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russia is winning and is on the right side of history...The German, UK and French governments want to decide on Sunday whose representative will accompany Volodymyr Zelensky during his visit to Washington on August 18, the German newspaper Bild reported, citing government sources. CNN, citing sources, announced on Saturday that US Vice President JD Vance, who had previously clashed with Zelensky, would attend the August 18 meeting, while European officials expect one European leader to join the Trump-Zelensky talks in the White House, although it remained unclear who exactly. According to Politico, it could be Finnish President Alexander Stubb. According to the publication, Trump allowed Zelensky to take European politicians with him, but there is no official invitation. On Saturday, French President Emmanuel Macron, along with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, planned to hold another meeting of the "coalition of the willing" via video link on Sunday. That same day, Zelensky confirmed a planned visit to the United States on August 18 to meet with Trump. Earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Trump held talks in Alaska. The leaders met at the Elmendorf-Richardson military base. Their narrow-format talks in the "three-by-three" format lasted two hours and 45 minutes. The Russian side was represented by Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and presidential aide Yuri Ushakov. The United States was represented by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the US leader's special representative Steve Witkoff. Trump scolded Zelensky at the White House on February 28 when he arrived to sign an agreement on the joint development of Ukrainian mineral resources. The US leader demanded that Zelensky agree to a ceasefire and stop criticizing Putin. US Vice President JD Vance called Zelensky an ungrateful agitator for the Democrats when he began to justify his steps, blame Russia, and even threaten the United States that they would feel the consequences of the conflict, although they are separated by an ocean. As a result, the Ukrainian delegation was asked to leave the White House, and the agreement was not signed. Later, Zelensky tried to apologize, noting that he regretted what happened, and also stated that he agreed to negotiations as soon as possible.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
SEE ALSO: https://www.rt.com/russia/623016-lasting-settlement-essential-ukraine-putin/
SEE ALSO: https://www.rt.com/news/622931-eu-trump-putin-alaska/
SEE ALSO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p89d3VDQt54
SEE ALSO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqPQ6NdmHuo
Danny argues that the only real way to end the Russia–Ukraine war is through a direct peace agreement, not just a temporary ceasefire. Trump, who initially opposed sanctions and ultimatums, is now pushing for negotiations aimed at ending the war outright. An “air ceasefire” is being floated as a first confidence-building step to allow a Trump–Putin–Zelensky meeting, possibly within weeks. However, major obstacles remain: Zelensky still insists on sanctions pressure, security guarantees, and “nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine.” European leaders also issued a joint statement backing security guarantees and rejecting any Russian veto over Ukraine’s EU/NATO path—positions Russia sees as core threats. This risks undermining Trump’s peace push, since Russia will never accept those terms. The commentary stresses that Western leaders have repeatedly rejected diplomatic off-ramps (Minsk agreements, Istanbul talks, etc.), prolonging the conflict and Ukrainian suffering. If Zelensky or Europe block compromise, Putin will continue fighting until Russia secures its goals by force. The speaker urges Trump to call out Kyiv and Europe directly, warning that if they refuse peace, the U.S. should fully withdraw support. Bottom line: the war can only end if Putin and Zelensky agree, but Western demands are seen as unrealistic, leaving Ukraine facing ongoing losses unless its leadership shifts course.
SEE ALSO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvemmPak41I
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paying attention....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFIrEn9S4gc
Excluded Zelensky watched the Alaska summit so closely he got frostbite in his vitals. Stenographers for Nato. West believes Russia is nothing but a gas station. No ceasefire because Russia is winning......
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
summons....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KUE-nJP9ILE
Trump SUMMONS EU Leaders and Zelensky to Washington!Donald Trump has invited Zelensky and the European leaders to Washington on Monday 18th of August. Donald Trump will discuss the outcome of the Alaska Summit with the two parties and present them with a provisional plan that he has agreed upon with Vladimir Putin. Zelensky has stated that he will not cede territory to Russia under any circumstances and the EU leaders seem to share the same view. Bloomberg and NYT have written about Vladimir Putin’s demands regarding Donbas, the Russian language and the Russian Orthodox Church. Today, the Coalition of the Willing will hold a video conference at 3pm.
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
medialysis....
The Russia-US Summit as a Mediadiscursive Fixation Zone
On August 15, at the Elmendorf-Richardson military base in Alaska, a historic summit was held between the leaders of Russia and the United States, Presidents Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump. Despite the lack of concrete steps towards resolving the Ukrainian conflict, the meeting of the two heads of state marked a new stage in the transition process from a unipolar world system to a multipolar model.Dialogue between two centers of power at this level signaled to the world an increasingly evident thesis: the architecture of global security is capable of withstanding seismic shifts of any magnitude, provided there is political will for dialogue between the poles of power. In this context, the political marginalization and irrelevance of supporters of the Euro-Atlantic model’s hegemony in global security is becoming more apparent.
The Anchorage summit is presented in the media discourse as a kind of “fixation zone” for the processes of shaping a new world order, which Western media seek to challengeIn the current confrontation of narratives, which is an integral part of any hybrid war, discourse – composed of verbal signals, connotations, and semantic frameworks-serves as an important indicator for measuring sentiments and strategies of interpretation.
That’s why, in today’s world of political postmodernism, where disinformation and post-truth shape the agenda, discourse is what Western political science calls the “fabrics” of public policy. In other words, it is discourse that shapes political images, meanings, and the climate in a particular political domain. Accordingly, the aim of this article is to conduct a critical discourse analysis (CDA) of the Russia-US summit in Anchorage using the example of the German media landscape, serving as an effective academic-analytical tool for identifying dominant ideological attitudes and interpretations in Western liberal democracies.
Critical Discourse Analysis
The term “critical discourse analysis” (CDA) was introduced into the methodology of political research by Norman Fairclough, Teun van Dijk, and Ruth Wodak at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries. According to its definition, CDA treats language “as a tool for reproducing power, ideology, and inequality.” In other words, deconstructing the discourse of mainstream media allows us to understand how a particular topic is covered and presented. For example, in the context of the Russia-US leaders’ meeting in Alaska, CDA makes it possible to reveal which narrative construct around the summit is promoted and replicated in the German media landscape. A deep understanding of such verbal constructions allows for answers to a wide range of key questions, from the formation of the public image of contemporary Russia in global politics to the perception of the crisis in the Euro-Atlantic system of relations. Thus, CDA serves as an effective tool for analyzing both linguistic strategies and hidden ideological attitudes in media discourse.
The methodology of CDA often appeals to so-called “frames” – a concept which, according to Robert Entman, is defined as “the selection and highlighting of certain aspects of reality to strengthen a particular interpretation.” In other words, a frame is a verbal-cognitive structure that sets the form of interpreting events and phenomena. Based on the conducted analysis, this study identifies five key frames reconstructed from the materials of six mainstream German media outlets:
The “Victory” Frame
The dominant narrative in the German media space was the image of the “winner,” in which President Vladimir Putin was portrayed in the media discourse. From the start, the Russia-US summit was positioned in mainstream German publications not as a platform for negotiations aimed at forming the contours of strategic cooperation between Moscow and Washington, but as a kind of “chess game,” where President Putin’s archetype as an experienced and rational negotiator a priori guaranteed him a symbolic advantage over President Trump.
This choice of tone reproduced several stable linguistic patterns reinforcing the idea of Russia’s victory, such as:
The “Weakness” Frame
An asymmetrical role distribution in the media discourse manifested in the portrayal of President Donald Trump as an embodiment of the new West’s weakness. While Russia and its leader were depicted as the strategically winning side, the US was positioned not as an equal partner, but rather as a counterpart in a losing position.
The personification of strategic weakness in Trump’s image was reinforced by narratives emphasizing a crisis in the transatlantic security architecture. In the texts of German media, this perception was accompanied by typical expressions:
The “Disappointment” Frame
A significant part of the publications interpreted the summit through the prism of disappointment, linking the very fact of the meeting to the defeat of the collective West and Ukraine. Such a tone framed the talks as pointless and having no positive added value. Expressions reinforcing the idea of diplomatic stagnation and lack of results were used:
This lexis reinforced the dominance of a discourse of escalation, as opposed to diplomatic resolution following the presidents’ meeting.
The “Catastrophe” Frame
Some German publications resorted to a more radical tone, describing the summit’s consequences as catastrophic. The texts included such phrases as:
Especially telling was Tagesschau’s statement, calling the meeting a “gift to Putin,” which reinforced the narrative of Russia’s strategic victory and, accordingly, the West’s defeat.
The “Useless” Frame
The “uselessness” frame reflected the ambivalence of the German media discourse: on the one hand, attention was drawn to the summit’s “catastrophic” consequences for the West; on the other, the absence of concrete results was noted, which helped negate the summit’s significance. Such delegitimization was expressed in stable formulations:
Conclusions and Interpretations
Thus, based on a critical discourse analysis of mainstream German media’s coverage of the Russia-US summit, the following conclusions can be drawn.
Firstly, the discursive optics of the German media reflect a steady systemic tendency toward the dominance of an anti-Russian narrative. Tonality, verbal constructions, and stable phraseological patterns contribute to further deepening the polarization of public opinion regarding Russia’s international role and processes associated with building strategic dialogue with Moscow. An analysis of key German media outlets forming the agenda on a daily basis revealed no signs of a systematic transformation of the anti-Russian discourse in the Western liberal mediapolitical field, nor the political will necessary for such a transformation. Today’s mainstream media in fact echo the voice of the federal government led by Chancellor Merz, whose anti-Russian rhetoric seeks monopoly in the German political field.
Secondly, the identified frames reinforce the narrative about the systemic and structural crises of transatlantic relations, while at the same time indicating the gradual consolidation of a multipolar architecture of international relations.
The Anchorage summit is presented in the media discourse as a kind of “fixation zone” for the processes of shaping a new world order, which Western media seek to challenge – on the one hand, by strengthening the anti-Russian discourse, and on the other, by undermining trust in the narrative of the preservation of America’s unipolar model of global security.
Thirdly, the discourse surrounding the summit demonstrates that the media space acts not only as an instrument of information but also as an active mechanism for constructing political reality. The representation of the meeting in terms of “victory” and “defeat,” “meaning” and “meaninglessness” shows that language and frames become a full-fledged resource of geopolitical rivalry. The perception of global politics in the era of political postmodernism confirms CDA’s key thesis: information and its interpretations today are an active zone of contestation of meanings during the geopolitical transformation of the world.
Ramiz Khodzhatov – political scientist, international observer, expert in geopolitics, international security and Russian-German relations
https://journal-neo.su/2025/08/30/russia-us-summit-in-anchorage-a-critical-discourse-analysis-of-german-media/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.