Transcript submitted by a reader:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQNqBwqEiE4
Diesen: 0:00
Hi everyone and welcome. I am joined today by Gilbert Doctorow, an historian, international affairs analyst and author. And I would advise everyone to follow his Substack for some very insightful analysis of world events. Welcome back to the program.
Doctorow:
Well, very good to be with you.
Diesen:
I wanted to start off first with the topic of Germany, as this has been a key, well, event, and also it could be a very dangerous new step in this escalation of the proxy war. That is that Merz is proposing, this joint production of Taurus missiles with Kiev. Now Germany seemingly to me is looking for another way to attack Russia while claiming not to attack. I guess the whole problem is you want to change the rules of the proxy war. So if you send the missiles and they’re used to attack Russia, your fingerprints are pretty much all over this.
And as the Russians have said, they’re politicians, you have military leaders, the media, that these missiles will be operated by the Germans and that the Russians have the right to retaliate directly against Germany. So how can Germany attack Russia while claiming not to be involved? I mean, this is the difficult space they’re trying to maneuver, I guess. What are the rules of the proxy war? And so the next step now appears to be this joint production, which opens up a lot of questions. So how are you reading this situation?
Doctorow: 1:44
After I published this morning my “Hotsy-Totsy, another Nazi” essay — by the way, I take no credit for that terminology. It takes us back to the early 1940s and Charlie Chaplin and some other humorous viewings of what was going on in Germany, which was in fact not very funny. In any case, Chancellor Merz is taking a gamble, but he’s always been something of a risk taker. And he’s assuming first that the Article 5 would be successfully implemented to defend Germany if the Russians attack.
2:24
I think he’s also assuming that the Russians are good to their word, and any attack they make on Germany will be directed against a military installation, probably if it makes any sense, against the factory in, I believe it’s in Bavaria, that was producing, up to this year, the Taurus missile. And that it would not have a deep political attack on Berlin or on his government or on him personally. That’s a fairly safe assumption. It would possibly serve his purposes of driving up the German budget and the EU budget for military industry if the Russians in fact attacked Germany. So it’s difficult to read exactly what his calculus is. There is, I mean, trying to suggest there may be something rational behind what looks like a totally irrational position by Merz in Germany.
Diesen: 3:24
Well, what about the Russian position? Do you think, again, they want to come, this is a very stern warning coming from them. I mean, you hear the same from Lavrov, saying that this is a direct attack by Germany. And they’re also drawing some historical parallels, saying that the Germans are going the same path as they did more than once in the previous century.
And again, often we dismiss these things, I think, too easily. That is, we say, “Oh, we have the right to help Ukraine defend itself.” But you can argue that Russia has the right to help Yemen defend itself or any other country that NATO countries have attacked. But if you have Russian long-range missiles operated by Russian soldiers, guided by their satellites striking in the heart of London, we would not dismiss this as, “Oh, well, they have the right to assist a country with help, to self-defense.”
I think this dismissiveness and people are very cautious to speak against, I think, what the governments are doing, because well, anything you say now can be construed as helping, taking Russia’s side. So no one’s really allowed to say the obvious, but this is a direct attack. So how do you think the Russians will react? Is this mere bluff, or do you think that they would actually launch an attack, destroy these facilities? Because I mean, the threat from NATO is, you know, like all threats, is capabilities and intentions. And irrespective of any intentions from the NATO countries, if they don’t have the capabilities, yeah, why wouldn’t you go through with this?
Doctorow: 5:17
Well, let’s take a step back and see how the Germans got themselves into this situation, because it didn’t just happen with the personality of Mr. Merz, though that’s a big contributing factor. We have to go back maybe 10 years or more, when the Alternative for Deutschland started this all, which sounds a bit peculiar, given that the AfD is now one of the strongest resisters to what Merz wants to do. But they started this, in the sense that they made the claims of “Ami go home”, “Americans go home”, which had been a left-wing call previously. And they were saying that Germans of today, this generation, bears no guilt for the sins of their grandfathers, which is a reasonable thing to say, except if you happen to be German, and except if you happen to have Russia as a neighbor, which doesn’t forgive, but certainly does not forget what happened. 26 million citizens died in the war that was conducted, led by Germany.
6:25
So the AfD, I think unleashed this German, a new German thinking that “We are guiltless”, that “We are Europeans with European values” and allowed Germans, particularly the Greens, to step up on soapboxes and to start lecturing the Russians for violating human rights and violating the universally accepted principles of how states behave within Europe. So the AfD unleashed this, but then it was picked up by all German parties and it has gone a lot farther as we see today. It was adopted by genuine revanchist tendencies that are in the center and center-right, of which Mr. Merz is the outstanding case.
7:19
So that’s how we got to where we are. What does Mr. Merz expect? What could he expect? Well he could have is doubts, “Will the Russians really do this? After all, what we Germans are about to do is no more a violation of Russia’s red lines than what the Americans, the British and the French have been doing without any consequences.”
But I would just add, from the Russian perspective, the other three countries were once allies and they hesitate to identify them as Russia’s main enemies. Whereas Germany was not an ally, it was precisely the force conducting the devastating attack on Russia from 1941. And they have free hands to take their revenge on what they see as neo-Nazi-led country.
8:16
Now, just going back to Mr. Lavrov, and your paraphrasing him a moment ago, this is one, it’s like an inch away from saying that Merz is a Nazi. They said, “like Hitler, Merz is…” well, okay. That’s just a hair breadth away from saying that Merz is Hitler today.
Diesen: 8:39
Well, the idea though that, well, “the others are doing it so we can do this as well”. This is a dangerous way of looking at it, because Germany is not the same. That is, for one, the Russians have been seeing this dilemma for a long time, that is, “Do we strike back and then risk a wider war, or do we not strike back but then embolden our opponents to escalate further?”
So they’re under pressure to make a point, because within Moscow there’s people as well saying that Putin let this thing go so far because they kept crossing the lines which were set and there was no real consequence. Now this is my point, the Germans are not like the Americans and the French or the British. First of all, Germany doesn’t have nuclear weapons, so it would have to rely on the Article 5.
Second, as you said, Germany has also a very unique history in terms of the death and destruction it has unleashed upon the Russians. So a lot of this seems to be betting on the idea that Article 5 will stand. Article 5 doesn’t actually obligate the rest of the military alliance to attack, to come to their aid. I forgot the actual text, but it’s more or less they can take any measures they see fit, including the use of military force. But this idea that it triggers a forced military response, it’s not necessarily the case.
10:22
And even if that’s what the text said, I can imagine countries like the United States would think twice, honoring an agreement if this entails their nuclear annihilation. So are they betting now completely on this Article 5 of the NATO treaty?
Doctorow: 10:40
Well, if Merz is doing that, he’s making a terrible mistake. I think Donald Trump and his team hinted, or actually stated openly, that if any of the European countries pursue the war, the proxy war with Russia, they will be on their own. And that is exactly what the Russians would bring to the United Nations Security Council.
They’ve made their, outlined their future steps fairly clearly. They wouldn’t just push a button and send the Oreshniks here or there. They would take their case that Germany is now at war with Russia, and they would take it to the United Nations Security Council. And they would say openly, “We are now about to destroy this or that site in Germany”, knowing full well that their Oreshnik missiles are unstoppable, and the destruction that they are outlining before the world will take place.
11:40
So that is where Chancellor Merz is making a terrible mistake. He is, as you say, refusing to understand that Germany is not England or France, is uniquely vulnerable and will not, likely not have an American backup.
Diesen:
That’s a great point. Yeah, that the Russians probably would go this way too. Because one of the things that actually constrains Russia now, as the blood is boiling in Moscow, is the fact that they have other international partners, be it China, India, with which they would like to maintain a good reputation.
But if they go to the UN, explain, “Listen, this is Germany attacking us. There’s no two ways of looking at this. We have the right to self-defense. We’re not going to annihilate the nation, but we’re going to destroy, as now much of political leadership say, we’re going to destroy their military capabilities which are being used to attack us, which is a measured response.”
Then I think while they might not approve, the Chinese and the Indians and others might at least understand and, well, may not look the other way, but this would not be seen as being an irrational surprise attack.
So in your thinking then, if the Russians begin to take this to the UN, this is when the Germans should, well, effectively begin to expect a strike on their country.
Doctorow: 13:20
Merz is really exacerbating the situation. When he spoke yesterday with Zalensky concluding their talks, he spoke about this joint production without saying where it would take place, though, obviously not in Ukraine, because the factory wouldn’t last beyond the foundations if such a project were undertaken. But he left it at that. That is to say, he wasn’t contradicting directly his coalition partners in the SPD, the Social Democrats, who have continued the policy of the previous chancellor, Olaf Scholz, in refusing to ship the Taurus to Russia.
14:06
But today’s news, and this is the latest ticker on Russian news, is that he has said that they will deliver the Taurus after all. He’s speaking about within a timeframe of the next few weeks. Actually, when all of the Western countries aiding Ukraine, beginning with the United States, say they will do it in a few weeks, it means they’ve already done it. The missiles have already been delivered to Ukraine. So that is a foregone conclusion.
He is post-dating something that’s happened already. If he’s done that, and if the mission goes ahead, then we are just weeks away from the scenario that you and I have just discussed of United Nations Security Council discussion of it, and likely Russian attack on exactly what is not clear. The factory that has been producing the Taurus is out of production. They say they’re awaiting new orders. And so to attack a non-functioning factory doesn’t look like it’s accomplishing a great deal.
15:20
I also don’t know exactly where Taurus was produced, because it is a joint Swedish-German project. It could be that a lot of Taurus was actually built in Sweden. So this becomes more complicated than it appears at first glance.
Diesen:
Yeah, well again I also think one thing that’s not appreciated enough in the West is the extent to which the German history still plays in. Because we kind of think of Germany now as the country learned from its history and wouldn’t go down any of these routes any more.
But again, this is what the Russians see. This is the same Germany that’s as we speak actually, you know, being complicit in aiding a genocide as we speak in Gaza, but also the fascist elements in Ukraine. I mean, it’s not the thing– we’re, I think, too dismissive of here in the West now, which is kind of strange, because before the Russian invasion in 2022, this was a thing that, you know, the media spoke openly about, politicians could speak about. Leading Western media were discussing that, you know, the fascist elements in Ukraine was a problem, that they had too much influence. Then suddenly Russia invades and it just disappeared.
16:44
But it’s important to keep in mind that they disappeared from our media, not the Russian media. This idea that “Zelenskyy has Jewish roots, so we can just dismiss all the evidence of the actual people who have key positions” is very dangerous. And again, the way they see it, they see it as a wider historical continuity, I think, that is they see the Ukrainian elements in the fascist movements cooperating with the Germans in World War II. They saw after World War II the United States and others backing them to weaken the Soviet Union, and now it’s effectively some of the same again.
So just to repeat this point, I get the impression now that the blood is really boiling in Moscow. They’re very angry about this. I can’t imagine German missiles flying into Russian cities, killing Russians, and somehow they’re just going to look the other way. This is– I don’t understand how he came to this point. How is it possible that Germany is actually contemplating this?
Doctorow: 17:54
Well, the United States has contributed to this, and by specifically Donald Trump. As it may come out in our discussion further this morning, I am quite sympathetic to Trump’s intentions and initiatives. However, there are side effects, which he and his advisors surely did not anticipate. One of the side effects of the United States reducing its attention to Europe and withdrawing from NATO, if not de jure, then in practice by cutting back its support of NATO, is that Europe has been liberated and left to itself. And there are a lot of rotten things in Europe that were kept under the surface or invisible because of the American presence. Now that America is backing away from Europe, these forces are freed to show themselves and to try to take control of politics.
18:55
And Europe really is becoming a war project, not a peace project. So far, the animus and the hostility of feeling is directed against Russia. But I think the way Europe is headed right now with all of the revanchist forces that we see in Germany, they also have counterparts elsewhere in the continent. And we may see a lot of conflict within Europe that was kept at bay, that was kept under the surface by the American domination of Europe.
Diesen: 19:34
This has been, I guess, the benefit of having the Americans in Europe, though. It’s always pointed out that they were the pacifier that could preserve some cohesion within Europe, prevent too ugly competition and also from doing something reckless. I think we too often under the liberal idea was that we all discovered democracy and human rights and united under common values. But I don’t know, as a political realist, I have a tendency to see more in terms of power, that is the United States has been here and put a lid on some of these things. But now, of course, it is coming out.
20:15
And I think, given that we’re losing this war, we bet everything on this. I mean, the economy, we sent everything of our military, everything has been bet on defeating the Russians there. Now that we’re losing the war, you can see the desperation and the possible crazy reactions coming. But how would America position itself in such an event? If the Germans would now start to engage in such, let’s call them direct attacks on Russia, and Russia decides, well, it goes to the United Nations, “We’re going to retaliate, we have the right for self-defense.” What would the Americans do?
Doctorow: 21:01
Abstain. I think that Trump could get away with that. There are many limitations on his freedom of maneuver, even in international relations, as we see by the way that Lindsey Graham has gathered 80 votes in the Senate to impose severe sanctions now on Russia. But as to how you vote at the United Nations Security Council, I think Trump has completely free hands. And I wouldn’t be surprised if this comes to a vote that the United States abstains.
Diesen: 21:35
Well, it does appear that we’ve come to the point where at least the Russians see that they have a need to establish clear rules of this proxy war. Because again, as I began saying, I think this has been one of the key issues over the past three plus years. What is the rule of the proxy war? Again, former CIA Director Leon Panetta calls it proxy war. Boris Johnson, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, they all defined it as a proxy war.
And the kind of weapons you can use, it’s always escalated so we change the rules. And then I think it came a very critical point when we began to say, “Well, why should the war be limited to Ukrainian territory? Why should Russia be a safe space?” And then we opened up for again, German tanks rolling into Russia, missile strikes deep into Russian cities. But now, of course, the Russians are saying, “Well, why should Europe be a free space? Why is this immune for attacks?”
This is again, as your leaders recognize as well, it’s a NATO-Russia proxy war taking place within Ukraine. And again, the natural development is that this war will escalate and it will widen. So it’s just–
Doctorow: 22:53
Within Russia, within Russia, the latest polls are showing that Putin enjoys 82 percent confidence. But I don’t believe those numbers. Going back a year or two, some of my peers were saying that the Russian high command is very unsatisfied with the way that Putin is directing this war and so forth. I did not take that very seriously, because I think that the subordination of the military to civilian rule in Russia is 100 percent. But as we are today, I think Russians are quite tired of this war, and I think there is a strong undercurrent of opposition to its lengthy continuation of war of attrition for the next 20 years, which was what was hinted about by Mr. Medinsky in the last negotiations. So I think that Mr. Putin’s hand will be forced. I don’t think he has a choice domestically of responding with great force to any German participation in a missile attack or other long-range attack on Russia, that’s by air, that Germany facilitates or … facilitates. The country is a democracy in its own way, and he is not a dictator. He is not a Joseph Stalin.
24:18
When, it was several weeks, several days ago, rather shocking bit of AI reproduced Joseph Stalin on Solovyov’s program, in which Stalin was saying how the Russian people were so important in World War II, the Russians out of the whole Soviet group of nationalities, because the Russian people did not say our leadership– this is after 1941-42, when the Russian forces were rolled back to Moscow– they didn’t say, “Our leadership is not good; we should change it.” Well, this was, of course, quite a mockery, the notion that the Russians, civilian population could get rid of Stalin by saying that he was not an effective war leader. This strains our imagination.
25:13
But today it is feasible. Putin is not Stalin. And yes, he could be swept from power, I believe it, if he could not respond appropriately to a German attack.
Diesen: 25:28
Well, this pressure which is mounting on Putin to take a tougher line. You do see that the Russians are getting much tougher on the battlefield as well. And recently Trump had a statement that Putin is crazy, which is a very strange way to talk to another world leader, especially one when you’re in negotiations. But again, from my perspective, I saw it as also strange because as you were saying, he’s under great pressure, exactly not to be so soft, to be more aggressive, to respond to these escalations.
But somehow, yeah, this was Putin being crazy, which, you know, begs the question whether or not you think Trump is well informed because, yeah, President Putin himself came out and said that he didn’t think that Trump was informed. Why would the Russians go out with such a statement against Trump?
Doctorow: 26:40
The Russians, as Peskov made a statement like that, I think a very well calculated statement. They don’t want to let on to where they believe Trump’s sympathies are and what level of understanding they have of him. That would not serve their purposes.
And so they play along with the game, and they issue a very restrained diplomatic response that, yes, the situation is quite tough today, and we understand emotional responses. That’s how they handled it. But that’s not what they believe. They believe, or I believe that they believe, and I myself believe that Trump should be, not be listened to, he should be watched. What he says, everything he says, is calculated.
27:35
The notion that he is a buffoon, that he doesn’t follow the news, that he’s out playing golf and couldn’t care what’s going on, is utter nonsense, which he genuinely manufactures for the purpose of keeping his opponents off balance, for the purpose of allowing them to think that he is another Biden who can be manipulated by his nominal subordinates and can be compelled to do what they want, not what he wants. This is a game. He is a very good actor. He’s been on television. He knows how to act.
28:12
And this is, I find it surprising that some of my peers are taken in by this and decide that he is genuinely under-informed, that people are whispering in his ear and he’s listening to them. Not at all. I think the man who made this devastating, very well prepared speech in Saudi Arabia about the crimes of the neocons and how wonderful it was that Saudi Arabia had raised itself in prosperity by its own bootstraps and not by the American warriors who were introducing democracy and the good life into the world. That speech, he didn’t write it, of course, but he read it, and he knew what he was reading. And that was a speech that is utterly inconceivable as being prepared by a buffoon or delivered by a buffoon.
29:08
He knows what he’s doing. And I follow his feet. What is he doing, not what is he saying? And in this regard, he made through some very strange things, but which I anticipate, for example, what happens if the Senate bill passes that Lindsey Graham has put up and it is non-vetoable and he’s obliged to impose sanctions? I think this will be timed by Trump in a way that looks like an offset.
“Well, I’m walking away from the situation in Ukraine. It’s beyond our possibility to resolve. But I’m sanctioning the Russians to moderate their behavior. And I’m also stopping all this aid to Ukraine to moderate their behavior.”
29:59
It looks very reasonable. And that would be making the best of a bad situation. So I see him as being far more intelligent, far better informed, better informed, if you don’t mind my saying so, than you or I are. Yes, much more, many more sources of information than we have. And I think it is a mistake to underestimate what Team Trump is about. That doesn’t mean you have to like it, but to underestimate it is a mistake.
Diesen: 30:29
Yeah, now that is an interesting question, whether or not he’s a bit of a buffoon as they say, just listens to the last person talk to him or you know he’s easy to influence, or if this is as you said, a game because it is interesting how you know if he’s all incompetent how we ended up in this situation where it looks as if he’s trying to make a competition. Who can compete for his affection the most? Zelensky or Putin. And this is kind of how you’re going to obtain your power. Now this, you know, not linking yourself closely to either one of them and appearing neutral, it is a good game to play, because if you wed yourself to one, then you alienate one and the other one has nothing to fight for.
31:20
But I’m not sure if the Russians want to play this game though, because it looks now that the Americans have set up a situation where they can continue their proxy war against Russia while at the same time demanding essentially that Russia does not respond, because then they’re crazy, they’re aggressive and you will lose the affection of Trump. I’m not sure if they want to play this game. And in terms of the communication, do you think this on the Russian side is a deliberate role of former president Medvedev that Putin tries to be more measured in his speech, but then the good cop, and then he unleashes his pitbull, which is Medvedev who comes out effectively warning World War III.
32:03
Is this how they’re playing their information? Because I can’t imagine this is just, you know, this always seems to be the case that Putin comes with, you know, the soft option and, you know, here’s Mr. Medvedev who is our alternative.
Doctorow: 32:22
Yes, both sides are play-acting and that’s not surprising. Better they play-act than they go directly to one another’s throats. The position of Russia is to follow its own North Star. Last week, we heard recommendations from the States that the Russians get rid of Modinsky, that they appoint a new team, that they hand over their memorandum in advance.
What are they doing? The Americans will know about the Russian memorandum on the 2nd of June when it’s delivered to the Ukrainians. No advance information. The discussion that some people, including Americans, put up that the negotiations be moved to Geneva. It’s not going to be moved to Geneva. The Russians and the Turks agreed it’s going to be in Istanbul and it will be in Istanbul if it takes place at all on the 2nd of June. Mr. Medinsky will head the delegation.
In short, the Russians are listening to Mr. Trump. They’re not insulting him, but they’re doing what they damn well please according to what they think best defends their national interests. And that’s how it’s going to continue. Mr. Trump can pretend that he’s influencing or directing things, but he’s not.
Diesen: 33:50
On the negotiations though, why is there no actual NATO-Russia negotiations? Why is– because I was making the point long before the Russians invaded, that the conflict was being artificially constructed as a Ukraine-Russia conflict. But, you know, because NATO said, you know, we’re going to expand, we have an open-door policy, the decision has been made. In other words, this whole great power responsibility between the Americans and Russians to come together and find a European security architecture that isn’t too zero sum in nature, that this was effectively, they closed the door on this thing. Now we’re going to expand. If you want to prevent this, then you have an issue with Ukraine effectively.
34:33
And we’re still continuing down this path. That is the idea that Ukraine has to give up on its NATO ambitions. I don’t think Russia would be even content with this because Ukraine can change its mind next week. It had this in its constitution. It wasn’t supposed to join any military blocs. So–
But why are there no talks between NATO and Russia? Surely, these are the main two actors in the European security architecture, which should sit down and again, return to the whole Helsinki Accords format. How do we create Europe based on indivisible security without dividing lines? Something that is a positive-sum game.
Doctorow: 35:22
Let’s go back to December, 2021, and to the spokesman for the Russian Ministry of Defense, Deputy Minister Ryabkov. And there I find the answer to your question. There’s step one, there’s step two. Yes, the whole crisis in Ukraine was over the architecture of European security. And logically, as you say, the negotiation should be with NATO. However, what did Ryabkov say?
He said, we go back to the status quo and to before the expansion of NATO, 1997, 1999. We go back to that period. That’s what we want to reinstate. And if you don’t agree to it, we will push you back. Pushing NATO out of Ukraine is the most important demonstration of Russia’s ability to physically push back NATO. If it means marching on Paris, they will march on Paris. And I think everyone understands that.
36:32
If they destroy the Ukrainian army, they are in effect destroying NATO’s capabilities. And I don’t think that even the thickheads here in Brussels will miss that point. So step one is capitulation in Ukraine. Step two is capitulation in Brussels.
Diesen: 36:53
So, yeah, because, well, that was my last question. That is, even in Western media now, they have reports that the Russians are producing a lot of heavy military hardware. However, they’re also reporting that very little of this is going actually to the front. They’re already supplied sufficiently, they’re already manned. Instead, you’re seeing a very powerful army being built up in the rear.
And we also know that the Russians have Oreshnik missiles and they are likely putting this onto mass production to get as many as possible. But we’re not seeing any of the Oreshnik missiles being used either. Do you see the Russians preparing for a wider possible war? I’m not suggesting that this is a desired situation indeed. Even Western observers are recognizing that Russia has gone to great length to avoid a direct conflict with NATO.
37:52
But now that we’re reaching the final stages, the Ukrainian military is collapsing, the Europeans are getting very desperate, The Germans are now seemingly preparing to engage in direct attacks on Russia. But the Russians are setting themselves up, preparing for a wider war once the Ukrainian army has been broken.
Doctorow: 38:15
Let me go back to where we were at the start of all of this, when Lavrov said, bold truth, “If you want peace, prepare for war.” And that’s exactly what it is.
Diesen:
Well, that’s a good answer. So, okay. Well, Gilbert Doctorow, thank you so much for taking the time, on a holiday as well. So I appreciate it. So yeah, have a good day. Thank you.
Doctorow: 38:39
My pleasure.
Tag: russia
Glenn Diesen interview, 29 May 2025: Germany and Russia Moving Toward War
Today’s discussion with Professor Glenn Diesen was far-reaching and no doubt viewers will find it especially rewarding.
As the title indicates, we began with review of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s irresponsible decision to approve supplying Kiev with the long-range German cruise missile Taurus by one means or another. In fact, as I remark here, the logic is that he already has delivered some missiles there in violation of his commitments to his coalition partners.
We concluded with considerations on how this war may end after Donald Trump withdraws the United States from participation. As I suggest, the inevitable capitulation of Ukraine will also signify the capitulation of NATO, and at that point finally negotiations will begin to draw up a new security architecture for Europe, as the Russian proposed back in December 2021 but the USA and NATO haughtily rejected out of hand.
In between we discussed why Donald Trump is play acting all the time, why we must look closely not at what he says, which is calculated to confuse and disarm his opponents, but at what he does. The man who approved closing down USAID, the main instrument of regime change paid for by the CIA, the man who has decapitated the US intelligence agencies, who is now purging the State Department, who is scaling back the National Security Council from its bloated 200 staff under Biden to its prior headcount of 60 – the man who is doing all this cannot be a buffoon. Let us put aside his egotistical personality and admit that Trump is intelligent and brave and knows what he wants to do with the U.S. government. As I also state here, it is very wrong-headed to believe that Trump is under-informed or misinformed about the international situation by his subordinates. On the contrary, it is more believable that he knows more about what is going on in the Russia-Ukraine war than any of us commentators on youtube today. That is just how it should be.
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025
Translation below into German (Andreas Mylaeus)
Interview mit Glenn Diesen, 29. Mai 2025: Deutschland und Russland auf dem Weg zum Krieg
Die heutige Diskussion mit Professor Glenn Diesen war sehr aufschlussreich und wird für die Zuschauer zweifellos besonders interessant sein.
Wie der Titel schon andeutet, begannen wir mit einer Rückschau auf die unverantwortliche Entscheidung des deutschen Bundeskanzlers Friedrich Merz, die Lieferung der deutschen Langstrecken-Marschflugkörper vom Typ Taurus an Kiew auf die eine oder andere Weise zu genehmigen. Wie ich hier bereits angemerkt habe, hat er damit gegen seine Verpflichtungen gegenüber seinen Koalitionspartnern verstoßen, da er bereits einige Raketen dorthin geliefert hat.
Wir schlossen mit Überlegungen dazu, wie dieser Krieg enden könnte, nachdem Donald Trump die Vereinigten Staaten aus dem Konflikt zurückgezogen hat. Wie ich vermute, wird die unvermeidliche Kapitulation der Ukraine auch die Kapitulation der NATO bedeuten, und an diesem Punkt werden endlich Verhandlungen beginnen, um eine neue Sicherheitsarchitektur für Europa zu entwerfen, wie sie Russland bereits im Dezember 2021 vorgeschlagen hatte, die aber von den USA und der NATO hochmütig abgelehnt wurde.
Zwischendurch diskutierten wir, warum Donald Trump ständig Theater spielt, warum wir nicht auf das achten dürfen, was er sagt, denn das ist darauf ausgelegt, seine Gegner zu verwirren und zu entwaffnen, sondern auf das, was er tut. Der Mann, der die Schließung der USAID genehmigt hat, dem wichtigsten Instrument für Regimewechsel, das von der CIA finanziert wird, der Mann, der die US-Geheimdienste enthauptet hat, der jetzt das Außenministerium säubert, der den Nationalen Sicherheitsrat von seinen aufgeblähten 200 Mitarbeitern unter Biden auf die frühere Personalstärke von 60 Mitarbeitern reduziert – der Mann, der all das tut, kann kein Clown sein. Lassen wir seine egoistische Persönlichkeit beiseite und geben wir zu, dass Trump intelligent und mutig ist und weiß, was er mit der US-Regierung vorhat. Wie ich auch hier feststelle, ist es sehr kurzsichtig zu glauben, dass Trump von seinen Untergebenen schlecht oder falsch über die internationale Lage informiert wird. Im Gegenteil, sollten wir eher annehmen, dass er mehr über den Krieg zwischen Russland und der Ukraine weiß als jeder von uns Kommentatoren auf YouTube heute. So sollte es auch sein.
Transcript of ‘Judging Freedom,’ 29 May edition
Transcript submitted by a reader
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FW9y77Z0TVQ
Napolitano: 0:34
Hi, everyone. Judge Andrew Napolitano here for “Judging Freedom”. Today is Thursday, May 29th, 2025. Professor Gilbert Doctorow joins us in just a moment on just how dire is the situation in Ukraine.
[commercial message]
2:21
Professor Doctorow, welcome here, my dear friend. Congratulations on your new book, “War Diaries …”, which, of course, we will discuss at some point during our interview today. I do want to start with the latest out of Germany. Has the decision of Chancellor Merz to deliver Taurus missiles to Ukraine without geographical limits made Germany a co-belligerent in the war in the eyes of the Kremlin?
Gilbert Doctorow, PhD:
Definitely, yes. I’d say the language has changed a little bit in the last week or two. Now, what Mr. Lavrov said most recently about Merz, is a hair’s breadth away from calling him a Nazi. Lavrov said that like Hitler, Merz is doing this and that. Well, like Hitler, it means that he’s already associating Mr. Merz with the Hitler heritage or legacy.
3:22
And that is a dramatic change in the language coming out of the Kremlin. The Russians have said very plainly that if Merz proceeds with this– and the last news, updated news is that they probably have already shipped the missile to Kiev. When Merz said yesterday that it could be, as soon as a few weeks from now, well, judging by the last three years, we know that when statements like that are made, the shipments have been made weeks before, so that we may assume that this missile is already in the possession of the Ukrainians. For the Russians, that is war.
Napolitano:
What do you expect President Putin to do about it? I mean, Prime Minister, or Foreign Minister Lavrov’s words are strong, but they’re just words. I don’t mean that to demean him, as you know, I’m very fond of him personally and professionally, but what do you think President Putin will do?
Doctorow:
I don’t think that President Putin has any margin for his own opinions in this matter. The latest opinion polls in Russia show that he has gone up to an 82 percent approval rating.
Napolitano:
Wow.
Doctorow:
But let’s not deceive ourselves. The popular mood in Russia has changed, whereas some of my peers and colleagues were saying as long ago as two years ago, that the Russian general staff didn’t like the go slowly approach, softly, softly approach of Mr. Putin and wanted something more dramatic. I didn’t put much credence in what they think or say privately, because the military is wholly under the control of civilian rule in Russia. However, the indications [are]–and this even came up in recent talk show programs from Moscow– that the popular mood has changed, and people are weary of this go-slow approach.
5:10
And they– I don’t believe that Mr. Putin would stay in power if he failed to respond to … attacks by the Ukrainians using the the Taurus missile against against their military or civilian assets.
Napolitano:
I know your field is not military tactics, but how far can these Taurus missiles reach? Can they reach Moscow?
Doctorow:
Not quite, but the objective that Mr. Merz himself made when he first discussed shipping them was to do something dramatic, something that would humiliate Moscow and would put Russia in an impossible position, the regime in an impossible position, namely to destroy the Crimean bridge. And for that purpose, the German missile is much more effective than the shorter range missiles from Britain and from France, the Storm Shadow, that were supplied previously. They are not, those were not in their targeting capabilities and in the power of their punch, they were not capable of delivering a really destructive blow against bridges or fortified underground positions. This missile, the Taurus, has that capability, and the Russians have no experience dealing with the unique features of its targeting and of its path. This is a cruise missile, so it has changeable paths of attack and is difficult to intercept.
7:09
For that reason, the Russians are particularly concerned about its becoming available to Kiev, since it could do what the previous deliveries from Britain and France and the United States with HIMARS were incapable of.
Napolitano:
One of our viewers writes that the range is 300 kilometers. Is that, if that is accurate, and if this is fired from Ukraine territory, can it reach that bridge?
Doctorow:
Well, the, as far as I know, 350 kilometers is the limit on Storm Shadow. The Taurus is 500 kilometers. And that is the significance of Merz saying two days ago that limitations on range no longer hold. He meant precisely the longer-range Taurus.
Napolitano:
Are the Germans prepared for a couple of Oreshniks aimed at their industrial base?
Doctorow: 8:13
I don’t think that Mr. Merz takes seriously the Russian threats. After all, he could say, with entire logic, that the Russians never responded to the American shipment of long-range missiles, the HIMARS, the ATACMS, they never responded to the Storm Shadow. However, that is ignoring the Russian view of Germany as opposed to its former allies. Russia is neuralgic, is hypersensitive to what the Germans do. And the recent celebration of the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Europe on May 9th, we were all reminded about the 26 million Russians who died in that conflict, largely due to German military efforts. And that is unforgivable, unforgettable.
9:09
So anything that Germany does, is a special case for Russia. And as I said, whatever the personal preferences of Mr. Putin, he cannot go against the popular will. He wouldn’t want to. The popular will in Russia is to differentiate between German missiles and the others, in a way that means the Russians will have to respond in a dramatic way.
Now, taking out military production facilities, I’m not sure that that would be the first thing that happens, because that particular facility making the Taurus has been idle for more than a year. They have not been producing it, so it wouldn’t accomplish much to bomb it out. That means that they will probably have to find another target for Orashniks. The Russian talk shows spoke vaguely about Berlin. What exactly is meant, we don’t know.
Napolitano:
Wow. Here’s Chancellor Merz two days ago on this very topic. Chris, cut number seven.
Merz:
There are no longer any range restrictions on weapons delivered to Ukraine neither from the British nor the French nor from us nor from the Americans. This means that Ukraine can now also defend itself, including, for example, by taking actions such as attacking military positions located within Russia, or by targeting other strategic sites as necessary. Until recently it was not able to do that. Until recently, with very few exceptions, it also did not do that. Now it can.
In jargon, we call this long-range fire, meaning equipping Ukraine with weapons that can attack military targets in the rear. And this is the decisive, this is the crucial qualitative difference in Ukraine’s conduct of the war. Russia attacks civilian targets completely ruthlessly, bombing cities, kindergartens, hospitals and nursing homes. Ukraine does not do that and we place great importance on ensuring that it stays that way. But a country that can only confront an aggressor on its own territory is not defending itself adequately. So, and this defense of Ukraine is now also taking place against military infrastructure on Russian territory.
Napolitano: 11:24
Before I ask you to analyze that, that was an AI translation from German to English using his voice, amazing what can be done today. What is he trying to accomplish?
Doctorow:
He is preparing a justification in advance for the deployment of these missiles, for their use in striking against Russian targets, and he is lying through his teeth. Everything that he said about the Russian conduct of the war is an outrageous lie scripted in Kiev.
12:02
It is precisely the Ukrainians that have been using terror techniques and deploying their drones and what missiles they have, primarily against civilian targets. That’s been the nature of the warfare going back to 2014. They were destroying civilian residential neighborhoods and playgrounds and hospitals and the rest. And that’s continued to this date.
They have used, the Ukrainians have made some attacks on militarily important facilities. But that is the number of such attacks versus their overall activity, like 2,000 drones were sent into the Russian Federation in the last two weeks by the Ukrainians. They knocked out, or they hit at least, one facility producing chips or something or other for military use. Otherwise it is all ambulances, buses and the rest of it.
13:07
So Mr. Merz is turning everything on its head. The reality is just the opposite. And the Russians have demonstrated this on air, what exactly they targeted and with what effect, because they have drones that inspect, that follow, monitor the destruction.
Napolitano:
Is it too early in his chancellorship for me to ask you fairly, in fairness to you, whether you agree with the Scott Ritter analysis that Merz is the most dangerous German Chancellor since Hitler?
Doctorow: 13:43
Well, I agree completely with that. He is utterly irresponsible, and he is courting disaster for his country. If he believes, and there’s another factor here, that he may well think, first, that the Russians won’t dare strike against Germany. There is dead wrong. They’ve said it openly. They will.
And second, that if they were to do so, then the United States and the other allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization would respond and come to Germany’s aid. Nonsense, maybe other European countries singly will do that, but the United States, I believe, will abstain. And that will condemn completely the notion of the united defense to save Germany from itself. Therefore, Germany will likely suffer uniquely Russian revenge.
Napolitano:
Wow. Let’s transition a little bit. In one of your recent pieces, you wrote about the things Ukrainian soldiers returning from the front are saying about their Russian counterparts. What are they saying?
Doctorow:
Well, I want to point out that this came from an article that was posted by a non-staff person from the “Financial Times” on the front page of their newspaper online, perhaps two days ago. And it was quite astonishing, because of the openness, transparency of the reporting. Much of the information was coming in fact from Russian television. Though the reporter, the writer, author of this piece did not refer to Russian television. Nonetheless, he also interviewed on the battlefield, on the front, Ukrainian soldiers who were saying openly that the Russians are using very effective new tactics. For example, they are instead of coming in on tanks, which are quite vulnerable to destruction by Ukrainian drones as well as others, they are coming in on scooters. They’re coming in on motorcycles in small groups.
16:05
And they’re surprising the Ukrainian defenders of various hamlets on the front line and taking over territory. But the Russians are being very inventive while also they are supporting their forward movement by heavy artillery, by glide bombs, and other serious military equipment. So the Ukrainians are acknowledging the Russian advantage technically in the drone warfare where Russians started out at a big disadvantage three years ago.
Napolitano:16:42
What are the numerical differences of which you’re aware and which you find credible … between Russian enlistments and Ukrainian conscriptions.
Doctorow:
Again, this was also repeated in the article I’m making reference to. And the importance of citing this article is that, editorially, the “Financial Times” is viciously anti-Russian. Some of their journalists slip in some interesting and useful information, considering it is a business newspaper, after all, regarding the state of the Russian economy. Even yesterday, they had an article citing the prosperity and the good feelings of the Russian consumers and general population.
But the newspaper is anti-Russian, and yet they are putting up this material that I just described as a kind of forewarning, I think, to their business subscribers to expect a Ukrainian defeat, something which would not have been acknowledged in any way going back a few months ago.
Napolitano:
Let’s talk for a moment, if we could, about the attempted— this has gotten very, very little play in the West— the attempted assassination of President Putin using drones while he was in a helicopter. Isn’t it reasonable to believe that the information about his presence in that helicopter and the location of the helicopter was supplied to the Ukrainians by either MI6, CIA or Mossad?
Doctorow: 18:25
It is possible, but not necessary. One of the points that bears mentioning and the way that military intelligence has changed in the course of the war, thanks to drones.
The Russian targeting of Ukrainian Western- supplied equipment is largely coming from constant reconnaissance drones. It’s not coming from satellites. And so it is entirely possible that the Ukrainians themselves could have detected a special movement. After all, Putin was coming close to the border. He was visiting Kursk, and that is a bordering oblast. So it is possible the Ukrainians could have learned this through their own reconnaissance, that is, technical means, or they could have learned it from espionage, from leaks.
19:25
Let’s face it, it recently came out, that the reason why the Ukrainian incursion, later invasion of Kursk succeeded so well, was because of widespread corruption in the oblast of Kursk. And this has come out in the last several days. Severe attack on a local administration, which had stolen the money that had been appropriated for defense of the border. It is possible that there are Russians within Kursk who are working for Ukraine.
Napolitano:
But the concept of assassinating President Putin, is it rational that that plan would have been hatched without the Americans knowing about it?
Doctorow:
I think we have to acknowledge that the Ukrainian government, regime, what you want to call it, is desperate. Now, this leads us to the question, is a collapse of the army imminent? I don’t think so. But they are desperate. They are fearing, perhaps, that they will be overthrown because of the military reverses. And they are ready for anything, meaning primarily terrorism.
20:44
Let me alert you to something that isn’t talked about. Turkish airlines have warned passengers on their flights to Russia now that they may be grounded if Turkey believes that its flights from Istanbul could be subject to Ukrainian drones. So that the Ukrainians would even think of attacking Turkish airlines shows you how desperate and totally violent and irresponsible ,and terrorist in nature, the Ukrainian government has become.
Napolitano:
Do you think that mainstream media here in the West is beginning to recognize all this ,or is the “Financial Times” not a barometer of mainstream media?
Doctorow:
No, I think it is a barometer, but that doesn’t mean that they are totally current in and bringing up to date all aspects of Ukrainian activities. As recently as a day ago, nobody was talking in the “Financial Times”, just as they weren’t talking in other Western mainstream, about the massive increase in Ukrainian drone attacks on Russia that preceded the Russian counterattack, which is the only thing that has been covered, in which the Russians have done massive bombing of Kiev and other cities.
22:11
That got everybody’s attention, but what provoked it has been ignored by the “Financial Times”, as well as the rest of mainstream.
Napolitano: 22:21
Here’s President Trump expressing disappointment with the current state of affairs. Chris, cut number 13.
——–
Reporter:
Do you believe the Russians are being disrespectful when they say that your criticisms of Putin are simply an emotional response, and do you still believe that Putin actually wants to end the war?
Trump:
I can’t tell you that, but I’ll let you know in about two weeks, within two weeks. We’re going to find out very soon. We’re going to find out whether or not he’s tapping us along or not. And if he is, we’ll respond a little bit differently. But it’ll take about a week and a half, two weeks.
We have, Mr. Witkoff is here, who’s doing a phenomenal job, is dealing with them very strongly right now. They seem to want to do something, but until the document is signed, I can’t tell you. Nobody can. I can say this, I can say this, that I’m very disappointed at what happened a couple of nights now where people were killed in the middle of what you would call a negotiation.
I’m very disappointed by that. Very, very disappointed. Yeah, please.
——–
Napolitano: 23:30
What do the Russians think of him when he makes comments like that?
Doctorow:
Let’s divide this between what they think and what they say. What they say is very diplomatic. You know what Pieskov said, precisely that the Americans are reacting emotionally, that it’s very tense and therefore it could be explained away. However that’s not what Moscow thinks. That’s what Moscow feels obliged to say, not to tip its hands to the to Donald Trump’s enemies and opponents.
They would– what Moscow thinks is that Mr. Trump is basically well disposed, is looking for detente, and they applaud his efforts, but they are very open to acknowledging the level of opposition that he faces, which was most recent. It was called out also on Russian news yesterday that is Lindsey Graham’s 80 Senate signatures on the bill that he has advanced to call for drastic sanctions to be imposed on Russia. This is a bill that will be veto-proof and this may condition what Mr. Trump was saying yesterday. You’ll see in two weeks what our response will be.
24:48
I think that if this motion by Lindsey Graham and that’s 80 he signed up, proceeds and they force Trump’s hand on this issue, that he will respond by indeed walking away from the negotiations, saying “We’ve done our best” and leaving with a fair-handed equal treatment. That is, the Russians will get more sanctions and the Ukrainians will get no more financial, military aid or reconnaissance aid from the United States. And that will look very good.
Napolitano:
Wow.
Doctorow:
He’s prepared. But I do say that he is not ignorant. The man who delivered that speech in Saudi Arabia, which you, I, and so many others consider to be a brilliant and the most astonishing denunciation of the whole ideology of neocons in the presence of the Saudi leaders, saying that “You’ve done it yourself, you’ve gotten democracy, you’ve gotten prosperity, no thanks to us, because we’ve only brought death and destruction wherever we tried to do nation building.”
The man who delivered that, he didn’t write it, it’s not important, he delivered it, and he knew what he was delivering. That man cannot be described as a buffoon. I am certain, Judge, that he knows as much and probably a lot more than you or I or anyone else around, about what the situation is on the ground in Russia today. And it’s not thanks to the National Security Council, which he has been busy depopulating.
Napolitano:
Right, right.
Doctorow:
Because it was packed by Biden.
Napolitano:
I have to note that standing next to him, I don’t know if you could just put up an image, Chris, of what we just saw from Cut 13 where President Trump was speaking just for a second. Just put up the beginning of number 13. Chris? All right, maybe we can’t get it out.
——–
Reporter:
Do you believe the Russians are being disrespectful when they say that your criticisms of Putin are simply an emotional response, and do you still believe that Putin actually wants to end the war?
Trump:
I can’t tell you that, but I’ll let you know in about two weeks, within two weeks. We’re going to find out very soon. We’re going to find out whether or not he’s tapping us along or not. And if he is, we’ll respond a little bit differently. But it’ll take about a week and a half, two weeks.
We have, Mr. Witkoff is here, who’s doing a phenomenal job, is dealing with them very strongly right now. They they seem to want to do something, but until the document is signed, I can’t tell you. Nobody can. I can say this.
——–
Napolitano: 27:34
Right. I had to comment about the woman standing next to him. That is Janine Pirro, the interim US attorney for Washington DC, my former colleague at Fox News, whom I’ve known for 20 years. That is the longest she’s ever been in front of a camera without saying a word. Tell us about your new book, “War Diaries”, Professor.
Doctorow:
Well, this is a book– I’ve noticed when I went to Amazon that somebody in Ukrainian has published “War Diary” in singular, about a year ago, telling the story from the perspective of the Ukrainians. I’m telling the story as in how it looked, how the development of the war looked on the ground in Russia from my visits there, from my close following their press and so forth.
28:24
It is not intended to be a comprehensive history of the war; it’s intended to be a personal account of what has changed in Russia, how society has changed, the thinking of the man on the street, the thinking of the intelligentsia, the rise in patriotism. All of these are features that I tracked over the course of the war, as you know, in essays that I wrote day by day, week by week.
Napolitano:
Right.
Doctorow:
And I have culled that to produce this very large book, which in some respects will be a reference book. But I think that readers will find that there are good chunks of it which speak to them directly and interest them, particularly my travels in Russia, which were four times a year before I curtailed them as travel became more difficult. Nonetheless, this was a unique reportage because Western journalists all left the country at the start of the special military operation. I think it’s ultimately a valuable contribution.
There will be a volume two. I’m hoping that I can produce it by the end of this year, because the war will be over by then. But of course, nobody knows.
Napolitano:
Nobody knows. Well, we all know how much we appreciate you. Thank you for sending the essays, however long or short they may be. I have the benefit of your thinking all the time and almost instantaneously. I can’t wait to get my copy of the book. And thank you very much for your time today and I’ve already heard from Janine Pirro who apparently is watching this. She loved the wisecrack that I made. All the best. Thank you for joining us, Professor.
30:09
Well, thank you.
Napolitano:
Of course. And coming up later today, we have a full day for you, at 2.15 this afternoon, Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson; at three o’clock, Professor John Mearsheimer; at four o’clock from wherever he is on the planet, Max Blumenthal; and at five o’clock, Professor Jeffrey Sachs.
30:31
Judge Napolitano for “Judging Freedom”.
‘Judging Freedom,’ 29 May edition: How Precarious Is Ukraine?
Today’s chat examines the very provocative plans of German Chancellor Merz to supply the Taurus missile to Ukraine. I believe he may not properly appreciate the way the Russians distinguish between American, French, British missiles and those the Germans are providing. As I say here, President Putin will have no choice but to respond with missiles destroying German military assets because a large and vocal part of the Russian population will not allow him to sit on his hands.
Do heads of state determine the will of the people or are they implementers of the will of the people? The question was posed by Lev Tolstoy as the central issue of War and Peace. Here and now my call is that Putin must implement the will of the people and not his own predispositions. Hence. If the Germans do go through with deliveries of Taurus to Kiev, Putin will attack Germany with Oreshnik hypersonic missiles, likely after making his case before the UN Security Council. There is no reason for him to conceal his intentions. There is no need to be surreptitious: the Oreshniks are unstoppable.
Donald Trump is in a similar situation. His predisposition is to oversee a peace negotiation that ends in a treaty closely approximating Russian demands. However, the political forces in Europe and on Capitol Hill work against that. In this chat we discuss the bill that Lindsey Graham has introduced in the Senate calling for imposition of very harsh new economic sanctions on Russia with reference to Russia’s latest drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities. Graham says the bill is approved by 80 Senators, making it veto-proof.
I believe Graham’s bill will precipitate the long-awaited declaration by Trump that the USA is leaving the peace process and ending its involvement in the Ukraine war. In that case, Trump can claim to be even-handed. He will accept the inevitable with respect to new sanctions, saying the intention is to moderate Russian demands to conclude a peace. And he will simultaneously end U.S. military, financial and intelligence aid to Ukraine to moderate Ukrainian demands. The net effect will indeed be to end the war on the terms of the victor, Russia, sooner rather than later.
Otherwise, in this interview Judge Napolitano posted a video of Merz claiming that Russia has been attacking civilian targets in Ukraine – apartment buildings, hospitals, kindergartens. These are outrageous lies coming from Kiev and disseminated irresponsibly by Merz. In this regard, he is now rivaling British Prime Minister Starmer in the Pinocchio rankings.
I was particularly pleased to deal with the question of the drone attack on President Putin’s helicopter when he toured the Kursk oblast at the start of the week. Some analysts have said that this indicated that US or British intelligence sharing with Kiev had enabled this assassination attempt. There is even the suggestion that Trump may have had foreknowledge of the attack. However, there are, as I say here, other possible explanations, including the Ukraine’s own surveillance with drones given that the Russian President was flying just across the border from Ukrainian positions. Or, more likely their intelligence could have been provided by Russian traitors based in Kursk.
In the past several days the Russian authorities have made arrests of Kursk officials for expropriating defense funds that were allocated to the oblast early in the Special Military Operation. This theft, it is said, made possible the successful Ukrainian incursion in August 2024. Russian news reports yesterday emphasized the rampant corruption in Kursk. It is not inconceivable that in such an environment there have been willing collaborators in Kursk selling intelligence to the Ukrainians.
Finally, I am grateful to Judge Napolitano for featuring my just published War Diaries. The Russia-Ukraine War, 2022-2023 and inviting my comments on why the book should interest readers.
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025
Translation into German (Andreas Mylaeus)
„Judging Freedom“, Ausgabe vom 29. Mai: Wie prekär ist die Lage in der Ukraine?
Im heutigen Chat geht es um die sehr provokanten Pläne des deutschen Bundeskanzlers Merz, die Ukraine mit Taurus-Raketen zu beliefern. Ich glaube, er unterschätzt möglicherweise, wie sehr die Russen zwischen amerikanischen, französischen und britischen Raketen einerseits und den von Deutschland gelieferten Raketen andererseits unterscheiden. Wie ich hier bereits gesagt habe, wird Präsident Putin keine andere Wahl haben, als mit Raketenangriffen auf deutsche Militärmittel und -anlagen zu reagieren, da ein großer und lautstarker Teil der russischen Bevölkerung ihm nicht erlauben wird, untätig zu bleiben.
Bestimmen Staatschefs den Willen des Volkes oder sind sie nur Ausführende des Volkswillens? Diese Frage stellte Lew Tolstoi als zentrale Frage in „Krieg und Frieden“. Hier und jetzt sage ich deutlich, dass Putin den Willen des Volkes umsetzen muss und nicht seine eigenen Vorlieben. Wenn die Deutschen also die Lieferungen von Taurus an Kiew tatsächlich durchführen, wird Putin Deutschland mit Oreshnik-Hyperschallraketen angreifen, wahrscheinlich nachdem er seine Argumente vor dem UN-Sicherheitsrat vorgebracht hat. Es gibt keinen Grund für ihn, seine Absichten zu verbergen. Es besteht kein Grund zur Heimlichtuerei: Die Oreshniks sind nicht aufzuhalten.
Donald Trump befindet sich in einer ähnlichen Situation. Er neigt dazu, Friedensverhandlungen zu leiten, die zu einem Vertrag führen, der den russischen Forderungen weitgehend entspricht. Die politischen Kräfte in Europa und im US-Kongress arbeiten jedoch dagegen. In diesem Chat diskutieren wir den Gesetzentwurf, den Lindsey Graham im Senat eingebracht hat und der sehr harte neue Wirtschaftssanktionen gegen Russland fordert, unter Verweis auf die jüngsten Drohnen- und Raketenangriffe Russlands auf ukrainische Städte. Graham sagt, der Gesetzentwurf sei von 80 Senatoren gebilligt worden und damit veto-sicher.
Ich glaube, dass Grahams Gesetzentwurf die lang erwartete Erklärung Trumps beschleunigen wird, dass die USA aus dem Friedensprozess aussteigen und ihr Engagement im Ukraine-Krieg beenden. In diesem Fall kann Trump behaupten, unparteiisch zu sein. Er wird die unvermeidlichen neuen Sanktionen akzeptieren und sagen, dass damit die russischen Forderungen nach einem Friedensabschluss gemildert werden sollen. Gleichzeitig wird er die militärische, finanzielle und geheimdienstliche Hilfe der USA für die Ukraine einstellen, um die ukrainischen Forderungen zu mäßigen. Der Nettoeffekt wird in der Tat sein, dass der Krieg eher früher als später zu den Bedingungen des Siegers, Russland, beendet wird.
Ansonsten hat Judge Napolitano in diesem Interview ein Video von Merz gepostet, in dem dieser behauptet, Russland habe zivile Ziele in der Ukraine angegriffen – Wohnhäuser, Krankenhäuser, Kindergärten. Das sind empörende Lügen, die aus Kiew stammen und von Merz unverantwortlich verbreitet werden. In dieser Hinsicht konkurriert er nun mit dem britischen Premierminister Starmer um den Pinocchio-Preis.
Besonders gefreut hat mich, dass ich auf die Frage nach dem Drohnenangriff auf den Hubschrauber von Präsident Putin eingehen konnte, als er Anfang der Woche die Region Kursk bereiste. Einige Analysten haben behauptet, dass dies darauf hindeute, dass der US-amerikanische oder britische Geheimdienst Kiew Informationen weitergegeben und so dieses Attentat ermöglicht habe. Es gibt sogar die Vermutung, dass Trump möglicherweise Vorwissen über den Angriff gehabt habe. Wie ich hier jedoch bereits dargelegt habe, gibt es andere mögliche Erklärungen, darunter die eigene Überwachung der Ukraine mit Drohnen, da der russische Präsident direkt über der Grenze zu ukrainischen Stellungen flog. Oder, was wahrscheinlicher ist, ihre Informationen könnten von russischen Verrätern in Kursk stammen.
In den letzten Tagen haben die russischen Behörden Beamte aus Kursk wegen Veruntreuung von Verteidigungsgeldern festgenommen, die zu Beginn der Sonder-Militäroperation für die Region bereitgestellt worden waren. Dieser Diebstahl soll den erfolgreichen Einmarsch der Ukraine im August 2024 ermöglicht haben. Russische Medienberichte betonten gestern die grassierende Korruption in Kursk. Es ist nicht auszuschließen, dass es in einem solchen Umfeld willige Kollaborateure in Kursk gab, die Informationen an die Ukrainer verkauft haben.
Abschließend möchte ich Judge Napolitano dafür danken, dass er mein gerade erschienenes Buch „War Diaries. The Russia-Ukraine War, 2022-2023“ vorgestellt und mich gebeten hat, zu erläutern, warum das Buch für Leser interessant sein könnte.
Hotsy-Totsy, another Nazi: Friedrich Merz proposes joint production of Taurus with Kiev
On 15 February 2022, at his joint news conference with Vladimir Putin which concluded his visit to Moscow, former German chancellor Olaf Scholz called ‘risible’ the Russian leader’s denunciation of the Kiev regime as neo-Nazi run. How could a nation led by a Jew, Zelensky, behave in a Nazi manner, he asked with sarcasm. In saying this, Scholz discredited himself to the Russians once and for all. He also surely contributed to Vladimir Putin’s decision to launch the Special Military Operation on the 24th by demonstrating that it was hopeless to find a diplomatic solution to the East-West confrontation since basic assumptions were too far apart.
To his credit, in the three years of warfare in and over Ukraine that followed Scholz had sufficient discipline and fear of overly antagonizing the neighbor to the East which compelled him to ignore the warlike pronouncements of his Foreign Minister from the Greens Analena Baerbock and his popular Defense Minister Pistorius. He refused to allow the shipment of Germany’s Taurus cruise missiles to Ukraine lest this directly involve Germany in the war, leading to unpredictable but ominous Russian retaliation.
During his electoral campaign last fall, Scholz’s successor, Christian Democrat leader Friedrich Merz chose instead to light the fires of German revanchism to bolster voter support. He advocated the delivery of the Taurus to Kiev. Not only that, but he precisely recommended it be used to destroy Russia’s landmark Kerch bridge connecting the Crimean peninsula with mainland Russia, thereby inflicting a humiliation of enormous proportions on the Kremlin.
In the early weeks of his chancellorship, Merz was prevented from openly handing over Taurus to the Ukrainians by his coalition partners, the Social Democrats, who insisted on abiding by Scholz’s ruling. However, we see from the Chancellor’s meeting with Zelensky yesterday for consultations on further military assistance to Ukraine, that Merz has chosen to have his way by crook if not by hook. Their joint declaration speaks of technical cooperation enabling Kiev to manufacture precision long range missiles for the purpose of striking military bases deep inside the Russian Federation.
The formula advanced by Merz and Zelensky leaves it unclear exactly where the future production facility would be situated, but it is a safe guess to say that it would be inside Germany, because anything built within Ukraine would surely be destroyed by Russia’s Oreshniks before it produced the very first products. Merz is gambling on the notion that Russia will not dare strike Germany due to its protection under Article 5 of the NATO treaty.
In doing this, Merz is willfully ignoring the unmistakable remarks of Vladimir Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov that Germany’s participation in sending Taurus missiles against the Russian Federation makes it a co-belligerent and that Russian retaliation against Germany will follow.
Friedrich Merz is now publicly identified by the Kremlin as a Hitler-like figure. No ifs, ands or buts. He is viewed as the embodiment of German revanchism which will be smashed just as the Nazi armies were smashed 80 years ago. The German nation has been forewarned. We now wait to see how it will respond.
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025
Mainstream catches up with Alternative Media on the dire situation facing Ukraine
Occasionally over the past six months I have directed attention to articles in the very mainstream Financial Times dealing with the Russian economy that described fairly accurately the generalized rising prosperity in the country today notwithstanding the expenses of the war effort and an unprecedented volume of Western sanctions intended to degrade that economy. As I remarked, such reportage runs directly counter to the Russia-bashing line that the FT editors tend to impose on all coverage of Russia.
This weekend the level of truthfulness in FT reporting on the dire military, financial, economic and other circumstances of Ukraine reached a level on a par with what Alternative Media, including this newsletter have been saying for a couple of years.
See the report of Christopher Miller based in Kiev, ‘Expect no miracle’: Ukraine braces for Russia’s summer offensive.
Miller has interviewed Ukrainian soldiers, who say openly how effective are Russia’s latest tactics of sending in infantry on motorcycles, even on electric scooters to catch the Ukrainian defenders of hamlets and settlements by surprise and seize territory. This, by the way, is precisely what Russian state television news is showing day by day.
But that is not all. Miller tells us: “Aiding the infantry is Russia’s heavy and high-tech weapons blasting its way through, with glide bombs, missiles and drones – including new models connected via fibre-optic cables that make them immune to electronic jamming. Defenders have been forced to pull back from towns including Toretsk and Chasiv Yar, where the cost of holding ground proved too high.” All of this is very true, and it is all being said on Russian television.
He may based in Kiev, but it seems to me that Miller has his television properly tuned to where real as opposed to fake news is coming from.
Miller also speaks about the manpower shortages that leave the Ukrainian command with a losing hand:
“At a Kremlin meeting on economic development this month, Putin claimed that up to 60,000 Russians ‘volunteer’ to join the army each month – double the roughly 30,000 Ukrainians he said were being conscripted.”
Though Miller does not say it, he is taking those facts straight from Russian state news.
Finally, to the same point, in this article Miller alludes to a very damaging assessment of the overall Ukrainian situation delivered to an audience in London last week by Valery Zaluzhny, the Ukrainian ambassador to the United Kingdom, former four star general and commander in chief of the Ukrainian armed forces (to February 2024). This speech was the source of the title that the FT assigned to his article: not to expect ‘some kind of miracle…that will bring peace to Ukraine.’ Specifically, Zaluzhny said: “With an enormous shortage of human resources and the catastrophic economic situation we’re facing”…etc, etc.
Once again, Miller was right in line with what Russian state television was reporting this past weekend. Director of Russian television news Dimitry Kiselyov called attention to the Zaluzhny speech in London as an indication that the political elites of the Ukraine are now challenging the narrative coming from Team Zelensky, indicating that the regime is cracking.
So far, so good. I close my examination of this FT article by noting that in one important respect it is more truthful about the situation on the battlefield than what you will hear or read in the Alternative Media videos of some of my peers, who are still predicting Ukrainian collapse and capitulation next week. After explaining how the Russians are outgunning, out manning the Ukrainians, he cites a Vienna-based military analyst, Franz-Stefan Gady: “We can expect gradual Russian advances but no imminent collapses, no collapse of the front line.” That corresponds to the generally cautious assessments you will hear on Russian state television.
All of the foregoing bears out my repeated justification for watching Russian state television news and relaying to the Community what they are saying. Now even the FT has become a follower.
*****
Everything in moderation. I do not want to suggest that all of Western mainstream has become transparent and truthful about the war all of the time. Western coverage of the Russian drone and missile attacks on Kiev and other Ukrainian cities the past few days is printing text written in Kiev, without any sideways glance at the Russian accounts. We hear and read that Russia has been striking apartment buildings and other civilian targets, that it is clearly out to destroy the chances for continuing peace talks, blah blah and blah blah. This is the propaganda line that Trump’s domestic and European opponents have been disseminating. To counter it, Trump issued his now very widely cited criticism of Putin as having gone ‘crazy, though to the disappointment of Neocons, Trump has not indicated any intention of sanctioning the Russians over this. Indeed, mainstream media rightly understand that Trump’s feet are still pointed in the direction of withdrawing the United States from the war.
Russian state television has been showing videos of precisely what they were attacking these past two days – factories producing drones, an airport from which a Ukrainian F-16 took off and fired Storm Shadow missiles at Russia, a container ship in the port of Odessa which was carrying war materiel. They also explained that these were ‘revenge attacks’ for the past week of massive Ukrainian drone attacks inside the Russian Federation and particularly concentrated on Moscow.
*****
Now I wish to comment briefly on a development in the war that has received almost no attention in Western mainstream though it has been picked up especially by Indian newscasters, namely the drone attack on the helicopter carrying Vladimir Putin on his visit two days ago to Kursk oblast, a region of the Russian Federation bordering on Ukraine which was partially occupied by the Ukrainians from August 2024 until its full liberation several weeks ago.
The Russians have said very little about this because the swarm attack of drones indicates a breach of security whereby Ukrainian intelligence knew when and where Putin would be traveling within the range of Ukrainian offensive weapons. One other explanation that is still more alarming is that American or European aerial or spatial reconnaissance information may have enabled the Ukrainian assassination attempt on Putin.
We do not know for a fact whether Putin was actually on the helicopter that was being targeted, but from Russian news there is reason to believe that he was, and that the incident did not lead to disaster only because Russian air defenses were sufficiently effective to down all of the attacking drones.
It is an open question what kind of revenge attack Moscow will now implement. Will they see this as justifying the ‘neutralization’ of Zelensky for which so many Russian patriots are impatient? There is no doubt that his elimination by missile attack on Kiev is doable by the Kremlin at any time of its choosing.
****
I close this overview of current Russia-Ukraine affairs by turning to Russian commentary on what German Chancellor Merz was hinting at in his latest statements about offensive weapons that Europe is supplying to Kiev. Two days ago, Merz said that there no longer is any limit on the range of missiles being supplied to the Ukrainians and that they must be able to strike military targets deep inside the Russian Federation. Rightly or wrongly, Russian state television including Sixty Minutes and Evening with Vladimir Solovyov last night took this to mean that Merz is once again determined to ship the 500-km range German cruise missile Taurus to Ukraine with intent to knock out the Kerch (Crimean) bridge, for which it is very capable, more so than the French and British long range Storm Shadows supplied to Ukraine till now.
Russian commentators, who surely had the backing of the Kremlin in this instance, stated that supplying the Taurus to Ukraine will be viewed by Moscow as bringing Germany directly into the war and will require a suitable response. The suitable response will be the launch of Russia’s unstoppable hypersonic Oreshnik missiles to strike one or another target inside Germany. One panelist said that two Oreshniks should be sufficient to completely destroy the factory in Germany that has been producing Taurus (NB – there is presently no production of Taurus at that site). Such destruction would take the Germans five years to recover from, putting paid to Merz’s plans of making his country the most powerful militarily in Europe. The speaker went on to say that before this attack, Russia should state its case justifying such a response to Germany directly joining the war. This justification would be read out in the United Nations Security Council. Another panelist said the Oreshniks should be directed against Berlin without further details.
Allow me to note, that this entire discussion of Merz and his Taurus missiles was discussed in utter seriousness and in a visibly depressed mood. Readers of my War Diaries, Volume I will observe how there have been frequent flip flops in the mood of the hosts and panelists of the main Russian talk shows from confident expectation of victory to anxiety that the end of the world is approaching. The mood on Russian television last night fell into the latter category.
Postscript, 28 May: ‘The Financial Times’ today has published another of its in-depth and very positive appraisals of the Russian economy. This is by its own staff and is based largely on their close scrutiny of help wanted announcements to determine how the salaries offered in starting positions have evolved over the past year. See “Vladimir Putin’s war economy is cooling, but Russians still feel richer”
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025
Translation below into German (Andreas Mylaeus)
Die Mainstream-Medien holen bei der Berichterstattung über die dramatische Lage in der Ukraine gegenüber den alternativen Medien auf
In den letzten sechs Monaten habe ich gelegentlich auf Artikel in der sehr etablierten Financial Times hingewiesen, die sich mit der russischen Wirtschaft befassten und recht genau den allgemeinen Wohlstandsanstieg im Land beschrieben, trotz der Kosten für den Krieg und der beispiellosen westlichen Sanktionen, die darauf abzielen, die Wirtschaft zu schwächen. Wie ich bereits angemerkt habe, stehen solche Berichte in direktem Widerspruch zu der russlandfeindlichen Linie, die die FT-Redaktion sonst in ihrer gesamten Berichterstattung über Russland verfolgt.
An diesem Wochenende erreichte die Wahrhaftigkeit der FT-Berichterstattung über die katastrophale militärische, finanzielle, wirtschaftliche und sonstige Lage der Ukraine ein Niveau, das dem entspricht, was alternative Medien, darunter auch dieser Newsletter, seit einigen Jahren sagen.
Siehe den Bericht von Christopher Miller aus Kiew: „Erwartet kein Wunder“: Die Ukraine bereitet sich auf die Sommeroffensive Russlands vor.
Miller hat ukrainische Soldaten interviewt, die offen berichten, wie effektiv Russlands neueste Taktik ist, Infanteristen auf Motorrädern und sogar auf Elektrorollern einzusetzen, um die ukrainischen Verteidiger von Weilern und Siedlungen zu überraschen und Gebiete zu erobern. Das ist übrigens genau das, was die russischen Staatsfernsehsender Tag für Tag zeigen.
Aber das ist noch nicht alles. Miller berichtet: „Die Infanterie wird von russischen schweren und hochtechnologischen Waffen unterstützt, die sich mit Gleitbomben, Raketen und Drohnen den Weg bahnen – darunter neue Modelle, die über Glasfaserkabel verbunden und somit immun gegen elektronische Störsignale sind. Die Verteidiger waren gezwungen, sich aus Städten wie Toretsk und Chasiv Yar zurückzuziehen, wo die Kosten für die Verteidigung zu hoch waren.“ All das ist absolut wahr, und all das wird im russischen Fernsehen gesagt.
Miller mag zwar in Kiew ansässig sein, aber mir scheint, dass er seinen Fernseher richtig eingestellt hat, um echte Nachrichten zu empfangen und nicht Fake News.
Miller spricht auch über den Personalmangel, der das ukrainische Kommando in eine aussichtslose Lage bringt:
„Bei einem Treffen des Kremls zur wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung in diesem Monat behauptete Putin, dass sich jeden Monat bis zu 60.000 Russen ‚freiwillig‘ zur Armee melden – doppelt so viele wie die etwa 30.000 Ukrainer, die seiner Aussage zufolge eingezogen werden.“
Miller sagt es zwar nicht, aber er übernimmt diese Fakten direkt aus den russischen Staatsmedien.
Schließlich verweist Miller in diesem Artikel auf eine sehr vernichtende Einschätzung der allgemeinen Lage in der Ukraine, die Valery Zaluzhny, der ukrainische Botschafter im Vereinigten Königreich, ehemaliger Vier-Sterne-General und Oberbefehlshaber der ukrainischen Streitkräfte (bis Februar 2024), letzte Woche vor einem Publikum in London abgegeben hat. Diese Rede war die Quelle für den Titel, den die FT ihrem Artikel gab: „Keine ‚Wunder‘ erwarten, die Frieden in die Ukraine bringen werden“. Konkret sagte Zaluzhny: „Angesichts des enormen Mangels an Humanressourcen und der katastrophalen wirtschaftlichen Lage, in der wir uns befinden“ … usw. usw.
Wieder einmal lag Miller genau auf einer Linie mit den Berichten des russischen Staatsfernsehens vom vergangenen Wochenende. Der Direktor der russischen Fernsehnachrichten, Dimitri Kiseljow, wies auf die Rede von Zaluzhny in London als Zeichen dafür hin, dass die politischen Eliten der Ukraine nun die Narrative des Teams Selensky in Frage stellen, was darauf hindeute, dass das Regime bröckele.
So weit, so gut. Ich schließe meine Untersuchung dieses FT-Artikels mit der Feststellung, dass er in einem wichtigen Punkt wahrheitsgetreuer über die Lage an der Front berichtet als das, was Sie in den Videos einiger meiner Kollegen in den alternativen Medien hören oder lesen können, die immer noch den Zusammenbruch und die Kapitulation der Ukraine in der nächsten Woche prophezeien. Nachdem er erklärt hat, dass die Russen den Ukrainern an Waffen und Soldaten überlegen sind, zitiert er den in Wien ansässigen Militäranalysten Franz-Stefan Gady: „Wir können mit einem allmählichen Vormarsch der Russen rechnen, aber nicht mit einem baldigen Zusammenbruch oder einem Zusammenbruch der Frontlinie.“ Das entspricht den allgemein vorsichtigen Einschätzungen, die man im russischen Staatsfernsehen hört.
All das bestätigt meine wiederholte Begründung, warum ich die Nachrichten im russischen Staatsfernsehen verfolge und der Community weitergebe, was dort gesagt wird. Jetzt ist sogar die FT auf den Zug aufgesprungen.
*****
Alles in Maßen. Ich möchte nicht behaupten, dass der gesamte westliche Mainstream in Bezug auf den Krieg jederzeit transparent und wahrheitsgemäß ist. Die westliche Berichterstattung über die russischen Drohnen- und Raketenangriffe auf Kiew und andere ukrainische Städte in den letzten Tagen druckt Texte, die in Kiew geschrieben wurden, ohne auch nur einen Seitenblick auf die russischen Darstellungen zu werfen. Wir hören und lesen, dass Russland Wohnhäuser und andere zivile Ziele angreife, dass es eindeutig darauf aus sei, die Chancen für eine Fortsetzung der Friedensgespräche zu zerstören, bla bla bla. Das ist die Propagandalinie, die Trumps innenpolitische und europäische Gegner verbreiten. Um dem entgegenzuwirken, hat Trump seine mittlerweile viel zitierte Kritik an Putin veröffentlicht, der „verrückt geworden“ sei. Zur Enttäuschung der Neocons hat Trump jedoch keine Absicht signalisiert, Russland deswegen mit Sanktionen zu belegen. Die Mainstream-Medien haben richtig erkannt, dass Trump weiterhin darauf hinarbeitet, die USA aus dem Krieg zurückzuziehen.
Das russische Staatsfernsehen hat Videos gezeigt, die genau das zeigen, was sie in den letzten zwei Tagen angegriffen haben – Fabriken, in denen Drohnen hergestellt werden, einen Flughafen, von dem aus eine ukrainische F-16 gestartet ist und Storm-Shadow-Raketen auf Russland abgefeuert hat, ein Containerschiff im Hafen von Odessa, das Kriegsmaterial transportierte. Sie erklärten auch, dass es sich dabei um „Racheangriffe“ für die massiven Drohnenangriffe der Ukraine in der vergangenen Woche innerhalb der Russischen Föderation handele, die sich insbesondere auf Moskau konzentriert hätten.
*****
Nun möchte ich kurz auf eine Entwicklung im Krieg eingehen, die in den westlichen Mainstream-Medien fast keine Beachtung gefunden hat, obwohl sie insbesondere von indischen Nachrichtensendern aufgegriffen wurde, nämlich den Drohnenangriff auf den Hubschrauber, der Wladimir Putin vor zwei Tagen bei seinem Besuch in der Region Kursk beförderte, einer Region der Russischen Föderation an der Grenze zur Ukraine, die von August 2024 bis zu ihrer vollständigen Befreiung vor einigen Wochen teilweise von den Ukrainern besetzt war.
Die Russen haben sich dazu kaum geäußert, da der Schwarmangriff der Drohnen auf eine Sicherheitslücke hindeutet, durch die der ukrainische Geheimdienst wusste, wann und wo Putin sich in Reichweite ukrainischer Offensivwaffen bewegen würde. Eine andere, noch alarmierendere Erklärung ist, dass amerikanische oder europäische Luft- oder Weltraumaufklärungsinformationen den ukrainischen Attentatsversuch auf Putin ermöglicht haben könnten.
Wir wissen nicht mit Sicherheit, ob Putin tatsächlich in dem angegriffenen Hubschrauber saß, aber russische Medienberichte lassen vermuten, dass dies der Fall war und dass der Vorfall nur deshalb nicht zu einer Katastrophe führte, weil die russische Luftabwehr alle angreifenden Drohnen abschießen konnte.
Es ist offen, welche Art von Vergeltungsschlag Moskau nun durchführen wird. Wird man dies als Rechtfertigung für die „Neutralisierung“ von Selensky ansehen, auf die so viele russische Patrioten ungeduldig warten? Es besteht kein Zweifel, dass seine Eliminierung durch einen Raketenangriff auf Kiew für den Kreml jederzeit möglich ist.
****
Ich schließe diesen Überblick über die aktuellen Ereignisse zwischen Russland und der Ukraine mit einem Blick auf russische Kommentare zu den Äußerungen des deutschen Bundeskanzlers Merz in seinen jüngsten Erklärungen zu den von Europa an Kiew gelieferten Offensivwaffen. Vor zwei Tagen sagte Merz, dass es keine Begrenzung mehr für die Reichweite der an die Ukrainer gelieferten Raketen gebe und dass diese in der Lage sein müssten, militärische Ziele tief im Inneren der Russischen Föderation zu treffen. Zu Recht oder zu Unrecht interpretierten russische Staatsfernsehsender, darunter „Sechzig Minuten“ und „Abend mit Vladimir Solovyov“ gestern Abend, dies so, dass Merz erneut entschlossen sei, die deutschen Marschflugkörper Taurus mit einer Reichweite von 500 km an die Ukraine zu liefern, um die Kertsch-Brücke (Krim) zu zerstören, wozu sie besser geeignet sind als die französischen und britischen Langstreckenraketen Storm Shadows, die bisher an die Ukraine geliefert wurden.
Russische Kommentatoren, die in diesem Fall sicherlich die Unterstützung des Kremls hatten, erklärten, dass die Lieferung des Taurus an die Ukraine von Moskau als direkte Einmischung Deutschlands in den Krieg angesehen werde und eine angemessene Reaktion erfordern werde. Die angemessene Reaktion werde der Start von Russlands unaufhaltsamen Hyperschallraketen vom Typ Oreshnik sein, um das eine oder andere Ziel in Deutschland zu treffen. Ein Diskussionsteilnehmer sagte, dass zwei Oreshniks ausreichen würden, um das Werk in Deutschland, in dem Taurus hergestellt wird, vollständig zu zerstören (Anmerkung: Derzeit findet an diesem Standort keine Produktion von Taurus statt). Von einer solchen Zerstörung würden sich die Deutschen fünf Jahre lang erholen müssen, was Merz’ Pläne, sein Land zum militärisch mächtigsten in Europa zu machen, zunichte machen würde. Der Redner fuhr fort, dass Russland vor diesem Angriff seine Gründe für eine solche Reaktion auf den direkten Kriegseintritt Deutschlands darlegen sollte. Diese Begründung würde im Sicherheitsrat der Vereinten Nationen verlesen werden. Ein anderer Diskussionsteilnehmer sagte, die Oreshniks sollten ohne weiteres gegen Berlin gerichtet werden.
Ich möchte anmerken, dass diese gesamte Diskussion über Merz und seine Taurus-Raketen in aller Ernsthaftigkeit und in einer sichtlich gedrückten Stimmung geführt wurde. Leser meines War Diaries, Band I werden feststellen, dass die Stimmung der Moderatoren und Diskussionsteilnehmer der wichtigsten russischen Talkshows häufig schwankt, von zuversichtiger Erwartung des Sieges bis hin zur Angst, dass das Ende der Welt naht. Die Stimmung im russischen Fernsehen gestern Abend fiel in die letztere Kategorie.
Transcript of WION interview, 26 May
Transcript submitted by a reader
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-5KO68FMFE
WION 0:00
US President Donald Trump has lambasted his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, describing him as “absolutely crazy” after Moscow launched its largest air attack of the war on Ukraine, killing at least 13 people. The comments came as Ukraine’s Air Force said Russia had launched a record number of drones against Ukraine overnight on Sunday. The Russian attack was the largest of the war in terms of weapons fired, although other strikes have killed more people. So what happened to the Bonhomie? And does that mean the ongoing talks are in limbo?
Dr. Gilbert Doctorow is an international affairs analyst. He’s also an author and a historian. He is now joining us live from [Brussels]. Dr. Gilbert, thank you very much for your time. What do you make of Trump’s fury over Putin? They just spoke days ago, and it seemed as if it was smooth sailing for them.
Gilbert Doctorow, PhD: 0:53
Well, he had to respond to the outrage that European leaders have expressed and that the mass, the mainstream media have expressed over the sharp increase in Russian strikes on Kiev and other major cities. Though we knew in advance that that would happen, since the Russians had pointed out that 1,000 drones and other objects had been fired at Russia by Ukraine in the preceding week, including many focused on Moscow. So this was anticipated, but nonetheless it brought outrage. And Donald Trump had to show that he is listening to what his critics are saying. But is he really listening? That is the question for discussion.
WION: 1:40
Doctor, Moscow has intensified its warfare by using drones and even missiles. What’s the message that Putin is trying to pass to his adversaries in the West?
Doctorow:
That Russia has gained, after a lot of work to increase its technology and production, that Russia has now mastered drone warfare, which really is decisive or defining the stage of warfare today in the Russia-Ukraine war. It was originally strictly an artillery duel. This was, most of the three years were an artillery duel, but Russia enjoyed a very large advantage in supplies, 10 to 1 in armaments advantage over Ukraine. But in recent, in the last six months, eight months, the Ukrainians showed that they had great capabilities in drones, and the drones could be effective in preventing a mass attack on the front line, because soldiers were obliged to break up into small units to avoid carnage from attack drones. The Russians have now more than mastered drones, and this is demonstrated by the latest attacks.
2:59
The drones are also used as a way of diverting the attention of the air defence from the missiles that are incoming and which do the real damage.
WION: 3:12
President Putin recently visited the Kursk oblast and some critics were saying that was a kind of provocation. What do you make of Putin’s visit to Kursk?
Doctorow:
The single most remarkable thing about the visit is that he got there. He was subjected to massive drone attack by the Ukrainians. Somehow they had been made aware of his plans to visit Korsk. So he got there. That was a big achievement. What he did on the ground was also very important. He met with officials, he met with the victims of the Ukrainian occupation of this territory.
3:55
He spoke with the people who are rebuilding, the volunteers who are facilitating the reestablishment of people whose homes were destroyed by the Ukrainian occupiers of this basically Russian territory, part of the Russian Federation. And so it was to build confidence, both locally and nationally, that he made that visit.
WION:
Is President Volodymyr Zelensky’s shuttle diplomacy working, do you think?
Doctorow:
Well, he doesn’t stop traveling, that’s for sure. What comes out of it is public relations, and he is a public relations man. It’s regrettable for the life of Ukrainian soldiers that their military command is directed by a public relations man, and that they are viewed as fodder for the demonstration of Ukrainian strength and resilience to get more assistance from the West. So it has been. But he is visiting everywhere to find new support, financial and material, for the war, which he will really need to have as the United States withdraws from the conflict.
WION:
Sanction threats towards Russia have returned. President Putin seems unperturbed, even after the EU said it will push forward with sanctions. Trump is also considering sanctions as another option. But how far will these threats go if Putin continues to give them a deaf ear?
Doctorow:
Well, Putin is holding out that possibility of a [deaf]. So the more immediate military task that he discussed when he was in Kursk is to ensure a buffer zone that protects Russian civilian settlements as in Kursk or Belgorod, the neighboring frontier or border provinces of Russia, from attacks by Ukrainian short-range missiles and drones. That is where the emphasis is going, not on seizing new territory, however desirable it is for Russian patriots to take Odessa.
WION: 6:12
What about the sanctions? Because they are increasing by the day, and President Trump says that he may consider advancing the sanctions on Russia.
Doctorow:
This is all rhetoric. The fact of the matter is that Russia is sanction proof. Three years of sanctions have made it the country with the largest number of sanctions ever imposed on any state in history. They have survived quite well, and are doing very nicely, thank you. So this is just rhetoric addressed by European leaders in particular and by opponents of Trump in the States hoping to pressure him to apply greater sanctions; it is rhetoric.
The, frankly, the West has no leverage over Russia. That is a fact that is coming out, and I want to make the point that the most important development in the past week or two has been that mainstream media have caught up with alternative media in describing accurately the dire situation of Ukraine, militarily, financially, and otherwise.
WION: 7:19
Let’s now talk about the negotiations or the talks. Russia’s demands were Ukraine’s recognition of Russian-occupied Crimea, independence for separatist-controlled Luhansk and Donetsk, and demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba stated that while his country was ready for talks to resume, Russia’s demands had not changed, critics call those demands unfathomable.
Doctorow:
You are exactly right. The claims or the expectations of the warring parties are irreconcilable. And that is why discussion of a peace arrived at in the current negotiations is not realistic. It has served political purposes, particularly in the States, where Donald Trump is the one who first called for peace talks.
But the reality is that they will fail in their present composition, because the Ukrainian leadership is unwilling to face the reality on the ground that even its friends like “Financial Times” are openly acknowledging. So I do not believe there will be a military victory. In that respect, I’m in agreement with JD Vance and others in the administration of Donald Trump. But there will be a political collapse.
8:48
And we’ve seen that coming in the growing fissures within leadership in Ukraine, most recently by the statements by the Ukrainian ambassador to England, Zaluzhin, admitting the dire situation the country is in.
WION:
Doctor, finally, let’s talk about this issue that has been going on for a long time. A peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine remains elusive. What will it take for both sides to calm down, meet, talk, agree and end the conflict? What’s your message to both Putin and Zelensky?
Doctorow:
Well, I don’t believe that Mr. Zelensky will be around to conclude the peace. So my commenting on him is not really relevant. Putin most likely will be around. And I think this will take place before the end of the year, not because of some massive Russian advance on the front that breaks the Ukrainian line. I don’t believe that they will collapse.
But I think they will capitulate because of a political breakdown. That is to say the leaders, the political leaders within Ukraine will move away from Zelensky towards another person who is willing to accept reality. That person might very well be Mr. Zaluzhny, judging by what he said last week.
He was put forward some time ago as America’s preferred replacement for Zelensky. So in that event, a political collapse will bring the parties to the table. The terms will be rather similar to what Mr. Putin has demanded at the current negotiations.
WION: 10:33
Dr. Gilbert Doctorow is an international affairs analyst. He’s also an author and a historian. We’ll have to leave it there. Thank you very much for giving us time and for talking to me on World Is One today.
Doctorow:
Thanks for the invitation.
WION (India): Trump, Putin Bonhomie in Tatters
WION (India): Trump, Putin Bonhomie in Tatters
It was a pleasure and an honor to return to WION news commentary programming yesterday to discuss the latest developments in U.S.-Russian relations over resolving the Ukraine war. WION is India’s largest global broadcaster in English with nearly 10 million subscribers.
As the headline attached to this video quoted above suggests, the starting point for our chat was Donald Trump’s latest remarks to reporters that he was outraged over new massive Russian drone and missile attacks on Kiev and other cities which violate the notion of continuing peace talks. Trump called Putin ‘absolutely crazy’ and said he could not understand what had gotten into the Russian leader.
Let us not mince words. I think I said clearly in my live commentary that Trump’s words were empty rhetoric. They were intended to shut up his domestic and foreign critics who demanded some strong response from the USA, hoping for an end to Trump’s peace efforts and full resumption of the war against Russia, both economic and kinetic, with redoubled American participation. That will not happen.
I also make reference in this video to the Russian warnings in advance of their latest missile and drone strikes that there would be revenge attacks for the unprecedented high level of Ukrainian drones being sent against their own cities, in particular against Moscow these past few days. To be sure, the Russians claim to have destroyed the thousand or more Ukrainian drones sent their way, but falling debris did cause injury and death to some civilians.
I mention as well in the video the drone attack on President Putin’s helicopter during his visit to the Kursk region that was liberated several weeks ago from a Ukrainian occupation that began in August 2024. Kiev’s murderous intentions against the Russian President will yet receive a suitable retaliation whatever Donald Trump and others in the West may say. I will discuss this in greater detail in a separate essay later today.
Finally, I mention in the video the new direction in Western mainstream reporting on the war that now finally acknowledges the dire situation of Ukraine, militarily, financially, economically. This issue, too, will figure in the essay to come.
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025
Translation below into German (Andreas Mylaeus)
WION (Indien): Trump und Putin – die Freundschaft liegt in Trümmern
Es war mir eine Freude und Ehre, gestern wieder in der Nachrichtensendung von WION zu Gast zu sein, um über die neuesten Entwicklungen in den Beziehungen zwischen den USA und Russland im Hinblick auf die Beilegung des Ukraine-Konflikts zu sprechen. WION ist mit fast 10 Millionen Abonnenten der größte englischsprachige globale Sender Indiens.
Wie die Überschrift zu diesem Video oben andeutet, war der Ausgangspunkt für unser Gespräch Donald Trumps jüngste Äußerungen gegenüber Reportern, er sei empört über die neuen massiven russischen Drohnen- und Raketenangriffe auf Kiew und andere Städte, die gegen die Fortsetzung der Friedensgespräche verstießen. Trump bezeichnete Putin als „absolut verrückt“ und sagte, er könne nicht verstehen, was in den russischen Präsidenten gefahren sei.
Lassen Sie uns kein Blatt vor den Mund nehmen. Ich glaube, ich habe in meinem Live-Kommentar deutlich gesagt, dass Trumps Worte leere Rhetorik waren. Sie sollten seine Kritiker im In- und Ausland zum Schweigen bringen, die eine harte Reaktion der USA forderten und auf ein Ende von Trumps Friedensbemühungen und die vollständige Wiederaufnahme des Krieges gegen Russland hofften, sowohl in wirtschaftlicher als auch in militärischer Hinsicht, mit verstärkter Beteiligung der USA. Das wird nicht passieren.
Ich beziehe mich in diesem Video auch auf die Warnungen Russlands vor seinen jüngsten Raketen- und Drohnenangriffen, dass es Vergeltungsschläge für den beispiellos hohen Einsatz ukrainischer Drohnen gegen ihre eigenen Städte, insbesondere gegen Moskau in den letzten Tagen, geben werde. Zwar behaupten die Russen, die mehr als tausend ukrainischen Drohnen, die auf sie abgefeuert wurden, zerstört zu haben, doch verursachten herabfallende Trümmerteile Verletzungen und Todesfälle unter der Zivilbevölkerung.
Ich erwähne in dem Video auch den Drohnenangriff auf den Hubschrauber von Präsident Putin während seines Besuchs in der Region Kursk, die vor einigen Wochen von der ukrainischen Besatzung befreit wurde, die im August 2024 begonnen hatte. Die mörderischen Absichten Kiews gegenüber dem russischen Präsidenten werden noch eine angemessene Vergeltung erfahren, was auch immer Donald Trump und andere im Westen sagen mögen. Ich werde darauf später heute in einem separaten Essay näher eingehen.
Schließlich erwähne ich in dem Video die neue Richtung in der westlichen Mainstream-Berichterstattung über den Krieg, die nun endlich die desolate Lage der Ukraine in militärischer, finanzieller und wirtschaftlicher Hinsicht anerkennt. Auch dieses Thema wird in dem kommenden Essay behandelt werden.
War Diaries, Volume 1. The Russia-Ukraine War, 2022 – 2023
It is a pleasure to announce the publication today of my latest collection of essays in a paperback edition. The book is available for inspection and purchase on Amazon websites globally. The link to the book’s webpage on the USA site is here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F9VK1WM2/ref=sr_1_1?crid=10FL4JGJQ8SXI&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.dY8TQWRTDcjoqfQOi-MFjQ.kuhSnf_vSO6gt51bTH7l4fpsUNYlUMGSSv8W78p-tvM&dib_tag=se&keywords=war+diaries+doctorow&qid=1748198341&sprefix=war+diaries+doctorow%2Caps%2C293&sr=8-1
The Look Inside function allows you to peruse the Table of Contents and a few pages of the very first chapter. Regrettably, Amazon did not make available on Look Inside the Foreword and Introduction which explain very clearly what this book is and what it isn’t. However, the book description below can serve as a brief guide:
Quote
Volume 1 of War Diaries presents the author’s essays on the Russia-Ukraine war from the period immediately preceding its outbreak in February 2022 to the end of 2023. The material is diverse. It includes the author’s travel notes on the home front in Russia from his periodic visits to St Petersburg. He records the availability of consumer goods and services on the market of a country under the most severe sanctions in history. He records the changing mood of the man in the street and of the intelligentsia as the war progressed and an upsurge of patriotism changed Russian society, bringing forward new elites. The author closely monitored Russian media, in particular the state news and political talk shows whlch have a wide audience in Russia and reflect the views of Kremlin insiders. His observations fill the void left by the departure of mainstream journalists from Russia following the start of the Special Military Operation. There are also links and summaries of his appearances on television programs of commentary broadcast by major global English-language media such as TRT (Turkey) and WION (India) as well as on widely watched private U.S. internet channels. This book is essential reading for all those interested in how Russia fared during wartime.
An e-book edition will be added to the amazon websites in about two weeks
Unquote
Translation below into German (Andreas Mylaeus)
Kriegstagebücher, Band 1. Der Krieg zwischen Russland und der Ukraine, 2022–2023
Ich freue mich, heute die Veröffentlichung meiner neuesten Essaysammlung in Taschenbuchform bekannt zu geben. Das Buch kann weltweit auf Amazon-Websites angesehen und gekauft werden. Der Link zur Buchseite auf der Deutschland-Website lautet:
Mit der Funktion „Blick ins Buch“ können Sie das Inhaltsverzeichnis und einige Seiten des ersten Kapitels durchblättern. Leider hat Amazon das Vorwort und die Einleitung, in denen sehr klar erklärt wird, worum es in diesem Buch geht und worum es nicht geht, nicht in „Blick ins Buch“ zur Verfügung gestellt. Die folgende Buchbeschreibung kann jedoch als kurze Orientierungshilfe dienen:
Zitat
Band 1 der „War Diaries“ enthält die Essays des Autors zum Krieg zwischen Russland und der Ukraine vom Zeitraum unmittelbar vor dessen Ausbruch im Februar 2022 bis zum Ende des Jahres 2023. Das Material ist vielfältig. Es umfasst die Reiseberichte des Autors aus Russland, die er während seiner regelmäßigen Besuche in St. Petersburg verfasst hat. Er berichtet über die Verfügbarkeit von Konsumgütern und Dienstleistungen auf dem Markt eines Landes, das unter den strengsten Sanktionen der Geschichte steht. Er dokumentiert die sich wandelnde Stimmung der Bevölkerung und der Intelligenz im Verlauf des Krieges, als ein Aufschwung des Patriotismus die russische Gesellschaft veränderte und neue Eliten hervorbrachte. Der Autor verfolgte aufmerksam die russischen Medien, insbesondere die staatlichen Nachrichten und politischen Talkshows, die in Russland ein breites Publikum haben und die Ansichten von Kreml-Insidern widerspiegeln. Seine Beobachtungen füllen die Lücke, die durch den Weggang der Mainstream-Journalisten aus Russland nach Beginn der „Sondermilitäroperation“ entstanden ist. Es enthält auch Links und Zusammenfassungen seiner Auftritte in Fernsehkommentaren, die von großen englischsprachigen Medien wie TRT (Türkei) und WION (Indien) sowie auf weit verbreiteten privaten US-Internetkanälen ausgestrahlt wurden. Dieses Buch ist eine unverzichtbare Lektüre für alle, die sich dafür interessieren, wie Russland während des Krieges abgeschnitten hat.
Zitat
Eine E-Book-Version der Kriegstagebücher wird in etwa 10 Tagen auf den Websites hinzugefügt.
News Flash: Youtube is now carrying Russian media videos in the English and Russian languages!!
I inform the Community about a dramatic development which, to my knowledge, has not been mentioned by mainstream media in the West, namely the return of Russian videos to youtube.com
Those who read my Travel Notes from my most recent visit to St Petersburg will be aware of my surprise to find then that youtube was virtually inaccessible during this visit whereas I had encountered no such problem in the past three years of war. At the same time, LinkedIn, which the Russians had banned from the start of the SMO, was once again accessible there. It made no sense.
It now would appear that during the period when youtube was cut off in Russia some negotiations must have been going on with the internet platform’s owners, Google (Alphabet). The ban on Russian media has evidently been lifted. Not only are current Russian media offerings available on youtube but it seems that media offerings dating back many years are also now accessible.
See, for example, the following:
RT – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSyJEIWnjrE
The Great Game (Bolshaya Igra) – Go to the search box in youtube and type in Большая Игра. For some reason the link does not open on this substack platform.
‘Judging Freedom’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtNg8Uu1pQI&t=34s
The last link above happens to be the Russian voice-over version of my interview with Judge Andrew Napolitano yesterday. Within 6 hours of the broadcast of the English language original, this voice-over was put on line on the Russian internet channel rutube.ru (pun intended, obviously) as was the case with all of my Judging Freedom interviews these past several months. The producer of these voice over versions is a certain Russian organization called Polit Mnenie (translation – Political Opinion).
I offer this news to break the ice and start discussion of this development in the West. I assume that others will soon provide additional remarks on how this came about, and what it may say about the lifting of censorship on things Russian in the USA under Donald Trump.
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025
Translation below into German (Andreas Mylaeus)
Kurzmeldung: YouTube zeigt jetzt russische Medienvideos in englischer und russischer Sprache!
Ich möchte die Community über eine dramatische Entwicklung informieren, die meines Wissens von den westlichen Mainstream-Medien nicht erwähnt wurde, nämlich die Rückkehr russischer Videos auf youtube.com.
Diejenigen, die meine Reiseberichte von meiner letzten Reise nach St. Petersburg gelesen haben, wissen, wie überrascht ich war, dass YouTube während dieses Besuchs praktisch nicht zugänglich war, obwohl ich in den letzten drei Jahren des Krieges keine derartigen Probleme hatte. Gleichzeitig war LinkedIn, das die Russen seit Beginn der SMO gesperrt hatten, dort wieder zugänglich. Das ergab keinen Sinn.
Es scheint nun, dass während der Zeit, in der YouTube in Russland gesperrt war, Verhandlungen mit dem Eigentümer der Internetplattform, Google (Alphabet), stattgefunden haben müssen. Das Verbot russischer Medien wurde offenbar aufgehoben. Nicht nur aktuelle russische Medienangebote sind auf YouTube verfügbar, sondern offenbar auch Medienangebote, die viele Jahre zurückreichen.
Siehe beispielsweise Folgendes:
RT – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSyJEIWnjrE
Das große Spiel (Bolschaja Igra) – Gehen Sie zum Suchfeld auf YouTube und geben Sie Большая Игра ein. Aus irgendeinem Grund lässt sich der Link auf dieser Substack-Plattform nicht öffnen.
‘Judging Freedom’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtNg8Uu1pQI&t=34s
Der letzte Link oben ist zufällig die russische Synchronfassung meines gestrigen Interviews mit Judge Andrew Napolitano. Innerhalb von sechs Stunden nach Ausstrahlung des englischen Originals wurde diese Synchronfassung auf dem russischen Internetkanal rutube.ru (das Wortspiel ist natürlich beabsichtigt) online gestellt, wie es auch bei allen meinen Judging Freedom-Interviews in den letzten Monaten der Fall war. Der Produzent dieser Synchronfassungen ist eine bestimmte russische Organisation namens Polit Mnenie (Übersetzung: Politische Meinung). Ich bringe diese Nachricht, um das Eis zu brechen und eine Diskussion über diese Entwicklung im Westen anzustoßen. Ich gehe davon aus, dass andere bald weitere Kommentare dazu abgeben werden, wie es dazu gekommen ist und was dies über die Aufhebung der Zensur russischer Inhalte in den USA unter Donald Trump aussagen könnte.