Mundu multipolarra versus unipolarra
NBE (Nazio Batuen Erakundea) gaindituta, ICC (NAPE) (International Criminal Court) alboratuta, eta Mossad nagusi… aspalditik gainera…
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Stop saying history will judge them, judge Israel now. With ICC judges.
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ICC (international Criminal Court) NAPE (Nazioarteko Arlo Penaleko Epaitegia)
International Criminal Court judges refuse to be bow to Trump’s sanctions as he tries to exempt Israeli and American officials from the rule of law: “We are not going to be intimidated.”
Israel killed JFK to get nukes. Not Iran
Israel stole several hundred pounds of highly enriched uranium from U.S. Not Iran
Israel stole other nuclear secrets and components from us to build their bombs. Not Iran
Israel refuses to sign the Nuclear Non- Proliferiation Treaty.
Iran signed it. Israel won’t submit to nuclear inspections. Iran does.
Israel violated the Atmospheric Test-Ban treaty. Not Iran
Israel holds the world hostage with Samson Option nuclear blackmail. Not Iran
Israel controls U.S politicians through the israel lobby & Epstein-style blackmail. Not Iran
Israel controls our online speech through the ADL, SPLC & their infiltration of Big Tech. Not Iran
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For the second consecutive year in 2025, Israel killed more journalists than any other country.
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CARLSON: “Israel’s nuclear weapons were created from nuclear materials stolen from a nuclear plant in Pennsylvania.”
HUCKABEE: Nods along and doesn’t deny it.
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025671139465318450
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Daniel Mayakovski@DaniMayakovski
“Los europeos vinieron a este continente americano y literalmente sometieron a limpieza étnica a toda la población nativa hasta su extinción, los mataron en una escala sin igual por millones. Sin embargo, eran ellos los que llamaban salvajes a los nativos“.
Richard Wolff, economista de Harvard, relata como la propaganda colonial occidental criminalizaba a sus víctimas nativas en América como “salvajes“, al igual que hoy hace en Gaza.
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025814751742210419
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Colin Powell admitted in an email in 2015 that Israel has over 200 nuclear weapons.
This means, by law, Israel should be held to International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards. Allowing inspections to ensure they are adhering to that standard.
The Symington Amendment (part of the Arms Export Control Act, 22 U.S.C. § 2799aa): prohibits U.S. economic and military assistance to any country suspected of having obtained nuclear capabilities without oversight from the IAEA.
Yet, Israel receives all of its economic and military aid from the U.S..
This means everyone in our government, including all politicians, that have supported sending our tax dollars to Israel is in violation of 22 U.S.C. § 2799aa, and should be prosecuted.
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Israel possesses 200 plutonium nuclear warheads, has not ratified the Non-Proliferation Treaty and does not allow any inspections.
It has attacked seven countries just in 2025.
Iran has no atomic bomb and has not attacked anyone in 250 years.
Who is the danger?
Aipamena
Carlos Paz@CarlosPazC2021
ots. 20
Israel posee 200 ojivas nucleares de plutonio, no ha ratificado el Tratado de No Proliferación y no permite la inspección alguna. Por si fuera poco, ha agredido a siete países sólo en 2025. Irán no tiene bomba atómica y no ha atacado a nadie en 250 años.
¿Quién es un peligro?
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How many nuclear weapons Iran possess? 0
How many Israel possess? 75-400
How many countries Iran attacked in 2025? 0
How many Israel attacked in 2025: 9
How many civilians Iran killed in 2023-24-25? 0
How many Israel killed? ~100,000
Who poses more threats? Israel or Iran?
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Mehdi Hassan: “How many nuclear weapons does Iran have as of today?” : “Right now, none.”
Mehdi Hassan: ”How many does Israel have?” : “No idea.”
Secret arsenal, zero transparency, ignored UN resolutions, but endless lectures on Iran!
Hypocrisy UNMATCHED
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025501148560670861
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: the only entity in the Middle East that possesses nuclear weapons. and
: the only country to ever drop a nuclear bomb. want to lecture
: the country that doesn’t have a single nuclear weapon, doesn’t want any, and runs a peaceful, civilian nuclear program.
Aipamena
Caleb T. Maupin@RealCalebMaupin
ots. 22
Israel has HUNDREDS of nuclear weapons.
So threatening Iran over its peaceful nuclear energy program is ABSURD.
I confronted John Kirby of the US State Department over this… WATCH!
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025410637073879119
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If Washington is serious about peace, it must begin with reality — and three fundamentals:
1.Israel’s campaign of erasure in Gaza and the West Bank must end. Accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity is not optional.
2.This is not about managing or feeding a population. It is about freeing them. It is about ending the occupation. It is about the inalienable historic, legal, and political rights of the Palestinian people — to self-determination and return.
3. No just and lasting peace can be built around the Palestinian people. It must be built with them. Link to interview with
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025578040017731638
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George Galloway@georgegalloway
Will Russia and China stand by and allow Trump to destroy a second of their allies in just a couple of months ?
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025139212878786863
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It was named #Palestine It is named Palestine It shall continue to be named Palestine
Reza Pahlavi is a “Mossad asset.”
— Ex-CIA agent John Kiriakou
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025653473514070329
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“The Defeat of the West”
We Should Have Integrated Russia Into the West.
Emmanuel TODD one of the greatest living French intellectuals says it’s not Russia that’s winning, it’s the West that’s losing !!!
Emmanuel Todd:
One of the Americans’ obsessions is to prevent, from the beginning, I think these are the real strategic objectives of the Americans, is to prevent the cooperation of Germany and Russia.
– Apolline de Malherbe:
A rapprochement Germany-Russia?
Emmanuel Todd: It’s the terror of the American geopoliticians. But it will fail because the war will end up ceasing.
– Apolline de Malherbe: If I understand you correctly, Russia will end up winning this war?
Emmanuel Todd:
But it’s not Russia that’s winning, it’s the West that’s losing, it’s the reality that’s going to win.
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025670020253012285
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John Mersheimer: Israel is pushing the U.S. toward war with Iran to divert global attention, so that they can easily carry out the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025797516999147801
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An independent survey of 2,000 Gaza households, published in The Lancet, estimates that 75,200 Palestinians were directly killed in Israel’s genocide between October 7, 2023 and January 5, 2025.
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Los Otros Judíos #StoptheGenocide@losotrosjudios
Qué “sorpresa”… Israel es el único país con ojivas nucleares en Oriente Medio. Ellos pueden, los demás no. Faltaba más.
Uno de los supuestos motivos del ataque de Israel a Irán fue el programa nuclear de la nación persa.
Según el primer ministro israelí, Benjamín Netanyahu, Teherán estaba cerca de construir una bomba nuclear, a pesar de que no pudo demostrar este hecho.
En Oriente Medio, solo Israel posee ojivas nucleares, de acuerdo con el Instituto Internacional de Investigación para la Paz de Estocolmo. Además, no firmó el Tratado sobre la No Proliferación de Armas Nucleares ni tampoco está sujeto a inspecciones del Organismo Internacional de Energía Atómica. Vía RT.
Victor vicktop55 commentary@vick55top
Russia supports its allies, including Cuba and Iran, despite Western slander, Maria Zakharova said in an interview with TASS:
“We provide support to our friends, our allies—without which I’m not sure they could preserve their statehood, and the blow to the populations of these countries would certainly be colossal.”
She said it’s ridiculous to hear that Russia can’t protect anyone and abandons them.
Tucker Carlson:
“There was a threat to my family. The Israeli government, and [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu himself, tried to punish two members of my family. I won’t be more specific, but actually punish two members of my family because he, as he has said in public many times, believes in blood guilt, Amalek. You know, when someone commits a crime against you, you punish not just him, but his family, his bloodline.
There’s no idea that’s less Western than that, more anti-Christian than that. Christians reject that. Netanyahu doesn’t. That’s why he’s talking about Amalek, and he was going after my family, literally, so I felt very threatened by that.”
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025757503863046310
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Cuba is our own Gaza. And the whole world abhors the abuse of both.
Aipamena
David Adler@davidrkadler
ots. 21
Do US Americans know that — every single year at the General Assembly of the United Nations — the *entire world* votes to condemn our country for the criminal blockade of Cuba? Not just “Communists.” Not just the “Global South.” The entire world.
The United States has voted against ending the unlawful embargo of Cuba 32 times in the UN against the vast majority who wanted to end the embargo. The US is a terrorist country supporting another terrorist county called Israel.
Aipamena
Glenn Diesen@Glenn_Diesen
ots. 22
In an act of war, the US has placed a blockade on Cuba. The US is strangling and “pushing the nation toward a humanitarian crisis” as no oil can enter it. Where is the outrage from governments and journalists who otherwise preach about international law and human rights?
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Not enough people are talking about the fact that Israel likely tested a nuclear weapon last month in Dimona and that most of humanity is within range of its Jericho III nuclear missiles
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Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025699501223121175
Aipamena
Steve Witkoff claims that Iran is one week away from having industrial-grade bomb-making material for a nuclear weapon.
Last year, the Trump Administration said Iran’s nuclear facilities have been completely obliterated—and suggestions otherwise are fake news.
The US is a country of habitual lying, and the lies change constantly, even 180 degrees, to support their next campaign to destroy another nation.
Truth doesn’t matter, integrity doesn’t matter. Only military-industrial complex profits and disaster capitalism matters. These are the values of the country that is trying to ‘civilise’ nations thousands of years older than it.
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/2025556357110276589
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The Flamingo Effect
Ukraine has struck the Votkinsk Machine Building Plant using a Flamingo cruise missile. The ramifications of this event could reverberate globally.
Feb 23, 2026
The launch of a Flamingo cruise missile by Ukraine
On the night of February 20-21, 2026, Ukraine launched an intermediate-range missile at the Votkinsk Machine Building Plant, a strategic defense industrial facility located in the Republic of Udmurtia, some 1,300 kilometers from the Russian-Ukrainian border. The missile, equipped with a 1,000-kilogram warhead, struck a building housing Workshop 19, which houses a critical electroplating and stamping workshop. It is here that Russian technicians carry out the metal stamping and forming processes related to the manufacture of missile body elements, as well as the galvanic processing of parts, including the application of protective and functional coatings and surface preparation for further assembly. Workshop 19 playes a critical role in the manufacture of some of Russia’s most strategically vital ballistic missiles. The Flamingo’s warhead blasted a 30-by-24-meterhole in the roof of the structure, setting its interior on fire. At least 11 workers were wounded in the attack.
It is not known the extent to which the attack on Workshop 19 has impacted Russia’s ability to produce strategically important missiles such as the Topol-M and Yars intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), the Bulava submarine-launched ballistic missile. The Iskander and Oreshnik missiles are manufactured at the Votkinsk plant, as well as research and development on follow-on strategic delivery systems like the Kedr ICBM.
What is known is that the Ukrainian’s have struck at the very heart of Russia’s strategic defense industry, delivering a blow which is not just politically damaging in terms of the image it creates regarding the status of Russia’s war with Ukraine, which is entering its 5th year, but also potentially crippling Russia’s ability to keep pace with any increase in strategic nuclear delivery systems now that the last remaining arms control treaty between the US and Russia—New START—has expired.
Russian President Putin meets with the Russian Security Council to discuss an draft agreement of strategic stability in Europe
Russia has long been alerted to this very possibility. Back in December 2021, Russia sent a clear signal to both the United States and NATO that it viewed the stationing of intermediate- or short-range missiles on the territory of Ukraine was a red line which, if crossed, presented an unacceptable threat to the security of Russia. In draft treaties addressed to both parties, Russia defined one of the bedrock conditions needed to be met for stability in Europe. Article 6 of the US treaty stated that “The Parties shall undertake not to deploy ground-launched intermediate-range and shorter-range missiles outside their national territories, as well as in the areas of their national territories, from which such weapons can attack targets in the national territory of the other Party.” Article 5 of the draft NATO treaty likewise stated that “The Parties shall not deploy land-based intermediate- and short-range missiles in areas allowing them to reach the territory of the other Parties.”
In the weeks prior to the Russian initiation of the Special Military Operation, the Russians went out of their way to communicate to the Biden administration the seriousness to which they attached this issue. Senior Biden administration officials acknowledge that Russian President Vladimir Putin had specifically accused the United States of seeking to place missiles inside Ukraine, something the Biden administration assured Russia it had no intention of doing. While the US declared that it was open to “discussing the future of certain missile systems in Europe, along the lines of the INF treaty, which Russia violated and the previous U.S. administration withdrew from,” little movement in that direction took place when US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov met for more than seven hours in Geneva, Switzerland on January 10, 2022. The two sides talked cross purposes, with Russia looking for a concrete response to its December draft treaties, and the US indicating there could be no agreement without additional consultation with allies, including Ukraine.
US Secretary of State Tony Blinken shakes hands with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, January 21, 2022
A follow-on meeting between US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held on January 21 produced no results, other than a pledge by the United States to provide a written response to the Russian draft treaties “soon.” On January 26, the US and NATO did just that, rejecting outright Russia’s conditions for European stability and security, including a rejection of Russia’s concerns about the stationing of intermediate- and short-range missiles on Ukrainian soil. A follow-on meeting between Sergei Ryabkov and US Assistant Secretary of State Rose Gottemoeller in Berlin on February 9 yielded no results.
Since the SMO began, Russia has made it clear that the provision of long-range strike capability to Ukraine by the US and NATO represented a serious threat to Russian national security. The use by Ukraine of British-made Storm Shadow missiles and their French analog, the SCALP, together with US-provided ATACMS missiles, were permitted by the providing nations only on the conditions that these weapons not be used to strike targets inside the boundaries of the Russian Federation as recognized in 1991. Russian threats about holding Germany accountable helped convince the German government not to provide the Taurus cruise missile to Ukraine (the Storm Shadow/SCALP missiles possess a range of 250 kilometers, while the ATACMS possesses a range of up to 300 kilometers; the Taurus, with a range of up to 500 kilometers, would have represented a major upgrade to Ukraine’s ability to strike targets inside Russia.)
In September 2024 the US and UK governments were actively considering authorizing Ukraine to use Storm Shadow and ATACMS missiles to strike targets inside Russia proper. Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that if Western countries authorize Ukraine’s use of long-range missiles in Russian territory, they will become directly involved in the war. “It will mean nothing less than the direct involvement of NATO countries, the United States and European countries in the war in Ukraine,” Putin said. “This will be their direct participation, and this, of course, will significantly change the very essence, the very nature of the conflict.” Based on such threats, Putin warned, Russia would be forced to take “appropriate actions.” Putin’s threats came at a time when Russia had issued a new nuclear doctrine which allowed Russia to use nuclear weapons in retaliation for the very kind of attacks the US and UK were considering.
Rear Admiral Thomas Buchanan addresses CSIS, November 2024
The danger of nuclear conflict was very high. In November, the head of plans for Strategic Command, Rear Admiral Thomas Buchanan, told a Washington, DC think-tank that the Biden administration was ready to fight and win a nuclear exchange with Russia, and in early December 2024 the CIA, responding to an announcement by the administration that it would greenlight the use by Ukraine of ATACMS missiles to strike targets inside Russia, briefed members of Congress that there was a greater than 50% chance there would be a nuclear war between Russia and the US before years end.
While President-elect Trump helped lower tensions by pledging that he would reverse the Biden administration’s decision once he came into office (something he did, in fact, do), his inability to follow through on his pledge to bring a rapid end to the Russian-Ukraine conflict led to increasing frustration and resentment toward Russia and its leadership, prompting President Trump to announce that he was considering providing Ukraine with the Tomahawk cruise missile—the very weapons system Russia had declared would never be permitted to be stationed on Ukrainian soil.
The threats to provide Ukraine with Tomahawk missiles were more of a negotiating ploy than real threat, however. The real threat came from elsewhere—a missile designed by the British using indigenous Ukrainian parts and manufacturing infrastructure known as the FP-5 Flamingo.
The Flamingo made its debut at the international defense industry exhibition IDEX-2025, which took place from February 17 to 21, 2025 in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, when the Emirati-British Milanion Defense Industry Group unveiled a prototype missile. Built around the Ivchenko AI-25 turbo-fan jet engine, which had been developed in the 1950s by the Ivchenko Design Bureau in the Soviet Union, and produced at the Motor Sich aircraft factory in Zaparozhia, the Flamingo was a derivative of the Soviet-era Tu-141and Tu-143 reconnaissance drones, which had been repurposed by Ukraine into ground-attack cruise missiles. The warhead appeared to be based upon Ukrainian gravity bombs. The goal behind the Milanion design was to provide Ukraine with an affordable indigenous long-range strike capability which bypassed the Russian restrictions on foreign weapons.
The Milanion-designed FP-5 Flamingo
This subterfuge, however, is shallow. Fire Point, the company which oversees the manufacture of the FP-5 Flamingo, is little more than a shell company overseen by a CEO, Iryna Terekh, who has zero education or experience which would lend itself to missile production. The task of coordinating Ukrainian defense manufacturing with foreign suppliers is well above her paygrade. The FP-5 Flamingo is exactly what it portends to be—a British-made weapon designed to get around the legalities, and consequences, of Russian red lines regarding the use of long-range missiles based in Ukraine against Russia targets.
Moreover, Russian military strikes have severely disrupted Ukraine’s ability to assemble the FP-5 on Ukrainian soil—the near complete destruction of the Motor Sich factory earlier this year stands as a harsh example. Fire Point has opened a Flamingo production facility in Denmark, near Skrydstrup Air Base and the town of Vojens in Southern Jutland, that will produce solid rocket propellant used to boost the FP-5 into flight during ground operations. The Danish defense minister, when asked whether establishing Ukrainian arms production in Denmark would make the country a target for Russian attacks, noted that Denmark was not at war and that an open Russian attack on Denmark would constitute an attack on a NATO country.
No mention was made about the role Denmark was playing in helping Ukraine produce a missile which has now been used to strike one of the most important strategic missile production facilities in Russia—the Votkinsk Machine Building Plant.
Sergei Karaganov (right) with Russian President Vladimir Putin (left)
Sergei Karaganov, the head of Russia’s Council for Foreign and Defense Policy, has been warning about the use of Ukraine as a dagger to wound Russia on behalf of the collective West, writing in mid-June 2023 that Russia needed to lower the threshold for use of nuclear weapons to break Western support for Ukraine. If the West did not back down, Karaganov stated, then “we will have to hit [with nuclear weapons] a group of targets in a number of countries,” adding that if Russia failed to do this, “not only may Russia perish, but most likely the whole of human civilization will end.”
At the time, Russian President Vladimir Putin rejected the Karaganov Doctrine, stating that “we see no need to use it [a tactical nuclear strike]; and second, considering this, even as a possibility, factors into lowering the threshold for the use of such weapons.”
Such “factors” included the use by Russia of the Oreshnik intermediate range ballistic missile twice against targets inside Ukraine—both times to send a signal to Ukraine and its supporters in the West about the dangers inherent in any escalation of the conflict.
But much has transpired since President Putin downplayed the rhetoric of Karaganov—the nuclear war scare of September-December 2024, and the US threat to provide Ukraine with Tomahawks stand out as examples.
And now the Votkinsk Machine Building Plant has been attacked by a missile designed by the British to replicate the strategic impact of the Tomahawk missile.
Votkinsk is the heart and soul of Russia’s strategic defense industry.
And now it has been attacked by a British-designed weapon using intelligence provided by the CIA.
This attack is as close to an act of war by both the United States and the United Kingdom as one can imagine.
Suddenly Karaganov’s June 2023 nuclear posturing doesn’t seem so far-fetched.
Russia is at a crossroads.
In the short term, Russia needs to find a solution to the Flamingo threat to Votkinsk and other strategic defense industries located in the Ural regions that are now under threat of attack (a solid rocket motor production facility in Perm, for example.) Given the role played by Europe in designing, funding, and manufacturing the Flamingo, a response limited to striking targets inside Ukraine would achieve no fundamental change.
Missiles would still be built, and these missiles would continue to be launched at strategic targets deep inside Russia.
If Europe is not deterred once and for all from delivering this kind of military assistance to Ukraine, then Russia will be at risk of dying a death by a thousand cuts.
But then there is the larger issue of what to do with Ukraine itself. Russia is currently engaged in a drawn out “peace” negotiation with Ukraine, overseen by the United States, which has now been exposed—thanks to the attack on Votkinsk—as little more than a cover for Ukraine to develop the military capacity to strike Russia’s strategic interior in an effort to pressure Russia into ending the conflict on terms less than those previously set forth by President Putin.
If the Russian-Ukrainian conflict ends on such terms, then Russia will have conceded the very thing it said was a red line back in December 2021—the deployment of NATO-affiliated intermediate-range missiles on the soil of Ukraine.
It will represent a strategic defeat for Russia in every sense of the term.
Kiril Dmitriev (left) with Steve Witkoff (right)
It is well past time for Russia to stop participating in such a self-defeating exercise. The United States is not a trustworthy negotiating partner in this regard—the attempted assassination of President Putin on December 29, 2025, by 91 Ukrainian drones guided to their target by CIA intelligence should underscore this reality. The continued use by President Trump of sanctions designed to cripple the Russian economy should be viewed not in the light of “business as usual”, but rather from the perspective of its current author, Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessant, who envisions such sanctions as “bringing Russia to its knees”, a literal overt act of surrender. And the 7-point economic plan being promulgated by Kiril Dmitriev at the behest of Steve Witkoff is nothing more than a re-working of the economic domination plans of the US employed in the 1990’s and attempted to foist on Russia during the regime change-disguised-as-reset policies promoted under the Obama administration.
The Trump administration is not looking for a mutually beneficial peace with Russia, but rather to achieve a strategic victory over Russia, just like the Biden administration before.
If this wasn’t clear before the Flamingo attack on Votkinsk, there is no excuse for it not being painfully so now.
Simply put, the Votkinsk attack underscores the reality that Ukraine as it is currently configured cannot be allowed to exist once the conflict is ended. As former Russian President Dmitri Medvedev has pointed out, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is a “green bug” that needs to be “swatted.”
The same holds for the totality of the existing Ukrainian government. There is no election that can cure the ills of Ukraine under the existing formula—General Valerii Zaluzhny, the United Kingdom’s favored candidate to replace Zelensky, is a Banderist, and Kirylo Budunov—America’s anointed replacement—is a terrorist with Russian blood on his hands.
If Ukraine survives intact, so, too, does the FP-5 Flamingo missile program, meaning Russia will never again go to sleep at night without the fear of a Ukrainian attack.
The FP-5 Flamingo must be eradicated in totality.
And to do that, Ukraine in its current configuration must likewise be eradicated.
This is the very definition of an existential issue for Russia.
One that demands an adequate response to Europe as well.
Anything less will be interpreted as nothing less than a Russian surrender.
(Given the deteriorating relations between the US and Russia, and the consequences of such as outlined in this article, there has never been a more important time than now for the kind of citizen diplomacy I have been engaged in as part of my “Waging Peace” Project. I am currently scheduled to travel to Russia, along with Garland Nixon, next month. This trip is made possible by the donations of readers such as yourself. I thank you in advance for your support—I promise to put it to good effect.)
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Ritter’s Rant 076: Consequences
(https://scottritter.substack.com/p/ritters-rant-076-consequences?utm_source=notes-share-action)
Feb 23, 2026
Ukraine, using a missile built by the British and directed by the Americans, just attacked one of the most important defense industrial facilities in Russia. There will be consequences.
Transkripzioa:
Hello and welcome to this episode of Ritter’s Rant. Today we’re going to talk about consequences. In particular, I’d like to talk about an attack that took place on the night of February 20th and 21st involving a Ukrainian Flamingo FP5 attack. cruise missile, which struck a workshop at the Vodkins machine building plant,
a strategic defense industrial facility about 1,300 kilometers away from the Ukrainian-Russian border in the Republic of Udmyrtya. You know, some people might just brush this attack off and say, well, it’s just part of a series of escalatory moves made by Ukraine. But this attack more than any other attack that Ukraine has carried out against Russia resonates deeply,
especially when it comes to the strategic goals and objectives of Russia when it comes to Ukrainian conflict. Let’s go back in time. In December of 2021, the Russian Federation, the Russian government provided two draft treaties, one to the United States, one to NATO. in which they outlined a methodology for considering a new European security framework,
the goal of which was to reduce tensions between Russia and NATO, Russia and the United States, and resolve the Ukraine crisis by acknowledging Ukraine’s neutral status. And each of these documents, though, was a was an article that many people just brushed over. I think in the U.S. Treaty, it was Article 6, and it said that
no parties will deploy intermediate-range or short-range missiles on the territory of other nations that threaten the security of other parties to the agreement. Article 5 in the NATO treaty said basically the same thing. Now, while the Russians didn’t spell it out in these treaties, their language was more all-encompassing.
It was clear in the United States what the Russians meant because the Russians articulated it. Russia did not want NATO missiles deployed on the soil of Ukraine. Russia was concerned not only about NATO becoming a or Ukraine becoming a NATO member, but to have NATO long range strike capability deployed on the soil of Ukraine would
create horrible strategic problems for Russia because Ukraine sits like a mailed fist in the stomach of the Russian Federation. And This would just bring, you know, NATO strike capability that much closer to strategic targets of vital importance to Russia, including defense industrial facilities like Vodkinsk. The Russians were just operating in the blind here. You see, in 2019,
August 2019, the United States withdrew from the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty. Now, we cited a a fraudulent case of Russian non-compliance. I think I’ve spoken about this before, the case of the 9M729 cruise missile. Russia was willing to allow the missile to be inspected and undertake further
evaluations in order to assure the United States that the missile did not violate the treaty. But as a senior American arms control official said, the United States didn’t want to go through that process because they were convinced the Russians would probably demonstrate that the missile was not in violation. And that’s not the answer the United States wanted.
The United States wanted out of the INF Treaty. For what reason? Well, we have other indications of exactly what they wanted out of this. You see, the United States had been pushing to deploy what’s known as the Mark 41 Aegis Assure system. It’s basically a ground-based or land-based variant of
a missile launch system that’s loaded or that arms the Aegis-class destroyers and cruisers and frigates that the United States has out there. Ostensibly for anti-air, anti-missile defense, the launcher also is used to launch the Tomahawk, cruise missile, a strategic system. The ground launch version was banned under the INF Treaty,
but the United States was desperate to get the Tomahawk back into play. The Russians said, look, this Mark 41, even though the United States claims that the installations in Poland and Romania were only for surface-to-air or anti-missile applications. They said it can be used to launch the Tomahawk.
And the United States assured Russia that, no, that’s not the case. We clipped certain wires and things aren’t happening. Less than a week after the United States withdrew from the INF Treaty, the United States tested a Tomahawk missile from an Aegis uh capable mark 41 ground launching system proof positive the united states all
along intended to deploy the tomahawk from this capability the only thing that stood in their way was the treaty um and so russia had a reason to believe that the united states wasn’t acting in good faith that nato wasn’t acting in good faith and that the uh effort to bring ukraine into nato would just represent another
opportunity for the united states to deploy forward strategic missile launch capabilities that threatened Russia’s vital national security interests. So these treaties weren’t out of the blue, but the United States dismissed them. There were several meetings in early January, late January and early February where Russia tried to get the United States to
agree to sit down and take these Russian concerns seriously, but the United States did not. And Russia responded by implementing the special military operation. Now, what does this have to do with missiles? Well, as the special military operation progressed The United States and its NATO allies began providing Ukraine with long range strike capability.
The British provided the Storm Shadow air launch cruise missile. The British provided or the French provided the Scalp, which is analogous to the Storm Shadow. These have ranges of 250 kilometers. The United States provided the Atakums missile, which has 300 kilometer range. Now, initially, all three of these weapons systems were bound by an understanding that Ukraine
could only use them against Crimea or territories that Russia had absorbed since 2022. Basically, Ukraine was banned from using these weapons inside the 1991 borders of Russia. Russian sensitivities on this were even furthered when Germany threatened to sell the Taurus missile, which has a 500-kilometer range capability, which would allow Ukraine to strike targets in Moscow.
And Russia basically said that if this Taurus missile is deployed, then Germany becomes a party to the conflict and will be held accountable as such. warnings resonated and the Germans did not deploy the missile. In September of 2024, this issue came to a crisis when the United States and Great Britain, frustrated by
know russia’s unwillingness to end the conflict on terms acceptable to the west meaning in effect a russian surrender made a decision to allow ukraine to use the storm shadow and attack his missiles to strike targets inside russia this led to the the crisis of the fall of 2024 the best way to describe the danger of this
crisis was a briefing given by the CIA to the United States Congress in late November, early December of 2024, in which they said that a Russian response to any US-British authorization to greenlight the use of their weapons systems to strike targets inside Russia could very well be nuclear,
and that there was a better than 50% chance that there would be a nuclear war between Russia and the United States before year’s end. Adding to this is statements made by Rear Admiral Thomas Buchanan, the director of plans of the Strategic Command, the command responsible for nuclear war fighting, made to CSIS, a Washington, D.C.
bank think tank based think tank, in which he said that the Biden administration is ready to fight and win a nuclear war with Russia. I mean, this is this is the danger of these weapons systems. Fortunately, Donald Trump, who was then president elect Trump, made a public statement in December that said once he was inaugurated,
he would bring an end to the Biden administration’s green light. And this was enough to mollify the Russians. But since that time, Donald Trump who promised to bring a rapid end to this war, uh, said he’s frustrated with Russia’s unwillingness to surrender, basically to exceed to his demands on the terms on how this war ends. And, um,
And he threatened to allow the United States to supply Ukraine with Tomahawk cruise missiles. This means that the basic Russian fear that existed back in 2021, that the United States and NATO would seek to deploy long range strike capabilities on Ukrainian soil were coming true. And Russia made it clear that this would drastically change the strategic
relationship between the United States and Russia. Now, the United States didn’t send tomahawks, but what did happen is that the British and NATO began working with Ukraine to develop an indigenously conceived and produced long-range strike cruise missile called the FP, short for Firepoint, the Ukrainian company responsible for overseeing this development of this missile, the FP5 or Flamingo.
Now, this is a British design. We know this because the company, Melanion, is an Abu Dhabi-based group actually headquartered in the United Kingdom. And in February of 2025, they put on display a prototype of the FP-5 Flamingo. And they made it clear that it was a Ukrainian weapon system. But it was designed by the British,
built by the British for the Ukrainians to have a work around the Russian red line of no Western-supplied long-range strike munitions. Now, the FP5 is not necessarily the most modern of weapon systems. It makes use of a turbofan, a jet engine that was produced widely in the Soviet Union in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s,
produced actually in Zaporizhia at the Motor Sich aviation plant. And it makes use of, you know, Ukrainian conventional bombs, a pair of 500 kilogram bombs given a 1000 kilogram payload. It uses German provided navigation, satellite navigation, GPS navigation. It’s not sophisticated, but it has long range.
And when fired is capable of striking targets deep inside Russia, as was the case with Vodtinsk. which was hit. Workshop 19 was struck. This is a workshop that does metal forming, bending metal into shapes that are needed to use for missile assembly. They also do galvanizing treatment,
special coats of treatment to this metal so that they can meet the performance characteristics of these missiles. Now, the missiles we’re talking about are strategic in nature. We’re talking about, you know, the Topol-M, which is the SS-27, a road mobile and silo-based intercontinental ballistic missile. We’re talking about the Yars, which is a follow-on to the Topol-M,
talking about the Yars-M, a follow-on to the Yars. We’re talking about the Bulova, which is one of Russia’s top submarine-launched ballistic missiles. We’re talking about future follow-on systems like the Cedar. We’re also talking about the Iskander missile, which plays an important role in the ongoing conflict with Ukraine. and the Ereshnik. The Ereshnik missile is built in Vodkinsk.
By striking Vodkinsk, the Ukrainians put at risk one of the most critically important and sensitive defense industry facilities in Russia. There is no facility like this. It is not replicated anywhere. And these missile systems that I spoke of are the heart and soul of Russia’s strategic deterrence system.
These are the very things that Russia wanted to protect by denying nato access to ukrainian soil to deploy long-range strike capability and now because of the british the germans and even the danish because the danes have opened up a flamingo factory that produces the solid rocket fuel that’s used to
boost the flamingo into space they have basically given ukraine the very weapon that russia said ukraine can’t have So now we have a quandary because, first of all, Russia’s at risk. This is a strategic threat to Russia and how Russia responds means everything. The other thing is that the negotiation process that’s currently underway can no
longer be viewed as valid or trustworthy by Russia. It appears that the United States was fully knowledgeable of this flamingo workaround and was leading the Russians on while Ukraine deployed this. Now the United States is hopeful that Russia will come to the negotiating table and
and allow a Ukrainian government led by a Zelensky type leader to continue to rule Ukraine. This means that Ukraine will continue to be aligned with the West, a Ukraine that possesses long range strategic strike capability. This is unacceptable to Russia. So these negotiations are going nowhere.
And maybe it’s time for Russia to call it a day on these negotiations. But two, The Ukrainian government as it exists cannot be allowed to survive. This is a strategic threat to Russia of an existential nature. You know, Dmitry Medvedev has spoken about the need to swat the green bug.
That’s the derogatory term he uses for Volodymyr Zelensky. Maybe it’s time that the green bug be swatted, not just in terms of the one leader, but then their totality. I mean, the United States is promoting elections this summer in which the British are proposing that General Zaluzhny become the next president. He’s a Banderist.
He literally posed with a photograph of Stepan Bander behind him while he awarded a medal to an Azov member. Or Budanov, the head of the Ukrainian intelligence service, currently serving as presidential advisor to Zelensky, who is a man who’s committed horrific terrorist acts against Russia.
Neither of these men can possibly serve as the leader of Ukraine going forward in a post-conflict environment. And then the question comes of Ukraine itself. what form this nation will take. I think it’s time that Russia dictate an outcome that is very severe and recognize the need to achieve this outcome because anything less than this
be tantamount to surrender anything that allows ukraine to continue to exist in a state where flamingo missiles can be built and deployed on ukrainian soil with a known track record of striking targets that can only be struck if given the intelligence by the united states or other nato nations this will be a permanent
threat to russia it creates an environment where Not only will Russia never know peace, but it’s a guarantee that it will know war in the future, a war where Ukraine will be backed by a revitalized Europe. No, Russia needs to drive the last nail in the coffin of Ukraine, of Zelensky,
and of the American NATO dream of staging long-range strike missiles on Ukrainian soil. What was a theory in December of 2021 has become reality, and unless Russia responds accordingly, Things will not go well. Anyways, that’s been my rant. And next time a thought crosses my mind, I’ll be sure to let you know.
oooooo
Geure herriari, Euskal Herriari dagokionez, hona hemen gure apustu bakarra:
We Basques do need a real Basque independent State in the Western Pyrenees, just a democratic lay or secular state, with all the formal characteristics of any independent State: Central Bank, Treasury,
proper currency1, out of the European Distopia and faraway from NATO, being a BRICS partner…
Euskal Herriaren independentzia eta Mikel Torka
eta
Esadazu arren, zer da gu euskaldunok egiten ari garena eta zer egingo dugun
gehi
MTM: Zipriztinak (2), 2025: Warren Mosler
(Pinturak: Mikel Torka)
Gehigarriak:
MTM klase borrokarik gabe, kontabilitate hutsa
Anthony Anastosi: Estatu dirua, Klase borroka
1 This way, our new Basque government will have infinite money to deal with. (Gogoratzekoa: Moneta jaulkitzaileko kasu guztietan, Gobernuak infinitu diru dauka.)












