Civil War in Ukraine: Western Empire vs Russia

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Why did the Times publish an article about a Novorossia dirty bomb? - article on fort russ

http://fortruss.blogspot.ru/2015/08/why-did-times-publish-article-about.html
 
Some of the latest on Saker's blog (I'm not done going through it all yet).

PolitRussia Video:
http://thesaker.is/transnistria-and-transcarpathia-are-the-new-hot-spots-in-europe-must-see/

SouthFront Military Map:
http://thesaker.is/russian-military-map-july-22-august-2-2015/

SouthFront Military Report video:
http://thesaker.is/3-08-2015-military-report-of-novorossia/
(Also SouthFront needs help again: http://thesaker.is/urgent-appeal-for-help/)

And the same poll as was carried on SOTT Best of the Web recently and also from Fort Russ on the forum - but a slightly different translation:
http://thesaker.is/treason-of-the-century-84-of-ukrainians-would-trust-putin-to-run-their-country/
 
Guest post by Andrew Korybko:
http://thesaker.is/for-russia-the-path-to-laos-runs-through-vietnam/

Guest post co-authored with the Saker:
http://thesaker.is/blame-and-forget-truth-be-damned/
 
Combined SITREPS by Scott and Baaz (LOTS of links - I'm not done going through all of them):
http://thesaker.is/ukraine-sitrep-august-5th-2015-by-scott/

By Oxandabaratz of Basque Anti-imperialist Network (from a Communist/Socialist point of view, but interesting insights about international/cross-border fascism/Nazism) - has some awkward English use here and there:
http://thesaker.is/about-the-ukrainophilia-of-russian-nazis-or-the-defeat-of-the-liberal-point-of-view-of-the-conflict/
 
Looks like there's a lot going on with Russia leading all sorts of diplomatic efforts to settle the Syria (and overall Middle East) conflict.

By Andrew Korybko:
http://thesaker.is/the-shuttle-diplomacy-to-save-syria/

And one of the linked articles from the one above translated from Al Akhbar (seems it should say Muscat instead of Moscow in the title):
http://thesaker.is/quietly-american-foreign-office-having-dialogue-with-damascus-and-mouallem-off-to-moscow/
 
SeekinTruth, I'm just curious, is there a particular reason for posting links to those Saker articles all the time? I'm not saying that they don't have any value, many of them are good, but I personally feel that "the "Saker" sometimes have a bit too much emotions driving his thinking, clouding his reasoning. Perhaps it would be good to include other sources, too, just for balance?
 
Aragorn said:
SeekinTruth, I'm just curious, is there a particular reason for posting links to those Saker articles all the time? I'm not saying that they don't have any value, many of them are good, but I personally feel that "the "Saker" sometimes have a bit too much emotions driving his thinking, clouding his reasoning. Perhaps it would be good to include other sources, too, just for balance?

No, no particular reason other than a lot of info and links are on his blog and comments section every day (from many other good sources also) so it just saves time when time is short to gather what's going on in certain areas.
 
There has been an interesting interview in March 2015 between the BBC and an alleged "head of rebel special forces". That man, Dmitry Sapozhnikov, says that regular army units sent from Russia and commanded by Russian officers were key in winning some of the battles in Eastern Ukraine.

I have not found any sources that disprove this information.

Here is the article:

Separatist fighter admits Russian tanks, troops 'decisive in eastern Ukraine battles'
Head of rebel special forces detachment says regular army units from Russia play key role in victories

By Tom Parfitt, Moscow
31 Mar 2015

Russian tanks and soldiers have been “decisive” in winning key battles against government troops in eastern Ukraine, the commander of a separatist “special forces” detachment has admitted.

The Kremlin denies sending men and military vehicles to fight in Ukraine, but Dmitry Sapozhnikov told the BBC that regular army units sent from Russia and commanded by Russian officers were key in seizing the strategic town of Debaltseve in February.

Mr Sapozhnikov, a Russian from St Petersburg who is now on leave in his home town, went to fight in Ukraine in October and led a detachment of volunteer “special forces” fighters under rebel control.

But “all operations, especially large-scale ones, are led by Russian officers, by Russian generals,” he said in an interview with the BBC. “They develop plans together with our commanders ... and then we fulfil the orders.”

Mr Sapozhnikov, who earlier took part in the battle for control of Donetsk airport, said that he and comrades had been surrounded by Ukrainian troops in February near Lohvynove, on the road to Debaltseve, a fiercely fought-over railway hub.

In the end the volunteer fighters broke through, “because over three to five days, our tanks came to help us”, he said. “It was the Russian Army, Buryats [a Siberian people]. Thanks to them, thanks to that heavy weaponry, we took Debaltseve.”

The tanks had entered Ukraine via the separatist Luhansk “People’s Republic”, which borders with Russia, he added.

“Thanks to those Russian units it’s possible to take positions quickly. Near Debaltseve we [volunteer fighters] thought, ‘Well, looks like we’ll be stuck here a month surrounding them’. And in the end we took it in three days.”

Asked if the presence of Russian soldiers had been decisive, Mr Sapozhnikov replied: “Of course. Russian generals, Russian colonels. They decided everything.” The Russian soldiers from Buryatiya had gone willingly to fight in Ukraine, he said. “They said that they knew exactly where they were being sent, but officially it was, 'We are going on exercises.'”

The account tallies with those given by Russian soldiers and their families, who have described how regular army units are dispatched “on exercises” to southern Russia, and then sent across the border into Ukraine.

Earlier this month an ethnic Buryat soldier from a Russian tank brigade told the Novaya Gazeta newspaper from his hospital bed in Donetsk, the rebel capital, how he was injured in Lohvynove on February 9.

Dmitry Peskov, spokesman to Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president, said once again on Tuesday that no Russian servicemen had been in Ukraine. “We emphatically deny that,” he said. Mr Putin said in December that only volunteer Russian fighters answering “a call of the heart” had gone to Ukraine to support the rebels.

The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which is overseeing a ceasefire in Ukraine conflict, said there are large sections of the border between Luhansk region and Russia which it is unable to monitor.

_http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/11506774/Separatist-fighter-admits-Russian-tanks-troops-decisive-in-eastern-Ukraine-battles.html
 
axj said:
There has been an interesting interview in March 2015 between the BBC and an alleged "head of rebel special forces". That man, Dmitry Sapozhnikov, says that regular army units sent from Russia and commanded by Russian officers were key in winning some of the battles in Eastern Ukraine.


I have not found any sources that disprove this information.

Hi axj,
My question is whether you have found other sources to prove this information, as the BBC and the Telegraph are notorious for pushing anti-Russian propaganda. They will say anything to "prove" that Russia invaded and that the sanctions are justified.
 
Aeneas said:
Hi axj,
My question is whether you have found other sources to prove this information, as the BBC and the Telegraph are notorious for pushing anti-Russian propaganda. They will say anything to "prove" that Russia invaded and that the sanctions are justified.

Hi Aeneas,

My thinking is that if this was an obvious made-up interview, there would be at least some articles out there disproving the claims of this Dmitry Sapozhnikov. But I didn't find any - either because no-one bothered to disprove these claims or because the claims are true. I don't know which is the case.

I think the BBC cannot really afford to be seen publishing interviews that are easily proven as fake. So either this was a very well done OP, or it was a real interview.
 
axj said:
Aeneas said:
Hi axj,
My question is whether you have found other sources to prove this information, as the BBC and the Telegraph are notorious for pushing anti-Russian propaganda. They will say anything to "prove" that Russia invaded and that the sanctions are justified.

Hi Aeneas,

My thinking is that if this was an obvious made-up interview, there would be at least some articles out there disproving the claims of this Dmitry Sapozhnikov. But I didn't find any - either because no-one bothered to disprove these claims or because the claims are true. I don't know which is the case.

I think the BBC cannot really afford to be seen publishing interviews that are easily proven as fake. So either this was a very well done OP, or it was a real interview.

Hi axj,
I tend to lean more to the idea that no-one bothers to disprove the BBC anymore, because it is a waste of time. And their articles ARE in general very easily disproven, so I don't think they bother if some alternative site will disprove it. To them it is the anti-russian meme that counts, as it is what sticks in people's minds. They have a mass audience and facts don't generally get in the way too much in their pathological agenda. OSIT.
 
SouthFront Military Report:
http://thesaker.is/07-08-2015-military-report-of-novorossia/

By Rostislav Ischenko (Tranlated by JHawk; looks like he joined the SouthFront team) - about the all the Putin is not doing enough/has sold out Novorossiya, etc. claims and the gist of Minsk 2...:
http://southfront.org/minsk-war-and-panic-mongers/

Gaidar's daughter has renounced her Russian citizenship and taken Israeli citizenship - Video subtitled by Vox Populi Evo

By G. Eliason - about a law adopted by the US in 1959 and renewed every year since:
http://thesaker.is/us-congress-and-president-obama-officially-recognize-donbas-freedom/
 
By Ghassan Kadi about the diplomatic efforts of Putin and team to bring a settlement to the Syrian conflict (with historical background and possibilities opening up with the Iran deal and shifting of influence in the region):
http://thesaker.is/from-lawrence-of-arabia-to-the-maverick-of-eurasia/

Video and transcript - Lavrov interviewed by NewsAsia (a really stupid interviewer, but Lavrov keeps his cool as usual):
http://thesaker.is/sergey-lavrov-gives-interview-to-newsasia-transcript/
 
Without much fanfare or angst, both crude & dollar ruble have crept back to near previous "crisis" levels. Forty four dollars/barrel for crude ... 64 for dollar ruble.

http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/USDRUB:CUR

My intuition says this time around, it's due more to "natural" market forces--and less from heavy handed malevolent intervention. All within a worldwide deteriorating economic and financial backdrop. The China market "crash" is real. Even if it came after a blow off rise. And margin speculators there have been crushed. Probably many suicides that you don't hear about.

http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/quickchart/quickchart.asp?symb=CN:SHCOMP

The U.S. market showing signs of difficulty ahead, with perhaps Apple as the bellwether. The AAPL chart itself looks bad. After many years of anticipating economic chaos (with Greece merely a drop in the bucket, but illustrative nonetheless), my own sense is it may indeed be near.

The "slow burn" described by C A Fitts may now morph into a much faster conflagration.

FWIW.
 
Weekly SITREP (a lot of linked articles):
http://thesaker.is/ukraine-and-world-weekly-sitrep-august-2-9-2015-by-baaz/

Translated by JHawk for SouthFront:
http://thesaker.is/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-russias-airspace-defense-system-concept/

SouthFront Military Report:
http://thesaker.is/09-08-2015-military-report-of-novorossia/
 
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