© Alexei Druzhinin/Russian Presidential Press and Information Office/TASS
Rebekah Koffler, The Hill: Putin draws a 'red line' on Ukraine, and he means it
Last week, Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), told the Senate Intelligence Committee that DIA has no idea why Russian President Vladimir Putin has mobilized troops near Russia’s border with Ukraine. “We don’t know what the intent is right now,” he said.
This is disappointing, considering American taxpayers shelled out $23.1 billion for military intelligence in 2020 alone, but it’s hardly surprising.
As a former DIA senior intelligence analyst for Russian doctrine and strategy, I know that the lack of foresight in the intelligence community extends well beyond a failure to understand what Putin wants “right now.” Frighteningly, many officials have little grasp of the Russian leader’s long-term game and the peril it holds for the United States.
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WNU Editor: When it comes to Crimea definitely. And Putin is not the only one who is serious about red lines .... Survey: Nearly all Russians support annexation of Crimea (EU Observer).
Let's see, there seems to be a difference for Democrats when they use Russia as a stalking horse in domestic politics and dealing with Russia on real world issues.
ReplyDeleteDemocrats are fools that play with dynamite.
ReplyDelete“JOE CROW doesn’t even know where his corn field is.”
- Vernon Jones next governor of the great state of Georgia.
Did the WNU Editor just admitted he believed in a Poll conducted by Russia in regards to Crimea annexation support?
ReplyDelete"Did the WNU Editor just admitted he believed in a Poll conducted by Russia in regards to Crimea annexation support?"
ReplyDeleteName a population of people who are not irredentist. Gotcha
Russia didn't name the red lines, China did and that is more dangerous.
ReplyDelete