Posted on Leave a comment

Ukraine War Why Ukraine Cannot Attack Russia

destroyed buildings and streets in ukraine

Russia has been invading Ukraine since 2014, with the Russian government claiming that soldiers invading Ukraine are little green men or are Russian citizens taking a vacation to go to Ukraine. 

The United States government has known since October 2021 that the Russians were planning an invasion. 

The Biden administration informed the Ukrainian government for months before the actual invasion, which took place in February 2022, that the Russians would be invading. 

To prepare Ukrainians for the Russian invasion, the US government sent assets that Ukrainians could use to fight the Russian Federation; these assets were mainly portable sets and other smaller equipment like the Stinger Fiererockets and other anti-tank weaponry. 

This was due to a common consensus that with the Russian Federation having the second-largest land army on the planet, the Ukrainians would fall within the year. 

Instead, during the Ukraine War, Ukrainians have performed above anyone’s expectations.

flag of america
Photo by Sharefaith on Pexels.com

Mark Milley

General Mark Milley, the United States Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, carries around a set of notecards that have the overall strategic goals of the USA during the Ukraine conflict, which are as follows;

  1. Don’t allow Ukraine’s defence efforts to become a direct war between the USA and NATO military forces against the Russian Federation.
  • Maintain the unity of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation members in the face of Russian aggression.
  • Support the Ukrainian military and its economy with everything the NATO alliance and the USA can provide the Ukrainian government and its armed forces to defend the territorial integrity of the nation of Ukraine. It’s essential to add that without the economic and military equipment of NATO and its affiliate members, and the Ukrainians would be unable to continue the war.
  • Contain the war inside the territorial borders and geographical areas of Ukraine though this can be debated on whether or not Eastern Ukraine and Crimea are Russian territories.

The United States and its allies cannot guarantee that the Ukraine war will mainly occur within Ukraine. The second reason is that the Russians are performing so badly, and now the Ukrainian government is already using paramilitary organisations to attack Russia.

devastated bus stop in town after bomb explosion
Photo by Алесь Усцінаў on Pexels.com

Russian Claim to Ukraine

It’s been repeated in Russian propaganda that Ukraine has always been and always will be part of Russia; this is categorically false information, but like all information that is misinformation, it does contain a grain of truth. 

The Russians as a culture group are Slavic, the same way that Western nations like Germany, Great Britain and France have Germanic roots and Latin roots in their cultures, including their legal system and use of words having Latin and German roots. 

The Russians as a people did begin in Kyiv but were removed from the area due to the invasion of Genghis Khan and his Mongol hordes in the 13th century. 

And throughout the centuries, Ukraine has been a battleground of Germanic kights, the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Ottoman/Turkish Sultans and a host of other neighbouring powers trying to conquer the region. 

Ukrainians have only been independent since 1991, and in the proceeding 30 years, particularly during the Ukraine-Russian war in 2014 to the present day, a new distinct ethnic group and identity is emerging. 

Ukraine war can be likened to the American War of Independence from 1775 until 1883 because, like during that long conflict, a separate and new American identity was made that was partially distinctive from the home islands of Great Britain. 

Over time, each nation and culture group is fractured and reunited through a series of migrations, natural disasters and wars. The unity created by Holy Rome Emperor Charlemagne in the ninth century no longer exists today. 

There is no longer a unity between Italians, Germans and the French. 

As the culture divided and civilisation collapsed, newly independent nations and identities were created; this has happened before and will happen again. 

The most recent in human history was the collapse of the old imperial empires of the previous 20th century. It led to new nations gaining independence and winning their freedom after centuries of oppression. 

Despite the 1991 agreement that the Ukrainians would keep their independence if they handed over their nuclear arsenal to the Russian Federation, Ukraine, in perpetuity, would maintain its national independence. 

Instead, Vladimir Putin, the President of Russia, has put forward a fictional argument that the Western world wishes to devour and destroy Russia. 

Vladimir Putin sees the world through a very old lens of the Cold War and previous centuries, making him out of touch with reality. 

The biggest crisis Russia faces is not from the West but from the collapse of its demographics, which is the same problem most of the Western world and other nations like China and Japan, especially South Korea, which have no future due to not enough people being born.

men in black and red cade hats and military uniform
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Ukrainians Fighting Russia

According to the Atlantic Council, a non-profit organisation that unites northern American and European analysts stated in a report published in November 2022 that the Ukrainians have the legal right to hit back against Russian installations that firing rockets into Ukraine. 

But the Ukrainians are not permitted to do so due to the fears of the Western backers that are worried the Ukrainians will start attacking the Russian Federation territory or Ukraine and launch offences into Russia proper.

Russians may launch nuclear weapons or trigger a global war against the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, starting World War three. 

The reason why NATO and the United States are reluctant to provide the Ukrainian government with missiles and aircraft is highlighted by US General Mark Milley, whose goal is to prevent an escalation of the conflict to avoid using tactical nuclear weapons. 

In a worst-case scenario, the Russians used tactical nuclear weapons against Ukraine, which may avoid world war three, but this kind of attack on Ukraine may not necessarily mean war with the West. 

As for the Ukrainian’s reasons for not attacking Russia with its military, one is because they are still fighting Russians within Ukraine, and the second reason is that its supply lines come from the NATO alliance. 

Without the equipment, Ukraine could not keep fighting the Ukraine war. 

Ukraine cannot attack Russian territory, and it guarantees the Russian position of being the aggressor and never the victim. 

The war will primarily occur within the Ukrainian nation, and all damages and loss of civilian life will be Ukrainians. 

The Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated as early as May 14, 2023, that the Ukrainian counteroffensive would not involve any attacks on Russian soil. 

During the Discard leak of January 2023, it was revealed that President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is very interested in attacking Russian targets within Russia that are being held back due to their allies in NATO and the USA having no skin in the game.

selective focus photography of brown wooden book shelf
Photo by Engin Akyurt on Pexels.com

Sources and Bibliography

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/interactive/2022/ukraine-road-to-war/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/interactive/2022/ukraine-road-to-war/

https://news.sky.com/story/putin-comes-clean-on-crimeas-little-green-men-10368423

http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/66181?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template

https://www.businessinsider.com/who-is-alexander-lukashenko-closer-look-at-the-belarusian-dictator-2021-5

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/russia-hits-targets-across-ukraine-with-missiles-drones

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/volodymyr-zelenskyy-ukraine-president-counteroffensive-russia

https://www.msnbc.com/opinion/msnbc-opinion/zelenskyy-ukraine-russia-war-report-leak-rcna84451

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/americas-far-right-embraces-hungarys-autocratic-president

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/05/13/zelensky-ukraine-war-leaked-documents/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/05/31/ukraine-russia-war-hmars-mlrs-rockets-biden/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%E2%80%932023_Russian_mystery_fires

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/apr/22/die-in-fire-at-russia-defence-institute

https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1603555/russia-fire-coal-fired-power-plant-sakhalin-smoke-clouds-oblast-thermal-plant

https://www.newsweek.com/russia-fire-zhukovsky-moscow-ukraine-war-1708832

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2022/11/21/warehouse-fire-near-moscow-train-stations-leaves-several-dead-a79439

https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2022/12/26/7382406/

https://czechia.postsen.com/world/85387/Kyiv-experienced-more-airstrikes-on-New-Year%E2%80%99s-Eve-a-nuclear-power-plant-was-on-fire-in-Russia.html

https://english.nv.ua/nation/military-facility-on-fire-near-russia-s-belgorod-russia-ukraine-war-news-50295215.html

https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1718614/Russian-military-conscription-centre-fire-Bratsk-Ukraine-war-Vladimir-Putin

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/russia-hit-by-another-mystery-fire-the-latest-is-a-huge-siberian-timber-plant/vi-AA16dpaW?category=foryou

https://www.newsweek.com/explosion-moscow-kolomna-ukraine-drone-attacks-1785303

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimean_Bridge_explosion

https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidhambling/2023/04/10/russia-is-burning-who-or-what-is-behind-the-fires/?sh=70e68ebff21e

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/05/04/world/russia-ukraine-drone-attack-news

https://www.newsweek.com/ukraine-assassinated-russian-propagandists-1801233

https://www.newsweek.com/zakhar-prilepin-russian-politician-injured-car-explosion-nizhny-novgorod-1798794

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgorod

https://www.kyivpost.com/post/17394

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/05/22/russian-border-region-says-ukrainian-sabotage-unit-carried-out-incursion-a81233

https://www.cnn.com/2023/05/22/europe/belgorod-ukrainian-forces-russian-territory-intl/index.html

https://www.newsweek.com/russia-removes-nuclear-munitions-belgorod-amid-conflict-ukraine-1801940

https://understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-may-22-2023

https://www.reuters.com/world/putin-update-russias-elite-ukraine-war-major-speech-2023-02-21

https://uk.style.yahoo.com/map-shows-little-ground-russian-103000910.html

https://twitter.com/KyivPost/status/166061999589255577

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-63621426

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/05/21/bakhmut-ukraine-russia-zelesnky-encircle/

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/more-than-8000-civilians-killed-since-russia-invaded-ukraine-un-2023-02-21/

https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2022-ukraine-russia-us-nato-conflict/

http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/66181?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template

Social Media and Other Links

LinkedIn Link https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-riley-b463881b4/

Blog Link https://renaissancehumanism.co.uk/ 

YouTube Link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCChWzkJjCwD37gmvugB9a_g/featured

Anchor Link https://anchor.fm/renaissancehumanism    

Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/1DXGH7dTHgYE49sdmfv1C8

My Amazon author page https://www.amazon.com/author/jonathan1997

My Twitter https://twitter.com/Jonathan5080549

My Medium link jonathanrileywriter.medium.com  

Donate To Ukraine Links

United24 link

Come Back Alive link  

Nova Ukraine link

Razom link

The $1K Project for Ukraine link

Hospitallers link  

Posted on Leave a comment

Russian Demographics and Ukraine War

war destruction in ukrainian city

Russian Federation and Russia historically have been a kingdom, Empire and nation that is easy to invade but very hard to defend against the Mongols; the first French Empire and Nazi Germany found this out for themselves and a host of other nations that invaded or have had wars against Russia. 

Russia has flatlands perfect for Mongol hordes and organised armies and tank divisions. 

Russia has shown that it can defend itself if it controls the invasion points into Russia by controlling the Carpathian Mountains last time the Russians had this control and security was during the Cold War from 1945 into the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989. 

Russians could only have security by having control of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Hungary, and Yugoslavia, including parts of Finland which Russia won during the Finnish-Soviet War of 1939 to 1940, more commonly known as the Winter War. 

This war also guaranteed that Finland would not join the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and the alliance network created by the United States of America to fight Russia. 

These geographical areas are essential to Russia because other power must do more than send tanks through these buffer zones. The territory is outside of natural defences, flatlands, and enough native infrastructure and space to ensure the war happens outside Russia’s borders. 

Russia’s defence planning mainly involves plugging the invasion gaps with soldiers and fighting along defensive lines. Russians fight their wars by rail, not by roads, due to massive infrastructure projects not being practical due to the natural Russian geography.

destroyed residential building in ukraine  Ukraine War
Photo by Yevhen Sukhenko on Pexels.com

Geopolitics

It is hard for Westerners and people growing up in a liberal, multicultural and democratic society and worldview to understand the motivations for Russian leaders wishing to conquer and hold vast sway of territory. 

It’s not only alien but an antithesis to Western values since 1945. 

What needs to be understood is that the Russian leadership and peoples come from entirely different historical and cultural backgrounds. Russians are not just Europeans; they are so Asians. 

The Russians are Europeans who meet the Mongol hordes and see what has been created in contemporary Russia due to Western and Eastern cultural influences. 

Russia is not a liberal society; it does not favour a liberal worldview that has been hard-won and thought for in the West, where the individual is just as important as the collective. 

This is why the Russians can afford to take losses of 5 to 1 or 10 to 1, and Western liberal nations can not afford those kinds of losses because the West favours individuality over collectivism is one of the significant differences between Western civilisations and other civilisations. 

There is also the Russian view of international politics when it is the survival of the fittest, where nations rise and fall in their abilities to protect their soil and compete to be the global or regional hegemony. 

History before 1945 was when nations thought nations were in an independent self-help system described by international relations scholars like John Mearsheimer, author of, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics, and the system where nations fight for survival. 

Mearsheimer uses the example of Otto von Bismarck and their policy of destroying the Poles to prevent the recreation of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth, which would threaten Germany and the Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires, respectively. 

The reason why this was such a threat to Germany was that in the 19th century, Germany was surrounded by enemies to the West in the forms of the Second French Empire, the East by the Russian Empire, to the south by the Austrian Hungarian Empire and to the north the decaying Scandinavian powers of Denmark and Sweden. 

As for the North Sea, this was the territory of the British Empire, the largest empire the world had ever seen, dominating international trade in the 19th century. 

So like Russia and its actions in the Ukraine war and Germany in the 19th and early 20th century, these nations perceive themselves as being surrounded by enemies and aggressors who would see their destruction if given a chance but keep in mind their point of view. 

They are not protected by natural defences like Great Britain and the United States of America; they are islands onto themselves. Geography plays a massive part in political decisions, what Tim Marshall, a journalist and author, ‘prisoners of geography’.

devastated bus stop in town after bomb explosion  Ukraine War
Photo by Алесь Усцінаў on Pexels.com

Russia Re-establishing Control of Invasion Gaps

Russia, since the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990, has been trying to regain invasion gaps into Russia since 1992 with the occupation Transnistria region of Moldova.

In 1991 Moldova declared independence from the Soviet Union; shortly after this event, the ethnically identifying region Transnistria situated on the east bank of the Dniester River, unilaterally declared independence with the backing of Russia. 

The declaration triggered armed conflicts in the region, ending in a ceasefire on July 22 1992. Transnistria is a largely Russian-speaking population and has remained unofficially part of the Russian Federation since 1992, with Russian soldiers stationed in Transnistria. 

Transnistria is home to Russia’s largest arms arsenal from the Second World War. 

For people reading this who are fans of history, the collapse of the Soviet Union is very much reminiscent of the partition of the German Empire at the end of World War I in 1918, the Empire was broken up, and independent states like Poland were created. 

Unfortunately, the divisions and new states created after World War I caused greater divisions and hatred that contributed to Second World War because ethnic Germans not living within the much reduced German Republic/Weimar Republic in 1918 and 1933 gave Nazi Germany a cause bill to expand its territories. 

The World after the Cold War did not effectively deal with the remnants of the Soviet Union and Russia after a Cold War spanning from 1945 until 1989; like the Second World War, the origins of the Ukraine War can be found in the aftermath of the Cold War. 

The Allied nations defeated the Russians, like Imperial Germany, after 1918. 

However, due to the Russian use and availability of nuclear weaponry, that state could ne be defeated, which, like the First World War, led to the Second World War from 1939 to 1945, the Russians were able to rearm and rebuild their economy to be a recurring threat to the West. 

‘Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much’-Oscar Wilde, an Irish poet and playwright. 

Russians have repeated this process of occupying territory to fill invasion gaps in Russia, the examples above Transnistria region and during the Georgian Civil War 1992 to 1993. On October 20, around 2,000 Russian troops moved to protect Georgian railroads. 

On October 22, 1993, the government forces launched an offensive against pro-Gamsakhurdia rebels led by Colonel Loti Kobalia and, with the help of the Russian military, occupied most of Samegrelo province. 

Again in 2008, Russians on the pretext of protecting Russians after Georgia deported four suspected Russian spies in 2006. 

Russia began a full-scale diplomatic and economic war against Georgia, followed by the persecution of ethnic Georgians living in Russia. 

By 2008, most residents of South Ossetia had obtained Russian passports. 

Like the Ukraine War, the Russian Federation created puppet republics since the 2008 war and subsequent Russian military occupation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the Russian government, along with four other UN member states, considers the territories sovereign independent states: the Republic of Abkhazia and the Republic of South Ossetia.

entrance to residential building devastated by explosion  Ukraine War
Photo by Алесь Усцінаў on Pexels.com

Russian Demographics

The Russian Federation, People’s Republic of China, South Korea and Japan have some of the world’s worst demographics with Ukraine due to the Ukraine war since 2014 has entered the club of nations with decaying demographics. 

This means that nations that do not have replacement generations face the extinction of their cultures and economies because devout people who invest and work in the economy cultures and then nations would fade from human history. 

Massive gouges are out of the Russian demographics due to the trauma of the previous century, with World War II killing 22 and 27 million Russians. 

The great famine of 1930 to 1933 killed 7 to 8 million Russians and 4 to 5 million Ukrainians. 

One of the most significant demographic crunchers in Russian people was the missed decade of the 1990s, were death rates doubled and birth rates halved. 

What has been happening recently due to the war in Ukraine is that 1.3 million Russians a 35 and below fled the Russian Federation. 

This happened due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and to fear of being drafted into fighting as part of the Russian war machine in the classic throw bodies at the problem until it goes away strategy of Russian warfare.

silhouette photo of a mother carrying her baby at beach during golden hour  Ukraine War
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Sources and Bibliography

Atlantic Council The 2008 Russo-Georgian War: Putin’s green light link

Wikipedia Russo-Georgian War link

United States Holocaust Memorial THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC link

TRT World What is the Russian army doing in Transnistria? link

Prisoners of Geography: Read this now to understand the geopolitical context behind Putin’s Russia and the Ukraine crisis: Ten Maps That Tell You Everything You Need To Know About Global Politics by Tim Marshall link

Zeihan on Geopolitics Ask Peter Zeihan: Will Putin “Disappear” and Updates on Russian Demographics? link

Social Media and Other Links

LinkedIn Link https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-riley-b463881b4/

Blog Link https://renaissancehumanism.co.uk/ 

YouTube Link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCChWzkJjCwD37gmvugB9a_g/featured

Anchor Link https://anchor.fm/renaissancehumanism    

Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/1DXGH7dTHgYE49sdmfv1C8

My Amazon author page https://www.amazon.com/author/jonathan1997

My Twitter https://twitter.com/Jonathan5080549

My Medium link jonathanrileywriter.medium.com  

Donate To Ukraine Links

United24 link

Come Back Alive link  

Nova Ukraine link

Razom link

The $1K Project for Ukraine link

Hospitallers link  

Posted on Leave a comment

Deglobalisation: The US Withdrawal as Global Protector

america ancient architecture art

The driving force behind deglobalisation is the decrease in the size of United States destroyers in terms of the available numbers to patrol global shipping lanes and protect international shipping not just for the United States and its allies but also for non-aligned nations, including Russia and China.

As of writing, the United States has 150 destroyers and 11 supercarriers, insufficient to protect the global oceans. Its leading American allies, such as the Japanese, began a rearmament programme to protect their national interests.

As globalisation breaks down because the USA is no longer interested in maintaining a globalised international economy, the US allies will begin rearming themselves and pursuing a more independent foreign policy strategy.

The United States does not need globalisation even though it will lead to higher living costs and inflation as it brings its industries and manufacturing back to America.

Furthermore, the United States is a continental economy, meaning unlike smaller nations that have fewer resources, the United States doesn’t need globalisation.

Deglobalisation and Globalisation: Yalter Conference

Why America Created Globalisation

Unlike the British Empire during the age of the Pax Britannica from 1815 to 1914, the British pursued a free trade policy and the development of the first version of globalisation to enrich the English economy and expand its influence globally.

The British needed its empire to become wealthy by trading in foreign markets within the imperial system that the British and other imperial powers created in the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries.

Furthermore, Britain is an island nation much smaller than its neighbouring European rivals and tiny compared to the United States. For the British to be a relevant power and successful, it relied on international trade and shipping.

The United States never needed globalisation and only created globalisation as we know it; the end of World War II in 1945 was to buy an alliance and win the Cold War against the Soviet Union, which lasted from 1945 to 1989 and the final collapse of the Soviet system in 1990.

With the end of the Cold War, the United States’ incentive to maintain globalisation is fading, and the growing disinterest of the United States since 1992 is leading to a deglobalisation of the international world order.

Posted on Leave a comment

Japan’s Rearmament

mt fuji

For people interested in the Far East, Japan’s rearmament is one of the biggest news stories to hit the region. It is historically significant for the Japanese, with their pacifist constitution being in force since the end of the Second World War in 1945.

On September 16, 2022, Fumio Kishida, the Prime Minister of Japan since 2021, released three new versions of national security documents focusing on national security, national defence strategy and national defence programme.

The papers are the first significant change to Japanese defence policy since 2013; documents are also blunt regarding the threats facing the Japanese home islands being described as ‘the most severe and complex security environments as the end of World War II’.

One of the fundamental changes they made to the Japanese military budget was a move away from spending 1% of the national GDP, and national defence was the standard North Atlantic Treaty Organisation convention of 2% of GDP.

Currently, as a share of GDP placed in context, the United States of America only spends 3.1% of national GDP and is expected to decline to 2.8% by 2033. The current economy of the United States is currently at in terms of GDP $26.854 trillion. In comparison, Japan’s GDP is at $4.4 trillion and is the world’s third wealthiest nation.

Regarding Japan’s chief Pacific rival, the Chinese government announces defence expenditure information annually.

In March 2023, China announced a yearly defence budget of RMB 1.55 trillion ($224.8 billion)1, marking a 7.2 per cent increase from the 2022 budget of RMB 1.45 trillion ($229.6 billion).

Japan’s Rearmament

Why Japan Wants to Rearm

The current president of Japan is pursuing the rearmament and re-militarisation of his nation, which is quite surprising due to Fumio Kishida supporting policies of nuclear disarmament and coming from the piece wing of the Liberal Democratic party (自由民主党, Jiyū-Minshutō).

Three massive geopolitical threats threatened the survival and independence of Japan, with the Japanese government calling the Chinese ‘greatest strategic challenge ever to securing the peace and stability of Japan’.

The other two significant threats to the Japanese were the North Koreans and Russians. People in predominantly Europe forget that Russia stretches from Eastern Europe to the Japanese archipelago with the Sakhalin Island.

The Japanese did not favour rearmament and remilitarisation for two fundamental political reasons. First, Japan lost World War II and the United States in retaliation rather than trying the Japanese culture or its independence as a people.

America opted for a truly American and unique strategy to integrate Japan into the global economy, maintain Japanese identity and enforce a Japanese peace constitution.

An essential tenet of the pacifist constitution is Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, which contains the No war clause.

It occurred on May 3, 1947, immediately after World War II. The text of the article of the Japanese Government formally renounces war as a right of sovereignty and refuses to settle disputes using military force.

The second or most fundamental reason the Japanese did not maintain a strong military was the security provided by the United States during the Pax Americana.

Unfortunately, the Japanese know Americans are no longer interested in global affairs and being the world’s policeman.

Since the election of William ‘Bill’ Clinton in 1992, American presidents have been increasingly focused on internal American politics, and the American public has voted for increasingly isolationist presidents.

George W. Bush went against this mould primarily due to the wars in Afghanistan that focused American political presidential leadership mainly in that part of the globe, which prevented George W. Bush and his successors, Barack Obama and Donald Trump, from focusing on the Pacific.

It must be stated that it wasn’t Donald Trump and his successor, Joe Biden, that saw American foreign policy moving from the European continent to the Pacific.

Even with the seachange, the American Navy has consistently shrunk since the end of the Cold War in 1989 and no longer can secure the world shipping lanes.

According to the geopolitical analyst, author, and YouTube Peter Zilhan, America’s allies increasingly have to fend for themselves in a more chaotic and disorganised world.

Japan’s Rearmament

Why Japan Needs Weapons

With the USA being overstretched with the war in Ukraine and when it comes to pursuing a naval policy with the US destroyers down to 150 and a focus on supercarriers, which are nation killers are not practicable when it comes to protecting the world’s oceans, Japanese must rearm.

With this environment, North Korea, China and Russia have more missile capability than the Americans and Japanese have in that region.

Japanese coastal defence missiles are currently limited to a range of just 200 km; even the air missiles Japan has acquired from Norway are only capable of 480 km.

This is not something the Japanese can tolerate any longer, with the Japanese planning to at least have the capacity to launch missiles able to reach targets at least 16,000 km, which is far enough to give the Japanese the capabilities to attack Beijing and Pyongyang in retaliative strike.

The Japanese government that the only reason they would ever use this capacity in a first strike and not a retaliative strike would be if they had solid Intel that North Korea, China or Russia was planning to attack Japan or its allies in the Pacific.

Opening phases of Japan’s rearmament were the purchase of Tomahawk missiles from the USA and a focus on domestic production within the Japanese home islands.

Furthermore, the Japanese government has contracted Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to produce a Japanese homegrown type XII missile.

The Japanese government is moving quickly in a missile-buying bonanza to become less independent internationally from outside sources inside the Japanese home islands. Sipri stated that Japan gets 80% of its missiles from the USA.

Japanese are running out of Babies: Japan’s Rearmament

Problems With Japan’s Rearmament

The Japanese plan to rearm has one massive problem: the rearmament programme’s ability to have the population size necessary to fight a war on the battlefield and within industries.

Japan’s objective to improve the security situation in the region may not be feasible with Japan’s declining demographics, and its military has a problem with over 16,000 positions that cannot be filled.

If the Japanese cannot replace personnel, it is doubtful they could automate in time with the projection of the Chinese invading Taiwan within the next five years, nor is it possible to increase its birthrate in time.

The Japanese birthrate has been below replacement levels since the 1970s, partly due to the oil crisis in the early 70s and the issues in Japan and the ones being faced by most developed and industrial nations throughout the world.

The Japanese issues are caused by modern lifestyle, culture, and other factors that cannot be easily fixed, which Japan has been trying to fix for over three decades.

An option the Japanese could use is immigration. Unfortunately for Japan, South Korea and China, these are Monotonicity. Unlike their Western counterparts, they don’t have the option to bring immigration due to their protection attitudes to their culture.

Westerners, particularly people part of the Anglosphere, who are the English-speaking peoples, may perceive this as racist because if they moved to these nations, no matter what they do, they would never be considered Chinese or Japanese.

Western countries deduce they have this attitude toward culture. Still, it was decided politically and culturally to move away from a monoculture into a multicultural society, which these nations, as stated above, don’t have that option as a means to regrow the population numbers.

China is running out of Babies: Japan’s Rearmament

Chinese Internal Issues

The geopolitical analyst and author Peter Zilhan predicts that this decade will be China’s and Russia’s last decade as a serious international power, and he gives two main reasons for this.

The first one is a terminal demographic issue in these two nations that won’t start to recover until the twenty-second century.

The second reason is that the Russian Federation cannot maintain its multi-ethnic empire without a sufficient population, and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is unlikely but possible to maintain CCP leadership.

For these two reasons, war with China or Russia is highly possible.

Within the context of this article, China is the biggest problem for Japan.

The Chinese Communist Party is facing a perfect storm with an undercounting of its population by at least 100 million and China missing over 80 million women who have never been born due to the impact of the one-child policy.

The one-child policy was implemented due to the CCP’s ideology that allowed for state intervention, state eugenics and the overall attitude that the state has the right to play an active part in its population’s lives.

Because of these beliefs, the one-child policy, which started in 1979, limited Chinese couples to only one child due to the fear of mass starvation.

The long-term impact of that policy 40 years later is that millions of girls that could have been born have been aborted due to the desire to continue on the family name in the Chinese society that is more favourable to males.

Also, due to China’s declining demographic, it is a country that is getting old before it can get rich, in contrast to its neighbour Japan, which faced the same issue and has faced the same problem since the 1990s.

However, the Japanese managed to reindustrialise and revitalise its economy after it was devastated during World War II and became wealthy enough to pay for its increased ageing population.

As for China, it has run out of time with its Boomer generation hitting retirement this decade and the bulk of them most likely being dead by 2040.

What this means for the China Communist Party to survive even though it will most likely lose any foreign war with the United States and its allies.

There is a solid amoral case for the Communist Party.

Even if it lost the war, it got to choose the time and place of its defeat and dictated the narrative of Chinese history after the event, where the Chinese Communist Party’s priority was survival.

The Chinese Communist Party have rewritten history before with China’s so-called hundred years of humiliation from 1837 to 1949, which is based partly on historical nonsense.

China has been divided for at least half its existence throughout its long history, if not more, depending on how you view Chinese civilisation.

It has repeatedly collapsed, faced rebellions, and has seen Southern China repeatedly breaking away from the North.

Chinese history is long and complicated, and the public only tends to get a slim-down version. Very few people understand the strong ethnic divide between northern and southern Chinese, according to Jerrard Diamond, author of Guns, Steel and Germs.

As for the CCP, it is to survive. If this means at least half a billion dead Chinese, according to Peter Zilhan, that is something they can live with.

Posted on Leave a comment

Ukraine War: Winter 2023 and 2024

person in jacket running on snow covered ground

If you have been following my writing since July, you may remember me writing about the Russians targeting power grids and other energy sources during the winter of 2022 and 2023; the Russian Federation did this during the initial Ukraine war launched in February 2022.

The Russians targeted Ukrainian energy due to the complete logistical disaster because Russian mechanised units ran out of fuel for their vehicles and had to withdraw from northern Ukraine back into Belarus.

Due to the Russian military’s failures and corruption, they had to start using siege tactics because if the Russians did not defeat the Ukrainians on the battlefield, they would try to freeze them to death.

Furthermore, the Russians are deliberately targeting the Ukrainian ability to feed themselves and export agricultural products around the world, which could lead to a mass famine of at least 400 million people, primarily affecting China and the nations like Niger and Nigeria.

As of September, Putin has sufficiently disrupted Ukraine’s grain exports and agricultural sector. Meanwhile, the Russians were bolstering their wheat exports, so global supply has held steady, and prices are still down.

However, relying on Russian grain is unreliable due to the high potential of sea conflicts, privateering, or other factors that could disrupt Russian grain from the Black Sea to the rest of the world.

Eduard Zernin, head of Russia’s Union of Grain Exporters, cited a potential aggravation of what he called ‘hidden sanctions’ that ‘may lead to an increase in freight and insurance costs’ for Russia.

This ‘will be reflected in the price level of wheat and other grains on the world market’, Zernin told Reuters.

Give some perspective on the importance of Russian grain. Russia is the largest wheat exporter in the world, followed by Canada and the United States. Three countries export more than 20 million tons of wheat: Russia, Canada and the United States.

Russia accounts for nearly 24% of the top 20 largest wheat exporters.

To secure the screen supply, the best option, though it may be unrealistic due to a lack of political will in the West and both American political parties, Democrat and Republican, being hotly divided on the issue of Ukraine due to some Americans viewing the conflict as a foreign war.

The infrastructure development option is building railway networks connecting Europe and the grain from Ukraine to transport agricultural materials.

As the temperatures shift, we will see the Russians change their strategy again. They will transition from attacking Ukrainian agricultural infrastructure to targeting the power grid, but just because the Russian focus has shifted doesn’t mean grain markets will be stable.

Ukraine War

Donate To Ukraine Links

United24 link

Come Back Alive link

Nova Ukraine link

Razom link

The $1K Project for Ukraine link

Hospitallers link

Posted on Leave a comment

The Ukrainian Counter-offensive

war museum perspective army

There are three main assaults to follow: one of strategic importance and the other being a mix of strategic and emotional significance because wars are not merely thought for strategic objectives but for emotional value.

Two examples of this can be found in World War II during the Battle of Britain in 1940, with Nazi Germany focused bombing attacks on the British people and not focusing on the more strategic and vital infrastructure, manufacturing and the Royal Air Force.

With the Germans pursuing emotional tactical strategies, they enabled the Royal Air Force to rearm and equip the Air Force to fight the Luftwaffe/German Air Force and maintain British air superiority.

The second example is during the Battle of Stalingrad, 23 Aug 1942 – 2 Feb 1943, the Germans needed to take the Russian oil fields to keep its divisions and mechanised fighting forces in action.

Instead, due to the interference of Adolf Hitler, the Germans focused on taking Stalingrad, which had no real strategic aims or significance.

Still, it had great significance to the Soviet Union because the city was named after its leader Joseph Stalin, and Hitler wanted to hurt Stalin’s pride.

We can see this again during the Ukrainian conflict, where according to University Professor Geoffrey Roberts, Bakhmut is becoming Ukraine Stalingrad and is draining the Russian Federation resources by focusing on taking a location that has no genuine significance regarding strategic importance.

It is estimated that over 100,000 Russian soldiers have been killed or wounded fighting to take control of that city; it’s now become an important symbol of resistance for the Ukrainians.

The purely strategic assault is a multi-pronged move on Zaporizhia, hoping to push south to the Sea of Azov. This would sever the land bridges of Ukraine proper and Russia proper…splitting the front in two.

The second assault was supposed to be an amphibious assault further down the river that would eventually cut off the Crimean Peninsula.

The Russians foiled those plans with the destruction of the Kakhovka Dam. And possibly triggering farming that has not been seen since the Soviet famine of 1930 to 1933 killed between 4 to 5 million Ukrainians.

The third assault is a push east into the Donbas. This would be no easy feat, but it’s on the table for one reason: if the Ukrainians can reclaim territory that Russia seized in 2014, it would be a global humiliation.

Humiliating enough to convince some of those Russian backers to reconsider their allegiances.

Sources and Blogography

Responsible Statecraft Whose ‘Stalingrad’ will Bakhmut be? link

Britannica Battle of Britain European History [1940] link

Imperial War Museum What You Need To Know About The Battle Of Stalingrad link

 Zeihan on Geopolitics The Ukrainian Counter-Offensive Is Upon Us || Peter Zeihan link

Online Sources and Other Links

LinkedIn Link https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-riley-b463881b4/

Blog Link https://renaissancehumanism.co.uk/ 

YouTube Link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCChWzkJjCwD37gmvugB9a_g/featured

Anchor Link https://anchor.fm/renaissancehumanism    

Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/1DXGH7dTHgYE49sdmfv1C8

My Amazon author page https://www.amazon.com/author/jonathan1997

My Twitter https://twitter.com/Jonathan5080549

My Medium link jonathanrileywriter.medium.com  

Donate To Ukraine Links

United24 link

Come Back Alive link  

Nova Ukraine link

Razom link

The $1K Project for Ukraine link

Hospitallers link  

Posted on Leave a comment

China in Crisis

boy and girl in traditional clothes bowing their heads

China is in crisis; according to geopolitical analyst and author Peter Zeihan, this decade will be China’s last decade as an international power, and the entire system of the Chinese Communist Party may also implode with the breakup of China.

It’s not clear precisely what is happening in China, but China is in crisis, with youth unemployment hitting a high in June 2023, with 21.3% of people aged between 16 and 24 unemployed.

The reason is that not enough graduate jobs are being created in the Chinese economy to develop its middle class.

There is a mismatch between Chinese university graduates and the jobs available within the Chinese economy.

The last time there was this imbalance in China was the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989, with mass protests on the Chinese mainland.

China is also facing a crisis with its population being miscounted by at least 100 million people, and those people are the millennials who have not been born, which has increased the price of labour within China and with retirement and ageing out of the Boomer generation.

Furthermore, in China, the Boomer generation is now hitting mass retirement at 60 unless they change their policy and increase the working age by decree or by law.

This will further harm China’s ability to export manufactured goods at low prices, with the United States moving its suppliers of manufacturing goods from China to Mexico to ensure Americans still have the choice and convenience of cheap manufacturing goods.

The rest of the world has not noticed the growing issues and crisis rowing within China due to distractions within domestic politics with the United States focusing on the Orange Man, a.k.a. Donald Trump, the Japanese rearming, the cover 19 pandemic due to governments looking inwards and not outwards.

China in Crisis and Chinese Baby

What Does This Mean with China in Crisis

The Chinese Communist Party put forward a grand vision of China being a united entity for at least over 2000 years, if not more, going back around four millennia; this is, unfortunately, complete and utter horse shit.

As a united entity, China has spent more years being divided into separate warring kingdoms than it has been a united entity.

China is a monoculture dominated by the Han Chinese, making up 92% of its population, though these figures vary by percentage points.

China is typically disunited, but during different moments in its long and bloody history, a power in the northern plains of China, a.k.a. northern China, is united under new dynasties or regimes that proceeded to go on and conquer the other regions of China.

China is a massive country that requires a centralised government typically run from northern China, with the other regions breaking away at different points in history only to be reintegrated into greater China.

China faces many crises that could see the nation shatter and reintegrate after a Civil War period.

China in Crisis Food and Energy

Food and Energy

China is dependent upon food and energy imports, and this is a reason why China is facing a crisis due to the reliance on supply routes stretching from the Bosporus and the Aegean, through the Persian Gulf and through the Indian and Vietnam, seas which is a vulnerable supply line for China.

All it takes is China’s enemies or state-sponsored privateers to seize these goods, which could devastate the Chinese economy.

If the USA and China went to war today, China would starve to death within six months.

China is dependent upon global supply chains and global security that have historically been maintained by the Pax Britannica from 1815 to 1914 and then from 1945 to the present day by the Pax Americans.

Basically, the Chinese depend on infrastructure and, more importantly, the protection of the seas that was guaranteed historically by the Royal Navy and then the U.S. Navy.

With the United States no longer interested in global affairs and that system is going away, the U.S. Navy focused on constructing supercarriers, which are nation killers and not destroyer-heavy Navy that is essential for protecting global shipping lanes.

As of writing this article, the USA has 72 destroyers and 17 cruisers, which is not enough to keep the seas safe.

China had to get rich and develop a strong international Navy before the Americans pulled out of the global system they had created.

Unfortunately, China is getting old before it can get rich and has not made the transfer from an industrial economy into a consumer economy.

Its domestic population can no longer meet the required domestic consumption that is no longer optional.

Posted on Leave a comment

Ukraine War: Russian Military Equipment and Nukes

saint basil cathedral on red square at new year night

Putin and Kim Jong-un finally had their little group therapy session at the Cosmodrome out in the far east of Russia.

The sides massaging and soothing over their gigantic egos and contemplating who is the most authoritarian, and it appears the main discussion has been focused upon North Korea providing military assistance to the Russians, primarily in the form of artillery shells.

Russian war against Ukraine won’t be letting up anytime soon, with this war for the Russian Federation also being a war for its survival and geopolitical security.

Ukraine is not the endpoint of Russia’s goal, merely the first stepping stone in securing invasion routes into Russia.

With the Ukraine war dragging on into its second year, the Russians need to replenish their dwindling stocks of artillery shells.

With the only options in China and North Korea, Russia has very limited options.

From this deal with Russia, North Koreans may be getting long-range missile tech to help speed up the North Korean nuclear weapons programme.

The development of intercontinental ballistic missiles should be very concerning for the Chinese Communist Party and other nations in the region.

It’s a massive mistake to believe the Chinese and North Koreans are friends with the Koreans under the leadership of Kim Jong-un, who allegedly called the Chinese ‘bastards’ due to China’s imperial aptitude under Xi Jinping regarding the North Korean regime.

Given this deal’s regional and global security implications, countries like South Korea, Japan, China and the US should be worried. Sure, there are sanctions in place, but in all reality, those minor deterrents won’t stop North Korea.

Ukraine War: Russian Military

Industrial Capacity and Technical Skills

Towards the end of the Soviet period, arms control treaties with the US peaked under Gorbachev, but each US President has handled these differently.

Treaties fell under Clinton due to him sleeping with interns in hand to deal with the threat of impeachment from Congress and the Republican party, which meant his Presidency’s focus was on internal issues. By internal matters, I mean keeping his cock in his pants.

The US presidency is very much like the eye of Sauron; they can only focus on one issue at a time.

I had a resurgence under George W. Bush and have since fallen off. Today, the post-Cold War arms treaties have all but vanished, at least in practice far into the geopolitical analyst Peter Zilhen.

Without these treaties, several concerns arise: can Russia maintain its nuclear arsenal? What happens if things go nuclear? What if they launch a nuclear weapon and it fails?

There are too many moral and strategic dilemmas, but we should probably have some roadmap to guide us through these scenarios.

Unfortunately, policymakers still need to establish procedures for specific situations like a failed nuclear strike attempt, which is quite a conundrum.

Russian technical education seller part in the 1980s, and since then, they have relied on foreign companies and workers to keep their industrial capacity and higher technical infrastructure working.

Since the Ukraine War, beginning in 2014 to the present day, those companies have been leaving or have left Russia.

Ukraine War: Russian Military

Donate To Ukraine Links

United24 link

Come Back Alive link

Nova Ukraine link

Razom link

The $1K Project for Ukraine link

Hospitallers link

Blog link

Posted on Leave a comment

Ukraine War the Russians Go Scorched Earth

abandoned battle tank

The tactic ‘scorched earth is nothing new regarding the history of warfare in Europe; the Russians are mainly famous, if not infamous, for using scorched earth tactics to defeat their enemies historically. 

In the last 200 years, Russia has been invaded twice by foreign powers; the first was Napoleon Bonaparte of the first French Empire which existed from 1804 until Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo by Arthur Wales, the Duke of Wellington, at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. 

When Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812, he invaded with a force of over 600,000 men made up of French, Germans, Italians and other peoples from part of the new French Empire, which had expanded since the French Revolutionary Wars in 1793 until the collapse of the Napoleonic Empire first in 1814 and finally in 1815. 

The Russians did not defeat Napoleon on the battlefield. Still, they defeated him by using scorched earth tactics to prevent Napoleon from using his power of manoeuvre and the ability to feed his vast army with supply lines stretching from France to the Russian capital city Moscow.

Russia is both a very strong country but also a weak one; it is the norm that Russian defeats enemies by swarming them with Russian soldiers or using Russian terrain to defeat the enemies of Russia. 

Napoleon Bonaparte’s inability to feed his army and keep it supplied with winter equipment cost Napoleon the ability to conquer Europe and the collapse of the first French Empire. 

Russia, again over a century later, during the Second World War in 1939 until 1945, was invaded by another wannabe hegemony of Europe; this invading force was Nazi Germany which Adolf Hitler led. 

Again it was not superior Russian tactics that won Russians their freedom and the freedom of the rest of Europe, but the inability of the Germans to keep its army supplied and the Russians destroyed their farmland to prevent any means for the Germans to keep their army supplied using the internal resources of Russia.

war destruction in ukrainian city  Ukraine War
Photo by Алесь Усцінаў on Pexels.com

Kakhovka Dam Destroyed

Russians, on 6 June 2023, destroyed the Kakhovka dam, which is the head of a large water reservoir in the Ukrainian central river of the Dnieper. 

The explosion of Kakhovka dam was an internal explosion and, therefore, could only have been deliberately destroyed by the Russian Federation. 

Though it is essential to add that there has been fighting in the area and that the Ukrainians and Russians have damaged the dam in the past, this did not cause the current destruction of the Kakhovka dam. 

The Russians have committed this act of terror because they are doing poorly in Ukraine; this destruction is part of Russian scorched earth tactics to delay and prevent the Ukrainian offensive and bide Russians time to mobilise and resupply their forces. 

The way the Russians fight the war is not pretty, but no war is pretty, to begin with, the Russians will fight the Ukrainian conflict the way they fight most of their wars by throwing bodies at the problem, and the Russians have 7 million men that can be thrown into the meat grinder. 

Make no mistake; this war is still very much the Russian’s war to lose even though their current casualties are between 300,000 to 400,000 men, depending on the available statistics.

firefighter in front of a residential building destroyed by shelling  Ukraine War
Photo by David Peinado on Pexels.com

The Delay of the Ukrainian Offensive

With the destruction Kakhovka dam, the possibility for the Ukrainians to launch an amphibious offensive within that region and surrounding territories will be further delayed for several more months if the Ukrainians still intend to fight in that region and possibly take the Crimea peninsula. 

The previous offensives planned by the Ukrainians have already been delayed due to the Russian winter, making it impossible for tanks and other equipment to successfully manoeuvre in Ukraine due to the sludge and the melting ice, making transport impractical. 

The Kakhovka dam is also part of a cooling system for one of the Ukrainian nuclear power plants called the Zaporizhzhia power plant; there is currently no concern due to backup cooling systems, but it is placed in danger due to the destruction of the Ukrainian dam. 

With scorched earth takes, we can expect the Russians to destroy more infrastructure and dams to prevent Ukrainians from successfully manoeuvring their armies, which could deliver a hard blow to the Russian military. 

Suppose the Russians are pushed out of Ukraine. In that case, it makes it possible that the Ukraine war could see the use of nuclear weapons or the Ukrainians may invade Russia or its satellite puppet state Belarus, making the situation more deadly regarding the Ukraine war.

It’s unclear if the Ukrainians defeated the Russians on the battlefield; they would surrender and hold a ceasefire with the Ukrainians because, like the Crimea War of 1853 to 1856, Russians could keep sending more soldiers to fight. 

Russia is easy to attack and can be accessible in summer conditions to move large tank divisions throughout the Russian flatlands; it may be easy to invade Russia, but it’s another matter entirely in subduing a country that large. 

Furthermore, the destruction Kakhovka dam may trigger a regional famine in Ukraine; this happened in the past again caused because of the Russian state, and this may further inflame hostilities and violence between both nations. 

The scorched earth tactics being used by the Russians in the Ukraine war may only further escalate the conflict and entrenched hostilities of Ukrainians towards the Russians, which have deep historical roots. 

According to Wheatcroft, the last time the Russians starved Ukrainians gave an estimated 5.5 to 6.5 million deaths during the Soviet famine of 1930 to 1933. 

The Encyclopedialike Britannica estimates that 6 to 8 million people died from hunger in the Soviet Union during this period, of whom 4 to 5 million were Ukrainians.

man and woman kissing illustration  Ukraine War
Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

Sources and Biography

Zeihan on Geopolitics The Russians Go Scorched Earth: Destroying a Critical Dam For Crimea || Peter Zeihan link

Reuters Kakhovka dam breach takes Ukraine war into uncharted territory link

Britannica Dnieper River River, Europe link

Sky News Ukraine war: Workers at deteriorating Zaporizhzhia plant fear ‘devastation’ on a scale ‘worse than Chernobyl’ link

History Channel How Joseph Stalin Starved Millions in the Ukrainian Famine link

Social Media and Other Links

LinkedIn Link https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-riley-b463881b4/

Blog Link https://renaissancehumanism.co.uk/ 

YouTube Link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCChWzkJjCwD37gmvugB9a_g/featured

Anchor Link https://anchor.fm/renaissancehumanism    

Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/1DXGH7dTHgYE49sdmfv1C8

My Amazon author page https://www.amazon.com/author/jonathan1997

My Twitter https://twitter.com/Jonathan5080549

My Medium link jonathanrileywriter.medium.com  

Donate To Ukraine Links

United24 link

Come Back Alive link  

Nova Ukraine link

Razom link

The $1K Project for Ukraine link

Hospitallers link  

Posted on Leave a comment

European Sanctions Affecting Russian Gas

low angle view of illuminated tower against sky at night

European sanctions have been levelled against Russia since they seized parts of eastern Ukraine and the Crimea peninsula in 2014.

They have only increased since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Since then, most European nations have worked to reduce their dependency on Russian natural gas.

They have successfully delivered this and put the German economy, the manufacturing heart of Europe, at risk.

Russia has experienced the lows help out of natural gas since 1978 onto the Russian natural gas state monopoly Gazprom.

European Sanctions targeting piped natural gas have effectively cut off European supply, and the existing infrastructure cannot be easily redirected.

While Russia has alternative natural gas sources and facilities, the limited workforce and technical challenges make these options difficult to maintain.

The Russian technical education system that actually manages the manufacturing, energy and complicated engineering system collapsed in the mid-1980s, the same time as Russia’s birthrate.

Simply put, the Russian economic system doesn’t have the technical skills to continue manufacturing, nor does it have the population to retrain this particular set of technical skills and the sheer mass to wage the kind of attrition war in Ukraine.

Gerard Dimond, the author of the book Guns, Steel and Germs, argues that societies with large populations succeed because societies that increase in population size will increase the possibilities of generating outliers like Steve Jobs or Nicholas Tesla.

(Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, and futurist best known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current electricity supply system.)

(Steven Paul Jobs was an American business magnate, inventor, and investor. He was the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Apple; Pixar’s chairman and majority shareholder; a member of The Walt Disney Company’s board of directors following its acquisition of Pixar; and the founder, chairman, and CEO of NeXT.)

It is the outliers that push society forward. Without large populations, the chance of having unique individuals driving forward technological advancements means fewer opportunities.

European sanctions are working well, and these efforts may permanently sever ties to Russian natural gas with little impact on their systems. The Russian natural gas industry faces an unprecedented fall from grace, but not all industries have been impacted equally.

European Sanctions Affecting Russian Gas

Donate To Ukraine Links

United24 link

Come Back Alive link

Nova Ukraine link

Razom link

The $1K Project for Ukraine link

Hospitallers link