Posted on 04/08/2022 6:54:52 PM PDT by ransomnote
ransomnote: The Expose is over the target and taking flak, banned and censored - even Paypal turned against them in an effort to deprive them of funding. Please pray that the Expose receive the funds it needs to keep serving the public.Larry C Johnson; veteran of the CIA and the State Department’s Office of Counter Terrorism, claims the Ukrainian Army has been defeated up and all that’s left is “mop-up”. The veteran who provided training to the US Military’s Special Operations community for 24 years sat down with Mike Whitney to explain why.
Interview conducted by Mike Whitney
Question 1– Can you explain to me why you think Russia is winning the war in Ukraine?
Larry C. Johnson– Within the first 24 hours of the Russian military operation in Ukraine, all Ukrainian Ground Radar Intercept capabilities were wiped out. Without those radars, the Ukrainian Air Force lost its ability to do air to air intercept. In the intervening three weeks, Russia has established a de facto No Fly Zone over Ukraine. While still vulnerable to shoulder fired Surface to Air Missiles supplied by the U.S. and NATO to the Ukrainians, there is no evidence that Russia has had to curtail Combat Air Operations.
Russia’s arrival in Kiev within three days of the invasion also caught my attention. I recalled that the Nazi’s in Operation Barbarossa took seven weeks to reach Kiev and the required 7 more weeks to subdue the city. The Nazis had the advantage of not pulling punches to avoid civilian casualties and were eager to destroy critical infrastructure. Yet many so-called American military experts claimed that Russia was bogged down. When a 24 mile (or 40 mile, depends on the news source) was positioned north of Kiev for more than a week, it was clear that Ukraine’s ability to launch significant military operations had been eliminated. If their artillery was intact, then that column was easy pickings for massive destruction. That did not happen. Alternatively, if the Ukrainian’s had a viable fixed wing or rotary wing capability they should have destroyed that column from the air. That did not happen. Or, if they had a viable cruise missile capability they should have rained down hell on the supposedly stalled Russian column. That did not happen. The Ukrainians did not even mount a significant infantry ambush of the column with their newly supplied U.S. Javelins.
The scale and scope of the Russian attack is remarkable. They captured territory in three weeks that is larger than the land mass of the United Kingdom. They then proceeded to carry out targeted attacks on key cities and military installations. We have not seen a single instance of a Ukrainian regiment or brigade size unit attacking and defeating a comparable Russian unit. Instead, the Russians have split the Ukrainian Army into fragments and cut their lines of communication. The Russians are consolidating their control of Mariupol and have secured all approaches on the Black Sea. Ukraine is now cut off in the South and the North.
I would note that the U.S. had a tougher time capturing this much territory in Iraq in 2003 while fighting against a far inferior, less capable military force. If anything, this Russian operation should scare the hell out of U.S. military and political leaders.
The really big news came this week with the Russian missile strikes on what are de facto NATO bases in Yavoriv and Zhytomyr. NATO conducted cyber security training at Zhytomyr in September 2018 and described Ukraine as a “NATO partner.” Zhytomyr was destroyed with hypersonic missiles on Saturday. Yavoriv suffered a similar fate last Sunday. It was the primary training and logistics center that NATO and EUCOM used to supply fighters and weapons to Ukraine. A large number of the military and civilian personnel at that base became casualties.
Not only is Russia striking and destroying bases used by NATO regularly since 2015, but there was no air raid warning and there was no shutdown of the attacking missiles.
Question 2– Why is the media trying to convince the Ukrainian people that they can prevail in their war against Russia? If what you say is correct, then all the civilians that are being sent to fight the Russian army, are dying in a war they can’t win. I don’t understand why the media would want to mislead people on something so serious. What are your thoughts on the matter?
Larry C. Johnson– This is a combination of ignorance and laziness. Rather than do real reporting, the vast majority of the media (print and electronic) as well as Big Tech are supporting a massive propaganda campaign. I remember when George W. Bush was Hitler. I remember when Donald Trump was Hitler. And now we have a new Hitler, Vladimir Putin. This is a tired, failed playbook. Anyone who dares to raise legitimate questions about is immediately tarred as a Putin puppet or a Russia stooge. When you cannot argue facts the only recourse is name calling.
Question 3– Last week, Colonel Douglas MacGregor was a guest on the Tucker Carlson Show. His views on the war are strikingly similar to your own. Here’s what he said in the interview:
“The war is really over for the Ukrainians. They have been ground into bits, there is no question about that despite what we hear from our mainstream media. So, the real question for us at this stage is, Tucker, are we going to live with the Russian people and their government or we going to continue to pursue this sort of regime change dressed up as a Ukrainian war? Are we going to stop using Ukraine as a battering ram against Moscow, which is effectively what we’ve done.” (Tucker Carlson– MacGregor Interview)
Do you agree with MacGregor that the real purpose of goading Russia into a war in Ukraine was “regime change”?
Second, do you agree that Ukraine is being used as a staging ground for the US to carry out a proxy-war on Russia?
Larry C. Johnson– Doug is great analyst but I disagree with him—I don’t think there is anyone in the Biden Administration that is smart enough to think and plan in those strategic terms. In my view the last 7 years have been the inertia of the NATO status quo. What I mean by that is that NATO and Washington, believed they could continue to creep east on Russia’s borders without provoking a reaction. NATO and EUCOM regularly carried out exercises—including providing “offensive” training—and supplied equipment. I believe reports in the United States that the CIA was providing paramilitary training to Ukrainian units operating in the Donbass are credible. But I have trouble believing that after our debacles in Iraq and Afghanistan, we suddenly have Sun Tzu level strategists pulling the strings in Washington.
There is an air of desperation in Washington. Besides trying ban all things Russian, the Biden Administration is trying to bully China, India and Saudi Arabia. I do not see any of those countries falling into line. I believe the Biden crew made a fatal mistake by trying to demonize all things and all people Russian. If anything, this is uniting the Russian people behind Putin and they are ready to dig in for a long struggle.
I am shocked at the miscalculation in thinking economic sanctions on Russia would bring them to their knees. The opposite is true. Russia is self-sufficient and is not dependent on imports. Its exports are critical to the economic well-being of the West. If they withhold wheat, potash, gas, oil, palladium, finished nickel and other key minerals from the West, the European and U.S. economies will be savaged. And this attempt to coerce Russia with sanctions has now made it very likely that the U.S. dollar’s role as the international reserve currency will show up in the dustbin of history.
Question 4– Ever since he delivered his famous speech in Munich in 2007, Putin has been complaining about the “architecture of global security”. In Ukraine we can see how these nagging security issues can evolve into a full-blown war. As you know, in December Putin made a number of demands related to Russian security, but the Biden administration shrugged them off and never responded. Putin wanted written assurances that NATO expansion would not include Ukraine (membership) and that nuclear missile systems would not be deployed to Romania or Poland. Do you think Putin’s demands are unreasonable?
Larry C. Johnson– I think Putin’s demands are quite reasonable. The problem is that 99% of Americans have no idea of the kind of military provocation that NATO and the U.S. have carried out over the last 7 years. The public was always told the military exercises were “defensive.” That simply is not true. Now we have news that DTRA was funding biolabs in Ukraine. I guess Putin could agree to allow U.S. nuclear missile systems in Poland and Romania if Biden agrees to allow comparable Russian systems to be deployed in Cuba, Venezuela and Mexico. When we look at it in those terms we can begin to understand that Putin’s demands are not crazy nor unreasonable.
Question 5– Russian media reports that Russian “high precision, air-launched” missiles struck a facility in west Ukraine “killing more than 100 local troops and foreign mercenaries.” Apparently, the Special Operations training center was located near the town of Ovruch which is just 15 miles from the Polish border. What can you tell us about this incident? Was Russia trying to send a message to NATO?
Larry C. Johnson– Short answer—YES! Russian military strikes in Western Ukraine during the past week have shocked and alarmed NATO officials. The first blow came on Sunday, March 13 at Yavoriv, Ukraine. Russia hit the base with several missiles, some reportedly hypersonic. Over 200 personnel were killed, which included American and British military and intelligence personnel, and hundreds more wounded. Many suffered catastrophic wounds, such as amputations, and are in hospital. Yet, NATO and the western media have shown little interest in reporting on this disaster.
Yavoriv was an important forward base for NATO (see here). Until February (prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine), the U.S. 7th Army Training Command was operating from Yavoriv as late as mid-February. Russia has not stopped there. ASB Military news reports Russia hit another site, Delyatyn, which is 60 miles southeast of Yavoriv (on Thursday I believe). Yesterday, Russia hit Zytomyr, another site where NATO previously had a presence. Putin has sent a very clear message—NATO forces in Ukraine will be viewed and treated as combatants. Period.
Question 6– Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been lionized in the western media as a “wartime leader” and a modern-day “Winston Churchill”. What the media fails to tell its readers is that Zelensky has taken a number of steps to strengthen his grip on power while damaging fragile democratic institutions in Ukraine. For example, Zelensky has “banned eleven opposition-owned news organizations” and tried to bar the head of Ukraine’s largest opposition party, Viktor Medvedchuk, from running for office on a bogus “terrorist financing” charge. This is not the behavior of a leader that is seriously committed to democracy.
What’s your take on Zelensky? Is he really the “patriotic leader” the media makes him out to be?
Larry C. Johnson– Zelensky is a comedian and an actor. Not a very good one at that in my view. The West is cynically using the fact he is Jewish as a diversion from the size-able contingent of Neo-Nazis (and I mean genuine Nazis who still celebrate the Ukrainian Waffen SS unit’s accomplishments while fighting with the Nazis in WW II). The facts are clear—he is banning opposition political parties and shutting down opposition media. I guess that is the new definition of “democracy.”
Question 7– How does this end? There’s an excellent post at the Moon of Alabama site titled “What Will Be The Geographic End State Of The War In Ukraine“. The author of the post, Bernard, seems to think that Ukraine will eventually be partitioned along the Dnieper River “and south along the coast that holds a majority ethnic Russian population.”
He also says this:“This would eliminate Ukrainian access to the Black Sea and create a land bridge towards the Moldavian breakaway Transnistria which is under Russian protection. The rest of the Ukraine would be a land confined, mostly agricultural state, disarmed and too poor to be build up to a new threat to Russia anytime soon. Politically it would be dominated by fascists from Galicia which would then become a major problem for the European Union.”
What do you think? Will Putin impose his own territorial settlement on Ukraine in order to reinforce Russian security and bring the hostilities to an end or is a different scenario more likely?
Larry C. Johnson– I agree with Moon. Putin’s primary objective is to secure Russia from foreign threats and effect a divorce with the West. Russia has the physical resources to be an independent sovereign and is in the process of making that vision come true.
Bio– Larry C Johnson is a veteran of the CIA and the State Department’s Office of Counter Terrorism. He is the founder and managing partner of BERG Associates, which was established in 1998. Larry provided training to the US Military’s Special Operations community for 24 years.
I don’t think Zelensky will last that long.
Maybe he should send over here to get Jill Biden’s Iranian bodyguards. 🙀🤪😜
Not sure I agree, but interesting and thought provoking issues raised. I do agree that war correspondents of today’s media are not what they once were and probably can’t be trusted to print/show the truth.
It’s not working so well involving an Exodus FROM Russia!:
Plus the fact that Ukrainians hate Russians for starving millions during the communist take over. That hatred is generations deep and visceral
Agree. Raw Russian propaganda.
(Which I think has a Russian derivation).
If I say, "Explain to me why we should be involved in this fight?", does that make me a Russian sympathizer?
If I point out that the pro-Reset crowd in the west precipitated this war, does this make me a Russian sympathizer?
If I point out obvious over the top pro-Ukrainian propaganda, like dead men in body bags smoking cigarettes', by people that have lied to us for years, does that make me a Russian sympathizer?
I was pilloried back in Jan for making the comment that if we didn't deal with Putin then we'd have to deal with the prick later and the consequences would be much greater. The very same people that called me a war monger and said that I was a coward calling for other people's son's to go get killed are the same ones lapping up the globalist propaganda and calling anyone that questions the narrative a "shirtless Vlad fanboy" Yes, someone on FR actually used that catchy term to berate someone that had the audacity to say that things are not as they seem in all this.
More of us are on your side than on the side of the paid propagandists at the State Department, who are still trying to cover up Joe and Hunter Biden’s deep involvement with the current corrupt Ukrainian regime.
Well, it seems like those FReepers that are most vehement in their support of the Ukraine narrative (like calling for the deportation of fellow Americans) are cut from the same bolt of cloth as the pro-COVID, pro-poke crowd around here. It's disheartening to know that so many self proclaimed patriots are actually shills for the globalists.
I believe that the Azov maniacs will dispose of Zelensky long before Putin’s assassins get to him.
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Then the 36th Azov will have to break through the Russian 8th Guards units which has them surrounded on 3 sides and their backs to the Sea of Azov in the Mariupol area.
What a joke! You believe every shovel full your media masters throw into your trough. The Russians didn’t run anywhere. Your ghost of Kiev killed them all. Oh yeah, and your big guy, you make a fool of yourself carrying water for, is still the most popular president you ever elected. You’re worst than than climate change liars. Drop dead dates come and go and you simply eat up the next lie. Remember six weeks ago when you dipsh!ts were all over “Russia out of gas, ammo, generals and nerve in two weeks”? Let’s go back and have some fun looking at all the laughable disinfo I’m sure you were trafficking in.
what’s your point? Your post is all about you.
“Held back? 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Sure, Jan. That’s what it was.”
It’s about you foolishly comparing Russia holding back on the outskirts of Kiev and the US Shock and Awe in Baghdad. Man, try to stay on topic from one post to the next. Or is it you realize how foolish your position is and just cash it in by claiming you don’t know what we’re talking about? Good little media stooge, you’ve learned so well.
It’s amusing that few ever address why there are so many ethnic Russians in Ukraine.
Here’s a clue: There were a lot of available farms after the 30’s and 40’s. Seems millions of Ukrainians just “ disappeared.”
Like I said, we took out Baghdad, and collapsed the government, in twenty days. Shock and awe was air power and air superiority/supremacy. Russia has not demonstrated air superiority or supremacy at any time in the conflict. The have not toppled the government and now have pulled back from trying, after considerable losses to men and equipment. They, well actually you, are now trying to claim second prize was their only goal. If that was their strategy as you claim, it was as foolish in its cost and failure as if they had actually intended to take Kiev.
Now go back to playing dungeons and dragons in your basement.
Of course, and a sure sign of Russian success is the need to reorganize your army after your great victories! https://www.foxnews.com/live-news/ukraine-russia-live-updates-04-09-2022
This is as nonsensical as saying that Ukrainians are marching on Moscow.
1. The Russian air force failed. It still doesn’t have air superiority
2. Russian paratroopers were shot out of the sky in such numbers that they are a spent force.
3. Thousands of Russian constable dead.
4. Russia has captured some roads in the south and east. The countryside is still Ukrainian and thars where the guerrilla attacks on Russian soldiers originate.
Exactly. In a poll in 2011 in all areas except Crimea the number of people who said they were Russian was less than 30%.
And that mixed up people who speak Russian as a first (like Zelensky himself) vs those who felt Russian.
That number has decreased, with many now reject any relationship with a Putin run state
“He’s now fled to Poland and he’s hoping that the Russkies wipe all of AZOV in the Donbas out at Mariupol and then Zelensky can return without the neo-nazis there.”
You read Pravda.ru planned headlines for 24th February?
Things didn’t go according to Putin’s script.
The problem with that plan is that he who once said they were Russian now don’t want anything to do with Putin’s Russia.
Mariupol was a Russian speaking city. But they didn’t and don’t want to fall to Putin
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