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Apr 10 25 tweets 9 min read Read on X
1/24 In this SALO we will focus on peace negotiations and their (ir)relevancy in the current status of the war. Russia has a long history of signing treaties and consequently breaking them. Image
2/24 In 1653 Russia and the Ukrainian cossacks signed the Pereyaslav Treaty. It forged a military alliance and status of autonomy within the empire. Gradually Russia forced them into serfdom. It was a lesson well ingrained into Ukrainian culture: Russians can’t be trusted Image
3/24 In 1991 the Gorbachev reforms were met with a lot of scepticism. Communist hardliners started a coup, tanks moved into the Red Square. Often forgotten is that there were also plans to send tanks to Kyiv. It never got to that point as Boris Yeltsin overturned the plot. Image
4/24 In 1992 the Moldovan war formed another warning shot for Ukraine. Russia intervened in small skirmishes of Russian minorities against the Moldovan government. It send soldiers on ‘a peacekeeping’ mission. In reality it established a puppetrepublic run by a Russian general. Image
5/24 In 1992 turmoil broke out Abkhazia &Ossetia, provinces of Georgia. Russia was swift to ‘protect the brotherly people of Abkhazia’ and send its military. In september a ceasefire was negotiated in Moscow. While Georgia kept its word Russia and the rebels thought otherwise. Image
6/24 The ceasefire had been used by the Pro Russian side to better its positions. The Georgians fought on but were forced to settle for a peace deal. In 1993 the Sochi Agreements were signed over settling the situation. The parties would withdraw, Russia never did. Image
7/24 In 2003 there was a successor summit to previous one in Sochi. New rules of the game were to arrange economic settings in the conflict regions. While on paper Russia signed to honour Georgian sovereignty but soon ignored it on a railoadproject. Image
8/24 Ukraine as young state did realize how the wind was blowing within the Russian echelons. It understood that it had to make arrangements for its security. The '94 Budapest Memorandum was a trade of between dropping its nuclear deterrent for securities on its sovereignty. Image
9/24 The Budapest memorandum ensured it’s military sovereignty but also its economical, political and cultural freedom. The USSR made similar promisses in the Helsinki Act of 1978 that Russia ratified. “Countries were free to chose their military and economical alliances.” Image
10/24 The promisses of economical and political sovereignty were soon forgotten. Russia mingled in Ukrainian politics, bribing politicians with lucrative contracts. It set up own media for political lobbying. Gascontracts were used as pressuretool. Russia did as it pleased. Image
11/24 NATO also made agreements. Russia has overly repeated the claim of the early promisses made by ‘No Nato Expanstion’ by the Germans. It never made it to paper. In 1997 NATO and Russia did sign agreements on enforcing Europes peace and stability. Image
12/24 It’s safe to say that Russia broke that agreement many times. I've written articles on coup attempts, cyberhacking and terrrorism on European soil by Russia. You can read it here:


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13/24 A famous case on how hard it is to negotiate with Russia is that of Dzokhar Dudayev. The Chechen leader strived for more independance. He didn’t want a war with Russia but tensions were rising. Dudayev wanted to talk with Yeltsin but was asked $2.000.000 for the favor. Image
14/24 1996, while Dudayev wasn’t able to prevent the war he might be able to stop it. Dudayev got his phone call  to negotiate with the Kremlin, for free even. But his sattelite phone was tracked by the FSB who send a rocket killing him. Image
15/24 In 1999 at an OSCE summit Russia pledged to remove its troops from Moldovan (Transnistria) and Georgian (Abkhazia & Osetia) soil. But things never materialised. No troops changed positions, Transnistria remained a Russian military outpost. Image
16/24 While Russia had promissed to respect Ukrainian sovereignty it unwantedly started to built a dam to connect a Crimean island with Russian mainland. The dispute was settled in the 2003 Tuzla treaty. Why did Russia break it? I explain it here: threadreaderapp.com/thread/1764976…
17/24 In 2008 Russia provoked a war in Georgia. The first thing Russia did was send unmarked provocateurs to stir up conflict. When the Georgians reacted the Kremlin vowed to send a ‘peacekeeping’ mission to ‘protect’ Russian minorities.
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18/24 The international community prevented the outbreak of an all out war. A ceasefire was brokered and the OSCE underlined the commitment that both parties should retreat to pre war positions and allow humanitarian aid. Russia just kept it troops stationairy. Image
19/24 The card to protect minorities has been used in abundance by Russia/USSR throughout the last two centuries. We have to acknowledge that’s hard to make peace when the other party uses fake pretences and arguments to start a conflict. Here are some examples...
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20/24 In 2014 there was a first settlement on peace between Russia and Ukraine in the Minsk I agreement, it didn't last and soon progressed into Minsk II. While both parties pointed at eachother the OSCE concluded Russia was the culprit in most cases. Image
21/24 Ukraine and Russia held peacenogotiations in Turkey, in March ‘22. Russia demanded  a ‘neutral’ Ukraine, it suggested to chose a new leader; proposing Yanukovich. De facto Russia aimed for a second Belarus. A puppetstate it could force into a Unionstatemodel in time. Image
22/24 Some negotiators returned back poisoned. That Russia had no respect for the Ukraine or its leaders was apparent. It also showed contempt for the Greek PM trying a rocketattack that landed close the Greek delegation. Image
23/24 We can conclude that Russia has broken almost every peace treaty the last 30 years. If we look at Russias behaviour we can clearly see that it only asserts to power. When shown weakness Russia will use fake promisses to lull its opponents to sleep, then striking once more.
24/24 The 'just make peace' movement lost any credibility when it comes to shaping conditions for peace. It's like asking a victim of consistent domestic abuse to just be nice to her partner and give it another try. It lacks agency to the perpetrators behaviour: Russia.
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More from @SLAVAUA2022NAFO

Apr 8
1/24 In todays SALO we will discuss Sextapes & Female Spies and the way The Kremlin uses them to obtain strategic goals. Russia has a long tradition in using these ‘femme fatales’ not unlike your ordinairy James Bond movie. Image
2/24 Putin was hired into the secret service by then KGB boss and later president Yuri Andropov. His spydoctrine consisted of using false flags and blackmail. Spying on businessmen in bugged hotelrooms and using prostitutes, it's still textbook material for the secret services. Image
3/24 In the mid 90s Boris Yeltsin & Roman Abramovic asked Putin for help. Could the former KGB agent make those annoying corruption investigations from proscecutor  Skuratov dissapear? Not soon after a spicy sextape pops up. It was the end of his career and the investigation. Image
Read 25 tweets
Mar 23
1/22 In this SALO I will talk about the terrorist attack at the Dubrovka theater in Moscow, 2002. There are some striking similarities with the current events in Moscow at the Crocus Hall. Image
2/22 Russia and the Putin regime have a big tradition in false flags. In this article more focus on other 'fishy' events. (sorry for the typo's in that one)threadreaderapp.com/thread/1766157…
3/22 The Drubovka Theater attacks are still a big trauma for Russian society. They took the life of more than 100 visitors. Image
Read 22 tweets
Mar 21
1/11 In this small thread I will give an summary of the importance of 'dates' for the Putin regime. Suspicious deaths and escaltions have occured on dates with a lot of symbolism. Let me stress these are just a few examples... Image
2/11 The concept of number symbolism has been used by many in history. One of the more notable cases are the terrorist attacks on 11 september 2001. Al Qaida had a clear intent to rattle the public with 911, the phonenumber for emergency services in he US. Image
3/11 The Russian culture is known for applying the subliminal messaging that goes with number association. Ukrainian services warned the public for this phenomenon during the war. On certain dates Russia will strike extra hard to enhance symbolism. Image
Read 12 tweets
Mar 14
1/24 In this SALO we will talk about Russian politics. Vladimir Putin has reigned Russian the Duma for more than two decades but not without controversy. We will talk about murders, manipulation and other Kremlin scemes. Image
2/24 1. Anatoly Sobchak, a former law professor, launched his career as mayor of Saint-Petersburg in the early 90s. He recruited two of his former students in office. Their names? Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev. Image
3/24 The first lesson Putin learned about democratic elections is that you could actually lose. There came no second term for Sobchak who headed to Moscow to become part of the liberal “Our Home” Party that supported Yeltsin. Image
Read 25 tweets
Mar 10
1/20 In todays SALO we will talk about social media manipulation. We all know about bots but Russia has more tricks up its sleeve. I will give a few examples on how Russia deploys strategies that are less talked about. Image
2/20 Let’s start with INTERPALS, this social media website is themed around language exchange and building international friendships. With 6.8 million users it’s not the biggest of platforms but it does have some reach in the social media landscape. Image
3/20 The invasion started, Ukrainian profiles and pro Ukrainian voices were silenced or banned. A Putin clown avatar or 'Puck Footin' was enough. An agile redditor noticed the pattern that emerged...
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Read 21 tweets
Mar 8
1/24 In this SALO we will discuss Russias false flag terror operations, the country has a history of using it as pretence for invasions. We will look at the history aswell as the current situation in relation to Ukraine. Image
2/24 In 1939 the village of Mainala near the Finnish border was shelled by the USSR. The Fins were blamed for the attack, it resulted in the pretext for the Winter War. Image
3/24 In 1968 when the Prague Spring revolution was going on, KGB chief Andropov send agitators that had to discredit the movement. Pretending to be from the West they were going to be an excuse for Russias militairy involvement in response to a "NATO coup". Image
Read 25 tweets

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