Russia Attacks Ukraine - 23 Feb 2022 #9

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  • #181
The landbridge for Russia is almost completed...

Just my opinion,only but this war will drag on..
Ukraine army is not trained,they excised of “volunteers”

In the meanwhile,Putin is trying to get more allies from Africa,Middle East and so on..


It has (imo) nothing to do with NATO,but about fossil and controle world power..
The Ukrainian army and defense forces are actually better trained than the Russian Army. The majority of Russian ground troops are just conscripts. It is really quite shocking. I am sure eventually Russia will get control of much of eastern Ukraine simply by sheer numbers of troops and artillery. But even that will come at a staggering cost for Russia. As for Russia's attempts to rally allies, they are reduced to talking to third world nations that really offer no assistance. I do agree that this invasion has little to do with any alleged "threat" from NATO. This is about Putin wanting Ukraine's resources. It is nothing more than genocide purely for the purpose of theft.
 
  • #182
And speaking of drinking tea in Russia. These are very popular there. Samavors

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They have very fancy ones too. Boiling water for tea.
 
  • #183
<snipped for focus> As for Russia's attempts to rally allies, they are reduced to talking to third world nations that really offer no assistance.

From news reports, Russia's attempts to rally allies includes the People's Republic of China. This is much more significant and concerning than other allies that might be third world nations.
 
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  • #185

NEW YORK, June 16, 2022 – Today during a meeting with U.N. ambassadors and officials at the U.S. Mission to the U.N., United States Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack announced the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and The Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food of Ukraine are entering into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to enhance coordination between the U.S. and Ukrainian agriculture and food sectors and build a strategic partnership to address food security.

The MOU will establish a three-year partnership driven by the need to address the economic disruptions in the United States and worldwide due to the Russian war on Ukraine.

Through the MOU, the United States and Ukraine will agree to the consistent exchange of information and expertise regarding crop production, emerging technologies, climate-smart practices, food security, and supply chain issues to boost productivity and enhance both agricultural sectors. USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service will also mobilize its resources to provide Ukraine technical assistance for animal health, biosecurity, and sanitary and phytosanitary controls, and utilize the Borlaug Fellowship Program and re-establish the Cochran Fellowship Program to enhance U.S.– Ukraine collaboration and research as Ukraine rebuilds its agricultural sector.


President Joe Biden said the U.S. is helping build temporary grain storage for Ukrainian shippers who are trying to send their commodities via rail to Polish and Lithuanian ports. The grain has to be unloaded from Ukrainian trains at the border and then reloaded on European trains because Ukrainian rail gauges are different.
 
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  • #186

U.S. veterans missing in Ukraine formed bond over background

apnews.com
apnews.com

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Alex Drueke and Andy Huynh are both military veterans from Alabama, so it was natural that they formed a bond once they met in Ukraine, where each traveled separately with the intention of helping defend democracy against Russian invaders.

[...]

The U.S. State Department said it was investigating unconfirmed reports that Russian or Russian-backed forces captured two American citizens and possibly a third. ...

[...]

Shaw [Drueke's aunt] said it’s possible the two could just be lying low: She noted that the 39-year-old Drueke had extensive training and experience during two tours in Iraq, while Huynh, 27, served four years in the U.S. Marines.

[...]

Huynh’s fiancee, JB, said she got a message from a soldier telling her that both men had missed their rendezvous point and were in an area that was hit “pretty hard.” Black, speaking in an interview with WAAY-TV, said she ran to her mother’s room and fell on the bed sobbing.

[...]

Army veteran Harrison Jozefowicz, who quit his job as a Chicago police officer and traveled to Ukraine soon after Russia invaded, is now helping place volunteers in combat positions and coordinating supplies as head of a group called Task Force Yankee. Several hundred Americans serve in the International Legion of Defense of Ukraine, he said, and still more are assisting outside the force.

“In the volunteer world, the people who are here for the long haul are digging in and getting serious — buying warehouses, establishing permanent routes of logistics with dedicated drivers,” he said Thursday.

[...]
 
  • #187

Russia-Ukraine war: EU to give fast-tracked opinion on Kyiv bid; Russia low on troops and missiles, UK defence chief says – live

www.theguardian.com
www.theguardian.com

2m ago 01.06

Summary​

  • Hundreds of civilians sheltering at the Azot chemical plant in Sievierodonetsk are no longer able to evacuate because of the sustained Russian artillery barrages, officials say. Luhansk governor Serhiy Haidai told CNN 568 people, including 38 children, are taking refuge in the Azot plant. A pro-Russian separatist leader claimed Russian-backed forces would reopen a humanitarian corridor for civilians to leave the plant, the Interfax news agency reported.
  • The leaders of France, Germany and Italy have vowed to support Ukraine’s bid to join the European Union on a visit to Kyiv. Macron said all four EU leaders present supported the idea of granting an “immediate” EU candidate status to Ukraine.
  • Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said Russia is “not ashamed of showing who we are” in an interview with the BBC. “We didn’t invade Ukraine, we declared a special military operation because we had absolutely no other way of explaining to the west that dragging Ukraine into Nato was a criminal act,” he said.
  • Nato says it is committed to providing equipment to maintain Ukraine’s right to self-defence, and will be making more troop deployments on its eastern flank. Nato’s secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, condemned “a relentless war of attrition against Ukraine” being waged by Russia, and said Nato continued to offer “unprecedented support so it can defend itself against Moscow’s aggression”.
  • The head of the UK’s armed forces says Russia has already “strategically lost” the war in Ukraine and is now a “more diminished power”. Admiral Sir Tony Radakin said Vladimir Putin had lost 25% of Russia’s land power for only “tiny” gains. In an interview with PA Media, he said Russia was running out of troops and advanced missiles and would never be able to take over all of Ukraine.
  • Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, appeared as a hologram while referencing Star Wars in an attempt to secure more aid from big tech firms. Zelenskiy told a crowd of hundreds at the VivaTech trade show in Paris on Thursday that Ukraine was offering technology firms a unique chance to rebuild the country as a fully digital democracy.
  • At least three civilians were killed and seven injured by a Russian airstrike in the eastern city of Lysychansk, according to local officials. The strike hit a building where civilians were sheltering, Luhansk governor Serhiy Haidai said.
  • An overnight Russian air-launched rocket strike hit a suburb of the northern Ukrainian city of Sumy, killing four and wounding six, according to officials. Regional governor Dmytro Zhyvytskyi said another rocket strike hit the Dobropillia district, which lies next to the Russian border, at 5am on Thursday, followed by 26 mortar rounds fired from across the border.
  • Children born in Ukraine’s Kherson region since 24 February will automatically receive Russian citizenship, according to an official. Kirill Stremousov, deputy head of the Russian-imposed military-civilian administration in the occupied Kherson region, claimed that thousands of citizens in the territory were applying for Russian citizenship. Ukraine has repeatedly accused Russia of abducting children from its territory and transferring them into Russia.
  • A Russian spy tried and failed to secure an internship at the international criminal court (ICC) using the false identity as a Brazilian citizen that he had built up for as long as a decade, according to Dutch intelligence. Sergey Vladimirovich Cherkasov, 36, accused of being an agent of Russia’s GRU military intelligence, was detained when he arrived and sent back to Brazil the following day.
  • The UK announced a fresh wave of sanctions against Russia aimed at people involved with the “barbaric treatment of children in Ukraine”. Those targeted by sanctions include the Russian children’s rights commissioner, Maria Lvova-Belova, military commanders, Vladimir Mikhailovich and Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox church.
  • The UK has purchased and refurbished more than 20 long-range guns – M109s – from a Belgian arms company which it is sending to Ukraine, Britain’s defence secretary, Ben Wallace, said. Russia outnumbers Ukraine in artillery fire by 20 to 1 in some areas but allies are beginning to give Ukraine the long-range artillery and rocket systems that will enable its forces to win, he told Sky News.
  • Russia warned that gas flows to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline could be suspended, blaming problems with turbine repairs. Russia’s ambassador to the EU, Vladimir Chizhov, told the state-owned news agency Ria that a complete halt in gas flows in the pipeline, which supplies gas from Russia to Europe under the Baltic Sea, would be a “catastrophe” for Germany. Canada says it is in active discussions with Germany about a Siemens-made turbine equipment undergoing maintenance in Canada and unable to return due to sanctions.
  • Temporary silos on Ukraine’s border would prevent Russia from stealing Ukrainian grain and ensure the winter harvest is not lost due to a lack of storage, US agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack said on Thursday. It follows comments from US President Joe Biden that temporary silos would be built along the border with Ukraine.
  • Zelenskiy accused Russia of being unwilling to look for a way to peace, claiming it will “decide for himself that the war must end”. Ukrainian peace talks negotiator Mykhailo Podolyak also dismissed Russia’s most recent comments about being willing to continue negotiations as an attempt to deceive the world. Russia, he said, wanted to give the impression of being ready to talk while planning to stab Ukraine in the back.
 
  • #188
DBM
 
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  • #189
Anyway, don’t know of this is posted before,but Europe -Poland-Romania
should make grain exports a priority (imo)

The corridors are hellish for (UA) truck drivers.
In the video,there are two Polish guards only working from Monday till Friday,while the traffic jam getting longer and longer..
They are stranded for 6 days:


“He gives an example. The moment he was already standing in the customs zone with his car, so the traffic jam was over and it was his turn, it still took him hours before he could drive into Poland. "There are kilometers of trucks that want to cross the border. At the customs there are exactly two people on the Polish side for all those trucks! And they both pretend they don't speak English or German. To-ta-le unwillingness. I stood at the counter seven times with those two people. You are really sent from pillar to post."

One of the reasons is also because Ukraine isn’t a member of the EU,so there is a paperwall,which takes too many days.
 
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  • #193

International investigators visit war-torn areas near Kyiv – as it happened

www.theguardian.com
www.theguardian.com

3h ago 19.03

Summary​

It’s 2am in Kyiv. Here’s where things stand:
  • A Ukrainian paramedic has been released from Russian captivity, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy announced on Saturday. Zelenskiy said that Ukraine has been able to secure the release of Yulia Payevska, a civilian parademic who was captured by Russian forces in Mariupol on March 16.
  • The Biden administration’s plan to sell four large, armable drones to Ukraine has been paused on the fear its sophisticated surveillance equipment might fall into enemy hands, according to two people familiar with the matter. The objection to the export of the drones arose due to concerns the radar and surveillance equipment on the drones could create a security risk for the United States if it fell into Russian hands.
  • Viktoria Apanasenko, a civic volunteer from Chernihiv, Ukraine has been chosen to represent the country at the 2022 Miss Universe pageant. “Victoria helps the capital Naíve [a Kyiv-based restaurant] cook food for battalions of the Armed Forces and the elderly. She and her friend are engaged in addressing food, medicine and hygiene products for children, the elderly and internally displaced people,” said a statement by Ukraine’s Miss Universe organization.
  • Dozens of Ukrainian civilians performed military exercises on Friday in fortified positions left by Russian troops in Bucha, a town synonymous with war crimes blamed on Moscow’s forces. “Most of those who are here aren’t soldiers. They’re just civilians who want to defend their country - 50 percent of them have never held a weapon until today,” said a sergeant known as “Ticha”.
  • Ukraine has received a $733 million loan from Canada. In a statement released on Friday, Ukraine’s finance ministry said that funds, which were “raised in accordance with the loan agreement between Ukraine and Canada”, will be “directed to the state budget to finance priority expenditures, in particular, to ensure priority social and humanitarian expenditures.”
  • German chancellor Olaf Scholz said that it is “absolutely necessary” for leaders to speak directly with Russian president Vladimir Putin in attempts to end the war. Speaking to German news agency DPA on Friday, Scholz said, “It is absolutely necessary to speak to Putin, and I will continue to do so – as the French president will also.”
  • Russian media has supposedly shown images of two US citizens captured in Ukraine. On Friday, the Izvestia newspaper showed footage of what it said was an interview with Andy Huynh, 27. The Russian channel RT also posted a photo of a man that it identified as Alexander Drueke, 39.
  • A group of international investigators and experts have visited war-torn areas near Kyiv, including a burnt-out school, as part of Ukraine’s ongoing investigation into alleged war crimes. “The scale of these crimes, the systematic nature of them, it very clearly appears to be crimes against humanity ... it runs the whole gamut of violations of international humanitarian law,” one expert told Reuters.
 
  • #194
JUN 18, 2022

Russian state media releases video of missing U.S. vets in Ukraine​


New video has emerged showing missing U.S. citizens in Ukraine who now appear to be detained by Russian soldiers. Melissa Nakhavoly has more on the video and the plea from the family of the missing men.
 
  • #195
JUN 18, 2022

Russian state media releases video of missing U.S. vets in Ukraine​


New video has emerged showing missing U.S. citizens in Ukraine who now appear to be detained by Russian soldiers. Melissa Nakhavoly has more on the video and the plea from the family of the missing men.

It's tragic to me that Andy is apparently coerced to say that in America he was listening to "Western propaganda."

At least they were alive at the time of this video.

God willing they get home safely.
 
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