“An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile—hoping it will eat him last.” — Churchill (1940)
“The weak get beaten.” — Stalin (1931)Ukraine's borders must not be changed by force, EU leaders say | BBC News
The Boss Meets the Apprentice: “Russia, Russia, Russia” Was Never a Hoax — It Was Management Training
If you ever wondered what Russian management style looks like applied to a superpower, wonder no more.
Friday’s Trump–Putin summit was basically an episode of The Apprentice filmed in geopolitical IMAX. The set was America. The script was written in Moscow. And the big reveal?
The United States is either still under Russian management — or at the very least, the franchise rights haven’t expired.
Open a Kremlin-friendly newspaper this week and you’d think Putin had just negotiated the Second Coming.
Izvestia swoons that the meeting is about ending the Ukraine war on Russia’s terms. Moskovsky Komsomolets didn’t bother with subtlety: “Catastrophe for Kyiv.”
The plot twist? Trump and Putin have backed Ukraine into a corner so tight it’s practically a coffin.
If Zelensky says yes to whatever “peace deal” these two cook up, it’s political suicide. If he says no, Trump — ever the mercurial deal-artist — will walk away from Ukraine faster than he ditched half his cabinet.
From Moscow’s perspective, this is a coup worthy of a Netflix mini-series: the Americans invited Putin onto U.S. soil instead of slapping the promised August 8th sanctions on him.
Zelensky didn’t even get a pity invite — which tells you exactly how much Trump values Ukraine’s opinion in the “peace” process.
And since Trump has the kind of immunity to Russian disinformation you get from being a willing participant, Zelensky’s fears aren’t paranoia — they’re actuarial certainties.
Putin’s already reframed the narrative. The core issue is no longer a cease-fire; it’s which territories Ukraine should surrender.
Imagine a hostage negotiator whose first move is to decide how many hostages the kidnapper gets to keep.
The Phantom Pivot
Last month, there was breathless speculation that Trump might pivot hard on Ukraine policy.
That pivot remains about as real as his “self-funded campaign” — a talking point that evaporates the second you check the receipts.
When the moment comes to show spine against Moscow, Trump opts instead for his favorite cosplay: the “world’s greatest dealmaker.”
And here’s a deal-making truth bomb for free — Putin reads Western indecision as weakness, not wisdom.
The one solid move — slapping tariffs on India for buying Russian oil — might have been a start.
But without equivalent pain for Russia’s main partner, China, it’s geopolitical theater — all props, no plot.
Republicans Left Standing in Their Underwear
Trump’s own allies look like they brought squirt guns to a tank battle. Jim Risch, chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, promised “shock and awe” sanctions on Russia by August 8th — economic napalm.
Lindsey Graham waved visions of record-breaking arms shipments to Ukraine. One month later? Crickets.
The only shock and awe is how completely those promises have dissolved into the ether.
The Bering Strait Bromance
So, will Alaska become the launchpad for the world’s most awkward bromance? Probably not.
Their interests are too misaligned for a grand bargain. For Putin, this summit is about buying time, painting Ukraine as the obstacle to peace, and deflecting just enough to keep the West chasing its own tail.
For Trump, it’s a prestige play — one more photo op to prove he’s the only man alive who can look Putin in the eye without flinching (or noticing the wallet being stolen).
Putin didn’t beg for this meeting. He slow-played it, then pulled out the “yes” card when Trump’s White House served up an ultimatum.
And just like that, America’s “tough guy” president folded like a discount lawn chair.
Nothing in Putin’s posture suggests he’s giving up on his war aims — because why would he?
The West keeps proving he can wage war indefinitely without paying the full price.
The Only Thing That Works
Let’s cut the pageantry: the only strategy that stands a chance of making Putin quit is pressure — massive pressure.
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More weapons.
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Harder sanctions.
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Relentless isolation.
Everything else is appeasement. And appeasement, history reminds us, is just a down payment on a bigger war.
Final scene of the episode: The boss (Putin) leans back, smirks, and says, “You’re fired.”
We still don’t know if he means Zelensky… or America.
Because in the Russia, Russia, Russia saga, the only real question is:
When the boss meets the apprentice — who gets to keep their job?
yours truly,
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