‘Judging Freedom’ edition of 8 September: Nearing the end in Ukraine

This chat with Judge Andrew Napolitano began with breaking news of the murderous Israeli attack on the Hamas negotiating team in Qatar and moved on to the balance between the evil that Donald Trump enables by his support to Netanyahu and the good that he has likely done by preventing an Israeli nuclear attack on Iran and by his giving breathing space to Vladimir Putin to complete the war in Ukraine on Russia’s terms.

As regards the prospects for the war ending soon, I once again express my doubts that a pure military victory will be the outcome. Rather it will precipitate at a certain point the political collapse both within the Kiev regime and within the Coalition of the Willing.  Progress on the former was evidenced yesterday by the defection to Poland of former Ukrainian Minister of Foreign Affairs Kuleba. Progress on the latter was evidenced yesterday by the collapse of the French government. While Macron and the people he appoints as prime minister are being battered over their domestic policies rather than over his leadership of the Coalition of the Willing and belligerency towards Russia, the near bankruptcy of the country, the severe austerity being imposed on all budget entries except military expenses sharply aggravate the popular discontent with Macron in France and put his continued rule in jeopardy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2saYUvFeCY

Transcript of conversation with Glenn Diesen, 6 September

Transcript submitted by a reader

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kWxalQjkhM

Prof. Glenn Diesen: 0:00
Hi everyone and welcome back. We are joined today by Gilbert Doktorow, historian, international affairs analyst and author of _War Diaries, the Russia-Ukraine War_. So it’s good to have you back. There’s a lot that’s currently happening in the world, both in China, but also of course in Ukraine. But I thought a good place to start would be the meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in China, as the dust appears to have been settling at the moment. And yeah, have we learned anything new from how I guess the world has changed as a result of this?

Gilbert Doctorow, PhD:
Well, yes, it’s changed. I think that the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which was hidden to a side, which was not really attracting the attention of the broad public in the West, and even of specialists, has moved to the fore ahead of BRICS. And the reason I say that is that BRICS has been held up, has progressed slowly because of the diverse interests of the founding members, in particular Brazil and South Africa, which have been in the past when it came time to vote on additional members, had been looking one eye to the United States and how their alignment with Russia, China, could affect their ongoing relationships with the United States. Now that, of course, has become the less serious question, since the United States has gone after all of them anyway and is engaged in this tariff war, which has been very cruel to both Brazil and to South Africa, both with 50 percent or more tariffs.

1:53
Nonetheless, in other matters also, the security interests, the financial well-being of Eurasia was not the key issue, a key issue of BRICS. Whereas these countries are important; together, they take in more than 40% of the world’s population, and I think something like 36 percent of global GDP. And they’re not being looked after properly by BRICS. So in this case, what we see, what we saw this past weekend during the gathering in Tianjin and then continuing at the military parade gathering in Beijing, was a big step in the evolution of the SCO. The SCO has been evolving gradually since its founding.

2:51
I don’t mean to say that this totally, what happened this past weekend totally changes the mission statement or the interests of the SCO, but it significantly moves it to a higher plane and one which requires the greater attention of the world community. And what I have in mind is the apparent primary emphasis now placed on financial and material well-being of the populations of Eurasia. That seems to be moved ahead of the original security considerations, which were in the founding documents of the SCO. And in that context, the single most important fact has been what I believe is the rise of India. That came out, and it’s not formally declared, but I’m saying is a guess. It’s not something that I can say with reference to this or that document. There aren’t any documents.

4:00
But from the body language and the treatment of Modi at the SCO, it seemed to me that he was being invited to join a troika, which is the word that was used by various Western media also, the Troika being Xi, Putin and Modi, as the deciders, the most decisive voices in the SCO. Now India had been a member of the SCO for a long time, but it was not on a governing board of two. And so this changes the situation, the prospects for what can be achieved with the SCO considerably.

4:44
It gives some additional comfort– as you mentioned in our last discussion– it gives additional comfort to Russia, because it’s not alone as a junior partner to China. And I think that all of this development, this interpretation of what’s happening has received further backing by Modi’s decision yesterday not to go to the United Nations General Assembly in September in New York, as a kind of protest against the American administration. Definitely India has moved farther away from the States than the Trump administration reckoned it would, and has drawn closer to Russia, and somewhat reluctantly, even closer to China. So these are the big developments.

Diesen: 5:42
Yeah, well, you heard a lot of comments from the Chinese side where they also focused on the need for China and India to learn to overcome their differences and work together. Now that’s very different from being in an alliance where all the interests are harmonized. But I guess the general idea if you can have these three Eurasian giants, Russia, India, and China, working out differences and working together, having economic connectivity, then the smaller pieces would be easier to fall in line and avoid some fragmentation. But I do think it’s interesting that because these three countries, they make up three of the four largest economies in the world in terms of purchasing power parity.

6:30
The one missing though would be the United States. It would have been, I don’t know, I would personally have liked to see the United States there with those three others. Instead we saw Trump tweeting from home about these three Eurasian giants conspiring against America. It then had a very strange tweet, seemed a bit bitter that America had lost India and Russia to the deepest, darkest China. I was wondering what you read into the American reaction to this. It looks like they could have played this very differently, though.

Doctorow:
In 2015, I was a panel leader at a peace conference in Massachusetts at MIT. And the most important or best known participant in that was Noam Chomsky. And they were talking about relations with Russia — remember this was 2015. And someone had said that yes, and this administration has lost Russia. And Chomsky objected, he said, you can’t lose something that you never owned.

7:40
And so it is with the current events. The United States did not own India, and there’s no finger pointing as to who lost it, although it’s pretty obvious that Trump has put a wrinkle in the relationship that’ll take some time to iron out. It will iron itself out. If you watch or listen to what the Indian media are saying, they’re generally pro-American, the major broadcasters in English.

And what they’re saying is that there’s no way that China can replace the United States in the global trade of India and provide it with export earnings of similar nature, because when you look at the two countries, they don’t have an economic fit. Their own country, India, doesn’t produce anything that China needs. Whereas China produces a lot of things for India to buy. That lopsided relationship is not a good foundation for cooperation. So they give this argument why the United States will always be an important factor in Indian economic relations and from economic relations you get political relations.

8:56
So I think this is a temporary problem. Moreover the whole logic of Trump’s attack, the terror of attack on India, was its continuing purchase of Russian hydrocarbons. And that issue will disappear when the Ukrainian war disappears, which is probably a matter of months and not a matter of years. Therefore, the punishment of India is not likely to go on for very long. And after that, they can start to mend fences.

Diesen: 9:31
Well, I guess it’s a bit of a learning process, too. Indeed, that’s what the meeting in SCO was about as well, that is learning to live in a multipolar world. You have to clearly define the relations between the different players. Well, it’s not unfair to argue that the Americans also have a learning process there. I mean, you can’t sit at the center of the world and have a whole world organized around the United States for decades and then I guess suddenly expect them to learn to treat others as, I guess, sovereign equals.

And so I think the best thing the Indians could do is what they did, just push back and draw the line. You’re not going to line us up on a chair in front of the desk of Trump like the Europeans. We will be addressed like an equal and that gives the United States some time to walk back something. I don’t think this is beyond fixing.

It’s a very big bump in the road, obviously, but I think it’s reasonable and part of a larger process. And when I hear Trump’s make statements such as, without America, the world would die, you see that there’s still some way left to, I guess, readjust this multipolarity.

Doctorow: 10:50
Definitely. There’s one other event of course; that is the parade. I was watching BBC coverage of the parade, which is the coverage [where] the journalists were saying absolutely ridiculous things about China.

But actually, I take it back. They were rather differential to China, which surprised me a bit. At the same time, they were insulting towards North Korea and, of course, to Russia. There was a distinction in the way this was nuanced. They didn’t want to offend China, but because you all have a good time offending the Russians. That was clear. Their comments were– also clearly, they respected what China was showing on the parade.

11:34
Now, going back to what we discussed a week ago, this question of the balance between Russia and China and how India helps Russia feel comfortable in the new situation where economics will be as important or more important than security. I want to bring up what I heard on Russian television, this is on the “Evening with Vladimir Solovyov” show, speaking about the military parade in Beijing. It surprised me, but it should be said, it should be a topic for discussion for among viewers.

They said, [“By the way, the Chinese parade doesn’t mean very much because nobody has used those weapons on the battlefield. And the Chinese don’t have a clue as to whether any of it really works.”] Therefore, to draw out conclusions, about the strength of the Chinese army, which is not war tested for, I don’t know, 20, 30 years, excluding this little tiny skirmish. Well, no, the last skirmish was pretty good, the turn of the century with Vietnam. But since then there has been almost no real exercise on the battlefield by Chinese troops.

12:53
And therefore, they were kicking the tires. And that surprised me. Although I have a right, and there was a reason for it, it was clear. What they were, the subtext was, “Beijing, take your military gear and bring it to the battlefield in our war with Ukraine and see if it works in practice.” So I imagine the people in Beijing were listening to that, because that was the clear message.

Diesen: 13:21
Yeah, no, that’s trying out the… But it also, besides encouraging China to get a bit involved in the Ukraine war, it’s also, you know, no one is comfortable with any balance, lack of symmetry. And people often focus on the balance of power between adversaries. But within any institution, you also need the balance of power. This is why I say within the political West, the European Union needs a format for collective bargaining power to have some symmetry with the United States, even within the EU.

It works better if you have Germany as the economic, France as the military power. It was better when the British were in, because again, there was some balance. Once too much power began to focus in Germany, you saw already how from Greece to Poland, people were starting to express some discomfort. So I think it’s the same within the SCO. It’s always good for the Russians if you have some partners like the Arctic corridor where they have the territory.

14:19
So there’s more balance in relation with the Chinese or the military where the Russians now have some battle experience. But also as you said, if you can bring in other large Eurasian giants like India, then the Russians can make their peace that the Indian, sorry, the Chinese, they’re the leading power, but they can’t dictate to us, they can’t dominate. And there’s a very big difference between leadership and dominance. And yes, I think that’s important for India, not for Russia to have India there. I did notice though that both Russia and India now opposes Azerbaijan’s membership in the Shanghai Cooperation organization. What do you read into this partnership to hold the Azerbaijanis out?

Doctorow: 15:08
These are certain parallels here. India vetoed the membership of Azerbaijan and Pakistan vetoed membership of Pashinyan’s little enclave in the Southern Caucasus, Armenia. They are linked. These are linked issues.

And one part of it, as far as India’s promotion of Armenia at the expense of Azerbaijan, has to do with the passage of the north-south corridor which goes through the southern Caucasus and is an important prospective avenue of new markets for India and new raw materials for India.

So they do not want Armenia to step on their tail in this issue. And when they vetoed Azerbaijan, Pakistan turned around and vetoed Armenia. They’re being vetoed as permanent members. It’s not really a big issue. It’s symbolic, but I don’t think it will do much harm to either country. If the North-South corridor proceeds, then Armenia will prosper and gain a great deal, even if it is not yet a full member of the SCO.

Diesen: 16:47
And how do you see the role of Mongolia having changed as a result of this meeting? I found the new Power of Siberia 2. They have been talking about this now for the past decade. So it’s interesting to see that this finally made it across the line. And this, of course, will put all this Arctic gas intended for Europe now sent to China.

But it is interesting that it’s– in the past, it was some proposals had it passing between Kazakhstan and Mongolia and the Altai region. Now we can argue environmental reasons why this was not ideal. But now, of course, it will go through Mongolia, which is a landlocked country sandwiched between Russia and China. So What is the significance of this?

Doctorow: 17:47
Oh, I think it is very xxxxx. Landlocked it may be between those two countries, but that has not prevented the United States from doing everything possible to turn heads in Mongolia, to show how wonderful it would be to … have had closer relations, economic, geopolitical, every kind of relationship with the United States. Now this puts paid to that. I think that as a participant in the Power of Siberia 2, the transit country, Mongolia will enjoy considerable transit fees.

More importantly, it won’t dare do anything against the interests of its two neighbors, because the project is so important, so big, important to both Russia and to China, that any hint that Mongolia was not supportive or of imposing unfair restrictions and price demands on the transit, could bring serious, including military, consequences for Mongolia. So the United States out of the picture. That’s a very big change.

Diesen:
This is a bit of a risk as well though, isn’t it? I mean, before 2004, when the West backed this Orange Revolution in Ukraine, before this, I think about or up to 80 percent of Russian gas to Europe went through Ukraine.

And whenever you’re a transit country, anyone wants to disrupt this relationship, it becomes, it’s an instrument there. I just thought one of the benefits of China and Russia is that they have this massive huge border where they don’t have to be reliant on a transit state which could be, well, where a big great power like United States could come and disrupt. And I think the United States tries to position itself as the third neighbor to Mongolia, symbolically, but nonetheless, to balance out the excessive dependence on the Chinese and the Russians. But is this anything the Russians and Chinese would be worried about?

Doctorow: 20:05
I don’t think so. Mongolia is not Ukraine. Mongolia is not Poland. There’s no need to skirt Mongolia’s borders because the population is negligible, and it doesn’t have supporters and allies on its Western frontier or on any frontier, as Ukraine did and does. Therefore, the possibility of dirty tricks by Mongolia against its large neighbors simply doesn’t exist. How could the United States, aside from sending in sappers to blow up the pipeline, how could the United States do anything? There would be, against the interests of the supplier and the purchasing country, transiting Mongolia.

So that is a different situation. And I think that these parties, there are many aspects to the routing of the Siberia 2 pipeline that don’t get covered in the press, but do get covered in the Russian press. And what I have in mind is, I don’t know the particulars here as they apply to the routing through Mongolia, but the geographic location is important for the Russians’ own gas supplies to its own population. For decades, Gazprom was under-supplying gas to the Russian domestic market, because it was burdened by sales prices fixed in law that were either giving them negligible profit or giving them losses on gas versus production costs and transmission costs.

21:58
Large parts of Russia were heated by logs and or by canisters of gas, which had a habit of blowing up in apartment buildings and causing every winter some kind of tragedies. What we have seen in the last two years, since the start of the special military operation and the underutilization of those gas fuels that had been developed to serve Western markets and now will in in five years’ time preserving Chinese markets. This situation has been directives from Putin to Gazprom, to gasify the country. Remember the old ,,electrify the country”? This was Lenin’s slogan.

Well, gasify the country, provide gas to residential buildings, both in the countryside and of course in towns and cities. That is a very big change. It was discussed openly in a, you know, Putin has a way of 50 different, they call them subjects of the Russian Federation. We would call them states or provinces or whatever, similar designations. This is a geographical area and a political entity.

And their governors, usually their governors, meet with Putin, given the number of entities and the number of weeks in the year, at least as one a week and sometimes more than one a week. And one that was shown a week ago was someone from the far eastern region, a governor, who was explaining how with the new Siberia 2 pipeline, they would finally get substantial allotments of pipeline gas from Gazprom and could finally build a large fertilizer factory because their agriculture– there’s a lot of agriculture, including soil in Eastern Siberia– they had been short on supplies of fertilizer from the Russian domestic market and they were resorting to imports. So that is one example. Of course, the petrochemicals of the plants will be built along this pipeline. So this may have played into the decision to run this through Mongolia. That is, that particular location where Russia would be supplying China from. I don’t know for sure, but I imagine it was one consideration.

24:39
Well, that has been a big issue in Russia, though, the idea that if, you know, now that they’re pivoting to Asia, they have to develop economically the eastern regions as well, because Russia is mostly a European state in terms of where the population lives and economies. But I remember, was it a bit over a decade ago, the concern by people like President Medvedev then was, they called it, I think, they needed dual integration because if you have the eastern parts of Russia integrating closely with China and the western parts of Russia integrating closely with Europe, that sovereignty could become an issue in the future. Again, when you’re the largest country in the world, you do worry about sovereignty.

25:30
So the main idea is, if we link ourselves to China, not only do you need the eastern parts of Russia to link yourself to China, you need also the rest of the country to link yourself closer to the eastern parts of Russia. So I guess these kind of gas projects that links the arctic with Eastern Russia and China that this also has an economic purpose; it also has a geopolitical purpose of cementing sovereign control, not worrying about any fragmentation. Again, it’s not that long ago since the Soviet Union collapsed and the West expressed some desire for the same to happen with the Russian Federation. So there is some insecurity there. Just as a last question though, I want to ask after the SCO summit, the Chinese were celebrating the 80th anniversary of defeating Japan in the Second World War.

What do you make of the special attention then given to Russia and North Korea? Because at the SCO it appeared to be Russia and India and then at the military parade it was Putin and Kim Jong-un. So again, the coverage in the media here in the West has been very superficial, just dictators, you know, because it’s not legitimate without us. But it is interesting how much North Korea was elevated though. This stood out a bit, it was strange to me.

Doctorow: 27:01
I’m sure that there is, we can identify some reasons. It doesn’t mean potential reasons. I don’t know if the decision-makers have in mind when they formulated it this way, as you just described, but potential explanations are first the refusal of all Western leaders in Europe to come to the parade. I’ve criticized Donald Trump for not coming to the parade, because the Americans made such a big contribution to not just the liberation of China, but of course to the liberation of so many islands and countries that were occupied by Japan prior to the American liberation at the cost of blood. And these people were not properly honored.

27:49
And for Trump to have put this into his social platform message to Xi, that we hope that you have looked after our people, was rather pitiful sounding. So I’ve criticized Trump for not going, but I can understand a number of reasons. Of course, the reasons multiplied as the date approached. He had presumably wanted to go. He had barred the Taiwan president from stopping in New York on a visit to the South, Latin America.

And this was two weeks ago, between two and three weeks ago. And this was interpreted, I believe correctly, by analysts in the West as showing that Trump did not want to displease the Chinese because of the coming celebrations in Beijing, meaning that he wanted to go. And then we see he didn’t go. Without any other leaders present from the West, of course he couldn’t go. He would be like Putin in the G8, the odd man out. And for somebody with an ego like Trump’s that is utterly unthinkable.

29:05
But not just an ego like his; most any normal person would not want to be in such an unattractive situation. For Modi I think the same thing came up, that he did not want to be an odd man out, and particularly when it was known that the real guest of honor would be Kim. Therefore, there are explanations for what we saw on the screen and why the other possible, potential attendees did not come. It was not widely said on BBC or other Western reporting that the leaders weren’t there, the Western leaders, weren’t there, not because they weren’t invited, but they refused to accept the invitation.

29:55
That should have been brought out; it wasn’t. The reading public, or the television-watching public in the West doesn’t have a clue as to why the Western readers weren’t there, and can listen to this propaganda that you repeated, that it was intended to be a gathering of authoritarians. That was not the intent.

Diesen: 30:17
Yeah, that’s what I’m thinking. It’s such a wasted opportunity. Imagine if you would have a lot of Western leaders there as well, how different it would have been. It would have been a way of de-escalating some of the tensions which have been growing over the years. There was one exception though, that is the Prime Minister of Slovakia, Robert Fico. He did show up and he actually scolded the European Union. He said they wanted to isolate China, and they isolated themselves.

And that sounds about right. You also had Vucic, of course, from Serbia, but they’re not part of the European Union. But it was interesting that Fico made it, though. I thought if anyone was going to break ranks it would be Orban as he tends to stick his head out, but it was Fico this time.

Doctorow: 31:06
Orban is very careful. He says a lot of things that we all like, _we_ all like in the alternative media, But when push comes to shove, he usually lines up with the majority, particularly when they’re voting on sanctions for Russia or other items. Fico was clearly not going to approve funding for Ukraine or military aid to Ukraine, whereas Urbán can fudge that. He can make some, try to use his leverage to claw back some of the punishment that’s been dealt to Hungary because of his otherwise unaligned or non-aligned approach to so many foreign policy issues of the EU.

The one last thing that comes to mind, I was very pleased to find this morning that the “Times of India”– which I don’t generally have a high regard for because they are very sensationalist on their YouTube podcasts– they picked up my RT interview of the 4th of September in which I denounced the Secretary General, Rutte, for the most outrageous statement that he made and was recorded and has played on television, saying that we don’t, in the West, we don’t have to pay any attention to Putin and what he thinks about boots on the ground in Ukraine, because after all, Putin has no more power than the governor of Texas.

32:49
The leaders like Rutte or like Kaja Kallas, they’re saying the most outrageous things. And nobody’s pushing back properly. I’m happy that I was given the chance to do that, but they should be getting it from all sides. They are showing themselves to be so clumsy. The level of language is what you would hear from a fellow of the next barstool who’s had a bit too much to drink. They’re completely wild statements.

Diesen: 33:30
It’s not that long ago, only 30 years ago, when we talked about security, people used terms like indivisible security, don’t enhance your security at the expense of others. This was always a core theme, but these days, this idea is that Russia shouldn’t have anything to say at all. I mean, they don’t have veto power and NATO represents Europe, where Russia is not a part of NATO, has nothing to say. I mean, this is efforts to deprive them of an institutional voice, it only left them with the military to prevent this.

I mean, if we had talked in the past, if the people lie Rutte had been replaced by people who actually recognized that you do have to take your opponent’s security concerns into play, there wouldn’t be a war in Ukraine. I mean, this is– and even now that we’re losing the war, they’re still sitting there going, “Well, why are we listening to him? He’s, you know, as a governor of Texas.” It’s quite extraordinary. But yeah, no, it’s a…


Doctorow: 34:27
I have one positive message to give to close my part in this. I was listening to, I had a lengthy discussion with a member of the European Parliament a day ago, and was listening with great pleasure to his estimation, and he knows a lot of people there, that von der Leyen won’t last six months, that she’s on the way out. And if she goes, then the whole crew, that whole motley crew of fools, will go with her.

Diesen: 35:00
Well, it’s not in these days, it’s not every day we get to finish on a positive note, and this is a very, very positive note. So we can leave it at that, the exit of von der Leyen. So yeah, I hope that this is true and Europe can return to reason and hopefully a better future awaits us. So yeah, thank you so much.

Doctorow:
My pleasure.

A conversation with Professor Glenn Diesen, 6 September: Russia, China and India Unite Against US Hegemony

Today’s discussion with Professor Diesen was far reaching, starting with a review of the achievements of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Tianjan, consideration of the prospects for the United States and India to patch up relations in the coming six months, Russian comments on the Beijing military parade which may surprise viewers, the logic behind India blocking the accession of Azerbaijan to the SCO and Pakistan blocking Armenia, the consequences for Mongolia of its being a transit country for the Power of Siberia-2 pipeline, the Russian interest in the agreed routing of the pipeline for the sake of ‘gasification’ of Eastern Siberia and the reasons why Trump was not present at the Beijing military parade, The chat ended on a positive note when I shared the prediction I heard a day ago from a European Parliament deputy who is in touch with various blocs of deputies though he himself is non-aligned. He expects von der Leyen to fall from power within the coming six months, meaning that the entire ship of fools that she has put together, including the Russophobic dummy in charge of foreign policy, Kaja Kallas, will go with her.

NATO Chief MERCILESSLY Roasted For Mocking Putin; ‘Insane Rutte Needs Padded Cell’

The Times of India website regularly puts on youtube sensationalist videos and would not normally be a source that I re-post for the Community.  However, today’s podcast is an exception.

Hats off to Times of India! They have cleverly excerpted part of the interview I gave on 4 September to RT International explaining why NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte is deranged and in need of a padded cell.

In terms of viewings, the podcast is doing very well, thank you.

Transcript of Espoire et dignite interview

Transcription submitted by a reader

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZMub8zcb4s

Jawad Husain, Espoir et Dignite: 0:00
Good morning, everyone. Today we have the great honor of speaking with Dr. Gilbert Doctorow, a respected political analyst and writer on international affairs, especially Russia and Europe. We will ask him about the current tensions between Europe and Russia, the role of the United States and the future chances for peace. My first question, Dr. Doctorow, why do you think Europe is so invested in the idea of a final and total confrontation with Russia?

Doctorow:

Europe discovered after the first six months, eight months of the special military operation which began in February, 2022, that Russia is a much more formidable military force than it had imagined.
1:04
And when it looked around, it looked in the mirror at itself, it understood that it is naked. It has virtually no modern armies in Europe, if you take out NATO, by which I mean if you take out the American component. The Europeans are unable to defend themselves. This didn’t just happen accidentally, it happened because there was no reason to defend themselves after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the accommodation with the new Russian Federation, which wanted very much to become integrated into Europe and into the Western world.

1:46
It didn’t play out that way. The Americans decided to take maximum advantage of their situation as the only surviving superpower after 1992. And they used the 1990s to economically destroy Russia with very good advice, they said, on transition from the communist centralized economy to a market economy, the result being shambles was left. Most of industry in Russia was destroyed, and the rest went into the hands of some rich people whom we call oligarchs.

2:26
That was the outcome of the ’90s, and it took some time for Europeans and for Americans to understand that Russia under its new president, Putin, was capable of and was in fact restoring its strength. Of course, being half the size and population of the Soviet Union, the Russian Federation could not be the equal in terms of economic output and other parameters, but it was doing very well since it had no dependencies to feed.

That is to say, Russia’s kind of colonial relationship with its Warsaw Pact countries no longer existed. It did not have to give subventions in cheap supplies to those countries and receive back shoddy commercial merchandise. So Russia was paradoxically strengthened by getting rid of its empire, and it became as it demonstrated particularly in year two of the Special Military Operation, when it slaughtered the Ukrainians’ so-called counteroffensive, which had all the weight of the United States and NATO countries behind it, and the Ukrainians were destroyed.

3:46
This vision of a big neighbor whom they had been poking in the eye for more than a decade, and being militarily vastly more powerful in conventional weapons than they were, frightened them out of their boots. And when you are afraid, one of the normal emotional responses is hate. And hate took hold in the leadership of the European EU member states to the point where they were fanning Russophobia, Russia hatred, from the towering heights of power.

And that is how you have– to their surprise, to the European surprise, Donald Trump won the elections last year, and he came in with a policy that placed primary emphasis on an accommodation with Russia, on recognition that the war was lost, and to move on to areas of cooperation with Russia in geopolitical terms, which the United States deemed important. That is to say, to change the balance of power and relationship with China by way of removing Russia from China’s arms and WArm embrace.

5:06
So the Americans started making movements away from the confrontation between Russia and Ukraine, and the Europeans doubled down and insisted on continuing the war, because it would keep in power those who had got Europe into the war; and they would not be shown up to have made wrong bets and to be on the wrong side of history. So that is how we got to today. Europeans have been encouraged by the Biden administration to support Ukraine in every possible way, which they did. And now Donald Trump was doing the opposite and renouncing such policies and they were left hanging in the air. That’s how we got to [today].

Husain: 5:54
Okay, thank you sir. How would you describe the present relationship between Russia and Europe?

Doctorow:
Terrible. The Europeans under the, shall we call it leadership, of the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, are collectively committing suicide. There are only two sane members among the leadership in Europe, and they are Fico in Slovakia and Orbán in Hungary. It’s not that they are Russia friends. It’s just that they would like to live. And the leaders in the other 25 countries seem to be betting on suicide.

Economically, Europe is going down the drain. I live in Belgium. It’s a small country. And this small country, like many other small countries in the EU, is largely dependent on a strong German economy to maintain its export business and generally for its economic prosperity. Germany is now in the second year of recession. Germany has slipped from being the fourth largest economy to behind Russia.

7:13
Russia has now taken over from Germany the lead as the largest economy in Europe. And this has happened because the Germans have been at the forefront of the proxy war against Russia and with sanctions, and they have allowed their economy to be destroyed by their renouncing Russian energy supplies. That is the situation today. The Europeans, unfortunately, European leadership doesn’t care a whit about their populations or prosperity. They only care about keeping their seats in power.

And by maintaining the war in Ukraine, they have the argument that we need, that Europe needs strong leadership, meaning we, and that we will stay in power to look after your security. That’s what they’re saying. In fact, they are destroying that security by preparing for a war with Russia in 2029. They believe that they can dictate when the war will start, when they’re ready. That’s dead wrong. The Russians will not let that happen.

Husain: 8:27
If I follow on with that, President Trump has spoken about a peace initiative. He’s been on this track of normalizing relations with Russia. Do you believe such an initiative can bring real chances for peace, considering your answer to the previous questions, that the Europeans are not prepared to make peace with Russia and they want to continue the war against Russia?

Doctorow:
Well, I think we’ve seen in the last two days during the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit that Europe geopolitically counts for nothing, nothing whatsoever. It’s just the leaders refuse to face that bare fact.

As for Mr. Trump and making peace, generally whatever Mr. Trump says, I treat with great caution. I follow what Mr. Trump does, not what Mr. Trump says. And that’s not because he is badly organized or confused or doesn’t know what he wants. No, it’s because he lives in a political environment which is populated by enemies to the policies that he wants. I don’t mean personal enemies, although there are plenty of them among the other aspirants for power, as always is the case in any country, but political enemies, people who oppose what he is trying to do.

9:58
And what he’s trying to do is in fact make peace, but not at the level of solving the dispute and little war between India and Pakistan or doing something nice in Africa. No. Or being a mediator in the Ukraine-Russia war, which is nonsense, of course, because in fact, the United States is a co-belligerent. Co-belligerents, normally, are not mediators.

What he is trying to do is to destroy the bloc system. He is doing his best without being conspicuous about it, because if he were conspicuous and if he spoke openly and truly about it, he would be impeached. The American political establishment does not agree with what his foreign policy intentions are. His foreign policy intentions are to break the United States out of the blocs.

We saw this in his attack, his tariff attack on India. People say, “Oh, it won’t work. Oh, we were losing our good friends in India.”

Nonsense. He had one intention, and it looks like he got what he wanted, namely for India to withdraw from the quadrilateral arrangement in the Indo-Pacific, which the United States has been building for the last 25 years, for the purposes of containing and possibly fighting China. One of the first things that Mr. Modi did was to withdraw active participation in the quadrilaterals.

11:29
In fact, even Mr. Trump is saying, well the rumor is, that he will not go to the next quadrilateral summit. So in that case, in the Indo-Pacific, where there is no big structure approved by the Senate that he has to overturn, Mr. Trump is undoing America’s involvement in a bloc that’s aimed at fighting China.

He is intent on reducing American participation in NATO, which will effectively destroy NATO. It removes the reason for its existence. But he cannot be open about this, as I said, or he would develop enormous resistance. And so he’s speaking double-talk, as we say in colloquial English, out of both sides of his mouth. But I don’t listen– that’s why I don’t listen to what he says, I watch what he does.

Husain: 12:24
Thank you very much, Dr. Doctorow, for sharing your valuable insights with us today. Before we close, we would like to remind our audience of your latest book, “War Diaries, The Russian-Ukraine War, Volume 1, 2022-2023”. We highly recommend it to all those who want a deeper understanding of this important subject. And finally, dear viewers, if you enjoyed this interview, please support our channel by subscribing, liking and sharing our contact content. Your support helps us continue bringing you valuable discussions like this one. Thank you very much, sir.

Doctorow: 13:07
My pleasure.

Transcript of RT interview: insanity of NATO Secretary General Rutte

Transcript submitted by a reader

https://rumble.com/embed/v6wb53y/#?secret=LTCubIeAhz

RT: 0:00
Right now, let’s get more on this now and speak to author and independent international affairs analyst, Professor Gilbert Doctorow. Professor, I’m glad to have you join me now. So judging from the speeches by the NATO chief and President Macron, Western politicians are excluding Russia’s opinion on their plans to send troops to Ukraine, despite the fact that NATO expansion was one of the key reasons why the war erupted in the first place. Why do you think they are seemingly intent on ignoring Moscow?

Doctorow: 0:34
Because they’re insane. Lt’s say the definition of insanity is detachment from reality. And everything that Mr. Rutte said and that you have put on air would indicate that he needs a padded cell. The man is not spreading propaganda; he’s spreading insanity. What he said, that Russia is, that Mr. Putin has the strength of the governor of Texas, is utterly ridiculous. Now, Mr. Obama, in his worst days, said that Russia was a regional power. He didn’t say that Russia was Texas.

1:09
I understand that Mr. Rutte could be deranged. After all, he spent 15 years or more as the prime minister of the Netherlands. In the 1990s, when Russia’s economy collapsed, it was widely observed with some humor that the whole of the Russian economy was the size of the Netherlands economy.

I think Mr. Rute is caught in a time warp. He thinks it is still the 1990s. He is ignoring the fact that Russia is now the fourth largest economy in the world, as measured by price parity, and it is the largest economy by far in Europe. In this circumstance, to speak about Russia, Mr. Putin’s country, as having the weight of Texas, shows that the man is deranged.

RT: 2:06
Now it’s been three years already. What needs to happen still for the West to take into account Russia’s position in national interest when it comes to ending the war?

Doctorow:
The utter collapse of Ukraine; that is the only thing that can bring these people to reason and reality. So this is not something that Russia has decided upon solely. No, This was a solution that was imposed on Russia by the European Union, by the past high representative or commissioner for foreign policy. I’m speaking about Yosef Borrell, who famously said that this conflict between Russia and Ukraine would be solved on the battlefield.

2:55
Well, Mr. Borrell, it is being solved on the battlefield. The Ukrainians have lost 1.7 million men. And that is incredible loss, which Mr. Rutte doesn’t want to acknowledge. In that case, he is personally taking responsibility by his light-minded approach to this for those deaths. He wants that to continue. He wants to annihilate the able-bodied men in the country of Ukraine. This cannot go on. Mr. Ruta has outlived his usefulness, even as a propagandist.

RT: 3:34
Now, today, the Hungarian foreign minister has publicly brought up the issue of forced mobilization in Ukraine. Let’s take a listen to this.

Minister:
It is a well-known fact that there is an open hunt for people in Ukraine, that there are violent conscription events in Ukraine. Everyone knows that during these violent arrests, people are often beaten, in some cases to death. And they can do this because, according to pro-European politicians, Ukraine is allowed to do anything in this situation. I think that one of the greatest European disgraces of the 21st century is that in the heart of Europe there is a hunt for people, that in the heart of Europe there is a violent conscription and that in the heart of Europe, under the pretext of conscription, people are beaten to death. And I think that here, along with the specific criminals, responsibility also lies with all the Brussels politicians who do not pay attention or ignore these crimes.

RT: 4:31
All right, he’s talking about open hunt for people and violent conscriptions there. Now, he is the first European high-level politician to speak on this matter. Will that open the floodgates to others following his lead or will the silence continue? What do you make?

Doctorow:
I don’t know about floodgates. The mainstream newspapers in the United States and in England, I am thinking now of the Herald Tribune, even they, in the last month or two, have come back down to earth and recognized that Ukraine is losing the war very badly and that the procedures for recruiting, so to speak, new forces for their depleted army are the ones you described. That is already in print in the West in major newspapers. So the problems are extensive. I can tell you from my experience here in Belgium that elites in Belgium are also living in a different world or universe.

5:38
I have sat at the table in the most prestigious monarchist royal club in Brussels, French speaking, and heard my colleagues at the table and their wives say how wonderful it will be for their sons — and daughters — to receive military training and to prepare for … to execute their citizens’ obligations for defense. They are living in a dream world. Russia will win this war in a dramatic way in the coming weeks to months, not years. And only then, when the Ukrainian people acknowledge that they have been beaten, and they will, then Europe will also have to look at the facts, which they are ignoring. At the popular level, at the elite level, it is not yet understood what a disaster this war is for the Ukrainian nation.

RT: 6:40
Completely spot on. We have to leave you here now. Professor Gilbert Doctorow, independent international affairs analyst and author, thank you so much for your opinion.

RT International interview: the latest insane remarks of NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte

Today’s quotations from the European leaders taking the Old Continent to the brink of catastrophe are absolutely stunning for revealing a detachment from reality that one can properly call insanity.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz went on record yesterday as calling Vladimir Putin the ‘worst war criminal of our days.’ This quote was put to the Russian president by Kommersant newspaper journalist Andrei Kolesnikov at a press briefing to the news pool after Putin’s arrival this morning in Vladivostok. Putin disposed of this insulting and totally unacceptable remark by his German counterpart by reminding him who was responsible for the outbreak of the civil war in Ukraine in February-March 2014: namely the Germans, French and Poles who did not exercise their obligations as guarantors of a deal for peaceful transfer of power signed with the then Ukrainian president Yanukovich a day before the violent coup d’etat that overthrew him.

Merz’s remarks were a provocation. One can say the same of the quote from NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on the sidelines of the latest gathering of the Coalition of the Willing in Prague. Listen closely to the quote that I was asked to comment on by RT International. We hear him say that Putin has no more power than the Governor of the U.S. state of Texas and that there is no reason to take Russia’s opinions into account while the Europeans plan putting their soldiers on the ground in Ukraine to ensure its security after a truce or peace is concluded. This is pure insanity

It is painful to think that persons so detached from reality as Rutte are entrusted with Europe’s defense.

https://t.me/rtnews/109920

Transcript of ‘Judging Freedom’ edition of 3 September

Transcript submitted by a reader

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ydnuvwbn_Y

Napolitano: 0:30
Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for “Judging Freedom”. Today is Wednesday, September 3rd, 2025. Professor Gilbert Doctorow will be with us here in just a moment. Russia spreads its wings commercially and thumbs its nose diplomatically. But first this.
[ad]

2:08
Professor Doctorow, welcome here, my dear friend. Before we get to the significance of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting and the effect on BRICS of the meeting this week, a couple of questions, if I might, about Ukraine. What are the attitudes, as you perceive them, among Russian elites about the likely end of the special military operation?

Doctorow: 2:39
I think they perceive that it will be resolved on the battlefield. The expectations that any of the friends of Russia like India or China, or for that matter President Trump, will bring Ukraine to the table and make them amenable to a realistic settlement, I think those expectations are minimal.

There is, if you follow the Russian state television news daily, there is a clear perception that the advances are significant, as advances on the ground, the taking of territory is now at the level of 700 square kilometers a month, whereas it had been 400 a month at the start of this year. So there is also the awareness that the front has in some respects, weakened to collapse around the logistical hub of Pokrovsk, which is of great importance to all logistical services to the Ukrainian frontline soldiers. In that respect, I think that the Russian elites have a vision of the race to the Dnieper River, which would be the culmination. There’s also talk, of course, of taking Odessa, which would be a still more dramatic denouement, conclusion, to this military conflict. That is the mood among elites.

Napolitano: 4:13
Do you foresee any circumstances under which Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky sit down at a table together?

Doctorow:
It is possible. It’s very difficult to imagine, but it is possible. However, the Russians have made it fairly clear that Mr. Zelensky’s signature on any documents will not be welcome. They could meet, they can discuss what a settlement can and should be, but they would want to have a legitimate signature on any documents concluding peace. They don’t consider his to be legitimate.

Napolitano: 4:50
Interesting. What do Ukrainian elites think? If you know, their generals, their diplomats, their senior government officials, not including President Zelensky, about the likely coming Russian military achievement of the Russian objectives on the battlefield?

Doctorow:
Well, for obvious reasons, they do not speak openly their minds. If they did, they would be in deep trouble if not imprisonment altogether. So it’s very difficult to answer your question. The Ukrainian media are tightly controlled, as we know. No criticism of the government’s policies [is] acceptable.

And the opposition leaders of the past like Timoshenko, Poroshenko, are really on board with Zelensky in his objectives. They just think they could do it better. So there is not a big split in Ukrainian elites at this moment, sufficient to encourage us to think that the Ukrainian side will back down, until the military defeat becomes impossible to conceal.

Napolitano: 6:11
What about the supranationalists, the Banderists, the people that some refer to as neo-Nazis. Do they accept the coming reality, or are they so driven by ideology that they’ll fight to the end?

Doctorow:
There was an article I think last week on Zero Hedge by one commentator who pointed out that the Russians are ensnaring the elite forces of the Ukrainian army by not pushing to full advantage their daily progress on the line of confrontation and allowing or inviting the Ukrainians to make a counter-strike, which they then snuff out, taking so many hundreds or thousands of soldiers with them. Therefore you cannot see the diminishing strength of those nationalists. Russia’s ideal is to exterminate them. And best of all, exterminate them on the field of battle so you don’t get into all the nonsense of judicial trials.

Napolitano:
You were kind enough to share that article with me and I found it fascinating. And the author’s thesis is that, as I understand it and recall it, President Putin could move for a swift victory, but that’s not what he wants. He wants a slow, methodical victory so as to eliminate as much as possible of the Ukrainian fighting force, particularly these people we’re calling the Banderists, so he doesn’t have to deal with them when the war is over.

Doctorow: 8:01
That is a very good summation. An additional small point here is that Putin wants the Ukrainian people to say “uncle”, He wants the Ukrainian people to admit that the whole of Bandera program that was imposed by the new government following in February 2014 coup d’etat, that all the principles behind it of extreme nationalism are totally discredited. For that reason, he is allowing or even encouraging the enormous extermination of capable males in Ukraine, those who were inducted into the military.

8:56
It would be possible theoretically for that to be avoided, but that would not drive home to the Ukrainian nation that they have lost and that the principles behind their fight are false.

Napolitano: 9:09
Do you have any feel for ties between MI6, CIA and the Banderists?

Doctorow:
No, that’s outside my field of competence.

Napolitano:
I know it’s outside your field, but I know you also have a lot of contacts. So I respect the intellectual honesty of your answer. And I thought I would throw it out.

Before we get to India and the Shanghai Organization and BRICS, is there any reaction in Moscow when President Trump does things like blow out of the water a Venezuelan ship, killing everybody on it without any due process whatsoever. This is arguably a homicide. This is a pre-conviction extrajudicial execution.

Does Moscow react at all internally when Trump does things like this, sort of like when he killed General Soleimani in his first term?

Doctorow: 10:12
Well, Soleimani they would react to because they are close friends of Iran, and he was a very prominent person. As regards these latest incidents, the Russians are quiet about it. You won’t find it in the news. They don’t comment on it.

Their official position remains very favorable to Trump in the belief that they can do business with him, that he is the first American president in a generation who listens to them. So they leave it at that.

Napolitano: 10:46
All right. Chris, put up the full screen from President Trump on his Truth Social [page], what the president wrote this morning.

Trump trxt:
The big question to be answered is whether or not President Xi of China will mention the massive amount of support and “blood” that the United States of America gave to China in order to help it secure its FREEDOM from a very unfriendly foreign invader.

Napolitano: 11:09
He’s talking about Japan and World War II.

Trump text:
Many Americans died in China’s quest for Victory and Glory. I hope that they are rightfully Honored and Remembered for their bravery and sacrifice. May President Xi and the wonderful people of China have a great and lasting day of celebration.

Napolitano:
Now this sarcasm that I want to ask you about, Professor, back to quoting the President,

Trump text:
Please give my warmest regards to Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un as you conspire,

Napolitano:
–as you, not as they, as you conspire

Trump text:
against the United States of America.

Napolitano:
How does the Kremlin view that type of diplomacy by sarcasm?

Doctorow: 11:50
I don’t think they’ll react at all, for the reasons I just mentioned. They don’t pay much attention to what Donald Trump says in public. I think I’ve called this out in the past. I don’t follow up closely what he says. I don’t parse his words because they’re largely double talk. And double talk to keep off balance all of his many opponents, domestically and foreign.

But I think this message is very important for a different reason. It is very sad, deeply sad, that Trump did not make arrangements to be present at the parade today. It is deeply sad.

And to make these words about hoping that American soldiers who died will be honored, I’m sorry, that’s pitiful. By the same token, let me be broader about this. I have publicly criticized on Indian television interviews Modi’s decision not to be present, because one and a half million Indians died fighting in World War II on the European and Pacific fronts. And it was a failure to honor those deaths of his compatriots, although that India was not yet a nation, that is a state in 1945. But it was disgraceful that he did not honor their memory by attending.

13:20
So it was with Trump. It’s just disgraceful that he wasn’t there. And I think it would have played out differently. What we saw on the television screens today would have looked different if Trump had been at the party.

Napolitano:
What has been the effect, the economic effect, the short-term economic effect– we can speculate the long-term, but the short-term economic effect– of Trump’s tariffs on India?

Doctorow: 13:47
Well, for me, the distinguishing consequence was what looks like the pullout of India from the quadrilateral arrangements for a containment- of-China policy and/or a proto-NATO in Indo-Pacific, of which they were members after 25 years of cultivating this relationship by Washington. I think that was the end result that Trump sought and he got it.

Now as to the other consequences, of course the great deal of noise has been made about these tariffs, though they apply to manufactured [goods] and primarily to textiles, which is an important employer in India. So the political impact in India is greater than the dollar value of trade that is being lost as a result of these tariffs, considering that these are low-paid textile workers who will be out of a job.

But the major component of US-Indian trade, which is IT, software programming, business intelligence done under contract or even with subsidiaries of American corporations in India. This remains intact, $80 billion worth out of $100 billion in trade as far as I understand it, of exports to the United States. And then pharmaceuticals also are untouched.

But the way that this was brought in and the insulting remarks by Trump in his telephone conversation with Modi made it inevitable that India would react and would dig in the heels and would demonstrate its independence and sovereignty from the United States. So this is what happened.

Napolitano: 15:46
What has been the effect on the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and on BRICS, the combined effect of the sanctions on Russia, the sanctions on China, the sanctions on India? Could one argue that the effect has been the opposite of what Trump wanted, a more unified, strengthened, commercially adaptable and integrated Shanghai Organization and BRICS?

Doctoorow: 16:18
Well, that assumes we know what Donald Trump wanted. And I’m saying that is an arguable case that he wanted the opposite of what he said he wanted. Nonetheless, let’s come back to the question that you posed, which is very serious, and I’m very glad that you have brought the two subjects up together. Because in the broad public, there is confusion of what is BRICS and what is Shanghai Cooperation Organization. How are they different?

Well, they are different, at least in most simplified way we could say that BRICS was from the beginning an economic and commercial trade organization to bring together these countries of the global south and Russia for the sake of greater prosperity, trade not going through the dollar, and things like that. It was not primarily a geopolitical organization or certainly not a defense organization.

17:13
Looking at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization or SCO, we’re looking at something that was founded at the start of the new millennium when terrorism, particularly the Islamic state, Islamic fundamentalism was rife, was a very big issue globally. And it was founded by China and by Russia, first of all, to secure the territory between them, for which they could be competitors. And the United States, of course, is one of those hoping that they would be fierce competitors and would be at one of the throats.

17:47
The Shanghai Cooperation Organization was precisely created to avoid that, to moderate their joint governance of the big territory, populous territory between them. It also, as a security organization, it announced its goals to be anti, to combat terrorism, and combat narco trading. And what we’ve seen are baby steps from that initial primarily security and regional look, Central Asia primarily, to a more broader Eurasian framework extending all the way out to Belarus in the west and to the United Arab Emirates in the southwest. So geographically it has expanded, although it’s still Asia.

18:38
And then the remit, the mission statement has been by baby steps going in the direction of economics, trade, and banking. And there was a big step, not a baby step, but a big step this past weekend when Xi announced the plans to create a SCO development bank. So what we see is the elements of BRICS are now being fully developed within a limited geographic area. BRICS is global. The SCO is regional, but of course the region takes in 40% of the world’s population.

Nonetheless, it is regional. India, China, and Russia are the big players. What happened this weekend was yes, the remit has changed, the ignition statement has broadened, and the role of India, I think, has been offered the possibility to be one of the three governing countries of SCO.

Napolitano:
Oh, that is profound.

Doctorow: 19:47
India was on the sidelines. India is on the governing board of BRICS, but it was not on the governing board of SCO. And now that SCO is becoming kind of regional BRICS, it is both logical and important. I also would like to introduce a remark that was made by Glenn Diesen, when we had a recent conversation. And I think it’s very appropriate to understand what’s going on, that when Russia and China were involved in a security mission in SCO, Russia and China are pretty balanced. Oh yes, okay. China has a bigger army in manpower numbers, but Russia has a much more effective and battle-practiced army.

20:28
So they are pretty balanced in military and security issues. When it becomes very economic, banking, finance, well, the economy of China is many times the size of the Russian economy. And Russia would be a junior partner. By bringing in India as an equal partner, Russia improves its feeling of comfort in SCO. This was Diesen’s observation, and I think it is a very good insight.

NJapolitano:
Very astute observation, and I’m grateful that you raised it. What is the significance of this Siberia 2 pipeline, which I guess will be the longest pipeline in the world by far, to deliver– is it oil or natural gas? enlighten me– from the top of Russia into the bowels of China?

Doctorow: 21:22
It has several dimensions to it. Yes, it is primarily to double the amount of natural gas that Russia is delivering to China on pipeline.

The Power of Siberia 1, which has been operating for several years, and is close to 50 billion cubic meters of gas a year, now itself will be raised as part of separate agreements that were reached this past weekend by another 12 billion cubic meters. And Siberia, Power of Siberia 2, which has been in talking, in discussions year after year. I know two years in a row, the Vladivostok Eastern Economic Forum, which is supposed to be the big platform for Russia to announce its investment projects in the Far East. Each year there was discussion will the Chinese come in and sign it off? They didn’t.

22:27
This year, ahead of the forum, the forum starts on Friday, ahead of the forum, the Russians came out and said, it has been done. And this was announced yesterday by the “Financial Times”, although they had to kick the tires and say that the financial details aren’t yet in place, but they admitted this is a legally binding commitment to construct that pipeline, which has an additional feature that it passes through Mongolia. It goes more directly to the interior of China and from the interior it passes all the way down to Shanghai. But its features are several, and they are not widely announced, so I’ll add a couple of additional factors that Russian television talks about. That is spurs of this pipeline will be feeding natural gas into parts of the Russian Far East that have not been served by any pipelines, and which are energy short.

23:30
And for example, in far eastern Siberia, they will be building a major production center for fertilizer, based on this gas. So Russia will be serving itself. And the transiting of Mongolia is a very big issue. For Mongolia, it will be an important source of additional income, and it locks the three together. The United States has been doing its best to prise Mongolia away from Russia and China.

Well, it’s failed, guys. This pipeline across Mongolia means Mongolia is a fraternal country with Russia and China and not with the United States.

Napolitano: 24:10
And there’s not much the United States can do about this unless they’re going to engage in sabotage like on Nord Stream 2. How long will it take, before we run, how long will it take to build this?

Doctorow:
The early ’30s. So I think about five, seven years, something like that. And it will be receiving gas from those gas fields which had been supplying Western Europe and are now underutilized because Western Europe is boycotting pipeline gifts, xxxxxx pipeline gas. The fact is that Europe is buying a lot of liquefied natural gas for Russia.

Napolitano: 24:48
Another topic for our next talk, the absurd decisions of Western Europe. Professor Doctorow, thank you very much. Thanks for your time. As always, thank you for the illuminating little lecture on BRICS and SCO. Very, very helpful and very timely. All the best. We’ll see you again next week.

Doctorow:
Thanks. Bye-bye.

Napolitano:
Thank you. Coming up later today at 11 this morning, Aaron Maté; at one this afternoon, Max Blumenthal; at two this afternoon, Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski; at three this afternoon, Phil Giaraldi.

25:27
Judge Napolitano for “Judging Freedom”.

‘Judging Freedom’ edition of 3 September 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ydnuvwbn_Y

Today’s chat with Judge Napolitano dealt with the impact of Trump’s tariff war with New Delhi on interstate relations and the withdrawal of India from the Quadrilateral Indo-Pacific arrangements that Washington has developed over the past 25 years. Other topics included the possible rise of India to a place at the governing board of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization as it expands into a new role as trade and finance coordinating center for Eurasia, performing at a regional level that takes in 40% of the world’s population what BRICS does at the global level. But these were only high points of a discussion that covered the waterfront, as they say in the States, including an updated vision of how the Russia-Ukraine war is likely to end