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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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A man of conscience: Putin reveals what motivates him

Putin
© RIA Novosti/Alexei Druzhinin
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said that being honest with yourself and the people who have entrusted you to govern the country is extremely important for a head of state.

In an interview with Italian newspaper Il Corriere della Sera on the eve of his visit to Milan, the Russian leader admitted that he "tried not to make himself an idol."

He noted that there are many worthy examples of brilliant leaders in Russian and European history; however, it is necessary to act in accordance with the present day circumstances.

"I try, or rather I am motivated by the interests of the Russian people in my work on the basis of all [the experience] that has been amassed over the past times. I act in accordance with the conditions of our present day life and, of course, I try to develop a medium-term and long-term strategy for our economy, policy, first and foremost, our domestic one, and our international agenda."

"Being honest with yourself and the people that have entrusted you this work is the most important thing,"
the Russian leader concluded.

Comment: When comparing Putin's words and actions, it becomes exceedingly clear that he is a man of uncompromising integrity. Unlike his Western counterparts.


Info

'Third World War being fought piecemeal': Pope Francis slams global 'atmosphere of war'

Image
© Reuters / Stringer
Pope Francis has attacked what he called "the atmosphere of war," which he believes is hampering the world. He also attacked those profiteering from war and those engaging in arms sales, as he led a mass in Bosnia on Saturday.

Francis received a joyous welcome from around 100,000 people who lined the streets of Sarajevo, Bosnia's capital, as his motorcade made its way to the national stadium, where the pontiff celebrated mass for a mainly Catholic audience of around 65,000, speaking in Italian.

Many conflicts across the planet amount to "a kind of Third World War being fought piecemeal and, in the context of global communications, we sense an atmosphere of war," the pontiff said, according to AFP.

"Some wish to incite and foment this atmosphere deliberately," he added, attacking those who want to foster division for political ends or profit from war through arms dealing.

Comment: The Pope is absolutely correct here but what are the solutions? It will be interesting to see the results of Putin's visit with the Pope.


Black Magic

War crimes! Israel is in 'grave violations against children in armed conflict' [graphic images]

Image
© Reuters/Ammar Awad
Reports have come out that the UN was considering adding Israel to the list of "grave violations against children in armed conflict." As detailed below, Israeli army and Israel's state policies are systematically violent against Palestinian children.

A recent Independent article noted that [Special Envoy for Children and Armed Conflict Leila] "Zerrougui's draft report cited IDF attacks on schools and hospitals during the 2014 war in the Gaza Strip..."

Even though the UN has historically not taken strong action against any of Israel's war crimes over the decades, let alone those specifically against Palestinian children, Israel has reportedly exerted pressure to be de-listed from the draft list, with seeming success.

The Independent wrote, "UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, however, is said to be leaning towards not including Israel in the list, amid what several diplomatic sources anonymously said was intense lobbying from Israel."

Apparently, Israel thinks such call for its joining the list is "a heinous and hypocritical attempt to besmirch the image of Israel and it is doomed to fail," Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon reportedly said.

In fact, the UN should have listed Israel from at least 2009 when, as the UN website notes, "the Security Council decided to also list armed forces and groups who kill and maim children, commit sexual violence against children, and attack schools and hospitals."
Image
Does Israel violate the six areas detailed? Five out of six, most definitely:

MIB

The myth of organised crime

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Organised crime, the mythology of the Mafia, and the American/Anglo Response
  • The UK government's 2011 strategy for organised crime, Local to global: reducing the risk from organised crime, is based on 'reducing the risk' of a poorly understood phenomenon.
  • Most popular and professional understanding of organised crime in the UK, and elsewhere, derives from the USA, where policy has been informed by an association with a set of myths associated with 'Mafia' criminality and dominated by an approach based mainly on centralising law enforcement.
  • This spawned legislation such as the American Organized Crime Control Act (OCCA) of 1970, which was designed to cope with a highly centralised and rational criminal structure that never existed. This act has provided a blueprint for organised crime control both at home and abroad.
  • Through the commitment to United Nations (UN) anti-drug and anti-crime conventions and other agreements, most nations, including the UK, have ignored the deficiencies of American organised crime control and followed its lead since the 1980s.
  • A British approach that replicates American institutions and tactics has not so far made a positive impact on crime control here, but is about to be further enshrined with the launch of the National Crime Agency in 2013.
  • More attention should be given to understanding the sources and nature of the risk the Home Office strategy is hoping to reduce. In the meantime, debate is limited by mythical statistics and a flawed national and international security consensus.

Comment: The war on crime, the war on drugs, the war on terror, even the war on poverty, who benefits? Follow the money.


Play

South Front Military Reports 5-6 June 2015: Blatant Minsk violations by Kiev continue unabated

south front
The clashes have been continuing at the frontline since last evening. Ukrainian artillery has shelled Putilovka and Kievskiy districts of the city Donetsk. The firefight was going in the sector of Spartak last night. Kiev's forces attacked from sector of Avdeevka to the Yakovlevka and Yasinovataya checkpoint.


Comment: Kiev has been violating the Minsk 2.0 agreements since the beginning, and the U.S. has known about for just as long. See: Caught red handed: Leaked email reveals Kiev violated ceasefire many times. But that hasn't stopped them from publicly stating the exact opposite. What can we expect? Psychopaths are notorious liars.


Snakes in Suits

OSCE representative to Ukraine resigns

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© OSCE/Mikhail Evstafiev

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) representative to Ukraine Heidi Tagliavini resigned over disagreements between the sides involved in Contact Group reconciliation talks, a source close to negotiations said Saturday.


Tagliavini's resignation was reported in Swiss national media late Friday. The Die Suedostschweiz daily later cited the country's Federal Department of Foreign Affairs as confirming the Swiss diplomat's intention to leave the post in the near future.

"Having seen that it is not help that the sides need, but that they cannot agree in the first place, Ms. Tagliavini decided that her future work will not get the peace process moving," the source told RIA Novosti.

Comment: The parties responsible for increasing tensions don't need the OSCE. They say Russia invaded Ukraine 389 times, and that's going to be the story no matter what. They believe that they're the reality creators:
"The aide said that guys like me were 'in what we call the reality-based community,' which he defined as people who 'believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.' I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. 'That's not the way the world really works anymore,' he continued. 'We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality - judiciously, as you will - we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out. We're history's actors ... and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.'"
But now, thanks to their lunacy, reality is actually a lot closer to 'Russian propaganda'. Check out:


Bad Guys

What's Kiev's plan for Saakashvili in Odessa?

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© Sputnik/ Nikolay Lazarenko

While analysts continue to discuss what Georgia's ex-President Mikheil Saakashvili's appointment as governor of Ukraine's Odessa region might actually mean to Ukraine, American bimonthly international affairs magazine The National Interest comes with its analysis of the "great friend of Ukraine" and his "Stanislavski school of governance."


US bimonthly international affairs magazine The National Interest came up with an analysis of Georgia's former President Saakashvili, wanted by his country's prosecutors for embezzlement, abuse of power and politically-motivated attacks.

The magazine bluntly analyzed his "knowledge, experience and unique know-how", as well as what his "school of governance" is all about and what it will mean to Ukraine.

Comment: Also see:


Eye 1

The demoralized Ukrainian Army

ukraine donetsk shelling
© Reuters/Alexander Ermochenko
A firefighter works to extinguish a fire at a local market, which was recently damaged by shelling, in Donetsk, Ukraine, June 3, 2015.

It operates like a slapdash Keystone cops bunch - its ranks filled with unhappy conscripts wanting no part of fighting their own people.


Corruption is rampant. Hundreds of millions of dollars disappear into the pockets of high-ranking military officials.

Ordinary Ukrainians suffer enormously from impoverishment, unemployment, skyrocketing inflation, unaffordable goods and services, and hugely repressive regime practices.

Comment: Also see:


Light Saber

Sergei Lavrov sets Bloomberg reporter straight on ISIS, Syria, FIFA, and Greece: "You are contaminated by American philosophy; you always want to tell people what to do"

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov sat down with Bloomberg News — and what he said should come as no surprise to even an amateur Russia watcher. Lavrov insists that a "realistic approach is getting the upper hand" in relations with the U.S. Although dismissing the idea of a new "reset", Lavrov described John Kerry's recent visit to Sochi as "the realization of the need for normalcy."

Watch the whole interview:


Attention

'Russia would attack NATO only in mad person's dream' - Putin

Putin
© RIA Novosti/Alexei Druzhinin
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Russia is not building up its offensive military capabilities overseas and is only responding to security threats caused by US and NATO military expansion on its borders, Russian President Vladimir Putin told Italian outlet Il Corriere della Sera.

Speaking to the paper on the eve of his visit to Italy, Putin stressed that one should not take the ongoing "Russian aggression" scaremongering in the West seriously, as a global military conflict is unimaginable in the modern world.

"I think that only an insane person and only in a dream can imagine that Russia would suddenly attack NATO. I think some countries are simply taking advantage of people's fears with regard to Russia. They just want to play the role of front-line countries that should receive some supplementary military, economic, financial or some other aid," Putin said.

Certain countries could be deliberately nurturing such fears, he added, saying that hypothetically the US could need an external threat to maintain its leadership in the Atlantic community. "Iran is clearly not very scary or big enough" for this, Putin noted with irony.

Russia's President invited the journalists to compare the global military presence of Russia and the US/NATO, as well as their military spending levels. He also urged them to look at the steps each side has taken in connection with the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Russia's military policy is "not global, offensive, or aggressive," Putin stressed, adding that Russia has "virtually no bases abroad," and the few that do exist are remnants of its Soviet past.

He explained that there were small contingents of Russian armed forces in Tajikistan on the border with Afghanistan, mainly due to the high terrorist threat in the area. There is an airbase in Kyrgyzstan, which was opened at request of the Kyrgyz authorities to deal with a terrorist threat there. Russia also has a military unit in Armenia, which was set up to help maintain stability in the region, not to counter any outside threat.