Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Nuclear expert: IAEA is supporting Russia

From UNIAN:

""The IAEA's right-hand man is a co-organizer of the Zaporizhzhya NPP occupation! There can be no talk of its operation under Russian control," says nuclear expert Vande Putte. 

17.10.2025

Leading nuclear safety expert Jan Vande Putte spoke to UNIAN about the main risks at the Zaporizhzhya NPP, the hidden danger created by the occupiers at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, the real reason behind the IAEA's hypocrisy, and what else Western partners should do to protect the world from Russia. 

Ukrainian nuclear power plants are under constant threat due to the reckless and irresponsible actions of the Russians. This applies not only to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, which lost power from the grid on September 23 and switched to diesel generators because the occupiers want to reconnect it to their power grid, nor to the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, where the Russians continue to create dangerous situations threatening radiation leaks. This also applies to all operating nuclear power plants in Ukraine, which the aggressor periodically threatens to attack. Meanwhile, the weak response of international partners, who continue to cooperate with Russia's Rosatom, and especially the inaction of the IAEA, which almost directly supports the Kremlin, legitimizing its disinformation, gives the occupier free rein.

Jan Vande Putte, a leading radiation safety expert and nuclear energy expert at Greenpeace Ukraine who has extensively researched the situation in Ukraine, laid out all the risks and dangers posed by the occupiers at domestic nuclear power plants in a comprehensive, exclusive interview with UNIAN. The Belgian researcher discussed the current state of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP), the potential and conditions under which a serious nuclear disaster could occur there, how the occupiers damaged the new confinement at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant (Chernobyl), and why this problem is much more serious than it might initially appear, what would happen if Russia dared to attack key substations at Ukrainian NPPs, and how the international community continues to support the Kremlin. Furthermore, the expert shared his vision for how Ukraine's energy sector should be restored to ensure that our country becomes a powerful energy hub for all of Europe.

His experience and expertise are especially valuable, as Jan Vande Putte has been with Greenpeace for nearly 30 years and leads the radiation protection group in various parts of the world. He worked at Fukushima in the first days after the 2011 disaster and carried out radiation monitoring in India. He visited Chernobyl in July 2022, witnessed the consequences of the Russian occupation firsthand, and continues to study them. He also researches the Russian occupation of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant...   

- In Ukraine, you're specifically investigating the situation at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. How would you describe its current state? Especially considering that the plant lost power from the grid on September 23. 

Russia attacked and occupied the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant on March 3-4, 2022. Since then, the plant has been in a state of disarray. Many qualified employees have left. There's a shortage of staff. They've hired new employees who don't have the necessary qualifications. Therefore, the Zaporizhzhia NPP is experiencing a general maintenance crisis and staff incompetence. The situation is unstable. This is very important. 

Since September 2022, all reactors have been shut down – the fuel in the reactor core has begun to decay, producing less heat. This is an important part of the story, because a single operating reactor produces a huge amount of energy – approximately 3,000 megawatts of thermal power. That's equivalent to 3 million electric kettles! 

 If you lose all cooling at this point, then within hours all the water will evaporate, the fuel will be exposed, and will begin to melt. Then a major nuclear accident could occur. That's why nuclear power plants have many backup systems. 

If there's no grid power, what we call a loss of external power (which is what's currently happening in Zaporizhzhia), diesel generators are activated to keep the cooling pumps and everything else running. But in the case of the Zaporizhzhia NPP, this is under a much more stable condition, after three years of fuel cooling. While at an operating nuclear power plant we're talking about hours before a fuel meltdown, in the current situation it's anywhere from two weeks to well over a month.

I'm giving such a broad range because there are six reactors at Zaporizhzhya NPP, and each reactor building contains two major sources of radioactivity: the core and the pool containing old spent fuel that has already been removed from the reactor. Therefore, each of them has slightly different characteristics. There's no specific figure. But it's at least two weeks.

In this sense, we can still classify this situation as serious. But it's not urgent. And, of course, the technical problem is, in a sense, a trap. Most importantly, it's essentially a political issue.

- Is there anything international organizations, particularly the IAEA, can do in this situation to influence the aggressor? Because we understand that the Russians are using the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant as a tool for nuclear blackmail against the entire world. 

Exactly. This is the entire political context. Looking at the situation only from a technical perspective, you can completely miss the point. The loss of power was not caused by shelling from Ukraine, as Russia claims. We can prove that this is all disinformation and sabotage.    

There's probably some damage (to the power line that fed the station - UNIAN), but it's limited. This means Russia can repair this line in a matter of hours, perhaps a day, perhaps two days at most. It's almost as if they have a switch. If they want to restart the system, if there's a real crisis, if all those diesel generators are no longer working, then they can still repair everything very quickly. Even that's not a problem.

They say we can't go there because Ukraine is shelling the area. And we can prove that's not true. But the IAEA is acting so surreal that it seems reality no longer matters. We prove everything with satellite images—they're not faked, they can be verified. And yet the IAEA still talks about a problem from both sides.  

Therefore, the IAEA's problem isn't just that they're supporting Russian disinformation, but that they're also jeopardizing the situation by supporting Russia in keeping this nuclear power plant without external power. Why won't the IAEA tell the Russians to repair the line?

- And indeed, why? What do you think is the real motive behind their position? 

Because they're biased. The first thing we did as Greenpeace after the full-scale invasion was write a letter to Mr. Grossi, saying: "Your deputy, the IAEA's right-hand man, is Mr. Chudakov. He's a former Rosatom employee and a co-organizer of the occupation of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. So, your organization is headed by a Russian agent. Please remove him from office." That's how our discussion about the IAEA began.  

Our assessment is based on two things. First, Russia is the world's most important exporter of nuclear technology. And the IAEA's formal function is to promote nuclear energy globally. So the connection is obvious. But more fundamentally, Mr. Grossi has ambitions to become the next Secretary-General of the United Nations. And to do so, he needs Russia's support. And Putin has backed him, which is a definite conflict of interest. 

- As you've already said, many politicians are involved in this issue.

Exactly. But what's important for Ukraine, and what matters to us as the environmental organization Greenpeace, is that because of this policy, the IAEA is essentially supporting Russia, supporting this risk. This is 100% contrary to their mandate. And this must be stopped. 

- Speaking about the current blackout at the Zaporizhzhya NPP, some Ukrainian experts compared the situation to what happened at Fukushima. As someone who personally investigated the nuclear disaster in Japan, how do you feel about such comparisons? 

I've already explained the difference between an operating nuclear reactor producing enormous amounts of heat and one that has been shut down for three years. Of course, it's a huge difference, and it's sparked a lot of discussion, as we've seen. The fact that the reactors and fuel have cooled for a long period of time doesn't mean a serious nuclear accident is technically impossible today. However, it seems like a process unfolding in slow motion. Of course, there are many things a nuclear power plant operator could do under normal circumstances to prevent this, but there's no normal operator there. This is a rogue operator. And we don't know what Russia's intentions are. 

This could still be a significant difference from Fukushima, as there were short-lived isotopes there, such as iodine-131, which causes problems for the thyroid gland. This was well known in Ukraine after Chernobyl in 1986. So, there's practically no iodine left there (behind the Zaporizhzhia NPP, - UNIAN). This is a fundamental difference.

In the worst-case scenario, if the Russians do something to the station, a large amount of radiation could still be released in a different form of contamination. But then again, we're still weeks or months away from that.

- We understand that until the Zaporizhzhya NPP is returned to Ukrainian control, it will still not be safe. This is especially true given the occupiers' desire to re-energize and restart the plant from their power grid, while Russian engineers are unaware of how to handle this type of reactor and equipment. What scenarios do you envisage for returning the plant to Ukraine? 

This is certainly a long-term discussion. In fact, Greenpeace published a report on March 2, 2022, just one or two days before the attack on the occupied territory, which envisaged this scenario. After that, we declared that Russia must leave the nuclear power plant without any alternatives, that Ukraine's legitimate nuclear safety authority, the State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate, must regain control of the Zaporizhzhya NPP, and that Ukrainian workers familiar with the facility must return to their positions.   

This isn't enough. It may sound radical, but Ukraine's victory is the only factor that can restore this reactor to a state where it can be operated by Ukraine. It's not that we're supporters of nuclear energy. Greenpeace is critical of it. But now we find ourselves in a situation where we must say: no resuming operation of a nuclear reactor under Russian control! This is priority number one. Russia must leave Ukraine. Ukraine's power grid as a whole must become stable again. This is also important for other operating nuclear power plants in Ukraine: in Rivne, Khmelnytskyi, and Yuzhnoukrainsk.

- Turning to Ukraine's existing nuclear power plants, what threats exist for them? 

Despite Greenpeace's critical stance toward nuclear energy, Ukraine is now heavily dependent on it, due to the destruction of many other energy facilities: hydroelectric power plants, coal-fired power plants, and gas-fired power plants. Therefore, Ukraine has become increasingly dependent on these three nuclear power plants. But this in itself is a huge problem, as the energy sector must be considered as a unified system.  

If one of these nuclear power plants were to lose power, a shock wave would ripple through the grid, potentially destabilizing the power grid enough to trigger a true blackout. What we call a technical blackout isn't what happened in Ukraine. A true blackout is what we recently saw in Spain. It's an uncontrollable situation that halts all electricity production and complicates grid restoration, which can take a very long time. Therefore, their high reliance on these three nuclear power plants also makes them highly vulnerable. If one of them is shut down due to a military attack on a key substation in the power grid, it could, say, trigger a chain reaction and cause a massive power outage in Ukraine. Then, the existing nuclear power plants would become dependent on diesel generators, but with extremely hot reactor cores. We would then find ourselves in a truly dangerous situation, very different from what we have today at the Zaporizhzhia NPP. This is a real problem. 

- And what could be the consequences in this case? 

Of course, other nuclear power plants also have diesel generators with backup power and fuel storage. We know that Ukrenergo is a hero, doing incredible things we never thought possible. But if the power outage continues for a long time (we hope it won't), the most important thing will be a speedy restoration. The problem is that you can't restore the grid to restart it. 

Restarting the grid requires energy. If a nuclear power plant can't do this, a hydroelectric power plant, a coal-fired power plant, or a gas-fired power plant is needed. And since many of these have been destroyed, this too becomes a problem. This is where the risk of a systemic power outage in Ukraine lies. And we must avoid this at all costs. This is why we, at Greenpeace, are pressing the international community so hard to force Russia to stop its attacks on critical infrastructure, on seven critical substations in Ukraine.

- What are you doing, as Greenpeace, to prevent such scenarios and put pressure on Russia? What do you expect from the international community, what actions are you organizing, and what else can be done to increase leverage over the aggressor? 

Directly, it doesn't matter what we say. But there are other ways to exert pressure. You see, Russia is the world's leading exporter of nuclear technology. Their image in the world, especially in the Global South, is very strong. If they screw up here, and it is perceived as their responsibility, it will be catastrophic for Rosatom's business worldwide.  

It's not even about money here. It's about political influence. They tie governments down and make them dependent, even if it costs them money. They buy them politically. For Russia, this is strategically important. And they are very sensitive to the possibility of being perceived as responsible for creating a nuclear catastrophe. That's where we have leverage.

We're talking about every Russian false-flag operation, like the recent attack on a 750-kilovolt power line near Zaporizhzhia (which resulted in the Zaporizhzhia NPP losing power, - UNIAN). This needs to be exposed. Exposing disinformation is crucial because we need to ensure Russia doesn't escape accountability for its lies. This is one way we're working to do that.

The next step is pressure on Mr. Grossi and the IAEA because of their shared interests. The IAEA also doesn't want to create an overly dangerous situation. They've been cooperating with Russia for a long time. For far too long. But the IAEA still doesn't want a nuclear catastrophe in Ukraine. That's probably why the IAEA began pressuring Russia when the power grid situation became truly dangerous for Ukraine's nuclear safety in October-November last year.

Therefore, we can pursue at least two strategies. We must invite other partners, other governments, to expose Russia's lies. It is important that this information be widely disseminated and acknowledged.

- There's another Ukrainian nuclear power plant, infamous worldwide, whose territory is frequently shelled by the Russians, and some damage is even known. It also recently experienced a brief power outage. We're talking, of course, about the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. How would you rate the safety of this plant today? 

On February 14th of this year, there was no accident, but a deliberate attack on the New Safe Confinement (NSC) – a special protective structure called "Shelter" at the old No. 4 reactor, where a nuclear disaster occurred in 1986. And then, in February, Russia launched a deliberate, highly targeted attack on the NSC. Perhaps no one planned for the consequences, but they are far-reaching. And in fact, even today, there is no real solution to this problem.     

The drone, carrying perhaps 50-90 kilograms of explosives, didn't cause a huge explosion, but it was enough to create a fifty-meter-wide hole. And that's already pretty bad, because it began smoldering throughout the entire structure, primarily in the northern part. And so the entire function of the new confinement was disrupted. 

How can this be restored? It's very difficult, because this entire gleaming protective structure, this New Safe Confinement, was built not on top of the shelter, but away from it. And then it was moved into place on enormous rails. Due to high radiation levels, workers couldn't work there for very long. This is a serious problem. 

How can we solve it? The first idea that came to mind was this: we should try to return the entire structure to its original location, repair it, and then reinstall it on top. Right now, it seems like this would be very difficult, if not impossible. 

 Therefore, we currently have no solution to this problem unless we can, for example, expedite the dismantling of the protective structure inside the New Safe Confinement (the old, so-called Sarcophagus, - UNIAN). This dismantling is extremely important. It's a highly radioactive structure—the old "Sarcophagus"—that needs to be dismantled. It can't remain there forever—it's unstable. This can only be done if there's a sealed enclosure around it that prevents the radioactive dust generated during operation from spreading too far. And right now, all of that is under threat. And that's a serious problem. 

- If the confinement's integrity is breached, does this mean the situation could pose a danger to people living relatively close to these areas? 

Probably not, because that's precisely what the Exclusion Zone exists for. There's debate about whether such a large Exclusion Zone should be maintained, as some parts of it are not heavily contaminated. But the Exclusion Zone's function is also to ensure that, should radiation arise from these operations, the radioactive dust released does not pose a real danger to the population. Therefore, it's likely that this risk to the population is not real. 

This could pose a certain risk to workers if the new safe isolation doesn't work. Of course, there's already background contamination in the area. It's not like you're working on a clean slate. It's a contaminated area. But clearly, the purpose of this new safe isolation is to keep the entire area stable so that workers who come there every day have a safe space to work. This is crucial.

- The New Safe Confinement was a large-scale, lengthy, and very expensive project. Are there even rough estimates of how much its restoration might cost Ukraine, our partners, and donors? 

Right now, this is just speculation. Perhaps, for example, the EBRD is conducting research and already has a more precise idea. The final cost will depend on the chosen scenario. But we're potentially talking about a huge bill. This is just a guess, but it's likely hundreds of millions of euros for just one cheap Shahed drone. We'll send this bill to Russia. I'm from Belgium. And Euroclear in Brussels has about 190 billion euros in Russian assets. I go through there in Brussels almost every day. Yeah, let's get the money. [Laughs]  

- You also studied the aftermath of the Russian occupation of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on the ground. What did you see there when you returned after the occupation? What did they do to the environment and the plant itself? 

The Ukrainian authorities invited us to document the war crimes and environmental crimes committed in February and March 2022 during the Russian occupation, in a completely irresponsible manner. And, of course, at the time, a lot of attention was paid to the few trenches the Russians had dug: "Oh no, those poor Russians, they'll come back and get sick" [laughs]. But that wasn't the point. Of course, we went there, and we documented that even those trenches weren't actually heavily contaminated. 

- So they didn't dig in in the Red Forest? 

Yes. But the main problem we noticed back then was the widespread use of anti-personnel mines. And that's a huge problem. It still hasn't been solved. 

Here's just one example. Forest fires occur from time to time, some of them in heavily contaminated areas. And they can release radiation. It's crucial that firefighters go out there and extinguish the fires. They can't be allowed to spread and get out of control. But, of course, this is extremely dangerous for firefighters today. Every step you take effectively puts your life at risk, and you can't clear this vast area of ​​mines. Therefore, this fact has enormous long-term consequences for the management of the entire Exclusion Zone. 

There were also thefts—for example, of laboratory equipment from the Ecocenter, sources for calibrating machines... Why did they steal small parts that had no real economic value but to a certain extent impacted the operation of the Ecocenter laboratory? It's unclear. 

- There's another potentially dangerous place in Ukraine. Enriched uranium is still stored at the Kharkiv Institute of Physics and Technology. And the city is constantly being shelled by the Russians. What risks does this situation pose? 

The radiation levels there are much lower than in a nuclear power plant reactor. The two are incomparable. But it could still lead to some contamination, at least locally. The location and GPS coordinates of this nuclear center are very well known. Therefore, any explosion in this area would be completely irresponsible. In my opinion, this demonstrates Russia's carelessness and irresponsibility in handling anything related to nuclear energy.

- The main leitmotif of our entire interview is the question of how to stop Russia. 

My short answer to this is that there are ways. We are not helpless. Ukraine is not helpless. The world is not helpless. I think the main problem is that the international community doesn't support Ukraine clearly enough. Since the beginning of the full-scale invasion, Ukraine has lacked material support. It also lacks political support, especially on the nuclear issue. We have good general statements from all the major political leaders in Europe. But they lack the courage to condemn Russia for its false flag operations, and they lack the pressure on the IAEA to stop supporting Russia. 

And, of course, we know why this is happening. For example, France has many joint business projects with Rosatom, and it's deeply sad that there's no clear, 100% clear support for Ukraine. And this is precisely where we must exert greater pressure. 

Greenpeace is also campaigning against LNG imports in Belgium, holding non-violent protests. For example, last week we were in Bruges, where Russian liquefied natural gas from Yamal is imported to Europe. We blocked the port for several days to prevent Russian gas from entering the EU gas grid. We truly must stop this. Not in 2027, but now. 

And as for nuclear energy, it's even worse. This long-term cooperation between EU countries, France, and even Germany with Rosatom is very cynical. 

Many countries are truly dependent on Russian nuclear fuel and technology. Do you see any prospects for our partners finally breaking this dependency and finding alternatives? 
 
I think something has truly changed profoundly. It's sad to say, but for a change in thinking to occur, we need drones flying into Poland and around EU airports. Political leaders are thinking about this differently now. This is important. Therefore, I am confident that there is momentum now to push harder on nuclear sanctions, as well as on gas sanctions, to move much faster. That's the first point.
 
But, of course, Europe must also avoid further investing in dependency, as in Hungary, which is now inviting Russian workers to build the Paks II nuclear power plant. The European Commission approves of this. And Germany will likely grant Siemens a license to participate in this project. If there is political momentum now, we must sever these ties and ensure that Hungary is not even more entangled in the Kremlin's political orbit than it is today..."

 

How to ensure that children of Gaza are not indoctrinated to hate

From the Obozrevatel:

"What to do with the children of Gaza? They are taught to hate Jews from preschool

Dmytro Chernyshev, 17.10.2025 

Let's talk about a serious topic—the children of Gaza. What should we do with them? This is especially important now, when all the defenders of this oppressed people will quickly forget about the children. It's so easy to attend demonstrations with photos of a destroyed Gaza and talk about children's tears. And yet, there's so little desire to truly address this serious issue.

What is the situation with children in Gaza today? Muslim children are taught hatred from kindergarten onward. At school parties, children act out scenes from the knife intifada, attacking Jews. The most popular children's toys are guns and grenades, and the coolest clothing is camouflage. School textbooks glorify martyrs. In class, children are given problems like, "If one shahid killed five Jews, and another one only three…" Ritual costumed executions of Israeli soldiers are popular at graduation ceremonies. During school holidays, there is military training and paramilitary camps. 

On TV, a program called "Pioneers of Tomorrow" featured a mouse named Farfour (similar to Mickey Mouse) calling for the murder of Jews. Then, the television showed Farfour's death at the hands of an actor posing as an "Israeli agent" who beat him to death. "Farfour died a martyr's death defending his land. Child killers destroyed him." 

There's no zone free from hatred and war. Family, kindergarten, school, streets, propaganda—everything is saturated with death—this height, this width. Friends teach, "You're a coward if you're not ready to die for Allah." Posters of suicide bombers hang on every corner. The families of terrorists receive cash payments. Multiply this by the "most peaceful religion" with its cult of death. 

The most important question arises: what to do? 

1. Replace all the teachers? Where will you get them? From Gaza? It's poisoned with hatred for generations to come. Bring them from Turkey or Saudi Arabia? And what will you do with the street? And with the family? And with kind Grandma Fatima, who will tell you how to slit the throats of Jews with a knife? And with the mullahs in the mosque? A child spends six hours in school and 18 hours out.

2. Get them out of this viper's nest? 

We've already tried. In 1992, Denmark accepted 321 Palestinian refugees. By 2019, 64% of them had been convicted of crimes, and 34% of their children also had criminal records. And this is despite the fact that getting a prison sentence in Denmark is extremely difficult. Sweden's experience absorbing poor Palestinians has also been extremely unsuccessful. I won't even mention Jordan, Kuwait, and Lebanon.  

3. Adopt some kind of "Trump Plan" to create jobs in Gaza? 

The idea is certainly good—if you give people jobs and prospects, they'll renounce violence. But experience shows it won't work. Ideology is stronger than economics. The terrorists who hijacked the planes on September 11, 2001, were educated engineers from wealthy families. 

The situation is complicated by the fact that, unlike Germany or Japan, where there was unconditional surrender and occupation, where the ideology of racial superiority was completely discredited, and where the victorious powers had complete control over education, media, and justice, this did not happen in Gaza. There were no war crimes trials. Religious ideology was not condemned. 

You yourself, at rallies, demanded the withdrawal of the "Israeli occupiers" from sacred Palestinian land. As a result, Hamas declares victory and returns to power. You yourself instilled in them the idea that they are not criminals, but victims—my mitochondrial fools from Prague and Venice. And if the people of Gaza are victims, then nothing needs to change. That means everyone owes them everything, and they will continue their holy war.

P.S. A natural question after reading this text is: what do you suggest? 

I'll write what I think should be done, but first I'd like to hear from you.

White House rebuts legitimate question with juvenile insults

From Yahoo!News:

""Your Mom Did": Karoline Leavitt Had An Incredibly Sophomoric Response To A Very Simple Question About Trump

S.V. Date
After President Donald Trump touted yet another meeting with his benefactor/murderous dictator Vladimir Putin Thursday, this time in Budapest, HuffPost contacted his top spokespeople at the White House with an obvious question: Why Budapest?
 
After all, the Hungarian capital was the site of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, in which Ukraine gave up the thousands of nuclear weapons it had inherited upon the breakup of the Soviet Union in return for assurances that Russia [and the USA and UK - M. M.] would respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity. 
 
Putin broke that promise with his 2014 invasion and annexation of Crimea, with his decade-long military offensive in the Donbas region, and then with his all-out invasion in 2022. He continues killing Ukrainian civilians in their homes to this day with regular drone and missile attacks. 
 
Given all that, HuffPost asked the White House: Who picked Budapest? 
 
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt responded minutes later with: “Your mom did.” 
 
White House Communications Director Steven Cheung after a minute added the far more succinct: “Your mom.”
 
After HuffPost asked Leavitt if she thought her response was funny, she replied: 
 
“It’s funny to me that you actually consider yourself a journal [sic]. You are a far left hack who nobody takes seriously, including your colleagues in the media, they just don’t tell you that to your face. Stop texting me your disingenuous, biased, and bullshit questions.” 
 
HuffPost is devastated, and is fearful of asking any more questions, let alone escalating with “I’m rubber, you’re glue,” or some such.
 
This article originally appeared on HuffPost."
 
***
 
On the same topic, from a report in the Daily Beast / Yahoo!News:
 
"White House Fires Off Childish Insults Over Trump’s Putin Summit
 
Tom Sanders
When asked whether the president is aware of the significance of Budapest in terms of Russia-Ukraine relations, CNAS transatlantic security analyst Jim Townsend told the HuffPost, “I’m sure Trump doesn’t know and doesn’t care.

“Trump likes Orban and probably thinks he’s doing him a solid,” he added. “Also, Putin is an Orban friend. Most of the world would not consider Budapest neutral ground for such a meeting, but I guess Trump and Putin do.”

Orban, a rightwing autocrat, has borrowed heavily from both Trump and Putin’s playbooks to dismantle much of Hungary’s democracy. Since the start of the war, Orban has used his position to delay military aid to Ukraine and act as a prominent pro-Russian voice in European politics..."

The meeting was ultimately called off.

For allies, talks with Trump are tug-of-war

 Unnamed European official, cited by UNIAN, Oct 17:

"With Trump, it's a constant game of tug-of-war. You talk to him, help him understand that Putin is the problem, and then you move on to other issues, and he again moves to the side of Putin's position. So we have to talk again. And so it goes on, again and again..."

Why Russia never belonged to NATO

Translating a material by Alfred Kokh in Faktor (original source: kasparov.ru):

"...In his speech, Putin repeated his now traditional stories about Russia, which twice (in 1954 and 2000) asked to join NATO and was rejected. This much is clear to me: Putin simply cannot grasp the simple fact that NATO is an alliance of democracies. If you are not a democracy, you have no business there. But Putin wants to join all the alliances of the global West while ruling the country like an Arab sheikh. This does not work. And I hope it never works. 

Moreover, Russia is not the only country that has been rejected. Take Ukraine, for example. It has applied to join NATO not twice, but 22 times, and has been rejected each time...

Russia has not been accepted into NATO because it plans to attack it. Russia is not accepted because it is neither free nor democratic, because NATO members are not ready to defend it in every situation, because they do not believe that it will be honorable in any conflict with the rest of the Alliance. They do not want to become hostages to the whims, phobias and discontents of an irreplaceable, adventurous ruler whose thinking and value system are too opaque and unpredictable. Or, conversely, too transparent and predictable, which in this case is actually the same thing..."

Former Mayor of Kherson tells about his captivity

As part of a prisoner exchange between Ukraine and Russia on August 24, former Kherson mayor Volodymyr Mykolaenko was rescued from captivity. The occupiers detained him after he refused to cooperate with the enemy. Mykolaenko spent more than three years in captivity. He could have returned much earlier, but he refused the exchange in favor of a seriously ill prisoner of war.


Mykolaenko before and after Russian captivity (source).

He later told about his experience - translating from UNIAN, Oct 17:

"They were convinced, in any case, that they were right, and that truth was on their side, and that we were some kind of feeble-minded people, some kind of propaganda-infused people, and that Right Sector, Azov, and Aidar were roaming our streets, intimidating people. People would generally like to see the Russian army and greet them with flowers, bread, and salt. And they believed that only these "fascists" were preventing people from realizing their free will."

The former mayor emphasized that the Russians were forbidden from personally communicating with the prisoners, but they answered his questions. "When things were really bad, I was convinced, I thought, that I would never return from this captivity. I asked one of the investigators: 'Is there a body swap, or are you just going to leave me under a fence somewhere for the dogs to tear apart?' He said, 'No, no one has cancelled the body swap.' This was, you know, also a positive thing for me, because I knew at least my family would get a body. Thank God that didn't happen. But they promised me, 'You'll never get out of prison, you'll die here.' And indeed, that was their sentiment, so I consider my release a miracle." 

Americans were escalation-phobic before, and now simply want to be friends with Russia on principle

From an interview of Ukrainian Army officer Ihor Lucenko to UNIAN:

"Standard Show-Off": Why Trump Talked About Ukraine's Offensive 

 Tanya Polyakovskaya, 16.10.25

Speaking at the White House yesterday, Trump, speaking about Ukraine, said it wants to go on the offensive, and the US "will have to make a decision" about that. What did he mean?

The phrase "make a decision" is just standard Trump show-off; he's probably bragging about being in control of the process. We won't go on the offensive simply by the United States' decision. This is our task, and we must prepare for it, or not, and his decision doesn't play much of a role here.  

If we're talking about how the United States could help us if they were willing to support our hypothetical offensive, there are at least two things we can name. 

First, air defense systems. I'm not talking about the Patriot, but rather systems that counter aircraft, as the Russians are currently testing increasingly long-range KABs. Accordingly, both offensively and defensively, it's important for us to have as few KABs as possible. The Russians can use aircraft against us, but we can't use them against them because of the asymmetry in our air defenses. They can shoot down our aircraft from hundreds of kilometers away, which is difficult for us. 

And secondly, tactical missiles of the HIMARS class or higher. If we provide them in large quantities, it would allow us to simply breach Russian positions in a certain area and, in fact, launch an offensive there. 

So, what we're currently doing with drones—trying to destroy the equipment we spot every night, some of their fortifications we discover—the same thing could be done at a much higher cost, but much faster and more effectively. And all with the help of American missiles. 

I think any American military officer of a certain level could suggest this to their superiors: "Let's give the Ukrainians five hundred missiles, and they'll literally wipe out every living thing in a certain area in a matter of days, everything they see, and they'll go there." That's the idea. But the Americans haven't done either one yet, most likely because they're escalation-phobic. Or rather they used to be, but now they simply want to be friends with Russia on principle. So they're playing this game of "I'll give it to you or I won't give it to you."..."

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

China exponentially increases its military export to Russia

A picture is worth a thousand words:

The optical fiber cable is used for drones that are immune to electronic warfare. China is helping Russia to produce drones that kill Ukrainians.


The Kremlin threatens Moldova with the fate of Ukraine

From the Dialog, Oct 12:

"Peskov issued threats against Moldova, hinting at a "Ukrainian scenario" 

The Kremlin is threatening Moldova with aggression due to its strengthening ties with Europe and the republic's new military strategy.

Russian dictator Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin's press secretary, stated that Moldova "has no prospects" if the country continues to strengthen ties with Europe while simultaneously opposing Russia. The Kremlin spokesman's statement was disseminated by Russian media on October 12. 

"Moldova's current leadership, in our view, is making a serious mistake. They believe that building relations with Europe requires completely antagonizing Russia. One country has already made this mistake. It hasn't brought any good to that country," Peskov stated.  

Clearly, the country the Russian dictator's representative hesitated to name is Ukraine. In other words, Peskov is effectively threatening a full-scale invasion and occupation of yet another country—Moldova."

***

I am sick of today's reality when freedom-loving Eastern Europeans strive to join the West, while Western voters put in power ugly monsters who feed Eastern Europe to Russia. 

Bulgarian political scientist: Merkel made Europe toothless servant of Kremlin

Translating from Faktor an opinion piece of Bulgarian political scientist Ognyan Minchev:

Merkel turned Europe into a toothless servant of the Kremlin's aggressive ambitions

Merkel's position (Poland and the Baltic states are responsible for Putin's war in Ukraine, expressed in an interview with the Hungarian publication Partizaan, editor's note) does not cause surprise. She was the main political figure - along with several successive presidents of France - who ensured and consistently carried out the defeatist policy of a united Europe towards Russia, Putin and his ambitions for geopolitical revenge against the Old Continent. Whatever Merkel's motives for pursuing this policy were, its outlines are clear and categorical. AT ANY COST to ensure a priority partnership between Europe (Germany) and Russia with one main goal - economic and political symbiosis, in which Europe (Germany) provides the Kremlin with leading technologies for the modernization of Russia, and Moscow provides energy resources for the economic development of Europe. 

There would be nothing wrong with this strategy if the two countries maintained equal relations of balanced power and influence towards each other. Unfortunately, the reality was completely different: the priority relations led to complete helplessness of Europe (Germany) in the face of the Kremlin's strategy for geopolitical revenge in the era after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Putin used the strange softness and concessions of Berlin, Paris and Brussels in the first two decades of our century to deploy an aggressive strategy of subjugation of Europe - through blackmail through an energy monopoly (especially in Eastern Europe), through a massive propaganda-operational (hybrid) war against Europe, against its values, institutions and policies, through the control of (Eastern) European public institutions for the purposes of systemic corruption at the top of power in favor of Russian strategic interests.

Merkel's policy towards Moscow was a bizarre continuation of the policy of the German empire towards Russia, carried out for centuries. The main victims of this policy were the countries of central Europe - Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, the Baltics... The division of central and eastern Europe was the deep content of the relations between the Habsburgs, Prussia and Russia, and their main victim was Poland. To the south, we must add the Ottomans as rivals for control of Eastern Europe to the three empires. In Berlin, of course, they would be indignant at such an analogy, but we are not obliged to respect anyone's hypocrisy. Merkel is indignant that Poland and the Baltics have prevented her from successfully continuing to sell - to give away - Eastern Europe to Putin in the name of priority German-Russian relations. For their part, Warsaw, Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius know their own history well and did not want to once again go like sheep to the slaughter in favor of German-Russian friendship. That's what it's about - Merkel regrets the missed opportunity in 2021 to once again satisfy the Kremlin's cannibalistic appetite at the expense of the negligible interests of Poland, Ukraine and the Baltics. 

Let us recall here that the cordial relations between Merkel and Putin (sometimes darkened by the appearance in the room of a large Doberman...) affected not only Poland and the Baltics, but all of Eastern Europe. The model of partnership at all costs between Europe (Germany) and the Kremlin created the foundations of the post-communist oligarchic model, which still governs the destinies of the Balkans, Hungary, Slovakia.

On the one hand, Bulgaria was already a member of NATO and the EU, but on the other hand, in the deep layers of the Bulgarian economic and political reality, the key interests of the Russian state, its special services (they have not left since 1944) and the Russian corporate - energy and financial infrastructure - comfortably settled. In Sofia, Merkel's friends ruled, who did the same thing as she did - they talked about European values ​​and obediently carried out Putin's whims, obeyed his arbitrariness. When the rulers from Sofia went to Brussels to vote for what Merkel wanted, European officials flattered them about the high corruption and all other outrages of the government, even wrote profoundly wise reports (Cooperation and verification mechanism). This was a constructive hypocrisy from which we all benefited – Bulgarians got richer from the EU funds, those who manage them got filthy rich (both from the East and the West), and Putin got everything he wanted from Bulgaria, just as he got everything he wanted from Europe (Germany). Only the bad Poland and the Baltics grumbled a little.

Merkel and Sarkozy blocked in 2008 in Bucharest the provision of the MAP – an action plan for Ukraine and Georgia’s membership in NATO, thereby giving Putin carte blanche to open the season of Moscow’s dirty wars against the countries of the post-Soviet space. Thank God, Merkel was not in power in 1997 and 2004 to prevent the NATO membership of the countries of Eastern Europe! After Putin’s invasion of Crimea and Donbas, Merkel and François Hollande directed the “Minsk Agreements”, which were in practice supposed to provide legitimacy to the Kremlin’s invasion. What was the main goal of Minsk-1 and Minsk-2? To ensure constitutional autonomy for the Luhansk and Donetsk separatist republics, so that their criminal elites, on orders from Moscow, could block any legal and political act of the institutions in Kiev that could realize the independence of Ukraine in contradiction to the imperial interests of the Kremlin. This is the kind of “peace” that Merkel and Hollande provided to Ukraine, a country that was a victim of aggression. If Merkel had remained in power until February 2022, she would undoubtedly have organized Minsk-3, 4, 5... Ukraine would have been pressured to part with everything that could serve as the basis for its national independence. Poland and the Baltics are hindering Merkel’s happy partnership with Putin. Ukraine is also hindering... Thank God, Merkel nevertheless parted ways with power in Germany in 2021. The Russian aggression of February 2022 allowed post-Merkelian Europe to wake up from the deep sleep of fear, humiliation, and hypocrisy in the face of Kremlin arrogance. But Merkel’s legacy has not yet been consigned to the history museum.

The metastases of “friendship at all costs” with Putin are swelling in Budapest, in Bratislava, they have crossed the ocean and become part of the new conservative wave, expressed by people like Tucker Carlson, Mearsheimer ... the list goes on. Europe has evolved beyond recognition as a result of the devastation inflicted by the two catastrophes of the 20th century. The very existence of the European Union is a result of this evolution. But the old imperial instincts lie deep within and sometimes manifest themselves in outwardly paradoxical forms of official policy. Whatever Merkel’s motivations for turning Europe into a toothless servant of the Kremlin’s aggressive ambitions, her political legacy must be clearly defined and repudiated as a model of official policy if Europe is to have dignity, respect and a prospect of survival as a significant world power in the turbulent waters of the era in which we live."

Report from just one Russian attack

From the Obozrevatel:

"Russians dropped an aerial bomb on a church in Konstantinovka: three people were killed and five were injured

Olga Ganyukova, 10/11/2025


On Saturday, October 11, Russian troops again bombed Kostiantynivka. This time, the occupiers targeted the Church of St. Job of Pochayiv...

At 10:39 a.m., Russian forces dropped a FAB-250 bomb, killing two men, aged 49 and 56. Five more people were wounded: two men (aged 47 and 74) and two women (aged 56 and 62). 

At the scene of the attack, police found a two-year-old boy with his father, a priest. The boy was unharmed, but his father and grandfather were wounded. The child was evacuated to Kramatorsk. It's worth noting that the boy's mother was killed in an enemy strike last week...

Police officers were taking away the wounded and a child under fire. Drones swooped down on the officers every few minutes, forcing them to disperse and take cover...

The Russian bomb killed a 4-year-old girl and injured a priest who tried to hide the child in the church."

Biden called Zelensky "pain in the ass"

From online.ua, Oct 15:

"Stoltenberg revealed Biden's real attitude towards Zelensky

Viktoria Lytovchenko

Former NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg frankly admitted in his memoirs that former US President Joe Biden was not always favorable to Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky and even called him a "pain in the ass" behind his back. 

The former NATO Secretary General recalled an incident that occurred on the eve of the Alliance summit in June 2023.

It was then that Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky publicly demanded from the bloc members clear formulations regarding Ukraine's prospects in NATO.

According to Stoltenberg, such boldness greatly irritated Biden.

What is important to understand is that the points regarding Ukraine in the final declaration were agreed upon with official Kyiv in advance.

"So we were caught off guard by the events of the first day of the summit. On the way to Vilnius, Zelensky posted a harshly critical Twitter post against NATO. He called it "absurd" that the alliance had not provided a timetable for either Ukraine's invitation to NATO or its membership." 

However, this outraged former American leader Joe Biden the most.

He didn't even hide his emotions, although he did it behind closed doors: Biden, who was sitting next to me, leaned over and said, "As they say in America, he (Zelensky — ed.) is a pain in the ass," Stoltenberg recalls."

How Russia uses the Olympics

From DonPress, Oct 11:

"The Foreign Ministry issued a statement regarding the "Olympic Truce" with Russia

Ukraine supports Italy's proposal for a global ceasefire during the Winter Olympics, which will be held from February 6 to 22, 2026. Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Heorhiy Tykhyi stated this at a briefing, according to an RBC-Ukraine correspondent. 

"We support this call. But it should be remembered that Russia has launched several wars during the Olympic Truce. Russia launched an invasion of Georgia during the Olympic Truce. Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine during the Olympic Truce," Tykhyi noted. 

According to him, such actions by Russia are no coincidence, as during the Olympics, all media attention is focused on sporting events. And in the shadow of such events, Russia has committed crimes."

Russians tortured and killed teenage Ukrainian patriot, then bombed school named after him

From the Obozrevatel:

"The occupiers attacked a school in Kramatorsk, which was named after the tortured and killed Stepan Chubenko

Lilia Ragutska, 10/11/2025

On the night of October 11, Russian occupiers attacked Kramatorsk in the Donetsk region. Two Russian attack drones simultaneously struck the building of the city school, named after 16-year-old Stepan Chubenko, tortured to death by the occupiers in 2014...


 You can read more about young Stepan Chubenko in his Wikipedia page.