Victoria Nuland taught russians squaredancing when she was 20, and it never stopped

26. September 2024

That sum­mer she tal­ked to a fami­ly at the ame­ri­can embas­sy in Moscow, who hired her as a nan­ny, so she could get a visa exten­si­on, and she real­ly loo­ked after a bunch of child­ren this sum­mer, but also “tra­v­eled all over the place”.

Oh, and she con­firms, that it wasnt But­cha, why the peace nego­tia­ti­ons stopped --

as Wagen­knecht points out here --

But we alrea­dy knew that.

From Davyd Arak­ha­mi­ia, from Nafta­li Ben­net, and from Simon Shus­ter (Times Repor­ter for over 15 years).

Aber aus irgend­ei­nem Grund scheint der Lanz zu glau­ben die not­wen­di­ge Auf­ar­bei­tung der Jour­na­lis­ti­schen Per­for­mance bei der Bericht­erstat­tung über die­sen Krieg lie­se sich mit “schrein wir die Wagen­knecht nie­der” übertünchen…

Now its only fair that Zygar gets Nuland to con­firm this on his you­tube chan­nel - becau­se we all know that Zygar is the spo­kes­ho­le into the rus­si­an expat com­mu­ni­ty, of cour­se all US Nar­ra­ti­ve Sales­men have to talk to him. Timo­thy Sny­der, Fio­na Hill, Anne App­le­baum, Vic­to­ria Nuland -- becau­se if they dont Zygar wri­tes gre­at com­men­ta­ry arti­cles in the ger­man Spie­gel that assess that the Kursk offen­si­ve will speed up peace nego­tia­ti­ons [Die Inva­si­on von Kursk könn­te den Beginn von Ver­hand­lun­gen bedeu­ten] -- you know so Zygar can then be invi­ted to Glob­sec Forum panels, 

- whe­re Zygar can talk about buil­ding this real­ly gre­at, honest and true rus­si­an oppo­si­ti­on, that will run rus­sia in case of a coup…

I hope the­re are some more Nuland “stin­gers” (nota­ble moments) in this video, becau­se I’m only about 5 minu­tes in and alrea­dy had to docu­ment her sto­ry­tel­ling - anec­do­te wise, on how good she taught rus­si­an peop­le squa­re­dan­cing in Odes­sa, and how well she cared about tho­se child­ren as an Au Pair in Mos­kow, while tra­ve­ling all over the coun­try in tho­se six mon­ths… - while she was working for a US con­gress­man - back in the US, who allo­wed her to take this time off… Becau­se it was just too good to let it slide.

And the best part? As she retur­ned back home, she found an invi­ta­ti­on from the US sta­te depart­ment in her post box to work there.

Love it!

edit: Also of cour­se Vic­to­ria Nuland doesnt know the dif­fe­rence bet­ween a debt cut and an IMF credit in the 90s, … - but hey at least half of Ger­ma­ny doesnt eit­her, Son­der­ver­mö­gen sei Dank. Gut, der IMF Kre­dit war in USD nicht in Rubel, aber was macht das schon für einen Unter­schied… Dem Zygar fällt da nichts auf. Er ist ja nur legi­ti­me rus­si­sche Opposition.

edit: Sor­ry, sor­ry - I have to inter­ject again, the coo­kies were sand­wi­ches, and Nuland orga­ni­zed them to be han­ded out to pro­tes­ters becau­se of “too much sla­vik instinct”, becau­se “tho­se pro­tes­ters were 18 and 19 year olds, after a long night of being kett­led in by Ukrai­nes (Janu­ko­wytschs) poli­ce forces”.

Of cour­se Nuland also thought, that lea­king the “fuck the EU” pho­ne­call real­ly show­ed how despe­ra­te Putin was, and that he didnt see any other way out of the situa­ti­on other than “to make me famous”. Nuland thought that was a “move born out of desperation”.

Ah sto­ry­tel­ling, I bet­ter book a work­shop soon to get as good as Nuland!

Wait what?!

24. September 2024

18.10 Uhr: Pis­to­ri­us - Bun­des­wehr schnellst­mög­lich kriegs­tüch­tig machen

Ver­tei­di­gungs­mi­nis­ter Boris Pis­to­ri­us (SPD) hat die Not­wen­dig­keit der schnellst­mög­li­chen Aus­stat­tung der Bun­des­wehr bekräf­tigt. Bis 2029 müs­se man damit rech­nen, dass Russ­land sei­ne mili­tä­ri­sche Rekon­sti­tu­ti­on abge­schlos­sen haben wer­de und in der Lage sein könn­te, einen mili­tä­ri­schen Schlag gegen Nato-Gebiet zu füh­ren, sag­te Pis­to­ri­us ange­sichts des rus­si­schen Angriffs­kriegs gegen die Ukraine. 

src: click

Kann man das bit­te mal genau­er begrün­den, oder ist schon Vorwahlkampfphase?

Hin­ter­grund: Weder Chat­ham House, noch Kof­man, noch CSIS, noch Gres­sel, noch… Also nie­mand hat das bis­her auch nur angedeutet.

Selen­skyj behaup­tet Sieg Ende 2025 - gut, hörn wir nicht drauf, der Rest mehr so 3-10 Jah­re war of attri­ti­on, aber der SPD Kanz­ler­kan­di­dat in spe…

edit: Ah, schau an - der Pis­to­ri­us liest Atlan­tic Coun­cil Copy, und BR24 weist das als Eigent­leis­tung aus…

[edit: Kor­rek­tur, er liest doch nicht Atlan­tic Coun­cil, der sagt das schon län­ger (seit Juni)…]

NATO-Russia dyna­mics: Pro­spects for recon­sti­tu­ti­on of Rus­si­an mili­ta­ry power

Exe­cu­ti­ve summary

The Rus­si­an Federation’s full-scale inva­si­on of Ukrai­ne on Febru­a­ry 24, 2022, brought war to the North Atlan­tic Alliance’s doorstep—altering the political-military dyna­mics bet­ween NATO and its neigh­bor to the east. Sin­ce the Rus­si­an inva­si­on, NATO has been under­go­ing a dra­ma­tic chan­ge that has impac­ted its plans, com­mand struc­tu­re, for­ce model, and capa­bi­li­ties requi­re­ments. The effec­ti­ve­ness of this chan­ge must be gau­ged against the adversary’s abi­li­ty to field its for­ces and resour­ce them in a way that nega­tively impacts the Supre­me Allied Com­man­der Europe’s abi­li­ty to exe­cu­te the new regio­nal plans. The del­ta bet­ween how quick­ly Rus­sia can rebuild its mili­ta­ry and how quick­ly NATO can rearm, espe­cial­ly the Euro­pean allies, will defi­ne the risk level for the Alli­an­ce should deter­rence fail. A credi­ble assess­ment of the speed with which Rus­sia can recon­sti­tu­te and expand its military—especially its land for­ces com­po­nent, which has been signi­fi­cant­ly attrit­ted during the cur­rent cam­pai­gn in Ukraine—is cru­cial to accu­rate­ly asses­sing NATO’s over­all for­ce pos­tu­re and abi­li­ty to respond should Rus­sia choo­se to attack a mem­ber of the Alli­an­ce. Here, the exper­ti­se and assess­ments of the United Sta­tes’ allies most expo­sed to the Rus­si­an thre­at along the eas­tern flank offer valu­able insights from the front­li­ne, aug­men­ted by their regio­nal exper­ti­se and under­stan­ding of Rus­si­an cul­tu­re, poli­tics, and mili­ta­ry infu­sed with cen­tu­ries of expe­ri­ence of living next door to Russia. 

In sup­port of United Sta­tes Euro­pean Command’s Rus­sia Stra­te­gic Initia­ti­ve, the Atlan­tic Coun­cil orga­ni­zed two workshops—in War­saw, Poland, and in Hel­sin­ki, Finland—to gain a bet­ter under­stan­ding of alter­na­ti­ve futures for Rus­si­an mili­ta­ry recon­sti­tu­ti­on and its impli­ca­ti­ons for secu­ri­ty on the Euro­pean con­ti­nent. The work­shops were desi­gned to assess (1) how Rus­sia will recon­sti­tu­te its land for­ces in respon­se to ongo­ing deve­lo­p­ments in Ukrai­ne and NATO for­ce adap­t­ati­on, (2) the vul­nera­bi­li­ties hin­de­ring Russia’s visi­on for the recon­sti­tu­ti­on of its mili­ta­ry, and (3) the thre­at of future Rus­si­an capa­bi­li­ties to the trans­at­lan­tic secu­ri­ty architecture.

Key takea­ways from this line of effort include:

Rus­sia has demons­tra­ted that it can fight and mobi­li­ze at the same time.
The pace of Rus­si­an mili­ta­ry recon­sti­tu­ti­on has been fas­ter than Wes­tern ana­lysts expec­ted, inclu­ding both refur­bis­hed and new equip­ment and man­power mobi­liz­a­ti­on. Still, the rea­di­ness of the Rus­si­an armed for­ces is not likely to be the princi­pal dri­ver of decision-making in Moscow; rather, any decisi­on to attack a NATO mem­ber will fac­tor in the “cor­re­la­ti­on of for­ces,” with the goal of explo­i­t­ing the Alli­an­ce in a moment of weakness.
Based on pro­duc­tion data, the big­gest risk of Rus­sia attacking a NATO mem­ber will be in 2025–26 when peak pro­duc­tion, refur­bish­ment, and training/readiness lines inter­sect. One ana­lyst pro­jec­ted Rus­sia will pro­du­ce well over one thousand tanks annu­al­ly by then.
Moscow will not, howe­ver, make decisi­ons based on objec­ti­ve indi­ces of rea­di­ness alo­ne. It will deci­de to move against a NATO sta­te when it deems that the win­dow of oppor­tu­ni­ty has opened—hence, under­stan­ding the poli­ti­cal cul­tu­re that under­girds Russia’s decision-making is as important as having an accu­ra­te assess­ment of its mili­ta­ry capabilities.
The West is in a race against time, with the del­ta bet­ween Rus­si­an for­ce recon­sti­tu­ti­on and NATO’s invest­ment in real, exer­cis­ed mili­ta­ry capa­bi­li­ties con­sti­tu­ting the level of risk in the Euro­pean thea­ter in the event of a full-scale war. Clo­sing the gap will requi­re NATO to prio­ri­ti­ze rear­ma­ment across the board, inclu­ding its defen­se indus­tri­al base in Euro­pe and the United States.

src: click (Atlan­tic Council)

edit: Oh Wun­der, oh Wun­der, Chat­ham­house sah das noch im Juli ganz anders… Pick your favou­rite Anlaysts! I KNOW, I KNOW, I’M BORIS PISTORIUS, I’M PICKING ANALYSTS FROM War­saw, Poland, and Hel­sin­ki, Fin­land, THOSE WILL TELL ME THE UNFILTERED AND BALANCED TRUTH! (Well in EU terms, you got to lis­ten to the most frea­ked out mem­bers, I guess…)

08 Conclusion
Mathieu Boulègue
Con­sul­ting Fel­low, Rus­sia and Eura­sia Programme

Just as the war in Ukrai­ne has high­ligh­ted both weak­nes­ses and resi­li­en­ce in the Rus­si­an mili­ta­ry, the les­sons for the West are equal­ly mixed. Signs of Rus­si­an vul­nera­bi­li­ty offer no grounds for Wes­tern com­pla­cen­cy – but point to the impor­t­ance of redu­cing Russia’s war-making capa­ci­ty by attri­ti­on. Abo­ve all, con­ti­nued Wes­tern sup­port for Ukrai­ne will remain crucial.

More than two years into the full-scale inva­si­on of Ukrai­ne, Rus­sia remains able simul­ta­ne­ous­ly to con­ti­nue to pro­se­cu­te the war and to effect war­ti­me adap­t­ati­ons to its com­mand struc­tu­re. With vary­ing degrees of suc­cess, the Krem­lin has been able to rapidly mobi­li­ze reser­vists, employ pri­va­te mili­ta­ry com­pa­nies, sus­tain military-industrial pro­duc­tion for basic sys­tems, and hea­vi­ly mili­ta­ri­ze the public infor­ma­ti­on space in sup­port of the war.

In terms of com­mand struc­tu­re, the sepa­ra­ti­on of the Wes­tern Mili­ta­ry District into Moscow and Lenin­grad districts in March 2024 is also telling.163 Moscow is now rever­ting to its ‘com­fort zone’, name­ly Soviet-era com­mand struc­tures in the Euro­pean theat­re. The new Moscow Mili­ta­ry District will con­cern its­elf exclu­si­ve­ly with Ukrai­ne, Bela­rus and Kali­nin­grad, which will ine­vi­ta­b­ly be of direct con­cern to the US and NATO in the Bal­tic theat­re as well as on the eas­tern flank of the Alliance.

The pace of imple­men­ta­ti­on and the effi­ci­en­cy of con­ti­nued reforms in the com­mand struc­tu­re, howe­ver, remain to be seen. They will part­ly depend on the effec­ti­ve­ness or other­wi­se of the new minis­ter of defence, And­rei Belou­sov, appoin­ted in May 2024. Simi­lar­ly, it is unknown if the Rus­si­an Armed For­ces can be a ‘lear­ning orga­niz­a­ti­on’ able to imple­ment genui­ne chan­ges, whe­ther struc­tu­ral or cultural.164

On top of war­ti­me adap­t­ati­ons in the com­mand struc­tu­re, the mili­ta­ry indus­try has dis­play­ed resi­li­en­ce in its abi­li­ty to deli­ver mili­ta­ry equip­ment and hard­ware in the war against Ukrai­ne. The ongo­ing recon­sti­tu­ti­on of mili­ta­ry equip­ment and hard­ware will ine­vi­ta­b­ly inform the next cycle of the Sta­te Arma­ment Pro­gram­me (GPV) after 2027, as well as future plans regar­ding modern mili­ta­ry tech­no­lo­gy and mili­ta­ry innovation.

The Rus­si­an Armed For­ces remain a credi­ble thre­at to NATO and its allies. In Ukrai­ne, the Rus­si­an mili­ta­ry has shown it can absorb los­ses and main­tain tactical-operational credi­bi­li­ty des­pi­te stra­te­gic fail­u­res. Rus­si­an for­ces can count on impro­ved recon­nais­sance fire and strike com­ple­xes equip­ped with a vast arse­nal of long-range pre­cisi­on muni­ti­ons, as well as lar­ger quan­ti­ties of impro­ved uncrewed aeri­al vehi­cles (UAVs). Rus­si­an long-range strike and stand-off muni­ti­ons, cou­pled with multi-layered air defence sys­tems, repre­sent the big­gest con­ven­tio­nal thre­at to NATO.

The Aero­space For­ces (VKS) and the Rus­si­an Fede­ra­ti­on Navy (RFN) remain cri­ti­cal parts of the nuclear and con­ven­tio­nal stra­te­gic deter­rence for­ce, poten­ti­al­ly hol­ding NATO assets at risk of dest­ruc­tion. Final­ly, asym­metric capa­bi­li­ties – espe­cial­ly the use of cyber and infor­ma­ti­on war­fa­re; elec­tro­nic war­fa­re for counter-UAV and counter-precision-guided-munitions ope­ra­ti­ons; and space-based assets – are still able to off­set NATO and US con­ven­tio­nal superiority.

Russia’s pro­spects for rege­ne­ra­ting its mili­ta­ry machi­ne remain mixed, both in terms of speed and effec­ti­ve­ness. Yet as the war against Ukrai­ne con­ti­nues, and regard­less of the depth of the recon­sti­tu­ti­on of Russia’s mili­ta­ry power, the cur­rent Krem­lin lea­ders­hip will remain a thre­at to Euro­pean and trans­at­lan­tic secu­ri­ty as well as a stra­te­gic com­pe­ti­tor to NATO and its allies.

Ana­ly­sis of Moscow’s nuclear decla­ra­to­ry poli­cy sug­gests that if Rus­sia were to suf­fer suf­fi­ci­ent­ly seve­re degra­dati­on of its con­ven­tio­nal mili­ta­ry power, such that the lea­ders­hip deemed the exis­tence of the Rus­si­an sta­te to be under thre­at, this would crea­te con­di­ti­ons under which Rus­sia might con­si­der the use of nuclear weapons.165 Howe­ver, this pos­si­bi­li­ty remains remo­te, espe­cial­ly while Russia’s air arms, and its naval for­ces bey­ond the Black Sea, remain rela­tively intact.

Fur­ther­mo­re, Rus­sia will con­ti­nue to explo­it its tool­kit of asym­metric capa­bi­li­ties and ambi­guous sub-threshold tac­tics. The­se tools must no lon­ger be ana­ly­sed as part of a ‘grey zone’ or ‘hybrid’ ran­ge of mea­su­res aimed at blur­ring the line bet­ween war and peace. They are fun­da­ment­al­ly part of Russia’s con­ti­nued low-intensity war­fa­re against Wes­tern interests.

Con­ti­nued assess­ments of Russia’s mili­ta­ry reform and of its ongo­ing recon­sti­tu­ti­on of equip­ment are vital to under­stan­ding in which sec­tors Moscow still repres­ents a thre­at to Wes­tern inte­rests. Such assess­ments will be essen­ti­al for the US and NATO in terms of retai­ning both a tech­no­lo­gi­cal and over­all deter­rence advan­ta­ge against the Kremlin.

The sin­gle most signi­fi­cant fac­tor that can impair Russia’s abi­li­ty to recon­sti­tu­te its over­all mili­ta­ry power and leverage asym­metric capa­bi­li­ties in com­ing years will be ongo­ing Wes­tern sup­port for Ukraine.

Final­ly, the sin­gle most signi­fi­cant fac­tor that can impair Russia’s abi­li­ty to recon­sti­tu­te its over­all mili­ta­ry power and leverage asym­metric capa­bi­li­ties in com­ing years will be ongo­ing Wes­tern sup­port for Ukrai­ne. Wes­tern coun­tries must con­ti­nue to work tog­e­ther to pro­vi­de Ukrai­ne with arms, ammu­ni­ti­on, finan­cial sup­port and refu­gee assi­s­tance, and to show moral soli­da­ri­ty with the Ukrai­ni­an war effort.

Deny­ing Rus­sia vic­to­ry and for­cing it to con­ti­nue in a long attri­tio­nal strugg­le will fur­ther degra­de all ele­ments of its war-making capa­ci­ty, inclu­ding its abi­li­ty to invest in and pro­du­ce cutting-edge tech­no­lo­gi­cal enab­lers. Cri­ti­cal­ly, the­se efforts will also fur­ther under­mi­ne the Kremlin’s infor­ma­tio­nal stra­te­gy both at home and abroad, dimi­nis­hing its abi­li­ty to desta­bi­li­ze Wes­tern demo­cra­tic sys­tems and, ulti­mate­ly, wea­ke­n­ing its long-term hold on power.

src: click (Chat­ham­house)

Halbzeit Fazit

23. September 2024

This House Would Fight for Demo­cra­cy, Liber­ty & the Rule of Law Abroad (Oxford­Uni­on)

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

I coun­ted:

3x Hit­ler
2x Genocide
1x shame
and
1x neve­r­en­ding war for our child­ren, if we let Rus­sia win

on the side of the “would fight for demo­cra­cy” fraction.

The unsett­ling part being, that the majo­ri­ty of peop­le in euro­pe think like me, when it comes to figh­t­ing for their coun­try - never mind democracy.

But as we all know, the emo­tio­nal argu­ment wins -- damit kann der Krieg dann ja end­lich weitergehen.

Bonus: The US inter­ven­ti­on in Kuwait, accord­ing to the pro­pon­ents for the moti­on was also to safe­guard inter­na­tio­nal rule of law.

Its inte­res­ting to see how far back some con­cepts go.

Rechnen lernen mit dem ukrainischen Kriegsbedarf

23. September 2024

oder Neu­ig­kei­ten auf dem Gebiet der kon­ven­tio­nel­len und weni­ger kon­ven­tio­nel­len Kriegsführung

Reis­ner schätzt aktu­ell den Defen­siv­be­darf der Ukrai­ne bei Kampf­pan­zern und Kampf­schüt­zen­pan­zern auf 300 -- und den Bedarf für eine Offen­si­ve die das aktu­el­le Kriegs­ziel der Ukrai­ne erfül­len könn­te auf “wei­te­re 3000”.

Das Ver­hält­nis Kampf­pan­zer zu Kampf­schüt­zen­pan­zer ist dabei 1:2 (sel­bes Videointerview).

Laut statistica.com hat Euro­pa im Jahr 2024 gesamt 4540 Kampf­pan­zer, von denen die Ukrai­ne in der Defen­si­ve dem­nächst 100 braucht um wei­ter­zu­kämp­fen, und 1000 um noch­mal in die Offen­si­ve gehen zu kön­nen -- um auf dem kon­ven­tio­nel­len Weg ihre Zie­le (Rück­erobe­rung aller ukrai­ni­schen Gebie­te mit dem Stand vor 2014) zu erreichen.

Das wäre also noch­mal ein Vier­tel aller in Euro­pa ver­füg­ba­ren Panzer.

Laut wiki­pe­dia liegt die Auf­sto­ckungs­quo­te in Deutsch­land bei 39 in vier Jah­ren, dh 10 Pan­zern pro Jahr - bei 300 Bestand. Dh. die Ukrai­ne bräuch­te von Deutsch­land so viel, wie Deutsch­land in 8 Jah­ren durch Pro­duk­ti­on lukrie­ren kann.

Laut Oryx hat die Ukrai­ne bis­her etwa 1000 Pan­zer und Schüt­zen­pan­zer ver­lo­ren. Aktu­ell hat die Ukrai­ne eben­falls laut Oryx etwa 2000 Pan­zer und Kampf­schüt­zen­pan­zer im Einsatz.

Zusam­men­ge­fasst, für das Poten­ti­al eines kon­ven­tio­nel­len Sie­ges (alles Gebiet zum Stand von vor 2014 zurück) bräuch­te die Ukrai­ne 2.5 mal MEHR Pan­zer als sie der­zeit hat -- und das wären ein gutes Vier­tel aller in Euro­pa der­zeit noch ver­füg­ba­ren Pan­zer. (Ohne Anga­be zur tat­säch­li­chen Ein­satz­be­reit­schaft der staat­lich ange­ge­be­nen Zah­len, wir ken­nen das Pro­blem aus Deutsch­land. Zumal 1365 von den 4540 in Grie­chen­land sta­tio­niert sind.)

(Alles unter dem Vor­be­halt, dass die US kei­ne Abra­hams mit Tur­bi­nen­an­trieb schi­cken. (Aktu­ell warens 31.))

Jetzt zur weni­ger Kon­ven­tio­nel­len Kriegsführung:
Laut Zei­han hat die Ukrai­ne mög­li­cher­wei­se die rus­si­sche Rail Logis­tik ein­se­hen kön­nen und bei­de Sei­ten wissens.

Bedeu­tet - die Ukrai­ne hat ein bes­se­res Ver­ständ­nis von Rus­si­schen Muni­ti­ons­de­pots (Zahl - Ort, Men­ge) -- und könn­te jetzt die Rus­si­sche Logis­tik durch Angrif­fe auf die rus­si­sche Ener­gie­in­fra­struk­tur emp­find­lich ent­schleu­ni­gen (rus­si­sche Züge sind zum Groß­teil elek­tri­fi­ziert und fah­ren mit Strom).

edit: Kiev Post Edi­tor in Chief indi­ca­tes, that Ukrai­nes “win­ning” is in lar­ge part a regime chan­ge play, so get­ting the cur­rent regime to topp­le in russia:

What is NATO Propaganda

22. September 2024

SPÖ-Wehrsprecher sieht Druck auf Neu­tra­li­tät durch “trans­at­lan­ti­sche Elite-Zirkel”

src: click Der Stan­dard dazu: click

Wie kann er nur!

Sie­he:

Öster­reich du gei­le Sau

Sie­he dazu auch:

First off - it is ama­zing to see Fio­na Hill show that much restraint. For once. The selec­ti­ve framings are few and far in bet­ween if you just look at the state­ments of Hill and Con­stan­ze Stel­zen­mül­ler. They are still the­re, but this time they are very muted.

Of cour­se Hill is still nee­ded to tell the sto­ry that this is one per­sons war - and Putin was so iso­la­ted, and most­ly worried about his lega­cy, and that this was a plan that he had for years and plan­ned out meti­cu­lous­ly, which of cour­se is dis­pu­ted by both the initi­al Nafta­li Ben­nett Inter­view (the iso­la­ti­on part) - as well as Ste­phen Kot­kin, and David Arak­ha­mi­ia (the head of Selen­sky­js par­ty) by now -- but Fio­na this time around has down­gra­ded her “iso­la­ti­on” argu­ment to “iso­la­ted with the same peop­le” (so didnt talk to the west, during the Coro­na lock­downs?), which was when Putins decisi­on - accord­ing to Fio­na - was made to attack Ukrai­ne, becau­se Putin thought most­ly about his lifes lega­cy in tho­se days. Which Fio­na of cour­se knows, becau­se she knows how Putin thinks. Becau­se of tho­se four stone sta­tu­es she saw in his office in 2015 - when she last par­ti­ci­pa­ted in a Val­dai Dis­cus­sion Club mee­ting. Thats a very tame ver­si­on of her sto­ry (that still con­tains dou­ble Vla­di­mir btw - which is ama­zing), but none of her other logic jumps - she pre­vious­ly made, when pre­sen­ting her “what Putin thinks” sto­ry in the past.

Of cour­se Fio­na Hill is now also con­tra­dic­ted by Ste­phen Kot­kin (the per­son who inven­ted the initi­al wes­tern war nar­ra­ti­ve at the Hoo­ver Insti­tu­ti­on, which then every euro­pean news out­let copied, see Kot­kin at the Hoo­ver Insti­tu­ti­on on the 4th of March 2022):

Becau­se Kot­kin by now sta­tes, that the most popu­lar public nar­ra­ti­ve in the west has now chan­ged from “cra­zy Putin” to a “this was the goal of the broa­der rus­si­an lea­ders­hip” one, becau­se the rus­si­an peop­le seem ok with it, and becau­se the “cra­zy Putin nar­ra­ti­ve” kind of fizz­led out over time, making Fio­nas input, nar­ra­ti­ve wise, less and less important.

Ste­phen Kot­kin: “So it’s real­ly Putin per­so­nal, capri­cious, whim­si­cal, his per­so­na­li­ty, his KGB past, all the things that you wri­te about. That explana­ti­on was popu­lar until recent­ly when peop­le star­ted to see that it was­n’t only Putin in the war in Ukrai­ne, that Rus­si­an eli­tes see­med to fall in line. Not ever­yo­ne, but many of them.

The Rus­si­an peop­le did­n’t seem on on mass to oppo­se the war. Yes, many did and suf­fe­red for it, and many are in exi­le or in pri­son as a result. But it’s hard to say that this is one per­son alo­ne. It’s also hard to say that any of the alter­na­ti­ves woul­d’­ve been dif­fe­rent once they’­re in power.

Cau­se Putin was­n’t today’s Putin when he first came to power. It’s also hard to under­stand how if they had been dif­fe­rent, they woul­d’­ve sur­vi­ved. Just becau­se you come to power does­n’t mean you sur­vi­ve in power. You can come to power by acci­dent. But sur­vi­ving in power for deca­de after deca­de is not an accident.

And so this, the second explana­ti­on, it’s Putin or pre­do­mi­nant­ly Putin, I don’t think holds water.”

Of cour­se Fio­na Hill is also famous for her appearan­ce at the CFR here:

Whe­re she encou­ra­ges the audi­ence the peop­le in the CFR and jour­na­lists to come up with bet­ter sto­ry­tel­ling, to tell to peop­le in a simp­le way what has hap­pen­ed, try­ing to regain them in mass, after having lost them -- refe­ren­cing the two thirds of the world that might belie­ve in chi­nas view on the events f.e.

Here the moneyquote:

Fio­na Hill: “You know, you’ve lost—forgotten—and this is exact­ly what he said. You’ve kind of lost huma­ni­ty. What’s hap­pen­ed to the Ame­ri­cans who go out the­re and tell a sto­ry, you know, that makes it very clear about why peop­le are doing things? And, you know, that’s some­thing that mem­bers of the Coun­cil on For­eign Rela­ti­ons do. It’s why we’re having this event.

It’s also what peop­le do in jour­na­lism, like Ser­ge and, you know, all of his opi­ni­on and com­men­ta­ry pie­ces. But it’s kind of, you know, some­thing that we’re all going to have to do on a regu­lar basis. And, you know, I think some of you might have read just recent­ly in the New York Times the movie of Bul­ga­kov, Mas­ter and Mar­ga­ri­ta, that’s being shown, you know, right now in in Rus­sia and having an impact. We’ve got to start being crea­ti­ve about things like this, about tel­ling stories.

The sto­ry of Ale­xei Naval­ny dying—you know, some­bo­dy of that kind of unspeaka­ble bra­very to, you know, do the things that he did, and to sacri­fice hims­elf in the way that he did—telling that sto­ry and moving it forward.

Becau­se you can’t just lea­ve Vla­di­mir Putin to tell the sto­ry. And I think that this docu­men­ta­ry is a chal­len­ge to all of us about how do we get out the­re and work on the narrative.”

Thank you Fiona!

Next we look at Con­stan­ze Stel­zen­mül­ler, who of cour­se, as always, finds it so hard to deal with that fact, that in ger­ma­ny the­re still isnt this noti­on, that the­re is a real war going on right now bet­ween the west and chi­na, and that we real­ly ought to take a hint and side with the ame­ri­cans on this -- “becau­se of demo­cra­ci­es vs. aut­ho­cra­ci­es”, right?

Right. So - here is why thats so hard for the ger­mans to under­stand. Becau­se the ger­man eco­no­mic infra­st­ruc­tu­re is inter­wo­ven with Chi­na in a dif­fe­rent way, than the one in the US is. So while the US bene­fits from 100% tar­rifs on chi­ne­se goods, the ger­man eco­no­my actual­ly suf­fers even from the lower impact tar­rifs the EU has by now put on chi­ne­se electric vehi­cles (see, Poli­ti­co: Ger­ma­ny laun­ches 11th-hour bid to avert tra­de war with Chi­na) but Con­stan­ze just cant fathom why thats still the domi­nant view in germany.

Try­ing to debunk the two male coun­ter­parts on this panel is an excer­cise in futi­li­ty, becau­se they flog emo­tio­nal “US, the shi­ning city on a hill” nar­ra­ti­ves whe­re about every second sen­tence is wrong - in a fun­da­men­tal way -- so I will not even try that to -- for once, keep this pos­ting from explo­ding into 10 pages of dealing with idio­tic gobbledigug.

And the­re is a final slight, soft framing thats estab­lis­hed in the Broo­kings Insti­tu­ti­on panel dis­cus­sion here, that still tou­ches on -- well rus­sia had no real rea­sons to start this war.

While on the fun­da­men­tal level thats cor­rect, this seeks to sim­ply out­fence all the inter­na­tio­nal poli­cy maneu­vers the US and the Ukrai­ne put in place befo­re­hand to essen­ti­al­ly free Cri­mea, which might have been an essen­ti­al impe­tus for Rus­sia to start this war -- as Her­fried Münk­ler sta­tes here:

Spä­te Erkenntnis

And which Ange­la Mer­kel also open­ly allu­ded to when tal­king about the natu­re of Minsk 2.

So take your NATO nar­ra­ti­ve, and essen­ti­al­ly stuff it -- even though this is the tamest and clo­sest ver­si­on to what will be in our histo­ry books ten years from now.

(Putin mani­pu­la­ted rus­si­an histo­ry as a high prio­ri­ty goal sin­ce 2015 - I’m still an equal oppor­tu­ni­ty take your shit and stuff it kind of guy. (Hope­ful­ly.))