Tuesday, January 31, 2023

The Michael Savage Show 1/30/2023

 



Are we on the brink of World War III? Colonel Douglas Macgregor joins Savage to break down how the Biden Administration and other Western nations are fanning the flames of war. A tank expert, Macgregor describes the specifications of the tanks headed for Ukraine. Never backing down from the truth, he exposes how warmongers have exploited the Domino Theory to fund endless war; How NATO has caused the demise of Ukraine; From sky to sea, how Russia has caught up to America’s military hegemony; And the possible end of the nuclear arms control. Then, Macgregor sends a dire warning against the United States entering direct war with Russia and why he fears Western Civilization is at risk of collapse. 

Judging Freedom with Judge Napolitano 1/31/2023

 



Judging Freedom with Judge Napolitano 1/31/2023
U.S. Not Prepared To Take On Russia




Thursday, January 26, 2023

The American Conservative 1/26/2023




This Time It’s Different

Neither we nor our allies are prepared to fight all-out war with Russia, regionally or globally. 


Until it decided to confront Moscow with an existential military threat in Ukraine, Washington confined the use of American military power to conflicts that Americans could afford to lose, wars with weak opponents in the developing world from Saigon to Baghdad that did not present an existential threat to U.S. forces or American territory. This time—a proxy war with Russia—is different. 

Contrary to early Beltway hopes and expectations, Russia neither collapsed internally nor capitulated to the collective West’s demands for regime change in Moscow. Washington underestimated Russia’s societal cohesion, its latent military potential, and its relative immunity to Western economic sanctions. 

As a result, Washington’s proxy war against Russia is failing. U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was unusually candid about the situation in Ukraine when he told the allies in Germany at Ramstein Air Base on January 20, “We have a window of opportunity here, between now and the spring,” admitting, “That’s not a long time.” 

Alexei Arestovich, President Zelensky’s recently fired advisor and unofficial “Spinmeister,” was more direct. He expressed his own doubts that Ukraine can win its war with Russia and he now questions whether Ukraine will even survive the war. Ukrainian losses—at least 150,000 dead including 35,000 missing in action and presumed dead—have fatally weakened Ukrainian forces resulting in a fragile Ukrainian defensive posture that will likely shatter under the crushing weight of attacking Russian forces in the next few weeks. 

Ukraine’s materiel losses are equally severe. These include thousands of tanks and armored infantry fighting vehicles, artillery systems, air defense platforms, and weapons of all calibers. These totals include the equivalent of seven years of Javelin missile production. In a setting where Russian artillery systems can fire nearly 60,000 rounds of all types—rockets, missiles, drones, and hard-shell ammunition—a day, Ukrainian forces are hard-pressed to answer these Russian salvos with 6,000 rounds daily. New platform and ammunition packages for Ukraine may enrich the Washington community, but they cannot change these conditions.

Predictably, Washington’s frustration with the collective West’s failure to stem the tide of Ukrainian defeat is growing. In fact, the frustration is rapidly giving way to desperation. 

Michael Rubin, a former Bush appointee and avid supporter of America’s permanent conflicts in the Middle East and Afghanistan, vented his frustration in a 1945 article asserting that, “if the world allows Russia to remain a unitary state, and if it allows Putinism to survive Putin, then, Ukraine should be allowed to maintain its own nuclear deterrence, whether it joins NATO or not.” On its face, the suggestion is reckless, but the statement does accurately reflect the anxiety in Washington circles that Ukrainian defeat is inevitable.

NATO’s members were never strongly united behind Washington’s crusade to fatally weaken Russia. The governments of Hungary and Croatia are simply acknowledging the wider European public’s opposition to war with Russia and lack of support for Washington’s desire to postpone Ukraine’s foreseeable defeat. 

Though sympathetic to the Ukrainian people, Berlin did not support all-out war with Russia on Ukraine’s behalf. Now, Germans are also uneasy with the catastrophic condition of the German armed forces. 

Retired German Air Force General (four-star equivalent) Harald Kujat, former chairman of the NATO Military Committee, severely criticized Berlin for allowing Washington to railroad Germany into conflict with Russia, noting that several decades of German political leaders actively disarmed Germany and thus deprived Berlin of authority or credibility in Europe. Though actively suppressed by the German government and media, his comments are resonating strongly with the German electorate.

The blunt fact is that in its efforts to secure victory in its proxy war with Russia, Washington ignores historical reality. From the 13th century onward, Ukraine was a region dominated by larger, more powerful national powers, whether Lithuanian, Polish, Swedish, Austrian, or Russian. 

In the aftermath of the First World War, abortive Polish designs for an independent Ukrainian State were conceived to weaken Bolshevik Russia. Today, Russia is not communist, nor does Moscow seek the destruction of the Polish State as Trotsky, Lenin, Stalin, and their followers did in 1920. 

So where is Washington headed with its proxy war against Russia? The question deserves an answer.

On Sunday December 7, 1941, U.S. Ambassador Averell Harriman was with Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill having dinner at Churchill’s home when the BBC broadcast the news that the Japanese had attacked the U.S. Naval Base at Pearl Harbor. Harriman was visibly shocked. He simply repeated the words, “The Japanese have raided Pearl Harbor.”

Friday, January 20, 2023

The Michael Savage Show 1/19/2023



Russia's Massive Winter Offensive
Interview with Colonel Macgregor


What can we expect in the coming weeks as reports claim Putin is preparing a massive offensive? Colonel Douglas Macgregor is back to deliver his expert breakdown of the evolving conflict in Ukraine. Might we see a false flag event disrupting the grain infrastructure of Ukraine? How dire is the loss of life facing the two nations? Will Washington cave to mounting pressure to supply tanks; what about Germany? Why did Kissinger change his tune on Ukraine’s NATO membership? When will the offensive begin and what will it entail? Is there a possibility of electronic warfare; are satellites potential targets? How has the Biden Administration escalated the conflict, and will they continue fueling the flames of war? Why does Russia hold an advantage in terms of ammunition? Could Russia sabotage the tank deliveries? How has Zelensky nullified his own generals? Macgregor and Savage dive into all the details as Europe faces a historic mobilization, not seen since World War II.








Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Real Clear Politics 1/6/2023

 



Macgregor: The Army Will Be Needed At The Border To Fight Cartels, And The Fighting Will Spill Into The U.S.

Posted By Ian Schwartz
January 6, 2023

Ret. Col. Douglas Macgregor in an interview Friday with FOX News host Tucker Carlson warned there is a "war with the drug cartels" at the U.S.-Mexico border and fighting will eventually spill on the American side. Macgregor said Mexican President Obrador is irrelevant and a mouthpiece for the cartels, adding Mexico is "the only truly existential threat" to America.

"What we are seeing here is not an effort to enforce the law, not an effort to do anything good," Macgregor said. "It's a fight between a cartel, the Sinaloa Cartel, and the Mexican army. They're fighting for turf, they're fighting for cash, they're fighting for influence inside Mexico."

"There is no cooperation with Mexico. President Obrador is irrelevant. He does not run the country. He's a mouthpiece for the drug cartels," Macgregor said.


"At some point we will shut down the border because things will have gotten that bad," Macgregor told Carlson. "When we do that, we will immediately be at war with the drug cartels because we cut off their income. We are going to have to fight inside the United States as well as on our border. And that's going to demand the United States army because our border patrol is not nearly as well-equipped. They are outgunned, outperformed in every sense, every category of military power by the cartels."

"Ukraine and Mexico are just about equally corrupt," Macgregor said. "As you point out, Ukraine means a lot of money for a lot of people in Washington, shutting down the border, stopping the influx of illegals, stopping the influx of human trafficking, and going after the drug cartels doesn't really make anybody money."

DOUG MACGREGOR: So what we are seeing here is not an effort to enforce the law, not an effort to do anything good. It's a fight between a cartel, the Sinaloa Cartel, and the Mexican army. They're fighting for turf, they're fighting for cash, they're fighting for influence inside Mexico. They want the son of El Chapo presumably so they can give it to the president of Mexico and he can create the illusion that by turning him over to us that there is cooperation with Mexico. There is no cooperation with Mexico. President Obrador is irrelevant. He does not run the country. He's a mouthpiece for the drug cartels...

TUCKER CARLSON, FOX NEWS: If the president of Mexico is a mouthpiece for the drug cartels and the government of Mexico has allowed millions of foreign nationals to stream over its territory into our country along with fentanyl that's killed hundreds of thousands of people in this country, why is Mexico not our main enemy?

MACGREGOR: That's a good point because Mexico right now -- in Central America writ large because of the criminality -- is an existential threat to us. It's the only truly existential threat to the country. And remember, they reach into the United States -- all of your major cities there are networks there that reach back into Mexico.

That's why they are powerful and that is a war that will eventually have to be fought because at some point we will shut down the border because things will have gotten that bad. When we do that, we will immediately be at war with the drug cartels because we cut off their income. We are going to have to fight inside the United States as well as on our border. And that's going to demand the United States army because our border patrol is not nearly as well-equipped. They are outgunned, outperformed in every sense, every category of military power by the cartels. What you saw is a good demonstration of just how powerful those cartels are.

CARLSON: So you're saying we could see scenes like this in our country?

MACGREGOR: Absolutely, it's inevitable.

CARLSON: So the last time a president suggested deploying the U.S. military to the border the Pentagon scoffed at him. I think unconstitutionally but they did. Do you think the Pentagon would be willing to fight the drug cartels? It seems like they issue their own orders at this point.

MACGREGOR: The fact that you are raising the question is a sad and tragic comment on the state of civil-military relations. We have people at the top of the military establishment who pick and choose from a menu of tasks and decide what they will and won't do presumably because there's lots of money in the Ukraine war and there's not money them in the Mexican war.

Bear in mind that Ukraine and Mexico are just about equally corrupt. The difference is that right now they're killing more people in Ukraine, but the murder rate in Mexico is one of the highest in the world, about 136 out of every 100,000. It leads most of the world in murder. It's not that far off, it wouldn't take much to catch up with Ukraine. As you point out, Ukraine means a lot of money for a lot of people in Washington, shutting down the border, stopping the influx of illegals, stopping the influx of human trafficking, and going after the drug cartels doesn't really make anybody money.



Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom 1/10/2023

 


Saturday, January 7, 2023

Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom 1/4/2023

 


Ukraine Says Russia Shifting Away From Bakhmut

Ukraine Sees Signs of Russia Shifting Front-Line Firepower Away From Bakhmut



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