Russia's Invasion of Ukraine (Official Thread)

Cuban Pete

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MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Kremlin said on Monday it was worried about the state of affairs in Moldova's breakaway Transdniestria region, where it said Ukraine and other European countries were stirring up the situation.

Moscow last week told the West that it would view any actions that threatened Russian peacekeepers in Transdniestria as an attack on Russia itself, a warning that came amid increased concerns in Moldova, a small ex-Soviet republic located between Romania and Ukraine, of a possible Russian threat.

Moldova's pro-European president, Maia Sandu, this month accused Moscow of plotting a coup, something Russia denied.
 

Json

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I would say it’s a good deterrent to call out there moves but we’ve all seen where this is going but I hope I’m wrong…

I guess the anti war argument would be

“if NATO weapons weren’t in Ukraine
,Putin wouldn’t have to attack Moldova.”
 

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Drones fly deep inside Russia; Putin orders border tightened​


By SUSIE BLANN20 minutes ago


FILE - Ukrainian servicemen of the Prince Roman the Great 14th Separate Mechanized Brigade fire a Soviet era Grad multiple rocket launcher at Russian positions in the Kharkiv area, Ukraine, Saturday, Feb. 25, 2023. Grueling artillery battles have stepped up in recent weeks in the vicinity of Kupiansk, a strategic town on the eastern edge of Kharkiv province by the banks of the Oskil River as Russian attacks intensifying in a push to capture the entire industrial heartland known as the Donbas, which includes the Donetsk and the Luhansk provinces. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File)
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FILE - Ukrainian servicemen of the Prince Roman the Great 14th Separate Mechanized Brigade fire a Soviet era Grad multiple rocket launcher at Russian positions in the Kharkiv area, Ukraine, Saturday, Feb. 25, 2023. Grueling artillery battles have stepped up in recent weeks in the vicinity of Kupiansk, a strategic town on the eastern edge of Kharkiv province by the banks of the Oskil River as Russian attacks intensifying in a push to capture the entire industrial heartland known as the Donbas, which includes the Donetsk and the Luhansk provinces. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File)

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Drones that the Kremlin said were launched by Ukraine flew deep inside Russian territory, including one that got within 100 kilometers (60 miles) of Moscow, signaling breaches in Russian defenses as President Vladimir Putin ordered stepped-up protection at the border.
Officials said the drones caused no injuries and did not inflict any significant damage, but the attacks on Monday night and Tuesday morning raised questions about Russian defense capabilities more than a year after the country’s full-scale invasion of its neighbor.
Moscow blamed Kyiv for the assaults. Ukrainian officials did not immediately claim responsibility, but they similarly avoided directly acknowledging responsibility for past strikes and sabotage while emphasizing Ukraine’s right to hit any target in Russia.
Although Putin did not refer to any specific attacks in a speech in the Russian capital, his comments came hours after the drones targeted several areas in southern and western Russia. Authorities closed the airspace over St. Petersburg in response to what some reports said was a drone.

Also Tuesday, several Russian television stations aired a missile attack warning that officials blamed on a hacking attack.


The drone attacks targeted regions inside Russia along the border with Ukraine and deeper into the country, according to local Russian authorities.

A drone fell near the village of Gubastovo, less than 100 kilometers (60 miles) from Moscow, Andrei Vorobyov, governor of the region surrounding the Russian capital, said in an online statement.

The drone did not inflict any damage, Vorobyov said, but it likely targeted “a civilian infrastructure object.”

Pictures of the drone showed it was a small Ukrainian-made model with a reported range of up to 800 kilometers (nearly 500 miles) but no capacity to carry a large load of explosives.

Russian forces early Tuesday shot down another Ukrainian drone over the Bryansk region, local Gov. Aleksandr Bogomaz said in a Telegram post.

Three drones also targeted Russia’s Belgorod region on Monday night, with one flying through an apartment window in its namesake capital, local authorities reported. Regional Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said the drones caused minor damage to buildings and cars.

The Russian Defense Ministry said Ukraine used drones to attack facilities in the Krasnodar region and neighboring Adygea. It said the drones were brought down by electronic warfare assets, adding that one of them crashed into a field and another diverted from its flight path and missed an infrastructure facility it was supposed to attack.

Russia’s state RIA Novosti news agency reported a fire at the oil facility, and some other Russian reports said that two drones exploded nearby.

While Ukrainian drone strikes on the Russian border regions of Bryansk and Belgorod have become a regular occurrence, other strikes reflected a more ambitious effort.

Some Russian commentators described the drone attacks as an attempt by Ukraine to showcase its capability to strike areas deep behind the lines, foment tensions in Russia and rally the Ukrainian public. Some Russian war bloggers described the raids as a possible rehearsal for a bigger, more ambitious attack.

Russia hawks called for a strong retaliation. Igor Korotchenko, a retired Russian army colonel turned military commentator, called for a punishing strike on the Ukrainian presidential office in Kyiv.

Another retired military officer, Viktor Alksnis, noted that the drone attacks marked the expansion of the conflict and criticized Putin for failing to deliver a strong response.

Also on Tuesday, the authorities reported that airspace around St. Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city, was temporarily closed, halting all departures and arrivals at the city’s main airport, Pulkovo. It did not give a reason for the move, but some Russian reports claimed that the move was triggered by an unidentified drone.

The Russian Defense Ministry said it was conducting air defense drills in western Russia.

Last year, Russian authorities repeatedly reported shooting down Ukrainian drones over annexed Crimea. In December, the Russian military said Ukraine used drones to hit two bases for long-range bombers deep inside Russian territory.

Speaking at Russia’s main security agency, the FSB, Putin urged the service to tighten security on the Ukraine border.

In another development that fueled tensions across Russia on Tuesday, an air raid alarm interrupted the programming of several TV channels and radio stations in several regions. Russia’s Emergency Ministry said in an online statement that the announcement was a hoax “resulting from a hacking of the servers of radio stations and TV channels in some regions of the country.”

Meanwhile, satellite photos analyzed by The Associated Press appeared to show a Russian warplane in Belarus that Belarusian guerrillas claimed to have targeted as largely intact.

Tuesday’s high-resolution images from Planet Labs PBC showed no immediate signs of damage to the Russian A-50 early warning and control aircraft after what Belarusian opposition activists described as an attack on the Machulishchy air base Sunday outside the Belarusian capital of Minsk.

Belarusian activists supporting Ukraine alleged that the aicraft was seriously damaged, but Russian and Belarusian officials did not comment on the claims.

In Ukraine, four people were killed and five others wounded Tuesday by renewed Russian shelling of the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, regional Gov. Oleksandr Prokudin said in a Telegram.

A 68-year-old man was also killed as Russian forces shelled Kupiansk, a town in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region, its Gov. Oleh Syniehubov said.

The fiercest fighting continued to be in eastern areas of Ukraine, where Russia wants control over all four of the provinces it illegally annexed in September.

Ukrainian officials said Russian forces have deployed additional troops and equipment, including the latest T-90 battle tanks, in those areas.

In a video address, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked U.S. industrialists for supporting Ukraine and voiced hope for their support in rebuilding the country after the war. Zelenskyy noted that the country faces a “colossal task” to restore hundreds of thousands of damaged sites, including “whole cities, industries, productions.”

___ Associated Press Writer Jon Gambrell contributed to this report from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
 

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NATO chief says Ukraine will ultimately join alliance​

Jens Stoltenberg, the alliance's secretary general, stressed on Tuesday the priority for Ukraine remains to fend off Russia's aggression.
Le Monde with AFP

Published on February 28, 2023 at 13h47, updated at 15h19 on February 28, 2023


NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during SAMAK's annual meeting in Helsinki, Finland, Tuesday, February 28, 2023.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during SAMAK's annual meeting in Helsinki, Finland, Tuesday, February 28, 2023. HEIKKI SAUKKOMAA / AP


NATO's Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said on Tuesday, February 28, that Ukraine would become a member of the alliance in the "long term" but stressed that the immediate issue was for the country to remain an independent nation in the face of Russia's invasion.


"NATO allies have agreed that Ukraine will become a member of our alliance but at the same time that is a long-term perspective," Stoltenberg told reporters on the sidelines of a visit to Finland. "The issue now is that Ukraine prevails as a sovereign independent nation and therefore we need to support Ukraine," Stoltenberg said.

After Russia's invasion, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged the military alliance led by the United States to grant his country fast-track membership. Ukraine applied for European Union membership in February last year, shortly after it was invaded, and was granted candidate status in June.

When the war ends "we need to ensure that history doesn't repeat itself," Stoltenberg said. "Russian President Vladimir Putin cannot continue to attack neighbors. He wants to control Ukraine and he is not planning for peace, he is planning for more war."

Spooked by Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, Finland and Sweden dropped their decades-long policies of military non-alignment and applied to join NATO in May 2022.

Turkey and Hungary are the only remaining members yet to ratify the Finnish and Swedish bids to join the alliance.

Stoltenberg said that "both Finland and Sweden have delivered on what they promised in the trilateral agreement they made with Turkey last June in Madrid." "The time is now to ratify and to fully welcome Finland and Sweden as members," he said.
 

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Russia forced to replace Wagnerites as most units were destroyed by Ukrainian troops​

TETIANA LOZOVENKO — TUESDAY, 28 FEBRUARY 2023, 19:32
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Military personnel of the Russian army are forced to replace the mercenaries of the Wagner Group on the Bakhmut front, because most of this PMC's units were destroyed by the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

Source: Hanna Maliar, Deputy Defence Minister of Ukraine, on air of the 24/7 nationwide newscast

Details: Maliar commented on the partial replacement of Wagner PMC units with regular Russian troops as follows: "the Russians are forced to make this replacement (of Wagnerites on the Bakhmut front – ed.) because most of Wagner's units were destroyed by our Armed Forces. They have to do it now."

Details: She also said that regular Russian soldiers are discouraged, unlike Wagnerites, who are mercenaries and are thus motivated by their payment.
Maliar stressed that the situation in Bakhmut is "tense and difficult." The enemy prevails in numbers, but the losses of the invaders, according to her, are significantly higher than those of the Ukrainian defenders.

Background:
  • Late in January, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) said that the military personnel of the Russian army would probably replace the exhausted mercenary forces with the Wagner PMC to strengthen the offensive on Bakhmut.
 

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Zelenskyy discusses rebuilding of Ukraine and prospect of its membership with OECD Secretary General​

OLENA ROSHCHINA — TUESDAY, 28 FEBRUARY 2023, 19:39

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has had a meeting with Mathias Cormann, the Secretary General of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) who came to Ukraine with a visit.

Source: President’s Office of Ukraine

Details: Zelenskyy highly appreciated the news about opening the OECD office in Ukraine, which will become an important step in the cooperation with this organisation.

The President invited the representatives of the organisation to join the process of rebuilding Ukraine.

The parties discussed, among other things, the creation of a tax system that will be appealing to businesses during the post-war recovery of Ukraine.

As Zelenskyy believes, an advantageous taxation system will be of particular importance for attracting private capital to rebuild the country.

The parties agreed to prepare and implement, with the involvement of OECD experts, a tax model in Ukraine that will create competitive advantages and special incentives for doing business in Ukraine during the recovery period.


Zelenskyy also invited the OECD team to join the development and implementation of the concept of confiscation of Russian assets in the Organisation's member states.

The parties discussed the prospects of Ukraine's accession to the OECD.

The Ukrainian President noted that the country had recently received an official letter from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development confirming the granting of the status of a member of the Working Group on Combating Bribery in International Business Transactions. And now Mathias Cormann has been handed a letter of response.

Zelenskyy thanked the OECD for admitting Ukraine's membership prospects.

For his part, Cormann said his visit was a sign of solidarity with Ukraine and its people, who suffered terrible human losses, destruction of infrastructure and housing due to Russia's unprovoked and unjustified aggression.

"But we all admire how brave, courageous and determined Ukrainians are to defend their independence and democracy," said the OECD Secretary-General.

Cormann praised the reforms being implemented in Ukraine despite all the security challenges and stressed the further support for Kyiv.

Quote: "Together we will implement a program aimed at facilitating Ukraine's accession to our Organization. Ukraine is enhancing its participation in the work of our bodies, and I am pleased to receive a letter regarding participation in our Working Group on Bribery," the OECD Secretary-General summarised.

Background: Starting from 1 March, the Office of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) will start its work in Kyiv.
 

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Kremlin complains of Scholz and Macron not contacting Putin at all lately​

STANISLAV POHORILOV — TUESDAY, 28 FEBRUARY 2023, 09:44


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Dmitry Peskov, press secretary of the Russian President, has stated that Vladimir Putin remains open to negotiations about Ukraine, but neither German Chancellor Olaf Scholz nor French President Emmanuel Macron, with whom the Kremlin wants to be in touch, are contacting Russia at the moment at all.

Source: Peskov's interview with the Izvestiya news outlet

Quote from Peskov: "We have heard a lot of statements from Scholz and Macron, who said they would continue to speak with Putin in order to look for some ways out of the situation. However, there have been no initiatives recently."

Details: Peskov has recalled that Macron declared his readiness to call Putin five or six times, but the Kremlin has not received any requests for such a conversation. "Everybody has to know this: there were no requests or considerations of possible time frames for such a conversation," Peskov added.
Nevertheless, the Russian President's press secretary has said that Putin remains open to "any contacts that will help Russia achieve its own goals through various means".

"Mainly peaceful ones, at the negotiation table, but when that is not possible, with military ways, as we see now," he explained.
Background:

  • In the middle of February 2023, Macron stated that he supported Russia’s defeat in the war in Ukraine while also warning against an aspiration to "destroy" Moscow, which, according to Macron, would never be Paris' position.
  • On 26 February 2023, Olaf Scholz criticised China's "peace plan" to settle Russia's invasion of Ukraine, as the document does not mention the withdrawal of the Russian army.
  • Peskov claimed that Moscow studies the "peaceful plan" of China but so far sees no reasons to go "in a peaceful direction".
 

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SOHH ICEY MONOPOLY

Kremlin complains of Scholz and Macron not contacting Putin at all lately​

STANISLAV POHORILOV — TUESDAY, 28 FEBRUARY 2023, 09:44


8c95832-kremln.jpg


Dmitry Peskov, press secretary of the Russian President, has stated that Vladimir Putin remains open to negotiations about Ukraine, but neither German Chancellor Olaf Scholz nor French President Emmanuel Macron, with whom the Kremlin wants to be in touch, are contacting Russia at the moment at all.

Source: Peskov's interview with the Izvestiya news outlet

Quote from Peskov: "We have heard a lot of statements from Scholz and Macron, who said they would continue to speak with Putin in order to look for some ways out of the situation. However, there have been no initiatives recently."

Details: Peskov has recalled that Macron declared his readiness to call Putin five or six times, but the Kremlin has not received any requests for such a conversation. "Everybody has to know this: there were no requests or considerations of possible time frames for such a conversation," Peskov added.
Nevertheless, the Russian President's press secretary has said that Putin remains open to "any contacts that will help Russia achieve its own goals through various means".

"Mainly peaceful ones, at the negotiation table, but when that is not possible, with military ways, as we see now," he explained.
Background:

  • In the middle of February 2023, Macron stated that he supported Russia’s defeat in the war in Ukraine while also warning against an aspiration to "destroy" Moscow, which, according to Macron, would never be Paris' position.
  • On 26 February 2023, Olaf Scholz criticised China's "peace plan" to settle Russia's invasion of Ukraine, as the document does not mention the withdrawal of the Russian army.
  • Peskov claimed that Moscow studies the "peaceful plan" of China but so far sees no reasons to go "in a peaceful direction".

Putin: Dear mister Im too good to call or write my fans :mad:
 

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Putin paying Palestinians in Lebanon refugee camps to fight in Ukraine - report​

The majority of the Palestinians being deployed to the frontlines in Ukraine hail from Ain al-Hilweh, the largest Palestine refugee camp in Lebanon.​

By MAJDI HALABI/THE MEDIA LINE

Published: FEBRUARY 28, 2023 12:07
Updated: FEBRUARY 28, 2023 13:17

 A member of the Palestinian Fatah faction holds a gun inside the Ain el-Hilweh refugee camp near Sidon, southern Lebanon, December 6, 2017. (photo credit: REUTERS/ALI HASHISHO)

A member of the Palestinian Fatah faction holds a gun inside the Ain el-Hilweh refugee camp near Sidon, southern Lebanon, December 6, 2017.
(photo credit: REUTERS/ALI HASHISHO)


A Lebanese government security source has told The Media Line that Palestinians residing in Lebanon have signed up to join the ongoing conflict in Ukraine on behalf of Russia, having been offered a sum of 350 dollars by Russian entities.

For more stories from The Media Line go to themedialine.org

The source added that the recruitment effort is being carried out by activists affiliated with the Palestinian embassy in Lebanon.

Most of those enlisting were born after 1969, as those born after this point onwards do not have proper registration with the Lebanese authorities, making it easier to travel for the purpose of participating in the conflict as mercenaries.






As a result, the Lebanese government lacks the ability to monitor or track the movements of these Palestinian recruits for Russia.

The majority of the Palestinians being deployed to the frontlines in Ukraine hail from Ain al-Hilweh, the largest Palestine refugee camp in Lebanon, just south of the port city of Sidon.

 Palestinian group Hamas' top leader, Ismail Haniyeh, is seen projected on a screen as he speaks during his visit at Ain el Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in Sidon, Lebanon September 6, 2020.  (credit: REUTERS/AZIZ TAHER)
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Palestinian group Hamas' top leader, Ismail Haniyeh, is seen projected on a screen as he speaks during his visit at Ain el Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in Sidon, Lebanon September 6, 2020. (credit: REUTERS/AZIZ TAHER)
The recruits are reportedly members of the Fatah political movement, which is led by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, as well as to other organizations such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
“I do not have specific information on this subject, but I am not surprised that it happened because the situation in the camps is miserable… and there are no jobs for young people.”
Riad Kahwaji, Lebanese researcher

The individuals reportedly receive a monthly stipend and compensation for their families in exchange for agreeing to participate in the conflict in Ukraine on behalf of Russian forces.


The Lebanese security source indicated that the recruitment of Palestinians and others is being carried out in coordination with the Lebanese-based, Iranian-backed Hezbollah organization.

Hezbollah takes up the Russian cause

According to the source, Hezbollah is also actively enlisting young supporters, including those skilled in operating drones and individuals with expertise in guerrilla warfare in urban areas, to assist the Russians in the war in Ukraine.

Riad Kahwaji, a prominent and veteran Lebanese researcher in security and defense affairs, who resides in Dubai, told The Media Line that the recruitment of Palestinians from Lebanon is not unfathomable.

“I do not have specific information on this subject, but I am not surprised that it happened because the situation in the camps is miserable… and there are no jobs for young people,” he said.

 Lebanese and Russians living in Lebanon carry flags as they stand near lit candles reading, ''For Russia!'' during a rally in support of Russia, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, at a beach in Beirut, Lebanon April 9, 2022. (credit: REUTERS/MOHAMED AZAKIR)
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Lebanese and Russians living in Lebanon carry flags as they stand near lit candles reading, ''For Russia!'' during a rally in support of Russia, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, at a beach in Beirut, Lebanon April 9, 2022. (credit: REUTERS/MOHAMED AZAKIR)
“It is not surprising that they were recruited to work with the Russians in return for paying them salaries because the camp environment is open to such possibilities,” Kahwaji said.

"Palestinian camps in both Syria and Lebanon have high unemployment, and it is not surprising that these things happen."

It is not clear exactly how many Palestinians have been recruited to fight for Russia, but it is thought that approximately 300 individuals have already completed rapid training in Russia and been deployed to the frontlines.

In the Ain al-Hilweh refugee camp, another group of approximately 100 additional fighters is reportedly being organized and prepared for deployment to Russia in the near future.


Muhammad Sarmini, Director of the Abaad Center for Strategic Studies, based in London and Istanbul, told The Media Linen that since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Syria has seen two paths for recruiting fighters to join the invading Russian troops.

The first path is recruitment via the Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary organization believed to have been founded by Dmitry Valerievich Utkin, a former special forces officer in Russia's Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU).

The group’s representatives recruited fighters in areas along the Syrian coast and with a high population of young Palestinians. The recruitment process was conducted through delegates who met inside the Khmeimim Air Base, a Russian-controlled installation near the northwestern port city of Latakia.

The second path includes sending fighters from the Syrian regular forces, especially from the military units supervised by Russia, such as the 25th Special Operations Division, headed by Maj. Gen. Suhail Al-Hassan.

Sarmini said these elite fighters are highly paid to enter the war zone, earning 500-700 USD per month, a very high sum by Syrian standards.

Russia's desire to recruit Syrian fighters has two aims: to bolster the number of its fighters in Ukraine and as a display of loyalty from the regime of Bashar Assad, which would not have survived until today without Russian support.

The Palestinian embassy in Lebanon declined to comment on the matter, saying it had no connection to the conflict in Ukraine and did not encourage Palestinians to participate in it.
 
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