– #A paradoxical intention | A fifth shoot from the hip | A kind of heavy head-shaking towards Someone having the runs –
From a military-technical point of view, we are, of course, ready. (Vladimir Putin, Outlook on Nuclear War)
Honourable Chance(llor) Scholz! Dear Lord of The Loo! Dear Ollie!
To start with, He ‘s not been the only one in recent history ever having been concerned about a Third World War ... a Global Nuclear Holocaust!
Doesn’t He know? – :
# 1952 to 2011 | Nuclear and Radiation Accidents and Incidents – Soft Nuclear Threats[2]
# 1958 | Tawain Strait Crisis – 1rst Hard Nuclear Threat[3]
# 1962 | Cuban Missile Crisis – 2nd Hard Nuclear Threat[4]
# 1940s to 1980s | Sino-Soviet Disputes and Crises – 3rd Hard Nuclear Threat[5]
# 1979 to 1980 | Nuclear Close Calss – 4th Hard Nuclear Threat[6]
Surprise, Mankind ‘s still alive!
Correspondingly, Global and especially European Scenarios[7] – likely to substantiate – have been well known since WWII and are once again to be/being understood.
How come, The Lord of Loo believes, his modest temperance of the highest degree is getting him off the hook by means of voiding friction with Vlad P.?
Could Mr Chancelloo imagine, Vlad P. The Bomber – having mediated[8] Sino-India‘s relaxed relationship – to be screwing up China‘s and India‘s interpersonal Muzak, as much as their respective global businesses and relations on igniting a Nuclear War against the Ukraine ... Europe ... the World?!
We have them with us all the time, constantly in a state of combat readiness. (Vladimir Putin, On Combat Readiness)
Wouldn’t Xi and especially Modi[10]!!! have a say in this matter too?!
Why ain’t He confronting Putin’s Injustice ... why ain’t he got The Balls to withstand a cSOB?[11]
Oh ... ain’t it past His bed time?!
Okay ... well then, how about dating a China Girl?
Respectfully yours,
Cal Caleido
Frame of Reference
Strength Is In Truth: It 's Not Over Vlad P. ...
The Nuclear Armageddon Revisited (I) | The Nuclear Armageddon Revisited (II) | The Nuclear Armageddon Revisited (III) | The Nuclear Armageddon Revisited (IV) | The Nuclear Armageddon Revisited (V) | The Nuclear Armageddon Revisited (VI) | The Nuclear Armageddon Revisited (VII)
Germany’s Lord of The Blind(ness): In The Search of An Alternative For Germany
Germany’s Lord of The Appeasement: Barely Enough to Keep Body and Soul Together
Germany’s Lord of The Limbo: In The Need of Staying Unsucked
Germany’s Lord of The Helmet: In The Search of Soft Force
The Nuclear Threat is Back (I) - Cal Caleido’s Caleidoscope (substack.com) | The Nuclear Threat is Back (II) (substack.com) | The Nuclear Threat is Back (III) (substack.com)
Vladimir Putin's "New Soviet System"
TrumPutinian Tango & Th‘ Russian Mafia
Putin’s Very First Coup in 1999 at The Intourist Hotel
When Mike Wallace Put Vladimir Putin's Balls To The Wall (2005)
When Reagan, Gorbachev, Kohl and Scorpions Altered The World's Destiny
[1] Putin warns the West: Russia is ready for nuclear war | Reuters
[2] Nuclear and radiation accidents and incidents (Wikiped)
[3] Second Taiwan Strait Crisis (Wikiped): Then U.S. Secretary of State Christian Herter reportedly described the conflict as the "first serious nuclear crisis". ––– The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisis: A Documented History : M.H. Halperin : Internet Archive ––– related as follows: Political status of Taiwan (Wikiped) [peripherally related as follows: TSMC (Wikiped) ––– Taiwan’s dominance of the chip industry makes it more important (economist.com) ––– AI’s Single Point of Failure | Rob Toews | TED - YouTube ––– | ––– Intel (Wikiped) ––– Samsung (Wikiped)] ––– Hong Kong–Mainland China conflict (Wikiped)
[4] Cuban Missile Crisis | The World on the Brink of War | Britannica
[5] Sino-Soviet dispute | political history | Britannica ––– 20th-century international relations - Sino-Soviet Split, Cold War, Ideology | Britannica ––– Sino-Soviet border conflict (Wikiped) ––– Sino-Soviet conflict (1929) (Wikiped) ––– | ––– related (1) as follows: The Sino-Soviet territorial dispute, 1949-64 : Ginsburgs, George : Internet Archive ––– The Sino-Soviet conflict 1956-1961 : Internet Archive ––– The Sino-Soviet dispute : Internet Archive ––– related (2) as follows: Cold War Turning Point - The Sino-Soviet Split and the Prelude to Detente with the United States, 1965-1968 ––– Origins and Consequences of the Soviet-Chinese Border Conflict of 1969 (hokudai.ac.jp) ––– The Sino-Soviet Military Rapprochement (dtic.mil) ––– The 1969 Sino-Soviet Border Conflicts As A Key Turning Point Of The Cold War | Hoover Institution ––– The Sino-Soviet Border Conflict: Deterrence, Escalation, and the Threat of Nuclear War in 1969 | CNA ––– related (3) as follows: Conflict on the Ussuri: The 1969 Sino-Soviet Border Dispute (dtic.mil) ––– New Evidence on Sino-Soviet Rapprochement (wilsoncenter.org) ––– Peking's Tactics and Intentions along the Sino-Soviet Border (gwu.edu) ––– The Sino-Soviet Border Conflict: (cna.org) ––– The Sino-Soviet Border Dispute: Background, Development, and the March 1969 Clashes (rand.org) ––– The Sino-Soviet Border Dispute Facts (armscontrolcenter.org) ––– The Sino-Soviet Split: A Domestic Ideology Analysis (byu.edu) ––– The Sino-Soviet Split Seen from a Provincial Archive in Russia (prchistory.org) ––– related (4) as follows: Sino-Soviet Conflict in the 1970s: Its Evolution and Implications for the Strategic Triangle (rand.org) ––– The Soviet Union and China in the 1980s - reconciliation and divorce (lse.ac.uk)
[6] False Warnings of Soviet Missile Attacks Put U.S. Forces on Alert in 1979-1980 | National Security Archive (gwu.edu) ––– related: Nuclear close calls (Wikiped)
[7] LONG STANDING GLOBAL VIEWS || 1982: The Consequences of a "Limited" Nuclear War in East and West Germany (princeton.edu) ––– 1988: How Nuclear War Might Start: Scenarios from the Early 21st Century (rand.org) ––– 2014: Nuclear Deterrence, Nuclear War Planning, and Scenarios of Nuclear Conflict (bmeia.gv.at) ––– 2017: Nuclear Emp Attack Scenarios and Combined-Arms Cyber Warfare (dtic.mil) ––– 2020: Nuclear War as a Global Catastrophic Risk (jhuapl.edu) ––– 2022: What would a nuclear war look like? (sgr.org.uk) – note: What a stupid question! ––– 2023: Global Effects of Nuclear Conflict - Implications for Nuclear Policymaking, Then and Now ––– | RECENT EUROPEAN VIEWS || 2023: Scenario-building Workshop Europe after the war (europeanleadershipnetwork.org) ––– CURRENT VIEWS ON RUSSO-UKRAINIAN WAR || 2024: Five Security Scenarios on Russian War in Ukraine for 2024-2025 - Implications and Policy Recommendations (europeanleadershipnetwork.org) ––– The War in Ukraine and Europe's Geopolitical Awakening
[8] Russia as India-China mediator: How Soviets, Mao's China split over India in 1950s-60s - The Week ––– The Sino-Indian Clash: Russia in the Middle – The Diplomat ––– How Russia emerged as key mediator in the China–India dispute | East Asia Forum ––– Can Russia Mediate Between India and China? — Valdai Club ––– related: Sino-Indian Conflict and the Sino-Soviet Alliance | China's Quest: The History of the Foreign Relations of the People's Republic of China | Oxford Academic (oup.com)
[9] Russia ‘ready’ for nuclear war, Putin claims – POLITICO
[10] How an India-Pakistan nuclear war could start—and have global consequences (rutgers.edu) ––– related (1) as follows: Partition of India (Wikiped) ––– India–Pakistan relations (Wikiped) ––– related (2) as follows: Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts (Wikiped) | List of wars involving Pakistan (Wikiped) ––– Kashmir conflict (Wikiped) | Timeline of the Kashmir conflict (Wikiped): The following is a timeline of the Kashmir conflict, a territorial conflict between India, Pakistan and, to a lesser degree, China. India and Pakistan have been involved in four wars and several border skirmishes over the issue. ––– related (3) as follows: Indo-Pakistani war of 1947–1948 (Wikiped) ––– Indo-Pakistani war of 1965 (Wikiped) ––– Indo-Pakistani war of 1971 (Wikiped) ––– Siachen conflict (Wikiped) ––– Kargil War (Wikiped) ––– related (4) as follows: 2001–2002 India–Pakistan standoff (Wikiped) ––– 2019 India–Pakistan border skirmishes (Wikiped) ––– 2020–21 India–Pakistan border skirmishes (Wikiped) ––– 2023 India-Pakistan border skirmishes (Wikiped)
[11] Biden calls Putin a ‘crazy SOB’ and criticizes Trump’s Navalny comments during fundraiser | CNN Politics
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