Is Russia Ready for Another Land Grab in Ukraine?Oh well, the good thing is that these folks are showing their true face along with their mind boggling level of dishonesty. This will all eventually end like it always does, with a big and very predictable backlash. Then they will whine and sob about how nobody loves them (for some mysterious reason).
It's time for a new strategy.
by Noah RothmanTwo weeks ago, the world reacted with palpable shock to the news that Russia had unilaterally closed naval traffic through the Kerch Strait separating the Black Sea from the Sea of Azov, but it's a mystery as to why. Moscow's brazen violation of Ukraine's maritime navigation rights and its arrest of sailors is only its latest egregious attack on international norms. Such attacks have ranged from the invasion and annexation of sovereign territory in Europe to the active support for the starvation of Syrian civilians. This last offense against responsible statecraft was comparatively modest, but it was no less dangerous. If Russia's provocation was a calculated effort designed to gauge how the world would react to another transgression against Ukrainian sovereignty, Moscow got a rather definitive answer: it wouldn't. Russia has taken its cues, and it may be preparing for something far worse.© Soldiers of the Ukrainian air assault units board a military cargo aircraft at a military base in the Zhytomyr region, Ukraine, Thursday, Dec. 6, 2018.
Soldiers of the Ukrainian air assault units board a military cargo aircraft at a military base in the Zhytomyr region, Ukraine, Thursday, Dec. 6, 2018.
Andrey Illarionov, a former economic advisor to Vladimir Putin who has become a fierce critic of the Russian regime in his current role as a Cato Institute scholar, told the Kiev Post this week that time is not on Russia's side and the Kremlin knows it. Occupied Crimea is running out of water. The peninsula relies primarily on a Soviet-era canal to channel fresh water from mainland Ukraine and, between periodic draughts and the Ukrainian government's efforts to choke off resources to the illegally occupied territory, Illarionov believes it's only a matter of time before the canal runs dry. He thinks that Putin is resolved to prevent that kind of a crisis by any means necessary.
The Saker















Comment: The rest of the article goes on in the same vein if you wish to read it. Where to start with just this two paragraphs of Rothman's hit piece?
"Unilaterally closed?" Of course, if one's borders are breached on the orders of a neighboring country's failed leader hoping to provoke an incident to boost his polling numbers.
- Russia blocks Kerch Strait passage after Ukrainian Navy ships violate border, calls UNSC meeting - Kiev declares martial law - UPDATES
- FSB holds briefing on Kerch Strait provocation: Ukrainian ships were overloaded with arms, planned covert movements
- Fmr Ukrainian general: Kiev hoped its sailors would be killed in the Kerch Strait
"Brazen invasion of Europe" One presumes Rothman means Crimea, which was "running out of water" because of Ukrainian sabatoge. The story dates from 2015, so he is really reaching here. Russia solved that problem the same year:- Crimea's Supreme Council makes decision to join Russia as federal subject
- 95% of Crimea has no regrets reuniting with Russia - poll
- Russian resources minister says nyet: Moscow will not bargain with illegal Ukranian over Crimea's water supply
- Junta in Kiev is unforgiving: Ukraine builds dam cutting off Crimea water supply
- New pipelines from tapped wells start supplying fresh water to Crimea
"Starving Syrian citizens" is whose fault?- U.S. attempting to block Russian aid flights to Syria
- Pompeo, de Mistura discuss need for unhindered aid access in Syria - after months of US refusing aid deliveries
- Leaked UN report blames US, EU sanctions for punishing Syrian civilians, stalling aid work and food shortages
- Russia airdrops 32 tons of humanitarian aid to Syrian city besieged by ISIS
- Russian military delivers 5 metric tons of humanitarian aid to Latakia, Syria
- True humanitarians: Russia delivers another 17 tonnes of aid to Syria
Etc.