Tuesday, March 4, 2014

'Realists' Misjudged Ukraine

From Jamie Kirchick, at the Daily Beast, "How the ‘Realists’ Misjudged Ukraine":

Obama Putin photo o-OBAMA-PUTIN-facebook_zps2e5d6bdf.jpg
2014 will now forever be bound with the years 1956 and 1968, when the Soviet Union invaded Hungary and Czechoslovakia, respectively. Then, as now, Russia used phony pretexts to violate other nations’ sovereignty. During the Cold War, the Soviet Union justified its sackings of Budapest and Prague by claiming to rescue socialism from “counterrevolutionary” forces. Today, Russia intervenes to “protect” Russian minorities from “fascist” elements in Kiev. In all these episodes, Moscow was confronted with popular, democratic revolutions against its domination.

The Russian invasions of the past and present share another similarity: defenders in the West. Whereas Soviet imperialism could only rely upon the support of orthodox communists (and not even then could Moscow depend on all of its adherents to follow the party line; the invasions of Hungary and Czechoslovakia instilling a fatal disillusionment with the Soviet project among many Western communists), today’s apologists for Russian imperialism span the political spectrum. These foreign policy “realists,” identifiable by their abjuring a role for morality in American foreign policy and the necessity of US global leadership, locate the real imperialists in Washington and Brussels, not Moscow. For years, they have been proven embarrassingly wrong about Russia and its intentions, and in the unprovoked and illegal invasion of Ukraine, their failure of analysis is now laid bare for the world to witness.

The most noxious of these figures is New York University professor and Nation magazine contributor Stephen Cohen. His recent opus, “Distorting Russia,” will go down in history as one of the most slavish defenses of Putinism. “Mainstream American press coverage of Russia,” Cohen writes, has been “shamefully unprofessional and politically inflammatory.” Western readers, he complains, have been subject to a “relentless demonization of Putin, with little regard for facts.” Putin—a man who presides over a rubber stamp parliament, subjects his political opponents to show trials, dispatches riot police to beat peaceful protestors, and has restricted freedom of speech and association by banning pro-gay language and demonstrations—is unfairly portrayed as an “autocrat,” Cohen says (scare quotes original).

On the contrary, the Russian president is something of a hero. Cohen lauds Putin for granting amnesty to 1,000 prisoners in December, failing to note that some of those individuals—most famously members of the punk band Pussy Riot and opposition leader Mikhail Khodorkovsky—would never have been jailed in a democratic country with an independent judiciary. Cohen cites Putin’s 65 percent approval rating as evidence of his legitimacy, as if such a metric is a valid indicator in a country where every major media outlet is state-run and political opposition invites harassment and physical abuse. Rather than isolate Putin and stand with these beleaguered Russian democrats, Cohen asks, “Should not Obama himself have gone to [the] Sochi [Olympics]—either out of gratitude to Putin, or to stand with Russia’s leader against international terrorists who have struck both of our countries?”

As for Ukraine, Cohen believes Russia is protecting a set of legitimate interests in that formerly sovereign nation and the West is engaging in imperialist meddling. To engage in such sophistry, he has to portray the criminal former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych—who ordered the murder, in broad daylight, of dozens of his own citizens—as a decent ruler. In January, without any public hearing or parliamentary debate, the Ukrainian legislature adopted, and Yanukovych signed, a set of 10 laws that collectively smothered freedom of speech, press and association, a draft of regulations that led Yale University professor and Ukraine expert Timothy Snyder to conclude that, “On paper, Ukraine is now a dictatorship.” Cohen furiously defended Yanukovych, writing that, “In fact, the ‘paper’ legislation he’s referring to hardly constituted dictatorship, and in any event was soon repealed.” Like Putin releasing the prisoners he should never have jailed, Cohen wants us to give credit to a dictator for (temporarily, and only to save his own skin) undoing a trapping of dictatorship. The dictator giveth, and the dictator taketh away.

For the realists, the seeds of today’s antagonism between Russia and the West are found not in Putin’s KGB mentality, but in the expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to include former members of the Soviet-era Warsaw Pact. For the past 25 years, they have been warning that NATO is an outdated alliance with no purpose other than to “antagonize” a Russia that wants nothing more than peace and which deserves to have “spheres of privileged interests,” to use Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev’s phrase, in the lands it occupied for over four decades. Responsibility for today’s crisis, Cohen writes, can be laid at the feet of “provocative US policies,” namely NATO enlargement, a process that stalled, perhaps irreversibly, in 2008, when the body, caving to Russian pressure, voted against Membership Action Plans (MAP) for Georgia and Ukraine. Both of these nations, incidentally, are now home to Russian occupation forces.

For anyone paying the remotest bit of attention to Russia since Putin took office, the events of the past week should not have come as a surprise. Five years after he came to power in 2000, Putin remarked that the collapse of the Soviet Union “was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.” Slowly but surely, he has gone about attempting to right that tragedy, the invasion of Ukraine—which, he remarked to George W. Bush in 2008, is not a real state—being the latest gambit. Demonstrating his utter credulousness about Putin’s intentions, Cohen scoffed last month that, “Without any verified evidence, [Snyder] warns of a Putin-backed ‘armed intervention’ in Ukraine after the Olympics.” Oops.

Russia and the West do indeed have competing interests in the post-Soviet space. The problem with the realists is that they fail to see the moral, tactical and legal disparities that exist between the aims and methods of East and West. When Brussels and Washington propose EU and NATO membership, they are offering association in alliances of liberal, democratic states, achieved through a democratic, consensual process. Russia, meanwhile, cajoles, blackmails and threatens its former vassals into “joining” its newfangled “Eurasian Union,” whose similarity to the Soviet Union of yore Putin barely conceals. The right of sovereign countries to choose the alliances they wish is one Russia respects only if they choose to ally themselves with Russia. Should these countries try to join Western institutions then there will be hell to pay.

Despite all this, Cohen complains of a “Cold War double standard” in the ways we describe Western and Russian approaches to the former Soviet space. The West’s “trade leverage” to persuade Ukraine is treated benignly, Cohen writes, while Putin’s use of “similar carrots” is portrayed as nefarious. A crucial difference, however, is that when a country turns down a Western diplomatic package, as Ukraine did at the November Vilnius Summit (thus sparking the massive protests in Kiev that ultimately overthrew Yanukovych), the EU does not invade.

It should not come as a surprise why countries like Poland, the Czech Republic and other former Warsaw Pact nations that lived under the heel of Russian domination for so long might want to join the NATO alliance, which, according to its charter, is purely defensive. NATO has no designs on Russian territory and never has. But in the fervid and paranoid minds of the men running the Kremlin (and, apparently, in that of Stephen Cohen and other opponents of NATO expansion), the alliance’s defensive nature is irrelevant. If Russia were a healthy, liberal, pluralistic society at peace with itself and its neighbors, it would have nothing to fear from America, the EU, or NATO. Indeed, as crazy as it may sound today, in the 1990s, some Russian and Western leaders spoke optimistically of Moscow joining the latter two institutions. But these hopes of a European Russia were dashed when Putin came to power.

In the world of Cohen and the other realists, it is “Washington’s 20-year winner-take-all approach to post-Soviet Russia” that has brought us to the present impasse. He describes NATO expansion in martial terms, writing of “the West’s ongoing, US-led march toward post-Soviet Russia, which began in the 1990s with NATO’s eastward expansion and continued with US-funded NGO political activities inside Russia,” civil society organizations, gay rights groups, and democracy promotion programs described as if they were the equivalent of CIA political assassination plots. Indeed, while Russia’s open meddling in the politics of its neighbors goes unmentioned by Cohen, he condemns anything the US and its Western allies do to promote democracy in the former Soviet Union. Commenting on a leaked telephone conversation between US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and the American Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt, in which the two diplomats hashed out scenarios for the creation of a coalition government to replace the faltering Yanukovych regime, Cohen says that, “the essential revelation was that high-level US officials were plotting to ‘midwife’ a new, anti-Russian Ukrainian government by ousting or neutralizing its democratically elected president—that is, a coup.”

Washington’s alleged engineering coup d’etats has become an oft-repeated accusation of realist critics of robust American involvement overseas. “Is it the job of the American ambassador to act as a local potentate, choosing who does, and does not, get to serve in a coalition government?” Jacob Heilbrunn asked in The National Interest, the premier realist journal. In that same publication, David Rieff observed that Nuland was behaving like “a British resident agent in one of the princely states of India during the Raj” who “conspired with the US ambassador to Kiev to overthrow the current president of Ukraine.”

For many realists, American “restraint” now means not just withdrawing America’s overseas troop presence and drastically cutting the defense budget, but curtailing diplomacy itself.

This indictment of American meddling was also echoed by uber-realist Stephen Walt, a professor at Harvard. “Amazing thing re #Ukraine: US & EU colluded to help oust corrupt but pro-Russ leader, yet expected Moscow to do nothing about it,” he tweeted the other day. According to Walt, who in a single tweet distilled a week’s worth of Kremlin propaganda, it was not hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians braving the harsh Kiev winter and rooftop snipers who deserve credit for overthrowing Yanukovych, but rather their US and EU puppet-masters. (This paranoid and illiterate analysis of the situation in Ukraine, by the author of The Israel Lobby, is of a piece with his theories of a Jewish cabal controlling American politics).

Herein lies a paradox at the heart of foreign policy realism: that same, all-powerful US and EU octopus which is capable of overthrowing governments with the flip of a switch is somehow incapable of confronting Russian hard power. Any attempt at repelling Moscow’s aggression is quickly derided as “warmongering,” with requisite references to the mistakes of Iraq thrown in for good measure. Perhaps we should stop calling these people “realists.” “Isolationist” seems more apt.
Looks like Kirchick's settling some scores on this one, heh.

No matter. Stephen Walt's a vile Israel-hating asshole, and don't get me going about the Stalin-coddling idiot's at the Nation. (Keep reading here.)

And here's the Cohen piece --- he's even attacking the far-left New York Review for bashing Putin (and he loathes Julia Ioffe, my favorite Russia expert who is herself ethnic Russian).
Read the full thing at the link.

PHOTO: At Huffington Post, "Obama, Putin Tensions Signal Tough Times For U.S.-Russian Relations."

The Battle for Eastern #Ukraine Is Underway

From Matthew Kaminski, at WSJ:
Crimea was the appetizer. The real prize for Vladimir Putin is likely to be eastern Ukraine. Without this vast region of coal mines and factories, the Kremlin strongman won't be able to achieve his goal of either controlling, destabilizing or splitting Ukraine. Otherwise the takeover of the country's southern peninsula hardly seems worth the trouble.

The Kremlin's claims about the importance of ethnic Russian identity and language are just a sideshow in the struggle here. What's going on is a pure power play. Since Mr. Putin has nuclear weapons and no apparent care for world opinion, give him an edge. But eastern Ukraine won't be as easy to snare as Crimea, and the attempt could backfire on Mr. Putin...
Keep reading.

Review: 'The Limits of Partnership: U.S.-Russian Relations in the Twenty-First Century'

A review of Angela Stent's book, by Robert Legvold at Foreign Affairs.

Interesting and extremely timely:
Stent’s analysis proceeds chronologically, lingering longest over the issues that most roiled the relationship, such as the Iraq war, the 2008 Georgian-Russian war, missile defense, and, more recently, the civil war in Syria. The heart of the problem, Stent argues, is the asymmetry in the two countries’ economic power and military strength and the distance between their views of international realities. The relationship is also stymied by the inability of both sides to shake the legacy of the Cold War. Notwithstanding the genuinely important reasons Moscow and Washington have to cooperate, Stent contends that the relationship will remain a limited and troubled partnership as long as these obstacles are left in place.
Stent is Professor of Government at Georgetown University and Director of the Center for Eurasian, Russian, and East European Studies.

And order the book here, The Limits of Partnership: U.S.-Russian Relations in the Twenty-First Century.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Hotties of Hollywood on the Red Carpet — #Oscars

At Egotastic!, "2014 Academy Awards — Oscar Red Carpet Hotties (Updating)."

I was digging on Kate Hudson last night, man.



Russian Embassy Denies It Has 'Deployed Forces' in Ukraine in Twitter Exchange with Louise Mensch

I was on Twitter when she was having this exchange, and she posted it to Storify.

And see London's Daily Mail, "Russian Embassy denies the country has 'deployed forces' in the Ukraine in extraordinary Twitter exchange with Louise Mensch."

Louise Mensch photo proxy1_zpsf6f507ef.jpg

Britain Rules Out Russia Sanctions in Secret Briefing Document Caught by News Photographer at Downing Street

A pretty nifty scoop.

BuzzFeed features magnified images of the document, "Secret Document Suggests UK Government Will Not Support Trade Sanctions Against Russia."

And at Telegraph UK, "Ukraine crisis: UK prepares to rule out sanctions against Russia amid threat to global economy":

Secret Briefing Document photo Downing-St-ukraine_2840886c_zpseac6e7b5.jpg
Downing Street document indicates British concerns over economic impact of Crimea stand-off as Russian aggression intensifies.

Britain is preparing to rule out trade sanctions against Russia amid fears that the Ukraine crisis could derail the global economic recovery.

Stock markets around the world fell sharply on Monday as Russian aggression intensified yet again following last month’s revolution in Ukraine.

There are growing international fears that Vladimir Putin is preparing to launch an all-out invasion of eastern Ukraine and Crimea after military bases were said to have been given an ultimatum to surrender on Tuesday morning.

Russia sought to justify its action in Crimea by producing a letter from the Viktor Yanukovych, the deposed Ukrainian president, asking Mr Putin to intervene.

The letter said: “Under the influence of Western countries, there are open acts of terror. I would call on the president of Russia, Mr Putin, to use the armed forces of the Russian Federation to establish peace and defend the people of Ukraine.”

Barack Obama and other senior American figures led a renewed round of international condemnation. However, the capacity of European leaders to react decisively has been hampered by the dependence of much of the European Union on Russian oil and gas. Any economic stand-off could derail Europe’s fragile economic recovery.
More.

More at the BBC, "Ukraine: UK rules out Russia trade curbs?"

Obama in Denial on Russia

From Jonah Goldberg, at USA Today:
In 1983, then-Columbia University student Obama penned a lengthy article for the school magazine placing the blame for U.S.-Soviet tensions largely on America's "war mentality" and the "twisted logic" of the Cold War. President Reagan's defense buildup, according to Obama, contributed to the "silent spread of militarism" and reflected our "distorted national priorities" rather than what should be our goal: a "nuclear free world."

Of course, it's unfair to put too much weight on anyone's youthful writings. Except there's precious little evidence his views have changed over the years.

In his first term, President Obama's biggest priority with Russia was to get the two countries on the path to that "nuclear free world." One of his — and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's — first actions in office was to betray our commitments to Poland and the Czech Republic on missile defense.

Indeed, across a wide range of areas, it has been Obama who has been, in the words of The Washington Post's Jackson Diehl, in a 1980s-soaked "foreign policy time warp."
A wild-eyed leftist then as he is today.

You're not going to stand tall against Russian aggression if you think it's a justified response to U.S. hostility and provocation in the first place. But read the whole thing (at the link).

Huge Wave Crashes Into Moby Dick Restaurant on Stearns Wharf in Santa Barbara

My wife and I used to eat at Moby Dick's periodically. The north side of the restaurant sits right above the water. The wave surges must have been 20 feet high. I doubt that's the best time for dining, heh.

At LAT, "Video shows huge wave crashing into Santa Barbara restaurant."

On YouTube here, "Wave breaks into Restaurant on Stearns Wharf in Santa Barbara."

Kim Novak's 'Frozen' Appearance Sets Twitter Aflame — UPDATED AND BUMPED!

I just tweeted:


And see the New York Post, "Twitter erupts over Kim Novak’s stiff speech," and Twitchy, "‘Frozen’: Oscars show viewers criticize, defend 81-year-old Kim Novak."

Also at USA Today, "Kim Novak takes a beating on Twitter."

Still more, at E!, "Rose McGowan Calls Oscars Audience 'Self-Obsessed' After Not Giving Kim Novak a Standing Ovation."

ADDED: From Robert Stacy McCain, "Kim Novak’s Oscar Appearance Sparks Remarks About Age, Plastic Surgery."



Obama's Fantasy Foreign Policy

A hard-hitting editorial at the Washington Post, "President Obama’s foreign policy is based on fantasy" (via Memeorandum):


FOR FOR FIVE YEARS, President Obama has led a foreign policy based more on how he thinks the world should operate than on reality. It was a world in which “the tide of war is receding” and the United States could, without much risk, radically reduce the size of its armed forces. Other leaders, in this vision, would behave rationally and in the interest of their people and the world. Invasions, brute force, great-power games and shifting alliances — these were things of the past. Secretary of State John F. Kerry displayed this mindset on ABC’s “This Week” Sunday when he said, of Russia’s invasion of neighboring Ukraine, “It’s a 19th century act in the 21st century.”

That’s a nice thought, and we all know what he means. A country’s standing is no longer measured in throw-weight or battalions. The world is too interconnected to break into blocs. A small country that plugs into cyberspace can deliver more prosperity to its people (think Singapore or Estonia) than a giant with natural resources and standing armies.

Unfortunately, Russian President Vladimir Putin has not received the memo on 21st-century behavior. Neither has China’s president, Xi Jinping, who is engaging in gunboat diplomacy against Japan and the weaker nations of Southeast Asia. Syrian president Bashar al-Assad is waging a very 20th-century war against his own people, sending helicopters to drop exploding barrels full of screws, nails and other shrapnel onto apartment buildings where families cower in basements. These men will not be deterred by the disapproval of their peers, the weight of world opinion or even disinvestment by Silicon Valley companies. They are concerned primarily with maintaining their holds on power.

Mr. Obama is not responsible for their misbehavior. But he does, or could, play a leading role in structuring the costs and benefits they must consider before acting. The model for Mr. Putin’s occupation of Crimea was his incursion into Georgia in 2008, when George W. Bush was president. Mr. Putin paid no price for that action; in fact, with parts of Georgia still under Russia’s control, he was permitted to host a Winter Olympics just around the corner. China has bullied the Philippines and unilaterally staked claims to wide swaths of international air space and sea lanes as it continues a rapid and technologically impressive military buildup. Arguably, it has paid a price in the nervousness of its neighbors, who are desperate for the United States to play a balancing role in the region. But none of those neighbors feel confident that the United States can be counted on. Since the Syrian dictator crossed Mr. Obama’s red line with a chemical weapons attack that killed 1,400 civilians, the dictator’s military and diplomatic position has steadily strengthened.

The urge to pull back — to concentrate on what Mr. Obama calls “nation-building at home” — is nothing new, as former ambassador Stephen Sestanovich recounts in his illuminating history of U.S. foreign policy, “Maximalist.” There were similar retrenchments after the Korea and Vietnam wars and when the Soviet Union crumbled. But the United States discovered each time that the world became a more dangerous place without its leadership and that disorder in the world could threaten U.S. prosperity. Each period of retrenchment was followed by more active (though not always wiser) policy. Today Mr. Obama has plenty of company in his impulse, within both parties and as reflected by public opinion. But he’s also in part responsible for the national mood: If a president doesn’t make the case for global engagement, no one else effectively can...
More.

I like the forcefulness, although can we have some policy options? I think WSJ nailed it on that earlier, "Will Obama and Europe Let Putin Carve Up Ukraine?"

How Moscow Orchestrated Events in Crimea: Old Allies, Old Resentments Re-Emerge

At the Wall Street Journal (via Google):
SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine—A week ago, Dmitry Polonsky was a fringe political activist in the Ukrainian province of Crimea, signing up middle-aged men rankled by the new authorities in Kiev to a small pro-Russia militia.

Today, as thousands of Russian troops swarm through Crimea, Mr. Polonsky's star is rising. He introduces himself as an adviser to Crimea's new prime minister. His Russian Unity party, though holding only three of 100 seats in the regional assembly, is the de facto authority in the Black Sea peninsula that has cut itself off from mainland Ukraine. On Sunday, the party's leader said he would be raising an army to defend Crimea against invasion from Kiev.

"The government of Crimea will be owned by Crimeans," Mr. Polonsky told a gathering Sunday, as Russian flags waved above the crowd.

The sudden rise of Russian Unity shows how the Kremlin, faced with a pro-Europe uprising in Kiev that emerged victorious, responded by helping push a once-marginal group of Russian nationalists into power—a feat of political stagecraft that played out like clockwork under the cover of chaos.

The turn of events in Crimea shows how adroitly Moscow has used old allies and long-simmering resentments to fill a power vacuum left by the Feb. 22 overthrow of Ukraine's Russian-backed president, Viktor Yanukovych . By potentially transforming Crimea into a dubious unrecognized republic and destabilizing Ukraine's east, Moscow has gained a crucial lever of power over the new, weak government in Kiev...
Keep reading.

More, "U.S., Europe Threaten to Punish Putin: Russia's Crimea Incursion Sparks Demand for Withdrawal, Talk of Sanctions; 'They Are Settling In'."

And at the Washington Post, "Ukraine Prime minister says country is ‘on the brink of disaster’."

BONUS: Julie Ioffie on CNN yesterday, "The Ukrainian Military is in a Very Bad Position Vis-à-Vis Russia Right Now..."


Governor Jerry Brown: 'How many people can get stoned and still have a great state?'

I was watching. He's a sensible guy, for all the flak I've given him in the past.

At LAT, "On 'Meet the Press,' Jerry Brown worries about 'potheads'."

Watch it: "Jerry Brown to David Gregory - Legalized Marijuana Could Create Too Many Potheads."

FLASHBACK: "California Ãœber Alles."

The 'Tolerant' Left Freaks Out as Matthew McConaughey Thanks God During Best Actor Acceptance Speech

At Twitchy, "Matthew McConaughey rattles Oscar crowd, wins hearts by thanking God [video]."


And we're this f-ked up if someone's got to "explain" why McConaughey was prasing the man upstairs. At Time, "Explaining Matthew McConaughey’s Confounding Acceptance Speech."

More at Variety, "Matthew McConaughey Takes Oscar for ‘Dallas Buyers Club’."

Lupita Nyong'o Acceptance Speech Best Supporting Actress (VIDEO) — #Oscars

When her voice chocked up my eyes watered up. Just a little, but I couldn't help it. She's so genuine and loving. She's apparently been graceful and dignified throughout the entire awards season. She sure showed it.



And at the Washington Post, "Transcript: Lupita Nyong’o's emotional Oscar’s acceptance speech."


'American Hustle' Snubbed at #Oscars

I didn't even notice, really.

The competition was fierce, and the Academy had to give something to "12 Years a Slave" lest cries of racism ruin the evening's buzz and publicity. And "Gravity" really swept up the rest.

In any case, at Huffington Post, "'American Hustle' Oscars: Star-Studded Film Majorly Snubbed."

RELATED: At NYT, "A Landmark Oscar Win for ‘12 Years a Slave’."

What 'Free Palestine' Really Means

At Israel Matzav.

What 'Free Palestine' really means photo FreePalestine_zps8927f509.jpg

Jessica Biel Photobombed by Anne Hathaway at #Oscars

Crazy people.



'This Week with George Stephanopoulos': Crisis in #Ukraine

Scroll forward about a minute. This is an excellent background report with lots of first-hand video from yesterday morning at ABC News.



More: "John Kerry: ‘All Options on the Table’ to Hold Russia Accountable in Ukraine."

Screw John Kerry. The U.S. is all talk. The Wall Street Journal had an outstanding list of extremely firm and decisive moves the U.S. could take to sanction Moscow. Of course, none of those things will happen.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

'12 Years a Slave' Wins Best Picture — #Oscars

"Gravity" pretty much carried the night, but it's like Ellen said at the beginning of the show, "you're all racist" if "12 Years a Slave" doesn't win best picture. Anti-climactic, sure. But that movie is simply astounding. A monumental achievement.

At LAT, "Oscars 2014: '12 Years a Slave' wins best picture."

Also, "Oscars: '12 Years A Slave,' the best-picture winner that can't win?"

More:



Ellen Degeneres Selfie Most Popular Tweet of All Time — #Oscars

Actually, I couldn't tell if she was seriously trying to take a picture.

At Mashable, "The Moment Ellen Passed Obama for Most Popular Tweet of All Time."


More at Fire Andrea Mitchell, "ABC hypes Ellen DeGeneres Oscar selfie with a picture of the Obamas."

Don't Cry for #Ukraine

From Spengler, at PJ Media, "Ukraine Is Hopeless … but Not Serious":
There isn’t going to be a war over Ukraine. There isn’t even going to be a crisis over Ukraine. We will perform our ritual war-dance and excoriate the Evil Emperor, and the result would be the same if we had sung “100 Bottles of Beer on the Wall” on a road trip to Kalamazoo. Worry about something really scary, like Iran.

Ukraine isn’t a country: it’s a Frankenstein monster composed of pieces of dead empires, stitched together by Stalin. It has never had a government in the Western sense of the term after the collapse of the Soviet Union gave it independence, just the equivalent of the family offices for one predatory oligarch after another–including the “Gas Princess,” Yulia Tymoshenko. It has a per capital income of $3,300 per year, about the same as Egypt and Syria, and less than a tenth of the European average. The whole market capitalization of its stock exchange is worth less than the Disney Company. It’s a basket case that claims to need $35 billion to survive the next two years. Money talks and bullshit walks. Who wants to ask the American taxpayer for $35 billion for Ukraine, one of the most corrupt economies on earth? How about $5 billion? Secretary of State Kerry is talking about $1 billion in loan guarantees, and the Europeans are talking a similar amount. That’s not diplomacy. It’s a clown show...
Continue.

Letter Protesting Professor Lisa Duggan's Racist Anti-Israel Conference to NYU President John Sexton

In my post last Sunday, "Professor Lisa Duggan and the Academic Boycott of Israel," I mentioned that I'd be sending a letter to NYU's administration protesting the racist "Circuits of Influence" conference organized by Lisa Duggan, Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis in NYU's Department of Social and Cultural Analysis.

I just sent this to NYU's President John Sexton and cc'd to a number of other administrators at the university.
NYU Anti-Israel Conference

Dear President Sexton:

I meant to write earlier, but I see now that Professor Lisa Duggan's Israel-hating conference has now been concluded: http://legalinsurrection.com/2014/03/closed-nyu-anti-israel-conference-goes-off-without-a-hitch-or-a-dissenting-voice/

Professor Duggan sought to keep this event private and secret from public view. Why? Such behavior fundamentally contradicts the purpose of the academic mission, at both your university and across the system of higher education in the United States.

I can't see how your administration thought that no stain would be attached to this event for the reputation of New York University. Enough shame cannot be heaped on you for sanctioning or affiliating with such hatred.

I know you've dealt with many aspects of the whole ASA boycott controversy, so no need to rehash things.

I just wanted to be on record that your school now has a reputation for literally racist speech that normally would have no place in the academic setting and the discrimination promoted at such events has no constitutional protection. Indeed, there'd likely have been widespread campus outrage and approbation were it other minorities besides Israeli Jews (and Israeli scholars) who were being targeted.

Sincerely,

Donald K. Douglas, Ph.D.
Irvine, California
For related background, I refer readers to William Jacobson's entry from December, "Reader crowdsourcing project to fight American Studies Assoc anti-Israel boycott."

I recommend that readers considering similar letters to university administrators keep it simple and to the point, and also keep it explicitly professional and without ad hominem invective and vituperation. And if readers are contacting a university in which they are alumni, be sure to make mention of the withholding of charitable contributions to the university's foundation.

Be respectful but keep the pressure on.

About That Pesky Budapest Memorandum...

You know, I saw the buzz about the 1994 Budapest Memorandum a couple of days ago, at London's Daily Mail and especially at Telegraph UK, "Ukraine pleads for Britain and US to come to its rescue as Russia accused of 'invasion'":
Ukraine has called for Britain and the United States to intervene in its rapidly-escalating conflict, as the interior minister accuses Russian forces of staging an "armed invasion" in Crimea.

Deeply worried politicians inside Ukraine's parliament have pleaded with Britain and the United States to come to their rescue, after Russia was accused of launching a series of raids in the Crimea region.

The two Western powers signed an agreement with Ukraine in 1994, which Kiev's parliament wants enforcing now. The Budapest Memorandum, signed by Bill Clinton, John Major, Boris Yeltsin and Leonid Kuchma – the then-rulers of the USA, UK, Russia and Ukraine – promises to uphold the territorial integrity of Ukraine, in return for Ukraine giving up its nuclear weapons.

Article one reads: "The United States of America, the Russian Federation, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, reaffirm their commitment to Ukraine ... to respect the Independence and Sovereignty and the existing borders of Ukraine."

And Kiev is now claiming that their country's borders are not being respected.

Oleksandr Turchynov, the interim president, also told agitated MPs on Friday morning that he was convening the country's security and defence chiefs for an emergency meeting over the unfolding crisis.

Arsen Avakov, who was named interior minister on Thursday, said that the international airport in Sebastopol had been blocked by Russian forces. Sebastopol has for the past 230 years been home to Russia's Black Sea fleet – a key strategic hub for Moscow, as ships and submarines based there are just north of Turkey and can reach the Mediterranean to influence the Middle East and the Balkans.

Mr Avakov said Russia's actions amounted to "a military invasion and occupation".

He wrote on Facebook: "It is a direct provocation of armed bloodshed in the territory of a sovereign State."
And now? Well, the key thing there is how Ukraine gave up its nukes for a Western security guarantee. It's not a difficult answer to consider what would be more valuable today. Putin understands raw power.

Back in the summer of 1993 Professor of Political Science John Mearsheimer (yes that John Mearsheimer) argued that Ukraine should keep its nuclear arsenal as a deterrent against Russian power and likely revanchism. See, "The Case for a Ukrainian Nuclear Deterrent":
Ukraine cannot defend itself against a nuclear-armed Russia with conventional weapons, and no state, including the United States, is going to extend to it a meaningful security guarantee. Ukrainian nuclear weapons are the only reliable deterrent to Russian aggression. If the U.S. aim is to enhance stability in Europe, the case against a nuclear-armed Ukraine is unpersuasive.
Well, it's interesting to see how the simple logic of political realism seems so compelling today. But back then, shortly after the end of the cold war, the demobilization mindset of Western elites was much too powerful for the cold calculations of realpolitik‎.

I think Mearsheimer's a pretty vile individual, actually. But there's something to be said for the parsimony and predictive power of the realist paradigm from which he develops his theoretical expectations.

Chronology of Latest Events in #Ukraine

I love this from AFP (via Instapundit).


More at my Ukraine tag.

Roundup of the Roundups for #Oscar Sunday

At Director Blue, "Larwyn's Linx: Harry Reid, Liar" (with some Sarah Palin Rule 5). And hat-tip to Maggie's Notebook.

Sarah Palin photo 201403021457211078_zpsa9d4be4c.jpg
And all the good stuff at Bad Blue.

Check Right Wing News as well for lots of aggregating.

And at the Other McCain, "FMJRA 2.1: Technical Ecstasy."

Also yesterday at Maggie's Farm, "Saturday morning links."

At Moonbattery, "ObamaCare at Mardi Gras."

And from TCOTs, "Ten-Hut! – @ProteinWisdom Goes All Chesty Puller."

And American Digest, "The Academy Awards Live From Kiev."

Also at Wizbang, "War on Poverty Not Just a Failure, the Very Epitome of Pathological Altruism."

More from E.C. Hackett at Blackmailers, "Saturday Linkfest, Every Day Is Like Sunday Edition."

Don't miss the old-fashioned babe-blogging at Cousin Odie's, "Optical Illusions ~OR~ Rule 5 Woodsterman Style."

More later. These roundups take a lot of time, lol!

(I'll be watching the Academy Awards, if for nothing but a break from the Ukraine crisis.)

Obama's Ukraine Démarche to Moscow!

LOL!



Elizabeth Marxs on Twitter!

Man, this lady is fabulous.

Check out her feed, heh.


And check the Rule 5 roundup at Pirate's Cove, "Sorta Blogless Sunday Pinup."

Will Obama and Europe Let Putin Carve Up Ukraine?

Yes, obviously.

But see the editorial at the Wall Street Journal, "Putin Declares War":
Vladimir Putin's Russia seized Ukraine's Crimean peninsula by force on the weekend and now has his sights on the rest of his Slavic neighbor. The brazen aggression brings the threat of war to the heart of Europe for the first time since the end of the Cold War. The question now is what President Obama and free Europe are going to do about it.

With a swiftness and organization that suggests the plans were hatched weeks ago, Mr. Putin is moving to carve up Ukraine after Russia's satrap in Kiev, former President Viktor Yanukovych, was deposed in a popular democratic uprising. Russian troops have invaded Ukraine's territory and now control all border crossings, ports and airports in Crimea. The Kremlin's rubber-stamp parliament on Saturday approved Russian military intervention anywhere in Ukraine, which is nothing less than a declaration of war. The new government in Kiev responded by putting forces on high alert.

***
This is a crisis made entirely in Moscow. Speaking the day Mr. Yanukovych fled his palace in Kiev, Mr. Putin lied to President Obama about Russia's actions and intentions. So did his foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, in calls with Secretary of State John Kerry. If the blitzkrieg succeeds, Russia's assault could end Ukraine's 22-year history as a unitary independent state. The peaceful European order that the U.S. has paid such a high price to establish after the collapse of the Soviet Union is also in danger.

Entering his 15th year in power, Mr. Putin has never concealed his ambition to recreate Russia's regional hegemony. He has replaced Soviet Marxism with ultra-nationalism, contempt for the West and a form of crony state capitalism. He bit off chunks of Georgia in 2008 and paid no price, but Ukraine's 46 million people and territory on the border of NATO are a bigger prize. His updated Brezhnev Doctrine seeks to entrench authoritarianism in client states and prevent them from joining free Europe.
More at the link.

A fabulous editorial!

In Moscow, Lone Orthodox Priest Protests Russia's Invasion of #Ukraine

And according to Black Sea research analyst Michael Cecire, he was promptly arrested.



Ukraine Forces Ill Equipped to Take Back Crimea

Following up on my entry a few minutes ago, "Pessimism Is Key to Understanding Russia in #Ukraine."

Recall from Julia Ioffe, Putin's gobbling up the Crimea (and most likely Eastern Ukraine) because he can. Who's going to stop him? Certainly not Ukraine's own feeble military forces.

At the New York Times, "Ukraine Finds Its Forces Are Ill Equipped to Take Crimea Back From Russia":

KIEV, Ukraine — The new government of Ukraine called an emergency session of its national security council on Saturday in the face of the Russian military’s seizure of Crimea, but the leaders are facing a grim reality: Their armed forces are ill equipped to try to reconquer the region militarily.

Crimea has always been a vital base for the Soviet and then Russian Navy, serving as the headquarters of the Black Sea Fleet, which has controlled the waters off southern Russia since 1783. After a period of tension following Ukraine’s independence when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Russia got to keep its base in Crimea on a lease, extended until at least 2042 by the now-ousted president, Viktor F. Yanukovych.

But the Ukrainian military has only a token force in the autonomous region — a lightly armed brigade of about 3,500 people, equipped with artillery and light weapons but none of the country’s advanced battle tanks, said Igor Sutyagin, a Russian military expert at the Royal United Services Institute in London. The forces also have only one air squadron of SU-27 fighters deployed at the air base near Belbek.

A senior NATO official said that Ukraine’s small naval fleet, which was originally part of the Black Sea Fleet, had been boxed in by Russian warships.

The Russian takeover of Crimea was relatively easy, in part because the Ukrainian military was careful not to respond to a provocation that would excuse any larger intervention. The military — which has seen its top leader change constantly with the political situation — has also made a point of staying out of the internal political conflict in Ukraine.

The current military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Mykhailo Kutsyn, was named to the job only on Friday, after Adm. Yuriy Ilyin, 51, was relieved of his post after traveling to Crimea and, reportedly at least, having a heart attack. Admiral Ilyin had only been in the post for a short time himself, appointed by Mr. Yanukovych on Feb. 19 after Col. Gen. Volodymyr Zamana was fired for being unwilling to attack protesters in Kiev. All these changes have been an object lesson for the military to try to stay out of politics and civil unrest.

Even so, Ukraine had no realistic contingency plan for a Russian takeover of Crimea, given the size of the Russian forces legitimately based there, said Mr. Sutyagin, the military analyst.
Keep reading.

Pessimism Is Key to Understanding Russia in #Ukraine

I'm so silly.

I'm sure I've written before that Julia Ioffe's one of the very best --- if not the best --- analyst on Russian politics, but I nevertheless forgot about her when I was reading all the other crap at the top foreign policy journals I'm always reading (here's looking at you Kim Zisk).

Funny too, since I just tweeted an #FF for Ioffe on Friday. So WTF?

See her dead-on piece from yesterday, "Putin's War in Crimea Could Soon Spread to Eastern UkraineAnd nobody—not the U.S., not NATO—can stop him."

And here's the best passage (especially from the perspective of international relations theory):

Pessimism always wins. One of the reasons I left my correspondent's post in Moscow was because Russia, despite all the foam on the water, is ultimately a very boring place. Unfortunately, all you really need to do to seem clairvoyant about the place is to be an utter pessimist. Will Vladimir Putin allow the ostensibly liberal Dmitry Medvedev to have a second term? Not a chance. There are protests in the streets of Moscow. Will Putin crackdown? Yup. There's rumbling in the Crimea, will Putin take advantage and take the Crimean peninsula? You betcha. And you know why being a pessimist is the best way to predict outcomes in Russia? Because Putin and those around him are, fundamentally, terminal pessimists. They truly believe that there is an American conspiracy afoot to topple Putin, that Russian liberals are traitors corrupted by and loyal to the West, they truly believe that, should free and fair elections be held in Russia, their countrymen would elect bloodthirsty fascists, rather than democratic liberals. To a large extent, Putin really believes that he is the one man standing between Russia and the yawning void. Putin's Kremlin is dark and scary, and, ultimately, very boring.


The Israel Project Celebrates Scarlett Johansson

At the New York Times, "Countering Israel Boycotts, With Glamour."


And at the Israel Project, "Tell Scarlett Thank You!"

Obama, Ukraine and the Price of Weakness

From Jonathan Tobin, at Commentary:
The lessons of the tragedy unfolding in the Crimea are many, but surely the first of them must be that when dictators don’t fear the warnings of the leader of the free world and when America demonstrates that it is war weary and won’t, on almost any account, take firm action, to defend its interests and to restrain aggression, mayhem is almost certainly always going to follow.
RTWT.

Genuine Suspense Over 'Best Picture' at 2014 Academy Awards

I've seen more of the top films this year than I have in a long time. I'd like "12 Years a Slave" to win Best Picture simply because of its unparalleled historical significance and incredibly outstanding production. It's a fabulous movie on a matter of intense importance. But it's no shoo-in.

See the Los Angeles Times, "Academy Awards 2014: Best picture race is an Oscar tale of suspense."

And at the Washington Post, "For best picture, it has to be ‘12 Years a Slave’."

Saturday, March 1, 2014

U.S. Has Few Options in #Ukraine

Here's the analysis at the front-page of this morning's Wall Street Journal, "Obama Has Few Options to Challenge Russia on Ukraine: U.S. Administration Shifts to Sterner Tone With Moscow, Voicing Concern on Military Moves" (via Google):

WASHINGTON—Until Friday, the American approach to Ukraine's mounting crisis was designed explicitly to show the U.S. didn't view this as a return of Cold War frictions, but as an opportunity to work with Moscow to stabilize a former Soviet state.

That changed late in the day when President Barack Obama bluntly warned Russia against intervening in Ukraine, a stark indication that old tensions are seeping back into the relationship.

"We are now deeply concerned about military movements taken by the Russian Federation inside of Ukraine," Mr. Obama said. "Just days after the world came to Sochi for the Olympic Games, it would invite the condemnation of nations around the world."

The statement, delivered in a rare late-afternoon appearance at the White House press room, was an indication of the mounting concern in Washington that Russian President Vladimir Putin may be prepared to take drastic steps to keep Ukraine in Moscow's orbit. It sent a message that Mr. Putin should be under no illusions about the damage such steps would wreak.

The White House had been cautious in its comments on Ukraine. Since Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych's overthrow a week ago, the administration avoided casting the revolution there as a victory for the West.

Mr. Obama's latest statements, like those of other top U.S. officials this week, lacked any indication of what the U.S. would do in response to a Russian military incursion. The warnings did, however, underscore the limited range of available options.

The U.S. has started talks with European partners about what steps they could take in response to Russian actions in Ukraine, including the possibility of the U.S. and its European allies boycotting the upcoming Group of Eight meeting in Sochi, according to U.S. officials.

The U.S. is also considering withholding some trade and commercial benefits which the Russians have been seeking. Russia currently has a team in Washington to discuss deepening trade and commercial ties.

The George W. Bush administration didn't move to enact sanctions against Moscow in 2008 after Russian tank columns annexed territories in the Western-leaning former Soviet republic of Georgia.

Washington increased financial aid to Georgia in the aftermath and tried to accelerate its membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Union.

European officials are in a similar bind. They are seeking to work with Russia on Ukraine even when they appear to be pursuing conflicting objectives. European Council President Herman Van Rompuy spoke with Mr. Putin Friday afternoon and discussed the "financial and security situation" in Ukraine, the EU said.

Still, a growing number of U.S. lawmakers and American allies said this week that Mr. Obama needs to do more to directly challenge Mr. Putin and acknowledge that the Kremlin's leader isn't an American partner.

Not doing so, they said, could lead the Kremlin to take even more aggressive steps to try and shape the future in Ukraine. It also could lead Russia to continue challenging U.S. interests in Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

"Someone needs to tell [the administration] the restart button is jammed," said a senior Arab official who's involved in Syria and Iran diplomacy. "Even on a good day—without Ukraine, Syria, Georgia, or Iran—the Russians won't play ball with you."
More at the link.

And previously, "Charles Krauthammer: Obama Tells the World We Aren't Going to Do Anything About Invasion of #Ukraine."

Look, Putin could fully annex Ukraine, like Hitler's Anschluss of Austria in 1938, and the U.S. under this administration would do virtually nothing to stop him. The options are extremely limited, indeed. But the force of presidential personality here is totally lacking. We're miles from willing to "pay any price, bear any burden" to guarantee the survival of Ukraine's liberty. It's pretty sad, actually.

Invasion of the Crimean Peninsula

Here's a follow up to yesterday's entry featuring political scientist Kim Zisk, "Russian Invasion of Ukraine?"

I think we're past the question of whether Russia will invade now, although when Zisk was writing it was probably still just "paramilitary forces" who were "patrolling" the Crimean airports.

It's way beyond that. Zero Hedge tweeted this out from Contemporary Issues & Geography earlier:


Professor Zisk has an update, "Putin's Biggest Mistake: The Real Stakes of Intervening In Ukraine."

And see Robert Stacy McCain, "The New Crimean War."


U.S. Diplomatic Efforts Failing to Resolve Crisis in #Ukraine

From Colum Lynch, at Foreign Policy:


President Obama's diplomatic effort to head off a violent breakup of Ukraine ran aground Saturday as a top U.N. envoy was blocked from a peace mission to the disputed region of Crimea and Russia's parliament, or Duma, approved a request by Russian President Vladimir Putin to send military forces to Ukraine in support of pro-Russian Ukrainians.

The White House and other European governments have been pressing for international mediation in Ukraine, saying it offered the only hope of reaching a bloodless resolution to the crisis. During a closed-door session of the U.N. Security Council Friday, Samantha Power, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, proposed the U.N. send special envoy Robert Serry to the Crimea to see if he could persuade pro-Russian leaders there to make peace with authorities in Kiev. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki moon on Friday instructed Serry -- a former Dutch ambassador to Ukraine who currently serves as the U.N. special envoy to the Israeli-Palestinian peace process -- to travel immediately to Crimea.

But Crimea's pro-Russian authorities have refused to extend an invitation to Serry, according to a diplomatic source tracking the peace process. Crimea's newly appointed prime minister has asked Russia for help. Serry, meanwhile, has been unable able to secure a flight to Crimea, where Russian-backed forces have seized control of the main airports, according to diplomatic sources.

Ban's spokesman, Martin Nesirky, told reporters at U.N. headquarters Saturday that the diplomatic mission to Crimea had been called off for now. Serry "had wanted to visit Crimea but this proved to be logistically difficult and therefore he has opted to go to Geneva as initially planned, and this will be to brief the [U.N.] Secretary General," Nesirky said.

Obama sought to breath life into the diplomatic process, telling President Putin during a 90-minute phone call that the Russian leader should address his concerns in Ukraine through direct talks with the Ukrainian government, backed by international mediators, the White House said in a statement. The President also proposed the immediate deployment of international monitors to Ukraine under the auspices of the UN Security Council and the UN and Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. Russia, the White House noted, is a member of both organizations, giving it a privileged position to ensure its interests are addressed.

But Obama also warned Putin that Russia's "continued violation of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity would negatively impact Russia's standing in the international community," according to the White House statement. Obama also told Putin that the United States will suspend participation in preparatory meetings with Russia for the upcoming Group of 8 industrial powers summit. "Russia continued violation of international law will lead to greater political and economic isolation," Obama said.

The Kremlin issued its own readout of the conversation, noting that Putin had defended his decision, claiming that Ukraine's new government had encouraged the "provocative, criminal actions by ultra-nationalists" and threatened ethnic Russians.

"The Russian president underlined that there are real threats to the life and health of Russian citizens and compatriots on Ukrainian territory," according to the statement. "Vladimir Putin stressed that if violence spread further in the eastern regions of Ukraine and in Crimea, Russia reserves the right to protect its interest and those of Russian speakers living there."
Well, diplomacy's all we have right now, although diplomacy without the credibility of international commitments isn't of much use. Russia's going to do what it will, damn the West.

More at the link.

Charles Krauthammer: Obama Tells the World We Aren't Going to Do Anything About Invasion of #Ukraine

I posted Krauthammer's Friday commentary yesterday, "Russian Forces Seize Airports in Crimea in Major Escalation of International Tensions."

And now at National Review, "Krauthammer’s Take: Obama Tells the World We Aren’t Going to Do Anything About Invasion of Ukraine" (via Memeorandum).



Pro-Russia Forces Beat Maidan Occupiers in Kharkiv, Northeast Ukraine

You got the feeling of the enormity of the Ukraine crisis with the woman-in-the-street interview at CBS News I posted the other day. The woman said "Russia will do bad things." And she was scared.

I'm reminded of the woman's genuine fear with the news and images from Kharkiv, at the Washington Post, "In northeast Ukraine, pro-Maidan occupiers are routed by counter-demonstrators":

KHARKIV, Ukraine — Anger spilled onto the streets in the eastern city of Kharkiv on Saturday as protesters stormed the regional government headquarters, ending the six-day occupation of the building by Ukrainian nationalist activists.

Police stood by as protesters swarmed into the building, beating their opponents and taking prisoners before hoisting Russian and Ukrainian flags at the front door.

Kharkiv is one of several cities across eastern Ukraine where demonstrators with a generally pro-Russian tilt held rallies and raised Russian flags.

The rout occurred during an otherwise peaceful rally in Kharkiv’s Freedom Square, where tens of thousands of people gathered in the morning to protest against the Maidan revolution.

A series of small explosions in the square triggered an angry reaction from the crowd. Hundreds of protesters broke through a police barricade around the regional government building and attacked the occupiers.

The assault on the building was “completely spontaneous,” said Denis Levshinko, a sociology student who participated in the rout of the Maidan occupiers. “We are all fed up with them. We united and we chased them out.”

Levshinko said the protesters clashed with about 500 occupiers, armed with sticks and baseball bats, inside the government building. Many of the activists were taken captive and dragged onto the street, where, forced to their knees, they apologized to the jubilant crowd.

“Beat them, that’s the right thing to do,” shouted one woman. “They should not even be alive.”


Obama Skips Key White House National Security Briefing Amid Worst Territorial Crisis Since End of the Cold War

Again, just short of astonishing.

In August 1990, President George H.W. Bush declared that "a line in the sand" had been crossed by Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. We saw an intensity to events that's rare in world politics. And we're returning to the intensity with developments in Russia and the Ukraine. Unfortunately, the intensity's everywhere except 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

At Twitchy, "President Empty Chair skips Saturday’s national security meeting?"

And at Weekly Standard, "Obama Skips National Security Team Meeting on Russia, Ukraine."


I don't know. At some point things are going to get so big that the entire Western world will be looking at Washington for a decisive green light to intervene with force in Ukraine. Whatever happens, if the use of force is seriously considered, the United States cannot be on the sidelines. These are really monumental maneuvers taking place over there. Like I said on Twitter earlier, Russia's acting like a superpower.

More at Reuters, "Putin tells Obama Russia has right to protect interests in Ukraine," and "WRAPUP 8-Putin ready to invade Ukraine; Kiev warns of war."

Left-Wing Nutjobs Go Full Meltdown Over Obama/Putin Photos Posted by Time's Michael Crowley

This is hilarious!

At Twitchy, "Lefties go full meltdown over Time journo’s side-by-side image of Obama and Putin [pic]."



Sports Illustrated Breaks the Nude Barrier

Well in this day and age, what are you going to do?

Besides, Sports Illustrated's always been culturally-cool soft pornography.

At the Improper, "Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue Takes Plunge into Full-On Nudity: Crosses Line With Fully Exposed Breasts."

And see Esscurve, "Nina Agdal Breaks Nude Taboo in SI Magazine."

BONUS: At Egotastic!, "Rachel Hunter Called a Classic by Sports Illustrated; We Take a Peek at Rachel Topless in Playboy."

#Ukraine and Our Useless Outrage — Comical Useless Outrage

Seriously. All we've got left is comic relief at this point.

From Victor Davis Hanson, "The history of Obama’s foreign-policy posturing bodes ill for the future of Ukraine":

Simple, Free Image and File Hosting at MediaFire
The U.S. has now shot so many rhetorical arrows that its quiver of indignation is empty — and the world’s troublemakers may know it. An administration that ignores almost all of its own Obamacare deadlines surely cannot expect others to abide by any timetables it sets abroad.

There may be no viable solutions to the violence in Syria or Ukraine. The messes in Egypt and Libya, the Chinese provocations to their neighbors, the North Korean lunacy, and the spiraling violence in Venezuela certainly have no easy answers. But not knowing quite what to do is not the same as knowing certainly what not to do.

Although the U.S. alone seems to honor its promised deadlines of withdrawal from Afghanistan and Iraq, the world’s aggressors sense that the Obama administration’s bluster will be followed by more bluster. Therefore, they have decided to risk aggrandizements while they can. In the mind of Vladimir Putin, today Ukraine, tomorrow the Baltic States or Eastern Europe. In the minds of the Iranian theocrats, if chemical WMD are okay in Syria, why not nuclear WMD in Iran? In China’s view, when Japan backs off, why shouldn’t Taiwan, South Korea, or the Philippines?

Such a seemingly insignificant loss of deterrence is how wars often start — when an aggressive nation bets that loud words signal that consequences will never follow. So it is emboldened to up the ante to try something even riskier.

America’s step-over line/deadline/red line outrage is long past monotonous and empty — and the result has been an ever scarier world.

Putin Bullying Obama? OMG CNN!

We're screwed.

At Twitchy, "Not a Photoshop: Here’s how CNN is covering Putin and Obama [pic]."



The West is Caught Flat-Footed in #Ukraine

Well, like I said earlier, Putin knows exactly what he's doing in Ukraine.

See Walter Russell Mead, at the American Interest, "Red Lines In Crimea":


President Obama stepped up to the podium twenty minutes after the announced time for his talk and gave a short, sharply worded but ultimately vague statement on what looks like a growing and intentional Russian military presence in Crimea.

We shall see how things work out, but at first glance President Putin appears to have stolen yet another march on the sputtering West. As I wrote last week, Putin was under pressure to act quickly and run risks; not for the first time, complacent and unobservant Western leaders underestimated Russian decisiveness and determination to surprise. Washington in particular appears to have been caught flat-footed by Russian moves, and even as Kremlin forces fan out across the restive province, President Obama seemed unsure just what Putin intends.

One can already hear a chorus of people discussing Russia’s Crimean move in the terms people used to describe Hitler’s move into the Rhineland. The Germans are only going into their own back garden, said Britain’s Lord Lothian. George Bernard Shaw told the public that it was like the British moving into Portsmouth. Crimea is historically and culturally more a part of Russia than anything else, we are told. It’s a long way from the United States and what happens there doesn’t really matter very much.

While President Obama is unlikely to take the Bernard Shaw line, he now faces a genuinely difficult moment in the troubled course of his second term foreign policy. Two of the President’s highest goals—progress on nuclear arms control in general and a peaceful end to Iran’s nuclear ambitions—depend in large part on Russia’s willingness to act as an American partner. Just as his Syria strategy (talks at Geneva to prepare a political transition) fell horribly flat when the Russians backed away, his Iran and nuclear strategies would face some very rough sledding if Russia’s promises of help prove hollow...
More.

And now here we go, at the New York Times, "Russia's Senate Approves Use of Military Force in Ukraine" (at Memeorandum).

'We like to pay it forward in my family...'

A great story, at the Mirror UK, "Eight-year-old son of dead Iraq veteran hands tear-jerking note of thanks to soldier with $20."

And NewsBusters, "Tearjerker: CBS Spotlights Gold Star Son's Heartfelt Note to National Guardsman."

Simple, Free Image and File Hosting at MediaFire

'Not Everyone Has Two Legs'

At iOWNTHEWORLD, "9 year-old reminds math teacher that not everyone has 2 legs."

Simple, Free Image and File Hosting at MediaFire

More at Twitchy, "Nine-year-old remembers wounded warriors on math assignment."

Driver Falls to His Death After Big-Rig Hits Guardrail on Rainy 210 Freeway in Colton

This is why I don't really like joking about the rain (even though Jimmy Kimmel was cracking me up).

At the Riverside Press-Enterprise, "COLTON: Driver plunges to death off connector road."

Photo: At the Los Angeles Times, "Major storm brings needed rain to L.A., but at a cost."

Simple, Free Image and File Hosting at MediaFire

Lewis Gill's Mom Says One-Punch Killing of Andrew Young Was 'No Big Deal'

At the Mirror UK, "Mum of single punch killer Lewis Gill claims her son's crime was 'no big deal'":

Sherron O'Hagan, 41, said of Andrew Young's death: "It was just an accident. It's not a big deal. All of this will be forgotten about by tomorrow."
That's a f-king cold, heinous murder. The racist black thug should get 20-to-life at minimum.

Also at London's Daily Mail, "Killing a man? 'It's no big deal': A sneer from mother of thug who punched Asperger's sufferer, as Attorney General is deluged with calls to increase sentence." And, "What a sick joke: Four years' jail for thug who'll be out in two after he ended a vulnerable man's life by punching him when he complained about a cyclist on pavement."

Russian Invasion of Ukraine? — UPDATED!

No, it's not an "invasion" yet (thankfully, for Blake Hounshell, at least).

But see Professor Kim Zisk (Kimberley Martin), at Foreign Affairs, "Crimean Punishment: Why Russia Won't Invade Ukraine":
There has been much speculation of late about a possible Russian intervention in Ukraine. After Russia ordered large-scale military exercises on Ukraine’s border earlier this week, for example, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned that “any kind of military intervention that would violate the sovereign territorial integrity of Ukraine would be a huge, a grave mistake." And NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen tweeted today, “I urge Russia not to take any action that can escalate tension or create misunderstanding.” It seems that Western policymakers are most worried about two possible scenarios: First, that Russia would embargo gas to Ukraine, and second, that it would invade Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula. Is either of these two really likely?
Keep reading.

Personally, I'm not ruling anything out. Putin could send a couple of hundred thousand troops to "secure" Kiev and Obama wouldn't do a damned thing.

UPDATE: Professor Zisk has revised her unfounded prediction, "Putin's Biggest Mistake The Real Stakes of Intervening In Ukraine," putting the blame for the headline on the editors at the magazine. But she erred in her analysis. Check the link for her new take on events.

Personally, I don't think as many commentators were calling Russia's moves an "invasion" until today (Saturday), and that's how I saw it: as a limited operation to secure Russia's military assets and lines of communication. So, my bad. Interesting spin from Zisk, however:
The title and subtitle were picked by the editors; my read on the situation did not give me certainty that Russia wouldn’t invade Crimea, and indeed I argued that an invasion was likely if there was violence against ethnic Russians there (which is why I urged the Ukrainian government not to rise to the bait by permitting or encouraging anti-Russian violence in Crimea).
Heh. Double negatives are sure to confuse.

But nah. I'd just say events unfolded faster than folks could get an accurate handle on what was going on. "Invasion" indicates more like an armored assault with arrayed infantry divisions, etc. But whatever. It's on now.

'Crimea: No science fiction, no action movie. This is how a Russian airborne invasion looks like...'

It's not the Russian zombie apocalypse, but still.

Video at Live Leak.

Sarah Palin Mocked in 2008 for Warning Putin Might Invade Ukraine if Obama Elected

At Instapundit, "WHO’S DUMB NOW?"

It's former editor of Foreign Policy, Blake Hounshell.

And at Twitchy, "‘Someone has a case of the sads’: Editor who dismissed Sarah Palin’s Russia/Ukraine prediction whines," and "‘I could see this one from Alaska’: Hey journos, ‘stupid’ Sarah Palin was right about Ukraine all along."

You have to admit, this really is something else, heh.


Obama Heckled on 'Nuclear War with Russia' at DNC Fundraiser

At Townhall, "Obama Responds to Russia Heckler: 'What the Heck Are You Talking About!?'"

And at the Hill, "Heckler: Obama wants 'nuclear war with Russia'."



RELATED: At Jammie Wearing Fools, "Deeply Somber Obama Following Ukraine Remarks: ‘It’s Officially Happy Hour With the Democratic Party’."

'Ruthless' Arthur Chu on 'Jeopardy'

I watched it last night. And I can see what they mean, heh.

At the Washington Post, "Why we’re actually mad at ruthless ‘Jeopardy!’ contestant Arthur Chu."

Desperately Much-Needed Rain in California!

We do need the rain, and there were some evacuations in Azusa, Glendora and Monrovia yesterday, so not to belittle this. But Jimmy Kimmel is cracking me up.



Seriously, though, here's more on the storm, "Heavy, steady rain soaking Southern California."

Friday, February 28, 2014

Obama Warns Russia Against Military Intervention in Ukraine

Obama's credibility is shot.

Frankly, he's a laughing stock on the international stage. Our foreign rivals can rest assured the U.S. won't lift a finger to defend U.S. strategic interests.

At the Wall Street Journal, "Russia Warned Over Unrest in Ukraine's Crimea Region: Troops Seize Airports, Roads Amid Fears Moscow Is Intervening in Ukraine; Kremlin Denies Involvement":

Ukraine's new government appeared to lose control over the restive territory of Crimea on Friday after heavily equipped gunmen—possibly Russian soldiers—surrounded its two main airports and armed checkpoints were established on key roads.

Officials in the West reacted with alarm, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, British Prime Minister David Cameron and others working the phones to Moscow. President Barack Obama publicly told the Russians "there will be costs for any military intervention in Ukraine."

In Kiev, the country's capital, acting President Oleksandr Turchynov went on national television to accuse Russia of "blatant aggression" aimed at provoking a conflict that could lead to the annexation of Ukrainian territory by Moscow.

Top officials in Kiev said the men who had taken over the airport and the roads—who wore unmarked military uniforms and carried automatic weapons—appeared to be Russian soldiers.

Russia denied its forces were involved, and the Russian foreign ministry said what was happening in Ukraine was an internal matter. Russian President Vladimir Putin told concerned European leaders who called him Friday that he opposes any escalation of violence and supports normalizing the situation.

Though the U.S. intelligence community doesn't yet have clarity on the precise nature of troop movements in Crimea, preliminary indications point to a Russian military that is in the process of intervening—despite assurances from Moscow that it would respect Ukraine's territorial integrity, U.S. officials said.

The unrest in Crimea—where Russia maintains a naval base despite ceding control of the territory decades ago—raised the possibility of the de facto partition of Ukraine, a former Soviet republic that gained its independence in 1991...
Continue reading.

More at TCOTs, "Ukraine Recedes Into The Darkness," and the Mad Jewess, "Obama Warned Putin Tonight About Ukraine..."