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  • 4/24/2025
๐ŸŒ The narrative is breaking downโ€ฆ
The United States is now positioning itself as a โ€œmediatorโ€ โ€” in a conflict it arguably helped escalate. ๐Ÿคฏ

In this eye-opening episode of The New Atlas, we explore:
๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ How the U.S. continues to shape global narratives while playing peacekeeper
The real story behind the war in Ukraine and the West's role
๐Ÿ“‰ Media manipulation, hidden agendas, and power politics exposed
๐Ÿง  What this means for global stability and geopolitical truth

๐Ÿ’ฅ It's not just about war โ€” it's about control, perception, and influence.

๐Ÿ‘‰ LIKE ๐Ÿ‘, SUBSCRIBE ๐Ÿ””, and SHARE ๐Ÿ“ฒ to spread the truth they donโ€™t want you to hear.

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Transcript
00:00I have written another article for New Eastern Outlook. It is titled,
00:04U.S. Plays Mediator in Its Own War on Russia. And this is in response to this recent development.
00:12This is current U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, arch neocon, voluntarily included into
00:19the Trump administration, despite claiming to fight the deep state, a key facilitator of the
00:25deep state. And it says, U.S. will abandon Ukraine peace efforts within days if no progress made,
00:32Rubio warns. And down here it says, the United States could end its efforts on ending the
00:37Ukraine conflict within days if there are no signs of progress, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio
00:41warned. If it is not possible to end the war in Ukraine, we need to move on, he told reporters
00:47before departing Paris, where he had held high-level talks with European and Ukrainian officials. We
00:52need to determine very quickly now, and I'm talking about in a matter of days, whether or not this is
00:58doable, he said. And so he's talking as if the U.S. is some independent, neutral mediator
01:08between Russia and Ukraine. And the U.S. is trying to end this war, but both sides are being unreasonable,
01:17and they're just going to give up and wash their hands of everything within days if they cannot get
01:23some sort of deal. And the deal that they want is this ceasefire that U.S. Secretary of Defense,
01:31Pete Hegg said, back in February 12, 2025, laid out. European troops go in, they freeze the conflict,
01:40they double down on rebuilding, reorganizing the Ukrainian military. They themselves expand their
01:46military industrial base, the U.S. does as well. The U.S. goes off to go start a very similar war
01:52with China and the Asia-Pacific region, while Europe holds Russia in Ukraine, and also as the U.S.
02:01ramps up violence in the Middle East. So Russia is confined to Ukraine, cannot assist, say, Iran,
02:08as the U.S. prepares for war with Iran, and surely cannot help China if and when some sort of conflict
02:14breaks out in the Asia-Pacific region. This is exactly what they did to successfully overthrow
02:20Syria. They overextended Russia in Ukraine and Iran across the entire region, Lebanon, Gaza, Yemen,
02:31within Iran itself. And they created conditions which a previously lost proxy war. The U.S. lost the
02:38proxy war in Syria, but they had managed to freeze it. They were able to unfreeze it and finish it on
02:44their terms. So this is exactly what the U.S. is setting out to do, and that is what my article
02:49is about. So I'm going to just get right into it. I'm going to read it as usual, adding in any
02:54additional information when and if necessary, and also showing you all the sources that I used
02:59are cited while writing this article. So recent comments from current U.S. Secretary of State,
03:04Marco Rubio, has signaled Washington's intent to abandon peace efforts if progress isn't made between
03:10Russia and Ukraine. And I read from the CNN article what it said. This is framed as if the U.S. is
03:17serving as some sort of mediator between Russia and Ukraine. In reality, the U.S. is one of two
03:23primary parties to the conflict, the other being Russia with whom this war was provoked. The U.S.
03:30has been at war with Russia by proxy since the end of the Cold War, the two Chechen wars. This was the
03:37U.S. stirring up trouble within Russia's borders. During the Cold War, the war in Afghanistan,
03:45the war in Vietnam in many ways was a proxy war against the Soviet Union. So the U.S. war on Russia
03:52since the Cold War ended. This is what I'm going to talk about next. The U.S. has since the end of the
03:58Cold War invested billions of dollars in political interference within Ukraine. And this is not me
04:06guessing at this or baselessly accusing the U.S. of this. This is Victoria Nuland herself right here.
04:14This was December 19th, 2013. This is as they were setting up the Euromaidon violently overthrowing
04:22the elected government of Ukraine. And this was her speaking at this Ukraine in Washington, 2013,
04:29U.S.-Ukraine Foundation, addressed by Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland. And this is
04:36what she said. Since Ukraine's independence in 1991, the United States has supported Ukrainians
04:43as they build democratic skills and institutions, as they promote civic participation and good
04:49governance, all of which are preconditions for Ukraine to achieve its European aspirations.
04:54We've invested over five billion dollars to assist Ukraine in these and other goals that will
05:00ensure a secure and prosperous and democratic Ukraine. Today, there are senior officials in
05:07the Ukrainian government, in the business community, as well as in the opposition, civil
05:13society, and the religious community who believe in this democratic and European future for their
05:18country. And they've been working hard to move their country and their president in the right
05:24direction. We urge the government, we urge the president to listen to these voices, to listen
05:32to the Ukrainian people, to listen to the Euromaidon, and take Ukraine forward.
05:38And did you notice the big chevron logo behind her and all of the other U.S. corporations listed
05:46on that backdrop? Because unelected corporate financier interests drive U.S. foreign policy.
05:53And that policy is to maintain American dominance over the entire planet so that no competition can
06:00arise, forcing these unelected corporate monopolies to, number one, compete, and number two, give up
06:09their share of global power and profits, which they always seek to maximize. It's very simple.
06:18So that is her admitting five billion dollars, to be precise, were invested in Ukraine's internal
06:25political affairs, a blatant violation of international law under the UN charter. All nations have their
06:32political independence protected by the UN charter. And so this is the U.S. openly, blatantly, bragging,
06:39about how much they have interfered in Ukraine's internal political affairs. And of course,
06:43I also mention this article from The Guardian, 2004. So even before 2013, 2014, successful regime
06:52change in Ukraine, the U.S. admitted that it had been deeply involved in trying to overthrow the
06:57Ukrainian government and other governments in Europe well before then. And as I've always pointed out,
07:04this article admits that the protest in Ukraine in 2004 was an American creation, a sophisticated and
07:11brilliantly conceived exercise in Western branding and mass marketing that in four countries in four
07:15years has been used to try to salvage rigged elections, topple unsavory regimes, which is just a euphemism
07:21for governments that don't obediently do what the U.S. says. Do not subordinate themselves to the U.S.
07:28maintain their sovereignty as is their right under international law. That is unacceptable. The U.S.
07:33will overthrow your government and replace it by a client regime they install into power and one
07:38that answers to the U.S. at the expense of whatever country was just overthrown. Funded and organized by
07:45the U.S. government deploying U.S. consultancies, pollsters, diplomats, the two big American parties,
07:49so this is bipartisan, doesn't matter if it's Republican or Democrat, Biden, Trump, Harris,
07:54doesn't matter. They're all on board with this. And U.S. non-government organizations, which are just
08:00organizations U.S. government funds as intermediaries to divert attention away from the U.S. government,
08:05the campaign was first used in Europe in Belgrade in 2000 to beat Slobodan Milosevic at the ballot
08:11by. So overthrow Slobodan Milosevic and install a U.S. client regime there. Richard Miles,
08:16U.S. ambassador in Belgrade, played a key role. And by last year, the U.S. ambassador in Tbilisi,
08:22so he was in Belgrade and then he was in Tbilisi. He repeated the trick in Georgia,
08:28coaching Mikhail Sakisvili and how to bring down his opponents. And we remember 2003, the U.S.
08:36successfully overthrew the government of Georgia. They put Mikhail Sakisvili into
08:41power. They began reorganizing the Georgian military. And by 2008, they encouraged the
08:47Georgian military to attack Russian peacekeepers around South Ossetia. And it triggered this very
08:54short, devastating war that Russia won, prompting the U.S. to reset its relationship with Russia.
09:01In other words, to buy time so they could reset the trap again, this time instead of using Georgia,
09:07a very small country, using Ukraine, a much larger country with a larger population, a larger military,
09:14that the U.S. could do real serious damage if they repeated this trick again. That is exactly
09:18what they were trying to do, even as of 2004. Ten months after the success in Belgrade, the U.S.
09:26ambassador in Minsk, Michael Kozak, a veteran of similar operations in Central America. So this isn't just
09:31Europe. This is everywhere, as I've pointed out over many years. Notably, in Nicaragua,
09:36organized a near identical campaign to try to defeat the Belarus hard man, Alexander Lukashenko. That one
09:41failed. So they're admitting that all of this, this is the U.S. This is the U.S. from A to Z, organizing
09:51these mobs, putting them out into the streets, overthrowing an elected government, a government that
09:56is independent from U.S. influence, and replacing it with a client regime installed into power by the
10:01U.S. itself. From 24, so that was 2004, and then successful regime change finally taking place in
10:092014, and that's what Victoria Nuland was talking about back in 2013. From 2014 onward, Ukraine was
10:16transformed, just like Georgia was from 2003 to 2008, into a military proxy of the United States, aimed
10:22specifically to threaten the Russian Federation, just as politically captured Georgia in 2003,
10:29was used to attack Russian peacekeeping forces in 2008. And as I have always pointed out,
10:36despite even to this day many people claiming Russia invaded Georgia, the EU conducted their own
10:41independence investigation, and they concluded that Georgia started war with Russia, EU backed report,
10:48right there. Reuters, that link will be in the video description below, and you can read that
10:52for yourself. The growing security threat this posed to Moscow, already revealed in the U.S. use of
11:00Georgia from 2003 to 2008, culminating in a military attack on Russian forces, precipitated the launching
11:09of Russia's February 2022 special military operation, and the subsequent fighting that has continued
11:14ever since, including, up to, and including today. A series of articles from the Western media itself has
11:19revealed over recent years, the degree to which the U.S. has not only politically captured Ukraine,
11:25but also institutionally captured its military intelligence agencies, reconfiguring them to operate
11:31as armed extensions of the United States along Ukraine's border with Russia, and even across it
11:38within Russia itself. And I've always talked about the conflict in Ukraine as a proxy war,
11:43a U.S. proxy war against Russia using Ukraine as intermediaries. And I have said everything about
11:49that conflict is being determined in Washington, for Washington, not by the Ukrainians. They're just
11:58there to give the U.S. plausible deniability. That is the only reason they're using the Ukrainians,
12:04because they do not want to fight a war directly with Russia, because the U.S. and Russia are both
12:09nuclear powers that can escalate very quickly into a nuclear exchange. The whole purpose of fighting
12:16a war by proxy is to have your proxy suffer all of the costs, and any benefit that is left over is enjoyed
12:24by you. Among these admissions is the New York Times' February 2024 article titled,
12:31The Spy War, How the CIA Secretly Helps Ukraine Fight Putin, which admits, and it's this article right here,
12:38right here, The Spy War, How the CIA Secretly Helps Ukraine Fight Putin. For more than a decade,
12:42the U.S. has nurtured a secret intelligence partnership with Ukraine that is now critical for
12:48both countries encountering Russia. So this wasn't a product of Russia's invasion into Ukraine in 2022.
12:55The U.S. was already building up Ukraine as a threat to Russia, which is why Russia responded
13:01with the special military operation in the first place. And again, the West deliberately lies about
13:07this and portrays this as happening backwards. Russia invaded, then the U.S. came to aid Ukraine.
13:13And this is what Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the Trump administration, this is a lie they're
13:18still trying to tell the public. A lie created under the Biden administration continued under the Trump
13:24administration. This article admits to a CIA-supported network of spy bases constructed in the past eight
13:32years that includes 12 secret locations along the Russian border. So the CIA is building bases along the
13:38border with Russia. This is a direct threat to Russia. If Russia was doing this to the United States,
13:44in Canada, it would be perceived as an act of war. Well, Russia perceived it as an act of war,
13:49and then they themselves acted. In response, the article would also admit around 2016, so long before
13:56the special military operation, the CIA began training an elite Ukrainian commando force. Now,
14:01a commando force are forces armed and trained to conduct lethal operations against a targeted military or
14:12nation or organization. It was known as unit 2245, which captured Russian drones and communications
14:20gear so that the CIA technicians could reverse engineer them and crack Moscow's encryption systems.
14:26One officer in that unit was Kirlo Bundanov, now the general leading Ukraine's military intelligence. And
14:33the CIA also helped train a new generation of Ukrainian spies who operated inside Russia, across Europe,
14:40and in Cuba and other places where Russians have a large presence. So again, just like the US versus
14:47China, full spectrum war, direct war, proxy war, economic war, in every conceivable way. The US is also
14:58waging this type of conflict with Russia. While the New York Times tries to insist the CIA did not help
15:04Ukrainians conduct offensive lethal operations. It later admits CIA-trained Unit 2245 not only
15:12conducted lethal operations, but did so within Russian-held territory, claiming at the time the
15:18future head of Ukraine's military intelligence agency, General Bundanov, was a rising star in Unit 2245. This
15:26was being set up and trained by the CIA. He was known for daring operations behind enemy lines and had
15:32deep ties to the CIA. The agency had trained him and also taken the extraordinary step of sending him
15:39for rehabilitation to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Maryland after he was shot in the
15:44right arm during fighting in the Donbass. So the CIA was helping them carry out lethal operations despite
15:51claiming they didn't. The New York Times contradicts itself within the same article. Disguised in Russian
15:58uniforms, then Lieutenant Colonel Bundanov, like commandos across a narrow gulf and inflatable
16:03speedboats landing at night in Crimea. But an elite Russian commando unit was waiting for them.
16:08The Ukrainians fought back, killing several Russian fighters, including the son of a general,
16:13before retreating to the shoreline, plunging into the sea, and then swimming for hours to Ukrainian
16:18controlled territory. In other words, the U.S. was training, equipping, arming, and directing deadly
16:23operations out of Ukraine into Russian-held territory before Russia launched its 2022 special
16:30military operation. The U.S. was helping Ukraine kill Russians long before the special military operation
16:37began. Very important. I know I'm diving into this deeply and extensively, exhaustively,
16:46but it is important to understand that this is a U.S. war on Russia and the Trump administration,
16:53pretending as if they've tried to end the conflict, and it's just Ukraine and Russia are being so
16:58difficult. There's nothing else they can do. This was always part of the plan. Pretend to seek peace,
17:04dump it on Europe, who's going to send troops in to freeze the conflict, as U.S. Secretary of Defense
17:09BHAG said, all the way back in February 12th this year. The same article admitted that these CIA
17:15officers deployed to and overseeing operations in Ukraine began playing a central role after Russia
17:22launched its SMO in 2022. The New York Times would admit, within weeks, CIA had returned to Kyiv,
17:29and the agency sent in scores of new officers to help the Ukrainians. A senior U.S. official said of the
17:35CIA's sizable presence. Are they pulling triggers? No. Are they helping with targeting? Absolutely.
17:41So again, Ukraine would not be able to fight this war without U.S. assistance. The U.S. was choosing
17:48all of the targets, and they were just simply using the Ukrainians to hit them, because if they did it
17:53themselves, then it would be a direct war between the U.S. and Russia. And this article is bad enough,
17:59but the next one I'm going to cover in this article is much, much worse. Some of the CIA officers were
18:04deployed to Ukrainian bases. They reviewed lists of potential Russian targets that the Ukrainians
18:09were preparing to strike, comparing the information that the Ukrainians had with U.S. intelligence to
18:14ensure that it was accurate. Another, again, admitting that the Ukrainians would not be able
18:19to strike these targets without U.S. intelligence. Subsequent articles by the New York Times would expand
18:25upon just how deeply involved the U.S. has been in the fighting, making the war for all intents and
18:31purposes. An American war fought through the Ukrainians. So let's talk about Washington's
18:37war on Russia in Ukraine. A March 2025 New York Times article. This one here. And it's displaying
18:48a little bit weird in my browser. The partnership, the secret history of the war on Ukraine. This is
18:54the untold story of America's hidden role in Ukrainian military operations against Russia's invading armies.
18:59But this was always obvious to myself and many other analysts following this from the very beginning.
19:05It was obvious the U.S. was involved in absolutely everything. It was a U.S. war on Russia fought
19:10through Ukraine. It was so obvious. And all the New York Times is doing is confirming everything that
19:15we all already knew by watching the fighting unfold on the battlefield. It's so much worse when you hear
19:23the New York Times actually admitting it, though, even when you already knew this. So this March 2025 New
19:30York Times article would explain that not only has the U.S. provided tens of billions of dollars worth of
19:36military equipment, weapons and ammunition, including, and this is a quote from the New York Times,
19:41half a billion rounds of small arms ammunition and grenades, 10,000 Javelin anti-armor weapons, 3,000 Stinger
19:49anti-aircraft systems, 272 howitzers, 76 tanks, 40 high mobility artillery rocket systems, they're
19:58talking about HIMARS, 20 MI-17 helicopters, and three Patriot air defense batteries. And a lot of the
20:05equipment that Europe was sending to Ukraine was made by the United States and being transferred to
20:11Ukraine. And that is what they have planned for the future as well, to expand that,
20:16using Europe as the new intermediary instead of Ukraine. So all of this weapons, ammunition,
20:24and equipment, but that the U.S. military itself has been and still is playing a central role in
20:30picking and striking at targets on both sides of the Ukrainian-Russian border. It admitted that it was
20:37U.S. intelligence used to carry out many of Ukraine's most successful attacks on Russian military
20:42headquarters, including at the Crimean port of Sevastopol, which had been under Russian control
20:48even before the 2014 U.S. overthrow of Ukraine and Crimea's subsequent reunification with Russia. So
20:55Russia already had an agreement with Ukraine long before any of this ever started.
21:00Its military was at Sevastopol. This naval base was Russian before any of this started. And so you can
21:08talk about, well, the CIA, the U.S. military, they were helping, but they were helping Ukraine strike
21:13Russians with the Ukrainian territory. So Sevastopol has always been Russian. All right. And that's,
21:18that was just the start of it. Much of Washington's control over the conflict was coordinated through
21:23a mission command center established in Weisbaden, Germany. So there's a command center the U.S. set up
21:30in Germany and they were running the entire war out of it. Absolutely everything was being run
21:35through this command center. They drew up plans for all of the major offensives, the 2022 offensive,
21:42the utterly disastrous and defeated 2023 offensive. I guarantee you, even though the New York Times
21:49doesn't admit it, they also engineered the Nazi incursions into Belgorod and then the subsequent
21:56incursion into Kursk. I guarantee you all of this was planned out by the Americans and Ukrainians simply
22:04carried it out. Well, you read the whole article and you will understand why I think that that is
22:10the case. Literally everything Ukraine was doing, including things Ukraine did not want to do,
22:16was because the U.S. was telling them to do it. While many of Ukraine's military operations were
22:21attributed to Ukrainian planning, the New York Times has since revealed it was instead overseen by
22:26the U.S. and other NATO members through Weisbaden. The article would explain side by side in Weisbaden's
22:32mission command center, American and Ukrainian officers planned Kiev counteroffensive. So it
22:37wasn't Ukraine planning it and then having the U.S. check it. The U.S. was planning it and Ukrainians
22:42were in the room because then they would just tell the Ukrainians do this. A vast American intelligence
22:47collection effort both guided big picture battle strategy and funneled precise targeting information
22:54down to Ukrainian soldiers in the field. So again, every aspect overseen and decided upon by U.S.
23:03generals in Germany. One European intelligence chief recalled being taken aback to learn how deeply
23:10enmeshed his NATO counterparts had become in Ukrainian operations. They are part of the kill chain now, he said.
23:16The kill chain is you find a target. Well, first you find the target using intelligence and then you
23:24need to find assets that are capable of striking it, feed the targeting information to them and guide
23:29these rounds to that target to kill it. That is the chain to kill an enemy target. And so this was the
23:36U.S. overseeing the Ukrainian kill chain. It was not Ukraine. It was the U.S. through the Ukrainians.
23:43New York Times also admitted military and CIA officers in Weisbaden helped plan and support
23:48a campaign of Ukrainian strikes in Russian annexed Crimea. Finally, the military and then the CIA
23:55received the green light to enable pinpoint strikes deep inside Russia itself. So you remember
24:02they pretended as if Ukraine was carrying out all of these strikes using their own intelligence. No,
24:07it was the U.S. the entire time. And these drone strikes being carried out in inside Russia right now
24:13are also being overseen by U.S. generals in a command center in Europe. They're still doing this because
24:20otherwise it is impossible for Ukraine to find targets. They do not have the ability to collect
24:25intelligence accurately enough, quickly enough inside Russia to carry out these strikes on their own. It is
24:31still the U.S. under the Trump administration waging war against Russia through Ukraine, which is why
24:39Secretary of State Marco Rubio's comments about how everyone's being impossible in the U.S. is just
24:44going to wash its hands of the conflict. It is America's conflict. That is why it is so
24:49obscene and insulting to the intelligence of the global public. The article admits that Western military
24:55officers, not Ukrainians, made the final decision regarding what targets would be hit and how. This
25:02included the use of U.S. provided M777 howitzers and the HIMARS multiple launch rocket system. The
25:09New York Times admitted Weisbaden would oversee each HIMARS strike. U.S. General Donahue and his aides
25:19would review the Ukrainians target list and advise them on positioning their launchers and timing their
25:25strikes. The Ukrainians were supposed to only use coordinates the Americans provided. To fire a warhead,
25:31HIMARS operators needed a special electronic key card which the Americans could deactivate
25:37any time. And remember Mark Sloboda talking about this for literally for years since they sent HIMARS
25:44to Ukraine. And I think a lot of people were skeptical about whether that was true or not. But
25:48here's the New York Times telling you, yes, it was true. Every aspect of these HIMARS strikes was
25:54overseen and directed by U.S. generals, not Ukrainian commanders. Every large-scale Ukrainian
26:01operation including the 2022 Kherson and Kharkov offensives, as well as the failed 2023 offensive,
26:07were planned, organized, and directed by U.S. military officers from Weisbaden. This also included the
26:13creation of new Ukrainian brigades. New York Times admits was overseen not by a Ukrainian commander,
26:19but by U.S. Lieutenant General Antonio Aguto Jr. It is also revealed that it wasn't Ukraine who asked
26:28for longer-range weapons like the Army Tactical Missile System, ATAKIMS. It was the U.S. Generals in
26:34Weisbaden. The New York Times admits General Cavoli and Aguto recommended the next quantum leap,
26:41giving the Ukrainians Army Tactical Missile Systems missiles known as ATAKIMS, that can travel up to 190 miles
26:48to make it harder for Russian forces in Crimea to help defend Maledipal. And that was, you remember,
26:54they were trying to reach Maledipal and Mariupol and all of these positions along the coast during
27:04their 2023 offensive, and it was not working. And because it was a U.S. plan, it was the U.S. generals
27:11who created it who were panicking because it wasn't working. And they were the ones demanding that
27:16Washington send additional weapon systems that previously were unthinkable, including ATAKIMS,
27:22send them so that they would have a chance of succeeding. Their plan was failing. And it's
27:26interesting, not everything in this New York Times article should be believed at face value. You can
27:32see as the U.S. was bungling this proxy war, they continuously made excuses as if the Ukrainians just
27:40weren't listening to all of their good advice. Toward the end of the article, it makes it abundantly
27:44clear. The U.S. simply exhausted its material resources. Its military industrial base was
27:49incapable of fighting a war like this. Russia was. And that's where we find ourselves at this current
27:57juncture. But I'm getting a little ahead of myself. Let me continue. It was also revealed that Ukrainian
28:02commanders realized the U.S. planned and directed 2023 offensive was doomed during its earliest phase.
28:08You remember those heaps of Leopard 2 main battle tanks burning out in open fields the Russians had
28:16completely mined. The Ukrainians knew at that point the offensive had failed. It was not going to work.
28:23And they told the U.S. generals this was not going to work. Yet U.S. commanders demanded Ukraine,
28:29this is a direct quote from the New York Times, press on. Various options were formulated to try to salvage the
28:36failed offensive with the New York Times, attributing its failure to a number of factors,
28:40including infighting among Ukrainian commanders and even tension between Ukrainian commanders and
28:45their U.S. handlers, because that's what the U.S. generals were. They were handling the Ukrainian
28:49military. The Ukrainian military was completely subordinated to the U.S. The U.S. was at the top of
28:56the command structure and they were barking orders down to the rest of the Ukrainian military, which was
29:01subordinated to this command center in Germany. In reality, the offensive failed because of the
29:07realities of material limitations on Western military industrial production and their inability to fight
29:13the type of war of attrition Russia had prepared for years in advance and imposed on them. And I remember
29:20for years and years, even before 2014, the Russian military was, and I used to watch this Russian
29:27series called Combat Approved. And they were talking about all of these weapons they were developing
29:34and the large quantities that they were developing and the revamping of the military industrial base.
29:41And I was wondering, what were they getting back then? I mean, many years ago, I was wondering,
29:46why are they doing all of this? What do they see that I don't realize yet? And they saw the U.S.
29:53and this encirclement, encroachment, and containment strategy. And they knew that this war was inevitable
30:00and they were preparing for it for years in advance. The U.S. also knew that because of the way they have
30:07set up their system to maximize profit over purpose, they're not able to take the necessary steps to
30:13prepare properly for a war of attrition of this nature. There is no profitable model
30:22yet that allows you to fight a war like this. It is going to cost you. You are going to have to lose
30:28money. You're going to have to have state-owned enterprises because a private corporation would
30:35never agree to any of the actual measures needed to win a war like this. And we can see how that has
30:44played out over the last three, now going on to four years in Ukraine. Toward the end of the New York
30:50Times article, it admitted that the coalition simply couldn't provide all the equipment for a major
30:55counteroffensive. They're talking about the 2023 offensive completely failed. And then they were
31:01thinking, how can we launch another offensive? They can't. They simply don't have the equipment
31:08for it, nor could the Ukrainians build an army big enough to mount one. So this idea of building
31:13brigades out of thin air, as I pointed out at the time, was never going to work. Even though they had,
31:19you know, U.S. generals who supposedly were experts at doing so, this was never going to succeed. It was
31:26just unrealistic. But you have to remember, the U.S. didn't actually care. When the 2023 offensive was
31:34failing right from the beginning, and the Ukrainian commanders saw this, and they told the Americans,
31:40almost certainly because they wanted to stop, because they realized that if they continued,
31:44they would lose their whole army. The U.S. said, press on. Why did they say press on? Because they thought
31:49there was some way they could possibly pull off a win? No, because this was always about overextending
31:56Russia. Not necessarily defeating Russia, but overextending it to the fullest possible point,
32:04and fully at the expense of Ukraine. When they said to the last Ukrainian, they meant to the last
32:09Ukrainian. And this New York Times article really makes it clear how deeply ingrained that mentality
32:18was at every single level, politically and militarily within the U.S.
32:22various operations were described throughout the article, including U.S.-British attempts to destroy
32:29the Kerch or the Crimean Bridge connecting Crimea to the rest of Russia, all of which ended in failure.
32:35While the article attempts to blame the gradual drawdown of U.S. support for Ukraine on the election
32:40of President Donald Trump and its desire for peace, which was always a lie from the very beginning, was never
32:47genuine. It is clear the U.S. simply exhausted the means to continue waging a proxy war against a Russian
32:54military, much better able to replace its losses than Ukraine and its Western sponsors. The New York
32:58Times essentially admits this was a U.S. war waged against Russia, simply using Ukraine as intermediaries.
33:06Every major military operation down to specific targets to be struck and which U.S.-European made and
33:11provided weapons systems to use to strike it with was made by American, not Ukrainian generals.
33:18Now let's talk about playing mediator while seeking to freeze a failed proxy war, because that's what
33:23the Trump administration is actually doing. And that's what the Biden administration was trying to do
33:27before the changeover to the Trump administration. Today, the U.S. government is attempting to play the
33:32role of a frustrated mediator trying to broker peace between Ukraine and Russia, when in reality,
33:37this was always a war between the U.S. and Russia. In reality, current U.S. Secretary of Defense,
33:43Pete Hegseth, in a February 12, 2025 speech, discussed European and non-European troops being
33:50sent into Ukraine as a security guarantee, which would in practice either freeze the conflict or
33:55precipitate direct hostilities between Russia and Europe. And that is this. This is the entire transcript
34:01right here. I've played the video many, many times. This is where, you know, Russia is always talking
34:08about the cause of this conflict needs to be addressed. What is the cause of this conflict?
34:13It is not Ukraine. It is the United States and its use of NATO to encircle, contain, and threaten to
34:20absorb Russia. That is the central cause of this conflict. This is what Russia is talking about needing to
34:28be addressed. What has the Trump administration said about NATO? That it's the cause of all of this
34:33and it should be dismantled? No. You had Secretary Hegseth in Europe telling the Europeans you're going
34:39to spend more than double what you're already spending to expand NATO, to expand your funding
34:45for NATO so that we can expand NATO altogether. This is what he said during this February 12,
34:52I would say directive that he gave to Europe that Europe has ever since very obediently and strictly
34:59adhered to and has begun implementing. Secretary Hegseth also instructed Europe the next steps
35:05regarding Ukraine would be donating more ammunition and equipment to Ukraine, as well as expanding your
35:11defense industrial base. These are quotes from this transcript. What Secretary Hegseth actually laid out
35:19was a directive, not toward peace in Ukraine, but to once again freeze the conflict as the U.S. and Europe
35:24did during the Minsk agreements, during which the U.S. and Europe could expand their own military
35:29industrial bases to match or exceed Russian production and rearm and reorganize Ukrainian forces to resume
35:35hostilities again in the future when factors lean in Washington's favor, not Moscow's. Secretary of State
35:41Marco Rubio's predictable boredom with peace talks with Russia signals the U.S.'s readiness to transfer
35:48responsibility for its proxy war fully onto Europe as planned and as laid out by Secretary Hegseth in
35:55February as it pivots toward a much more dangerous confrontation with Russia's ally to the east, China,
36:03which is the exact same kind of conflict the U.S. has created with Russia and is pretending to want peace
36:09in the middle of. It is engineering the exact same conflict with China and also Iran. Now think about this
36:17strategically and logically. The U.S. is openly fixing for a war with Iran. It is already waging war
36:24against Yemen. It has Israel waging war against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. Do you want peace
36:31with Russia? Do you want to actually really solve the conflict in Ukraine so that Russia can free up
36:39resources to support its ally Iran? Absolutely not. You want to freeze the conflict and force Russia to remain
36:46committed to Ukraine. That is what they are doing. That is what Secretary Hegseth said all the way back
36:51in February. Everything that they have actually done, regardless of the rhetoric that they have used as
36:57a smoke screen to do all of this behind, everything they have actually done is to freeze this conflict.
37:04Minsk 3 plus a Syria-style conflict freeze with an invasion force on the ground in Ukraine,
37:14keeping Russia, either forcing Russia to decide whether to continue and risk war with nuclear-armed
37:23Europe or just accept that that's where the battle lines will be frozen until some point in the future
37:30when hostilities resume again, just as they did in Syria. The Trump administration and the Biden
37:37administration before it never had any intention of addressing the actual cause of the conflict in
37:42Ukraine. NATO's expansion up to and all along Russia's borders with every intention of inevitably
37:47absorbing Russia itself. Because of this, genuine peace was never possible, regardless of the Trump
37:53administration's public rhetoric and empty gestures toward Russia. I've tried to warn about this for now
38:00months, even before President Trump took office. I warned that there was never going to be any peace
38:05between the U.S. and Russia. We can see it now materializing. People are still clinging to the
38:11hope that somehow this is just, oh, well, Trump has these neocons in his administration that are
38:16resisting peace. Who put them there? President Trump did, just like he did the first four years he was in
38:22office. While the Trump administration has paid lip service to NATO expansion, because I've had people say,
38:30no, President Trump has talked about NATO expansion and identified it as the cause of this conflict.
38:37But what has he actually done about it? So the Trump administration's only decision regarding NATO
38:43specifically has been to demand NATO members more than double funding for NATO, to expand NATO. Not to
38:51disband it. It serves no purpose. It is only a threat to Russia, forcing Russia to respond in this way.
38:58No, they're going to have each member state more than double their funding for it to expand it.
39:05Russia, for its part, has left the door open for honest negotiations and has provided the United
39:10States ample exit ramps from both an unwinnable proxy war and indefinite confrontation with Russia
39:16into the future. The U.S. is obviously not interested, and I think Russia knew this all along, but they had to
39:23do this anyway, if only to maintain appearances. It wants to appear to have pursued diplomacy, even
39:34though it knew the U.S. was never interested. The U.S. wants the world to believe, and this is what
39:39Secretary Rubio is doing. He wants the world to believe the U.S. sought diplomacy and it simply failed,
39:47leaving them no other option, but to continue on picking a fight with China and Iran in exactly the
39:54same way it picked this fight with Russia, and dumping the conflict onto Europe, and then indirectly
40:00supporting Europe in the continuation, or at least the freezing of this war until a point in the future
40:05where it can be restarted. Russia had, throughout peace talks with the U.S., continued its war of
40:11attrition against Ukrainian forces, continuing the process the New York Times described as the
40:16central contributing factor for the proxy war's current failure. The real question that remains
40:22is whether or not Russia can continue this process at a faster and more effective rate than the U.S. and
40:27Europe can continue donating more ammunition and equipment to Ukraine while attempting to expand their
40:33defense industrial bases. And again, that was from Secretary Hegsteth's February directive. That is
40:40what he told Europe to do. Only time will tell for sure. As Syria has demonstrated, a proxy war the U.S.
40:47has lost one moment can be frozen, revisited, and eventually won if it is able to overextend designated
40:55adversaries like Russia and Iran for long enough and extensively enough elsewhere. The U.S. has already
41:01embarked upon armed conflict with Yemen and is threatening war with Iran, forcing Russia to once
41:06again make difficult decisions regarding where it invests its finite military resources versus the
41:12seemingly infinite U.S. capacity to create instability and conflict worldwide. I think we can all agree
41:18that that is something the U.S. excels at, creating instability and conflict everywhere, forcing nations to
41:26expand resources to address it, to respond to it, allowing the U.S. to maintain initiative in a way.
41:34The survival and success of multipolarism depends on the multipolar world cooperating against U.S. attempts
41:41to reassert American primacy, not only through direct and proxy war, but also through economic coercion and
41:46political interference. And to understand that a U.S. war on Russia and Ukraine, or a proxy war waged against
41:53Syria in the Middle East is in fact a war against the rise of multipolarism altogether, and the promise
42:00of peace and prosperity it offers. I'm here in Southeast Asia, in the Kingdom of Thailand, a U.S. proxy war
42:10against Russia and Ukraine, the war against Syria, threat of war against Iran, and then obviously much
42:20closer to here in Southeast Asia. This trade war the U.S. is starting with China and its preparations for
42:26actual war, building up its military forces in this region closer to Chinese shores than to American shores.
42:33This is an obvious, open, direct threat to Thailand. Peace, prosperity, stability here in Thailand as well.
42:41Every nation in the multipolar world needs to understand this. They need to act accordingly. They need to act in cooperation
42:48with these pillars of multipolarism. Russia, Iran, China, India, to a certain extent. All of these nations
42:56need to work together to address this. They need to be realistic about the threat that the U.S. poses,
43:02not to these nations far off, these far off battlefields that you see in the news. That is a direct threat to
43:10your peace and your stability right now in your own country, no matter how far flung it seems. It is all
43:17interconnected. And this is why I spend so much time talking about this. I don't really talk about
43:23political developments in Thailand for a number of reasons. But if people understand what is going on
43:29in Ukraine, the U.S. is driving this and that the Trump administration is just lying to people,
43:34like all administrations before it, including the previous Trump administration. If people can
43:39understand that and see through it, they can see through what the U.S. is doing to their specific country
43:44as well. And they can see how all of this poses a threat to them. Again, no matter how far
43:49it seems geographically, it is very close geopolitically. So that's the article. We
43:57obviously have to keep a very close eye on this. I continuously go back to this directive laid out by
44:03U.S. Secretary of Defense, Pete Hanks. I actually see analysts who are still utterly convinced that
44:10President Trump wants peace with Russia and that it's everybody else undermining all of this.
44:16And they talk about certain people in his administration trying to undermine him. Europe,
44:22Ukraine is undermining President Trump. They don't ever talk about Secretary of Defense, Pete Hankseth,
44:31laying out in excruciating and open detail this plan that Europe is having all of these meetings now
44:38to put together and implement the the sending of right here. The United States does not believe
44:46that NATO membership for Ukraine is a realistic outcome of a negotiated settlement. Instead,
44:51any security guarantee must be backed by capable European and non-European troops. They're talking about
44:56Western aligned troops going into Ukraine. And what is the purpose of these troops? Do you honestly
45:02believe it is to oversee a peace agreement or is it a Syria-style freeze of the conflict, forcing Russia
45:11to stop where it is? The United States in Eastern Syria, Turkey in Northern Syria forced Russian and
45:19Iranian-backed Syrian forces to stop. They were not able to recapture all of Syria's territory,
45:25re-consolidate control over all of it. The conflict was just frozen and it was left there.
45:32And there was no resolution. And the US always pretended that it sought some sort of political
45:37resolution for the conflict when in reality, they always planned to just keep overextending
45:43Russia and Iran elsewhere while undermining Syria's economy at home until a collapse began,
45:50including with the help of this military force the US and its regional allies put together and then
45:56swarmed Syrian positions and overran them. And so this is what they're setting up to do again in
46:04Ukraine. And even as they do this, they are picking identical fights with all of Russia's allies, Iran
46:12and the Middle East, China and the Asia Pacific regions. We need to wake up to this. This is what
46:16the US is doing, whether we like it or not, whether we want to believe that it's happening or not.
46:21That is what the US is doing. And our best chance, we as just ordinary people who don't really have
46:27much of a say in what is happening in Washington or in Moscow, the best we can do is help people
46:34understand what is really happening, to shed the delusion that we want to cling to, that they're
46:40going to work all of this out on their own, except that the US is never, never going to seek peace,
46:48unless it is forced to. And that is what the multipolar world needs to do. It needs to create
46:52the conditions on the ground that leave the US no other option, but to choose peace, not freezing
46:58the conflict, not kicking the can down the road, but actually accepting peace and going back behind
47:03its borders where it belongs and focus on rebuilding the United States for the American people, which is
47:09what President Trump promised during his campaign season, but is the exact opposite he's doing right
47:15now. He is still pursuing American empire abroad, not only at the cost of the rest of the world,
47:20but also at the cost of the American people. I talked to Americans. I'm American. I'm from America.
47:26My family is still in the United States and I talked to them and I can guarantee you that they're not
47:32benefiting from any of this. It has been a constant slide downward, cost of living crisis,
47:40constantly increasing. And it is because of these tariffs, these wars, this lie that the US government
47:48is going to look after the Americans and the American people and make America great again,
47:54when in reality, they're just clinging to their empire at the cost of everyone, including the
47:59American people. So again, we have to keep a close eye on this. I will continue keeping a close eye on this.
48:04If you thought this video was useful, please like and share. Think about subscribing. It's free to do.
48:08It helps the channel grow. Check the video description below for all the places you can
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48:19platforms. All of the links that I referenced, including this New Eastern Outlook article,
48:24that will be in the video description below, as will be ways you can help support my work.
48:28I do not monetize any of my social media platforms. If ads pop up, feel free to skip them.
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48:47work with others. All of that is greatly appreciated. That is what makes this work
48:51possible. So thank you. And as always, thank you for watching.

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