Russia Attacks Ukraine - 23 Feb 2022 #10

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  • #621

Deciphering Vladimir Putin's many appearances since mutiny​


Where's Vladimir Putin? That's what we were wondering most of Monday - two days after a dramatic insurrection by the Wagner Group that saw a convoy of mercenary fighters headed to Moscow.

A spokesman for Mr Putin announced a deal to end the Wagner mutiny late on Saturday. But when would the president himself comment on the controversial agreement?

It was controversial because the Wagner mercenaries had rebelled, seized military sites (with apparent ease) and then marched on Moscow; Russian air force pilots had been killed in the mutiny. Yet the Kremlin had agreed not to prosecute Wagner fighters or their leader Yevgeny Prigozhin in return for calling off the uprising.

Over the last week, President Putin has made a series of unusual public appearances - all televised - in an apparent attempt to steady the ship.

Monday: Addressing the nation​

[...]

He tries to bring everyone on side: he thanks the Russian public, Russian officials, religious leaders, the Russian armed forces and his security services. He distinguishes between the leaders of the mutiny and regular Wagner fighters and commanders, whom he praises as patriots. Crucially, he presents himself as the man who averted major bloodshed.

"As soon as these events began to unfold," he says, "in keeping with my direct instructions, steps were taken to avoid spilling blood".

Remember that controversy I was talking about? He doesn't address that.

But, hey, Russia has stepped back from the brink. That's the main thing.

Tuesday: Facing the troops​

On Monday he was playing catch-up. By Tuesday morning it's full steam ahead to try to restore his authority.

[...]

In his brief address, President Putin again claims that Russian society has come together after the Wagner mutiny. But most of what he says is praise for his military for "stopping a civil war".

There's a minute's silence for the air force pilots who were killed. The president is paying his respects, but still not addressing the question of why Wagner fighters are not being prosecuted over their deaths.
Speech over. Cue the national anthem and a gun salute.

Overall message: the president's not only in charge. With the help of the Russian army and the Russian people, he's just scored a great victory.

Wednesday: Up close and personal​

This is probably the most surprising Putin video of the week - perhaps of the year. That's because it's a very un-Putin-like Putin we see, in terms of getting up close and personal with the crowds.

[...]

We've grown used to seeing Vladimir Putin keeping his distance from those he comes into contact with. Remember those long Kremlin tables with Putin seated safely at one end and his guests at the other?

Not here. In Dagestan he's kissing children, hugging women, shaking hands and posing for photos.

State TV laps it up.

[...]

Thursday: Standing ovation...and doodles​


1688217605703.png

EPA
President Putin's attending a business conference on Russian brands in Moscow. It doesn't exactly make for another rock-star moment.


President Putin's attending a business conference on Russian brands in Moscow. It doesn't exactly make for another rock-star moment.

Still, any opportunity to try to show (a) he's in charge (b) he's active (c) he has the support of the people.

[...]

From the same event, we see another slightly more bizarre video. President Putin is doodling on an interactive whiteboard.

The result is a cartoon-like red face with three strands of hair. A curious picture from a leader who has learnt the art of political survival.

Lines of loyal troops, gun salutes, screaming fans and a standing ovation.

With these kinds of images, the Kremlin leader is trying to show he's back in control.

He even has time to doodle. He must be feeling confident.

Following the mutiny, we've witnessed a turbo-charged Putin this week. He was here, he was there, he seemed to be everywhere. It was almost as if he'd kicked off his campaign for re-election (his presidential term expires next year).

But positive pictures do not change the fact that the rebellion had taken the Kremlin by surprise. It was a threat. The Wagner fighters had been well on their way to Moscow when the mutiny was called off. It was an unprecedented challenge to Putin's authority.

And the long-term consequences of that are still unclear.

 
  • #622

'Go In Unnoticed And Inflict Damage': Ukrainians Train Drone Operators For Battle


Drones have become a key tool in the battle for Ukraine with both the Ukrainian and Russian sides using them for surveillance, targeting, and attacks. RFE/RL joined a training session for drone operators in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhya region.

Ukrainian Tank Commander Recounts 'Three-Day Shoot-Out' To Liberate Donetsk Villages


A Ukrainian tank unit played a key role in a recent counteroffensive operation that managed to recapture several villages in the Donetsk region. The tank crew claims to have advanced more than 6 kilometers along the Mokri Yaly River in the hotly contested region.

'Beaten To A Pulp': Ukrainian Volunteer Recounts Torture By Russian Troops


Serhiy Pihar says he was beaten and electrocuted by Russian troops while in captivity. The Ukrainian man was detained by invading Russian forces in June 2022 after helping people evacuate from his village in Ukraine's Mykolayiv region.
 
  • #623

'Mines Everywhere': Ukrainian Drone Unit Recounts Battle To Retake Donetsk Village


A Ukrainian drone commander recounts the fight to retake what he called "dead land" in Blahodatne, a village in the Donetsk region. The area was among the first gains of Ukraine's ongoing counteroffensive. Current Time correspondent Borys Sachalko spoke with the soldiers about the battle.

Survivors Of Kakhovka Dam Breach Clean Up Devastating Flood Damage


Residents from the village of Sadove in Ukraine’s Kherson region continue to dig in, cleaning up vast devastation as best they can without power or water. Floodwaters from the fatal June 6 breach of the Kakhovka dam have receded, but farms and homes remain filled with debris and rot.

Kid-Sized Body Armor Protects Ukrainian Orphans During Evacuation From Frontline Village


Specially made body armor is being used to protect children being evacuated from villages near the front line in eastern Ukraine. Three orphans endured shelling by Russian forces until being relocated to Kyiv with their cousin, who has been acting as their guardian since their parents both died.
 
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Noting..
July 1, 2023 6:45PM EDT
''SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Thousands of people logged complaints about problems accessing Twitter on Saturday after owner Elon Musk limited most users to viewing 600 tweets a day - restrictions he described as an attempt to prevent unauthorized scraping of potentially valuable data from the site.
The crackdown began to have ripple effects early Saturday, causing more than 7,500 people at one point to report problems using the social media service, based on complaints registered on Downdetector, a website that tracks online outages. Although that's a relatively small number of Twitter's more than 200 million worldwide users, the trouble was widespread enough to cause the #TwitterDown hashtag to trend in some parts of the world.''
 
  • #626
There is the ''theater of war'' and then there is just theater. The whole W group versus P makes me wonder what plot is unfolding backstage during this world stage distraction? speculation, imo.

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This satellite image provided by Planet Labs PBC and taken on Friday, June 30, 2023, shows apparent recent construction of tents at a former military base outside the Belarusian town of Osipovichi. As part of a deal to end a rebellion in Russia by Wagner Group mercenaries, Belarus’s president says he offered the fighters an abandoned military unit to set up camp and the leader of an exiled Belarusian guerrilla organization told The AP it is near Osipovichi. (Planet Labs PBC via AP)

''Satellite images analyzed by the Associated Press on Saturday showed what appeared to be a newly built military-style camp in Belarus, with statements from a Belarusian guerrilla group and officials suggesting it may be used to house fighters from the Wagner mercenary group.


The images provided by Planet Labs PLC suggest that dozens of tents have been erected within the past two weeks at a former military base outside Osipovichi, a town 230 kilometres (142 miles) north of the Ukrainian border. A satellite photo taken on Jun. 15 shows no sign of the rows of white and green structures that are clearly visible in a later image, dated Jun. 30.

Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin and his fighters escaped prosecution and were offered refuge in Belarus last week after Minsk helped broker a deal to end what appeared to be an armed insurrection by the mercenary group. The abortive revolt saw Wagner troops capture a military headquarters in southern Russia and march hundreds of kilometres (miles) towards Moscow, seemingly unimpeded.''
 
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JUL 2, 2023
  • Ukraine has said Russian troops are advancing in four areas in the east of the country amid “fierce fighting” but reports that Kyiv’s forces are moving forward in the south. Russian troops were advancing near Avdiivka, Mariinka, Lyman and Svatove, said the deputy defence minister, Hanna Maliar. “Fierce fighting is going on everywhere,” she wrote on social media on Sunday. Russian accounts said Moscow’s forces had repelled Ukrainian attacks near villages ringing Bakhmut and in areas farther south, including the strategic hilltop town of Vuhledar.
  • The US president, Joe Biden, will travel to Europe in a week for a three-nation trip, including a Nato summit, focused on reinforcing the international coalition backing Ukraine amid its counteroffensive against Russia. Biden is set to depart on Sunday 9 July for Britain and then head to Lithuania’s capital, Vilnius, for the meeting of Nato leaders, followed by a one-day visit to Helsinki for talks with his Nordic counterparts, the White House has said.
  • A top Russian propagandist has accused Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin of going “off the rails” after receiving billions in public funds, as Moscow’s new narrative takes shape after Wagner’s brief mutiny. “Prigozhin has gone off the rails because of big money,” Dmitry Kiselev, one of the main faces of the Russian propaganda machine, said on his weekly television show on Sunday. Prigozhin led his forces in a short-lived rebellion against Russia’s top military brass just over a week ago in a major embarrassment for the Kremlin.
  • Four civilians were injured by Russian shelling in the southern city of Kherson, the prosecutor general’s office said on Sunday, including two in a direct hit on a high-rise building. Russian forces fired on the residential area from the occupied east bank of the Dnipro River, also reportedly damaging civilian infrastructure.
  • Award-winning Ukrainian writer and war crimes researcher Victoria Amelina, 37, has died after being wounded in a Russian missile strike in Kramatorsk, the freedom of expression group PEN has said. The attack last Tuesday destroyed the Ria Pizza restaurant in the eastern Ukrainian city, killing another 12 people, including four children, and wounding dozens.
  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy paid tribute in Odesa to those serving in the navy on Ukrainian Navy Day on Sunday in a video posted on Twitter. The Ukrainian president said: “The enemy will in no way dictate its terms in the Black Sea.”
  • Two British peers were among 50 people who attended a party organised by the Russian ambassador to the UK at his residence in west London last month to mark the creation of a Russia independent of the Soviet Union. The Conservative Lord Balfe and crossbencher Lord Skidelsky attended the event at which the Russian envoy, Andrei Kelin, spoke and sought to justify the invasion of Ukraine, according to the Sunday Times.
  • Yevgeny Prigozhin’s media holding company is to shut down, the director of one of its outlets said. Patriot Media, whose most prominent outlet was the RIA FAN news site, had taken a strongly nationalist, pro-Kremlin editorial line while also providing positive coverage of Prigozhin and his Wagner group.
  • Poland will send 500 police officers to its border with Belarus, Poland’s interior minister, Mariusz Kamiński, has said. Warsaw earlier announced a tightening of security because of concerns over the Wagner group’s presence in Belarus.
  • Energy giants TotalEnergies and Shell have defended activities linked to Russia after a critical report into their trading in natural gas despite the war in Ukraine. The campaign group Global Witness said TotalEnergies was the third-biggest player in Russian liquified natural gas last year and Shell the fourth, behind two Russian companies. Both companies said on Sunday they were tied to ongoing contracts despite pulling out of Russian partnerships after Ukraine was invaded last year.
  • Russia has cancelled its 2023 Maks international airshow, probably over security concerns after recent uncrewed aerial vehicle attacks inside the country, according to the UK Ministry of Defence’s latest intelligence report.
 
  • #630
JUL 2, 2023
The Ukrainian army has begun recovering some of the roughly 25 Western-made tanks, fighting vehicles and engineering vehicles it lost while trying to cross a minefield south of Mala Tokmachka on June 8.

[...]

The 47th Brigade on June 8 abandoned at least 17 of its 99 M-2s plus three of its six Leopard 2Rs mineclearing tanks. The Leopard 2Rs and a Wisent mineclearer, the latter apparently belonging to the 33rd Brigade, were trying to clear lanes through potentially hundreds of 21-pound TM-62 anti-tank mines for the M-2s and some of the 33rd’s 14 Leopard 2A6s when something went wrong.

It’s possible the mineclearing tanks missed a few too many mines, triggering explosions that wrecked many of the lead vehicles and caused a pileup behind them that made the rest of the battlegroup an easy target for Russian artillery and helicopters.

In any event, the 33rd-47th battlegroup retreated with their wounded and dead. The brigades remained in the fight despite each losing around a fifth of their best vehicles. As Ukraine’s counteroffensive ground on along several sectors in Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk Oblasts, the 33rd and 47th ultimately found some way through or around the Mala Tokmachka minefield.

[...]

Expect Ukrainian forces to tow away and fix many of the damaged vehicles. While the United States recently pledged to Ukraine an additional 50 M-2s in order to make good recent losses, the Ukrainians as a matter of custom refuse to waste vehicles.

[...]
 
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JUL 4, 2023
At least 43 people, including twelve children, have been injured after a missile struck the carpark of a residential building in Ukraine's Kharkiv region, local officials say.

What is believed to be a Russian Iskander missile landed in the town of Pervomaisky at about 13:30 local time.

Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin said there were only residential buildings in the area.
A one-year-old and a ten-month-old were reportedly among the injured.

Russian air defenses on Tuesday foiled a Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow that prompted authorities to briefly close one of the city's international airports, officials said, as a Western analysis said Russia has managed to slow Kyiv's recently launched counteroffensive.

Flights from Russia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt were diverted to other airports in the city.

"The Kyiv regime's attempt to attack an area where civilian infrastructure is located, including the airport, which incidentally also receives foreign flights, is yet another act of terrorism," said foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova.

"The international community should realise that the United States, Britain, France - permanent members of the UN Security Council - are financing a terrorist regime."

On Tuesday, Russian troop losses since the start of Vladimir Putin's full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022, stood at 231,030, the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces posted on social media, up 770 from the previous day.

This figure is more than 31,000 higher than the 200,000 milestone, which Kyiv claimed on May 17, and comes amid Ukraine's counteroffensive, which started at the beginning of June.
 
  • #636
Now we have information from our intelligence that the Russian military has placed objects resembling explosives on the roof of several power units of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. Perhaps to simulate an attack on the plant. Perhaps they have some other scenario. But in any case, the world sees – can't but see – that the only source of danger to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is Russia and no one else. Unfortunately, there was no timely and large-scale response to the terrorist attack on the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant. And this may incite the Kremlin to commit new evil. It is the responsibility of everyone in the world to stop it, no one can stand aside, as radiation affects everyone.
 
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