@nopie's banner p

nopie


				

				

				
0 followers   follows 0 users  
joined 2022 September 16 07:44:09 UTC
Verified Email

				

User ID: 1228

nopie


				
				
				

				
0 followers   follows 0 users   joined 2022 September 16 07:44:09 UTC

					

No bio...


					

User ID: 1228

Verified Email

Obviously when Ukraine joins the EU, it will be required doing business with Russia in accordance with the EU customs rules.

But that is completely different from the statement that the EU demanded Ukraine stop doing business with Russia.

We need to be precise what we mean to have a meaningful discussion.

Bad/good is different from worse/better. Besides many things you are demanding of them are not of intelligence but executive which belong to a completely different part of the government. I doubt that CIA runs the country. And it is good that they don't.

I find it hard to believe that the US demanded that Ukraine stops doing business with Russia.

Also, I also don't believe that Poland's main export is labour. It is true that a lot of Polish people were working in other EU countries but now Poland is developing their own industries and getting richer in this way.

Ukraine however remained poorer than Russia, mostly due to its own corruption. Despite all the flaws of the EU, the EU membership has been good for economic development of post-Soviet countries. Ukraine could definitely benefit from the EU membership.

It is hard to believe that US intelligence is becoming worse. The recent events (Ruso-Ukrainian war, Crocus City Hall shooting) show that is has become better.

It appears that CIA has wide access to online communication worldwide and combined with modern AI technologies that allows to sieve vast amounts of information and find a needle in the haystack. A translator I had known got hired by a US agency couple of years ago. She has never spoken what she does but I suspect that she works on automated translation models for US intelligence. Currently we should assume that communication in any language is equally monitored and analysed.

Also, it hard to believe that if Russians really possessed such technology that many describe as improbable it wouldn't have leaked by now. Even best agents eventually make mistakes.

Russians have been involved in assassination in other countries, like in the UK. But we know that because eventually we found some evidence. It is likely that it could have happened in this case too, especially after repeated attacks in several countries. Unless, of course, CIA knows more about these cases but keep silent.

And third, why would Russians use this technology against targets of low importance instead of someone who really matters?