Leaders of the so-called “Free Nations of Post-Russia Forum” begin their four-day, three-city blitz in the United States this Tuesday, with an all-day conference at the Washington, D.C. headquarters of the Hudson Institute titled: “A New Architecture for Northern Eurasia: The Sixth Free Nations of Post-Russia Forum.” The conference will be livestreamed for maximum impact. Invitations for the events of the four days are illustrated with a proposed map of the 41 “nations” into which they seek to divide the Russian Federation.
EIR will release this week a profile of this Anglo-American-directed operation whose intent is nothing less than to erase Russia from the world map. The public sponsors of this “VI Free Nations of Post-Russia Forum,” the neocon bastions of the Hudson Institute and Jamestown Foundation, organized this U.S. tour to bolster their drive for full disintegration of the Russian Federation to be officially adopted as the only acceptable outcome of the NATO-provoked and NATO-led Ukraine war on Russia—an act of madness leading to nuclear war.
Speakers on the first day include:
• at least 14 “future heads of independent state of the post-Russian space” (their words), among them Russian terrorist-spokesman Ilya Ponomarev and “Chechen Republic of Ichkeria Foreign Minister” Inal Sherip, representing the London-based “government-in-exile” formed by the jihadis who waged two wars against Russia in the 1990s and 2000s in Chechnya, including carrying out monstrous acts of terrorism against civilians in Moscow and other cities;
• a half-dozen or more Ukrainian, Polish, Lithuanian, Estonian and Austrian figures supporting the “Free Nations of Post Russia Forum”; plus
• the key Anglo-American handlers of this terrorist-separatist movement: Hudson Institute’s Luke Coffey, the Jamestown Foundation’s Janusz Bugajski and Paul Goble, former Atlantic Council Senior Fellow Anders Aslund, and the former editor of London’s The Economist, all of whom except Aslund having been regular participants in the deliberations of this so-called “Free Nations of Post-Russia Forum.”
The second day in D.C. starts with a “Public Debate and Direct Dialogue” between “Free Russia” opposition leaders advocating regime change but of a unified Russia and the “Post-Russia” advocates of breaking up Russia. A debate jury consisting of five people from the U.S., EU and Ukraine is to decide the winner. That will be followed by a private strategy session between the FNPRF representatives and their U.S. handlers.
The Post-Russia crowd and their handlers then head up to Philadelphia, where April 27 is to be spent “brainstorming” on possible governance models between representatives of the city of Philadelphia and the state of Pennsylvania and “the future heads of independent state of the post-Russian space.” April 28 they hold another full day of speeches in New York City, on the topic “Empires Always Fall. The Future of Post-Russia: U.S.A.’s, Regional, and Global Win-Win.”