Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Sat Jul 12, 2025 11:50 am

Return to the military solution
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 12/07/2025

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“Trump is realizing that Putin doesn't want peace, he wants Ukraine. Zelensky is willing to negotiate, but the attacks continue. I'm glad the aid suspension has been reversed,” he said in a recent interview with CNN , the go-to venue for former Republican or Trumpist figures who disown Trump or reject the strategy of inducements and threats with which Donald Trump naively believed he would achieve a quick peace. The US president trusted that his position as Ukraine's main supplier would be enough to force Kiev to resort to diplomacy and that his good relationship with Vladimir Putin would be enough to force the Kremlin to accept an inconclusive plan that would not resolve the most important issue: NATO expansion, which even Trump had accepted as the fundamental cause of the war.

Pence, whose knowledge of the war is as limited as that of his former boss in the White House but expresses the general sentiment of the American and European establishment , is mistaken in his reference to Zelensky's willingness to negotiate. The Ukrainian leader has accepted, largely to avoid alienating the self-proclaimed American peace president, the rhetoric of the need to end the conflict, but at no point has he appealed to a negotiation process. Moreover, Zelensky's preferred option, beyond continuing to receive massive assistance to continue fighting until he is in a position to achieve his political objectives, has never been negotiation, the scenario most feared by Kiev and its European allies, aware that, in war, dialogue is determined by the marked balances on the front lines. Negotiation was not an option in the fall of 2022, since even then, at a time of maximum Russian weakness, Ukraine would not have been able to demand from Moscow its most cherished desire: Crimea. In a much more compromised position since the failure of the 2023 ground offensive, when Ukraine artificially raised expectations to demand more weapons from its allies and provoked strong disappointment when it failed to break through the Zaporozhye front, kyiv would now have far fewer arguments to demand anything from Russia, not even the withdrawal of those territories that the Kremlin was willing to return according to the 2022 Istanbul pre-agreement.

The ideal option for Zelensky and his team, having momentarily lost the option of continuing the progressive escalation that had marked the Biden era, was precisely Donald Trump's favorite: a three-way meeting in which the presidents resolved what could easily be resolved and everything else would be left unresolved. That image would have been enough for the American leader to claim credit and add the war in Ukraine to the list of conflicts he claims to have resolved, using it as another argument in his shameless advertising campaign for the Nobel Peace Prize. That type of resolution , very similar to the summit at which the second Minsk agreement was signed in February 2015 after a night of negotiations between presidents, would also have been satisfactory for Zelensky for the same reasons that the agreement ten years ago was. On the one hand, Ukraine would succeed in preventing further Russian advances, which, although extremely slow, continue to occur on the most important front, the Donbass front—a further analogy to the situation Ukrainian troops found themselves in when Petro Poroshenko agreed to sign the agreement negotiated for him by Angela Merkel. On the other hand, also as then, the process would lead to a negotiating table where, without any viable mediation, it could drag on forever, chronicizing the conflict, justifying the militarization of Ukraine, Russia, and Europe in general, and with no real possibility of resolution. As ten years ago—and like the seven years since—kyiv's negotiating position would be limited to making demands of Russia that did not correspond to the situation on the ground, which, in cases of inconclusive resolution of a conflict, define the peace talks.

During that process, after a war that Ukraine had been unable to win, Ukraine remained firm in its red line of not negotiating any political aspect in any format other than that of presidents, something that is being repeated now. Only decisions made by the Normandy Format, in which the heads of state or government of Germany, France, Ukraine, and Russia participated, were taken into account. Normandy made decisions that were subsequently passed on to the Trilateral Contact Group in Minsk, where they became bogged down in the deadlock from which they would never emerge. Thus, Ukraine failed to recover the lost territories of Donbass, something that was never its priority, but it was not forced to make a concession it was never willing to make: special status for Donetsk and Luhansk, political rights that contradicted the intention of imposing a centralized and nationalist, i.e., anti-Russian, model. Perpetuating the conflict also meant keeping alive the possibility of continuing to claim Crimea in the future and opened the door to demanding arms and funding from its allies on the basis of the ongoing war, always facing the threat that Russia would lose hope that Ukraine would implement the signed agreements and become militarily involved. That possibility did not truly emerge until late 2021, when a series of circumstances unfolded in which Russia clearly saw that the implementation of Minsk was not going to happen, as Ukraine focused even more firmly on achieving its two main objectives: obtaining help to demand the return of Crimea—with the Crimea Declaration, which affirmed that Kyiv would use all means at its disposal to recover the territory—and moving closer to official NATO membership by inviting countries like the United Kingdom to establish military bases in places like Odessa. The escalation of the bombing of Donbass, a tool routinely used to raise tensions and pressure Russia into making concessions, was just one aspect of a strategy to escalate tensions, which Russia responded to with coercive diplomacy , first bringing troops closer to the border and then invading in February 2022.

Nothing was inevitable, and practically until the last moment, the expansion of the war to encompass all of Ukraine and part of Russia could have been avoided by complying with the Minsk agreements and refusing to accept Ukraine as a NATO member. At that time, Ukraine and its allies showed no intention of negotiating either aspect. However, the appearance of calls for peace still persisted, with both kyiv and continental capitals appealing to Minsk as a settlement for which there was no alternative. Only after the Russian invasion did Ukraine and its European allies confirm what had always been evident: kyiv never intended to implement the agreements, as Zelenskyy told Merkel and Macron in 2019, but it used the time to strengthen its military and its relationship with the West.

In his CNN interview , Mike Pence boasted that “under our direction, Ukraine received real support: missiles, not blankets. Putin did not invade the country on our watch.” While it is true that the first Trump administration, whose Ukraine policy was exactly the same as that inherited from Obama and Biden, approved the delivery of Javelin anti-tank missiles, which were hardly useful at a time when there was no attempt by the People's Republics to advance into Ukrainian territory, it was not this supply that prevented an invasion that had much more to do with political tensions than with the supply of weapons. However, it is relevant that Mike Pence, as Donald Trump is also accustomed to doing, boasts about the flow of weapons to Kiev, the effect of which both are willing to exaggerate, as it indicates the current trend.

References to the possibility of negotiations are quickly disappearing from European discourse, which, like Ukraine's, is returning to the dynamics of demanding more weapons, triumphalism about the possibility of victory, and military action as the way to achieve the desired resolution. "Russia's continued massive attacks against Ukrainian civilians are deplorable. Today I urged leaders to take additional steps to ensure Ukraine has more ammunition and air defenses. I just spoke with President Trump and am now working closely with allies to ensure Ukraine receives the aid it needs," Mark Rutte declared yesterday.

The weapons financed with funds approved by the US Congress during the Biden era are running out, and the Trump administration was on the verge of finding itself in a compromising situation, which is somewhat less so if one appeals to the idea that Russia has given up on negotiations. Trump's team managed to obtain the starting positions of Russia and Ukraine, but failed to translate those documents into a negotiation between the parties. The complete lack of trust between Kyiv and Moscow and the incompatibility of their territorial and, above all, security demands made a competent and committed mediation necessary, which simply does not exist. Contrary to Donald Trump's hopes for a quick resolution to the conflict, the war not only has not stopped but currently demands more weapons, especially defensive ones, since, despite constant warnings, Russia still hasn't run out of missiles and has significantly improved its drone capabilities. In this context, Trump would have to choose between abandoning or increasing his involvement. The first option would involve withdrawing, implicitly accepting defeat in their goal of achieving peace, and leaving Ukraine at the mercy of European capabilities to compensate for the loss of US materiel. The second involves abandoning the president's idea of peace—or applying the same definition of peace that has been used in the case of Iran, that is, bombing—and approving new arms deliveries, especially air defense and perhaps the long-range weapons to attack Russia that Andriy Ermak and other members of Volodymyr Zelensky's inner circle are once again demanding.

“Ukrainians, Americans, and Europeans believe in the same things: family, their land, hard work, duty, and the right to protect what is theirs. What unites us is the idea that peace is not weakness, but the result of strength, action, and principles,” wrote Andriy Ermak yesterday. By simplifying the facts, he has managed to convince the entire population of Ukraine, the United States, and Europe—understood as the European Union, the United Kingdom, and Ukraine—to share a single opinion, specifically that of an action that involves more force than peace and that, for the first time in six months, has the approval of the President of the United States. “You'll see what will happen,” Donald Trump provocatively stated yesterday, having announced to the press on Thursday a major statement on Russia for next Monday. It seems clear that the US President is referring both to the approval of the sanctions package proposed by Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal and to the supply of arms.

In this last sense, Axios reported yesterday that "Trump plans to send weapons to Ukraine through his NATO allies." "President Trump is planning to sell weapons to NATO allies with the understanding that they will then provide them to Ukraine, three sources familiar with the discussions tell Axios ," the outlet writes, specifying that part of the White House believes this formula would guarantee supplies without increasing US involvement, a childish trap for someone who doesn't want to accept the failure of what was his flagship foreign policy proposal. Trump would, however, achieve his goal of leaving the financing of the war in the hands of European countries without giving up the revenue that a high-intensity war represents for the country with the largest military-industrial complex in the world. Pending Monday's declaration, everything indicates that the war is heading for a new phase of escalation.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/12/vuelt ... n-militar/

Google Translator

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From Cassad's telegram account:

Colonelcassad
0:18
Gladkov on the Ukrainian Armed Forces' attack on Belgorod Arena: the enemy is deliberately attacking peaceful civilian facilities, its mission is terror. The governor posted a video of the attack on the sports complex.

Two social facilities were damaged by Ukrainian Armed Forces UAV attacks in Belgorod. According to preliminary information, there are no casualties.

One of the UAVs hit the Belgorod Arena sports complex, where classes were taking place, resulting in a roof fire — fire crews are working on the scene to put it out.

***

Colonelcassad
Pyongyang will unconditionally support Russia's policy of protecting its territorial integrity and sovereignty, said North Korean Foreign Minister Choi Son Hee.

According to her, the participation of combat units of the DPRK Armed Forces in the operation to liberate the Kursk region clearly demonstrates the highest level of cooperation between the two countries.

The participation of North Korean military personnel in the liberation of the Kursk region confirms the fraternal nature of relations between Moscow and Pyongyang - Lavrov

"The Russian Federation had no reason to refuse to help the DPRK in the SVO, it was a sincere expression of solidarity. The issue of further assistance to Russia in the SVO in Ukraine is decided by Kim Jong-un himself ," the head of the Russian Foreign Ministry added.

Other statements by the head of the Russian Foreign Ministry from the meeting with his counterpart from the DPRK, Choi Son Hee:

- the issue of further assistance to Russia in the special operation from Pyongyang is decided by Kim Jong-un, Lavrov noted;

- the countries plan to resume maritime communication. Putin and Kim Jong-un are in constant contact, personal contacts will certainly continue in the future;

- Pyongyang made the necessary conclusions long before the US and Israel attacked Iran, which ensured security;

- Moscow warns the US and its allies against creating threats to the security of the Russian Federation and the DPRK. Russia will assist in the dialogue between Pyongyang and Seoul only on those issues that are of interest to the DPRK;

- Russia respects and understands the reasons why the republic is developing a nuclear program;

- Moscow does not take seriously attempts to create a "corps of multinational forces to protect Ukraine", this is fantasy;

- Russia and the DPRK consider attempts to create NATO infrastructure in Northeast Asia and in the Asia-Pacific region as a whole to be dangerous.

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

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Comedy-Turned-Farce: Trump Pledges a Whole Ten Missiles to Ukraine
Simplicius
Jul 10, 2025

After failing to coerce Russia into an unfavorable cessation of hostilities (read: surrender), the US is now again playing ‘sanctions’ roulette, which deep state neocon vampire Lindsey Graham has been wedging onto Trump.

The sanctions on Russian energy exports and banking services are meant to ‘degrade’ Russia’s ability to wage the war in perpetuity, given that Western elite are finally coming around to the fact that Russia will not submit, and plans to carry on indefinitely.

NYT writes that Senators Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal are preparing a bill on new sanctions against the Russian energy sector, which could lead to a global collapse of energy markets and a global recession. At the same time, the publication indicates that there is no panic in Moscow. Russia is used to sanctions pressure and is quickly adapting.

But there is still some equivocating that’s clearly meant to give Trump the ability to play both sides, as usual—i.e. to simulate the ‘tough guy’ via some marquee sanctions bill, yet still have the ability to diplomatically sanitize and dial them in as needed, as a sop to both sides.

Rubio implies as much: (Video at link.)

Similarly, MSM now reports that Trump may initiate the first ever completely new arms package to Ukraine under his administration—in contrast to the Biden-era carryover PDA that was still squeezing out some last few drops.

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https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/tr ... 025-07-10/

But, again, is there more than meets the eye?

Firstly, there’s talk of a paltry $300M PDA (Presidential Drawdown Authority) package, which effectively amounts to a handful of missiles, depending on weapon system. Even Biden’s PDA had nearly $4B remaining to disburse.

Secondly, as part of his new package Trump reportedly has pledged to send “10 Patriot missiles” to Ukraine:

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https://kyivindependent.com/ukraine-war ... y-06-2025/

You’re probably thinking—that’s 10 full missile launchers, a hefty offering!

But—mind-blowing as it may sound—the 10 missiles appears to refer to just that: 10 actual missile interceptors; as in, the ammunition.

In the article, Trump asks Germany to send a fully battery while he sends 10 missiles. This is a strange request, as 10 missile launchers would represent a battery themselves, thus the distinction would not be necessary to make. In fact, that is almost two batteries, with each battery costing upwards of $2.5B dollars in export terms; $5B is an extremely unlikely amount from Trump, given that his new package aims to gift a mere $300M, as stated earlier.

Also, the previously-‘frozen’ aid verifiably contained “30 Patriot missiles”—as in, the actual ammunition itself—as can be cross-checked through various mainstream sources. Here, Reuters:

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So, if this much-vaunted shipment generated so much bafflegab over a mere 30 missiles, then it’s conceivable Trump’s announcement of an additional 10 pertains to the ammunition. Keep in mind, Patriot PAC-3 MSE missiles cost upwards of $10M each. That means another mere 10 missiles would be as much as $100M, which certainly makes sense within the context.

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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/202 ... nterceptor

If that’s the case, then we should be gobsmacked at this theater of the absurd: all this noise for a mere 10 missiles that will be fired off in three or four seconds during Russia’s next attack?

Just last night, Russia again broke the record, this time walloping Ukraine with over 700+ drones and missiles in a single night. (Video at link.)

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What are the miserable 10 missiles supposed to do against that? Clearly, one can see the deliberate duplicity and delay games in this farcical show.

The last reason to doubt the 10 refers to launchers is Rubio’s statement regarding other nations needing to foot the bill to send their launchers to Ukraine, implying US shouldn’t have to send any more: (Video at link.)

Of course, we all know whether it’s 10 measly missiles or 10 batteries, it makes no difference in the end. At $10 million per missile, you’re looking at a cost of $7B per day in intercepting Russia’s 700+ Geran drone attack. Multiple Ukrainian figures have recently put forth that Russia will soon be launching 1,000+ daily Gerans.

Now Trump has told NBC that he will be making some ‘big statement’ on Russia on monday—presumably, something having to do with the sanctions.

If some form of stronger sanctions do go through, it would merely be part of the same old European plan to box Russia’s merchant fleets in—plans which are developing daily in dangerous directions.

For instance:

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https://www.ft.com/content/0c42af06-213 ... 0494794c98

Recall the duplicitous game: boot Russian ships from the international insurers’ markets, then “require insurance” in waters entirely controlled by arbitrary EEZs to effect “legal piracy”.

From another source:

Sweden has now announced that starting on July 1 its navy will stop, inspect and potentially seize all suspect vessels transiting its exclusive economic zone, and is deploying the Swedish air force to back up this threat. Since the combined maritime economic zones of Sweden and the three Baltic states cover the whole of the central Baltic Sea, this amounts to a virtual threat to cut off all Russian trade exiting Russia via the Baltic — which would indeed be a very serious economic blow to Moscow.

It would also threaten to cut off Russia’s exclave of Kaliningrad, which is surrounded by Poland, from access to Russia by sea.


Meanwhile, Russia has continued escorting its so-called “shadow fleet” ships:

An analyst from Starboard Maritime Intelligence Ltd reports that the tankers SELVA and SIERRA passed through the English Channel at the same time as the corvette BOIKOY of Project 20380 of the Baltic Fleet of the Russian Navy. This is the first recorded escort of Russian tankers by Russian warships (through the English Channel).

Just in case, Russia has also been bulking up some of those phantom reserves we’ve talked so much about.

Russia Expands Military Presence Near Finnish Border

Fresh satellite imagery published by Western outlets shows that Russia is constructing a new military complex near the Finnish border — a clear sign of long-term troop reinforcement in the region.

Significant earthworks and new facilities have appeared at the Lupche-Savino garrison, part of the city of Kandalaksha in Murmansk Region, roughly 110 km from Finland. According to reports, two brigades have already been relocated to this area.

Satellite photos also reveal expansion at the Sapyornoye garrison on the Karelian Isthmus, located about 70 km from the Finnish border.

Russia is simultaneously continuing preparations in Petrozavodsk, the capital of Karelia. The city houses the command of a mixed aviation division, which oversees the Besovets airbase nearby.

Notably, Russia is forming a completely new 44th Army Corps in the Republic of Karelia — a move that effectively adds around 15,000 troops to NATO’s eastern frontier.


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Don’t be surprised to see many of the freshly-produced T-90Ms there.

The US sanctions, either way, happen to be stillborn, as skeptical WaPo already informed us last time:

On paper, a bill from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) attempting to enact the toughest and most far-reaching trade sanctions on Russia to date ought to please supporters of Ukraine. But there’s a problem: As bold as the legislation is, it would amount to launching a trade war with nearly the entire rest of the world, cutting off America’s nose to spite Russian President Vladimir Putin’s face.

In the meantime, Ukraine fatigue ramps up in the West. Polish president Duda has made quite a provocative statement, essentially threatening to close down the Rzeszow airport weapons pipeline into Ukraine, which is by far the most critical NATO weapons node: (Video at link.)



As a closing item, snake-oil salesman ‘Hissing Hegseth’ released this cringe-worthy new PR spot to announce the coming age of American ‘drone dominance’: (Video at link.)

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It seems under Trump America continues its Dionysian humiliation ritual. Either that or its transformation into some kind of kitschy, campy, post-capitalist dystopian weapons bazaar-cum-casino resort.

You know, the sort of place this White House renovation is fit to symbolize:

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https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/com ... mp-pledges

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It’s A Smart Move For Russia To Strike Ukrainian Draft Centers
Andrew Korybko
Jul 11, 2025

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This could raise the chances for a breakthrough somewhere along the front, help to decisively shift domestic public opinion against the conflict, and thus make it easier for “deep state” forces to conspire against Zelensky.

The Financial Times (FT) reported that “Russia attacks Ukraine’s draft offices in effort to undermine armed forces”, which drew attention to its latest strategy nearly three and a half years into the conflict. What began as a special operation quickly transformed into a proxy war that’s since become a “race of logistics”/“war of attrition”. Accordingly, without Trump coercing Zelensky to comply with Putin’s demands for peace and given his promise to send more “defensive weapons”, the conflict will continue.

It therefore makes sense that Russia would finally target Ukraine’s military logistics, particularly its draft centers, with a view towards preventing Kiev from replenishing its frontline losses in order to consequently raise the chances of a game-changing breakthrough somewhere along the front. Russia still won’t destroy Ukraine’s bridges across the Dnieper, possibly for the reasons speculated here last year, but striking its draft centers is better than nothing and could give also Russia a soft power edge.

As the FT acknowledged in their report, these draft centers are incredibly unpopular among the people, so it therefore follows that Russia’s destruction of them could lead to average Ukrainians breathing a sigh of relief and perhaps becoming more inclined towards a political solution to this long-running conflict. Those that already were anti-Russian or became so throughout the course of the hostilities might not change their political views, but what’s important is that they might not oppose concessions to Russia.

To be sure, the primary reason why Zelensky doesn’t want to comply with any of Putin’s demands for peace is because it could set into motion fast-moving events that remove him from power, but public opinion also plays a role in falsely justifying this self-interested position to the population. The independent organization of large-scale protests is practically impossible in Ukraine nowadays due to the SBU’s domestic dominance, but decisive shifts in public opinion could prompt a power struggle.

That institution and/or others could potentially see an opportunity in that scenario to allow some controlled protests for the purpose of pressuring Zelensky “from below” into doing what’s needed to end the conflict, which could then legitimize pressure upon him from their institution(s) too. The goal would be to remove him from power, even if only through the new elections that he promised would shortly follow the end of the conflict, and then potentially profit from lucrative reconstruction contracts.

For as compelling as this sequence might seem, it can’t be taken for granted, but the possibility still remains that Russia might at least obtain a soft power edge if it continues striking these draft centers. More average Ukrainians will likely appreciate that since they don’t want to die for Zelensky. Even JD Vance recognizes this reality as proven by him telling the world in late February during his fight with Zelensky in the White House about Ukraine’s forcible conscription policy and recruitment problems.

It's therefore a smart move for Russia to finally start striking Ukrainian draft centers since this could raise the chances for a breakthrough somewhere along the front, help to decisively shift domestic public opinion against the conflict, and thus make it easier for “deep state” forces to conspire against Zelensky. Russia has nothing to lose and everything to gain by keeping up and possibly expanding these strikes since they hit Zelensky where it hurts in more ways than one.

https://korybko.substack.com/p/its-a-sm ... -to-strike

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SBU Colonel Eliminated in Kyiv Participated in Organizing the Murder of "Motorola"
July 11, 21:00

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The NYT reports that SBU Colonel Voronich, who was killed yesterday in Kiev by an unknown shooter, was involved in organizing the murder of Sparta Battalion commander Arsen Pavlov (call sign "Motorola"). If this is true, then retribution for the murder of "Motor" came 9 years later. But of course, Voronich was not the only one involved, so...

"Motorola" was blown up in an elevator in Donetsk in 2016 after a series of unsuccessful assassination attempts.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9949989.html

Strikes on Ukraine. 12.07.2025
July 12, 13:21

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Strikes on Ukraine. 12.07.2025

Based on the results of the night strikes.

Last night, the enemy was hit by fire from 300 Geran-2 UAVs. The strike was accompanied by a corresponding number of false targets, for which the enemy was forced to spend a significant amount of expensive air defense ammunition.

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The attack scheme according to the enemy.

The strike of 110 UAVs hit the Lviv ARZ.
The strike of up to 100 UAVs hit the Motor plant in Lutsk.
The strike of up to 50 UAVs hit the Chernivtsi airfield, where the enemy stored long-range aviation ammunition, as well as missiles for the air defense system.
The strike of up to 50 UAVs hit the Kanatovo airfield.

In addition, strategic aviation aircraft carried out massive strikes with Kh-101 missiles on the Lviv ARZ, the Lutsk Motor plant, and the warehouses of the Chernivtsi airfield.

A very successful raid, the enemy's air defense continues to lose the initiative.

P.S. In the photo, a hole in the body of the Elektron plant in Lviv. Missile system components and avionics elements were manufactured there.
It can be noted that instead of spreading Geraniums over a bunch of different targets, the Russian Armed Forces have already clearly switched to a scheme with massive raids on a group of objects in order to maximize damage.

Lots of photos/videos of night and morning strikes as usual in Telegram https://t.me/boris_rozhin/172180 (if you are interested, subscribe)

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9950861.html

Google Translator

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Brief Frontline Report – July 11th, 2025

Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Zinderneuf
Jul 11, 2025

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "Units of the "West" Group have liberated the settlement of Zelenaya Dolina in the Donetsk People's Republic through decisive combat operations."

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ЛБС 20.4.2025=Line of Combat Contact April 20th, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

On the Kupyansk-Torskoye situation map, we observe the enemy's defensive salient along the Peski Radkovskye-Novodyanoye line (Look south of Borovaya and when you find the former, look straight east all the way to the edge of the map). From April 20, 2025 to present, the most significant advances along the line of contact have occurred at the northern and southern faces of this bulge (Kruglyakovka-Novaya Kruglyakovka and Redkodub-Zelenaya Dolina). Anticipating the threat of this salient being cut off and Russian forces reaching the Oskol River, in early June the enemy deployed reserves to the east bank of the Oskol River, where they established defensive strongpoints along the Borovaya-Oskol line. This line represents the AFU's primary defensive position, anchored by the Oskol Reservoir (just north of Peski Radkovskye) and protecting both the right flank of their Kupyansk direction defenses and the left flank in the Izyum direction.

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ЛБС 01.11.2024=Line of Combat Contact November 1st, 2024. ЛБС 01.01.2025=Line of Combat Contact January 1st, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.*

For their forward defensive line, the AFU has utilized the Nitryus River along Glushchenkovo (Hlushenkovo)-Shandrigolovo (Shandryholovo)-Novoselovka, where the river is at its widest with a cascade of ponds and its confluence with the Seversky Donets, while further upstream near Glushchenkovo it nearly dries up. A frontal assault on this position appears unlikely. Flanking from the south would be particularly challenging as the defense there is based around the urban areas of Shandrigolovo, Novoselovka, and Drobyshevo, protected by the Seversky Donets riverbed.

The northern approach near Glushchenkovo presents more favorable conditions as the river ceases to be an obstacle and a road network begins. This area represents the most likely avenue for outflanking the AFU's forward defenses. Recognizing this vulnerability, the enemy has established defensive positions in the Glushchenkovo-Novy Mir sector to protect this flank.

Given these conditions, the most probable course of action involves reconnaissance-in-force operations toward Novy Mir-Glushchenkovo, maintaining constant pressure on this sector to identify and exploit weaknesses. The main operational focus is expected to develop southward toward Kolodezi-Zarechnoe-Stavki.

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-11th
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Sun Jul 13, 2025 12:36 pm

Reconstruction and repairs
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 13/07/2025

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The Putilovka Bridge, destroyed by the Ukrainian Army and a symbol of the gap between Donbass and Ukraine

An annual gathering where presidents of countries whose companies hope to profit from Ukraine's future reconstruction present their credentials and announce millions in public contributions that will be used as private profits, this week's Ukraine reconstruction summit in Rome has been overshadowed by the return of military means as a means of resolving the conflict, a boon for US hawks and the continental political establishment that will delay any infrastructure recovery work and make it even more costly. "The focus of the conference is on encouraging long-term private sector investment, but this has been overshadowed by the urgent need to protect the Ukrainian population and economy from the consequences of drone attacks," wrote The Guardian this week . The continued fighting and the increasing use of air warfare, which is causing serious material damage on both sides of the front and specifically to Ukrainian industrial and military infrastructure, means the final bill for recovery work will continue to mount, which Chancellor Friedrich Merz has currently estimated at €500 billion.

This is also the amount the German leader is demanding from Russia in compensation for the war and a prerequisite for Moscow to regain access to the Russian public and private assets seized in February 2022. In other words, Germany expects €500 billion in Russian public funding for the reconstruction of Ukraine in exchange for the return of funds that only partly belong to the Russian state. This maneuver seems intended to ensure that the state bears the cost of the war and not, for example, with the assets of oligarchic interests also seized by the European Union after the Russian invasion. The reconstruction conference, which the day after the ceasefire was presented as a business opportunity for large Western construction and civil engineering firms, is a form of privatization of war profits that aims to be accompanied by an impoverishment of the Russian state, which must bear the entire cost of the conflict. And although the chancellor and other European leaders have explored the possibility of seizing the withheld funds over the years, the possibility of litigation resulting in a ruling in Russia's favor, given the illegality of seizing the assets of a country against which war has not been declared, has made it impossible to take this step, which Trumpism, for example, continues to suggest.

The amount estimated by Germany is significantly higher than the $200 billion total reconstruction cost estimated in a detailed study by experts and cited this week by The Guardian . But beyond the amount, it is important to keep in mind that studies on reconstruction needs following a future ceasefire, which now seems distant, take into account the entire territory of Ukraine according to its internationally recognized borders. Germany's demand for war reparations that more than doubles the amount currently established as necessary for the reconstruction of the Ukrainian territories under Kyiv's control, those under Moscow's control, and Crimea, which seceded from Ukraine and was annexed by the Russian Federation in March 2014, not only represents a further obstacle to the possibility of a diplomatic agreement that would end the battle, but also seeks to force Russia to bear the costs of the entire conflict. Germany, like the rest of its Western allies, aims to make Moscow pay for the entire war, including the one launched by Ukraine in April 2014, when it tried to resolve a political problem—the fact that a portion of the population refused to accept the irregular change of government that had taken place in February and rejected its nationalist agenda—through military means. Russia, which at the time hosted hundreds of thousands of refugees and, over the years, took over the payment of pensions and social benefits, which Ukraine de facto halted that summer and officially that fall, must also bear the costs of Kiev's war of aggression against Donetsk and Luhansk.

Much has changed this week, which began with the US announcement of a suspension, always expected to be temporary, of deliveries to Ukraine of some key weapons, including air defense interceptors. It ends with the expectation of Donald Trump's planned announcement regarding Russia tomorrow, Monday. It must be assumed that this will involve a package of sanctions on Russian oil—specifically targeting countries, primarily China, that continue to trade with Russia—and arms for Ukraine, possibly in exchange for payment from European NATO countries. Even so, the trend on the battlefield is clear, and despite Ukraine's triumphalist rhetoric, a resolution to the war in which kyiv would recover all or a large part of the territories along its 1991 borders is unthinkable today.

This reality means that a portion of the territory will remain, temporarily or permanently, under Russian control, which complicates the discussion about the amounts the West intends to demand from Russia as war reparations, always relying on the frozen Russian assets card. This trump card means European countries don't need to militarily defeat Russia to demand reparations, which are generally intended to make the victors retaliate against the vanquished.

With these factors in mind, Reuters reported earlier this year that Russia had expressed its willingness to hand over the approximately €300 billion in Russian public and private assets seized by the European Union, which Moscow continues to demand be returned but has long since given up for lost. The condition for authorizing this transfer, which according to the latest calculations would cover all of Ukraine's reconstruction needs, would be, according to the same source, that a proportional share of these funds also reconstruct the parts of the territory remaining on the Russian side. Today, Russia controls just under 20% of Ukraine's territory according to its 1991 borders, so that would be the percentage that Moscow could demand from these funds, its public and private funds, if the criterion were territorial, or even more if the damage suffered by each territory were assessed. Although drone and missile attacks have caused and continue to cause serious material losses, the damage in regions far from the front is incomparable to that suffered in the southern regions, which are in much greater need of reconstruction and largely under Russian control.

It's no surprise that this proposal failed to attract the slightest interest from the West, determined to extract from Russia a sum far exceeding the reconstruction needs of the entire territory, and to appropriate it all without taking into account the reconstruction needs of Donbass, which has been at war for 11 and a half years, or the rest of the territories under Russian control. The objective is not to guarantee the reconstruction of Ukraine but to force Russia to bear all the costs. Hence, Germany is demanding an exorbitant amount and is evidently seeking to reconstruct the Ukrainian part of the territory and finance the subsequent rearmament of the "day after" strategy: a Greater Israel capable of attacking its enemy whenever it deems its conditions are not being met.

Western arrogance means that the territorial issue and its implications for reconstruction have only truly emerged in recent months, when, for the first time in three years, the possibility of negotiations to achieve a ceasefire has been raised—but failed. This is surprising, considering that since 2022 it has been clear that the war was heading for an inconclusive end that would involve a de facto partition of Ukraine with at least Donbass and Crimea remaining under Russian control. However, in the brief moment when the West feared the possibility of an agreement, doubt arose. “There is great uncertainty surrounding the US-led peace plan, which is expected to include territorial concessions. According to a report last month, more than a third of Ukraine's reconstruction costs, almost $200 billion, would fall on a bankrupt Russia if Ukraine were forced to cede control of four territories as part of a potential peace deal,” wrote The Guardian . Aside from the curiousity of calling Russia "bankrupt," given that it's not Moscow but Kyiv that has been dependent on foreign subsidies to sustain the state for three years, the new argument defending Ukraine's need to recover its territories is relevant. On the one hand, Russia is being demanded an amount far greater than the reconstruction needs of the entire territory, including the areas under its control, knowing that the funds in Kyiv's hands will only rebuild the Ukrainian regions. On the other hand, once Russia has been demanded an amount precisely to force its bankruptcy, concerns arise about what will happen to the reconstruction of the territories under Russian control. How can Ukraine abandon these areas to their fate, in the hands of a bankrupt and impoverished Russia? When arguments are needed to defend the continuation of a war with catastrophic results for Ukrainian society, even the forgotten, insulted, and demonized population of the territories under Russian control become useful tools.

The fact that this third of the reconstruction that would correspond to Russia and that, despite having already begun in cities like Mariupol, is assumed that Russia will not be able to carry out "underlines the likelihood that Ukraine's future will be not only one of political division, but also of divergence in terms of wealth and economic growth, with the eastern territories controlled by Russia likely to suffer significantly," says The Guardian , who in eight years of Ukrainian blockade against Donbass was never bothered by the economic measures with which Kiev tried to achieve the surrender of Donetsk and Lugansk, which the war against it had not achieved. Ukraine, a country whose indicators before the war were more negative than those of the Russian Federation, which has lost an alarming amount of population and where today 8.8 million people live below the poverty line, will grow and create wealth and it will be only the territories under Russian control that suffer. It's the contradiction between wanting to economically sink Russia and only then realizing that this could have consequences for the territories Ukraine fails to recapture.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/13/recon ... araciones/

Google Translator

*****

From Cassad's Telegram account:

Colonelcassad
Ukrainian border guards eliminated competitors

Dealers in the Odessa region set their sights on the Ukrainian state monopoly of enslaving people - under the guise of assistance, the criminals recruited socially vulnerable citizens in the Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions. They promised them housing, wages, a new life. But they took them to the Odessa region, took away their documents, intimidated them and forced them to work without pay.

During the searches, law enforcement officers found 16 slaves, seized rough accounting, phones and cars. Four criminals were detained, including a married couple.

The fate of the "liberated" is not reported.

***

Colonelcassad
The new US Army Tank Platoon Tactics Manual for July 2025 states that if an enemy UAV is detected on the march, it is prescribed to shoot it down from a tank. Yes, you heard right, from a 120mm cannon.

***

Colonelcassad
Forwarded from
Russian engineer
Telegram
Lynia🇷🇺
Collection for consumables for training in combating enemy drones

Hello everyone, this is "LYNYA". Today is Saturday and we continue to collect for the purchase of consumables for training our units. Thanks to your help, we are developing the course, preparing new units…
The thorny path to shotguns .

About a year ago, talking with Sergey "Lynya" we once again discussed possible means of combating drones. And again we came to the conclusion about the prospects of using smoothbore guns. But we were perplexed that the seemingly obvious solution was not scalable at the front.

And then a small ripping off of the veil, which explains many nuances on the pressing issue.

Last summer, I accidentally learned that, as it turns out, based on the results of some experimental shooting back in the spring of 2023, a report was sent to the very top about the unsuitability of shotguns for this task. Which, in fact, partly explained the indifference of the top brass to the topic of smoothbore guns for the front in 23, early 24. After all, back then, in the spring of 23, when FPV drones became a fairly widespread phenomenon at the front, they were already trying to find ways to combat them, tried different methods, theories and hypotheses and, as a result, only electronic warfare systems were recognized as the main methods of combat at that time.

Therefore, there was such a cold reaction to the emotional experiences in the TG that guns needed to be transferred to the front, and successful defeats of drones from them were explained by survivor error .... But after the enemy, following us, switched to fiber optics, the situation began to change dramatically.

And we returned with renewed vigor to the issue of using smoothbore guns. During the next discussion, I suggested conducting a study with a scientific approach, and Sergey took on all this enormous work, immediately began to assemble a team. Inviting Anna "Saiga", the champion of Russia in practical shooting, and Boris Rozhin, who helped with organizational issues with the material base, to join the team. And already in a couple of weeks, Lynya with a team of instructors went on the first trip to the LBS, to practice the interception technique - selection of the necessary exercises, shooting parameters, etc.

After the first training courses, we summarized and generalized the results, which were then passed on to the leadership of the Ministry of Defense. Which probably partly helped to overcome the initial skepticism about shotguns. And now the training program that Lynya's team has developed is head and shoulders above what the Armed Forces of Ukraine are trying to portray, which are very behind us in terms of training methodology.

At the same time, the techniques are being honed, the number of trained fighters is growing, and this is reflected at the front - fighters with smoothbore guns are no longer a target for FPV drones, but on the contrary, they themselves become drone hunters. And this entire project is being implemented entirely at the expense of the people, and recently, with the very significant support of the Gagaring company , since volunteer activity is much more flexible and faster than the inert mechanism of a huge military department.

So the army is meeting us halfway as much as possible in terms of organization, and the people and businesses are helping with their rubles, training fighters to hunt enemy drones. Therefore, anyone who wants to support the project can do so using the details on Sergey "Lyni" channel.

Russian Engineer -

***

Colonelcassad
Colonel Voronich was allegedly eliminated by citizens of Azerbaijan.
Today, the SBU reported that two people involved in the murder of SBU Colonel Voronich, who was involved in organizing terrorist attacks in Russia and was involved in the murder of "Motorola", were killed.
The murdered woman is Narmin Guliyeva. Information about the man has not yet been published.
This is unless the SBU is simply simulating work by eliminating random people.

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

******

Rubio Claims Russia Suffered 100k KIA in Six Months, Ukrainian Casualties Remain 'Vague'
Simplicius
Jul 12, 2025

The topic of casualties is one we periodically revisit when necessary. Now is such a time, as Marco Rubio has made the absurd claim—coordinated with MSM outlets—that the Russian Army has suffered a whopping 100,000 deaths just since January of this year alone; purely deaths, not even total casualties: (Video at link.)

This was immediately backed up by new articles, like the following from the Economist, which likewise claims Russia is experiencing its deadliest year on the front yet, with 30,000+ deaths just in the past couple months alone:

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https://www.economist.com/interactive/g ... est-so-far

The above article is a particularly egregious example. Just take a look at their methodology, or lack thereof. This small extract constitutes the entirety of their ‘scientific’ premise for Russian losses:

There is no official tally of losses on either side. But our daily war tracker offers some clues. Our satellite data and shifts to areas of control suggest when the fighting is intensifying. This lines up well with more than 200 credible estimates of casualties from Western governments and independent researchers. By combining this data we can, for the first time, provide a credible daily death toll—or an estimate of estimates.

In short, they claim their satellite data alerts them to where fighting happens to ‘intensify’, and from that they—by some incredible leap of logic—infer that Russian forces are experiencing massive losses. The baffling part is that this facile methodology should apply to the AFU in parallel as well, yet when it comes to Ukraine’s losses, the Economist’s staff are without even a hint of curiosity:

Image

Read that again: satellite data showing “intense fighting” inherently points to Russian losses merely on the assumption that any fighting, as a general rule, results in Russian but not Ukrainian losses. This is an astoundingly juvenile, biased, and to be frank, fraudulent, level of analysis.

Recall this previous revelation, which tells us everything about the West’s info-hygiene:

Image

These publications claim to have such ‘sensitive’ attunements to the battlefield fluctuations as to give exact Russian figures, but when it comes to Ukraine, they are suddenly lacking data.

The fact is, there’s a reason why MediaZona very abruptly changed up their methodology to include “projected” deaths rather than real counted ones, as done previously—because contrary to this coordinated propaganda campaign, Russian losses have actually been at the lowest in a long time. This is precisely the reason such an orchestrated campaign was necessary: Ukraine is badly losing, and the only remaining aspect of the war the propagandists could feasibly utilize to try and spin the narrative are the casualty figures, because they are typically the most ‘subjective’ and ambiguous in nature—which makes them perfect fodder for devious manipulation.

Presently, MediaZona has the total Russian death toll at ~117k as of early July:

Image

If you highlight only January 1st to present, you get 9,849 confirmed deaths:

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https://en.zona.media/article/2025/07/0 ... es_eng-trl
You can do this yourself at the official site to confirm.

That means through the first six months of this year, they have registered a mere 9,849 Russian deaths, which amounts to 1,641 per month. Western and Ukrainian publications, on the other hand, claim Russia is suffering that many deaths per day. The discrepancy shows an unprecedented detachment from reality.

We do know MediaZona has a ‘lag’ because it takes time to confirm most recent deaths, and so the number will likely rise, but probably not by an inordinate amount. There is no evidence whatsoever that Russia is taking anywhere near the kinds of losses the West claims. In fact, someone made a good point: since it is Ukraine that purports that 70-90% of their kills on Russian soldiers come by way of drones, they should be able to show all these vast amounts of losses via drone camera recordings; yet there is nothing—and we know the AFU loves nothing more than showing off its ‘successes’.

In an article two months ago, I had highlighted the timeline of the Russian Army’s growth from Ukraine’s own sources. It went as follows:

2023: Bloomberg announces Russian troop count at 420,000.

2024: Head of Ukraine’s military intelligence tells Economist the number had swelled to 514,000.

Early 2025: It was 600,000.

And what do we have now, at the midpoint of 2025? Straight from Zelensky’s own mouth:

Image

So, to reiterate and simplify:

400k troops in 2023, 500k in 2024, 600k in early 2025, and already 700k in mid-2025.

This is all from Ukrainian sources, the originals of which you can find in my previous article here.

How can Russia possibly be suffering a claimed 100,000 dead in just six months—as per Rubio—when it is literally gaining over 100,000 per year?

Image

In order for Russia to suffer 100k deaths in six months—annualized to 200k per year—and still gain 100k+ men per year, Russian recruitment would have to be staggering, given the contract churn we outlined previously. Hard to imagine people willingly signing up under the dark cloud of such losses, while in Ukraine—suffering “far fewer casualties”—people have to be forcibly kidnapped from the streets and herded into vans like cattle.

Strange how it’s Ukrainian cemeteries that continue to infamously fill up, rather than Russian ones, and how the past year’s ratio of dead body exchanges has jumped to such astronomical figures as to be off the charts:

Image

Any honest journalist would pucker at such incongruities in the data—but alas, that species is about as common as a three-legged emu.

As a recent glimpse into Russian losses during active assaults, here is one honest post from Russian military sources about a settlement that was captured. They write that they suffered four “200s” during the operation:

Image

There are many such assaults per day, so you can multiply the four by the daily amount to get a reasonable count—but it certainly isn’t hundreds, much less thousands.



Neue Zürcher Zeitung has a new piece which spells out that Ukraine only has two options to prevent collapse:

Image
https://www.nzz.ch/pro/jetzt-geht-der-k ... ld.1892551

Now the Kremlin is going all out.

The Russian operational plan aims to tear apart the Ukrainian ground forces. The general staff in Kiev still has two options to prevent a breakthrough.


They begin by aptly noting that Putin spelled out the strategy himself at a recent forum:

“They already have too few personnel,” Putin went on to analyze, “and they are withdrawing their forces there, which are already lacking in the decisive theaters of armed conflict.” Putin is making little effort to conceal his operational intentions: the Russian General Staff wants to tear the Ukrainian army apart - and then attempt a breakthrough at a suitable point.

Then they reveal the two options Ukraine faces, which I’ll annotate:

Sirski, on the other hand, still has two basic options for saving Ukraine from a military defeat in the current situation:

1.Delay: The aim is to lose as little ground as possible during the Russian summer offensive and to avoid encirclement of larger troop units. In the fall, the front could then be consolidated and a starting point for negotiations created. At present, Kiev appears to be pursuing this course - in the hope that the USA will resume its military aid.


Here, they admit that Ukraine’s best chance is merely to stall until “negotiations” can be effected; but we know Russia has zero incentive for such a thing, unless you kowtow to the fake figures of Russian losses and believe Russia is “on its last leg”, as per Strelkov and the rest of the doomer clan.

Their second option is to withdraw to the new defensive line reportedly being constructed a few dozen kilometers behind the current LOC:

2. operational withdrawal: The Ukrainian ground forces could gradually withdraw from the front and take up new positions protected by natural and artificial obstacles. The aim is to prevent a capitulation and to maintain the army to protect sovereignty even in the event of an unfavorable outcome to the negotiations. One indication that this option is being examined is the construction of a Ukrainian fortification line 20 kilometers behind the front from the Kharkiv area to Zaporizhia in the southwest of Ukraine.

There are not enough forces for a surprise anywhere along the front, and the pinpricks in the depths of the Russian area will hardly have any effect except in the information area. The Ukrainians lack fighter aircraft such as the F-35 to gain at least partial air superiority. In addition, ammunition for the Himars missile artillery, the Taurus guided missiles, supplies for air defense - the list is well known in Western capitals.

Europe has gone on summer vacation and Trump is at least considering sending defensive weapons to Ukraine again. But the risk of a Russian breakthrough is growing. If a gap opens up somewhere, the occupying forces can suddenly maneuver and use the bridgeheads at Sumi and Kharkiv for large-scale operations. Sirski then gradually ran out of options.

However, the decision to switch from delay to operational withdrawal in good time does not lie with the head of the army, but with President Volodimir Zelensky in Kiev and his dilemma: between military necessity and the political principle of hoping that the Western allies will stand by their big words after all. Meanwhile, the Kremlin is going all out - politically and militarily.


But what would that do? Just like the inherent nonsensical nature of the first option, the second would hardly give Russia pause. We know Ukraine relies on PR to maintain continuity and casualty figures are one facet of this which can be deftly hidden, while territorial changes cannot. This means the organ grinder-in-chief Zelensky would prefer to quietly keep composting thousands of his men while feigning ‘strong resistance’ and pretending that Russia is ‘making no gains’. If a sudden large-scale breakthrough swallowed up a chunk of Ukrainian territory, Western support would likely collapse over night as Ukraine would be deemed a dead case.



Lastly, in anticipation of Trump’s supposed “big announcement” on Monday, several MSM publications are reporting that Trump is preparing to launch an unprecedented global oil embargo against Russia:

Image
https://www.thetimes.com/world/russia-u ... -r2pg8kw6t
It describes a fancifully unrealistic plan to shackle any country in the world that buys oil or uranium from Russia with a massive 500% tariff. The chances of this passing are laughable, as it would destroy the economies of the US and its allies, rather than harming Russia.

The squabbles over ‘control’ discussed last time rear their head again:

Senators have said they would be willing to grant Trump the power to waive the tariff for up to 180 days, provided there was congressional oversight. The White House is, however, insisting that Congress should have no power to intervene if the president decided to end the sanctions.

Maximilian Hess, a fellow in the Foreign Policy Research Institute, predicted Trump would baulk at the 500 per cent tariff in the bill, which would be equivalent to a global embargo on Russian oil.


Hess elaborates:

“As it’s written, in my view it’s just too strong to ever be used, unless Trump gets out there and says, ‘We need to face the risk that Russia poses to Europe and the globe and we have to accept oil prices of closer to $100 or maybe even higher’,” he said. “Which I just cannot see Trump doing.”

The reason Trump wants such control is because he’s merely using the threat of these laughable ‘sanctions’ to try and frighten Putin into concessions, and wants the ability to immediately pull out, TACO-style, as soon as it backfires. The neocon segment of Congress—Graham, Blumenthal, and co.—want to deviously ‘bake in’ the sanctions by having power over them, so that Trump is forced into a major confrontation with Russia; obviously, the freewheeling deep state moles in Congress cannot allow a US-Russian rapprochement and need to create fissures at all costs.

It is also why they recently ‘leaked’ the audio of his threats to bomb Moscow at an opportune time: they’re doing everything in their power to stir the pot and fan the flames of the narrative of confrontation to browbeat Trump into escalation against Moscow.

The big question is, does Trump have the backbone to stay the course?



Lastly:

Ukraine reports Russia has accumulated a record number of missiles—2,000 total: (Video at link.)

Even as we speak, another major strike on Ukraine reportedly featuring hundreds of drones and a few dozen missiles is ongoing—all unopposed, as usual: (Video at link.)

How are those Patriots coming along?

https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/rub ... fered-100k

The problem with this analysis is that Trump is incapable of real negotiation. All his life he's dealt from a position of strength, usually financial but other factors may be relevant. But now, to borrow his own analogy, he has no cards. And if he tries to bluff Putin with nukes we may all be fucked.

*****

Ukraine’s Corporate Carve-Up Collapses
Posted by Internationalist 360° on July 11, 2025
Kit Klarenberg

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BlackRock’s Ukraine reconstruction fund collapses from a lack of investor interest, marking the death knell of Western profiteering dreams as Kiev’s defeat looms and foreign capital flees.

On July 5th, Bloomberg reported that a BlackRock-administered multibillion-dollar fund for Kiev’s reconstruction, due to be unveiled at a dedicated Ukraine Recovery Conference in Rome July 10th/11th, had been placed on hold at the start of 2025 “due to a lack of interest” among institutional, private, and state financiers. As the summit looms, lack of investor enthusiasm persists, and “the project’s future is now uncertain.” It’s just the latest confirmation that the West’s long-running mission to carve up Ukraine verges on total disintegration.

BlackRock’s Ukraine Development Fund has been in the works since May 2023. It was originally envisaged as one of the most ambitious public-private finance collaborations in history, which would rival Washington’s Marshall Plan that rebuilt – and heavily indebted – Western Europe in World War II’s wake. With vast returns promised, initially investors were reportedly “ready to plow funds” into the endeavour, due to widespread optimism Kiev’s much-hyped “counteroffensive” later that year “might end the war quickly.”

In the event, the counteroffensive was an unmitigated disaster. Ukraine suffered up to 100,000 casualties, with much of its arsenal of Western-supplied armour, vehicles, and weapons obliterated, in return for recapturing just 0.25% of the territory occupied by Russia in the proxy war’s initial phases. As BlackRock vice chair Philipp Hildebrand explained, the results killed off investor exuberance, as they required “the cessation of hostilities, or at the very least a perspective for peace.” Concerns about Ukraine’s ever-reducing skilled workforce were also widespread.

Fast forward to today there is no indication of any peace deal on the horizon, Russia is rapidly advancing across multiple fronts, and the Ukrainian government estimates the country has lost around 40% of its working-age population due to the proxy war. No wonder there is zero foreign interest in investing in Kiev’s reconstruction. Quite what will remain of Ukraine when the conflict is over, and whether any financial returns can be gleaned from its ruins, are open, grave questions.

The collapse of BlackRock’s Ukraine Development Fund is not only a microcosm of the impending, inevitable defeat of Kiev and its overseas puppet masters in Donbass. It also reflects the death of the dream of breaking apart Ukraine’s industries and resources to untrammelled rape and pillage, long-held by Western corporations, oligarchs, and governments. Planning for this eventuality dates back to the country’s 1991 independence, producing concrete results following the 2014 Western-orchestrated Maidan coup, and becoming turbocharged once all-out proxy war erupted in February 2022.

‘Investment Climate’

From the start of 2013, Western corporations began moving en masse to buy up Ukraine wholesale. It was widely expected across Europe and North America Kiev would enter into an “association agreement” with the EU, facilitating privatisation, and tearing up of longstanding laws restricting foreign purchase and ownership of the country’s untold agricultural riches. The former “breadbasket of the Soviet Union” was equivalent to one-third of the EU’s total arable land, and potential profits could be voluminous.

That January, Anglo-Dutch MI6-linked energy giant Shell signed a 50-year deal with the Ukrainian government to explore and drill for natural gas via fracking in areas of Donetsk and Kharkov “believed to hold substantial natural gas.” Then, in May, notorious, now-defunct chemical giant Monsanto announced plans to invest $140 million in constructing a corn seed plant in the country’s agricultural heartlands. The company was a founding member of the US-Ukraine Business Council, established in October 1995 to “improve” Kiev’s “investment climate.”

USUBC’s treasurer was and remains David Kramer, who then-served as president of Freedom House, a National Endowment for Democracy division. NED was avowedly founded by the CIA to do publicly what the Agency historically did publicly. The Endowment and Freedom House were responsible for Ukraine’s 2004 “Orange Revolution”, which brought pro-Western puppet Viktor Yushchenko to power. He immediately implemented deeply unpopular neoliberal economic reforms, including slashing regulations and social spending. Yushchenko was voted out in 2010, securing just 5% of the vote.

Following Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s rejection of the EU association agreement in favour of a more advantageous deal offered by Russia in November 2013, mass protests – later dubbed “Maidan” – in Kiev were ignited by NED-affiliated actors, and fascist agitators. They raged until late February 2014, when Yanukovych fled the country. In the meantime, Ukraine was plunged into total chaos – yet, firms associated with USUBC weren’t deterred. Many, including major companies with representatives on the organisation’s executive committee, continued making sizeable investments in Ukraine.

Their undimmed enthusiasm may be explained by David Kramer being an alumni of Project for the New American Century, a neoconservative think tank widely credited with masterminding the Bush administration’s “War on Terror”. The organisation’s cofounder Robert Kagan is married to Victoria Nuland, at this time the State Department’s point person on Ukraine. She visited Kiev repeatedly during the Maidan “revolution”, and hand-picked Yanukovych’s replacement interim government. Nuland was thus well-placed to know USUBC member investments in Ukraine would be safe long-term.

‘Trade Opportunities’

Nuland’s fascist interim government was replaced in June 2014 by an administration led by far-right Petro Poroshenko, who stood on an explicit platform of privatising state industries. The President passed legislation enabling this in March 2016. Two years later, his government adopted sweeping laws to further facilitate the auctioning off of Kiev’s public assets and industry to foreign actors. However, a moratorium on private sale of arable land, imposed in 2001, remained in place. No matter – in August 2018, the European Court of Human Rights ruled this was illegal.

There was still one problem, though. Opinion polls consistently showed Ukrainian citizens overwhelmingly rejected privatisation, and the sale of their country’s agricultural land to overseas buyers. As luck would have it, the proxy war’s eruption, and imposition of martial law, allowed for industrial scale trampling by Volodomyr Zelensky’s government over public opinion, and political opposition. Throughout 2022, a series of laws intended to “make privatization as easy as possible for foreign investors” were passed.

In the process, close to 1,000 nationalised enterprises were offered up for overseas sale, and auctions for purchase of these entities “under simplified terms” convened. The next year, these efforts intensified, with further legislation enacted enabling “large-scale privatisation of state assets and state companies.” This was reportedly motivated by “the attractiveness” of Ukraine’s “large state assets to institutional investors.” They included an Odessa-based ammonia factory, major mining and chemical firms, one of the country’s leading power generators, and a producer of high-quality titanium products.

Encouraged by the West’s reception to these moves, in July 2024, Kiev announced a dedicated “Large-Scale Privatisation” plan, with more prized assets under the hammer. Little wonder that two months later, a British Foreign Office briefing document acknowledged it viewed “the invasion not only as a crisis, but also as an opportunity.” London’s primary economic aid project in Ukraine is explicitly concerned with ensuring the country “adopts and implements economic reforms that create a more inclusive economy, enhancing trade opportunities with the UK.”

The previous January, the World Economic Forum’s annual congress was convened in Davos, Switzerland. The proxy war, and Kiev’s economic future loomed large on the event’s agenda. Its centrepiece was a breakout breakfast attended by political leaders and business bigwigs, where Zelensky appeared via videolink. The President thanked “giants of the international financial and investment world,” including BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan, for buying up his country’s assets during wartime. He boldly promised, “everyone can become a big business by working with Ukraine.”

Subsequently, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink pledged to coordinate billions of dollars in reconstruction financing for Kiev, forecasting the country would become a “beacon of capitalism” resultantly. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs chief David Solomon spoke with intense optimism about Kiev’s post-war future, and the gains his firm and other major Western financial institutions could reap. “There is no question that as you rebuild, there will be good economic incentives for real return and real investment,” he crowed.

Zelensky spoke at multiple events held in Davos over the five-day-long conference’s course, where pro-Kiev sentiment was reportedly “overwhelming”. The President spoke of recapturing Crimea, and demanded attendees “give us your weapons.” His audiences were invariably highly receptive. On one panel, Boris Johnson, who personally sabotaged fruitful peace talks between Kiev and Moscow in April 2022, urged that Zelensky be given “the tools he needs to finish the job.” Johnson boomed, “Give them the tanks! There’s absolutely nothing to be lost!”

In years to come, the January 2023 Davos summit may be viewed both as the high point of Ukraine’s proxy war effort, and roughly when everything began to spectacularly unravel. The desired weapons arrived in huge quantities, to no effect. Kiev’s three biggest military efforts since that year’s counteroffensive, the Krynky incursion, and Kursk “counterinvasion” – were all deeply costly cataclysms, leaving the country undermanned and ill-equipped to fend off Russian advances. Countries that supplied munitions borderline disarmed themselves in the process.

On June 10th, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced Ukraine would receive no further military aid from Washington, save for remaining shipments agreed by the Biden administration. On July 1st, even this much-reduced commitment was jettisoned, due to Pentagon concerns over artillery, air defense missiles, and precision munition stockpile shortages. Kiev is now permanently out of American weapons, and it will take years for Europe to plug the gap, if at all.

In the intervening time, Ukraine has been subject to ever-increasingly devastating Russian drone and missile attacks, and Moscow’s forces appear to be going in for the kill across the frontline. Public and political support for keeping the proxy war grinding on is waning across the West. BlackRock’s once-vaunted Ukraine Development Fund failing to drum up a single dollar for the country’s reconstruction strongly suggests international investors foresee Kiev’s post-war corpse offering them nothing to pick at.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2025/07/ ... collapses/

******

New attacks on factories
July 12, 2025
Rybar

" Western enterprises are under fire "

On the night of July 11-12, Russian troops carried out another massive raid on the territory controlled by the Kyiv regime - the targets were again objects in cities in the west of the so-called Ukraine.

Enemy resources report that Russian troops have deployed about 600 drones, although this number may be exaggerated. Most of them "flew" into industrial facilities in the Lviv and Volyn regions.

What is known about the affected targets at the moment?
One of the strikes hit Lviv - the target was the Electron plant, whose facilities had been repurposed to produce components for Ukrainian military products.

Explosions also thundered in the area of the Lviv Aircraft Repair Plant: the enterprise specializes in repairing MiG-29 fighters and has repeatedly become the target of attacks by the Russian Armed Forces since the beginning of the Second World War.

Another blow was dealt to the Motor plant in Lutsk - Russian troops had already struck it on July 6. According to the FIRMS fire monitoring service, numerous fires were recorded on its territory. The enterprise specializes in repairing aircraft engines, including the RD-33 for the MiG-29, and serious damage to the stands could stop the process.

The explosions in the Chernivtsi region, which rarely attracts the attention of the Russian Armed Forces, stand apart . However, this time the Gerani visited the Elektronmash plant in Chernivtsi. Since 2024, many previously abandoned enterprises in the city have been repurposed for the production of military products.

In addition to the above, explosions were recorded in Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Sumy, Poltava, Ternopil, Kyiv, Rivne, Cherkasy, Vinnytsia, Odessa, Zhitomir and Kirovohrad regions. In most cases, these were attempts to intercept Russian UAVs.

Today's strike was again distinguished by a greater concentration on a limited number of targets, allowing for an increase in the expenditure on their destruction. In particular, about 40 Geranium strikes were recorded against the Lutsk plant alone.

In the current reality, such tactics are much more effective than "splayed fingers strikes", allowing to break through Ukrainian air defense and damage key enemy facilities. So far, the Ukrainian Armed Forces have not found a countermeasure to this, and strikes must be actively continued.

https://rybar.ru/novye-udary-po-zavodam/

Google Translator

******

From grateful locals to the Shopping and Entertainment Centre
July 13, 14:58

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Inscription in Ukrainian on fragments of the wing of "Gerani"

"For TCC from grateful residents of the city of Samara" (renamed Novomoskovsk by Banderites)

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Similar for Odessa.

"For TCC from local residents of Odessa."

Local residents are now actively leaking data on the location of TCC bases to our military. The hunt has begun.
Citizens of Ukraine - inform Russian military about the location of man-catchers.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9952808.html

The Liberation of Karl Marx
July 13, 13:13

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Footage of the liberation of Karl Marx (renamed Mirnoye in 2016, now the name is being returned)..
Russian troops continue to liberate the remaining border areas in the southwest of the DPR.. At the current rate, by the end of the summer, all DPR territories south of the Krasnoarmeyskaya agglomeration will be almost completely liberated.

(Video at link.)

Also today they liberated Grushevsky and Nikolaevka.

As for Krasnoarmeysk...

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Now there are tough battles for Novoekonomicheskoe. Control over it will allow to squeeze Mirnograd more tightly.

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The northern pincer enveloping the Krasnoarmeyskaya agglomeration continues to slowly crawl west to the main logistics route going north. Despite all efforts, the Ukrainian Armed Forces were unable to stabilize the front to the northeast of the agglomeration.

Well, they destroyed 2 launchers of 1 radar of the Patriot air defense missile system. Karl Marx approves.

Image

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9952569.html

Google Translator

******

Brief Frontline Report – July 12th, 2025

Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Zinderneuf
Jul 12, 2025
Kharkov Direction

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On July 3rd, the Russian Armed Forces liberated the village of Melovoye in Kharkov Oblast of Ukraine as part of the plan to establish a buffer zone along the border. The enemy was forced to take urgent measures to mitigate the threat. Ukrainian reserves were deployed to the Khatnoe (Hatnoe)-Ambarnoe area: the 143rd Separate Mechanized Brigade and the 425th Separate Assault Regiment (from training grounds in Lvov Oblast).

The poorly organized, hastily arranged resistance of the Armed Forces of Ukraine failed to stop our assault units, which advanced westward into the forested area and reached the Tytunikov Yar ravine (the source of the Upper Dvurechnaya River). Counterattacking groups from the 425th Separate Assault Regiment of the AFU near the settlement of Khatnoe were destroyed.

The soldiers of the 143rd Separate Mechanized Brigade of the AFU, positioned between the settlements of Melovoye, Khatnoe, and Ambarnoe, were effectively abandoned by their command. According to unnamed sources within the security forces:

"Ukrainian artillerymen and drone operators are delivering indiscriminate strikes, attempting to eliminate all personnel in this sector of the front. A significant portion of Ukrainian munitions are (accidentally) targeting the concentrations of the 143rd Separate Mechanized Brigade (their own soldiers), whose personnel are chaotically moving between positions."

This indicates a lack of coordination and a loss of command control by the AFU in this area.

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ЛБС 20.6.2025=June 20th, 2025. Участки Активности=Area of Activity.

Analyzing the situation in the July 3rd report, we suggested that the primary objective of the Russian Armed Forces in this sector was to expand the bridgehead and consolidate positions in the Melovoye-Khatnoe-Ambarnoe area. Today’s developments indicate that the first preliminary line of the buffer zone will be established from north to south along the Upper Dvurechnaya River, anchored by the radially positioned ravines of Tretjakov Yar, Krutaya, and Popov Yar, as well as the villages of Otradnoe, Dvurechenskoe, and Stroevka.

However, in our view, the direction toward the town of Velikiy Burluk remains a priority. After securing the necessary conditions, further developments in this direction are possible.

Sumy Direction

The situation in the Sumy Oblast buffer zone has changed but continues to evolve, with the initiative in its formation and development still held by the Russian Armed Forces—despite the deceitful propaganda of CIPSO attempting to distort the narrative.

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Буферная Зона=Buffer Zone. ЛБС 31.5.2025=Line of Combat Contact May 31st, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

Recognizing the threat of the Russian Armed Forces' advance toward Sumy, including in the media sphere, the AFU command deployed all of its most prepared reserves to this direction.

The strategy of the Russian General Staff in addressing this issue can be likened to the principle of judo—using the enemy’s strength (and foolishness) against them.

"You brought equipment and manpower to the 'meat grinder' yourselves? Good—the meat grinder is ready. Come on in."

The AFU conducted up to ten counterattacks along the Kondratovka-Andreevka-Alekseevka-Varachino line. Everywhere, they were stopped dead in their tracks, suffering losses in personnel and equipment. For particularly excitable readers, we remind and explain: if the need and conditions arise, our units will successfully fall back to reserve positions and lure the enemy into pre-sighted kill zones. War is not about capturing territory but about destroying the enemy’s manpower, equipment, and weaponry. Territory is merely the prize, obtained when there is no one and nothing left to defend it.

Having established a defensive wall on the right flank, the units of the Russian Armed Forces' "North" Group in the center (near Yunakovka) continue to advance, clearing the village.

On the left flank, they have secured positions in the village of Alexandria and reached the village of Miropolye, located in terrain with complex topography: elevations, groves, ravines, and the confluence of three rivers—the Psyol, Udava, and Rybitsa.

Judging by the situation, the enemy is counting on holding this area with minimal forces, having transferred part of them to their left flank on the Khoten (Hoten)-Marino line. And where a void was created, our assault troops flowed in—nature abhors a vacuum.

Simultaneously, further west in the Tetkino-Novy Put area, our border security forces entered enemy territory and secured positions in the villages of Ryzhevka and Bessalovka, forcing the enemy to allocate reinforcements to this sector as well.

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We are witnessing Gerasimov’s strategy of overwhelming the enemy, who is being stretched into doing "the splits."

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-12th
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Mon Jul 14, 2025 1:33 pm

Ukraine's "main asset"
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 07/14/2025

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Losing an election, and with it not only a position but also the capacity for political influence, forces Western politicians to seek new paths, a course that generally involves navigating the revolving door of large multinationals. However, for those whose aspirations are not only economic but also political, the most viable option is the enormous complex of foundations, non-governmental organizations , or think tanks , where they can continue carrying out strongly ideological work and guarantee a media presence and influence, as well as future prospects in supranational institutions once the leadership of an average European country no longer seems a sufficiently ambitious goal. The case of Sanna Marin, the Finnish social democratic star who managed to fast-track her country's NATO membership before losing the elections to the right, is paradigmatic. His belligerent pro-Ukrainian, anti-Russian, and warmongering stance after the Russian invasion, the beginning of a path that has led to the Nordic countries, previously seen as pacifist, now being one of the most belligerent centers of Europe, did not go unnoticed, nor did his sad face at the funeral of a fascist. Visiting to demonstrate Finland's unwavering support for Ukraine in the common war against Russia, Marin appeared with the Ukrainian president to bid farewell to Da Vinci , Dmitro Kotsiubaylo, a member of the Praviy Sektor whom Zelensky had awarded the title of Hero of Ukraine before the Russian invasion and whose funeral was attended by the highest levels of the political and military establishment , an unequivocal sign of the direction the country has taken in the last decade.

From her position as a political leader of a continental social democracy linked to NATO, which has not hesitated to see the merits of war in its crusade against Russia, Marin has continued to be an important part of the political-ideological complex justifying the military path as the only possible resolution to a conflict in which Ukraine must triumph and the Russian Federation must be defeated on the battlefield. In this final week, which was supposed to be marked by the reconstruction summit, although the focus has returned thanks to Donald Trump's change of position to a military solution and the need for weapons to escalate the war again, Marin returns to the spotlight of lobbying disguised as analysis to act as spokesperson for the institution where she is a "strategic advisor," the Tony Blair Institute for Strategic Change .

The BIT , as it is known by its acronym in English, is not only controversial because of the figure of its founder, who did not hesitate to use lies to join George W. Bush and other protagonists of the invasion that managed to destroy Iraq and destabilize the entire Middle East, but has also been in the spotlight these days for its participation in another initiative that is no less harmful and no less illegal. According to the Financial Times , members of the Institute led by the former British Labour prime minister, whose role as a lobby group in the Middle East is not new and has never been constructive, participated in the design, by the Boston Consulting Group, of the Riviera plan for the ethnic cleansing of Gaza and its transformation into the utopia proposed by Donald Trump, who even went so far as to publish an artificial intelligence-created video in which he was tanning by the pool, drink in hand, alongside Benjamin Netanyahu.

In the case of Ukraine, neither Marin nor Blair propose paying half a million people to "voluntarily" leave their homes—after having been bombed for months and subjected to a regime of starvation to force them to leave behind what remains of their lives—as they do in Gaza. Instead, they adhere to the official line shared in Europe by Christian Democrats, Social Democrats, Greens, and a significant portion of the far right. The fight against Russia is too important to take into account the polls that point to the exhaustion of a population inclined toward compromise and the search for a ceasefire that would allow the country to recover. Marin's proposal for the BIT, published as an article in Politico to coincide with the reconstruction summit, fails to take into account the return of the hawks' prominence and the more than likely escalation of the war. Instead, it is written still under the fear of a ceasefire or even, the worst possible scenario for continental ideologues, a conflict resolution agreement.

“As world leaders gather in Rome for this year's Ukraine Recovery Conference, there should be no illusions about what is at stake. Ending Russia's war of aggression remains Ukraine's top priority. But the truth is that even that will not guarantee lasting stability,” says Marin, whose proposal appears designed to be the political complement to the Starmer-Macron plan to deploy some kind of military contingent from European NATO countries as a deterrent. Both approaches are based on a temporary resolution that will not close the conflict, the scenario desired by European countries and Ukraine precisely to justify their military, political, and economic presence in the country. In the division of labor, the governments, primarily those of the United Kingdom, France, and Germany, are responsible for providing the official narrative to justify the military presence on the ground, while organizations theoretically unrelated to them are responsible for recruiting investment and managing a privatization of public management cloaked in humanitarian political and economic interventionism. All this is based on the idea that, like the war, the post-war period in Ukraine is also existential for Europe , understood as the United Kingdom, the European Union and Ukraine.

The objective, then, is to present the country as a reliable, stable state committed to European values , which need no definition, and capable of responding to the challenge of the day after the war with the unity with which it responded to the invasion. This approach ignores the division that has existed not only since February 22, 2022, but since February 22, 2014, when the country was torn apart, Crimea was lost, and thousands of people in Donbass and other parts of the country took up arms to fight against Ukraine. The discourse of unity, of a people acting as a whole both on the front lines and in the rearguard of the economic and social resistance to maintaining employment and military production, is as false now as it was a decade ago, a time when only those who, located in territory under Kyiv's control, defended the war of aggression against Donbass and closed ranks with its government in the idea of fighting until Russia's final defeat, were considered the Ukrainian people . From this simplistic perspective, lobbyists and think-tankers of all stripes see Ukrainian society as an organism that moves to the rhythm of the desires and needs of its government, which coincidentally coincide completely with those of European states and big capital.

“True recovery will require more than reconstruction funds or military deterrence. It will require deep and sustained investment in the systems that support a strong sovereign state. One of the most vital—and most forgotten—systems is the Ukrainian people themselves,” writes Sanna Marin in the clear advertising language of the analytical articles, which are, in reality, a call for investment from businesses and an order to governments to reform to accommodate their interests. In just two mentions, Marin dismisses the issue of population loss due to emigration, an issue that the Ukrainian government does consider existential. The conversation should not focus on the return of the refugee population, Marin argues, despite admitting that their return will be critical in the long term. But if the return of millions of people to the country isn't something we should waste time on right now, it's because of the fact Sanna Marin adds, admitting that only half of that population intends to return. In the arrogant triumphalism of a country that survives thanks to foreign contributions, assuming that the entire refugee, emigrant, and even part of the foreign-born diaspora will return to the motherland is a relevant part of the nationalist discourse and promises of future prosperity and wealth.

But even the organizations closest to Ukraine are aware that this narrative is a difficult dream to fulfill, so they must focus on using the remaining population in the country to justify the economic proposal of deregulation and privatization with which they intend to revive an economy artificially sustained thanks to Western concessions. “Ukraine's greatest untapped asset is already within its borders: millions of citizens willing to work, retrain, and rebuild, if given the opportunity. This is not a soft issue, but a strategic imperative. And a new study by the Tony Blair Institute shows that, if we acted boldly now, Ukraine's labor force could increase by 25%, even while the war lasts,” Marin concludes, giving a figure of three million people who could be incorporated into a labor market that, of course, demands reforms.

Ukraine cannot afford to wait for the return of the refugee population, an implicit admission that they will not return, so "we must focus on unleashing the potential of those already within the country's borders. And that starts with modernizing the labor market, removing barriers to work, and investing in the skills that will drive Ukraine's reconstruction from the ground up."

“Currently, 83% of Ukrainians with disabilities are unemployed. Women face a 15-point participation gap compared to men. And more than a third of internally displaced people are unemployed. Meanwhile, 40% of companies report they cannot find the qualified talent they need,” Marin explains, describing what she perceives as the employability problems of a significant portion of the population. The problem isn't the huge increase in people with disabilities due to the war, nor is the high unemployment rate among women due to the fact that a large portion of the male population is employed, not always voluntarily, in the military. The problem is that companies can't find qualified workers, something that also has nothing to do with the state's neglect of its functions in education or the fact that emigration has been, long before the Russian invasion, the most feasible way to earn a living.

From the utopian vision of a country committed to European values and willing to implement the necessary reforms to transform its labor market into the panacea of the free world, Marin proposes three simple measures that are no different from the model that has been imposed in Ukraine, in one form or another, since 1991 and especially since 2014. These measures are part of the reason why the country was, before the Russian invasion, one of the poorest in Europe. In an optimistic style, always offering simple solutions to complex problems, Marin does not present the situation as a problem, but as an opportunity, a possibility for change that will undoubtedly benefit the country's population. Of course, these are solutions coming from outside, and in which the opinion of the population wants to rescue from archaic legislation from 1971, the fruit of the social state that liberals of all stripes want to abolish and make us forget, a country that has to leave behind the vestiges of that which offered social rights in favor of one based on individual rights—applied only to the right Ukrainian people —and, above all, corporate profits.

“The good news is that Ukraine has the tools to change this situation, and the country has momentum on its side: billions in donor aid, a nearly finalized new Labor Code, and real political will. It has a digital infrastructure that is the envy of governments across Europe. It also has a population willing to adapt: nearly 40% of Ukraine's unemployed say they are willing to retrain, and a quarter of them are willing to move to another country if they find the right job,” Marin boasts, without mentioning that the Labor Code she praises eliminates collective bargaining and leaves women's labor rights in the hands of the business class, or that the figures she offers aren't exactly positive for the country's development. The message is also a way of reminding the Ukrainian government that it doesn't need to wait for the end of the war to implement reforms , which are compatible with continuing to fight a war that is already the state's raison d'être.

Although the entire economic approach of the Tony Blair Institute, Sanna Marin, the IMF, the European Union, and the Zelensky government, whose economic ideology is close to that of Javier Milei, revolves around privatization and deregulation, the article does not specifically address these aspects, possibly because they are taken for granted. In fact, Marin offers only three proposals, all of them overwhelmingly simple. Using the opportunities of the digital economy to find job or training opportunities and completing labor reform are two of the Tony Blair Institute's major proposals. The last, somewhat more elaborate, recommends "putting employers in the driver's seat by linking each retraining program to a real employment opportunity. Although there are hundreds of courses available, many teach skills that companies don't need, or target workers already employed rather than those looking for work. Retraining aid should be conditional on employers co-designing curricula and committing to hiring graduates." There is nothing more social democratic than putting the business class at the helm of labor policy design.

Everything for the company, and everything for the company, especially those being encouraged to invest, specifically major European and North American capital. Because, as Sanna Marin concludes, "with the right investment, Ukrainians will not only rebuild, but they will lead."

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/14/el-pr ... e-ucrania/

Google Translator

******

From Cassad's telegram account:

Results of strikes on military, airfield and industrial infrastructure of Ukraine - on the night of July 13-14, 2025

During the day of July 13-14, 2025, the Russian Armed Forces carried out various strikes on airfield network facilities, radar posts, logistics sites, repair facilities and support units of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. The strike was mainly carried out by Geran-2 strike UAVs and air-launched cruise missiles.

Dmitrovka , Kharkiv region ( 20:25 07/13/2025 ) A Kh-35
missile hit a radar position of the 732nd separate radar company . The targeted strike destroyed the 35D6 all-round radar station , designed to detect targets at a range of up to 360 km and an altitude of up to 20 km. Significance of the strike : The destruction of a stationary radar post blinds part of the north-eastern sector of Ukrainian airspace coverage, disrupting the operation of adjacent medium-range SAM batteries. Nizhyn , Chernihiv region ( 19:45 13.07.2025 ) Five attack UAVs struck the territory of the Nizhyn airfield , which officially belongs to the civil defense system, but is actually used to camouflage the aviation infrastructure of the Ukrainian Armed Forces . As a result of the attacks, double-glazed windows were damaged in the buildings of the headquarters, aviation control, and the control center of the engineering and aviation service. A fire broke out in the command and control center building on an area of 400 m² . Poltava ( 19:45–20:45 13.07.2025 ) Three UAVs struck technical and warehouse infrastructure: • A warehouse building (500 m²) was destroyed in the technical sector. • A warehouse (300 m²) and an adjacent area of dry vegetation (50 m²) burned down in the area of the Long-Range Aviation Museum (used as a reserve hangar fund). Significance : the museum and the airfield are combined into a single logistics zone with underground infrastructure. According to intelligence, the hangars are used to store Western aircraft parts. Grigoryevka , Kharkiv region ( 02:20–02:30 14.07.2025 ) Three UAVs struck the battle formation area of the 3rd Separate Tank Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces . At least 8 enemy servicemen have been confirmed killed. Tactical significance : the brigade is participating in battles in the Kupyansk direction , actively using Western infantry fighting vehicles and tanks. The strikes are aimed at wearing out and disorganizing the brigade's strike core. Lozovatka, Dnipropetrovsk region, Krivoy Rog international airport ( 02:50–03:10 14.07.2025 )
Three UAVs hit sections of the airfield, causing fires. There is currently no precise information about the results of the raid. One person from the 27th aviation commandant's office is known to be wounded .

Shostka , Sumy region, ( 03:25–03:35 14.07.2025 )
A massive strike by eight UAVs hit the territory of the state-owned enterprise Shostka Plant Zvezda , which produced explosives and charges.
Result:
• Fire in the plant administration building (300 m²);
• Three garage boxes with a bus and a passenger car were destroyed.

Military significance : the enterprise is involved in the assembly and packaging of ammunition and charges for artillery. The strike on Zvezda is the second in a month , indicating a systemic destruction of the combat production infrastructure.

Fastiv , Kyiv region ( 03:30 14.07.2025 )
One UAV hit the warehouses of the former Fastiv Fuel Terminal , starting a fire in two hangars and destroying six trucks with empty tanks .
Context : the oil depot is used as a camouflaged warehouse and transport hub for fuel trucks. The attack is preemptive, with the aim of preventing the repeated use of the facility. @don_partizan

***

Colonelcassad
The Battle of Pokrovsk

Over the past two weeks, the Pokrovsk section of the Donetsk front has become more active. In early July, units of the Center group drove the enemy out of the village of Razino and suddenly rushed west. Ukrainian publics are sounding the alarm: according to their information, Russian troops have already entered Rodynskoye, just four kilometers from the 60,000-strong Pokrovsk (Krasnoarmeysk). This means that we have managed to cut off an important highway going north and connecting this city with Dobropillya.

The noose around the Pokrovsk-Mirnograd agglomeration is gradually tightening. The other day, the Ministry of Defense reported the liberation of Nikolaevka, adjacent to Novoekonomicheskoe. The last inhabited village is located 3 kilometers from Mirnograd and is actually its suburb. Earlier, the Center group occupied a number of villages to the east and took physical control of the highway connecting Pokrovsk and Mirnograd with Kramatorsk.

In fact, today the garrisons of these cities have only two logistical arteries for supplies and rotation. The first is the T0406 highway, which goes to the Dnipropetrovsk region through Kotlino and Udachnoye. Both villages are under the fire control of the Russian army, which liberated Volkovo 2 kilometers to the south at the end of June. The second is the E50 highway, which connects Pokrovsk with Pavlograd. The enemy is holding on to it with all its teeth and is actively transferring reinforcements to this area. Kiev understands that without communication with the "mainland" the Pokrovsk-Mirnograd agglomeration will not last long.

In fact, our military is trying to pull off the same tactics that allowed them to liberate Ugledar, Avdiivka, Krasnogorovka, Kurakhovo and a number of other cities. It consists of isolating the combat zone and cutting off Ukrainian units from supplies. When the enemy, trapped in the cauldron, runs out of food, water and ammunition, he will either capitulate or try to break through. The latter option will inevitably lead to high losses.

@sashakots

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

*****

Brief Frontline Report – July 13th, 2025

Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Zinderneuf
Jul 13, 2025

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "Units of the "Center" Group of forces liberated the settlement of Nikolaevka in Donetsk People's Republic through offensive actions. The "East" Group continued advancing into enemy defensive depths, liberating the settlement of Karl Marx (K. Marksa on the map) in the Donetsk People's Republic."

Today's decisive operations by the Russian Armed Forces on both flanks of Pokrovsk (Krasnoarmeysk) direction yielded further success with two more settlements in the DPR territory secured.

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ЛБС 02.5.2025=Line of Combat Contact May 2nd, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

On the eastern flank (east of Pokrovsk-Krasnoarmeysk), from Grodovka to Razino, following Nikolaevka's liberation, our forces cleared the right bank of Kazenny Torets River. Nikolaevka - a small riverside village of about 350 residents - provides control over river crossings to Novoekonomicheskoe on the opposite bank. Northward from the Razino bridgehead, expansion continues toward Fedorovka and Boykovka on the left bank, with further advances along the river toward Novotoretskoye.

As noted in our July 3rd assessment, after Razino's capture, Russian forces established a west-bank bridgehead allowing operational flexibility while maintaining initiative. The latest reports confirm our assault groups have pushed from Razino toward Fedorovka and Boykovka. The enemy had prepared defensive positions in the Boykovka-Zatishok-Fedorovka area to protect their left flank near Novotoretskoye-Belitskoye-Pokrovsk defensive hub.

Neutralizing these positions while securing our right flank near Novotoretskoye enables driving a new wedge through the Razino-Rodinskoye axis. This disrupts AFU logistics from rear areas and isolates their Konstantinovka grouping, while simultaneously threatening Mirnograd (Dimitrov)-Novoekonomicheskoe from the north.

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ЛБС 31.10.2024=Line of Combat Contact October 31st, 2024. ЛБС 30.11.2024=Line of Combat Contact November 30th, 2024. ЛБС 01.01.2025=Line of Combat Contact January 1st, 2025. ЛБС 01.4.2025=Line of Combat Contact April 1st, 2025.

On the southwestern flank (southwest of Pokrovsk-Krasnoarmeysk), we liberated Karl Marx (Mirnoye). Formerly a German colony, Mariental, with ~600 residents, this AFU strongpoint covered the Komar-Aleksandrovgrad and the Komar-Poddubnoye approaches. Its capture opens routes toward the Dnepropetrovsk Oblast border via Aleksandrovgrad-Voskresenka across a broad front. To secure our right flank, assault operations continue against Zeleny Gai (Zeleny Haiy on the map) and Novokhatskoye.

Following regrouping, we anticipate renewed activity in the southern sector, particularly the Shevchenko-Kamyshevakha area.

Since June 21st, 2025, Russian forces have been dismantling a major AFU defensive node between four rivers (Novonikolaevka-Novopavlovka-Ivanovka-Voskresenka-Komar-Orekhovo). By July 13th, most southern sections (the "East" Group's zone of responsibility) have been cleared. The northern sector (Muravka-Novopavlovka-Filiya-Orekhovo under the "Center" Group's responsibility) remains. Its elimination will complete our advance to Ukraine's administrative borders.

Translation Note: The village now called Karla Marksa in Donetsk Oblast was founded in 1885 as Mariental, a German Mennonite colony meaning "Mary's Valley.” In 1923, Soviet authorities renamed it Karla Marksa after Karl Marx during de-Germanization efforts. After Ukraine's “independence” in 1991, it was officially called Mirnoye meaning "Peaceful,” though locals often kept using the Soviet-era name. Since 2014, the DPR administration has used Karla Marksa again as the official name.

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-13th

******

It's time to go home
July 13, 2025
Rybar

"Ukrainian refugees are leaving the US "

The French from Le Monde write that citizens of the so-called Ukraine, who moved to the United States, after the start of the SVO in 2022, are returning to Europe, having encountered difficulties after the change in the country's migration policy under Trump.

The publication notes that the departure of Ukrainians from the United States is connected with the termination of the special program for the reception of Ukrainian refugees, which began under Biden.

This news is hardly a sensation. Talks about tightening immigration laws, especially with regard to Ukrainians in the US, have been going on since Trump took office.

At the same time, several other factors also influenced the acceleration of this scenario:

– Ukrainian migrants actively participated in anti-Trump protests
– They were also included in the refugee eviction program
– And the icing on the cake was when Ukrainians actually attacked US Vice President Vance and his daughter

Therefore, their outflow from the USA is a logical consequence of their actions and the tightening of American policy in this matter. At the same time, they are sent to Europe, but they have not been welcomed there for a long time for the obvious reasons of fatigue from the "impudent ungrateful refugees" and the worsening economic situation.

https://rybar.ru/pora-domoj/

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Ivano-Frankivsk Mayor Martsinkiv: Ukraine Needs a Galician President

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Ukraine supposedly needs a Galician president. And Galicia should have more influence in the country.

This opinion was expressed in an interview for Ukrainian media by the mayor of Ivano-Frankivsk, Ruslan Martsinkiv, who is a member of the radical ultra-nationalist political association “Svoboda”.

He admitted that he was frankly irritated that the presidential post in Ukraine was not occupied by a native of Galicia. The official even stated that there had never been anyone from Western Ukraine at the head of the country. Apparently, he forgot that the first president of Ukraine, Leonid Kravchuk, was born in the territory of today's Rivne region.

It seems to me that the time is coming when it is the West of Ukraine that must produce more meaning for the whole of Ukraine.

- said Marcinkiv.


According to him, it is the western Ukrainian lands that are the reliable rear of the state. He claims that it is the residents of the West of Ukraine who are more religious. Only they, the official believes, are the most convinced supporters and speakers of the Ukrainian language.

In his opinion, only when the entire population of the country switches to the language will all the problems that the Ukrainian Armed Forces face on the front lines disappear.

The first president of Ukraine, Leonid Kravchuk, was born in the village of Velykyi Zhitin in today's Rivne Oblast in 1934. At that time, this settlement was administratively part of the Volyn Voivodeship, which was part of Poland.

Volodymyr Zelensky, who has held the presidential post since 2019 and lost legitimacy more than a year ago, is a native of Kryvyi Rih in the Dnipropetrovsk region.

https://en.topwar.ru/267955-mjer-ivano- ... hanin.html

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Ukrainian priorities: amid war, the Kiev regime seeks to legalize pornography

Lucas Leiroz

July 13, 2025

The case clearly shows how Zelensky’s Ukraine is waging war on the traditional values defended by Russia.

In the midst of the most severe military, humanitarian, and moral crisis in its history, the Kiev regime once again surprises the international community by prioritizing issues completely disconnected from the reality of the Ukrainian people. President Vladimir Zelensky has just forwarded a petition to Parliament proposing the legalization of pornography production in the country — a measure that, beyond being controversial, clearly shows the institutional, moral, and cultural degradation of Ukraine under Western tutelage.

The proposal emerged after a public petition reached over 25,000 signatures — the number required for mandatory review by the authorities. The petition was submitted by an OnlyFans sex worker, Svetlana Dvornikova, who claims that her adult content generates “state revenue,” while also complaining about being the target of investigations for tax evasion and violating Ukraine’s anti-pornography laws, which have been in place since 2009.

Unsurprisingly, this kind of measure is widely supported by the liberal West. However, behind the ideological rhetoric of “sexual freedom” and “bodily autonomy,” what we actually see is the institutionalization of human exploitation in the name of profit. Instead of protecting the dignity of Ukrainian women, Zelensky’s regime chooses to regularize a market that has historically fueled human trafficking, abuse, and social decay. This measure is not only a direct attack on traditional family values, public morality, and child protection, but is also a desperate attempt to raise funds to sustain a collapsing state.

The main argument used by supporters of the proposal is tax revenue: Dvornikova claims to have paid over 40 million hryvnias (nearly 1 million dollars) in taxes in recent years. Lawmakers such as Daniil Getmantsev and Yaroslav Zheleznyak echo this logic, stating that adult content creators could generate additional income to fund the war effort. This line of thinking, in addition to being morally bankrupt, exposes the true financial desperation of the Ukrainian regime — willing to sell the dignity of its women in exchange for tax crumbs.

While young Ukrainians continue to be sent to the front lines as “cannon fodder” in a clearly lost war, the government shifts its attention to legalizing pornography as yet another attempted economic solution. It is impossible to ignore the complete inversion of priorities. The country’s infrastructure is in ruins, millions of civilians live in conflict zones, and the mass exodus to Europe continues — yet, for Zelensky and his allies, the focus is on enabling platforms like OnlyFans to thrive legally on Ukrainian soil.

Even more alarming is the growing number of scandals involving sexual exploitation and human trafficking linked to the war. Recent reports indicate that many Ukrainian women and girls who have fled to Europe are being victimized by exploitation networks, often fueled by the precarious conditions created by the conflict. Instead of fighting this phenomenon, the regime chooses to normalize and institutionalize it, following a neoliberal logic that turns bodies into commodities and suffering into profit.

The attempt to legalize pornography amid the destruction of the nation is yet another clear example of how Ukraine, under Zelensky’s leadership and under the direct influence of Western powers, has completely abandoned the principles of sovereignty, dignity, and the common good. The war has ceased to be just an armed conflict with Russia — it has also become a war against the very dignity of the Ukrainian people. The offensive is not only military, but also cultural and moral.

In this scenario, what we see is not a government concerned with its people, but a failed administration dominated by foreign interests and globalist agendas. While blood continues to flow in the trenches, the Kiev elite bets on pornography to expand its profits — and, clearly, to further offend traditional values. This is the true face of the regime the West insists on defending as a symbol of “democracy” and “freedom.”

For those who still believe in the possibility of a respectful, traditional, and peaceful Ukraine, the hope remains that this cycle of decadence will come to an end — and that the country may one day rise again, free from both war and institutionalized moral degeneration. And this will only be possible through the unconditional military victory of the Russian Federation.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2025/ ... rnography/

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Tue Jul 15, 2025 3:20 pm

50-day ultimatum
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 07/15/2025

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After the weekend's announcements and the morale boost given to Ukraine by the Reconstruction Conference, where Kiev secured $11 billion in commitments and, above all, revived the rhetoric of using force to achieve political objectives, yesterday was defined as a turning point. With the excitement of someone who can hardly wait for the moment to arrive, Andriy Ermak posted a message on his social media on Sunday night, consisting solely of an emoji (two eyes), the message being hardly subtle: good things are yet to come, and no one can miss it. Added to the high expectations for the political statement on the conflict that Donald Trump had announced would be delivered was the long-awaited visit of Ukraine's closest friend in the US administration, General Keith Kellogg. Ermak's warmly welcomed reception with a big hug from the suit-wearing president and the announcement that Kellogg would remain in Ukraine for a week were sufficient indicators to understand the signal that Kiev knows the visit represents. Unlike the receptions of European leaders, who usually travel to the Ukrainian capital to make pre-prepared announcements and promote their political views, Kellogg's role has never been propagandistic, and each of his meetings with Ukrainian officials underscores the state of relations between Ukraine and Donald Trump.

This is the plan that Trumpism has implemented since coming to power, especially from the moment when, a few weeks after taking power, Marco Rubio and then-National Security Advisor Mike Waltz fired the starting gun for the process with which Donald Trump, based on praising Vladimir Putin and offering Russia the return of American companies to Russia, intended to easily achieve the end of a war he has never bothered to understand. Trump's approach, following the Kellogg and Fleitz plan, was to shift from a strategy of gradual escalation to one of incentives and threats, making the delivery of weapons contingent on kyiv's willingness to negotiate and punishing Moscow with an increase in the flow of military aid to kyiv if Russia rejected diplomacy.

During the first three years after the Russian invasion, the United States and its European allies had gradually increased the volume and power of the weapons sent to Ukraine, gradually crossing each of Russia's red lines, trying to maintain the difference between a proxy war and direct confrontation and avoid a harsh Russian response. This tactic completely ruled out the possibility of a diplomatic resolution to the conflict and assumed that Western countries would continue supplying Ukraine with weapons, ammunition, financing, intelligence, and even mercenaries for as long as necessary —that is, until Kiev could come to a negotiating table and impose its terms. As Mikhail Podolyak, the most outspoken of Ukrainian officials, occasionally recalled, Kiev did not intend to fight people to people until it regained territorial integrity along the 1991 borders, but rather would achieve this by entering the diplomatic phase in a position of strength. Although, in the arrogance of someone who knows they can count on the resources of their suppliers to present themselves in a negotiation as stronger than they appear on the battlefield, that discourse fell flat with the failure of the ground counteroffensive that was supposed to put Russia on the ropes and force the Kremlin to accept the agreement the West presented.

In reality, despite the differences in form that have emerged between the United States and its European allies in the first five months of the Trump administration, the European and Biden administration approaches are exactly the same as those adopted by the current White House, with the collective approval of the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and the European Union. The moment it became clear that the West was not going to achieve the surrender agreement it hoped to obtain from Tehran, the Israeli and then American attacks followed, an example of the peace through strength that European countries aspired to, though not necessarily Joe Biden, who was somewhat more moderate than his European partners. However, until this week, Donald Trump had remained relatively firm in his intention to achieve his objectives by exploiting the incentives and incentives he understood he was offering to Russia. However, in a war that the Kremlin has considered existential since 2022, a discourse increasingly accepted by a significant portion of the Russian population since Western weapons began attacking the territory of the Russian Federation along its internationally recognized borders, the possibility of resuming trade with Washington could hardly be considered sufficient.

Despite the current rhetoric claiming that Russia has not fulfilled its commitments, a real negotiation has never taken place. As Kellogg himself has admitted, what the United States has achieved is the term sheet of both sides, their true negotiating positions. From there, the general claims to have achieved a combination of the two to reach a viable agreement that completely coincides with the European and Ukrainian proposal, a coincidence that the Kremlin could not overlook. Kellogg's proposal, which has never been negotiated in the talks between Russia and Ukraine and is questionable whether it has even been discussed in meetings between Russia and the United States, implied Russian acceptance of the presence of NATO troops and left the door open to Ukraine's future accession to the Alliance, as there was no commitment to neutrality on the part of Ukraine or renunciation of expansion on the part of the military bloc. Although it wasn't the only red line in Kellogg's proposal, this point made it absolutely unfeasible for Russia to sign an agreement on those terms without having been militarily defeated. Under current conditions, with Ukraine increasingly struggling to replenish its ranks, withstand ground assaults, and repel drone attacks—previously easily shot down—believing that the mere presence of Donald Trump or vague promises of future trade or the lifting of long-term sanctions would be enough to convince the Kremlin is further evidence of the Trumpist foreign policy team's lack of understanding of reality. In Kellogg's case, his attitude could simply reflect a view of the war closer to that of Ukraine and its European allies than to that of Donald Trump at the time he took office. Presumably, that perception was the reason Russia vetoed Keith Kellogg in favor of Steve Witkoff, who is now more focused on achieving the agreement Trump and Netanyahu want in Gaza than on the nonexistent negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, in which the Ukrainian delegation has been ordered not to negotiate any political issues.

With the speed with which he usually changes his mind, Trump, the man whose team claimed to be negotiating with Iran in good faith, who modified the terms mid-negotiation, and who supported a military strike by his regional proxy the moment he realized he wouldn't be able to achieve the agreement he wanted, once again complained yesterday about what he considers a deception by Vladimir Putin. "I talk to him a lot," he stated in his press conference with Mark Rutte. "Every time I get off the phone, I think, 'It was a very nice call,'" he continued, disregarding the fact that a ceasefire has never been negotiated, adding that Russia subsequently bombs "everyone." The low mortality rate from Russian long-range bombing is not a factor in assessing the state of the war.

“I am very disappointed in President Putin. I thought he was someone who said what he said, who spoke so beautifully and then bombed people at night. We don't like that,” he had told the press the day before, ignoring, of course, the Ukrainian bombings, the fact that a unilateral ceasefire cannot be expected from Russia after Operation Spider Web, and completely oblivious to the hypocrisy of criticizing Russian bombings and supplying the weapons with which Israel has bombed Iran and daily attacks Gaza, causing a civilian death toll far higher than that of the war in Ukraine. According to the latest United Nations count, the war in Ukraine has caused the deaths of 13,580 civilians since 2022, 716 of them children—a dramatic figure, but one that pales in comparison to the destruction wrought by Israel in Gaza, where, according to Save the Children, more than 18,000 children have died from Israeli bombs.

The smiles of Richard Blumenthal and Lindsey Graham, sponsors of the legislation that provides for 500% tariffs on countries that trade with the Russian energy sector and do not provide funding for Ukraine's defense—that is, China—heralded today's change of trend that American hawks and the European political establishment had been waiting for six months. "I expect that in the coming days we will see an influx of weapons at a record level to help Ukraine defend itself... I expect that in the coming days Europe will be more supportive of their efforts to help Ukraine. Putin made a miscalculation. For six months, President Trump tried to convince Putin to come to the negotiating table," Graham stated during his appearance this Sunday on Face the Nation . In his usual vein, Graham manipulates reality, since Russia did attend a negotiating table in which Ukraine's role was, as its own authorities have acknowledged, to show that Kiev is not an obstacle to peace. In other words, the Ukrainian government was seeking to cover up appearances to prevent the threats and punishments component of the Kellogg-Fleitz plan from being activated against Ukraine and, as is now about to happen, against Russia.

According to the NATO Secretary General, who was visiting Washington, Donald Trump informed him of his change of heart last Thursday, at which point talk began about the massive arms supply Ukraine would soon receive. The enthusiasm for war was evident over the weekend, with European countries once again willing to mobilize resources to support Ukraine in the common war against Russia. In the current style of praising daddy Trump and granting his every wish, Mark Rutte publicly expressed his happiness that European countries would be shouldering the cost of future supplies. "You want Ukraine to have what it needs, but you want the Europeans to pay for it, which is perfectly logical," he told the press, while the US President nodded in agreement. Hours earlier, Donald Trump had made his move clear: the United States is going to "send them several pieces of very sophisticated military equipment, and they," the Europeans, "are going to pay us 100% for it." It's "a business deal for us." In this way, and always without admitting that the use of force reflects the failure of its peace plan and its supposedly legendary ability to reach agreements, the United States manages to combine not investing more money in the war in Ukraine with protecting its European proxy and obtaining economic benefits.

However, just as it did with Iran, where Trump and his Israeli ally provoked a war scenario that the White House subsequently halted by awarding medals only for peace and not for war, the United States has not changed its tune. Facing Mark Rutte, Donald Trump stated that "I think this is an opportunity to achieve peace. Europe is very enthusiastic about this war. They really believe it's a very, very important thing, or they wouldn't be doing it." While Ukraine is once again enthusiastic about the possibility of launching missile attacks deep into the Russian Federation, resuming the Biden administration's tactics of a year ago, Trump is now speaking of the importance of war, emulating his predecessor. "We have hope in the US leadership, as it is clear that Moscow will never stop if its unreasonable ambitions are not curbed by force," Voldymyr Zelensky had declared hours earlier after his meeting with Keith Kellogg. Both presidents agree on the questionable use of the word peace as a euphemism for the dream scenario, which neither comes nor stops at the cost of lives in Ukraine.

However, despite the excitement surrounding the announcement of the imminent delivery of large packages of weapons, which according to Axios will include "long-range missiles capable of reaching deep into the Russian Federation, including Moscow," the nuclear option has yet to be announced regarding sanctions. In his press conference with the delighted NATO Secretary General, Donald Trump did not confirm secondary sanctions on countries that trade with Russia, nor the seizure of the approximately $5 billion in Russian assets held in the United States, as some analysts had expected. In the style of his European allies and his predecessor, Donald Trump announced an ultimatum: the United States will impose secondary sanctions in the form of 100% tariffs on countries that continue to trade with the Russian Federation if there is no peace agreement within 50 days.

With this threat to Russia and the increased military flow to Ukraine—led by European countries and benefiting the United States—Washington is activating exactly the terms outlined in the Kellogg-Fleitz plan of a year ago and placing the entire responsibility of reaching a final agreement on Russia, which is impossible without a negotiating partner willing and mandated to do so. With seven years of experience using and abusing negotiations to buy time, Ukraine only needs to manage to delay negotiations until early September to secure the sanctions it has been demanding for years and insists—possibly exaggeratedly—would make it impossible for Russia to continue fighting.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/15/ultimatum-de-50-dias/

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From Cassad's Telegram account:

Colonelcassad
Ukrainian Prime Minister Shmyhal has resigned as part of the reshuffle demanded by Washington.
They are going to appoint Yermak's protégé Svyrydenko in his place.

Shmyhal was once sold to the post of prime minister by the oligarch Akhmetov.

Ultimately, this is rearranging the beds in a burning brothel. The essence of the Nazi regime will not change fundamentally.

***

Colonelcassad
Russian Defense Ministry summary of the progress of the Northern Military District as of July 15, 2025.

Force Grouping North: The tactical situation has been improved. The mechanized, ranger, airborne assault brigades, assault and airborne assault regiments of the Ukrainian Armed Forces were damaged near Kondratovka, Alekseyevka, Khrapovshchina, Ryzhevka and Novaya Sich (Sumy region). In the Kharkov direction, the airborne assault brigade and territorial defense were damaged near Vovchansk and Okhrimovka. Ukrainian Armed Forces losses: up to 180 soldiers, 5 armored fighting vehicles, 6 vehicles, 8 guns, an electronic warfare station, and an ammunition depot.

Force Grouping West: Positions on the forward edge have been improved. Three mechanized brigades and two territorial defense brigades were damaged near Borovskoye, Boguslavka, Petrovka, Kupyansk (Kharkiv region) and Torskoye (DPR). Ukrainian Armed Forces losses: over 230 soldiers, 2 armored vehicles, 14 vehicles, 3 guns, 2 counter-battery stations and 4 warehouses were destroyed.

Force Grouping "South": The settlement of Petrovka (DPR) was liberated. Two mechanized, mountain assault, assault, airmobile brigades and the National Guard were damaged near Zakotnoye, Slavyansk, Pleshcheyevka, Seversk, Dronovka, Konstantinovka (DPR). Ukrainian Armed Forces losses: up to 125 soldiers, 2 vehicles, 2 guns, an electronic warfare station, a warehouse.

Force Grouping "Center": Advancing deep into the defense. Three mechanized brigades, an assault, a ranger, an airborne assault brigades, marines, two territorial defense brigades and the National Guard were damaged near Novoekonomicheskoe, Novopavlovka, Dobropolye, Krasnoarmeysk, Rodinskoye, Dimitrov, Udachny (DPR) and Filiya (Dnipropetrovsk region). Ukrainian Armed Forces losses: up to 435 soldiers, 1 tank, 5 vehicles, 3 guns.

Force Grouping "East": The settlement of Voskresenka (DPR) was liberated. A mechanized brigade, marines and two territorial defense brigades were damaged near Novogeorgievka (Dnipropetrovsk region), Temirovka, Poltavka (Zaporizhia region). Ukrainian Armed Forces losses: up to 185 soldiers, 10 vehicles, 4 guns.

Force Grouping "Dnipro": The tactical situation has improved. A mechanized brigade, a coastal defense brigade, and 2 territorial defense brigades near Kamenskoye, Novoandriyevka (Zaporizhia region), Sadovoye, and Nikolskoye (Kherson region) were hit. Up to 35 soldiers, 12 vehicles, 6 electronic warfare stations, and 2 warehouses were destroyed.

Russian Aerospace Forces strikes: The infrastructure of military airfields, UAV assembly sites, ammunition depots, and deployment points of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and mercenaries in 142 districts were hit. 2 IRIS-T (Germany) air defense missile system launchers and a P-18 radar were destroyed.

***

Colonelcassad
Russia has officially and effectively ignored "Trump's 50-day ultimatum."

1. The strikes on Ukraine have continued as before.
2. Russia is not refusing to negotiate, but only with the recognition of the realities on the ground.
3. In response to the statements of the program "17 Patriot complexes," two German Iris-T air defense systems were taken out tonight.
4. As it turned out, some of the complexes announced by Trump will only arrive in a few months.
5. China and India have also shown no intention of fulfilling Trump's demands.
6. At the same time, Trump's 30% tariff against the EU will come into force on August 1, and the bill on sanctions against Russia in the US Congress has been canceled.
7. In general, nothing is changing for Russia now, it must continue to advance, occupying new territories, "improving the negotiating background."

P.S. Spoiler - the war will not end in 50 days.

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

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The next four phases of Ukraine's collapse
byGordonhahn
July 14, 2025

*Translated by Wayan, proofread by Hervé, for Saker Francophone .

I wrote some time ago : “ With the collapse of the front and the army on the verge of dissolving, Zelenskiy’s post-Maidan regime is deeply divided and in danger of dissolution, which could lead to state collapse, internecine warfare, and widespread chaos .” Below, I detail these four imminent or potential collapses—collapses of the battlefront, the Ukrainian army, the Maidan regime, and the Ukrainian state itself—because this issue is of crucial importance to the question of war or peace in Ukraine and to the challenges that will be faced in any reconstruction.

A dysfunctional Ukrainian army, regime, and state will prevent Kyiv from concluding any peace process and treaty that U.S. President Donald Trump or others might develop. In fact, the peace effort Trump is beginning to enlist Russian President Vladimir Putin in will almost certainly be thwarted by a cascade of two or more of the four major dysfunctions, collapses, and crises that appear to await Ukraine unless the war ends or a radical shift occurs in the correlation of Russian and NATO-Ukrainian forces. The first two of these collapses, of the front and the army, will almost certainly occur this year. The last two—of the Maidan regime and the Ukrainian state—may be postponed until next year.


The collapse of the military front in Ukraine
Ukraine's defensive fronts have slowly weakened and increasingly collapsed over the past year. Throughout last year, Russian territorial gains and, for most of this year, Ukrainian losses increased monthly, just as I predicted more than a year ago. The infamous Institute for the Study of War , a Washington-based organization that relies on Ukrainian propaganda and turns itself into “ data ,” falsely claimed : “ Russian forces gained 4,168 square kilometers (1,609 square miles, GH), largely consisting of fields and small settlements in Ukraine and Kursk Oblast, at a reported cost of more than 420,000 casualties in 2024. Ukrainian Commander-in-Chief Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi said on December 30 that Russian forces suffered 427,000 casualties in 2024. ISW observed geotagged evidence to estimate that Russian forces advanced 4,168 square kilometers in 2024, indicating that Russian forces suffered approximately 102 casualties per square kilometer of Ukrainian territory seized .” The propaganda element here lies primarily in the claim that Russia's territorial gains were " largely fields and small settlements " and in the figures for Russian losses. The Russians seized " largely fields and small settlements " because the landscape of Ukraine, like that of any country, is largely made up of arable land and small villages. However, Russia did capture several small towns and the main Ukrainian strongholds of Avdiivka, Vuhledar, Kurakhove, Selydove, Novosilevke, Toretsk, and almost all of Chasov Yar. The Russians may not have suffered 420,000 casualties over the course of the entire war, let alone in 2024. For 2024, the Mediazona institute—which, in affiliation with the BBC and the Russian opposition outlet Meduza , scours internet sources, social media, obituaries, and regional government announcements—counted 120,000 Russians killed in action between the start of the country's " special military operation " in February 2022 and the end of 2024. It found that at least 31,481 Russian soldiers died between January 1, 2024, and December 17, 2024. Even if we increase this figure by 50%, taking into account the typical 1:3 ratio of killed to wounded, we still arrive at a figure of only about 180,000 Russian casualties in 2024, half of the reported Ukrainians/ ISW .

What is going on here? The acceleration of what I have called Russia's " attrition and advance " strategy has been downplayed by ISW by accompanying it with data on territorial gains from the Ukrainian Defense Minister and other Ukrainian military sources on Russian losses in order to give the impression of massive Russian losses disproportionate to the " modest " territorial gains. This is done to support the Western myth that Russia is throwing away the lives of its soldiers in " human wave " attacks. ISW carefully avoids the prospect of negative comparison by omitting any mention of Ukrainian casualties, mimicking the Ukrainian Defense Ministry and US-funded " Ukrainian " news outlets such as Ukrainskaya Pravda .

The raw data show that Russian territorial gains have indeed increased throughout the year on a nearly monthly basis, with the possible exception of December, which saw a decline compared to November. As Western media outlets finally began to expose the fallacy of the “ Ukraine is winning ” propaganda line in the fall of last year, the New York Times referenced data from a military expert with the Finland-based Black Bird group, Pasi Paroinen. It turned out that Russian gains were being made all along the front line, from the north at Kharkiv to the south at Zaporozhye. Paroinen’s measurement of Russia’s overall gains in the first ten months of 2024 confirmed my own expectation of an intensified Russian advance. Russian advances during this period amounted to over 1,800 square kilometers and were made at an increasingly accelerated pace: “ Half of Russia’s territorial gains in Ukraine so far this year have been made in the last three months alone. In August, Ukraine’s defensive lines buckled and Russia quickly advanced 16 km. In October, Russia made its most significant territorial gains since the summer of 2022, as Ukrainian lines buckled under sustained pressure. October’s gains amounted to over 257 square km of land in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region alone .” Russian forces advanced 2,356 square kilometers in September, October, and November 2024, making 56.5% of their 2024 territorial gains during this period . November proved to be the most successful month for Russian forces in terms of territorial gains in 2024, “ advancing at the significantly higher rate of 27.96 square kilometers per day ” during that month.

ISW was careful not to compare Russia's territorial gains in 2024 with those made in 2023, so as not to highlight the crucially important trend of accelerating Russian advances and Ukrainian retreats, but France 24 television picked up the slack . It noted that the Russian military had advanced in 2024 “ seven times more than in 2023 ,” taking “ 610 square kilometers in October and 725 square kilometers in November. These two months saw the Russians capture the most territory since March 2022, in the opening weeks of the conflict. Russia's advance slowed in December, reaching 465 square kilometers in the first 30 days of the month. But it is already nearly four times greater than in the same month last year and two and a half times more than in December 2022. ”

Now, a major collapse of Ukraine's defense fronts along the entire or nearly entire battle line—which stretches from Kherson just north of Crimea in the east, then north through Donetsk to Kharkiv and Sumy—is imminent. Some fronts may hold out longer, but they are unlikely to survive 2025. Russian forces are beginning to encircle the crucial industrial, mining, and transport center of Pokrovsk. After its fall, perhaps in two months, Moscow's army will have a relatively unimpeded march toward Dnipro, Zaporozhye, and other points less south of the Dnieper. After that, the territorial advance will continue to accelerate at an ever-increasing pace and could lead to major breakthroughs across the Dnieper at any moment now, given the already dire and deteriorating state of Ukraine's armed forces.

https://gordonhahn.com/2025/07/14/les-q ... -lukraine/

Google Translator

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Brief Frontline Report – July 14th, 2025
Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Zinderneuf
Jul 14, 2025

Pokrovsk Direction

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "Units of the "Center" Group continued advancing into the operational depth of enemy defenses and liberated the settlement of Mayak in the Donetsk People's Republic."

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ЛБС 02.5.2025=Line of Combat Contact May 2nd, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

On the right flank of the Pokrovsk (Krasnoarmeysk) sector of the Donetsk direction, active operations by Russian assault groups continue.

Today, following a deep envelopment of Novotoretskoye from the north, the village of Mayak (approximately 1,000 residents) was liberated. The advance appears to have been conducted via a covert movement along the Glubokaya gully ("Deep Beam" on the map), crossing the Kazenny Torets River (in this area the floodplain width reaches 30 meters with depths up to 2 meters). This operation effectively isolates the Konstantinovka defensive sector of the Armed Forces of Ukraine from Pokrovsk.

Simultaneously, Ukrainian sources have begun reporting the appearance of our assault groups on the outskirts of the mining town Rodinskoye. Our forces have also entered the mining settlement Krasny Liman and established fortified positions.

We are observing coordinated operations: a diversionary strike in the north with the capture of Mayak, and the main assault targeting the central fortified area protecting Pokrovsk (Krasnoarmeysk) from northern approaches.

While maintaining professional restraint, one must acknowledge that the actions of our fighters in this sector inspire nothing but admiration and gratitude toward the commanders, staff officers, and frontline troops demonstrating true military art in these operations.

Zaporozhye Direction

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "As a result of decisive actions by units of the "East" Group, the settlement of Malinovka in Zaporozhye Oblast has been liberated."

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Территория РФ Временно Оккипованная=Territory of the Russian Federation Temporarily Occupied (by the AFU)

The village of Malinovka (approximately 850 residents) in Russia's Zaporozhye Oblast had been subject to gradual clearing operations over two months by the 1466th Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment of the 127th Motorized Rifle Division. The particular persistence in storming this specific settlement indicates its non-random selection within our command's operational planning.

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ЛБС 31.5.2025=Line of Combat Contact May 31st, 2025. Участки Активности=Area of Activity.

First, Malinovka forms the southern terminus of the Uspenovka-Novonikolaevka-Poltavka-Malinovka agglomeration stretching along the left bank of the Yanchur River (running between Poltavka and Pervomayskoe).

Second, it serves as an eastern gateway to Gulyaipole (Hulyaipole) while covering the O-080618 lateral route that supports the Armed Forces of Ukraine's left defensive flank in the Gulyaipole sector.

Third, control of Malinovka provides access to the commanding heights of the Yanchur-Gaichur watershed (the Gaichur River runs through Gulyaipole). This elevation dominates the Ukrainian defensive cluster anchored on settlements stretching north-south from height 157.2: the small khutor (farming settlement) Veseloye (about 10 residents), the settlement Zeleny Gai (about 100 residents), and the village Chervonoye (about 800 residents).

With Malinovka secured as a stronghold Russian units can now shield their right flank from the Uspenovka-Poltavka agglomeration while preparing to eliminate the AFU defensive line Veseloye-Chervonoye, ultimately gaining an elevated approach toward Gulyaipole from the east.

To the north, advances toward Temirovka in the Novoyvanovka direction threaten to sever the Gulyaipole-Novoselka highway, disrupting enemy logistics along northbound lateral routes from Temirovka. Furthermore, control of the Voronaya-Yanchur watershed will grant our artillery dominance over the Solenaya and Yanchur river valleys, facilitating subsequent operations against the Uspenovka-Poltavka agglomeration.

The strategic significance of these developments cannot be overstated, as they systematically dismantle AFU defensive systems while establishing favorable conditions for further advances. Russian forces continue demonstrating superior operational planning and execution across both the Donetsk and Zaporozhye directions.

Translation Note: When Russian is written by hand, the "г" (when typed) looks like a backward "S," and the "и" looks like our "u." Also, the typed Russian "т" looks like a western "m" when it is written by hand. Lastly, the "д" turns into something that looks like a "d." Hopefully, this helps if some of the symbols seem unfamiliar to you!
If you're paying attention to the Russian on the maps, Mikhail used both Russian print and Russian script.

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-14th

******

The mountain gives birth to a mouse(?)
July 14, 2025
Rybar

" On Trump's statements about aid to the so-called Ukraine "

The US peacekeeping rhetoric has predictably given way to statements about imminent new arms deliveries to the Kiev regime. From Trump's usual verbal flow, one can single out that Europe will pay for the aid.

Just recently we wrote that the US plans not to curtail support for the so-called Ukraine, but only to stop doing it for free and shift it onto the shoulders of European taxpayers, earning money from them. In the end, that's how it all turned out.

The question is what exactly the US is ready to supply that it has not transferred before. The biggest threat is posed by the long-range JASSM-ER air-launched cruise missiles, whose range reaches targets deep in the Russian rear.

Everything else has already been supplied to the Kiev regime. Moreover, most of the ammunition has already been used up, and the amount of aid is limited by the US's own reserves and production capabilities (which is especially important to understand given the announced supply figures).

At the same time, it is funny to watch how Trump once again spat on his electorate, to whom he promised something fundamentally different. But these are their internal problems, especially since his voters are used to it - during his first term he did exactly the same thing.

But what is important for Russia is to realize that in the current conditions it is the realities on the battlefield that determine diplomacy, and not the other way around. We have written about this many times, and this is once again confirmed in practice.

By the way, it is for this very reason that the negotiating track on both sides is unlikely to be completely curtailed, although now it seems to be the only alternative. The mentioned realities are conducive to this.

Gratitude in Kiev
July 14, 2025
Rybar

"...or not a broken hryvnia for the traitors "

Against the background of the transfer by the so-called Ukraine during the recent prisoner exchange of a defector from Russia, who fought in the RDK and other Vyrus detachments, several more rather funny stories have come to light. The traitors to Russia themselves turned out to be betrayed by their employers.

It turned out that five members of the so-called "Russian Volunteer Corps" in Ukraine are not resting on their laurels. Vyrus, who participated in battles against the Russian Armed Forces in various parts of the front, after being withdrawn from the front line, are being held in conditions that can easily be equated to prison.

How did they repay the traitors?
▪️According to the defectors, the official reason for their detention was a conflict with the leadership of the Freedom of Russia Legion.

▪️The Vyrusseys from the RDC were placed in the detention centers of the migration camp under the pretext of violating the rules of stay in the country. It should be noted that many of the defectors entered Ukraine illegally, but only those who were undesirable were charged.

▪️They are prohibited from using communication devices, and the duration of their daily walk is only 15 minutes. At the same time, the head of the facility has completely prohibited providing medical assistance to the defectors.

▪️The "volunteers" went on a hunger strike that lasted at least 18 days, but the camp's management doesn't care about them. The head of the facility tries to force the Vyrusians to sign a waiver of claims against their treatment at the facility through persuasion and torture.

▪️Activists, one of the deputies and even, ironically, the Right Sector, which has no love for Russians, tried to stand up for the defectors. Nevertheless, the former members of the RDC are still in the migration camp, and its head has not been held accountable.

What happened is not surprising - traitors are not liked even by those who use them. Ukraine needs the RDK primarily to create a media image of "correct Russians" who have come out against the Russian authorities.

Despite cases of awarding awards and granting citizenship, defectors are not perceived as equals in Ukraine. However, if one of them takes a step to the side, they will be dealt with immediately. For example, through accusations of illegal entry into the country.

It's funny that, given the recent incident during the prisoner exchange, the others were threatened with the same fate, but whether it came to fruition is still unknown.

Despite the formal oddity of the situation, for Russia the acquisition of such prisoners carries a certain danger. By threatening to reveal their participation in the RDC, the special services of the so-called Ukraine can easily manipulate the "liberated Russians", forcing them to commit terrorist acts and sabotage in the Russian hinterland.

https://rybar.ru/blagodarnostpo-kievski/

Google Translator

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"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Wed Jul 16, 2025 11:30 am

Trump's war
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 07/16/2025

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A day of reactions, broad-brush analyses, and self-serving positions on the message of each of the parties directly or indirectly participating in the war. Tuesday passed between the uncertainty of the signal sent on Monday by Donald Trump, the exaggerated hope of those who already see themselves as victors, and the fear of those who doubt whether the president of the United States will actually follow through on his threats. "50 days," lamented Anne Applebaum, one of the usual propagandists of this war, suggesting that Trump's announcement will be nothing more than a bluff. "Trump can't back down and not help Ukraine," headlined yesterday's editorial in The Washington Post, using the acronym "TACO" (Trump always chickens out), used by Chuck Schumer and other Democrats to claim that the president of the United States is a chicken who first threatens and then backs down. "Ukraine needs more weapons. But Putin needs more pressure to end the war,” the outlet writes, insisting that “so far, Putin has calculated that time is his ally; he could wait for the West’s patience to run out with a grueling and costly war of attrition. Trump is trying to change Putin’s assumptions, forcing substantive negotiations within a tight deadline by wielding an economic weapon—secondary sanctions—that the United States has been hesitant to use” because, as the outlet admits, they are also a threat to the global economy.

Demanding compliance and praising the measure has also been the official position of the European Union, although there have been two sides to the issue. Like a good cop always trying to please Trump, the President of Finland wrote that he welcomes "the decision of the President of the United States to provide Ukraine with more weapons in its fight against Russia's illegal war of aggression. The 50-day ceasefire, coupled with the threat of sanctions, including those included in the Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal package, constitutes an important step forward in forcing Russia to the negotiating table. Collaboration with allies toward a just and lasting peace continues." Like Iran when it was attacked, Russia was already at the negotiating table, although not in a position of weakness and faced with the need to unconditionally accept the terms offered by the West. Alexander Stubb's counterpoint was, predictably, Kaja Kallas, who believes the 50-day grace period Trump has granted Vladimir Putin to reach an impossible agreement, given that Ukraine has never sent a delegation mandated to negotiate political issues, is "very long." No measure can fully satisfy the continent's most belligerent hawks.

Meanwhile, the work of Trump's envoy to Ukraine continues, remaining in the country for a week that, in terms of logistics and planning, is significant. "I met with General Keith Kellogg: a clear voice of strength and strategy. We discussed weapons, sanctions, and the principle of peace through strength. We thank the US President for his firm decisions. That's what it takes to stop Putin: strength. Ukraine remembers those who lead with courage," wrote Andriy Ermak, intoxicated with success since he managed to place his successor, Yulia Svyrydenko, as a candidate for prime minister and obtained from the United States exactly what Kiev was looking for: a large arms package that will not come with any restrictions. This was reported yesterday by media outlets such as Axios and The Washington Post , each citing their own sources in the Pentagon or the White House, who announced that Ukraine will have no restrictions on the use of the weapons it currently possesses.

“A source involved in the decision has told me that this likely includes permission to use the 18 long-range ATACMS missiles now in Ukraine at their maximum range of 300 kilometers (about 190 miles). That wouldn't reach Moscow or St. Petersburg, but it would allow attacks on military bases, airfields, and supply depots deep inside Russia that are now out of reach. The package could also include more ATACMS,” David Ignatius wrote yesterday in The Washington Post . Moscow and St. Petersburg were also part of the speculation that circulated throughout the day due to allegations by Ignatius and Financial Times reporters Max Seddon, Christopher Miller, and Henry Foy. “‘Volodymyr, can you attack Moscow? Can you attack St. Petersburg, too?’ Trump asked on the call, according to the sources. Zelensky responded: ‘Absolutely. We can if you give us the weapons,’” they wrote yesterday in an allegation that the White House later sought to deny. "Let them feel the pain," Donald Trump reportedly added, referring to the population of the two Russian capitals. According to The Washington Post , he is even considering sending Tomahawk missiles capable of reaching both cities to Ukraine.

If the weapons currently on the ground will have no restrictions on their use, it is to be expected that the weapons sent to Kiev from now on will not have any restrictions either, from which the United States will derive significant economic benefits, which is why Donald Trump's team is currently congratulating itself in the press. "The days of the United States sending unlimited amounts of taxpayer money to defend Ukraine are over. The President of the United States has made a very intelligent decision and reached an agreement with NATO, which stipulates that Europe and Canada will pay for the weapons; the United States will manufacture them," boasted the US ambassador to NATO in an interview with Fox News . European partners, proud that the United States is progressively moving closer to their position on the use of force and the need to escalate the war one step closer to direct confrontation with a nuclear power, have responded by expressing their pride at being chosen to pay for the weapons with which Donald Trump will finally and completely join the common proxy war against the Russian Federation. “President Trump took an important initiative today: the United States will provide Ukraine with large-scale weapons if its European partners finance it,” wrote Chancellor Friedrich Merz on social media, adding that he had assured Trump that “Germany will play a decisive role,” Merz concluded. So decisive that Defense Minister Boris Pistorius of the SPD has insisted that German soldiers will be prepared to kill Russian soldiers in the event of an attack—a completely gratuitous warning that, in the current context, in which Germany emerges as the continental leader in the discourse of massive shipments of weapons for war, sounds like a threat. “This,” Merz added, referring to the supply of Western weapons, “will help Ukraine defend itself against terrorism through Russian bombings. Only in this way will pressure increase on Moscow to finally negotiate peace. In short, we are showing that we are working together as partners in security policy,” Merz concluded, describing a partnership in which one side bears the costs and the other reaps the economic benefits.

“The threat of imposing 100% secondary sanctions if Russia fails to reach an agreement within 50 days is unlikely to succeed,” wrote Ukrainian-Canadian academic Ivan Katchanovski, adding that “this has been demonstrated by the failure of numerous previous sanctions against Russia and the imposition of even higher tariffs against China, which had to be reversed due to the reciprocal tariffs imposed by China against the United States and their economic consequences for the United States.” Focusing on the purely military issue, analyst Patricia Marins added that “if Putin is confident of forcing a breakthrough in 60 days and achieving his goals, Trump has given him 50 days,” she summarized, for example. “That is being pragmatic,” she added, “whether [Putin] will achieve those goals or not is his own problem. What cannot be done is to indefinitely delay the end of the war through politics.” That last sentence perfectly sums up Donald Trump's thinking. Despite the fact that there hasn't been any kind of peace process, only isolated negotiations with Ukraine and its European allies and initial talks with the Russian Federation, he is convinced not only that the peace process existed, but that it was on the verge of resolving the conflict. "I'm not done with it, but I'm disappointed," Donald Trump stated, adding, incredibly, that he thought "we had reached an agreement four times, and then you come home and see he just attacked a nursing home or something... I said, 'What the hell was that all about?'" Donald Trump hasn't noticed that Ukraine derailed a passenger train, causing civilian casualties, but he has been informed of a nonexistent bombing of a nursing home.

The American leader is simply projecting frustration at his failure to initiate a peace process that was supposed to involve direct dialogue between the parties and which, due to the complexity of the causes and the contradictory red lines of both countries, was always going to be long, hard, and difficult—a very different kind of negotiation from the one Trump enjoys. Unable to reach an agreement and without the possibility of applying against Russia the measures he applied against Iran the moment he realized Tehran would not accept the unacceptable agreement he offered as his only option, with no possibility of negotiating, the US president moves into the phase of threats.

Understanding the sharp increase in arms deliveries expected to occur over the coming days, weeks, and months as the equivalent of the military attack on Iran against Russia, analysts like David Ignatius referred to the intention to "escalate to de-escalate," a concept widely used by Israel to describe its bombing campaigns to force its numerous regional enemies to accept, by force, the conditions imposed by Tel Aviv. However, threatening and even attacking a smaller country, subjected to sanctions for decades and under an arms embargo that has only been lifted in recent years, is not the same as attacking a nuclear power whose population is increasingly aligning with the official narrative that they are not confronting Ukraine but the West as a collective.

“We have already been through all this… We are overcoming it and we will overcome it,” Lavrov said in a statement that contrasts with that of Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, who did not downplay Trump’s threats, which he described as “very serious.” In this context, the press yesterday not only tried to decipher what Trump will do in the medium term, but also what Vladimir Putin’s response will be in the short term. “Putin intends to continue fighting in Ukraine until the West accepts his peace terms, and his territorial demands could expand as Russian forces advance,” three sources close to the Kremlin told Reuters . The Russian president believes Russia’s economy and military are strong enough to withstand additional Western measures, the sources said. One of the sources stated that Moscow could halt its offensive after conquering Ukraine’s four eastern regions if it encounters strong resistance. “But if he falls, there will be an even greater conquest of Dnipropetrovsk, Sumi, and Kharkiv,” the Reuters news agency wrote yesterday . Without the possibility of negotiations—which Russia has not refused to accept, but as Sergey Lavrov recalled yesterday, Ukraine has not responded to the proposal for a new meeting—Russia's only option is active defense, an attempt to consolidate its positions on the front, weaken the Ukrainian ground contingent as much as possible in key locations such as Krasnoarmeisk-Pokrovsk, Konstantinovka, Kupyansk, and Sumi, and prepare its air defenses for the massive use of Ukrainian drones accompanied by Western-made missiles.

If there's no agreement in 50 days, "bad things will happen," "sanctions and more," Donald Trump declared yesterday afternoon. The threats continue and will increase as time passes and the deadline approaches. "If Putin and others are wondering what will happen on the 51st, I would suggest they call the Ayatollah," said Senator Lindsey Graham, emboldened by his recent successes. His fanaticism is nothing new, nor is the attempt to take the war to Russia, a rhetoric that is increasingly becoming the official one.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/16/la-guerra-de-trump/

Google Translator

******

Trump's Weapons Magic Show is Smoke & Mirrors Masterclass
Simplicius
Jul 15, 2025

Trump finally ‘wowed’ the world today with his grand announcement on punitive measures against Russia.

As usual, the announcement struck a dull and lackluster chord for most, with Russian markets jubilantly jumping by nearly 3% in response. But let’s dig in to see whether there is actually more meat on the bone of Trump’s scary threats than people give credit for.

Firstly, the timing: Axios now reports that Putin allegedly told Trump he plans to ‘intensify’ the Russian summer offensive in the next 60 days, with the goal—according to some sources—purportedly being to capture the remainder of nominal Russian territory, i.e. Donetsk, Lugansk, and Zaporozhye oblasts.

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Axios: According to Trump, Putin allegedly told him about plans to intensify the offensive in Ukraine in the next 60 days.

Trump shared details of the conversation with the Russian leader with his French counterpart Macron, adding: "He wants to take everything."

It was after this conversation, according to the publication, that Trump criticized Putin and promised to increase arms supplies to Ukraine.


If there’s any hint of truth to such reports, then Trump’s “50-day notice” would seem to line up with Putin’s timeline, given that the conversation happened days ago, and thus Putin’s “60-day plan” would fall almost precisely on Trump’s deadline.

The basic interpretation of that could be that Trump is giving Russia two months to capture whatever territory it claims belongs to it, then “the hammer” will come down.

Now on the weapons side, as always, is where the biggest cloud of ambiguity lies. No one seems to know precisely what weapons and from what package will be sent, but according to CNN, it all sounds like more of the same, but just ‘repackaged’ with a new price tag.

Reports indicate the same air-to-air missiles, howitzer and GMLRS rounds will be sent as before, but simply that now NATO countries will foot the bill. Prior to that, under Biden’s PDA, the US was sending weapons directly to Ukraine from its own stockpiles, and then replenishing those stockpiles with new orders to the MIC, from taxpayer funds. Now, it will come from European taxpayer funds—a win for the US, we must admit. (Video at link.)


But the biggest focal point were the Patriot ‘systems’. Again, the cloud of confusion—no one quite knows what the numbers represent: Patriot launchers, batteries, battalions, etc. Trump once mentioned the word ‘batteries’, but the numbers being discussed do not appear to realistically jibe. For instance, he mentioned sending “17” to Ukraine, but the US itself only has something like a total 50-70 active batteries, and obviously sending a third of its entire Patriot stock is unlikely.

When you really read between the lines, what Trump appeared to intimate was that the eventual goal is to scrounge up a larger amount of ‘systems’ for Ukraine, but “initially” only a tiny fraction will be sent. This is one of the few commenters who grasped the nuances of the mealy-mouthed ‘announcement’:

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Recall that Rubio just recently implied the US has no more Patriots to give, a video I posted several updates ago. He called on Europe to give their Patriots instead, but quelle surprise, in a new FT article German Defense Minister Pistorius admitted that Germany will not be sending any Patriots nor Taurus missiles:

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https://archive.ph/aXm7y
You can see in the above, he goes on to say that Germany could purchase two systems from the US for Ukraine, instead. This is a kind of puerile shell game which is really meant to bolster the PR narrative that Ukraine is being ‘supported’ in order to keep hopes alive, so that the AFU doesn’t collapse from demoralization.

German Defense Minister Pistorius to Reuters:

Decision on two Patriots for Ukraine will be taken within days or weeks, but actual delivery of first system will take months.


In short: it’s a lot of hoopla to kick the can down the road again, repackaging the same policy with new fanfare.

The sanctions threat was likewise fraught with double-meaning. Trump called them ‘tariffs on Russia’, but in reality they are merely tariffs on US’ own allies:

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Russia exports virtually nothing to the US which can be ‘tariffed’. The threat here is meaningless as these other heavyweights will not put up with Trump’s threat, forcing him to back away at the last moment as usual, then claiming “victory” after securing some other secondary fig leaf ‘deal’.

In conclusion: the entire charade appears to be a sneaky but brilliant act of jugglery by Trump, wherein he once again gives the appearance of major ‘action’ against Russia to silence critics and placate neocons, while in actuality doing little to further Ukraine’s war efforts, apart from plugging the previous status quo back onto life support. The act is meant to play both sides, relieving pressure on himself, while not overly risking his relationship with Putin in the hopes he can still clinch his big Nobel-earning armistice.

Notably, top-shelf items like JASSM missiles were all absent from the discussion, contrary to high-octane predictions from the peanut gallery the day before. Likewise, in the earlier-mentioned FT article, Pistorius once again categorically rejected—for the umpteenth time—the sending of Taurus missiles to Ukraine:

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So, what are we left with? Essentially, the resumption of Biden’s PDA status quo with an ambiguous new promise of “a few” Patriot launchers, which is more a preliminary call to look for some potential stock among allies.

When asked what would happen after the 50 day mark if Putin refuses to back down, Trump told a reporter: “Don’t ask me that question.”

The bigger debate is whether Trump has now officially taken ownership of the war, despite his feeble attempts to impute his continued failings to Biden; many think so. But I still suspect Trump is trying his hardest to playact the stern and impatient taskmaster to signal ‘toughness’ against Putin for his deep state audience, all while actually trying to mitigate damage to US-Russian relations.

For instance, ‘senior officials’ told FT just two days ago that Trump still views Zelensky as the primary obstacle to peace:

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https://www.rt.com/news/621382-trump-ze ... ine-peace/

That would likely make his ‘anger’ at Putin a put-on.



Intermezzo:

Ex-Russian prime minister Sergei Stepashin has a stark message for Germany, amidst all the militarization threats: (Video at link.)

Moscow 'knows location' of German missile plants as Merz plans to hand Zelensky the bombs to hit 'center of Russia' — ex-PM Stepashin


Given that all the Trump-Ukraine weapons antics are merely an attempt to front-run and offlet some steam from the Russian summer offensives, let us now turn to frontline news:

Starting in western Zaporozhye Russian forces took over the remainder of Kamyanske:

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East of there, Russian forces liberated ‘Myrne’, a settlement whose Russian name is Karl Marx:

Mercenaries thought they were going on safari, but it turned out to be a war: how the Russian army liberated the settlement of Karl Marx

➖A scout with the call sign "Husky" spoke about the liberation of the settlement of Karl Marx in the DPR:

▪️ What role do "birds" play in assault operations – 00:11

▪️ How foreign mercenaries were captured – 00:30


(Video at link.)

This settlement is just to the west of Gulyaipole:

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And to the east of it, you can see Malinovka, whose complete liberation by Russian forces was also just announced:


The 1466th Motor Rifle Regiment and the 3rd Battalion of the 114th Motor Rifle Regiment, operating under Task Force "Vostok," have liberated the village of Malinovka in the Zaporozhye direction.

The battle for Malinovka was long, bloody, and exhausting. Both sides suffered heavy casualties in the fierce fighting. But in the end, the Russian flag was raised over the village.

Having secured this foothold, Task Force "Vostok" is now regrouping and preparing for the next move.


(Video at link.)

Further northeast on the Velyka Novosilka line, you’ll recall Russian forces had recently captured Poddubne. Now they have expanded north to capture Tolstoi and some of Novokhatske:

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Some sources claim Novokhatske is already taken and they’ve even moved farther to Zeleni Hai, as follows:

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But there’s no official confirmation yet and we won’t jump the gun.

The most talked about direction has been the Pokrovsk-Mirnograd agglomeration, where Russian forces made a critical breakthrough according to some reports:

⚡️Russian troops broke through four kilometers in the Pokrovsk direction and took control of the sludge ponds of the Mirnogradskaya Central Processing Plant, the Telegram channel Slivochny Kapriz reports, citing georeferences.

The below shows geolocated footage of Russian forces advancing past Razine toward Rodinske:

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The reason this is particularly important is that it would put Russian forces in striking distance of one of the last remaining supply arteries to the entire agglomeration.

Here’s a better view and explanation. Below, the yellow circles show one of two main supply routes feeding this entire gigantic fortress-agglomeration that includes both Pokrovsk and Mirnograd:

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If Russian forces obtain fire control of the yellow route, the vast supply chain for the agglomeration falls onto the last route in the red circle. That means this entire area’s logistics will become compressed into a single route which will put it under tremendous strain, particularly as Russian forces get closer to this last route and eventually put it too under fire control.

Another report:

DivGen reports that all supply roads going into the Pokrovsk - Mirnograd agglomeration are now within 🇷🇺FPV drone range

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In short, Ukrainian losses in this area’s rear stand to go through the roof.

More detailed report:

According to available data, initial information about the breakthrough of the defense line of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the Rodinsky area is confirmed.

The front in the northeast of Pokrovsk collapsed in the area of responsibility of the 14th Operational Brigade of the National Guard of Ukraine, which, according to operational data, actually lost the ability to organize defense. The depth of the breakthrough of the Russian Federation, presumably, reached 5 km, the advanced units of the Russian 9th Motorized Rifle Brigade and the 57th Motorized Rifle Regiment have already reached the eastern outskirts of Rodinsky, from where no more than 4 km remains to the city center.

The breakthrough, judging by some reports, became possible due to the poor adaptation of the terrain to defense. The section between Razino and Fedorovka is open fields. The Russian tactics have remained the same: reconnaissance identifies vulnerable areas, after which assault groups numerically outnumber the defenders are brought in. Due to this, a local advantage is created, which the Armed Forces of Ukraine cannot compensate.

The Ukrainian command made an attempt to stabilize the front by maneuvering reserves: units of at least four different assault units were urgently transferred there, one of which was brought in from the Kherson direction, and the second from the Sumy direction. This corresponds to the actions according to the Sumy scenario, where the reserves worked as a fire brigade, but in this case the effect could not be achieved.


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There were some other advances but we’ll leave it at these main ones for now.

(More at link)

https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/tru ... w-is-smoke

******

Trump Delivers Next Nothingburger To Ukraine

On July 3 U.S. President Donald Trump had a phonecall with the Vladimir Putin, President of the Russian Federation:

President Donald Trump revealed the details of his conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday.
Trump told reporters before he boarded Air Force One for an "America 250" rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, "We had a call, it was a pretty long call, we talked about a lot of things, including Iran. We also talked about the war with Ukraine."

Trump shook his head and said, "I'm not happy about that," as the president remarked about the ongoing war he hoped to quickly end.

"No, I didn't make any progress with him today," Trump said when asked about a potential deal with Putin to end the Russian offensive in Ukraine.


Trump wanted to pause the war In Ukraine while Putin sees an advantage for Russian troops in the field and wants to continue the war until its root cause, the NATO march towards Russia, is eliminated.

Trump could not get his will. He was also under pressure from neoconservative parts of Congress to commit the U.S. to a longer war against Russia. They asked for shipping more weapons to Ukraine and for penalties against countries which continue to buy oil and gas from Russia.

Yesterday Trump gave in and decided (archived) to give another try to his predecessors failed Ukraine policy :

President Trump said he would help Europe speed more weapons to Ukraine and warned Russia that if it did not agree to a peace deal within 50 days, he would impose a new round of punishing sanctions.
Speaking from the Oval Office, where he met with NATO’s secretary general, Mark Rutte​, Mr. Trump said the weapons would be “quickly distributed to the battlefield.” He also threatened to impose secondary sanctions, which are penalties imposed on other countries or parties that trade with nations under sanctions.

“I’m disappointed in President Putin, because I thought we would have had a deal two months ago, but it doesn’t seem to get there,” Mr. Trump said.

“It’s just the way it is,” he added. “I hope we don’t have to do it.”


Several additional Patriot air defense missile systems are supposed to be given to Ukraine by NATO countries which would buy new ones when the U.S. is able to deliver them (archived):

Mr. Trump said the United States would sell those arms to European nations, which would ship them to Ukraine or use them to replace weapons they send to the country from their existing stocks.
But Pentagon officials said later that many details were still being worked out.


It is doubtful that new Patriot batteries will help against Russian swarm attacks each with several hundreds of drones and missiles. There is also a severe lack of munitions for these system with new production of Patriot missiles per year still being lower than the monthly consumption in Ukraine and elsewhere.

Trump did not specify what additional weapons and how many of them would be delivered to Ukraine (archived):

What Trump didn’t talk about is that the military assistance might also include authorization for some powerful new offensive weapons. I’m told by a source involved in the decision that this is likely to include permission to use the 18 long-range ATACMS missiles now in Ukraine at their full range of 300 kilometers (about 190 miles). That wouldn’t reach all the way to Moscow or St. Petersburg, but it would strike military bases, airfields and supply depots deep inside Russia that are now out of range. The package might also include more ATACMS.
...
Trump also considered sending Tomahawk cruise missiles, the same weapons fired against Iranian targets last month. If fired from Ukraine, these could hit Moscow and St. Petersburg, and they were included in discussion as late as Friday. But the Tomahawks are off the delivery list for now, I’m told. They could be deployed later if Trump wants even more leverage.
Trump’s determination to squeeze Putin was conveyed in a conversation last week with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, a source told me. Trump asked Zelensky why he didn’t hit Moscow. “We can if you give us the weapons,” Zelensky said. Trump said Ukraine needed to put more pressure on Putin, not just Moscow but St. Petersburg, too.


ATACMS are an old story. In the overall balance these 'wonder weapons' had little effect so far.

Tomahawks are a no-no because they can be nuclear armed. Russia's strategic defense would have to consider any ongoing Tomahawk attack on Moscow or Petersburg to be a nuclear decapitation strike and act accordingly. The U.S. is unlikely to risk a Russian counterstrike with nuclear weapons.

Trump's sanction threat against buyers of Russian hydrocarbons is not taken seriously (archived):

[E]xperts doubted the credibility of Mr. Trump’s threat to impose 100 percent tariffs on Russia’s trading partners if President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia did not agree to a cease-fire within 50 days.
The scale of China’s mutual trade with Russia — nearly $250 billion per year, including huge oil imports — means that delivering on the threat would throw Mr. Trump into a showdown with Beijing. Analysts said it was unlikely that Mr. Trump would risk a renewed confrontation with the world’s second-largest economy over Ukraine, a country whose fate he has long said is not vital to the United States.

Mr. Trump is also notorious for setting deadlines that he does not enforce, raising questions about whether he will act if the 50-day timer he has set for Mr. Putin expires.


The neoconservative editors of the Washington Post are not convinced that the policy change (if this even is one) will lead to significant changes.

They ask the right questions to then pressure for more measure without regarding the consequences for the U.S. (archived):

But what if Putin refuses to make peace and sticks with his maximalist demands for a dismembered Ukraine under Russia’s thumb? Is Trump ready to ramp up the pressure? Will he sustain the arms shipments once the stockpiles run dry? Will he seize billions of dollars in frozen Russian assets? Will he try to crack down on the shadow tanker fleet that moves Russian oil? And will he follow through on his secondary sanctions threat, with its potentially vast implications for trade with countries such as China and India?

The war against Ukraine has already persisted for far too long, with horrific casualty tolls on both sides. It will only end when Putin realizes he has nothing more to gain, and much more to lose, the longer it goes on. The arms shipments to Ukraine might bring that realization closer. More pressure can bring that day closer still. Now that Trump has issued his ultimatum, he needs to make clear to Putin he means what he says.


In late 2021 Russia issued its demands in form of treaty outlines with the U.S. and NATO. They were disregarded by the U.S.. The war is a consequence of that.

Russia has the means to continue the war until those demands are met. Meanwhile Ukraine is running out of - not weapons but soldiers.

How long will it take for the editors to understand that it is Putin who has the trump cards in this game?

Posted by b on July 15, 2025 at 13:41 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2025/07/t ... .html#more

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The War in Ukraine Has Shattered the West’s Digital-Age Delusions
July 14, 2025 natyliesb
by David Betz and Michael Rainsborough, The Daily Sceptic, 6/15/25

David Betz is Professor of War in the Modern World at King’s College London. Michael Rainsborough is Professor of Strategic Theory at the Centre for Future Defence and National Security.

For all the breathless commentary, one awkward truth has loitered beneath the surface of the Russia-Ukraine war, which is that most people beyond the immediate theatre of conflict don’t have any clear sense of what’s happening on the ground. The fog of war has been thickened not only by competing narratives along with fragmentary info-snacking YouTube clips of drone strikes, but by something more persistent — Western wishful thinking.

For nearly three years, a chorus of commentary penned by pundits whose proximity to the war — geographically or intellectually — is open to question have served up a diet long on optimism but short on evidence. A rotating cast of Atlanticists from Anne Applebaum to Timothy Snyder, along with just about every op-ed in the Daily Telegraph, have reliably assured readers that Ukrainian victory is in sight, or that Putin’s regime has been humiliated or teeters on the edge of collapse. These forecasts, rarely tethered to battlefield realities, have functioned less as analysis and more as morale management — designed to reassure rather than inform.

This faith-based commentary sits uneasily alongside the equally confident illusions that once animated post-Cold War Western military thinking. Western politicians and strategists imagined war in the digital age would be light, precise and swift — waged by lean expeditionary forces wielding smart weapons and networked command systems. The result, they hoped, would be relatively bloodless victories achieved from a polite distance, preferably before lunchtime.

Instead, they got Bakhmut.

As this short essay will seek to disclose, the war in Ukraine has shattered a generation of digital-age delusions. It has exposed the brittle realities beneath Western military thinking and underscored the extent to which the strategic balance has shifted—less due to enemy cunning than to Western self-delusion.

The End of History did not arrive. The Return of Artillery did.

The Digital Mirage

In short, digitalisation — once regarded as the West’s ultimate strategic advantage — has failed to deliver the political returns its proponents anticipated. The concept was deceptively simple: combine precision weaponry with real-time data and operational mobility to achieve swift, efficient and low-cost victories. In the words of one tract in the mid-1990s, the aim is to apply massive shock with minimal force, such that the enemy is stunned into compliance.

Yet war, as the Prussian philosopher of war Carl von Clausewitz long ago observed, remains a clash of wills — reciprocal, unpredictable and fundamentally political. It is not a frictionless exercise in systems management, nor a technological showcase. It is organised violence pursued for political ends. Always messy and brutal. And always resistant to tidy solutions.

What Western strategists often overlooked was a basic fact: adversaries adapt. And many of them have invested not in apps or digital platforms, but in mass, resilience and industrial depth.

The assumption that digital superiority would render conventional war obsolete, where the future of war belongs not to mass armies and tanks, but to decentralised networks and precision strikes’, has not merely proven false — it has been inverted. Russia and other actors have appropriated these same tools, stripped them of their idealistic framing and employed them pragmatically — effectively, economically and at scale.

The West, by contrast, became increasingly enamoured with the imagined virtues of the digital society: a realm where information moves at light speed and liberal pieties hitch a ride on the algorithm. Nowhere was this more evident than in the enthusiasm for cyberwarfare — an area long hyped, but whose strategic effects have often fallen short. Figures such as then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson notably proclaimed that such high tech was transforming the nature of conflict.

The practical outcome of actual warfare, however, has not been the digitalisation or dematerialisation of war, but rather its real-time mediation — live streamed, framed and packaged for distant audiences. In a hyper-connected world, conflict is increasingly staged for global spectatorship. But if the medium has changed, the consequences have not: war remains bloody, destructive and — for all the intrusion of high-tech drones and AI onto the battlefield — still deeply human. “Technology may change how we kill, but not why we kill or what killing does to us.”

The Return of Walls: Fortresses in the Age of Fibre Optics

We should recall the broader intellectual mirage in which Western military thinking once basked—a time of post-Cold War euphoria when history had allegedly ended and borders were passé. Remember when Francis Fukuyama serenely informed us that ideological conflict was over? When Zygmunt Bauman waxed lyrical about ‘liquid modernity’, Michael Mandelbaum speculated about the obsolescence of major wars and Kenichi Ohmae proclaimed the borderless world, flattened by markets and lubricated by technology?

Yes, well: these ideas have not aged like fine wine.

Far from dismantling fences and ushering in a frictionless utopia, the digital age has made fortification fashionable again. Border walls, missile shields and fortified strongholds are proliferating. Bunkers are booming — economically, if not always structurally.

And on the battlefield — from Gaza to Donbas — it isn’t data packets, viral hashtags, networks or narratives that are seizing territory. It’s bulldozers, concrete and men in trenches or ankle-deep artillery shell casings.

The war of the future, we were told, would be weightless, networked, almost antiseptic. While it is true that drone warfare has made a dramatic appearance as highly advanced form of surveillance and precision guided artillery, these new technologies have serviced very traditional modes of warfare. Instead of some new conception of war in the digital age, what we got instead was a flashback: steel, trenches and the long, grinding calculus of attrition.

War hasn’t dematerialised. It has reindustrialised — only now with high-definition targeting and better graphic design.

Ukraine: A Cautionary Tale in Three Acts and No Exit Plan

The Ukraine conflict was supposed to be a masterclass in Western strategic superiority — a proxy war in which Ukraine would draw upon NATO’s high-end technology, soft power, economic leverage and moral confidence to reduce Russia’s ambitions to rubble. Instead, it’s begun to resemble a doomed product launch — overpromised, underdelivered and still limping along on the exhaust fumes of its own marketing, too costly to cancel outright and too awkward to acknowledge as a failure.

Let’s count the miscalculations:

Soft Power: Meant to win hearts and minds. But hearts, as it turns out, aren’t for sale — and minds are busy doomscrolling through drone footage on TikTok, or more often tuning out altogether. Influence, it seems, doesn’t flow so easily from Pride-flag waving embassies and finger-wagging hashtags.
Economic Warfare: The so-called ‘sanctions from hell’ were supposed to crush the Russian economy in record time. Instead, Russia’s GDP has outpaced much of the Eurozone, while Germany’s once-vaunted industrial base has gone into self-induced hibernation — collateral damage in a moral crusade that forgot to run the numbers.
Strategic Credibility: Once burnished by Cold War mystique, NATO’s reputation now wobbles somewhere between ceremonial relic and crisis PR firm. The alliance increasingly resembles a séance for departed strategic purpose — hands clasped around the table, muttering slogans, hoping the ghost of 1991 will manifest and tell them what to do. It lurches between virtue-signalling and threat inflation, unsure whether it’s meant to deter adversaries or simply reassure itself that it still matters.
The unspoken truth in all this is bleak but not especially complicated: strategically, Ukraine has already lost. So too — albeit less dramatically and more expensively — has Europe. And for anyone paying attention, this wasn’t an unpredictable ending. It was the opening scene, played out exactly as the script always hinted it would. Viewed alongside the other glittering triumphs of Western statecraft — Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Libya, Syria — it raises the uncomfortable question: why does strategic failure keep happening and who keeps hiring these people? At this point, a moderately alert housecat could have produced a more coherent grand strategy — if only by knocking the relevant documents off the table before they reached Cabinet.

BRICS and Mortar: Realignments in a Shattered Order

One of the most egregious strategic miscalculations — and one that yet again should have been foreseen by anyone not still mainlining end-of-history optimism — was the West’s attempt to isolate Russia. In practice, this bold stand for ‘rules-based order’ only served to hasten the very multipolarity it once dismissed as a paranoid fantasy. China and Russia are now closer than at any point since the Brezhnev era. BRICS, once dismissed as a loose acronym in search of a purpose, is gaining unexpected traction — with countries like Turkey and Indonesia now eyeing membership as a potentially better seat at the global table. De-dollarisation, once confined to fringe economists and survivalist blogs, is edging into the mainstream.

Meanwhile, the West’s effort to turn the ruble into rubble instead left it suspiciously intact — at times more stable than a few G7 currencies. Meanwhile, the grand strategy to ‘cancel’ Russia economically has largely backfired, inflicting more damage on Western industry than even the most vodka-marinated of Kremlin plotters might have dared to dream. German manufacturing sends its regards — from behind a padlocked factory gate.

Geopolitically, the unintended consequence is a slowly forming Eurasian compact: one increasingly convinced that the West — at least in its EU-NATO incarnation — is decadent, distracted and no longer capable of setting the global agenda. It’s not quite the overturning of the world order, but it’s one where states feel they have greater options than merely to choose between Western modernity and pariahdom. One thing is for certain, it is not the world order that Washington or Brussels believe they are still running.

Mass Isn’t Dead. It Just Moved East

For years, Western military doctrine enshrined speed, agility and precision as the hallmarks of modern war. Mass, by contrast, was treated as a dusty artefact — something best left in museums next to the flintlock and the bayonet. According to one set of commentators: “Mass is no longer a requirement for victory. Information superiority and speed of command will displace attritional warfare.” Large-scale mobilisation, in other words, was seen as a clunky relic of industrial wars: too slow, too costly, and too reminiscent of the bad old days when wars actually lasted longer than a news cycle.

Then came Ukraine. And Gaza. And with them, the blunt truth reasserted itself: mass matters. Industrial capacity — measured not in white papers but in shells, drones and replacement parts — still wins wars.

The hard numbers from Ukraine are telling:

Russia is producing artillery shells at a ratio of roughly 3:1 over the combined output of the West.
It manufactures more armoured vehicles, drones and missiles than all of NATO put together.
It’s done all this without running up colossal debts or collapsing its domestic economy — relying instead on retrofitted Soviet factories and a grimly effective wartime mobilisation.
By contrast, the West struggles to supply even its own forces — let alone those of its Ukrainian proxy. The US production rate of SM-3 interceptor missiles, for example, is a grand total of 12 per year. That’s not a misprint. It’s barely enough to protect a single aircraft carrier, let alone a continent.

What we’re witnessing is not just a clash between Russia and Ukraine. It’s a collision between two theories of war: the Western model of information-age finesse, and the industrial-age brute force its strategists once declared obsolete. The former looks increasingly like a TED Talk. The latter, like it’s winning.

Manoeuvre vs Attrition: When Theory Meets Mud

Western military theory has long exalted manoeuvre warfare — rapid, fluid operations designed to outpace the enemy, strike weak points and collapse morale before a proper defence can even form. It’s a vision of war as ballet: swift and elegant, and preferably done by last orders at the wine bar. Attrition, by contrast, is treated as a kind of doctrinal embarrassment — too crude, too slow, too First World War.

But the battlefield, tells a different story.

Ukraine’s much-vaunted counter-offensives have bogged down in kilometre-deep minefields and trench networks that look like they were lifted from 1916. Russia’s static defences — dismissed early on as archaic — have proven not only resilient but maddeningly effective. Gaza, too, offers little comfort to the manoeuvrists: less lightning war, more bloodied crawl.

The promised revolution in precision warfare — guided missiles, smart bombs and real-time targeting — hasn’t rewritten the rules so much as underlined the old ones. ‘Smart’ weapons may hit what they aim at, but they don’t change the fact that the other side is still dug in, still shooting back, and often still there after the smoke clears.

What has emerged isn’t the war of tomorrow, but the war we thought we had left behind — less networked lethality and more Verdun with drones. And despite the glossy brochures, war, it turns out, still favours the side that can take a punch, not just throw one.

Operational Tempo: Fast, Dumb and Going Nowhere

Speed, we were assured, kills the enemy. Victory belongs to the swift. Wars must be fought fast, finished faster and ideally wrapped up in time for the next election cycle. The longer they drag on, the more politically toxic and strategically incoherent they become. But once again, theory has collided with reality — and reality, as usual, has no interest in being tidy, televised or tactically convenient.

From Iraq to Afghanistan to Ukraine, the West’s ‘fast’ wars have displayed an unfortunate tendency to turn into drawn-out strategic purgatories. Initial momentum gives way to mission creep, political drift and tactical improvisation dressed up as doctrine. Tempo without purpose quickly devolves into noise. Being able to react faster doesn’t help much if you have no idea what you’re reacting to — or why.

What we’re left with is movement masquerading as progress. Digital velocity, for all its dashboards and situational awareness apps, is no match for old-fashioned things like strategic patience, industrial resilience or political staying power. The West has become excellent at starting wars quickly. It has rather less to show when it comes to finishing them.

Information Wars and the Hollow Victory

Few phrases have received more adoration in recent years than ‘information war’: the idea of gaining advantage by protecting access to information flows, while destroying and disrupting those of the adversary. Think tanks, officials and consultants alike have extolled the virtues of strategic communications, narrative shaping and viral content as if policy papers and social media posting could substitute for tanks.

Ukraine, by almost every Western measure, has won the information war hands-down: cinematic footage, clever memes and Zelensky’s branded defiance — all flawlessly packaged for global consumption. Most recently, this spectacle was crowned in early June by the daring drone strike against Russia’s strategic bomber fleet deep inside its own territory.

Launched from modified civilian lorry containers, the operation thrilled the op-ed writers but carried rather less charm for anyone concerned with nuclear stability, risking as it does, the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty and practically inviting Russian reprisals against Western targets. One can only hope Moscow — or any other future adversary — isn’t tempted to return the favour in kind. After all, there is a certain irony in Western commentators applauding such actions as bold and justified while assuming, quite serenely, that their own military bases will be sacrosanct.

But the point is though, that none of this moves the needle in Ukraine’s favour. It is Russia that occupies territory, fires more shells and steadily dictates the tempo of the war.

The paradox is hard to ignore: while Western commentators celebrated Kyiv’s narrative dominance and drone-delivered showmanship, Moscow focused on artillery. One side perfected the aesthetics of resistance; the other brought bulldozers and blasting tactics. It turns out that shaping perceptions doesn’t stop projectiles — and that going viral is no defence against shrapnel.

Winning the narrative, in other words, is not the same as winning the war. It may not even be relevant once the shells start falling.

The West’s Strategic Malaise: ‘Something Must Be Doneism’

Since the Cold War, Western wars have rarely been existential. They’ve been gestures — emotional reactions to tragedy, terrorism or televised horror. The political logic has been consistent, if not exactly strategic: be seen to act. It’s foreign policy as theatre — enough engagement to look principled, but not enough to get seriously hurt or to seriously imperil the national homeland.

The results speak for themselves. Libya, Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq — all launched with moral fanfare and media buzz, all ending in fatigue, withdrawal or the polite burying of lessons left unlearned.

Ukraine, however, is different. The stakes are higher. The adversary is stronger. And yet the habits remain the same. The West’s response has been a familiar mix: morally emphatic, logistically improvisational and industrially unsustainable. It’s as if NATO is attempting to wage a 20th-century land war on 21st-century terms — with 1990s stockpiles and attention spans measured in quarterly press briefings rather than prolonged campaigns.

In truth, many of these interventions seem designed less for the battlefield than for the curated stage of liberal respectability — crafted to win plaudits in opinion pages, panel discussions and policy forums where moral posturing always trumps material constraint. They are calibrated for the approval of the right-thinking, not the requirements of strategic success. Here, victory is optional, while virtue-signalling is mandatory.

Conclusion: Welcome to the Post-Post-Cold War

We were told the digital age would flatten borders, replace firepower with fibre optics and swap armies for narratives. Instead, we got trenches, mass mobilisation and a resurgent Eurasian bloc. It’s not quite the holographic future imagined by the PowerPoint prophets.

The West’s military models aren’t failing for lack of virtue, but because they’re built on expired assumptions. The future didn’t arrive on schedule — and the past, rather rudely, refused to stay buried.

What lessons emerge?

1.Industrial capacity matters: You can’t tweet your way to artillery shells.
2.Mass still wins wars: Precision is nice, but only if you have a lot of it.
3.Soft power is not eternal: A civilisation unsure of itself can’t expect others to follow its lead.
4.Digital illusions are just that: Cyberspace didn’t transcend the battlefield; it just added lag, disinformation and another excuse for inaction.

In the end, strategic success depends not on who reacts fastest or trends hardest, but on the dull, unglamorous verities that underlies modern war: production, patience and purpose.

And right now, those are in short supply west of the Dnieper.

https://natyliesbaldwin.com/2025/07/the ... delusions/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Thu Jul 17, 2025 12:01 pm

Azov and recruitment, the example of the Third Assault Brigade
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ July 17, 2025

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The foreign units of the Third Assault

The disappearance in action of a French citizen at the end of May 2025 illustrates the processes of change being observed in the integration of volunteer and mercenary personnel into the Armed Forces of Ukraine, and particularly in the Third Brigade, recently reconstituted as the Third Corps. The unit is led by Andriy Biletsky, Azov's main historical leader.

The disappearance in action of Eirik Coursier

Based largely on a previous report by Le Progrès , on June 6, Le Parisien devoted an article to the disappearance in action and probable death on the Ukrainian front of a French citizen, Eirik Coursier. Since September 2022, then sharing the life of a group of volunteer soldiers, Coursier began in Kharkiv the oft-reported path of an aspiring freelance reporter or photographer, eager to "show the reality" of Ukraine, who ends up joining a unit of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and dying shortly after on the front.

Le Parisien reports that Coursier's contacts in Ukraine included French citizens "volunteers on the front lines and journalists" whom he met again in that city around September 2024, during what would be his last vacation as a police deputy in France.

Kharkiv, however, was not his only destination on that trip to Ukraine. In his personal tribute to Coursier, freelance journalist Joseph Roche recounts his trip from Kyiv to Kharkiv that autumn of 2024, during which he picked up two passengers at the departure point: Frost, a Finnish woman, and Eirik Coursier. The then police deputy was heading to Izium and no longer considered himself a journalist but rather "a guy who comes to help." When asked about Roche, Coursier specified that the purpose of his visit to Izium was to see a group of "friends serving in Azov," referring to Andriy Biletsky's Third Assault Brigade. He had met them at the beginning of the war when he arrived, barely out of high school, in Kharkiv "to help and document." "We're still friends," he said. But those friends, charged with taking him to Izium, were not from his French circle in Kharkiv, but rather people who, during the technical stop they made in Kramatorsk, communicated with him in English.

Against Roche's wishes, who saw Coursier as a romantic who, far from the summer parties that attract Western youth, spent his holidays in Azov, 30 kilometers from the front, Eirik would end up enlisting a few weeks later in the Third Brigade. After his 2024 tour of Kharkiv and Izium, just a few dozen kilometers west of Borova, the central point of the Third Brigade's operations in the region, his desire to take up arms led him to take the plunge. After the mandatory general training period (lasting around eight weeks for those destined for the front), around February or March 2025, he joined, relying on his good command of English, what Le Parisien describes as "an English-speaking unit integrated into the Ukrainian army."

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Image by Eirik Coursier on Facebook

After a specific training period in that unit, lasting between a month and a half and two months, while awaiting the required infantry training certificate, barely turning 21, he joined his first "mission." On the second day, he was seriously injured after a Russian FPV drone attack on his group. His probable death came on May 28. Evacuation impossible in the face of the onslaught of drones, and with injuries incompatible with life, Coursier's unit comrades were forced to leave him behind. His family was aware that "he knew the risk; he had already lost friends there" and the type of dangerous missions that could await him, but according to his parents' statements to Le Parisien , "he was determined to go and help" the Azov Brigade.

From the available information it appears that Coursier died in fighting somewhere along the front line between Makeevka, in the extreme southeast of Lugansk Oblast , and Zarichne, a town located at the confluence of Kharkiv, Lugansk and Donetsk Oblasts and the only one where military reports place fighting around the date of Coursier's probable death.

The area between Makiivka and Zarichne is located in the central area of operations of the Third Assault Brigade, between Borova, in Kharkiv Oblast, and the strategic military outpost of Toretsk, in Donetsk Region. There are many reasons, including the Third Brigade's fighting for control of Nadiya in March, the death of Franco-Croatian Toni Herceg in May near Karmazynivka, and the very mention of Makeevka in the sources, to suggest that Coursier's disappearance in action occurred near the southwestern part of Luhansk Oblast, the last area with a real operational presence of the Ukrainian army in this region of Donbass.

The English-speaking recruits of the Third Brigade

Coursier's career illustrates the broader transformation of Andriy Biletsky's Third Brigade as it recast itself as the Third Corps of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, particularly with regard to the creation and integration of a number of foreign volunteer and mercenary units.

In a December 2024 Reddit post , one of the Third Brigade's recruiting advocates referred to the upcoming formation of a new grouping intended to integrate, from the end of January 2025, all of the Brigade's English-speaking soldiers, both those already recruited and new recruits who would join in the future. According to militaryland.net , this would be the International Rifle Battalion, which would integrate both the new English-speaking company and the one composed of Portuguese-speaking personnel. The English-speaking company would be composed, in particular, of English-speaking foreign personnel, especially Canadians, who previously served in the Brigade's Second Assault Company. The apparently strong demand from new recruit candidates and organizational difficulties would ultimately delay, however, the consolidation of the company until early April, which, de facto, would begin operating in May.

Given his limited level of military training but good English skills, it is likely that Coursier would join this new English-speaking unit of the Biletsky Brigade. Sources indicate that at the beginning of the year, the former French police deputy would join the First Rifle Battalion of the Third Azov Brigade, a battalion into which the new English-speaking company would initially be integrated, pending the creation of the planned International Battalion.

It is much less likely that Coursier would have joined the 3rd Brigade's other, all-English-speaking group, known as Tempest, which is made up of individuals with extensive combat experience in Ukraine. According to militaryland.net , it is a volunteer team made up of former members of Chosen Company, integrated into the brigade's Reconnaissance Battalion. The unit includes experienced combatants from English-speaking countries such as the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia, but also nationals from France, Germany, Argentina, and even Ukraine. It is composed primarily of veterans of the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Burma, and, after the start of full-scale war in 2022, Ukraine.

As a volunteer unit of entirely Swedish origin, Chosen Company was initially established as the 312th Volunteer Company of the Ukrainian Foreign Legion. In early 2023, it was renamed Chosen Company and joined the 59th Motorized Brigade of the Ukrainian Ground Forces. It is best known for its involvement on the Donetsk front, particularly in the village of Avdiivske (Pervomaiske). Tempest members from Chosen Company include the Korean-American sniper Khan , as well as other former leaders of the unit such as Dirty P or Mossy , known for their involvement in Operation Shovel over Pervomaiske in 2023.

According to militaryland.net , foreign recruits detached from Chosen Company joined the 3rd Assault Brigade's Tempest group between late November and early December 2024, likely seeking a more effective support structure than that offered by the 59th Brigade. Given its effective role as special forces, the new Tempest group seeks recruits with extensive military experience in reconnaissance and penetration operations, generally soldiers of fortune who have served in this century's major wars.

The Latin units: Hispanic Storm and Serpent

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But the Third Brigade's activities have not been limited to the usual integration of English-speaking volunteers or mercenaries, but have expanded to other groups of soldiers, particularly in Latin America. Thus, in March 2025, the creation of the Hispana Storm Assault Battalion took effect, reflected both on militaryland.net and by the unit's presence on Instagram and TikTok, with the first videos published throughout that month.

However, the initiative dates back to before, as a Facebook page project was launched on September 26, 2024. The recruitment process for the Spanish-speaking unit, which at the time featured heavily Colombian recruit leaders in Ukraine, such as the man known as Lieutenant Vegeta, began in October 2024, primarily through TikTok.

Earlier this year, information was published about the creation of a Portuguese-speaking company, the Serpente Company, which had already been mentioned in January as a company intended to be included in the International Battalion alongside the English-speaking company. Its presence on social media was first confirmed in an Instagram post on February 4, 2025, calling for the recruitment of Brazilian and Portuguese-speaking volunteers. This is the only Portuguese-speaking company in Ukraine and is composed of Brazilian combatants with military experience in operations abroad, having participated in the war in Ukraine since at least 2023.

Current trends

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Behind these movements, one can see the aspiration of Andriy Biletsky's new Third Corps to incorporate and restructure, through the formation of units based on linguistic criteria, the groups of foreign recruits who have distinguished themselves most throughout the Ukrainian war. This distinction can be linked both to previous military experience in other units, as is the case with the members of the Chosen Company, or to the ability to control the recruitment process, particularly in the case of the Spanish Storm.

This capacity for control is precisely what characterizes the main leaders of the Colombian recruits who were integrated at the time into Karpatska Sich, the 204th Separate Battalion of the Kyiv Territorial Defense (Brigade 241), or the 59th Motorized Infantry Brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. They are, in fact, the main recruiting and commanding references in these groups (among them the Colombian commander and instructor in Battalion 2004, known on TikTok as focolatino, and Vegeta, the Latino leader in Karpatska Sich, a unit from which Lieutenant Arcángel also hails) who converge in the configuration and consolidation of Tormenta Hispana. In this process, it is not surprising to see the Chosen Company's own links with some Colombian volunteer and mercenary units, specifically within the 59th Brigade.

In addition to the Biletsky Brigade's privileged position in terms of access to military resources provided by NATO countries, one of the main reasons for the convergence within the Third Brigade is its adherence to the organizational model, which, according to its promoters, is far removed from the "Soviet" way of thinking that still characterizes much of the Ukrainian armed forces' leadership, a model of military action that expects greater protection for combatants. The Chosen Company, like the Colombian groups affiliated with the 59th Brigade, has been noted in the past for its high level of casualties in combat operations.

The commitment to controlling the best reconnaissance and assault units, made up of foreign volunteers or mercenaries, characterizes, in a broader sense, the configuration of the new Corps of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. In addition to the Third Brigade within the Third Corps, other Ukrainian units have begun forming specialized international battalions, including the 12th Azov Brigade of the National Guard of Ukraine, led by Denis Prokopenko. This brigade began restructuring its Third Battalion at the end of December 2024 and will incorporate new foreign recruits from that date, officially forming the Third International Battalion.

These trends, linked to the conversion of the Third and Twelfth Brigades, both direct heirs of the Azov movement, into Corps, demonstrate the growing military and organizational power of military formations that constitute de facto true armies, sometimes similar in size and capabilities to those of major European countries. These Ukrainian formations, historically linked to the local far right, will be reinforced in their reconnaissance, assault, and trench warfare actions by the incorporation into their ranks of the most active combat units made up of foreign personnel. The observed military power will necessarily be reflected in the political dimension, as reflected by the recent appointment by the Zelensky government of a veteran of Azov and the Third Brigade, Oleksandr Alferov, as head of the Ukrainian Institute of National Remembrance.

All of this does not, however, guarantee that the high risk of premature death in the missions to which units staffed by foreign personnel are assigned will be resolved. The protection promised by the Azov forces, in their discourse of post-Soviet military organization, was also ineffective for inexperienced recruits like Eirik Coursier, who disappeared in the first days of his effective combat action and, according to his unit comrades, probably died after being abandoned to his fate in the borderlands of Donbas.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/17/azov- ... de-asalto/

Google Translator

*****

From Cassad's telegram account:

Colonelcassad
1:17
Kiev is preparing another provocation with the dropping of containers with toxic chemicals on the positions of the Russian Armed Forces, said the head of the NBC Protection Troops, Major General Alexey Rtishchev.

On July 3, the militants of the Ukrainian Armed Forces placed antenna-mast equipment at the ammonia distribution point in the area of the Novotroitsk antenna-mast equipment. This enterprise is a first-class hazard facility, and if it is blown up , more than 550 tons of liquid ammonia could be released into the environment .

"The expectation is that our country will be subsequently accused of deliberately creating a man-made disaster and causing reputational damage to the Russian Federation. Let me remind you that the use of a high-risk facility for military purposes is a violation of international humanitarian law ," General Rtishchev noted at a briefing.

Since the beginning of 2025, the Ukrainian Armed Forces have been regularly dropping containers with the substance "CS" and homemade ammunition with chloropicrin on the positions of the Russian Armed Forces using drones. Such facts were noted in the area of the village of Liman Perviy in the Kharkiv region and the village of Kolotilovka in the Belgorod region.

In addition, the Kiev regime, with the support of the West, has not abandoned the barbaric tactics of the "chemical belt" - militants place and detonate containers with toxic chemicals in combat areas.

@projectrhbz

***

Colonelcassad
Another exchange of the dead took place.
Russia took another 19 bodies of our fallen soldiers.
Another 1,000 killed Ukrainian soldiers were handed over to the enemy

***

Colonelcassad
A forcibly conscripted Ukrainian shot two Ukrainian Armed Forces sergeants as soon as he got his hands on an AK-74

The man, who was "busified" somewhere in the vast expanses of Nezalezhnaya, was brought to a training ground in the Chernihiv region. There they began to explain how to shoot: he quickly learned the science.

"Soldier Koshel B. E., for a motive that is currently unknown, grabbed the AK-74M assault rifle, brought it to a combat position and fired shots in the direction of Senior Sergeant Kryshtal D. O., Chief Sergeant Rekunenko O. L., Senior Sergeant Skripka D. O.," the incident report says.

As a result , two Ukrainian Armed Forces sergeants were killed, the third managed to dodge. What happened to the soldier who shot is unknown.

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

******

Brief Frontline Report – July 15th, 2025

Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Jul 15, 2025

Konstantinovka-Toretsk Direction

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "The Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov congratulated the command and personnel of the 1465th Motorized Rifle Regiment on the liberation of the settlement of Petrovka (Novospasskoye) in the Donetsk People's Republic."

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ЛБС 09.4.2025=Line of Combat Contact April 9th, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

The village of Petrovka (approximately 1,000 residents) is located on the left bank of the Krivoy Torets River and is part of an agglomeration of settlements stretching continuously from north to south, starting from the city of Konstantinovka: Ivanopolye – Pleshcheevka – Kleban Byk – Katerinovka – Shcherbinovka (on the east bank) – Petrovka – Leonidovka – Nelepovka – Novgorodskoe (Ukrainian: New York, Novhorodskoe on the map).

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ЛБС 02.5.2025=Line of Combat Contact May 2nd, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

For nearly a year, Russian forces have been gradually advancing from south to north, liberating settlements in this agglomeration—an area heavily fortified by the Armed Forces of Ukraine for many years with strongholds, weaponry, and logistical infrastructure. The terrain is complex and rugged, crisscrossed by rivers, tributaries, watersheds, ravines, and extended gullies. At the center of the southern front lies the Kleban Byk Reservoir, which serves as a key defensive anchor for several AFU positions.

The advance through such challenging terrain was achieved by securing and expanding flanks, launching multi-directional strikes, and coordinating efforts across all branches of the armed forces.

The liberation of Petrovka effectively seals the fate of Shcherbinovka. Simultaneously, continuous pressure is being applied to the left flank of the AFU’s Kleban Byk defensive hub—targeting the settlements of Yablonovka and Aleksandro-Kalinovo. There is also a high likelihood of activity on the right flank (Dyleevka – Belaya Gora – Aleksandro-Shultino), which would force the AFU to withdraw its forces toward the Berestok-Ivanopolye area, ultimately collapsing the Kleban Byk defensive node—a critical anchor for enemy defenses near Dzerzhynsk (Toretsk).

South Donetsk Direction

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "Servicemen of the 37th Motorized Rifle Brigade (part of the "East" Group) broke through enemy defenses on the western bank of the Mokrye Yaly River and liberated the village of Voskresenka in the Donetsk People's Republic."

Image
ЛБС 31.10.2024=Line of Combat Contact October 31st, 2024. ЛБС 01.01.2025=Line of Combat Contact January 1st, 2025. ЛБС 01.02.2025=Line of Combat Contact February 1st, 2025. ЛБС 01.3.2025=Line of Combat Contact March 1st, 2025. Продвижение после предыдущей сводки=Progress since the previous summary. Граница областей=Oblast Border*.

Without losing momentum, the "East" units—advancing practically on the heels of the retreating enemy—are pushing forward across a 4-kilometer-wide front toward the Russian state border. The liberated village of Voskresenka (around 500 residents) is the last settlement before the border with Dnepropetrovsk Oblast in this area.

Image
ЛБС 31.10.2024=Line of Combat Contact October 31st, 2024. ЛБС 30.11.2024=Line of Combat Contact November 30th, 2024. ЛБС 01.01.2025=Line of Combat Contact January 1st, 2025. ЛБС 01.4.2025=Line of Combat Contact April 1st, 2025.

To the north, pressure is mounting on the Zeleny Gai and Novokhatskoye defense areas. Once these are neutralized, the Tolstoy-K. Marksa frontline sector will advance even further toward the border. Subsequently, the previously quiet Shevchenko-Kamyshevakha axis is expected to "come back to life."

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-15th

******

Democracy dies in Ukraine?

Russiagate reverberates. Yermak's meetings with Alexander Soros. Failure of the struggle against corruption, victory of the scam call centers.
Events in Ukraine
Jul 15, 2025

Yesterday we took a look at the sordid story of Sir Shabunin. Until recently, the USAID/Open Society Foundation-sponsored ‘anti-corruption activist’ was protected from the responsibility to fight at the frontlines. He, like other such ‘activists’, were protected by their patrons in the Democratic Party.

Image
Shabunin (far right) in happier days. To his left is virulent Poroshenko-allied Sorosite journalist Yury Butusov. Blinken is in the middle, and on the far left is US ambassador Bridget Brink, with whom Zelensky was constantly unhappy due to her support for semi-oppositional figures like Shabunin.

But unfortunately for the cause of Democracy, one senile boomer was replaced with another over in Washington at the start of this year. Mr Trump has quite the distaste for Ukrainian liberal thought-warriors like Shabunin.

And not simply for aesthetic reasons. Here’s a clue why. Shabunin and his fellow crew of embattled ‘anti-corruption warriors’ have been fixated on the leadership of the Bureau of Economic Security (BES). They have been enraged by Zelensky’s refusal to appoint a certain Oleksandr Tsyvinsky to head the anti-corruption organ. The ‘foreign experts’ who have decisive votes in choosing such officials cast their lot for Tsyvinsky to head BES, though the Ukrainian cabinet prevented him from assuming the position on July 7.

Image

But who is Tsyvinsky, and how is he related to Trump?

Well, the Ukrainian publication strana.ua cites its sources in law enforcement (strana is allied with the most long-lived sections of the Ukrainian deep state), who claim that Tsyvinsky took part in the fabrication of the Manafort saga - ‘Russiagate’ - back in 2016.

This is not very difficult to believe, since Tsyvinsky was at the time head of the second department of NABU detectives. The NABU (National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine) is an organ set up in 2015 on the money and urging of USAID and the Open Society Foundation. I wrote here in detail about the major role the NABU played in the Manafort saga at the beck and call of its Democrat benefactors. It was Tsyvinsky’s department that was involved in ‘releasing’ the materials related to Paul Manafort.

Back then, the aim was to tar Trump as a Russian agent, thereby forestalling any possible rapprochement between Moscow and Washington. Luckily for the likes of Shabunin, Tsyvinsky, and the Democrats, they succeeded, and Ukraine is now a large scale testing ground for western weapons. A great win for democracy.

Unfortunately, with Zelensky on the offensive against the great Shabunin, democracy is now in mortal threat. Given the lack of response from western capitals, it could even be said to be dying in darkness.

Though I must say, Shabunin seems quite far from the ‘physical liquidation’ he constantly accuses Zelensky of planning. He still found the time, for instance, to talk to Ukrainska Pravda reporters for an hour today. I tried to listen to the whole thing, but I’ll be honest, sometimes a mental health break is necessary.

Image

In any case, why has the Office of the President decided on this course of action, and what are the implications for the fading light of Democracy? Will Alexander Soros continue his friendship with Zelensky’s head of administration Yermak, and what does this all have to do with Ukrainian scam call centers and the suicides of key Russian officials? And why are some Ukrainian nazi militarists declaring their jealousy of Russian tactics in the struggle against corruption?

(Paywall with free option.)

https://eventsinukraine.substack.com/p/ ... in-ukraine

Zelensky REPRESSES Brave Sorosite Activists!

Free World Over! Shabunin down! BH Lévy, T Snyder, Zhadan and Vakarchuk at the frontlines! '
Events in Ukraine
Jul 14, 2025

‘And they mock the fools who are dying in the East instead of enjoying life in the capital.’

Image

Writing this substack can be somewhat dispiriting. However, I’m glad to announce that today we have a relatively happy ending.

Vitaliy Shabunin, one of Ukraine’s most notorious grant-feeder ‘Sorosites’ - or, as they’d rather call themselves ‘independent anti-corruption warriors’ - has been sent to the front by our beloved comic-in-chief!

Or rather, the honorable Activist’s false claims of serving at the frontlines have been disproven, and law enforcement has now actually forced him to leave his Kyiv restaurants and anti-corruption conferences for the muddy trenches of the Kharkiv oblast…

Or, as the Activists put it, the mini-Putin has set the country on the path of ‘corrupt authoritarianism’. Goodness, no!

I’ve taken the time to curate, translate, and editorialize a range of Ukrainian media content on this succulent saga. Many of these posts were written by Volodymyr Boiko, an actually-serving Ukrainian journalist who I must describe with great admiration as one of the greatest haters of all time. I decided that I wanted my readers to have just as encyclopedic a knowledge of the Shabunin saga as he does. Indeed, it has been through his efforts that Shabunin has been brought to justice (at least, so it seems).

Besides Boiko’s struggle, we’ll learn about how Shabunin’s family have been enjoying themselves on Czech and American taxpayer money while he receives income and a vehicle from a military unit he never fought in. His top fellow USAID-funded warrior against corruption also used her connections to smuggle her husband out of the country to avoid mobilization, while simultaneously shaming working class men for not fighting hard enough.

We’ll even encounter intellectual titans like Timothy Snyder, Francis Fukuyama, and Bernard-Henri Lévy. Their eastern counterparts, Ukraine’s virulently nationalist ‘culture warriors’, have made the armed forces into a playpen for them to entertain their delusions of being actual warriors. A man named none other than Ostap Ukrainets has even been appointed ‘military representative in the office of the language ombudsman’.’.

Let me first explain why it’s impossible to resist a smile at the mobilization of the western-funded liberal nationalists. They have spent the past decade or so abusing most of Ukraine’s population for its insufficient patriotism, doing their best to collapse the country’s industry (particularly the military industrial complex), forcing through endless neoliberal shock therapy, and generally playing the avant-garde role of transforming Ukraine into a concentration camp-kamikaze country for western interests. This has all been done against the wishes of the majority of the country, who the Sorosites despise as uneducated crypto-commies.

(Paywall with free option.)

https://eventsinukraine.substack.com/p/ ... e-sorosite

******

Russia Rejects Trump’s Ultimatum on Ukraine

Image
X/ @Circonscripti18

July 16, 2025 Hour: 8:03 am

The Russian Foreign Ministry condemned the weapon deliveries as evidence that NATO countries are not interested in peace.
On Tuesday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov rejected U.S. President Donald Trump’s 50-day ultimatum to agree to an Ukraine ceasefire, dismissing the threat of “severe tariffs” as unacceptable.

Ryabkov emphasized that Moscow favors a diplomatic resolution to the Ukraine conflict and is ready to negotiate. “However, if this is not met with a proper response, if we cannot reach our set goals through diplomacy, then the special military operation will go on,” he continued.

“We expect Washington and NATO to take this seriously,” Ryabkov stressed, pointing out that his country’s position is unshakable.

Trump on Tuesday denied earlier allegations that he encouraged Kiev to strike deep into Russian territory, saying that he isn’t taking sides in the conflict and advised Ukraine “shouldn’t target Moscow” with long-range weapons.


Just one day before the clarification, Trump said at the Oval Office that the U.S. will send weapons to Ukraine through NATO, and threatened “severe tariffs” targeting Russia if a ceasefire deal is not reached in 50 days. He said some of the first Patriot missile systems could arrive in Ukraine “within days.”

The Russian Foreign Ministry condemned the weapon deliveries as evidence that NATO countries are not interested in peace.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said Trump’s reference to 100 percent secondary tariffs meant “economic sanctions.”

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s parliament on Tuesday voted to extend the country’s wartime status and military mobilization for another 90 days, through Nov. 5. Lawmakers also approved a temporary withdrawal from the Ottawa Convention, an international treaty that prohibits the use of anti-personnel landmines.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/russia-r ... n-ukraine/

******

Deadly purple rays
July 16, 21:08

Image

Deadly purple rays

( https://telegra.ph/file/002d8de709656e25844ef.jpg ) Paustovsky - Russian or Ukrainian?
"My father laughed at his hetman origins and said that our grandfathers and great-grandfathers were ordinary farmers."
Paustovsky is one of the brilliant graduates of the First Kiev Gymnasium and the University of St. Vladimir. Although Konstantin Georgievich was born in Moscow. Only the hero of his notes from 100 years ago could call Paustovsky Ukrainian.

LIKE THIS:

"The people of Kiev made the "independent" government a target for an unheard-of number of jokes. The people of Kiev were especially amused by the fact that the operetta haidamaks walked along Khreshchatyk with stepladders, climbed on them, took down all the Russian signs and hung Ukrainian ones instead."
"Petliura brought with him the so-called Galician language - quite heavy and full of borrowings from neighboring languages."
"Under Petliura, everything seemed deliberate - both the Haidamaks, and the language, and all his policies, and the gray-moustached chauvinist citizens who crawled out of their dusty holes in huge numbers.
" "Everything in the city was arranged to look like old-world Ukraine, right down to the gingerbread stall. It was unclear whether something serious was happening or whether a play was being played out."
"Rumors acquired a new essence. They turned into a means of self-assurance, into the strongest narcotic medicine. People found hope for the future only in rumors. Even outwardly, the people of Kiev began to resemble morphine addicts."
"When the Soviet regiments approached Kiev, the order of the Petliura commandant was announced. It was said that deadly violet rays, provided to Petliura by the French military authorities through the "friend of free Ukraine" French consul Enno, would be launched against the Bolsheviks."


OIL PAINTING.

As if it was written about our damned days. Cretinism, gossip, javelins, lend-lease, leopards and abrams, cocoinum, F-16 and French violet rays. Society, which in the USSR was provided with a water closet, an 8-hour work day, trade union vouchers and higher education, quickly stood up on all fours, barked, began to break monuments, feed on carrion, shoot up sullenly, and from below they drummed all the time.

(c) M.Ravreba

https://t.me/Ravreba/9838 - zinc

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9958721.html

European Outsourcers and the War in Ukraine
July 16, 19:15

Image

European Outsourcers and the War in Ukraine

The plans to help Ukraine announced by Trump ( https://russian.rt.com/world/article/15 ... ie-ukraina ) turned out to be quite discouraging for the European satellites of the United States, despite the initial ostentatious satisfaction. If in Europe ( https://russian.rt.com/world/news/15077 ... vy-rossiya ) they hoped that Trump would at least partially return to Biden's course with direct deliveries of American weapons, the reality turned out to be completely different.

Trump made it clear that the United States will complete the delivery of the remaining batches of weapons, equipment and ammunition under the "Biden package" of November - December 2024, which is coming to an end. And part of the deliveries to Ukraine is, in fact, the unblocking of frozen deliveries, which were twice stopped by the head of the Pentagon, Hegseth, under the pretext of observing American interests and replenishing arsenals. That is, there will be no more free deliveries to Ukraine. At the same time, there are a number of American weapons - air defense systems, missiles of various types, communication systems - that Europe is not able to replace. The United States knows about this dependence of Europe and Ukraine on American systems, so they act emphatically from a position of strength, simply presenting their satellites with the fact of an already made decision, leaving the main trump cards in their hands.

As an alternative, Trump proposed buying weapons and ammunition from the United States. At market value. Some of the announced 17 Patriot air defense systems ( https://t.me/rt_russian/248922 ) are already actually in service with Germany and a number of other countries ( https://russian.rt.com/world/news/15078 ... izh-berlin ) NATO air defense systems, which must be transferred to Ukraine and compensated for by purchasing new air defense systems of this type and batches of missiles for them from the United States. At the same time, the cost of air defense systems and missiles for them has been steadily growing in recent years due to increased demand in various theaters of military operations. In fact, the United States is presenting its European satellites with a fait accompli: they need not only to increase defense spending ( https://russian.rt.com/world/news/15078 ... p-es-obman ) to 5% of GDP (in Europe, this has been stretched out until 2035), but also to further increase spending on financing Ukraine, giving the American military-industrial complex (and primarily the Raytheon Corporation) the opportunity to take an additional margin from these supplies. There is no longer any talk of an equal contribution from the United States and Europe - the Trump administration is proposing that Europe outsource almost all funding for the war in Ukraine while the United States reorients itself to confronting China.

Therefore, it is not surprising that a number of NATO countries have already officially refused to participate ( https://t.me/rt_russian/249142) in this scheme. France and Italy said their "no", directly indicating that there is no money for this, and these states do not want to take out additional loans. It can be expected that several more countries will refuse to participate in this, although Britain, a number of Scandinavian countries, Poland and the Baltics will most likely purchase weapons for Ukraine even on credit, since the funds of national budgets will not be enough.

The bifurcation point in this issue will be the fate of the tariff war ( https://russian.rt.com/world/article/15 ... y-politika ) between the US and the EU. If a compromise option is not reached and Trump introduces 30% duties on goods from the EU from August 1, and Europe responds, then the scheme with the sale of weapons to Europe may be called into question. Trump intends to seek concessions from Europe both on the issue of tariffs and on the issue of shifting the financing of the war in Ukraine to the Old World. Europe would like to avoid this, but economic problems and general political, economic and military dependence on the United States make its position in negotiations with Trump obviously weaker.

At the same time, it is worth remembering that these disagreements within the Western camp are of a tactical and methodological nature. On the issue of "containing Russia," the West remains largely united, so there is no point in harboring unnecessary illusions about stopping arms supplies to Ukraine. The United States is simply optimizing this issue in its own interests, and the costs to Europe and Ukraine do not bother them too much.

(c) specially for RT

https://t.me/special_authors/7933 - zinc

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9958643.html

Google Translator
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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blindpig
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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Fri Jul 18, 2025 11:46 am

Political changes
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 07/18/2025

Image

Feeling invincible once again after Donald Trump's announcement of the 50-day ultimatum to Russia, Ukraine has taken advantage of this week, which, in its exaggerated triumphalism, it considers the turning point of the war, to implement the political changes that have been expected for some time. Although Zelensky's authoritarian tendencies predate the Russian invasion, over the past three years, he has blatantly attempted to accumulate power in a few hands by taking advantage of the state of emergency, the prominence of the military, and the impunity granted by the staunch defense of the West, which has seen in the current president the ideal proxy to lead the war. With the Rada subjugated by demands for loyalty to the president, equating him with the homeland, and with the resignation by decree of those deputies whom Zelensky deemed useful as a scapegoat for exemplary punishment that would threaten any potential dissident, examples of political opposition have been few and far between since February 2022.

Although it is assumed that, once Zelensky initiates an electoral process after the end of the war, Valery Zaluzhny will announce his candidacy, the former army chief has yet to make any significant political statements. Moreover, the only opposition, sporadic and limited by his limited political and rhetorical skills, has been Vitaly Klitschko, the current mayor of Kyiv, whose clash with the government predates the Russian invasion and stems from an attempt by Zelensky and his circle to limit his power in the capital. In media terms, criticism has also been scarce, partly due to the perception of disloyalty with which any criticism is presented, but also due to threats from power. However, the lack of interest in actively monitoring the power struggles that persist in the country, precisely to avoid breaking with the rhetoric of Ukrainian unity, does not make the disputes between the different power groups present in the country disappear. Sometimes, these shadowy battles, which seek to position members of various oligarchic families, active members of the liberal NGO complex with Western connections, or members of the most well-established groups of the nationalist far right, manage to reach the media to accuse Zelensky of the worst of sins: his resemblance to Russia. Illustrated with a close-up of a malicious-eyed Zelensky, The Kiev Independent published a lengthy report this week urging the president to stop moving down a path that would lead the country to become like authoritarian Russia.

“The Ukrainian government has been renewed, and starting today, government officials must begin implementing their assigned tasks. I thank all the parliamentarians who supported the candidacies of the prime minister, deputy prime ministers, and ministers,” Zelensky wrote yesterday, welcoming the changes and announcing those that will take place over the coming days. The appointment of Ukraine's new ambassador to the United States is still pending. The big question is whether Andriy Ermak will achieve his most difficult objective: the removal of Kirilo Budanov as head of military intelligence, a plan that The Economist announced last week as part of Ermak's work to concentrate power.

Too striking to be mentioned by some media outlets, such as France 24 , who are asking whether it is a question of "more control?" for the president's inner circle and, above all, for his right-hand man, the change in the government's composition responds to the need to position loyalists of Zelensky and his right-hand man, Andriy Ermak, at the top of the government's most important positions, and above all, those whose work is aimed at deepening relations with the United States. With war as the raison d'être of the Ukrainian state, the government, the President's Office, and Zelensky's inner circle have two fundamental tasks: to maintain complete political control in view of future electoral processes and to secure the support of the United States in economic and military terms, as well as backing in preparing for the return to politics.

Despite the growing certainty of the authoritarianism of the small circle that controls all power in Ukraine, there has been little analysis of the significance of Svyrydenko's appointment, who during his recent trip to the United States acted as a front for Andriy Ermak. "Ukraine undergoes major ministerial reshuffle and appoints new prime minister," was the headline, for example, in RFI , which specified, despite the appearance of the headline, that it is "a rather internal reshuffle, since, according to martial law, and with the aim of ensuring institutional stability despite the state of emergency, the cabinet should not be dissolved." There are minimal, and always superficial, mentions of the concentration of power in the President's Office, which is beyond any control by the already paralyzed Verkhovna Rada. “Zelensky's rivals have long accused him of trying to consolidate power, and some critical media outlets claim that Svyrydenko's appointment marks the latest step in this trend. She is seen as loyal to Andriy Ermak, Zelensky's powerful chief of staff,” wrote France 24 , the most critical of the European media outlets, in the final section of its article yesterday.

Svyrydenko meets all the requirements to meet the needs of Ukraine and Volodymyr Zelensky at this time. Young, an expert in “antimonopoly”—that is, in reducing the state's presence in the economy—and a privatizer, Svyrydenko is exactly the technocratic profile that the European Union and the international institutions that support the Ukrainian state expect so that it can continue fighting on the front lines. Making clear what her priorities will be, the new prime minister declared that “war does not allow for delays. We must act quickly and decisively. Our priorities for the first six months are clear: reliable supplies for the army, expansion of domestic arms production, and technological strengthening of our defense forces. This same urgency must apply to the economy, while we make every effort to support Ukrainian entrepreneurs. In this regard, we need swift and tangible actions: comprehensive deregulation, an end to illegal pressure on businesses, the acceleration of large-scale privatization, and the greater implementation of effective support tools.” Deregulation, privatization, and support for business have been the foundations of Volodymyr Zelensky's economic policy since 2019, a country ideologically closer to Javier Milei than to any of his European counterparts. Unlike the other countries directly or indirectly participating in the war and opting for various forms of military Keynesianism, Ukraine, whose war effort is being generously financed from abroad, has seen the war as a suitable setting for deepening these ultra-liberal policies aimed at eliminating the few vestiges of the social state it inherited from the Soviet Union.

Aside from her economic policy, Svyrydenko's relationship with the White House is a testament to her commitment to the minerals agreement with the United States, a secret section of which has not been read even by the members of the Rada who ratified it. The new prime minister comes to the post with the important background of a good relationship with the United States. Svyrydenko, a former deputy head of the President's Office and very close to Andriy Ermak, provides the control Zelensky believes he needs, but without the pushback that, according to media outlets such as Politico and The Economist , Andriy Ermak currently provokes, perceived as excessively arrogant by the establishment of both parties.

Preparing the ground to maintain political control beyond a (perhaps distant) future ceasefire and consolidating a completely privatized economy tailored to businesses rather than the population are long-term objectives currently subordinated to the war. Immediacy rules, and day-to-day operations currently depend on securing sufficient military supplies and political and diplomatic support to continue fighting Russia on the military and economic fronts. All of this currently depends not on Brussels or other European capitals, even though they are already the main supplier to the Ukrainian Armed Forces, but on the United States, which can supply the most important weapons—long-range missiles and air defense systems—and the most coveted sanctions. In this sense, Olha Stefanshyna's transfer from the post of Deputy Prime Minister for European and Euro-Atlantic Integration to her new appointment is representative. "I have signed a decree appointing Olha Stefanishyna as the Special Representative of the President of Ukraine for the Development of Cooperation with the United States of America. In this role, Olha will work to maintain the momentum in our relations with the United States while all necessary procedures are completed to approve her nomination to Washington as Ukraine's ambassador to the United States." The most important relationship is no longer with the European Union or even NATO, but with the White House.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/18/cambios-politicos/

Google Translator

******

From Cassad's telegram account:

Colonelcassad
The shelling of Energodar and the region's power equipment by the Ukrainian Armed Forces did not affect the operation of the Zaporizhzhya NPP, the radiation background is within normal limits, the press service of the plant reported.

A civilian was injured due to the shelling of the Zaporizhzhya NPP satellite town of Energodar by the Ukrainian Armed Forces, the mayor reported.

IAEA inspectors were informed about the Ukrainian shelling.

***

Another lair of man-catchers has been struck in the Kamensky district of the Dnipropetrovsk region.
The SBU continues to threaten those who inform the Russian military about the location of the TCC. However, the amount of information from Ukrainian citizens about the location of the TCC continues to increase, becoming part of the passive resistance to the man-catchers.

***

Colonelcassad
Permanent representatives of the EU countries have agreed on the 18th package of sanctions against Russia, which will include restrictions on banks, Kallas said.

The new package of EU sanctions includes a reduction in the price ceiling for oil from Russia to about $47.6 per barrel, Reuters writes.

Since December 2022, the G7, the EU and Australia have introduced a price ceiling for Russian oil at $60 per barrel: it is prohibited to transport and insure more expensive oil.

And the head of EU diplomacy said that new sanctions against Russia will affect Rosneft's refineries in India.

***

Colonelcassad
During the night, the air defense intercepted and destroyed 73 Ukrainian drones.

Of these, 31 UAVs were over the Bryansk region, 17 over the Oryol region, 10 over the Moscow region, four over the Republic of Crimea, three over the Azov Sea, two over the Smolensk and Nizhny Novgorod regions, and one over the Belgorod, Kaluga, Voronezh regions, as well as over the Black Sea.

Temporary restrictions on the operation of airports were introduced in Nizhny Novgorod, Vnukovo, Domodedovo and Zhukovsky. At this moment, they have all been lifted.

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

******

Brief Frontline Report – July 17th, 2025
Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Zinderneuf
Jul 18, 2025
Kharkov Direction

Image
Активность=Activity. Буферная Зона=Buffer Zone. ЛБС 17.7.2025=Line of Combat Contact July 17th, 2025.

The village of Degtyarnoye (50°26′26″N, 37°27′18″E, approximately 70 residents, Dehtyarnoe on the map), reported as liberated by the Russian Forces according to the Ministry of Defense, is a small settlement at the northernmost protrusion of Russia’s state border with Ukraine’s Kharkov Oblast.

Four kilometers to the south flows the Volchya River, while to the west, at roughly the same distance from the border, lies the village of Tikhoe (Tyhoe on the map, just to the east of Volchansk).

The main groupings of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in this area are concentrated near the city of Volchansk. The border is guarded by small groups of border troops. The Degtyarnoye–Krugloye–Budarki–Zemlyanki sector is secured by one border detachment. The nearest regular AFU military units are located approximately 30 kilometers to the west.

The Russian Armed Forces (likely) will establish a buffer zone along this segment of the state border, following the right bank of the Volchya River (Wolves River on the map, look slightly north of Varvarovka, it runs all the way to Volchansk) in the direction of Degtyarnoye–Tikhoe. Simultaneously, they will draw upon the already overstretched AFU reserves, which are spread thin. There are several other sections of the border (in this direction) where Russian units may advance into Ukrainian territory.

"Foundations" will be laid, serving as anchor points for Russian forces in forming the buffer zone as the situation develops. In other words, these are the familiar "wedges" driven into "bedrock," destined to fracture the "granite" of AFU defenses.

As for the sequence and timing of these wedges being driven in—that will be a surprise for Ukraine’s leaders.

Additionally, the Kharkov Oblast area centered around the village of Veliky Burluk (south of the area depicted in this map, in closer to the Kupyansk direction) is being carefully encircled from multiple directions. This area is critical for sustaining two AFU defensive fronts: Volchansk and the northern Kupyansk sector.

Konstantinovka Direction

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "Units of the "Center" Group have liberated the settlement of Popov Yar in the Donetsk People’s Republic."

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ЛБС 02.5.2025=Line of Combat Contact May 2nd, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

The village of Popov Yar (48°25′07″N, 37°27′27″E, approximately 120 residents) lies at the center of a key route connecting AFU defensive strongholds in this sector: the agglomeration of Shakhovo and Vladimirovka to the west, and Yablonovka–Aleksandro-Kalinovo to the east. By securing Popov Yar, Russian forces have split the AFU’s defensive bloc yet again.

Now, the supply and coordination between the flanks of the AFU’s defensive line—Konstantinovka–Pokrovsk (Krasnoarmeysk)—will have to follow a longer radius: Sofiyevka–Dlinnaya Balka–Konstantinovka. The direct distance from Popov Yar to Konstantinovka is about 8 kilometers, well within reach of both artillery and UAVs.

The AFU’s defensive front is being methodically and relentlessly fragmented into isolated sections before being destroyed. This process is only accelerating.

Zaporozhye Direction

Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov congratulated the command and personnel of the 7th Guards Mountain Air Assault Division on the liberation of the settlement of Kamenskoye in Zaporozhye Oblast.

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ЛБС 01.10.2024=Line of Combat Contact October 1st, 2024. ЛБС 01.01.2025=Line of Combat Contact January 1st, 2025. Активность=Activity.

The village of Kamenskoye (47°32′23″N, 35°22′17″E, approximately 2,500 residents) is located at the confluence of the Yanchekrak River and the Kakhovka Reservoir.

By securing this settlement, the Russian military command is establishing a bridgehead to control a section of Zaporozhye Oblast, bounded by the Konka River from its inflow into the Kakhovka Reservoir near the village of Malokaterinovka (map below), extending through Kamyshevakha–Tavriyskoye–Orekhov, encircling Orekhov from the west, and advancing toward the southern approaches of the regional center—Zaporozhye.

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ЛБС 03.3.2025=Line of Combat Contact March 3rd, 2025. Активность=Activity.

As on neighboring fronts, this objective will be achieved by fracturing AFU defenses—"driving wedges" along the entire line of engagement and stretching their reserves into the familiar "splits."

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-17th

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Army life

Fragging and drugs. Desertion, discipline and punishment. Blocking detachments, penal battalions, and hundreds of bodies.
Events in Ukraine
Jul 16, 2025

It feels like the end of an era. The ecosystem of liberal nationalist activists sponsored and protected by the Democratic Party, the Open Society Foundation, and a host of EU governments since 2014 is being harshly disciplined by Generalissimo Zelensky. And all without a peep from their old patrons.

But the more things change, the more things stay the same. The liberals have long lived far away from the real world, one ruled by the gun, not the pen.

In a sign of the times, a man who threw a grenade at police in Bucha was shot and killed on July 12. He managed to wound five officers. They were called to the scene after the man’s 18 year old daughter called complaining of threats to her family from her 41-year-old father. Four guns were also found at the man’s apartment.

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While the liberal activists are only feeling the whip of discipline now, it’s never gone away in the army, a much more powerful and enduring institution. However, as we will see, the forms of discipline practiced aren’t always particularly logical - or legal. This, as I will explain, is partly due to the removal of Ukraine’s military justice system in 2019, on the will of Ukraine’s American-sponsored ‘anti-corruption warriors’.

The Ukrainian publications strana.ua put out an interesting article on July 11 titled ‘how Ukrainian soldiers are punished for insubordination’.

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This is quite a topical issue, given that the (liberal) nationalist opposition to the army generals focuses its criticism on the issue of ‘impossible orders’ from above.

For instance, the more liberal-aligned Bohdan Krotevych of the National Guard Azov Corps got in a range of public feuds with top generals. He accused them of setting his men suicide missions, and that when he provided criticism, he was menaced with the initiation of internal investigations.

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(Paywall with free option.)

https://eventsinukraine.substack.com/p/army-life

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On the threat of chemical use in the Novotroitskoye area
July 17, 14:59

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On the threat of chemical use in the Novotroitskoye area

Kiev is preparing another provocation with the dropping of containers with toxic chemicals on the positions of the Russian Armed Forces, said the head of the NBC Protection Troops, Major General Alexey Rtishchev.

On July 3, militants of the Ukrainian Armed Forces placed antenna-mast equipment at the ammonia distribution point in the area of the Novotroitsk antenna-mast equipment. This enterprise is a class I hazardous facility, and if it is blown up, more than 550 tons of liquid ammonia could be released into the environment.

"The expectation is that our country will subsequently be accused of deliberately creating a man-made disaster and causing reputational damage to the Russian Federation. Let me remind you that the use of a high-risk facility for military purposes is a violation of international humanitarian law," General Rtishchev noted at a briefing.

Since the beginning of 2025, the Ukrainian Armed Forces have regularly dropped containers with the substance "CS" and homemade ammunition with chloropicrin on the positions of the Russian Armed Forces using drones. Such facts were noted in the area of the village of Liman Perviy in the Kharkiv region and the village of Kolotilovka in the Belgorod region.

In addition, the Kiev regime, with the support of the West, has not abandoned the barbaric tactics of the "chemical belt" - militants place and explode containers with toxic chemicals in combat zones.

Ukraine and the West will continue to use the OPCW as an instrument of political pressure on Russia, without taking into account objective facts, said Alexey Rtishchev. Kiev has repeatedly used the Technical Secretariat of the Organization to legitimize false incidents with the alleged use of chemicals by our troops.

Kiev refers to the results of research by Western laboratories and some intelligence data that cannot be verified or confirmed. They do not have a sufficient level of competence and an OPCW-accredited laboratory base.

Ukraine voices what its Western curators suggest. The goal of anti-Russian attacks is to present our country as a malicious violator of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

According to the Western countries, these aggressive actions will limit or suspend the rights and privileges of the Russian Federation under the Convention. They will also contribute to the introduction of sanctions.

"On July 4, Dutch Defense Minister Ruben Brekelmans accused Russia of violating the Convention based on "some available intelligence." This form of report was not chosen by chance, since it makes it possible to make accusations without presenting specific evidence. This step once again demonstrates the Russophobic aspirations of the Dutch government," the head of the NBC Protection Troops emphasized.

https://t.me/projectrhbz/13702 - zinc

The OPCW, of course, will not do anything, since it has long been an instrument of the West. This was clear even in Syria, where the OPCW acted in concert with the terrorists.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9959857.html

Ukrainian Armed Forces losses from 24.02.2024 to 17.07.2025
July 18, 11:05

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Ukrainian Armed Forces losses from 24.02.2022 to 17.07.2025 according to the WarTears project ( https://t.me/wartearsorg/512 ).
The mathematical model used for the calculation is https://wartears.org/posts/math-model/

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9961233.html

(For the Russian language challenged, like me, those numbers from top to bottom are: KIA, POW and active duty. The post title is incorrect, and should read 24.02.2022. Still a monster number. )

Google Translator

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How Trump’s 50-day deadline threat against Putin will backfire

By Jennifer Kavanagh, Responsible Statecraft, 7/15/25

In the first six months of his second term, President Donald Trump has demonstrated his love for three things: deals, tariffs, and ultimatums.

He got to combine these passions during his Oval Office meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Monday. Only moments after the two leaders announced a new plan to get military aid to Ukraine, Trump issued an ominous 50-day deadline for Russian President Vladimir Putin to agree to a ceasefire. “We’re going to be doing secondary tariffs if we don’t have a deal within 50 days,” Trump told the assembled reporters.

The threat is unlikely to change Putin’s calculus, however, or bring the conflict to a near-term conclusion. Instead, Trump’s deadline is likely to make his own life more difficult, limiting his future flexibility, putting the settlement he craves farther out of reach, and forcing him to take steps that harm rather than advance U.S. interests.

Trump’s intention to impose “secondary tariffs” on Russia if Putin does not meet his deadline was not well-explained in his press conference with Rutte. Nor was it immediately clear if the planned punishment for Putin’s continued intransigence would include tariffs on Russian trade with the United States or “secondary sanctions” on Russia’s trading partners — or some combination of the two.

Whatever the details, however, looming economic consequences are unlikely to intimidate Putin or convince him to accept an early ceasefire. For starters, if Trump is indeed talking about tariffs on Russian trade with the United States, then his threat is an empty one. The United States imported only about $3 billion in goods from Russia in 2024, meaning that U.S. tariffs will impose little, if any, new costs on Moscow.

If Trump was instead warning that he would impose secondary sanctions or economic penalties on countries like China, the European Union, and India which purchase Russian oil and other goods, then the potential consequences for Russia are higher — if Trump follows through. A U.S. decision to impose economic penalties on Russia’s trading partners would place at risk the income Moscow relies on to finance its war machine, but it would also create political and economic complications for Washington that undermine the credibility of Trump’s threat and its effectiveness as a tool of coercion.

Not only would such a policy disrupt and set back ongoing U.S. negotiations with important U.S. trade partners and put pressure on the U.S. economy, but in the case of India and Europe, it would force Trump to impose painful economic punishments on crucial security partners. Because of these concerns, the United States has historically enforced secondary sanctions only sporadically and selectively, often targeting adversaries but not allies. The same would likely be true in this case.

Moreover, there is no guarantee that even secondary sanctions would cut off Russian revenues, as Moscow has become skilled as using black market transfers and its “shadow fleet” to circumvent U.S. and European economic pressure.

Most importantly, Putin and the Russian economy have shown tremendous resilience to the economic weapons that the United States and its allies have unleashed so far, and there is no reason to expect this time to be different. In fact, the Russian stock market rose almost three percent after Trump’s announcement, suggesting Russian investors share this assessment. As a result, Putin is unlikely to be fearful of Trump’s economic intimidation or sensitive to even the moderate costs additional U.S. economic warfare might impose.

If Trump’s ability to force Putin to the table using economic sticks is limited, then his military leverage is even smaller. Putin has a clear advantage on the battlefield, and the new aid arrangement in which Europe will buy U.S. weapons to send to Ukraine is unlikely to change this.

What weapons Europe can send quickly — purchased from the United States or taken from their own stocks — will be small in number and limited in type. After over three years of war, neither the United States nor Europe have deep reserves of munitions or other kinds of weapons to provide. More weapons can be purchased off production lines, but they won’t arrive for some time and so won’t do anything to help Ukraine’s soldiers in the near-term.

Moreover, defensive weapons like Patriot systems and interceptors — the focus of much fanfare during today’s big announcement — will help protect Ukrainian civilians but do little to reinforce Ukraine’s already strained front lines.

Putin’s continued strikes on Ukrainian cities and decision to press forward with a summer offensive are evidence of his confidence in Russia’s ability to persist militarily for the foreseeable future. It is unlikely the meager military aid package announced on Monday will change his mind on this score.

Ultimately, Trump’s newest deadline, like those that he has issued before, is unlikely to factor into Putin’s decision-making or to change the trajectory of the war. Putin has staked far too much on the outcome of the conflict in Ukraine to stop fighting before achieving his basic objectives or to settle for an unsatisfactory deal in response to an artificial and U.S.-imposed deadline while he still has the military advantage.

In this way, Russia is like any other wartime combatant, unwilling to sue for peace until it is clear that there are no more benefits to be gained from continued fighting.

Rather than bringing peace closer by forcing Putin the negotiating table, Trump’s threats may make near-term resolution less likely, both by hardening Putin’s resolve and by placing at risk newly opened channels of communication between the United States and Russia. The ultimatum also compromises Trump’s effectiveness as a mediator and constrains the flexibility he will need to successfully broker a deal between Russia and Ukraine.

When 50 days is up and Putin has not agreed to a ceasefire Trump will have an unenviable choice to make: demonstrate fecklessness by backing down or take economic actions that will inflict harm on the United States, alienate close partners, and almost certainly push a near-term end to the war beyond his grasp.

There is one glimmer of hope that Trump and others hoping for peace can hang on to, however. Fifty days is a long time, and will arrive in the early fall, as Russia’s summer offensive winds down and the winter approaches. There could be an appetite for another round of negotiations at this point, especially if Putin feels he has achieved enough militarily and prefers a deal that meets most of his war aims to continued fighting.

This shift would be unrelated to Trump’s new deadline, but U.S. national security officials should be preparing the ground to take advantage of the opportunity all the same. This includes pushing hard for bilateral meetings between the United States and Russia at least at the working level and encouraging more direct negotiations between Russia and Ukraine.

Reaching an end to the war in Ukraine will be a lot harder than issuing ultimatums, but openings for peace could still emerge organically soon. Washington should be ready when they do.

https://natyliesbaldwin.com/2025/07/ft- ... l-excerpt/

(Russia does not target Ukrainian civilians, just sayin'.)

Nicolai Petro: NOW Political Collapse Is Inevitable: NATO Can’t Save Ukraine
July 17, 2025 natyliesb



https://natyliesbaldwin.com/2025/07/nic ... e-ukraine/

******

Self-dehumanization, Ukrainian style
July 17, 2025
Rybar

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Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi proposed exchanging the remains of Soviet soldiers who died during the Great Patriotic War for members of Ukrainian formations who are in Russian captivity.

The statement is timed to coincide with the completion of the dismantling of the memorial Hill of Glory in Lviv, during which the Kiev regime exhumed 355 remains and destroyed the grave of the legendary intelligence officer Nikolai Kuznetsov.

The digging up of mass graves and the use of the ashes of long-dead soldiers for bargaining is the best illustration of the essence of the so-called Ukraine and a demonstration of what the cultivation of total hatred and brainwashing by local regimes leads to.

Until recently, even among anti-Russian citizens, such thoughts were the lot of the most marginalized. Now, when the population sees such news, nothing clicks, and they do not consider this abomination to be vile.

The uncontrolled spinning of the propaganda flywheel leads to a logical end - the dehumanization of one's own citizens and ancestors with the gradual loss of human appearance.

Here the so-called Ukraine has outdone even the Middle Eastern groups: even Hamas did not think of using the bodies of Jews who died a hundred years ago from the ancient cemeteries of Gaza for bargaining with Israel.

https://rybar.ru/samoraschelovechivanie-po-ukrainski/

Rybar got that last paragraph backwards, 100 years ago there were nearly no Jews in Gaza, if any.
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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blindpig
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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Sat Jul 19, 2025 12:28 pm

Sanctions and the language of ultimatums
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ July 19, 2025

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After overcoming the blockade imposed by Slovakia, which is obliged to guarantee that its imposition will not cause the country to suffer fuel shortages, the European Union yesterday—during the same week in which it decided not to impose any sanctions on Israel—managed to approve the 18th set of sanctions against the Russian Federation since the invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022. “I welcome the adoption this morning by the European Union of a new, unprecedented package of sanctions against Russia,” Macron wrote, seeking to add a touch of distinction to a measure that has become routine and has never achieved its objectives. “Done! This morning, we Europeans adopted unprecedented sanctions against Russia and the countries that support it. France played a key role in this decision. Together with the United States, we will force Vladimir Putin to accept a ceasefire,” added Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot, who was not merely exaggerating the value of the package but wished to highlight his role in the imposition of the 18th sanctions package, a clear reflection of the outcome of the previous 17. “We are attacking the heart of Russia’s war machine,” wrote Ursula von der Leyen with a triumphalism that has been repeated periodically for the past three and a half years.

“We continue to maintain pressure on Russia,” added Chancellor Merz, sounding somewhat more realistic. As Bloomberg expert Javier Blas commented following the news , it has only taken Russia weeks to adapt and successfully circumvent the sanctions imposed so far. “There is still much to be done. But every step taken clearly and decisively contributes to bringing Russia’s war closer to an end,” declared Ukraine’s newly appointed Prime Minister, Yulia Svyrydenko, welcoming the new measure, but implying that Ukraine expects even more. Kiev is not content with talk of unprecedented actions ; it is demanding results.

In line with previous packages, the current one includes more Russian banks, ships from the ghost fleet with which Russia exports oil, once again attempts to impose a price cap on the Russian oil market, and includes Nord Stream. For European authorities, it is not enough that three of the four Russian- and German-owned gas pipelines were opened underwater in September 2022; the pipeline must be banned. The European Union's unilateral—and therefore illegitimate—sanctions also target Indian infrastructure where Rosneft refines oil for subsequent export. The rationale behind these sanctions includes both the dynamics of the 17 previous packages, which seek to undermine the Russian economy and make it impossible for continental relations to normalize beyond the end of the war, and the logic of Donald Trump's ultimatum this week.

The fact that Brussels is seeking to prevent India from contributing to the export of Russian oil shows the EU's attempt to join the sanctions that Donald Trump has promised to impose against Russia and its economic allies if Vladimir Putin fails to reach an agreement with Ukraine within 50 days of the ultimatum. China and India are targeted as customers of Russian oil, and Brazil is a member of the BRICS and is in Trump's sights due to the legal cases investigating the coup attempt following Lula da Silva's electoral victory and linked to Jair Bolsonaro, a loyal ally and protégé of Donald Trump. The US threat has not prompted major media statements from Russia, China, or Brazil, which has already been sanctioned with 50% tariffs that, in practice, close the US market to Brazilian products, similar to what 100% tariffs would do. Only India, whose energy minister has stated that the country could survive without Russian oil, has explicitly addressed what would happen if Trump's warning came true. The comment elicited joy from Andriy Ermak, who, including his current favorite emoji , the two staring eyes, wrote that "India will have no problem replacing Russian oil supplies if the United States imposes new sanctions," adding that this is the "path to a just peace." "Good. This is the path to ending the war and achieving a just peace. And if not, then let's finish off the Russian economy once and for all," he declared.

Yermak's words, and especially the tone of anticipation of a victory that he naively or arrogantly already believes is imminent, have been echoed throughout the week. "Given that Russia shows no intention of stopping, we would be sincerely grateful if the United States, using its global strength and influence, could help apply real pressure on Moscow," he wrote on Wednesday, having already assumed that secondary sanctions would be imposed on Russia's allies starting in September, making their trade with the United States unviable—something the Ukrainian establishment doesn't even consider surviving without. "The US sanctions on Russian oil and gas will hit Putin where it hurts the most. He spends that money on weapons. If the revenue is cut, it reduces his ability to continue this war," Volodymyr Zelensky claimed this week in an interview, speaking in the future tense, but assuming that the secondary sanctions will be implemented and, therefore, that there will be no agreement in the next 50 days.

Ukraine's rhetoric is to delay negotiations and wait for the deadline set by Donald Trump to pass before imposing sanctions, all while seeking to ensure that its actions are not seen as obstacles to dialogue. The appointment of Rustem Umerov, who led the Ukrainian delegation in Istanbul, as president of the Security and Defense Council should be read in this light. Possibly due to the need to express a constructive opinion, even Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has described the news as positive. However, given the sharp increase in military aid expected this month and the fact that Ukraine is just weeks away from securing the sanctions against Russia it has been demanding for years, kyiv, which has always viewed a continuation of the war as a more favorable scenario than a peace with compromises, has little incentive to negotiate. Even so, with the appointment of Umerov, who is more open to dialogue than the rest of the Ukrainian government team, to head an institution with such military weight, Ukraine seeks to send its allies the message that it is willing to negotiate, a prerequisite for consolidating the favorable sentiments of Donald Trump, who not so long ago blamed Zelensky primarily for the lack of peace.

As The Washington Post highlighted yesterday , European countries have been instrumental in Donald Trump's change of heart regarding Ukraine and, especially, Volodymyr Zelensky. This lobbying effort to highlight the Ukrainian president's worth began, according to the US outlet, even before Zelensky left Washington following his Oval Office humiliation. The British outlet The Telegraph adds the work of Marco Rubio, a neocon hawk sanctioned by Russia and China for his interventionist stances, and Keith Kellogg, undoubtedly the most pro-Ukrainian of Donald Trump's foreign policy team members. The Ukrainian press also emphasizes the role of Melania Trump. Ignorant of Russian or Ukrainian politics and uninterested in understanding the nature of the conflict between the two countries, which he has already failed to resolve twice—in 2017 and 2015—the US president is easily influenced and his opinions are easily manipulated. But despite Donald Trump's shifts in the war and other aspects of domestic and international politics, Ukraine remains confident that nothing will change between now and September and that the burden of responsibility for accepting the unconditional ceasefire without any promise of moving toward negotiations falls solely on Vladimir Putin.

Ukraine doesn't seem to fear the time Russia now has to significantly worsen the situation on the front lines, but rather to convince Donald Trump that, if negotiations haven't been possible, it's at least partly due to the fact that, as he himself has admitted, Zelensky sent a delegation to Istanbul with orders to obtain Russian acceptance of the unconditional ceasefire, which is the ultimatum of the European countries, and to negotiate only humanitarian, but never political, issues. However, in lobbying to impose its position, Ukraine has resources that neither Russia nor arguments based strictly on facts can compete with.

The perfect reflection of the sense of invincibility currently projected by Ukraine is a comment written by Andriy Ermak on social media and repeated in his media appearances. “Ukraine seeks peace. But not peace through surrender or the loss of territory. A just peace is only possible when the aggressor pays for its crimes and recants from terrorism.” For months, mentions of Ukraine's territorial integrity, which implies an endless war against Russia until a practically impossible goal is achieved, were limited to groups such as the Weimar+ format, which excluded European countries and the European Union from attempts to initiate a diplomatic process in search of peace. Trump's words, the revival of ultimatum language, and the promise of increased military assistance to Ukraine have led kyiv to regain its highest goal of recovering all its territories, including Crimea, silenced—though not forgotten—during the months in which Trump demanded active signs of seeking a negotiated end.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/19/sanci ... ultimatum/

Google Translator

******

From Cassad's Telegram account:

Colonelcassad
Ukraine has lost almost all of the Abrams tanks supplied by the US. How did it happen that the tanks that America positioned as invulnerable were destroyed by the Russian Armed Forces?

I analyzed it specifically for RT in a post: https://t.me/special_authors/7946

***

Colonelcassad
Forwarded from
RT in Russian
3:18
The VSEU soldier decided to fight for Russia after he and his fellow serviceman were saved by the Russian Armed Forces from shelling from Ukraine.

The soldier with the call sign Elektrik was captured by the Russian military about 11 months ago. During this time, he only became more determined to go over to the Russian side.

He explains the reasons for his decision as follows:

"The entire command knew where we were, they abandoned us. After 15 minutes we got in touch, tried to say that we had a wounded man [an FPV had flown in]. They just froze. About three hours later, Russian soldiers came to take us to a safer place, then Mavic [drones] and artillery [of the Ukrainian Armed Forces] started working hard."

The military sat in the basement of the house for three days - seven VSSU men and three Russian soldiers: they waited for the shelling to stop. According to Elektrik, the Russian used up all his painkiller injections on the Ukrainian:

"When they were taking us out, this old man who was wounded, he himself was almost on his knees begging to be left alone, to be shot: he could no longer walk. His side was torn. But no one left him. A Russian soldier led him out almost by the arms. And during that time I understood what our army is really like and what our enemy is like."

After this, the Ukrainian decided to sign a contract with the Russian Armed Forces.

The electrician also said that many of those mobilized into the Ukrainian Armed Forces do not even have time to reach the front line: as soon as they are sent, they are declared missing: "They [the superiors] take the payments for themselves. Apart from the fact that they are f*****gs, there is nothing else to say."

***

Colonelcassad
The German garbage dump "Bild" reports that Trump ordered Merz to transfer German Patriot air defense systems to Ukraine, implying that by removing the air defense systems from combat duty, Germany will then have to replace them by buying new Patriot air defense systems from the US, which the US is not going to give to either Ukraine or Germany for free.

In fact, he is simply twisting arms, demonstrating the very same obvious catch in the statements about the transfer of "17 Patriot air defense systems". In fact, Trump promised that Europe should transfer them to Ukraine, and then also buy new Patriots for itself from the US.

It is not surprising that a number of NATO countries have already officially refused to buy weapons for Ukraine from the US.

***

Colonelcassad
A Ukrainian court has sentenced Russian chess player Sergey Karyakin in absentia to 9 years in prison with confiscation of property — the SBU

has accused Karyakin of financing actions committed with the aim of forcibly changing the borders of the territory or state border of Ukraine.

Grandmaster and senator Sergey Karyakin commented on the sentence handed down to him in Ukraine.

"An absurd theater of the Kiev regime.
This piece of paper from Chernivtsi is an indicator for me that I am doing the right thing. I have not betrayed and will not betray my Motherland, and the real traitors are in the leadership of Ukraine."

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

******

Brief Frontline Report – July 18th, 2025

Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Zinderneuf
Jul 18, 2025

Reports confirm intensified combat operations on the Volchansk axis and in newly emerging bridgeheads within the buffer zone on the northeastern flank of Ukraine's Kharkov region.

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The overview map of this sector reveals the logic behind the development of previously established and newly forming "wedges." As these expand, they will disrupt the defensive lines of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

First, new sectors (Degtyarnoye [Dehtyarnoe on the map] and Melovoye) have been established in areas lightly defended by AFU units (primarily Ukraine's Border Guard Service). The AFU will be forced to redeploy reserves from other frontline sectors to reinforce these areas.

Furthermore, this demonstrates that the Russian Armed Forces have sufficient resources to conduct successful offensive operations: expelling the AFU from newly claimed Russian territories, thwarting AFU attempts to breach the border near Tetkino-Novy Put, and establishing a buffer zone in the Sumy and Kharkov regions.

Second, the buffer zone is being shaped along radial roads converging near the center of the Kharkov sector, specifically around Bely Kolodez - Prikolotnoye - Velikiy Burluk.

Third, the buffer zone's boundaries are now visible: stretching along the Volchansk - Bely Kolodez - Prikolotnoye - Velikiy Burluk - Sadovod route, with an advance toward Kupyansk.

Fourth, with the formation of these (and likely additional) active sectors, the command of the Russian Armed Forces gains additional "keys." By alternately pressing these "keys" (positioned along the entire line of combat contact), the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces will perform Chopin's Sonata No. 2 for the AFU. And the more such "keys" there are, the purer and more convincing the melody will sound.

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-18th

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Trump’s ultimatum to Russia is bluster and bluff to hide proxy war defeat

July 18, 2025

In 50 days, Trump will have a serious amount of egg on his face when Russia’s defeat of the NATO proxy war becomes more evident.

What’s behind Trump’s angry ultimatum to Russia this week? The short answer: failure and frustration. Donald Trump promised American voters that he would end the Ukraine war in 24 hours upon his election in November 2024. Six months into his presidency, Trump has failed to deliver on his boastful promises.

This week, Trump flipped his pacemaker image by pledging billions of dollars worth of new American weaponry to Ukraine. He also issued a warning to Russia to call a ceasefire within 50 days or else face severe secondary tariffs on its oil and gas exports. The tariffs, quoted at 100 percent, will be applied to nations purchasing Russian exports, primarily Brazil, China, and India. The latter move indicates that the U.S.-led proxy war in Ukraine against Russia is really part of a bigger geopolitical confrontation to maintain American global hegemony.

In any case, Moscow dismissed Trump’s ultimatum. Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said that Moscow would not comply with pressure and that Russia would not back down from its strategic goals in Ukraine to counter NATO’s historic aggression.

It is clear that Trump and his administration have failed to understand Russia’s strategic position and the root causes of the conflict.

Trump’s supposed diplomacy is seen to operate on a superficial basis more akin to showbiz, with no substance. He wants a peace deal with Russia to show off his vaunted skills as a business negotiator and to grab the limelight, headlines, and adulation.

Resolving a conflict like Ukraine requires deep historical understanding and genuine commitment to due diligence. Moscow has repeatedly stated the need to address the root causes of the conflict: the expansion of NATO on its borders, the CIA-sponsored coup in Kiev in 2014, and the nature of the NATO-weaponized Neo-Nazi regime over the past decade.

Trump and his administration have failed to appreciate Russia’s viewpoint. Thus, expecting a peace deal based on nothing but rhetoric and vacuous claims about “ending the killing” is futile. It won’t happen.

This failure, based on unrealistic expectations, has led Trump to adopt an increasingly bitter attitude towards Russian President Vladimir Putin in recent weeks. Ironically, Trump has accused Putin of duplicity and procrastination when, in reality, it is Trump who has shown no serious commitment to resolving the conflict.

Now, with chagrin and bruised ego, Trump has reacted with frustration over what are his own failings by issuing ultimatums to Russia. Trump’s 50-day deadline for a Russian response to his demands has a similarity to the 60-day deadline he threatened Iran with, after which he carried out a massive bombing attack on that country. Trump’s aggression towards Iran has turned out to be a fiasco and failure. Threatening Russia is even more useless.

This proclivity for threatening other nations has the hallmark of a Mafiosa megalomaniac. It is also causing Trump to lose support among his voter base, who believed he was going to end “endless wars.” It’s shambolic. Biden’s war is becoming Trump’s war because, at the end of the day, it is the U.S. imperial deep state that rules.

Trump’s mercurial switch from professing peace in Ukraine to ramping up the promise of weapons shows that his previous aspirations were always hollow and contingent on other interests.

It seems that the 47th American president did not want peace after all. What was driving his apparent desire to end the conflict in Ukraine – what he deprecated as “Biden’s war” – was simply to cut American financial costs.

What has appealed to Trump is that the proposed new supplies of American weapons to Ukraine will be paid for by Europe. Money and profit are all that matter to him. It is significant that when Trump announced the new arms racket scheme, he was sitting beside NATO chief Mark Rutte in the Oval Office. Rutte has a knack for wheedling, previously referring to Trump as “daddy” and this week absurdly praising the U.S. as the world’s policeman for securing peace. It seems that the NATO and transatlantic ruling establishment have found a way to manipulate Trump. Tell him that the Europeans will henceforth directly subsidize the U.S. military-industrial complex.

The trouble for Trump and the NATO establishment is that it is all an unworkable bluff. For a start, the U.S. arsenal of Patriot missiles and other munitions has been depleted and destroyed by Russia over the past three years in Ukraine. There are no “wonder weapons” that can alter the battlefield dominance of Russia.

Secondly, the European economies are broke and can hardly sustain the proposed purchase of U.S. weapons for Ukraine, even if such supplies were feasible, which they are not. At least four European states, including France, the Czech Republic, Italy, and Hungary, have said they will not engage in any scheme of buying American weapons for Ukraine.

Thirdly, Trump’s threat of secondary sanctions against Brazil, China, India, and others for doing business with Russia is a blatant assault on the BRICS and Global South that will only garner international contempt. Trump’s bullying is neither viable nor credible. His earlier trade war against China has already failed and shown that the United States is an impotent giant whose power is a thing of the past. Trump had to climb down from his hobby horse towards China.

So, threatening to hit China and others with 100 percent tariffs for doing business with Russia is like a former prizefighter shaking a feeble fist while sitting in a wheelchair. He is liable to incur more self-harm.

Lastly, Russia is decisively winning the NATO-led proxy war in Ukraine. The Kiev regime’s air defenses are non-existent at this stage. Therefore, Russia can and will press its strategic terms to end the conflict because it is the military victor.

Trump’s ultimatum to Russia is nothing but bluster and bluff. He once mocked Ukraine’s puppet president Zelensky, that he had no cards to play. Trump, for all his bravado, has only a couple of deuces himself.

In 50 days, Trump will have a serious amount of egg on his face when Russia’s defeat of the NATO proxy war becomes more evident.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2025/ ... ar-defeat/

******

The Other Azov Brigades

The 3rd Army Corps, and a new "Azov family" in the National Guard
Moss Robeson
Jul 18, 2025

“Pro-Ukraine” propagandists like to have it both ways when it comes to the Azov movement, which they’ve long distinguished from the (not really) “depoliticized” Azov Brigade in the National Guard of Ukraine (NGU). These entities get conflated again when whitewashing the broader neo-Nazi movement.

The western media’s favorite Ukraine “experts” all but claimed that those in NGU Azov ceased to be real “Azovites,” because the neo-Nazi “origins” of the 2014 Azov Battalion were ostensibly overcome in the National Guard, and the extremists left the unit at some point between 2014-22, either because they were purged, or simply retired from military service and joined the Azov veterans’ movement.

If people really believed this, alarm bells should have been going off as new Azov units formed outside the National Guard and consolidated under the fascistic leadership of Andriy Biletsky, the original Azov commander. After all, his core followers are “old” Azov veterans, the type who never bothered to clean up their image. The depoliticization experts apparently took an oath of silence as more openly neo-Nazi fighters began to receive the hero treatment in Ukraine and abroad.

By 2023, with one Azov brigade “clean,” and the other (Biletsky’s 3rd Assault) “dirty” —according to the experts’ forgotten logic — and both of them famous, it became inconvenient for the anointed truth-tellers to seriously distinguish one unit from the other. “Didn’t we already settle this issue?” some journalists must have wondered about Biletsky’s proudly extremist forces. “Russian propagandists never grow tired of the discredited ‘Ukrainian Nazi’ trope!”

Over three years into the full-scale Russo-Ukrainian war, the Azov movement, although fractured, leads an army within an army, from one regiment (2022) to a pair of brigades and other units (2023), and now two corps (2025), which suggests the Azovites will command tens of thousands of soldiers, comparable to the 1940s Ukrainian Insurgent Army that they valorize. Most important is the 3rd Assault Brigade in the Ground Forces of Ukraine, the foundation of Biletsky’s new 3rd Army Corps. By 2024, you could read about Azov’s Führer (“Vozhd”) in the western media as an effective and quotable military leader, without any reference to his neo-Nazi movement, which is the best armed and most powerful one in the world.

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Merchandise from the publishing house of an Azov ideologist with the 3rd Assault Brigade. This patch references the slogan “White Pride World Wide.”

3rd Army Corps
About a month ago, France’s premier newspaper, Le Monde, published a compelling investigation about neo-Nazis in the Ukrainian armed forces that inevitably zeroed in on the Azov movement’s 3rd Assault Brigade, which is often said to be one of the biggest and most effective in Ukraine. In just 10 days, French journalists identified more than 350 Ukrainian soldiers displaying neo-Nazi symbols on public Instagram accounts, with at least 200 of them linked to this one unit. Inspired by their investigation, I’ve begun compiling examples on my Twitter/X account, starting with artillerymen and the main battalions of the brigade.

1st Assault Battalion

2nd Assault Battalion

1st Mechanized Battalion

2nd Mechanized Battalion

It’s taken months for details to emerge about the composition of the new 3rd Army Corps since Andriy Biletsky announced its creation in March. “MilitaryLand,” a pro-Azov database of Ukrainian military units, recently backpedaled its breaking news that the Azovite military intelligence “Kraken” regiment would be joining the 3rd Army Corps. Apparently only “part” of the unit has sought the transfer, but “this move has not yet been approved by officials.” Meanwhile the 60th Mechanized Brigade has reportedly been reassigned, including its 97th Mechanized Battalion, another Azovite unit that “is closely aligned with Kraken.”

Le Monde and MilitaryLand note that Biletsky could command up to 50,000 troops if his forces are fully expanded. For now, let’s take a closer look at the origins of this corps, and the neo-Nazi backbone of the 3rd Assault Brigade.

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Andriy Biletsky announcing the 3rd Army Corps (March 2025)

—The ‘Combat Wing’ of the ‘Civilian Part of the Regiment’
The Azov movement, as something bigger than the original Azov Battalion/Regiment in the National Guard, took shape by 2015-16 with the establishment of the “Civil Corps” NGO and later the “National Corps” political party, as well as Azovite youth camps. These and other structures (like the Azovite “ATEK” base in Kyiv), led by Biletsky and his cadre of neo-Nazi veterans, kept the movement intertwined with the NGU Azov Regiment, for example with recruitment, fundraising, ideological lectures, support for veterans, and the “Yevhen Konovalets Military School” for sergeants.

NGU Azov fighters supported the National Corps, and their commanders continued to refer to Biletsky as their leader, years after he formally left the unit in 2014 to become a member of parliament. Relations have strained since 2022, especially in recent weeks, but that is another story.

In 2017, Andriy Biletsky swore in Denys Prokopenko, the current NGU Azov commander. Also that year, under the leadership of Ihor Mykhailenko, another former Azov commander, the National Corps established a “combat wing” or “street branch” called the “National Militia.” Alexei Levkin, a prominent Russian neo-Nazi, is an important ideologist in this sector of the Azov movement that ultimately formed the backbone of the 3rd Assault Brigade. (He’s now affiliated with the Azov-linked “Russian Volunteer Corps,” which has a high concentration of neo-Nazis.) Levkin’s friend Danil Koval, another Nazi pagan ideologist from the National Corps and alleged expert on the “ancestral home of the Aryans,” at least used to oversee the brigade’s recruitment center in the Ukrainian capital.

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Le Monde: “In this photo, in the foreground, an officer [from the 3rd Assault Brigade] in charge of recruit training.” They are making Nazi salutes.

The National Militia relaunched as “Centuria” in 2020, and could be described as a neo-Nazi street gang, at least before the Russian invasion. Since then, as the “newest Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists [OUN],” it’s become the premier group for young Azovites. Dmytro Krukovsky, the acting head of Centuria, is a veteran of the 3rd Assault Brigade, with a Hitler tattoo on his arm. If only under his leadership, the organization inaugurates the changing of the seasons with pagan cross-burnings. Last year he led an anti-LGBT march in Kyiv. With Krukovsky’s help, the Azov movement is reviving the OUN death cult alliance of radical war veterans and young extremists. It appears that he’s joining the ideological service of the 3rd Army Corps.

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From left to right: Krukovsky’s patch collection (including the pro-Nazi “Russian Liberation Army,” a Nazi flag, and the inspiration for his Hitler tattoo), Krukovsky sitting under a Nazi flag with his young son (out of frame), and Krukovsky with Biletsky at a recent 3rd Assault Brigade/Army Corps ceremony.

“Patriot of Ukraine,” the youthful Nazi pagan paramilitary group that largely formed the Azov Battalion in 2014, has a powerful spiritual successor. Take a look at any Centuria events today and you will probably see young people wearing merchandise from Alexei Levkin’s band “M8L8TH” (AKA “Hitler’s Hammer”), the most popular National Socialist Black Metal group in the Azov movement. The National Militia used the same Nazi-linked runic symbol as Levkin’s Azov-linked “Wotanjugend,” a Hitler-worshipping organization from Russia that’s connected to M8L8TH. “Nord Storm,” another Hitler-glorifying Azovite organization, sprung up in eastern Ukraine as a group within Centuria.

Last summer, Centuria held a knife-fighting (“Knife Cult”) tournament to honor a prominent fallen member, Oleg “Malysh” Fadeenko, who co-founded Nord Storm, the Knife Cult, and a special “Hatred” unit that migrated from Kraken to the 3rd Assault Brigade. Some of the event organizers wore shirts covered in swastikas. Mykhailenko was there—the founder of Centuria, a deputy commander of the 3rd Assault Brigade, and former deputy head of the Patriot of Ukraine. So was “Istok,” another former Patriot of Ukraine militant who ran the brigade’s “young fighter course.” Less than a year before the Russian invasion, “Malysh” and Nord Storm held a knife-fighting tournament to celebrate Adolf Hitler’s 132nd birthday, an event fondly remembered this year by the Hitler-tattooed leader of Centuria.

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Centuria leader Dmytro Krukovsky (wearing white) at the 2024 “Knife Cult” event with Nord Storm to honor the hardcore neo-Nazi “Malysh”
—Azov Special Forces: ‘Borderline Insane … Hyped-Up Warriors’

In 2022, the Azov movement created territorial defense units across the country, most of which joined Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces (SSO, Syly Spetsialnykh Operatsiy). That spring, while the NGU Azov Regiment was seemingly defeated in Mariupol but reborn in “pro-Ukraine” propaganda, the SSO Azov Regiment formed in Kyiv, spearheaded by the National Corps and Centuria.

It behooved the new Azov units to merge in the 3rd Assault Brigade, and drop their favorite word from the name of the unit, if only to sidestep a Congressional ban on US weapons and training for the “Azov Battalion.” It also helped to muddy the waters for journalists who preferred to not think too hard about this stuff. The Azov movement needn’t be mentioned when writing about any of the Azovite units.

In the spring of 2023, the New York Times took notice of the 3rd Assault Brigade, but dithered about callings its fighters “Azov soldiers.” Andriy Biletsky was meekly identified as “a former far-right politician.” Some articles about the battle for Bakhmut mentioned Biletsky and his unit, but not “Azov.” In May, NYT reporter Marc Santora conducted “an extended interview with Colonel Biletsky near the front,” describing him as “a former ultranationalist politician and the founder of the [NGU] Azov regiment, a group that was part of Ukraine’s national guard before the war and is now integrated into the country’s military forces, with little or no political bent.” The Times implied by omission, in this article and the rest to come, that Biletsky’s openly neo-Nazi unit also has “little or no political bent.”

Later that year, the US “newspaper of record” referred to the 3rd Assault Brigade as “one of Ukraine’s most battle seasoned units,” once again without reference to Azov or its troubled “origins.” In June, the New York Times even started to use images from the 3rd Assault Brigade as artwork for articles about the war in Ukraine and the much-hyped 2023 “counteroffensive.” This was before the Azovites published a historical photo project, reaffirming that they see themselves as the spiritual successors of Ukraine’s Nazi collaborators. So it wasn’t really Azov that evolved, but their media coverage, in Ukraine and around the world.

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3rd Assault Brigade sightings in June 2023 NYT articles that don’t mention the unit

When Centuria founder Ihor Mykhailenko handed out SSO Azov Regiment patches with a new design, the western media gave rise to a myth that the Azov movement abandoned Nazi symbolism. (Le Monde has decisively proved otherwise, and the issue is hardly just an Azov problem.) “It still has a lot of its neo-Nazi presence,” admitted Justin, an impressionable young American who wanted to defend Ukraine. He joined SSO Azov-Kyiv in the spring of 2022, not long after arriving in the capital. “You sort of just adapt to it, because these are your guys,” he explained.

Regardless of my battalion commander, my company commander being the Nazis that they were … I still get a kick out of this. I came in one day, and … you have to understand, these guys are hyper-fucking-masculine, these guys are almost borderline insane in terms of … they’re hyped-up warriors, you know, they’re these fucking gung-ho guys. So they kind of idolized the American Special Operations Forces, they wanted to be like them … so we watched these old History Channel Ranger School videos and stuff, and when my company commander opened his laptop on this huge fucking TV screen, he had a fucking desktop photo of fucking Adolf Hitler.

A short Azovite propaganda film, “Made in Ukraine,” captures the neo-Nazi essence of the SSO units behind the 3rd Assault Brigade, and in turn the 3rd Army Corps. It starts with “Martyn” shaving his head, which has “Made ꑭ Ukraine” tattooed on the back, so this becomes the title sequence. A couple minutes later, “Doc” is wearing an “88K” patch, the first sign of an openly neo-Nazi squad that stars in this project. The camera cuts to another group of “88K” fighters. Leading them is “Toten,” a platoon commander with the Nazi SS slogan tattooed on his arm in runic letters.

Then we see “Tokha,” with a tattoo of the 3rd SS Panzer Totenkopf Division emblem and the number 88 (“HH,” or “Heil Hitler”) on his shoulder. Moments later, a pouch with a hand-drawn swastika swings from a machine gun held by another soldier. Soon “Tokha” is back wearing the insignia of the 14th Waffen-SS Galicia Division, and “Doc” reveals a Black Sun tattoo and Patriot of Ukraine patch. We see Azov fighters laughing in the grass, next to a machine gun with an SS symbol. There are several more instances of Nazi imagery, including a Nord Storm patch at the end. The full video, including the opening sequence and credits, is less than 10 minutes.

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“Tokha” (neo-Nazi MMA fighter Anton Radko) from “Made in Ukraine” starred in this 2023 billboard advertisement for the 3rd Assault Brigade

The SSO Azov Regiment produced “Made in Ukraine” with “Neutrino Film,” an obscure venture based in London and Kyiv. Jack Hershman, the British co-founder, meanwhile worked as a Content Director for Google at Redwood BBDO in London, supposedly “the world’s leading content agency.” A longtime Azov photographer “Yara” went unrecognized in the credits, but the Ukrainian director confirmed her involvement. In the summer of 2023, “Yara” completed a photo project that saw Azov fighters from Andriy Biletsky’s brigade recreate historical images of the Waffen-SS Galicia Division and Ukrainian Insurgent Army, or the armed wing of the fascistic OUN’s “Banderite” faction that massacred Jews, Poles, and other “enemies of the nation.” As noted by the historian Marta Havryshko, the ideological service of the 3rd Assault Brigade produced this photo series, “In Storms of Steel,” which was exhibited at the Kyiv History Museum in September 2023.

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Russian Azovite “Kolovrat” at the Kyiv History Museum. Fighters from his company in the 3rd Assault Brigade recreated a 1944 photo of soldiers from the Ukrainian Waffen-SS division.

The 3rd Assault Brigade was established by early 2023. As far as I know, Andriy Biletsky wasn’t revealed to be its commander until his 44th birthday in August. Later that month, on Ukraine’s Independence Day, the brigade presented “In Storms of Steel” on social media. In the meantime, Volodymyr Zelensky and his team visited Biletsky’s command post in the Bakhmut sector, as if to rubber stamp his position. Recently, an ideologist from the 3rd Assault Brigade joined Zelensky’s government as the new head of the Ukrainian Institute of National Memory. (Stay tuned for more on the “Azovization” of the memory war…)

1st Azov Corps
Colonel Andriy Biletsky was the first brigade commander in Ukraine to announce the creation of a new corps under his leadership, but it seems that he did so prematurely, perhaps in order to upstage the NGU Azov commander, Lt. Col. Denys Prokopenko, whose fame surpassed Biletsky as a result of the 2022 siege of Mariupol.

About a month later, in April 2025, when Prokopenko became the second brigade commander to make such an announcement, he could also name the new units in the National Guard’s 1st Azov Corps. As for Biletsky, we still don’t know how many brigades will join the 3rd Army Corps or come from the Azov movement. With a feud apparently brewing between Biletsky and Prokopenko, the latter might be trying to start a new “Azov family” in the 1st Azov Corps, which consists of five brigades, including its namesake.

Until its recent expansion, the Lyubart brigade was the 5th battalion in the NGU Azov Brigade. In 2022-23, Lyubart was its own unit in Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces, “formed by Azov veterans and members of Centuria movement in Volyn Oblast on the day of [the] Russian full-scale invasion,” according to MilitaryLand.net. The first battalion is represented by “Dontsov’s beast,” a lion-wolf-hedgehog hybrid conjured in the twisted mind of the genocidal fascist ideologue who translated Mein Kampf into Ukrainian. The second battalion uses the aforementioned runic symbol favored by Wotanjugend and Azov’s former National Militia (now Centuria).

Just two of the five NGU Azov brigades are truly Azovite, and neither has purged the far-right. Certain “experts” and the many journalists who echoed them routinely claimed that Azov was long ago “integrated” in the National Guard, as if that implied depoliticization. Now three brigades are being integrated into the NGU’s 1st Azov Corps: “Bureviy,” “Chervona Kalyna,” and “Kara-Dag.” Perhaps that will not be too difficult. The 3rd battalion of the Chervona Kalyna brigade, for example, has an undeniable neo-Nazi symbol (Black Sun) in its emblem, and the reconnaissance company is represented by a patch shaped like several Waffen-SS divisions.

Arsen “Lemko” Dmytryk, the far-right chief of staff of the 1st Azov Corps, wrote an article for Forbes Ukraine this month about “why we cannot win the war without rethinking the essence of the army and state,” with “Azov as the bearer of a new management code.” According to Dmytryk, “When Ukraine enters the reconstruction phase after the war – not only of cities, but also of state institutions – this new type of leadership will be crucial. … Azov is not adjusting to the old Ukraine. It is preparing a new one. And this is its main victory. And our main hope.”

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“Lemko” at a 2024 Forbes Ukraine event

https://azovlobby.substack.com/p/the-ot ... v-brigades
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Sun Jul 20, 2025 12:40 pm

The military component of Trump's threats
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 20/07/2025

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“Russian President Vladimir Putin’s rejection of President Donald Trump’s peace proposals and his continued massacres of Ukrainian civilians in attacks on cities have dashed hopes for a deal that would end the war or repair Moscow’s relations with the West,” writes the American daily The Washington Post in its latest article on Putin’s war . This speech, practically unique this week in the media, avoids explaining that the current conflict cannot be resolved with brief talks between presidents and that a negotiation process has never been reached in which the parties addressed the political, military, territorial, and social issues that led to the war—a prerequisite for an agreement that is more than an image of a ceasefire compromise to be presented as a success that would collapse shortly after. The analyses being published these days even omit the fact that the United States didn't even give Russia time to respond or refine the "final proposal" prepared by Steve Witkoff before that roadmap became, thanks to the intervention of Keith Kellogg and Marco Rubio, the counterproposal of Ukraine and its European allies.

In just a few days, external intervention meant that the terms of Witkoff's proposal—so brief and vague that they would have been manipulable, just as the Minsk proposals were, leaving territorial and security issues open. These included the lifting of sanctions against Russia and US recognition of sovereignty over Crimea—were abandoned in favor of a document specifying that there would be no limitations on the presence of foreign troops on Ukrainian territory, one of the causes of the war. Aware that Russia cannot accept, unless militarily defeated, a document that fails to define borders (which are deliberately left up in the air), opens the door to Ukraine's future accession to NATO, and does not even lift sanctions, the European countries, whose proposal was maximalist precisely to prevent it from being debated and agreed upon, raised the stakes with an ultimatum. France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Poland gave Russia 48 hours to accept an unconditional ceasefire that wasn't even accompanied by promises of negotiations to end the conflict, possibly because maintaining it remains the strategy of European countries. From eternal war to eternal conflict—political, economic, and social.

Russia bought time by inviting Ukraine to direct negotiations, which Kiev attended solely to cover its own expenses. Since then, no progress has been reported in the political negotiations, possibly because they have never occurred. Donald Trump's about-face this week, in which he embraced the language of the European ultimatum and, although he denies it, embraced Biden's war , is not something that emerged spontaneously, but was foreseeable at the moment it became clear that there would be no ceasefire that the US president could present as a personal success. In addition to the grievance over the feeling of being betrayed by a friend, a childish view of international relations in general, and even more so under conditions of war, we must add a process of rapprochement with Ukrainian positions since Operation Spider Web , a moment in which Ukraine most played with the Third World War , as Trump had accused Zelensky months earlier, but not at that time.

“President Trump realizes that Putin is lying to him, and it's important that President Trump sees it for himself—not what he hears from someone else, but what he sees with his own eyes,” Volodymyr Zelensky said in an interview this week, with renewed confidence that the US president's views on the war in Ukraine will not change in the next month and a half and certain that political statements will be accompanied by military gestures. To guarantee this, Zelensky is even willing to send a delegation to Istanbul again to negotiate with Russia, as he stated yesterday. However, yet another routine meeting, in which he already announces that he will once again demand from Moscow the unconditional ceasefire that he knows the Kremlin cannot accept, will not change the trajectory of either war or peace.

"The United States House of Representatives voted to continue military aid to Ukraine," Andriy Ermak congratulated himself yesterday in a post accompanied, as usual, by emojis to illustrate its meaning, this time the flags of the United States and Ukraine joined by two hands shaking. The decision, which does not involve any financial allocation, is the ratification of what Donald Trump had announced, whose change of heart immediately led to a similar position among the vast majority of Trump supporters, the only part of the Republican Party that had rejected sending more US weapons to the war. The economic benefit and the need to cover up Trump's failure to achieve any political progress in six months have caused the turning point.

In Wiesbaden, the place where the United States and the United Kingdom helped Ukraine wage the proxy war and, with Zaluzhny, planned the counteroffensive that was supposed to definitively break the front and force Russia into a peace under conditions of weakness, the new US Army commander in Europe, Alexus Grynkevich, has confirmed that military supplies of large quantities of "very sophisticated weapons" are on the way, as Donald Trump described the air defense systems and possibly missiles. "I'm not going to reveal to the Russians or anyone else the exact number of weapons we are transferring or when we will do it, but what I will say is that preparations are underway," he declared in his first hours in office in an appearance in which he added that "we are going to move as quickly as we can." German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, the main sponsor of the initiative under which NATO will acquire the weapons for Ukraine, which will provide the dead, while the United States reaps the benefits, echoed a similar sentiment. "Ukraine will soon receive long-range strike systems and additional military support," he said in a joint appearance with Sir Keir Starmer, adding that "we are working with the US administration and Congress to finalize decisions on this." In his remarks, Merz confirmed that the new assistance will not be limited to air defense systems and munitions, as Trump had promised during the NATO summit, but will include purely offensive weapons.

“I have ordered the urgent signing of all relevant contracts for the drones required by our Ukrainian Defense Forces. We also discussed how to ensure deep strike capability: the frequency of our strikes and priority tasks,” Volodymyr Zelensky wrote yesterday, also pointing to an escalation of the air war in terms of resuming the strategy of a year ago, with which Ukraine sought to wear down Russia with Western missile attacks on its rear.

In this regard, it is relevant to recall what media outlets such as The Washington Post and the Financial Times reported on the July 4 conversation between Trump and Zelensky, which the Ukrainian president perceived as the most important he has ever had with his American counterpart. According to both outlets, Donald Trump asked Zelensky why Ukraine had not attacked Moscow or St. Petersburg and whether he had the weapons to do so. After the details of the conversation were published, the White House attempted to deny the facts, and Trump, accustomed to refuting reality and trying to change the meaning of his words, claimed that it had merely been an innocent question. Although Donald Trump insisted that he had not tried to suggest to Zelensky that Ukraine attack the two Russian capitals, the question, coupled with the comment in which, according to the two American outlets, he insisted that "the Russians have to feel the pain" of the war, is reminiscent of Biden's rhetoric during his term. In another parallel, former officials close to the president are making media appearances explaining the significance of White House actions. It's no longer John Bolton on CNN , but General Jack Keane on Fox News, suggesting that Trump hasn't banned Ukraine from attacking Moscow or St. Petersburg, but rather reminded it to only attack military targets. Considering that Trump has never been bothered by artillery attacks on neighborhoods of Donetsk or by train sabotage causing civilian casualties, the argument sounds like an attempt to distance himself from any unwanted side effects caused by weapons sent by the United States, the use of which requires Washington's authorization.

“As the effective leader of the entire world, Trump is not happy,” the State Department spokeswoman stated at one of her press conferences this week, granting her president the status of a global leader, but was unable to explain what she hopes to achieve with the current measures. The incoherent way the White House has handled its chaotic attempt to broker negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, the rapid return to the Biden era's escalatory tactics, and the shift to rhetoric reminiscent of his predecessor's have revived Ukrainian and European hopes of continuing to fight until they achieve a position of strength with which to impose peace terms on the Kremlin. In this context, the news of the Australian shipment of 49 American Abrams tanks or Merz's hopes for long-range missiles represent a flashback to 2023, when Ukraine was preparing its major ground operation in the Zaporozhye fields.

To Ukraine's dreams of an offensive to defeat Russia on the front lines, we must add Trump's comment during the July 4th conversation. "According to a Ukrainian official, Trump claimed that Ukraine is not going to change the course of the war by playing defense and needed to go on the offensive," writes The Washington Post . Comparatively much weakened than two years ago, when Russia's ability to defend such a vast front with troops mobilized just months earlier was questioned, it is practically unthinkable that Kiev could be capable of organizing another multi-billion-dollar offensive that would face even greater difficulties than in 2023. Trump's comment, more rhetorical than political and based on ignorance of the military reality of war, is just another parallel with the attitude of Joe Biden's team. The €140 billion in military assistance to Ukraine that Western countries and their allies had provided to kyiv by April of this year, according to the latest count by the Kiel Institute, has failed to defeat Russia, a reality that hasn't taught the White House the lesson of underestimating Moscow's ability to respond to changing conditions on the front lines. History doesn't repeat itself, as conditions currently aren't ripe for a major ground offensive, but it does rhyme, especially in the United States' willingness to pursue military options in the hope of imposing terms on Russia that don't correspond to the balance of power on the front lines.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/20/el-co ... -de-trump/

Google Translator

******

From Cassad's Telegram account:

Colonelcassad
Major General of the Bundeswehr army Freuding - called for a strike on Russian airfields:

"Preemptive strikes on aircraft and airfields with long-range air warfare weapons before they are used. This also includes strikes on defense industry facilities.

Secondly, if we are talking about how Russia has managed to significantly increase the production of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and especially drones, we should seriously think about how effective they are"


***

Colonelcassad
Only officially, the Ukrainian prosecutor's office opened 107,672 new criminal cases for desertion in the first half of 2025. In total, since 2022, about 230,804 criminal cases have been officially opened under this article. In total, more soldiers deserted from the Armed Forces of Ukraine than are listed in the British, French and German armies combined.
Considering that the figures are, as usual, understated by the Narco-Fuhrer regime, in reality it may be much higher.

***

Colonelcassad
Frontline report: results of the night's work .

Last night, our forces launched a massive fire strike on key enemy targets using about 300 Geran-2 UAVs. The operation was accompanied by the deployment of a significant number of false targets, which forced the enemy to expend a significant stock of expensive air defense missiles.

Main targets and results of the strikes:

Pavlograd Chemical Plant : Up to 150 Geran-2 UAVs struck the territory of the State Enterprise Scientific and Production Association Pavlograd Chemical Plant. According to available information, fires and explosions continue at the facility. The target of the attack was underground workshops where explosives were manufactured.

Production of Grom-2 OTRK components : Up to 40 Geran-2 UAVs hit the Pavlograd LLC industrial enterprise, which is involved in the production of components for the Grom-2 operational-tactical missile systems and the refueling of Western-made solid-fuel charges.

Equipment Storage and Redistribution Center in Vakulenchuk : Up to 50 Geran-2 UAVs struck a military town near the village of Vakulenchuk, where the Center for Storage, Pre-Sale Preparation, Sale and Disposal of Weapons and Military Equipment is located (military unit A2365 of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine). The facility was an important logistics point, ensuring the transportation of equipment to replenish the units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the north-west.

ZVEZDA Plant in Shostka : Up to 40 Geran-2 UAVs hit the state-owned enterprise ZVEZDA near the village of Shostka. This plant is one of the oldest enterprises in Ukraine specializing in the production of ammunition.

Aircraft Repair Plant in Odessa : Up to 40 Geran-2 UAVs visited an aircraft repair plant near the city of Odessa. The plant itself, the Shkolny airfield and the border unit were attacked.

Additional information:

It is reported that the director of the Odessa air club "Odessa" Konstantin Oborin was liquidated during a combat mission. This character was one of the pilots who used Ukrainian Yak-52s to intercept Russian reconnaissance UAVs and kamikaze drones in the Odessa region. "Geran" or PePeO?

Overall, the night raid can be considered very, very effective. We continue our work.

@NgP_raZVedka

https://t.me/s/boris_rozhin

Google Translator

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Ukraine - The Battle Over Zelenski's Fate Is Still in Balance

An intense information operation has been launched to remove Ukraine's (former) President Vladimir Zelenski from office. Behind it are a cabal of Ukrainian opposition figures in coordination which western media and parts of the Trump administration.

The current campaign follows a earlier one which was directed against Zelenski's main advisor and head of the office of the president Andrei Yermak.

Vladimir Zelenski, Andrei Yermak
Image

Politico.eu introduced Yermak:

The game plan of Zelenskyy's powerful chief of staff - Politico.eu, Jun 3 2025

The once little-known lawyer and B-movie producer — now in the thick of triangular peace diplomacy with the Americans and Russians — is always reverently loyal to his boss. In an interview with POLITICO last year, he referred to him glowingly as the “president of the people.” What else could he say? Yermak has ridden Zelenskyy’s coattails to become the second-most-powerful figure in Ukraine — even a co-equal.


Then the U.S. version Politico.com set out to destroy him:

The Ukrainian official Washington loves to hate - Politico.com, Jun 19 2025

Speaking to allies in private, Yermak has accused Trump administration officials of being Russian assets, according to the first person familiar with the visit, including Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, who has met with Putin four times as Trump seeks to cajole Moscow to the negotiating table.
People familiar with the U.S.-Ukraine relationship and Kyiv’s backers in Washington fear that the friction wrought by Yermak could quickly spread to undermine his country’s standing with its most vital partner.


But Yermak survived the public relations onslaught and even managed to increase his control in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s political infighting gets nasty (archived) - Economist, Jul 6 2025
As Trump starves it of arms, there is turmoil inside the government

Three developments in June set the tone. On June 23rd, a deputy prime minister, Oleksiy Chernyshov—once tipped as a future prime minister—became the most senior Ukrainian politician ever charged with corruption. On government business in Europe, he initially delayed returning, creating the absurd image of a minister for repatriating Ukrainians planning his own self-exile.
At around the same time, the cabinet was warned of an imminent reshuffle, and the probable appointment of a new prime minister, the 39-year-old Yulia Svyrydenko. And a renewed attempt was made to remove Ukraine’s fiercely independent spy chief, Kyrylo Budanov—though it ended in failure, at least for now.
Multiple sources identify the shadowy hand of Andriy Yermak, who runs the presidential office but in reality is an unelected chief minister in all but name, as instrumental in all three plays.


Yermak survived and fought back successfully. But now the fight has turned directly against his boss or sidekick Vladimir Zelenski to whom he is bound by money and fate.

Within hours of each other the British outlets Financial Times and Spectator fired a full broadside against him.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused of authoritarian slide after anti-corruption raids (archived) - Financial Times, Jul 18 2025
Politicians, activists and diplomats accuse Ukraine’s leader of favouring loyalists and using wartime powers against critics

Ukrainians have lost faith in Zelensky (archived) - The Spectator, Jul 18 2025

In recent weeks, Ukraine has been engulfed in corruption scandals. Two deputy prime ministers, minister for national unity Oleksiy Chernyshov and minister for reconstruction Oleksandr Kubrakov, have been investigated for embezzlement and treason. Zelensky has also repeatedly tried to sack Major General Kyrylo Budanov, the head of Ukraine’s military intelligence, allegedly because of his growing popularity. Only pressure from the US embassy in Kyiv prevented the sacking of one of Ukraine’s most popular generals, a serving senior European diplomat with knowledge of the case tells me.
...
‘Ukraine has two enemies, two Vladimirs: Zelensky and Putin,’ says a former Ukrainian cabinet minister, once a strong Zelensky supporter. ‘Putin is destroying Ukraine from [the] outside, but Zelensky is destroying it from within by destroying its will to fight and its morale. Human rights are being trampled on, there is pressure against political opponents, rich and influential people who could support opposition are being expropriated and opposition media is silenced. And the irony is that this Putinification of Ukraine is being funded by the West.’


On top of those anti-Zelenski pieces the legendary reporter Seymour Hersh is writing that Washington is now ready to oust him.

THE END FOR ZELENSKY? (archived) - Seymour Hersh, Jul 18 2025
Washington wants the Ukrainian president to leave office—will it happen?

[Former General Valeri] Zaluzhnyi is now seen as the most credible successor to Zelensky. I have been told by knowledgeable officials in Washington that that job could be his within a few months. Zelensky is on a short list for exile, if President Donald Trump decides to make the call. If Zelensky refuses to leave his office, as is most likely, an involved US official told me: “He’s going to go by force. The ball is in his court.” There are many in Washington and in Ukraine who believe that the escalating air war with Russia must end soon, while there’s still a chance to make a settlement with its president, Vladimir Putin.
There are indications that Zelensky knows what is coming. He has just shifted or fired three officials: the minister of defense, the prime minister, and the ambassador to the United States. As the US official told me, Zelensky “is beginning to read the danger signs.”


Hersh however depends on his sources. There are some claims in his latest which let me doubt their veracity:

I have been provided with new Russian casualty numbers, from carefully evaluated US and British intelligence estimates, that show that Russia has suffered two million casualties—nearly double the current public numbers—since Putin started the war in early 2022.

Given the notorious lack of ammunition on the Ukrainian side of the war the claim of "two million [Russian] casualties", some 50,000 per month, is simply not plausible. Even Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense claims only 1 million. In December 2024 Zelensky claimed less. BBC/Mediazona have counted only 100,000+ Russian killed in action. Here are more reasons to disregard at least some of Hersh' sources. https://twitter.com/EventsUkraine/statu ... 9194914031

The big question is of course who is behind the anti-Yermak and now anti-Zelenski campaign. It turns out that these are not just some figures in the Trump administration.

The Ukrainian outlet Strana, blacklisted in Ukraine and Russia, provided some insight.

Internal threat number one. How Poroshenko and Fiala go on the warpath with Zelensky (in Russian, machine translated) - Strana, Jul 17 2025

In Ukraine, an alliance of Petro Poroshenko and grant structures previously close to the US Democratic Party has formed against Volodymyr Zelensky.
'Grant structures' are the 'civil society' and 'anti-corruption' non-government organization in Ukraine which were, until recently, financed by U.S. funds and controlled by Democrats.


After the defeat of the Democrats in the US elections, both grant makers and Poroshenko realized that Zelensky could use the change of power in Washington to crack down on all his opponents inside the country, which Biden did not allow to do before. Therefore, it was decided to join forces to confront Bankova. A significant role is also played by the monetary factor – a sharp reduction in Western grant funding , which hit numerous activists and the media. Against this background, Poroshenko, who has a huge financial resource, looks like a very attractive patron of art for them. At the same time, grantees have their own resources – control over a number of media outlets, and most importantly – influence on the institute of international experts, who have a decisive voice in the selection of judges and heads of law enforcement agencies. And although the creators of this system from the US Democratic Party have already been removed from power in Washington, the system itself continues to function in Ukraine. [..]" the source said.
...
"... this alliance has connected all its broad connections in the West, conveying to European politicians the idea that Zelensky is turning into a dictator, a "new Putin", and therefore he needs to be hard pressed so that he does not touch opponents."


It is thus obvious that the recent anti-Zelenski pieces in the FT and Spectator are originating from the Poroshenko/NGO alliance in Ukraine. It may even have paid for them.

But it does not mean that these forces are winning.

If Trump believes that he can use Zelenski to further his aims he is likely going to stick to him, no matter whatever else Zelenski does.

Posted by b on July 19, 2025 at 12:17 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2025/07/u ... .html#more

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It's time for the Abrams to go into battle
July 19, 2025
Rybar

It's time for the Abrams to go into battle
Australia has sent 49 Abrams main battle tanks to Ukraine . Their total value is estimated at $160 million. They will be part of a new package of Australian military aid to the so-called Ukraine worth a total of $ 980 million.

In the Ukrainian segment of the Internet, one can already see joy and jubilation on the one hand, and restrained skepticism on the other, which was influenced by the experience of their use at the front. I remember that the first tanks were considered to be what would turn the tide of battles at the front.

The story of the transfer of decommissioned Australian tanks has been going on for more than a month. The first mentions of this have been going on for over a year, and at some point Canberra even gave the go-ahead for the shipment, but then the delivery was blocked by Trump .

However, now, taking into account Trump’s position, which has changed more than once, the tanks will most likely reach the so-called Ukraine, and it is even quite possible that they are either on their way or have already partially arrived in the so-called Ukraine.

The Abrams tanks from Australia are extremely outdated vehicles that will require a lot of work on both the chassis and the armor. War has changed a lot, and standard tanks don't last long due to the active use of drones.

The Australians could do this, but it would require money that no one would spend. Therefore, after delivery to the so-called Ukraine, they will still need to be modernized before being transferred to the balance of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

The key point here is that the Abrams, like any other weapon, is not a "wunderwaffe ." Armored vehicles have now become armored taxis for delivering cargo and people (and not even to the front lines), as well as "roving weapons" for striking strong points.

https://rybar.ru/abramsam-pora-v-boj/

Google Translator

******

Analyzing The Ambiguity Over The American-NATO Arms Arrangement For Ukraine
Andrew Korybko
Jul 19, 2025

Image

The Europeans’ compliance or lack thereof will play a crucial role in the conflict’s future course.

The offensive dimension of Trump’s new three-pronged approach to Ukraine involves the sale of American weapons to NATO who’ll in turn transfer them to Ukraine. This aligns with what Trump told NBC several days prior to the aforesaid announcement. According to Reuters’ sources, however, “Trump presented a framework - not a fleshed-out plan”, and some of the six countries that NATO chief Rutte mentioned will participate in this scheme allegedly only found out about it during that time.

Other reports then circulated about France, Italy, and Czechia’s refusal to participate on various pretexts ranging from their principled support for the European defense industry, which would struggle to fulfill its potential if EU countries buy more expensive US arms, to simple budgetary concerns. The resultant ambiguity over the American-NATO arms arrangement for Ukraine that Trump announced accordingly raises questions about what’s really going on. There are three likely explanations.

The first is that there were innocent communication issues between the US, NATO, and the bloc’s individual members, but that’s difficult to believe since everyone just gathered for the latest NATO Summit less than a month ago. This arrangement was presumably discussed during that time. It would also contextualize their agreement to raise defense spending to 5% of GDP, especially if the Europeans expected to purchase more expensive arms for transfer to Ukraine as part of this arrangement.

The second explanation is that nothing concrete was agreed to, at least with all members, during that summit. This would account for why some of them were reportedly caught by surprise and others refuse to participate. In this scenario, Trump’s announcement would have been meant to pressure them into this profitable arrangement to “save face” since all but Hungary and Slovakia (which also won’t participate) have consistently claimed that they’ll support Ukraine “for as long as it takes”.

And finally, the last possibility is that the analyzed media reports are part of a deception campaign along the lines of what Israeli media claimed that Trump and Bibi pulled off ahead of them bombing Iran. This version of events assumes that there’s much more agreement between NATO members behind the scenes than has been reported. The purpose of claiming otherwise would be to get Russia’s guard down ahead of what could be NATO’s rapid rearmament of Ukraine with American weapons.

Whichever explanation(s) one adheres to, more clarity will be forthcoming from Russian media reports, which will reveal the existence of these new arms on the battlefield or lack thereof ahead of the expiry of Trump’s 50-day deadline. If lots of US arms flood into Ukraine, then it’ll show that there was enough agreement and capacity to back up his threat. If not, then he might blame the Europeans for fumbling it, after which he might only impose some secondary sanctions but no longer militarily escalate.

Trump repeatedly said that the Europeans must step up since this conflict is waged on their continent. If enough prioritize other interests over supporting Ukraine “for as long as it takes”, however, then Trump likely isn’t going to have the US once again “lead from the front”, do the “heavy lifting”, and thus let them keep “freeloading” off of it since that would betray his planned reform of US-NATO relations. The Europeans’ compliance or lack thereof will therefore play a crucial role in the conflict’s future course.

https://korybko.substack.com/p/analyzin ... y-over-the

******

Network protection
July 20, 8:57

Image

Nets to protect against FPV drones on a number of key supply roads of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. They try to completely cover dangerous sections with nets to reduce losses, since up to 20-30 units of equipment can be destroyed per day in unprotected dangerous sections. The first photo shows a Ukrainian Armed Forces checkpoint destroyed by a strike by the Russian Armed Forces, where the nets above the road were also caught.

The concept itself was first implemented by the Russian Armed Forces in the summer-autumn of 2023 after the liberation of Artemovsk. It is still used today.
The enemy laughed at it then, as well as at the "dragon's teeth", but then realized their mistake and began to shamefully copy the Russian experience.

Image

(Other photos at link.)

The net is certainly not a panacea, but it allows to reduce losses from FPV somewhat.

Below is a photo of the use of nets by the Russian military.

Image

Image

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9965566.html

Google Translator

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Ukraine officially becomes a weapons testing ground: What is the Kiev-backed ‘Test in Ukraine’ initiative?

Erkin Oncan

July 20, 2025

A state-supported defense initiative in Ukraine has called on foreign countries and defense companies to “test their weapons in Ukraine.”

A state-supported defense initiative in Ukraine has called on foreign countries and defense companies to “test their weapons in Ukraine.”

Under this newly launched program, Kiev will allow allied governments to deliver defense technology prototypes—such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), sea drones, electronic warfare systems, and AI-supported products—for battlefield testing.

In return for the tests, this initiative, which operates under the Ukrainian government, will provide a detailed report on the frontline performance of the weapons and offer recommendations for real-time modifications.

Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine’s Minister of Digital Transformation, stated in a press release: “This is an opportunity to gain experience that cannot be simulated in a laboratory.”

This process, called “Test in Ukraine,” will be coordinated by Brave1, an initiative backed by Kiev.

What is Brave1?

Brave1 was established in April 2023 under the leadership of the Ukrainian Ministry of Digital Transformation, with the aim of revolutionizing warfare technologies in Ukraine.

Described as the “heart of defense innovation,” Brave1 is not only supported by the Ministry of Digital Transformation. It is a joint platform operated by key state institutions such as the Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Strategic Industries, Ministry of Economy, General Staff, and the National Security and Defense Council.

The platform provides grant support to defense startups, facilitates testing and feedback processes for new technologies, and works on enabling joint production by matching these technologies with Ukrainian manufacturers.

Perhaps the most “critical” feature of the platform is that it offers NATO Stock Number (NSN) certification services, which are used in NATO-affiliated countries for standardized identification and tracking of military and defense materials.

By the end of 2023, Brave1 had supported around 500 defense projects and increased its 2024 budget to 1.5 billion hryvnias (approximately 39 million USD). So far, the platform has received over 3,600 project applications, including dozens of prototypes in areas such as UAVs, electronic warfare systems, AI-supported imaging technologies, and autonomous land/sea platforms that have been tested on the battlefield.

Brave1 is also supported by the European Union (EU), with notable financial and structural assistance. In collaboration with the European Defence Fund (EDF) and the EU Defence Innovation Scheme (EUDIS), Brave1 signed a 100 million euro cooperation agreement named BraveTechEU. It’s also worth noting that Ukraine has been included in Europe’s 150 billion euro common defense fund, SAFE.

In short, Brave1 has become a strategic innovation hub that not only meets Ukraine’s defense needs but also contributes to NATO and Europe’s broader security architecture. Notably, Brave1’s European partners include major defense companies such as Sweden’s SAAB, Germany’s Rheinmetall, and the U.S.-based Raytheon.

How will ‘Test in Ukraine’ work?

The implementation of the “Test in Ukraine” initiative announced by Brave1 is described on the platform’s official website.

Answering the question “Why test in Ukraine?” Brave1 points to “real combat conditions” as the reason.

Brave1 emphasizes that allied technologies will be tested by “working directly with troops experienced in real combat” and promises defense companies the opportunity to “develop their products based on battlefield experience.”

Announced under the slogan “Let’s develop, produce, deploy, and accelerate access to new markets together!”, the initiative offers the following “test scenarios” for companies:

Let’s Test Together: You bring your product and directly participate in the testing process. This way, you can observe its performance firsthand and make instant adjustments if necessary.
Leave it to Us: You deliver your product to Brave1, and we handle everything else. You provide us with an online training on how to use your product, and we carry out the tests with our own team, then deliver a detailed report including results.
Brave1 also offers detailed guidelines on its website for defense companies about how to obtain import permits for Ukraine, as well as information on products not subject to permits.

All of this shows that, amid the ongoing war, the Kiev administration has effectively turned the country into a giant R&D lab, while defense giants are lining up at Ukraine’s doors, eager to test their latest weapons under “real combat conditions.”

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2025/ ... nitiative/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Footnotes from the Ukrainian "Crisis"; New High-Points in Cynicism Part V

Post by blindpig » Mon Jul 21, 2025 11:46 am

The international order based on selectively applied rules
Posted by @nsanzo ⋅ 21/07/2025

Image

With undoubted talent in the field of communications, given that a large part of the government team comes from the entertainment and cultural sectors, Zelensky's team has always known how to navigate the dangerous waves of changing international relations in pursuit of the maximum they could obtain at any given time. In the years prior to Zelensky's coming to power, his predecessor, Petro Poroshenko, had also attempted, with much less brilliance, to take advantage of the war situation in Donbass to obtain priority treatment from the European Union, international institutions, and NATO. The work carried out during that period to demand weapons from his allies, begin the process of Western training and continental integration of the Armed Forces, and begin the ideological task of imposing as official the nationalist discourse previously linked only to specific areas of the country or to far-right groups has provided a foundation upon which Zelensky and his entourage have built what they want to be the Ukraine of the future. The Russian invasion, which erased any red lines the West had regarding the use of Ukraine as an anti-Russian platform, has provided Zelensky not only with an unwavering flow of military, humanitarian, and financial assistance to sustain the army, the population, and the state, but also with a spotlight from which he has greatly benefited.

In his speech in the Spanish Parliament, the Ukrainian president appealed to Gernika despite the fact that the country legally classifies as heroes of Ukrainian freedom those who fought alongside the man who bombed the Gernika market during World War II. In the Greek Parliament, Zelensky did not seek to equate the Ukrainian struggle with that of King Leonidas, but he did want to speak accompanied by a soldier of Greek origin to emphasize a historical link. However, in the country that left behind the iconic image of Manolis Glezos, a historian of anti-fascism, tearing down the Nazi cross from the Parthenon, the Ukrainian leader was accompanied by a member of the Azov Brigade, a group with such a significant neo-Nazi and fascist presence that, year after year, US budget legislation prohibits arming, financing, or training it. Before the Arab League, seeking the desired support that the Global South has denied Ukraine, especially given the lack of solidarity regarding the fate of other conflicts and non-European peoples, Zelensky boasted of Ukraine's recognition of the State of Palestine, something it, like other post-Soviet republics, inherited from the Soviet Union. However, before their Western partners, both Zelensky and his predecessor have stood out for their praise of Israel, an unwavering support that has become even more pronounced since the Middle East regained, on October 7, the centrality it had ceded to Ukraine in terms of attention and headlines since the Russian invasion.

Although the situations are very different, the Russian-Ukrainian conflict and the Israeli aggression against Gaza and the bombing of Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and later Iran have provoked similar reactions. In a context where Western hegemony is in marked decline amid the rise of powers like China and alliances seeking to progressively reduce the use of the dollar, the world has been divided between the West and the Global South, with similar positions in both cases. In Ukraine, without necessarily siding with Russia—although China has admitted to the European Union that it does not want to see it defeated in the war—virtually the entire Global South has demonstrated a constructive stance in defense of peace. While the West opted for military means as the only possible solution to the conflict, countries as diverse as Brazil, China, South Africa, leading a delegation of a dozen African countries, Indonesia, and Arab countries such as Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, have offered their services as mediators and sought to contribute proposals to help Europe achieve an end to the war.

In the Middle East, these same blocs have been repeated. The West clings, even now, to the idea of the right to defend itself against Israel, both on October 7, 2023, and in the 21 months since then, with daily massacres of the Palestinian population in Gaza and bombings against other countries in the region intended to impose Israeli dominance that consolidates Western hegemony in the region. The difference between the Western camp and the Global South was again evident on June 13, when condemnations began to pour in for the unprovoked, unjustified, illegal, and widely hypocritical aggression of a nuclear power, Israel, against a non-nuclear power, Iran. The routine was repeated ten days later, when it was the United States that, violating international law and the Non-Proliferation Treaty, bombed Iranian civilian nuclear facilities. Condemnation came solely from the Global South, while countries in the European Union, NATO, and their allies—with the notable exception of Japan, the only G7 member to condemn the attacks on nuclear infrastructure, for obvious reasons—praised Trump's ability to achieve peace through force .

As Zelensky has sought to emphasize since coming to power, although undoubtedly with greater emphasis since October 2023, there is a bond between Tel Aviv and Kyiv that justifies treating his cause in the same way the West treats the military needs of Israel, perpetually subsidized by the United States and protected by Washington, London, and Paris on the rare occasions when its aggressions are met with a military counterattack. To insert itself as an integral part of a single common Western cause, Ukraine has chosen to elevate the relationship between Iran and Russia to the status of an alliance, so close that Moscow complied with the arms embargo against Tehran while it was in effect and for years has resisted delivering to Tehran the air defense weapons that Iran clearly needed. Despite strongly condemning US and Israeli actions, Moscow, like Beijing, has not offered Iran military assistance at the time it was under attack. Even so, the Ukrainian discourse seeks to turn the two military situations, its own and that of the Middle East, into a global conflict in which the West faces a Moscow-Tehran-Pyongyang axis that, depending on the moment, also includes Beijing.

“Global politics is a vast network in which the interests of two hundred nations intersect. Yet every time these complex structures begin to unravel, a disruptive actor constantly emerges. Russia deliberately multiplies the disorder, undermines international law, and ignores the norms of bilateral and multilateral relations,” Mikhail Podolyak wrote last week, adding that “the key issue today is not diagnosing the problem, but the West’s willingness to apply strong instruments of coercion. Because without pressure on those who violate the global order, there will be no return to peace. The question, therefore, is not whether it should be done, but when. The chaos sown by the Kremlin will not dissipate just like that. It must—and can—be overcome by force, applied systematically and decisively.” The narrative is clear, and it involves a division of the world between the axis that follows the rules and the one that does not and thrives on promoting war to advance its global aspirations. From the country that invented an anti-terrorist operation to justify using the army to resolve a political problem militarily, the actions of those who colonized the Global South or attacked, invaded, and destroyed Iraq without reasonable justification such as the alliance of the rules-based international order , specifically those imposed by the West, are highlighted.

In this position, Ukraine's coordination with its Western partners is absolute. Meloni's words about how it must show "the same determination" against Russia that it has shown against Iran are exactly what Kiev hoped to hear from its allies regarding the way the United States and Israel blew up the ongoing negotiation process the moment Washington realized it couldn't achieve the kind of agreement it was seeking. Even Steve Witkoff, the closest to Russia among Donald Trump's foreign policy team members, emotionally declared that the pacification of Iran should be understood as a sign of hope for the war between Russia and Ukraine. Blowing up a negotiation process by understanding that an agreement in which the West can impose terms of capitulation, bomb at the risk of causing a wider war, and then demand even harsher terms from its enemy is not only the West's modus operandi against Iran but also the Ukrainian hope that it can be repeated against Russia.

Although they are secondary actors in both conflicts, European countries are playing a key role in attempting to present the war in Ukraine and the defense of Israel as a common cause, and also in exerting extreme military and political pressure against Russia and Iran. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz stands out above the rest in this position, taking to heart the idea that it is a matter of state for Germany to defend the State of Israel, but does not apply the same logic to other victims of Nazi Germany. “I think I must clarify this once again. There is clearly a fundamental difference in how we should assess the situation in these two regions. Russia is waging a war of aggression that violates international law, while Israel has been under threat for decades. At least since October 7, 2023, we have known that this threat could become a terrible reality. That is why, for me, it is unacceptable to equate these two situations,” explained Chancellor Merz, making it clear that the parameters used for Ukraine are not applicable to other peoples under attack.

The Russian occupation is the reason why Ukraine and its allies must fight against Russia until they achieve their goal of defeating Moscow's troops. It justifies kyiv receiving long-range weapons to attack Russian territory, selectively assassinating Russian (or Donbass) officers, sabotaging key infrastructure such as the Kerch Bridge and passenger trains, and endangering civil aviation with its drones. The Israeli occupation, however, is not only not a reason to send weapons to Palestine, but armed factions have no right to exist, nor to defend themselves. Nor are the daily bombings, the expulsion orders from areas of Gaza, or the humanitarian blockade that threatens widespread famine. Although the United Nations' civilian death toll in the war in Ukraine, which pits two heavily armed armies against each other in a much more populous country, is lower than the number of children killed by Israeli forces in Gaza since October 2023, Russia is violating the norms of the rules-based international order and must be punished for it, while Israel is exercising self-defense.

“The Big Three,” Sir Keir Starmer stated last week, referring to the United Kingdom, France, and Germany, “have major plans to deploy troops in Ukraine.” In the Middle East context, these three countries are known as the E3, the three Western European countries that participated in the negotiation of the Iran nuclear deal reached in 2015 and unilaterally broken by Donald Trump in 2018. With a clear desire to revive the agreement, which provided for the lifting of the draconian sanctions with which the West has punished Iran's independent policy for decades—sometimes hiding behind human rights, sometimes selectively applying the norms of that international order they wish to preserve—Iran strictly complied with the terms of the agreement for another year, giving the E3 valuable time to force its American ally to return to an agreement that was working as intended. Nor did there appear to be any return to compliance with the agreement during the Biden era. The month of June of this year has demonstrated the United States' intentions and willingness to bomb Iran illegally and illegitimately, based on absolutely false premises of imminent danger, given its inability to force Tehran to agree to submit to US hegemony globally and Israeli hegemony regionally.

In their selective view of international norms, European countries decided that it was Israel, not the bombed country, that was legitimately defending itself and condemned—in the German case even before it occurred—the legal and proportionate Iranian response. Manipulating in the same way as in the case of Russia and Ukraine, where they failed to take into account that it was kyiv, not Moscow, that sent a delegation with explicit orders not to negotiate political issues, the E3 has demanded that Tehran "return to the negotiating table," from which it only left after being militarily attacked with the connivance of the party with which it was supposed to engage in dialogue.

Unlike in the Ukrainian case, where everything revolves around imposing an unconditional ceasefire on Russia and a roadmap that neither corresponds to the outcome of the war nor brings an end to the conflict between the two countries, in the case of Iran, the E3 demands that Tehran return to the negotiating table and submit to an agreement that seeks to include not only the nuclear program, but also its missile program and, if possible, Iranian sovereignty itself. In reality, the E3 functions as an expanded format that also includes Kaja Kallas, whose radicalism has gone so far as to demand from Iran something that not even Trump is trying to impose: an end to Iran's nuclear program entirely.

Last week, blaming his opponent for his inability to obtain the agreement he desired, Donald Trump resorted to ultimatum language to threaten Russia with economic sanctions and secondary tariffs on its allies. Along the same lines, the E3, which, like Ukraine, feigns dialogue to give the impression of negotiation, announced the possibility of activating the system that would automatically reimpose sanctions approved by the United Nations Security Council, claiming that Tehran has been violating the 2015 agreement since the United States withdrew, and which would therefore be binding and obligatory for Russia and China as well. The logic is the same Trump used with the bombings of Iranian nuclear facilities and the one Brussels and other European capitals also want to use against Russia: selectively applying the norms of the rules-based international order and demanding surrender, a peace tailored to their needs, and in both cases through military force, threats, and sanctions. And always from the moral superiority of someone who knows that they impose the rules and are capable of deciding against whom they should be applied.

https://slavyangrad.es/2025/07/21/el-or ... aplicadas/

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Out of Options, West Again Floats Flushing Zelensky?
Simplicius
Jul 20, 2025
In seeming coordination this week, multiple publications began to throw Zelensky under the bus:

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At the same time Seymour Hersh again mounted his oracle pulpit and declared—per his sources—that Zelensky is due to be replaced by Zaluzhny in the near future. Many have criticized Hersh for his record with previous predictions, however last month his prediction of strikes on Iran mere days before they happened did pan out quite accurately.

B at MoA covered this in full, so I don’t need to rehash every detail. But suffice it to say that it accords with Trump’s alleged recent opinion that Zelensky is the ‘main obstacle to peace’, despite new misgivings about Putin. B does point out that Hersh reportedly makes a perplexingly off-target claim about Russian losses, as follows:

I have been provided with new Russian casualty numbers, from carefully evaluated US and British intelligence estimates, that show that Russia has suffered two million casualties—nearly double the current public numbers—since Putin started the war in early 2022.

If the same sources who’ve furnished Hersh with such outlandish casualty figures are the ones who’ve relayed the latest Zelensky intel, then it certainly casts doubt on the rest of their info.

In fact, another round of new body exchanges has shown casualty disparities continuing in the stratospheric range, as Russia gave back 1,000 new bodies to Ukraine, and received 19 in return:

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Not to mention head of Ukraine’s prestigious ‘Come Back Alive’ charity Taras Chmut in a new interview admitted that Russian recruitment is higher than its losses, while Ukraine’s is the opposite: (Video at link.)

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If Russian losses are two million as per Hersh’s sources, then Ukrainian losses must be in the double million digits.

But getting back.

While Trump has not been happy with Zelensky, it begs the question of what, exactly, Zaluzhny can do differently? First of all, it must be reminded that Zaluzhny is really the MI6’s guy, which is why he was sent to act as ambassador to the UK. The UK does not want to end the war, contrary to Trump’s stance. That means if Zaluzhny were to be installed, it would certainly not be for peace purposes, but rather to find new ways of continuation for the war.

The most likely method would be merely to serve as a new PR boost to lift the morale and spirits of the populace, given Zaluzhny’s erstwhile popularity. This would buy the European deep state another half year or so of continuity before the public again slowly sours. Recall that the chief desire from the European deep state is for Ukraine to launch full-scale mobilization of the 18-25 cohort—but Zaluzhny has been on record in the past as against this, and instead seeks more advanced weapons from the West before sacrificing the last fraction of the population.

So unless Zaluzhny has a sudden change of heart, I don’t see how his installation would alter the calculus at all. Russian experts agree, and believe there are other candidates being considered for that very reason:

There are no clear favorites for Zelensky's replacement in the US; besides Zaluzhny, they also meet with Poroshenko and Yermak, political scientist Alexander Asafov told "Zvezda." They are constantly compared sociologically and tested for manageability. Hersh's claims greatly oversimplify the situation.

"Sooner or later, the States will force Zelensky to go through elections. His chances are exactly the same as everyone else with whom discussions are ongoing. To say that Washington has unequivocally backed Zaluzhny is quite a bold simplification," the expert noted.

The candidate is not confirmed because the elections in Ukraine will create a new reality, and the US will again have to make additional efforts, Asafov believes. From the American perspective, their efforts are already excessive and should be handled by Europeans.


Scott Ritter has another idea:

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The above may have the right idea. At this point, Trump’s only real imperative is to create perceptions of strength and success in the public eye, and particularly for his opponents in the media. To one extent it, it relates to feeding his ego, and to another it’s simply a consequence of his realization that there’s nothing he can really do to end the war, and so the only remaining impulse is to make sure whatever happens can at least be spun as a personal victory. The 50-day window buys time to allow Trump to look tough with the threat of harsh sanctions, without actually having to follow through with them, in hopes something will flip the calculus by then and save him from having to commit to impossible promises. In short, a wayward, rudderless foreign policy, as always.

Getting someone to replace Zelensky is merely a gambler’s chance: another roll of the die in hopes someone more amenable takes charge. Amenable to what, you ask? To accepting the ‘realities’ even Trump knows are necessary, which Zelensky outright rejected: freezing the conflict at the current line, officially giving up Crimea and other territories, and more such concessions.

Sure, Russia requires far more than this as part of its demands, but Trump is still blind, deaf, and dumb to that—he believes the basic set of concessions from Ukraine—which Zelensky is incapable of accepting—will be enough to mollify Putin. Since Trump does not actually understand the core genesis of the conflict, he’s physically incapable of grasping why Russia requires far greater security guarantees by way of victory terms. American exceptionalism precludes US leaders from ever fundamentally grasping the existential security concerns of other nations; Israel, of course, being the sole exception.


On the front there continues to be talk of a ‘much larger’ Russian offensive, with a claimed 150,000 troops that Russia has positioned for the task. Most of this is bunk, as the troop count refers merely to troops Russia is already using for the purpose. However, it’s true that Russia has not yet maximized the intensity to its fullest. But don’t expect a massive fresh army to suddenly start doing “big arrow”-style pushes everywhere.

CNN’s latest repeats the claim of “160,000 troops”, but also provides some interesting tidbits:

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https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2025/07/17/euro ... nsive-intl+

A commander they interviewed confirms that Russia’s summer offensive has not yet peaked:

A Ukrainian commander, who goes by the call sign Musician, and has led a drone company near Pokrovsk since October, told CNN the Russian offensive had been underway for some time. “It has probably not reached its peak yet,” he said, “but they have been advancing for some time and are doing so quite successfully.”

Note the last part.

In fact, the article makes a humorous contradiction. First, they admit Russian forces are conducting ‘logical’ advances to encircle Pokrovsk:

Musician said the defense of Rodynske was key. “The enemy understands this and is counting on it. If they advance from Rodynske, the situation will be critical. There are one or two roads there that they can take control of, and logistics will be cut off. It’s a logical move on the part of the enemy.”

But then they go on to claim that Russia is suffering 90% losses in these recent pushes:

Ukrainian blogger and serviceman Stanislav Buniatov, who goes by the call sign Osman, wrote that the advances bring Moscow’s forces further into the Dnipropetrovsk region, an area not originally part of Putin’s territorial goals. The daily clashes leave “70-90% of the enemy’s personnel and equipment destroyed, but the enemy is advancing, and everyone understands why,” Osman wrote.

The hilarious irony comes next, as they go on to conclude, totally straight-faced, that lies about the front are precisely what’s doing Ukraine in:

Misleading reports from Ukrainian commanders to their superiors were hampering their defense, DeepState posted on Wednesday. “A big part of the enemy’s success is the lies in reports from the field about the real state of affairs, which makes it hard to assess risks and respond to changes in the situation from above… this is a huge problem that has catastrophic consequences. Lies will destroy us all.” The post highlighted the area to the south of Pokrovsk as particularly vulnerable to this internal, Ukrainian failing.

Imagine how propagandized you have to be to not put two and two together; in one sentence, blithely mentioning Russia’s “90% losses” in “otherwise successful assaults”, while in the next admitting that lies are precisely the reason Ukraine is losing.

Face meet palm.

Taras Chmut from another recent interview says that, contrary to the propaganda, the Russians are evolving faster on the battlefield than Ukraine. Listen carefully: (Video at link.)




To finish off with the front, other Ukrainian sources continue claiming Russia is gearing up for larger movements:

Russia is gathering forces from the rear of the Zaporizhzhia region and preparing for an offensive in the second half of July. This is according to Andryushchenko, an ex-advisor to the fake mayor of Mariupol.

(Video at link.)

For now there hasn’t been too much new movement on the Zaporozhye front. Only at its eastern end, Russian forces expanded control around Zelene Pole, with some sources claiming Russian units have begun attacking the outskirts of Temyrovka to the west:

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Just north of there Russia has had its biggest successes of late. There was a lot of back and forth activity here.

Recall last time Russia had captured Poddubne and was approaching Voskresenka to its south. They managed to fully capture Voskresenka, but then were booted out by a Ukrainian counterattack, though they now hold a portion of the town’s outskirts:

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Up north, however, they had success and captured both Tolstoi and most or all—by some accounts—of Novokhatske. Dachne was also mostly taken, while Yalta was taken but again recovered by the AFU in a counterattack. Note that Myrne was also taken just days ago, and now all the fields to its west have been captured to flatten out the line between Voskresenka and Novokhatske.

One of the byproducts of these movements is that Novopavlovka is now also being slowly encircled, like its larger neighbors to the northeast, Pokrovsk and Konstantinovka:

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In the area of the Pokrovsk-Mirnograd agglomeration, not much has changed other than Russian forces have fully established themselves on the outskirts of the key center of Rodinske such that cautious map-makers have finally penciled it in:

[https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_ ... 0x383.jpeg[/img]

Top Ukrainian analyst Myroshnykov believes the situation is getting critical:

On the Myrnohrad direction, the enemy is approaching Rodynske.

Everything happened too quickly, and now the enemy is practically on the outskirts of the city.

This now creates huge problems for the defense of the entire Pokrovsk-Myrnohrad agglomeration.

And if you consider that the enemy is already on the outskirts of Novoekonomichne, the situation can be described as critical.

There are literally subsidence areas everywhere — in the south near the village of Shevchenko, and in the southwest near Kotlyne-Udachne.

The enemy constantly "switches" between the main attack sectors, forcing us only to react.

For now, the initiative is completely with the enemy — we can only react, and that post factum.

At first, they advanced on the Toretsk direction, where they were stopped.

Then there was Sumy region. There, they were also stopped.

And now the enemy again, as in summer-autumn 2024, has directed its main efforts to the Pokrovsk direction.

In all these actions from the Toretsk direction to Pokrovsk, Sumy, and Kharkiv regions, we constantly shifted forces back and forth. And it kept "breaking through" further.

That's the situation.


Notice the small revelations he makes about the Russian strategy, which we covered here many times before. Due to Russia’s superior logistical abilities, Russia is able to re-deploy its forces all across various fronts much faster, continuously attacking Ukraine where it has the least or weakest units.

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He gives another analysis:

On the Pokrovsk direction, where it seemed this spring that there were all chances to hold the agglomeration, the situation has now begun to smell very bad.

The scum are advancing towards the very mine near Pokrovsk.

Also, the enemy is simultaneously advancing towards key points - the routes to Pavlohrad and Dobropillia, and they are having success.

In the event that they cut them off - this is practically an operational encirclement, because narrow rural roads will remain, which are already littered with destroyed cars, especially civilian ones.

The scum don't care who they kill with drones. Everything that moves is already under drone attack.

The situation in the entire direction is critical, and the prospects for our defense at the moment are very unpromising.

And at the same time, I don't see anything at the moment that would change the situation.

Our soldiers are doing much more than their capabilities allow. Therefore, help for our army, especially on the hot directions - is vitally necessary!


Recently the AFU had a string of small tactical successes in counterattacks on various fronts, including the above-mentioned ones. One of the reasons I typically don’t bother posting these is because in almost every case, they are reversed soon after, and thus are transitory.

One recent example of this is in Sumy, where Ukraine counterattacked and pro-UA analysts made a huge rouse about how Russians were “driven out” of Kondritovka, as seen below:

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Now only days later, reports indicate Russian forces recaptured all lost positions. This is a typical tactic by Russian troops to briefly abandon positions that are pre-calculated for artillery solutions and let the Ukrainians essentially impale themselves there, then storm back in to clean up. This usually happens each time, which is why it’s pointless reporting on the temporary Ukrainian ‘successes’.

Lastly, on the Konstantinovka front, there is no confirmation yet but some pro-UA sources claim this lower area has fallen:

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By the way, Western “analysts” continue to exult over the fact that Russian advances, while continual and relentless, are “tiny” in the overall scheme of things. They show fancy calculations of how at its current pace, Russia is set to take everything up to Kiev in 70 years.

The problem is, Russian advances are not linear, but rather they are going exponential on a yearly scale. This year they are already double that of last year, and given Ukraine’s terminal decline in resources and manpower, it can be expected that they may continue to multiply this way.

Just look at the chart below, with blue lines representing gains from the same time last year, which are always half or less than half of current gains:

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If last year averaged around 5km2 per day, and this year is averaging 10-15km2 per day, then what if next year averages 20-30km2 per day, and the year after that 40-60km2? At that exponential rate, Russia would capture everything within a few years, rather than “70” as claimed. Collapse is never linear, just check the earlier chart for body exchanges. (Video at link.)

By the way, while everyone anticipates the mythical ‘summer offensive’, in reality Russia has always launched its main, largest offensives—counter-intuitively, it may seem—during late fall and winter, after rasputitsa. Two of the war’s biggest battles, Bakhmut and Avdeevka, both essentially began around October, of 2022 and 2023 respectively, and continued on throughout the winter.

In each case, it was mostly a consequence of Ukraine’s own summer offensives. Russia waited out the Kherson and Kharkov offensives during summer and fall of 2022, then began Bakhmut. In 2023, the famous ‘grand summer counter-offensive’ took up the summer, after which Russia launched the Avdeevka drive in October of that year. In 2024, Ukraine again used the summer to launch its own Kursk offensive in August, and Russia began the Kurakhove line of offensives after first stabilizing Kursk, around October of that year.

Similarly for 2025, Russia is “preparing” the ground for both the Pokrovsk-Mirnograd agglomeration and Konstantinovka, and I don’t expect they will attempt the final capture of those cities until this winter at the minimum. As such, one or both of those key centers will likely be this winter season’s ‘big battle’ in the tradition of Bakhmut, Avdeevka, and Kurakhove. Although, Pokrovsk has a chance to begin much sooner given the particular precariousness of that encirclement—whereas, Konstantinovka still needs more time to warm in the oven.

Of course, that doesn’t mean there won’t be many other major advances all along the other fronts, particularly on the Donetsk-Dnipro front, where Russian forces will likely continue pushing toward Pavlograd to eventually connect with the Zaporozhye grouping pushing up from the south.


A few last items:

It turned out Trump ‘deceived’ Europe with the Patriot scam, says BILD. No one knows who’s actually sending the Patriots, and the few that may arrive won’t do so for up to 8 months or more:

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Trump deceived again: Europe has big problems sending Patriots to Ukraine

The Patriot SAM from Germany for Ukraine will be ready only in 6-8 months, Bild writes citing a source in the German government.

Initially, it was planned that Washington would transfer air defense systems to Ukraine from its own reserves, and Germany would pay for their replenishment. However, Trump stated that the US Army cannot give up a single unit. Europe must provide air defense from its own arsenals.

Thus, the publication writes, paying for weapons for Ukraine is not enough. Europe must dismantle its own stockpiles and order replacements from the American defense industry.

At the same time, Europe is short of air defense. Closed negotiations have been going on for several days about who can help Ukraine.

Currently, according to Bild, a decision is being formed: Switzerland is moving back in the queue for Patriot systems. The first unit will be sent not to Bern, but to Ukraine – at Germany's expense. But the system is still being finalized by the American company Raytheon and will be ready no earlier than in 6-8 months.


Germany corroborated that they had no clue what Patriots they were supposed to be sending, as per Trump:

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https://kyivindependent.com/germany-den ... e-07-2025/

Just more of the laughable shell game.



An extremely revealing story from a Ukrainian officer about a Ukrainian general who watched footage of dead AFU troops, and was flummoxed as to why they weren’t on the attack: (Video at link.)

A Ukrainian Armed Forces General, watching a drone video broadcast at headquarters, was surprised that the dead Ukrainian soldiers were lying down and not going on the attack. This was reported by the Ukrainian Armed Forces officer Anton Chorny.

"Well, they are already dead, Mr. General," the drone operator explained to the high command.



Lastly, Trump showcased his risible cluelessness—or narcissism, depending on your point of view—by again claiming he will “quickly” destroy the BRICS if they ever pose a threat, and that the BRICS nations are so terrified of Trump they are “virtually afraid to meet”: (Video at link.)

https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/out ... ain-floats

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Brief Frontline Report – July 20th, 2025

Report by Marat Khairullin and Mikhail Popov.
Zinderneuf
Jul 20, 2025

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports: "Units of the "South" Group successfully advanced and liberated the settlement of Belaya Gora (Belaya Hora on the map) in the Donetsk People's Republic.”

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ЛБС 09.4.2025=Line of Combat Contact April 9th, 2025. Зона Активности=Zone of Activity.

The village of Belaya Gora (coordinates: 48°28′55″N, 37°52′08″E; population approximately 80) is a small settlement that, together with the village of Aleksandro-Shultino, forms a major and well-fortified defensive area of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The terrain is advantageous, anchored by the confluence of two rivers - the Naumikha and the Bakhmutka.

With the capture of Belaya Gora and the subsequent liberation of Aleksandro-Shultino, the "South" Group of Forces will secure a key hub on the Konstantinovka sector of the Donetsk front. This position threatens two AFU defensive areas: in the northern direction (Belaya Gora - Predtechino), it enables the encirclement of the AFU's defensive "pocket" on the last segment of the right (west) bank of the Seversky Donets-Donbass Canal; in the southwestern direction (Belaya Gora - Pleshcheevka), it allows for a northern flanking maneuver against AFU forces holding the northern approaches to Dzerzhinsk (Toretsk), with potential to breakthrough into the rear of the Kleban-Byk defensive line.

In both operational scenarios, the enemy should already be withdrawing its main forces to the Berestok-Ivanopole defensive line.

Simultaneously, to pin down enemy reserves, Russian forces launched an offensive north of Chasov Yar, advancing toward the village of Maiskoe where forward units have reached the outskirts.

On the left flank of the Konstantinovka sector, our assault groups are actively engaging AFU defenses near Yablonovka. By cutting the H-20 highway, our troops will isolate AFU units in Aleksandro-Kalinovo from their main forces.

The entire southern and southeastern segments of the AFU's defensive line in this area are now under increasing pressure due to previously established breakthrough zones, wedges, which are gradually expanding and fragmenting their defensive positions.

https://maratkhairullin.substack.com/p/ ... -july-20th

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"Tear apart" the enemy's defense: information is coming in about the Russian Armed Forces forcing the Seversky Donets west of Volchansk

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There are reports that Russian troops have crossed the Seversky Donets River west of Volchansk, creating a second bridgehead on this section of the front. Let us recall that the first bridgehead was created within the city limits – after crossing the Volchya River and taking control of the oil extraction plant, which the Ukrainian Armed Forces had turned into a powerful fortified area.

The enemy itself confirms the significant complication of the situation in the Vovchansk direction. In low-literary formulations in messengers, Ukrainian "volunteers" and military personnel write about how the situation for the Ukrainian Armed Forces has worsened in Vovchansk, as well as to the east and west of it.

The fighting is taking place along the line Tikhoe - Volchanskiye Khutor - Pokalyanoye. This is to the east of the city. In the area of Pokalyanoye, there is a powerful fire impact on the flank of the enemy's defense. There, a multiple launch rocket system was destroyed along with its crew, and strikes aimed at breaking through the defensive lines of the Ukrainian Armed Forces continue there.

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The fire impact in the area of Pokalyany and Vovchanskiye Khutors significantly reduces the enemy's ability to quickly transfer forces and resources between Vovchansk and the north-east of the Kharkov region. Several days ago, the Russian Armed Forces liberated the village of Degtyarnoye on the north-eastern "outskirts" of the Kharkov region.

The creation of a new bridgehead, now also to the west of Volchansk, could allow the enemy’s defense to be “pulled apart” in this direction.

https://en.topwar.ru/268353-razdergat-o ... anska.html

Google Translator

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A doctor from Kharkiv was beaten to the point of intensive care during detention by CCC workers in Odessa
July 20, 2025, 5:20 PMRead also in Russian

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Photo: Telegram/Honcharenko

Odessa is investigating an incident involving a doctor from Kharkiv who was injured

This was announced by People's Deputy Oleksiy Honcharenko, reportsRegioNews.

According to preliminary information, the man was detained by representatives of the CCC, after which a conflict arose between them. Witnesses claim that the detainee was beaten, after which he was placed in a minibus.

During the incident, the medic received serious injuries. In particular, he was diagnosed with broken ribs and a damaged lung. The victim was hospitalized in the intensive care unit, where doctors are providing him with the necessary assistance. His condition is assessed as serious.


According to eyewitnesses, at first they tried to take the victim not to the hospital, but to the military medical commission. However, it was the commission doctor who insisted on immediate hospitalization, which probably saved the man's life.

The territorial procurement center reported that an internal audit has been scheduled to clarify all the circumstances of the incident. The actions of the employees involved in the incident are currently being verified.

It was previously reported that in the Poltava region, a man with amputated feet was sentenced for evading mobilization.

https://regionews.ua/ukr/news/odesskaya ... g_rewarded

Google Translator

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And Again, And Again ...

... I have to repeat--and how is this news, really?


US-made Patriot air defense systems, long hailed as a cornerstone of Western military aid to Ukraine, are now struggling to intercept advanced Russian ballistic missiles, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, citing sources. One unnamed Ukrainian official told the outlet that Russian ballistic missiles have become more maneuverable, allowing them to evade Patriot radar detection. He did not clarify what type of missiles he was referring to. Meanwhile, in light of the EU’s efforts to wean itself from the American military-industrial complex amid uncertainty regarding continued US support for Ukraine, a next-generation European alternative is seeking to dethrone the Patriots, the report says.

I will repeat:

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US hardware is a technological and functional failure in the modern war, across the board, with the exception of the American impressive ISR capabilities, which still failed to prevent the agony of NATO. Per SAMP/T by France:

The upgraded Samp/T missile system, developed by the Franco-Italian joint venture Eurosam, is being promoted as better suited to handle current threats and features a new radar that reportedly detects targets at a distance of more than 350km while being able to fire missiles in all directions, the paper notes. The Samp/T also requires fewer operators, with the entire system able to run with as few as 15 people, compared to roughly 90 troops needed for a US Patriot battery, according to the WSJ.

It also comes with the latest espresso machine, excellent dishwasher, entertainment center, latest version of environment-friendly A/C and AI voice system which says Ooh La La, each time Iskander is detected at the terminal and SAMP/T fails to develop firing solution. As I stated not for once--NATO doesn't know what real AD is. Difficult to know, when one considers a dismal academic level of military academies in NATO and not understanding that some "programs" serious AD tactical and operational officer do not make. I offered not for once the insight of Russia's AD military "establishment"--just look up this academy. Yaroslavl, apart from 5 years, 6 days a week academic and military regimen--a heavy focus on Air Defense systems and their tactics and operations. It is a different level of professionalism which NO military officer school in the West can provide.

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The ONLY field in which the US retains a parity (apart from advantage in ISR) are submarine forces. US Navy's submarine force is still world-class in terms of platforms. In terms of fire-power--not anymore. But don't tell this to these two clowns: H.I. Sutton and Amick (aka Sub Brief). What do you expect--there are still some confused US officers who believe that Patriot shoots down Iskanders, Kinzhals and Zircons easily. The fact that they are unable to see through the murky streams of BS from 404 merely confirms what is becoming patently clear--a low professional level of the US military, whose defining feature throughout post-WW II decades has become ignorant arrogance.

http://smoothiex12.blogspot.com/2025/07 ... again.html

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DNR - When there are no Banderas
July 20, 23:02

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Footage from the liberated city of Kurakhovo.
The city suffered moderately, but serious restoration processes have not yet begun, since the front has not yet gone very far. But it will certainly be restored.

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(Other photos at link.)

https://t.me/WarInMyEyes/10925 - zinc

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9967143.html

Google Translator

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Colombia Moves to Ban Citizens From Fighting as Mercenaries Abroad
July 20, 2025

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Colombian mercenaries captured by Haitian authorities after the assassination of former President Jovenal Moïse in 2021. Photo: Jean Marc Herve Abelard/EPA/file photo.

Colombia is moving forward with a legislative proposal to prohibit its citizens from participating in armed conflicts abroad, announced Deputy Foreign Minister Mauricio Jaramillo. He explained that the measure stems from concerns about Colombian mercenaries in Ukraine and other international war scenarios, where they have been victims of deception and violence.

The initiative comes after the ambassador of Russia in Colombia, Nikolai Tavdumadze, decried that Ukraine is recruiting mercenaries in Colombia through its diplomatic missions, something that violates the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro emphatically has called mercenarism “a way of robbing a nation” and has advocated for “comprehensive human security” to replace the logic of the “internal enemy.” Jaramillo said that Colombia considers it unacceptable to send its citizens to fight in foreign armies.

Colombia’s concern about mercenarism is not limited to Ukraine. Recently, former Colombian military personnel were reported to be involved in the conflict in Sudan. They were allegedly recruited by a contracting company registered in Bogotá and run by a retired army colonel living in Dubai.

Reports indicate the Colombians travel to the United Arab Emirates and are transferred to Libya to cross the desert into Sudan, where they face ambushes and danger. Colombian deaths have already been reported in Sudan.

The armed conflict in this African country, which began in April 2023, has caused mass displacement of 11 million people and a severe humanitarian crisis.

In mid-2021, Colombian mercenaries in Haiti were also involved in the assassination of former President Jovenel Moïse, though they later claimed that they had been framed.

https://orinocotribune.com/colombia-mov ... es-abroad/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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