Thursday 30th of January 2025

why does the western media always huff and puff about putin?.....

BEFORE GOING TO A VERY SLANTED/BIASED/ERRONEOUS ARTICLE FROM THE ABC IN REGARD TO YUCKRAINE, WE NEED TO STATE:

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.

THESE WILL ALSO INCLUDE ODESSA, KHERSON AND KHARKIV.....

CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN — AS IT USED TO BE PRIOR 1954

TRANSNISTRIA WILL BE PART OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

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

EASY.

THE WEST KNOWS IT (except the writer of the ABC article).

 

------------------

 

Donald Trump said he'd end the Ukraine war in a day. This is why it's not that easy
By Europe bureau chief Mazoe Ford

 

As the war in Ukraine approaches its fourth year, there is a collective feeling of exhaustion across the country.

A lot of people are asking: when will it end?

While campaigning last year, US President Donald Trump repeatedly declared he would end the war "in one day".

"I know [Ukrainian President Volodomyr] Zelenskyy well. I know [Russian President Vladimir] Putin well. I would get that ended in a period of 24 hours," he said in an interview with British broadcaster GB News last May.

"One hundred per cent, it would be easy. That deal would be easy."

Trump never said how he would do this, and many experts dismissed the claim as bluster.

Then, as his second presidential stint edged closer, he backtracked on that self-imposed, one-day deadline — and suggested six months was more realistic.

Earlier this month, his nominated envoy for Ukraine, retired General Keith Kellogg, told Fox News he had set a target to bring the war to an end in 100 days.

But many analysts say that timeline is tight, too.

How interested is Trump in ending this conflict?

For all of the boasts about deals and deadlines, some of Trump's statements have led many Ukrainians to believe he would cut off US funding and support for their war-torn nation.

The president's dislike for how much money the Biden administration handed over is well-known.

"Every time Zelenskyy comes to the US he walks away with $US100 billion. I think he's the greatest salesman on Earth," Trump said last September.

During an interview with NBC's Meet the Press last month, Trump was asked whether Kyiv should prepare for less aid from Washington after he was sworn in.

"Possibly," he said.

"Yeah, probably. Sure".

He then went on to reiterate his position that the European countries in the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) were not spending enough on defence.

According to NATO guidelines, member states should spend 2 per cent of GDP on defence.

Many do, but some countries don't, including Italy, Portugal, Canada and Spain.

Before re-entering the White House, Trump was vocal in his opposition to the outgoing administration's decision to allow Ukraine to fire US-supplied long-range missiles at targets inside Russia, describing it as an "escalation".

But retired General Ben Hodges told the ABC there were indications Trump was not just going to walk away from Ukraine.

"I can envision some scenarios where President Trump would see a reason to help Ukraine win, not based on moral or ethical sort of considerations, but from a pure advantage," he said.

"He's got a lot more leverage over Vladimir Putin now than he did eight years ago [when] he didn't even expect to win the election.

"Now, he is in a much better place from a personal experience and political power standpoint, but Putin, eight years later, is in deep trouble now because of this war — economically, politically, you name it."

Hodges said he was also "heartened" by the fact that those advising Trump on Ukraine, such as Kellogg and national security adviser Mike Waltz, are both pro-Ukraine and pro-NATO.

Last week, Trump said he wanted to meet with Putin as soon as possible.

"I really would like to be able to meet with President Putin soon to get that war ended," Trump told the World Economic Forum in Davos via video link.

"And that's not from the standpoint of economy or anything else, it's from the standpoint of millions of lives are being wasted.

"It's a carnage, and we really have to stop that war."

He threatened to impose "high levels" of sanctions on Russia and tariffs on imports if Moscow did not reach a deal.

Could Trump try to force Ukraine and Russia to make a deal?

The day after Trump spoke at Davos, he took to social media, telling Russia: "Settle now, and STOP this ridiculous War! IT'S ONLY GOING TO GET WORSE. If we don't make a 'deal', and soon."

"Let's get this war, which never would have started if I were President, over with! We can do it the easy way, or the hard way — and the easy way is always better. It's time to 'MAKE A DEAL'."

There is a fear among many Ukrainians that any deal brokered by Trump might try to make Kyiv cede territory to Russia.

Ukraine's ambassador to Australia, Vasyl Myroshnychenko, told the ABC his country would never do that.

"Not a single Ukrainian government will ever cede any territory in Ukraine, it's just impossible," Myroshnychenko said.

"More so, we have to understand it's not the territory that Russia wants; Russia wants to destroy all the sovereignty, they want to destroy our statehood."

Kyiv-based human rights lawyer Oleksandra Matviichuk, whose organisation the Centre for Civil Liberties in Ukraine won the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize, said finding an end to this was about much more than land.

"It's not about territories. It's about people who live there. It's our families, it's our relatives, it's our neighbours, it's about human beings," Matviichuk told the ABC.

"We will never return to the Russian empire."

Myroshnychenko said he believed the only way to protect his country's sovereignty was for it to join NATO.

It is something Zelenskyy has been lobbying hard for, but key NATO members such as the US and Germany have been resistant to, for fear of becoming ensnared in a war with Russia.

NATO countries are supposed to consider an armed attack against one member "an attack against them all".

"[NATO membership] is the only security guarantee Ukraine can get because otherwise Russians will come back. They will replenish, regroup, and will mount another attack," Myroshnychenko said.

"We want a lasting, comprehensive and just peace. Russia has to be held accountable for their war crimes … and we need to have some guarantees for this war to be over to actually make sure and prevent it from happening in the future."

Could a diplomatic solution be reached?

Zelenskyy was one of the first world leaders to congratulate Trump on his election victory back in November.

With the help of French President Emmanual Macron, Zelenskyy was then able to secure a meeting with the US president-elect on the sidelines of celebrations in Paris for the grand reopening of the Notre Dame cathedral last month.

"I had a good and productive trilateral meeting with President Donald Trump and President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysée Palace," Zelenskyy said on social media.

"We all want this war to end as soon as possible and in a just way."

Trump has expressed a willingness to meet with Putin to discuss the conflict.

Kyiv has previously voiced opposition to Western leaders interacting with the Russian leader, but it has not spoken out against the prospect of a Trump-Putin meeting.

Sir Lawrence Freedman, an emeritus professor of war studies at King's College London, told the ABC he thought "the key factor in all of this is how the Russians play it".

"I think the [new Trump] administration will want to test Russian attitudes as much as they can, but that requires the Russians to be prepared to be tested," he said.

On Monday, the Kremlin said was ready to organise a meeting between Putin and Trump.

"So far, we have not received any signals from the Americans," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

"Russia's readiness [for a meeting] remains, and the same readiness, as far as we have heard, remains on the American side.

"Apparently, a certain amount of time is required [to set something up]."

Is it all on the US to solve this?

Since the war began, Washington has sent more aid to Ukraine than any other country.

Trump's calls for NATO countries to boost their defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP would more than double the security alliance's current spending targets.

Matviichuk said it was in the interests of all countries, including Australia, to do more to help Ukraine.

"Ukraine is not just a goal for Russia, Ukraine is a tool — how to break the international rules-based order, how to dictate the rules to the entire international community, and even forcibly change internationally recognised borders," she said.

"And that's why Ukrainians are fighting, not just for ourselves, we are fighting for the international rules-based order established after the Second World War, which means that our fight is preventing the third one."

Myroshnychenko, who greeted Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong in Kyiv last month when Australia reopened its embassy there, said while Ukraine appreciated every dollar of Western aid, he described the funding as "drip drops".

"There is just enough assistance for us not to fail, but we're not getting enough of that assistance to be able to prevail," he said.

Zelenskyy has been firming up guarantees from key allies other than the US, while he waits to see what support from the Trump administration will look like.

Earlier this month, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced an "historic" 100-year pact with Ukraine, which would include 3 billion pounds ($5.9 billion) of British support a year indefinitely, more training for Ukrainian soldiers, and mobile air-defence systems.

Zelenskyy has previously asked for the UK, and other European allies such as France, to send peacekeeping troops when the war ends, but no commitments have been given.

How long could the fighting continue?

This month, Russia has gained ground in Ukraine faster than at any time during the war, and has launched sustained attacks on the country's energy infrastructure.

At the same time, Kyiv has been keeping up its attacks.

While neither country releases official death tallies, analysts said each side has sustained hundreds of thousands of casualties since Russia invaded in February 2022.

The most recent months have been particularly deadly.

Despite "the pressure on both sides", Professor Freedman said the fighting would continue until a diplomatic breakthrough has been achieved.

"The best assessment is you carry on more or less as before with the Russians sort of grinding away, throwing people at the problem, and the Ukrainians struggling to cope because they haven't mobilised as effectively as the Russians," he said.

"It's been difficult for the Ukrainians, there have been attacks on critical infrastructure and the Ukrainians have suffered from this, but it hasn't been as decisive as the Russians might have hoped."

For the people of Ukraine, danger has been a feature of daily life for almost three years.

"When we go to bed, we have no guarantees that we will get up next morning because the war is a lottery," Matviichuk said.

"You have no idea which next residential building will be hit."

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-01-29/what-trump-presidency-could-mean-for-ukraine-war-putin-zelenskyy/104822998

 

AT NO STAGE IN THIS ARTICLE HAS THE RUSSIAN GRIEVANCES BEEN TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT...

AS WELL, THE USUAL BULLSHIT FROM GEN. BEN HODGES IS BROUGHT THE FORE AS IF HE WAS THE ONLY EXPERT ON THE SUBJECT. PEOPLE LIKE JOHN MEARSHEIMER AND SCOTT RITTER ARE NEVER QUOTED BY THE ABC, BECAUSE THEY TELL THE TRUE STATE OF AFFAIRS... BUT.

THE FACT AND FIGURES QUOTED THERE IN REGARD TO THE CASUALTIES ARE USELESSLY SLANTED TO SUPPORT YUCKRAINE... AT THE BEGINNING OF 2023, SOME SECRET PENTAGON DOCUMENTS GOT ACCIDENTALLY RELEASED BY AN UNDERLING (HE GOT 15 YEARS IN PRISON FOR THIS)... THE RATIO OF CASUALTIES ADMITTED BY THE PENTAGON WAS 7 UKRAINIANS FOR ONE RUSSIAN. THE PENTAGON BOFFINS KNEW THAT THIS WAS NOT SUSTAINABLE. THE REALITY WAS 16 YUCKRAINIANS FOR ONE RUSSIAN. AND THIS WAS FAR TOO MANY FOR RUSSIA. PRESENTLY IT IS ABOUT 50 YUCKRAINIAN SOLDIERS FOR ONE RUSSIAN. STILL TOO MANY FOR RUSSIA.

IF UKRAINE HAS BEEN YUGOSLAVIA, NATO WOULD HAVE MADE SURE IT GOT SPLIT INTO A VARIETY OF SMALLER ETHNIC BIZOS... BUT THIS IS YUCKRAINE, A PRIZED TERRITORY FOR NATO — A RED LINE FOR RUSSIA. UNDERSTOOD? THE RUSSIAN DONBASS REGION WAS ONLY ADDED TO UKRAINE IN 1922 TO MAKE SURE THE GALICIANS ("ORIGINAL" UKRAINIANS) REMAINED UNDER "COMMUNIST" INFLUENCE... DURING WW2, THE GALICIANS JOINED THER GERMAN NAZIS AND KILLED 600,000 JEWS PLUS A GREAT NUMBER OF POLES, RUSSIANS AND OTHERS. 

PUTIN KNOWS HISTORY AND THE NEFARIOUS INTENT OF NATO. THE TRUMPY TOAD HAS NO IDEA AND ONLY PUFFS...

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

HYPOCRISY ISN’T ONE OF THE SINS OF THE TEN COMMANDMENTS.

HENCE ITS POPULARITY IN THE ABRAHAMIC TRADITIONS — ESPECIALLY IN EVANGELICAL TRUMPIAN/BIDENIAN AMERICA…

 

EU huffs n' puffs....

The European Union (EU) renewed sanctions against Russia and agreed on a road map to lift some of those imposed on Syria. At an EU foreign ministers meeting on Monday, leaders also called for a unified approach to deal with US President Donald Trump and what analysts refer to as his "divide and rule policy." 

The EU's top diplomat Kaja Kallas said as the US undertook a "transactional" foreign policy, Europe needed to "close ranks." 

"We are stronger when we are united," she told reporters. 

Zsuzsanna Vegh, a program officer at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, said that Trump intends to weaken the EU and deal with countries bilaterally. 

"European leaders competing for attention from the Trump Administration will have a negative impact on the unity of the EU," she told DW. "And Trump's support for the euroskeptic European far right could further weaken the union."

While no one is clear how exactly Trump's policy will unfold in coming weeks, and fears of a trade war continue to grow, there is some hope that he may not go easy on Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Behind closed doors European diplomats seemed relieved that Trump threatened to hit Russia with higher tariffs and even more sanctions if it didn't end the war Moscow started against Kyiv.

Kallas said it was good that Trump has put "more pressure" on Russia, and made it clear that the onus to end the war lies with Putin.

The Europeans are taking Trump's stern words against Russia as a positive sign. Experts say the US president's position likely took Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who is more Putin-friendly than the rest of EU leaders, by surprise. 

EU extends Russia sanctions as Orban dialed down threat to veto

The EU renewed sanctions against Russia that restrict trade with the country and freeze billions of sovereign assets. 

 

"Europe delivers, " Kallas posted on X as she confirmed the renewal of sanctions that comes up every six months. "This will continue to deprive Moscow of revenues to finance its war," she added. "Russia needs to pay for the damage they are causing." 

Orban had been stalling the process and had threatened to veto the extension if the EU didn't get Ukraine to transport Russian gas through its pipelines to Hungary. Earlier  this month Ukraine decided against renewing an agreement that allowed Russian energy sources to flow through its territory. 

Orban said he was putting the "handbrake" on sanctions renewal and claimed Hungary had been losing billions since Ukraine stopped Russian energy supplies. 

 "If the Ukrainians want help, for example to sanction the Russians, then let them reopen the gas pipeline and let them allow the Central European countries, including Hungary, to import the gas we need through Ukraine,” Orban had said. 

But then Orban relented.

Why did Orban give in? 

News agency Reuters reported that the EU Commission released a statement saying it is ready to continue discussions with Ukraine "on the supply to Europe through the gas pipeline system in Ukraine in line with Ukraine's international obligations."

The Commission also said it would involve Hungary and Slovakia in the process.

"The Commission will approach Ukraine to request assurances regarding the maintenance of oil pipeline transfers to the EU," it added. 

But the statement said nothing about whether it would ask Ukraine to resume supply of Russian gas, which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has flatly refused.

"We will not let the Russians profit," he told the press last week as he offered to set up an alternative: to let Azerbaijan supply gas to those European nations in need. 

Experts say that after Trump's unexpected admonishment of the Russian government to end the "ridiculous war" and "make a deal," Orban found himself in a quandary. 

Vegh said that Orban's giving in regarding the EU sanctions reflected that he "took into account the American position."  

"[Orban] expected Trump to step in regarding the war in a way that would benefit Putin and him," Vegh said. Trump's position may have come as a surprise to Hungary, she added. Orban "did have to tone down his objections" to the renewal of sanctions against Russia, and is now forced to "carefully navigate his ties with Moscow and Washington." 

EU suspends Syria sanctions

The EU is also assessing developments in Syria under the transitional authority of Islamist group Hayat Tahir al Sham (HTS), a former al Qaeda affiliate, as it lifts sanctions on the war-torn country. 

The bloc agreed on a "road map to ease sanctions" while retaining the option to reimpose them if Syria did not form an inclusive government, or if it was accused of grave human rights violations. 

Julien Barnes-Dacey, the director of the Middle East & North Africa programme at the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), said there is a growing consensus in Europe about the need for quick movement on sanctions relief, "even if there's a desire to ensure some degree of conditionality and reversibility to maintain some leverage over the new authorities."

"The dire state of the economy is clearly one of the biggest challenges facing a positive transition," Barnes-Dacey told DW. "There's a real risk that if the country can't be stabilized things could deteriorate quickly."

Edited by: Carla Bleiker

https://www.dw.com/en/eu-renews-russia-sanctions-calls-for-unity-against-trump/a-71427544

 

MEANWHILE, NO ONE HAS TRIED TO MAKE A DEAL WITH RUSSIA... RUSSIA'S POSITION REMAINS THE SAME SINCE 2022: THE DEAL OFFERED IN 2021 (WHICH DEMANDED THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE MINSK AGREEMENTS) AND REJECTED BY THE USA WAS THE BEST UKRAINE WAS GOING TO GET. FROM THE REJECTION ONWARDS. IN REGARD TO THE TRAP SET BY THE USA IN THE EAST OF UKRAINE (A PLANNED INVASION OF THE DONBASS BY THE KIEV REGIME ARMIES IN MARCH 2022), THE DEAL HAS CHANGED TO: 

NO NATO IN "UKRAINE" (WHAT'S LEFT OF IT) AS PER THE 2021 OFFER.

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

THESE WILL ALSO INCLUDE ODESSA, KHERSON AND KHARKIV.....

CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN — AS IT USED TO BE PRIOR 1954

TRANSNISTRIA WILL BE PART OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

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

EASY.

THE WEST KNOWS IT....

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

 

europe lies...

 

Russia Is Spinning Up a New Barrage of Lies in Europe

European officials are in a long battle against disinformation.

By Luke McGee, an Emmy Award-winning journalist covering European diplomacy.

 

THIS IS THE HEADLINE FROM FOREIGN POLICY....

 

ONE CAN SAY WITH CONFIDENCE THAT EUROPE IS LYING FAR MORE THAN RUSSIA...

 

WHAT ARE THE LIES OF RUSSIA?

 

As the war in Ukraine grinds into its fourth year, European leaders can do little more than sit and wait to learn what U.S. President Donald Trump’s supposed plan is to end the conflict, or whether Russian President Vladimir Putin will respond to Trump’s recent threat of tariffs and sanctions.

Few believe Putin will call time on Russian hostility to the West, which is why many officials have argued that 2025 will see a dramatic escalation in the Kremlin’s propaganda war.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2025/01/27/russia-putin-disinformation-hybrid-warfare-europe/?tpcc=recirc_latest062921

 

IF TRUMP ONLY GETS HIS ADVICE FROM THE WESTERN PROFESSIONAL BULLSHIT ARTISTS — OF WHICH THE FOREIGN POLICY WEBSITE IS ONE — HE'S GOING TO BE BELLIGERENT AND PUFFING LIKE A MILLION SENILE BIDENS...

THE LIES FROM THE KREMLIN ARE WESTERN-ANNOYING TRUTHS NONETHELESS... 

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

HYPOCRISY ISN’T ONE OF THE SINS OF THE TEN COMMANDMENTS.

HENCE ITS POPULARITY IN THE ABRAHAMIC TRADITIONS…