The Week According To . . . Leilani Dowding


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 16, 2025

Fanell: “We’ve Gotta Get Our Act Together On Dealing With The People’s Republic Of China”


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 16, 2025

Posobiec: Mainstream Media Doesn’t Understand The Shared History And Shared Sacrifice Of The U.S. And Russia


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 16, 2025

Rickards On Putin: “When He Says Something Believe Him, You Don’t Have To Agree, But You’ve Gotta Believe What He’s Saying”


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 16, 2025

When Russia Was Our Ally Before 1917


Posted originally on Aug 17, 2025 by Martin Armstrong |  

1863_Harper_s_weekly Russian Ships

QUESTION: I am a history buff myself. I have never heard that Russia came to the aid of the United States during the Civil War to protect us from the British and the French. What is your source for such a statement?

FC

Galbraith Great Crash PNG

ANSWER: I learned in high school that they do not teach what goes against their agenda. I had to read The Great Crash by Galbraith, which omitted the fact that Europe defaulted on its debt in 1931, including Britain, the Commonwealth, and that included Canada. Galbraith was a socialist who blamed corporations for omitting the actions of the government.

1931 NYSE Banking Crisis listing shares

Foreign bonds were sold in small denominations to mom-and-pop investors and were listed on the NYSE. This is a chart of the bond collapse in 1931, just on the NYSE. This was no small minor omission. The stock market tanks the risk. But wipe out the bond market, and that is what causes the depression rather than a recession. It was estimated that the average American investor held as much as $10 billion dollars in foreign bonds in 1929. In today’s dollars, that was close to $200 billion. This is what really wiped out 9,000 banks, and the average person who did not lose on the stock market lost on bonds.

Mellon Gentlemen Prefer Bonds C

During the Great Depression, losses in foreign bonds and stocks were both catastrophic, but they differed in timing, scale, and recovery.  Sovereign bond defaults were triggered by trade collapse, currency crises, and the global credit freeze. Of course, there was Andrew Mellon’s famous quote about bonds, which they turned into blonds for the movies.

The scale of losses on sovereign bonds was staggering – we’re talking 70% average losses on sovereign bonds – not corporate. When a corporation goes bankrupt, assets are sold and creditors are repaid. When a government defaults, you get nothing. Germany and Latin America were disasters. The UK/Canada eventually honored their debts but defaulted in gold.

Canada did not technically default legally on its sovereign debt on October 19th, 1931. Still, it did suspend gold payments on its external debt obligations following the UK’s abandonment of the gold standard on September 21, 1931, due to the Great Depression. Now, here is the kicker. After a long period of negotiation and economic adjustment, Canada finally resumed payments on its external debts. However, they really defaulted. On May 1, 1933, Canada resumed service on its external debts, but in Canadian dollars rather than in gold or foreign currency. They followed Roosevelt’s lead. In March 1933, that is when the banking crisis peaked. Roosevelt declared the bank holiday on March 6th. Then, on April 5, 1933, with Executive Order 6102. That is when he confiscated private gold, and on April 20th, 1933, he formally suspended the gold standard. Canada saw that and did the same, defaulting on the promise to repay in gold and swapped it to the Canadian dollar only.

I stumbled upon Herbert Hoover’s Memoirs in an antique book store in London. It opened my eyes to the fact that they selectively teach propaganda. They were teaching Socialism and Keynesian Economics, the business cycle was not definitive, so the government can manipulate us as they desire. After that experience, my study has never even been TRUST BUT VERIFY; it was converted to QUESTION EVERYTHING AND THEN VERIFY.

Harper_s_weekly Oct 17 1863

This is the issue of Harper’s Weekly from October 17th, 1863. I have verified this account that Russia protected the Union forces of the United States against the British and French, who claimed to be neutral, but covertly were supporting the Confederates.

1864 Napoleon III

Emperor personally favored the Confederacy, hoping to secure Southern cotton for French textile mills and establish a French-aligned buffer state to protect his imperial ambitions in Mexico. France refused to recognize the Confederacy without British cooperation, which never materialized. Napoleon III did propose a joint mediation with Britain and Russia in 1862, including a six-month armistice and opening Southern ports. The Union angrily rejected this, viewing it as pro-Confederate interference by the French.

Like the EU pretending not to be involved in the Ukraine war, France was allowing the Confederacy to purchase weapons and warships. The French ministers did object to Napoleon III and went as far as the French government initially blocked the ironclad CSS Stonewall. By the time it made it to America, the war was over. Napoleon’s Mexican campaign (1861–1867) was aimed at exploiting the U.S. division by installing Maximilian I as emperor. Confederate independence would have shielded this venture from Union retaliation.

Britain declared neutrality in May 1861. It did recognize the Confederacy as a separate belligerent, granting it the right to contract loans and use blockades, but did not recognize it as a sovereign nation. This angered the Union. Aristocrats and conservative elites such as Chancellor William Gladstone did sympathize with the Confederacy, seeing parallels with Southern plantation society and even old scores for the American Revolution.

Working-class Britons, particularly in textile regions, largely opposed slavery despite economic hardship from the “cotton famine.” Lincoln praised Lancashire workers for refusing Confederate cotton, which was on religious grounds.

British private firms smuggled arms, luxuries, and supplies into Southern ports in exchange for cotton and tobacco. Then there was the warship construction carried out in the British shipyards. They constructed the CSS Alabama, leading to the post-war Alabama Claims, where Britain paid the US $15.5 million for damages for that action.

Then there was the Trent Affair of 1861. That was a near-war crisis that erupted when the U.S. Navy seized Confederate diplomats from a British ship. Britain demanded their release, and Lincoln complied to avoid war.

By 1863, France and Britain found alternative cotton sources (e.g., India, Egypt). However, the Union threatened war if Europe recognized the Confederacy. That even put Canada and the Caribbean colonies all at risk. Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation (1863) solidified moral opposition to the Confederacy. That followed Tsar Alexander II, who freed the Russian serfs through the Emancipation Manifesto, signed on  March 3, 1861, and was publicly announced on March 5, 1861. President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, declaring, “that all persons held as slaves” within the rebellious areas “are, and henceforward shall be free.”  The fact that Russia took that action first was what led to pressure on Lincoln for the Emancipation Proclamation, as well as the start of the war, which took place about one month later on April 12, 1861.

Post-War Repercussions were profound. The U.S. forced France to withdraw from Mexico (1867), leading to Maximilian’s execution. Britain paid reparations for warship damage.

Napoleon1812 Russia

Our enemies were really Britain and France during the early 19th century. Of course, there were the Napoleonic Wars, and Napoleon even attempted to invade Russia. Clearly, France and Russia were direct enemies (e.g., Napoleon’s disastrous invasion of Russia in 1812). Then you had the never-ending Britain vs. France, who to this day still harbor resentment for being each other’s primary enemy throughout the wars.

Leaders_FDR Churchill Stalin

Britain & Russia were allies against Napoleonic France as part of the coalitions. That was no different from Stalin joining the Allies against Germany.

Nonetheless, the Post-Napoleonic Era & The Holy Alliance (Post-1815) saw Russia’s role under Tsar Alexander I, became the dominant conservative power in Europe, leading the Holy Alliance (with Austria and Prussia) to suppress liberal revolutions. Britain’s stance under Castlereagh and later Canning distanced itself from the Holy Alliance’s interventionist policies. While not directly fighting Russia, Britain often diplomatically opposed Russia’s attempts to dominate European politics and suppress revolutions, seeing it as a threat to the balance of power and British interests. It was a quasi-proxy war again.

Then there was the Eastern Question & The Crimean War (1853-1856). That core conflict remains the most significant example of direct Anglo-French opposition to Russia. What is often overlooked is that although the “official” position of the US in the Crimean War was neutral, the United States supported Russia during the 1863 Crimean War, allowing some 30 American surgeons to “volunteer” to serve in the Russian military. Russia lost that war to the alliance of Britain, France, and the Ottoman Empire. Then Russia faced yet another challenge a few years later. In 1863, there was an uprising in the regions of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth under Russian domination. That became a guerrilla war against Russia, and they responded by crushing the rebellion and even punishing the nobility by confiscating their lands. The immediate outcome of the 1863 was a devastating military defeat, followed by ruthless repression, the complete elimination of any vestige of autonomy, and the onset of an intense and systematic decades-long campaign of hating Russians thereafter. This was no doubt a residual from the century before, when Sweden made its most significant attempt to invade Russia during the Great Northern War (1700-1721), specifically in the years 1707-1709.

The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was a major theater of war for much of the conflict. Swedish King Charles XII invaded and spent years campaigning there. Charles XII forced the Polish nobility to depose their elected king, Augustus II (Elector of Saxony), and install a Swedish puppet, Stanisław Leszczyński (1704). Russia responded, seeking to expand its influence at the expense of the declining Ottoman Empire, particularly aiming for control over the Black Sea straits and protection of Orthodox Christians in Ottoman territories who were being persecuted.

Anglo-French formed a stiff opposition to Russia for its wealth. Britain feared Russian expansion would threaten its Mediterranean routes (especially to India) and the European balance of power. France, under Napoleon III, sought to revive French prestige, protect Catholic interests in the Ottoman Empire (countering Russia’s Orthodox claims), and challenge Russian power. Thus, Britain and France formed a military alliance with the Ottoman Empire and fought a major war against Russia in the Crimea. The war ended with a Russian defeat.

All of this produced a prolonged strategic rivalry and espionage contest centered on Central Asia and South Asia (Afghanistan, Persia, Tibet). Britain was obsessed with protecting its “jewel in the crown,” India, from any perceived Russian threat of invasion or influence. While it rarely resulted in direct war between the two empires, it involved intense diplomatic maneuvering, proxy conflicts, and military expeditions. France was not a major player in this specific rivalry.

The Franco-Russian rapprochement came after Germany’s defeat of France in 1871 and the subsequent formation of the Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy). France at that time actively sought an ally against the German threat. This led to the Franco-Russian Alliance (1894), a fundamental shift aligning France and Russia against the German-led bloc. As you can see, this was like a bunch of cross-dressers switching sides.

Anglo-Russian tensions continued, keeping Anglo-Russian relations in opposition. However, facing the rising power of Germany, Britain also began to realize that the wealth of Russia might be set aside, given the increasing threat from Germany. This eventually led to the Anglo-Russian Entente (1907), settling colonial disputes in Central Asia and aligning Britain with France and Russia in the Triple Entente against the Triple Alliance.

Consequently, Britain and France were absolutely opposed to Russia at many key points and only tolerated the Russians when they needed help against Germany. Britain maintained a deep strategic rivalry with Russia throughout the century due to concerns over India and Asia. Meanwhile, Britain often diplomatically opposed Russia’s conservative dominance in Europe early in the century. The balance of power shifted dramatically in the last decade of the 19th century. The rise of Germany drove former rivals France and Russia into a formal alliance (1894), and Britain later joined them in the Triple Entente (1907), setting the stage for World War I.

As you can see, there were periods of cooperation early against Napoleon between Britain and Russia. Still, a complete reversal of alliances unfolded when the glimmer of Russia’s wealth caught their eye, and they did not need their support.

Lenin Valdimir Returns to Russia

By 1917, Germany faced a two-front war against the Allies. They decided that if they could orchestrate a Russian withdrawal, it would allow Germany to concentrate forces on the Western Front. German officials viewed Lenin as a “plague bacillus” to infect Russia from within, aiming to trigger internal collapse and end Russia’s war participation. The idea was hatched by the German Foreign Secretary Richard von Kühlmann and General Erich Ludendorff. Alexander Parvus (a Russian-German businessman and former socialist) proposed the scheme to the German Foreign Office, drafting a 23-page revolutionary roadmap and securing initial funding of 2 million marks for Bolshevik propaganda.

On April 9th, 1917, Lenin and 31 revolutionaries departed Zurich on a German-chartered train. The group crossed Germany in a “sealed” carriage with extraterritorial status (marked by chalk lines), avoiding passport checks. Non-Bolsheviks were included to pretend there was no intentional German collaboration or plot to create the Russian Revolution. The German High Command prioritized the train, even delaying Crown Prince Wilhelm’s transport. Officers escorted the group to the Baltic Sea, from where they proceeded via Sweden and Finland. The trip concluded at Petrograd’s Finland Station on April 16th, 1917.

1914 William II AU 20 Mark

Germany funneled over 50 million marks to the Bolsheviks from 1917 to 1918 to fund the revolution (2.5 million 20-mark gold coins at 1/4 ounce of gold; about $2.125 billion today). This financed Pravda (Bolshevik newspaper), arms smuggling, and propaganda to undermine the Russian Provisional Government. Acting as a middleman, Parvus facilitated German funds and border logistics (e.g., bribing Finnish guards). Lenin, distrusting Parvus, later excluded him from Soviet politics. In the end, it was Germany that funded the Russian Communist Revolution to keep them out of the war.

Seward William Henry

The United States purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867. The treaty was signed on March 30th, 1867. It was officially transferred on October 18th, 1867, for  $7.2 million (about 2 cents per acre). Russia was struggling to maintain its distant colony after the costly Crimean War (1853–1856). There was also the fear that the British would just seize the territory, adding it to Canada. Selling to the U.S. was preferable.

At the time, their main commerce was the fur trade, which had declined, and Russia saw little potential for future development. Secretary of State William H. Seward believed in Manifest Destiny, meaning that the U.S. must expand its territory across North America to counter the British. Securing the Pacific Northwest and gaining a foothold near Asia for trade/military influence was a key point that Seward maintained. He did suspect riches in fish, timber, fur, and minerals. Gold was eventually discovered, but not until the 1890s. The main strategy was to prevent British dominance in the region.

Sewards Icebox

Steward was mocked. They called it “Seward’s Folly” or “Seward’s Icebox,” with critics calling Alaska a worthless frozen wasteland. That perception did not change until after gold was discovered in the 1890s, followed by oil discoveries proving it was of immense value compared to the Louisiana Purchase. Eventually, Alaska became a U.S. territory in 1912 and the 49th state in 1959. This was another act where the United States helped Russia in our warm relations against the European powers pre-1917.

US Russia vs Britain France

While the US and Russia were actually strategic partners with significant cooperation and friendship (most notably during the American Civil War and the sale of Alaska), and became cobelligerents in WWI for a brief period in 1917 after the Tsar was overthrown, they were never formal allies bound by a mutual defense treaty before the 1917 Revolutions. Their relationship was characterized by positive diplomacy, mutual interests at key junctures, and the absence of major conflict, but not a committed alliance. The deep ideological divide and differing geopolitical priorities prevented a formal alliance structure.

Our Neocons hate Russians as a people simply because the Germans funded the Revolution, and the Russian people have been the victims. Naturally, the polls in Russia show that only the elderly miss the Communist days when the state just took care of them and they did not have to make any decisions. Among the 60+ generation, approximately 58% of Russians regret the collapse of the Soviet Union, with many indicating a preference for the economic stability and social security associated with that period. The younger generations (18-24) are less likely to express a desire to return to communism, with polls coming in at most 20%. Our Neocons are generally 70+ in age. Like the older Russians, they too have refused to accept that anything has changed. This is the generation pushing us toward World War III simply because they hated communists, who no longer exist.

Armstrong on Russian TV


Posted Aug 16, 2025 by Martin Armstrong |  

As for those who think I should not be on RT, go pick up your gun, send your children there or grandchildren there as well to die, and try building a nuclear air raid shelter in your basement and see if you can even get anti-radiation pills they reserve just for government officials and the families of the NEOCONS. Somebody has to show that all Americans do NOT support endless wars. If you are a warmonger, put your life on the line instead of others. I lost most of my high school friends to Vietnam. What did they die for? The right to have a strip club?

Economic Ties = PEACE

ECONOMIC SANCTIONS = WAR

There is no war when Everyone is Fat & Happy

Zelenskyy Likely to Bring EU Leaders Monday for Moral Support as He Meets Trump to Discuss Terms of Russian Peace Agreement


Posted originally on CTH on August 17, 2025 | Sundance

Considering that Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been called a “puppet” for various western interests, the reports of Zelenskyy bringing EU leaders along for his meeting with President Trump, strikes as a little ironic.

Apparently, the EU is worried that Zelenskyy could screw things up for their Ukraine interests, so handlers or minders are being dispatched along with him just in case. Finnish President Alexander Stubb and NATO General Secretary Mark Rutte are among the names being discussed as chaperones for the Ukraine President.

Additionally, French President Emmanuel Macron and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer are planning a teleconference Sunday as the “coalition of the willing” brainstorms the best way to avoid a Zelenskyy capitulation to the terms and conditions outlined by President Vladimir Putin.

With Blackrock and JPMorgan prepositioned to control the Ukraine Recovery and Reinvestment Bank {LINK}, the coalition of the willing want U.S. troops to backstop the terms of a potential peace agreement.  The banks and financial beneficiaries need the insurance provided by the U.S military.

Ultimately banking interests are the stakeholders in the future, and the U.K, France and German political officials represent the strategists, in place to protect the interests of the banks.  Not coincidentally this is classic -albeit inverted- fascism.

If Zelenskyy is indeed the character playing a role complete with costume, then the Ukraine President would appear to be responsible for negotiating something considerably outside his skillset. Hence, the chaperone handlers are needed.

Credit should be given, because the front man Zelenskyy is very good at banging the tin-cup in various parliamentary houses, while the actual war fighting is subcontracted to the CIA and western intelligence.  However, in this phase a different skillset is required.

The new role may require a costume change for Zelenskyy.  The traditional Call of Duty cosplay outfit may not work well given the nature of the meeting in the Oval Office.  Perhaps the ‘coalition of the willing’ will decide Sunday whether to require a suit and tie for the White House performance.

There are also reports that President Trump wants to wrap things up quickly, perhaps as early as this week.

Once Zelenskyy agrees to the broad terms outlined during the Trump meeting with Putin, President Trump then wants to put both Putin and Zelenskyy into the peace deal process fast.

Again, with Trump pushing rapid urgency to stop the bloodshed, the EU needs to have their interests represented in DC on Monday.

Tariff Evasion Bust – U.S. Customs Finds Transnational Shell Companies in Taiwan, South Korea, Indonesia and Vietnam


Posted originally on CTH on August 16, 2025 | Sundance

U.S. Customs and Border Patrol has discovered a massive network of Chinese shell companies, set up in Taiwan, South Korea, Vietnam and Indonesia, specifically to avoid U.S. tariffs.

…”Investigations into transshipping are ongoing, the CBP tells FOX Business with monetary recovery likely to grow beyond $400 million”…

Up to 250 shell companies have been identified in the Beijing network with boots on the ground going to look at manufacturing facilities in Southeast Asia that have no manufacturing activity, yet they generate products for shipment to the USA.

CBP is now on the trail of what CTH identified in January of this year with a visit to Vietnam {GO DEEP}.

ASEAN NATIONS – U.S. Customs and Border Protection has busted up a duty-evasion ring attempting to evade President Trump’s tariffs, FOX Business exclusively reports. 

The CBP uncovered over $400 million in unpaid trade duties through investigations permitted under the Enforce and Protect Act (EAPA), a tactic used to police and stop illegal transshipments and other methods aimed at defrauding the U.S. government. That figure is expected to rise as the investigation deepens. 

[…] A source tells FOX Business’ Edward Lawrence that one of the operations had boots on the ground in Taiwan and Indonesia to look at mattress factories and found that there was no production going on. 

Additionally, over half, or $250 million, came from a network of 23 Chinese shell companies which funneled repackaged goods as if they were made in Asian nations, including South Korea, Indonesia and Vietnam, to avoid tariffs.  (read more)

Trump Outwits EU Leaders on “Security Guarantee” Plan – No Ceasefire, Straight to Peace Agreement


Posted originally on CTH on August 16, 2025 | Sundance


For months, the so-called “coalition of the willing” led by Great Britain, France and Germany, have been proposing a multinational group of peacekeepers on the ground in Ukraine – supported by U.S. military.  However, after President Trump asserted he would not support a U.S. troop presence in Ukraine, things got sticky.

Without the U.S. military, the NATO members were not willing to put their troops into the meat grinder buffer zone between Russian and Ukrainian forces. The U.K, France and Germany continually demanded U.S. troops as protection, just in case things escalated.  This insurance approach was expanded by Ukrainian President Zelenskyy who coined the term, “security guarantee” to encapsulate the EU demand.

However, President Trump cuts the Gordian knot in the “ceasefire plan,” by eliminating the “ceasefire plan.”

Instead, President Trump goes directly to a peace agreement, and somehow the EU members agreed to it.  There will be no negotiation for a ceasefire; instead there will be immediate negotiations for a long-term peace agreement.

PRESIDENT TRUMP – “A great and very successful day in Alaska! The meeting with President Vladimir Putin of Russia went very well, as did a late-night phone call with President Zelenskyy of Ukraine, and various European Leaders, including the highly respected Secretary General of NATO. It was determined by all that the best way to end the horrific war between Russia and Ukraine is to go directly to a Peace Agreement, which would end the war, and not a mere Ceasefire Agreement, which often times do not hold up. President Zelenskyy will be coming to D.C., the Oval Office, on Monday afternoon. If all works out, we will then schedule a meeting with President Putin. Potentially, millions of people’s lives will be saved. Thank you for your attention to this matter!” (link)

President Trump does not publicly point out that the shift in plan negates the need for a ceasefire security force, but the reality is inside the unspoken change.  A very smart and strategic approach that appears to have flown under the radar.

WASHINGTON – U.S. President Donald Trump has won the support of Western partners for his bid to end the war in Ukraine, with European capitals voicing their approval following his high-stakes talks with Russia’s Vladimir Putin in Alaska.

Trump spoke with top EU leaders on Saturday morning after the bilateral summit on Friday appeared to end without an agreement.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen also took part in the telephone conversation, alongside Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, Finland’s Alexander Stubb, Poland’s Karol Nawrocki and Italy’s Giorgia Meloni were confirmed by Brussels to have joined. A second call was then held by the European leaders without Zelenskyy and the Americans to discuss the situation.

In a statement, Zelenskyy said that he had a “long and substantive” conversation with Trump, initially one-on-one, before other leaders were invited to take part. “We support President Trump’s proposal for a trilateral meeting between Ukraine, the U.S. and Russia,” he said, adding that he will travel to Washington on Monday to meet with Trump.

“As envisioned by President Trump, the next step must now be further talks including President Zelenskyy, whom he will meet soon,” the group of European countries represented on the call said in a statement. “We are also ready to work with President Trump and President Zelenskyy towards a trilateral summit with European support.” (read more)

Zelenskyy will be in Washington DC on Monday afternoon for a talk with President Trump.  In that meeting, we anticipate President Trump telling Zelenskyy that the general terms of the ‘peace agreement’ will be to include the permanent loss of territory in exchange for something we do not yet know.

Brian Glenn: “I Don’t Think President Trump Is Playing Games At All With President Putin”


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 15, 2025