RA’s Daily Russia News Blast – May 9, 2014
TODAY: Russia to be stationed on the moon by 2030; NATO doubts troop withdrawal; Victory Day parade to go ahead; Putin oversees military rocket launches; Ukrainian rebels to go ahead with planned referendum; gay rights march authorised for next week; sexist diplomat ridiculed over Pussy Riot comments; Snowden manipulated by Kremlin, says former NSA head; Ukraine will not accede to Gazprom’s latest demand.
Russia has apparently drafted a program for colonizing the Moon, a project which it supposedly intends to begin implementing in 2030, in a bid to win any future competition for natural lunar resources. A member of the Russian Academy of Cosmonautics says such a plot is ‘unrealistic’ given that the price of exporting any goods from the Moon to the Earth would far exceed their worth. The Foreign Minister says NATO’s Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen is ‘blind’ if he doesn’t see that Russia has followed through on its withdrawal of troops from the Ukrainian border; Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov says there are 15,000 Ukrainian troops currently stationed near the Russian border. Despite criticism, Russia will go ahead with its Victory Day parade in Moscow amidst what the BBC calls ‘a surge of patriotism kindled by its annexation of Crimea’. President Vladimir Putin personally oversaw test launches of military rockets yesterday, and rumours suggested he would attend a procession of warships in Crimea today. Putin maintains that the situation in Ukraine was caused by ‘irresponsible politics’. Radio host Vladimir Solovyov deftly tried to explain Putin’s surprising appeal to rebels in Ukraine to suspend their planned referendum on sovereignty, calling the President ‘peacemaker number one’ and slamming a caller who ‘dissented’. Ukrainian separatists (separatist cats?) in any case denied Putin’s request, saying that they will go ahead with their planned vote this Sunday. Putin has already got ‘most of what he wanted’ in Ukraine, says The Economist.