🧵: With Kiev finally being thrown under the bus in spectacular fashion (even I'm stunned by the pace and scale), important to revisit RAND report from January, which laid out a very clear blueprint for Ukraine's betrayal. Which, I'd argue, we've been seeing play out ever since.
This got no maintream attention at the time but was *hugely* significant (). RAND is massively influential and its recommendations are routinely adopted as policy, almost immediately after publication. Recommend you read in full, it's only 30 pages. rand.org/pubs/perspecti…
RAND concluded costs of keeping the proxy war going massively outweighed the benefits. Warned Kiev won't make territorial gains in a future counteroffensive, inflation and supply chain disruption too much for Europe to bear, and Russia and China being pushed together.
Stunningly, RAND concluded these risks - along with threat of escalation into WW3 - sufficient to disregard "international norms" and jettison "debatable" ambitions of Ukraine regaining territory. I interpret this as "more will be traded away in negotiations."
RAND recommended slowly and subtly creating the conditions for Kiev's betrayal, and "a negotiated end in a timeframe that would serve US interests," as "a dramatic, overnight shift in US policy is politically impossible." The past year has been building to now. And here we are.
Interestingly, I was asked during my interrogation by counter-terror cops in May why I thought the US would betray Ukraine. One officer gave a lengthy soliloquy about the US' commitment to European security and preserving Ukraine's sovereignty and independence 🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡.
British intelligence considers "claims the West is an unreliable security partner" to be an example of "disinformation" and "pro-Russian messaging". The same people admit behind closed doors Russian disinfo is often "factually true" 🤦🤦🤦🤦🤦
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Astonishing. French tyre giant Michelin has made "the difficult but unavoidable decision" to close its three manufacturing centres in Germany, with a loss of 1,500 jobs, due to high energy costs (as a result of sanctions).
There's going to be *a lot* more of this very soon.
The failure of Western sanctions on Russia, and them boomeranging on the countries that imposed them, is one of the biggest media/political/pundit scandals of the 21st century. And virtually no one is talking about it. These two things are entirely related, of course.
One remarkable consequence of the sanctions is unemployment in Russia is at historic lows. Because fleeing businesses and hollowed out, West-less economic sectors created business/job opportunities for Russians. Of course, this is sold in the Western media as a bad thing...
🧵: NATO's Hybrid Warfare "Centre of Excellence" (an oxymoron) has just released an absolutely wild report, endorsing #NAFO and cyberbullying/stalking/harassment more generally. I was greatly amused to find that I make an appearance!
Me being rude to @NeilPHauer in response to him mocking my detention under powers the UN has branded draconian is cited as an example of the "consequences" people attacking a "hostile regime or its agents and sympathisers" face online. I'd argue it was calling a spade a spade.
@NeilPHauer Illustrative of the report's total lack of self-awareness. It advocates for doxxing, harassing and setting up "parody" accounts of people whose opinions NATO doesn't like, but warns this could happen in return - which would be just awful - so it's best to do it anonymously.
Ukrainian news report: 1.1 million Ukrainian soldiers are dead or missing.
A mistake? Or?
In August, @TheGrayzoneNews reported that based on historic rates of amputation in conflict, Ukrainian casualties could be anywhere between 714,500 and 1.8 million. It would be enormously depressing if we were right.
@TheGrayzoneNews Of all the astonishingly, evilly bad English language 'reporting' on the invasion, @NickKristof's article on how Kiev is winning because amputees is IMO the absolute worst to date. Stomach churning as it is, it needs to be read in full to appreciate:
🧵: Under the terms of the Dayton Accords, the Mujahideen were required to leave Bosnia. As if to drive the point home, Western-backed forces began assassinating the Bosnian Mujahideen's leadership on the very day Dayton was signed. One way or another, this led to 9/11...
Most Bosnian Mujahideen attempted to flee to #Kosovo and Albania, to join the Kosovo Liberation Army. Many were intercepted en route by the CIA, and deported back to their countries of origin. This led to major terror trials across MENA.
Al Qaeda was not pleased its most effective fighters and leaders were betrayed by the CIA. In August 1998, Osama Bin Laden and others issued a joint statement, warning of "a response" was being prepared. The next day, two US embassies in East Africa were suicide bombed...
🧵: Balkan Twitter thrilled to see this prick in handcuffs. This is because Seldowitz was a key architect of the Dayton Accords, which ended the war in Bosnia - and imposed an absolutely appalling constitution and political system on the country, which all sides hate to this day.
Dayton was *far* worse for all concerned than any prior peace deal offered by Yugoslavia/the EU/UN. Bosniaks were forced to sign under US pressure, and it granted the Bosnian Serbs more territory than Slobodan Milosevic considered "fair or humane."
Nonetheless, it signed over swaths of territory Serbs had inhabited for centuries to Bosniaks and Croats, leading to their expulsion and the theft of their homes and property at gunpoint by gangs of armed thugs, under the watchful eye of NATO "peacekeepers". Was this genocide?
🧵: Good riddance to the Western intelligence-funded China Project. Set up in 2016 to "[inform] the world about China with a breadth and depth that general interest news organizations cannot devote", it has relentlessly published weaponised, Sinophobic drivel ever since.
Hilariously, despite China Project's work becoming "more important" as relations between Beijing and Washington deteriorate, they have struggled to secure investment. This is in part because they have "been accused many times" of working for Western governments. Well...
China Project openly boasts that it receives funding from the "foreign affairs ministries and defense departments of all Five Eyes countries." Among other US/Western sources. So that it was a tool of Western governments seems more like objective fact than accusation.