The Duran Podcast - Zelensky, playing for time
Episode Date: July 20, 2024Zelensky, playing for time The Duran: Episode 1965 ...
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All right, Alexander, let's talk about what is going on in the conflict in Ukraine.
A more talk about Sierskyy, perhaps, resigning or being fired.
Some talk about Sierzky and Zillusinni wanting to surrender to the Russian military because they realize that Sierzikin's illusionie, I say Zalusini, because there's talk that there's some sort of general, top-level general mafia in U.
And all of this was about getting Ukraine to surrender to Russia because the generals understand that this war can not be won.
And we have the second peace summit.
Zelensky is saying that Russia is invited to this very kind of him, that Russia is going to be invited to this peace summit or a Russian representative will be invited to this peace summit.
but there is also talk which claims that Zelensky is just saying this because he is anticipating
that Russia will not come to the peace summit.
And when they don't show up to the second peace summit, that will show that Russia is not interested
in a peace.
So what do you make of all of this that is happening in Ukraine?
I think that Zelensky has no real sincere.
to negotiate or to achieve peace.
I think, as I've discussed in many programs,
as we've discussed on programs here,
I think that Zelensky understands perfectly well
that if there was a serious move now
to achieve peace and to end the war with Russia,
not only would there be an immediate political crisis in Kiev,
I mean, the Azov Brigade has already given warnings,
basically telling Zelensky if he goes down that road, they'll be after him.
I mean, quite explicit warnings, by the way.
But not only that, but I think he also knows that even if he were to survive that physically,
politically, he would be toast.
I mean, he would not be able to remain president of Ukraine if after all these years of war
and after all these terrible sacrifices, of which we would.
would at that point begin to get finally something like a true measure and the Ukrainian people
would get a true measure of it as well. Anyway, I think Zelensky knows perfectly well that he would
not be able to survive politically if the war were to end. And as I said, his own personal position,
his own physical position is at risk too. So I don't think he wants peace. But at the same time,
the situation in Ukraine overwhelmingly points to the need for it.
So I don't know for sure what advice Siersky and perhaps Zillusioni are giving.
But Bezuglia, who is one of the deputies in the Rada,
is going around telling everybody that Sierski is telling everyone that surrender now
is the only thing that can happen, that the military is almost played out, that they can't keep
on resisting for much longer, that Ukraine's resources are all but exhausted. So she's saying
this, she's saying that this is what Szylisky is saying. Zaluzzi might be saying the same thing.
One does get the sense that the top military leaders understand how desperate the situation is
becoming. Every single day, we get more reports of appalling Ukrainian casualties. They're now
running, according to the Russians, at around 2,000 men dead and wounded every day. Casualties
Ukraine cannot replace. Every day we get reports of more Russian advances, more fortified positions,
falling to the Russians.
This morning reports that a key road to the fortified town of Vuglidah has been cut
that the Russians have broken into the main part of Chassevya.
This is now happening every single day.
Ukraine being bombed and smashed,
growing doubts about the abilities of the F-16s to achieve anything in the war.
The European Union's promises of hundreds of thousands of shells have dwindled to nothing.
President Pavel's plan to supply Ukraine with shells that were going to be bought on the international arms market,
have turned into a Sikh joke.
Just as we predicted they would do.
The European Union claiming that they were going to produce 1.7 million shells, most of which would be supplied to UK.
Ukraine this year, it looks as if they won't be able to produce even as much as a third of that
amount. And nobody thinks that they can produce more. Germany cutting halving, the military
support is going to supply to Ukraine next year because it's facing a budget crisis. The situation
in France looking incredibly complicated. The situation in the United States looking incredibly
complicated. Britain basically exhausted, unable to do much more. So everything, everything points
to the need for negotiations. So what Zelensky is doing, this is getting his people to tell
the New York Times. We're looking for a plan to negotiate. He's telling his people to spread
stories about how Russia is going to be, you know, very kindly and generously invited to the next
peace conference.
All of this, it looks to me like Ukraine, or rather like Zelensky himself, playing for time,
hoping that something somewhere will turn up.
They're telling the economist today that they again think that Russia is almost out of
weapons.
Remember that?
We've heard that before.
Big article today in the economist.
Russia is almost out of weapons.
It's tank stocks and infantry fighting vehicles are exhausted.
We'll be talking about this in 20 years.
Exactly.
Anyway, apparently, you know, they're clinging, clutching on to all those sort of hopes.
I don't think that Zelensky really wants negotiations.
But the fact that there is this talk floating around about it shows how desperate the situation is
and how great the pressure to end the war in Ukraine has now become.
So what is Olensky going to do?
What is Zelensky going to do?
I mean, Ukraine is being smashed?
Yes.
Is there some sort of a plan from NATO, from the collective West?
I mean, do they have a plan?
They were talking about a no-fly zone in the west of Ukraine.
They were talking about airfields in the west of Ukraine,
where the F-16 would take off from.
They've been talking about isolating Crimea.
France was talking about sending troops to Odessa.
I mean, do they have a plan?
Is there something that's going to save Zelensky?
Is that what he's holding out hope for?
No, I think they've never had.
He doesn't know.
He doesn't know.
I don't think NATO has ever had a plan.
I think that they have had various schemes,
like isolating Crimea,
by, you know, bombarding the place with missiles.
Only that hasn't really worked.
And the latest story is that because the missile launches are being destroyed by the Russians
where they are located because the Russians now have complete surveillance of the area with their drones,
that they're actually pulling out the missile.
So that didn't work.
So the idea of sending French troops and other troops to Ukraine,
European public has now shown in repeated elections,
that is dead set against.
that idea too. So I don't think they've got a plan basing the fighter jets in Romania and Poland.
The Russians have given strong warnings against that. The Pentagon isn't keen on that idea
because it doesn't want to get into a clash with the Russians. And the no-fly zone idea that
Zelensky floated when he went to Poland, getting the bulls to shoot down the missiles over
Ukrainian territory. Well, the Poles were clearly blindsided, but they've now clearly been told
again by the Pentagon. We're not interested in this, and the polls have pulled back on that.
So I don't think they have a plan. I think that Zelensky, to the extent that he has a plan,
it's this. Firstly, hold on for as long as he can in the hope that something, as I said, will turn up.
Maybe the Russians will run out of tanks. Maybe Putin really will fall ill with cancer.
maybe there will be big protests in Russia.
Who knows?
But I think that even Zelensky in his calmer moments
realizes that none of that is very likely.
So I think he wants to hold out
until basically the bitter end.
And then when it's clear that everything is going to fall apart,
he's going to try to do what Garni did in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan and Tew did in Vietnam.
He's going to get on his plane and fly with his briefcases and suitcases to the West and to the United States
and perhaps hope that he can set up a government in exile there.
I think that is his plan, actually.
I don't think he has anything more sophisticated or planned or thought through than this.
He probably calculates that his prospects of a.
survival, both physically on this earth, and secondly, politically, and remember if he's able to
create some kind of government in exile, he has, in a kind of a manner, survived politically. He can
still receive funding from Western governments that would still support him. Even if the Western
governments lost interest, there would probably still be NGOs and philanthropists and all sorts of
people who could provide something. So that, I think, for him personally, would work better
than trying to conduct a negotiation, which would put him in peril of his life, and which would result
in his complete political disgrace. So I think that's what he's going to do.
Yeah, a government in exile, a type of act two.
to the Zelensky play,
which would mean that he would get,
maybe he won't get billions of dollars,
but he'll get hundreds of billions of dollars.
So I imagine that he thinks that's the best solution for himself.
Yeah, I could definitely see that being his game plan.
But you have to wait until, you have to time it right.
Yes.
You have to wait until the very end,
right before the collapse,
minutes before the collapse to get on your plane
and to have your suitcase.
packed with cash and to get out.
Yeah, he's going to have to time this very, very well.
He's had plenty of...
Batista in Cuba.
There's a tune in Vietnam.
Garni and Kabul.
They all did it.
And he has to pick his destination.
Oh, absolutely.
He has to pick the right destination as well,
where he's going to be protected to set up this,
this government in exile.
Yeah, so Lavrov is in New York.
He was attending the UN security.
Council meeting. And he said some interesting things about Ukraine, Project Ukraine's failure and
collapse and how it will affect NATO. Yeah. What are your thoughts on what Lavrov said?
Yeah, I think the first thing to say is that Lavrov clearly doesn't believe in any of these
Ukrainian overtures. I mean, this is absolutely obvious to me from what he was saying.
Basically, Lavrov's point is that the Western powers have used Ukraine, that Ukraine has failed,
that they're hoping in some way to sort of cast it aside, but they won't be able to do that
without this having a massive impact on their own credibility and their own ability to function
as a future organisation. And I think he's right. He said that the narrative about
the fact that
that if Ukraine loses
then Russia's going to
to invade Estonia
and the Baltic states
and move into NATO territory.
He said that's a manipulation.
The truth of the matter is,
according to Lavrov, is that
if Ukraine loses,
that it's going to be the Baltic states
and other NATO member states
that are going to lose their trust
in NATO
and in the U.S.
has protection of their of their country with regard to the NATO umbrella and they're going to
start to leave NATO which will eventually lead to the collapse of NATO and the collapse of the
European Union. What do you make of that thinking? He's absolutely right. If NATO fails,
well, not if NATO was, NATO having failed in Ukraine in this absolutely spectacular way.
And remember, Ukraine is a big country, large population, big army,
a army heavily built up, trained and reinforced by the NATO powers.
If NATO can't win it defeat the Russians in Ukraine,
there is absolutely no way that he can defeat the Russians and the Baltic states.
And if young Britain's, Germans, Frenchmen, Italians are not prepared to fight for Ukraine,
they're not going to be prepared to fight for the Baltic states either.
And the current generation of Baltic leaders probably will refuse to accept this.
But future generations of Baltic leaders may begin to understand that.
And though I think Lavrov's expectations that they will all quit NATO are a bit of a stretch.
There is no doubt at all.
There is no doubt that defeat in Ukraine,
especially on the scale that we're about to see, is going to severely damage the credibility of the whole NATO system.
And that it might ultimately not survive this.
It's going to undermine NATO in two respects.
One, in the way that Lavrov was talking about, in the countries like Finland, the Baltic states, Sweden, the other states, will now say to themselves,
is the United States really going to defend us from the Russians?
it shouldn't be perhaps instead be rethinking what we have been doing over the last 30 years.
Perhaps we should look to the Russians instead.
So there's that collapse of credibility.
But the other one, which I think people aren't picking up on,
is that for many people in the United States,
it's now become clear what a dangerous thing,
these open-ended commitments that the NATO bureaucracy has foisted on the United States are,
most Americans do not want to fight the Russians in Ukraine.
Most Americans do not probably want to fight the Russians in the Baltic states.
We're going to start seeing a shift away from NATO amongst the American public as well.
And not just the American public, but the political club.
and that is playing a key role, I think, in the rise of Donald Trump.
Ultimately, isn't the fear that the money's going to dry up to NATO.
I mean, most of the money is coming from the United States.
Most of it is from the U.S.
And if NATO starts to, I don't even want to say backtrack,
let's just say if NATO is just, stops expanding, it's just contained
and doesn't continuously try to expand,
then effectively there's no need to continue to pump it up with so much.
money and that means if there's no money going to NATO well there's no money going to
all of the bureaucrats who are in and around NATO as well as all the think tanks and
NGOs that are also associated with NATO I mean isn't the big fear at the end of the day
and the military industrial complex at the end of the day it's it's all about
NATO not expanding anymore it needs no more money being pumped into NATO and
that's bad for for all of these entities which are feeding up to the NATO racket
Absolutely. What purpose does NATO now have?
NATO was originally created in the 1940s to withstand the Soviet Union, which was in those days
the ascended superpower in Europe. It was led by Joseph Stalin, the Red Army was the biggest
army on the European continent. It was the country at the vanguard of a revolutionary
ideology, which was spreading across Europe. So you could argue then convincingly that
you needed an alliance to hold that all back.
And that was the purpose of NATO throughout the Cold War.
Then after the Cold War ended, it acquired its new purpose, which is as a prop and
instrument of the hegemonic power of, well, let's call it the United States, but if you
prefer the neocons vision of the United States.
So NATO is expanded constantly. It brings in more and more countries. It links them to the Washington system. The neocons are an overall charge of this. All kinds of people in Europe do very well out of it. There's a constant grift of money and financing and all of that. And the inherent logic of that kind of NATO, very different from the earlier NATO, is that it constantly expands. It expands in
Europe, it expands in Eurasia, it isolates the countries and ultimately destroys the countries,
which the neocons identify as the enemy, first Russia, then China. It expands ultimately to the Asia-Pacific
region as well. If NATO cannot do that anymore, if NATO is stopped, if the whole process of
NATO expansion ends, if it's isolated in itself, well, what purpose does it serve, ultimately,
because it's no longer an effective mechanism for expanding neocon power? So at that point, it loses its second
purpose. And there isn't realistically going to be a third one. So the whole thing starts to wind
down. There's less interest in providing it with the money and with the support and with the
personnel and all of those things. There's less interest in creating this vast array of think
tanks and publications and NGOs and agencies that cluster around it that feed off again the
money that the US taxpayers are providing. There is some brave talk in Europe of keeping NATO going
without the United States, which is a ridiculous idea.
It's absolutely ludicrous to think that that can happen.
The point about NATO was to have the United States in Europe.
I mean, it's just a stupid idea.
So without perpetual expansion, NATO will die soon or later.
It will, first of all, turn into a zombie, an organization that has no real
function and then it will gradually die because people won't take it seriously anymore.
The money will gradually stop.
The institutions will fall away.
The exercises will decline.
The governments in Eastern Europe will start to cut their own deals with the Russians and with others.
And the whole thing will finally implode on itself.
And the world will be a much better place.
Absolutely.
All right.
We will end the video there.
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