Tag: Ukraine

  • How military operations in Ukraine can stop – Russia

    How military operations in Ukraine can stop – Russia

    Russian presidential spokesman, Dmitry Peskov has revealed conditions that must be met before its military operations in Ukraine can stop.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Peskov made the revelation in an interview with Reuters on Monday.

    He said Russia will immediately stop its military operations if the Ukrainian authorities amend their country’s constitution to abandon their ambition to enter “any bloc,” and recognise the Crimean referendum and the independence of the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics (DPR and LPR).

    “They should make amendments to their constitution according to which Ukraine would reject any aims to enter any bloc,” Peskov said.

    He went further to say: “We have also spoken about how they should recognise that Crimea is a Russian territory and that they need to recognise that Donetsk and Lugansk are independent states.

    “And that’s it. Then, Russia’s military operations will stop in a moment”.

    Peskov added that Moscow would finish the demilitarisation of Ukraine and urge Kiev to stop its military action.

    On Feb. 24, Russia began a special operation to demilitarize and “denazify” Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the DPR and LPR in countering the aggression of Ukrainian troops.

    The Russian Defence Ministry said the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only and the civilian population was not in danger.

    Moscow has repeatedly stressed that it has no plans to occupy Ukraine.

  • We’ll stop military operations immediately in Ukraine only if… – Russia

    We’ll stop military operations immediately in Ukraine only if… – Russia

    Russia will immediately stop its military operations if the Ukrainian authorities amend their country’s constitution to abandon their ambition to enter “any bloc,” and recognise the Crimean referendum and the independence of the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics (DPR and LPR).

    The Russian presidential spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told Reuters on Monday.

    “They should make amendments to their constitution according to which Ukraine would reject any aims to enter any bloc,’’ Peskov said.

    “We have also spoken about how they should recognise that Crimea is a Russian territory and that they need to recognise that Donetsk and Lugansk are independent states.

    “And that’s it. Then, Russia’s military operations will stop in a moment.’’

    Peskov added that Moscow would finish the demilitarisation of Ukraine and urge Kiev to stop its military action.

    On Feb. 24, Russia began a special operation to demilitarize and “denazify” Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the DPR and LPR in countering the aggression of Ukrainian troops.

    The Russian Defence Ministry said the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only and the civilian population was not in danger.

    Moscow has repeatedly stressed that it has no plans to occupy Ukraine.

  • FG to evacuate more Nigerians from Ukraine under humanitarian corridor – Onyeama

    FG to evacuate more Nigerians from Ukraine under humanitarian corridor – Onyeama

    Foreign Minister Geoffrey Onyeama says plans are underway by the Federal Government to evacuate more Nigerians trapped in Ukraine under the humanitarian corridor.

    This is as Russia on Monday announced the opening of humanitarian corridors to allow the evacuation of civilians from several Ukrainian cities experiencing heavy fighting, including the capital Kyiv and Sumy.

    Onyeama disclosed this via his verified Twitter handle @GeoffreyOnyeama.

    He appreciated his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba for granting the request of the Nigerian government for evacuation.

    “Deep gratitude to @DmytroKuleba, Foreign Minister of Ukraine for approval given as promised, to establish a humanitarian corridor.

    “And authorise evacuation of Nigerian students from Sumy starting tomorrow.

    “The big challenges is procuring buses. We are doing everything to make it happen. Great commitment by Nigerian Ambassador, to Ukraine, Shina Alege,” Onyeama twitted.

    Newsmen reports that the federal government has so far evacuated 807 Nigerians from Ukraine.

    Newsmen reports that the first batch of 450 Nigerians stranded in Ukraine arrived aboard Max Air flight 747 at 7:10 a.m., on Friday through Romania.

    The second batch came aboard Air Peace Boeing 777-300 flight (APK7534) and arrived in Abuja with 183 passengers including kids through Warsaw.

    The third batch of 174 evacuees arrived at 11.50 p.m. on Friday through Hungary.

    The Federal Government approved the release of 8.5 million dollars on Wednesday for the immediate evacuation of at least 5,000 Nigerians fleeing the Russian-Ukrainian conflict zone to Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia.

    On Feb. 28, the Federal Government said Nigeria’s diplomatic mission had received 256 citizens from Ukraine at Bucharest, Hungary, Poland and Romania following the invasion.

  • Ukraine, Russia prepare for 3rd round of peace talks

    Ukraine, Russia prepare for 3rd round of peace talks

    Ukraine and Russia are expected to meet for third round of negotiations, which both sides had said could take place on Monday.

    The location and exact time of the talks is not mentioned yet.

    The two delegations last met in the Brest region in western Belarus for two rounds of peace talks and agreed to have humanitarian corridors in place in the embattled cities of Mariupol and Volnovakha to facilitate the evacuation of civilians.

    However, the attempt to evacuate Mariupol failed on Sunday, according to the Kremlin and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

    Russia and Ukraine traded blame for failing to adhere to the agreed ceasefire.

    The head of the Ukrainian delegation for talks with Russia, David Arachamija, rejected Russia’s core demands as “not acceptable” in an interview with Fox News.

    “I would not say we are moving fast because we have a lot of people killed every day, especially civilians,” he said when asked about the progress of the negotiations.

    “It’s tough, honestly, but we are still demonstrating some progress.

    “At least, two groups are listening to each other and actively discussing different things.”

    Arachamija added that the only parts which are almost impossible to agree on are Crimea and so-called republics that Russia insists that we recognise as independent.

    “This is not acceptable within Ukrainian society.”

    He said Russia demands that the Crimean Peninsula, which it annexed in 2014, be recognised as Russian territory.

    In addition, he said it wants the regions of Luhansk and Donetsk, controlled by pro-Russian separatists, recognised as independent states.
    Moscow also calls for a complete “demilitarization” of Ukraine.

  • Ukraine denies admitting foreigners to wage war against Russia

    Ukraine denies admitting foreigners to wage war against Russia

    Ukraine has denied admitting foreign volunteers to wage war against Russia after Vladimir Putin ordered invasion of the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Ukraine also clarified requesting $1,000 from Nigerian volunteers for air ticket and visa, denying the claim as well.

    This was contained in a statement released on Monday by the Spokesperson to Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Francisca K. Omayuli (Mrs).

    According to the statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs contacted the Ukrainian Embassy in Nigeria following reports of ongoing registration of Nigerian volunteers into the fighting force of Ukraine at the Embassy in Abuja, Nigeria’s federal capital.

    The Ukrainian Embassy refuted the allegation, but confirmed that a number of Nigerians had approached the Embassy indicating their willingness to fight on the side of Ukraine in its ongoing conflict with Russia.

    The Ministry in the statement argued that Nigeria discourages the use of mercenaries anywhere in the world and will not tolerate the recruitment, in Nigeria, of Nigerians as mercenaries to fight in Ukraine or anywhere else in the world.

    The statement reads: “The attention of the Federal Government of Nigeria has been drawn to an alleged ongoing registration of Nigerian volunteers into the fighting force of Ukraine at the Ukrainian Embassy in Abuja.

    “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs contacted the Embassy to verify the speculation. The Ukrainian Embassy refuted the allegation, but confirmed that a number of Nigerians had approached the Embassy indicating their willingness to fight on the side of Ukraine in its ongoing conflict with Russia.

    “Furthermore, the Embassy clarified that the Ukrainian government is not admitting foreign volunteer fighters and as such dissociated itself from the claim that it is requesting $1,000 from each Nigerian volunteer for air ticket and visa.

    “As a responsible member of the international community and consistent with our obligations under international law, Nigeria discourages the use of mercenaries anywhere in the world and will not tolerate the recruitment, in Nigeria, of Nigerians as mercenaries to fight in Ukraine or anywhere else in the world.

    “The Federal Government will continue to engage with the Embassy of Ukraine in Nigeria and other relevant authorities to prevent this possibility”.

  • US Secretary of State Blinken reveals Ukraine’s plan in war with Russia

    US Secretary of State Blinken reveals Ukraine’s plan in war with Russia

    United States Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, has revealed Ukraine’s plan amid Russia’s invasion of their country.

    Blinken said Ukrainians have a plan for “continuity of government one way or another” should anything happen to their President Volodymyr Zelensky amid war with Russia.

    He said this during an interview with CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

    “The Ukrainians have plans in place that I am not going to talk about or get into any detail about to make sure that there is continuity of government one way or another, and I am going to leave it at that,” Blinken said.

    Blinken also praised Zelensky for his “leadership” through this crisis.

    He said, “The leadership that President Zelensky has shown, the entire government has shown is remarkable, they have been the embodiment of these incredibly brave Ukrainian people.”

  • What if Putin Flips? – By Chidi Amuta

    Before our very eyes and at an unexpected moment, a horror movie may be unfolding. Last Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, warned that a Third World War between Russia and NATO is possible and that it would be a nuclear war. On the same day, Russian artillery fire set off a blaze at a Ukrainian nuclear facility, the largest in Europe. Luckily, before dawn on Friday, Ukrainian fire fighters had put out the fire. Still on the same day, French President Emmanuel Macron after a telephone conversation with Putin cautioned that : ”the worst is yet to come.” Later in the day, it was a visibly jittery and troubled Putin that addressed Russians and the world to affirm that the invasion of Ukraine was going well according to his plan. Instructively, the broadcast was interrupted twice as Putin stood up in front of global television to adjust his ill-fitting jacket, all the time shying from eye contact with the audience in spite of a teleprompter ahead of him.

    The fog of the Ukrainian war could produce a more frightening outcome than the familiar tragedies of war. Vladimir Putin may mutate into a real dangerous foe not only for Ukraine but for the rest of humanity. Russia is being incrementally isolated. Crippling sanctions on all fronts threaten to strangulate Russia’s enclave economy. More directly, for the first time, Putin’s personal wealth and those of his support cast of oligarchs spread all over the world has been targeted by sanctions by Europe and the United States.

    Under the impact of the volley of sanctions, Russia’s economy is likely to begin to tank in less than 90 days. Financial services are beginning to feel the impact. The Russian Central Bank has adjusted interest rates up from 9% to over 20%. Key Russian banks have been excluded from the strategic international SWIFT network. That literally locks them out of the international banking and transactional super market. Putin has prohibited Russians from making international transfers. It is predicted that life could become quite hard for ordinary Russians in the next couple of weeks.

    Already anti war protests in Russia have been on the increase since the beginning of hostilities with Ukraine, leading to the arrest and detention of over 6000 Russians. If you add this number to the multitude being held in various detention centres for previous protests, it becomes hard to fathom how much repressive capacity Vladimir Putin possesses. Meanwhile, elite dissent is growing as a large group of Russian intellectuals last week issued a forceful statement against the Ukraine invasion. From anti war protests, Russia’s already bulging political opposition could swell into hardship riots as product shortages hit shop shelves. The pressure on Putin’s hold on power could swell to breaking point. Unfortunately, Russia’s democratic institutions are fragile and revolve around Mr. Putin’s stranglehold on power. In the event of increased popular domestic pressure, the threat on Putin’s hold on power could unravel and plunge Russia into something too frightening to name.

    Meanwhile, the advance of Russian columns into the Ukrainian capital and other cities is being frustrated and stalled by the patriotic resistance of ordinary Ukrainians. After over one week of an invasion originally programmed to last no more than a few days, the world ought to be concerned about the cumulative effects of these frustrations on the psychology of Mr. Putin, an unrepentant autocrat and repressive tyrant. Intelligence investigations into the state of Mr. Putin’s present state of mind may be closer to what the moment demands.

    There are enough reasons why Mr. Putin could become more dangerous to us all. An unpredictable autocrat presiding over a nuclear super power is not exactly a pleasant playmate. An autocrat who is easily the richest man in the world can acquire the mindset of a God figure with the power of life and death over the rest of humanity. An ex- KGB officer with an inscrutable face and shadowy family life may not worry much about the familiar moral qualms of regular mortals about human lives and ultimate tragedy. Worse still, a man with a permanent nostalgia for the defunct great USSR and the days of Cold War sabre rattling can pursue his obsession at the expense of others if events keep pushing him to the brinks of sanity.

    When such a man is encircled, his country isolated, his military rendered ineffectual and his private fortunes threatened, it is uncertain how far he can go in seeking revenge against those he sees as his traducers. Throughout history, the mind of a typical autocratic demagogue has been an area of darkness, full of uncanny possibilities. On hindsight, I shudder to think of what could have become of the world if Hitler had access to the codes of a nuclear weapons system. In the isolated seclusion of his bunker, he ordered some of the most massive military assaults that humanity has known during the Second World War. The body count meant nothing to him.

    But here we are today with Mr. Putin, a real autocrat with a record of serial murders of his opponents. He is in control of the world’s second largest arsenal of lethal and nuclear weapons. How far could he go to hurt the rest of the world just to assuage his injured ego? How far will Putin go just to prove to the world that he is not necessarily weak and will not go down in humiliation? Could Vladimir become demented by frustrations of his territorial ambitions in Ukraine and beyond as to do the kind of irrational things that similar figures have done in history?

    Russia as an isolated rogue state is not the best prospect in a world dominated by aspiring democracies. Over 85% of the nations of the world are now democracies or aspiring democracies. In that world, an illiberal democracy or fringe autocracy such as Russia is not your favourite next door neighbor. Worse still, a nuclear super power presided over by an unstable dictator with an injured ego and threatened financial fortunes is a nightmare that could blow up in our faces. Already, Mr. Putin has placed his most strategic military units including his nuclear command, at alert and in an active disposition. Lethal weapons banned by the Geneva Convention have already been reportedly put to use in only a few days of the Ukraine invasion.

    The best way out of this possible nightmare is to show Mr. Putin clearly marked exit points to escape from the consequences of his disastrous judgment. Clearly, he miscalculated his chances in the Ukraine mission. He probably underestimated the extent to which Ukrainians detest and even hate the Russians. You cannot sustain a massive military campaign in a terrain where the occupying force is so despised. Also, Mr. Putin never estimated the groundswell of international opposition that his invasion of Ukraine would attract. More tragically, he probably did not calculate the character of Russia’s post war relations with the European states and former Soviet republics that Russia has to live with in perpetuaity.

    Every war ends in peace. The best prosecutors of wars are also the most creative seekers of peace. Peace talks between Russia and Ukraine are an encouraging sign. But Mr. Putin would rather negotiate with Ukraine as a conqueror hence his armoured columns are proceeding into central Ukraine just as his peace delegation meets with Ukrainian officials. It is doubtful if the two parallel lines will meet somewhere in a bombed out Ukraine. Putin would probably find more satisfaction if the West is an open guarantor of the dubious peace he is seeking through the backdoor.

    The West can help Mr.Putin find a convenient exit point out of the cage he has built around himself. But the interest of a more enduring world peace is not served by the present attitude and rhetoric of the US and the West. It is a good thing to marshal a global coalition against a menacing adversary of the international rule- based order. It is also in order to contain a belligerent autocrat who tramples on the sovereignty of less powerful nations. It is quite understandable to pile up crushing sanctions to bend such a determined aggressor. Adversarial propaganda and guided lies such as we are witnessing from both sides on all media platforms is a legitimate part of the tradition of warfare. The Ukrainians who are at the receiving end of this assault know where the truth of this war really lies.

    But the premature triumphalism of Washington and the West is wrongheaded and could produce a more dangerous Putin. We must not forget; the object of this war is not the humiliation of Russia or Putin even though Mr. Putin provoked it. The object of the war is the protection of the sovereign integrity of independent states from the aggression and deliberate belligerence of more powerful nations. It is of course in the enlightened self -interest of the US and the West to contain Russian influence and Putin’s territorial ambitions. But in the end, the world still needs a powerful stable Russia as a bulwark against the excesses of the West just as much as we need a wealthy Europe and the US to demonstrate the relative advantages of liberal democracy and the power of the free market.

    For those who are desirous or anxious about how this war will end, there are a few certainties. First, Russia can neither crush nor annihilate Ukraine. Second, Russia will not be able to prevail against a coalition of the US, NATO and the rest of the free world. Third, the coalition of pro-Ukrainian forces will not be able to defeat Russia and exclude it from the international system. A humiliated Russia is an unlikely historical oddity.

    The risk that Mr. Putin could flip on the side of ultimate evil and catastrophe is not the only unintended consequence of this war. Other more foreseen and anticipated outcomes of war have come out in full display in less than a week of the invasion. Civilian deaths have topped 700 and still counting. Russian combatant deaths are climbing by the day. Infrastructure is being systematically destroyed. Psychologically, Ukrainians have become united more than ever under a banner of patriotic national resistance and defense. Russia is the unsavoury aggressor while Putin is the irredeemable villain.

    An unplanned refugee crisis and humanitarian disaster is in the making. Close to a million Ukrainians and others have streamed across the borders into neighbouring states. Foreign nationals resident in Ukraine have also been affected too.

    Between Putin and Zelensky, a familiar paradigm of good versus evil has emerged. A former comedy star who once acted a comic president and then became an actual president has in his heroic stance against Russian aggression turned out a real national hero and war time president. Irrespective of how this war ends, president Zelensky has secured his place in world history as a Ukrainian hero and wartime leader of global stature.

    Making a villain out of Putin requires little effort. Mr. Putin has not surprised anyone. A fierce autocrat with an insensitive bearing and inscrutable visage is the material out of which history moulds villains. Hitler, Stalin, Mussolin etc. But in acting out his predictable role, Mr. Putin may be on the way to destroying whatever legacy he may have created in three decades of power and leadership over Russia.

    On the diplomatic front, the world has united against Russia’s aggression. A barrage of United Nations resolutions in condemnation of Russia has lined up two thirds of the member states behind Ukraine. It is significant that votes against Russia’s role in Ukraine have cut across familiar boundaries. All Third World countries especially African countries that used to take a more sympathetic view of Russia have voted to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Communist era ideological solidarity is dead; long live the ideology of the market place and liberal democracy. Hungary and Turkey, known allies of Russia, have also broken ranks. The prospects of a more isolated Russia have become real, clear and present.

    Worse still, Europe and the United States have slammed a quick avalanche of punishing and crushing sanctions on Russia, Putin and his support cast of oligarchs both at home and in diaspora. An estimated $650 billion in Russia’s external reserves has been sterilized. The Moscow Stock Exchange was closed for most of last week. For the first time, sanctions have targeted Mr. Putin and his top Kremlin crew. Cash, choice real estate, luxury private jets, yachts and other assets of Russian oligarchs, friends and associates of Mr. Putin are being confiscated all over the West.

    Before we are all carried away in the nasty exchange of sanctions and reprisals, we must not forget the cardinal rules of international relations that lie at the root of this conflict. They are the principles of the sanctity of the sovereign territorial integrity of nations no matter how weak or strong, big or small. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is a flagrant violation of this principle. Its deliberate carving up of Ukrainian territory by recognizing the breakaway regions as sovereign republics is a deepening of this annoying original violation.

    On the other hand, there is the countervailing principle of Spheres of Influence. Under that convention, Russia has a right to see Ukraine as part of its sphere of influence for historical and strategic reeasons. Recognotion of that sphere of influence does not permit Russia to invade Ukraine; it only allows it to act in a manner to protect that sphere. While Ukraine may have a sovereign right to join or associate with the European Union, its right to join NATO, which is a military alliance, is hindered by the convention of spheres of influence. Everything in the history of Russia and the independence of Ukraine dictates that matters of military alliance and security between the two states ought to be negotiated and agreed upon without the necessity of war. Russia’s recourse to invasion and a shooting war is a reckless endangerment of both principles. The full consequences are Russia’s to bear ultimately.

    Vladimir Putin must be ready to carry those consequences which now include international isolation, crushing sanctions and Ruussia’s inevitable encirclement by states that are bound to be hostile and perennially suspicious neighbours and at best uneasy allies. No rational leader can wish his nation such catastrophe.

  • Pandemic Putin power play – By Biola Sobowale

    Pandemic Putin power play – By Biola Sobowale

    By Biola Sobowale

    “Let them hate me, just as long as they fear me.” Lucius Accius, 170-86 BC

    Ordinary power is the ability to make other people behave in ways they ordinarily would not – whether they like it or not. Great power is the ability to make significant impacts on other peoples’ behaviour far beyond the person’s immediate environment. Absolute power, which corrupts absolutely, is the ability to alter the course of human history and relationships among peoples in far-flung areas for ever. Irrespective of what one might think of what he had done; or one’s judgment on the matter, February 22, 2022 and the invasion of Ukraine have immortalised Vladimir Putin, President of Russia, for ever. Henceforth, historians will mention his name in the same breath as those of, Alexander the Great(356-322BC), Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), Joseph Stalin (1878-1953) and Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) – men who sought to play god after their nation acquired vast military power and they were eager to use it. For leaders like these, might is right. The powerful do what they like; and the weak suffer what they must. Such individuals invariably don’t care what other people think about them. They have ambition; and their mission in life – to become the most powerful person on Earth – is what matters. They are fanatical about that.

    PANDEMIC AND POWER

    “I am making you an offer you cannot refuse.”

    Mafia Boss to Store Owner in Brooklyn, New York, 1967.

    A Nigeria friend was working for a successful corner Supermarket, in Brooklyn, N.Y, owned by a Chinese gentleman when one day, the local Mafia kingpin entered with six armed hoodlums. He had a contract to buy the supermarket at a particular price; which he wanted the owner to sign immediately. The Chinese looked at the amount offered; it was about half the value. He started to refuse it. One of the hoodlums jabbed a gun in his side. The kingpin hissed at the victim. “I am making you an offer you cannot refuse.” To make sure the store owner got the message; one of the hoodlums pumped bullets into a shelf of expensive wines. Very meekly, the man signed. The shop immediately changed ownership. Putin was making Ukraine an offer the small neighbouring country could not refuse without serious consequences.

    Power-mongers, like Putin, affect us like a pandemic because, once they strike, the impact if felt world-wide in one form or another. For instance, the world is just crawling out of the economic depression resulting from COVID-19 and Omicron. Supply chains are gradually being re-established and factories are humming again with activities.

    Then the war in Ukraine started. It will reverse a lot of the post-COVID gains; this time with hyper-inflation as a certainty in most countries. Prices of crude oil and gas are climbing faster than any time since 1973. Most oil producing nations will benefit; but, most countries in the world will suffer. Nigeria will be among the worst hit. Whereas, most Nigerians think higher crude oil prices will be favourable to us, economists know that we are heading for a major economic distress if crude oil price keeps rising. Here is why.

    Our production level is low and cannot be increased because rig count is at its lowest. We export crude oil and import, not only petrol, but finished products resulting from refining. They cost several times more per litre than crude oil. Right now, Nigeria is at the risk of paying more for fuel imports than we earn from crude exports. That calamity will constitute our own collateral damage on account of Putin’s War. Every single Nigerian will feel the impact. And in case you think this is a false alarm then read this.

    “Nigeria can’t celebrate $103/barrel oil price due to low production – FG”

    Mr Timipre Sylva, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources explained the economic paradox to Nigerians this way.

    “So for us who are the net importers it is also not very good for us…if you are now producing less and then you still have to make sure that the Nigerian market is supplied fully with petroleum products, then you will see that there will be a shortfall [in net oil revenue].”

    Let me explain that in plain language. The higher the price of crude climbs the more the Nigerian economy will suffer. Blame it all on Putin; but he doesn’t care.

    PERSONAL ATTRIBUTES OF POWER-MONGERS

    “Power and money, of course, drive people crazy. So, why shouldn’t people also gain power and wealth through being crazy?”

    Saul Bellow, 1918-2005, VANGUARD BOOK OF QUOTATIONS, VBQ p 195.

    If you think hard enough about the powerful and wealthy people you know, you might be surprised to realise how many of them are “abnormal”. They do and say things which other well-adjusted people shrink from virtually all the time.

    Short man Devil was a human species known before Christ and Mohamed trod this planet. It will exist as long as there is homo sapiens on Earth. Size apparently matters. All the four men mentioned above – Alexander, Napoleon, Stalin, Hitler — were on the average, short for their generation. Putin is no exception. Look at a picture of world leaders, with Putin among them. Compared to Biden, Turkey President Erdogan, Chinese Xi and our President Buhari, Putin is almost a midget. But, he is the most feared President in the world; because he can do (and does) what no other President would think of doing. And, he dares the victim(s) to retaliate. In fact, as Sir Tagore,1861-1941, had said “Power takes as ingratitude the writhing of its victims.” So, as far as Putin is concerned, the rest of us wretched human beings are ungrateful for not appreciating his genius and greatness. He will be remembered by history; his exploits will be studied in universities and military academies until the end of time. We are supposed to applaud this performance, to thank God to be alive to witness this great atrocity — instead of grumbling about it. It is almost certain that if Hitler were to re-incarnate he will perfect his act and create a bigger Holocaust; kill more people before going down again. Incidentally, the only global leader who recognised Putin’s “genius” was US Ex-President Donald Trump – another screw-ball.

    Powerful individuals like him don’t regard their citizen as human beings; only tools to be used to satisfy their, quite frequently, unhidden ambitions. Whether there are 100 million or 1.5 billion; they represent so many assets to be sacrificed for one man’s ambition, or place in history. That is why the first thing they do is to enslave their own people. Everything they do, every step they take is approved unanimously by zombies.

    “An ambassador is an honest man sent to lie abroad for his country.”

    Sir Henry Wotton, 1568-1639.

    Foreign Ministers still go round the world lying just as they did more than 400 years ago. But, in this case, it is doubtful if the Russian Foreign Minister was ever honest. Dictators don’t want honest men around them. They select people like Hitler’s Joseph Goebbels, 1897-1945 – for whom no falsehood is too much.

    Thus, once Putin made up his mind to wipe out Ukraine, all the lies and pretensions by his Foreign Affairs Minister, and Putin himself were designed to buy time for Russia to finish its plans for the invasion. The Foreign Minister went about assuring the world that there was no plan to attack. A lot of deluded people believed him – including Ukranians. By January this year, I was telling anybody and everybody that Russia would invade. Simple-minded individuals argued with me and were convinced that the issue could still be negotiated. My Personal Assistant, Korede, has a friend in Kyiv who was in touch almost daily. During a call, three days to the start of war, I asked Korede to tell her and other Nigerians to leave as fast as they could. She replied that Kyiv was calm and no war was expected. Now, they are all trapped. Yet, Putin does not give a damn if Nigerians, South Africans or Norwegians die by the thousand as a result of his war. They are all expendable. It is his ambition that counts. Now, several Nigerian families are now in distress. The kids they joyfully sent to Ukraine might return home; a lot of money lost and kids education suffer as a result.

    WHAT TO EXPECT NEXT

    “Brute force without wisdom falls by its own weight.” Horace, 65-8BC, VBQ 63.

    This article started two days after Russia invadedUkraine as I expected. The first part is being ended a week after the war started in earnest. Fighting is still going on. But, the drama is not going as Putin has scripted it. Within four days of fighting, the Ukranians have demonstrated more guts and grits than the war-monger expected. Their resistance must have reminded Putin of Russia’a own defiance of Nazi Germany’s overwhelming power during the Second World War, WWII. In the Battle of Stalingrad, August 1942-February 1943, the Russians faced the worst barrage of any nation in St Petersburg, later called Stalingrad, but, they eventually overcame the stronger Germans in the end. Between Hitler’s and Stalin’s forces, close to 8 million Europeans died during WWII. They didn’t care.

    Not surprising, the over-confident Putin seen on television screens globally has given way to a confused and more desperate one. He cannot lose this war. But, absolute victory is now appearing out of reach. So, he made the first attempt to re-organise. He suggested negotiation with the Ukrainian leader in Belarus. It was a crude attempt to achieve easy victory. The offer was refused because once the Ukrainian President landed in Belarus, he would have been arrested and forced to surrender, and, at best, would have been allowed to go into exile. Most likely, he would have been executed as a “war criminal” and a puppet government would have been installed in Ukraine. Prolonged war became inevitable; which is exactly what Putin does not want.

    The global response to the invasion was also more overwhelming than Putin expected; and the economic sanctions are hurting Russians than he anticipated. Like a kidnapper cornered, he has raised the risks to the entire world.

    “There are no desperate situations; only desperate men.” (Goebbels).

    Since the United States dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, to bring WWII to a quick end, every country in possession of nuclear weapons, has deliberately avoided talking about using them irrespective of how tough the situation had been for them militarily. The US lost the Viet Nam war; and, lately, the one in Afghanistan without ever mentioning nuclear arsenal. But, that is because the US has never had a leader like Putin. His order for Russian nuclear defences to be placed on high alert was nothing less than a signal to the world that nothing is forbidden in this war. He would rather take millions of people worldwide down with him than go down in defeat alone. Again, that is not surprising.

    The reason for his new threat is easy to understand. Even an absolute dictator recognises that he is not God. Among his closest and trusted aides are people envious of his power, infuriated by some of his policies and who are aware of how much his personal security costs the country. They want to take him out – if they can. But, with his iron-grip on power, they need a divine opportunity such as the Ukraine adventure. Putin has taken a gamble which is hurting every Russian very badly; and, it cannot be covered up. So, he must succeed or be in trouble at home. He must continue fighting, even escalating the conflict into a global confrontation, as a prelude to a negotiated settlement which will provide him with the excuse to retrace his steps without much loss of face or clout.

    In that connection, he would need the reluctant help of the European and American governments. They should now be preparing a set of proposals which might be interpreted as a win-win settlement to help Putin save face. He is, at any rate, now a globally despised man. NATO and neutral nations in Europe, which became scared of the Russians, after WWII, should acknowledge, the legitimate concerns of Russia, despite Putin’s personal characteristics. The United States, in particular, should remember the response of late US President John Kennedy, 1917-1963, to the presence of Russian missiles stationed in Cuba in the 1960s. America declared it unacceptable and was prepared to go to war – if need be with nuclear weapons. President Biden should be honest enough to admit that America would not allow any powerful nation, acting under any alliance to place weapons within 40 kilometres of its territory. Why should they expect Russia to act differently?

    Putin’s major faults in all these include his impatience with diplomacy; and his bully’s instinct. For people like Putin, “there is no dispute which a punch in the nose cannot resolves.”

     

    To be continues….

  • Russian invasion: Fourth batch of Nigerians arrives in Abuja from Ukraine

    Russian invasion: Fourth batch of Nigerians arrives in Abuja from Ukraine

    The fourth batch of 306 Nigerians fleeing from the war in Ukraine has arrived at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja from Budapest, Hungary.

    The evacuees arrived via Air Peace Airline at 12:35 a.m on Sunday.

    The stranded Nigerians were successfully evacuated following the intervention of the Federal Government with the cooperation of governments of countries neighbouring Ukraine.

    Welcoming the returnees on behalf of the Federal Government, Mr Mustapha Ahmed, Director-General, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), said that President Muhammadu Buhari had approved that $100 be given to each of them.

    Ahmed, represented by Air Commodore Edward Adedokun, Director, Search and Rescue, NEMA, added that the money was meant to assist them with their transportation to their various locations.

    He said that a one-night accommodation arrangement had been made for the returnees to rest before continuing their journey to their homes, while those whose relatives had come for them were free to go home.

    NEMA staff along with representatives of other agencies involved in the reception at the airport, were on ground to receive the returnees.

  • UKRAINE INVASION: Visa, Mastercard shelve operations in Russia

    UKRAINE INVASION: Visa, Mastercard shelve operations in Russia

    U.S. payment card firms, Visa Inc. and MasterCard Inc., on Saturday, announced the suspension of their operations in Russia amid growing pressure from within Ukraine and from U.S. lawmakers.

    The decisions came hours after President Volodymyr Zelenskiy asked U.S. lawmakers to urge both companies to cease business in Russia following its continued assault on Ukraine.

     

    All transactions initiated with Visa cards issued in Russia will no longer work abroad. Any Visa cards issued by financial institutions outside of Russia will also no longer work within the country, the company said in a statement Saturday.

     

    Chairman and chief executive officer. MasterCard, Al Kelly, said: “We are compelled to act following Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, and the unacceptable events that we have witnessed. Given the unprecedented nature of the current conflict and the uncertain economic environment, we have decided to suspend our network services in Russia.”

    The European Union is providing the first tranche of 500 million euros in assistance to refugees fleeing Ukraine, a step that Zelenskiy tweeted Saturday would help “ensure decent living conditions.”

    The government in Kyiv offered to hold further talks with Russia on Monday, even as President Vladimir Putin repeated his demands for “demilitarization” of Ukraine. A Russian official said a meeting might take place on Monday, Interfax reported.