Axil do we know Putin's plan? I do not think so.
I would say that each country has the government it deserve. It takes many
generations to change it.
I have no admiration for the Russian government for at least the last 800
year. It has not changed much.Tsarism or communism no difference.
It is the leadership / government they always had. They have always been
isolationist. They have a tradition of solving internal disputes with
radical means. They wish to solve external affairs the same way. Nothing
new and much harder as we have so good communication nowadays..
Russia's strengths is not mainly depending on their ability to  control
European energy supply. If LENR can contribute a decentralized distribution
of energy the Russian might see that as the ultimate savior to keep that
vast territory under control. As I see it they have a tremendous problem to
supply the sparsely populated Asian part of Russia with modern amenities
and keep people contempt. Local cheap energy would certainly solve some
problems.
I think the whole globe needs a LENR solution. I see much more potential
losers in the US. US has world domination in all oil trade and is the
biggest energy consumer with an infrastructure mainly built to support the
same interests.
Let us worry about how to get this technology out of the cradle. To me it
is like one of those old fashion striptease shows when she was wearing ten
layers of under ware. At least to me it became rather boring after the
fifth set. In other words the credibility is much more of a problem and it
helps the strong oil interest to push LENR at bay..

Best Regards ,
Lennart Thornros

www.StrategicLeadershipSac.com
lenn...@thornros.com
+1 916 436 1899
6140 Horseshoe Bar Road Suite G, Loomis CA 95650

“Productivity is never an accident. It is always the result of a commitment
to excellence, intelligent planning, and focused effort.” PJM


On Fri, Feb 28, 2014 at 1:51 PM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Putin’s plan for the reemergence of Russia as a hegemonic influence on
> world affairs might be characterized with Russia’s successful steps toward
> “energy super-power” status.
>
> How would the emergence of LENR affect Putin’s actions as he realizes that
> Russia is sure to lose its previous energy hegemony in Europe?
>
> Will Putin take the loss of his dream for Russia and its ability to
> project power with good grace, or will the former KGB spy revert to old
> form and take matters into his own hands to remove the clear and present
> threat that he sees as catastrophic to Russia’s national interests as well
> as the interests of his cadre of criminal plutocrat functionaries?
>
> Remember what happened to Georgi Ivanov Markov
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgi_Markov
>
> And then there was Alexander Litvinenko… PR Senior News Analyst Daniel
> Schorr says that the death of Alexander Litvinenko, a strong critic of
> Russian President Vladimir Putin, is the latest in a long line of
> suspicious deaths that may have been politically motivated.
>
> Paul Joyal, Russia expert, security consultant: A message has been
> communicated to anyone who wants to speak out against the Kremlin: “If you
> do, no matter whom you are, where you are, we will find you and we will
> silence you—in the most horrible way possible”.
> Paul Khlebnikov, an American business journalist, was gunned down.
> The first attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II took place on
> Wednesday, 13 May 1981, in St. Peter's Square at Vatican City. The Pope was
> shot and wounded by Mehmet Ali Ağca while he was entering the square. The
> Pope was struck four times, and suffered severe blood loss.
>
> Several theories exist concerning Mehmet Ali Ağca's assassination attempt.
> One, strongly advocated since the early 1980s by Michael Ledeen among
> others, is that the assassination attempt had originated from Moscow and
> that the KGB had instructed the Bulgarian and East German secret services
> to carry out the mission. The Bulgarian Secret Service was allegedly
> instructed by the KGB to assassinate the Pope because of his support of
> Poland's Solidarity movement, seeing it as one of the most significant
> threats to Soviet hegemony in Eastern Europe.
>
> If the NiH reactor more of a thread to Russian hegemony than the Pope was?
> You decide.
>
>
>

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