Eastern Europe/Ukraine

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Austin
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

Pratyush wrote:We may just see the Russians try to rebuild the Union. With the like minded states.
There is CSTO that more akin to NATO thats been there since 90's , There is little chance that it may expand at best people will be where they are. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective ... ganization

Other than that the only Union is Custom Union thats more like Economic Block of Free Trading Nation , Most likely India and Vietnam will join in at some stage ( India officially has expressed interest in Joining ) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurasian_Customs_Union

Then there is SCO and this is like CSTO on Lite Diet , Mostly confined to anti-Terrorist/Narcotics, Intelligence sharing arrangement and prevent push of NATO towards East.

Likely India and Pakistan will join SCO in 2015-2016.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

RSoami wrote:Obama has been very sane. He has been acting against the US establishment. He should get credit for keeping American engagement abroad to minimum. We would have been staring at a third world war if we had someone like GWB2 or McCain at the helm.
Most like thats true as well , Had there been Hillary or McCain we would have seen US engaged in many wars..... Obama is not a through-breed politician thats also his downfall when it comes to foreign policy relying on bunch of Babus and NSA for advise and cannot think with his political hat on.

I saw on CNN today even Saudi Top official complaining about Obama , getting friendly with Iran , didnt bomb Syria ,couldnt contain Russia etc....

In the end in some ways what Obama did was not of typical Washington Streotypes and other were plain disaster , Only History will judge what he did and how it has impacted US.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

JE Menon wrote: 2. Libya? OK it is a necessary mess, but the US could have done with a lower profile there. But this one is OK, hard to say anyone else could have done better.
The UN Security Mandate for Libya was just for No Fly Zone , Using that mandate The US & Company simply went in bombing Gadaffi , supported local militia to take him out and in the end killed him.

This for Gadaffi who trusted the West gave up Nuclear Weapons , Missile and gave western companies big contracts after he reached a deal with them.

But then Libya and Iraq shared one thing in common once their leaders were out the country turned from bad to Worse and in the end it bought more misery to the common people then they were when those bad leaders existed.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by habal »

http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/arti ... 07321.html
45% of Russians Believe Shadowy Group Controls Humanity
The Moscow TimesSep. 17 2014 20:43 Last edited 20:43

"The world is run by some sort of overarching entity that pulls the strings in governments around the globe" is a statement nearly half of Russians would agree with, a state-run pollster revealed Wednesday.

The Russian Public Opinion Research Center found that 45 percent of Russians believe in the existence of an omnipotent force that lords over state governments, controlling the affairs of humanity. Only one-third of the population expressly rejects this hypothesis, while another 23 percent of Russians remain undecided, according to the survey.

The research center also revealed that individuals with higher levels of education and enviable salaries were more likely to embrace such theories than their less-educated, lower-earning counterparts.

..

Yet more than half of those who believe in the entity's existence are unable to identify who — or what — it is comprised of. Respondents to the survey listed "Jews," "masons" and "Great Britain," as among the groups that may be secretly running the show.

The survey also showed that 48 percent of those who believe in the existence of this global force are uncertain about its primary motive, or the reason for its existence.

Another 32 percent of those who believe in its existence think that its goal lies in world domination, while 10 percent said its aim is to enrich a select number of people.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

Frozen conflict? It also virtually assures the eastern pro-Russian enclaves effective independence from Kiev. Russia has made its point,humanitarian aid is flowing freely across the border through convoys,which could as easily turn into mil. convoys if the truce is broken by the chickens a la Kiev!

War over? Both sides in Ukraine conflict sign treaty banning military action
Published time: September 19, 2014
http://rt.com/news/189192-ukraine-milit ... on-banned/
Kiev and self-defense forces signed a memorandum aimed at effectively halting all fighting in eastern Ukraine after talks in Minsk. It creates a buffer zone, demands a pullback of troops and mercenaries, and bans military aviation flybys over the area.

READ MORE: Obama declines to give Ukraine 'lethal aid' despite Poroshenko's plea

The signed memorandum consists of nine points, former Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma told journalists following peace talks in Minsk, Belarus.

“The first [point] is to stop the use of weapons by both sides; the second is to stop all military and militia units in their positions as of September 19. The third is to ban the use of all types of weapons and offensive action,” former Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma, who represents Ukraine at the talks, told journalists.

The agreement outlines a buffer zone of 30km free from heavy weapons and bans all military aircraft from flying over the rebel-controlled part of eastern Ukrainian territory. An exception is being made for the surveillance drones used by the OSCE to monitor the situation, Kuchma said.

Kiev said it would start the pull-back of heavy weapons under the agreement starting on Saturday.

Ukrainian servicemen ride on an armoured vehicle near the eastern Ukrainian town of Pervomaysk, September 17, 2014. (Reuters/David Mdzinarishvili)

Ukrainian servicemen ride on an armoured vehicle near the eastern Ukrainian town of Pervomaysk, September 17, 2014. (Reuters/David Mdzinarishvili)

All foreign mercenaries must be withdrawn from eastern Ukraine by both sides of the conflict, the signed Minsk memorandum states, according to Kuchma.

“We have agreed on the withdrawal of all foreign mercenaries from both sides,” Kuchma said.

Both sides also vowed to continue the exchange of prisoners.

The OSCE has been tasked to monitor that both sides adhere to the memorandum’s conditions. The organization’s observers will be sent to observe the situation along the entire zone of the ceasefire, Itar-Tass reported.

Five hundred OSCE observers will be sent to monitor the ceasefire in eastern Ukraine, Lugansk People’s Republic representative Aleksey Karyakin said, adding that the meeting was quite difficult.

“We were able to substantially increase the number of OSCE observers in the conflict zone from 300 to 500,” he said.

The negotiations were also attended by Russia’s OSCE representatives.
Kiev, rebels exchange prisoners

On Saturday, the self-defense forces of the People's Republic of Donetsk and Ukrainian security services exchanged prisoners in accordance with the “40 for 40” formula on Saturday.

The exchange took place near the village of Konstantinovka, situated 60 kilometers south of the city of Donetsk.

The third convoy of Russian humanitarian aid has also crossed the border into Ukraine, Itar-Tass reported. The convoy consists of around 200 vehicles carrying some 2,000 tons of aid to the residents of southeastern Ukraine – including cereals, canned food, generators, medicine, warm clothes, and bottled water.

Before the convoy’s departure, Ukrainian border guards had been repeatedly invited to inspect the cargo by the Russian side. However, the border patrol declined all offers without citing any particular reason.

Russia's third humanitarian aid convoy is prepared to be sent to the southeast of Ukraine on a testing site in the town of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky, Rostov Region. (RIA Novosti/Sergey Pivovarov)

Russia's third humanitarian aid convoy is prepared to be sent to the southeast of Ukraine on a testing site in the town of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky, Rostov Region. (RIA Novosti/Sergey Pivovarov)

Meanwhile, the prime minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, Aleksandr Zakharchenko, declared that there will be “no Ukrainian election” in Donetsk, referring to one of the conditions set out in the September 5 Minsk protocol, which gave special status to the Donetsk and Lugansk regions, both located in eastern Ukraine.

Zakharchenko said he considers the special status as a declaration of independence of the self-proclaimed republics.

The memorandum follows a more general ceasefire agreement signed on September 5, which outlined a peace roadmap negotiated by Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko and representatives of the self-proclaimed republics of Donetsk and Lugansk.

READ MORE: Minsk protocol: Ukraine to be decentralized, special status for Lugansk, Donetsk

Despite the agreement, there have been numerous reports of truce violations since then. Both troops and anti-government fighters blame each other for sporadic shootings.

On Tuesday, the Ukrainian parliament approved laws on a special status for the Donetsk and Lugansk regions, as well as amnesty for those participating in the hostilities. Both points were originally outlined in the September 5 agreement.

READ MORE: Special status to E. Ukraine regions, amnesty to combatants - parliament

The law guarantees the right to use and study Russian or any other language in Ukraine. It also states that local elections are to take place in the regions on December 7.

The law will be valid for three years, but could be terminated in six months if order is not restored, according to the Ukrainian president’s advisor, Igor Gryniv.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Shreeman »

Phillip,

Difficult to imagine this will stick -- novorssoiya or whatever is not in the law. Trains to crimea still go through ukraine proper and Zaporizhiya or whatever hasnt even entered the picture. 100,000s still dependent on russia for food through the winter.

ukraine hasnt gotten anything out of this, and they have to leave a lot of armor behind. donetsk is not going to be won by any western weapons next year and they have the elections. the blond lady will not look kindly at loss of two plus provinces.

then there is the unpredictability of the matters on the ground. ukraine has been firing totchkas into donetsk through the last ceasefire.

it will be a ceasefire in name only until hell freezes over ( which is only 4 weeks away by the way).
why do you think anything will change on the ground?

I am not optimistic this will last next year. The ukrainians will continue to itch for everything including crimea.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Satya_anveshi »

Huge blast devastates munitions factory in Ukraine’s rebel-held Donetsk
“There was a direct hit at the No 47 industrial explosives shop, where some explosives were present. It detonated and caused another explosion. Luckily it didn’t hit the main storage facility where we have some 2.5 tons of explosives,”
The blast happened just as a Russian humanitarian aid convoy was unloading elsewhere in the city. Some 200 trucks carrying 2,000 tons of aid crossed the border earlier on Saturday.

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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Satya_anveshi »

Reminds me of Ojhri Camp incident in pukiland.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

Swift diplomatic moves by Russia to evict the US from Kyrgyzstan.

Russia tightens control over Kyrgyzstan
As EU imposes new sanctions on state-owned companies, Gazprom and Rosneft invest heavily in Central Asian state
Stephanie Ott in Bishkek
theguardian.com, Thursday 18 September 2014

Vladimir Putin with the Kyrgyzstan president, Almazbek Atambayev.

While Russia’s relationship with Ukraine has been grabbing the headlines, Moscow has been steadily strengthening its foothold in another of the post-Soviet states – Kyrgyzstan.

In the past few years Russia has written off half a billion dollars of the impoverished Central Asian country’s debt, pledged to supply the government with weapons and military equipment and taken over its gas network.

The state-run oil giants Rosneft and Gazprom, the subject of new EU sanctions announced last week, have both invested heavily in new energy projects in Kyrgyzstan over recent years.

Significantly, Russian influence resulted in the recent closure of the massive US air base Manas outside the capital Bishkek, marking the end of American military presence in the region.

“In essence, the closing of Manas marks Kyrgyzstan’s new era as a Russian client state,” said Central Asia specialist Alexander Cooley, professor of political science at Barnard College at Columbia University.

Manas was built in 2001 after the 9/11 attacks and served as a base for more than 5.3 million Nato troops serving in Afghanistan. It officially closed in July 2014.

“The Kyrgyz side faced significant pressure from Moscow to close the facility,” Cooley said.

Acting under a mix of pressure and economic incentives from Russia, the Kyrgyz government first tried to evict the US from Manas in 2009. The Americans agreed to raise the annual rent from $17.4m to $60m, and the base was allowed stay.

But Russia grew increasingly wary of foreign military presence in the region, and upped the ante.

“This time Moscow has effectively used a number of instruments of influence to assert itself as Kyrgyzstan’s primary foreign policy and security partner,” Cooley said.
US soldiers prepare to head to Afghanistan from Manas airbase near Bishkek in 2011. US soldiers prepare to head to Afghanistan from Manas airbase near Bishkek in 2011. Photograph: Vyacheslav Oseledko/AFP/Getty Images

In August, Russia pledged $500m in financial assistance to Kyrgyzstan to speed up Kyrgyzstan’s integration into the Moscow-led Eurasian Economic Union, an economic bloc that currently includes Belarus and Kazakhstan. Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the funds will ensure “maximum comfort” for Bishkek, but did not disclose details what the money will be spent on. Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev said his country would join the Eurasian Economic Union by the end of the year.

Now that the foreign military presence is gone from Kyrgyzstan, “Russia will now assert itself as the country’s exclusive security patron,” Cooley said.

In 2012 Russia agreed to write off almost $500m of Kyrgyz debt in exchange for a 15-year extension of the lease for a Russian military air base.

Moscow operates four military installations in Kyrgyzstan, including the Kant Air Base near Bishkek where 600 Russian servicemen and a number of warplanes are based, and a naval test site at Lake Issyk Kul in the Tien Shan mountains.

Russia also pledged to supply weapons and other military equipment worth $1.1bn to Kyrgyzstan as part of a bilateral armed forces assistance programme, according to the Russian news agency RIA Novosti.

Experts say that with these measures Putin is trying to restore influence in the region that Russia lost when the Soviet Union disintegrated.

According to Alexei Malashenko, a Central Asia scholar and chair of the Carnegie Moscow Center, Russia exerts a lot of power over Kyrgyzstan. “To my mind, Kyrgyzstan is more controlled by Moscow than other Central Asian states,” he said. Kyrgyzstan’s current president Almazbeck Atambaev “sees no alternative to Russian economic and political presence,” he added.

Anti-government protests that let to the resignation of former president Kurmanbek Bakiyev in 2010. Photograph: KPA/Zuma / Rex Features/KPA/Zuma / Rex Features

Kyrgyzstan’s gas infrastructure was put entirely under Russian control this year. Russia’s Gazprom paid a symbolic $1 to take over the Kyrgyzgaz natural gas network in July, and vowed to invest 20bn roubles ($521m) to upgrade its infrastructure in the first five years. With this deal, the Russian gas giant also assumed Kyrgyzgaz’s debts of around $40m.

This month Bishkek announced that Gazprom would start exploration of gas fields in Kyrgyzstan by late September. Other recent deals include RusHydro, a Russian state-owned energy company, which began construction on a series of hydroelectric dams in Kyrgyzstan.

Rosneft, the Russian state-owned oil company, also signed a deal in February this year to invest up to $1bn for a stake of at least 51% in Manas International Airport.

Last week the EU announced new sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine crisis, including restrictions on the Rosneft and Gazprom, which will now be prevented from raising capital on EU markets.

Kyrgyzstan has many ethnic and cultural similarities with Russia. Almost one million Kyrgyz people are said to work abroad, most of them in Russia. Their remittances, according to the World Bank, make up 30% of Kyrgyzstan’s GDP.

Kyrgyzstan is the only multi-party parliamentary democracy in Central Asia, but the political system is under pressure. Two presidents have been deposed by violent revolts since 2005.

Mirsuljan Namazaaly, a political economist in Bishkek and the co-founder of the Central Asian Free Market Institute, said: “I wouldn’t say that Kyrgyzstan is politically independent from Russia, as many laws are just copying the laws from Russia, presidents and members of parliament always look at Russia and do what Russia can approve.” However he stressed that Kyrgyz people are generally not opposed to Russia’s influence, and that most favour the Russian presence and support in their country.
This is what India should've done/do in Sri Lanka.Make the Rajapakse regime an offer it cannot refuse and throw the Chinese into the IOR.Every opportunity offered to us first (Hambantota,etc.) was squandered by the GOI of the day,mainly the treasonous regime of Quisling Singh and the Roman empress. Quislign stuck his head and turban in the sand and the Chinese simply walked in,with their malevolent parasitic tick,Pak,upon its back. We now will have to spend billions to strengthen our vulnerable southern borders when a billion or so spent in Sri Lanka earlier could've kept the Chinese out.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

Russia Sending New Stealth Submarines to Crimea
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/business/ ... 07287.html
By Matthew Bodner
Sep. 17 2014
The Novorossiisk's sister ship, the Stary Oskol at the Admiralty Shipyards in St. Petersburg

As part of its military buildup in recently-annexed Crimea, the Russian military is deploying the first of six new ultra-quiet Kilo-class submarines to the Black Sea Fleet, a spokesperson for the armed forces said Wednesday.

Earlier on Wednesday, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu called the buildup of Russian forces in Crimea a top priority for the military, as "the situation in Ukraine has escalated sharply and the presence of foreign military has increased in the immediate vicinity of our borders," news agency TASS reported.

Russia seized Crimea from Ukraine in March, prompting an international crisis that has been deepened by bloodletting in eastern Ukraine, where the West accuses Moscow of supporting pro-Russian separatist militias.

The new stealth submarine, named the Novorossiisk, is still in St. Petersburg, awaiting transfer to the Northern Fleet for its final sea trials and cruise-missile tests, a spokesperson for the Southern Military District told RIA Novosti Wednesday. After completion of these final tests, the boat will be deployed in Sevastopol — home of the Black Sea Fleet.

An update to the classic Kilo-class diesel-electric submarine design, the Novorossiisk is quieter than most of the nuclear powered submarines that Russia operates, such as the new Yasen-class attack submarines that are being built for the Northern Fleet.
While the Yasens are designed for long-range deployments in the deep oceans, diesel-electric submarines like the Kilos are suited for operations close to home in shallow waters.

The Black Sea Fleet will receive 6 brand-new Kilo-class submarines by 2016. The second boat under construction, the Rostov-on-Don, was launched in July, while the third and fourth vessels — the Stary Oskol and Krasnodar — are still under construction. Two more boats will be laid down for construction within the next two years.

Russia has built a great many Kilos over the years, as they are a popular export item for the defense industry. Since their introduction in the 1980s, Russia has exported 19 of the submarines to China, Iran and India, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a nonprofit organization that tracks the proliferation behaviors of major world powers.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Shreeman »

cease....fire!!!. Also, general obvious is a general.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by sampat »

Pro-Ukrainian demonstration in Moscow. Live Now..Reports

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQN0hEY ... ewcasterTV

estimated 5000 people are demonstrating according to Russian government. Opposition parties claims it is up to 100000 people.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

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Prime Minister Modi: India Supports Peaceful Reconciliation of Ukrainian Crisis
NEW DELHI, September 21 (RIA Novosti) - India stands for the peaceful resolution of the Ukrainian crisis, involving all parties, the country's Prime Minister Narendra Modi told CNN in an interview, broadcasted Sunday.

"Ultimately, India's view point is that efforts need to be made to sit together and talk, and to resolve problems in an ongoing process," Modi said.

"There is a saying in India that the person who should throw a stone first is the person who has not committed any sins," prime minister replied to the question about India's stance on the alleged role of Russia in the Ukrainian crisis – the topic, never particularly commented by Delhi.

Narendra Mori gave an interview to a Western television channel for the first time since his assumption of office in May. His first visit to the United States as the leader of India, including a meeting with US President Barack Obama is scheduled next week. In 2005, Modi, then chief minister of India's state of Gujarat, was denied entrance to the United States over a religious riot in his state, which led to around 1,000 deaths.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Deans »

http://www.segodnya.ua/regions/donetsk/ ... 54094.html

This is a link to a Ukrainian newspaper (in Russian). It basically quotes Chocolate saying that the Ukrainian army has lost 60-65%
of its vehicles in the war !
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Deans »

sampat wrote:Pro-Ukrainian demonstration in Moscow. Live Now..Reports

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQN0hEY ... ewcasterTV

estimated 5000 people are demonstrating according to Russian government. Opposition parties claims it is up to 100000 people.
This was covered in the Russian media. They are people who represent a broad spectrum of Anti-govt views and protest everytime they are asked to. One of the sub groups in the protest was for gay rights. (total crowd according to different estimates was between 5-25000). There was also a pro rebel demonstration.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Shanmukh »

Deans wrote:http://www.segodnya.ua/regions/donetsk/ ... 54094.html

This is a link to a Ukrainian newspaper (in Russian). It basically quotes Chocolate saying that the Ukrainian army has lost 60-65%
of its vehicles in the war !
Thanks, Deans-ji. Very interesting. Read the article fully. Poroshenko claims that the fighting capacity of the frontline units is restored (if I understood his claim correctly). Maybe someone should ask him what it cost to replace 60% of the equipment, no?
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Pratyush »

In a perverse manner, we can say that a substantial minority in Russia is open to the idea of a Colour revolution.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

Mostly these are the Well Educated Western leaning Moscovites ...They were against Gay Bill and also against Putin when he stood for election last time and when Hillary Clinton gave the message to protest.

Being in Moscow they can attract the media attention.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

The ceasefire agreed upon by Choco zero before the onset of the assault on the UKR by Gen.Winter!
That was a nice one by Modiji,quoting Christ about "...throwing the first stone"
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Neshant »

Ukraine envoy for Scottish type referendum in Kashmir

Tuesday, September 23, 2014 - Islamabad—The ambassador of Ukraine in Pakistan Volodymyr Lakomov on Monday said Kashmir is an internal issue between Pakistan and India, however a referendum on pattern of recent Scottish referendum in Kashmir might resolve the issue.

While addressing a news conference here at the embassy the ambassador of Ukraine in Pakistan Volodymyr Lakomov observed that the ratification of an agreement by Ukrainian parliament to deepen economic and political ties with European Union will bring Ukraine to EU.

Elaborating further the, Lakomov observed, in the same time the EU Parliament also approved the historic document with 535 votes. He pointed out that Ukrainian President while addressing a recent sitting of US congress had mentioned that Ukrain is not having a war for her freedom, but was engaged in the battle for the regional peace and stability. The Ukrainian ambassador added further that Ukrainian Minister for Foreign Affairs Pavlo Klimkin has said that the idea of the Association Agreement between Ukraine and EU is perceived by Russia as an intrusion into the sphere if its interests. One of the best possibilities to guarantee Ukraine’s security is successful implementation of the Association Agreement, Volodymyr Lakomove stressed while quoting Pavlo Klimkin.

Volodymyr Lakomov while responding a question was of the view that after recent ceasefire agreement with Russian, the hundreds of ceasefire violations have been spotted by the Russians inside Ukraine. “We sought a moral support from Pakistan over the issue being a Ukraine’s friend,” Lakomov added further. He stated that his government was in continues contact with Pakistan’s Ministry for Foreign Affair over Russia-Ukraine issues. Over issue of recent referendum in Karimia, Ukrainian envoy termed the referendum as a joke saying as “With respect to NATO Secretary Generals’ statement on reported elections in the automomous Republic of Karimia, Ukraine, the Ukrainian side together with NATO do not recognize these elections.

He added that that it is obvious that Russia remains reluctant to enter the realm of international law and find a modality of peaceful coexistence with Ukraine. To a question he maintained that historically Ukrain remained part of Europe not the Russia and that is the reason it is moving a head towards European Union, although it will take few years to be part of EU. Responding another question he mentioned that that Kashmir is an internal issue between Pakistan and India, however a referendum on pattern of recent Scottish pattern in Kashmir could resolve the issue.—Online


http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=253041
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

The False Promise of Petro Poroshenko
http://nationalinterest.org/feature/the ... ?page=show
The habit of inviting foreign dignitaries to address Joint Meetings of Congress is one of the more longstanding, as well as dubious, American political traditions. Since 1874, according to the Office of the House Historian, 110 foreign dignitaries or heads of state have addressed a Joint Meeting of Congress, the most recent being President Petro Poroshenko of Ukraine, who appeared on the House rostrum last Thursday.

In his address Mr. Poroshenko cautioned that “if [the Russians] are not stopped now, they will cross European borders and spread throughout the globe,” and that the conflict in Ukraine is one between “civilization and barbarism.” He added, “[T]he only thing that now stands between the reality of peaceful coexistence and the nightmare of the full relapse into the previous century, into a new Cold War, are Ukrainian soldiers.” Given their performance in recent weeks, let’s hope not.

In keeping with a time-honored American political tradition, Mr. Poroshenko made sure to make all the right noises about the sacrosanct quality of “democracy.” Ukraine, he told Congress, is at the “forefront of the global fight for democracy” and “democracies must support each other . . . otherwise they will be eliminated one by one.” Channeling his inner William Wallace, he declared that Ukrainians have “an unbreakable will to live free.”

Poroshenko was doubtlessly aware that rhetoric of this sort works wonders in helping to secure Congressional largess. Michigan Senator Carl Levin said the speech was a “real rousing call to us to be supportive of their dreams,” while Tennessee Senator Bob Corker declared it “a great speech” and found it “just embarrassing…the way our administration has responded to Ukraine.”

President Obama, meeting with Poroshenko in the Oval Office after the speech, assured him, “You have a strong friend not only in me personally, but I think, as you saw in Congress today, you have strong bipartisan support here in the United States.” The administration then pledged to provide Ukraine an additional $60 million in nonlethal aid. And not to be outdone, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously passed the Ukrainian Freedom Support Act which would designate Ukraine (and Georgia and Moldova) a “major non-NATO member ally,” impose further sanctions on Russia and provide $10 million over three years to assist Ukraine in countering Russian propaganda.

This sequence of events is simply part and parcel of foreign leaders appearing before Congress to profess their devotion to democratic ideals, and then fly home and wait for the American eleemosynary assistance to start rolling in.

You can hardly blame Poroshenko: it’s worked for Ukraine before. In 2005 President Viktor Yushchenko had his turn before a Joint Meeting of Congress, where he said, “The Orange Revolution provided evidence that Ukraine is an advanced European nation sharing the great values of Euro-Atlantic civilization.” Afterwards, North Dakota Senator John Thune said that Yushchenko’s speech was “an affirmation that freedom is on the march.” Meeting with Yushchenko at the White House, President George W. Bush said that Ukraine was “an example of democracy for people around the world.” Bush then sought an additional $60 million from Congress to help aid the cause of “reform” in Ukraine. Plus ca change, plus c'est la même chose.

Yet for all the fulsome talk, then and now, of the America and Ukraine’s common democratic values, Poroshenko’s claim that the fight between Ukraine and Russia is one between “civilization and barbarism” merits some scrutiny.

Nearly coinciding with Poroshenko’s visit to Washington, Amnesty International released a report documenting a number of atrocities committed by both the rebels and by forces in the employ of Kiev. According to the Amnesty report, Kiev’s far-right Aidar battalion has been responsible for “abductions, unlawful detention, ill-treatment, theft, extortion, and possible executions.” Reports have also surfaced that far-right militias, taking a page from the ISIL playbook, have started beheading captive rebels. Newsweek, citing Ukrainian news sources, recently reported that the head of one such unfortunate was returned to his mother in the mail.

In a sense, these battalions are taking their cue from Kiev’s political class, which routinely employs dehumanizing language to describe pro-Russian Ukrainians. A senior adviser to Poroshenko, Yuriy Lutsenko, has referred to the residents of Donetsk as “Kremlin-poisoned citizens” while former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko expressed her desire to kill Russians living in Ukraine with nuclear weapons.

Further, there have been ample reports coming out of Europe that cast a rather less-than-heroic light on Ukraine’s freedom fighters. In the UK, the Telegraph, the Guardian, the BBC and the Independent have all reported on the neofascist character of many of the volunteer battalions who—though they fall under the purview of the Ukrainian Interior Ministry—are largely funded by private donations. According to a report in the Telegraph, Andrei Biletsky, a leader of both the Azov battalion and the far-right Patriots of Ukraine (which has joined Prime Minister Yatsenyuk’s newly formed People’s Front coalition), has written that “The historic mission of our nation in this critical moment is to lead the White Races of the world in a final crusade for their survival…a crusade against the Semite-led Untermenschen.”

Yet if any of this was the cause of disquiet among Mr. Poroshenko’s legions of fan on Capitol Hill, you’d never know it. Likewise, pundits from across the political spectrum have labored mightily to paint Vladimir Putin as Hitler’s rightful heir. In a recent op-ed in the Washington Post, George F. Will noted that what really worried him about Putin was that his “fascist mind” possessed an “ethnic-cum-racial component” that renders it “Hitlerian.” Mr. Putin’s animus toward the West makes him “more dangerous than the Islamic State.” Former Deputy Secretary of State and the current CEO of Brookings Incorporated, Strobe Talbott, wrote in Politico that “what’s new about Putinism” is “the ultra-nationalist proposition that Russian statehood should be based on ethnicity.” Talbott concluded that Russia under Putin “is a potential threat to world peace.” And in a much discussed essay for The New Republic, Timothy Snyder opined that fascist ideas “are on the rise in Russia” and that “people can say what they like in Russian in Ukraine, but they cannot do so in Russia itself.”

These claims should be evaluated in light of several recent developments in Russia. In early September, Russia’s Presidential Human Rights Council proposed changes to a 2012 law requiring NGO’s to register as “foreign agents.” On September 8, a Moscow city court ruled that the election monitoring organization Golos was not required to register as a “foreign agent” under the act. This weekend roughly 20,000 protesters took to the streets of Moscow to protest Russia’s involvement in the Ukrainian crisis. Some waved the Ukrainian tri-color and while others held signs mocking Putin and the Kremlin. Other, smaller, antiwar (they could also fairly be characterized as anti-Putin) rallies took place in St. Petersburg and Yekaterinburg. The day of the rally, the former oligarch turned dissident Mikhail Khodorkovsky announced his return to Russian political life. In an interview in Le Monde he announced his intention to relaunch his political foundation, Open Russia, and discussed his willingness to return to Russia run for the presidency “in case it appears necessary to overcome the crisis and carry out constitutional reform." A longtime Russia-watcher blogged: “Mikhail Khodorkovsky is not a modern day Alexander Herzen. His openrussia.org isn’t The Bell. And Russian society today is not asleep, awaiting the White Prince. On the contrary, Russia is a beehive of activity and of free debate.” [Emphasis added].

All of this is certainly not to say that Russia is a model liberal democracy, that it has no far-right politics, or that the Russian government’s actions throughout the Ukraine crisis have been praiseworthy. It is to suggest, though, that the picture is more complex than the White House, the Congress and many pundits would lead us to believe. It would be closer to the mark to say that there is a party to the Ukrainian conflict that is at risk of backsliding into fascism. It just happens to be the one we’re supporting.

James Carden is a contributing editor of The National Interest.
UlanBatori
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by UlanBatori »

Oh! UkBapziStan is now a MUNNA!!!
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously passed the Ukrainian Freedom Support Act which would designate Ukraine (and Georgia and Moldova) (and Pakistan) a “major non-NATO member ally,”
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Satya_anveshi »

That is a formal declaration of surrender by Uncle Scam. From full NATO member to being MUNNA and giving such declaration from US senate. wah wah..
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Deans »

Chocolate reportedly asked NATO for M-1 Tanks. His statement that the Ukrainian army units lost 65% of their vehicles, was to build grounds
for free weapons (in that regard he's learnt from the Paki's). His generals were bluntly told by NATO that their problem was the competence of crews in handling even T-64's and that their weapons had a disturbing tendency to fall intact into rebel hands. As a sop, Ukraine got MUNNA status and
some non lethal aid.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

Obama excerpts in UN Speech on Ukraine
This is the except in which Russia and the Ukraine are mentioned:

(...) Russia’s actions in Ukraine challenge this post-war order. Here are the facts. 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.

This is a vision of the world in which might makes right – a world in which one nation’s borders can be redrawn by another, and civilized people are not allowed to recover the remains of their loved ones because of the truth that might be revealed. America stands for something different. We believe that right makes might – that bigger nations should not be able to bully smaller ones; that people should be able to choose their own future.

These are simple truths, but they must be defended. America and our allies will support the people of Ukraine as they develop their democracy and economy. We will reinforce our NATO allies, and uphold our commitment to collective defense. We will impose a cost on Russia for aggression, and counter falsehoods with the truth. We call upon others to join us on the right side of history – for while small gains can be won at the barrel of a gun, they will ultimately be turned back if enough voices support the freedom of nations and peoples to make their own decisions.

Moreover, a different path is available – the path of diplomacy and peace and the ideals this institution is designed to uphold. The recent cease-fire agreement in Ukraine offers an opening to achieve that objective. If Russia takes that path – a path that for stretches of the post-Cold War period resulted in prosperity for the Russian people – then we will lift our sanctions and welcome Russia’s role in addressing common challenges. That’s what the United States and Russia have been able to do in past years – from reducing our nuclear stockpiles to meet our obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, to cooperating to remove and destroy Syria’s declared chemical weapons. And that’s the kind of cooperation we are prepared to pursue again—if Russia changes course. (...)
Basically, this is the same line as Poroshenko (which is really unsurprising since they used pretty much the same speechwriters). The message to Russia is simple:"surrender or we will mobilize the entire planet against you".

Foreign Minister Lavrov commented:
“As for the U.S. President’s speech, we earned the second place among the threats to international peace and stability: number one is the Ebola virus, number two is the so-called Russian aggression in Europe and ISIL and other terrorists who are now taking hold of the Middle East and primarily of the countries, which have evidenced U.S. interventions, are ranked as number three.”
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

:rotfl: Deans,"tendency to fall into rebel hands...",some backhander what! Perhaps the Choco soldier should instead fight Russian vodka with his brand of chocolates.At least he'll win the hearts (and perhaps more) of the pro-Russian Natashas,Irinas and Katrinas in the east! Vodka and chocolates.That would be a great battle to watch.

Meanwhile,the Ukranians are going to go hungry this winter,pun intended,as Hungary turns off the gas tap "indefinitely",thanks to pressure from Moscow.Gen Winter approaches and the first "nip" in the air is being felt.
Viktor Orban,the Hungarian PM has shown that national interests come first,plus who the F**K cares for the fascist Ukranians anyway? The much touted EU cookie has started to crumble.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/s ... ure-moscow
Hungary suspends gas supplies to Ukraine under pressure from Moscow
Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban announces move after Russia threatens to cut off countries re-exporting its gas to Kiev.
Agence France-Presse in Budapest
The Guardian, Friday 26 September 2014 17.49 BST

Hungarian gas distribution system The Hungarian gas pipeline operator FGSZ's distribution facility in Kiskundorozsma. Photograph: Laszlo Balogh/Reuters

Budapest has announced that it will freeze its gas deliveries to Ukraine, as the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orban, said his country could not afford to run the risk of losing its own Russian gas supplies.

“Hungary cannot get into a situation in which, due to the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, it cannot access its required supply of energy,” Orban said on state radio following threats from Moscow.

Hungary’s gas pipeline network operator FGSZ said late on Thursday that it had suspended supplies to neighbouring Ukraine indefinitely for technical reasons, a move Ukraine’s state-owned gas firm Naftogaz described as “unexpected and unexplained”.

Orban’s statement followed a warning from Moscow that it could cut off European countries that have been re-exporting gas to Ukraine to help Kiev cope with Moscow’s energy sanctions.

The threat came as energy chiefs gathered in Berlin for EU-mediated talks aimed keeping Russian gas supplies to Ukraine flowing and preventing parts of the country being left without winter heating.

The European commission rapped Hungary, an EU member state, for cutting off its so-called reverse flow supplies to Ukraine.

“The message from the commission is very clear. We expect all member states to facilitate reverse flows as agreed by the European council in the interest of a shared energy security,” the commission spokeswoman Helene Banner said in Brussels.

The Hungarian move came days after a meeting in Budapest between Alexei Miller, the head of Russian gas giant Gazprom, and Orban, who often warns against damaging commercial relations with Russia.

“In the next period we will need large quantities of gas … We will receive this, I agreed this with Alexei Miller,” Orban said.

Russia is Europe’s biggest gas supplier, with Hungary one of 12 eastern and central EU member states that rely on Moscow for more than three-quarters of their gas.

Price disputes between Russia and Ukraine have led to cuts in supplies to Europe twice in the last decade.

The EU began reverse flows of gas through Hungary, Poland and Slovakia when Moscow ended all gas sales to Ukraine in June. Kiev had balked at paying a higher price Moscow imposed in the wake of ousting in February of the Kremlin-backed president Viktor Yanukovych.

Russia’s energy minister, Alexander Novak, told a German newspaper on Friday that reverse flows of Russian gas to Ukraine were illegal and could leave some nations without Gazprom supplies for the first time since 2009.

The EU insists the deliveries are legal.
Naftogaz has said Hungary’s decision to halt deliveries “goes against the core principles of the European Union single energy market”.
Philip
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

Gen. Winter fast approacheth and the Choco factory is flat broke!


http://rt.com/op-edge/190332-ukraine-ec ... -bankrupt/

Ukraine is broke and winter is coming.....

Bryan MacDonald is a journalist, writer, broadcaster and teacher. He wrote for Irish Independent and Daily Mail. He has also frequently appeared on RTE and Newstalk in Ireland as well as RT.

Published time: September 24, 2014
People stand inside a steel art factory that was recently shelled in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, September 16, 2014 (Reuters / Marko Djurica)

Ukraine is broke, and that's the sad legacy of this year's tumult. The question now is: will its western “friends” and Russia save Kiev from the abyss?

One day, during the credit-fueled economic madness of the early Noughties, I got a credit card in the post. I hadn’t ordered it: the bank had just forwarded it without any prompting. That sounds crazy now, but was considered normal back then. I was a student and it wasn’t Christmas, but it sure felt like it. Armed with my plastic pal and its €3,000 limit, I hit Dublin’s luxury Brown Thomas store and purchased designer gear with all the intent of a puppy on amphetamine.

A few raucous nights out followed, “More champagne? No bother!” and a trip to Paris. Then reality dawned and I had to pay it back. That wasn’t fun – in fact, it was extremely difficult. However, while grazing on baked beans and toast, I had my memories of the “good times.”

Countries often experience similar short-term periods of paper wealth, followed by a humongous hangover when the debt collectors come calling. There are a myriad of current examples in Europe: Greece, Spain and my own Ireland for starters. Others didn’t have much of a party, but still got the furry tongue – Hungary, Cyprus and Portugal spring to mind.

Reuters / Konstantin Grishin

Reuters / Konstantin Grishin

Nevertheless, there is one European state that bucks all trends by having had no shindig at all before getting its medicine from the markets – Ukraine. That is, unless you count a civil war, a violent revolution and a horrifically divided nation as a party. Incredibly, some in Ukraine actually do. To them, Maidan and its consequences is all a big celebration. Well, the hijinks are over now and the DJ has just played “My Way.”

Ukraine is broke. It was already treading water before the “revolution” – helped by corruption that ranged from the small scale to the incredibly large. Now, however, it’s completely banjaxed. Meanwhile, the “do-gooders” in the mainstream media ignore this while they crack on about “nation building” and “reforms.”

That’s all great stuff at think tanks and in newspaper columns, especially when you have a western salary, but it’s not much use when you are a Ukrainian living in Lviv. They can’t easily scuttle off back to New York or London – or even Moscow – when the global press gets bored of the story. They have to stay in Ukraine and live there and try to make ends meet in a bankrupt country. That’s not fun at all, unless you are the type who finds having your fingernails pulled out by pliers pleasurable.

A rebel walks in front of a factory destroyed during recent shelling, in the town of Nizhnaya Krinka, eastern Ukraine, September 23, 2014 (Reuters / Marko Djurica)

A rebel walks in front of a factory destroyed during recent shelling, in the town of Nizhnaya Krinka, eastern Ukraine, September 23, 2014 (Reuters / Marko Djurica)

The “friends” from the western media and the think tank rackets won’t be around for the drudgery of the recession. No, they’ll be off to cover the next big story, while the locals they espouse “European values” to will be sitting in their kitchens trying to figure out how to pay for groceries. They might take solace from their departed “friend from America” telling everyone in NYC hipster bars “how nice and stoic the Ukrainian people are,” but consolation won’t fill the fridge.

How broke is Ukraine? On a scale of one to 10, I’d venture 10 and a half. What the well-meaning idiots from abroad haven’t talked about is how dependent Kiev’s economy is on Russia. In 2013, more than 60 percent of their exports went to post-Soviet countries. Meanwhile, export levels have, officially, fallen by a gigantic 19 percent already this year (and the real figure is probably much worse).

Also, what little high-end manufacturing Ukraine had was almost entirely beholden to the Russian military-industrial complex. An example is Antonov, the famed aircraft maker, which recently had to write off $150 million when it couldn’t deliver an order to the Russian Air Force. Antonov’s planes can’t compete in western markets, so without the Russian market the company is finished. Good news for Komsomolsk-on-Amur (the home of Sukhoi) in Russia’s Far East, but a tragedy for the 12,000 employees of Antonov, near Kiev.

I'm not sure how Roshen Chocolates is doing, but with a $1.3 billion fortune, its owner, oligarch Willy Wonka, or President Petro Poroshenko as he's better known, won't be going hungry. He's one of the lucky ones.

Firefighters pull a hose as they work to extinguish a fire at a printing factory hit by what locals say, was recent shelling by Ukrainian forces in Donetsk August 23, 2014 (Reuters / Maxim Shemetov)

Firefighters pull a hose as they work to extinguish a fire at a printing factory hit by what locals say, was recent shelling by Ukrainian forces in Donetsk August 23, 2014 (Reuters / Maxim Shemetov)

Industrial production has fallen off a cliff in Ukraine, down over 20 percent already this year and retail sales aren’t far off, at about 19 percent. Foreign currency reserves have collapsed by around 25 percent, even with emergency IMF funding. Yet, that’s not even close to the largest concern. This would be the currency, the hryvna, which crumbled by 11 percent against the dollar last Friday alone. A year ago, the rate was around 8.1, it’s now a startling 13.5. Great news for those paid in greenbacks, but 99 percent of locals are remunerated in hryvnas. Inflation is north of 14 percent and is set to increase dramatically in the short-term as the currency is geared in only one direction.

Winter is coming, and anyone who has been in Kiev in January can tell you how shivery that gets. It’s a special variety of biting cold and it takes more than North Face – for the few can afford it – to survive the onslaught.

Ukraine imports 80 percent of its natural gas – and most of that comes from Russia. A real problem here is that Kiev currently owes Gazprom, Russia's state gas giant, $4.5 billion. In fact, Ukraine’s single most profitable export service (worth $3 billion annually) is transit fees for Gazprom’s access to other European markets. This is what is known as a “double bind.”

I didn’t mention the IMF loans yet. They are not “aid” – and they must be repaid. The latest guarantee was around $20 million and there have been suggestions that a sizeable portion has been looted by kleptocrat insiders already. The IMF’s Articles of Agreement forbid it to make loans to countries that clearly cannot pay. Unless the agency is willing to tear up its rule book – thus making Greeks the happiest people alive – it’s clear that emergency funding from that source is also about to grind to a halt.

Where else can Ukraine get cash from? Waging civil war is expensive and the chickens are now roosting. Not to mention that much infrastructure has been destroyed this year and will have to be rebuilt. As President Poroshenko’s peace accord keeps the troublesome Donetsk and Lugansk regions inside Ukraine, that duty will surely fall to Kiev. A quarter of Ukraine’s exports are derived from the eastern provinces – but Poroshenko has bombed Donbass’s industry and left its coal mines without electricity.

Many economists now believe that Ukraine will soon default. Right now, it’s unclear how to even begin to mount a recovery because the figures just don’t add up, no matter how fancy the calculator. This winter, with the cold wind of economic malaise blowing, Ukrainians won’t have much to celebrate. Maidan’s supporters can fondly look back at that moment when so much was promised, but so little delivered.

As one gang of oligarchs were deposed to facilitate a new team of oligarchs to take power, those ebullient protests seem far away now. Will those memories be enough to sustain the country through winter? I doubt it.

Ukraine has already been broken. Now it’s actually broke. The three external parties who squared off around the nation’s carcass – Russia, the US and the EU – have a moral responsibility to fix the mess. Will they put enmities aside and club together to do the right thing? Let’s see. I’m not holding my breath.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
Austin
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

Is a Ukraine Ceasefire Real?

Thom Hartmann talks with Stephen Cohen,Contributing Editor-The Nation / Professor Emeritus of Russian Studies & Politics at NYU and Princeton

Austin
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

Interview with Sergei Lavrov

Lavrov: US must stop acting like global prosecutor, judge and executioner

Washington must stop acting unilaterally, with no regard to other nations’ interests, and should engage in honest cooperation to tackle global problems, Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said in an interview with RT and the VGTRK media corporation.

Read the full version of the interview
RT: We’re talking right after your speech at the UN General Assembly. Perhaps for the first in 10-15 years, many speakers criticized the UN: the Brazilian president spoke on this issue, the Venezuelan president spoke about it, and there have been many protesters outside the UN building in recent months. They say the UN needs to be reformed. Do you agree? Do you think the UN is an efficient institution today?

Sergey Lavrov:
The UN cannot be more efficient than its member states because the UN is not some abstract notion; the UN is an international organization composed of governments, and it is these governments that define its agenda. All the Secretariat does is act on the instructions they receive from the governments. The UN has been changing and will certainly continue to change; the UN reform is an ongoing process. And this is not just because the people working on it have nothing else to do; no, we live at a time when the whole world is changing. New challenges come up all the time. Who knew this Ebola virus would come up, for example? And yet it is perhaps the top priority now. Something needs to be done to stop people from dying. We need to find some kind of cure.

The UN is being reformed in many different aspects. For example, the Peacebuilding Commission was set up a few years ago. It deals with the situations when a conflict enters the stage of settlement, and there is a need for reconstruction. Such situations are in between two jurisdictions: that of the Security Council dealing with war and peace matters, and that of the Economic and Social Council – dealing, naturally, with the matters reflected in its name.

There is also another lengthy process that is currently under way. It started in the early 2000s or even earlier. I am referring to the UN Security Council reform. The Security Council is criticized primarily for being unable to resolve certain specific conflicts. For example, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict hasn’t been resolved, and this is the longest conflict under the Security Council’s consideration. It has been going on for about 70 years, and no solution has been found so far that would be acceptable both to the Palestinians and the Israelis. So, people criticize the Security Council for that, even though it is the parties to this conflict who should come to the negotiating table and work out an agreement. The Security Council can’t invent anything for them. All the Security Council can do is encourage them, provide certain recommendations, appoint mediators, special envoys, etc., and the Security Council does all that with all the conflicts – be it the Western Sahara, which is another long-time conflict, or new conflicts like the ones we are witnessing today in Mali, in the Central African Republic, in Afghanistan. I repeat, the Security Council can’t solve all the problems for everybody.

Some people criticize the Security Council because in some situations it fails to sanction the use of force in order to defeat one of the parties to the conflict. But the UN can only be efficient if we focus on the key matter, and the key matter is this: if we are facing obvious common challenges like terrorism, the illegal drug industry, WMD proliferation, epidemics, or food security (which is another very serious challenge), we should focus on finding ways to deal with these challenges collectively. But instead, people sometimes use the Security Council for entirely different purposes: to make an appearance or to spite someone. For example, when the Syrian crisis broke out, Russia and China were first to propose a resolution that would urge both the government and the opposition to launch the political process of settlement, discussing what kind of nation they all would live in. Western countries categorically rejected the idea and said they would veto the resolution. So, we decided not to put it up for a vote because that would create a somewhat scandalous situation, you know, with a resolution backed by Russia and China being vetoed. This was not because we thought the approach we suggested was wrong; no, we just thought there was no point in starting this whole process if we know for sure that the resolution has zero chance of passing. We didn’t want to put our partners in a position where they would have to vote against it. But then our partners proposed their own draft, which put all the blame on the Syrian government and justified everything the armed opposition did. And they put it up for a vote, knowing perfectly well that Russia and China would veto it. So, you see, different countries have different concepts of partnership in the UN Security Council. I think our concept is more appropriate, more ethical, if you will. But unfortunately, we are not always able to persuade our partners that they shouldn’t use the Security Council to increase tension. On the contrary, the Security Council was set up for the purpose of working out compromises – primarily, between the five permanent members, each of whom has the right of veto.

Some people accuse the permanent members of abusing the veto right but these criticisms are misplaced, because when the UN was established, it took into account the negative experience of the League of Nations with its “one country, one vote” system. The United States, for example, did not join the League of Nations, because its opinion would not matter much under such an arrangement, and the League of Nations gradually sank into oblivion. And so when the UN was set up, it was decided that the resolutions of the Security Council must be approved by all the five permanent members unanimously. It’s a not a privilege, it’s a responsibility for maintaining peace and security. The authors of the UN Charter were wise enough to incorporate this requirement. They realized that consensus was vital to resolving issues in a collective and efficient way. We must put an end to the UN being exploited in someone’s narrow egoistic interests. We create this body and we bear the responsibility for its efficiency and we must work hard together on the issues where we share the same opinions. On the issues where our views are divergent we need to continue consultations seeking ways to align our positions as much as possible. But it doesn’t always happen that way. Some of our Western partners are tempted to use some of the world’s issues to make a biased statement tailored to their domestic audience. Some leaders are getting ready for re-election, some are vying for high-ranking positions within the EU. That’s life and there can be no perfect solutions but anyway we must be moving towards that goal.

Vesti: In one of the statements by the Russian Foreign Ministry, it claimed that the US often resorts to lies in its foreign policy. Now that you’ve been to the General Assembly and heard Barack Obama’s speech, does it re-affirm that view? Can you give us any examples from this forum and elsewhere?

SL: In their public statements on the Ukraine crisis, Washington relies on unconfirmed reports or spins facts on purpose. Once they claimed the footage showed a helicopter downed in Ukraine while in reality it happened in Syria. There were multiple cases when false data was used to back up a public statement or a call for action. We all remember how Colin Powell, the then US Secretary of State, displayed a vial with a white substance that he claimed was anthrax and that the Iraqi leadership was working on a program to illegally produce biological, chemical and other kinds of weapons of mass destruction. It later turned out Colin Powell had been actually framed by the CIA. Some use lies on purpose, some make statements based on unconfirmed online reports. This is very embarrassing.

Russia and the US have a solid channel of communication between me and John Kerry. Our discussions are straightforward on any issue – be it the Ukraine crisis or anything else. Sometimes I get a hope that our signal has been heard but unfortunately it’s not always followed up by action. We actively worked together during the active phase of the Ukraine crisis, it was in April, and the outcome of the efforts was the Geneva declaration signed by Ukraine, Russia, the US and the EU which outlined the key provisions for a settlement. It was agreed that Ukraine should immediately launch an inclusive dialogue involving all the political groups and regions to pursue a constitutional reform that would ensure the interests of all Ukrainians are respected. Ukraine signed up to it but the process didn’t start at that point. And it was only in September that together with the EU leaders we managed to persuade the Ukrainian authorities to sit down at the negotiating table with the militia forces. And since then we’ve seen some relative success. People may be still dying, but not as many as before, and the shelling became less intense. The disengagement process is underway, heavy weaponry is being withdrawn 15km away from the separation line, and the OSCE mission is going to monitor the ceasefire. The parties are now expected to engage in the talks on a political settlement. The Ukrainian parliament recently adopted a law on the self-government of those regions. This is a good example that diplomatic efforts can achieve success – despite the fact that there had been attempts to torpedo the talks as part of the so called Minsk process. These attempts were made by foreign stakeholders, including in the US. I don’t have the names but there were folks in Washington who encouraged Ukraine’s Prime Minister Yatsenyuk whose stance is different to that of President Poroshenko. Every time there’s a ray of hope he engages in arrogant rhetoric suggesting Ukraine should join NATO or that Russians are not to be trusted or that the West should push for more sanctions against Moscow. It’s strange to hear these comments from a prime minister who is supposed to be in charge of the economy. I remember the times when Arseny Yatsenyuk was Ukraine’s Foreign Minister and at that time he had completely different views. Something has happened to him. Or maybe it’s part of the internal squabbles ahead of the election. As you know, Yatsenyuk and Turchinov refused to cooperate with the Poroshenko-led party and set up their own People’s Front. Again, the goals of the election campaign are out of sync with the need for a settlement to the Ukraine crisis.

I very much hope that the US will finally see the light and realize that they can no longer act as the prosecutor, the judge, and the executioner in every part of the world and that they need to cooperate to resolve issues. As you can see, they began fighting terrorists only when their own citizens were beheaded and that footage was made public. We had warned them long ago that the US should not support those forces only because they are fighting Assad in Syria. So they declared this war on terror and their plans to defeat ISIS. And they had to build a broad coalition – they realize the mission required a political and military alliance. The proper way to do it would have been to put the issue up at the UN Security Council and to cooperate with the Syrian government which had long declared they were ready to cooperate with the international community in fighting terrorism. But the US picked a different path. This is wrong, and doesn’t add legitimacy to the process. Furthermore, unintended consequences could provoke an escalation of the situation. I still hope that the reality will teach all of us that there’s a strong need for collective action and that there’s no room for personal grievances. Grievances are okay if it’s a family issue or an issue between friends. There’s no room for petty grievances in politics when one country takes actions to spite the opponent. In doing so, they simply shoot themselves in the foot.

RT: Mr. Lavrov, you mention your personal relationship with Kerry and other Western partners. We’ve been hearing the term “Cold War” a lot recently – from them and especially from the Western media. Do you think we are really witnessing Cold War 2.0 today? And how would you describe your personal relationship with John Kerry and other Western colleagues in view of their tough rhetoric?

SL: Like I mentioned recently elsewhere, I was talking to one of my colleagues here in New York, and as we were discussing the opening part of the General Assembly and the speeches given by some of the Western leaders, he told me, “It seems like the Cold War never ended.” Perhaps he is right in a sense. Look how quickly NATO switched to confrontation over the Ukraine crisis and started hurling serious yet completely unfounded and biased accusations at us. They immediately terminated all of our cooperation programs, including the ones that served their interests. They did this so quickly and so brusquely that it becomes clear that NATO still has the Cold War mentality.

This is very sad because we had been building a relationship after the 2008 crisis in the Caucasus, when Georgia attacked, basically, its own citizens in South Ossetia, because even though it was a conflict zone, nobody questioned Georgia’s territorial integrity at the time. Yet Saakashvili gave the order to attack his own citizens. We had our peacekeepers there, and they came under fire, and some of them were killed. We went to the Russia-NATO Council and asked for an emergency meeting in order to discuss this situation. But the Americans told us, “No, there will be no Russia-NATO Council meeting, and we will even suspend the Council altogether for what you did in response to Saakashvili’s actions.” Then, after a few months, Western countries came back to us and said, “We made a mistake. We want the Russia-NATO Council to continue its operations under any circumstances, because otherwise we’ll have no channel for dialogue.” So, today they are making the same mistake again. Of course, they kept the political format at the level of ambassadors, but all practical cooperation has been suspended.

If a cold war starts today, I think it will be different. It will be primarily a media war. Of course, the Cold War we know used the media as well. But that was nothing compared to what you can do with the media today, with the Internet and all that comes with it. But in my contacts with John Kerry and with the foreign ministers of Germany, France and many other European countries, I can see that they don’t particularly enjoy the current situation but they simply can’t abandon the position they’ve taken, namely, that it’s all Russia’s fault, that it was Russia who brought about the Ukraine crisis.

The same thing happened three-and-a-half years ago, when the Syrian crisis broke out. The president of the US, France and other European countries said there could be no talks with Assad. I’m pretty sure they regret saying that today. They hoped everything would happen quickly, like in Egypt and Libya, but Syria turned out to be different. We always said the situation in Syria can’t be resolved unless we bring the government and all of the opposition forces to the negotiating table. In fact, this is what we all agreed on back in in June 2012, when we had a meeting on Syria in Geneva. The document says that there should be a “transitional governing mechanism” that has the support of both the government and all the opposition forces, representing the entire spectrum of the Syrian people. This is what the document said. But when we said, “Alright, let’s implement this, let’s call a conference,” they told us, “No, first Assad has to go.” So, you see, they even violate the agreements we have, which makes us wonder whether it is even possible to have any agreements with them at all.

There is a saying in Russian, words are not birds: once the word is out, you can’t take it back. Politicians usually don’t want to risk their reputation by taking back what they said on the spur of the moment. This shows that we should never jump to conclusions. You have to examine the situation before you say something.

With Ukraine, I think our Western partners realize today that they made a botch of their– first, when they refused to have trilateral talks between Russia, the EU and Ukraine on a solution that would enable Ukraine to align its ambitions to sign the Association Agreement with the EU and stay within the free trade zone of the CIS member states. Back in November Moscow made a proposal to that effect but the EU rejected it. They told us bluntly that their relationship with Ukraine is none of our business. Then on February 21, 2014 an agreement was signed between Yanukovich, Yatsenyuk, Klitschko, and Tyagnibok, and the foreign ministers of Poland, France and Germany also put their signatures. The first provision called for the establishment of a national unity government that would draft a new constitution that was expected to be adopted until September, with the presidential election to be held by the year’s end. It was clear as daylight that Yanukovich didn’t have any chance to win it. A day after that agreement had been signed, the radical forces stormed government buildings and announced a new government, a government of winners instead of a national unity government. They also demanded the abolition of laws giving Russian-speaking Ukrainians the right to speak their native tongue and granting the same right to other ethnic minorities. They attacked government and public buildings in other parts of Ukraine, including in Crimea.

We urged the parties to get back to the February 21 agreement, we addressed our Western partners, those who took part in drafting the document specifically. We were told that ship had sailed and the realities on the ground had drastically changed. But how deep should the realities change for the national unity to be completely removed from the domestic agenda? We continued to get this sort of ridiculous explanations, including when we pushed for the Geneva declaration to be implemented. We were told ‘it’s a great plan but look, there’s a new plan proposed by President Poroshenko’. Our partners have been clearly engaged in moving the goalposts, as they say, when the terms are changed time and again. It’s dishonest and utterly ineffective.

Finally, Ukraine has returned to the idea of a national dialogue. Right now it involves Kiev and just these two regions but I am certain Ukraine needs a comprehensive constitutional reform. Fortunately, the country is now moving towards a political settlement. Incidentally, the EU and President Poroshenko recently recognized our concerns and agreed to delay the implementation of certain provisions of the Association Agreement that affect the economic interests of Russia and other member states of the Free Trade Zone. The parties now have until the end of 2015 to work out the differences. Paradoxically, things have come back to where they were supposed to be – we now see the launch of a national dialogue and negotiations on our economic concerns. But it could have been done a year ago. Yanukovich made the same kind of argument. He never wanted to reject the pact with Europe altogether – instead, all he asked for was more time to review its impact on the economy. So we got back to where we started but at the cost of thousands of lives, considerable damage to the infrastructure, and a crisis that shook the whole of Europe.

Vesti: We often hear about a new cold war raging in the world at the moment, at least in the minds of many leaders who spoke at the UN General Assembly. But contrary to their statements you had dozens of bilateral meetings on the sidelines of the forum. Some view Russia’s visa free treaty with Honduras with irony but the reality is that we now need visas only to get to the US and Canada. Does it mean their claims that Russia is isolated do not hold water?

SL:
We still have a visa regime with the EU.

Vesti: I referred to the countries in the Americas.

SL: There are still a number of Latin American countries that have not lifted the visa regime with Russia. It’s Mexico – and we agreed with its Foreign Minister to move towards this goal, Panama and some others. You don’t need any visa to travel to the rest of Latin America. As for Honduras, it’s a wonderful country, with responsible and experienced leaders, and we enjoy a great relationship. I would recommend Russians to take advantage of the treaty and spend some time in Honduras. It’s a very hospitable land.

I met with many counterparts and also with the leaders of a number of international organizations, including the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the Arab League, and CELAC. We held a ministerial session of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and BRICS. The latter resulted in a substantive communique. We met with member states of the Southern African Development Community, a powerful body led by South Africa, Namibia, Angola, and Mozambique.

These meetings have been very productive. The world is seeing a growing number of new centers of gravity. Integration efforts in Africa and Latin America are picking up steam and offer a bright future. We have expanded our interaction and signed a cooperation memorandum with Mercosur, Latin America’s trading bloc and customs union. We are finalizing another memorandum that would grant Russia observer status in another body, the Central American Integration System.

So, in general I didn’t notice any evidence that Russia is isolated. To the contrary, there were even more people who wanted to contact me than before.

RT: When the MH17 flight crashed in Ukraine, the Western media rushed to blame Russia. How come that today, two months on, Russia appears to be the only country that is repeatedly calling for a full investigation into the tragedy, here at the UN and other international bodies, while the nations that lost their citizens in the crash are silent?

SL:
It’s a mystery to me and a source of much concern and doubt. It’s not the first time that incidents in Ukraine are investigated not as fast or full as they should be. Take the deadly sniper shootings at Maidan which killed the Heavenly Hundred. There is evidence that it was actually a provocation by the Right Sector and Paruby, the commandant of the Maidan, who was seen with a sniper rifle. The chairman of the investigation committee resigned saying he didn’t manage to get the data from the current Kiev regime. There is no probe into the Odessa tragedy on May 2 when dozens were burned alive. There were reports that the authorities identified a suspect and maybe a second suspect, but the investigation has been frozen in its tracks. A similar tragedy took place in another Ukrainian city, Mariupol. There’ve been numerous cases. Just recently, mass graves were discovered near the city of Donetsk. There’s evidence that civilians were shot in cold blood.

Russia will demand that the real cause of all these incidents be established. We have repeatedly raised this issue with the Council of Europe, the OSCE, and the UN human rights agencies. They seem to be heeding our call and are ready to take action. But the Ukrainian authorities first need to ensure independence and transparency of the investigation.

The same goes for the situation with MH17. They say the experts sent by the Netherlands and Australia don’t have safe access. “Safe access” is the explanation provided by the Ukrainian authorities. Militiamen say, “You are welcome to come anytime, we will provide you with everything you need for your work.” Immediately after this disaster, the Security Council adopted a resolution on July 21, calling for an immediate independent international investigation. In other words, we were supposed to see something happening immediately, on July 21. The resolution demanded “immediate access.” Yet I remember very clearly that the Kiev authorities said they would provide access after they clear this area of terrorists and separatists – and this is after the Security Council adopted a binding resolution demanding immediate access! And it was only about ten days later, in the last days of July, that they declared a ceasefire so the experts could come.

So, those are the facts. There is an international commission headed by the Dutch Security Council. It includes ICAO experts, including some from Russia. But not all the experts have access to all the documents, unfortunately. And this is another question we regularly raise with our partners. The preliminary report presented by this commission says nothing of the steps that any expert investigating such a disaster must take. These things are like ABC. I won’t go into details but specialists know what I’m talking about. There is a certain procedure. But the experts who went to Ukraine did not collect all the debris, did not look for the objects that hit the plane. After our aviation experts read this report, they wrote a few pages with questions regarding this ongoing investigation – and that’s in addition to the 20 questions they wrote immediately after the disaster.

So, we will insist on completing this investigation.

Vesti: And the last question. On the same day the US president gave his speech, the New York Times carried a large piece saying that the US is currently upgrading numerous nuclear facilities and will spend $1 trillion on nuclear weapons over the next 30 years – and this despite the fact that Obama spoke about the need of disarmament at a Security Council meeting in 2009, and this was part of the reason why he received the Nobel Peace Prize. If this is not a cold war, is this a new arms race?

SL: Obama received the Nobel Peace Prize before he addressed the Security Council. I don’t think we are on the verge of a new arms race. At least, Russia definitely won’t be part of it. In our case, it’s just that the time has come for us to modernize our nuclear and conventional arsenals. We have a long-term armament program, which takes into account our economic situation and, of course, the need to have efficient and modern defensive capabilities to protect our national interest. It is not super-expensive, and besides, like I said, we haven’t been doing much in this regard for a number of years. The US nuclear arsenal is somewhat younger than ours but perhaps it is also time for them to upgrade it. I just hope that the US will abide by the provisions of the New START treaty, which are legally binding. It is fine to upgrade your stockpile, replacing old weapons with new ones, but there are certain restrictions on how many weapons you can have, and all these restrictions are still in place.
Philip
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

Kiev clique get their noses bloodied again.Will they never learn?

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/s ... -ceasefire
Violence in eastern Ukraine kills at least 12 people despite ceasefire
Nine soldiers reportedly among dead following fighting between pro-Russian rebels and government troops that has also left 32 wounded
Associated Press
The Guardian, Monday 29 September 2014
Ukrainian troops Ukrainian troops at a military camp near the town of Debaltseve in eastern Ukraine Photograph: DAVID MDZINARISHVILI/REUTERS

Eastern Ukraine has suffered the worst violence in more than a week as fighting between pro-Russian rebels and government troops in the region killed at least 12 people and wounded 32, according to officials.

Colonel Andriy Lysenko told journalists at a briefing in Kiev on Monday that at least nine troops had been killed and 27 had been wounded.

Meanwhile, the city council of Donetsk said at least three civilians were killed and five wounded in overnight shelling of a residential area in the northern part of the city, where fighting has centred on the government-held airport. Throughout the day in Donetsk, regular explosions could be heard coming from the north of the city.

Violence has continued despite a ceasefire declared on 5 September. The Ukrainian president, Petro Poroshenko, has been at pains to convince to a sceptical audience at home that his peace plan is working and said last week that he believed “the most dangerous part of the war” was over.

Since fighting began in April, the conflict has claimed at least 3,500 lives. On 20 September, representatives of Russia, Ukraine, and the rebels signed another agreement that would require both sides to remove all heavy artillery from the frontline, creating a buffer zone that would allow the ceasefire to be better enforced.

The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, said the situation in east Ukraine was “anything but satisfactory”.


“The elementary question of the ceasefire is not yet cleared up, still less the future status and cooperation between the Luhansk and Donetsk regions and the Ukrainian central government,” Merkel said. “There is no protection of the border along the entire Luhansk and Donetsk region – no control, no buffer zones, and all of that is the minimum condition for us to be able to consider revoking sanctions. Unfortunately, we are a very long way away from that.”

The EU imposed several rounds of sanctions on Russian companies and individuals for their role in the east Ukraine conflict. Kiev and the west have repeatedly asserted that Moscow has fuelled the separatist insurgency by providing it with arms and personnel, claims that Russia denies.

On Sunday, in the second-largest Ukrainian city, Kharkiv, nationalists tore down an enormous statue of Vladimir Lenin to cheers from the crowd. Across Ukraine, people have torn down statues to the former communist leader in a symbolic display of anti-Russian sentiment.

The authorities in Kharkiv supported the move. Arsen Avakov, Ukraine’s minister of internal affairs and a Kharkiv native, wrote on his Facebook page: “Lenin? Let him fall … As long as nobody gets hurt.”
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Philip »

Donrtsk school shelled many casualties.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

Pentagon: Russia and China want the revision of the world order that has been established over the past 70 years
China and Russia want to reconsider the world order established after the Second World War, but they should know that the United States can respond to the threat to its allies by military means. This was announced on Tuesday, Deputy Minister of Defense Bob Vork, speaking at the American Council on Foreign Relations.

"Firstly, it is absolutely clear that these two countries (China and Russia) are strengthening their positions close to their borders. And it's one of the things on which we (USA) have to work the next few years in terms of what areas they feel they have vital "- said Vork.

According to him, Washington must find ways to ensure that the intent of Beijing and Moscow "will not lead them to the use of force, which will require from us (USA) response to the use of military force." "We have to figure it out and be sure that Russia and China feel safe in their communities," - he added.

According to the deputy minister, "the two countries just believe that some aspects of the world order that has been established over the past 70 years, they would like to change." "It requires close attention. At the strategic level (must specify), we're going to work with two very strong regional powers right now, "- said Vork.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by pankajs »

BBC Breaking News ‏@BBCBreaking 2h2 hours ago

Rebel forces in eastern Ukraine begin offensive to capture government-held airport in Donetsk http://bbc.in/1oCSLZ1
ramana
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by ramana »

World order keeps changing always.

Anglo-Saxon West managed to seize the initiative using colonialism backed by Industrial Revolution while rest of world was asleep or just waking up. GB managed to pass of a bankrupt 'empire' to US for the bail-out. At same time US was eager to take the mantle from GB and use trade as a new paradigm which was the old colonial captive markets nonsense.

Cold War brought down the bogus Communism which was another way to keep the masses down.


This unleashed historical forces that are changing the world order.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

^^ Exactly the rule book of past 70 years is such that it allows the Anglo-Saxon world to rule and win and Pentagon seems to be nervous that China & Russia would want to change that.

But the only thing constant in the world is Change.

US & European economies are slowly dying and are just fueled by money printing out of thin air and that too has reached peak limits , Only Asia is growing and within Asia India along with China would fuel real growth in decades to come.

Hopefully the tight slap Russia received from Anglo-Saxon world in form of sanction would mean Russian economy backed by massive Energy Resource would now reorient toward Asia and specifically China and India , this is where EIA predicts the need for energy would grow exponentially.

Hopefully the Rouble-Rupee trade deal would give boost to trade with both and likely a new Strategic & Economically deal will be signed with Putin visit in Dec 1st week as Indian Ambassador has hinted at.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

America openly boasting of arm twisting Europe to Sanction Russia :lol:

Biden Says US Forced EU Countries to Impose Sanctions Against Russia
MOSCOW, October 3 (RIA Novosti) – The United States and US President Barack Obama personally forced the European Union members to introduce sanctions against Russian over its stance on the Ukrainian crisis, US Vice President Joe Biden announced.

Washington rallied “the world’s most developed countries to impose real cost on Russia” and introduce restrictive measures against Moscow, Biden said at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government on Thursday.

“It is true that they did not want to do that but again it was America’s leadership and the President of the United States insisting... Europe to stand up and take economic risks to impose cost,” the vice president said.

"We don't want Russia to collapse, we want Russia to succeed," Biden added. :rotfl:
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by Austin »

KrishnaK
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by KrishnaK »

Austin wrote:^^ Exactly the rule book of past 70 years is such that it allows the Anglo-Saxon world to rule and win and Pentagon seems to be nervous that China & Russia would want to change that.
Hmm, growing your economy 20 times and 5 times as China and India have done would count as a huge win to me. Doesn't really back your claims up, especially since this has been fueled at least partly with Anglo-Saxon money and almost completely by Anglo-Saxon consumption.
US & European economies are slowly dying and are just fueled by money printing out of thin air and that too has reached peak limits , Only Asia is growing and within Asia India along with China would fuel real growth in decades to come.
There won't be any real growth at all buddy, without the ability of the west to consume and finance. So I hope your strategic analysis doesn't come to a pass.
Hopefully the tight slap Russia received from Anglo-Saxon world in form of sanction would mean Russian economy backed by massive Energy Resource would now reorient toward Asia and specifically China and India , this is where EIA predicts the need for energy would grow exponentially.
Who cares what Russia does or does not do. Oh wait, those that spin up fantasies like
the rule book of past 70 years is such that it allows the Anglo-Saxon world to rule and win
Russia selling us energy is good. We require lots of it so we can sell to the west to finance our rise.
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Re: Eastern Europe/Ukraine

Post by RoyG »

KrishnaK,

The only reason why the West survives today is because we have to pay for the majority of our oil in dollars. This forces most countries to export to the US and maintain a dollar reserve to purchase oil and industrialize. Therefore, there isn't really anything super duper about the West. Slowly, regional powers are slowly chipping away at this payment system and there is an invoicing diversification emerging. Western decline is inevitable. We should care about Russia because they are leading the charge with China to attack the US, not militarily, but through financial markets, proxy war, and in cyber space.
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