all of their backwardness, when I compare westerners to Asians, it appears to me that Asians have a much better future.
What surprises me is that normal people, especially normal White people, have not yet started revolting against their governments. It is not exactly a secret that they are targeted for destruction, and that their children are particularly vulnerable and their futures look extremely bleak. I guess they are too fat, too demoralized, too dumb, too medicated, too brainwashed, or too selfish to give a damn as America heads down the path of the Roman Empire.
Sarkis,
DeleteWhite, Western society has been destroyed. A significant percentage of Whites in the US can't read properly, or even calculate change for a transaction in a store. Some readers here may not have visited the US in the last ten years, but that is actually the case. However, it is the "silent war" that many have talked about. It is hard for people to resist what they cannot see or understand. Obviously, a big part of that war is to normalize deviance, insanity, and bad habits. There apparently is even a TV series with a serial killer as a "hero", or so I have heard.
However, a question out of this is what the plans of the City of London/Anglo-Zionists may be. Many in technology ask if the future needs humans that much, and the black budget of the US is unbelievable. Just as an obvious example, it you posit that the US went to the Moon in 1969, what do you think they can do now? Classified work is typically decades ahead of what the masses can see. My bet is that the PTB have made a bet on a high-tech future, so 90% of the people in the West can be gotten rid of.
Living in Asia, and travelling around a fair bit, I would say Asia is in tremendously better shape, whether morally or just in terms of a purpose in life. And the rich elites seem to want a mistress, not a young boy.
Eurasian
Thank you for your lucid observations, Eurasian. I would only add that the agenda is not primarily against whites/westerners but against all of humanity. It's only that whites are an easier (captive) target. In my opinion, they want to - engineer - a human society that is gender confused and devoid of spiritually, nationalism, traditional family values and indigenous cultures. In other words, they want eating, breathing, English speaking robots. The ultimate intent? A smaller, more easily manageable global population living at the mercy of the global elite. Technology essentially makes their agenda all that more doable...
DeleteWe have the VI pan Armenian games coming up on 2nd August. It should be a great time to be in Armenia. Two weeks of soaking up the flavors of the motherland.
ReplyDeleteJust a point of curiosity. Who is bedros hajian ?. He is a journalist, and he has a program on TV. He makes interesting commentaries, but many times one wonders wether he is factual or not. I heard him in one of his programs lashing out at the West, Zionism, and how Armenia's were being assimilated in this cesspool of degeneracy. On the other hand he comes up with comments about another genocide in the making with the alignment of Russia and Turkey in an alliance. He rings a discordant note, and one wonders what is his point. His message appears to be a hopeless one. Genocide in the West in the mixing and blending of the Jewish - American degenerate world in which Armenians are being assimilated at a rapid pace, on the other hand the ongoing depopulation of Armenia through emigration leading to an Armenia without Armenians. He paints a darkening scenario, and does not offer strategies of escape or survival. He had a guest in his programs of mr Berkens ?, who in very meticulous detail condemns the hidden Jewish Karbala as the architects of the genocide. The young Turks, a Jewish creation in which many Armenians were inducted in collaborating with their own extermination. I heard his program for the first time.
ReplyDeleteI have noticed the same thing about Hajian and I have the same questions/concerns about him. In my opinion, he is most probably a good intentioned weirdo. But, if we were to figure-out what/who his political rhetoric serves best, I would say Turks. By blaming Jews for the genocide and by fear-mongering about Armenia's government and Russia, Hajian, whether he realizes it or not, serves Turkish interests.
DeleteI dislike Hajian, from what I know he is a Protestant reverend and therefore unreliable as far as I am concerned. When it comes to Armenian socio-political issues, I automatically disregard anything that the protestants, catholics, members of other cults, and athiests have to "contribute" - some people may look down on me for making such a blanket generalization but I have learned through experience that avoiding the fake Armenians is 100% effective with absolutely no negative side-effects. If Hajian is spreading Russophobia and anti-Armenia sentiments, it is probably largely influenced by the fact that he is a Protestant and therefore incompatible with healthy Orthodox nations like Russia, and unhappy with the special relationship between the Armenian Apostolic Church and the Republic of Armenia. I think this is the same Hajian from a 2001 article, it gives some background:
Deletehttp://articles.glendalenewspress.com/2001-05-29/news/export37848_1_gang-member-county-jail-jail-time
As for Christopher Jon Bjerknes, he authored a text called "The Jewish Genocide of Christian Armenians" as well as two books on the Einstein Fraud. While I appreciate Bjerknes highlighting the Jewish role in the Armenian Genocide, like Arevordi said in the end he is basically exonerating the Turks by blaming everything on the Jews. In reality , Turks, Kurds, Circassians, Germans, Jews as well as to a slightly less direct extent British, French, and other Europeans all have Armenian blood on their hands, and a lot of liability to spread among themselves.
Bjerknes is supposedly one-quarter jew and three-quarters German and has converted to Christianity. He also happens to be a rabid Russophobe spreading idiotic fairytales along the lines of "Putin is a zionist agent". Bjerknes appears to be quite motivated, as his books and his blog posts are very, very long. This is his vitriolic blog filled with anti-Putin fabrications:
http://jewishracism.blogspot.com/
In my opinion Bjerknes is a nutjob. Others have pointed out that given the amount of work he publishes and the political nature of his work, he may be some sort of intelligence operative, which also seems very plausible.
Awesome blog.
ReplyDeleteI have been reading this blog for some time now and agree with pretty much everything. I never knew we could comment until Sarkis86 told me. Keep up the good work and i hope i can contribute in some way.
Gev
Thank you, Gev. Looking forward to seeing your participation in our discussions.
DeleteI had a question for you Arevordi. One article i was reading you said you managed to go Kremlin and talk some people at the Kremlin - how did you manage that? I lost the link to that article would like to read it again but couldn't find it.
DeleteGev
Gev, I see you got banned from hyeclub. Congratulations, that is an indication that you were fighting on the right side in the information war. That place might as well be called Turkclub. I had not logged on probably for over year, I made an exception to invite you here.
DeleteI saw your last message where you asked me what I believe will happen to Artsakh. Ten years ago when - thanks to the Anglo-American-Jewish alliance - the BTC oil pipeline came into operation, I was very worried that Azerbaijan would use its new income to overtake Armenia militarily. Thank God that through capable leadership and through the crucial Russia-Armenia alliance, Armenia has more or less maintained parity or superiority to Azerbaijan in the military sphere, even though Azerbaijan has a military budget that is ten times larger than Armenia, not to mention ~2.5 times the population. Now that the Azeri economy is slowing down, I believe there is no reasonable way Azerbaijan can ever become stronger than Armenia.
That being said, it seems that the Armenian government is content with the status quo, we control almost all of Artsakh and we are defending the high ground which we have fortified and reinforced over the years. In the last few months we saw the Armenian military, particularly young Armenian conscripts, successfully repel Azeri subversion attacks carried out by Azerbaijan's best troops. It is very tragic that every year we know some Armenian soldiers will be martyred on the frontlines, but overall the situation is stable and easily manageable.
You mentioned giving some land back in exchange for peace. That is always a possibility. Some land being returned may allow the Aliyev regime to save face domestically, while Armenia and Artsakh can reunite. I question whether it can happen, though, because for one thing Aliyev has based his legitimacy on anti-Armenian hysteria. It seems Azerbaijan's entire national identity is based on "fuck those evil Armenians." He has pumped up his own people's desire for war, so he has very little room to maneuver now... But the key factor is Russia. The South Caucasus has been Russia's sphere of domination for the past 200+ years, and thank God because that is the key reason Armenia exists in a region full of Turks, Iranians, other Muslims, western/Jewish imperial interests, and Georgians. Russia will remain dominant in the region for the foreseeable future because if Russia loses Armenia, it will lose the entire South Caucasus forever, and after that it will be only a short time before it loses the North Caucasus to NATO-backed Islamists, not to mention the danger of losing the whole of Central Asia to NATO-backed Islamists. Russia is the alpha and omega of the region (even if the big-talking, under-performing Armenian Diaspora gets hurt feelings when confronted with this fact). If Russia decides to force a peace treaty between Azerbaijan and Armenia, Armenia will keep Artsakh and at a minimum it will keep Berdzor (Lachin) and probably Karvachar (Kelbajar). Everything else depends on how good Armenian officials are at negotiating with Moscow. The lack of an organized lobbying presence inside Russia is really troubling for this reason. The key to lasting peace in Artsakh is in Moscow; incidentally, the keys to freedom for Javakhk as well as the road to Western Armenia are all in Russia.
Armenia will never start a war, not even after the Azeris shot down our helicopter. Yerevan probably calculates that the potential risk and costs outweigh any potential gains, while the last thing Moscow needs is a giant South Caucasian headache as it deals with Syria and Ukraine. But if Azerbaijan gets desperate and does something stupid, I am sure Armenia will get the green light and some additional support to permanently solve the Azeri threat.
Arevordi and others have written at length about the topic, they may have some interesting things to say
Gev,
DeleteMy trip to the Kremlin never took place. The story was a parable meant to convey a certain message. It's in the blog commentary titled: "Armenians want to know, is Russia a friend or foe?"
Sarkis,
All the interesting things I would have said about this topic you already said it.
Sarkis i got banned for telling them how it is...they have a user named 'Chubs' no doubt he is a turk/azeri he went spastic at me so i told him how it is.......and instead of a turk getting banned they banned me.
DeleteWho cares anyway....they are just hurt because i told them how it really is. Thanks for that write up things are clear Sarkis & Arevordi.
Hacked Emails Expose George Soros As Ukraine Puppet-Master
ReplyDeletehttp://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-06-01/hacked-emails-expose-george-soros-ukraine-puppet-master
Putin's recent interview to Italian newspaper
ReplyDeletehttp://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/49629
Very impressive interview. If more westerners actually listened to what this man has to say they will start not believing their government's BS about Russia.
DeleteInteresting article
ReplyDeletehttp://www.huffingtonpost.fr/didier-chaudet/securite-pays-du-caucase_b_7314180.html
Goddam frog author went out of his way to insert anti-Armenian messages into his article, including the false accusation that the Armenian helicopter attacked Azeris before it was shot down (easily shown to be false by the video that the Azeri idiots themselves posted to the Internet), and the bullshit claim that it was Armenians who instigated a "military incursion" into Azerbaijan when in reality it was the Azeris who launched an incursion into Armenian territory and then were chased back to their starting positions.
DeleteFrance = Europe = EU = West = Israel = NATO = Turkey = Azerbajian = Islamic Extremism = Anti-Armenian = Anti-Russian
Not a single tear should be shed that Frogland has become an African and Middle Eastern dumping ground, a process which I am glad can never be reversed and will ultimately result in the bastardization and destruction of France. The French are NOT Armenia's allies, they never have been and they never will be. Shame on those Frogophile Armenians that revere everything French, and shame on the Armenians who give two-faced French clowns like Sarkozy and Hollande undeserved praise.
As one of our friends pointed out, the presidents of Russia, Serbia, Cyprus, and France were in Armenia on April 24. Out of those four, it was only the French faggot who felt compelled to travel from Armenia directly to Azerbaijan after he finished paying lip service to the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide.
Also the author claims that Armenia joining the Eurasian Union was based on fear and made "little economically rational orientation"? Someone remind that idiot that the EU is the world's worst economic joke, and whatever wealth their ancestors had accumulated over the centuries will be spent by the following decades supporting France's millions-strong Muslim colonists. Idiot.
His entire article implies that Russia and Armenia are responsible for the tensions in the South Caucasus, then he finished with a paragraph calling for more positive behaviors by all of the powers involved. Classic French bullshit.
re: the war in Novorossiya
ReplyDeleteDon't know if it is within the purview of this blog, but a real issue is whether Russia can ever limit the oligarchs. As Brzezinski roughly said "If your elite have $500 billion in the West, are they your elite, or ours?" A recent conference on the war in the Donbass had Robert Nigmatulin, a rather serious fellow from the Russian Academy of Sciences, say:
"The number of billionaires per unit of GDP. In the first place, Ukraine. In second place - Russia. And only then, by a wide margin, all the rest. Name the country where salary of a professor - ten times less than the salary of Members of Parliament."
In many ways, Russia has social figures down in the Nigerian or Brazilian level, though they are getting better. This is offset by a few things, such as low debt on housing and low taxes, but the issue is a serious one. Besides internal stability, it impacts the kinds of moves Russia can make geopolitically. The fact that Putin could tame Ukrainian-style oligarchs into Russian-style ones is an accomplishment, but really inadequate for standing up to the West.
This isn't meant to be pessimism, or even bad-mouthing Russia. This problem occurred with lots of Western "help". I am, however, a bit disappointed that Putin has been unable to take more anti-neoliberal actions since the coup in Kiev. It is a bit demoralizing, and means that the phrase "Russian Spring" can now only be used in irony or sarcasm.
Eurasian
In many respects, Russia has been and continues to be a backward society. Unlike the rest of the civilized world, Russia was not been able to develop naturally in the modern period because of the utter devastation brought upon by Bolsheviks; the utter devastation brought upon by the Second World War; the isolation Russia was under during the Cold War; and the complete collapse of the Soviet system and its chaotic aftermath. So, for about one hundred years Russians have been primarily worried about survival in a very hostile world. Russia could not have develop naturally during this period, which is why it fell behind the Western world in many socioeconomic and sociopolitical aspects. Therefore, some aspects of Russian society will resemble the Third World.
DeleteThe good news it that Russians realize this. The better news is that President Putin, for all his military displays, is actually a reformist president. History will look at him as a great reformer of Russian society.
With that said, all societies, regardless of where they are, will have elites (i.e. oligarchs). In fact, it is natural for societies to have financial, economic and political elites. In fact, it's human. The problem with such elites is not their money, it's their politics. When Putin came to town, the elites he chased out were the ones working against Russian interests. In other words, he chased out the ones that had extensive dealings with Russia's enemies and competitors around the world and he put the rest under state control. Today, Russians who have large amounts of money stored in foreign accounts are constantly under surveillance by Russian security agencies.
But do you actually think oligarchs do not exist in the West? The fact is they do. The only difference between the Western oligarchs (the entrenched financial/political elite in the West) and Russian oligarchs is that Western oligarchs closely collaborate with their governments (one could say they have taken over Western governments), whereas Russian oligarchs are not as politically refined and they are not entrenched in Russian society. You could look at the difference between Western and Russian oligarchy as as the difference between old money and new money. Old money is always much more refined and politically wiser than new money.
I do not support Marxism. I am by nature and by preference a constitutional monarchist or national socialist. In my opinion, both of these models need an entrenched, national elite - be it financial, be it political - to operate well. I don't have problems with oligarchs if they are keeping their businesses and their the wealth at home; if they are subordinate to the government; and if they are collaborating with national security.
Speaking of Western "oligarchs" and how effectively they operate within the Western political order: Notice how in the following editorial one media oligarch - the Wall Street Journal - is calling on other Western oligarchs - Coca Cola, Adidas and Visa - to help Western powers take the 2018 World Cup away from Russia. This is how finely-tuned and highly-refined Western oligarchy has become. This is a result of generations of evolution: Old money. This is the kind of wealthy/influential oligarchy Russia (as well as nations like Armenia) needs to develop/evolve -
DeleteThe Ugly Game: FIFA should take a re-vote on the Qatar and Russia World Cups: http://www.wsj.com/articles/the-ugly-game-1433544430
Speaking of national socialism as a political model: I am glad Moscow has been heading in that direction for some time now, although for obvious reasons Russians would never label it as such. Nevertheless, reading between-the-lines of the rabidly anti-Putin Wall Street Journal article seen below, we cannot help but see a Russia where nationalism and socialism is developing quite fast and is serving Russia quite well. Consider the following excerpt from the article -
Delete“The government has two urgent tasks: strengthening security at all levels of society and promoting innovation to end the macroeconomic stagnation,” a Kremlin military adviser tells Bloomberg News this week. “The solution to both problems is to intensify the development of the military-industrial complex.” Putin himself, from the site of the recent winter Olympics, on which the regime spent $50 billion, told a meeting of the defense ministry leadership: “We can and must do for the defense industry what we did for Sochi. All questions relating to adequate resource allocation have been resolved.”
Putin’s Survival Strategy: Russia’s president clearly seems to be lifting strategies from the Hitler playbook, likely deliberately so: http://www.wsj.com/articles/putins-survival-strategy-1433543719
Yes, all countries have elites. But what has saved Russia is that some of them are out of the KGB or GRU or even the old Soviet Academy of Sciences. In the Ukraine, it was and is all oligarch, and with most of their money and muscle in the West. That is the difference. But I admit to having read too much Plato.
DeleteWhere we may disagree is that I have doubts that a nationally-minded oligarchy is possible these days. It somewhat exists in Thailand, but that seems a bit unusual to me. Maybe it exists in Turkey; I don't know. So let me give an example. A Russian oligarch with his kids in school in Western Europe gets his short-term financing from Western banks because the Russian system is intentionally dysfunctional and works for the interests of the West. This oligarch has business deals, such as a 50-50 media operation with, say, Hearst or Bertelsmann. The Western partner brings technology and PR help, but promotes the usual Kardashians and total distraction and dumbing down of the masses. The employees brought in from the West are probably full of agents and assets of some kind. Now, it is nice that this oligarch doesn't directly work for Langley, but the situation is practically a disaster for Russia. Allowing the "Western domination of the information field" is suicidal, of course, but the bigger point is that there are think tanks and serious groups within the West that study countries like a hunter studies his prey. Then they act, and this is how places like Libya or Syria or the Ukraine get destroyed. It is scientific. And a liberal like Putin needs to overcome his liberal tendencies because it is not like free trade between Chile or China, where there are not many desires on one side to dominate the other.
That WSJ article is interesting, though Jenkins is junk.
Eurasian
Eurasian, I totally agree with you. We all live in an Anglo-American-Jewish era in human history. Everything we do, we do in their bubble. We essentially live in the ecosphere they meticulously constructed throughout the 20th century. And therein lies the danger. We currently don't have the choice of living in another ecosphere (unless you want to move to North Korea). We currently have to live in this Western reality. But in doing so we also need to see it for what it is and do our part in rising awareness in hopes that someone, someday will put a stop to it. That someone is Russia and to a lesser extent China. Therefore, regardless of our personal biases - be it against Russians, be it against Chinese - we need to hope that Russians and the Chinese will manage to truly create a new, multipolar world order.
DeletePutin is in a difficult position because he understands that if Russia is to be saved it has no choice but to stand-up against the West - while at the same time make sure that Russia does not become too isolationistic and thus stagnant and backward. After all, by doing what they are doing, Western power are hoping to contain/isolate Russia from the rest of the world. Russians therefore shouldn't be helping Western powers in this regard by voluntarily isolating themselves from the rest of the world. In a sense, what Russia's current political elite is trying is a juggling act. Sometimes the things you are juggling will fall to the ground, but you don't have a choice so you keep juggling until the danger passes.
FIFA Confirms Russia Will Be Stripped Of 2018 World Cup If "Evidence Of Bribery" Emerges
Deletehttp://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-06-07/fifa-confirms-russia-will-be-stripped-2018-world-cup-if-evidence-bribery-emerges
What will happen to turkey?
ReplyDeleteKurds and Turkish opposition parties said no to the sultan dictator. After years of religious and political hypocrisy, the Islamic brotherhood of Turkey collects the votes of its core electorate base constituting a third of Turkish voters, and the votes of those opportunists who still thought the AKP was a winning card or where afraid from opposing the sultan. Today Erdogan got less than half of the Turkish voters (41%) and will fail to assemble a government,and may even decide to call for early elections in autumn, in which case he will loose even more votes and this marks the beginning of his fall. Erdogan can avoid this fate,only by treachery and bloodshed. Erdogan's dogs may initiate a number of bloody events in Kurdish provinces in order to cancel the results of the elections in those regions and stop the HDP from acquiring sufficient votes to enter the parliament.
Erdogan knows that he can, this time, steal the power in Turkey, but he will not succeed in amending the constitution that grants him permanent and favorable presidential powers. Erdogan knows that by stealing power he will put Turkey on the path of a civil war threatening its unity and stability. In any case, the role of Erdogan in Syria and the region will now shrink.
Here's a map of the elections outcome.
https://twitter.com/mathieuvonrohr/status/607623024481828864/photo/1
Our next war maybe very well be to the north. Georgians destroying their own country. How can they trust Turks? Putin gave Batumi back to Saakashvili so he could deliver it to turks.
ReplyDeletehttp://times.am/?p=129345&l=am
In hindsight, it would have been better if Adjaria had maintained its autonomy back in 2003/2004. While it seemed to be a logical/pragmatic step at the time, encouraging Aslan Abashidze to flee Georgia proved to be a bad decision by Moscow. Russia and Armenia would have been better off if Ajdaria had maintained its autonomy.
DeleteActually Batumi is a good example of what happens to areas next to Turkey when Russia pulls out and a traitor leader like Saakashili comes in. Pretty much most property in Batumi is now owned by turks. almost all business activities too. The damage is done and they can't get rid of them even if a new leaders come.
DeleteI want to emphasize over and over and over again that it was the EU above all which in the 1990s and early 2000s demanded that Georgia import the descendants of Meshketian Turks which Stalin had deported to Central Asia in 1944. The plan was very open to the public, calling for the Turks to be settled in Javakhk, the Armenian region of Georgia.
DeleteGeorgia also rearranged its administrative borders after the Soviet collapse, merging Armenian majority Javakhk region with the Georgian-majority Samstskhe region to invent a new province called Samtskhe-Javaketi. The capital of that province was moved to Akhaltsikhe in Samtskhe, where Armenians are only 37% of the population, instead of the city of Akhalkalak, which is in Javakhk and is almost completely Armenian.
Georgia, a micro-empire ruling over various minorities, strongly discriminates against Armenian language and culture inside of Javakhk, despite all of the Anglo-American-Kike bullshit about Georgia being a shining light of democracy and human rights in one of the world's darkest, Russian-occupied regions.
Armenians in the capital of Georgia before the Soviet period constituted either a plurality if not outright majority. They have since dwindled in numbers. The Georgian Orthodox Church has confiscated many medieval Armenian churches which had been shut down during the Soviet period. In many cases they have destroyed Armenian inscriptions on churches and replaced them with new Georgian inscriptions. Georgian church and political leaders have also destroyed Armenian cemeteries and kachkars.
Saakashvili built his hideous presidential palace in Tblisi's Havlabar district, which was the old Armenian town. It was conveniently built over destroyed Armenian buildings, as well as over Armenian graves which were ripped out of the ground. Same story with Georgia's Sameba Cathedral, which was built between 1995 and 2004 as Georgia's shitty attempt to give their shitty church something comparable to Echmiadzin.
Finally, Georgia is saturated beyond salvation by western and kike interests. They are NATO's trojan horse in the region. Anti-Russian and anti-Armenian hatred flows throughout the Georgian body, it is a genetic and cultural disease which cannot be cured. It gives Georgians a predisposition to worshipping Turks, Jews, and westerners.
There is no other option. Armenia and Russia must dismantle Georgia permanently.
Incidentally, some of the diasporan Armenian cyber-warriors in Los Angeles and elsewhere in the west absolutely worship Georgia for its achievements in democracy. Our old friend, Glendale faggot Kevin Abrahamian is a prime example. Of course Kevin is just a barking dog (poodle) who will never actually influence the Armenian state in any way, but it offers yet more proof that the westernized diaspora is a danger to Armenia, and actually in bed with Armenia's enemies. But its not just the diaspora, Armenia's longest serving CIA agent, Paruhi Hayrikyan also sings the praises of Georgians (and Azeris and NATO!) in his delusional rants that focus on the KGB still being out to get him.
BTW, Georgians are faggots and cowards on the battle field. They have a tendency of abandoning their weapons and running away. We saw this in the failed War of Georgian Aggression against South Ossetia in 2008. The German's also tragically experienced Georgian treachery during World War 2:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgian_uprising_on_Texel
Don't let the western spin on Wikipedia fool you, Georgian soldiers attacked sleeping Germans. They are no better than Azeri axe murderer and national hero ramil safarov... Come to think about it, between their willingness to destroy Armenian churchs, gaves, buildings and monuments; their habit of murdering people who are asleep; and their habit of fleeing the battlefield in war they started, I really see no differences between Georgians and Azeris.
re: "There is no other option. Armenia and Russia must dismantle Georgia permanently."
DeleteSo why did Russia accept such a lame settlement to the 2008 war? They could have taken more territory for Abkhazia and Ossetia, for starters. And why not demand autonomy for Javakh? I guess my question comes down to the old saying "If you are going to kick a dog, kick it good and hard." Leaving Georgia with Saakhashvili in charge and the NATO/Western interests more-or-less everywhere, just left an angry dog. Saakhashvili seems to be an energetic man, who can now work his magic near Odessa. And Russia is still left with the problem of poor access to Armenia.
So perhaps they "must" dismantle Georgia, but will they? For that matter, will Armenia help? I saw today that Russian troops were doing a very large drill with drones in Ossetia, so that might be a sign.
Eurasian
Eurasian, Sarkis is merely expressing a wish many Armenians have these days due to Georgia's hostility and Turcophilia.
DeleteWith that said, there was no "lame settlement" back in 2008. Russia achieved its primary objective: The liberation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Politics, let lone war against a nation backed by major powers, is not a domestic dispute nor is it a street brawl. There are serious geopolitical and economic considerations and calculations behind every political move. In a nutshell: Moscow did not want to bite more than it could chew, especially back then when it had only recently begun making international waves. A Russian occupation of Georgia proper for instance may have been disastrous for Moscow, especially back then when it was considerably weaker than it is now. Even now, you see Moscow acting very cautiously in Eastern Ukraine.
The same applies to Western powers: Look at how cautious they have been against Iran and Syria. This all boils down to one thing: An overly ambitious step by a major power can lead to a world war. Nobody wants a world war. Dismantling anything - be it Georgia, be it Azerbaijan, bet it Turkey, be it Armenia - is a contingency plan major powers have but they reserve it for use only as a last resort.
Anyway, the rumor back in 2008 was that Putin had indeed asked official Yerevan to open up a front in Javakhq. Perhaps not knowing how easily the Georgian military was going to be defeated, Russians wanted Armenians to open a southern front to divert Georgian forces. According to the rumor: Yerevan categorically refused. Although I personally would have wanted to see an Armenian uprising in Javakhq, I nevertheless cant blame Yerevan for refusing to do so. Not knowing the ultimate objective of Moscow,Yerevan did not want to move against Georgia and risk losing its only lifeline to Russia and Europe. Such a move would have also risked seriously angering Western powers. I think a double blockade is bad enough. A triple blockade - as well as ruined/hostile relations with the West - may have ruined Armenia.
Ultimately, a southern front proved unnecessary because after the third/fourth day of the war the Georgian army had been totally defeated and Abkhazia and South Ossetia were safely in Russian hands. So, had Yerevan opened up a front in Javakhq, a whole new can of worms would have been unleashed and Armenia may very well have been in a very serious predicament today. We can of course speculate here that Russia would have, might have come to Armenia's aid... but all that, like I said, would be mere speculation.
Eurasian if you've noticed Russia under Putin never escalates until it is absolutely necessary. Georgia was radically anti-Russian from day one following the coup d'état which placed Saakashvili in power. There were minor clashes and diplomatic chest-pounding from the Georgian monkies for nearly five years before they crossed the line and Moscow responded, and even then like you said it was a rather limited operation.
DeleteWe can only guess why the Russians calculated this way. I suppose Moscow did not want to give the old continental European powers (namely France, Germany, and to a lesser extent Italy) a reason to totally cut relations back then, just like Moscow does not want Europe to totally cut relations today despite the western assault on Ukraine. Even during the rape of Serbia in 1999 Moscow did not go out of its way to punish Europe. There are probably many reasons for this:
-Maybe Moscow felt that it was not yet economically, militarily, societally, or politically ready at the time to enter a new Cold War.
-European countries are physically closer to Russia and they share a long history of political maneuvering, not to mention a lot of trade. Occupying all of Georgia would have created much more severe hardships back then.
-Occupying Georgia would have breathed new life into NATO and united them behind a common anti-Russian position. I remember back during 2008 France and Germany were the leading NATO voices that opposed membership for Georgia, it was the usual degenerate faggots (US, Britain, Poland, the Baltics) that were loudly calling for the so-called GUUAM (Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, Moldova) to be annexed into NATO. And this was at a time when the US presence in former-Soviet Central Asian states was much stronger than it is now, before Putin's Russia kicked the US military out of bases like Manas Air Base in Kyrgyzstan... Also note that if NATO were solidly united in an anti-Russian alliance because of Georgia, Turkey's importance would skyrocket due to its geo-location.
-At the end of the day, Russia liberated Abkhazia and South Ossetia, neutered the homoerotic Georgian military, absolutely destroyed any hope that Georgia would enter NATO, created a rift between the slightly more sensible old Europe (France and Germany) and the total basket case queers in the Anglo-American bloc and their new Eastern European vassals. And Russia kindly left the job of paying to rebuild a tattered Georgia to the west. And Russia now had a sledgehammer it could use in negotiations with the west, namely the threat of finishing Saakashvili off and showing the west to be impotent once again for the whole world to see. The invasion as it was carried out accomplished everything that was necessary.
-Additionally, Moscow may have calculated that since Georgian society itself had been so infected by western agents, money, NGOs, and media that it had inherently become anti-Russian. So Moscow may have figured it would be best to leave the Saakashvili regime in power for another couple of years knowing that Georgian living standards would never evolve and eventually Georgians themselves would get tired of Saakashvili's nepotism and failure to solve the country's many acute problems. Besides, all Georgia was doing was getting itself into debt with western institutions which it would never be able to escape; and bankrupt debt slaves are much easier to control.
We're having a very similar discussion here that Russian nationalists have on "why didn't Putin just take over all of Novorossiya or Ukraine militarily", or that Armenians have about "why didn't we just conquer all of Azerbaijan militarily". Sure these are nice scenarios, but the reasons in real life have hundreds of factors to consider, and rational governments will often take an extremely conservative and risk-averse approach to these decisions. And honestly that is a much better option than gambling everything and risking total loss like our friend Saakashvili. Besides, patience is a virtue; sooner or later the divisions among western factions will become more severe, and Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbiajian and others will be brought back in line.
DeleteI agree with Arevordi. When I say Javakhq needs to be liberated, I mean in a strategic, long-term, well-planned goal. Armenia restrains its conduct with Azerbaijan, a country with which Armenia is engaged in a low-intensity war at the moment, so don't expect Yerevan to open any other fronts anytime soon. If a major war breaks out in the region, which I pray does not happen, only then the calculations can change.
DeleteHypothetical: I'm just speculating here, but Armenia could probably defeat Georgia militarily without too many problems and liberate Javakhq if it wanted to do so in the immediate future. But like Arevordi said, the geopolitical repercussions at this point in time would be immense - enough to make this scenario completely unreal for the time being. The west and their Turkic allies would come down on Armenia with extreme intensity. The west and the Turks/Azeris would be infinitely more challenging than Georgia. The Dram (Armenian currency) would be attacked, the NGOs and propaganda rags would be activated, sanctions would be enacted, Turkey and Azerbaijan would be reinforces and encouraged by the west to harass Armenia (since they would consider this a liberated Javakhq a Russian victory as much as an Armenian victory), etc. Armenia's weak economy and extremely tight geopolitical situation would make this an existential threat to Armenia... I don't think that even Moscow would want to deal with such a hypothetical scenario right now when it has its hands full, because it could ultimately be dragged into a regional war.
The above may or may not be a slipper-slope, but it highlights the present danger in the region. And why it took something as extreme as Sasakashvili's 2008 invasion to trigger a sufficient Russian response. It's not for nothing that Moscow keeps telling Azerbaijan "whoever restarts a military conflict in Artsakh will be the losing party", and it helps explain why Armenia is so extremely restrained in responding to Azeri provocations, even when Azerbaijan launches nightly infiltration attempts or shoots down a helicopter. The above also helps highlight why nationalist nutjobs (well-intentioned or not) are among the greatest dangers for Armenia.
Anyway my original intent was to point out that Armenia would benefit with Javakhq because the region is almost all Armenian populated and it would help Armenia demographically. The region is in danger because west and Tblisi are interested in Turkifying Javakhq. And also I wanted to remind Armenians that while Hetq and Armenianow and the other western media are busy training young Armenians to worship Georgia, in reality Georgians are extremely hostile to Armenian people and culture.
ps Armenians should lobby extra hard to the Kremlin for significant numbers of advanced weapons like missiles, artillery, tanks, S-400s, etc. to make sure that Armenia can keep the Azeris and Turks at bay if the need arises for Armenia to open additional fronts in future conflicts.
Sarkis and Arevordi,
DeleteOh, I generally agree with what you wrote, and was exaggerating a bit due to the nature of the text in question. However, I wouldn't take the comparison with Novorossiya too far. Occupying half or all of the Ukraine would have been a disaster, so the only options were to try to lead a quick operation with people like Yanukovich for a a quick victory and a new election, one that Russia would not be happy with, or a more local operation, which is what they did. In the case of Georgia, however, Russia could have pulled out a week or two later after perhaps modifying the borders of Abkhazia or Ossetia, or even getting an agreement that Adjara and Javakh had autonomy of some sort. My bet is simply that the Kremlin and Russian elite circles were and are full of those who desperately want the "convergence" with Europe they have been seeking since the days of Andropov. I doubt they can ever get it. Russian elites don't seem to understand that they simply don't fit in with the Western paradigm. First of all, the Western model is to steal natural resources, usually with the use of a dictator, but someone like Yeltsin would suffice. Next, Russia simply can't stop important plans, such as with Syria and Iran. What kind of compromise is possible there? Finally, Russia keeps talking about equality, and Aslund even complained about it. There is no equality in the EU - they do what they are told. Russia cannot be any different.
In any case, Russia did achieve the main goals of the operation. No question. Perhaps my American mind always sees the logic in "never let a good crisis go to waste".
Where I may disagree with you is that I doubt the psychology will play out the way the Kremlin may hope, and I also doubt that economic problems in either the Ukraine or Georgia will really change the situation fast enough to work in Russia's favor. The US can and has kept rotten governments, such as Guatemala, in power for decades during civil wars and outright ethnic murder campaigns. Also, people who are suffering will search for scapegoats, and Russia is the best of them all. Russia could certainly carry out a destabilization campaign to bring down Kiev, but that is a different matter.
By the way, it is an open question as to whether Putin's approach of waiting till the last minute to escalate has worked properly. Russia has tolerated absurd abuses in the Baltic states and the Ukraine. The response was to turn the other cheek, all in the spirit of working with their European partners. To me, all of these cases of turning the other cheek illustrate weakness, a weakness that would help to convince typical Westerners of the logic of going to war with Russia in a non-nuclear way. Yes, a common home from Lisbon to Vladivostok would be a good idea, but first we should smash Russia to get the resources and abolish their nukes.
Eurasian
PS That is an interesting story about a possible Armenian front during the 2008 war. It might not be true, however, as has been pointed out here, Russia is fairly conservative, and would have had to deal with an Armenian-Georgian state of hostility after the immediate problem had been resolved.
re: possible turmoil in Georgia
DeleteArmenia should get its plans in place, because the Western Empire may want to cause trouble for Russia in as many places as possible at the same time, and Georgia seems more likely than Azerbaijan. The Aliyev clan and their allies have a lot to lose, and may not want to spend the rest of their days in Istanbul. Georgia, on the other hand, could be manipulated in a lot of ways that would force Russia's hands. A few bribes or threats might be all it would take. And, of course, one wonders how the key institutions such as the police or internal security stand. If they have American passports and have lived near DC, then it is a card that the US can play whenever they want.
Sarkis, about your point of Turkic and Western hostility if and when Armenia ever makes a move, well, Turkey is already pretty hostile, but what choice have you got? Armenia and Russia are both destined to have lots of friends when they are weak and desperate, and not so many when they are healthy and prosperous. And, doesn't the proposed gas pipeline go through Javakh? That would mean the West would have to pretend to stay friends. But this all begs a further question. If Armenia were to take Javakh, would that be enough? Don't you need access to the sea or to Russia?
Eurasian
I think the author of this article was in Armenia not long ago.
ReplyDeletehttp://russia-insider.com/en/politics/if-us-succeeds-luring-belarus-and-armenia-russia-trouble/ri7607
This article comes merely days after the same author wrote another article titled "The US Is Trying to Pry Armenia out of Russia's Orbit". I personally think Korybko is intentionally fearmongering because he can't be so gullible as to think that Armenia's ties to Russia is that vulnerable. So, what's his ulterior motive? I don't know, but his bio is interesting: "Andrew [Korybko] is a political analyst who writes extensively on Russian international relations. He is a specialist on Middle Eastern politics, Central Asia, and Eastern Europe. He is a frequent commentator on TV and radio. Originally from Cleveland, Ohio, he is currently completing graduate studies in international relations at Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO)".
DeleteI also felt that his article was not accurate, he blamed Sargsyan for the trip to USA. That trip had no hidden agenda. Sargsyan was there for AG events. And just because McCain came over and took a picture while he was in Congress doesn't mean at all that Sargsyan doesn't realize who McCain is.
DeleteMy opinion is Armenia will NEVER EVER even think about leaving Russia's orbit it's impossible.
DeleteIt's just not possible no matter who writes what. I don't know much about Belarus but if Armenia left Russia we would not exist. You don't need to be a brain surgeon to work it out that Russia runs the South and will continue doing this.
Honestly i would say Russia would go to WW3 for Armenia over any of it's other ally countries Armenia is very important for Moscow and vis versa.
His bio reads like a CIA poster... WTF is a guy from Cleveland of all places doing in Moscow, a rare academic choice, even for a yuppy grad student.
DeleteArevordi or Sarkis or ?,
ReplyDeleteThe Saker at The Vineyard of the Saker is fairly well-known in Anti-Anglo-Zionist Empire matters, and is looking for someone to write a weekly update on things in the Caucasus. If anyone is interested, look at:
http://thesaker.is/saker-message-to-the-readers-tons-of-thanks-details-and-a-wish-list/
Eurasian
Thanks for the offer but I simply don't have the time for it. I periodically monitor his site for relevant information about the war in Ukraine. I like much of what he has to say. But I have also noticed that he is somewhat indifferent towards Armenian matters. Even in his "wish list" he is more interested in Chechnya. Moreover, I am not totally enamored by him because I sense something fishy. In other words, I don't think he is operating on his own. He could be a Russian sponsored operation, he could be a Western sponsored operation. I have no way of knowing. In any case, I tend to stay clear of people who I don't think are independent operators - regardless of their politics.
DeleteSame here, thanks for the offer but I'm going to have a very busy summer. I don't want to commit to something I can't handle.
DeleteAmerica is a disgrace to the planet. Our old friend ted "the cuban queer" cruz is in this clip.
ReplyDeleteElections For Jews Only
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVNR9LOEGbk&list=UUtBqVgzL_cDv_t9o2hFiXXg&index=1
Can anyone explain what has happened on the ground in turkey? With the loss of seats for Erdogan, Armenians are hoping that things are about to change. Whereas I'm doubtful that anything could happen in our favor, even if Kurds gain more power. But I would like to hear the regular commenter's opinions on this matter
ReplyDeleteAlso, an interesting interview:
The US, Russia may be closer together politically than many people think
http://www.russia-direct.org/qa/us-russia-may-be-closer-together-politically-many-people-think
Erdogan is losing power to Kurds. For me any kind of unstability in Turkey is good for Armenia in indirect way.
DeleteQuestion: what is Azerbaijan's relationship with the Kurds like?
DeleteI have a funny feeling azerbaijan will try something after the fake baku games. I have a few family members serving in armenian army currently from what i been told we do have Iskander-M in our control & 102 base has it's own.
DeleteGev
Anonymous (June 9, 2015 at 10:17 AM), what you say is true but realize that the Aliyev clan are decedents of Nakhijevani Kurds.
DeleteSvediatsi, Erdogan essentially lost the carte blanche he has had in Ankara since he has been in power. But that does not mean anything of real political substance will change in Ankara with regards to Turkish-Armenian relations. If Armenians think Turkey is changing for the better, it simply means that after all these years Armenians are still being stupid about Turks. In my opinion, people like Erdogan is what we Armenians should want to see in power in Ankara because ultimately, like Arto suggested, what we want is a Turkey run by extremists or a Turkey that is politically unstable.
DeleteArevordi, thanks for the reply.
DeleteI forgot to make myself clear. Though you touched on that subject at the end in your reply. Don't you think that this whole Erdogan's loss of power is sort of a punishment to him by the West for trying to build closer ties to Russia?
As we know, Russian-Turkish cooperation has increased since the sanctions, be it food exports or the new Turkish-Stream pipeline plan.
Although I doubt that it would happen, don't the results of the elections signal that Turkey can easily be destabilized by the west if they really want it to, as a last resort?
Svediatsi, there is no doubt that Western powers have been looking to punish Erdogan for his real and perceived political independence for a long time now. There is also no doubt that Western powers are using young/left-wing/liberal/progressive Turks to do their dirty work against him, similar to what they do against targeted nations around the world. But I highly doubt that Western powers are trying to actually destabilize Turkey as a nation. Can they do so? Theoretically, yes. Will they? No, at least not for the foreseeable future. Therefore, what's happening in Turkey may very well be encouraged/orchestrated by Western powers as a punishment against Erdogan, but it has nothing to do with Turkey per se. Once more: Their problem is Erdogan's increasingly belligerent administration, not NATO member Turkey.
DeleteMuch ado about nothing. Erdogans party won the election. The other small parties that got elected will not affect Turkish politics. There is much glee in the fact that three Armenians got elected into parliament. Armenians in turkey ( personal impression based on experience in having dealt with many of them) are thoroughly turkified. They may have the Ian in their names, but any familiarity stops there. Therefore the election of these Turks with Ian names means little for Armenia. Some of them have even changed their names. Watch some of the sporting matches between Armenian Turks and others in national games and you find that there has been a brawl or animosity in those matches. Notorious was the basket match in 2011 where a row erupted, blows exchanged and the USA hyer hurled invectives to "you are Turks". The big question regarding Erdogan is that he's riled the Jewish masters, but the Jews have not responded in kind. Other heads of state have lost their jobs for similar behavior.
DeleteThe west will not give up on trying to create a rift between natural allies Armenia and Russia. Look at this psych-op conducted by the western-own NGO "civilitas", and then re-reported by western-owned "eurasianet.org".
ReplyDeletehttp://www.civilitasfoundation.org/cf/component/content/article/36-commentary/890-national-security-and-foreign-military-bases-in-armenia-public-discussion-and-opinion-poll-report.html
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/73801
The poll was conducted by the Armenian NGO Civilitas Foundation with support from the German and Norwegian governments. I'm sure the numbers were exaggerated. Also, I'm sure the way the questions were posed to the audience was loaded, because I doubt only 38% of the audience would say Armenia needs assistance against Turkey.
Here's an idea: a more reliable source like Sputnik Armenia or Novosti Armenii conduct a poll and ask relevant questions like these below:
-"Armenians, how do you feel about the fact that when a Turkish F-4 Phantom II was shot down in Syria back in June 2012, America and European NATO members rushed to Turkey and reinforced their military on the Syrian border with advanced weapons"
-"Armenians, would you accept sexual perversions like homosexuality and transsexuals as the west does, including a 100% positive portrayal in all the media of news and entertainment, including specifically targeting young children with the idea that such perversions are not only normal but actually desirable?"
-"Armenians, do you agree that Armenia is not diverse enough (97% ethnic Armenian, over 90% Armenian Apostolic Christian), and desperately needs "vibrancy" like the west enjoys that could only come from massive immigration from Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and even Central America of people who are biologically and culturally incompatible with Armenians?
It's typical Western style psy-ops. The author is either an idiot or he is simply assuming his readers are stupid when he raises the question about: how could Armenians want to ensure Armenia's security themselves at the same time have no problems with hosting a Russian base? I'm no genius but could it be that Armenians naturally want to protect their homeland themselves but realizing the limits of their capabilities want assistance from their Russian ally? There are no "mixed views" here but there is no doubt that the survey was manipulated.
DeletePS: If he wants to see "mixed views" and down-right hostility to a foreign military presence, the asshole who wrote this piece should instead review similar surveys conducted in dozens of nations around the world that host multiple American military bases. He can start in Japan and Korea - Marines Go Home: Anti-Base Activism in Okinawa, Japan and Korea: http://japanfocus.org/-Kageyama-Asako/3335/article.html
Civil as and Eurasian org , their questioning of Armenia is not diverse needs a strong refutal and riposte such as they have never heard of before. we do not need vibrancy through the degenerate, dystopic and dysgenic immigration . Immigration no longer exists in the XXi century. The word immigration is a euphemism for invasion. This is the unavoidable consequences of the dysgenic destruction of the biological genus of the Europid. Racial obliteration, Armenian is born Armenian, is not manufactured. For centuries we resisted turkification and succeeded. They must not come now with grandiose schemes of diversification and afroasianization of the motherland. The challenge to preserve our identity and culture and prevent genetic pollution is of Herculean proportions. They, the enemy, can siphon off millions of "refugees" and invaders into any targeted area almost at will. The grand kabbalistic program is population replacement and bastardization of the Euripid. Anon
Delete@Arevordi, Thanks for the article. The following sentence near the end of the article summed things up pretty nicely:
DeleteFurthermore, Misawa is currently being used as a forward staging area for bombing missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.14 These developments illustrate that US forces are not in Japan for the protection of Japan or peace and stability in Asia, but for the projection of American power throughout Asia and the Pacific, even to the Middle East.
@Anonymous:
I made the questions up to demonstrate areas in critical areas regarding national security and self-preservation in which Armenia, with its weak economy, barbaric neighbors, and still immature socio-political systems is way ahead of the west. However, these is absolutely no basis for wasting time and energy arguing about immigration in Armenia simply because it will never happen. If you want to take a constructive approach to preventing the danger of demographic-shifting immigration affecting Armenia, take your rage and unleash it on all of Armenia's pro-west activists, because the only entity pushing that globalist agenda inside Armenia is the west. Your past comments on this topic, such as the claim that Armenia's weak economy is somehow a "good thing" because it discourages immigration, have been self-destructive and motivated by fear and a lack of understanding and depth regarding Armenia. Armenians do not suffer from the effects of 70+ years of Anglo-American-Jewish propaganda, and therefore are still able to understand nuanced concepts such as the genetic/biological differences between races and sexes.
The "Euripids" can do whatever the hell they want. Armenia will not miss them; Turkey and Israel's artificial existence as regional powers and even as states, however, would quickly come to an end of the "Euripids" were no longer around to prop them up.
Evangelicals Open Door to Debate on Gay Rights
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/09/us/some-evangelicals-take-new-look-at-bibles-stance-on-gays.html?_r=0
More evidence that Armenia made the right civilizational choice in allying with Russia. And more evidence that the west is now rotten at its core. Every evangelical I have ever met has looked down on Armenian culture and the Armenian Apostolic Church as "not being true Christians or not being true to the Word of God", being over-pagan influenced, being overly ceremonial/ritualistic, etc. I have no problems seeing evangelical "Chrsitianity" taken the path towards self-destruction. I won't miss them, but the Jews and Turks will definitely miss them because evangelicals are the best allies Jews and Turks have.
Incidentally, here are the ukrs getting some of that hard-earned freedom:
Ukraine's president voices LGBT support in a first for the country
http://mashable.com/2015/06/05/ukraines-poroshenko-supports-pride-parade-in-kiev/
Yet another interesting article appearing in Russia Direct. The analyst is a Turk who seems to long for closer relations with Russia:
ReplyDelete"Regarding the repercussions of the latest elections on Turkish-Russian relations, the results will affect ongoing relations negatively since the pro-Kurdish party, with its strong support from the West, could destabilize the country and this, in turn, could harm the economic interests of Russia in Turkey.
One should also observe that Erdoğan, who has started to move closer to Moscow in recent months and is a personal friend of Russian President Vladimir Putin, is losing power in Turkey. Moreover, all other opposition parties and some groups within AKP that are hostile to Erdoğan, are also cautious about relations with Russia.
Most importantly, with the entrance of HDP to the Parliament with 80 deputies out of 550, a one-party and stable government is not possible in the long run. The coalitions will be politically more fragile against foreign pressures in this new Turkish balance of power. Therefore, a coalition government is unlikely to take strategic decisions easily for projects like the Turkish Stream pipeline."
(Geopolitically wise, the following part is interesting to consider)
"The only winner of the elections is the pro-Kurdish HDP, which doubled its share of the votes from 6.5 percent to over 13 percent. Besides its classical secular vote base in eastern parts of the country, HDP won the overwhelming support of religious Kurds, who were voting for AKP before. Now, from the Turkish-Georgian boundary to the Turkish-Syrian border, the HDP is the dominant power. Moreover, it also increased its votes in the western part of the country."
http://www.russia-direct.org/opinion/turkeys-elections-could-result-weaker-russian-turkish-ties
Back to Artsakh.
ReplyDeleteWhat do you guys think about this?
http://news.am/arm/news/271201.html
Gev
There's always a chance Aliyev will order an increase in the number and intensity of the subversive attacks Azerbaijan carries out on the frontlines against Armenia and Artsakh. It helps keep Azeris focused on an external enemy, rather than the fact that Aliyev and co. have largely robbed Azerbaijan of the billions of dollars in oil wealth that was promised over the past two decades. If Aliyev orders more raids against Armenia, he will fail to accomplish anything; in fact the Azeri casualties will just mount up and Baku will have a hard time hiding their losses, because you can't really expect people to believe that 100 Azeri soldiers died in car accidents, drownings, and rare infectious diseases during the same period where Aliyev is claiming that Azerbaijan scored a massive victory against an Armenian raiding party while suffering zero Azeri casualties. In fact, Armenian military officials have in recent months promised to launch more punitive retaliatory attacks against Azerbaijan, to cause them ten deaths for every Armenian soldier which is killed.
DeleteAll of that being said, it has been a topic of discussion since at least 2007 that when Azerbaijan's economic oil boom passes its peak, and they start running out of money and protests start all over the country, it will be the most dangerous period in the region. We are now entering that period because oil prices have dropped, oil production in Azerbaijan has been dropping for years, and Baku squandered most of its wealth. They have a bunch of ugly office buildings in the center of Baku and other large cities, and they now assemble shitty Israeli-designed drones and South African MRAPs, but most by and large most Azeris haven't seen their share of the billions, and Azerbaijan's economy and exports are still very, very strongly based on the energy industry. So at the very least we can expect tensions to rise sharply in Azerbaijan in the immediate future. Azeri security forces will have to start cracking down on larger and larger numbers of dissidents.
But to address the article directly: I doubt anything too major will happen when the Olympic games in Baku end. Also note that I don't think anyone wants to deal with another war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, not Russia with its hands full in Syria and Ukraine, and probably not the US either between American investments in Azeri pipelines pumping oil and gas to the EU and also the very real threat of Russia, Iran, Turkey/NATO, and Georgia getting involved if a conflict breaks out of control.
Anyway Armenia and Artsakh need to be militarily prepared, and I am confidant that our leaders are doing everything necessary.
The Azeries have shut down the offices of the OSCE. Is the West losing its leverage in Azeriland ? There is speculation that Russia want to integrate Azeriland into the EEUU. They can do that, but they better understand that the Karabakh question is no longer an issue. Azeries will never ever return to Artsaj. The connundrum gets intersting. The West ( USA-EU-Israel) will not take it graciously to any lessening t of their influence and " control" in Azerbaijan. If alyev tilts toward Russia, the West will look to become more enmeshed in Armenia. . It is quite sinister in a way that it has been a week ? that we have not had any news of Azeries incursions into Artsaj . Piper
DeleteThe time to seriously address the festering conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan may be nearing because with the creation of the Eurasian Economic Union and with the on-going crisis in Ukraine, Moscow may be ready to seriously seek the settlement of one of the region's most serious hotspots. Although the status quo is something Moscow can certainly live with, solving the problem may now better serve Russia's longer term interests in the region. Therefore, Russia and the West are both vying for influence over the settlement process. They both want to impact its outcome. When the West was on the verge of a major breakthrough, the October 27 assassinations took place and the matter was put back on the shelf. Today, a resurgent Russia stands poised to broker a final settlement and the West does not like it. They may therefore try to sabotage it if a settlement becomes imminent. Nevertheless, here is an interesting Western article on the matter -
DeleteAmerica Must Stop Ignoring the South Caucasus: http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/america-must-stop-ignoring-the-south-caucuses-13093
http://arka.am/en/news/politics/festive_event_held_in_erebuni_airport_in_armenia_ahead_of_day_of_russia_/
ReplyDeleteI am happy things like this are being organized
I couldn't agree more Arto. I'm glad to see the Russians being more proactive, and I am especially glad to see the Russian military working on its public image after the Permyakov tragedy.
DeleteUstinov said Russians and Armenians have plenty in common – they together won the victory in the Great Patriotic War (World War II).
These truths need to be emphasized over and over again. Many young Armenians, at least in the diaspora, do not understand the proper historical context in which to view World War II. Either they are outright Nazi sympathizers who lump all the Allies (including the hundreds of thousands of Soviet Armenians who served and sacrificed their lives) as Jew/Bolshevik/Communists, or otherwise they fall for the US propaganda that Britain bravely held out against Germany until the invasion of Normandy, and then the Anglo-Americans did the heavy lifting and defeated Germany largely on their own. Armenian heroes from World War II need to be emphasized as greatly building on the foundations which were laid at Sardarapat, Vanadzor, and Abaran in 1918, and ultimately laid the framework for the victorious liberation campaign in Artsakh in 1988-1994.
Why Are the Caucasus Hosting So Many Joint Military Exercises?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.silkroadreporters.com/2015/06/09/why-are-the-caucasus-hosting-so-many-joint-military-exercises/
I don't have to make any appeals to emotion, I don't even have to highlight past, unresolved grievances Armenia has against Georgia. The facts simply speak for themselves: There exist two, mutually-exclusive camps in the world; Georgia falls in one of those camps, and it is shared with Azerbaijan, Turkey, Israel, the EU, NATO, the USA, and the rest of the Anglosphere; Armenia falls into the opposing camp, and that camp includes Russia and a few other allies (with some seats reserved for natural members such as Cyprus and Serbia).
Day of Infamy: The Attack on the U.S.S. Liberty
ReplyDeletehttp://nationalvanguard.org/2015/06/day-of-infamy-the-attack-on-the-u-s-s-liberty/
The 48th Anniversary of the Jewish attack on the USS Liberty, and the incredibly cowardly and disgusting nonresponse of the US government, was four days ago.
Interesting article on Noravank about Turkish Military modernization Program until 2033. Noravank now has english language section with some interesting articles worth checking out.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.noravank.am/arm/articles/detail.php?ELEMENT_ID=13567
another good news
ReplyDeletehttp://armenpress.am/eng/news/808708/armenia-received-more-amount-of-money-from-eeu-common-budget-than-gave.html
ARF: IF RUSSIAN MP WANTS KARABAKH, LET HIM TRY TO TAKE IT
ReplyDelete12:38, 12.06.2015
Region:Armenia, Karabakh, Azerbaijan, Russia
Theme: Politics
YEREVAN. - If the Russian deputy believes that Karabakh should be
returned to Azerbaijan, let him come and take it, secretary of ARF
Dashnaktsutyun party Aghvan Vardanyan said coming on the remark by
Russian MP Dmitry Savelyev.
According to Azerbaijani media, Savelyev said that seven regions
of Nagorno-Karabakh have to be handed over to Azerbaijan. No such
statement was published by Russian media or on the personal website
of the MP.
"The meaning of these words for us is zero, just as the position of
Savelyev," Vardanyan emphasized.
http://news.am/eng/news/271427.html
Foremost, we should not get into the habit of quoting Azeri/Turkish press sources because we know they are notorious for making things up. With that said, we also know that there are Russians tasked with giving lip service to Azeris and Turks. It's their version of complimentary politics. What such individuals say about Artsakh should be taken with a grain of salt because we know that official Moscow wants Artsakh to remain in Armenian hands, we also know that the last thing Russia wants is to strengthen Turks and Muslims in the South Caucasus. If you want to know what's Moscow's position regarding Artskah, look at the situation on the ground. The situation on the ground strongly favors Armenians. Nevertheless, I was very pleased with the way Aghvan Vardanyan reacted to Azeri press release. He was wise/mature enough not to attack Russia or Moscow, he simply signaled out the individual for criticism. With that said, it is most probable that Savelyev's comments were misrepresented by Azeris.
DeleteSaakashvili has been appointed governor of Odessa. Besides the embarrassment of having a non-Ukrainian citizen appointed as governor, besides the silliness of a wanted criminal being appointed as governor (I guess it suits the Kiev junta), besides the retardedness of having a fat, tie-eating, warmonger who already got his ass handed to him by Russia barely seven years ago being appointed as governor in a regime determined to go to war with Russia, besides the irony of having a South Caucasian (with probable Jewish admixture) serving as governor in "nationalist-led free Ukraine", I have to wonder. Odessa has a very large number of ethnic Russians, in Odessa city 78% of the population speak Russian at home compared to 6% who speak Ukrainian at home, and 15% who speak both languages. What are the odds that Saakashvili will be killed sometime soon, either by Odessian patriots or as a sacrifice by his western puppet masters looking for a pretext to escalate the situation?
ReplyDeleteRussian speaking does not necessarily mean ethnic Russians. I don't know what the numbers are today but during Soviet times a majority of Odessa's population was of Jewish ancestry. I would guess even today the city has a significant Jewish presence.
DeleteOdessa is a criminal city, just like Chicago was. Number of multiethnic clans control all commerce, jews traditionally had a bigger say. Saakashvili will have to share money with all of them to survive. I think americans are tired of him, why not send him there to get rid of him. It's a perfect setup to blame Russians.
DeleteThat's true. Wikipedia states that the population is ethnically a 1/3 Russian and 2/3 Ukrainian, citing the 2001 Ukrainian census, with a shrinking jew population:
Delete(2001 Odessa city)
Ukrainians: 622,900 people (61.6%)
Russians: 292,000 people (29.0%)
Bulgarians: 13,300 people (1.3%)
Jews: 12,400 people (1.2%)
Moldovans: 7,600 people (0.7%)
Belarusians: 6,400 people (0.6%)
Armenians: 4,400 people (0.4%)
Poles: 2,100 people (0.2%)
No doubt that the Jews are still a significant, subversive presence.
Anyway, I'm sure Odessa's quarter-million or so Russians are divided into various political factions but even then, I would assume at least some percentage of Russians have retained their sense of self-preservation, and can comprehend that the Kiev junta, the ukr nationalist nutjobs, the jewish oligarchy in Ukraine, and other western agents (specially saakashvili) would like nothing more than to inflict genocide on Russians. Under such circumstances, saakashvili must feel like he is a target every time he steps out in public, regardless of how many security guards he has around him. I'm not saying that anything will definitely happen, but the risk seem higher than average.
This conversation reminded me of the Pale of Settlement (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_of_Settlement). No wonder Ukrainians, Poles, and Baltic peoples are so screwed up.
DeleteI wouldn't trust Wikipedia on anything that matters to the Anglo-Zionist Empire. I read that a Russian equivalent is being created, which is long overdue. Anyway, you can take to the bank that they will consider someone who is half Ukrainian and half Russian as a Ukrainian, and probably the same for others, and this is a very mixed city. Kind of the Los Angleles of the Russian world.
DeleteEurasian
Այլինտրանքային Հայացք դեպի «Մեր Հայրենիք»-ը:
ReplyDeleteAn Alternative look at the Armenian Anthem
http://haiknahapet.blogspot.com/2015/06/blog-post.html
Excellent press conference of Nikolai Starikov where he explains why Russia should keep the Donetsk and Lugansk Republics in Ukraine (English subtitled):
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OELF_qlalr8
A crash-course in geopolitics: Very lucid, sober minded, easy to understand presentation by Starlikov of the overall geostrategic situation Moscow faces in Ukraine today. What he describes is still essentially part of Moscow's plan to "Karabakhize" the region. As I have said, although south-eastern Ukraine will not ever be going back under Kiev's direct control, the region will not be annexed by Russia either. For various geostrategic reasons, the territory will remain a semi-independent "buffer" region backed by Russia for well into the future. The region's annexation to Russia will only occur when their is a drastic change in the geopolitical calculus or when things get out of control.
DeleteWith that said, I don't buy the supposition that Western powers intended to prepare Kiev for an actual war against Russia. I think that's simply a scare tactic being put out by Moscow. In my opinion, Western powers made their move in Kiev for two strategic reasons: Undermine Moscow's ambitious Eurasian Union project (because it had the potential of becoming a serious economic/financial competition) and sour Moscow's increasingly good relations with EU nations (because it had the potential of weakening Western influence inside continental Europe). What was the West's ultimate intent? To undermine Russia's growing power and influence in the world, specifically in Europe. Going forward: Moscow must do its best to keep good relations with important European powers (i.e Germany and France primarily), make sure the 2/3 million people currently under separatist control in Novorossiya are well fed and well protected; put steady military pressure on surrounding regions' still under Kiev's control; turn Crimea into a major, nuclear armed military base.
There is another goal USA is achieving by keeping the war going in Ukraine. The western (pro-west) and Eastern (pro-Russian) population of Ukraine is about 25% each. the other 50% is mixed in between people who call themselves Ukrainian. Continued war and war propaganda is aimed to make these 50% anti-Russian. Killed soldiers, lost families is a powerful tool they use to make hardcore enemies to Russia. They are basically propping a new society on Russian border that is ready to fight with Russia and do anything the masters will tell them to do.
DeleteI agree that it is a good presentation, but think the discussion/debate needs to be much more involved. For example, how long can one keep three million people in a state where normal life and business cannot take place? Abkhazia can function as a little tourist town for Russia, but it has a small population and no war. Also, the morale costs are high. The locals already feel used/abused by Moscow, so there is a limit. I doubt that many in Artsakh feel that Armenia set them up and betrayed them. In the case of say, Pakistan, it didn't stay in India, so it could develop. And, after all, Russia didn't keep Abkhazia and South Ossetia inside Georgia for leverage. That was done for a long time, but ...
DeleteArevordi,
I agree that the West doesn't actually intend to send Kiev against Russia directly; it would be too easy for Russia to then have a free hand. But it does add a real zone of tension to preoccupy Russia for the coming build-up. The West may have wanted to install a militarist in Azerbaijan, or created some turmoil in Georgia, or set up any number of angles in the Anaconda strategy. The problem with Kiev is that, unlike Saakhashvili's Georgia, the number of provocations is practically limitless. The countries were fairly intertwined.
Eurasian
It is unfortunate - yet inevitable - that Novorossiyans would have become pawns in the current power struggle between Moscow and Western powers. Armenians of Artsakh have also become pawns in a similar struggle. It is also natural that resentment and anger will develop as a result of the current situation. Moscow has to therefore do what it can to direct negative sentiments in the region towards the Western backed junta in Kiev and not itself. Soft power and propaganda (public relations) is very important in this equation. From what I can see, Moscow realizes all this and has been utilizing soft power and propaganda in the region it quite efficiently.
DeleteAnd on this point, I disagree with you and think Moscow is failing to a significant degree on the propaganda and morale front. It would be OK if major cities weren't being shelled daily, and perhaps Moscow was thinking that it wouldn't be this bad. Hard to say. But the propaganda war is at risk. As an example, the most popular blogger regarding the war, Colonel Cassad, posted something that has been all over the Russian blogosphere. It takes today's statements by various Russian or Novorossiyan authorities and puts them in the mouths of WWII figures. When you add the silent or contradictory approach regarding basic questions, such as "Do you want Kiev to fall quickly?", it leads to problems. In Cassad's view, the Kremlin is now getting to the stage where it is laughed at, which is what happened in the late Soviet period.
DeleteIn my limited range of vision, a fairly large number of people in the Russian blogosphere are mocking or laughing at a lot of the articles and posts by pro-Kremlin authors these days. These are not the usual professionals from the past, and they are not screaming that Russia must invade immediately. They simply have lost confidence in the authorities, just as was the case in, say, the late 1970's. Of course, there is a huge difference now, because the doubts are only over the Ukraine; back then, the doubts were over everything.
You may disagree, and you might be right. But I sense a major change now as compared to six months ago.
English
http://slavyangrad.org/2015/06/15/briefings-of-the-soviet-informburo-1942/
Russian
http://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/2236440.html
Eurasian
12 Reasons Why US Does Not Want to Win Wars It Instigates Worldwide
ReplyDeletehttp://sputniknews.com/us/20150614/1023355636.html
What I find most interesting is that even though the facts described in this article - that war as it is performed by the west is a racket - there is no shortage of dumbass Americans enlisting. It is really quite baffling because it is not a secret that America's government despises its own people and constantly works to disenfranchise them, and it is not a secret that the enemies America fights pose zero threat to America (unlike, say, massive invasions by third world criminals and gangs from the South, media-enticed chimp-outs, Jewish financial scheming, Israeli espionage, the American domestic espionage program, pharmaceuticals and GMOs, the world's largest and privately-operated prison system, or one of the world's most militarized and violent/murderous police forces).
I have touched upon this topic before: The strategic thinking in the imperial homeland is ultimately this: The more places they ruin on earth, the better they will be at home. It's part of their "order through chaos" approach. Example: When the Soviet Union collapsed and Russia fell into utter disarray, where did most of Russia's most wealthy people hide their money? In Western banks. Where did most Soviet scientists, doctors and skilled laborers go to after the collapse? To the West. Who took control over Iraq's and Libya's national wealth and oil industry? Western powers. By turning Syria into a bloodbath, they have weakened Syria, Hezbollah, Iraq and Iran. By plunging Ukraine into a civil war, they have undermined Russia's growing influence in Europe. So, as you can see, they don't have to win anything. They only have to break things. As I have said: As long as the imperial homeland is not suffering dire repercussions as a result of its actions around the world, they will continue sowing death and destruction around the world.
DeleteEEU is already doing a lot of good for Armenia even with the the regions problems and it will only get better with time: Armenia’s accession to Eurasian Economic Union gives big opportunities to country for exporting agricultural products - See more at: http://arka.am/en/news/business/armenia_s_accession_to_eurasian_economic_union_gives_big_opportunities_to_country_for_exporting_agri/#sthash.s3ySgBuR.dpuf
ReplyDeletere: NGOs
ReplyDeleteThis goes into some detail about how NGOs work to cause trouble. It is by that guy Korybko, who seems to write a bit of superficial stuff about Armenia, though I suspect it is simply him trying to suck up to whatever groups he is working for or trying to impress. He is studying in Moscow. Anyway, there is a desire to find NGO whistleblowers. For what it is worth, my take is he is on or trying to be on the Russian payroll, not that he is a Langley type.
http://thesaker.is/wanted-ngo-whistleblowers/
Eurasian
Your description of him may be the most accurate yet. I also don't think he is a Langley type. Most probably, he is a pro-Russian American (of Slavic ancestry?) trying to kiss up to Russians in hopes of landing a nice job in his field of interest...
DeleteInteresting interview of a German Banking Economist:
ReplyDeletehttp://russia-insider.com/en/german-top-banker-russia-and-china-will-defeat-usa/ri7988
I normally don't like posting links to mainstream television programming, but this particular commentary by HBO's John Oliver is very funny... and seriously scary -
ReplyDeleteLast Week Tonight with John Oliver: Nuclear Weapons (HBO): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Y1ya-yF35g&list=PLmKbqjSZR8TbfAMV9bLy4beDh4vrze5kc&index=44
That is pretty frightening. That seems like something that should have existed in the 1990s in Russia when the country was on its knees and military discipline and oversight was lacking. And it's not just the fact that something as critical as nuclear weapons are treated so carelessly that is shocking, but the fact that the military has pretty much an unlimited budget to oversee these programs - this is the type of corruption and inefficiency would lead to protests in other countries if the controlled media reported it.
DeleteSeparately, I grudgingly admit that, despite his liberalism and general partnership with Jews, John Oliver is more often than not actually funny, and his social and political humor is usually grounded in fact (before it inevitably shifts to a pro-Black, anti-White tirade or otherwise reduces serious matters to a joke). His 2008 stan- up comedy special made me laugh, especially the line, "isn't it something that you can walk into the Fox News office, punch the first person you come across, and know that deep down inside they probably deserved it." Lots of good Bush jokes as well.
John Oliver: Terrifying Times Full Show
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BH6GcYW4so
Sweden Beefs Up Military Hardware Over Alleged Russian 'Aggression'
ReplyDeletehttp://sputniknews.com/europe/20150616/1023407576.html
Who would have thought in 1991 that within 24 years the recently independent Republic of Armenia would have surpassed Sweden? If Hitler was around today, there is no way he would self-identify as Nordic.
What can we make of the recent murder of a Russian soldier from gyumri's 102 base? It was done by another Russian soldier........I think C.I.A is at work in Armenia and trying it's hardest to do something.
ReplyDeleteGev
confident that the west would provide security guarantees, yeah, sure, I feel really secure already...
ReplyDeleteNEWSPAPER: IF BAKU BECOMES MOSCOW'S SATELLITE, IT WILL RECEIVE KARABAKH
07:55, 16.06.2015
Region:Armenia, Karabakh, Azerbaijan
Theme: Politics
YEREVAN. - "I do not think that the Baku-Moscow rapprochement can have
a dynamic impact on the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, except for
one development. If Baku wishes to become a satellite of Moscow--I
find it hard to imagine--, but Moscow would like to serve Yerevan
and hand the occupied territories to Azerbaijan on a platter."
Prominent American analyst Paul Goble told the aforesaid to 168 Zham
daily of Armenia.
"He expressed a conviction that Armenia and Azerbaijan can reach
a settlement if the foreign forces, like Moscow, do not cause
uneasiness. According to him, a settlement can be achieved also in the
case when Armenia comes out of the RF's [i.e. the Russian Federation]
influence.
'"I am confident that the West would provide security guarantees
for Armenia, if Yerevan wished to return the occupied territories of
Azerbaijan and stopped playing the role of being Moscow's agent in
the Caucasus. (...) But it is not clear whether there are people in
Yerevan and in the West who are willing and able to carry out such
a deal,' said Paul Goble," reported 168 Zham daily.
http://news.am/eng/news/271991.html
Goble should the very least be declared persona non grata in Armenia. So should other American diplomats employed by Baku, especially Daniel Fried and Matthew Bryza... And LTP era traitors who were complicit in trying to pass the infamous Goble plan on Armenia should be tried for treason, it's better late than never.
DeleteHe sounds EXACTLY like Armenia's political opposition freaks. Incidentally, this is the same Goble that wanted to give Armenia's border region with Iran to the Turks. Had it not been for the parliamentary assassinations of 1999, the "Goble Plan" may have become reality and Armenia today would have either disappeared from the map once again, or simply been reduced to a desolate/endangered speck on the map.
DeletePlease elaborate. Vazgen Sargsyan was a hardliner. He was against any concessions. He was the one who had Levon step down when he was willing to go to concessions. I'm not sure how getting a hardliner taken out of the picture would help in the implementation of the "Goble Plan." Moreover, he was pro-Russian, with close ties to the Kremlin. Isn't it possible getting this hardliner strongman out of the picture would benefit the west who publicly pushed for a "compromised solution."? This also occurred at the time of the second Chechen war, when Russia was really preoccupied. Is it possible it was an internal job? perhaps, we can rationalize that serge/Robert didn't want to share powers, and didn't want to answer to vazgen. Certainly possible. But let's also not forget Vazgen brough Robert and Serge on board, publicly praised them, and condemned the Karabakhci-Hayastanci distinction. I guess we'll never really know the truth, all we can do is speculate...
DeletePaul Goble and his coterie of pompous catamites are nothing but poitical speculators , storm stirrers, and mendacious political dream merchants. These people do nothing else than write and pass banal ,vacuous , commentaries on any subject their radars zoom in. Gobble is a filthy Jew, and is sponsored by his tribe' s manifold institutions. Very few analysts seem to realize that there is no longer a Karabkh issue. Short of Azeries launching an armed invasion, there can be no claim to a land where there are no inhabitants ( in significant numbers) of a minority. There is nothing to discuss on karabakh other than legitimizing the the holding terrain . The myth of Azeries refugees has to be discredited . Their numbers increase exponentially as time passes on.
DeleteFrom Russia Transcaucasian geopolitics karabakh is a key element in their grand strategy. There will never be a political accommodation or agreement with current demographic configurations. If azeries really want to capture karabakh it is to serve the objective goal of linking up with turkey and eliminating any remaining Russian influence in the area. It will not serve Iranian interests either that the two Turkish states should coalesce into an
Anschluss . It will threaten Iran's northern lands and their territorial integrity. If the land of karabakh had a significant number of Turks azeries ( albeit a minority)in her confines then the political landscape would be different. A minority of Azries in karabakh would constitute a veritable danger and would also serve as a justification for an armed invasion by Azeries to come to the aid of their brethren. The best securities guarantees for Armenia is to be armed to the teeth. A modern day Sparta like nation is , in the contemporary world, the adequate and optimal security guarantee. Armenian should forget about economic material development and evolution a la West . Such a condition is at most a Utopian dream, a more realistic stasis is the realization that to survive a total militaristic view is number one priority to continue the struggle of survival. Uriah
Anonymous (June 17, 2015 at 11:42 AM),
DeleteVazgen was a patriot... but he was also a ignorant choban who had no understanding of geopolitics. I suggest you get away from the notion that just because someone is a patriot, he or she knows what they are doing in politics. I don't know how old you are but I was watching political events very closely back then and I can tell you beyond any doubt that official Yerevan was slowly warming to the idea presented by the "Goble Plan". The parliamentary assassinations put an abrupt end to it. And no, Vazgen was not a pro-Russian anything. So wasn't Karen Demirjian. Demirjian had no allegiances: He was purely a businessman/bureaucrat only interested in pursuing money. Vazgen Sargsyan was a pro-Armenian patriot - but with no real education, no political training and no experience. Western powers placed a lot of effort on luring them (as well as Robert Kocharyan) into the Western orbit back then. They both were made to believe at the time that the Western plan to gift Artsakh to Armenia at the cost of "internationalizing" Armenia's border with Iran was the best way to go forward. Armenia was even being promised billions of dollars by Washington if Yerevan only went along with the plan. According to all reports (as well as rumors on the street) back then, Vazgen and Karen were believing the hype. But apparently Kocharyan was not. On the morning of the assassinations, Stobe Talbot, a high ranking State Department official and an associate of Paul Goble, was in Yerevan said to be going over the Meghri deal with Vazgen. The meeting was reported to be productive. A short while after Talbot departed Armenia, the killings took place. Thereafter, the Goble Plan was never again discussed.
Anyway, go to the following blog commentary and read the Wall Street Journal article lamenting Vazgen's and Karen's deaths and then read the Russian ambassador's letter essentially urging Armenians to forget about the Goble Plan
Some Thoughts on the October 27 Killings in Armenia (October, 2010): http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2010/11/eleven-years-ago-today-gunmen-burst.html
I got the following news from a reliable source in Armenia today: In an effort to help Armenians better protect their young border guards from Azeri/Turkish sharpshooters, Russia has begun supplying Armenia's military with thermal vision night sights. The devices are currently being installed on Armenia's border with Azerbaijan as well as on ARTSAKH'S BORDER WITH AZERBAIJAN.
DeleteWill Baku attempt to take Artsakh by force once the international sports games they are hosting ends? No one knows for sure, but Armenia is not taking any chances. Armenia's rhetoric regarding Artsakh has hardened in recent weeks. The entire border with Azerbaijan is being reenforced. Yerevan is even signaling that the Western-backed "Madrid principals" are no longer valid and that not a single square meter of land will be returned. And just recently, official Yerevan openly appointed Artsakh's new defense minister and Artsakh's former defense minister was given a position in Yerevan. These are all signs that Armenia is preparing for something -
DeleteArmy future commander: I will be in Karabakh Wednesday morning: http://news.am/eng/news/272009.html
Karabakh Defense Minister gets office in capital Yerevan: http://news.am/eng/news/271978.html
Armenian, Russian Officials To Discuss Arms Supplies: http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/27073752.html
Is Aliyev actually crazy enough to try a serious attack on Artsakh? Is there any chance that Russia or Armenia actually wants to take some aggressive action and make it unclear as to what is going on? One assumes not, but is there some advantage to Russia is seeing Aliyev disgraced? After all, geopolitics is an ugly and brutal game.
DeleteOne other question: If Azerbaijan attacked in a serious way and failed, is there any chance that Artsakh/Armenia could move on the offensive and occupy some area or otherwise cause some serious problem for Azerbaijan?
Lastly, have Armenian border guards been shot? Is this a current problem, or preparation?
Eurasian
Dear Arevordi,
DeleteYou are making statements of fact, when in reality you have no way of knowing for certain.
I don't recall mentioning anything about Vazgen's political capabilities. But since your bring that up, then I would say that people who serve in the army, and especially during war, are much more likely to hold the nation's interest at heart during political leadership. As regard to Vazgen being a "choban," that is your personal opinion not having anything to do with reality. Vazgen was a charismatic, strong leader who projected grace and passion, who actually knew how to talk; he could be at the level of ordinary people, and he could sit down with the world leaders. I'm sorry to say, I don't see anyone in Armenia even remotely comparable--not serj, not galust sahakyan, not Edward sharmazanov, and certainly not Robert Kocharyan who was horrible at speaking. I'm not sure how old you are, but the way you express yourself seems like you've got a lot of bitterness and resentment inside of you. In any manner, that's not the way we address our heros whether you liked them or their ideas or not. That's hardly normal.
Being a military hero does not preclude you from being a good politican either, and doesn't mean you don't have policy advisors at your side.
Second, Vazgen "Sargsyan's term as Minister of Defence was marked by cooperation with Russia and Greece.[39][40] Sargsyan had "close connections" with the Russian military elite, especially Defense Minister Pavel Grachev.[41] According to the Jamestown Foundation, he pursued a military diplomacy with Greece, Cyprus, Syria, Iran and Bulgaria for a pro-Russian alliance."
I'm not sure what sort of hearsay from the streets you heard, but the only people are hated Vazgen were cowards who didn't want to send their kids off to the army, and real chobans devoid of any national ideology. There isn't a political force that would ever seriously contemplate going through with the goble plan of swapping meghri for latchin. That is absurd. First of all, even if Armenian leaders agreed, IRAN first and foremost wouldn't NEVER allow it. It is not serious.
As a point in case, during the administration of Levon Ter Petrosyan, Turkey asked Armenia to re-confirm the Treaties of Moscow and Kars, which Levon, THAT'S LEVON, turned down.
Third, if Russia orchestrated the oct 27 acts, the fact remains, and still clearly visible today, that it didn't shift Armenia away from the west. On the contrary, relations with nato increased, western presence inside Armenia increased. Like I said, Russia was preoccupied with war in Chechnya. Getting a hardliner opposed to any concessions out of the picture would hardly be a strike against the Goble Plan.
Anonymous, I am glad to see that Vazgen has become an legendary hero in death (at least for petty minds). Please, don't be upset at what I said for it's a natural human trait to bestow larger-than-life attributes to those who are no longer with us. However, rest assured that had Vazgen remained alive he would have been hated by the likes of you today for being just another fat bellied oligarch. So, sorry to ruin your fedayee fantasy. Anyway, it's obvious you are here only to get into a pissing contest with me. Not going to happen. I told you the fundamental facts: The Goble Plan was on the verge of being adopted by official Yerevan in late 1999; the parliamentary assassinations put an abrupt end to the madness; the killings also gave power to the pro-Russian Karabakh clan in Armenia: So, believe whatever makes you happy. I am not here to baby sit you.
DeleteGenius,
DeleteIt doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that any gains in Artsakh and the Republic of Armenia itself would be placed under direct existential threat by agreeing to the Goble Plan, which would encircle all of Armenia and Artsakh by Turks.
Let me say that again: encircle all of Armenia by Turks
I'm not convinced that Armenians were so stupid that Russia had to go out of its way to prevent Armenians from suicide. You lack basic logic, and are extremely arrogant.
It seems we have another nationalist badass on our hands who got extremely butthurt when it was pointed out that one of our mythical war heroes was actually human, flawed, poorly educated in the fine art of statecraft, and vulnerable to being played by global powers. Boo hoo.
DeleteAnd on top of it all, our anonymous badass appears to be another delusional parskahay making fantastical statements like "That is absurd. First of all, even if Armenian leaders agreed, IRAN first and foremost wouldn't NEVER allow it. It is not serious." Iran has limited influence on Armenia today, and had even less influence back in the 1990s. Didn't Iran start aggressively posturing its military on the Armenian border when Berdzor (Lachin) was liberated?
"I'm not convinced that Armenians were so stupid that Russia had to go out of its way to prevent Armenians from suicide." You must be 18 years old, if that. Hate to break this to you, but a mere seven years ago Armenians followed a filthy, Jew-wifed rat name Levon Ter-Petrossian, who had already led Armenia to the brink of collapse as President from 1991 until 1998, into the streets and nearly destroyed Armenia in the process, which resulted in 10 deaths, millions of dollars of physical vandalism in Yerevan, gave Armenia's international enemies immense power to pressure the Armenian government to further their own imperial interests, and emboldened the Azeris to launch the 2008 Mardakert skirmishes. Not to mention poisoning Armenian society for several years, and creating a very dangerous Armenian-Artsakhtsi divide. The same thing almost happened again in 2012 with that Mulatto-looking raffi hovannisian... The takeaway here is to put your own arrogance and emotions aside and recognize that, yes, Armenians can be incredibly self-destructive. This includes peasants on the streets who cannot conceptualize interests beyond their immediate financial gains, it includes "war heroes" like that sand-nigger import Jirayr Selfishian, it includes choban oligarchs, and it includes self-righteous smartasses who have degrees in worthless social sciences from western-associated colleges.
As stories like Mkhitar Sparapet teach us, Armenia's most dangerous enemy is the Armenian, regardless of how many Turks we have encircling our borders. Also, the fact that you talk about the dangers of Turks encircling Armenia's borders while in the preceding paragraphs you paint Iran like it is Armenia's savior is pretty amusing, but at the same time it proves that you lack the most basic logic, and are an extremely arrogant jackass with very poorly developed comprehension capabilities.
I accept the notion that Russia could have been behind the October 27 events in order to have prevented a pro-Western shift in Armenia's political orientation. However, it is ruled out that any administration governing the country could agree to a "Goble-type" plan. The country at the time, as now, was under a dual blockade by Azerbaijan and Turkey; they knew too well how vulnerable, to put it mildly, they would be economically if Turks became their southern border. I am not mentioning the physical threat such an arrangement would pose to Armenia's very existence. The Goble plan was complete suicide, and I very much doubt any political force could ever even consider it an option. Russia wouldn't need to go to such lengths to prevent Armenians from complete suicide.
DeleteI also have been told from a very reliable source that the entire armenian-azerbaijan border is being reinforced - and heavy equipment placed in strategic locations. On top of this we have a new DM for Artsakh ( Who is more experienced then previous one ) I know our Army is ready for any development but......one must wonder.......if baku does something that means they would be going against Russia and what do you think Russia will do if aliyev does something against it's will?
DeleteGev
Anonymous (June 23, 2015 at 3:55 PM)
DeleteYou should also accept the notion that starving Armenians can be lured into dangerous proposals by the masters of political manipulation. With that said, I think you are looking at this matter in black and white terms. There are gray areas to consider as well. I agree that we don't know for sure if Vazgen or Karen were going to accept the Goble Plan exactly the way the US State Department had proposed it. Most probably they would not have. What we do know however is that they were seriously discussing Uncle Sam's plan. What we do know is that they had accepted Washington's plan in principal but were negotiating/discussing Meghri's status. The whole thing may have eventually fallen apart. But the fact is that in late 1999 Vazgen and Karen were fully engaged with Washington and seemed to be totally ignoring/bypassing Moscow. What we also know is that all this coincided with the time in Moscow when Putin's FSB backed rise to power began in earnest. By late 1999 Russia's security services had begun seeking ways to reverse their post-Soviet losses, especially in their vulnerable Caucasian underbelly. I can't prove to you who were the real masterminds of the parliamentary killings, but I can tell you beyond any doubt that after the killings the Goble Plan was never again discussed...
Are you crazy?' People in Moscow widely oppose fake petition to nuke America (VIDEO)
ReplyDeletehttp://rt.com/news/266848-russia-nuke-america-poll/
The key takeaway from the American experiment is that democracy doesn't work, especially when the population is as dumbed-down, brainwashed, drugged-out, over-fed, over-vaccinated, and generally screwed-up as in the United States. Petitions are quite a vivid demonstration of what a self-defeating concept democracy really is, because there is pretty much no difference between the level of critical thought people, specifically Americans, put into deciding critical policy matters than they do when signing their names onto various petitions. There are dozens of other examples of this, Infowars and others dupe people at protests or on college campus (the pseudo-intellectuals) into signing petitions which call for the ban of water where water is referred to by its chemical names (H2O, dihydrogen monoxide, etc.). There was a hilarious episode of the show Penn & Teller: Bullshit! where they went to an environmental rally and conclusively proved that almost everyone in attendance was hypocritical and borderline retarded. Well-meaning or not, this is the inevitable result of democracy.
As the old saying goes, "the best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter". Or as Professor Arevordi has pointed out in the past, "if democracy were actually a good and beneficial system, then the US wouldn't have to force it onto targeted countries through military means."
If anyone wants to watch the episode I mentioned, do it solely to study the answers that the activists give to the questions asked. The level of stupidity is stunning. Now imagine these people being given actual power to make foreign policy decisions. Or even more frightening, imagine their Armenian counterparts being given the same power.
P&T Bullshit Enviromential Hysteria, Parte 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3UJJ_OdJ08
P&T Bullshit Enviromential Hysteria, Parte 2
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQn3GdVVNFE
Western military edge will be lost when weapons like this come into action
ReplyDeletehttp://sputniknews.com/russia/20150615/1023369522.html#ixzz3d8BtpalS
Israeli Ministry Posts Cartoon Clip Mocking Foreign Journos in Gaza
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?t=13&v=PErsJ4tAaTg
If this is the current level of israeli propaganda, then I think it's safe to say the days of kike control over public opinion are numbered. Thank God. The kikes should really stick to "muh hollowco$t" stories targeted at dim-witted westerners.
Journalists blast Israeli govt cartoon mocking Gaza news coverage
http://rt.com/news/267736-israel-gaza-news-cartoon/
How The IMF Really Works
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIfYQhZPXbs&list=UUtBqVgzL_cDv_t9o2hFiXXg&index=1
I know some people are not fans of Nathanael Kapner, but I have found that, generally, his weekly video posts are informative summaries of interesting and relevant world developments, and they usually feature nice clips from interviews or news segments. Here he is summarizing the western looting of the Ukrs.
The clip of Yats might be the single best illustration of the "Rat-Faced Jew" type I have ever seen. As for Saakashvili, he looks terribly fat and out of shape, like he is breaking out in sweat and having trouble breathing as he speaks. Even if patriots in Odessa do not take him out, it looks like high cholesterol might do the job. Also, I assume that Saakashvili is speaking Russian in that clip and probably does not know Ukrainian (or does not know it fluently enough to get any serious work done). The face that Saakashvili has to use the Russian language while carrying out "official governor duties" is both incredibly ironic and incredibly amusing. But then again Ukraine as a whole is just one sad joke.
The bigger irony is that Ukraine's foreigners who are employed by Pork-o-shenko cannot even speak English and Ukrainian and have to resort to Russian. So much for wanting to break away from Russia on Ukraine's part.
DeleteBrother Nathaniel may be a bit controversial, but he's a thousand times better than Alex Jones. True his presentation of the facts on the ground may be a bit questionable at best, but he has an unusually sharp mind of what the Jews do best, especially since he was raised as a Jew himself.
With the recent Western shipping of heavy weapons into Russia's borders, I wouldn't be surprised if war might break out as early as say, next week. Next Monday is the anniversaries of both Operations: Barbarossa and Bagration.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLYmRdGiqo4
DeleteBy this point I'm not really sure about what is happening to Greece. I'm not sure if a Grexit would be a reality since the current Greek Prime Minister is trying to negotiate a deal with the Devil's Bank (aka: IMF). If by a fluke Greece does exit, then what's awaiting for them is a Russian economic aid (also Chinese economic aid as well).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7bxxAgFTwOU
This is related to the Spratlys dispute, and as Pepe Escobar mentioned (though I really agree with his words, unfortunately) is that the Philippines is a weak link in the US led efforts to contain China. Besides Ukraine, the West Philippine/South China Sea is also a potential trigger point. One final point I'd like to make: President Putin will become the first Russian president to visit the Philippines in November of 2015 during the APEC summit. It's once in a lifetime for the most blessed leader of Russia to be coming to a country like mine.
Yet more proof that Armenia made the right choice with Russia, and that building closer relations with "the west" of today is a death sentence.
ReplyDeleteItaly: School Forcing Elementary Students to Experiment with Crossdressing/
http://www.dailyslave.com/italy-school-forcing-elementary-students-to-experiment-with-crossdressing/
Jew York Times Celebrating Penis Removal for 18-Year-Olds
http://www.dailyslave.com/jew-york-times-celebrating-penis-removal-for-18-year-olds/
Moscow is once again going out of its way to reassure panicky Armenians and threaten bloodthirsty Azeris. Nikolay Bordyuzha's comments about coming to Armenia's aid if things escalate on the border with Azerbaijan is a very bold statement. Recent news that Russians are now helping Armenians install thermal vision night sights on Armenia's - and Artsakh's - border with Azerbaijan is no doubt part of the assistance Moscow is promising Yerevan. Stuff like this is what I mean when I say disregard what this or that "politician" or "expert" from Russia says about Artsakh when in Baku and just look at the facts on the ground. The facts on the ground in Artsakh strongly suggests that Russia is FULLY backing Armenia. Seeing all this, and fearing a further loss of influence in the south Caucasus, Western powers are in a panic. As we saw with Paul Goble's comments, Western powers will be doing their best to once again appeal to our self-destructive peasantry about the dangers of getting too close to Russia. The following are some of the interesting recent news reports -
ReplyDeleteCSTO chief promises Armenia support in case of Karabakh escalation : http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/193953/CSTO_chief_promises_Armenia_support_in_case_of_Karabakh_escalation
Bordyuzha says he never invited Azerbaijan to CSTO: http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/06/18/bordyuzha-n/
Army future commander: I will be in Karabakh Wednesday morning: http://news.am/eng/news/272009.html
Karabakh Defense Minister gets office in capital Yerevan: http://news.am/eng/news/271978.html
Russian airbase commander: Our goal is Armenia’s peaceful skies (PHOTOS): http://news.am/eng/news/271253.html
Armenian, Russian Officials To Discuss Arms Supplies: http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/27073752.html
Russian arms deliveries to Azerbaijan not disturbing parity, says CSTO chief: http://armenianow.com/karabakh/64504/armenia_csto_bordyuzha_weapons_russia_azerbaijan_sale: Russian arms deliveries to Azerbaijan not disturbing parity, says CSTO chief
Newspaper: If Baku becomes Moscow’s satellite, it will receive Karabakh : http://news.am/eng/news/271991.html
America Must Stop Ignoring the South Caucasus: http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/america-must-stop-ignoring-the-south-caucuses-13093
Why Are the Caucasus Hosting So Many Joint Military Exercises?: http://www.silkroadreporters.com/2015/06/09/why-are-the-caucasus-hosting-so-many-joint-military-exercises/
Armenia Was Forced by EU To Choose Between it and Russia’: http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/27079876.html
Putin Erdogan meeting in Baku starts with a scandal: http://armenpress.am/eng/news/809037/putin--erdo%C4%9Fan-meeting-in-baku-starts-with-a-scandal.html
Many interesting pieces in those. A large percentage of stuff in English is just psywar, though. The idea that Russia would let Azerbaijan run over Artsakh is absurd. Instead, they would damage Azerbaijan's oil/gas infrastructure and destroy a fair degree of the Azeri military. Turkey would be foolish to do much other than complain. So the US wants idiots in Armenia to believe lie A, and the idiots in Azerbaijan to believe lie B, and so on. Just realize that these liars take you for idiots, and say so. A great many in the Ukraine fell for these lies, and they will pay the price for the next 50 years. Slava Ukraina!
DeleteBy the way, is there a Russia Today in Armenian? Russia needs to learn the American adage "Advertising doesn't cost, it pays". And "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure", when it comes to places like the Ukraine.
As for the West's panic in the Caucasus, they have nobody to blame but themselves. They have been threatening Aliyev and Erdoghan, in addition to playing games with the Kurds, and had the EU lean on Yerevan. And Georgia is caught in a bind. One would think that this has relieved a fair bit of pressure off Moscow, and they can contemplate plans without being under time pressure. For example, they may be able to lean on Georgia now.
Eurasian
On the topic of how the Anglo-American Empire plans to fight future wars against Russia, China, and Iran, this is of some value:
Deletehttp://orientalreview.org/2015/06/17/how-the-pentagon-plans-to-defeat-eurasia-and-roll-out-robotic-warfare-i/
The important aspect is the Third Offset Strategy, which involves the rollout of things like electromagnetic railguns and an automated man-machine approach. Those who think the US military has simply wasted money are mistaken. A large percentage of the money was actually diverted to the black budget. And there are reports that the black budget in Russia has more than tripled in recent years.
Eurasian
The Kiev junta continues to add veteran losers and war criminals to its ranks, first the Georgian oaf Saakashvili, now the British bitch Tony Blair. It's like a reunion of failed Washingtonian puppets from the early and mid-2000s (aka the Bush Era).
ReplyDelete‘True friend of Ukraine’ Tony Blair tapped by Poroshenko to join Kiev advisory council
http://rt.com/news/267967-blair-poroshenko-ukraine-advisor/
Meanwhile, other puppets of Washington France and Belgium have illegally seized Russian state assets, supposedly to pay for the ridiculous fines the eurojew court levied against Russia for the Yukos case. These two vassals of Washington, with ailing economies and impotent militaries, are being forced as sacrifices in the Anglo-American-Jew crusade. It is a small comfort to know that for the duration of the period that France and Belgium will act as anti-Russian tools, the immigrant populations of Africans and Muslims within those countries (already nearly 15% of Belgium's total population, and several million strong in France) will be beating and draining those shithole nations dry.
And finally, the South Carolina shooting looks like an inside job, the perpetrator looks like a rehash of the mythical Adam Lanza.
Arevordi: Do you believe that the Russian assassination of Garegin Njdeh was in service of the Armenian nation as well?
ReplyDeleteViewer
"Assassination" of Njdeh? That's news to me. The Soviets (not Russians) actually had a lot of respect for him. But allow me to say this: If Njdeh was working for Nazi Germany during the Second World War, and we all know he was, I don't think we Armenians would have been able to legitimately complain if the Soviet Union (not Russia) did decide to execute him for his sins. Ultimately, what was "in the service of the Armenian nation" at the time was a total Soviet victory. Soviet Armenia lived through one of its mini-golden periods in the aftermath of the world war. The sacrifices of the Armenian nation at the time were not in vain.
DeleteWhat were the circumstances of Ndjeh' death ? Ndjeh was held in a Prison in Russia, and then the sudden announcement of his death. Sudden death is a normal occurrence in patients with long held ailments.
DeletePutin's speech at St Pete economic forum
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKFjpZ1wLKI
Arevordi, any thoughts on Russia's recent deal with Saudis? Apart from an excellent business opportunity do you sense an political considerations for such a deal to happen?
ReplyDeleteRussia and Saudi Arabia ink nuclear energy deal, exchange invites
"the document is the first in the history of Russia-Saudi relations to create a legal framework for cooperation between the nations in the field of nuclear energy. Future joint projects might include construction of nuclear power reactors, provision of services in nuclear fuel cycling, including those for nuclear power stations and research reactor facilities"
http://rt.com/news/268198-russia-saudi-nuclear-agreements/
All major international business deals are no doubt based in political considerations. With that said, I suggest you don't hold your breath. I don't see this kind of cooperation between Saudi Arabia and Russia getting too far because Saudi Arabia is too dependent on the Anglo-American-Jewish political order for survival. Any real move away from their traditional benefactors will destroy the country. From a Saudi perspective: I suspect the deal is merely a way to keep Russia engaged, so that when the inevitable occurs in Syria and/or Yemen (o.e. partition of the nations in question), Moscow will have major financial considerations in Saudi Arabia to take into account. I therefore see the deal as a bait, which is typical political approach for Arabs and Westerners. From a Russian perspective: This is also a way to remain in the game in the region, and make some money doing so. Anyway, Saudi Arabia remains one of the fundamental problems the Middle East has. It's destruction (a la Iraq, Syria or Libya) will only benefit the region. Many people do not know that while Saudi Arabia overly funded various anti-Israel projects throughout the Middle East, it was also covertly covertly cooperating with Israel. This explains the lip service Saudis only gave/give Palestinians in their latter's plight against the Zionist state. Since the Anglo-American-Jewish effort against Iran in recent years have changed the calculus, the Saudi cooperation with Israel is no longer covert. Read between the whitewashed lines of the following Wall Street Journal article -
DeleteSaudi Arabia Reluctantly Finds Common Ground With Israel About Iran: http://www.wsj.com/articles/saudi-arabia-reluctantly-finds-common-cause-with-israel-in-suspicions-about-iran-1434627043
Arevordi,
DeleteAre you of the school that expects Iran to become relatively pro-Western after the Syrian War is over? Thierry Meyssan takes that position. If that turns out to be the case, it would make sense for Russia to want to get deals from KSA. And then there is gas and oil. Also, a number of people think that there is a Western plan to see the House of Saud fall before too long. This isn't that hard to imagine in the current situation. If any regime on Earth looks like it has passed its expiry date, it is theirs.
On a related topic, I am not as confident as you are about the partition of Syria. I think they are doing pretty well at the moment, with support from Iran and Hezbollah and ISIS looking overextended and ripe for a hurting, and it is unclear if the Western powers would be happy with a minor partition. Of course, results on the battlefield can be overridden by political considerations. Perhaps there will be a little strip of a Kurdish "country" on the border with Turkey. Wonder how Erdoghan will view his new neighbor(s)?
Eurasian
Am I amongst those who "expects" Iran to become pro-West? No, I don't expect Iran to become pro-West. But knowing the cultural and financial lure of the Western world, I may 'fear' that Iran may one day make the same mistake made by the leaders of Libya, Syria, Georgia, Serbia, Ukraine, etc. Unlike the aforementioned nations that willingly/foolishly submitted to the West, Iranians are patriotic, shrewd, conniving and politically very experienced. Although they clearly have a Western fetish as well, Iranians in general are a fiercely proud people with long political memories. The following list is actually bigger and uglier but for Iranians it's hard to forget stuff like this -
DeleteSeven Things You Didn’t Know the U.S. and Its Allies Did to Iran: https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2015/04/07/10-things-didnt-know-weve-done-iran/
Unless there is serious internal upheaval during which the ruling clerics are overthrown, I don't expect Iran to turn Westward in the foreseeable future. With that said, Iran will seek to loosen the Western sanctions placed on it by actively cooperating with Western powers. Tehran's main concern right now is to get Western powers to back off and give it some breathing room. This is their number one agenda today. So, don't interpret diplomacy or political maneuvering as giving into Western powers. I don't think the Russia-Saudi deal has any direct relations to Russian-Iran relations.
PS: I am surprised you don't see that Syria is a done deal. Assad is only protecting and fighting for areas he wants to remain in control of when the current nightmare ends. Syria will be partitioned, so will Iraq. But due to various geopolitical considerations, it will be a long process, a process that may take a few more years and a few more hundred thousand casualties.
PS: I see absolutely no signs that Western/Zionist powers are turning against the nation of Turkey. Again, in my opinion, those who think along this line are those making the mistake of seeing Western/Jewish displeasure at Erdogan's government as a Western agenda against all of Turkey. The West's problem is with Erdogan, not Turkey. There will eventually be a Kurdistan, but at the expense of Iraq and Syria.
Turkey appears to be in disfavor for a Kurdistan overlapping Turkish boundaries, in which Kurds in turkey are most likely to seek an integration with their kinsmen. The Turks have a Kurdish question, this question could become an inflammable fuse should a Kurdistan be created at the expense of Syria-Irak. The fragmentation of turkey is a distinct possibility in the eastern zone, where Kurds form a sizable element. In the long run , depending how events pan out, friction is likely to appear with the Kurds in the contested areas of " western armenia". It is one thing to have Kurdish contrition and apologies for the genocide, whilst the Kurds have no power, and another thing is to have to deal with Kurds in a position of power. The areas in question will be contested, from the Armenian side mainly from the juridical angle, from the Kurdish perspective it will be based on physical possession and numerical mass in the area. The question of western Armenia is a moot question. Western Armenia is today without Armenians. Of course one could always resurrect the Hamshens and awaken them to their paradigm. It is something to ponder and reflect... and prepare plans into the future. We need to think two or three generations ahead.
DeleteIn general, I agree with you, but there is the matter of degree. A partition to create a Kurdish state is a done deal, but the other questions remain. I don't expect Syria to turn into four or five states as things look at the moment. The sources I follow for the Syrian War are pretty confident of how things are going, and it is certainly possible that the Syrian forces are now taking a better approach in the war. Let the insurgents try to defend the remote areas. A long topic, to be sure. Of course, if hundreds of thousands die in the future, that would mean there is plenty of fighting still to do. There is also the question of whether the Saudi regime has several years to continue in the same manner as they have in the last few years. They might be partitioned before Syria.
DeleteOn the question of Turkey, well, wouldn't a Kurdish state be even more pro-Israel or pro-Western than Turkey? I don't think the Yinon Plan is far from what many want, but the issue is what can actually be achieved. And a new Kurdish state will be able to put great pressure on Turkey and some pressure on Iran. In any case, we shall see what happens there. The Armenian establishment should start wargaming various scenarios over the Kurdish issue, though. My gut says the West does not want a strong Turkey. Too independent and in too important of a location. And too large of a population. After all, why do the West and Israel want small states in the first place? In other words, it is far more than Erdoghan that is the problem. It is the idea of an independent, prosperous, and technologically advancing Turkey that is the problem - not that dissimilar from Iran. A Kurdish state, on the other hand, might be ideal in the eyes of the West. No universities, no industry not owned by the West, no decent access to oceans, warlords as politicians, and probably a country in some bizarro world of NATO and Blackwater as being above the politicians.
But maybe I am wrong. What do you think Russia's stance would be on a Kurdish state? Do you think they have already accepted it?
Eurasian
@Syria will be partitioned, so will Iraq...process that may take a few more years and a few more hundred thousand casualties.
DeleteThis is what the Oded Yinon's Plan requires. Balkanization of the Middle East, living it prostrate after exhaustive devastation. Kurdistan would become a state friendly to Israel, like in the times of the Jewish Revolts when the Judaized dynasty of Adiabene came to its help.
http://rt.com/news/268918-armenia-protest-electricity-president/
ReplyDeleteI support these protesters not merely because of the validity of their demands but specially because of who there are. Those organizing these protests are essentially the same people that organized last year's widely popular "dem em" movement against the unpopular US-backed workers pension plan Armenian officials were planning on adopting. From what I have been able to see thus far, this movement really seems to be a grassroots movement made up of young activists. In other words - thus far - it does not seem to be a movement backed or financed by Western interests. Although Western financed mercenaries such as Raffi Hovanissian, Paruyr Hayrikian and Yeghia Nersesian (the always smiling, Arab looking "environmentalist") sometimes show their faces amongst the protesters, the activists behind these protests do not seem to be Western assets. Therefore, I am cautiously happy to finally see some healthy, constructive and homegrown political activism taking place in Armenia. Western style capitalism in Armenia has ruined the country. Western style materialism in Armenia has ruined the country. Government's CANNOT be run like corporations. There are certain things in life that government officials simply have to ensure for their citizenry: The cost of food, water, shelter, transportation, medical care, education, gas and electricity need to be kept at levels that the average citizen will be able to easily afford. Down with Western style governance.
DeleteArevordi.....
DeleteWith these recent protests we have many western rubbish participating in these protests........if you look at the videos carefully you will spot some people from raffi and ltp's clans
People are fed up, how can a regular Armenian family that makes 500 dollars a month in the best scenario pay 50 dollars electrical bill. The main problem here are the managers of all utility companies. Don't think that if the company is owned by Russia it is managed by them. Local dishonest cockroaches become rich and fat within few years draining the blood of their own people. I wish the protesters will get them to drop that price increase initiative. Let the government handle the mess they created, enough stealing. But i am also worried that this protests will be manipulated and taken under control of traitors.
DeleteIt is time Sargsyan intervenes and makes arrangement to meet protesters demand. they have only asked not to increase the price of the electricity.
These protests have started in an honest and bona fide spirit. The reasons for the protests are well grounded and justified. The government needs to heed these voices. The downside of the protests is the danger lurking behind the ranks of professional provocateurs, to stir up passions and derail the normal protests into a spiral of violence. The mercenary elements are always on the look out for opportunities of grievances to be exploited. We can not have a summer of discontent with ongoing protests without results. The Government needs to address the genuine causes of civilian unrest. If not, the agents of Soros of open borders and open society are waiting on the wings. Piper
DeleteIn a nation that willingly flirts with Western powers, there will always be the danger of genuine, homegrown sociopolitical movements getting usurped/hijacked by Western interests. This real danger Armenia faces is essentially why we tolerate the current, largely incompetent government in Yerevan as the lesser political evil. We are constantly worried about Western backed mercenaries in Armenia's political landscape turning the country into another Serbia or Georgia or Ukraine. We therefore put up with government incompetence. This is one of the ways in which Western meddling in Armenia continues to stunt the country's sociopolitical evolution/development.
DeleteI remain hopeful that a truly homegrown political opposition movement (perhaps with Russian backing) will take root in Armenia in the coming years.
It should be mentioned that last year's "Dem Em" movement succeeded in keeping out Western assets such as Raffi Hovanissian. There were even cases when political opposition representatives like him were heckled by the young activists. At the end of the day, I'm willing to support these kinds of "evolutionary" sociopolitical movements - as long as they remain free of Western meddling. With that said, I still have to assess the political composition of the current protests. If it's the continuation of last year's Dem Em movement, then there is hope.
Nevertheless, Western assets in and out of the country will no doubt be exploiting this opportunity. Predictably, Western news media is having a good time politicizing and sensationalizing what is happening. I'm glad political observers in Armenia are talking about this to the Russian media -
Foreign media trying to politicize Yerevan protests: http://arka.am/en/news/politics/foreign_media_trying_to_politicize_yerevan_protests_/
I was reading the comments on an article in which White/European nationalists were bashing Putin's Russia because essentially they bash any government that is not identical to Hitler's failed regime. Of course I expect nothing less from nationalists, because nationalists have been the Anglo-American-Jewish Alliance's best tool against Russia since the Cold War. Nationalists for the political west are now the equivalent of Turks/Islamists: too stupid and too infiltrated to ever rise up and pose a serious threat to the west, but just backwards and stupid (and disposable) enough that they can cause problems from their positions on or near Russia's borders - this is especially true of eastern European nationalists, but also applies to nationalists in western Europe and America who have been conditioned to focus so much on the Jewish roots of Bolshevism prior to the Stalin purges, and who are still busy fighting for Operation Barbarossa, that they would rather attack Putin today instead of focusing their limited attention on their own countries which are easily the most thoroughly jewed entities on the planet. Anyway I came across this post that I really liked by a pro-Eurasian and pro-Russian poster (probably Russian himself) about Russia's Jew-backed skinhead nationalists in response to the douchebag users with Mussolini avatars who were badmouthing President Putin's administration. Arevordi was correct when he said that nationalist fanaticism serves its main purpose on the battlefield, it becomes an existential danger when it enters the political realm where more often than not nationalists are easily manipulated by the masters of subversion in Washington, London, Brussels, and Tel Aviv:
ReplyDelete"Do you realize that if the Russian "nationalists" were given power in Russia that the RF would be break up and be defunct in less than a decade? The Russian "nationalists" would destroy the Russian state if they got their hands on it. How "nationalist" would they be then? "Russian purism" could never, has never, and will never work in Eurasia. Sure, if Russia wanted to be a moderately sized, land-locked client state of US/EU, then by all means, give the "nationalists" in Russia power. But the result would be to hand total victory to the Jewish-occupied US government. Jewish-US global rule forever? Doesn't sound good to me. What you folks (doctrinaire nationalists) don't understand is that (1) nationalism is a means, not and end and (2) often times, the superficial kind of "nationalism" you encourage is effectively, objectively and factually anti-national in its effects."
Should We Bless The Jews?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyY7a75dl7c&list=UUtBqVgzL_cDv_t9o2hFiXXg&index=1
Again, Nathanael Kapner does a very good job of highlighting different manifestations of the Jewish agenda with his weekly videos, and includes informative clips of the enemy in action. The Evangelical cunts are in focus this week. In case there are any Protestant Armenians here, or any Armenians who are delusional that the west is in any way sympathetic to Armenia because Armenia and the west are allegedly both Christian, then this serves as a nice wake up call. Every Protestant Armenian I have ever met only been superficially Armenian, they lack that Armenian soul and connection to our history and culture. They may give lip service to stories about Gregory the Illuminator and Mashdots, but they do not try to hide the fact that they look down their noses at Armenian culture, the Armenian state and government, and Armenians generally. They hide their distain for Armenia behind the excuse "look how corrupt Armenians are; the Armenian Apostolic Church has failed, Armenian folk culture has failed, Armenia needs to be reformed in the image of the Protestant/western ethic".
In case you ever come across any Protestant Armenian organizations or individuals trying to convert you or suck you into their activities relating to Armenia or Armenians, always remember that these people are your enemies. This includes the Armenian Missionary Association of America, dozens of minor Armenian Protestant Sects operating in Los Angeles and Armenia, and their related "Bible Study" or other groups. Rest assured that all Protestant groups (mainstream American/European or Armenian) are in an unbreakable alliance with the Jews, and view Armenian Apostolic Christians and mainstream Orthodox Christians like Russians, Greeks, Cypriots, and others as their worst enemies which they have a religious obligation to destroy. As history has proven time and again, these scum will partner with the Muslim Turks and Sunni Extremists to pursue their agenda against us each and every chance they get.
I personally equate Armenian Zionists with Armenian Turk-Nationalists. Same shit, literally shit.
How British spies covertly shape the flow of information online to 'discredit' their targets
ReplyDeletehttp://www.businessinsider.com/gchq-spies-discredit-targets-on-the-internet-2015-6
LOL Europe. Again, Armenia made the right choice with Russia. Keep the west as far away from Armenia as possible. Let Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Israel fully westernize and adopt these "values."
ReplyDeleteUK: Cambridge College Now Allowing Men To Wear Skirts At Formal Dinners
http://www.dailyslave.com/uk-cambridge-college-now-allowing-men-to-wear-skirts-at-formal-dinners/
From a comment on politikus.ru. Apologies for the machine translation.
ReplyDelete---
Yesterday, June 22, Yerevan hosted the NATO seminar, the key message of which was the idea of the Eurasian Union is a stub for Armenia. Below is his program. And, as it is quite unexpected, in Yerevan suddenly began Maidan.
---
What do you expect the South Caucasus countries from NATO, and what really has to offer NATO to these countries? Around such issues were often discussed by the participants of the 89th seminar of the road rose the NATO parliamentary Assembly. This is a very important issue, as you can gather, to make a very interesting speech, to ask each other questions, but the basis of any collaboration or partnership based on common interests, which in the case of NATO and the South Caucasus countries, it seems, are not so obvious.
What can Armenia expect from NATO? The biggest threat to the security of Armenia is considered the unresolved Karabakh conflict, which, despite the fact that polysaturated, but at any time may enter into an active phase. However, NATO officials claim that NATO has no direct involvement in resolving the conflict. "NATO supports the efforts of the Minsk Group co-chairs towards the settlement," said a senior expert on-line Euro-Atlantic integration and partnership, the headquarters of NATO Steffen Elgersma. The settlement of the Armenia-Turkey too it is pointless to expect support NATO because Turkey, as a key member of NATO, has a pretty serious impact on the decisions of this structure, and even the Minister of foreign Affairs of Armenia said that at certain resolutions adopted by NATO, you can see the influence of the lobby in Turkey.
And that can give Armenia NATO? A small military unit of the Armenian peacekeeping NATO mission in Afghanistan is in this country. However, the same Steffen Elgersma said that if not next year, in 2017 NATO will leave Afghanistan, and this episode partnership Armenia-NATO, too, will disappear. He says that in order to fill this gap, it is possible to organize special exercises, to try to deepen cooperation in the context of Armenia-Georgia-NATO, as relations between NATO and Georgia is more profound and multifaceted.
Armenia's membership in NATO has also commented the senior expert of the Centre for regional studies David Shahnazaryan, who repeated earlier voiced thesis that Armenia is not voluntarily entered into the EEU, it was not a sovereign decision of the Armenian people, nor the government, but was imposed by Russia, "this decision was taken under unprecedented pressure from Russia", D. Shahnazaryan said that membership in the EEU is not increased our safety and security, but only insure us against new threats that could emanate from Russia. D. Shahnazaryan believes that Russia may try change mounted within 21 years of the status quo in the Karabakh conflict zone, and to encourage the parties to resume the war, as a result, Russia will be able to enter into the conflict zone units of the Russian troops, under a peacekeeping mission. Shahnazaryan also recalled that the Karabakh conflict is the only post-Soviet space, where Russia has no military presence.
...
Eurasian
...
DeleteArmenia's membership in NATO has also commented the senior expert of the Centre for regional studies David Shahnazaryan, who repeated earlier voiced thesis that Armenia is not voluntarily entered into the EEU, it was not a sovereign decision of the Armenian people, nor the government, but was imposed by Russia, "this decision was taken under unprecedented pressure from Russia", D. Shahnazaryan said that membership in the EEU is not increased our safety and security, but only insure us against new threats that could emanate from Russia. D. Shahnazaryan believes that Russia may try change mounted within 21 years of the status quo in the Karabakh conflict zone, and to encourage the parties to resume the war, as a result, Russia will be able to enter into the conflict zone units of the Russian troops, under a peacekeeping mission. Shahnazaryan also recalled that the Karabakh conflict is the only post-Soviet space, where Russia has no military presence.
All this is understandable and clear. But, what could NATO do if Russia does decide to send troops to the territory of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, whether NATO is ready to be sverkajuschii in this conflict? Of course, it is pointless to expect such as it is useless to expect that NATO may be involved in the conflict in Ukraine. Some countries-NATO members Ukraine had not very significant military assistance, mainly on the supply of ammunition, but no country in NATO is not sent to Ukraine not a single soldier to protect against Russian attacks.
Even Georgia, who've sacrificed so much for Euro-Atlantic integration, can not be expected that NATO will, if necessary, to help her defend against Russia. Georgia persistently denied membership in NATO and Georgian experts have concluded that Georgia started growing number of skeptics who do not believe that NATO can take under his wing Georgia. Chairman of the Caucasian Institute for peace, democracy and development Gia Nodia, of course, is not a skeptic, and I am convinced that in the case of continuous and persistent struggle, Georgia will be able to achieve its goal of membership in NATO, saying that his country "needs to show strategic patience". Mr. Nodia says that they see no alternative to NATO, because the EAEC can not guarantee security, but in terms of economic development, it's a dead end. In order not to offend the Armenian participants of the seminar, he recalled the words of David Shahnazaryan, Armenia had entered into a standstill the EEU.
The EEU is a dead end, and the EU although there is opportunity for development, but this structure is not ready to include new members, new poor States that can become an extra burden for the EU. So, the choice is not so great, though, in comparison, of course, it is better to live with hope for development, than to be at an impasse, and know that in future one cannot expect any positive developments.
Eurasian, what has been happening in Yerevan during the past couple of days is not a Maidan, it's more like an Occupy Wall Street movement. Thus far.
DeleteArevordi,
Deletere: Occupy Wall Street versus Maidan
Sure, the situation in Yerevan sounds like an Occupy Wall Street, but the issue is that only one side (the Soros one) has had weapons and shown up for the battle in many such situations. In the case of Occupy Wall Street, the Soros groups brought in professionals from all over, such as Spain, to lead the protests into the ditch of having no demands, no purpose, and lots of junkies with needles on the grass along with homeless to keep the masses from joining in. They earned their pay, as they killed a popular idea.
The disappointing thing is that Russia has not had much of its own infrastructure, both to promote and prevent. Another issue is that the Kremlin takes a passive approach to things. There are two kinds of passivity: one is waiting for the enemy to do something somewhere, and the other is in not presenting a more positive vision to drive the agenda yourself. The Eurasian Union is too abstract for the masses, as is the idea of letting each country's rulers do what they want in their sovereign countries. The West has better visions, even if they are based on lies most of the time. Remember Bush II talking about the need to "catapult the propaganda"?
By the way, is there any evidence that the rise in electricity rates was done to provoke people? In other words, were there agents of the West either in Yerevan or Moscow who could influence the decision? This might be totally off-base, so apologies if that is the case.
Eurasian
I normally support the government versus protestors, but was the use of water cannons really necessary? The only impact that will have is to raise Armenian society's general level of sympathy for these protestors, as well as vilify the Armenian government internationally. Having been threatened with foreign-sponsored coup d'états for years, is Yerevan actually going to let electricity price hikes become a legitimate reason to spark popular dissent across the country? Especially at this point in time where the mainstream opposition has finally been neutered? And I get the feeling that protests in Yerevan will embolden Azeri aggression on the border, as was the case with the 2008 Mardakert Skirmishes.
DeleteThe protests are now become politicized. It started with the electricity bill rise, a seemingly reasonable cause of igniting an outpouring of popular discontent. But now the protest is taking a different color. There was a bearded thug interviewed by RT in the streets, and this self conceited lout and scum was declaring that everyone one in the government must be routed, the government must go. Another scum bag was pronouncing they will not leave the streets until all ----all ?--- demands are met . What are all this demands, besides the electricity, water and services are there other points of contention that is causing the initial peaceful protest to devolve into a " revolutionary frenzy". There are also flags of the rotten EU, fluttering amongst the crowds. I don't like it anymore. My sympathies lie with the expressions against the rise in tariffs, but now there seems to be other agendas. The protests have now been hijacked by elements who seek a political turnabout. The developing scenario fits perfectly with plans to create chaos and mayhem. I wonder what Nuland and Kagan are concocting for Armenia. We also have this shahzanarian with his speeches of the government serving Russian interests, and inciting the crowds to become more militant. The authorities must move swiftly and root out the core of organizers and drivers of thirst protests. This is no longer about electricity bills.On the other hand, judging by the merry faces of the demonstrators they are enjoying summer evening out in the streets. The police is giving them free showers, a fresh water stream to cool them in the heat of summer. The police has to go amongst the throng and sort out those fools carrying the Eu flags . What are EU flags doing in Erevan ?. We also heard from the other wild dog Avakov in the Ukraine tending a friendly hand to the mob in the street of Erevan. Do these fools flying EU. flags think they will have a cornucopia of abundance? What they will have is austerity , tightening of belts even further and lose your sovereignty and independence into the EU gulag. Oh but yes, you will also have a lot of Jazz, rap, imported alien races , fleeing refugees, democratic kleptocracy, pornography, drugs culture and other currents of national and racial dissolution.
DeleteTo Echo Arevordi I would venture to say the same thing.
DeletePlease note, both the Euro and US Dollar are down vs the Dram. This does not happen like this anyplace, there is reason for this and it is not economic it is political. Armenia is a prize to be won over, hence the assist by Western powers to shore up the currency as no one wants this in the US, EU or Russia.
Perhaps if we are to follow are advise, and learn from our mistakes as a people, it will never happen we are flawed. I guess it is part of the gene. Anyway the Armenian street might fuck things up for Armenia, hence even the likes of Serge, from System of a Down telling people the Armenian government had a right to restore order.
Funny times eh?
Vahram
Russia has a military presence in Karabagh through her proxy Armenian Army. Whilst the Armenian army is in Karabagh, Russia does not need her troops there. There are a lot of political analyst farting gases around for purely speculative purposes. The Karabagh issue is no longer in dispute, Karabagh will never return to Azerbijan-Turkey . But as a politcial footbal it is a case to be kept in the back burner . Azerbaijan can not willingly accept the new configuration. There could be another opening of hostilities but the outcome would be the consolidation of the so called adjoining areas or territories which Armenia is at present holding as a security zone. As to the merits of the case of Armenia having joinig the EEUU under duress, or under coercion , not a sovereign decision; this is false. If the EU was really interested in Armenia joining them, they would also have brought unbearable pressure upon Erevan to do so. The fact is that the EU can offer Zero to Armenia, and whether the Armenians took a sovereign decision or not is not the point in question. The ultimate question to be debated is how best can Armenia guarantee her sovereignty. In the current political and military configuration the EU or NATO are not reliable and trustworthy players; they are on the other side of the lines of combat. No matter how unpopular joining the EE.UU might be for some , it is and it was the only logical outcome historical necessity. The same charade is being played in Eastern Europe, where Nato and the EU appear to be unloading military hardware and advisers in those countries concerned of a Russian encroachment. The Russian army can advance and overrun those countries in a matter of a week, and all what Nato will do is race post haste and advance to their German bases. If the Eastern Europeans are dreaming about security from Nato, they better think again.
DeleteThis is for Mr Anonymous.
DeleteThe problem is the street has moved ahead of anyone's best laid plans. You can argue all you want. The problem in my view is setting an example. Let us use occupy wall street as an example. Someone on the other side of the world sees this, and says hummm great let me do this, so people in Japan revolt. The problem here was that the powers that be wanted to wake the Chinese street, not Japan. Now they sit back and wonder what went wrong.
The old saying goes, be careful of what you wish for.
Vahram
Anyone anyplace will use whatever means during any time for political reasons. Let us not use this as an excuse to be blindsided. For too long they have been mute, quite, compliant, and well behaved. Yes we are Armenians, but we are human after all.
DeleteLet us not blow this out of proportion, for if someone gets the feeling they can take advantage because WE LET THEM they WILL. Just becuase they have not thought of it yet, does not mean they will not be prompted to.
Vahram
Eurasian, you ask a good question. I don't know if the price hike was politically motivated. Although I admit I have not looked into it, I personally doubt it. In my opinion, it is more likely as matter of mismanagement and incompetence. To answer your other question: Russia simply is not in any position to compete with Western style sex, drugs and rock&roll... not to mention rap music, blockbuster films, pornography, shopping malls, homosexuality, feminism, McDonalds, Marlboro, Coca Cola, Gap jeans, BMWs, etc. The Western world will not have any competition to its lure, especially when it comes to the world's younger, stupider sheeple.
DeletePS: I was comparing the current protests in Yerevan with the Occupy Wall Street movement in the US in very loose/general terms. Re: Occupy Wall Street. Much of it was Soros organized even from the very beginning. Soros funds most of North America's liberal, left wing movements.
I fear that this movement is being gradually co-opted by foreign political interests. I'd like to remind the reader that Gyumri and Vanadzor are Western strongholds. If these protests resort to violence/vandalism I have absolutely no problems with Armenian law enforcement authorities using deadly force to restor law and order. Like I said, thanks to Yerevan's complimentary politics, there are large numbers of Western mercenaries waiting on the political sidelines in Armenia to take advantage of any political unrest. If the current government is somehow toppled, know that Uncle Sam's whores will be the ones best positioned to snatch political power in Yerevan. If it has to come to that, I would much rather Russians taking over Armenia. For the millionth time: Armenians are incapable of effective/efficient self-rule. We have proven this throughout our history. Self-rule is simply not in our DNA. To develop the kind of DNA needed for effective self-rule we as a people will need centuries peace and stability. Unfortunately for us, the south Caucasus is NOT the right place to expect any peace and stability. Let's therefore pray for Pax Russicana.
ReplyDelete"Armenians are incapable of effective self-governance"
DeleteI unfortunately had the exact same thought. I am proud of Armenia's ancient history and culture, Armenia's military, Armenia's astoundingly low crime rates, and even Armenia's diplomatic capability against Turkey and Azerbaijan... but it is quite depressing that Armenia as an internal society is still so unbalanced and vulnerable to foreign meddling. If the Russians reduced the prices for imported energy, yet the local Armenians decided to raise prices at the same time in order to gouge Armenia's impoverished masses, then the facts speak for themselves.
I'm going to put aside the plight of the people being forced to pay higher prices, and focus strictly on the geopolitical ramifications and consequences of the events which have transpired. The protests threaten the internal stability of Armenia and therefore should have been avoided. Armenia is already saturated with western agents and propaganda, and has been the victim of at least two recent coup d'etats (2008 and 2012). It should never have come to this. Through its money and influence, the west has made genuine activism into existential threats for developing countries like Armenia. Now would be a good time for the Armenian government to reign in some of the seedier segments of the elite, especially those engaged in price-gouging or too incompetent to be trusted in positions of authority. Russia might also want to be more proactive if it does not want to deal with future headaches in its South Caucasian ally. We know for certain that the west will look at this crisis as an opportunity.
Some interesting articles about the current unrest in Armenia -
DeleteKremlin Fears a Revolution in Armenia: http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-06-24/kremlin-fears-a-revolution-in-armenia?cmpid=yhoo
Russian Officials See 'Color Revolution' in Armenia: http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/russian-officials-see-color-revolution-in-armenia/524384.html
Foreign NGOs May Be Behind Protests in Armenia - Russian Senior Lawmaker: http://sputniknews.com/politics/20150624/1023792220.html
Armenian protests resemble Ukrainian Maidan coup scenario - Russian MP: http://rt.com/politics/269392-russian-senator-armenia-unrest/
Russia Worried About Protests In Armenia, Here’s Why: http://www.inquisitr.com/2199496/russia-worried-about-protests-in-armenia-heres-why/
Armenian protests - should Putin be worried?: http://blogs.blouinnews.com/blouinbeatpolitics/2015/06/24/armenian-protests-should-putin-be-worried/
Areshev: Protests against electricity tariff rise in Armenia have no signs of a coup d’etat: http://www.panorama.am/en/popular/2015/06/24/areshev/
Russia, West watching closely Armenia protests: http://armenianow.com/commentary/analysis/64707/armenia_rally_activists_russia_sargsyan
What Armenians are protesting (and what they’re not): https://www.opendemocracy.net/sergei-markedonov/what-armenians-are-protesting-and-what-they’re-not-protesting
Russian 'Profiteering' At Heart Of Armenian Power Protests : http://www.rferl.org/content/armenia-russian-profiteering-at-heart-of-protests/27091644.html
That bitch Nikol Pashinyan is involved in the protests.
DeleteFor those who don't know or forgot, he is the loudmouth troublemaker that called on security personnel to abandon their positions and join the revolution during Levin Petrostein's orange revolution attempt in early 2008. He is a disgusting piece of shit. He is however very articulate, much like a fast talking Jew York lawyer. Anyway, I recently saw a television program about him in which he was asked to name his favorite political figure in the world. Nikol answered - Nelson Mandela. LOL The asshole is an intellectual midget with a nasty attitude, and he has a significant following of intellectual midgets with even nastier attitudes...
DeleteSpending five minutes researching vermin like Pashinyan, or the even lower vermin who look up to him, is enough to draw all of the necessary conclusions about the unacceptable role they are playing in Armenian society:
Deletehttp://forum.hyeclub.com/showthread.php/20011-Politics-in-Hayastan/page10?p=359663#post359663
None of the opposition MPs have trust of the people. this protests will not become maidan.
ReplyDeleteIt is more likely a shake up. Sargsyan is losing his credibility in Putin's eye. He is unable to deliver necessary reforms and stabilize the country. Instead there is more and more discontent which may one day result in a western coup. This may all be a prelude for change in Armenia to a better pro-Russian government.
I hope you are correct. I like Sarkissian on a foreign diplomatic front but domestically there hasn't been too much shift in terms of purifying and lancing some of the poisonous pus from the elites in Armenia. He is a weak president. I feel that any president that has the balls to take some serious steps in this direction would be welcomed by even some of the so-called politically ignorant masses. Many of their complaints are legitimate when they see a tiny impoverished country being fleeced by a monopolistic and entrenched elite year after year, president after president. Any venue becomes the ideal opportunity to vent their frustrations. I agree with Arevordi about incompetence and inefficiency however I disagree that it is an ethnic or genetic trait. It can be done even in tiny Armenia if the right steps are taken by the right individuals.
DeleteOn a side note, does the Vorotan sale have anything to do with the electricity price hike?
Arto2.