The Lindsey Graham Timeline Does Not Work… He Died in Kyiv

Let’s follow the timeline. According to the official story: 911 call from his DC residence at 8:30pm ET on July 11 for suspected cardiac arrest. He “died at home.”

This is total BS!

So let’s go thru the timeline. Lindsey departed Dulles International Airport at around 0700 local on July 9 — the flight from Dulles to Warsaw is 9 hours. He took the overnight train that departed Warsaw at 18:15 hours local on July 9th and arrived in Kyiv between 09:45–10:45 local on July 10th.

So Lindsey Graham arrives in Kyiv by 11 am Friday morning. He meets with Zelensky and tours a drone factory. Then we are asked to believe that he returns to Washington, DC after spending less than 24 hours on the ground. Again, I call BS!

The earliest train back to Warsaw departs Kyiv-Pasazhyrskyi at 07:40–08:00 on the 11th and arrives Przemyśl Główny in the afternoon (~17:00–18:00). That is at least nine hours. That would make it roughly 1100 hours in Washington, DC. Let’s assume he has an hour to get to the airport and the plane takes off at 1900 hours local from Poland, which is 1200 hours in Washington. The flight going west takes 10 hours… This means the earliest the plane could have landed at Dulles is 2200 hours on the 11th. That is 2 ½ hours after Graham reportedly died at home.

I emphasize that the normal travel to Kyiv by members of Congress, members of NATO and the EU, and even Joe Biden is to take a plane to Poland and then hop a train to Kyiv. It is, normally, at least a 20 hour trip. In order for Senator Graham to have arrived at home by 2000 hours local in Washington, DC, he would have had to depart from Kyiv at 0700 hours local Ukraine. I have been unable to find any schedule that shows a train departing Kyiv at that hour.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/lindsey-graham-timeline-does-not-work-died-kyiv/5933234

Strait of Hormuz crisis: What is the current state of the waterway?

Strait of Hormuz crisis: What is the current state of the waterway?

RT

14 July 1016
The key global energy route has once again been shut down following renewed US strikes on Iran.

The renewed hostilities between the US and Iran have once again disrupted traffic through the Strait of Hormuz after a brief period of relative normalization.

The escalation comes after Washington carried out several consecutive waves of strikes on Iranian targets, claiming that the attacks are meant to protect commercial shipping in the strait. Tehran has responded with strikes on US military facilities across the region and has declared the waterway closed.

It follows the collapse of a fragile understanding reached last month, under which the US agreed to lift its naval blockade while Iran was expected to help ensure safe passage for commercial vessels pending further negotiations. The two sides now accuse each other of violating the deal.

The waterway is the main sea route for oil and gas exports from the Gulf and carries around one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas supplies, which has made it a major pressure point in the unprovoked US-Israeli war on Iran.

What is happening now?

The Strait of Hormuz has once again been declared closed by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) after the US resumed strikes on Iranian targets last week, accusing Tehran of attacking commercial ships transiting the waterway.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) said that the strikes are aimed at reducing Iran’s ability to threaten civilian vessels and commercial shipping. It said that American forces have hit Iranian air defenses, coastal radar sites, missile and drone facilities, small boats, and other military targets around the strait.

Iran has responded with strikes on US military facilities across the region, including bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Jordan, and Oman. Tehran says that the attacks are a lawful response to US strikes on Iranian territory.

What has Iran said?

Following the US claims of Iranian attacks on commercial vessels, Tehran said that it has the right to regulate traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and require ships to follow designated routes. It has warned that vessels attempting to pass without authorization or ignoring commands violate security procedures and may be treated as hostile.

Tehran has declared that the strait will remain closed until Washington ends its “illegal” military intervention in the region, and that no ship will be allowed to transit the waterway while US attacks continue.

Iranian servicemen will stand firm “until their last breath” and would not yield “even an inch” of the country’s rights in the key waterway, Iranian military spokesman Brig. Gen. Mohammad Akraminia has insisted.

Iranian officials have also framed the strikes on US bases in the Gulf as self-defense and have warned neighboring states not to allow their territory to be used for American attacks, saying countries that host US forces cannot expect to stay outside the conflict.

What is the US position?

CENTCOM has said that American forces are prepared to keep the waterway open and prevent Iran from threatening commercial traffic, stating that the renewed strikes are aimed at protecting “freedom of navigation” through the strait.

US President Donald Trump has declared that Washington is now “in control” of the strait and will be “taking over” security in the Strait of Hormuz and act as its “guardian.”

He has also proposed charging a 20% fee on cargo moving through the waterway, because Washington should be reimbursed for its protection. The White House has not explained how such a fee would be calculated, collected, or enforced.

What has happened to shipping?

Several commercial vessels have reportedly been hit or threatened in or near the Strait of Hormuz since hostilities resumed.

The UAE said that two tankers were struck by Iranian cruise missiles in Omani territorial waters on the southern lane of the strait. One Indian crew member was killed and eight others were wounded, according to reports citing UAE and Indian officials.

Shipping data cited by Reuters showed tanker traffic through the strait falling to its lowest level in two months as companies reassessed the risks of using the route.

Insurers are also expected to raise premiums for ships entering the area, increasing costs even for vessels that are not directly attacked.

What about the oil prices?

Oil prices eased after the US and Iran signed the June memorandum of understanding, which reduced fears of a full-scale disruption in the Strait of Hormuz. The latest escalation has reversed that trend.

Brent crude jumped nearly 10% on Monday, its biggest one-day gain since 2020, while US West Texas Intermediate rose more than 9%, according to market data. By Tuesday, Brent was trading around $86 a barrel and WTI above $80, their highest levels in about four weeks.

The latest spike remains below the levels seen during the earlier phase of the war, when prices briefly rose above $120 a barrel after traffic through Hormuz was heavily restricted. Analysts have warned that a sustained disruption in the strait could send oil back above $100 a barrel.

Iranian Oil Minister Mohsen Paknejad said that the country’s exports are continuing “as usual” despite Washington’s decision to cancel a 60-day sanctions waiver. He said that Tehran has mechanisms to bypass US restrictions.

What has been the international response?

China has called for safe and free passage through the Strait of Hormuz to be restored, saying that the waterway is intended for international navigation. Beijing added that it is ready to maintain communication with relevant countries and the wider international community on the issue.

India has summoned Iran’s deputy ambassador after an Indian crew member was killed and several other Indians were wounded in the strike on the two UAE tankers. New Delhi said that it lodged a protest over attacks on ships passing near Oman’s shores.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva criticized Trump’s proposed 20% protection fee, saying that “in the old days, this was called piracy.” He accused the US president of trying to take advantage of a tragedy to make money.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/643033-us-iran-hormuz-state/

Israeli army units face ‘de facto collapse’ amid critical manpower crisis

(Photo credit: Flash90)

The Cradle

JUL 14, 2026

Reservists say Tel Aviv is ‘bluffing’ by exaggerating conscription turnout rates, while complaining that ‘there are not enough tanks’

The Israeli military is facing a crisis within its reserve forces and is in a state of “de facto collapse,” with occupying brigades and battalions in Lebanon operating far below full capacity and strength, Israeli Army Radio reported on 14 July.

Army Radio correspondent Doron Kadosh made the revelations in a post on Tuesday, citing sources as saying that conscription turnout rates are “a bluff,” and that “there aren’t enough tanks.”

Kadosh said armored reserve companies that previously operated with 10 to 12 tank crews are now functioning with significantly fewer operational tanks, due to battlefield losses and damaged equipment requiring lengthy repairs – caused by Hezbollah resistance fighters.

Because of the shortages, the army reportedly summons fewer reservists from the outset, artificially inflating mobilization rates, while many of those counted as reporting for duty serve only part of their deployments.

“Reserve units today are hollow,” a reserve commander is cited as saying in Kadosh’s report.

The military source adds that “a battalion is not a full battalion, and a company is not truly a company.”

“The public and decision-makers hear about entire brigades operating in Lebanon, but in reality, the force is much smaller – far fewer soldiers, far fewer tanks, and far fewer vehicles. Parts of the reserve system are already, de facto, in a state of collapse,” the source went on to say.

The reserve commander told Army Radio that some units are “in better shape” than others, but that they are all “doing the maximum they can.”

The commander also says this is “a situation that is becoming impossible to sustain.”

The report cited several examples, including a reserve company that recently completed operations in Lebanon, with only one officer remaining in the entire company.

This forced enlisted soldiers to fill command roles normally held by officers.

Another reserve battalion in the occupied West Bank reportedly saw only two of its companies report for duty, requiring reinforcements from another reserve unit to fill operational gaps.

Kadosh also reported that an entire team of young commandos recently transferred to the reserves after completing active service informed commanders they could no longer continue serving due to “exhaustion” and academic pressures.

As a result, commanders have been approving the release of soldiers from reserve duty.

Kadosh explained that “even units where turnout percentages are 50–70 percent are in fact operating with a much larger personnel shortage at any given time.”

A reservist source told Army Radio that “There aren’t enough tanks and the turnout percentages don’t reflect reality. It’s a bluff.”

Prolonged deployments since 7 October 2023 have placed severe strain on manpower, equipment, and command structures across Israel’s reserve forces.

The years that followed 7 October have seen significant internal tensions in Israel, as Tel Aviv has been unable to reach a consensus on a law for drafting tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox Israeli Jews (Haredim) into the army.

Haredim, mainly those studying the Torah, have been largely exempt from military service for decades. In June 2024, the Israeli High Court ordered that they be drafted, following significant tension on the matter.

Ultra-Orthodox parties, which make up a significant bulk of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition government, have sought to make sure exemptions remain legal – while the opposition accused the Haredim of not doing their part or sharing the burden with the army.

The government has been unable to pass a law that would appease both the Haredi parties and the opposition.

The growing manpower crisis has worsened since Israeli troops invaded south Lebanon and expanded their occupation of the country in early March. Over 30 Israeli soldiers have been killed by the Lebanese resistance since then.

“The reserve army will collapse in on itself. There will be an unreasonable burden on the reservists. If nothing changes, the reservists will not be able to withstand this pressure in the years to come,” Israeli army chief Eyal Zamir said in May.

Scores of tanks, military vehicles, detection systems, radars, Iron Dome platforms, and other Israeli military assets have been destroyed by Hezbollah’s FPV drone campaign that has caught Tel Aviv off guard since the latest round of fighting began in March.

Israeli troops have occupied scores of Lebanese villages with the aim of creating a so-called security zone free of “threats.”

Hezbollah resistance fighters remain entrenched across Israel’s “security zone” despite months of occupation and bombing.

[…]

Via https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-army-units-face-de-facto-collapse-amid-critical-manpower-crisis-report

US authorities detain American journalist Max Blumenthal upon return from Iran

Almanar

American journalist Max Blumenthal says he was detained and questioned by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers at Washington Dulles International Airport upon returning from Iran, with agents searching his belongings and confiscating his smartphones after he refused to provide access to them.

Blumenthal described the questioning and seizure of his devices as a politically motivated response to his reporting from Iran, saying, “As punishment for my factual journalism, I was subjected to political harassment by the Trump administration upon my return from Iran.”

According to Blumenthal, CBP officers searched his luggage and demanded access to his mobile phones. After he declined to unlock the devices, the agents seized them.

He said the confiscation was intended to discourage his reporting on Iran, and that the officers repeatedly questioned him about his future travel plans.

“The seizure of my devices was a clear act of intimidation aimed at deterring me and others from doing further critical reporting from Iran, which is likely why my interrogators from CBP demanded to know if I would be returning to Tehran to report any time soon.”

Blumenthal said the scrutiny followed his recent reporting from Iran, which included coverage of public reactions to recent regional developments and reporting on US-Israeli aggression and the assassination of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.

He went on to say that the questioning was directly linked to his work, accusing his interrogators of acting on political motives.

The journalist also claimed that those questioning him were part of an “Israeli-influenced criminal cartel” that was “clearly threatened by my reporting from Tehran.”

Max Blumenthal, editor of The Grayzone, was among several foreign journalists who traveled to Iran to attend the farewell and funeral ceremonies of the martyred Leader.

The United States and Israel assassinated Ayatollah Khamenei, alongside some of his family members, on February 28, the first day of the 40-day illegal war of aggression on Iran.

[…]

Via https://english.almanar.com.lb/article/104222/

The CIA’s complicity in the Mexican Drug Cartels (including military training at Fort Bragg)

Cynthia Chung

The following is an except from Paul L. William’s book “Operation Gladio: The Unholy Alliance between the Vatican, the CIA, and the Mafia”:

When the US military occupation of Afghanistan became precarious, the CIA worked with the Mexican drug cartels to develop poppy fields throughout the mountains of Mexico’s west coast. By 2013, heroin and cocaine from Mexico – with a street value of $3 billion – flooded Chicago. The drugs arrived by land, rail, and air, including 747 jetliners. When Jesus Vicente Zambada Niebla, a member of the Sinaloa cartel, was collared by Chicago police officials, he claimed to be a CIA operative under government protection. His trial was halted by federal prosecutors on the basis of the “Classified Information Procedures Act.” The prosecutors claimed that Niebla’s testimony would constitute a threat to national security.

By 2018, Mexico’s southwestern Guerrero state became the top source of heroin for the US drug epidemic, which resulted in more than sixty-four thousand deaths in 2016. The Drug Enforcement Agency says that 93 percent of heroin in America now comes from Mexico, more than double the amount from five years before. Guerrero emerged as a heroin hub because its mountains are inaccessible and catch the warm, humid air from the Pacific.

[…]

Via https://cynthiachung.substack.com/p/the-cias-complicity-in-the-mexican

Why Americans no longer believe in America

Why Americans no longer believe in America

RT

13 July 2026

America’s 250th anniversary arrived amid growing doubts about democracy, prosperity, and national unity

The United States has just marked a major anniversary, 250 years since it declared independence from Great Britain and, in theory, this should be a moment of national pride with another historical milestone passed, another reason for flags, fireworks, and speeches about destiny.

But the mood is not especially festive.

Two weeks before the anniversary, Reuters published a poll that captured the depth of American anxiety – and the numbers were grim. More than two-thirds (70%) of Americans no longer consider their country the greatest nation on Earth, while 64% believe American democracy is in danger. And 38% don’t believe the United States will survive another 250 years as a single country.

The answers split sharply along party lines, with Republicans still clinging more strongly to the idea of the exceptional country of prosperity and divine favor. Among Democrats, the mood is much darker and pessimism has become almost a worldview as the United States has arrived at its 250th anniversary in the middle of a profound crisis of belief.

In some ways, this resembles the crisis Soviet society experienced in the final years of the USSR. Of course, America never had an official state ideology in the Soviet sense and nobody in Washington promised to build communism at breakneck speed, but the US did have its own coherent vision of the future which it called the American Dream.

That dream promised prosperity through hard work and freedom. Work hard, play by the rules, take responsibility for yourself, and life will improve, your children will live better than you did and your country will remain a model for the world, but in the 21st century, that promise began to fall apart.

The first serious cracks appeared among millennials, the generation born between 1981 and 1996. Their parents got rich, bought homes, built savings, and traveled abroad, but they inherited student debt, unaffordable housing, unstable work, and the strange feeling that no matter how hard they run, the finish line keeps moving further away.

Older Americans told them the answer was simply to work as hard as they did, but younger Americans could see the numbers and how with comparable effort, earlier generations ended up far wealthier.

So the old formula no longer worked and that undermined the idea of labor as an absolute virtue. If hard work no longer guarantees a decent life, then what remains? Freedom?

Americans are formally free in that they elect presidents and congressmen. Yet Congress is filled with elderly politicians who seem determined to change nothing and who often leave public life only when nature finally intervenes. Presidents speak beautifully on campaign trails, but once inside the White House, they usually follow the same old path so while the faces change, the machine remains and freedom, too, begins to look hollow.

For younger Americans, the American Dream is becoming what the bright communist future became for late Soviet citizens as an official promise repeated so often that almost nobody believes it anymore. Once a society loses its vision of the future, disorientation follows and almost everyone can feel that the system is not working properly. But what should replace it and where should the country go?

Well, American society has developed two sharply different answers. The conservative right believes America can be saved by a return to pragmatism with a freer market, support for major entrepreneurs, ruthless efficiency in public spending, and a foreign policy less constrained by old ideological sermons about democracy and human rights. In this view, America must stop trying to lecture the world and start taking care of itself.

The progressive left believes the opposite, that the pillars of liberal democracy mustn’t be abandoned, but that the economy needs radical restructuring. National wealth, they say, must be distributed more fairly and big business, especially in the technology sector, is viewed with deep suspicion. The new villains are “tech feudal lords,” billionaires whose power appears to rival that of the state itself.

Both camps agree on one thing, that the current order is exhausted, but they simply disagree on what should come next.

Donald Trump was supposed to test the right-wing answer in practice and his supporters expected a revolution in a break with the old elite, a new economic nationalism, a government that would stop apologizing and start acting because he promised all of that.

But Trump’s presidency has shown the limits of his movement in that there’s not much of a system and Trump doesn’t think in historical categories, but in terms of Trump. If it were up to him, Washington would be filled not with a new national doctrine, but with golden ballrooms and monuments to his own greatness.

His approach to America’s 250th anniversary has even disappointed some of his admirers. Many expected a serious program, or at least a symbolic reflection on the country’s path, but instead, Trump keeps speaking about his own achievements. At times, it is hard to tell whether America is celebrating 250 years of independence or continuing the festivities for its president’s 80th birthday.

So now disillusioned by the right, America is glancing left, although the country doesn’t yet trust the left nationally. But locally, especially in big cities, voters are increasingly willing to experiment, with Zohran Mamdani, the openly socialist mayor of New York, an obvious example. This is no accident as the largest cities are where the contradictions of modern America are most visible in terms of housing costs, inequality, migration, crime, decaying infrastructure, and anger at remote elites.

If socialist policies succeed at city level, their supporters will soon claim they are ready for higher office.

And what will their opponents do then? They could accept defeat or they may decide that their America can no longer live under the same roof as the other America, which is the real question behind the anniversary. Not whether the United States has had a remarkable 250 years, because it has, but the question is whether it still has a common future.

Perhaps America will find a new compromise and perhaps it will reinvent itself again, as it has done before, but perhaps its two political tribes have already begun traveling in different historical directions.

If, over the next 250 years, US history follows that road toward a civilized or uncivilized split, it won’t be because Americans lacked flags or speeches, it will be because the country’s old promise stopped convincing its own people.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/642938-why-americans-no-longer-believe/

Yemen bombs Saudi air base

The Cradle

UPDATE | A plume of smoke was seen rising from Saudi Arabia’s King Khalid Air Base after Yemeni forces unleashed a retaliatory ballistic missile strike targeting the facility.

Located in the Kingdom’s southwest, approximately 120 kilometers from the Yemeni border, the strategic air base serves as a major hub for the Royal Saudi Air Force, housing fighter jets, surveillance aircraft, and other military assets. The extent of any damage has not yet been confirmed.

Via https://t.me/thecradlemedia/64026

Trump declares US ‘Guardian of Hormuz,’ vows to charge 20 percent transit fees

(Photo credit: AP)

The Cradle

JUL 13, 2026

US President Donald Trump announced on 13 July that he will be reinstating the illegal naval blockade on Iranian ports, while declaring Washington the “guardian of the Hormuz Strait.”

The president additionally claimed the US will now be charging shipping fees in Hormuz.

“The Hormuz Strait is OPEN, and will remain OPEN, with or without Iran,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Monday.

Trump added that “all other countries will have fair and open use of the Strait.”

The president went on to claim that Washington “will be, from this point forward, known as ‘THE GUARDIAN OF THE HORMUZ STRAIT.’”

“But as such, and as a matter of FAIRNESS, [we] will be reimbursed, at the rate of 20 percent on all cargo shipped, for any and all costs necessary to do the job of providing safety and security to this very volatile section of the world,” Trump stressed.

He also claimed Washington’s oversight of the strait shall “begin immediately.”

Earlier on Monday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry condemned Washington’s continued attempts to backtrack on clauses of the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed with Iran.

These clauses encompass the arrangement for joint Iranian-Omani management of the Strait of Hormuz, a plan that Washington’s own delegation had endorsed.

They also include ending Israel’s brutal bombing, occupation, and ethnic cleansing campaign in Lebanon, which continues unabated.

Iran has been holding direct talks with Oman on the future management of Hormuz, but recently condemned the activation of a US-Omani shipping corridor, calling it a violation of the MoU.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said on Monday, “Our effort, in consultation with Oman, was to establish a mechanism to ensure the safe passage of ships,” adding that “because of [US] pressure exerted on Oman, this objective was not achieved.”

Trump’s recent social media post comes after a regionwide Iranian response to US strikes carried out against the Islamic Republic overnight.

Iranian forces targeted and struck US military assets in Kuwait, Bahrain, Jordan, and Oman – which Tehran had previously refrained from striking during the first 40 days of the war that began in February.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) stated in its retaliation announcement that Iran will block a “rogue and child-killing army from across the world” from ongoing interference in the Strait of Hormuz.

Hours earlier, the US began its massive new wave of strikes across Iran.

US attacks heavily targeted sites across over a dozen provinces in the country, hitting telecommunication infrastructure in Sirik on the southern coast, as well as military sites in other parts of Iran.

[…]

Via https://thecradle.co/articles/trump-declares-us-guardian-of-hormuz-vows-to-charge-20-percent-transit-fees

Yemen threatens to close Bab al-Mandeb Strait, warns of $200 a barrel oil amid Saudi aggression

The Bab el-Mandeb Strait is a strategic route for oil and natural gas ...

Press TV

A senior Yemeni official has warned that the country’s armed forces are prepared to close the Bab al-Mandeb Strait, sending oil prices soaring to $200 a barrel, if Saudi Arabia persists in its aggression against Yemen’s critical infrastructure.

Mohammed al-Farah, a member of the political bureau of the Ansarullah resistance movement, stated on Monday that Washington is provoking the Riyadh regime to strike Yemen, emphasizing such an incitement would never be in the interest of the US.
“If the current situation aggravates, the Bab al-Mandeb Strait and the Strait of Hormuz will be closed in an operational alliance. Oil prices would then skyrocket to $200 a barrel in a dreadful shock,” he said.

Farah noted that the Sana’a government’s response to any clear aggression by Saudi Arabia or its proxy forces will be decisive, and will target sites deep inside the kingdom.
The Bab al-Mandeb Strait is a vital shipping chokepoint linking the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden, funneling maritime traffic toward the Suez Canal. At its narrowest point, just 29 kilometers wide, it restricts vessel movement to two lanes for inbound and outbound traffic.

Meanwhile, a member of Yemen’s Supreme Political Council held the United States and Saudi Arabia fully responsible for the new spate of aggression and siege against the Yemeni nation, and bombardment of civilian facilities, including Sana’a airport, following a period of de-escalation.

Mohammed Ali al-Houthi emphasized that the Saudi attack on Sana’a airport constitutes a clear violation of humanitarian law, and falls within the framework of daily war crimes being perpetrated against the Yemeni people in the form of siege and starvation.

Separately, Ali al-Qahoum, a member of Ansarullah’s political bureau, vowed that Yemeni Armed Forces will soon retaliate against the Saudi aggression, and the push to break the 11-year-old siege on Yemen will never stop, and that enemies are fully responsible for any potential fallout.

“The Saudi regime’s aggression against Sana’a airport and its targeting of civilian infrastructure entail grave consequences. Riyadh must embrace all possible repercussions,” Qahoum stated.

Via https://t.me/presstv/198553

NATO summit restores POTUS to factory settings

NATO summit highlights Europe's broader security challenge - CGTN

Dmitry Orlov

It took me a while to understand exactly what happened at the latest NATO summit in Ankara, Türkiye. What had made the task artificially difficult was the initial faulty assumption: that something happened there. In fact, the summit was about exactly nothing.

Most commentators and analysts focused on things that Donald Trump said at the meeting, but what they neglected to notice was that Trump’s public utterances no longer carry any meaning at all. Whatever he says about annexing Greenland, or Canada, or destroying Iran, or any number of other such statements, are just noise. He is still trying to use such bloviation to move markets, to make a bit of money from day trading. For instance, he apparently thought that he found a way to gambling success by fighting weekend wars: trade on Friday before the close, then bomb Iran over the weekend, then trade some more on Monday. But even the dumbest market algorithms seem to have caught up to him. Whatever will he come up with next?

Aside from his sporadic bloviation during the summit, he just sat there quietly and then signed whatever piece of paper was being proffered. And what was proffered was very much more of the same, with a few minor refinements. For example, instead of the US spending money on the former Ukraine directly, the Europeans will now borrow that money, the US will essentially underwrite the debt using a USD/EUR currency swap via the Federal Reserve, and the Europeans will then give the money to US defense contractors. Everybody will get a cut, everyone is happy.

Whoever voted for all of these clowns should perhaps be told that the level of NATO military spending is preposterously huge, yet it doesn’t move NATO an inch closer to being able to defeat Russia. Consider the chart above. NATO has committed to spending around $250 billion just on the former Ukraine before 2028; Russia spends a tiny fraction of that and is winning. And yet NATO has no air defense that can stand up to the new Russian rocketry and has no ability to develop any. Some amount of equipment will no doubt be produced, but given the rapid rate of change at the Ukrainian battlefield, it will be obsolete by the time it is ready. As for the gigantic pile of cash, it will be evenly smeared across numerous private bank accounts, allowing the rich to continue getting richer even as the economies of NATO countries continue their steady deterioration.

There has been quite a bit of commentary devoted to Trump’s removal of Russia from the latest US National Security Doctrine document. Well, just with everything else that Trump has done — be it the now illegal tariffs or the attempts to negotiate a peace deal between Russia and the former Ukraine, or the various threats against NATO — this meant nothing at all. The adults in the room told him that NATO is a major cash cow and that he will not be allowed to slaughter it. Furthermore, they explained to him that the Ukrainian conflict is a wonderful opportunity and as long as it is there and willing to fight Russia down to the last Ukrainian, neglecting to take full advantage of that opportunity would be quite foolish.

Essentially, there is nothing to see here, keep moving. I am sure that lots of ink will be spilled and lots of hot air expelled over whether Trump was successful as an agent of destruction or whether things would have fallen apart at exactly the same rate anyway. But that’s in the future; for now, there is one important conclusion that is ready to be drawn already: the noises Trump makes are just noises. They don’t matter and he doesn’t matter. It is as if he never existed.

[…]

Via https://boosty.to/cluborlov/posts/d9211941-1cba-4b32-8a5c-67294f4fa106?from=email_new_post