Moderators Note
On reflection I have:
- Closed the existing main Ukraine (catch all) thread (1991 replies and 99k views) and that on the shooting down of MH17 over the Ukraine
- Create two threads for current matters
- First the fighting and military aspects -
- Secondly the wider non-military context (diplomacy, politicis, economics etc), so includes MH17 matters - this thread
- The Russian Info Ops thread is now in the Europe arena (ends)
http://amsat-uk.org/2014/07/29/delfi...-over-ukraine/
Last edited by davidbfpo; 08-04-2014 at 08:15 PM.
Moderators Note
On reflection I have:
- Closed the existing main Ukraine (catch all) thread (1991 replies and 99k views) and that on the shooting down of MH17 over the Ukraine
- Create two threads for current matters
- First the fighting and military aspects -
- Secondly the wider non-military context (diplomacy, politicis, economics etc), so includes MH17 matters - this thread
- The Russian Info Ops thread is now in the Europe arena (ends)
davidbfpo
Some statistics concerning regionalism and decentralisation before and and after the start of war.
http://mercury.ethz.ch/serviceengine...+in+Ukrain.pdf
Just caught part of the BBC Radio Four programme 'Crossing Continents' and this report by Lucy Ash 'Crimea: Paradise Regained'. It will be a podcast soon and I assume available beyond the UK:http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04b22h3
I am sure her last few seconds referred to a plan / suggestion that Sevastapol revert to being a 'closed city' to Westerners and Russians.Europe and the US have imposed the toughest sanctions on Russia since the Cold War amid anger over the Kremlin's support for east Ukrainian separatists who stand accused of shooting down a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet. But the crisis began further south with Russia's annexation of Crimea in March.
Crimea's idyllic scenery drew Soviet visitors for years - some called it the Communist Cote d'Azur. The collapse of communism did little to dent Russia's appetite for their bit of paradise on the Black Sea along with the thousands of Ukrainian holidaymakers who flocked there each year. But now the Ukrainians are staying away and the Russian government is trying to fill the gap by urging employers in Russia to send staff on subsidised breaks in Crimea. A holiday in the newly annexed peninsula has become every Russian's patriotic duty. For Crossing Continents, Lucy Ash visits Crimean tourist resorts and explores the motives behind Vladimir Putin's fateful decision to reclaim Russia's paradise.
davidbfpo
Some ideas on inducing cooperation from Russia:
Originally Posted by A Grand Bargain with RussiaOriginally Posted by A Grand Bargain with RussiaOriginally Posted by A Grand Bargain with RussiaOriginally Posted by A Grand Bargain with Russia
When I am weaker than you, I ask you for freedom because that is according to your principles; when I am stronger than you, I take away your freedom because that is according to my principles. - Louis Veuillot
Haeresis est maxima opera maleficarum non credere.
Hey Mirhond, I got a question. When the Russian troops roll west over the border, are you going to be with them or are you going to be staying in Moscow?
"We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again." Gen. Nathanael Greene
you have got to be what none biased?
come on comrade---you never did answer where those 36 bodies that your "zealous Christians" in their burial rituals took as well as their credit cards, cash, jewelry, and smart phones.
you claimed they went to Donetsk but my friend they never did not make it there.
you are not what.....biased?
Last edited by davidbfpo; 08-12-2014 at 09:58 PM. Reason: Edited slightly or completly by Moderator to enable thread to remain open
Jamestown has article about Fsb guy Girkin/Stelkov's last employer Malofeeyev.
http://www.jamestown.org/programs/ed...5#.U-Uod2IaySMConclusion
From a purely religious perspective, the militants’ sectarianism has little in common with true Orthodox Christianity. But there is a distinct danger that the Russian Orthodox Church and even Russian authorities may be increasingly swayed by its radical nationalist ideology, the consequences of which could lead to further chaos and unrest along Russia’s borders. Consequently, proponents of this dangerous ideology such as Konstantin Malofeev—who have deep pockets and whom the Kremlin can, seemingly, count on to finance artificial militant rebellions abroad—pose a specific threat to Western policies and should not be ignored.
This blog has translated interesting article.
http://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com...irill-fsb.htmlFriday, August 8, 2014
Window on Eurasia: Patriarch Kirill, FSB Backing Different Candidates in Ukrainian Church Election
Speaker of DPR parliament is communist, who replaced Malofeeyevs another friend Pushilin.
http://inforesist.org/kommunisty-vzyali-vlast-v-dnr/
Orthodox church, communists, FSB, KGB, GRU etc. typical Russia's ideological mix.
Ps mirhond, have you changed your avatar already third time in a month? Do you need professional stylist
Last edited by kaur; 08-08-2014 at 09:20 PM.
Cited in part:This is neither a bargain for the West's relations with Russia or the electorates in the West. It is crazy.
Many here were critics of NATO long before the Crimea / Ukraine crisis. It makes no sense for NATO members. As for yet more money etc for the former USSR, I suspect that includes Russia itself. Do the authors not realise the electorate let alone the bankers have a very different view?
Then there's their view that the most critical players include Russian citizens. Really? We as outsiders might wish Russian citizens played a greater role in decision-making, currently they do not and may in fact support Putin's adventures. Enable Russians to work abroad. OK, in the UK and I expect other EU countries that is simply stupid - when unemployment remains a national problem. Have they heard of UKIP?
Finally what does Russia have to offer in the Pacific? Far less than it can offer in Europe and the Middle East.
davidbfpo
“The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary”
H.L. Mencken
I disagree with the article's proposal about NATO also. But I do think NATO can serve as the foundation of a larger security structure beyond the north Atlantic region. The international system has two pillars - one political (the U.N.) and one security (NATO). Occasionally they work in tandem (i.e. Afghanistan) but not always. I think building more security linkages would compel states to resolve issues diplomatically and would also help relieve some of the burden on the U.S. defense apparatus.
I'm not as familiar with the sub-national level of Russian politics as I'd like to be but it seems like to me the alliances with oligarchs, the emphasis on state information campaigns, and the manipulation of political parties suggest the presence to some extent of a sensitivity towards popular sentiment. I don't see a very strong connection to the formulation of Russian foreign policy (which, by the way, according to recent research is true of the U.S. as well).Then there's their view that the most critical players include Russian citizens. Really? We as outsiders might wish Russian citizens played a greater role in decision-making, currently they do not and may in fact support Putin's adventures. Enable Russians to work abroad. OK, in the UK and I expect other EU countries that is simply stupid - when unemployment remains a national problem. Have they heard of UKIP?
This is true but is that because Russia is unable to or because Russia has been unwilling to? I think about the effect the USSR had on the Pacific (communist China, North Korea, Vietnam) etc...Finally what does Russia have to offer in the Pacific? Far less than it can offer in Europe and the Middle East.
When I am weaker than you, I ask you for freedom because that is according to your principles; when I am stronger than you, I take away your freedom because that is according to my principles. - Louis Veuillot
Professor John Schindler has a long column 'Putin’s War and the Hitler Thing' and he ends with:Link:http://20committee.com/2014/08/09/pu...-hitler-thing/What will happen in Ukraine will become clear soon. In the meantime, it is wise to choose proper historical analogies that add to understanding of complex problems, rather than confusing issues further. Above all, it is imperative that educated Westerners, particularly the postmodern denizens of the WEIRD contingent, understand that things they cannot contemplate because they find them unpalatable or even ridiculous may seem quite plausible to others. What you find utterly unthinkable may prove quite thinkable, even reasonable, to your enemies.
davidbfpo
According to Russian authorities data, there are 730,000 Ukrainian refugees in Russia, over 48,000 officially seek refuge.По последним данным российских властей, всего с начала конфликта вынужденно покинули территорию Украины и находятся на территории РФ более 730 тысяч граждан. Ранее сообщалось, что более 48 тысяч из них оформляют документы на получение убежища.
http://ria.ru/society/20140808/1019248416.html
Haeresis est maxima opera maleficarum non credere.
mirhond who admitted he is residing and blogging from Russia----
you have got to be kidding using numbers from RIA---the mouth piece for the Communist Party and Putin--you really want us to believe the numbers.
you should actually contact the UNHRC and ask for their numbers which are totally different than your numbers---was it not also the UNHR that indicated that the Russian charges of human rights violations inside eastern Ukraine did not quite match those complaints being expounded by both RIA/Interfax and your boss Putin?
come on comrade at least get your source of numbers correct---but wait you cannot as you sit in Moscow working for the FSB and they will not allow to write anything else---right mirhond?
Last edited by davidbfpo; 08-12-2014 at 10:00 PM. Reason: Edited slightly or completly by Moderator to enable thread to remain open
Bookmarks