Transcript of Glenn Diesen interview, 1 August

Transcript submitted by a reader

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XEO16V1X7Fg

Prof. Glenn Diesen: 0:00
Hi everyone and welcome back. We’re joined today by Gilbert Doctorow, an international affairs analyst, historian and author of books such as “War Diaries: the Russia-Ukraine War”. So welcome to the show. I want to ask you about the state of relations between the European Union and the United States, because as we all know, von der Leyen and Trump, they reached a US-EU trade agreement. And for many people, myself included, it looks more or less like a complete capitulation and subordination, and something that could, I guess, change the relationship between the EU and US, but also something that can undermine the internal cohesion of the European Union itself. So given that you’re located there in Brussels, what does this agreement actually include? And can you make any sense of it?

Gilbert Doctorow, PhD: 1:03
The agreement that was reached in Scotland has two important sides to it. One is what everybody is talking about, the tariffs. And the tariffs are now set at generally 15% down from a tentative 25% before an agreement was reached. But that doesn’t cover all products and services. Airplanes or airplane parts, for example, are not included in this. They are at a much lower tariff rate. There are other products which will be negotiated still.

For example, wines and liquor, which are of great interest to one of the leading countries in the EU, that is France, and that probably will be negotiated at a different level, lower level, in the wishes of the French. But looking at the tariffs, that is severe. It is compared to where we were at the start of the year. It is less than the dramatic and ruinous tariffs that Trump had spoken about before he would negotiate a deal.

And will this bring European manufacturing across the ocean to the United States at the expense of jobs in Europe? It’s not quite clear. There is very little discussion of what Europe actually sells to the States and how vulnerable it is to loss of market share due to price increases. That’s something we can perhaps get into, but what I have in mind is that mass products, products that are bought and used by the vast majority of the population, they are not typically European products. They are Chinese products. European products include a lot of luxury goods, and luxury goods are being sold to wealthy people for whom a 15% tariff won’t make a big difference.

3:07
So the real impact on European sales in the States from this agreement in Scotland still has to be refined. One cannot make definitive statements yet, because it’s not complete. There are these negotiations at the margins. But what was most outstanding and of course what impressed observers of all political stripes by the way, not just observers who are anti-American or pro-American. No, no.

All observers came to one conclusion. It was, as you say, a capitulation. To put it in other terms, it was an enormous humiliation for Europe. Von der Leyen went to Scotland, cap in hand, as more or less a beggar without any, not negotiating from strength, as I like to say these days. On the contrary, she’s negotiating from weakness and from the fear that the failure to reach an agreement would end in a tariff war that could cost Europe five million jobs.

So she was under enormous pressure to ingratiate herself with a man whom she knows despises her. Trump has never made that a secret. And she came away with something that isn’t too terrible. That’s the consensus, again, of observers here in Europe. It’s not too terrible, but it’s bad and it’s particularly bad for the way it was reached, because it demonstrated that there is no leverage from the European side.

4:40
But that is one side of the story. The other side of discussion was the commitment by Europe to purchase 650 billion dollars in American hydrocarbons, that is, liquefied natural gas and petroleum, over the next three years. That is potentially a far bigger impact on Europe from this whole tariff discussion, because it locks in the non-competitive situation of European wares on world markets. The single biggest factor in the deindustrialization of Germany that has gone on for the last three years at least, when the Nord Stream pipelines were destroyed, when Europe swore off buying more Russian pipeline gas and cheap oil. That was a decisive factor making the German economy uncompetitive.

5:47
It was a decisive factor in whole sectors of industry shutting down completely, those sectors that were highly dependent on cheap energy, like glass manufacturing, for example. And fertilizers, of course. These were hit enormously. And the fertilizers being hit, of course, has passed along to consumers in higher prices for all fresh produce, which is produced with less efficiency, with lower yields when the fertilizers are used more sparingly because it’s more expensive.

So this aspect is not in the featured news, when it deserves to be. As I said, it locks in the uncompetitive status of European products on world markets. Now, can that figure be reached? That is another question. Will they actually reach it? Will they actually achieve that over the three-year period?

These are quite big question marks. The United States now exports 80 billion dollars a year of hydrocarbons to Europe. To go from there to 215 billion dollars a year is a big stretch, particularly since it’s not obvious that America has the production capacity to fill orders should they come in. So that is all debatable.

But if it were to be exercised, if in some way the United States could achieve these exports and Europe could absorb them, that will be a big dent in the European economies. And Europeans, the middle-of-the-road supporters of Atlanticism, had been searching hard to explain why they were so disadvantaged in the negotiations with Trump, how he was able to vanquish and have von der Leyen kneeling before him and kissing the ring. This is something that they’re debating. The Belgian leading French-speaking newspaper, “Le Soir”, blames the problem on Europe’s over-dependence on exports to drive economic growth. That is not a convincing argument to anyone who is aware of global trade, since that is precisely the formula that China has used and continues to use so successfully to achieve its enormous growth, presently 5% per annum, whereas in the first quarter of ’25, the Europeans were displaying great pleasure to have 0.1% GDP growth.

Diesen: 8:33
Well, isn’t the real dilemma of the European Union then not that they’re dependent on foreign trade, but that they’re excessively dependent on the United States as a partner? Because it seems as if the EU wants to have a reliable dependency on the United States as it had in previous decades. And in order to do this, they have to win over the … I call it the good will or affection of America by doing as they’re told, which includes reducing their economic ties with countries such as Russia, China, Iran, and well, American adversaries. But by trying to win over the love of Washington, they isolate themselves more in the world and become more dependent on the United States.

9:25
So is this, by committing themselves solely to the US, will this strengthen the relationship with Washington, or will it undermine it by giving the Americans too much leverage in this partnership?

Doctorow:
If “strengthen” means for both parties, of course not. Strengthen the American leverage over Europe, definitely. The question is why did Europe submit to this? Did it have to? What was the overriding consideration?

I think there is a certain understanding among many observers that the driving force was defense. And they hope that by staying close to Trump, by submitting to his will, they could maintain an ongoing conversation with him and persuade him to do what they want most of all, which is to continue to support Ukraine in its war on Russia, because they have made that, arbitrarily they have made that an existential threat to themselves for the sake of the leadership staying in power. That is to say, they’re singing and dancing and moving from the story of last three years that “Russia has to be defeated” to the story of the present, which is “We have to stay united. We need the present leadership in power because this is the only way that we can rearm Europe and prepare for a war with Russia that may take place as early as 2029.”

That is the current story that the present leadership in 25 out of 27 countries of the EU is putting forward to the press, to the public at large, as their re-election bid and as their bid for support. This is based on the same delusion that we’ve seen in their understanding of the Russia-Ukraine war from the beginning. The delusion here is that they can persuade Mr. Trump of anything. They can’t.

And they’re listening to what he says, which is a terrible mistake. Mr. Trump has nothing but contempt for the press. He has nothing but contempt for most of the European leadership. He knows that they are weak, that they are cowardly, they are conformist, and that they will be bullied.

And that is essentially what he is. He is a bully. He’s a bully who is successful at this trick. And he is telling them one thing and doing something else. What he’s doing is stopping supplies to Ukraine.

What he’s doing– this is something we can get into– is probably aiding and abetting the eviction of Zelensky from office and his replacement by somebody who is capable of negotiating a peace treaty with the Russians. So they are going to be bitterly disappointed. They’ve made a bet, they have allowed themselves to be humiliated, for the sake of continuing a war with American help, which will not happen.

Diesen: 12:43
Yeah, this is a comment I made all the way back in Munich when Vance gave this speech. And I was making the point that the Europeans’ efforts to show their loyalty to the United States instead of being rewarded, I think not just Trump, but at some general level across the political class, they’re getting some contempt for the Europeans for the, well, their spinelessness or the inability to stand up for their own interests.

So, and again, this is something I’ve heard from many people as well, so the assumption here is you make a deal, a humiliating deal, a bit of subordination and then somehow this would be rewarded by the United States locking in its presence in Europe. But we also had the Ukrainians making the same assumption with this minerals deal. If we just sign this deal, then Trump will be locked into the Ukraine conflict. But a counter-argument would be then that he can come home to his own people and say, “Look, I got our money back. Now we can leave.” I mean, do you see this? You said they make a mistake by trusting that he will stay there. But how do you see Trump’s commitment to Europe in the months to come, because he has been making a lot more aggressive rhetoric towards the Russians. Is this essentially what the Europeans bought themselves with this horrible trade agreement?

Doctorow: 14:17
Well, he keeps everybody guessing, including those who have bet the House on the unsuccessful relationship with Trump by the handshake agreement this past weekend in Scotland. He keeps them all guessing. Even yesterday, there was this expression of horror that was picked up by major media here in Western Europe that Trump was about to do a deal, cut a deal with Vladimir Putin, that would be vastly destructive of all the ambitions of the EU. I don’t think he’s going to cut such a deal. I don’t think that he has anything to offer the Russians that could persuade them to yield in any way on their conduct of the war, when the victory on the ground is so close to being achieved.

So that is also nonsense. But they are uncertain. The Europeans here are hoping that they have him on line and can persuade him by pointing to these terrible acts of bombing that the Russians are committing now in Kiev and elsewhere. They can persuade him using Melanie perhaps, all kinds of levers that they believe, want to believe, can get Trump to change his mind in the hope that he is not a serious man, that he does not have long-term vision, and that he can be changed from one day to the next by somebody whispering in his ear. That is all false, completely false.

Nonetheless, it persists as a widespread notion of who Mr. Trump is, here in Western Europe. And then you have the special relationship with Keir Starmer, which would seem to demonstrate the validity of such assumptions about Trump. But also, Starmer went to Scotland. Trump didn’t come down to London.

16:33
He was also a supplicant, and the relationship there with the British, they have the most-favored tariff deal out of all countries with the United States at present with a 10% tariff. And they’re gloating over that. But they still have 50% tariffs on steel, which were a very important export product to the United States. And so the British have been given the hope that they have a favored position with the United States as against Europe. But it can change at any moment.

And I think that, again, looking at politics, who stands where? Mr. Starmer, head of the Labor Party, which is to the left, shall we say, of Mr. Trump’s politics. I don’t think he enjoys real respect.

Trump has it his way. And he gets a meeting with the king, that’s fine. He likes pomp and circumstance. But I don’t think that he is genuinely influenced in making policy on these superficial acts one way or another with this or that state leader. He has his own determination to self-impose sanctions on the United States by way of tariffs for the sake of re-industrializing the United States. And I don’t think it’s a vain proposal.

Diesen: 18:00
No, but some of these threats, though, they seem to become actions. Well, I’m thinking then especially what Trump is doing with the Indians, that is putting this additional tariffs on and justifying it by their trade with the Russians. And this is why I was wondering as well, these 10 days, which he has put on, well, it was 15, now it’s 10. Obviously, this could become another 50 again.

So these deadlines doesn’t necessarily have to mean anything, but it does beg the question why he would make himself vulnerable in terms of putting these deadlines to begin with. What is the thought process here? What is it that he’s trying to achieve? And not if, when Russia predictably ignores this, what will happen on day 10?

Doctorow: 18:52
Well, let’s, there’s speculation about day 11. But let me add to the complexity of the analysis, by bringing in what Russians are talking about on their talk shows. I think it’s a different perspective from what is being said by any of my peers in the United States and Western Europe. And that is: why the 10 days, what is it all about? It’s because 50 days, inconveniently, inconveniently expires on September 3rd.

And that is much too close to the celebration of the end of the World War II in the Pacific, which will be marked by the visit of heads of state from all over the place in Beijing. Putin will be there, I think 20, 30 or more heads of state from around the world will be there. And Mr. Trump wants to be there. He wants to have his face-to-face meeting with Xi during that time.

And possibly he could also have this, use that to have a face-to-face meeting with Putin. So I think in consideration or reconsideration of how inconvenient the September 3rd closing was in light of the new aspiration to meet with Xi in Beijing, which is supported by a number of other things, namely his refusal to allow the president of Taiwan to visit New York. I think their whole visit to the States was scrubbed with the intent to avoid any embarrassing conflict with the Chinese that would interfere with his being invited to the festivities in Beijing. So with that in mind, there’s a different focus entirely on what his deadlines are about. There’s more than one consideration when he sets these deadlines.

Diesen: 20:57
When we look though at the Europeans, there is a strange development. That is, they seem to solely focus on foreign policy these days. This is as you mentioned with Starmer, this is seemingly especially the case in the UK, where he spends very little time on domestic issues. I guess you can say the same about Macron. And again, this trade deal as well seems to sacrifice a lot of domestic priorities, that is to develop an economy, deal with social issues.

All of this is being, well, reduced in priority in order to instead buy some favor with the Americans to, again, for foreign policy objectives, no matter how foolish they might be, such as continuing the war in Ukraine. But how long do you think this can go on for the Europeans? Because this kind of doubles down on the disaster of first cutting themselves off from Russian energy and then of course destroying, the destruction of Nord Stream. Did you see the political instability permitting such an agreement to be passed, or not really?

Doctorow: 22:12
Well, one thing I wanted to bring up is what we mean when we say “Europeans” and who makes European policy. I’ve been rereading my materials going back to 2015 in preparation for the volume three of my memoirs.

And I was very focused on Germany in 2015, spoke about it at several conferences, and wrote about it in what I consider to be a very important policy analysis that was published in comparative politics of Megimo, the Russian university that prepares diplomats. What I was saying then is the European policy is made in [Berlin], And this is a well-kept secret. In 2015, just as in 2025, all the top posts in the European institutions are German designated. They were appointed by Germans. And they have appointed in this present case, von der Leyen has appointed people like Kallas, people from Lithuania, people from Poland who are under her thumb.

23:33
They are representing small countries, insignificant weight compared to the 450 million population of the EU. They are often people with– intellectual lightweights like Kallas who can be dominated by a strong and willful personality like von der Leyen. And that is to say, the commissioner, the head of the president of the commission, the head of the parliament, the president of the parliament, yes she’s Italian, but she’s appointed by the majority which is dominated by the European People’s Party which is dominated by the Christian Democrats. It all goes, but the strings all go back to Berlin, just as they did in 2015 when Junker was there. Yes of course, he was a Luxembourger, but he was a weak man who was … nominated and supported by Merkel, because she knew she could controll him, because there were scandals around, just as Tusk at that time.

24:37
He was made the president of the European Council. Tusk, who could hardly speak English, but spoke very good German by the way, was– she appointed him. And nobody bothered to think about what the German connection was there. He was under her thumb. So that was how it was in 2015. That’s how it is today.

And just as– the only thing that’s changed is that Europe, is that Germans today have come out behind, from behind the apron strings of EU institutions and are saying openly that they want to become, for example, the main military force in Europe. So the, who is Europe? Europe is Germany. Mr. Merz is the decisive voice on whether the tariffs agreed by von der Leyen will go through. And many other policy decisions. Your question about why foreign policy? That’s what you do when you’re losing and you can’t control domestic policy. You’re speaking about very unpopular leaders.

25:45
Keir Starmer has lost control of the Labour Party on domestic issues. He had a very severe setback when his reforms on support of the needy, of the wealth, of the benefits reforms were rejected by his own party and watered down to almost nil where they hoped to save a lot of money in the budget. Starmer on domestic issues is very weak. Therefore he can only hope to shine on international issues where nobody can say much.

The same is true of Macron. His domestic standing is negligible. He has very little popular support. And so he goes trotting around the globe, speaking like Mr. France and getting the press to listen to him. This is normal politics of the losing side.

Diesen: 26:46
What does it say about the future of the European Union though? Because not only was this a terrible agreement being made, but as you suggested before, the optics wasn’t great either. That is, von der Leyen coming to Trump’s golf course in Scotland. And well, the general benefit, I guess, or attractiveness of the European Union to begin with has always been this collective bargaining power, that they can negotiate from a position of strength. With obviously the US being the most important partner; that you can have some equality between Europe and the US as opposed to having 27 member states stand on their own.

But if we look back in the ’90s, early 2000s, this was the main selling point of the European Union as well. That is, it could set this asymmetrical interdependence with its neighborhood in the wider world. That is, when the EU sat down to negotiate trade with another state, Moldova or anyone, then the EU could dictate all the terms and not only having a favorable economic agreement, but they can also translate this into political power. So they set political conditions for trade, which became a form of external governance, which is why many people in academia refer to the EU as a regulatory power or regulatory superpower. If you want to trade with us, you have to follow our rules.

28:12
And this imperial model is maybe a bit over the top, but nonetheless, what will happen to the EU now? Because there is no equality with the US. The EU has … kissed the ring of Trump and subordinated itself and also with the rest of the world as the economic power of the EU continues to decline, as its leaders look more and more incompetent and corrupt and unable to reach proper agreements, this whole geopolitical EU, It seems to become more of a burden. If you’re Germany, you want to have good trade deal with the Chinese, you don’t bring the EU along because they will come with their geopolitical objective, which means to insult the Chinese instead. So, well, what does this say about the future of the European Union? Is this club, you know, is this a death sentence or is it, you know, expiring? How are you reading it? It’s not a good sign at least, I would say.

Doctorow: 29:17
To relax, I often turn on YouTube and just see what they’re proposing to look at. And mixed in with the geopolitical videos, they have a lot of animal videos, particularly dogs.

I think about one of these little videos which has a German shepherd and a golden retriever. They’re in the middle of a maze, And the golden retriever is saying, “We’re doomed.” Europe is doomed. The present configuration is doomed. This cannot continue.

They are driving down the welfare of people directly in measurable ways. As I’ve written recently, the rejuggling of the Belgian budget, which the new Flemish-dominated federal government has put into place, takes away benefits from what has been outstanding medical services, severe cuts. This is typical. The cuts are being made to make room for the burgeoning re-armament program, which is all a result of a dead wrong foreign policy. I’m just wondering when this will come out and we will have demonstrations similar to what we saw in Kiev a week ago.

31:03
This cannot go on forever. It defies gravity that the national leaderships in Belgium and in 25 out of 27 other member states of the European Union are working directly against the interests of the people who voted them into office. That is becoming more and more apparent as the budgets are revised to take away benefits for the sake of raising arms manufacturing, for the purpose of fighting a war which is unnecessary, which is driven by the same personal ambition as Mr. Netanyahu and his war in Gaza. That is called out by the Western press now openly.

This is not just a supposition of people like you and me. It is accepted as mainstream that Netanyahu is fighting a war to keep himself from going to court and prison. I say the same thing about all of the European leaders. They are pushing re-armament to avoid being put out in the street where they belong, because the budgets that they are submitting to the member states are anti-popular, they are against the people. It cannot go on, and so I agree with that … golden retriever: we’re doomed.

Diesen: 32:34
If, well, if you’re going to look at how this will affect Europe, then obviously, given that the main purpose of this trade agreement was to tie the Americans in and commit them to Project Ukraine. But also a lot of, as you said, a lot of the political elites there, they see their hold on to power that is in Brussels, dependent on the continuation of the Ukraine war again.

Continuation of Ukraine war is necessary to keep America in Europe, it’s necessary to keep these political elites in power. But beyond that, we also see that not just the European Union, but the European member states bet a lot of political legitimacy on defeating Russia. And not just the political legitimacy, the entire economy has been thrown into this and sacrificed. So what happens when the Ukraine war is eventually lost? And well, it depends what a defeat looks like, but what the Europeans were promising, they’re destroying Russia and having the Ukraine join NATO, all of this obviously is not going to happen.

33:59
And I think that’s an important question now, that Zelensky looks as if he is somewhat in a weaker position. He’s no longer the reincarnation of Churchill, apparently. And suddenly the Europeans, you know, a few weeks ago, it was Russian propaganda to say that he was an authoritarian. Now, suddenly, it’s permitted. So what do you see happening with Zelensky and Ukraine? How does this affect Europe once we eventually lose this war?

Doctorow: 34:35
It’s permitted not just to YouTube channels, it’s permitted to the “Financial Times”. They use that word in a headline of an article dealing with the new law stripping the anti-corruption agencies of their independence. He is damaged goods now. And he’s damaged goods in the Anglo-Saxon press in particular, on both sides of the Atlantic. Now, the question that I’ve had is: who was behind the enabling of the demonstrations that took place, the mass demonstrations that took place in Kiev and in other major cities in Ukraine over the course of several days, in the past week, against the law, which ultimately ended in the revocation of the new law and restoration of what is said to be the independence of these agencies.

35:36
The speculation, and again, I will share with your audience what the Russians are saying about this. They’re saying that we can expect in the immediate future, very scandalous trials. Already yesterday’s indication [was] that the newly installed prime minister was about to be charged with corrupt practices for having used together with Yermak, the head of the presidential administration, Ukrainian airplanes which are only to be used for state purposes. She as the prime minister has the right to use it. Yermak didn’t.

It was pretty obvious that she was doing the man who was behind her, who protects her, Mr. Yermak, she was doing this trip with him for his benefit, not for her own. So that’s the first shoe to fall. There are going to be some very big accusations made in the next few weeks against people in the close entourage of Zelensky and probably of Zelensky himself.

36:53
We are now in the last stages of Zelensky’s time in office. The question is who is pushing this most? Is it Britain with the MI6 who helped arrange that the Ukrainian police and military would not attack the demonstrators? Or was it the CIA?

There are two. These are now, you could say in the past they were one and the same, but not any more, because the United States and Britain have parted ways on the Ukraine war. For the Brits to have done this, it would be to replace Zelensky probably with Zaluzhny. Let’s remember for the last year and a half Zaluzhny, who was the head of the armed forces of Ukraine for several years and who was viewed by Americans in particular as being a good candidate to replace Zelensky, was moved out of Kiev and sent off into exile to London precisely so that to avoid that eventuality, that he would be on the inside, being able to muster support if the West nodded to him as the one to succeed Zelensky.

38:16
Well, he’s been biding his time in London. He’s been learning English, because he hardly could say two words when he arrived there. And he got there because he had said at the time what was true, how badly the Ukrainians were losing the war. And that was unacceptable to Zelensky. Now, that is one possibility. Another candidate, one that I call out on the American side is a very different story by saying Zaluzhny would be put in if the intent was to continue the war and to have somebody who has more credibility with American and West European suppliers of arms to Ukraine, because he is a genuine military person, and his orders would not be for PR stunts like Zelensky’s were, but having some genuine military foundation. Now, the other I’m saying is the Americans probably have a different game.

If they were behind this, then it is probably to install somebody like Umerov, who is now the leader of negotiations in Istanbul. Umerov is a civilian. Umerov is a Crimean Tatar, a Muslim by the way, probably speaks some Arabic, some Turkish, it would be logical. He has been a leading personality in Ukrainian meetings with the Gulf States.

39:45
More importantly for the United States, he’s their boy. When he was in secondary school, he spent a year in the United States living with an American family. When he went back, finished his higher education, became a successful businessman in high tech area, made a lot of money, he established fellowships for Ukrainians at Stanford University. Why Stanford University? Why United States? So he has an American connection, which is always looked upon. He doesn’t have an American wife, but you can’t get everything.

40:21
So he would suit the Americans very nicely as a stand-in and it is reasonable to assume that he could and would negotiate a peace treaty with the Russians, not on the ridiculous basis of Russian capitulation, but something close to Russian demands.

Diesen: 40:41
Yeah, this is interesting though. Of course, who Zelensky is replaced with will be a good indication of what’s intended for Ukraine to go. That is, is it continuing the war or not?

But yeah, I remember back in the days when it looked as if Zelensky was on very shaky grounds and I thought that he might be going away and then instead of course he shipped Zaluzhny to London which is an interesting thing. So I guess Zelensky would, well people like Aristović have said he will probably leave. I mean, I would also expect him to go to Miami or the south of France, but there will be a lot of pressure in the future to have him return to Ukraine. He made himself a lot of enemies and it wouldn’t be very difficult to put in a criminal case against him. However, how do you see, as I guess my last question, how do you see the war progressing from here though?

Is peace agreement now completely off the table or will it depend on who comes after Zelensky? Because it seems as if it would be possible to get an agreement on Ukraine’s neutrality that is going back to Istanbul. The problem is the plus, Istanbul plus the territorial concessions, especially humiliating would be to have a recognition of territories which aren’t even seized by Russia yet, that is of the four regions. But as Russia progresses on the territory, that humiliation wouldn’t it be reduced. That is the Russians are controlling more and more territory.

In other words, the gap between what they demand and what they already have is reduced. Do you see any possibility of anyone in Ukraine accepting these terms? Because you said they’re quite draconian. It’s, you know, I’ll be the first to say that Russians have some very high demands upon Ukraine.

Doctorow: 42:59
They are especially high demands when you’re demanding a concessionary territory that you haven’t even won on the battlefield. I think that problem will be solved before September. I think it’s entirely to be envisaged that Russia will sweep to the Dnieper. Chasov Yar was fought over for more than six weeks, seven weeks. This is a logistics center that was highly contested, very well armed, protected, fortified, and Russians finally overran it in the last few days. The next big center is in Pakrovsk, which the Russians call Krasnoyarsk, that is now facing Russian troops on the outskirts of the city. This has been going on for months, of course, this progress.

43:58
The Russians draw it out because they have wanted to avoid close-contact fighting, which can be very expensive in human life for both sides. They’ve mostly been conducting their war on Pakrovsk with aerial bombing, artillery bombing, and so forth, which costs them very little in lost soldiers and officers, but it’s quite devastating to the Ukrainian side. Once they take Pakrovsk, it’s a clean sweep across to the Dniepr. And so I think that if they take Pakrovsk in the next few weeks, they will take the whole of Donetsk and possibly Zaporizhzhye by September. And then the Russians can be generous in the terms of a settlement, because they will not have to haggle over taking territory that they didn’t win on the ground.

45:04
So that would be a good time to look for a settlement. Again, coming close to Mr. Trump’s original deadline of first days of September, in anticipation of the general meeting of world powers in Beijing to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the end of the war in the Pacific. I think these things come together. And so I would look for a change of leadership in Kiev within that timeframe, engineered either by the United States or by the Brits, depending on – now that will depend whether a peace treaty can be negotiated. But on the ground, the Russians will have gotten what they want.

Diesen: 45:53
Yeah, it looks, yeah, I think people– often you look at the defensive lines, obviously it’s not much west of Pakrovsk, but as you pointed out in this war especially, the logistics is really important and these logistics centers of Chasuviar, Kopiansk is what we can put in this. And Pakrovsk I think will be very important to crack the final stretch towards the Dnieper. So–

Well, thank you as always. It’s always a great pleasure to get your insights on this. So thanks again. And for people who want to follow you, you have your Substack. And of course, I’ll leave a link to your book, anywhere else people should look for you?

Doctorow:
No, no, that sums it up. If they look at the substack, just look at the last few issues because I’m particularly proud of, as I say, of 2015, which was quite a remarkable year for understanding who is who in Europe.

Diesen: 47:03
Oh, thanks again.

Doctorow:
All right.

Interview with Professor Glenn Diesen:  Europe is doomed, Regime change in Kiev

This 47 minute discussion with Professor Diesen was concentrated on the two interrelated issues in the headline.

Europe is doomed because 25 of the 27 heads of government of the European Member States presently have no interest in the prosperity and wellbeing of their citizens and are interested only in holding on to power, for which purpose maintaining support for Ukraine in its war with Russia and rearming Europe in preparation for a NATO-Russia war in 2029 are their top priority. Europe’s capitulation to Trump over tariffs may be explained by the hope it would keep Trump on side over further aid to Ukraine.  This, of course, is utterly delusional, since Trump has clearly shown he wants the USA to exit that war as soon as possible without any regard for Europe’s wishes.

Regime change in Kiev is coming soon. Thanks to the scandal over a new law that stripped the anti-corruption agencies in Ukraine of their independence, Zelensky lost credibility both in the USA and in Europe. Major media now speak of him as authoritarian, meaning anti-democratic. The wave of protests in Kiev and other major Ukrainian cities was unprecedented in the three years of war and suggests to me the active intervention of one or another Western power to bring down Zelensky and achieve regime change.  The question of the day: was it the Brits, who surely would like to install as president General Zaluzhny, former commander in chief of the Ukrainian armed forces, who has been serving as Ukrainian ambassador to the UK these past 18 months.  Zaluzhny as president would mean continuation of the war under the direction of someone who actually understands military strategy as opposed to the PR driven direction of the armed forces from Zelensky.  For their part, the Americans surely would favor as successor Zelensky Umerov, the current head of the Ukrainian negotiating team in talks with the Russians in Istanbul.  Umerov is a civilian who made a fortune in high tech commerce and who has a clear connection to the USA going back to his secondary school year spent in America.  Umerov, we may assume, could negotiate a peace with the Russians if he were his own man, not a subordinate to Zelensky as he is presently.

©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025

Interview with Professor Glenn Diesen:  Europe is doomed, Regime change in Kiev

This 47 minute discussion with Professor Diesen was concentrated on the two interrelated issues in the headline.

Europe is doomed because 25 of the 27 heads of government of the European Member States presently have no interest in the prosperity and wellbeing of their citizens and are interested only in holding on to power, for which purpose maintaining support for Ukraine in its war with Russia and rearming Europe in preparation for a NATO-Russia war in 2029 are their top priority. Europe’s capitulation to Trump over tariffs may be explained by the hope it would keep Trump on side over further aid to Ukraine.  This, of course, is utterly delusional, since Trump has clearly shown he wants the USA to exit that war as soon as possible without any regard for Europe’s wishes.

Regime change in Kiev is coming soon. Thanks to the scandal over a new law that stripped the anti-corruption agencies in Ukraine of their independence, Zelensky lost credibility both in the USA and in Europe. Major media now speak of him as authoritarian, meaning anti-democratic. The wave of protests in Kiev and other major Ukrainian cities was unprecedented in the three years of war and suggests to me the active intervention of one or another Western power to bring down Zelensky and achieve regime change.  The question of the day: was it the Brits, who surely would like to install as president General Zaluzhny, former commander in chief of the Ukrainian armed forces, who has been serving as Ukrainian ambassador to the UK these past 18 months.  Zaluzhny as president would mean continuation of the war under the direction of someone who actually understands military strategy as opposed to the PR driven direction of the armed forces from Zelensky.  For their part, the Americans surely would favor as successor Zelensky Umerov, the current head of the Ukrainian negotiating team in talks with the Russians in Istanbul.  Umerov is a civilian who made a fortune in high tech commerce and who has a clear connection to the USA going back to his secondary school year spent in America.  Umerov, we may assume, could negotiate a peace with the Russians if he were his own man, not a subordinate to Zelensky as he is presently.

©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025

Transcript of ‘Judging Freedom,’ 30 July

Transcription submitted by a reader

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1Bud26z87M

Napolitano: 0:34
Hi, everyone. Judge Andrew Napolitano here for “Judging Freedom”. Today is Wednesday, July 30th, 2025. Professor Gilbert Doctorow will be here with us in just a moment on “The European Union capitulates to Trump”. What’s behind it?

But first this. [commercial message]

2:01
Professor Doctorow, good day to you, my dear friend. Thank you very much for joining me today. Thanks for accommodating my schedule. What has been the general reaction amongst European leaders and European media to the announcement by Ursula von der Leyen and Donald Trump the other day about this agreement for 15% tariffs for everything the EU wants to sell in the US?

Gilbert Doctorow, PhD:
I don’t know of anyone who was rejoicing on that here in Europe. On the contrary, the consensus is that this is a tragic moment for Europe, that this will cost them dearly in future investments in manufacturing, which will now be directed to the United States by their local manufacturers here, because it is the only way for them to save their market share in the States under the new regime of US duties. So jobs will move to the States, jobs will be lost here, and there is the understanding that the very low growth, or negative growth in some countries, that has prevailed in Europe for the last two to three years will continue indefinitely when this new system is applied. The question is how do you explain the capitulation?

3:33
I think most everyone understands that von der Leyen was kissing Trump’s ring, bending the knee, and that Europe was a supplicant and not an equal partner in negotiations.

Napolitano:
Some of your colleagues on this show have criticized the agreement, arguing as you did, but in addition, we can’t even read it because it’s not even been reduced to writing. Is that true? Have they just agreed on the 15% and nothing has been reduced to writing yet?

Doctorow:
There is nothing more than a handshake as far as we know. But that is sufficient for these purposes because there [is] a lot of detail work that has to be done. This is not assumed to be the comprehensive and complete agreement.

There will be some discussions at the margins. For example, over the fate of automobiles, will they be at the 25% or indeed at 15%, such as liquor, which was not a subject of agreement during that meeting in Scotland. So there are these little bits and pieces along the way, but the general understanding is a 15 percent blanket tariff on all European wares. That may be accepted as a solid fact, not as a speculation.

Napolitano:
Back to what you said a few minutes ago, I suppose you could manufacture a Mercedes-Benz automobile in Tennessee, but you can’t make French champagne in New Jersey. So some of the goods and products unique to Europe cannot be put together here. Impossible.

Doctorow: 5:21
Yes, that’s true. So they will forego some of their sales volume in products like champagne or fine wines. That is a given. And that is part of what some critics say is wrong with the European economy that has been very dependent on exports for future growth. This was precisely the line of critique in the leading Belgian French-speaking newspaper, Le Soir, a couple of days ago. They’re looking for explanations. How was it that we were so weak in these negotiations? Of course, that logic doesn’t hold up when you consider that China is another part of the world where exports have driven growth.

6:08
And they record five percent GDP annual growth, not 0.1 percent as the Europeans are now boasting about the first quarter results in 2025. So that is an excuse that this paper, that people like this paper, who are supporters of the status quo in Europe, are exploring to explain what went wrong. But in their discussion, there is a fact which really is evident when you look at it closely, and that is they capitulated to Trump on the trade agreement because they’re hoping to keep him in play. They’re hoping that they can agree with Trump on further support to Ukraine, which is the leading issue of all of the heads of state and prime ministers in Europe.

Napollitano:
I want to get into that in some depth with you, but before we do, one or two more questions about the Trump-Von der Leyen agreement. What’s the next step for the agreement? I mean, is this it, or do the French who’ve condemned it and the Germans who’ve condemned it have the ability to veto or modify or create carve-outs?

Doctorow:
Well, they do. This is not just on the say-so of von der Leyen that a treaty is agreed and is imposed on all the 27 member states. It has to go through parliament.

It requires a ratification. And that is going to take a lot of negotiation within Europe. Considering that the largest economy in Europe, Germany, headed by a defeatist leader in terms of the tarif war, but a bold leader in terms of the future war with Russia, considering his role, how he and his party, the Christian Democrats, are leaders of the European People’s Party, which is the most important party in the European Parliament. And he, Merz, has come out two days ago saying that this is, yes, it’s a black day for Europe, but, but, but … but this is the best that we could get. That assumes that the Germans will vote for the deal.

8:37
The French are going to put up a lot of resistance. Let’s remember that the major economies are the ones that are most interested in the nature of the agreement with the States because they have the biggest trade flows with the States. The smaller countries, the smaller economies here are, well, let’s say, bystanders. They are not going to have a decisive say. They will follow what they are told to do by the likes of Germany.

So the French are the single biggest points of resistance to the agreement that von der Leyen has set down, not just the the so-called far right of Marine Le Pen, who instantly came out condemning this, but even the centrist Bayrou, the prime minister installed by Macron to manage the difficulties he has with his parliament, he came out against it as well.

9:38
So the French are going to dig in their deals and they will certainly demand concessions, though I doubt that they will overturn the agreement that von der Leyen reached, because so many other countries will follow Germany’s lead.

Napolitano:
Is it a simple majority vote in the European Parliament? Is it country by country? Is it two-thirds? How does it work?

Doctorow:
No, to my knowledge it would be a majority vote.

Napolitano:
All right, and you’re of the view that not withstanding this disenchantment for other reasons, which we’ll get into presently, this will likely be ratified.

Doctorow:
I think it will be. There will be modifications.

Napolitano:
Is she popular, von der Leyen, or is she not popular? That’s an inartful question. Is she popular with the folks in the streets? Is she popular with elites?

Doctorow:
No, I think it’s with elites. And “popular” is not an adjective I would apply here. Respected, willing to accept her judgment. However, let’s remember from the last several weeks, she was under fierce challenge in the parliament, and this was covered in the daily news. So the broader public, and even among elites, they are aware that she has opposition for the way she has managed the parliament and the European institutions. So she doesn’t have a free ride any more. Her situation is more tenuous than it was before the challenge to the way she negotiated the covid vaccine contracts.

11:14
That has put her in some jeopardy. And I think the broad public is aware of that, though it has other problems to worry about and isn’t very concerned about Madame van der Leyen.

Napolitano:
I mean, let’s just suppose, this may be fantastical, but let’s just suppose Marie Le Pen becomes the President of France. What can she do, if anything, to get out of this?

Doctorow:
Well, let’s look first as what von der Leyen is doing to get us into this. She has appointed the commissioners, all of whom, or a large majority of the important or key positions, she’s assigned to the non-entity countries, the Baltics and other East European countries, which are under German sway. She has appointed people who are intellectually inferior in the expectation that she could dominate them, and that has turned out to be true. Now, if Marine Le Pen came in, all of these people would be thrown out, and you might have a chance of seeing competent people who represent the 450 million people, a population of the European Union, and not people like Kallas, who comes from a country with one million population, who are drawing Europe around by the nose for the sake of their anti-Russian positions. So everything could change in policies, because the policies now are made by those who are under the direct instruction and control of von der Leyen.

Anyone who replaces her will certainly not enjoy that position of strength to appoint all of the commissioners and to control the whole of European policy the way von der Leyen has in the last several years.

Napolitano: 13:04
Okay, got it. But if the agreement with Trump is reduced to writing and ratified, and if France rebels, there’s nothing much they could do about it, right? This is part of the treaty that created the EU. They’re subject to this, or am I wrong?

Doctorow:
No, you’re right. But again, there is something here that we have to call out. There are parts of this agreement which are utterly unenforceable and which are probably the most damaging to the European economy.

Napolitano:
What are they?

Doctorow:
Not the 15 percent tariff, but the obligation to buy 650 billion dollars of American energy. That is the single biggest factor weighing on the weak European economies, starting with the German economy.

This, the dependence on liquefied natural gas at world prices, which has been the case ever since the destruction of the North Stream pipelines and the decisions in Parliament to phase out as quickly as possible use of Russian energy supplies — that has been the destructive factor in European economies more than this 15 percent tariff can possibly be. And the obligation to buy this, well, an obligation. What kind of obligations did the Chinese have in previous agreements with the United States? They never were effected.

14:34
And I doubt that this one ever will be carried out because the people who have signed onto it will not be in office.

Napolitano:
Got it. I don’t want to put you out on a limb, but which is the greater threat to European economic stability? Russia or the United States?

Doctorow:
At this point it’s the United States. To anyone with eyes to see what Mr. Trump has just done, the complete humiliation of Europe, the imposition of tariffs and purchase obligations from the United States, that is destructive of the European economy. It is not the act of a friend. And in that context, you have to ask, well, why are they going along with this? And there you have to look for the small print.

15:26
And is I said, even in the “Soir” editorial, it was, if you looked closely at the text, you found the answer. The answer is to keep up relations with Trump. And why do they want to keep up relations with Trump? In order to rope him in to continue American support for the Ukrainians in the war with Russia. This is the big, idee fixe of von der Leyen and her colleagues in the European institutions.

And it is not an economic concern. They don’t give a damn about the welfare of the broad populations in European countries. Their concern is their own holding onto power, which is made possible by this war with Russia because it gives them reason.

Napolitano:
Is it a coincidence that while all this is going on, France has announced a recognition of the state of Palestine and Great Britain with a little bit of wiggle room has announced that it is likely to do so by September.

Doctorow: 16:39
These are acts of impotence. They are giving Mr. Trump the finger in their pocket, which is what, which is a very common–

Napolitano:
In other words, giving him the finger and he can’t see them doing it.

Doctorow:
Exactly right.

Napolitano:
There’s a case in New Jersey where a guy gave a finger to the police. Oh, the prosecution went on for years. The Supreme Court said it was protected speech, but it was not in his pocket.

Doctorow:
Well, this is a Russian expression, by the way. So you see, they do have a sense of humor. It is a sign of impotence. They cannot say this openly. They are defying Trump. That’s what this recognition of the Palestine state is all about. It will change nothing, but it is holding up Trump to general opprobrium and criticism.

Napolitano: 17:36
Is this Epstein saga resonating in Europe? I mean, I was there for the past week and a half and talking to all kinds of folks, academics, elites, professionals, longtime friends, cab drivers. It wasn’t what Tulsi Gabbard was revealing. It was Epstein, Epstein, Epstein. Is it the same in Northern Europe where you are?

Doctorow:
Oh yes, and that’s certainly the Epstein story, it’s on the front page every day, and Ghislaine Maxwell’s picture is in the newspapers.

But the emphasis, I think, is on one feature which is also covered in the States The aspect of it that is watched most closely in European papers is what this says about the … MAGA. Are they a genuine revolt? Is there some loss of strength, political strength by Trump? That is the angle that interests them most, not the details of pedophilia or whatever. That side of it is not in the front pages.

Napolitano:
How close to the end of his days in office is President Zelensky?

Doctorow: 18:57
I think it’s very close, and I think he’s being prepared for eviction by the United States. And I say that with reference to very specific events that I followed from an angle I don’t see other people covering, strange to say.

The events that persuade me that Zelensky is on the way out have been the demonstrations in Kiev and other major cities around Ukraine last week, and these were as many as 10,000 demonstrators out on the streets, against the newly-passed law that stripped the anti-corruption agencies of their independence. That, the fact that everyone speaks about this having happened is if it were a natural thing. It’s not the least bit natural. Everyone is ignoring the authoritarian, dictatorial exercise of power by Zelensky and his immediate followers that [has] made it impossible to protest without getting your skull broken or getting yourself killed in a prison cell. No, there have not been demonstrations, not because the Ukrainian public was satisfied with Zelensky, because nobody dared.

20:20
Now, what changed? How is it that these demonstrations could take place? How is it that instructions were given to the Ukrainian army not to take part in the demonstrations wearing their uniforms? This is incredible.

I say that there was an outside intervention. Some organization imposed on the powers that be in Ukraine not to dare to fire on the demonstrators.

Napolitano:
Well, there’s only two organizations that could do that, I think: CIA and MI6.

Doctorow:
Well, I originally came down on the side of MI6, but received some very interesting comments from readers who pointed me in the other direction. MI6, after all, they have been the providers of security for Zelensky. They are his bodyguards. It is less than likely that they would be behind acts which are going to bring him down.

The United States and the CIA is a different story. Here it fits in perfectly with everything that Mr. Trump is doing, not with what he’s saying, of course not, but what he’s doing.

De facto, arms are being shipped [to a] much lesser extent and of much lesser use to Ukraine than his words would have indicated. The famous Patriots are going to take eight months to get there, if they get there at all. So on the side of Trump, who is by his actions, by his deeds, not by his words, in fact, been abandoning Zelensky, this would fit in perfectly to get him out over his violation of rule of law, which has been picked up by Western newspapers. Even the very anti-Russian “Financial Times”, day after day, is speaking about Zelensky having lost credibility because of this authoritarian behavior to neuter the agencies against corruption. So the way– the public is being prepared for his removal, because the guy is no longer a saint; he’s turning out to be a devil. And I believe that the Americans are behind this. [But that someone would agree.]

Napolitano:
If you’re correct, and you make a compelling case, Professor, you truly do, then the Americans would choose his successor.

Doctorow:
Yes. But of course, this is the thing that people immediately object to. “Well, it’s more of the same.”

Why do they assume that? There are, you have to look closely, but there are some people in Kiev who are not neo-Nazis and who are not of the same mindset as the present rulers. And I think of Mr. Umerov, the one who is the head of the Ukrainian delegation to the peace talks in Istanbul, as a possible candidate. There are others.

And the Americans certainly would know about it. Umerov–

Napolitano:
How about the fellow that’s the, I forget the name, Ukrainian ambassador to London.

Doctorow: 23:37
Zaluzhny. That’s also possible. There’s a lot of talk about it. That’s why he’s in London and not in Kiev, because Zelensky understood that the Americans were winking at Zaluzhny, because Zaluzhny told the truth about the real state of the military efforts, that they were losing badly, and it was time to get him out of the way. Now Mr. Umerov is another candidate. The interesting thing about him is his pure civilian background, a man who spent a year in the States living with a family while he was in secondary school, and so he’s fluent in English and knows American situation, and who has become very frankly wealthy by dint of his wits in high tech, and wealthy enough to have established fellowships in Stanford University.

24:33
So the man had an interest in the States. It would fit in nicely with the kind of leaders that Americans think–

Napolitano:
He will be the CIA’s type of guy. Professor Doctorow, thank you very much. A fascinating, as always, a fascinating conversation. I missed you in the past two weeks. I’m glad we’re all back together. Thank you for your time. We’ll look forward to seeing you next week.

Doctorow:
Very good.

Napolitano:
Thank you. And coming up later today, I’ve missed everybody, including all of you. At 11 o’clock this morning, Colonel Douglas Macgregor. At one this afternoon, Professor Glenn Diesen; at two this afternoon, Max Blumenthal; at three this afternoon, Phil Giroldi.

25:12
Judge Napolitano for “Judging Freedom”.

‘Judging Freedom,’ 30 July: EU Capitulates to Trump

Today’s session with Judge Andrew Napolitano centered on the von der Leyen – Trump agreement in Scotland on a 15%  tariff for European exports to the USA, which was in effect a humiliating defeat for the EU. Bad as that sounds, the far worse point agreed was for the EU to greatly expand its LNG and oil imports from the USA, with the figure 650 billion euros specifically named.  Of course, this obligation will likely never be met, just as similar obligations on China to import US agricultural products at certain target levels never were met. But the principle, if actually applied, will condemn European manufacturing to excessive costs, meaning to uncompetitive export prices and loss of markets abroad.

As I have noted elsewhere, the capitulation on tariffs was clearly motivated by the hopes of von der Leyen and of those European leaders supporting her that this concession will keep open relations with Washington and, in particular, lead to continuation of the common Euro-Atlantic stand on giving Ukraine the financial and flow of military equipment it needs to continue the war with Russia.  What I did not say in the interview but should be mentioned here is that the expectation of further U.S. assistance to Ukraine is delusional.  Trump wants out of the war and there is no way that Europe can so ingratiate itself with him as to change his mind on that cardinal point of U.S. foreign policy.

 Our brief discussion of the Epstein scandal that currently fascinates Washington, of the decision by Britain and France to recognize the Palestine state in September and of likely CIA hand in the anti Zelensky demonstrations that swept Ukraine last week  may also interest viewers.

NewsX World: Kremlin Says Kyiv Rejects Russia’s Peace Offer | Russia Ukraine Peace Talks

I used this interview to drive home the fact that the Russians do indeed seek a diplomatic solution to the war, but on their own well-known terms which amount to a Ukrainian capitulation. But the main issue I introduced was the likelihood that the United States now is actively working to bring down Zelensky by encouraging and facilitating the massive demonstrations this past week against Zelensky’s new law stripping the two Ukrainian anti-corruption agencies of independence.

There is some fresh news to add to that story.

First, this weekend’s Financial Times tells us that there is a revolt among deputies of Zelensky’s Servant of the People party against his decision to withdraw or rewrite the offending law on the anti-corruption agencies so as to satisfy domestic and foreign critics. As many as 70 of his deputies to the Verkkhovna Rada will vote against the volte-face by Zelensky saying that they fear prosecution now by the agencies because of their having voted to strip the agencies of power. If this happens, then Zelensky will be caught between a rock and a hard place – unable to move ahead and call off the opposition demonstrations.

Other news on Russian tickers today inform us that several officials now being investigated by the anti-corruption agencies have given testimony incriminating Zelensky.  Moreover, the ongoing street demonstrations now carry signs saying that Zelensky and his chief of presidential administration Yermak are both “traitors to Ukraine.”

The foregoing strengthens my argument that this war will end sooner rather than later and it will end due to regime change in Kiev, not to collapse of the Ukrainian armed forces on the front lines.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9_EnWerFus

Transcript of RT International interview, 25 July

Transcript submitted by a reader

RT: 0:00
And let’s now cross live to Gilbert Doctorow, a former visiting scholar at Harriman Institute, Columbia University. Welcome to the program, sir. On Tuesday, Zelensky and the Ukrainian parliament put an end to any independence the anti-corruption watchdog had, and today they’re restoring it by introducing a new bill in the Rada. Why such a quick turnaround, do you think?

Gilbert Doctorow, PhD:
Well, because of the massive demonstrations. I would like to complement the report that you’ve given very ably on what Mr. Zelensky did, what he has just undone, how he received pressure. That’s all fine. But let’s go to the question of these massive demonstrations. The “New York Times” said in their first report on the demonstrations, this goes back to Wednesday, “Well, this is the first mass demonstration in Ukraine in three years of war.”

Yes, very interesting. And why is it that there were demonstrations now? Nobody’s asked that question. Let’s deal with that. Does that mean that everybody was very happy in Ukraine with the government? Of course it doesn’t. It means that you’d get your skull fractured if you dared to step out and think of a demonstration. Going back to October 2014 and the elections of the [Rada] at that time, when the first elections that took place after the new regime was put in place by a coup d’etat, those elections were witnessed by foreign observers who reported extensively on the violence that was used against the opponents of the regime. That hasn’t changed. Now, what has changed is that nobody confronted the 10,000 or more demonstrators that came out on the streets of Kiev, not to mention thousands more in all the other major cities of Ukraine.

2:01
Why did that happen? Let’s try to think. I would suggest we should think that someone, probably in the West, wants to change the regime. And that is the investigation path that I urge upon listeners to this, I would suggest that the usual actors like MI6 are behind it. Why did the Ukrainian army not fire into the crowd? They got orders not to. And I don’t believe that Mr. Zelensky gave those orders. So we are about to witness regime change in Ukraine. And the major media in the West are preparing, at least in the States, the American public for regime change and for the removal of Zelensky.

RT: 2:49
And if we look at the reaction of the public, Ukrainians have not reacted in such a strong way to other controversial events, like when the country’s national resources were sold to the United States, for example. Why has this caused so much controversy now?

Doctorow:
Because now you weren’t going to get your head bashed in, that’s why. You weren’t going to get shot. This is the cardinal change that has to be brought out, what happened in this week. It is the first step of two or three steps to remove Zelensky and the whole gang of neo-Nazis who have the Ukrainian nation by the neck. It is not thinkable that the whole public was satisfied with the Zelensky regime and therefore didn’t demonstrate. No. They just used common sense, which was: you don’t want to risk your life. Now, it was clear the government had, the army had been given orders not to fire.

3:49
Moreover, the instruction that we understood again from major Western media is that the army was told not to come out in the streets in their uniforms to demonstrate against the law. My goodness, what a change. This is the first stage in the removal of the Zelensky government.

RT:
What about his image, Zelensky’s actions concerning NABU and the restoration of its autonomy? Do you think that will save the image or will it damage even more?

Doctorow:
Among whom? Among Ukrainians, I don’t think there is a particular love for Mr. Zelensky. The country is patriotic. Ukrainians share the same religious and political conservatism, shall we say, of Russians. They are going to fight to the end, but they’re not stupid. And if they did not demonstrate in any way against Mr. Zelensky, it was not for love of him and his peers and his colleagues. It was because they were afraid for their lives. That somehow miraculously has changed in the past week, and it deserves proper attention.

5:07
I have said for some time this war will not end by a military capitulation. The idea that next week the Ukrainian army will raise a white flag is totally unrealistic, even though nearly all of my peers are suggesting that will happen. No, no, the Ukrainian government will collapse of its own weight and of its own unpopularity. And with some help from those Western sponsors who want to see it collapse.

RT:
And meanwhile, Zelensky keeps asking for money from the Western backers, let’s call them that, Western friends. And now he wants the EU to pay Ukrainian soldiers their salaries. Do you think Europe will agree? And where is it going to find the funds?

Doctorow: 5:54
Well, I don’t think they’ll say no, but they just won’t do it. There aren’t funds available. And I don’t think there’s a great eagerness to provide them even if they were available. The standing of the Ukrainian government is very low. The notion that the Ukrainian army can defend its territory and that it, not to mention that it will gain back territory and defeat Russia, that is only maintained by complete fools. The Western mainstream media no longer holds that to be true.

And that is the point. They are preparing, at least in the United States, where there’s far more political freedom for the press than there is in Europe, the press in the States is giving strong signs. Less than two weeks ago there was a feature article in the “New York Times” on the war crimes committed by the Ukrainian forces during their occupation of Kursk Oblast. This is unbelievable.

6:57
From the start of the war, Western media portrayed Ukraine as bunny rabbits, which were being assaulted, attacked by the big bad wolf. Well, you know who that is. That’s Russia. Now we find the “New York Times”, by reporters on the ground, were explaining in detail the war crimes that these bunny rabbits were committing on Russian soil. That is a sea change.

RT 7:26
Well, the vibe definitely is changing, if we may call it that. Also this Friday, Russia reported destroying four Patriot systems. At the UN, the Russian representative said the more weapons the West delivers to Ukraine, the more will be
destroyed. What are your thoughts on that?

Doctorow:
Well, I think it’s an absolute statement of fact. Among my peers, almost everyone is in agreement that any new weapons shipped to Ukraine will be destroyed very quickly, and in any case cannot help the Ukrainian cause. The list of weaponry, the Bradleys, the armored personnel carriers, the tanks — all of that which was in Biden’s list is useless in Ukraine today, because the war has changed. The most dynamic part of the war is drone warfare. And heavy mechanized equipment, like what was in the Biden list, hides in forests today, because it would be blasted to pieces if it comes out in the open field.

8:32
So the war has changed. The Biden list of equipment to be shipped to the Ukraine is utterly useless. And the Patriots, of which there’s been so much reporting — as you say, they’ve been destroyed by the Russians. They are vulnerable to Russia’s most advanced missiles and they will not save the Ukrainian army.

RT:
Gilbert Doctorow, former visiting scholar at Harriman Institute, Columbia University, thank you so much for this analysis.

Doctorow: 9:10
My pleasure.

RT International:  ‘First stage in the removal of the Zelensky government’ — Prof. Doctorow

It was a pleasure to be given the opportunity to share with the RT International audience my interpretation of the goings-on in Kiev following two days of massive anti-government demonstrations in the capital and across the country, as thousands denounced a new law stripping the anti-corruption agencies of their independence.

President Zelensky was caught in a no-win situation.  If he persisted in defending the law, he faced further widespread protests that could overturn the regime.  If he conceded victory to the demonstrators and withdrew the law, he faced further protests that could overturn the regime.

The primary issue I see here is that somehow the Ukrainian police and military were instructed NOT to shoot the demonstrators, not to crack skulls.  Indeed, we have been told that the government only ordered soldiers not to participate in the demonstrations wearing their uniforms!

I insist that the week’s developments are the harbinger of regime change which is being enabled by one or another of the Western ‘backers’ of Ukraine, very likely Washington and London.  This type of treachery has all the fingerprints of MI6 on it.

Transcript of Iran TV interview on Russian-Iranian naval exercises

Transcript submitted by a reader

PressTV: 0:18
… Spotlight. I’m Marzieh Hashemi. Thanks so much for being with us. Iran’s navy, Northern Fleet and Russian vessels are conducting maritime drills in the Caspian Sea. “Together for a safe and secure Caspian Sea” is the slogan that has been chosen for the drills. Now, according to Iran, the primary goal of the exercise is to reinforce maritime safety and security while fostering greater cooperation among naval forces of the Caspian Sea littoral countries.

But what is the reason that these drills by neighboring countries are viewed with concern by some in the United States? Well, stay with us. We’re going to take a look at some footage and then I will be welcoming my guests.

2:15
I’d like to welcome my guests to the program. I’d like to welcome my first guest, George Szamuely, Senior Research Fellow, Global Policy Institute, London Metropolitan University, out of Budapest. And Gilbert Doctorow,independent international affairs analyst out of Brussels.

Well, thank you so much. I’m going to start this off with Gilbert. Welcome to the program. Gilbert, what is your perspective about the significance of these three-day drills between Iran and Russia, along with other Caspian Sea littoral states?

Gilbert Doctorow, PhD: 2:57
Well, for one thing, it is a reaffirmation that after the 12-day Israel-Iran war, Russia remains interested and pursuing a very close relationship with Iran in all domains, including defense. So that is a signal to the world at large that this cooperation is in full effect.

At the same time, I, since you mentioned in passing that the United States might be one of those countries not pleased by the ongoing cooperation in the Caspian between Iran and Russia, it brings back to my mind what was going on 20 years ago when the United States was hoping to intervene in the Caspian Sea management by furthering the either pipeline or LNG shipments of Turkmenistan gas across the Caspian for the purpose of countering Russian gas dominance in Europe.

4:12
So it’s an old story as far as the United States is concerned, the United States trying to frustrate the Caspian littoral countries from managing the sea themselves.

PressTV:
Yeah, indeed. I mean, it’s interesting, because you just talked about the United States. I mean, looking at that, It’s quite interesting that Washington would have problems with neighboring countries having naval drills. When the United States goes to the other side of the world and have constant naval drills with so many different countries. I mean, let’s talk about that, the hypocrisy and the reason [for] such sensitivity about the Caspian Sea.

Doctorow: 05:00
Yes, well the United States is a practitioner of hypocrisy in its foreign policy in almost any domain that you touch. So it is not surprising that it would behave in a hypocritical manner with respect to the cooperation by these two countries in an area where it would like to intervene and have a presence, but is systematically excluded by the Caspian Sea littoral countries.

PressTV:
Well Gilbert, from your perspective, from a strategic perspective, how important is the Caspian Sea?

Doctorow:
Well, the Caspian Sea is of course a major asset for both Iran and for Russia. Transport across the sea between the countries is foreseeable, although the predominant emphasis in cooperation now is on landlines by rail through the Caucuses. Nonetheless, it is a major asset in many respects, not just defense, but also economic, that the two countries share. And so it is an affirmation of their cooperation, as I say, that they are carrying out these present military exercises.

PressTV: 6:23
Yeah, you just mentioned, not just from a military perspective, also from an economic one. Let’s look at that, because we know that both countries have been and are majorly sanctioned by the United States. Tell me about the possibility of actually enhancing the economies of both these countries via that route.

Doctorow:
Well, of course, sea transport is by nature cheaper than land transport, And it would be understandable that this would be one element in the increasing logistical cooperation between Iran and Russia. Although, as I say, the biggest investments that are foreseeable in the near future pertain to rail connections for the North-South corridor.

7:19
But notwithstanding that, development of shipping across the Caspian Sea has to be in the target projects of both countries. There is fishing, of course the Caspian is a source of caviar and other valuable seafood products, But I think the logistical angle is probably economically the more important.

PressTV:
What about the overall deepening military and maritime cooperation between these two countries, especially now?

Doctorow:
The two countries are a major stabilizing factor in the region, but they don’t stand alone. One has to mention, of course, the quite profound cooperation between Iran and China and recently during the Israeli-Iran war, the statement of interest and support that came from Pakistan.

8:29
So we’re looking at cooperation between Russia and Iran in a broader context of countries in Asia, in the part of Eurasia, that have defense interests as well as economic interests and are defying the efforts of the United States to sanction both and to harm both countries economically. This, as I say, the broader context should be very reassuring to Iran, because it demonstrates that it is considered an equal player in the broader region and has countries that support its vital interests and are, have pledged themselves to ensure that Iran stays independent and sovereign despite all of the efforts of the United States.

PressTV: 9:26
Right. Well, let’s talk about that, because one of the goals of the drills, according to Iran, is also to show that Iran and Russia and basically the littoral Caspian Sea states can control these waters themselves, can keep the Caspian Sea secure and can provide stability. And of course this is something that usually the United States does not want to see and usually try to say that they have to be involved in order for any area to be safe.

The importance of this and the important role of these two countries in providing that type of safety and security in the Caspian Sea?

Doctorow:
This falls again into a broader context. Both Iran and Russia are member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. And the primary plank, or the most significant unifying theme of the Shanghai Cooperation Agreement is precisely to provide security to protect these countries against terrorism, against violence, and against criminal gangs. So, in that respect, this particular operation that’s now starting between Russia and Iran falls directly in the line of security, anti-terror and anti-criminal gangs. It’s to provide safety in the sea and its littoral.

PressTV: 11:06
You mentioned the Shanghai Cooperation. Let’s talk about that side of things and possibly the expansion and having access to Central Asia and the Caucasus via, of course, that body of water.

Doctorow:
Yes, it is. There are a number of states that are bordering this sea. As I said, going back 20 years, the interest of Turkmenistan at that time, of course they’ve changed since, but at that time was to use the sea for purposes of transporting gas. The other states are equally interested in its being secure and in keeping out would-be troublemakers like the United States.

PressTV: 12:00
Well we know that Iran and Russia earlier this year have signed a cooperation and a defense pact basically, which includes joint drills and tech sharing and coordination against common threats, but without a mutual-defense clause. I want to talk about both sides, the importance of what it includes and what it has excluded.

Doctorow:
Well, to my understanding, it was on the initiative of Iran that a mutual defense component was not included in the cooperation agreement. That was back in December. There was the hope still then that Iran would find an accommodation with the United States, with the incoming Trump administration, improbable as that seemed at the time. Nonetheless, there was the hope that they would find accommodation, the sanctions would be lifted, the Iranian economy could prosper in a more normal way.

13:10
That, as we know, did not happen. Mr. Trump has been very difficult, has placed impossible demands upon Iran in the negotiations. And so the bet on accommodation was not successful. Nonetheless, I think specialists in Russian affairs, like myself, placed too much stress on the defense component and underestimated, perhaps, Iran’s ability to defend itself very well, as it did during the 12-day war. So I’m happy to say that we were wrong, that Iran possibly was correct in not putting in a defense component at that time, and had the opportunity to demonstrate to Russia and to the world that it is very capable of defending itself with its thousands of highly sophisticated missiles that are well protected against aerial bombardment.

PressTV: 14:15
OK, you said it was perhaps OK at that time. Let’s talk now. Then Iran, as you said, has shown the world its ability to defend itself. So at this point in time, your thoughts from a strategic perspective, do you think that there should be a defense pact now? Do you think that it should be expanded, the cooperation between Russia and Iran?

Doctorow:
Well, again, in a broader context, given what China has done, China sending several of its important naval assets into the Persian Gulf in the last couple of days of the Iran-Israeli war to demonstrate to the United States that it was ready for war if it came to that. Since China has proven itself as a very reliable and powerful friend in time of need, I think that it would be appropriate now for Russia to step in and do the same thing. Russia would not be standing by itself; t would have China as a fellow defender or partner in the defense of Iran. And for that matter, it would, we know now the commitment of Pakistan to Iran’s survival as a sovereign state.

15:42
So in this group of nations interested in Iran’s continuing sovereignty and independence, an agreement with Russia would make a lot of sense.

PressTV:
And how much of it you would say that, as a matter of fact, it’s the policies coming out of Washington that actually increases the possibility of these countries working even closer together as Russia is being heavily sanctioned, Iran is being heavily sanctioned and China as you brought up also under threat, from military threats to, of course, the tariffs. I mean, your thoughts basically, from a strategic perspective, would you think that these countries, whether we’re talking about China, Russia or Iran, would basically say that sticking together at this point in time is the best way forward in basically conquering or trying to deal with the global bully?

Doctorow:
Well, I think that it is very timely that the countries should stand together. We see now in the approaching summit of the EU-China that von der Leyen is coming with a message to President Xi that he should break his support, should turn his back on the support for Russia.

And we see Xi saying that that cannot happen because he understands perfectly that China is next on the U.S. destruction list. So in these circumstances, a very open confrontation and frank language, I think that it is appropriate for the countries that are under attack from the United States not to be bashful any more about defending their interests and readiness for war if it comes to that. In the same context, the growing visible rapprochement and mutual support between Russia and North Korea is a template for what can and should be done in the case of Russia-Iranian relations.

PressTV: 18:07
Your thoughts about the overall message that Iran and Russia want to send to the West with these drills?

Doctorow:
The message is that Mr. Trump has overplayed his hand. And that is to the detriment of US and Western interests. And it can only be corrected by a return to reason and realism, the acknowledgment that Iran was capable of destroying, utterly destroying Israel, and did not do it, that they accepted Mr. Trump’s request for a ceasefire not because Iran needed it, but because Israel needed it. That should be made more visible, so that the world community, the readers of the “Financial Times” and the “New York Times” would understand properly how that war ended and why Iran is a strong country that deserves full respect and not the treatment or the kind of bullying that Trump, through Witkoff, was trying to exercise in the failed negotiations.

PressTV: 19:29
And what do you think it will take to get to that point. On the one hand, yes, Iran definitely showed its strength. On the other hand, we have seen the jargon still coming out of these western capitals, and the lack of condemnation continues against the Israeli regime and the American regime. So how do we get there, what you said?

Doctorow: 19:53
For the United States to correct its positions on Gaza, that is impossible at this particular moment because of Mr. Trump’s dependence on support from the majority in Congress that are pro-Israeli, pro-Zionist, and unreasonable about the genocide and Israel’s violation of international law. So from the United States, I don’t expect a change any time soon, but from Europe, it is entirely thinkable. And I would look in that direction for a support in the case of Gaza to end this genocide at once.

Today is the National Day in Belgium, and the King, Philippe, made a speech to the nation. And one of the two foreign policy issues that he addressed was precisely Gaza and his call for the demand of the UN Secretary General for an immediate ceasefire to be respected. So this is coming from Belgium. He didn’t yet name Israel as the aggressor, as the perpetrator of genocide, but it’s coming close to that. So I think Europe is at the moment, a more hopeful talking partner on the issue of the Middle East that is certainly foremost for Iran at this moment. That is a tragedy in the neighborhood that Israel is perpetrating.

PressTV: 21:39
And on that note, I appreciate your being with me, my sole guest tonight on this “Spotlight”, Gilbert Doctorow, independent international affairs analyst out of Brussels. And unfortunately our other guests could not join us, but we thank you viewers for being with us on another “Spotlight”. I’m Marzieh Hashemi. Hope to see you right here next time. Goodbye.

Press TV (Iran): Russia-Iran joint maritime drill in the Caspian

Press TV (Iran): Russia-Iran joint maritime drill in the Caspian

Last night’s chat with Press TV presenter Marzieh Hashemi about the ongoing Russian-Iranian naval exercises in the Caspian was perhaps too much of a good thing for me. Normally the format of The Spotlight calls for two panelists, but for technical reasons my counterpart was unreachable and I faced non-stop questions for 20 minutes which was fairly stressful.

Nonetheless, as Gogol once wrote, из всякой дряни можно добро получить, which may be freely translated as ‘from any old thing you can extract something good.’ I filled the time with more frank and open discussion of the potential for Russian-Iranian mutual defense and of the history of U.S. interference in management of the Caspian Sea going back 20 years to the time of the ‘gas pipeline wars’ when Washington tried to use the waterway for pipelines or LNG transshipment of Turkmenistan gas that would be carried to Europe outside the borders of the Russian Federation and to the detriment of Russian exports.

Now that I have viewed the video, I find it most interesting how the presenter pursued the question of whether Moscow would and should reconsider its relationship with Teheran to include mutual defense.