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  • 5/10/2025
In a major geopolitical twist, Donald Trump backs the Starmerโ€“Macron ultimatum, escalating tensions across Europe and beyond ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง.
Moscow stands firm, outright rejecting the pressure and continuing to defy Western sanctions ๐Ÿ’ฅ๐Ÿšซ.
Meanwhile, in the UK, Labour MPs are turning on Keir Starmer, exposing growing fractures within the party ๐Ÿ—ณ๏ธโš ๏ธ.
Alexander Mercouris breaks it all down โ€” power, pressure, and political backlash on all fronts ๐ŸŒ๐ŸŽ™๏ธ.

#AlexanderMercouris #TrumpNews #Starmer #Macron #MoscowNews #RussiaSanctions #Geopolitics #UKPolitics #LabourParty #StarmerCrisis #EUPolitics #USForeignPolicy #PoliticalTensions #InternationalNews #BreakingPolitics #SanctionsNews #TrumpBacksUltimatum #GlobalPolitics #WesternPressure #PoliticalShowdown
Transcript
00:00:00good day today is saturday 10th may 2025 and before i turn again to the ukraine situation
00:00:09which is becoming again more interesting i will touch on the situation between india and pakistan
00:00:18well it's now absolutely clear that my hopes of a few days ago that the situation would be brought
00:00:25um under control um has not been have not been realized the situation on the contrary is seriously
00:00:33escalating and it seems that over the last 24 hours there's been a major there's been a major
00:00:41series of strikes by pakistan um against indian targets including indian cities there's been
00:00:49meetings by government officials in both countries the indian defense minister is speaking of a
00:00:57situation where all-out war between india and pakistan looks inevitable which is i have to say
00:01:05an extremely ominous statement and the secretary of state the u.s secretary of state marco rubio
00:01:13has been busy telephoning and speaking to the foreign ministers of both india and pakistan
00:01:20presumably trying to find some means to bring the situation under control there is a huge amount of
00:01:28false information circulating um i'm not going to repeat it not even with the purpose of debunking it
00:01:38i think that doing so at the present time might actually lend credence to some of the more way
00:01:46out claims that i have seen i'll just mention one briefly there was claims um yesterday that um
00:01:56pakistani cyber attacks had inflicted colossal damage on um india's um electric power system
00:02:07uh those reports were not confirmed by any independent sources from within india itself
00:02:15and the indian authorities have said that they are untrue and they clearly were untrue but there's been
00:02:21many other claims um and i'm not going to say waste time or take up time going through them all and saying
00:02:29that these are true and these are not and all of those things i would add that to those who follow the
00:02:39news or at least some of the news um there is a tendency i've noticed in the western media to for some
00:02:51reason that i don't fully understand to work more with pakistani claims than with indian ones all i
00:02:59would say is that reading the media in both countries it seems to me that both countries make
00:03:07essentially the same claims against each other both claim to have shot down large numbers of fighter jets
00:03:14operated by the other side both sides claim to inflicted immense amounts of damage each side is
00:03:25saying negative things about the quality of the weapons that the other side has and i find it impossible
00:03:34myself to try to decipher and understand and say exactly what is going on the only thing i think one
00:03:44can say is that we are definitely now in a pattern of further escalation i don't know how far this will go
00:03:52i don't know where uh this is intended to end um for the moment it doesn't seem as if either side is engaging
00:04:05in a ground offensive against the other but the indian authorities this morning were talking about
00:04:12concentrations of pakistani troops arriving in the border areas and that might change anyway
00:04:23i have been getting some rather interesting information about the various perspectives of the great powers
00:04:32to the war and inevitably most of the information i'm getting is from russian sources because over the
00:04:39last three years i've well basically been working with those sources and the russian view appears to be
00:04:48that um pakistani pakistan at least the pakistani military are profoundly aligned with the united states
00:04:58and that at least some agencies of the united states government are deeply involved assisting pakistan
00:05:07in this conflict in this conflict i've been reading about u.s bases secret bases in pakistan i've been
00:05:15reading about reports about how pakistan has been involved in the past in u.s rendition programs that's
00:05:23situations where the united states quietly takes people captive around the world and they end up in well
00:05:34essentially prisons um where they are no longer heard or seen and become unaccountable um certainly that used
00:05:43to happen at one time about 20 years ago uh there's been various claims that it no longer happens anymore
00:05:52i'm skeptical about those claims um according to these reports which are stress come out of russia a lot of
00:05:59that is going on still in pakistan itself and yes pakistan has had reasonably good relations with russia
00:06:07though not as good as they were when imran khan was prime minister but the russians have not forgotten
00:06:14the fact that pakistan that pakistan supplied artillery shells to ukraine and the russians appeared to feel
00:06:26that the pakistani overtures to them to try to get them to involve themselves in mediation between pakistan and
00:06:37india are mostly designed to make trouble between russia and india that they're not really intended
00:06:46sincerely what i'm also hearing and this is again mostly from russian sources is that china which has been
00:06:56consistently pakistan's major ally is concerned about the situation and which is trying to persuade pakistan
00:07:07to exercise further restraint and is not happy with the way in which the situation is being escalated and
00:07:17that they're telling that they're telling this to pakistan which they say is mostly responsible um for this
00:07:26well again i'm not in touch with anybody from china about this um china um historically has been a very
00:07:35strong ally of pakistan if the chinese are exerting themselves in that kind of way then it is big news
00:07:44and one which i suspect would be received with alarm in pakistan but there is no visible or open sign of
00:07:52this and again to reiterate i don't know but this is a very dangerous situation overall i've seen reports
00:08:01media reports which discount the possibility that this conflict will escalate to an all-out nuclear
00:08:08confrontation and i sincerely hope that those reports are true but i don't think one can afford to be
00:08:16complacent about what is happening and um i have to say i'm surprised that internationally um it is
00:08:25getting less attention than i think it should anyway that's what i'm going to say about the situation
00:08:35in the conflict between india and pakistan at the moment to reiterate again if people have more
00:08:43information both from the indian and the pakistani side they are welcome to provide it on the threads to
00:08:53the to this video on the thread to this video and also if they wish in emails to me i'll be very
00:09:01interested in what people have to say well let's now turn to the situation in ukraine and the conflict
00:09:09in ukraine and of course yesterday we had the big celebrations in moscow 29 leaders turned up for
00:09:19these celebrations they came from many places the president of egypt the president of ethiopia both visited
00:09:28um russia um and had meetings with president putin uh president lula of brazil to the anger and dismay
00:09:39of some governments in the west also came and participated in the um festivities in moscow
00:09:47he came at the head of a very strong delegation from brazil and there are photos of him meeting in
00:09:53the kremlin with putin and again the room is full with officials on each side of the table russian on
00:10:02the uh on putin's side of the table brazilian on um lula's side of the table so clearly an awful lot of
00:10:11serious issues were discussed and there was a lot of there must have been a lot of talk and i'm going to
00:10:18make a guess that perhaps the main topic of discussion was work on the next bricks summit meeting which
00:10:32is going to take place in brazil and brazil's work in setting up the new finance and payment systems
00:10:42that are part of the bricks project a central part of the bricks project which is by the way
00:10:50um an issue very close to president lula's own heart he's actually very keen on moving forward
00:11:00with this project as well so anyway those sorts of meetings took place putin also had very friendly
00:11:10meetings with the two european leaders who came with president uh feats of prime minister feats of
00:11:17of slovakia they had a very friendly meeting with each other feats are apparently keen to
00:11:25emphasize to putin the friendly feelings that people in slovakia have towards um russia
00:11:33he spoke very negatively negatively about kayakalas he said that he'd received a message from kayakalas
00:11:42that by going to moscow he was placing himself on the wrong side of history and feats of said that
00:11:47he generally did not understand what that message meant he also spoke about the irrational nature of the
00:11:57new sanctions that the european union is now talking about and its plan to stop imports of russian oil
00:12:05and gas energy products completely from 2027 and he said that this made no sense and was completely
00:12:13incompatible with the structure of slovakia's economy budin had a similar meeting with president
00:12:22vucic of serbia perhaps they discussed economic ties rather less but anyway there was again a lot of
00:12:33discussion about the history about the relationship between serbia and yugoslavia and the soviet union
00:12:42during the second world war the fact that they fought together as allies the fact that it was in
00:12:50fact the red army that liberated belgrade first yugoslavia and now serbia's capital and things of that kind so
00:13:00anyway those were the meetings that took place in moscow yesterday there'd been many other events of
00:13:08celebration there was a big popular holiday in russia large numbers of people came out and participated in
00:13:18the festivities there was also um events in the kremlin putin appeared with all sorts of um dignitaries
00:13:28from various countries he hosted them he had of course as i discussed yesterday he's very very long
00:13:36and earnest discussions with the chinese leader president xi xinping who i believe is still in russia
00:13:42though i understand that he's leaving today anyway um that was the um what took place in moscow yesterday
00:13:54and i forgot to mention incidentally that putin also had meetings with various military officials from north
00:14:03korea generals he shook hands with them there was he hugged one of them um thanking them for their
00:14:12contribution to the kursk operation and of course a chinese military contingent paraded through red square
00:14:20alongside the russian army so all of that happening yesterday in moscow
00:14:28today it is the other side that makes its move so today in kiev we're having a meeting between zelensky
00:14:42and the leaders of the key european states france germany britain and by the way also poland they're all
00:14:51in kiev and they're going to be meeting zelensky and as we will see they have now prepared their own plan
00:15:01to move to move forward and importantly they seem to have won over the trump administration to this plan
00:15:10now i will deal with all of that in a moment but before i do i should say that there is now growing
00:15:19criticism back home of one of the participants in this meeting who is the prime minister of great
00:15:30britain sir keir starmer now i have spoken in several programs about the fact that keir starmer seems to
00:15:39be increasingly out of touch with the realities of politics in britain that one gets the impression that
00:15:45he's not actually very interested in what is taking place in britain that he is devoting a disproportionate
00:15:53amount of time to uh foreign policy and a disproportionate amount of the time that he is devoting to foreign
00:16:02policy to ukraine to the conflict in ukraine there there are times when he appears to give the impression
00:16:13that he is more interested in what is happening in ukraine than he is in the country which he is supposed to
00:16:22be leading which is britain well we have now received media reports who now obtained media reports are
00:16:32appearing in britain admittedly in unfriendly newspapers that there is no doubt that these reports
00:16:40are in substance true that this identical criticism is now starting to be made of starmer by the
00:16:50parliamentary faction of his own party the labour party in fact we have a long report in the daily telegraph
00:17:01of a meeting in the british parliament of the labour parliamentary party supposedly carrying out an inquest
00:17:14on the disastrous local election results that took place just over a week ago and the defeat in the
00:17:22the by-election in fact this meeting took place apparently um on friday directly uh a week exactly a week after
00:17:33these this um massive defeat that the labour party suffered in these elections and it seems that criticism
00:17:43of starmer which up to now has been very muted within the parliamentary labour party finally boiled
00:17:52over and burst out into the open now before i proceed i should say that in the run-up to last year's
00:18:02general election which it seems extraordinary to say took place just 10 months ago starmer's uh team
00:18:12uh made a very careful had a very careful had a very careful policy of picking candidates for parliamentary
00:18:22constituencies who would stand for the labour party who would were expected to be um unswervingly loyal to his
00:18:33leadership so when that we learn of public criticism of starmer by the labour parliamentary party it is important
00:18:48to understand that this is perhaps the most loyal section of british society the one that was basically
00:19:00structured to provide him with the greatest degree of support for his leadership anyway i will now turn to
00:19:08this report which is interesting and it appears in the daily telegraph and it appeared yesterday and the
00:19:14title was starmer is missing in action say his mps prime minister accused of dodging angry black benches
00:19:24with one saying we have no leader and this all took place at a meeting in the parliamentary labour party
00:19:37and we were told we're told by the daily telegraph that dozens of mps have joined a rebellion against his
00:19:45controversial winter fuel cuts while around 40 of his mps have warned the prime minister that his welfare reforms
00:19:53are impossible to support the prime minister has been urged to change course uh on immigration with a
00:20:01leading mp in the socially conservative blue labour caucus warning it is now or never to win back the
00:20:10working class but rather than face disgruntled mps at a meeting of the parliamentary labour party on
00:20:19wednesday i said sorry i said friday it was actually on wednesday last week sir keir starmer sent peter
00:20:26pat mcfadden the chancellor of the duchy of lancaster now this is one of the cabinet positions which
00:20:34is normally filled by someone very loyal to the prime minister it does not involve leading a government
00:20:42department and the person who fills this position is rarely considered a significant figure within
00:20:49the government anyway we're then told that the fact that starmer himself did not come to this
00:20:57meeting but that he sent this other cabinet minister provoked great anger one mp who was at the wash up
00:21:09in other words this frightful meeting uh criticized the message and um said to the telegraph where was keir
00:21:19where the and then there's a swear word was he he's missing in action um mps compared the prime minister to
00:21:29david brent the hapless boss from the tv show the office well i'm sure many of you know the series i believe
00:21:40there's been an american adaptation as well but anyway this is an incompetent and bungling
00:21:45person who's supposed to run um a department in a paper company and it was a well-known british cabin uh
00:21:55comedy anyway uh compared the prime minister to david brent saying we have no leader there is no one that can
00:22:05lead the party no one that can come out and say this is the direction this is what we're going to do
00:22:14and then um another mp said that the minister who was sent pat mcfadden got absolutely rinsed
00:22:23by angry colleagues as he urged them to take the fight to reform and this mp said it was not even
00:22:31tone deaf just deaf and then we come to the key the key point another labor mp accused the prime minister
00:22:41of spending too much time of spending too much time on foreign policy whilst the party faces a crisis
00:22:49at the ballot box and um we told that we're then informed that um he was away again on friday he was
00:22:59out of the country again on friday um and um mps got the sense that he was missing in action
00:23:08he's too busy on foreign stuff everybody is saying the same so there you go i've been saying it
00:23:20for some weeks now that as i said kia starmer's obsession is ukraine when people talk about foreign policy
00:23:28i suspect it is code for ukraine that he's spending far too much time on this one topic even as
00:23:38everything else collapses around him and this is conveyed as strongly as possible by members of the
00:23:47parliamentary party to one of their uh one of kia starmer's lieutenants but i doubt it is going to get
00:23:56through i get the sense that kia starmer himself simply isn't interested in what is happening in
00:24:04britain or what his own mps think he works and thinks inside a cocoon for him foreign policy is far more
00:24:15important focusing on ukraine is far more important and i don't myself imagine that he's going to change
00:24:23course or has any interest in or desire to do so anyway most of the media is avoiding talking about
00:24:34the um excessive focus i'm being careful in my use of words on kia starmer's part in ukraine
00:24:45but one can see that it has been noticed even amongst the loyalists within his own parliamentary
00:24:53party and that they're starting to complain about it well having discussed kia starmer let's now get to
00:25:00that meeting that has just a that is taking place in kiev today because the meeting and the reporting about
00:25:09it the advanced reporting about it that we are getting from the british media from reuters and from the
00:25:18financial times finally explains that very mysterious and strange uh post that donald trump published on
00:25:27truth social yesterday and i will come to it again i will just briefly repeat the few the first few words
00:25:36talks this is by donald trump talks with russia ukraine continue the u.s calls for ideally a 30-day
00:25:44unconditional ceasefire hopefully an acceptable ceasefire will be observed and both countries will be held
00:25:53accountable for respecting the sanctity of these direct negotiations if the ceasefire is not respected the
00:26:01u.s and its partners will inform impose further sanctions none of that made very much sense to me
00:26:09yesterday but following the report that appeared in reuters and an article that has appeared in financial
00:26:17the financial times it all now begins to make sense because apparently what all of these people
00:26:24people and we're talking about macro um melts starmer and tusk are talking about with zelensky in kiev
00:26:37is their new wonderful latest plan and their latest plan briefly is this either russia is presented
00:26:51with an ultimatum to agree to a 30-day ceasefire or in the alternative ukraine announces unilaterally
00:27:02a 30-day ceasefire if russia either rejects the ultimatum or ukraine's unilaterally declared ceasefire
00:27:15then the west the united states the europeans will proceed with further sanctions now we're not told
00:27:25what those sanctions are they may be the bone crunching sanctions that lindsey graham has been
00:27:31talking about but anyway there will certainly be more sanctions i saw one report that appeared a couple of
00:27:40days ago which said that trump is considering sanctions against gas pro russia's gas export monopoly
00:27:49and also sanctions against parts of the russian financial system and i'm going to make a guess
00:27:58that the target here is going to be the russian central bank there will be attempts to sanction
00:28:05russia's russia's central bank um prohibiting western countries from having contacts with it and perhaps
00:28:16prohibiting third countries from having contacts with it as well for the record this would not be the
00:28:23first time that the united states has sanctioned the central bank of another country
00:28:28i believe it has already done so with the central bank of iran and in the case of iran we can see that it has
00:28:40had well hardly any actual effect either geostrategic or diplomatic or as far as i can see economic
00:28:54either but anyway that appears to be well that is the plan we've been reading about it from reuters uh
00:29:03reuters says that they've been briefed about it by a french diplomat and the financial times also tells
00:29:13us that um diplomats who are involved in these discussions in kiev are thinking about doing the same
00:29:22thing and that as i said explains this very strange truth social post that donald trump published on
00:29:34on truth social yesterday the u.s calls for ideally a 30-day ceasefire hopefully an acceptable ceasefire
00:29:45will be observed and both countries will be held accountable for respecting the sanctity of these
00:29:52direct negotiations if the ceasefire is not respected the us and its partners will impose further
00:29:59sanctions so the idea is either
00:30:05give the russians an ultimatum to agree to a ceasefire within a set period of time and then follow
00:30:12up with sanctions or and perhaps more likely try to persuade zelensky and the ukrainians to declare a
00:30:2030-day unilateral ceasefire and hammer the russians with sanctions if they don't agree and don't observe
00:30:30the ceasefire which has been declared unilaterally in that kind of way now there is an obvious problem
00:30:40with this which is that we are looking at or talking about a ceasefire proposal
00:30:47which the russians have already rejected now putin and trump had a discussion on this very topic of a
00:30:5630-day ceasefire um on the 18th of march this was directly after the meeting between the ukrainians and the
00:31:06americans in jeddah up to that point and this again needs to be reiterated zelensky had been rejecting
00:31:15ceasefires he adamantly refused to receive a ceasefire in 2023 after the defeat of ukraine's summer offensive
00:31:28of that year i can remember lots of statements by ukrainian officials and by zelensky himself in the
00:31:36autumn of 2023 adamantly rejecting a freeze adamantly rejecting a ceasefire then of course over the
00:31:46course of 2024 the russians of 2024 the russians launched their great at launched an offensive
00:31:52first avdeevka fell then ocheretino fell then all sorts of other places in donbass also began to fall
00:32:03one after another in the summer of 2024 ukraine launched its operation in kursk but that ended
00:32:16in disastrous failure as we all know um in the autumn of 2024 missile strikes were authorized against
00:32:28russian territory itself and attack him's missiles and storm shadow missiles were launched against
00:32:34russia and some people seem to think that that would make a difference except that it didn't and
00:32:40well one way or the other um after continuing to oppose a ceasefire throughout the summer and autumn of
00:32:512024 2024 zelensky finally and with great deal of reluctance came around and accepted this idea now it is
00:33:05important to say at this point that i've seen some people claim that zelensky did in fact back a ceasefire
00:33:14um in the summer and autumn of 2024 on the contrary he was still talking about his victory plan um
00:33:25unrestrained military support by the united states for ukraine he set it all out in a speech i remember
00:33:34to the ukrainian parliament he was absolutely at that time still committed to supporting the wool
00:33:41and as recently as february when he went to the oval office meeting he was still saying that a
00:33:48ceasefire ukraine could not accept a ceasefire unless the united states gave ukraine a security guarantee
00:33:57in other words unless the united states agreed to take military action to enforce the ceasefire
00:34:04if the russians violated it in the event the united states refused to give such a security guarantee
00:34:14and the americans then staged the meeting with the ukrainian delegation in jeddah as i discussed at the
00:34:22time zelensky himself was kept away at a distance the americans worked on the ukrainians and the ukrainians
00:34:33finally came around and accepted at this meeting a 30-day ceasefire without getting that american
00:34:41guarantee and without conditions however though the ukrainians have not succeeded in getting an american
00:34:52security guarantee the european states britain and france have been eager to provide those security
00:35:01guarantees and macron and starma have been talking about sending troops to ukraine to back that security
00:35:11guarantee from the europeans with armed force on ukrainian territory so that's the story of zelensky's
00:35:22of zelensky's attitudes to a ceasefire until the meeting in jeddah he opposed it he was completely
00:35:30against the idea in 2023 2024 he gradually shifted ground especially after donald trump's election but he still
00:35:43demanded security guarantees for ukraine from the united states the ukrainians were forced after the united
00:35:52states cut off intelligence assistance and military aid to agree to a unconditional 30-day ceasefire
00:36:02at the talks in jeddah zelensky came around but the europeans provided a obviously inadequate security
00:36:13guarantee and nonetheless said that they would back it with troops all of which the russians rejected and
00:36:22then there was a telephone conversation on the 18th of march after the jeddah meeting between trump and
00:36:30putin and i've discussed this telephone conversation on many occasions i pointed out that the russian
00:36:39readout makes it clear that the meeting was contentious even acrimonious it referred to a full and frank
00:36:49exchange of views which suggests something that just fell short of an outright row but the point
00:37:00is that putin held his ground and rejected the american demand for an unconditional ceasefire
00:37:09putin said that before such a ceasefire could be agreed various nuances had to be taken into account
00:37:21such as how would the ceasefire be monitored who would be responsible for doing that
00:37:29and given the history given the fact that ukraine used the ceasefire the effective ceasefire that was
00:37:40put in place after the 2015 minsk agreement to re-equip and re-arm and build up its armed forces the russians
00:37:51could not afford to go through all of that all over again they would not give the ukrainians that sort
00:37:58of respite the united states and the western powers would have to agree instead to cease all supplies of
00:38:08military equipment to ukraine and all intelligence sharing with ukraine and unless that happened there was
00:38:17no possibility that a ceasefire would make any sense from a russian point of view now that was what putin said
00:38:26on the 18th of march so putin in effect as i said at the time politely rejected the proposal for an
00:38:40unconditional ceasefire now the europeans and it seems the americans because trump's true social post
00:38:51shows that the americans are on board with this are going to present the whole ceasefire plan again to
00:38:59the russians backed this time with an ultimatum to impose further sanctions in other words the europeans
00:39:10are planning to propose to the russians that which the russians have already rejected
00:39:18now in case there is any misunderstanding here what we doubt the russians have again made clear over the
00:39:26course of the last few hours that the position that putin outlined in his telephone call to trump
00:39:35on the 18th of march and by the way in the press conference that took place shortly before
00:39:43um a press conference which was attended by the yellow russian leader um alexander lukashenko
00:39:52that putin's rejection of the ceasefire plan the american 30-day unconditional ceasefire plan
00:40:01the russians have made clear that it remains fully in effect firstly we've had comments about this
00:40:09from peskov peskov spoke yesterday and we had a report yesterday about some of the things that he said
00:40:21that were uh provide that was provided by the official russian news agency tasks and i'll read the task
00:40:30report its date its title is discussion of 30-day ceasefire impossible without nuances taken
00:40:39into account and the report goes on to say a detailed discussion of a 30-day ceasefire with ukraine is
00:40:47impossible without nuances taken into account kremlin spokesman dmitry peskov told reporters
00:40:54when the issue of ceasefire was announced by u.s president donald trump's administration it was
00:41:01supported supported by president putin with a proviso that there were many nuances around
00:41:08the idea of a ceasefire without finding answers to which it is very difficult to speak about it in detail
00:41:19so that was what peskov said um to reporters but then subsequently he spoke to um abc news
00:41:32and he was much more explicit he said if we speak about a ceasefire what are you going to do with shipments
00:41:42of weapons coming every day from the united states and european countries we want arms supplies to be
00:41:50stopped otherwise it will be advantageous for ukraine ukraine will continue their total mobilization
00:42:00bringing new troops to the front line ukraine will use this period to train new military personnel
00:42:06and to give a rest to their existing ones so why would we want to grant such an advantage to ukraine
00:42:17so the russians have already rejected this proposal they've already said that they're not prepared to
00:42:26agree to the kind of 30-day unconditional ceasefire that the americans were talking about they still want
00:42:36monitoring and all those mechanisms to be agreed and sorted out and by the way they're absolutely right
00:42:41about that a ceasefire that does not have monitoring systems in place is worthless it is almost certain
00:42:51to break down very quickly as we shall see alternatively and beyond that even if a ceasefire is
00:43:03successfully put in place it will just be a repeat of minsk all over again the ukrainians will re-arm re-equip
00:43:15retrain reinforce and in 5 10 15 20 years the war will resume all over again given that the ukrainians are
00:43:25not prepared to accept the territorial changes and given that the europeans support them in this and given
00:43:35that the europeans intend to deploy troops to western ukraine as they have been openly talking about
00:43:42so the russians have already rejected this proposal but now it is apparently going to be presented to
00:43:52them all over again with a threat of sanctions if they don't agree now it's unclear to me who has come
00:44:03up with this particular plan there are some suggestions that it comes from friedrich mertz
00:44:10a couple of days ago he said that he was happy about the three-day uh ceasefire over the period of the
00:44:17victory day celebrations and that there would be intense discussions over the this weekend and that he was
00:44:25expecting that the ceasefire would be extended and it looks as if what he's now going to try to pressure
00:44:32zelensky to agree to is to declare unilaterally this 30-day ceasefire with threats of further sanctions
00:44:42against the russians if they don't agree so it could be that this originates with mats or it could be
00:44:49that it originates from kellogg and the constellation of neocons that circulate in washington ultimately
00:45:00it doesn't matter the point is the one way or another donald trump has come around to support this
00:45:10stance it's clear that there is no unity about this within his administration uh jd vance
00:45:19has already expressed deep skepticism about this he's said that the united states should focus on
00:45:28getting direct negotiations between ukraine and russia started rather than seek to obtain the ceasefire
00:45:39but it seems that for the moment the whole plan the project nonetheless continues to be
00:45:46to get the ceasefire to freeze the conflict in the way the general kellogg was talking about
00:45:54in accordance with general kellogg's plan and to try to strong arm the russians to reverse their positions
00:46:02and to agree to something that they have previously rejected now why
00:46:08why is there any assumption that this is going to succeed i i i ask this question why is it assumed
00:46:20that the russians will agree today to what they rejected outright in march
00:46:29um there's no sign as of this time that the russians have reconsidered their position
00:46:42um peskov by the way has made it crystal clear over the course of his various discussions yesterday
00:46:49and today that nobody has floated this proposal up to now to them they're only getting this information
00:47:00from the media reports in the right in reuters and in the financial times and places like that
00:47:06so it's not as if they've agreed to a ceasefire so why do people assume that the russians are going to
00:47:18crumble in the face of this ultimatum now here perhaps it's worth saying a few things
00:47:32about the nature of the ultimatum that is coming because it is an ultimatum to impose further sanctions
00:47:40against russia and perhaps they will include secondary sanctions against um the russian energy trade as
00:47:50well maybe we will be getting lindsey graham's bone crunching sanctions and all that now there have been
00:48:00endless sanctions packages imposed on russia going all the way back to 2014 there's been one package of
00:48:09sanctions after another there was a massive sanctions package as we all remember in february 2022
00:48:18the assets of the russian central bank were seized there was um confident predictions that the ruble
00:48:26would collapse um there were predictions that russia's gdp would collapse between a third and a half
00:48:39the french finance minister was confidently talking about the total collapse of the russian economy
00:48:49none of that happened the russian economy stabilized over the course of 2022 there was
00:48:55um some inflation quite a lot of inflation but it was brought very quickly under control
00:49:05there were predictions as i remember that there would be an industrial decline in russia a major
00:49:11industrial decline in june 2022 when supposedly the subcomponent parts from the west were the stockpile of
00:49:23them um was no longer available so that russian equipment and machines would not be able to work
00:49:31instead what happened was that starting from june 2022 the russian economy began
00:49:38it's process of expansion in 2023 despite further sanctions packages the russian economy
00:49:50grew well according to russian figures gdp grew by 4.1 percent the russians have now revised their figures
00:50:00upwards for 2024 they now say that in 2024 the russian economy grew even faster by 4.3 percent gdp growth
00:50:14in 2024 was 4.3 percent the russian central bank as we know increased interest rates in the summer because
00:50:27they became alarmed correctly and properly that's what central banks are supposed to do about the increase
00:50:35in inflation so they increased interest rates ultimately to the level of 21 percent there were
00:50:44lots of predictions that this would lead to a major economic decline in russia we've now had the first
00:50:52figures for gdp growth in russia in the first quarter and it appears to have come out with a positive reading
00:51:02of 2.3 percent which was surprised many people including me by the way on the upside and the latest pmi
00:51:14services in russia have been pointing to increases strengthening in um industrial growth and stable
00:51:29services a stable services sector so the point i'm making is that sanctions up to this time
00:51:37don't seem to have been at all successful on the contrary instead of a collapse we have seen economic
00:51:48growth there's been all kinds of claims or attempted claims that this economic growth isn't somehow real
00:51:57that the civilian economy is suffering that this is all part of military keynesianism and all of that
00:52:05but as i've discussed in many places at many times the actual figures the actual proportion of the economy
00:52:13that is being committed to military production roughly six percent of gdp really do not does not justify
00:52:24these claims so why assume that a further round of sanctions is going to make
00:52:32a difference well of course this time we're going to have more open secondary sanctions the trouble
00:52:39with secondary sanctions however is that they're only effective if others observe them are intimidated
00:52:46by them we have just had 29 leaders of countries come to moscow this is despite talk and threats
00:52:56of secondary sanctions that have already been circulating we've had the chinese president have lengthy and
00:53:04detailed discussions with the russian president talking about further economic cooperation specifically
00:53:13by the way on energy related matters but of course on many other things it doesn't look as if the chinese
00:53:20are in any mood to scale down their economic relationship with russia and they've gone out of their way to say
00:53:28that as far as they they are concerned they will not um bow to any attempts by the united states
00:53:37to interfere in their relationship with russia and china is now once again the biggest buyer of russian energy
00:53:47products and it is also the major supplier of many technological goods to russia though the russians
00:53:59themselves have been increasing the output of their own industries a fact which the west continues to
00:54:06underestimate so the same could be said about other countries a few days ago as discussed prime minister
00:54:12modi of india spoke with president putin prime minister modi and president putin agreed that external
00:54:20interference would not be allowed to affect this strategic partnership between india and russia and
00:54:29if it is indeed the case that the united states is involved in helping pakistan perhaps as part of some
00:54:38attempt to put pressure on india who knows well all i could say is it is more likely to antagonize and
00:54:45alienate india and make them feel that they need to work with their russian allies even further
00:54:53than to bend to the americans on this question of sanctions secondary sanctions and well prime minister
00:55:02starmer of britain has just signed a trade agreement with india is he prepared to reverse that because india buys
00:55:14russian oil is the united states prepared to put secondary sanctions on india conceivably jeopardizing the united
00:55:28united states its own relationship with india which the united states sees as a strategic partner
00:55:35against china because india continues to import
00:55:41russian oil why would india comply why would the united states want to do those things there's been lots of talk
00:55:53about sanctioning or interfering with russia's shadow fleet attempts to sanction individual ships and that
00:56:06kind of thing again people who think in this way as i said many times have little idea of the international
00:56:16maritime industry what an incredibly complex and fungible thing that is how ships change flags
00:56:27and registrations and uh do all sorts of things how they're able to transfer products on the high seas
00:56:34from one ship to another ship all kinds of things of that kind um this will be a nightmare
00:56:43to enforce if it is backed by force then as i said it could result in all kinds of problems the russians
00:56:53have already warned against any attempt to impose a blockade on their baltic ports
00:57:02if anybody is thinking along those lines it seems to me that not only will it fail it will also
00:57:09potentially lead to an extremely dangerous escalation so there we go and as i said sanctions on the russian
00:57:20banking industry which is already massively sanctioned what what difference is that actually going to make
00:57:30especially as the brick states move forward with setting up their own alternative payment systems which
00:57:38they seem to be keen increasingly keen to do now the big player here is of course china
00:57:50the united states is already involved in an economic war against china it's increased its sanctions
00:57:59to prodigious levels uh to this tariffs to prodigious levels 145 on some chinese goods 245 apparently on
00:58:10other chinese goods though it's had to relax sanctions on certain consumer goods that are imported from china
00:58:21there's been multiple claims that this is that china is coming around people are looking at the coming talks
00:58:30in geneva between china and the united states on the tariff question as signaling that china has bent
00:58:39to the american position and there's been an article to that effect
00:58:43in reuters which is based on the usual army of um anonymous sources and which has been seized on
00:58:57by all sorts of people mostly in the united states as some kind of confirmation that the chinese have
00:59:05in effect been forced to come around and to accept the american position
00:59:10in fact if you read the reuters article carefully you discover that the truth is otherwise it was in fact
00:59:18and the reuters article confirms this the united states that made the first move and asked china
00:59:27to begin negotiations about lowering the tariffs um moreover the chinese initially were uncertain whether to
00:59:39agree and when they did propose an official to conduct the talks who was china's commerce minister
00:59:49the americans were deeply disappointed and said that this person was too junior to conduct those talks
00:59:57and that they wanted the talks to be conducted with someone more senior instead well after some discussion
01:00:05the chinese agreed the chinese agreed to send one of their vice premiers to meet with the americans this person
01:00:11is being referred to in the media as china's economic supremo he is not by the way just to say that is
01:00:22a grotesque oversimplification of the political structures in china just to say but anyway um
01:00:30the meeting in geneva is apparently going to take place but the reuters article acknowledged
01:00:41that the chinese are so far deeply unimpressed by what the americans appear to be proposing
01:00:49and they have downgraded it so it is no longer negotiation it has been downgraded to the status of a meeting
01:01:00uh it's merely intended to explore what each side's red lines are it doesn't look as if the chinese
01:01:09have broken or capitulated to the americans at all on the contrary the chinese seem to be having more
01:01:18success in winning people round to their perspective um several asian countries have agreed with china they've
01:01:28published a series of joint statements with china which are openly critical of american tariff policy
01:01:39and japan and south korea agreed to one and there was another one of these statements which also appears to
01:01:49extend to japan as well so given that this is so what is the united states going to do if the chinese
01:02:01continue to import russian oil and energy project products and as i said they're the key players here
01:02:08is the united states going to call off the meeting in geneva is it going to impose still more tariffs
01:02:16against china what exactly is it going to do a couple of days ago donald trump published a post on true
01:02:25social in which he said that any country that continues to import iranian oil will no longer
01:02:32be able to do business with the united states to my knowledge china continues to import oil from iran but
01:02:40we see that instead of following up on that threat the united states now wants to meet with china to try
01:02:49to find some means to reduce the tariffs and to get trade started restarted and perhaps to get the chinese
01:02:58to relent on the export ban of certain rare earths to the united states so this whole idea of further
01:03:09sanctions of more pressure economic pressure on the russians to agree to a to this 30-day ceasefire which
01:03:17they have already rejected as of now i just don't see what actual sense it makes if we start talking
01:03:28about blockades in the blacks in the baltic sea that is a massive escalation involving the use of nato
01:03:36warships to seize ships which might not be russian they might be from third countries trading with russia
01:03:44on the high seas at a time when to repeat a further point the western powers and russia are not
01:03:53not technically in a state of war with each other not only is the legality of this dubious but it is also
01:04:03incredibly dangerous
01:04:07economically it's going to cause the russians some further problems but the evidence is with all the
01:04:19sanctions going all the way back to 2014 that the russians will find a work round and as i have already
01:04:28discussed in many programs now given that we are talking about a self-sufficient economy which is able
01:04:36to feed itself provide all the raw materials and other products that it needs which has a strong industrial
01:04:45and technological base sanctions on russia are not a particularly good idea now there is another
01:04:54interesting aspect about this particular ultimatum which is of course it is the threat does seem to be
01:05:04couched in terms of sanctions apparently for the moment at least not further arms supplies
01:05:14and that's unsurprising because the western powers have already run down their stockpiles to continue to
01:05:24arm ukraine mertz apparently is keen to send more weapons from germany to ukraine um the critical condition
01:05:36of the bundes of the bundes of air makes that very unwise and german officials are deeply negative about
01:05:44this and so is the wider public in germany so mertz is now doing exactly what you would expect him to do
01:05:53he's introduced regulations that reduces the degree of transparency the information that the german
01:06:03government is now required to provide to the german public about arms transfers to ukraine he is in
01:06:12other words going to strip the german military of even more of the limited number of weapons
01:06:20that ukraine the germany still has in order to go on arming ukraine in britain it's now all but
01:06:29admitted that the british military is out of self-propelled howitzers uh its military condition is terrible
01:06:38and this is true of most of the militaries across europe as well i've discussed the difficulties about
01:06:45increased military production in many other places the united states can still provide
01:06:51weapons weapons to ukraine it has far greater stockpiles than any other nato country but it has
01:07:00a potential conflict with china on its mind there is uncertainties about the prospects of deals with iran
01:07:12and there might be a conflict with iran in the autumn there are suggestions that this might be so
01:07:23the united states itself is not in as strong a position to go on arming ukraine as has been suggested
01:07:34by some people there and frankly it's also the case as i've discussed in many programs that
01:07:44continuing to arm ukraine would put donald trump in direct conflict with his electoral base
01:07:55a fact that people like marjorie taylor green and sean davis the ceo of the federalist are pointed out
01:08:03pointing out with the potential of this causing trump serious problems going forward so
01:08:12if the sanctions don't work you can of course provide weapons but if the weapons don't work
01:08:24what then what if the russians reject this ultimatum or this 30-day unilateral ceasefire that ukraine
01:08:38has or may be about to announce what if the europeans and the americans do impose their sanctions
01:08:52and what if it doesn't work what if the russian economy continues to adjust to the new sanctions pressure
01:09:01if the rest of the world as it is indicated refuses to enforce the sanctions and what if the russian offensive
01:09:14continues and continues to gain ground as it has been continuously doing since october 2023
01:09:24now at this point it's perhaps worth saying a few things about the military situation in ukraine
01:09:30over the last 24 hours and i've come to a conclusion that the truce the victory day truce that putin
01:09:41announced some days ago and which was supposedly took effect on the 7th of october oh 7th of may i'm sorry
01:09:49was mostly intended to stop drone attacks mutual drone attacks by each side against the other
01:10:04principally to ensure the safety of the leaders who were coming to moscow for the victory day parade
01:10:12despite claims from the russian side based on the information i am receiving the russian ground forces
01:10:27don't seem to have paid much attention to the ceasefire any more than the ukrainian forces appear to have
01:10:34paid much attention to the ceasefire i say that because in fact over the last couple of days
01:10:43it's the very days when the ceasefire was supposed to be in place the russian military has significantly
01:10:51strengthened its positions right across the front lines now i'm not going to go into huge amount
01:10:59of detail but suffice to say that if we start from the south in the village of bagatir in southwest donetsk
01:11:09there's much more there's many reports now of the russians making now being in control of around
01:11:1625 to 30 percent of this village they seem to be continuing to advance in the village there's no sign
01:11:25of them slowing down in the fighting for this village and it is widely assumed that bagatir will fall
01:11:33under russian control at some point within the next well maybe weak maybe it's unwise for me to make
01:11:41predictions on this the russians continue to advance uh southwest of pakrovsk towards the important
01:11:53village of novel pavlovka which is located in nepro region but which appears to be a major logistics hub
01:12:03or this some kind of a logistics hub for the ukrainian military there's been more reports that the russians
01:12:09have taken more positions um and are advancing further towards that village i discussed the
01:12:17situation in pakrovsk a few days ago that the fact that the russians appear to have made more advances
01:12:25south of pakrovsk and that there is now at least a possibility that the russians control more of southern
01:12:33pakrovsk than has been disclosed up to now the russians have gained significant further ground in the area
01:12:45south of konstantinovka and they have not only advanced and captured several villages there key villages
01:12:56including a village called alexander pill but they seem to be um gradually fragmenting ukrainian defenses
01:13:05um south of konstantinovka and it looks certain that a battle for konstantinovka of some sort
01:13:15is likely to begin very soon and in the area of liman the liman area um the russians uh apparently or
01:13:27according to some reports have now entered the village of kolodyazi which is located northeast of liman it is
01:13:35actually very close to liman um and they are also um on the other side of the um seversky donets river
01:13:49they've apparently re-entered the city the village of toskye and they're also the russians are also
01:13:57supposedly or at least i don't believe supposedly but they're making more advances um in the areas
01:14:05around novje and the important village of ridko dub which some see as the key to the eventual capture
01:14:16of liman itself now again maybe on the map these don't look like big advances but they are significant
01:14:27advances nonetheless i would suggest and they bring the russians closer and closer to the point where
01:14:36an offensive against slaviansk kramatorsk
01:14:41konstantinovka an attack on these towns um is pending and the one area incidentally where i'm hearing
01:14:52far less information than i was is in the area um northwest of the oskal rivers near kopiansk it looks
01:15:00as if the russian advance there is on hold maybe there's some kind of troop rotation underway but in
01:15:08the meantime the ukrainian attempts to break through into korsk region again and to capture the village of
01:15:15tortlinon all appear to have failed so the russians continue their advance and they have not yet committed
01:15:24their two reserve armies now i received a correction from an important source about the topic of the reserve
01:15:33reserve armies um i think two days ago i said that the total force represented by these two res reserve
01:15:45armies numbered around to a hundred and twenty thousand by my understanding all made up of
01:15:55uh contract soldiers um commanded by veteran officers and ncos who have fought in the war already i was
01:16:08immediately corrected about this it is not 120 000 men in total that these two reserve armies consist of
01:16:19it is rather 120 000 men which is the number of each of these armies so we are looking at an aggregate force
01:16:34trained and built up over roughly two years with veteran officers veteran ncos and professional soldiers
01:16:45equipped with modern weapons numbering around a quarter of a million men which has not yet been
01:16:54committed to the battle so all of these shaping operations and they should not just be discounted by
01:17:03themselves they're steadily eating away at ukraine's remaining defenses in donbass all of these
01:17:12operations with the russians having this enormous force building up in the rear and that of course is not
01:17:23the sum total of the forces that the russians are building up in other places as well anyway
01:17:32so what if the russians do decide to go to reject the ultimatum if the
01:17:46sanctions don't stop them and they never have done at any point in the war
01:17:52if they continue to advance what is the next plan what precise idea is there to turn the situation
01:18:06round then can i also say that over the last couple of days there has been an enormous amount of chatter
01:18:18about orashnik missiles gathering in kaputin yar the russian test site and being prepared for big missile
01:18:29strikes against ukraine you can find these reports in various places unclear to me what these missile
01:18:39strikes with the orashniks would be intended to do at this stage in the conflict but obviously
01:18:48if the russians do start launching orashnik missiles against ukrainian targets particularly
01:18:55multiple strikes using the orashniks against specific targets well it's difficult to see how that will not
01:19:04also have a significant maybe even dramatic effect on the battlefields so what then what does the west do
01:19:15at that time well i'm going to make a guess i don't think starmer macron uh um mouth or of course tusk
01:19:26have any clear answers to this i can say definitely what zelensky will do he will do what he always does he
01:19:36will come and he will demand even more weapons he will demand even more supplies he will inevitably as night
01:19:43follows day demand the deployment of western combat forces to ukraine that has been his objective in my
01:19:51opinion all along he wants to involve the western powers in direct combat with the russians that is
01:20:00what he will demand what he will demand what will the west however do what will donald trump do
01:20:10now donald trump appears to believe that he can let kellogg and rubio and the other hardliners
01:20:21in his administration lead him along this path of imposing further sanctions on the russians
01:20:30and well if that doesn't work maybe he can come back in the future and try something else
01:20:37i said yesterday that one of the interesting things about the truth social post that he's just published
01:20:44is that it carries no conviction the u.s calls for ideally a 30-day unconditional ceasefire hopefully an
01:20:55acceptable ceasefire will be observed it's not as if he really seems to believe that any of this is going
01:21:03to happen why words like ideally and hopefully and he then talks about the
01:21:15his services he's available on a moment's notice his services are needed so that if suddenly things
01:21:24all turn out otherwise well maybe he can step in and sort things out i get the sense here that maybe he
01:21:32imagines that if the sanctions somehow have the kind of effect that he appears to believe they will
01:21:40that kellogg and co have perhaps told him that they will that putin will call him and agree this meeting
01:21:50and will beg him to relent in some way and then he will be available at a moment's notice if his services
01:21:59are needed to help put it out of the crisis in which putin and russia will supposedly find themselves
01:22:07i think that is absolutely deluded by the way but maybe that is what donald trump um genuinely and
01:22:14seriously believes just saying well what if that doesn't happen in fact it seems to me that there is
01:22:25at least an equal possibility i would say actually a very very much stronger possibility that if trump
01:22:32does impose further sanctions on the russians then what he will find is that the russians not only reject
01:22:42the sanctions and continue their military operation as they have said but that he has finally and
01:22:51completely burnt his bridges to them even yesterday peskov was careful not to criticize trump personally
01:23:02he said that the russian leadership continues to be grateful to trump for the efforts that he is making
01:23:10to bring to bring the conflict to bring the conflict to an end but perhaps a stronger guide to the real
01:23:17feelings in moscow are those expressed by putin's aide yuri ushakov who spoke about how the russians are more
01:23:26disappointed with the americans meaning trump than trump is with the russians if trump goes forward
01:23:37and starts imposing further sanctions on the russians especially the bone crunching sanctions that lindsey graham
01:23:47is talking about and perhaps kellogg is talking about then it seems to me that the russians might
01:23:57conclude in fact i would suspect that they would conclude that trump
01:24:07is a lost cause just as happened during his first term when he was elected on a mandate
01:24:17of improving relations with russia but relations between the united states and russia instead deteriorated
01:24:27so in his second term it is the same all over again russia will decide that trump whatever his
01:24:41personal views and feelings about russia might be whether he whether he really does want to improve
01:24:49relations between the united states and russia as he continuously says the russians might say to themselves
01:24:57well look he can't deliver it's pointless wasting further time with him we have a strong and good
01:25:06relationship with china putin and see get on with each other and trust each other the chinese may be tough
01:25:15and difficult negotiators but when a deal with them is done it is done and there's no further
01:25:23doubt or reason to rethink or worry about it the russians might say let's not waste any more time with donald trump
01:25:39he's just another american politician he comes making all sorts of promises but the promises ultimately mean
01:25:48absolutely nothing let's continue instead with a special military operation let's not get distracted
01:25:56by diplomatic overtures which lead nowhere and let's just move forward and continue the war
01:26:05now that i go to suggest for trump personally is perhaps the worst outcome
01:26:12possible it would mean for example that he might actually face a genuine saigon fall of saigon moment
01:26:23if he goes down the road of imposing sanctions then he will indeed have taken ownership of the wall and he
01:26:32will have publicly aligned himself and the united states with ukraine despite the widespread view probably true
01:26:44that he doesn't like zelensky very much and despite the fact that much of his base
01:26:51actively dislikes and even despises zelensky well it is not my purpose here to try to persuade trump
01:27:05to change his mind or to take steps that might rescue his presidency it seems incredible to me
01:27:17that even at this point of the war even as the russians continue to advance
01:27:25there still seems to be this illusion that something could somehow be done
01:27:33which can reverse the situation and preserve ukraine and deliver the kind of diplomatic and political
01:27:44victory that people like mr aaron west mitchell that i discussed in my program yesterday still imagine
01:27:56but there it is the west continues to cling to its own assumptions
01:28:05i suspect that we're going to have to see we're going to have to test those assumptions
01:28:10and see to what extent they're true and whether as i think much more likely they fail and then i wonder
01:28:21what new cunning plan the western powers will come up with and what they will do
01:28:29well this is my program today more from me soon let me remind you again you can find all
01:28:34um our programs on our various platforms locals rumble and x you can support our work via patreon and
01:28:41subscribe star and by going to our shop last but not least if you've liked this video please remember
01:28:50to tick the like button and to check your subscription to this channel that's me for today more from me
01:28:56see you soon have a very good day
01:29:07you

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