Russia Attacks Ukraine - 23 Feb 2022 **Media Thread** NO DISCUSSION

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  • #821
Russian protestors struggle to understand Ukraine war: 'We didn't choose this' - CNN

(...)

But many Russians, in fact, do not fully know what is happening in Ukraine. State-controlled television shows almost no reports of Russian bombing and shelling in Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, instead it focuses on so-called Ukrainian "nationalists" and "neo-fascists."

(...)

But Russian young people like 25-year-old Arina, who lives in Moscow, is not watching TV -- she says she hasn't watched it in seven years. She's on the internet, reading blogs and listening to vloggers. She hasn't taken part in protests yet, but she has seen young people on the street taking part in "silent protests," sticking "No to War" signs on their backpacks or bags.

She, too, is having difficulty comprehending why this war in Ukraine is happening and what it will mean for her own life as a young Russian.

"It is very difficult to predict anything, of course, the situation is horrible," Arina, who asked CNN to only use her first name for her safety said. "Among some of my friends, there is a lot of anxiety about the future, a lot of fear, because we don't know how it will affect us."

But Arina's mother sees it completely differently: "My mom believes everything she sees on TV," Arina says.

"She believes that it was a necessary measure by Putin because there are weapons surrounding the country...there's a threat from the West, which is why Putin is doing this."

Arina says she even checked out a guide on a Russian online magazine for students, Doxa, suggesting how young Russians can talk with their parents and others about the war in Ukraine. "We understand how painful it can be when your parents, friends, colleagues, grandfathers and grandmothers turn into supporters of the war," it reads.

"So we decided to prepare a guide for how to talk about the war with those who justify it. In our guide you'll find answers to 17 of the most widespread arguments spread by propaganda and most often heard in fights," it said.

Arina read it just in time. On February 28, the magazine reported that the Russian government agency supervising communications, IT and mass media demanded Doxa remove the guide from its website.

Arina says she and her mother "had a very fierce argument."

"She just doesn't accept my position and thinks I'm a pro-Westerner, that I don't understand anything. She doesn't believe what I say, I don't believe what she says...We have very different sources of information: I learn everything from the independent media, which have mostly long been blocked in Russia, and she watches TV."

(...)
 
  • #822
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  • #823
Russian activist, 77, detained by police while protesting against Ukraine war


"Google analytics showed that the word “emigration” saw a spike in searches over the last week while countless Telegram channels have been set up in which worried Russians are discussing ways to leave the country."

Russian pensioner 'who survived siege of Leningrad' arrested for protest against Ukraine war – video

‘My future is taken away from me’: Russians flee to escape consequences of Moscow’s war
 
  • #824
The “Big Four” accounting firms—KPMG, Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Ernst & Young—have not severed ties, and legal regulations may make it difficult for them to do so, according to the Journal.
Volkswagen, IKEA And Spotify—Here’s The Growing List Of Companies Cutting Ties With Russia Over Invasion

One difficulty for the Big Four firms, according to people familiar with the matter, is that the Russian members of their networks are separate legal entities, answerable to local regulators.

The Big Four networks’s governing rules allow firms to be expelled only on specific grounds, such as gross misconduct. Booting a member firm because of the actions of its country's government would be a complicated, drawn-out process, the people said.
Consulting Firms Condemn Attack, Won’t Commit to Leaving Russia
 
  • #825
Second round of talks with Russia has ended with no breakthrough, Ukrainian negotiator says

From CNN’s Tim Lister and Katharina Krebs

A Ukrainian negotiator on Thursday said that a second round of talks with Russia is over but it didn’t deliver any results that Ukraine needed.

"The second round of negotiations is over. Unfortunately, the results Ukraine needs are not yet achieved. There is a solution only for the organization of humanitarian corridors," senior Ukrainian official Mykhailo Podolyak said in a tweet.

Live updates: Russia invades Ukraine and Vladimir Putin news
 
  • #826
What is martial law and how does it impact the Russia-Ukraine war?

Russian president Vladimir Putin set to crack down on political dissent at home as war enters a second week

Russia's parliament is reportedly convening for an extraordinary session on Friday in which it is expected to impose martial law, seemingly in order to clamp down on domestic protests and rallies opposing Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

But what exactly does that mean for Russian citizens?

Martial law is defined as the temporary imposition of military rule over a state or region in times of national crisis when civil authority has broken down or when wartime operations are underway.

(...)

The decision is expected to grant Russia’s military the authority to impose greater censorship in order to silence dissent and opposition to the war and amount to dominating the media, shutting down internet forums, social media and communication apps, jailing protesters and limiting travel.

(...)

(And presumably conscripting unwilling and appalled young Russian man to fight in his sham war?)
 
  • #827
Canada calls for Russian INTERPOL membership to be suspended amid Ukraine invasion

“Today, Canada and other close partners are calling to suspend Russia from INTERPOL,” Trudeau said.

“We’re supporting this because we believe that international law enforcement co-operation depends on a collective commitment to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and mutual respect between INTERPOL members.”

Canada targets Russia and Belarus with tariffs, sends more lethal aid to Ukraine

On Thursday, Freeland announced Canada is imposing a 35 per cent tariff on goods from Russia and Belarus.
Furthermore, the federal government is revoking Russia’s and Belarus’ status as a most-favoured-nation trade partner under World Trade Organization (WTO) provisions; North Korea is the only other nation that does not enjoy that status with Canada.
 
  • #828
  • #829
Under attack, Ukraine's musicians become war reporters and military fundraisers - BBC News
''I'm in shock that Russian people are not seeing the truth," she says. "It's like they are in North Korea, without information. My fans from Russia, they send me messages saying, 'It's not true. It's a lie. All of your posts are a lie.' They don't want to see it."

Korolova is not alone. Faced with war, Ukraine's vibrant and flourishing music scene has become a sort of unofficial news outlet, documenting the conflict for an audience that might not be tuned in to traditional news channels.''

''On Facebook, Svyatoslav Vakarchuk, frontman of the Ukrainian rock band Okean Elzy, is posting hourly updates about the conflict. In one video, he's visiting wounded soldiers in hospital; in another he's in a bullet-proof vest, making a speech on the streets of Kharkiv; in another, he's delivering food and fuel to Kyiv in his car.''

'''Vibrant music scene'
It hardly needs to be said, but this is not what Ukraine's top musicians were expecting from their career.
The country has a thriving, diverse music scene that brings a home-grown flavour to hip-hop, punk, EDM, pop and psychedelic rock.
"I'm a well-known this person in this part of the world and I'm trying to use this [position] and do whatever I can," he says.''

Russian conductor Valery Gergiev dropped by Munich orchestra over ties to Putin - BBC News
''The Munich Philharmonic has parted ways with its chief conductor Valery Gergiev over his ties to Vladimir Putin.
A close friend and supporter of Putin, the musician has faced increasing pressure to speak out against Russia's invasion of Ukraine over the last week.
Munich mayor Dieter Reiter issued an ultimatum, saying Gergiev would be dismissed if he failed to condemn Putin's actions by Monday.
After the deadline passed, Reiter terminated the musician's contract.''

''Over the weekend, the conductor was dropped by his management, dismissed from major festivals and had several upcoming concerts cancelled. On Monday, the Edinburgh International Festival - of which he was honorary president - asked for, and accepted, his resignation.''
"Edinburgh is twinned with the city of Kyiv and this action is being taken in sympathy with, and support of, its citizens," said the board of trustees in a statement.''
 
  • #830
  • #831
Gesprekken tussen Rusland en Oekraïne afgelopen: vaag akkoord over humanitaire corridors en tijdelijk staakt-het-vuren

Russia-Ukraine talks over: vague agreement on humanitarian corridors and temporary ceasefire
In Belarus, near the borders with Ukraine and Poland, representatives of Russia and Ukraine held talks for a second time. According to Ukraine, these did not yield the hoped-for result. Still, there would be a vague agreement on humanitarian corridors and a temporary ceasefire during the evacuation of civilians. There will also be a third round of negotiations early next week.

For the second time in four days, negotiators from Russia and Ukraine sat around the table. The talks lasted a little over three hours. According to the Ukrainian delegation, they have not achieved a real breakthrough.

Still, there would be a vague agreement on humanitarian corridors to evacuate civilians from areas under bombing. There is also said to have been agreed to "possibly" hold a temporary ceasefire during the evacuation of civilians.

The statements of the two delegations remain cautious, it is clear that there is only an agreement on principles, but some things still need to be worked out. The two delegations therefore agreed to organize a third round of negotiations. It was supposed to take place early next week.

Rudi Vranckx: "This agreement reminds me of what happened in Syria at the time: evacuate civilians and then continue fighting unabated"
 
  • #832
The White House announced new sanctions on Russian oligarchs. Here's who will be impacted.

The new list of individuals described as "Putin's cronies and their family members" will be cut off from the US financial system, their assets in the US will be frozen, and their property will be blocked from use, according to a fact sheet from the White House.

There will be full blocking sanctions on eight Russian elites, plus their family members and associates.
Live updates: Russia invades Ukraine and Vladimir Putin news
 
  • #833
Gorbachev’s resignation 30 years ago marked the end of USSR

"I still regret that I failed to bring the ship under my command to calm waters, failed to complete reforming the country,” Gorbachev wrote."

How Russia’s Nobel-Winning Newspaper Is Covering Ukraine

A group of former journalists from Komsomolskaya Pravda organised the newspaper in 1993, its first name was Ezhednevnaya Novaya Gazeta (Daily New Gazette).[7]Mikhail Gorbachev used the money from his 1990 Nobel Peace Prize to help establish the Novaya Gazeta in 1993 and purchase its first computers
Novaya Gazeta - Wikipedia
 
  • #834
But throughout the crisis, the Russian commanders insisted, “They’re not ours.” After a battle where U.S. airstrikes probably killed dozens of Wagner Group members, the wounded survivors were eventually flown home on Russian military airplanes.

This “experiment” is disturbing because it shows that Russia may be willing to launch (or at least support) violence against the U.S. and its allies abroad, even when that violence risks upending international agreements and causing a major crisis. In that sense it mirrors what the Russian GRU is now accused of doing against U.S. forces in Afghanistan.



Third, for the U.S. and its allies, forewarned is forearmed. Especially after the events of February 2018 in Deir al Zour—and now with the intelligence about GRU activities in Afghanistan—U.S. and allied forces abroad know exactly how untrustworthy the Wagner Group and its GRU backers in the Putin regime can be. When this knowledge is combined with what we know about Prigozhin’s related political influence operations, Russia has lost the advantage of surprise that has propelled its hybrid warfare campaign against the U.S. and its allies. Where the U.S. and its allies should concentrate their effort now is in proactively defending themselves against whatever Prigozhin, the GRU, and the Wagner Group may try next.

https://www.congress.gov/116/meetin...ses/HHRG-116-FA14-Wstate-MartenK-20200707.pdf
 
  • #835
Ukraine: How a week of war has transformed lives

Seven days which sparked a burning patriotic resolve in Ukraine, which propelled people the world over, from presidents and prime ministers, bankers and business leaders, football stars to figure skaters, artists and activists, to stand up and be counted to condemn Russia's aggression.


The Russian rouble collapsed, the UN General Assembly called on Moscow to pull out; Russian leaders denounced this "Russiaphobic frenzy." And, on the ground, swathes of Europe's second-largest country were reduced to smoking ruins, a harrowing echo of Russia's blistering campaigns in Grozny and Aleppo.

In the days before Russia invaded Ukraine, Kyiv was a European city of golden-domed cathedrals gleaming in the night, brightly-lit restaurants serving steaming bowls of borsch, corner kiosks pouring coffee behind frosty winter windows.

And the world was a place where many thought a blitzkrieg across a border was only history's business. At the Munich Security Conference, many a government minister quietly told me "I just don't think it will happen". And, of course, not against the capital.

But in her home in Kyiv, 37-year-old Liana was ready bags packed, including some books; clothes ironed, enough money from an ATM to last a while. Her mother Vera refused to do the same. Her friends poked fun at her. But Liana's son Rustam, a bespectacled 13-year-old wired to his smartphone, was ready too.

In the dead of night on Thursday 24 February, in a city which couldn't sleep, rumours and reports electrified social media and exploded in chat groups.

This snippet "Russian action will begin at 4am" shot through cyberspace with the kind of chilling precision Western intelligence reports had used for weeks to warn of "an imminent invasion" by nearly 200,00 Russian troops and heavy weaponry now massed along the borders.

Local flights kept cancelling, parents wondered if they should take their children to school in the morning, journalists started asking each other if they were staying.

By 05:00, posts cascaded across the internet - "hearing thuds" in Kyiv, Kramatorsk, Melitopol, Chernobyl, Odessa. The list was long.

At 05:58, Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tweeted "Putin has launched a full-scale invasion". Hours earlier, President Vladimir Putin had announced the start of a "special military operation" in eastern Ukraine.

At 06:00 Liana called her mother. "I told you so. Are you packed?"

By nightfall, roads out of Kyiv were gridlocked. Homes were emptied of energy as a city went underground, to basements and bomb shelters, to subway stations with marble stairways and magnificent mosaics built deep below in the 1960s to also double as Cold War bunkers.

(...)

Long feature by the BBC's Lyse Doucet at link
 
  • #836
What are Russian oligarchs and why do they have targets on their backs? - CNN
March 3 2022 rbbm.
''It's safe to say the sanctions have, at least so far, successfully grabbed the oligarchs' attention''.

''Maldives, an island nation in the Indian Ocean, does not have an extradition treaty with the United States, which could boost its appeal as an oligarch haven.''

''Of course, experts say enforcing sanctions on the tycoons won't be swift or simple. Savvy billionaires who built their wealth under an authoritarian government are adept at obscuring their assets through layers of shell companies and cronies.
"If you're a Russian oligarch floating on your yacht in Indian Ocean, most of your money's already going to not be in your own name,"
said Alison Jimenez, president of litigation consulting firm Dynamic Securities Analytics. "You're going to have the opaque layering of shell corporations with dummy people standing in for you."
That may take some of the punitive bite from the Western sanctions. "You can seize the boat, you can seize the plane, but they have money stashed all over the globe," Jimenez says. "If you manage to capture 75% of it, they're still going to be more wealthy than everyone else in the world."

The teenager that tracked Elon Musk's jet is now tracking Russian oligarchs - CNN
"The aircrafts these oligarchs have are absolutely crazy," Sweeney said. The country's richest are traveling on commercial-sized aircrafts like an Airbus A319 and Boeing 737. "Their planes are huge compared to other jets."
In total, the accounts track more than 40 planes and helicopters linked to Russian oligarchs. He has invited others to help bolster the amount of planes that can be tracked.''

Feb 28 2022 rbbm
Central Bank Sanctions Halt Russia’s Ruble Intervention - BNN Bloomberg
the-headquarters-of-bank-rossii-russia-s-central-bank-in-moscow-russia-on-monday-feb-28-2022-the-bank-of-russia-acted-quickly-to-shield-the-nation-s-1-5-trillion-economy-from-sweeping-sanctions-that-hit-key-banks-pushed-the-ruble-to-a-record-low-and-left-president-vladimir-putin-unable-to-access-much-of-his-war-chest-of-more-than-640-billion.png

''What Our Economists Say:
“Russia is in a financial crisis -- the question is how deep and prolonged it will be. Western sanctions against the country’s central bank proved to be a tipping point, blocking access to reserves that would have been a crucial backstop to the banking sector. Russia faces certain recession.”

''Russia has worked to remove the dollar’s hold over its financial system in recent years -- selling most of its U.S. Treasuries in 2018 -- as it girded for potential sanctions.

Yet Credit Suisse Group AG strategist Zoltan Pozsar reckons the Bank of Russia has $150 billion more held in U.S. dollars than its official numbers suggest. Pozsar parsed data from the central bank and financial markets to calculate the larger share and estimates the Bank of Russia’s dollar exposure is about 50%, compared with the 20% it reports.

Any unreported reserves would be far harder to track and target with sanctions, though it does raise the potential for the U.S. and others to target more accounts -- if they can identify where that money is.

The money trail fades even more when it comes to the central bank’s physical holdings of hard currency. The latest official data showed $152 billion in cash and deposits
. It’s also been buying foreign currency for the National Wellbeing Fund, which forms part of Russia’s reserves. The purchases in the open market were only suspended in late January after the ruble came under pressure.''
 
  • #837
A Russian plane arrived in the Czech Republic despite the sanctions. With fuel for Dukovany - Zdopravy.cz

The flight has an exemption from sanctions, the same aircraft transported fuel to Slovakia on Tuesday.

From Moscow's Domodedovo Airport, the Ilyushin Il-76 took off today at 5 p.m. Central European Time. It flies to the Czech Republic on an exemption from the Ministry of Transport. On board he has fuel from Rosatom for the Dukovany nuclear power plant. Normal air traffic is now banned between the two countries due to sanctions. Shortly after half past eight the plane landed in Brno...

This is practically the same situation as on Tuesday, when a Volga Dnepr Airlines plane flew with the same cargo to Bratislava. "Slovakia is thus securing itself from a possible problem with fuel supplies from Russia," the Slovak Economy Ministry said on Tuesday.
 
  • #838
Five reasons why Ukraine rejected Vladimir Putin’s “Russian World”

Quad meeting fails to unite in condemnation for Russian war in Ukraine

Mikhail Watford: Ukrainian oligarch's death investigated by Surrey Police - BBC News
A Ukraine-born oligarch has been found dead at his home in unexplained circumstances, Surrey police have said.

Officers are treating the death of 66-year-old Mikhail Watford, who made his fortune in oil and gas after the demise of the Soviet Union, as unexplained. But they said it was not thought to be suspicious.
 
  • #839
The Pentagon has established a channel of direct communication with the Russian ministry of defense to avoid unintended conflict related to the war in Ukraine.

A U.S. defense official said the “de-confliction line” was established March 1 “for the purpose of preventing miscalculation, military incidents, and escalation.” The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the communication line has not been announced.

Live updates: US establishes direct line with Russia
 
  • #840
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