… from Russia Today, Moscow
Who is really being taken for a ride here?
[ Editor’s Note: My, my… this came as a big surprise, a multi-billion euro jump in trade, in just the first two months of the year, a bit of a hint that some of the sanctions have a play-acting feature to them.
The Germans have been holding to their standard line that Crimea was seized by Russia, hence the sanctions cannot be removed, while behind the scenes, trade deals have found routes around the sanctions roadblocks.
This breathes life into the old adage of “where there’s a will, there’s a way”. Long forgotten by most now is that prior to the sanctions the EU had a 120-billion Euro trade surplus with Russia. It was sustainable because that was about the total of Russia’s energy sales, so it was not a big balance of payments problem for them.
It was a wonderful deal of the EU, really for both; so Russia had an obvious strategic long-term interest in maintaining good economic relations. The idea that somehow Putin had some secret master plan to retake the old Soviet States and threaten Western Europe is preposterous on its face.
It has amazed me how the warmongering spinmeisters have pitched Russia as a “given threat”, meaning one that is self-evident that it needs no confirmation. That of course is an old hustler’s con, but a huge segment of the public has just lapped it up, including more than a few Congressional Democrats.
This is the sad state we find ourselves in – an advanced state of “managed perceptions” where our political and bankster class has us over a barrel. The realities that debunk their Russian threat hype as a scam are not a big problem for them, as they are able, as long as they have the money and the right tools, to create whatever perception of reality they need to win a 50% vote.
This is one of the biggest national security risks that we face, and one for which there is no organized resistance from the general public or our mass of civic institutions, which are as compromised mentally as the citizens themselves. It is a pitiful state of affairs… Jim W. Dean ]
Trade between Russia and Germany saw a multi-billion euro surge in January and February, German newspaper Die Zeit reports. With the Russian economy recovering from the recession, German businesses are bullish on trade.
[ Editor’s Note: My, my… this came as a big surprise, a multi-billion euro jump in trade, in just the first two months of the year, a bit of a hint that some of the sanctions have a play-acting feature to them.
The Germans have been holding to their standard line that Crimea was seized by Russia, hence the sanctions cannot be removed, while behind the scenes, trade deals have found routes around the sanctions roadblocks.
This breathes life into the old adage of “where there’s a will, there’s a way”. Long forgotten by most now is that prior to the sanctions the EU had a 120-billion Euro trade surplus with Russia. It was sustainable because that was about the total of Russia’s energy sales, so it was not a big balance of payments problem for them.
It was a wonderful deal of the EU, really for both; so Russia had an obvious strategic long-term interest in maintaining good economic relations. The idea that somehow Putin had some secret master plan to retake the old Soviet States and threaten Western Europe is preposterous on its face.
It has amazed me how the warmongering spinmeisters have pitched Russia as a “given threat”, meaning one that is self-evident that it needs no confirmation. That of course is an old hustler’s con, but a huge segment of the public has just lapped it up, including more than a few Congressional Democrats.
This is the sad state we find ourselves in – an advanced state of “managed perceptions” where our political and bankster class has us over a barrel. The realities that debunk their Russian threat hype as a scam are not a big problem for them, as they are able, as long as they have the money and the right tools, to create whatever perception of reality they need to win a 50% vote.
This is one of the biggest national security risks that we face, and one for which there is no organized resistance from the general public or our mass of civic institutions, which are as compromised mentally as the citizens themselves. It is a pitiful state of affairs… Jim W. Dean ]
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Are we seeing an illicit trade love affair here, in spite of the sanctions? |
– First published … May 07, 2017 –
Trade between Russia and Germany saw a multi-billion euro surge in January and February, German newspaper Die Zeit reports. With the Russian economy recovering from the recession, German businesses are bullish on trade.