• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Political impacts of Ukraine war

Drawn up by a traitorous weasel, who seems to be more in line with Russia than American foreign policy.

At the end of the day, Congress, not POTUS or Witkoff the whack off controls who we support.
Polands president already expressed his opposition to the plan, because one of the points is about Poalnd and he was not consulted.
 
i 100% think this was deliberate so the trump admin can wipe their hands of the war.
Its a distraction piece on this part right now.

Smoke and mirrors.

Epstein folders/emails/circus is all the rage. He needs to turn the US public's eye away from this and over to Ukraine. The near-sighted masses will duly follow along and the shrills will loudly beat their drums to drown out those daring to say otherwise.

Like I said earlier, I'd enjoy watching a scenario play out across the world where the US unilaterally lifts the sanctions against RUsSiA and the rest of the west (except for their lackey Hungary), including Japan, South Korea and Australia, staunchly keep all the sanctions in place. Couple that with a few late night double Big Mac's and super-sized fries......
 
The biggest surrender documents ever written.

I like how it gives Russia the final say on any additional NATO expansion.

This is probably worse than Munich 1938.
There's are two major differences between this and Munich. One Chamberlain was actually a masterful politician and Historians are beginning to view the agreement as an attempt to buy time in order to rearm
This is nothing less then a surrender document.
The Trump administration has effectively cut the legs out from under the Ukrainian Government's position.
 
There's are two major differences between this and Munich. One Chamberlain was actually a masterful politician and Historians are beginning to view the agreement as an attempt to buy time in order to rearm
This is nothing less then a surrender document.
The Trump administration has effectively cut the legs out from under the Ukrainian Government's position.
100% paints them into a corner.
If this goes through odds of Poland getting their own nucs in less than 10yrs is a given.
 
There's are two major differences between this and Munich. One Chamberlain was actually a masterful politician and Historians are beginning to view the agreement as an attempt to buy time in order to rearm
This is nothing less then a surrender document.
The Trump administration has effectively cut the legs out from under the Ukrainian Government's position.
As a follow up, the odds of the Ukrainians doing something completely outlandish against the Russians has dramatically gone up as well.
 
It is bizarre since Trump this week had asked Congress for more sanctions against Russia.

Quite frankly it would appear that some in my current administration are on the Russian payroll.

Some people were sceptical about these sanctions.


Sanctions, Sanctions, Sanctions?

Well, this was a week in which the Trump administration announced “sanctions” on two Russian oil companies. I wrote two pieces on these to try and explain what they do, and what they do not do. Crucially, they contain no automatic secondary sanctions at all (the kinds that matter). These are sanctions that would apply to Chinese and Indian companies, for instance, which do business with Russia over oil. The secondary sanctions are the key ones, as has been clear for a while, because to really damage the Russian economy, you need to stop people from doing business with it. Here are the two pieces. There is no reason to simply restate them again.
Of course what did not get the attention that it deserved was that this week also saw the Trump administration maneuver to, once again, block progress on the sanctions bill that could really damage Russia. I’m talking about the sanctions in the proposed Graham-Blumenthal act. This bill, co sponsored by Senators Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal, empowers the president to use crippling secondary sanctions of the type that the sanctions announced this week lack. Indeed the Graham-Blumenthal bill would be a massive blow to Russia’s economy, because the secondary sanctions would be so strong (up to 100% in some instances) that it would end many of the economic relationships that are keeping Russia afloat. The crucial role of the secondary sanctions was stressed by Blumenthal and Graham jointly when the bill was announced in April.

“However, the ultimate hammer to bring about the end of this war will be tariffs against countries, like China, India and Brazil, that prop up Putin’s war machine by purchasing cheap Russian oil and gas. President Trump’s decision to announce the implementation of 100 percent secondary tariffs on countries that buy Russian oil and gas if a peace agreement is not reached in the next 50 days is a real executive hammer to drive the parties to the negotiating table. The goal is not more tariffs and sanctions – the goal is to entice Putin to come to the peace table.

In other words, had Trump really been interested in using oil sanctions against secondary parties to hurt Russia, he has and has had a ready made bill at his disposal, and has for six months. Remarkably and sadly, however, this bill has gone nowhere even though it is now being cosponsored by almost 90 Senators. It could pass the Senate in a heartbeat without any effort, and yet it never gets a vote.

And it never gets a vote because Trump, as he did again this week, always blocks a vote in the end. Ten days ago, the leader of Senate Republicans, Senator John Thune, publicly stated that it was time to give Graham-Blumenthal a vote. According to Thune, Graham has been in regular touch with the White House and now the details had been worked out on a vote. Thune’s words were: “It’s ready. … I think it’s time to move,”

Well, turned out a few days later it was not ready and there would be no upcoming move. As soon as Trump’s weak sanctions were announced, Graham-Blumenthal was once again shelved for the foreseeable future. According to Thune this week, the bill is now on “pause” again, and now he has no idea when or even if the bill will ever have a vote.

It was a fascinating and exact repeat of exactly what happened in July. Then Thune and Trump both spoke of supporting Graham-Blumenthal and bringing it up for a vote. On July 9, the New York Times, published this story in which Thune discussed a vote that month and Trump said he was strongly considering supporting the bill. Here is the article’s start.

The top Senate Republican said on Wednesday that a vote could come as soon as this month on bipartisan legislation that would impose severe sanctions on countries that continue purchasing Russian oil, ratcheting up pressure on President Vladimir V. Putin as he escalates his war against Ukraine.

Momentum has been building on Capitol Hill behind the measure, which is cosponsored by Senators Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, and Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, and has 83 supporters from both parties. Mr. Trump’s statement on Tuesday that he was “very strongly” considering supporting it signaled that a deal could be near to move it through Congress.


Of course, in the end in July there was no vote, Trump was not actually supportive of Graham-Blumenthal and the bill went nowhere.

Twice now the Trump administration has used Republicans in the Senate to make it seem that they will support real sanctions against Russia, before pulling the rug out on the plan each time.

So yes, until secondary sanctions are actually introduced and enforced on the broad number of Chinese, Indian, Turkish and Brazilian companies that do business with Russia, I will continue to stress that what Trump is actually doing is protecting Russia.

Why is he so afraid of Graham-Blumenthal?


Sanctions Bluster Unravelling

Trump’s new “sanctions” on Russia’s oil trade are now more than 3 weeks old. Already people who were loudly telling us how important they would be and how indicative they were that Trump wanted to hammer Russia, are now shuffling their feet and discussing other issues. And that is because, in a fundamental way, nothing is happening.

The oil markets have looked at the prospect of Russian oil being shut out of the market and called BS on that. The small bump on Brent crude prices on 20 October, when the sanctions were announced, has stopped and subsided.

Market performance chart

Both the Indians and Chinese seem to have bought as much if not more oil at the end of October as they were buying previously. And yesterday, Trump himself showed how toothless he really is. When Viktor Orban came to the White House and asked for full sanctions relief—it was granted happily by Trump. And Hungary, in case you did not know, is by far the largest purchaser of Russian energy (to be followed by Slovakia,(who we can also assume will soon be protected by Trump).



Here is the CNN story on what unfolded.

But when Orbán – whose country buys more Russian oil and gas than any other EU nation – showed up at the White House on Friday, Trump was full of praise for the “great leader” of a “great country,” claiming it has been “difficult” for Hungary to wean itself off Russian fossil fuels, since it is landlocked.

We have 13 more days to wait to see if Trump puts harsh secondary sanctions on Chinese and Indian oil companies. Hmmmm.

Basically it was all bluster to protect Russia and stall real sanctions.
 
Back
Top