“We have to strike Poland and the Baltic States, where there are NATO rockets and aircraft. Since we cannot allow one plane to take off and strike Russia – we will have to strike first – half an hour before takeoff. And to be sure, we will be carpet bombing. America is not a threat, but the small midget states of Europe will cease to exist. They will be wiped out. Then NATO will have to beg us for negotiations. Otherwise we will give them again a May ’45.”
– Vladimir Zhirinovsky, August 2014 (Television interview, 8.08.2014.)“In my book I wrote, more than ten years ago, that 2015 and this year is the break-point of Atlantic civilization.”
– Dr. Victor Kulish, 12 July 2014, author of Hierarchic Electrodynamics and Free Electron LasersLast month the grand old man of Russian politics, Yevgeny Primakov, made some rather telling statements during an interview for Russia Beyond the Headlines. Of course, Primakov justified Russia’s annexation of Crimea, but admitted that any insertion of Russian troops into southeast Ukraine would prove to be a “dead end.” According to Primakov such a move would effectively curtail trends which Russia is relying on for future success.
What are these “trends”?
Primakov did not directly say, but a short list might read as follows: Germany’s gradual drift into Moscow’s orbit, the establishment of Russian military bases in the Caribbean, the rise of Chinese military power in the Pacific, and the ongoing decline of the U.S. economy. Russia stands to gain from each of these “trends.” Even if Moscow is eager to smash Ukraine’s independence movement, it is best to wait. Why disrupt an otherwise favorable situation, especially as the United States continues to weaken?
Primakov says Moscow should rely on Russia’s “friends” in the West. Of course, Russia has plenty of friends, and agents of influence. But with a rising tide of violence in Europe won’t the average Russian begin to question Putin’s arms buildup? Meanwhile, in Ukraine, a new generation seeks greater responsibility and a greater say in their government. They do not want Soviet structures in their country. They do not want their presidents to be Kremlin lackeys. They are tired of liberalizations that bring no effective liberation. They are tired of an economy where the ruling class steals what it wants and the rest of society suffers the consequences. They are tired of the Soviet Union, which still exists! So the revolution against Moscow – whatever it is now called – cannot be stopped without violence. And violence begets more violence.
Perhaps the Kremlin thinks it can control the Ukrainian Revolution through its agents in Kiev. Do traitors in the Ukrainian command keep a floating bridge open on the border to supply the pro-Russian separatists? It doesn’t matter, in the long run, because the Russians are still losing in Eastern Ukraine, and Moscow will have to send tanks. They will have to retake Ukraine. They will have to liquidate the spirit of liberty – otherwise it will infect the Russian army itself. It will infect Moscow. Then Putin and his colleagues will be put on trial, and they will not be found innocent.
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Lacking any direct proof from Mr. Nalyvaichenko, we must admit the story fits the usual Russian pattern – which is a pattern of provocation. Look at the apartment bombings in 1999 which occurred before the Russian invasion of Chechnya. Famously, these ended in the Ryazan incident which showed that the FSB (KGB) orchestrated the apartment bombings to justify Putin’s invasion of Chechnya. So here we have an allegation by a Ukrainian official that Russia was trying to shoot down their own airliner in order to blame the Ukrainians, and use it as an excuse to invade Ukraine.
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With regard to its anti-American content, black-clad Nazis are seen saluting the Right Sector emblem beneath a pyramid emblazoned with the U.S. dollar and the Eye of Providence as seen on the Great Seal of the United States. Notice that a giant striped eagle surrounded by stars, which is meant to represent the United States, is shown to be the supreme engineer of this neo-Nazi (Ukrainian) revolution. If we juxtapose this media event with the curious statement of a former Director of the USSR Central Intelligence Service, Yevgeny Primakov, then we are forced to admit that Russia is still preparing for war.
While Russian television orients the country for war, Primakov’s erstwhile colleagues are working day and night to outflank America by various underhanded maneuvers at the U.S. border. Please read James Simpson’s 20 July article on veteran Border Patrol agent Zach Taylor. Watch the video. Watch what Taylor says about the border crisis and the Russians. Years ago I asked a Russian GRU defector how the Russian military expected to get WMDs into the United States in advance of a major war. He said, “Through the same routes that drugs are taken into the United States.” I say again, watch what Zach Taylor has to say. Watch it once, watch it twice – share it with your friends.
The Russian use of organized crime is not well understood in America. Yet there it is, openly stated by a knowledgeable expert on border security. Those who are interested in more detail should read Joseph D. Douglass book, Red Cocaine. The strategic use of narcotics trafficking is therein explained. Please note that the Mexican mafia is allied to the Russian mafia, which is an instrument of the Kremlin. If you want to understand the threat to America, the border is our first line of defense; and the border has collapsed. In this regard there are many things the American public needs to understand. There is much here that requires our careful study. But most of all, look at the fools in our government, in our media, in our universities.
All good things come to those who have infiltrated their enemy. That is the Kremlin’s path to victory, and it’s been their faith since 1917. You can be sure the Russians have agents in the White House, in our CIA, in our NSA, in our military, in our State Department. “In a globalizing world,” noted Primakov, “it is impossible to talk about an isolated Russia. We are not isolated from others and we do not isolate them, not even our enemies. We have diversified our economic orientation….” And it’s true. Russia’s strategy is not a strategy of isolation. Russia’s strategy is infiltration and integration. That is why the Russians can openly prepare for war and we don’t feel any sense of alarm. Russia’s agents have been surrounding us all along, whispering sweet nothings into our collective ear.
Trouble is coming. Can you hear it’s approach? Or are you seduced by sweet nothings?
Full article: Russia Prepares for War (JR Nyquist)