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Light Sabers

Ukraine's decision to not receive German president 'irritating' - Chancellor Scholz

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier
© AFP / John MACDOUGALLGerman President Frank-Walter Steinmeier
Germany is doing enough to support Ukraine, Chancellor Olaf Scholz told the country's RBB radio broadcaster on Wednesday. The head of government has also said he has no plans to travel to Kiev after the Ukrainian authorities turned down a visit by German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

The chancellor said he had been to Kiev not long before the start of the military conflict, adding that he is in constant contact with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky by phone. "There is hardly any head of state or government who has such intensive contacts with me," he told RBB.

Scholz called Kiev's decision not to receive the German president "irritating," adding that Steinmeier would have gladly visited the Ukrainian capital and "it would have been good" for Ukraine to welcome him.

Chess

Finland and Sweden in NATO means change to nuclear posture - Moscow

russian navy
© Sputnik / Aleksandr GalperinRussian Navy ships are taking part in a naval parade
Russia would have to deploy significant forces to its northwestern borders if Sweden and Finland join NATO, the country's ex-president, Dmitry Medvedev, warned on Thursday. He added that deploying nuclear arms to the region might well be a way of "restoring the balance" of security.

The two states acceding to the US-led military bloc would only mean Russia will have more "officially registered adversaries," the former president wrote in a lengthy Telegram post commenting on the aspirations of Stockholm and Helsinki.

The length of the land border between Russia and the military bloc will nearly double should the plans come to fruition, added Medvedev, who is currently deputy chairman of the country's Security Council. "This border's [security] will have to be strengthened," he continued. Possible enhancement options include "drastically increasing the number of land forces and air defenses" in the region, and deploying additional warships to the Gulf of Finland.

"The non-nuclear status of the Baltic region will be out of question in this case. The balance [of power] should be preserved," Medvedev warned, adding that Russia had not even considered such an option until now.

No Entry

Germany weighs snubbing India as G-7 guest over Russia stance

G7 map
© grafik-teilnehmerlaender-en/Federal GovernmentG7 Map
  • Berlin was considering inviting India PM to summit before war
  • Germany itself has come under criticism over Russia ties
Germany is debating whether to invite Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the Group of Seven summit it's hosting in June, given India's reluctance to condemn Russia for invading Ukraine, according to people familiar with the matter.

Germany is set to include Senegal, South Africa and Indonesia as guests at the meeting in Bavaria, but India remains under consideration, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing confidential matters. One of the people said India had been on a list drawn up before the war in Ukraine started, and a final decision hadn't been taken.

India was among the more than 50 countries that abstained from a United Nations vote to suspend Russia from the UN Human Rights Council, and has not imposed sanctions on Moscow. It is a significant buyer of Russian weapons, which it says it needs to deter its neighbors China and Pakistan.

Comment: Biden pressures Modi on Russian oil:
U.S. President Joe Biden has asked Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi not to accelerate purchases of Russian oil, saying doing so would not be in India's interest and could hamper the U.S. response to the war in Ukraine.

Biden, who is seeking to build a wider coalition of nations opposed to Russia's unprovoked attack on Ukraine, told Modi during an hourlong video call on April 11 that India's position in the world would not be enhanced by relying on Russian energy sources.

As the U.S. and other nations try to cut off Moscow's energy income, India has stepped up recently with a major purchase. India also signaled restraint when it was among 58 countries that last week abstained from a U.S.-led effort to suspend Russia from the UN Human Rights Council over allegations that Russian soldiers in Ukraine engaged in rights violations.

The call was characterized as "warm" and "candid," but the White House could not say if India stood with the United States in fully condemning Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying the choice ultimately rested with Modi's government.


In one word: "No"


Biden opened the video conversation by emphasizing the defense partnership between the two countries and by saying that the United States and India are going to "continue our close consultation on how to manage the destabilizing effects of this Russian war" on food and other commodities.
"The root of our partnership is a deep connection between our people, ties of family, of friendship, and of shared values."

Perhaps not 'shared values.'


During the call Modi called the situation in Ukraine "very worrying" and noted that an Indian student lost his life during the war. He said he has spoken with Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, appealing to both for peace.

Also on April 11, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin met in person with Indian Defense Minister Rajnath Singh, and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.

Austin appealed to India to act together with fellow democracies, saying now more than ever "democracies must stand together to defend the values that we all share."

Blinken and Jaishankar said India's defense modernization needs were a key topic that they discussed at length.

"Today we are able and willing to be a partner of choice with India across virtually every realm," Blinken said at a joint news conference following the talks.



Bizarro Earth

Ukraine: Deep stakes for Putin...and for China

clock countdown
© SputnikA Continuous Countdown
An interview with The Critical Hour today afforded a chance to expand on "Mearsheimer: Russia Sees 'Existential Threat', Must Win" of April

Putin is likely to press on with his armed campaign to demilitarize and denazify Ukraine; he seems already to have the wherewithal to achieve that aim. Better still from Putin's point of view, he possesses an important insurance policy that he has been paying premiums on for two decades — Big Brother President Xi Jin-ping of China is the insurance.

The growing closeness of the Russia-China strategic relationship had become clear well before the invasion of Ukraine, when — to the surprise of many — Xi decided to give Putin a waiver on Westphalia, so to speak. Xi's strong support for Russia speaks volumes.

Indeed, in a worst-case scenario sparked by the war in Ukraine, the U.S./NATO might well find themselves facing the possibility of a two-front war with both Russia and China. The most unsettling thing of all is that there is little sign that Biden's junior-varsity advisers are aware that — partly because of their own misfeasance — the U.S./Russia/China triangular relationship has become pronouncedly isosceles, with the U.S. on the short end.

Bullseye

US intel can help Ukraine attack targets in Crimea

Crimea
© Sputnik/Vladim Savitsky/Russian Defense MinistryServicemen at the Opuk training ground, Republic of Crimea, Russia.
As the US has ramped up its involvement in the Ukrainian crisis by supplying heavier weapons to Kiev, it has also decided to provide intelligence reports that can help Ukrainian forces attack targets in Crimea, media outlets reported on Wednesday. Russia considers the peninsula part of its territory.

"As the conflict evolves, we continue to adjust to ensure that operators have the flexibility to share detailed, timely intelligence with the Ukrainians," a US intelligence official told the Wall Street Journal.

The newspaper said Washington is moving to "significantly expand" intelligence-sharing with Ukraine, but "will refrain from providing intelligence that would enable the Ukrainians to strike targets on Russian territory [sic]". The report, which was confirmed by the New York Times, specifically mentioned Crimea as covered by the new policy.

Hiliter

Ezra Levant on Tucker Carlson Tonight discussing Trudeau's plans to license journalism

Levant Trudeau
© Rebel News/KJNEzra Levant Show • Canadian PM Justin Trudeau
Ezra Levant joined Fox News' Tucker Carlson Tonight to talk about the Trudeau government denying Rebel News a newly-conceived government licence to fully practice journalism.

Not only does that mean Rebel News is not allowed to attend government press conferences, but it also harms our online presence and punishes us under Income Tax Act.

We're not taking this lying down — Rebel News is fighting back, and we're suing Trudeau.

Please read our lawsuit to learn just what they've done to us — and why we have to fight back by clicking here.


Comment: Trudeau subsidizes the news outlets he approves, persecutes those he nixes.


Vader

The hypocrisy of empire: US has The Hague Invasion Act, but wants The Hague to prosecute Russia


international criminal court
Washington wants Putin in the International Criminal Court, but its law allows "all means necessary" to prevent cases against USA

Amid the fog of war in Ukraine and the total absence of any due process to assess the various violent scenes emerging from the conflict there - a process which normally takes years — the Biden administration is already looking for a way to get the International Criminal Court in The Hague to start from Washington's desired result and work backwards.

"The Biden team strongly wants to see President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia and others in his military chain of command held to account," according to the New York Times.

Except that the US isn't even a member of the court, so what authority, moral or otherwise, does it have? And neither is Russia, as of 2016, so any efforts to target Russia would amount to little more than symbolism. The lack of satisfaction that Washington would get, compared to the potential risks that it could itself incur, makes the lack of self-awareness even more flagrant. Why would Washington risk opening a massive Pandora's Box against itself by suddenly expressing its newfound interest in defending international law?

Attention

Not just Biden: Reports says Democrats fear Sen. Dianne Feinstein no longer mentally fit for Congress

diane feinstein
© Michael Reynolds/EPASen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), served as mayor of San Francisco before being elected to the Senate in 1992.
Longtime Sen. Dianne Feinstein is showing clear signs of cognitive decline, according to a new report, leaving her colleagues in Congress scrambling for ways to persuade her to retire before her term expires in 2024.

"It's bad, and it's getting worse," one Democratic senator told the San Francisco Chronicle, which also reported that a member of California's congressional delegation who has known Feinstein (D-Calif.) for 15 years recently had to reintroduce themselves to her repeatedly over a discussion lasting several hours.

"I have worked with her for a long time and long enough to know what she was like just a few years ago: always in command, always in charge, on top of details, basically couldn't resist a conversation where she was driving some bill or some idea," the lawmaker said. "All of that is gone. She was an intellectual and political force not that long ago, and that's why my encounter with her was so jarring. Because there was just no trace of that."

Comment: And from the Washington Free Beacon:
'It's bad, and it's getting worse'

"It was like Groundhog Day," a source told the New Yorker in 2020, "but with the pain fresh each time."

In September, former California Democratic senator Barbara Boxer became the first party figure to suggest Feinstein should retire.

"If Sen. Feinstein were to call me today and asked my advice ... I would say only you can decide this," Boxer told the Los Angeles Times. "But from my perspective, I want you to know I've had very productive years away from the Senate doing good things. So put that into the equation."

Feinstein has not held a town hall meeting in her state since the beginning of her current term. If she serves until 2024 and Democrats maintain a Senate majority, she could become the upper chamber's president pro tempore, making her third in line for the Oval Office behind Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris.



Treasure Chest

Exclusive: Russian geoeconomics Tzar Sergei Glazyev introduces the new global financial system

Sergei Glaziev
© The CradleLeading Russian economist Sergey Glazyev says a complete overhaul of the western-dominated global monetary and financial system is under works. And the world's rising powers are buying into it.
The world's new monetary system, underpinned by a digital currency, will be backed by a basket of new foreign currencies and natural resources. And it will liberate the Global South from both western debt and IMF-induced austerity.

Sergey Glazyev is a man living right in the eye of our current geopolitical and geoeconomic hurricane. One of the most influential economists in the world, a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and a former adviser to the Kremlin from 2012 to 2019, for the past three years he has helmed Moscow's uber strategic portfolio as Minister in Charge of Integration and Macroeconomics of the Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU).

Glazyev's recent intellectual production has been nothing short of transformative, epitomized by his essay Sanctions and Sovereignty and an extensive discussion of the new, emerging geoeconomic paradigm in an interview to a Russian business magazine.

In another of his recent essays, Glazyev comments on how "I grew up in Zaporozhye, near which heavy fighting is now taking place in order to destroy the Ukrainian Nazis, who never existed in my small Motherland. I studied at a Ukrainian school and I know Ukrainian literature and language well, which from a scientific point of view is a dialect of Russian. I did not notice anything Russophobic in Ukrainian culture. In the 17 years of my life in Zaporozhye, I have never met a single Banderist."

Glazyev was gracious to take some time from his packed schedule to provide detailed answers to a first series of questions in what we expect to become a running conversation, especially focused to the Global South. This is his first interview with a foreign publication since the start of Operation Z. Many thanks to Alexey Subottin for the Russian-English translation.

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

Desperation: Ukraine releasing convicts to form new nationalist battalions

ukraine prison
© Pierre Crom / Getty ImagesA recruitment notice on a Ukrainian prison wall
Three new battalions from those serving time for grave crimes have been put together by Ukraine, Moscow says

Ukrainian authorities have released convicts from prisons in the Kharkov Region, in the north east of the country, and used them to assemble several new military units, Russia's Defense Ministry claimed on Thursday.

"In Kharkov, the formation of three new nationalist battalions is being completed, staffed by prisoners, who have served sentences for grave and extremely grave crimes at the Alekseevskaya and 43rd correctional colonies," Colonel General Mikhail Mizintsev, the head of the National Defense Management Center, said during a briefing.