• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Ukraine/Russia conflict NEWS thread - Updates on the Ukrainian crisis.

Status
Not open for further replies.
Christian Fundamentalism is growing in power in the West?

When I was a kid in the '70s and '80s, pretty much with it at its height, we had stores closed on Sundays and stickers placed on cds, and the drinking age raised to 21.

Hardly tyrannical, but it was annoying. But now we are seeing gay marriage, pot legalized, and while cds still have stickers and the drinking age is 21, at least stores are open on sunday (except liquor stores)

I find it interesting that in America, stores being closed on sundays is some how religiously connotated.- While in Europe (gemrany), it is a worker's rights issue.
 

akira28

Member
Christian Fundamentalism is growing in power in the West?

When I was a kid in the '70s and '80s, pretty much with it at its height, we had stores closed on Sundays and stickers placed on cds, and the drinking age raised to 21.

Hardly tyrannical, but it was annoying. But now we are seeing gay marriage, pot legalized, and while cds still have stickers and the drinking age is 21, at least stores are open on sunday (except liquor stores)

Christian Fundamentalism used to be a million dollar affair. Now there are mega churches and billions of dollars going around. So they stopped trying to crush piles of CDs..temporarily. They successfully got the stickers placed on them though. They never took their eyes off of the prize though because they seem to have more power and money than ever before, even if gay marriage has passed. It's like, they make such a big issue over things, you start to believe they actually cared about it in the first place instead of it all having been an intelligent power play.

Christian Fundamentalism, to be more clear, would be the politically minded who use religion as a tool to help them deal with the public. So yes while we may have won a few battles for gay rights, we've lost the economic war to them for the next 20 years and we don't even know it yet.
 

kess

Member
Russian 'Humanitarian Convoy' Heads for Separatist Moldovan Region

A Russian NGO with close ties to the Kremlin plans to send a 60-lorry ‘humanitarian convoy’ into Moldova’s pro-Russian separatist region, amidst growing tension in the small former Soviet state after pro-EU parties defeated the pro-Russian Socialist party in last week’s parliamentary elections.

The first three lorries had arrived in Moldova’s self-declared Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic by Wednesday, with more to follow according to Alexander Argunov, director of the Moscow-based organisation in charge of the convoy, Eurasian Integration.

...

Eurasian Integration were not available to comment on why the east Moldavian region required humanitarian help when major fighting in the region ceased in 1992.

The convoys must, of course, pass through Ukraine first.
 
I hate to post a link to a Russian news agency, but that's the only English version of this article that I was able to find. So if anyone is wondering what Ukraine won with the Maidan happening the article below pretty much answers this question. Staying out of this joke Union is a pretty big victory. :)


http://itar-tass.com/en/russia/765744

Belarus’ customs officers have restarted inspections of trucks on the border with Russia.

Russia’s agriculture watchdog earlier imposed a ban, effective from November 30, on transit of food from Belarus to third countries, including Kazakhstan, through Russia without additional examination due to an increase of smuggling. The ban is applied to supplies of food sanctioned by Moscow in retaliation for western sanctions.
Control over the countries’ borders was suspended in 2011 after Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan had established the Customs Union, under which the inspections are carried out at the outer borders of the Union.
 

Nivash

Member
To try to curb currency depreciation and inflation, Russia increased their interest rate from 10.5% to 17%, what the fuck.

The measure failed utterly. The rouble is already down to yesterday's levels at 65-70 per dollar. And now they have a stifling interest rate to boot, even as they head for recession. Their economic situation is out if control.

http://m.bbc.com/news/business-30492518

Their only saving grace at this point are their reserves, but they'll burn through them in a year if the oil price doesn't rebound. After that, all that's left for them is tax hikes or spending cuts.

http://m.bbc.com/news/business-30491170
 

Nivash

Member
How much of their current economic woes are attributable to sanctions versus normal economic ups and downs?

Most is oil, but the rouble fell faster than it should have due to oil alone, so there are indications that the sanctions are contributing to imposing a fenomally low faith in the currency. No one is buying roubles right now who aren't planning on selling them right away at the next minor spike. It will probably fall even more now that speculators know that the CBR doesn't have a grip on the situation.
 

Maledict

Member
More qualified people would be able to offer an opinion, but right now it looks like a full on rout of the rouble. Raising your interest rates by 7% in the middle of the night in order to try and fix the currency exchange rates doesn't seem to have a huge rate of success from my understanding, and certainly when the UK tried it in the 90s it just confirmed the markets fears that things were out of control and the problem worsened.
 

Madness

Member
Putin is a super politician. You see his recent trip to India? He brought the new leader of Crimea with him in an attempt to legitimize him. This will basically be his puppet in Crimea just like he has one in Chechnya. India didn't even know about it, until the end when he revealed he wasn't there for talks with Indian leaders, but some random Indian merchants interested in doing business in Crimea.

Also, it's pretty interesting to note the religious resurgence in Russia and how it's perceived in the US. For decades during the Cold War, the Soviets/Russians were looked at as godless communists who didn't have any humanity to them, God would punish them etc. Now they embrace their Russian orthodox religion more openly, whereas the west has become secular and you now have protests like Pussy Riot at their Church and people calling them fundamentalist religious nutjobs etc. Some Russian propaganda posters even show the US and EU as satanists.

This won't end well for Russia. Oil prices ridiculously low, the limited sanctions preventing them from exploring other opportunities, and their allies are not strong enough to help them. They can't get more indebted to the Chinese. Almost about to enter a deep recession soon if things don't change. This can lead to two things, growing resentment at Putin for basically reversing a decade of massive growth, or resentment towards the US and basically conspiring to destroy Russia, thereby increasing their devotion to Putin to save them.
 

Chumly

Member
How much of their current economic woes are attributable to sanctions versus normal economic ups and downs?
The sanctions have had a significant impact. Far more than the United states or Europe had even hoped. Without the oil crash it would have been a far more muted impact but the same can be said for the oil crash. The oil crash would have been nowhere as severe if they actually had access to the credit market.
 

Maledict

Member
From the telegraphs lives blog:

12:12 We're there. One euro cent is equal to one rouble. And one dollar will now get you 80 roubles.

12:06 Another low of the day for the rouble. A dollar will now get you 77.2 roubles.
Yesterday, the rouble and a penny hit parity (£1 would grab you 100 roubles). Today it looks like we're about to see something similar.
The euro is rapidly approaching 100 roubles. Will we see the euro cent equal to the rouble by the end of the day?

Fascinating to watch how 'end of the day' turned out to actually mean six minutes later...
 

Nivash

Member
According to the BBC, the internal Russian media is trying to ignore the situation for now.

http://m.bbc.com/news/business-30492518

RT, to my surprise, did not. The results have been... interesting. Their story already have over 1000 comments, with more posted faster than I can read them. It's way beyond their moderators and completely insane. Tons of schadenfreude from westerners interspersed with attempts to downplay the situation ("this is actually good for Russia - it will strengthen its export sector!") and the utterly mental, like one guy calling on Russia to nuke the West in return and another saying that "if jews continue attacking Russia, expect a real holocust pretty soon :)".

The last one got four upvotes by the way.
 
RT, to my surprise, did not. The results have been... interesting. Their story already have over 1000 comments, with more posted faster than I can read them. It's way beyond their moderators and completely insane. Tons of schadenfreude from westerners interspersed with attempts to downplay the situation ("this is actually good for Russia - it will strengthen its export sector!") and the utterly mental, like one guy calling on Russia to nuke the West in return and another saying that "if jews continue attacking Russia, expect a real holocust pretty soon :)".

The last one got four upvotes by the way.

I know RT attracts the crazies, but fucking hell.
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/17/world/europe/obama-signing-russia-ukraine-sanctions-bill.html

New Russia Sanctions Bill Will Be Signed by Obama, White House Says

WASHINGTON — President Obama has decided to sign legislation imposing further sanctions on Russia and authorizing additional aid to Ukraine, despite concerns that it will complicate his efforts to maintain a unified front with European allies, the White House said on Tuesday.

The legislation calls for a raft of new measures penalizing Russia’s military and energy sectors and authorizes $350 million in military assistance to Ukraine, including antitank weapons, tactical surveillance drones and counter-artillery radar. The bill was approved unanimously by Congress, but Mr. Obama hedged for days on whether he would sign it.

^ yeah, sanctions, oil price, shitty economic environment as it was. Like a perfect storm.
 

Ryuuroden

Member
Interesting story that I think is pretty fair in explaining the causes of some of the problems of today. It doesn't absolve Russia of what it is doing now just as Germany is not absolved of what it did during WWII due to what the winners of WWI did to Germany. It just does a good job of cause and effect and how actions you make in the past can cause bad shit to happen in the future. BBC Article: Viewpoint: Why the shadow of WW1 and 1989 hangs over world events

This has been a year of great geopolitical anniversaries. We are at the 100th anniversary of the start of World War One, an event that more than any other shaped world history during the past century. We are at the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, the opening chapter of the demise of the Soviet empire and the end of the Cold War. Yet we know that painfully we observe something far more than a mere remembrance.

As William Faulkner remarked, "The past is never dead. It's not even past." WW1 and the fall of the Wall continue to shape our most urgent realities today. The wars in Syria and Iraq are the legacy of the closure of WW1, and dramatic events in Ukraine are unfolding in the long shadow of 1989.

1914 and 1989 are "hinge moments", decisive points of history on which subsequent events turn. How nations both great and small behave at such hinge moments determine the future course of war and peace.
 

freddy

Banned
Interesting story that I think is pretty fair in explaining the causes of some of the problems of today. It doesn't absolve Russia of what it is doing now just as Germany is not absolved of what it did during WWII due to what the winners of WWI did to Germany. It just does a good job of cause and effect and how actions you make in the past can cause bad shit to happen in the future. BBC Article: Viewpoint: Why the shadow of WW1 and 1989 hangs over world events

Good article. Thanks.
 

Yamauchi

Banned
Interesting story that I think is pretty fair in explaining the causes of some of the problems of today. It doesn't absolve Russia of what it is doing now just as Germany is not absolved of what it did during WWII due to what the winners of WWI did to Germany. It just does a good job of cause and effect and how actions you make in the past can cause bad shit to happen in the future. BBC Article: Viewpoint: Why the shadow of WW1 and 1989 hangs over world events
Yes, good article.

I remember my father telling me of the West's betrayal of Russia after the collapse of the USSR and how the Russians were expecting their own Marshall Plan to rebuild and re-integrate Russia into the European economy. It never came and, well, as Sachs writes: the rest is history.
 
Moscow Times has been taken down by a team of hackers (they claim) that seems to hate Russia, they are using the hastag #fuckrussia.

I guess this is an example that just about any ignorant idiot can be a scriptkiddie
 

ICKE

Banned
Humanitarian disaster looms as food aid blocked

Pro-Kyiv volunteer battalions are increasingly blocking humanitarian aid into eastern Ukraine in a move which will exacerbate a pending humanitarian crisis in the run up to Christmas and New Year, said Amnesty International.

“As winter sets in, the already desperate situation in eastern Ukraine is being made even worse by the volunteer battalions preventing food aid and medicine from reaching those in need. It is no secret that the region is facing a humanitarian disaster with many already at risk of starvation,” said Denis Krivosheev, acting Director of Europe and Central Asia for Amnesty International.

Amnesty

This is a real shitty thing to do, especially when old people need their heart medicine etc. And now Ukraine has also cut electricity to Crimea.
 

jimi_dini

Member
This is a real shitty thing to do

Pro-Kyiv volunteer battalions

Possibly the so called "volunteer battalions" shown in this German state television news report:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mf0vbGj9cO4

, especially when old people need their heart medicine etc. And now Ukraine has also cut electricity to Crimea.

Ukraine doesn't pay pensions to those old people since this month. It's quite obvious what they are trying to do.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/26/ukraine-banks-suspend-services-pro-russia-donetsk

“What this means in reality is the confiscation of the pensions and benefits of our veterans, pensioners, disabled people and mothers … It is an attempt to end civilised life in the Donbass region,”
 

chadskin

Member
This is a real shitty thing to do, especially when old people need their heart medicine etc. And now Ukraine has also cut electricity to Crimea.

Electricity to Crimea was "just" cut for a short time and has since been restored but still shitty from a humanitarian perspective, yeah.

I think the goal of Ukraine's leadership, ultimately, is to cut off the east more or less completely, which would likely lead to Russia supporting the east in a bigger official capacity, in terms of aid, financial support and so on. Such a move by Russia would inevitably lead to further international pressure on Russia, something the Ukrainian leadership would certainly welcome.

We'll see where it all goes. Personally, I expect Russia to annex the Donbass region sooner or later as Putin has fallen victim to his own propaganda and can't just back out of Ukraine without any kind of political "win". For Ukraine, they'd "get rid" of a region that's worth nothing economically and they could also move forward with their plan to join NATO.
 

Azih

Member
I'm confused. Why should Ukraine provide services to regions under separatist control? Surprised it didn't happen months ago.
 

pants

Member
I'm confused. Why should Ukraine provide services to regions under separatist control? Surprised it didn't happen months ago.

Because the civilians that lives there and I suppose paid taxes are not an acceptable target in a war/skirmish?
 

Kabouter

Member
Because the civilians that lives there and I suppose paid taxes are not an acceptable target in a war/skirmish?
Indeed they are not, however there is something to be said for both sides. Yours is one side, the other is that as the invader, the Russian federation should bear responsibility for the people of the Donbass.
 

pants

Member
Indeed they are not, however there is something to be said for both sides. Yours is one side, the other is that as the invader, the Russian federation should bear responsibility for the people of the Donbass.

We cant place this burden on civilians, they should be afforded all the services and pensions/grants owed to them as legal Ukrainian tax paying citizens. The fact that they are occupied by an invading force/populist movement/however you want to see this conflict is not of their making nor should they be made accountable for it.
 
This is a real shitty thing to do, especially when old people need their heart medicine etc. And now Ukraine has also cut electricity to Crimea.
The title of the story appears to be unnecessarily alarming when the essence is:
At least four convoys sent by the humanitarian foundation of Rinat Akhmetov, one of Ukraine’s richest men, were blocked on the roads leading to the separatist-controlled territory by the Dnipro-1 battalion last week.
The reason for that appears to be the fact that volunteer battalions found cigarettes and alcohol in these humanitarian convoys on two occasions:
i6EOr3a.jpg

http://maidantranslations.com/2014/...l-help-donbas-but-we-wont-sponsor-terrorists/
Akhmetov has been suspected of having connections to the new DNR leadership and funding at least one of DNR's battalions. Also red cross convoys seem to arrive just fine.

However this part seems legit bad, even though based on just one witness account:
An aid worker from the Luhansk Region has informed Amnesty International that Aidar battalion is also stopping and searching cars that travel from Starobil’sk to Luhansk and vice versa. Members of the battalion, which was previously implicated in arbitrary detention and torture, are reportedly stopping food and medicines getting through to the region.

The aid worker recalled a particular case when medicines for four elderly people in Krasnodon, who are suffering from heart and blood pressure conditions, were snatched from a bus at a checkpoint.

Of course all of it plays into the Russian narrative that Ukraine and the West are trying to exterminate Donbass population to extract shale oil & gas.

Possibly the so called "volunteer battalions" shown in this German state television news report:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mf0vbGj9cO4



Ukraine doesn't pay pensions to those old people since this month. It's quite obvious what they are trying to do.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/26/ukraine-banks-suspend-services-pro-russia-donetsk

Now that the ceasefire seems to be holding, many of Ukraine's volunteer neo-Nazi battalions are returning from 'the frontlines' to spread their terror on the civilians of Ukraine: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_P8H5nq60E

Why are both of you pushing this narrative? Azov is not mentioned in the Amnesty report and where does the notion come from that Aidar are nazis?
There is apparently just one battalion which is connected to nazi ideology: Azov. There are around 50k soldiers & volunteers deployed by Ukraine (according to wiki). Let's assume Avoz is 500 men strong. That's 1% being nazis (let's assume they're all nazis in that battalion) in Ukrainian forces. Surely this is pretty much in line with Western OR Russian armed forces?

There are quite a lot of (religious) fascists or straight up nazis among the Russians in donbass, yet weirdly enough it's all about Ukrainian nazis with you lot.
The founder of the fucking Novorossia is a Russian neo-nazi for fuck's sake:
In earlier years Gubarev was a member of the neo-Nazi Russian National Unity paramilitary group. Gubarev has publicly given thanks to this group for providing him with military training. In the same interview he said he was not a radical nationalist and described himself as "centre-left".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavel_Gubarev
Why do you think he chose a modified confederate flag as a flag for Novorossia?
WjOBJJq.jpg


But I'm sure this will be ignored and not commented on like the last few times this was discussed.

We cant place this burden on civilians, they should be afforded all the services and pensions/grants owed to them as legal Ukrainian tax paying citizens. The fact that they are occupied by an invading force/populist movement/however you want to see this conflict is not of their making nor should they be made accountable for it.
From what I understand the people can still come out of DNR & LNR territory into Ukraine held territory to get their pensions and other gov. services.
And funny how you called them "tax paying citizens". I am not aware of any tax agreements between those bullshit republics and Ukraine.

If anyone could be singled out as a culprit here is Russia. They started this shit and now don't have the balls to go all the way like in Crimea. They along with their bullshit republics are holding these people hostage.
 

pants

Member
From what I understand the people can still come out of DNR & LNR territory into Ukraine held territory to get their pensions and other gov. services.
And funny how you called them "tax paying citizens". I am not aware of any tax agreements between those bullshit republics and Ukraine.

If anyone could be singled out as a culprit here is Russia. They started this shit and now don't have the balls to go all the way like in Crimea. They along with their bullshit republics are holding these people hostage.

It's not okay to force people to travel outside of their areas to collect what is owed them. And yes they are tax paying citizens? Not that the tax paying is critical at this stage, since if they are prevented from paying tax it's not their fault, but they are citizens.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom