Haiti

as of 3/11/2024

The problems of today often have their roots in history. The intro from the transcript:

Caribbean leaders are holding an emergency meeting in Jamaica today to discuss the crisis in Haiti, where armed groups are calling for the resignation of unelected Prime Minister Ariel Henry. Haiti is under a state of emergency, with tens of thousands displaced amid the fighting, and United Nations officials warn the country’s health system is nearing collapse. Ariel Henry was appointed prime minister after the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, but he is currently stranded outside the country after a trip to Kenya, where he was seeking a U.N.-backed security force to help him maintain power.

For more, we speak with Haitian American scholar Jemima Pierre, who says the unrest in Haiti today can be traced to decisions made two decades ago by the United States and other outside powers. “The root of this crisis is not last week, it’s not this week, it’s not even Ariel Henry. But we have to go back to 2004 with the coup-d’état,” says Pierre. She adds that because successive security plans have been sanctioned by the United Nations Security Council, “the whole world is participating in the occupation of Haiti unwittingly.”

“Empire’s Laboratory”: How 2004 U.S.-Backed Coup Destabilized Haiti & Led to Current Crisis

“Empire’s Laboratory”: How 2004 U.S.-Backed Coup Destabilized Haiti & Led to Current Crisis

 

Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: We begin today’s show in Haiti, where fighting continues between police and armed groups calling for the resignation of the unelected Prime Minister Ariel Henry. Over the weekend, police and palace guards worked to retake some streets in the capital Port-au-Prince after armed gangs launched large-scale attacks on at least three police stations. Haiti has been under a state of emergency for the past week, with tens of thousands displaced amidst the fighting. U.N. officials are warning Haiti’s health system is nearing collapse due to shortages of staff, equipment and other resources to treat a growing number of wounded patients.

Meanwhile, the U.S. military said Sunday it conducted an overnight mission to airlift nonessential U.S. staff out of Haiti and to boost security at the U.S. Embassy in Port-au-Prince. Caribbean leaders issued a call late Friday for an emergency meeting today in Jamaica. They’ve invited the United States, France, Canada, the U.N. and Brazil to the meeting. CARICOM, the 15-nation Caribbean bloc, said in a statement, quote, “the situation on the ground remains dire.”

Ariel Henry was appointed prime minister after the July 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse. Henry still has not returned to Haiti after a trip to Kenya, where he was seeking a deal for a long-delayed U.N.-backed mission to Haiti. Kenya announced last year it would lead the force, but it has effectively been placed on hold. Henry arrived in Puerto Rico Tuesday after he was unable to land in the Dominican Republic, with the Dominican president saying Henry was not welcome in the country for safety reasons.

For more, we’re joined by Jemima Pierre, professor at the Social Justice Institute at the University of British Columbia in Canada and research associate at the University of Johannesburg. She’s a Haitian American scholar and co-coordinator of the Black Alliance for Peace’s Haiti/Americas Team, which has been closely following the crisis in Haiti. Her recent article for NACLA is headlined “Haiti as Empire’s Laboratory.”

Professor Pierre, welcome to Democracy Now! Can you start off by describing what you understand is the latest on the ground, who the armed groups are, and the different sectors of Haitian society that are joining together with those armed gangs and calling for the resignation of the unelected Prime Minister Henry?

JEMIMA PIERRE: Good morning. Thank you so much for having me, Amy.

One of the things that we need to just start off with is just these are paramilitary forces. I think “gangs” is an insufficient name for them, because a lot of them are former military and former police officers, and they’re heavily armed. What’s happening is a bunch of different groups coming together to say — and they call themselves now “Viv Ansanm,” which is “Live Together,” a bunch of different various — various armed young groups, young men in groups — to say that they want to get rid of Ariel Henry.

Now, we hear that there are negotiations happening around the clock. And apparently, there are supposed to be negotiations going on today, I think, in Jamaica or by the CARICOM countries, that include the U.S., France and Canada. The problem, though, is the fact that there are all these negotiations going on outside of Haiti by many foreigners with no main participation from the Haitian masses. And I think, you know, we have to go back to understand that the root of this crisis is not last week, it’s not this week, it’s not even Ariel Henry, but we have to go back to 2004 with the coup d’état.

AMY GOODMAN: So, take us on that journey back. If you’ll give us the historical context? In your piece, it’s headlined “Haiti as Empire’s Laboratory.” In it, you write, “Haiti has been and continues to be the main laboratory for U.S. imperial machinations in the region and throughout the world.” Explain.

JEMIMA PIERRE: Yes, definitely. You know, we say the crisis in Haiti is a crisis of imperialism. In 2004, as has been revealed and admitted to, the U.S., France and Canada got together and backed a coup d’état against the country’s first democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. And the U.S. Marines flew into his home, put him on a plane with his security officials, his wife and aide, and flew them to the Central African Republic. And people can actually go to the Democracy Now! archives, which covered this live. And I remember listening to this happening live.

And the point of this was that this coup d’état, which was led by two permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, was then sanctioned by the U.N. when these same two members of the U.N. Security Council — and that’s the U.S. and France — basically pushed the U.N. Security Council into sending a multinational military force to Haiti armed under Chapter VII deployment. And that itself was illegal, because the original coup d’état was illegal. The U.S. ambassador to Haiti and the deputy ambassador were in the process — they’re the ones that named who the interim president would be, put together a Council of Sages, and basically restructured Haiti’s elected president. And back then we had 7,000 elected officials; today we have zero. And over time, I say Haiti has been under occupation, because it is this military occupation, the MINUSTAH occupation, that went from 2004 to 2007, that established the Core Group, that — it’s an unelected group of Western officials, including Brazil, which led the military arm of the occupation in 2004 under Lula, which led then — which has been controlling all the actions in Haiti, down to naming who the prime minister would be, Ariel Henry, after the assassination of Jovenel Moïse.

I have to quickly say, though, one of the key things that happened is, in 2010, after the earthquake in Haiti that killed hundreds of thousands, when the U.S. pushed the sitting president, René Préval, to have elections — and the WikiLeaks papers revealed to us later that Hillary Clinton actually flew to Haiti and changed the election results, where Michel Martelly of the PHTK political party did not make the first round, but the U.S. forced the Haitian election council to actually make him — put him in the second round. And so, establishing the PHTK, Michel Martelly, a neo-Duvalierist, as Haiti’s president with under 20% of the people voting, with the largest political party in Haiti, Lavalas, not being able to participate, we set the stage for what we see today.

So, by the time we get to Ariel Henry being imposed on the Haitian people by the Core Group, we had no elected officials, because Michel Martelly, basically, under him, we lost a lot of — we didn’t have many elections, and then he put in his protégé, Jovenel Moïse, who was also unpopular and didn’t run any elections. So we actually haven’t had any elections in Haiti since 2016, when Jovenel Moïse was selected for us by the Core Group.

And so, to understand what’s going on in Haiti, we have to understand how the original moment of the 2004 coup d’état led us to the complete destruction of the Haitian state. And if we don’t do that, we don’t understand these current flareups, where people are saying that they want their democracy back and saying that whatever negotiations that are happening outside of Haiti has nothing to do with them because it has not included them.

AMY GOODMAN: You know, when we went to the Central African Republic in a small plane with U.S. Congressmember Maxine Waters and the late founder of TransAfrica, Randall Robinson, and a Jamaican MP, we flew to the Central African Republic. They went to retrieve the Aristides, who had been put there by the United States. And as we were flying back over the Atlantic, they got word that Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell were saying that the Aristides were not to return to this hemisphere, were not to return to Haiti, to which Randall Robinson replied, “Whose hemisphere?” And so, he was not able to land in Haiti and went into exile in South Africa, where you have also taught for many years, for over seven years, and then we went to South Africa when he finally returned to Haiti. And people can see all of those reports at democracynow.org.

But I’m wondering — I wanted to talk about the latest news, the Miami Herald reporting that Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke by phone Thursday with Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry in a series of calls that officials described as “tense.” This is the U.S. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller speaking Wednesday about the violence in Haiti.

MATTHEW MILLER: As the situation on the ground grows increasingly dire, we and CARICOM have continued to call on stakeholders, including the prime minister, to make concessions in the interest of the Haitian people. So, we are not calling on him or pushing for him to resign, but we are urging him to expedite the transition to an empowered and inclusive governance structure that will move with urgency to help the country prepare for a multinational security support mission to address the security situation and pave the way for free and fair elections.

AMY GOODMAN: But Jacqueline Charles, the Miami Herald reporter, said that the U.S. was pushing Ariel Henry to resign. What do you understand, Professor Pierre, about the latest, and also even where he is? Is he still in Puerto Rico, unable to get back to Haiti?

JEMIMA PIERRE: Yeah, he’s in Puerto Rico under FBI’s protection. He had to leave the hotel he was in when he first landed, because Haitian people living in Puerto Rico were protesting his presence in the state. And so that’s important.

You know, the U.S. government is being extremely hypocritical here, because in 2004, when the U.S. Marines landed at Aristide’s house, put him on a plane and told the world that he resigned, before the plane even landed in Central African Republic, and basically put in power a whole new government, and now they’re saying that this unelected prime minister that they put in place refuses to resign, where he actually has no legitimacy and no mandate whatsoever.

I also want to say quickly, just to touch back to the question earlier, is, the reason I say Haiti is a laboratory, because this is the first coup d’état that was sanctioned by the U.N., and Haiti was ruled by a multilateral coalition of all these countries. And so, the U.N. occupation of Haiti, through MINUSTAH and through the Core Group, is multinational, multiracial, and it almost seems as if this is a humanitarian effort as opposed to a coup d’état that has been successful. And so, the whole world is participating in the occupation of Haiti unwittingly, because — and this is how — we have to remember how the U.S. will work, and they will use their proxies to do the dirty work for them.

And I want to say what’s happening today on the ground with CARICOM is also a problem, because back in 2004, P.J. Patterson, who was the leader — who was the president of CARICOM, was very much against the removal of Haiti’s sitting president. In fact, he refused to acknowledge the imposed government that the U.S. put on us. But now CARICOM is playing a different role where they’re bringing the U.S., France and Canada, the people who did the original sin, to pick our leaders again.

And so, the problem is, if this goes on and if they don’t take into account other solutions that Haitians have been putting together — you know, in early 2021, you had La Fanmi Lavalas come up with Sali Piblik, which means that we need to start over and change the system. We had the Montana Accords. We have local groups that actually had a solution before the Moïse assassination. The U.S. government was trying to protect Moïse and basically ignored all these local solutions. And so, now they cannot say that they’re here to help Haiti, as much as trying to figure out how to put in place another unpopular and illegal government, and so then we’ll have the same problem a few years down the line.

The other thing I want to quickly say — I know, in a hurry — is that the people funding these armed groups are part of the oligarchy. And most of the guns and ammunition are coming from the U.S. People must remember that in the late 2022, in early 2023, the Canadian government sanctioned three of the richest oligarchs in Haiti. That’s Gilbert Bigio, Reynold Deeb and Sherif Abdallah. The Canadian government also sanctioned former President Michel Martelly and other — and Laurent Lamothe, his prime minister, all of them because they — for drug trafficking, but also for funding these armed groups. And so, in the news we get, you get these guys that look, you know, like raggedy — ragged and poor, but then the people really funding them, because Haiti does not manufacture guns, are these elites that are behind all the violence. And so I also want to put that into very clear context so that we know that this is a very complex problem that’s very much set up by the 2004 coup, but also perpetuated by the oligarchy and the U.S., which work together to keep Haiti unstable, so that we can say Haiti is ungovernable and we need to come in and save it.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you explain who Guy Philippe is, who just left U.S. prison in November, his role in the coup in 2004 and now what he’s doing?

JEMIMA PIERRE: Right, and this is very important. Thank you for asking this. Guy Philippe was around in 2004. In fact, Guy Philippe was trained by the U.S. in Ecuador and spent a lot of time training in — living and training in the Dominican Republic. So, in the lead-up to coup d’état against Aristide in 2004, what you had is — all the fall of 2003, what you had, Guy Philippe and his armed groups would ransack — would cross into the border and ransack and attack police stations and so on and so forth. Back then, which is fascinating, if you look up in the news, the Western media portrayed him as a freedom fighter. He was the hero standing up against the evil Aristide, according to the West. And so they supported him. And he would say later that he was actually being funded by the CIA and so on.

And then, as soon as, you know, what happened, once they removed Aristide, what you have is they tried to integrate these former armed military groups into the Haitian National Police, because Aristide had disbanded the army. And so, what you have is — that’s why I say we have to call these “paramilitaries,” because these are former armed groups that actually were funded by outsiders to oust our democratically elected president.

And here we are. Guy Philippe was arrested by the U.S. and put in prison for drug trafficking. And we have to understand this, because even during his trial, there are certain things that were kept secret because it implicated the U.S. government. And so, he served six years in prison as a criminal in the U.S., and now the U.S. dumped him in Haiti in November 2023, after serving six years of a nine-year term. And so now he’s back running around saying he wants to be president.

And he’s getting — you know, you’re saying Haiti’s — you know, everyone pretends that Haiti — you know, are saying that Haiti is at war, and so on and so forth, but the reality is, Guy Philippe is giving interviews to all the mainstream press. Guy Philippe gives more interviews than the local people who are organizing against repression. We don’t hear them in The Washington Post, but we hear Guy Philippe. But I wonder what the U.S. role is for Guy Philippe right now. And as far as I’m concerned, he should be tried for treason, because he was behind — he worked with the U.S. to actually remove our elected president. And so, we have to be very careful about what the U.S. is bringing, what the mainstream media is bringing to us as real and as the situation, when we know the situation is actually very much controlled by the U.S. and the Core Group when it comes to Haiti.

AMY GOODMAN: And Chérizier, known as “Barbecue,” the leader of one of the most powerful armed groups, explain his role right now and the alliance that has been formed between the armed groups. And also, really, is it true, for the very first time, sort of forming an alliance with the elite. as well, at least agreeing that Ariel Henry should be ousted?

JEMIMA PIERRE: Yes, apparently, it seems like Chérizier has joined in with all the other groups that they were having trouble with. And so, it is a combination of all kinds of groups that had worked against one another, that have fought against one another, and now they’re coming together to get rid of Henry. And I think part of the problem is, I think they’re afraid of this supposedly Kenyan-led, but U.S.-pushed, Kenyan mission of a thousand police officers coming in, another foreign invasion, and they’re worried about their position in Haitian society.

I do think the elite have to be brought into this, the oligarchs of Haiti that are funding this and supporting this, because this nonstop ammunition comes from somewhere. They’re coming from these ports that are owned by the elites. And so, there might be a — you know, we don’t know the machinations behind these gangs, who’s paying for them. You know, we know that they broke into the ports and emptied some containers. We don’t know what they took. But we know that the ports are not owned by the people, they’re owned by the oligarchs.

And so, what’s going on in Haiti is actually very important, because it’s — I don’t think it’s a plan that the U.S. wanted, which is why they rushed Henry to Kenya to sign this bilateral agreement, after the Kenyan courts said that it was unconstitutional for Kenya to send its police to Haiti. But I think things changed faster than they anticipated, and so now they’re scrambling for a new plan in Haiti. And in the meantime, what’s happening is our people, that are the people — the poor people on the ground, are the ones suffering.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, Jemima Pierre, we want to thank you so much for your analysis, professor at the Social Justice Institute at the University of British Columbia in Canada, was before that at UCLA and is research associate at the University of Johannesburg, a Haitian American scholar and co-coordinator of the Black Alliance for Peace’s Haiti/Americas Team, which has been closely following the crisis in Haiti. We’ll link to your piece in NACLA, “Haiti as Empire’s Laboratory.”

 

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Kenya halts Haiti security mission

The decision comes after the island nation’s prime minister, Ariel Henry, announced that he would resign

Kenya’s plan to deploy police officers to Haiti as part of a multinational security mission has been postponed following a decision by the Caribbean nation’s prime minister to resign, an official from the East African country’s foreign ministry has announced.

The Kenyan foreign ministry’s principal secretary, Abraham Korir Sing’Oei, told the media on Tuesday that Haiti would need a government in place to facilitate the mission.

“The critical ground situation is that there has to be an authority that can be the basis for a police deployment, that enjoys constitutional authority in Haiti,” he said, according to Reuters.

Last October, Kenya agreed to contribute 1,000 police officers and lead a UN-backed mission to combat criminal gangs and militant groups in Haiti. A court in the East African country ruled the move unconstitutional in January, but Kenyan President William Ruto has vowed that the plan will go ahead regardless.

Haiti, a nation of 11.4 million people, has seen an alarming surge in crime and unrest, including kidnappings, robberies, and murders, with armed gangs taking over some of its main ports and driving shortages in key goods. Statistics show that gangs control up to 80% of the capital of the country, which was devastated by an earthquake in 2010. The UN recently reported that more than 8,400 people were victims of Haitian gang violence last year, more than double the numbers seen in 2022. More than 800 people have been killed in January alone, the UN Human Rights Office says.

Ruto announced at the beginning of March that he had signed an agreement with Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who had traveled to Nairobi to expedite the delayed deployment. While Henry was in Kenya last weekend, armed gangs stormed the island’s two largest jails, reportedly freeing more than 4,000 inmates and demanding his resignation. The situation prompted the government to declare a three-day state of emergency and impose a nighttime curfew.

On Tuesday, the prime minister announced that he would resign once a transitional presidential council was formed. He became the leader of the unelected government in Port-au-Prince following the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise in 2021. He requested an “immediate” deployment of a specialized international armed force in October 2022 to address the country’s deteriorating unrest.

Revolution 2024

This year the West expects a revolution
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There are two Wests: the globalist one and… the ordinary one.
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The globalists refuse to admit that there is anyone in the world besides them. That is why they insist that there is no second West. But there is. We, the multipolar world, must realize as clearly as possible the existence of this West-2. It is composed of a variety of forces that disagree with the ultraliberal globalist agenda of the elites.
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There are leftists like Sarah Wagenknecht and her new party. The ‘Red Sarah’ (Valkyrie of Iranian-German origin) becomes a symbol of the European illiberal left. In Italy, a leading theorist from the same direction is Diego Fusaro, a pupil of the Marxist and anti-globalist Constantio Preve. In France, these are Alain Soral, as well as Michel Onfray, Jean-Claude Micheat and Serge Latouche.
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These left-wingers are mainly enemies of global capital, openly a contrast to the pseudo-left, bought in the bud by Soros, which is mainly pro-LGBT, pro-Ukrainian Nazism, pro-Gaza genocide and uncontrolled immigration, and anti-Russia and what their capitalist masters, themselves liberal Nazis, would call ‘fascism’.
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There is also a right-wing component, much battered, but which in many European countries is the second most important political force. For example, Marine Le Pen in France. The Alternative for Germany is strengthening in Germany. In Italy, despite Meloni’s liberal weakness, the right half of society has not disappeared. All right-wing populism has not disappeared.
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However, the main thing in the West-2 are ordinary people who understand nothing about politics. They simply cannot keep up with the demands to change their sexes, forcibly castrate their young children, enter yurakis with goats, bring in and feed even more migrants and Ukrainian maniacs who are incapable of taking care of themselves and basic hygiene, eat cockroaches, read prayers to Greta Thunberg at night and curse the Russians who have done nothing wrong to them. The Western man in the street, the petit-bourgeois, is the main support for the coming revolt: he stops understanding the liberal elites; he has irreversibly fallen behind the accelerating degeneration and degradation that these elites demand of the neo.
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A multipolar world must help the European revolution. The citizens of West-2 are ordinary people who are guilty of nothing. Democratically, they have no chance of changing the situation simply because there has been no democracy in the West for a long time and West-1 has established a direct globalist liberal dictatorship, mainly over West-2.
Only one thing remains: overthrow the power of the usurpers by revolutionary means.
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This is the 2024 agenda for Europe.
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Your freedom is in your hands.
— Alexander Dugin

Israel as a State

Israel as a state was created by the British Empire to control the Middle East – a systematic effort since the late 19th century.
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The method of creating a “mercenary state” is the same as in the case of Hitler’s Germany in the 1930s, and Nazi Ukraine in the 2014-2023 version. The goal of such states is, with the support of the economic resources of the West, to militarily destroy or bleed the geopolitical enemy of the West.
Let’s not forget that Hamas was created by the West – and the Israelis! – intelligence services based on the Muslim Brotherhood, in turn raised by the British MI6. So, on October 7, two “super-mercenaries”, Hamas and the state of Israel, once again ignited the conflict in the interests of their curators and sponsors.
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So far, the response from Arab states has been encouraging. Today’s summits in Saudi Arabia are focused on resolving the conflict by supporting the emergence of a full Palestinian state. The condition for peace in the region is the “denazification” of the state of Israel. And according to the experience of Ukraine today, this will be a long and difficult process.
Why the war in Gaza now? Because of Russia’s resilience in the conflict with the West in Ukraine, and because of the success of China’s Belt and Road project. China has pushed eternal opponents Iran, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf countries towards rapprochement.
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Acting in agreement with China, even without yet removing its financial system from the control of pro-Western elites, Russia, through its successful military opposition to the West, through the heroism and lives of thousands soldiers, has proven that this is possible in principle. Challenge the West and survive. And even create the risk of a humiliating defeat of Ukraine as a “mercenary state.”
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However, Russia is still highly vulnerable economically as the “Collective West” is putting almost all it

A little bit of History by Benjamin Freedman

 

 


US Supplies Israel

The United States hides data on the types and numbers of weapons it supplies to Israel so as not to link their use to casualties in Gaza.

The Intercept quotes interviewed experts as saying that this is explained in Washington by the fact that the disclosure of such information could allegedly harm the military security of the Jewish state.

Meanwhile, for some reason, this argument has no bearing on Ukraine: the Biden administration publishes a detailed list of weapons provided to Kiev regime, the article points out.

The publication’s interlocutors are sure that the US silence is an attempt to cover up the use of IDF weapons “to commit war crimes and murder civilians in Gaza”.

Yesterday, the White House said it did not believe that Israeli forces violates international law and would not respond to every new attack.

@ukraine_watch

Zionist gov under control of washington.

gnote…. find geopolitical report…. michael hudson. zionist gov under control of washington. trying to provoke war in the region for the sake of controlling the resources. Bush era, years ago, boasted of bringing down 7 arab countries. the only country left is iran. genocide in Gaza is used to provoke the regional countries to act. just like the Kiev regime had been terrorizing and killing people in the Donbass (ethnic russians) … to provoke russia to act. blinken tells iran not to take action, however, washington continues to provoke using their proxy. find and post to geopolitica

 


Someone will come and you will no longer be rich. In order to play the “new Yalta” you have to be a complex of economic, political, military, intellectual, media power.
This agreement was not possible before the SWO started. The SWO started from their side, not ours. They have been assessing us as a fading power for long enough. It was still possible to pursue under Obama a policy of gentle strangulation in an embrace. It was a more effective policy, it did not lead to escalation, which provokes Russia to grow. Russia withers when it doesn’t have a big task. When Russia becomes preoccupied with its own survival, it makes both a technological and mental leap. What we are seeing now. With the rise of all popular initiative and popular wisdom.
The US and its colleagues have been trying to squeeze Russia further away, to limit its space. This is still going on. You see what is happening in Armenia, in Central Asia. We are being squeezed from all sides. Why couldn’t they strangle us further in their embrace? For the simple reason that they ran out of embraces. They have been on their own since the 2008 crisis. In the end, it was decided that with such dynamics in China, with such reorganization in the world, we should act more actively. We have to deal with our competitors now, while we still have strength. They started to pressure us in Ukraine, which caused an understandable reaction for them. Russia will never agree to NATO bases in Ukraine. It’s too close, too dangerous.
Note: you should have listened to Viktor Orban and studied history. Russia is a militaristic nation. It is capable of strengthening itself in times of war, and the US gave us Chechnya (the first stage of strengthening) and Georgia (the breaking point in relations). Then Russia slowly and surely started to prepare for a new war. Moreover, earlier the USA made a mistake – put Yeltsin in power, and as a consequence created modern Russia. I will remind – it is a symbiosis of left, right and centrists.
Americans have created their own enemy. Only this time in a different classroom
@Slavyangrad

Separately, I’ll add. I remember Putin’s first election. Target group: all those who were offended by Yeltsin (Teachers, doctors, military, ordinary laborers, and many more- So when you see our liberals screaming in Putin’s direction – consider sending a point – Yeltsin offended everyone else) . But he was such an asshole that he offended everyone in general. That’s why you now have a united Russia as the majority.
Hence the strange at first glance hatred of liberals in our country and the strange at first glance evolution of the state as a social state. You created this mixture in the 90’s. + cultural peculiarities are not taken into account.
+ you did a very funny trick with the collapse of the Soviet Union… take Peter Tolstoy, he’s a descendant of the Tolstoy family. – empire. But smarter, more aware of the need for socialism. You brought some of the imperial elites back, but with the knowledge of the experience of socialism. That’s why Russia looks extremely strange to an outside observer.
It’s just starting to come together.
Politics is always a compromise of interest groups. And you created it then. And it’s haunting you now.
@Slavyangrad

❗️The self-inflicted demilitarization & demoralisation of western militaries is underway.
🇺🇸🇦🇺🇬🇧Western soldiers do not want to die in a foreign war.
🇷🇺Russian soldiers will fight because it’s in their blood.
🇺🇦Ukrainian soldiers fight because they have Russian blood.
🎙@AussieCossack on @RadioCrimea

Who is the World’s Terrorist??

Retired U.S. General and former presidential candidate Wesley Clark has offered up startlingly frank and unsettling revelations about the inner workings of the American political and military establishment. Specifically, Clark has repeatedly revealed that the purpose of the military is not to defend the United States so much as it is to start and perpetuate wars — all with the objective of undermining democracy and independent movements in countries not already under the thumb of the United States.

Government taken over by Wolfowitz, Chaney, Rumsfeld, … Project for a New American Century… plan to destabilize the middle east and under US control… and Russia couldn’t or wouldn’t stop them.   This was back in 1991.

 

Full speech in October 3, 2007

Commonwealth Club of California, San Francisco
Coutesy of Commonwealth Club

 

Dagestan

Makhachkala airport in Dagestan (Russia). Protest against Israeli’s unboarding and getting attacked. Organized and incited by CIA. On Sky New (major fake news outlet) is saying Russia is supporting the attack??? and shows meeting with Putin and collegues discussing the attack… voicing their own narrative. Suspicious.

Sky news interviews a rabbi who says just because Russia does not condemn Hamas, it automatically means Russia supports Hamas.

To note… Hamas is supported by Qutar, Israel and the US. Bibi hinted that Hamas is ISIS (ISIS and Al-Queda is supported by the US in Syria). Hamas is being used as an excuse….

Video of Putin addressing Dagestan incident…

SKY NEWS  (CIA backed attack)

Just a reminder…

Trump lied to the American people

My fellow Americans, a short time ago, I ordered the United States Armed Forces to launch precision strikes on targets associated with the chemical weapons capabilities of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad. A combined operation with the armed forces of France and the United Kingdom is now underway. We thank them both.

Tonight, I want to speak with you about why we have taken this action.

One year ago, Assad launched a savage chemical weapons attack against his own innocent people. The United States responded with 58 missile strikes that destroyed 20 percent of the Syrian Air Force.

Last Saturday, the Assad regime again deployed chemical weapons to slaughter innocent civilians — this time, in the town of Douma, near the Syrian capital of Damascus. This massacre was a significant escalation in a pattern of chemical weapons use by that very terrible regime.

The evil and the despicable attack left mothers and fathers, infants and children, thrashing in pain and gasping for air. These are not the actions of a man; they are crimes of a monster instead.

Following the horrors of World War I a century ago, civilized nations joined together to ban chemical warfare. Chemical weapons are uniquely dangerous not only because they inflict gruesome suffering, but because even small amounts can unleash widespread devastation.

The purpose of our actions tonight is to establish a strong deterrent against the production, spread and use of chemical weapons. Establishing this deterrent is a vital national security interest of the United States. The combined American, British, and French response to these atrocities will integrate all instruments of our national power — military, economic and diplomatic. We are prepared to sustain this response until the Syrian regime stops its use of prohibited chemical agents.

I also have a message tonight for the two governments most responsible for supporting, equipping and financing the criminal Assad regime.

To Iran and to Russia, I ask: What kind of a nation wants to be associated with the mass murder of innocent men, women, and children?

The nations of the world can be judged by the friends they keep. No nation can succeed in the long run by promoting rogue states, brutal tyrants and murderous dictators(This is exactly what the US is doing by supporting Israel and Saudi Arabia, among others)

In 2013, President Putin and his government promised the world that they would guarantee the elimination of Syria’s chemical weapons. Assad’s recent attack — and today’s response — are the direct result of Russia’s failure to keep that promise.

Russia must decide if it will continue down this dark path, or if it will join with civilized nations as a force for stability and peace. Hopefully, someday we’ll get along with Russia, and maybe even Iran — but maybe not.

I will say this: The United States has a lot to offer, with the greatest and most powerful economy in the history of the world.

In Syria, the United States — with but a small force being used to eliminate what is left of ISIS — is doing what is necessary to protect the American people. Over the last year, nearly 100 percent of the territory once controlled by the so-called ISIS caliphate in Syria and Iraq has been liberated and eliminated. (by Russia, not by the US, the US and Israel have been doing what they can to support them for years)

The United States has also rebuilt our friendships across the Middle East. We have asked our partners to take greater responsibility for securing their home region, including contributing large amounts of money for the resources, equipment and all of the anti-ISIS efforts. Increased engagement from our friends, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Egypt and others can ensure that Iran does not profit from the eradication of ISIS.

America does not seek an indefinite presence in Syria under no circumstances. As other nations step up their contributions, we look forward to the day when we can bring our warriors home. And great warriors they are.

Looking around our very troubled world, Americans have no illusions. We cannot purge the world of evil or act everywhere there is tyranny. (The US today is the main backer of evil and tyranny around the world)

No amount of American blood or treasure can produce lasting peace and security in the Middle East. It’s a troubled place. We will try to make it better, but it is a troubled place. The United States will be a partner and a friend, but the fate of the region lies in the hands of its own people.

In the last century, we looked straight into the darkest places of the human soul. We saw the anguish that can be unleashed and the evil that can take hold. By the end of World War I, more than one million people had been killed or injured by chemical weapons. We never want to see that ghastly specter return.

So today, the nations of Britain, France and the United States of America have marshaled their righteous power against barbarism and brutality.

Tonight, I ask all Americans to say a prayer for our noble warriors and our allies as they carry out their missions. (That’s rich, you’re calling for prayer while lying through your teeth. You are insulting people who actually believe in prayer.)

We pray that God will bring comfort to those suffering in Syria. We pray that God will guide the whole region toward a future of dignity and of peace. (I don’t believe you are praying for that, or that you believe in God, for if you did, you wouldn’t do what you are doing right now)

And we pray that God will continue to watch over and bless the United States of America.

Thank you, and goodnight. Thank you.