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МИД Армении выступил с осуждением агрессии Азербайджана

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МИД Армении обвинил Азербайджан в нарушении трехстороннего соглашения о прекращении огня в Нагорном Карабахе, в результате чего погибли и были ранены несколько военнослужащих.

«3 августа вооруженные силы Азербайджана, в очередной раз нарушив трёхстороннее заявление от 9 ноября 2020 года руководителей Армении, России и Азербайджана о прекращении огня в зоне нагорно-карабахского конфликта, предприняли агрессию в зоне ответственности российских миротворческих сил, вследствие чего есть жертвы и раненые», – говорится в заявлении.

В министерстве указали, что Ереван предпринимает шаги по достижению мира и стабильности в регионе, однако Баку продолжает политику запугивания населения Нагорного Карабаха.

МИД Армении выступает против односторонних попыток Азербайджана по изменению правового статуса Лачинского коридора, который соединяет территорию Армении и Нагорного Карабаха.

«Республика Армения, вновь подтверждая свою приверженность повестке установления мира и стабильности в регионе, призывает международное сообщество принять меры, направленные на пресечение агрессивного поведения и действий Азербайджана и запуск необходимых для этого международных механизмов», – указано в заявлении.

Ранее в Минобороны РФ заявили, что азербайджанские вооруженные силы нарушили режим прекращения огня в зоне Нагорно-Карабахского конфликта. После этого в непризнанной республике объявили частичную мобилизацию. В Баку в эскалации конфликта обвинили армянских военных.

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Heil Trump! Heil Putin! Heil Schroeder! Heil New Abwehr! Heil the old whore Admiral Canaris, the Grandfather of the Modern World Order! “Donald Trump kept a book of Hitler’s speeches by his bed”

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“Donald Trump kept a book of Hitler’s speeches by his bed” – This is the explanation of his oratorical style and very posiibly, his mentality. – M.N. – In my Opinion – Post



Does Donald Trump speak German?

But the point of this question is, if he speaks German. I think, he does speak some German; it is very likely that he had a German nanny, and it is possible that he read Hitler’s speeches in German. 




Another part  of this question is: Does Melania Trump speak German? She is from the German-Slovenian family, and it is very likely that she does. 



I wonder, what do they discuss in German (just like the old Russian Royalty-Nobility) during their daily, three hours long, private family meals?



FBI, could you please publish the transcripts?



Or would you need the separate subpoenas for that?



Michael Novakhov



6.1.19
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TL;DR ::: Of course not, the man can barely use English.



I was not under the impression that POTUS 45 (I no longer write out his name) might be capable of speaking or writing English. I have read many times that his family pretended to be of Swedish immigrant extraction to avoid anti-German prejudice during the world war 2 period. Surprises me because his father was an out and out convicted member of the KKK whose personal supremacist convictions (forgive the word play) brought him to march in robes and be fined 500$ in 1927, back when 500$ was a lot of money and not the kind of cash a loser would have to get out of jail-


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607 views · View 7 Upvoters

Trump was born just after World War II, at a point in history where any German his parents even knew would have been best kept to themselves. During his formative years, it’s unlikely anyone would put much effort into teaching him the language of a country we’d just defeated after years of war that cost hundreds of thousands of American lives.



It’s been reported that as an adult, Trump studied the oratorical style of Adolf Hitler, and had a book containing his collected speeches, but the book was almost certainly an English translation. I wouldn’t expect Trump to know much German beyond “Sieg Heil!”


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It’s been reported that as an adult, Trump studied the oratorical style of Adolf Hitler, and had a book containing his collected speeches

Dec 8, 2015 – Adolf Hitler addresses a crowd at a rally in 1941 ( Getty Images ) … time to time her husband reads a book of Hitler’s collected speeches, My … prolific orators, building a genocidal Nazi regime with speeches that … “People were most willing to follow him, because he seemed to have the ….. Report Comment.


Hitler’s collected speeches, My New Order

My New Order has attracted the attention of the press with the rise of Donald Trump as candidate for President of the United States 




because his first wife Ivana Trump revealed that Donald Trump reads a book of Hitler’s collected speeches, My New Order, which he keeps in a cabinet by his bed. It can be seen that there are clear similarities between the speeches of Trump and the speeches of Hitler. Here are examples: They repeat themselves constantly, saying the same things over and over again. They never admit they have made a mistake nor do they ever take anything back. To any criticism, they respond by insults and name calling. They use a low form of language, with simple sentences even a person with the lowest level of education or with no education at all can understand. Another contrast is the sheer volume of words. Hitler gave a thousand speeches and spoke millions of words. Hitler communicated almost entirely through his speeches. Hitler’s speeches were long, usually one and a half to two hours long. Trump made one of the longest speeches ever to accept the Republican Party nomination for President of the United States. His speech lasted one hour fifteen minutes. Trump communicates almost entirely through his speeches and through his tweets. Tweets are short 140-character messages. He almost never uses emails. Trump never gives an analysis or a logical justification for his views. Hitler is similar. Trump has written nothing. His one book, “The Art of the Deal”, was written by a ghostwriter. Similarly, Hitler only wrote “Mein Kampf”. One can see from the foreword here by Raoul de Roussy de Sales there are clear similarities between the speaking style of Hitler and that of Trump. “To use constantly and untiringly the same arguments and to pound into the heads of his listeners the same formulas is part of Hitler’s oratorical technique.” “Hitlers speeches are weapons as much as part of his strategy of conquest as more direct instruments of warfare. Hitler is past master of throwing up verbal smoke screens to conceal his intended moves. He knows equally well the effectiveness of massive oratorical assaults that shake the nerves of his victims and opponents and break down their resistance. He knows how to give pledges that will be broken later but will serve temporally to divide and confuse and to create the illusion of Security. He uses insults and lies in the same manner as his generals use Stuka planes and tanks to break the respectable but often weak front of his adversaries. He contradicts himself constantly but his contradictions often produce the effect of a psychological pincer-movement which crushes the best defenses of logic and ordinary morality.” “The Greatest Anthology of Broken Promises Ever Compiled”. Hitler made and then broke treaties. Trump is speaking of breaking our treaties with NATO countries, and with Japan and South Korea. This book is a collection of speeches made by Hitler during the 20,s and 30,s in which he affirmed his Anti Antisemitism, his desire for World Domination, and his contempt of efforts by the rest of the world to stop him. The original book, published in 1941, is 1008 pages long. This is too long to be published in soft cover, so it has been divided into to volumes. The first volume is Hitler’s speeches from the rise to power, 1918 to 1933 to the bloodless annexations Annexation of Austria and the Dismemberment of Czechosolvakia.





Adolf Hitler addresses a crowd at a rally in 1941

Donald Trump kept a book of Hitler’s speeches by his bed, according to his ex-wife




Hitler was one of history’s most prolific orators, building a genocidal Nazi regime with speeches that bewitched audiences

In the Vanity Fair article, Ivana Trump told a friend that her husband’s cousin, John Walter “clicks his heels and says, ‘Heil Hitler,” when visiting Trump’s office.






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What New World Order? The Case For A Stronger Germany

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-Analysis-

BERLIN — History’s grand plan, if it has one, doesn’t usually allow for repetition. The kaleidoscope of the past brings up endless new iterations of victory and defeat, triumph and agony, and allows us only a glimpse into the uncertainty of the future and the ambiguity of the past.

New world powers are coming to the fore, and the post-war world order — first the Cold War, then the Pax Americana — is disappearing. As the influence of NATO, which for many decades gave Europeans a sense of safety through its ability to deter and defend, begins to wane, the promise of protection from the United States is also disappearing.

It’s been a long time since Germany’s future, and that of Europe as a whole, has looked so uncertain. Around three decades ago, the Cold War was finally declared over as the United States and the USSR came to a mutual understanding. But that has not meant that global power relations are now smooth sailing.

The seismic changes of 30 years ago did not come about in an organized manner but through a process that Yale historian Paul Kennedy, in his master’s thesis on world powers, calls “competitive decline.” After the end of the second Iraq War, it seemed possible that a new world order may be established with America at the head, leading and bankrolling a global alliance against all troublemakers, but this was not achieved.

No new world order has appeared.

Instead we have lived through the collapse of nation states, civil wars, terrorism and religious fanaticism, alongside old-fashioned scourges such as droughts, mass poverty and epidemics. Sooner or later these will erode the foundations of what little prosperity and political security remains.

The long nuclear peace of the last 30 years of blissful ignorance is over. Gone too is the strategic stability that the Cold War provided. Even without the coronavirus pandemic sweeping the globe, the world stage offers chaos. And that makes it all the more important, for reasons of survival, to inject a little predictability, long-term perspective and strategic restraint back into international power relations.

For the foreseeable future, we are in a worse situation than we have been in a long time. While Washington, Moscow, Beijing and other centers of power — the nuclear order that sprang up after World War II — are in decline, no new world order has appeared.

This is where Germany comes into play. A new world order is sorely needed, and Germany, which flourished under the Pax Americana and, against all expectations, became a late-blooming, 20th-century success story, must play its part in establishing one.

Whether it will have a chance to draw on this experience is, to say the least, uncertain. When it comes to security and protection, Germany needs to learn how to stand on its own two feet and make a respectable contribution on the world stage, even if this means a bit of pain, financial cost and a few disagreements.

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Map of the Holy Roman Empire during the 16th century — Source: Friedrich Wilhelm Putzger/Wikimedia Commons

On a campaign trip to Trudering, in Upper Bavaria, Angela Merkel said that Germany could no longer rely on its old friends. Ever the cautious pragmatist, she was careful, nevertheless, not mention which new ones she had in mind. While telephones around the world are ringing off the hook, the German chancellor is remaining tight-lipped. That may be wise. Sometimes the situation and tactics require a politician to hold back.

But what is true for most countries is not true for Germany. The country is right in the middle of things — not just of Europe, but also of the global situation. Or, as Henry Kissinger liked to say, Germany is the wrong size: too big for Europe, too small for the world.

Enduring incompleteness

The best way to understand Germany’s role is as a half-hegemony: neither one thing nor the other. But this was also the situation for the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation, an empire that lasted for centuries by constantly renewing itself. It went against all classical thinking about how to structure a state, but it would be absurd to deny the legitimacy of an empire that lasted nearly 1,000 years.

Half-hegemony has been Germany’s situation since time immemorial. It has marked the country’s history, shaping its fate and that of its neighbors. In order to understand the present, it’s vital to see it from a historical perspective — even now, in the fourth decade since reunification.

Germany became the stage for wars that spread across the world.

To do that, we must look back to the Holy Roman Empire and its role in shaping Europe. It wasn’t an empire in the traditional sense, but a peaceful way of life for central Europe. Imperial rule had to be reaffirmed every time the emperor’s successor was chosen by the seven prince-electors: the “pillars of the empire,” as they were known. Not much was achieved through violence; it was money and gold that held sway.

While the European kingdoms around Germany were developing early modern states, Germany continued in a situation of enduring incompleteness, with a constitution that, like a Gothic cathedral, was a continual work-in-progress. As a consequence, during the Age of Discovery this unity broke down, peace agreements didn’t hold, and Germany became the stage for wars that spread across the world.

The Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648) branded Germans with a very real sense of “German angst.” But after the Peace of Westphalia brought an end to the war, the empire clung on for another 150 years, while its neighbors established colonies overseas.

Not strong enough to attack others, but powerful enough to defend itself, the Holy Roman Empire was a stabilizing force in Europe. For a few decades, Austria and Prussia shared the hegemony. The Austro-Prussian War of 1866 saw Austria defeated and Prussia’s influence expanded. The wisdom of the old empire failed and the rise of nation states began.

Above all, half-hegemony is a balancing act. After a shaky start, Bismarck succeeded at it, whereas his successors, enthralled by new technological developments and Germany’s rise on the world stage, failed. At the end of World War II, General Charles de Gaulle summed up Europe’s catastrophes since 1914 as “the Thirty Years’ War of our century.”

Thanks to the Pax Americana, this was not the last word on the subject. But now America has nothing left to offer. And there is nothing in today’s world to suggest that something better is on the horizon. Freedom is the recognition of necessity. It’s time for the country in the middle of Europe, together with others, to have another go at half-hegemony.

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Altkanzler Gerhard Schröder: “Warum soll ich mich entschuldigen?” (stern+)

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von Gregor Peter Schmitz sowie von Nikolaus Blome

03.08.2022, 05:57 11 Min. Lesezeit

Erstmals spricht Gerhard Schröder in einem Interview mit stern und RTL/ntv über die Gaskrise, seine Treue zu Wladimir Putin und einen möglichen Weg, den Krieg zu beenden.

Es ist später Nachmittag, die Interviewer sind gerade am Hauptbahnhof in Hannover angekommen, als das Telefon klingelt. Gerhard Schröder am Apparat. Sagt der Altkanzler noch ab, weil ihm ein Gespräch zu diesem Zeitpunkt doch zu heikel erscheint?

Aber nein, Schröder ist bester Laune und gesprächsbereit, er hat nur ein Problem: Was soll er seinen Gästen zu essen anbieten? Seine Frau ist noch in Südkorea, er hat nichts im Haus. Sashimi vielleicht? Später stellt sich heraus: Der von Schröder geschätzte Japaner hat geschlossen, aber Pizza geht ja immer. Die Sicherheitsleute, die ihn seit Jahren begleiten, übernehmen die Bestellung.

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Former chancellor of Germany claims that after meeting Putin peace in Ukraine can be possible

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Germany: Germany’s controversial former chancellor Gerhard Schroeder confirmed that he held a meeting with Vladimir Putin in Moscow last week and insisted the Kremlin was ready for talks to end the conflict in Ukraine.

“The good news is that the Kremlin wants a negotiated solution,” Schroeder said in an interview with the German magazine Stern, published on Wednesday. The former leader of the Social Democratic Party claimed that despite being a “mistake”, Russia’s invasion of its neighbor could be solved.

He referred to a UN-mediated agreement between Moscow and Kyiv to unblock Ukrainian grain exports, saying “the first success is the grain deal, perhaps it can be gradually extended to a ceasefire.”

From 1998 to 2005, Schroeder oversaw Europe’s largest economy. She has faced criticism at home and abroad for maintaining a close personal relationship with Putin and working lucrative jobs for state-owned energy companies in Russia.

Many of Moscow’s demands from the conflict were echoed in the former leader’s plan for a settlement. Schroeder argued that Ukraine’s claim to the Crimean peninsula, which Russia annexed in 2014, and its aspirations to join NATO, should be abandoned.


The solution to the Crimean crisis, according to Schroeder, “cannot be found in 99 years, as in Hong Kong, but in the next generation.”

Although the Russian minorities there should be given special rights, the eastern Donbass should remain part of Ukraine.

Schroeder suggested that both sides should make concessions and suggested that Turkey could act as a mediator.


Schroeder, who attempted to speak to Putin a few weeks into the conflict, reiterated that he would stay with Putin, saying he could be “useful”.

The Kremlin threatened to break diplomatic ties with Washington if the US called it a state sponsor of terrorism at the time of Schroeder’s interview.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova called the proposed designation “stupid” and against international law.


She announced on Tuesday that “the logical consequence of such a move becomes a break in diplomatic relations.” Washington runs the risk of eventually crossing the point of no return, which will be followed by all consequences. Washington should fully understand this.

A non-binding resolution urging Secretary of State Antony Blinken to designate Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism was approved by the Senate last week. Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has urged the US to use the designation.

However, Blinken objected to the plan, claiming that the proposed restrictions were similar to existing restrictions.

The US is reportedly directly involved in the conflict in Ukraine, along with arming Kyiv, according to accusations made by Russia.


According to the Russian Defense Ministry, Vadim Skbitsky, deputy head of Ukraine’s military intelligence, told Britain’s Telegraph newspaper that Washington was involved in the conflict, which is run by Putin’s ally.

Skibitsky told the newspaper that although US officials were not directly providing information on the targeting, US and Ukrainian intelligence officials had consulted prior to the attacks and that Washington had effectively vetoed the targets.


The Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday that all this “indisputably proves that Washington, contrary to the claims of the White House and the Pentagon, is directly involved in the conflict in Ukraine.”


“All Kyiv-sanctioned rocket attacks on civilian infrastructure and residential areas in populated areas of the Donbass and other regions, resulting in mass killings of civilians, are directly attributable to the Biden administration,” the statement said.

The White House and the Pentagon did not immediately respond to the ministry’s claims.


The Pentagon denied Moscow’s claim that Russia had destroyed six US-made HIMARS missile systems since the start of the Ukraine war. Russia often claims that it has killed HIMARS but has never provided evidence.


Ukraine and the West regularly accuse Russia of carrying out destructive missile attacks on civilian targets. Both sides argue that civilians were deliberately targeted.

According to Ukraine’s Zelensky, despite receiving weapons from the West, his nation’s forces are still unable to overcome Russian advantages in heavy weapons and manpower.

This is especially noticeable in the Donbass during the war. There, it’s just hell. It is beyond description.

Some of the fiercest fighting in the war has taken place in the Donbass, Ukraine’s traditional industrial stronghold in the east.


On 24 February, as part of what it refers to as a “special military operation”, Russia sent thousands of troops to Ukraine. It is depicted as an indiscriminate war of invasion by Kyiv and the West.


Igor Vishnevsky, deputy director of the Russian Foreign Ministry’s Department of Non-Proliferation and Arms Control, denied all claims. “unprovoked aggression” at a UN conference on Tuesday. Moscow, he continued, was of the opinion that nuclear war “must never be fought.”

Alexander Trofimov, a Russian diplomat, told the UN that Moscow would only use nuclear weapons in response to a conventional or weapons of mass destruction attack that endangered the survival of the Russian state.


According to Trofimov, a senior diplomat in the Russian foreign ministry’s non-proliferation and arms control division, “neither of these two hypothetical scenarios is relevant to the situation in Ukraine.”

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De nouvelles sanctions américaines contre la Russie

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La nouvelle a été annoncée par Washington, mardi : de nouvelles sanctions économiques à l’encontre de la Russie ont été prononcées, informe l’Agence France-Presse. Elles concernent notamment les entreprises et oligarques russes proches du président Vladimir Poutine. Parmi eux, Andrey Guryev, fondateur de l’entreprise de fertilisants PhosAgro, « proche associé » de Vladimir Poutine et ancien membre du gouvernement russe. Ses avoirs ont été gelés par le Bureau de contrôle des avoirs étrangers (Ofac). Ce dernier possède la plus grande propriété privée londonienne, située derrière le palais de Buckingham.

À LIRE AUSSIL’incroyable histoire des « soldats de la musique » ukrainiens

Son yacht, qui lui a coûté 120 millions de dollars et acheté en 2014, est, lui aussi, visé par Washington. Selon le Trésor américain, le navire « aurait désactivé son appareil de géolocalisation afin d’éviter la saisie ». Son entreprise n’est, quant à elle, pas concernée par les sanctions. Les transactions liées aux engrais et autres produits agricoles restent ainsi autorisées.

Le sidérurgiste Magnitogorsk également visé par les sanctions

« Les alliés de Poutine se sont enrichis et ont financé des modes de vie opulents », a déclaré la secrétaire américaine au Trésor, Janet Yellen.

La ministre a affirmé que « tous les outils à la disposition du Trésor seront utilisés pour s’assurer que les élites russes et les soutiens du Kremlin sont tenus responsables de leur complicité dans une guerre qui a coûté d’innombrables vies ».

Le fils d’Andrey Guryev, qui, de son côté, fait déjà l’objet de sanctions par plusieurs pays, est lui aussi visé par les sanctions de Washington.

À LIRE AUSSIMaghreb : bons baisers de Poutine

Sur la liste du Trésor, on retrouve également le sidérurgiste Magnitogorsk (MMK), « l’un des plus grands producteurs d’acier au monde » et « l’un des plus importants contribuables de Russie ». Deux de ses filiales et son actionnaire principal, l’oligarque Viktor Rachnikov, sont aussi mentionnés sur la liste. De la même manière que l’ex-gymnaste et ancienne membre de la Douma Alina Kabaeva, à la tête d’un groupe de médias « pro-Kremlin ». Cette dernière est déjà présente sur la liste noire de l’Union européenne. Ses avoirs américains ont ainsi été gelés.

Des restrictions de visas

Le Département d’État a, quant à lui, annoncé des restrictions de visas à l’encontre de 893 responsables russes et 31 responsables étrangers. Et cela, pour leur rôle joué dans la guerre ukrainienne.

Figurent également sur la liste noire de Washington trois oligarques, des entreprises publiques russes, ainsi que « 24 entités russes liées à la défense et à la technologie ».

À LIRE AUSSIViktor Bout, un si commode marchand de canons

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