Saturday 30th of November 2024

addicted to war......

Pope Francis: Ukraine war is “fueled by imperial interests of several empires.”

No, the U.S. did not invade in the same way that Russia brutally invaded a year ago. But in other significant ways, America, with its massive flow of arms and weapons, is now in control of how this war ends—and when. 

It is a fiction of the highest order when President Biden confidently says that President Zelensky and the Ukrainian people have to decide on negotiations for a settlement and ceasefire.

No rational person believes this.

 

 

By Blake Fleetwood / Original to ScheerPost

 

 

Peace Plans

This question is particularly relevant after Pope Francis, head of 1.3 billion Catholics, recently called for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire and declared that the ongoing Ukraine war is “fuelled by imperial interests of several empires.” 

Pope Francis directly blamed the rampant supply of arms, tanks and now planes by multiple countries into the war zone.

In an earlier interview with the Jesuit magazine La Civiltà Cattolica, as reported in the Guardian, “the pontiff condemned the ‘ferocity and cruelty of the Russian troops’ while warning against what he said was a fairytale perception of the conflict as good versus evil. “We need to move away from the usual Little Red Riding Hood pattern, in that Little Red Riding Hood was good and the wolf was the bad one. Something global is emerging and the elements are very much entwined.’”

The Pope earlier said, “The number of dead, wounded, refugees and displaced people, the destruction and economic and social damage, speak for themselves.” 

 

This week China’s President XI went to Russia supposedly to promote a similar 12 Point Peace Plan which called for ceasing hostilities respecting the sovereignty of all countries, and resolving the humanitarian crisis (seemingly a reversal of Beijing’s support for Russia).

China was attempting to harness discontent in the broader third world over sanctions and a possible wider war by pointing out that the U.S. is continuing to dangerously escalate great power tensions. President Biden quickly rejected both ceasefire proposals and stated that China’s plan was “not rational.”

What is not rational, in fact, is that this continuing war is killing hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians and Russians, devastating cities and threatening to escalate into a Third World War and even a possible nuclear holocaust. Undeterred, President Xi plans to speak directly with President Zelensky, who expressed interest.

Most Americans ordinarily would be shocked at the idea that a ceasefire, under any terms, is “not rational.” The U.S. has been trying to convince China not to send weapons to Russia.

Goebbels said that ordinary people never want to go to war. But if you repeat a lie often enough, people will start to believe it. The propaganda machine in the U.S. has worked—just as it worked during the Vietnam and the Iraq wars—and now many Americans, including our political leaders and the mainstream media, have been propagandized to believe that continuing a violent war is preferable to a ceasefire.

Washington’s central message is that this is a fight to preserve democracy against illiberal authoritarianism. That a new European Domino theory is in effect—the long discredited Vietnam War rationale—which led to millions of unnecessary casualties. But Washington doesn’t seem to be too concerned with democracy in the dozens of dictatorships around the world with which the U.S. has continuing good relations.

Ordinary people do not want war. A Pew survey earlier this year revealed that Americans consider promoting democracy abroad as one of the least important priorities for U.S. foreign policy. But our  political leaders and U.S. mainstream media will not allow for Peace Plans to even be aired, much less discussed. Calls for a ceasefire are silenced and labeled as traitorous. Truth, as they say, is the first casualty of war.

The Ukrainian military would not have lasted a week after the initial Russian onslaught had it not been for the flood of U.S. weapons, missiles, tanks, drones and money supplied since the  2014 coup. Most of the military and financial support is coming from America. The U.S.  is supplying over 90% of the funds–$117 billion–to arm Ukraine, while Germany, $6.5 billion, France $1.6 billion, and Italy $1 billion, combined have sent less than $9 billion. This is a proxy war between the U.S. and Russia and it will be fought up until the last Ukrainian is bleeding. It is up to America to decide when the shooting, bloodsheding, and carnage will stop.

Of course, the Russian invasion was horrible and brutal and stupid. The whole world has rightly admired the Ukraine fighters’ determination and heroic courage.

But as a historical review shows, America does not have clean hands.

Since the 1990s, Ukraine has been ruled by a succession of corrupt presidents and oligarchs representing the eastern (Russian leaning) and western (European leaning)  parts of the country. Free speech, elections, and the rule of law in Ukraine have traditionally ranked among the lowest in all of Europe. The stated reason NATO repeatedly rejected and stalled Ukraine’s bid to join NATO was connected to these democratic deficiencies.

Ukraine has been a direct American puppet regime since 2014 when a CIA front, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) helped overthrow a democratically elected pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych, in a violent coup.

In a now famous intercepted recording of a telephone call–now on Youtube – Victoria Nuland,  Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, can be heard  “midwifing” Yanukovych’s ouster, and naming several handpicked individuals to head the post-coup.

After the 2014 coup, a pro western, U.S.-approved president was installed–this one was equally as corrupt as his predecessor. What then followed was a slew of new laws shutting down Russian-language media and jailing those with pro-Russian voices. In the Donbass, the Kiev government  banned the Russian language from schools and public places like stores and restaurants. Any business caught violating the law was subject to a fine. Eastern Ukrainians were prevented from speaking Russian, their native language. And instead of allowing local elections of mayors and police chiefs, local officials were appointed by a far off Kiev government.

Not surprisingly, a spontaneous separatists’ movement arose. This was brutally suppressed by western Ukrainians, who used American weapons and bombs to intimidate the separatists with much bloodshed. This, in turn, prompted the Russians to move in with weapons and so called “volunteers.”

Most of the civilian casualties between 2014 and 2022 were in the eastern break-away section of Ukraine as Kiev tried to reassert its authority.

The Ukraine war is not unique in the post-Soviet era. In order to truly understand its origins, you have to go back to the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Tensions and conflicts arose in many, if not most, of the post-Soviet states, usually where the new international borders did not match the ethnic affiliations of local populations. There was also the problem that these new countries contained a sizable group of resident Russians and other minority ethnic groups, which caused conflicts with the majority local population. This was a common occurrence in almost all the post-Soviet countries:  Armenia, AzerbaijanBelarusEstoniaGeorgiaKazakhstan,  KyrgyzstanLatvia

LithuaniaMoldovaTajikistanTurkmenistanUzbekistan and Ukraine.

In the 1990s, I toured six of these newly minted post-Soviet nations in Central Asia. In Kazakhstan, I discovered first hand the deep resentment of the Kazakhs toward resident Russians. My group was attacked with flying fists by a band of young Kazakhs, who thought we were Russians. They only backed off when we produced our American passports. Apparently, we had wandered into a bar where Russians, perhaps 40% of the population then, were not welcome.

Fifteen years ago in Georgia, these tensions broke out into a full-scale war when two breakaway republics revolted against the Tbilisi central government. 

When the government military invaded the would-be separatists, Russia declared war on Georgia, responding with air strikes and sending in troops. An estimated 850 people were killed, and thousands of Georgians were displaced in fighting that lasted five days. In the end, a stalemate was reached where two breakaway regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, became autonomous and somewhat independent—post-Soviet “frozen conflict“—zones. 

A “frozen conflict” is a situation in which active armed conflict has been brought to an end, but no peace treaty or other political framework resolves the conflict to the satisfaction of the combatants. Georgia still considers the two territories, which are populated with different ethnic groups, a part of their country. Russia considers them independent.

Nagorno-Karabakh is another example; internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but  after several wars, most of the region is ruled by a de facto independent Armenian ethnic majority state. North and South Korea are also an  example of a frozen conflict zone. There is a cease fire, but a state of war officially rages on. The UN standoff in the war in Cyprus between the Greeks and the Turks has lasted nearly 50 years. Yes, a war exists, but no firing is taking place.

This is what many observers think will inevitably happen in Ukraine. In none of the other post-Soviet era conflicts did the U.S. become as heavily involved. 

Putin will never tolerate a defeat and Zelensky, with the help of U.S. weapons, seems to be dug in for the long haul while hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians and Russians continue to be slaughtered and maimed. 

The U.S. involvement in Ukraine will rank as one of America’s worst geopolitical blunders ever. Many European policy leaders fear continued brinkmanship toward Russia, like America First conservatives, will eventually lead to lead to a broader war, possibly with nuclear elements or even a Third World War. 

But perhaps the worst consequence is that with our worldwide sanctions, we have alienated China and driven it  into an anti-American alliance with its traditional enemy: Russia.  After his visit to Moscow, China’s President Xi boasted that the new relationship will bring about changes that “haven’t happened in 100 years.”

Moreover, America’s “you are with us or against us” attitude has antagonized India, large parts of Africa and much of Latin America, drawing them closer and closer into China’s orbit.The war has allowed long buried anti-American resentments to surface and find a united voice that was never articulated before.

America’s Ukraine war is also threatening the  dollar’s position as the world’s dominant reserve currency. Over the last 70 years, this has been an incredible financial asset, worth $500 to $700 billion per year, that has hugely benefited our economy and trading position.  

But since 2014, Russia has been moving away from investing in U.S. bonds. Currently, China is trying to establish the renminbi as a formidable competitor to the greenback—a strategy  worth paying particularly close attention to, says Stanford’s Matteo Maggiori. India has started paying for Russian oil with the renminbi and other countries may soon abandon the dollar as a trading currency. Last year, new investments into China surpassed new investments in America.

If the dollar is even partially dislodged as the world’s currency,  it would be a fiscal catastrophe for America’s economy, which leads to this question: Why is the U.S. risking all this? The ominous anti-American rapprochement between Russia and China is leading the U.S. into a new Cold War with two nuclear superpowers. Some commentators have pointed to what is called Thucydides Trap: a theory coined by eminent Harvard scholar Graham Allison, primarily used to describe a potential conflict between the United States and China. In Destined for War, he explains that when a rising power threatens to displace a ruling hegemon, the most likely outcome is war. Ominously, in a study of 16 historical instances, 12 ended violently.

The Ukrainian war will end in a settlement. The only question is whether that settlement comes sooner or later. Pope Francis said, “Let us remain close to the martyred Ukrainian people who continue to suffer.” The pontiff then pressed for the warring sides and “those in power in countries to make concrete efforts to end the war, achieve a ceasefire, and start peace talks.” Amen.

 

 

READ MORE:

https://scheerpost.com/2023/03/27/blake-fleetwood-no-question-ukraine-is-now-americas-war/

 

 

 

MAKE A DEAL PLEASE:

 

NO NATO IN "UKRAINE" (WHAT'S LEFT OF IT)

THE DONBASS REPUBLICS ARE NOW BACK IN THE RUSSIAN FOLD — AS THEY USED TO BE PRIOR 1922. THE RUSSIANS WON'T ABANDON THESE AGAIN.

CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN — AS IT USED TO BE PRIOR 1954

A MEMORANDUM OF NON AGRESSION BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE USA.

 

EASY.

 

THE WEST KNOWS IT.

 

 

 

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aussie/US decoupling....

 

By Dennis Argall

 

Very simply, we have to shake out cobwebs and think for ourselves. While it sounds simple, it is actually hard when trying to separate from a dominant ally and the “illusory truth effect” which envelopes us daily.

In recent years there have been hundreds of contributions here from writers urging that we withdraw from the defence alliance with the United States. But it’s easier said than done.

In February 2017 I wrote on “the complexity of saying no to the Americans” but practical difficulty continues to be a neglected subject, in contrast to the gentler or firmer calls for taking the step away in policy. Unless we want insurrection and disobedience in the ranks, we have to articulate a new vision for the ADF. To achieve a shift in perspective among those in all ranks who see no difference between Australian and American strategic perspectives will be far more difficult and more important because of its scale and because… well, because we won’t be getting off the Hollywood tit any time soon.

There has long been difficulty in some areas of the Defence Force distinguishing education from training. Training is how you give an order, what you do when you receive an order, what skills you bring to bear with what technology to kill people. Education is what should be provided so officers and other ranks alike understand the constitutional fabric of Australia and the place in that of the defence force; and the human and political geography, cultures and languages, of our national circumstance. And the legal positions of those who give and receive orders and act to kill people. Education becomes more important now as we are at hinge points, change moments, in regional and global affairs.

At the same time Australia is dealing with various policy and practical, social, economic, and environmental issues that have to be addressed as part of our contribution with other nations to improving rather than destroying the habitability of the planet for our species and others. We are hampered by the extent of couldn’t-give-a-stuffery and I’m-not-gunna-change-nuffin attitudes in the country; also simple addiction to the words that fall from the frown of John Howard.

The changes in our strategic circumstance are projected by some conservatives with focus on threats imagined: from China especially, with hostile vocabulary also for Russia. Thinking in terms of conflict. The rise of conflict, threat-and-killing-focused computer games builds young minds. In the binary structures with which IT, commerce, and economics run day to day, win or die are dominant notions.

It is difficult therefore for people to comprehend change in the strategic balance as other than a shift in military dominance. At tertiary education levels we have seen a shift from teaching international relations and strategic studies to institutions of conflict and security studies less given to understanding the world, more concerned, as are defence strategy studies, with identifying enemies and ways to whack ‘em. And the Morrison government made it more expensive to study humanities than theories and practices of killing.

If we stay with those directions, we may be comfortable within the White Mens Domains in the US, UK, EU and here. But we will lose our understanding of, and opportunities to interact with the other 90% of the world’s population. We will be disadvantaged because our aggressive fraction (about half) of our 10% of the world will no longer be facing economic, political or military “non-peers”. As more countries become economic peers or near peers, as they become military peers or near peers, we will have to grow up, become less callous, less arrogant… and more human. Iraq, Afghanistan and Ukraine would not have been possible had they been near-peer, had we been more cautious—and more respectful of life. We have the childish expectation that, increasing its defence force, China must have aggressive plans. Yet for Australia we have drummed in that our defence forces are just for defence. With a population of one third of one percent of the world population we spend 3.3% of global defence spending, excluding the US; 1.6% including the US.

We need to put aside expectations that, in the new multipolar world, defence forces and military action will shape the world. We should, as it were, come down from the trees. There will still be conflict, but less of the first-fine-carefree-disregard-of-human-lives as shown by the NeoCons.

There is a considerable number of regional economic groups around the planet, from RCEP, to which we belong, through the great array of organisations in Eurasia, Africa and Latin America, for which this valuable paper from the Tricontinental Institute for Social Research provides a good introduction.

Of especial importance as a force for change in this hinge era is BRICS, whose members bring together 40% of the world’s population. Many more countries have expressed interest in or applied to join BRICS. This briefing gives information about the candidates: note that it comes from an Asian regional business professional advisory company Dezan Shira and Associates. We should look for information sources like that outside the White Mens Domains. And we should get away from our childish woohoo-bad-guys view of BRICS etc. Assess as they are, not through dark glasses.

Our news is full of the fragility of the global financial system and the turbulence in the US political system. We need to see more from outside the White Mens Media, Think on these:

  • the BRICS countries and Arab states (BRICS candidates) are shifting their transactions and reserves away from the US dollar into their own currencies
  • the steps towards peace and normalisation of relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia have been facilitated by China
  • Saudi and Syria are teetering towards normalisation; the illegal US military occupation in Syria is more isolated in support
  • The discussions between Messrs Putin and Xi in Moscow, portrayed in White Mens Media as military, were mainly about economic cooperation and global development
  • and so on, make a start with different media:
  • and for a quality, different, coverage of the US financial situation, follow Ellen Brown, for a start HERE and HERE, and for more refreshing FACTS out of the US by subscribing to scheerpost.

It is now essential to work hard to discern truth. Caitlin Johnstone recently introduced me to the excellent term “illusory truth effect” which is discussed in wikipedia.

 

 

READ MORE:

https://johnmenadue.com/if-we-spit-the-american-dummy-what-becomes-of-us/

 

 

 

 

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rotting empire.....

In this episode of Capitalism Hits Home, Dr. Fraad traces a brief history of the rise and fall of the American empire. Throughout much of the 20th century, the US was the dominant global power, with strong unions, social programs, and a strong currency. 

Today, our wealthiest people are barely taxed, social services are weak, hunger and poverty are worse than ever, and the dollar is losing its primacy. How did we get here? How can we face this shift in global power and move forward? 

Dr. Fraad explores these questions. 

Correction: Judy Garland's death was never confirmed a suicide, but she was persecuted as a part of the communist party. 

Capitalism Hits Home with Dr. Harriet Fraad (CHH) is a @democracyatwrk production. The show addresses the intersection of capitalism, class, and personal lives, and explores what is happening in the economic realm and its impact on our individual and social psychology. Learn more about CHH: https://www.democracyatwork.info/capi... 

We make it a point to provide the show free of ads. Your contributions help keep this content free and accessible to all. If you would like to simply donate one time, you can do so by visiting us at http://www.democracyatwork.info/donate. Become a monthly donor: http://www.patreon.com/democracyatwork

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivwIWgL_AV4

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

MAKE A DEAL PRONTO BEFORE THE SHIT HITS THE FAN:

 

 

NO NATO IN "UKRAINE" (WHAT'S LEFT OF IT)

THE DONBASS REPUBLICS ARE NOW BACK IN THE RUSSIAN FOLD — AS THEY USED TO BE PRIOR 1922. THE RUSSIANS WON'T ABANDON THESE AGAIN.

CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN — AS IT USED TO BE PRIOR 1954

A MEMORANDUM OF NON AGRESSION BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE USA.

 

EASY.

 

THE WEST KNOWS IT.

 

 

 

FREE JULIAN ASSANGE NOW....

western incompetence....

by Andrei Martyanov

About this "LEAK of Pentagon documents” relating to the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AUF). OK, I'm not going to beat around the bush here — the only real interest in these “documents” is their “origin” in the purely internal game of the Americans which leads to catastrophe, when their plan was to triumph and humiliate Russia. Period.

In terms of valuable military information, these “documents” contain none other than confirmation that the Pentagon is completely clueless about the realities of the special military operation. The Peskov's answer to this "leakage" is quite relevant.

 

"We have no doubts about the direct or indirect involvement of the United States and NATO in the conflict between Russia and Ukraine," Dmitry Peskov told CNN in a statement. “This level of involvement is gradually increasing,” he added. “We are keeping an eye on this process. Of course, this makes the story more complicated, but it cannot influence the final outcome of the special operation”. 

 

It should be recalled that Russia has an extremely advanced ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) complex, ranging from human intelligence on the ground to electronic means and satellite constellations, which provide excellent situational awareness and tactical, operational and strategic aspects. When it comes to war correlates and combat stats, I wouldn't touch anything coming from the Pentagon with a long stick. As does note Larry rightly:

 

"This document, if true, removes any doubt that the United States and its NATO partners are heavily involved in helping Ukraine plan its next offensive. What puzzles me is why the US, NATO and Ukraine are talking so openly about the coming counteroffensive. Normally, professional military planners keep their plans SECRET and use deception to mask their true intentions. These documents are classified SECRET, which is normal. What doesn't make sense is that so many Western leaders are fussing over the “SECRET” counteroffensive."

 

Let's be clear: in terms of operational and strategic planning, NATO does not play in the same category as the Russian general staff. The problem, in the end, is not only military, it is cultural and incomprehensible to the united West. Especially considering the type of Russian “experts” who advise the military bloc designed only to strike at weak and defenseless victims.

As well Note my friend Marat Khairullin, REAL war correspondent who is constantly on the front lines:

 

"War correspondent Marat Khairullin explained the delay of the Russian forces in the assault on Bakhmut in the DPR. He shared his opinion on the PolitWera YouTube channel. Khairullin believes that the Russian troops have set themselves the goal of destroying the best reserves of the Ukrainian army and preventing an offensive, and therefore they are in no hurry to move forward. According to the military correspondent, the situation regarding the retention of Bakhmut has become a real headache for Ukraine, since the retention of the city has acquired a mainly political significance for Kyiv. Khairullin adds that the Russian forces are creating a NEED for Ukrainian troops in certain sectors of the front, so that UKRAINIANS are sending more and more reservists there to retain [AND BE SLAUGHTERED]."

 

Over the past five or six months, Vera, Vladimir Trukhan, Marat and yours truly have tirelessly been discussing the deliberate strategic defense setup of the Russian forces. It is also quite clear that Bakhmut is now a real headache for NATO. The fact that NATO generals could not see what became evident after Russian forces abandoned Kherson — effectively luring the AUF into the slaughterhouse — is staggering. It also demonstrates a complete detachment from the military and political elements of the West, which creates one disaster after another because the Western political apex is utterly, disastrously incompetent not only in basic military matters, but even lacking in rudimentary skills in terms of governance. The Russians, meanwhile, are eagerly awaiting the FAU “counter-offensive”. I'm sure with the planning of the Pentagon it will be an… overwhelming success, if you know what I mean.

source: Reminiscence of the Future

 

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

MAKE A DEAL PRONTO BEFORE THE SHIT HITS THE FAN:

 

 

NO NATO IN "UKRAINE" (WHAT'S LEFT OF IT)

THE DONBASS REPUBLICS ARE NOW BACK IN THE RUSSIAN FOLD — AS THEY USED TO BE PRIOR 1922. THE RUSSIANS WON'T ABANDON THESE AGAIN.

CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN — AS IT USED TO BE PRIOR 1954

A MEMORANDUM OF NON-AGGRESSION BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE USA.

 

EASY.

 

THE WEST KNOWS IT.

 

 

 

FREE JULIAN ASSANGE NOW....