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Ukraine Updates: Second round of peace talks conclude with agreement for civilian evacuation corridors, Russia says it won't stop fulfilling its military objectives

Lavrov
© Shamil Zhumatov/AFP via Getty ImagesRussian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday that Moscow wouldn't stop hitting Ukraine's military infrastructure as a precondition to peace talks.

The big picture: Lavrov said Russia had submitted demands to Ukraine's delegation but added it would see out the war until "the end," per Reuters.
  • Lavrov accused NATO of seeking to maintain military supremacy over Russia and said Moscow will insist on provisions that would prevent Ukraine from becoming a military threat, per AP.
  • He also claimed that Russia had no intentions of starting a nuclear war, despite provocative messaging from the Kremlin over the past week.
What he's saying: "We are ready to conduct talks, but we will continue the operation because we won't allow Ukraine to preserve a military infrastructure that threatens Russia," Lavrov said, per AP.
  • "The thought of nuclear is constantly spinning in the heads of Western politicians but not in the heads of Russians," he added, according to a translation from Reuters. "I assure you that we will not allow any kind of provocation to unbalance us."
Lavrov also acknowledged a toll on Ukrainian civilians, saying "any military action is fraught with casualties, and not just among the military but also civilians."

Comment: The second round of talks concluded with the agreement to jointly establish humanitarian corridors for civilians, and a temporary ceasefire while they are in operation. "Russia and Ukraine will soon create channels of communication and cooperation to organize these corridors," Ukrainian presidential aide Mikhail Podolyak said. According to the Russian negotiator, Medinsky, the two also "found common ground" on certain other issues, including military, humanitarian, and on future political reconciliation. This comes two days after Russian and Ukraine's first prisoner exchange (t Ukrainian soldiers for 1 Russian). Ukraine had entered the negotiations with establishing the corridors as their (minimum) main goal, which is sensible. Kiev is calling for a UN peacekeeping mission and no-fly zone. Over 1 million Ukrainians have fled the country so far.

Putin spoke to Macron again, reiterating Russia's objectives and adding that they will be achieved regardless of any other circumstances. He added that by delaying negotiations Kiev is simply exposing itself to additional demands. In other words, they had their chance (for 8 years), and now they will comply. Certain things will be negotiable, but the core demands are not. It is take it or leave it. Macron said "nothing reassuring" came from Putin, and he believes the "worst is yet to come."

Zelensky reported survived an assassination plot on Monday. (He is rumored to have been saved by the totally real "Chuck Norris of Kiev," the "Ghost of Kiev's" brother.) Ukraine 'sources' are floating the idea that Putin is planning on reinstating Yanukovich as a temporary president (presumably as he was the last legitimate leader in the country before being illegally ousted). Ukrainian politician Oleksandra Ustinova is finding out what it's like to have the U.S. as a "friend," telling NBC "To be honest, it was a total disappoint for us..." to watch Biden's speech. In other words, to see that they will get no actual support now that they need it. Zelensky claims 16,000 foreign fighters have arrived to assist the Ukrainian military. Germany claims it will send more Strela anti-aircraft missiles.

Hungary, by contrast, will not allow any military aid to flow to Ukraine, and not to send any troops or weapons. Orban explained Hungary's perspective, which is one of the most concise explanations of the war on offer:
War in Ukraine was inevitable, because the US and NATO didn't provide the security guarantees required by Russia, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Thursday.

He added that "there were no arguments for curbing our energy cooperation with Russia," despite the ongoing military conflict.

"NATO is steadily expanding eastward, and Russia likes it less and less. The Russians put forward two demands: Ukraine should declare its neutrality and NATO shouldn't accept Ukraine. The Russians didn't receive these security guarantees, therefore they decided to receive them through a war," the PM explained in an interview with Hungarian outlet Mandiner.
According to Putin, the families of Russian soldiers killed in action will receive over seven million rubles ($65,000) from the government. Those injured can receive three million ($28k), and those permanently disabled will receive lifetime pensions. On the fighting itself, he added:
The offensive is proceeding strictly according to its "schedule," Putin stressed, while admitting certain issues were experienced during the military operation. For instance, the Russian military has established safe corridors for Ukrainian civilians to escape the combat zone, yet local "neo-Nazi" forces and foreign "mercenaries" have been trying to prevent them from leaving, he said.

"Nationalist and neo-Nazi groups, foreign mercenaries, including those from the Middle East, are using civilians as human shields," Putin stated. "As I've already said, there is absolutely objective data, photos of how they place heavy military equipment in residential areas of cities."
He's telling the truth:


The ICC plans to open a war-crimes investigation regarding Ukraine. The prosecutor's office would start collecting evidence for "any past and present allegations of war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide committed on any part of the territory of Ukraine by any person", Khan said in a statement.

UPDATE (Mar. 4): Russia and the U.S. have opened a deconfliction line to avoid any "misunderstandings" or accidents in Ukraine. Contrary to calls by Kiev, the White House does not support stripping Russia of its UN Security Council seat. As for Moscow, Ukrainian officials say the Russians have been "gradually reducing" their demands:
"If we look closely at it, we see they have stopped talking about denazification," Arestovich said, adding that even the issue of a neutral status for Ukraine had not been raised. "It was a question of preventing the deployment of certain types of offensive weapons in Ukraine that was discussed," he said.

It was not clear, however, which of Lavrov's remarks Arestovich was referencing. On Thursday, the minister gave an interview to foreign media, and stressed that "denazification" was one of Moscow's key goals in Ukraine.

Arestovich's version of the matter has been refuted by Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov. Responding to a journalist's request to clarify whether Russia had rejected the idea of Ukraine's "denazification," Peskov said: "No, it's not the case."
Germany is downplaying reports of their own far-right extremists traveling to fight with the neo-Nazis in Ukraine, saying the number is "significantly fewer" than the reported 10. Germany is reportedly looking at ways to stop any more from traveling, like taking away their passports.

A skirmish at the Zaporozhskaya nuclear power plant is prompting hysteria in Western news, with the U.S. embassy calling it a Russian "war crime." What actually happened is that Ukrainians at the facility opened fire on Russian troops, who responded by firing illumination flares, then returning fire. Only an administrative building was damaged, and there is no risk of another Chernobyl.


Evil Rays

Russia criminalizes disseminating 'disinformation' about army, military operations

moscow duma parliament
© Sputnik/Russian State DumaRussian State Duma
Moscow has also accused Washington of launching an information war over the conflict in Ukraine

Russian lawmakers have approved legislation that could see people put behind bars for up to 15 years if found guilty of peddling so-called false information about the actions of the army, amid Moscow's military operation in Ukraine.

On Friday, the lower chamber of Russia's parliament voted to introduce the law to heavily penalize citizens spreading fake allegations against the country's armed forces.

The chairman of the State Duma, Vyacheslav Volodin, weighed in on the move, insisting that it is needed "to protect our soldiers, officers, in order to protect the truth."

Comment: Russia's actions are no more different, or shocking than those taking by any other country engaged in delicate military operations.


Pirates

New grift opportunities? Clinton Global Initiative restarted to tackle 'urgent needs'

Hillary and Bill Clinton
Hillary and Bill Clinton
The Clinton Foundation is planning another Clinton Global Initiative - the high-profile gathering of business, political and philanthropic leaders - this September in New York, according to a letter former President Bill Clinton sent to the foundation's supporters Friday

The Clinton Foundation is planning another Clinton Global Initiative - a high-profile gathering of business, political and philanthropic leaders - this September in New York, according to a letter former President Bill Clinton sent to the foundation's supporters Friday.

The initiative, which began meeting annually in 2005 and boasted speakers ranging from former presidents Barack Obama and Jimmy Carter to celebrity philanthropists like Bono and Ben Affleck, ended in 2016 during former Sen. Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, when questions were raised about the appearance of potential conflicts of interests if donors then had business before Hillary Clinton's administration.

Comment: Oy, the the brass of some psychos know no limits. A bit of background on this criminal organization:


Vader

Leading experts warned NATO expansion would lead to conflict. Why did no one listen?

nato expansion since 1997
© BBCBBC diagram showed the partial expansion of NATO over recent decades
From Kennan to Kissinger, Western foreign-policy thinkers saw NATO's eastward march was a dangerous game

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has provoked serious backlash around the world, particularly in the Western world - an understandable reaction against a war of aggression in violation of international law. However, it's also true that this outcome had been predicted by the world's foremost foreign-policy experts for decades.

Specifically, experts have consistently warned that NATO's eastward expansion would provoke conflict with Russia. So, this begs the question, how did we get here if so many people warned about it? Before getting into the answer, here are some examples of those warnings.

Dollars

Zuckerberg's 2020 election money dump violated Wisconsin bribery laws

Wisconsin ballot drop box
© OSCE Parliamentary Assembly / FlickrA Wisconsin ballot drop box
That's one of the many troubling findings in the report submitted Tuesday by a state-appointed special counsel to the Wisconsin Assembly.

Nearly $9 million in Zuckerberg grant funds directed solely to five Democratic strongholds in Wisconsin violated the state's election code's prohibition on bribery. That conclusion represents but one of the many troubling findings detailed in the report submitted today by a state-appointed special counsel to the Wisconsin Assembly.

Last August, Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos authorized the Office of Special Counsel, headed by retired state Supreme Court justice Michael Gableman, to investigate concerns about election integrity and the 2020 election. Gableman delivered an interim report to the state assembly on November 10, 2021. Earlier today, the special counsel provided a second interim report to the state legislative body, noting the report "is final in the sense that it provides a list of recommendations with time for the Legislature to act before the close of its session in March."

Comment: Add to the shenanigans the ability of Facebook to influence voting patterns.


Attention

How Russia will counterpunch the U.S./EU declaration of war

Swift System
© Strategic Culture
Only self-sufficiency affords total independence. And the Big Picture has also been keenly understood by the Global South.

One of the key underlying themes of the Russia/Ukraine/NATO matrix is that the Empire of Lies (copyright Putin) has been rattled to the core by the combined ability of Russian hypersonic missiles and a defensive shield capable of blocking incoming nuclear missiles from the West, thereby ending Mutually Assured Destruction (M.A.D.)

This has led the Americans to nearly risk a hot war to be able to place hypersonic missiles that they still don't have on Ukraine's western borders, and so be within three minutes of Moscow. For that, of course, they need Ukraine, as well as Poland and Romania in Eastern Europe.

In Ukraine, the Americans are determined to fight to the last European soul - if that's what it takes. This may be the last roll of the (nuclear) dice. Thus the next-to-last gasp at coercing Russia into submission by using the remaining, workable American weapon of mass destruction: SWIFT.

Yet this weapon can be easily neutralized by rapid adoption of self-sufficiency.

With essential input by the inestimable Michael Hudson I have outlined possibilities for Russia to weather the sanction storm. That didn't even consider the full extent of Russia's "black box defense"

- and counter-attack - as outlined by John Helmer in his introduction to an essay that heralds no less then The Return of Sergei Glaziev.

Glaziev, predictably detested across Atlanticist circles, was a key economic adviser to President Putin and is now the Minister for Integration and Macroeconomics of the Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU). He has always been a fierce critic of the Russian Central Bank and the oligarch gang closely linked to Anglo-American finance.

His latest essay, Sanctions and Sovereignty, originally published by expert.ru and translated by Helmer, deserves serious scrutiny.

This is one of the key takeaways:

"Russian losses of potential GDP, since 2014, amount to about 50 trillion rubles. But only 10% of them can be explained by sanctions, while 80% of them were the result of monetary policy. The United States benefits from anti-Russian sanctions, replacing the export of Russian hydrocarbons to the EU as well as China; replacing the import of European goods by Russia. We could completely offset the negative consequences of financial sanctions if the Bank of Russia fulfilled its constitutional duty to ensure a stable ruble exchange rate, and not the recommendations of Washington financial organizations."

Beer

Does the US dare sanction India over its S-400 deal with Russia?

S-400 russia
India has been the largest importer of Russian arms since 2016 but also has ties with the US.
India has been the largest importer of Russian arms since 2016 but also has ties with the US.

US President Joe Biden will decide whether to apply or waive sanctions on India, one of America's key partners, under the CAATSA law for its purchase of the S-400 missile defence system from Russia, a senior administration official has told lawmakers.

The US administration is required under a domestic law, Countering America's Adversaries through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) to impose sanctions on any country that has significant transactions with Iran, North Korea or Russia.

Comment: Amidst serious US-Ukraine provocations, India sealed major economic deals and even agreed to a 9 year military partnership with Russia. Less than two weeks ago, as the US was busy ignoring Russia's peace proposal, Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan went to Russia to meet with Putin to review relations and discuss energy deals. One gets the impression that a number of countries viewed the American escalation as a signal that the time was right to forge ahead with their already burgeoning partnerships. It may be that any concessions they make to the US now is mere appeasement with the long game in mind.

Meanwhile US allies and vassals are having to seek exemptions from the pitiful sanctions regime lest their economies collapse under the weight of US hubris: US exempts South Korea from Russian sanctions, Seoul expects impact on global economy to worsen

Also check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: The Truth About The Russia-Ukraine War




Attention

Ukraine coverage reveals West's inherent racism

Ukraine Propaganda
© Off-Guardian
We don't talk about racism much at OffG, except in meta-analyses of its political weaponisation.

A lot of the time "racism" is used by the establishment to attack people who pose a threat to the status quo (see: Jeremy Corbyn). Other times it is used to simplify complex political matters into good guys and bad guys.

The marketplace of ideas has become saturated with contorted attempts to turn everything into a simple question of race, to the point it has almost robbed the word "racism" of any meaning at all.

It's always been pretty clear that beneath this ersatz outrage there lurks - ironically - some of the most ignorant and most unreconstructed racism currently being manifested anywhere.

The indignation, for example, among the woke, that Tolkien's orcs are 'obviously' intended to represent black people (because orcs are stupid and violent), or that this mural must show Jewish bankers (because of the "hooked Jewish noses") - only shows that the wokest middle class whites have an image of blackness as dumbly bigoted as any white supremacist.

So, it probably shouldn't shock you - though it will - to realize one very potent reason the war in Ukraine is particularly upsetting is because it's happening to white people.

Don't believe me? Then take a look. From page to screen to social media the message has been loud and clear that this war is especially bad because it's being waged in Europe on a population with "blond hair and blue eyes":

Arrow Down

Judge rules against, fines overseers of Wisconsin 2020 election probe

wisconsin election line
© Scott Olson/Getty ImagesA report claiming that the 2020 election in Wisconsin should be decertified has been widely criticized by bipartisan lawmakers. Above, residents wait in line to vote at a shuttered Sears store in the Janesville Mall on November 3, 2020, in Janesville, Wisconsin.
A Wisconsin judge has turned down the findings of the state's probe into the 2020 presidential election.

Dane County Circuit Judge Frank Remington said that the report by former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman and Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos improperly denied access to public records that they allegedly used. Remington stated that their "denials, delays, and refusals violate the letter and the spirit of Wisconsin's public records law."

The report stated that Wisconsin should consider decertifying the legitimacy of the 2020 presidential election due to potential voter fraud, a conclusion that both Democrats and Republicans have criticized.

Comment:




Stock Down

Biden's SOTU speech TANKS—lowest first address ratings in thirty years

biden sotu
President Biden's performance was watched by just over 38 million Americans, giving him the the lowest rating for a president's first State of Union in thirty years.

President Biden's performance on Tuesday earned him the designation of lowest rated first State of the Union address of the past thirty years. On Tuesday, President Biden delivered the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress.

His performance was watched by just over 38 million Americans, giving him the the lowest rating for a president's first State of Union in thirty years, according to Nielsen Research.

Comment: See also: 17 absurd lies Biden told during his State Of The Union speech