Ukraine is getting cooked. I took these screenshots from discussion under Ukrainian military general command account on X…
There is hysteria…



Ukraine is getting cooked. I took these screenshots from discussion under Ukrainian military general command account on X…
There is hysteria…



A lot of people in the West are calling for the conflict in Ukraine to be frozen… This means Ukraine is cooked!
CNN has the details:
“I am very pleased to nominate General Keith Kellogg to serve as Assistant to the President and Special Envoy for Ukraine and Russia,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social channel. “Together, we will secure PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH, and Make America, and the World, SAFE AGAIN!”
OK 👌
Kellogg, Trump’s 80-year-old former national security advisor, has laid out his peace plan in some detail, writing for the America First policy institute in April.
It begins calling the war “an avoidable crisis that, due to the Biden Administration’s incompetent policies… has entangled America in an endless war.”
Blaming you predecessor ain’t cool…
Kellogg spends most time berating Biden’s actions – saying that his administration gave too little lethal aid too late. He says Trump’s decision to give the first lethal aid to Ukraine in 2018 conveyed the strength needed to confront Putin, and that Trump’s soft approach to the Kremlin head – not demonizing him like Biden has – will enable him to strike a deal.
I sensed in 2019 that things are heading to war. Trump’s weapons deliveries have emboldened Kiev and instilled the belief they can return Donbas and Crimea by force.
Kellogg says more weapons should have been given before the Russian invasion, and immediately afterwards, to enable Ukraine to win.
I think that more weapon deliveries would have spurred Russian intervention earlier.
Kellogg says the United States doesn’t need involvement in another conflict, and its own stocks of weaponry have suffered from aiding Ukraine, leaving the country potentially exposed in any conflict with China over Taiwan. He says Ukraine’s NATO membership – in truth a very distant prospect, tentatively offered to Kyiv in symbolic solidarity – should be put on hold indefinitely, “in exchange for a comprehensive and verifiable peace deal with security guarantees.”
There are people out there that believe, Murica has stockpiles overflowing and the amount of weapons sent to Ukraine was fractional.
Foremost, the plan says it should become “a formal US policy to seek a ceasefire and negotiated settlement.”
They want ceasefire because Ukraine is pretty much done for now.
It says future US aid – likely given as a loan – will be conditioned on Ukraine negotiating with Russia, and the US will arm Ukraine to the extent it can defend itself and stop any further Russian advances before and after any peace deal. This latter suggestion is perhaps dated by the fast Moscow advance underway in eastern Ukraine and the current high US level of aid already makes Kellogg uncomfortable.
Russia is on a roll, why would they stop now?
The frontlines would be frozen by a ceasefire, and a demilitarized zone imposed. For agreeing to this, Russia would get limited sanctions relief, and full relief only when a peace deal is signed that is to Ukraine’s liking. A levy on Russian energy exports would pay for Ukraine’s reconstruction. Ukraine would not be asked to give up on reclaiming occupied territory, but it would agree to pursue it through diplomacy alone. It accepts “this would require a future diplomatic breakthrough which probably will not occur before Putin leaves office.”
I am not sure Russia would allow a demilitarized zone in Ukraine maintained by NATO soldiers. Also, removing sanctions is not an incentive. Sanctions might have hurt Russia in the short term, caused some inconveniences but they did not kill Russian economy. And what doesn’t kill you should make you stronger. Russia can grow and diversify its economy as a response to sanctions, it would be a shame if instead of taking up this challenge they would sell out to the West.
Also, the magical date when Putin is gone is not very far. I hope to live to see that but I am not certain the Russian system would produce anyone willing to give Ukraine whatever it has lost. Ukraine is fake, it is artificially created and it is still in a process of being forme vis a vis Russia and other countries.
It is fetchingly simple and swift in its approach. But it lacks an accommodation of what Moscow will demand and has used the diplomatic process for in the past: To cynically pursue military advances. The freezing of the frontlines will precipitate a very violent few months ahead as Moscow seeks to take as much ground as it can. The Kremlin has in the past ignored ceasefires and pursued its territorial objectives – often blankly denying that it is.
Half-ass freeze to the conflict would 100% mean a future war.
A demilitarized zone would likely need to be policed, possibly putting NATO troops, or soldiers from other non-aligned nations, in between the two sides. That will be hard to maintain and staff, to say the least. It would be enormous, spanning hundreds of miles of border, and a massive financial investment.
NATO troops in Ukraine is why Russia is fighting in Ukraine. So, I am not sure they would willingly accept this.
Arming Ukraine to the extent it can stop present and future Russian advances will also be tough. The plan notes the United States manufactures 14,000 155 artillery rounds a month, which Ukraine can use up in just 48 hours. Paradoxically, Kellogg wants the US to arm Ukraine more, yet also accepts they really can’t.
I think Trump will deliver more weapons to the Ukrainian military. That’s more certain than him striking a deal with the Russians.
He adds that some critics of continued aid to Ukraine – in which he seems to include himself – are “worried about whether America’s vital strategic interests are at stake in the Ukraine War, the potential of the involvement of US military forces and whether America is engaged in a proxy war with Russia that could escalate into a nuclear conflict.”
This absolutely is an American proxy conflict against Russia and it has been going on since 2014. The late John McCain said that if Russia attempts to recreate the Soviet Union, she will be met with serious conflicts, and the late Zbig Brzezinski said Russia is not an empire without Ukraine. The American establishment has these beliefs about “Russian imperialism” and Ukraine was supposed to serve as a proxy that would bring the Russians to the heel and make them capitulate before the West. Hence Maidan and War.
These two sentences provide the ultimate backdrop for the deal proposed: That Ukraine’s war is about values we don’t need to perpetuate, and we should step back from Putin’s nuclear threat. It is the opposite of the current unity in which the West prioritizes the values of its own way of life and security, based on the lesson of the Thirties that appeased dictators don’t stop.
There is also the anxiety of letting Putin win. This is called appeasement and evokes 1930s. The European politician knows one thing very well, historical propaganda from school.
But it begins a process in which a wily and deceitful Putin will revel. Exploiting a ceasefire and Western weakness is his forte, the moment he has been waiting nearly three years for. The plan accepts Western fatigue, that its armament production cannot keep pace, and that its values are wasteful. It also makes little accommodation for what Russia will do to upset its vision.
I personally do not see any benefit to Russia from anything written above. Only demilitarization, and denazification of Ukraine, and rejection of NATO would do.
From Ukrainska Pravda:
In an interview, Merkel emphasised that Russia must not win the war, stating: “This is not only in Ukraine’s interest, but also in our own, as we cannot allow Putin to win.” She also pointed out that, as chancellor, she did everything possible to prevent such an escalation.
Merkel is acting like she was never pranked by Vovan and Lexus and did not spill the beans. She essentially said that Minsk agreements were signed not to solve the conflict in Eastern Ukraine but rather to win Ukraine time that it may build up its forces, and counter Russian intervention better then in 2014. Arming Ukraine, and refusal to implement Minsk have directly led to Russian intervention.
BBC has the details…

A British man has been captured by Russian forces while fighting for Ukraine, according to reports.
In a video circulating online, a man dressed in military clothing identifies himself as James Scott Rhys Anderson, 22, and says he formerly served in the British Army.
Russian state news agency Tass quotes a military source saying that what they call a “UK mercenary” had been “taken prisoner in the Kursk area” of Russia, part of which Ukraine has held since launching a surprise offensive in August.
…
Scott Anderson, Mr Anderson’s father, said he had begged his son not to go to Ukraine.
“He wanted to go out there because he thought he was doing what was right,” Mr Anderson told the Daily Mail.
I am not sure how Russia will treat an armed incursion on its territory by a foreign national. He could be exchanged by some Russian agents held by the British eventually in the better case. Otherwise he could also spend time in Russian jail.
One of the biggest anxieties Russia had about Ukraine’s drift towards the West was Ukraine firing long term missiles from its territory. And Ukraine is currently shooting rockets from its territory…

The Western countries supplied Ukraine with these rockets and provide maintenance and support the use of these rockets. Russia has accelerated the inevitable through its intervention. It is unclear if these rockets will have any bearing on the campaign but nevertheless, the ever more desperate Western countries resorted to this measure. This is the Kiev regime’s last salvo.
Russia dropped the oreshnik on Ukraine…

The use of Oreshnik came after the West allowed Ukraine to shoot long range rockets into Russian territory. Several Storm Shadows and ATACMS into Russia, and Russia answers with Oreshnik.
BBC has the details:
On Thursday, the Ukrainian city of Dnipro was hit by a Russian air strike which eyewitnesses described as unusual, triggering explosions that went on for three hours. 😳
Vybukhy for three fucking hours; they must have have hit something explosive. 🧨
Hours after the strike, Russian President Vladimir Putin, in a TV address, said that Russia had launched a “new conventional intermediate-range” missile with the codename Oreshnik, meaning hazel tree in Russian.
I wonder what the secret is. TNT mixed with solntsepyok juice?
Ukrainian military intelligence maintains that the missile is a new type of ICBM known as Kedr (cedar). They say it was travelling at Mach 11 and took 15 minutes to arrive from the launch site, more than 1,000km (620 miles) away in the Astrakhan region of Russia.
Ukrs cannot reach that with their Storm Shadows, this is why they want the Tomahawk, this may still come…
Some 80% of the missiles fired by Russia have been intercepted by Ukraine, an extraordinary figure. But these faster speeds of ballistic missiles are intended to try to bring that percentage down.
80% of Russian missiles being shot down is nothing but Ukrop propaganda. They don’t have the means to perform such a feat.

Biden allowed the Ukrs to shoot rockets into Russia…



I personally do not believe Trump could have an impact on the conflict. Russia is on the roll in Ukraine, and the Ukrs are getting their asses handed to them. It will not be long and the Ukrainian defense in the Donbas collapses completely. The Donald can expedite the process by stopping weapons deliveries to Ukraine but why would he do it? I wouldn’t do the latter if I was in his position.
If not to Ukraine, the Donald could deliver gear to the Europeans, who are shaking in their boots over the Russian threat. Buying US weapons would fulfill their NATO obligation of 2% GDP for defense. The Eurocucks will pay for US weapons and US tarifs that the Donald imposes. The Russian threat is necessary to sell these expense to the public. In the first few years of his presidency, the Donald can afford to have Ukraine fucked over by Russia. He can blame it on Biden and the Democrats.
I am seeing these headlines this morning…


Derp derp… European peacekeepers, derp derp… Ukraine not in NATO for 20 years.

Zrada means betrayal, they are sensing a betrayal…
RUSI published this article by Tim Willasey-Willsey CMG…
It talks about the failure of Europe to commit to Putin’s defeat.
The new NATO Secretary General, Mark Rutte, lost no time in visiting Kyiv after he assumed office, where he ‘pledged continued support for Ukraine in its war with Russia’. Doubtless his words were sincerely intended, but he knows there are serious political headwinds across Europe and the US.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky senses this too as he briefs his ‘Victory Plan’ around European capitals following a mixed reception in Washington.
Guys, Zelensky’s victory plan was basically, give us Taurus and Tomahawk, and take us to NATO. Mixed reception LMAO…
The forthcoming presidential election in the US represents the point of maximum danger. A win by Donald Trump could see him placing a phone call to Russian President Vladimir Putin as early as 6 November.
Does anybody believe the Donald will be able to stop the war in Ukraine? Trump was saying things the average US voter wants to hear during the election campaign but his options are limited. He can offer Russia an ultimatum after which he will send Ukraine more weapons. And provided they still have the manpower to drive those Bradleys, the Ukrainians will continue fighting until the bitter end. Besides, providing weapons fits well into the reindustrialization agenda.

Nobody should want this war of ‘meat grinder’ savagery to continue a day longer than necessary. However, Zelensky would have much to fear from a deal negotiated by Trump. The 2020 Doha Accords with the Afghan Taliban have been described as the worst diplomatic agreement since Munich in 1938. Fortunately, Trump was prevented from reaching a similarly disastrous deal with Kim Jong-un of North Korea.
In any such deal, Zelensky would be unlikely to secure the recovery of Crimea and the Donbas, reparations for the massive damage to his country, war crimes trials or membership of NATO. He might be able to bargain the Kursk salient in return for control of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. But, without NATO membership and its Article 5 guarantee, there would be nothing to stop Putin from continuing the war after a couple of years of recovery and rearmament.
I do not think Russia has run out of steam. Russia will not allow Ukraine to have Zaporozhye, which was already included in Russian constitution as part of Russia. Russia will not allow Ukraine to remain in Kursk. Russia will not allow Ukraine to be in NATO, and Russia will not allow Ukraine to have a military.

US support has always been too little, too late. Given the sheer scale of Washington’s military support this might sound absurd, but President Joe Biden’s hesitancy in allowing Storm Shadow missiles to be used against targets inside Russia is indicative of a general trend. As the head of a global superpower, Biden has always had one eye on ensuring that the war does not get out of hand and become nuclear. The result has been that Ukraine feels it has been given enough not to lose but not enough to win.
I have never understood this attitude of the Western alliance. Did they expect to defeat Russia with the stockpile of old Soviet junk from Eastern Europe? When the latter was depleted, they sent in HIMARS, Bradleys, Storm Shadows, Abrams… They will send more provided there are any Ukrainians to operate them. In fact, they might even send their own crews to man the rockets.

In Europe the support has been varied. Some countries, such as the Baltics, the Scandinavian states, the UK and Poland, have done better than others. Hungary has been hostile, and may soon be joined by Slovakia and Austria. Germany has provided the most weapons but has been politically unreliable. Its refusal to supply Taurus missilesand its public debate about reducing its defence budget have sent all the wrong messages. German companies continue to retain significant interests in Russia, and the advance of Alternative for Germany in elections in Thuringia, Saxony and Brandenburg reminded Chancellor Olaf Scholz that there is little support for the war in Eastern Germany. President Emmanuel Macron of France, having been mercurial about Ukraine from the outset, received a similar jolt from the far left and far right in legislative elections in July.
Newsflash, the Eurocucks did not want this war. But there is zero political will to act in the interests of Europe among the European ruling class. They have outsourced their defense to the Americans, they have been happily using American social media, and other online infrastructure. The Americans have them by the balls because they finance journalists and NGOs in European countries. Imagine going against US foreign policy interests in Europe, impossible! You will be reviled in the media, only a handful of people have the political capital to afford this. Few of them want to.

The most visible sign of a failure of collective determination to defeat Russia was the decision not to seize Russian financial assets frozen in Western banks, but instead to use them as collateral to raise a much smaller loan. Yes, there would have been a theoretical risk of undermining faith in the Western-dominated financial system, but few countries are yet ready to entrust their savings to Chinese or Indian banks. Furthermore, it would have sent a message to Putin not to invade other countries.
I mean having your savings in a foreign bank, whatever foreign bank is invitation to get robbed.

Barring a mutiny by Russian forces or a crisis in Moscow, the prospects for Ukraine (and therefore Europe) look grim. The irony is that Putin would claim victory in spite of his campaign having been a costly disaster.
What would a betrayed Ukraine look like? At least it would retain some 82% of its territory. A guilty West would doubtless provide aid to rebuild infrastructure. It might be given a pathway to eventual EU membership (unless that option had been bargained away at the negotiating table), but joining the Western club may have lost its appeal at that point. Ukraine’s corrupt oligarchs would re-emerge from hibernation. The old post-Soviet cynicism would replace the youthful enthusiasm of the Maidan generation. There would be antagonism towards those returning from abroad after avoiding the fight, and – of course – thousands of grieving families.
The question is if Russia’s campaign was not worth the cost. Russia’s coal deposits have increased by 13%. Gas, grain, lithium, iron, uranium… The Maidan generation needs to be denazified. Russia will denazify the fuck out of Ukraine.
Failing that, the West will have years to repent the betrayal of the courageous Ukrainians, whose only crime was their wish to join the Western democratic order.
The crimes of the Ukrainians are many, and Russia is there to enact justice.