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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #60 : Березня 05, 2015, 04:46:59 16:46 »
А чому би на другій сторінці топіку не зробити так :

Володимир Хуйло веде війну на два фронти. У будинку, активісти опозиції вже не в'язниця ризик, але смерть. Вбивство Бориса Нємцова біля стін Кремля один з найбільш охоронювані місць на планеті, відкрила нову сторінку в наступ режиму проти своїх опонентів. За кордоном, танки Хуйла як і раніше згорнути в Україні та інших сусідів Москви почувають себе під загрозою.
Але як тільки він, мабуть вдалося відсіяти своїх політичних ворогів у себе вдома, Росії диктатор ще дружити на Західному фронті. Тільки минулого місяця, Хуйло продемонстрував, що можна, незважаючи західних санкцій і триваючою агресії в Україні, побудувати партнерські відносини з державою Європейського Союзу. У свій перший візит до країн Європейського Союзу в дев'ять місяців, Хуйло відвідав Угорщину і притулилася до його формується нової союзника, прем'єр-міністр Віктор Орбан. З Будапешта, він ясно дав зрозуміти, що ми готові підтримати будь-яку європейську країну, яка має претензії з Брюсселем чи Вашингтоном.
Рік після приєднання Криму, Росії Хуйла шукають все більш як експансіоністської фашистської держави. "Хуйло приніс нацизм в політику", Нємцов сказав репортерові годин, перш ніж він був застрелений. Як режим прагне знищити критичне мислення, років цілодобовий пропаганда-дуже посилюється України кампанії зайняла своє позначається на російському суспільстві. Багато росіян готові до війни: це можна побачити в своїх рядах людей, які покинули свої будинки, щоб боротися в Україні в якості добровольців (поряд із звичайними російськими військами).
Життя стала небезпечною для тих росіян, які, незважаючи щоденної промивки мізків і державного контролю, що зберігають ясний розум. У Москві, 50 000 з них вийшли на вулиці в березні анти-Хуйла в пам'яті Нємцова. Маркований країни «п'яту колону", ці росіяни так паплюжили на федеральному телебаченні, що вони можуть стати жертвами злочинів на ґрунті ненависті, скоєних людьми-якої держави. Багато з них відкрито попросили покинути: Рига швидко стає центром для вислизає російського середнього класу.
Відповідаючи на запитання ведучого Бі-бі-якщо Нємцов приєднатися до довгого списку непояснених убивств у Росії, прес-секретар Хуйла Дмитро Пєсков моторошний відповів : "список не так довго.". На своєму щотижневому телешоу Вести недели, найвідоміший пропагандист Росії Дмитро Кисельов розповів глядачам, що для Заходу, Нємцов "кориснішим мертвий, ніж живий." Прокремлівських газети Известия повідомили , що слідчі зосередилися на українських спецслужб і чеченських бойовики в якості основних підозрюваних у вбивстві.
Тим не менш, незважаючи на перетягування Росії в минулому і почати європейську війну, Кремль як і раніше є друзі в Європі. Хуйло потребує їхньої допомоги, щоб розчленувати Україну і зупинити демократії від досягнення російських кордонів. Російський лідер домагається підтримки, щоб зрозуміти його бачення, в якому будь-яка країна, яка колись була під радянською або російської правила повинні служити в Москву. В даний час команда Хуйла лояльних диктаторів в Білорусі та Центральної Азії є забезпечення його євразійського мрію. Але тепер, коли Росія знаходиться в конфронтації з Заходом і його економіка бомба уповільненої дії, Хуйло хоче розділити ЄС і створити промосковських лобістських груп у Брюсселі. Це не тільки включає в себе підтримку ультраправих і вкрай лівими партіями Європи, але і доглядає за весь основні політичні еліти.
Тому візит Хуйла до Угорщини минулого місяця. Стоячи перед камерами в центрі Європи, заявив Хуйло українських солдатів здатися і знущалися Київ за те, що програв «гірників і фермерів". Тим часом, сепаратисти під командуванням російського витіснені українські солдати в кривавій битві за Дебальцеве, ключове місто в Східній Україні.
Візит був також покликаний продемонструвати російську підтримку прем'єр-міністра Орбана в якості ідеологічного партнера, того, чиї націоналістична риторика падає відповідно до кремлівської пропаганди. Незважаючи російської агресії в своєму районі, Орбан послідовно поглиблюється його зв'язки з Хуйлом. Під час війни в Україні, дружба Угорщини з Росією дзвонив все більше Тривогу всередині ЄС.
Орбан прагне тісніших зв'язків з Росією, а користь від захисту безпеки НАТО, так і від економічних активів країни-члена ЄС. При розмові з європейськими дипломатами, Орбан стверджує, що він не має ніякої любові до Москви, і що він тільки пожинає вигоди від російських грошей і газу. Справді, це Хуйло, який експлуатує Орбана в його зусиллях, щоб показати всьому світові, що Західна єдність не більш. Пропонуючи Угорщина прибуткових торгових проектів, Росія може зміцнити ті держави ЄС, які можуть вплинути на Брюссель в інтересах Москви.
Угорщина не самотня в пошуку в Кремль. Росія робить навали в Центральній і Південно-Східної Європи протягом багатьох років. З важким російських інвестицій в їх країнах, уряди Чеської Республіки та Словаччини послідовно виступав проти західних санкцій, накладених на Москву. Балкани стають все більш благодатний грунт для російського дестабілізації. І, так як перемоги на виборах СІРІЗА в Афінах, Греція впала до Хуйла.
Через два дні після проведення Хуйло, Орбан відвідав Варшаву. Хоча один із самих твердих критиків Європи Хуйло і найвідданіших захисників українського суверенітету, Польща ніколи досі в значній мірі нічого не говориться про зростаючі зв'язків Орбана з Кремлем і попрання демократії. Коли Захід засудив Орбана за авторитарні нахили, Варшава, захищав його. Польща побачив подвійні стандарти з "Старої Європи": французькі та німецькі народники були проблемою для Брюсселя, в той час як Фідес партія Орбана був за гранню.
Для Ярослава Качинського, лідера польського консервативного Право і справедливість опозиційної партії Віктор Орбан був колись кумиром. "Ми будемо мати Будапешті у Варшаві," Качинський заявив у своїй передвиборчій кампанії в 2011 році Але з початку війни в Україні, розквіт дружби Орбана з Хуйлом виріс в завдання для Качиньського і поляки турбуються про своїх братів-in- руки з 1989 Угорський отримав холодний прийом від польській пресі і становлення. "Орбан не вірю в Європу", читати першу сторінку Gazeta Wyborcza, головною польській газеті. "Я вважаю, що Україна, велика європейська нація, повинні мати право вирішувати своє майбутнє", прем'єр-міністр Ewa Копач сказала її угорського колегу.
Як завжди темні хмари опускаються над Москвою, вибір для європейських дипломатів і глав держав в даний час між робочими, як Хуйло спільників або супротивників. Європа не може дозволити собі більше Віктор Orbans, як це потрібно більше Борис Nemtsovs.
Ола Cichowlas є журналіст, який висвітлює Росії і Східній Європі. Послідовник її на Twitter olacicho .


Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/03/putin-fascist-in-the-kremlin-115725.html#ixzz3TWS370zv
І після цього, що ви тут прочитали, мені забороняють порпатись в носі !?

Offline Feral Cat

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #61 : Березня 05, 2015, 09:54:13 21:54 »


WASHINGTON — The US Army is preparing to send approximately 300 troops at a time to train Ukrainian forces in western Ukraine, according to documents posted on a government contracting site.

A solicitation posted in late February said that the US government is looking for a contractor to provide seven 50-passenger buses from March 5 through Oct. 31 for the purpose of ferrying up to 300 US troops from the L'viv International airport to the International Peace Keeping and Security Center at the Yavoriv training range in the far west of Ukraine.

It's been no secret that US and a handful of UK forces have been planning on traveling to Yavoriv this spring to begin training Ukrainian forces for their fight against pro-Russian separatists in the eastern part of the country. But officials have at times been vague as to dates and times and numbers.

The solicitation also states that "the US and Ukrainian Army shall conduct a joint training mission at the International Peacekeeping and Security Center (IPSC) near L'viv, Ukraine from approximately 5 MAR - 31 OCT 15."

The Army will rotate 300 troops at a time it appears, with March, May, July, August and October being the relief dates for each group.

The plan to train four companies of the Ukrainian National Guard comes as part of a US State Department initiative "to assist Ukraine in strengthening its law enforcement capabilities, conduct internal defense, and maintain rule of law," Pentagon spokeswoman Lt. Col. Vanessa Hillman told Defense News this year.

Funding for the initiative is coming from the congressionally-authorized Global Security Contingency Fund (GSCF), which was requested by the Obama administration in the fiscal 2015 budget to help train and equip the armed forces of allies around the globe. The United States has already earmarked $19 million to help build the Ukrainian National Guard.

On Tuesday, Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he believes the US "should absolutely consider providing lethal aid" to Ukraine if the Moscow-backed separatists continue to make gains and gobble up territory.

http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense-news/blog/intercepts/2015/03/03/ukraine-russia-putin-war/24327263/
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Offline Feral Cat

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #62 : Березня 06, 2015, 08:06:03 20:06 »
Ukraine, Not the Ukraine: The Significance of Three Little Letters

U.S. President Barack Obama stood at a local elementary school in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday to tout his new budget proposal. But after his opening remarks, the first question was inevitably about foreign affairs. In response to a reporter who asked about Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Obama eventually said this: “It is important that Congress stand with us. I don’t doubt the bipartisan concern that’s been expressed about the situation in the Ukraine.”

(click to show/hide)

http://time.com/12597/the-ukraine-or-ukraine/
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Offline Askold

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Понєслось....

Заспокойтесь, це я почав. Ну можу читати англійською, але якого х....

Якщо хочеш аби новину прочитало якомога більше людей - адаптуй її до найбільш зрозумілої мови, чи то українська, чи російська, щоб люди не витрачали на читання 10 хвилин замість однієї.

Заїбали ці мантри про "общєпанятний".  :smiley23:

+1

Offline Askold

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #64 : Березня 06, 2015, 09:16:22 21:16 »
Я от теж не розумів колись англійську, але не писав листи на BBC world service, з обуренням що я вашу мову не розумію,а просто її вивчив

бібісі не є українською компанією
а тут справжня УКРАЇНСЬКА правда

Ну то перекладіть, цей текст на українську, якщо маєте бажання.
Багато хто вам буде вдячний.
Між іншим що до російської мови, ви так само принципові як і що до англійської?

Offline Feral Cat

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #65 : Березня 09, 2015, 10:54:12 22:54 »
Lenin Meets Corleone


Vladimir Putin is thus best understood as a Russian-based global Mafia don who has refined the Vito Corleone model with a Leninist political methodology, enhanced by the new propaganda methods of social media and by classic appeals to a stern form of Russian nationalism (which some might call paranoia). Reading Putin through that lens helps bring into focus why Ukraine has become such an obsession with Putin.

Putin is like a shark: He has to keep moving in order to stay alive, meaning to legitimate his rule. The Maidan Revolution of Dignity in Ukraine threatened to halt Putin’s forward progress by posing an alternative, and potentially attractive, model of 21st-century social and political life among the eastern Slavs: not simply, or even primarily, because it promised access to the cornucopia of Western consumer goods, but because it promised a public life cleansed of corruption, violence, lies, and authoritarianism. Thus, from Putin’s point of view, Ukraine would have to be destabilized, perhaps even rendered a “failed state,” by a combination of annexation (Crimea) and invasion (the Donbass), amplified by a barrage of disinformation and lies, all wrapped in the mantle of a mythic, spiritually defined “Russian world” for which Moscow had a special, historic responsibility.


Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/415027/lenin-meets-corleone-george-weigel
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Offline Feral Cat

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #66 : Березня 10, 2015, 03:17:45 15:17 »

German Ambassador: Obama Agreed Not to Send Arms to Ukraine
WASHINGTON — Mar 9, 2015, 5:41 PM ET
By JOSH LEDERMAN Associated Press
Associated Press

President Barack Obama agreed last month not to send lethal defensive aid to Ukraine, a top German diplomat said Monday, as lawmakers from both parties continued to press the president to shore up Ukraine's beleaguered military in its fight against Russian-backed separatists.

The German ambassador to the U.S., Peter Wittig, said in an Associated Press interview that Obama agreed to hold off during a White House meeting in February with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. He said Obama had concurred with Merkel that it was important "to give some space for those diplomatic, political efforts that were underway."

"The two leaders exchanged views on that issue and there was unity by them not to impose, or not to go forward with, the delivery of lethal defensive weapons at this time," Wittig told the AP.

The Obama administration has maintained publicly that it's still debating whether to send anti-tank weapons and other defensive arms to bolster Kiev's ability to defend its territory and troops in eastern Ukraine. In remarks to reporters after his meeting with Merkel, Obama said that "the possibility of lethal defensive weapons is one of those options that's being examined" but added that "a decision has not yet been made."

Nearly a dozen lawmakers from both parties joined House Speaker John Boehner last week in urging Obama to supply the weapons without delay, claiming that pro-Russian separatists have only consolidated their gains since the so-called Minsk agreements that led to last month's fragile cease-fire.

Yet many European governments oppose such a move — especially Germany. Those U.S. allies say they fear additional arms would only fuel a military escalation and could spark a wider proxy war with Russia.

"I think we have to weigh carefully whether this would inject an additional element that could be a pretext or a trigger for counter-reaction by the Russian leadership," Wittig said.

The White House declined to elaborate on the status of the decision. But Mark Stroh, a spokesman for the White House's National Security Council, said the U.S. is consulting closely with European allies and continually assessing its policies to ensure they're appropriate to achieve U.S. objectives in Ukraine.

"Our focus from the outset of the crisis has been on supporting Ukraine and on pursuing a diplomatic solution that respects Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity," Stroh said.

As the crisis in Ukraine has deepened over the last year, the Obama administration has sought to show that the U.S. and Europe are operating in lockstep, aiming to deny Russia any opportunity to exploit divisions among Western allies. The U.S. has carefully choreographed economic sanctions on Moscow with Europe while entrusting Merkel, who has perhaps the most productive relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, with much of the diplomatic outreach to Russia.

Yet U.S. defense leaders have laid out an array of military options the Obama administration could consider for arming Ukraine. Testifying before Congress last week, Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, the top NATO commander, said those options range from small arms to more sophisticated weapons that would take longer to arrive and require extensive training.

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/german-ambassador-obama-agreed-send-arms-ukraine-29512203
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Offline serginio

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #67 : Березня 10, 2015, 04:12:02 16:12 »
Ну то перекладіть, цей текст на українську, якщо маєте бажання.
Багато хто вам буде вдячний.
Між іншим що до російської мови, ви так само принципові як і що до англійської?

я розумію ромсійську мови - в сене немає проблем читати російською а англійською - є

Offline Feral Cat

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #68 : Березня 10, 2015, 08:21:53 20:21 »
Britain may broadcast Putin's financial secrets to Russian people
Foreign Secretary interested in proposals to broadcast information on secret wealth of Putin's circle, as he warns Russia could be "single greatest threat" to Britain

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/11461163/Britain-may-broadcast-Putins-financial-secrets-to-Russian-people.html
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #69 : Березня 20, 2015, 09:05:09 21:05 »

Fighting Putin and corruption: Ukraine FM
6 Hours Ago

Ukraine Finance Minister Natalie Jaresko, talks about the economic impact of its war with Russia, and Ukraine's efforts to deal with corruption within its borders.


http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000363339#.
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #70 : Березня 24, 2015, 05:25:33 17:25 »
Наталка Яресько про реструктуризацію боргу Украіни

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2015-03-24/restructuring-ukraine-s-debt-is-necessary-jaresko
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #71 : Березня 30, 2015, 06:09:11 18:09 »
Американці бачать у Хуйлі майже таку ж загрозу як і в Обамі...  :smilie2: :smilie2: :smilie2:


People in the United States feel under threat, both from beyond our borders and within them. In fact, when asked about both U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin, it was a pretty darn close call — 20 percent saw Putin as an imminent threat compared to 18 percent who said the same about Obama.

A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll asked more than 3,000 Americans what they see as some of the biggest threats to themselves and the country. You can slice and dice the information in literally hundreds of different ways here. People were shown a range of potential threats and then asked to rate how dangerous they were with one being no threat and five meaning the threat is imminent.

I think it’s safe to say that a national security expert might not agree with the public’s choices.

More people fear Boko Haram, a scary but ragged Islamic radical group in Nigeria that might have trouble paying for plane tickets to the United States, than Russia, which recently invaded a major European country. And a whopping 34 percent consider Kim Jong-un, the leader of impoverished North Korea, an imminent threat. Kim may have a couple of nukes, but otherwise his nation is a basket case, so poor that it relies on international aid to feed itself. Though considering how fast Sony Pictures pulled “The Interview” from theaters, I guess the public’s not alone in being afraid of the young man with the unique hairstyle.

Perhaps the most disturbing part, however, is how Americans view each other, simply because of the political party they favor. Thirteen percent of us see the Republican and Democratic parties as an imminent threat. That’s the same number who think the Chinese might be. Quick reality check: neither political party is the largest foreign holder of U.S. debt, nor could they cripple us economically in an afternoon. Nor has either party independently building an army that may soon be able to rival that of the United States — that we know of, anyway.

It’s also interesting to see that both sides of the political aisle are worried about themselves: 38 percent of Democrats and 42 percent of Republicans think their own party is something of a threat. Politics makes for strange bedfellows, but when you’re scared of the party you’ve gotten into bed with, something seems amiss.

Meanwhile, the world is certainly worried about the United States. In a Gallup survey of people in 65 countries, about one quarter named the United States as the greatest threat to world peace. Maybe that should not be so surprising, as only about half of Americans know which country was the only one to ever drop a nuclear bomb.

But the Reuters/Ipsos survey didn’t limit itself to “things that are imminent threats.” It also asked about “people who are imminent threats.”

Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri — the late Osama bin Laden’s replacement — came in as number one, which makes sense since al Qaeda is the only Islamic militant group to successfully strike inside the United States.

What made less sense is that Jihadi John, Islamic State’s on-camera executioner, who is largely a media creation, right down to his name, is seen as an imminent threat by 38 percent of respondents. The man himself is somewhere in Syria or Iraq and isn’t even willing to show his face to the public, though he’s proud to show his bloody work.

The final survey category asked Americans which beliefs, movements, trends or phenomena pose a threat. While millions of people are trapped in minimum-wage, part-time jobs that offer little hope of every leading to a better life, terrorism is still considered threat number one, pulling in an impressive 55 percent. (Nine percent of people say they’re not sure what the top threat is, and that’s fair enough since Reuters threw a buffet of scary choices at them).

The number two perceived threat is cyber attacks and cyber spying. It’s not clear from the questions whether people are more afraid of cyber snooping from overseas or by the National Security Agency here at home.

Should we be surprised that 25 percent of respondents see Islam as an imminent threat? Only 24 percent see global warming — a scientific certainty that will change the way everyone on the planet lives, and not for better — the same way.

But threats come and go in the public’s mind as events change, and perhaps the list reflects what people are hearing as much as what they’re thinking.

Syria’s Bashar al-Assad used to rank high in people’s imaginations. Only 17 percent see him as a threat now, but a year and half ago, Secretary of State John Kerry put him on a list he apparently keeps that also includes Adolph Hitler and Saddam Hussein. Today, despite being more alive than Hitler or Saddam, Assad is just “meh” to most of us.

Lower on the list of beliefs and movements we feel are imminent threats sit Judaism and Christianity (7 and 6 percent, respectively), thus pulling in all three major Western religions. Still, many Americans feel atheism is an even bigger threat — 12 percent.

Depressingly, people see gay rights (12 percent) and women’s rights (5 percent) as imminent threats. We haven’t come such a long way, baby.

We’re scared here in the home of the brave. We see danger everywhere, even viewing the religious beliefs of our neighbors and the expansion of basic rights to all Americans as imminent threats. There are real bad guys out there, monsters who would do us harm. But far too many of these survey results suggest we are also very scared of each other. Now that is a real threat.

http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/20...han-obama/
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #72 : Квітня 03, 2015, 12:35:06 00:35 »
Russia Expected to Escalate War in Ukraine Soon


 2 April 2015

That’s what a number of prominent experts think. Andrii Parubii, the vice speaker of Ukraine’s Parliament and former national security adviser, stated on March 27th that there is a “high risk” of a “full-scale military operation” in the next few weeks. An expert team led by Wesley Clark, a retired US Army general and former NATO supreme allied commander, informed the Atlantic Council in Washington on March 30th that “Ukrainian forces expect [an] attack within the next 60 days. This assessment is based on geographic imperatives, the ongoing pattern of Russian activity, and an analysis of Russian actions, statements, and Putin’s psychology to date.” Finally, Russia’ premier military analyst, Pavel Felgenhauer, said on March 31st that the next “Russian offensive campaign” is “highly likely to begin soon.”
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Heightened fears of major Russian escalations—up to and including air strikes and a massive land assault—have occurred every one-to-two months since Russia’s invasion of Crimea in February 2014. Russia has confounded these expectations by escalating slowly, steadily increasing its supply of arms, money, irregular forces, and regular troops—while always stopping short of a full-scale war.

No one knows why. Has Vladimir Putin been skittish about the risks involved? Did he just make a mistake and fail to seize the best opportunity to attack—i.e., anytime in the first few months after the Maidan Revolution? Or has he been developing fiendishly clever plans and sharpening his knives? 

To launch a truly big war now would be a huge strategic mistake for Russia. Ukraine has a functioning government, police force, and army, and the latter has shown that it can dole out serious punishment to Putin’s commandoes in eastern Ukraine. According to official Ukrainian sources, the Russian separatists have lost 14,600 men since the spring of last year. In comparison, Ukraine’s armed forces incurred 1,232 deaths in 2014 and 2015.  (If the number were to include soldiers who are missing in action, and probably dead, it would probably be 2,500–3,000.) That’s a kill ratio of 1:4 or 1:5 in Ukraine’s favor. The kill ratio in the Battle of Debaltseve, in mid-January, was similar, putting the lie to the claim that it was a rout for Ukraine.

Russia has more soldiers and better equipment and it could defeat Ukraine in a massive land war, but the cost to Russia would be extremely high, especially as victory on the battlefield would not immediately translate into control of the country. Ukraine has a vast volunteer movement, an active civil society, a newly found sense of national solidarity, while Ukraine’s population overwhelmingly supports Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty. Resistance would be fierce, and a Russian occupation could easily turn into a strategic defeat.

As Felgenhauer argues: “There will in all likelihood be no drive toward Kyiv or Lviv, up to the Polish boundary. It won’t happen because Russia lacks the forces. In order to occupy Ukraine and place 45 million people on their knees, it is necessary to have many human resources and the army should consist of no fewer than a million. Seizing Kyiv is much easier than controlling it … We don’t have the capacity.”

Worse for Russia, a major escalation in the next few months would torpedo Moscow’s carefully calibrated attempts to split the European Union and convince Brussels to drop its sanctions. War—and the certainty of thousands of civilian deaths and hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing westward—would consolidate the Europeans and probably lead to an intensification of sanctions. Even the Obama administration would feel impelled finally to arm Ukraine with lethal weapons, as the only argument against provisions—that they would provoke an escalation—would fall away in the face of Putin’s unprovoked escalation. Stephen Cohen, North Korea, Marie Le Pen, and Germany’s Russlandversteher might cheer Putin’s aggression, but that would be small consolation for the Kremlin.

Still, Putin just might be irrational—or ill—enough to do something profoundly stupid and inhuman. Power-hungry dictators presiding over crumbling regimes and fearful of their own physical decay have been known to sacrifice millions for the sake of their manias.

The West must understand that Ukrainians will fight and that Putin’s war, if he launches it, will not be a cakewalk for Russia. Ukraine and Russia could be destabilized. If they are, Europe will be next. The EU’s favorite mantra—that there is no military solution to the war—can come to pass only if Ukraine has the capacity to stop a Russian assault. And that means provisions of lethal weapons.

Here’s what the Clark team recommends:

1. strategic imagery and other electronic/communications intelligence detailed and timely enough to be able to provide warning of an impending attack;

2. long-range, mobile anti-armor systems, as well as the shorter ranger Javelin system, both equipped with thermal imagery;

3. secure tactical communications down to vehicle level;

4. long-range, modern counter battery radars able to detect firing positions for long range rockets;

5. sniper rifles with thermal or night vision sights for counter sniper teams;

6. modern intelligence collection and EW [electronic warfare] systems effective against Russian digital communications; and

7. whatever counter UAV [unmanned aerial vehicle] systems can be made available on a near-term basis.

Most important, the West must act immediately. “At the minimum,” concludes Clark, “a palletized, emergency assistance package consisting of as much of the lethal components as possible should be assembled and pre-deployed for strategic airlift upon commencement of the Russian offensive.”

As the Romans said, “If you want peace, prepare for war.”

http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/blog/alexander-j-motyl/russia-expected-escalate-war-ukraine-soon
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #73 : Квітня 04, 2015, 12:43:07 00:43 »
Words Of War, From Ukraine To New York

On a windy evening in March, a slender man with slightly spiky hair stood in front of about two hundred people gathered at the Ukrainian Museum in Manhattan’s East Village. Beating time in the air with his hand, he read into a microphone in Ukrainian: “They once lived in this building—see the fading red paint blistering on the window frames—Its from those times when someone decided to house them all in one building so that their breath could be heard—in the entry ways”

The man is a prominent Ukrainian writer, Serhiy Zhadan, the author of twelve books of poetry, seven novels and the winner of more than a dozen literary awards. Western readers might’ve heard of his novels Depeche Mode and Voroshilovgrad, as his work has been translated and published in various languages, including English and German.

With his hipster looks – skinny jeans, converse sneakers, asymmetrical hair – he could be easily mistaken for someone from a trendy neighborhood in Brooklyn, jotting his thoughts in a leather pocket dairy, typing his novels into a laptop over fair-trade coffee at a cafe.

But that’s not the case. Zhadan flew to New York from Kharkiv, the second largest city in Ukraine, only a few hours away from the war in the country’s east. At 40 he is one of the few contemporary Ukrainian writers known in the Western literary world. He is the front man of a ska band, “Dogs in Space,” and is father to a college-age son and a two-year-old daughter.

These days, as his country fends off Russian aggression, Zhadan spends most of his time either speaking to westerners on behalf of Ukraine, or visiting towns affected by the war in its eastern region, Donbass, performing readings and concert, and delivering humanitarian aid.

“When abroad, I talk about what’s going on in our country,” Zhadan says. “We are at war and that’s hard to ignore.” But, he says, beyond ongoing sad and tragic events, it’s important to remember that “Ukraine existed before the war and it will exist afterwards. ” So he tries to talk about Ukraine’s culture, and his latest trip to the United States has him speaking at Columbia University and giving readings in the Northeast.

We meet for an interview in an area in the East Village called Little Ukraine – once inhabited by Ukrainian émigrés at the end of the 19th century, these days represented by a handful of Ukrainian restaurants, businesses, and cultural centers. We go to cafe Orlin where over lentil soup we talk about his books and writing (his book Mesapotamia came out a year ago and now is been translated into German) but the topic inevitably switches to the war in Ukraine and Russian aggression.

Born in a small town near Luhansk – the region that’s been making international headlines together with the town of Donetsk for being occupied by Russia-backed insurgents – Zhadan is fluent in Ukrainian and Russian. He moved to Kharkiv to attend university and has been living there for over two decades. He witnessed the birth of an independent Ukraine in the 1990s and realities of contemporary Ukraine serve as the backdrop of many of his novels and poems. During the Euromaidan revolution last winter, Zhadan was actively involved in pro-democratic protests in Kharkiv.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/katyasoldak/2015/04/03/words-of-war-from-ukraine-to-new-york/
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #74 : Квітня 04, 2015, 12:48:36 00:48 »
 Can Ukraine save itself from Vladimir Putin and the oligarchs?
Timothy Garton Ash




‘Welcome to the nation state of Ukraine,” says Mustapha Dzhemilev, a diminutive, soft-spoken 71-year-old leader of the Crimean Tatars, gentle on the outside, hard as steel within. He was deported from Crimea on Stalin’s orders in 1944, when he was just six months old, along with so many fellow Tatars. Persecuted under Soviet rule, he went on hunger strike for 303 days. A year ago, after Vladimir Putin’s annexation of Crimea, this quiet fighter was banned from re-entering the peninsula his forebears had inhabited for centuries, long before the Russians did. And now here he is in Kiev, welcoming us to a new Ukraine.

“Putin can win some battles but Ukraine will win the war – with our passion, with our willingness to die,” says Hanna Hopko. For now “we have the political nation”. Hopko, 33, is the chair of the Ukrainian parliament’s foreign affairs committee, one of a vanguard of young female MPs, self-professed heirs to the Euromaidan demonstrations, who now rattle off the details of political transformation plans faster than a rapper on speed.

Two very different life stories, but one and the same message: steely determination that Ukraine should become a sovereign, modern European country.

This is a story we largely miss. In Berlin, Washington or Brussels we say “Ukraine”, but within 30 seconds we are talking about Putin, Nato and the EU. So let us consider, for once, the struggle for Ukraine, by Ukrainians, inside the majority of its territory still actually controlled by Ukraine. Even if there were no war, this would be a daunting task, for there is a breathtaking scale of corruption and oligarchic misrule, which has deformed the state ever since it gained formal independence nearly a quarter of a century ago.

   
The deputy finance minister says the grey or black economy may account for as much as 60% of the country’s economy. One example: we are told that of the 20,000 kiosks that are dotted along the streets of Kiev, selling various goods, only 6,000 are properly registered and pay some taxes. The other 14,000 may pay bribes and protection money, but not taxes. Who controls them? Well, we are told, it’s often public prosecutors (who are numerous, and have extraordinary powers), police officers or judges. Here is a state so intravenously corrupted that those who should be its doctors are its poisoners. Perhaps we might call the radioactive poison in its bloodstream Ukrainium.

At the apex of this arrangement are the oligarchs, usually with regional strongholds. A former investigative journalist turned reformist MP talks matter-of-factly of the “Donetsk clan”: the (Rinat) Akhmetov clan, the (Dmytro) Firtash clan, the (Ihor) Kolomoisky clan, and so on. These oligarchs don’t just own vast chunks of the economy. They bankroll political parties, furnishing blocks of MPs to protect their interests. People refer to television channels by the oligarchs who own them: “Akhmetov’s channel”, “Firtash’s channel” and so on. Anyone who believes they don’t have state officials in their pockets deserves a Nobel prize for naivety. Oh yes, and several of them also have private security forces.

How does one start transforming such a deformed state? Where the ancient Romans asked “who will guard the guardians?”, the question for modern Ukraine is “who will prosecute the prosecutors?” The current plan is to set up an independent anti-corruption bureau, with its own investigative and prosecuting powers. The forces of resistance are strong, and can be nasty. One MP, who is working on the closely related anti-monopoly proposals, told me she was personally threatened (“I’m afraid something might happen to one of your relatives when they are crossing the street.”)


I hear two novel D-words: de-shadowing and de-oligarchisation. De-shadowing means trying to bring some of the grey economy out of those shadows, to help fill a giant hole in the public finances. President Petro Poroshenko told our visiting study group from the European Council on Foreign Relations that Russian aggression has cost Ukraine about 25% of its industrial output. Even if it receives the promised international financial support package of $40bn over five years, Kiev is barely able to pay its bills – including military costs estimated at $5m-$10m a day – and service its debts. But while bureaucrats are so badly paid, many of them will go on taking bribes, rather than, say, collecting taxes. Only a state that can raise the money to pay its civil servants properly will be able to raise the money to, er, pay its civil servants properly. That’s just one of many Ukrainian catch-22s.

Further reading:

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/apr/03/ukraine-save-itself-vladimir-putin-oligarchs?CMP=share_btn_fb
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #75 : Квітня 07, 2015, 07:02:02 19:02 »
(Reuters) - Germany's economy minister branded Greece's demand for 278.7 billion euros ($302 billion) in reparations from World War Two as "stupid" on Tuesday, while the German opposition said Berlin should repay a forced loan dating from the Nazi occupation.

Greek Deputy Finance Minister Dimitris Mardas made the demand on Monday, seizing on an emotional issue in a country where many blame Germany, their biggest creditor, for the tough austerity measures and record high unemployment connected with two international bailouts totaling 240 billion euros.

Sigmar Gabriel, who is economy minister and German vice chancellor, called the demand "stupid", saying Greece ultimately had an interest in squeezing a bit of leeway out of its euro zone partners to help Athens overcome its debt crisis.

"And this leeway has absolutely nothing to do with World War Two or reparation payments," said Gabriel, who leads the Social Democrats (SPD), junior partner in the ruling coalition with Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives.

Berlin is keen to draw a line under the reparations issue and officials have previously argued that Germany has honored its obligations, including a 115-million deutsche mark payment made to Greece in 1960.

A spokeswoman for the finance ministry said on Tuesday that the government's position was unchanged.

Eckhardt Rehberg, a budget expert for the conservatives, accused Athens of deliberately mixing the debt crisis and reform requirements imposed by Greece's international creditors with the issue of reparations and compensation.

"For me the figure of 278.7 billion euros of supposed war debts is neither comprehensible nor sound," he told Reuters.

"The issue of reparations has, for us, been dealt with both from a political and a legal perspective."

LEFT AND GREENS: BERLIN SHOULD PAY

But Greece's demand for Germany to repay a forced wartime loan amounting to 10.3 billion euros found support from the German opposition, with members of the Greens and the far-left Linke party saying Berlin should cough up.

Both Manuel Sarrazin, a European policy expert for the Greens, and Annette Groth, a member of the leftist Linke party and chairman of a German-Greek parliamentary group, told Reuters that Berlin should repay a so-called occupation loan that Nazi Germany forced the Bank of Greece to make in 1942.

Berlin and Athens should "jointly and amicably" take any other claims to the International Court of Justice, Sarrazin said.

Groth went further, saying: "If you look at Greece's debt and the European Central Bank's bond purchases every month, it puts the figure of 278.7 billion euros into perspective."

She said the German government should, at the very least, talk to Athens about how it came up with that figure.

"The German government's categorical 'Nein' certainly cannot be allowed to stand. That's disgraceful 70 years after the end of the war," Groth said.

Gabriel did say that Germany needed to keep asking itself whether it had done enough in connection with World War Two.

He said that while the "Treaty on the Final Settlement with respect to Germany" signed in September 1990 by the then-West Germany and East Germany with the four World War Two allies had put a "formal end" to the reparations debate, Germany could not - for the foreseeable future - draw a line under its responsibilities that arise from World War Two.

(Writing by Michelle Martin; Editing by Stephen Brown/Mark Heinrich)
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #76 : Квітня 27, 2015, 03:01:34 15:01 »
FT

The real threat to Europe lies in Ukraine rather than Greece

A failed state or further annexation by Russia would dwarf fears over Grexit



I have written much about the euro in recent years, and warned of the danger of an insufficient policy response. But the most dangerous threat to the future of the EU right now is not euro-related. The biggest threat to its geostrategic and long-term economic interests stems from a collapse of Ukraine, not Greece. Whatever we might think of Grexit, a failed Ukrainian state or further annexation of its territory by Russia would be of a different category. It would signal to the world that the EU is chronically incapable of defending its common interests.
Grexit would be a calamity for Greece and a huge financial and reputational loss for the EU. The EU should try to prevent it. but Grexit would not destroy the monetary union, and may even improve it in the long run. But success or failure of EU policy towards Russia and Ukraine could make or break the EU.


The situation on the ground in Ukraine is grave. The BBC reported last week that the second Minsk ceasefire agreement, negotiated in February, has been breached in Mariupol, a vital port city in the southeast, where the Ukrainian army has come under mortar attack from pro-Russian forces.
The latest economic data show a fall in Ukraine’s industrial output by 21.1 per cent in March, compared with March 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea. The Ukrainian central bank estimates gross domestic product in the first quarter of 2015 to have fallen 15 per cent against the same period last year. The forecast for annual inflation is 35 per cent. By the time the first tranche of a programme by the International Monetary Fund arrived in March, foreign reserves were down to a mere $5bn.
The central bank sees some economic stabilisation ahead, but that will depend on the fate of the ceasefire agreement.
The good news — from the EU’s perspective — is that the government of Arseniy Yatseniuk, prime minister, is the most pro-reform administration in Ukraine’s history. It is a fully paid up member of the EU’s policy consensus whereby all economic bliss comes from structural reforms.
I do not agree with this view in general, but a country has no choice but to prioritise reforms if it lacks the basic infrastructure of a modern economy. The new government is clearly determined to set up such an infrastructure, and has made progress in the fight against corruption. But the economic costs of the war in eastern Ukraine and the economic mismanagement of previous administrations has left Ukraine on the brink of insolvency.
Two things now need to happen. First, Ukraine will need to negotiate a hard debt restructuring. Natalie Jaresko, the American-born finance minister, has argued that a simple maturity extension of the outstanding debt would not bring about enough debt relief to achieve a return to solvency. To achieve this, there would need to be a reduction in the nominal value of the debt as well. Anna Gelpern of Georgetown University and an expert on Ukrainian debt, has written about the ways this needs to be accomplished. She calls a debt restructuring the second-biggest potential source of income for Ukraine after the loan programmes. As always, there are a lot of complications, among them a high concentration of creditors. Franklin Templeton Investments, the US-based investment company, is Ukraine’s single largest creditor, followed by the Russian government and various Russian banks. The EU, too, should have a strategy in place for when the moment arrives when Ukraine defaults on Russia.
Second, Ukraine will need more financial assistance from the EU — not only loans, but also grants because even a debt restructure will not get this war-torn country back on track. So far, the EU has dispensed €1.6bn in what it calls macro-financial assistance, and €250m in grants for fiscal stabilisation. A marginally higher amount of assistance has been approved for later disbursement. By comparison, the total of the two Greek programmes has been €195bn so far — about 100 times as much. Greece is, of course, a member of the EU and the eurozone, but this is gap is still disproportionate. Of the two, Ukraine is the bigger country — in terms of population, land mass, and economic output.
Anders Aslund of the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington makes the point in a book that Ukraine would be a candidate for a Marshall Plan type package, of the kind Germany and other west European countries received after the second world war. Ukraine has geostrategic importance to the EU, as Germany did to the US after 1945. And Ukraine has a government willing to undertake reforms.
With a debt restructuring, and an unwavering commitment of support by the EU, Ukraine might pull through. For the EU, Ukraine constitutes not only a potentially good investment but, more importantly, a unique opportunity to strengthen its geostrategic role.

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #77 : Квітня 27, 2015, 03:02:47 15:02 »
Побачимо сьогодні після саміту.

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #78 : Квітня 30, 2015, 12:17:35 00:17 »
The acts of Russian aggression against Ukraine are a threat to the world that must be confronted in a global context, U.S. President Barack Obama said at a joint press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe in Washington, Radio Svoboda reported on Wednesday.

Read more on UNIAN: http://www.unian.info/world/1072940-obama-calls-russian-aggression-against-ukraine-a-global-threat.html
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #79 : Травня 01, 2015, 06:17:56 18:17 »
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #80 : Травня 10, 2015, 06:09:48 06:09 »
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #81 : Травня 13, 2015, 01:47:29 01:47 »

My Ukraine
A personal reflection on a nation's dream of independence and the nightmare Vladimir Putin has visited upon it.


Chrystia Freeland



http://www.brookings.edu/research/essays/2015/myukraine

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #82 : Травня 13, 2015, 06:24:06 18:24 »
внесу трохи позитиву

Finance More: AFP Art Sotheby's
This painting just sold for $46.5 million at Sotheby's in New York
A Mark Rothko painting sold for $46.5 million at a Sotheby's auction in New York, an evening in which several records were set including one for a work by German artist Sigmar Polke.

The Rothko work "Untitled, (Yellow and Blue)," measuring 2.42 meters by 1.86 meters (about 8 feet by 6.1 feet) and completed in 1954, had been estimated at between $40 million and $60 million.

The painting was once owned by American socialite Rachel "Bunny" Mellon, according to Bloomberg.


Read more: http://uk.businessinsider.com/afp-rothko-painting-sells-for-46.5-million-in-ny-auction-2015-5?utm_content=bufferc5da5&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer?r=US#ixzz3a24V2JBZ

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #83 : Травня 18, 2015, 04:40:48 16:40 »
Ви особливо на американських республіканців не розраховуйте - вони так загрузли в бізнесі з кацапами, що їх звідти бульдозером не витягнеш


 Trent Lott's Firm Made a Fortune Lobbying for the Kremlin
May 14, 2015 11:00 PM CDT
The former Senate majority leader's company made $450,000 from a state-controlled bank that was the target of sanctions.


http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-05-15/washington-insiders-reap-windfall-peddling-influence-for-kremlin




The Kremlin and Big Oil are stuffing more money into Washington’s influence machine as Europe and the U.S. renew their commitment to Russian sanctions.

While Russia may be angry about international sanctions over the Ukraine conflict, Beltway lawyers are mopping up and big names in lobbying are piling in.

Consider that last year, the Washington, D.C., lobbying firm of former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott raked in $300,000 from Kremlin-controlled OAO Gazprombank, which was a target of sanctions. The Gazprombank billings for Lott’s firm are about double what Lott made in annual salary during any of his 18 years in the Senate.

Other high-profile ex-senators like John Breaux of Louisiana and Don Nickles of Oklahoma are also getting in on the Russian action, as is Haley Barbour, the former governor of Mississippi.

What’s driving this is no mystery. While the West expresses displeasure at President Vladimir Putin’s deadly Ukraine adventuring and the human toll it is taking, other things are at stake -- notably billions of dollars of investments on both sides of the Atlantic in Russia’s energy and finance sectors.

“Rather than send troops, we impose sanctions,” Matthew Sagers, head of the Russian energy advisory service for consultant IHS Inc., said of Washington's foreign policy weapon of choice.

That explains why top U.S. energy firms and companies associated with the Russian government are spending millions of dollars trying to influence the complex sanction rules aimed at individuals and enterprises considered close to Putin.

“Everybody’s trying to get on the bandwagon,” said Sarosh Zaiwalla, a London lawyer whose past clients have included Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi government and who now works with the Russian oil giant OAO Rosneft.

Russia keeps hoping, of course, that it will soon be off the hook. But for now, the U.S. and European Union are holding firm and even threatening to double down -- bad news for many ordinary Russians and some Russian plutocrats but a continuing windfall for ex-lawmakers and former political aides who populate Western capitals.

Conversation Starter?

Perhaps unsurprisingly, registration documents on file in Congress show some energy giants and banks using their lobbying firms to follow every utterance about sanctions as if they were the play-by-play of a professional tennis match.

Sanctions may also be proving to be among the great high-level conversation starters. For example, Rex Tillerson, Exxon Mobil Corp. chief executive officer, spoke with U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew -- whose department administers sanctions -- seven times in the second half of 2014, according to disclosures. That’s more than twice as many conversations as Lew had with Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co., the biggest U.S. bank. (Neither Exxon, which has huge Russian lease holdings, nor Treasury would comment on the conversations.)

After the U.S. slapped sanctions on Gazprombank last summer, the company hired Squire Patton Boggs, the Washington-based lobbying firm where Lott and Breaux serve as co-chairs of the public policy practice. It received about $450,000 for the work in the nine months through March. Angelo Kakolyris, a spokesman for Squire Patton Boggs, declined to comment.
Novatek Payments

OAO Novatek, one of Russia’s largest private oil producers and a target of U.S. sanctions, paid about $560,000 to Publicis Groupe SA’s Qorvis/MSLGROUP for work related to the Ukraine crisis in the second half of 2014. The company, which is partly owned by billionaire Gennady Timchenko, paid another $180,000 in the first quarter of this year, according to lobby registration documents.

Western oil companies have also been tapping well-connected insiders. Exxon, which has worked with Lott and Breaux, paid Nickles’s firm more than $190,000 to represent it on “issues related to Russian sanctions impacting the energy sector” as well as other matters.

Exxon also worked with former staffers to Secretary of State John Kerry and current Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Chevron Corp. turned to BGR Group, the lobbying outfit run by Barbour, also a former National Republican Committee chairman.
Kazakh Oil

A Chevron project in Kazakhstan sends oil through Russia via a pipeline in which Kremlin-controlled OAO Transneft is a major player. Chevron and its lobbyists were able to convince U.S. officials to spare Transneft, which is subject to financial penalties, from more onerous restrictions that would have prevented U.S. companies from doing business with it, according to three people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified.

“Chevron engages with the administration and U.S. Congress to provide perspectives on complex energy issues to help shape an effective and responsible U.S. energy policy,” said Kurt Glaubitz, a company spokesman.

As a substitute for sending troops, sanctions are proving a major growth industry for firms peddling expertise and influence. The Obama administration recently expanded sanctions on Venezuela while existing measures against Iran and Cuba are being reconsidered amid diplomatic talks.
BP Stake

The big money, though, lies in Russia. Unlike longstanding pariah states like Iran or Cuba, where Western business activity is relatively light, Russia is home to tens of billions of dollars in foreign investment. It has also built a clutch of international companies, largely controlled by the state. ‎

“It’s the first time we’ve tried to set sanctions against a country that’s so large and so elaborately integrated into the global economy,” IHS’s Sagers said.

BP Plc also has much at stake. The British oil producer, which owns a 20 percent share in Rosneft, worked with former George W. Bush staffer Dan Meyer to lobby on sanctions, paying his firm about $100,000 in the fourth quarter of 2014 alone.
Sanctioned Individuals

According to public filings, BP made its views on isolating Russia known directly to the British government through two meetings last year to discuss the Ukraine crisis with Kim Darroch, national security adviser to Prime Minister David Cameron. BP CEO Robert Dudley sits on the board of Kremlin-controlled Rosneft.

In an e-mailed statement, BP said it engages in “policy debate on subjects of legitimate concern or opportunity.”

Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin, a long-time Putin associate, has been personally sanctioned by the U.S. government but remains off the EU list, and thus is free to travel in Europe.

The sanctions regimes are anything but straightforward, making them perfectly suited to government relations specialists, and vary from country to country. While the oil majors appear to have won a round or two, the ability of companies like Exxon and Total SA to operate freely in Russia has been seriously limited.
‘Time and Attention’

“U.S. and European companies were surprised at how harsh the sanctions were, and it’s been difficult for them to get approvals to modify the rules,” said Richard Burt, a former U.S. Ambassador to Germany and managing director at consulting firm McLarty Associates. “They’ve had to focus a lot of time and attention working in Washington and reaching out to lobbyists and other consultants who can help them.”

Russian companies are also turning to the courts in Europe to challenge the legality of the sanctions. Rosneft as well as state-controlled lenders VTB Group and OAO Sberbank are pursuing claims. Zaiwalla, the London lawyer who’s working with Rosneft, says a moral issue is involved.

“You can punish the government, to force the government’s hand. But you should not injure the property rights, including the businesses, of innocent citizens,” Zaiwalla said.

With Western governments now considering their next step on Russian sanctions, the job of influencing outcomes has lost none of its value. U.S. energy companies are particularly concerned Europe could adopt a softer approach than Washington.‎

At a private dinner in London in February, U.S. State Department officials listened as executives emphasized that if the White House wouldn’t relax its own rules, it needed at least to make sure the EU sanctions were as tough so American companies wouldn’t be disadvantaged, according to two people who attended. The people asked not to be identified because the discussion was private.

The dinner, organized by the British-American Business Council, was held in the London offices of Squire Patton Boggs.
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #84 : Травня 18, 2015, 07:09:30 19:09 »


   
Reform-minded Ukraine merits debt reduction

May 17, 2015

Ukraine, the international community and its creditors will soon have to reach a conclusion about how to handle the country’s debt. The case for debt reduction is as strong as any that I have encountered over the past quarter century. How the issue is resolved will say much about the extent of international commitment to Ukraine and to resisting Russian aggression. Failure to achieve debt reduction would also confirm the view of those who believe that private financial interests disproportionately influence public policy.

Ukraine is in a state of quasi-war with Russia. Other former Soviet republics, as well as the nations of central Europe are watching anxiously. How this episode is regarded in history will depend as much on what is done for Ukraine as what is done to Russia.

This is especially true as Ukraine has its most reform-minded economic team since independence in 1991. It has shown real political courage in combating corruption and moving aggressively to curb energy subsidies that generated vast waste. Ukraine has done more in the past 12 months to reform its subsidies than most nations do in 12 years.

The moral, geopolitical, and economic case for the provision of strong support is compelling. The International Monetary Fund has done as much as can reasonably be asked with a programme totalling $17.5bn. While bilateral support from the US and Europe could be increased and the World Bank is missing a major opportunity, Ukraine’s viability ultimately depends on what happens to its debts.

The question of debt rescheduling or reduction is not a new one. When countries require assistance, it can always be argued that debt service obligations be delayed or partially cancelled. Usually — as in the case of European countries in recent years, or Asian countries during the 1997 financial crisis — this argument is rejected. The grounds are that with proper adjustment countries can meet their obligations, maintain access to markets and restore growth. Also, a world in which countries were willy nilly encouraged to default in order to meet budget obligations would be inimical to the effective flow of capital.

Over the years a number of international norms have evolved as to when it is appropriate to accept debt reduction. The most important is when a country’s debts are sufficiently large and its prospects sufficiently poor that there is no realistic prospect of repayment. Things become clearer when debt reduction would not be a source of systemic risk to the financial system or license widespread defaults.

All of this suggests a compelling case for debt reduction for Ukraine. The IMF has made clear that for its finances to be sustainable Kiev needs to reduce its current debt service payments and to avoid an excessive build-up of debt over the next five years. On even optimistic assumptions of Ukrainian economic performance and the avoidance of further conflict, this is not possible without debt reduction. Ukraine’s debt is not nearly large enough for a reduction to pose a threat to the world financial system. And why not set a precedent that if you lend money at a high spread to a country that is then invaded, you should not expect the world’s taxpayers to ensure that you are paid back in full?

So Ukraine’s debt should be reduced. Will it happen? Despite the merits, it is not clear. Ukraine’s creditors — led by the investment firm Franklin Templeton, but also with the support of a number of major US fund managers, who are sufficiently embarrassed by their selfish and unconstructive position that they avoid public identification — are playing hardball and refusing any write-offs. Understandably, if there are a substantial group of such free riders, other debt holders including the Russians will not accept writedowns.

It should be unacceptable to taxpayers around the world that their money be put at risk on loans to Ukraine in order that plans be made to pay back creditors in full. The IMF and national authorities should call out the recalcitrant creditors on their irresponsible behaviour. If necessary, Ukraine should be prepared to go into default and not meet its obligations, while at the same time the international community should make clear that it will continue to provide support to Kiev. In the context of these steps, creditors will have little choice but to accept the economic reality of the situation.

There is much in Ukraine that the rest of the world cannot control. But we can make sure that the country’s scarce resources are put to use restoring its economy rather than paying off those who made loans they now regret. And we can seize the opportunity to make clear that the world financial system will be operated to support the global economy not the other way round.

The writer is Charles W Eliot university professor at Harvard and a former US Treasury secretary

http://larrysummers.com/2015/05/18/reform-minded-ukraine-merits-debt-reduction/
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #85 : Травня 21, 2015, 05:14:54 17:14 »
Anders Östlund ‏@andersostlund 7h7 hours ago

Problem is EU leaders mostly appeasing cowards who give in to Russia. Ukraine should have plan for membership. #Riga
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #86 : Травня 21, 2015, 05:16:20 17:16 »
UK in Ukraine ‏@UKinUkraine 4h4 hours ago Ukraine

The British Embassy Kyiv team wishes you a happy #Vyshyvanka day!

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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #87 : Травня 21, 2015, 08:22:18 20:22 »
У нього вже старечий маразм... :smiley23:

Zbigniew Brzezinski ‏@zbig 3m3 minutes ago

Accommodation with Russia over Ukraine will have to be a compromise by both sides with some issues temporarily left in history’s icebox.
10 retweets 4 favorites



Walt395 ‏@Walt395 31s31 seconds ago

@zbig "Accommodation with Russia"  sounds like accommodation with Nazi Germany in Munich. Did you forget the price, Sir?
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #88 : Травня 21, 2015, 09:49:32 21:49 »
Tim Hogan ‏@TimInHonolulu 3m3 minutes ago

If West that promised to defend Ukraine sovereignty won't arm it with conventional weapons it will concede Ukraine's right to build nukes.
1 retweet 1 favorite

Tim Hogan ‏@TimInHonolulu 4m4 minutes ago

End the games.  Russia is engaged in aggressive war and its leaders should be charged with war crimes. Complicit nations too. #Ukeaine
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« Останнє редагування: Травня 22, 2015, 12:31:33 00:31 від Feral Cat »
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Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #89 : Травня 22, 2015, 12:18:08 00:18 »
War-torn reform

Ukraine’s government is making some progress. But much more needs to be done

http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21651844-ukraines-government-making-some-progress-much-more-needs-be

The current government, in contrast to predecessors, is making a serious effort to shake things up. On April 9th the parliament passed EU -inspired legislation to “unbundle” Naftogaz—splitting it up into separate production, transit, storage and supply firms. Once implemented, consumers will be able to choose their gas supplier, a radical change.

To close Naftogaz’s deficit, the government is increasing the household price of gas fourfold. Ukrainians will not really feel the pain until November, when they see the first bill of the winter. To offset the hardship, the government and the IMF say that spending on social programmes will see “an increase of 30% compared to 2014”. These figures are in nominal terms, however; with inflation running at 60%, social spending is probably falling in real (ie, inflation-adjusted) terms.

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