Sooo....no talk on Kiev's gradual descent into Mad Max beyond Thunderdome status??

Spidey Man

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Not in the Ukraine, but here are some pictures of the UK fighters intercepting Russian jets over the Baltic

773804324818370342.jpg


A RAF Typhoon fighter with two Russian SU-27 Flankers on the forefront.



773804326256927526.jpg


The one in the back is a RAF Typhoon and the one upfront is a Russian SU-27. Both jets are fully armed.

The Military Industrial Complex is sitting back like

mr-burns-endorses-mitt-romney.gif
 

88m3

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Not in the Ukraine, but here are some pictures of the UK fighters intercepting Russian jets over the Baltic

773804324818370342.jpg


A RAF Typhoon fighter with two Russian SU-27 Flankers on the forefront.



773804326256927526.jpg


The one in the back is a RAF Typhoon and the one upfront is a Russian SU-27. Both jets are fully armed.

The Military Industrial Complex is sitting back like

mr-burns-endorses-mitt-romney.gif


GE, General Dynamics, Raytheon


:blessed:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Not in the Ukraine, but here are some pictures of the UK fighters intercepting Russian jets over the Baltic

773804324818370342.jpg


A RAF Typhoon fighter with two Russian SU-27 Flankers on the forefront.



773804326256927526.jpg


The one in the back is a RAF Typhoon and the one upfront is a Russian SU-27. Both jets are fully armed.

The Military Industrial Complex is sitting back like

mr-burns-endorses-mitt-romney.gif
there was an invisible F22 in the pic too :troll:
 

Spidey Man

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there was an invisible F22 in the pic too :troll:

I found an F22 for you.

f22s-intercept-Bear.jpg


That was 50 miles from the California coast in a story dated 6/11/14. The billion dollar jewel of the USAF and a WWII era Soviet bomber.

Four Russian strategic bombers triggered U.S. air defense systems while conducting practice bombing runs near Alaska this week, with two of the Tu-95 Bear H aircraft coming within 50 miles of the California coast, the North American Aerospace Defense Command (Norad) confirmed Wednesday.

“The last time we saw anything similar was two years ago on the Fourth of July,” Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Norad spokesman, told the Free Beacon.

Davis said the latest Bear H incursions began Monday around 4:30 p.m. Pacific time when radar detected the four turbo-prop powered bombers approaching the U.S. air defense zone near the far western Aleutian Islands.

Two U.S. Air Force F-22 jets were scrambled and intercepted the bombers over the Aleutians.

After tracking the bombers as they flew eastward, two of the four Bears turned around and headed west toward the Russian Far East. The bombers are believed to be based at the Russian strategic base near Anadyr, Russia.

http://freebeacon.com/national-security/russian-bombers-fly-within-50-miles-of-california-coast/
 

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Putin Orders Central Russian Troops On 'Full Combat Alert'

  • JUN. 21, 2014, 8:53 AM
  • 7,021
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ap105632366256.jpg

AP



Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his troops in central Russia to be on "full combat alert" Saturday as a new wave of attacks by rebels supportive of his regime placed pressure on a ceasefire agreement in Ukraine.


According to Agence France-Presse, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu told Russian news agencies the order took effect Saturday morning.

"In accordance with his (Putin's) order, from 11:00 am Moscow time (0700 GMT) the troops of the central military district ... have been put on full combat alert," Shoigu was quoted as saying.

Putin's order came about 13 hours after Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko ordered a ceasefire Friday between his troops and pro-Russian rebels in the east of the country. Poroshenko's ceasefire announcement was part of his plan to decrease tensions between his government and the rebels following months of tensions in Ukraine after protests that saw the country's pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych ousted earlier this year and led to elections where Poroshenko was installed earlier this month.

Poroshenko's ceasefire deal was immediately threatened by what the Ukrainian government described as multiple rebel attacks Friday night and Saturday morning. Rebel leaders said Ukrainian troops were the ones ignoring the ceasefire. According to the Associated Press, prominent rebel leader Pavel Gubarev told the Rossiya-24 TV channel Ukrainian soldiers were either disobeying Poroshenko or the president was "lying" about the deal.

"There is no ceasefire at all," Gubarev said.

Putin's "full combat alert" order also came shortly after Russia beefed up its military presence on the Ukrainian border last week. According to the Associated Press, Shoigu said troops in Russia's central military district, which includes the Volga region and the Ural mountains, will conduct combat drills from June 21 through June 28 as a result of the order.

Russian chief of the general staff, Valery Gerasimov, said the order would affect over 65,000 troops, according to AFP. Gerasimov also said more than 180 planes and about 60 helicopters would be involved in the "full combat alert" drills.



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/putin-russian-troops-full-combat-alert-2014-6#ixzz35I1zpuEo
 

88m3

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Putin's Economic Model Showing Strain as Russia Is Cut Off From Global Finance
By Carol Matlack June 27, 2014
0627_putin_econ_bunker_970-630x420.jpg

Photograph by Yuri Kadobnov/AFP via Getty Images

Russia President Vladimir Putin at the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow, on June 27

Russia warned Ukraine today that it faces “grave” economic consequences, including potential new restrictions on trade, after President Petro Poroshenkosigned a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

Such retaliation would certainly harm Ukraine, which sends about one-fourth of its exports to Russia. But the construction of new trade barriers only underscores the bunker mentality that underlies President Vladimir Putin’s management of Russia’s economy—and the increasing risk it poses to the country’s economic health.

In an eye-opening report today, Bloomberg News journalists in Moscow describe an economic system that’s increasingly run by the Kremlin, isolated from global markets, and starved for financing. Among the key points:

STORY: Why Russia Probably Won't Get the Gas Deal It Wants From Ukraine
• State-controlled enterprises now account for more than half the national economy, up from 30 percent when Putin came to power in 1999.

• The central bank is pouring unprecedented sums into a troubled banking system that’s largely under state control after foreign competitors were squeezed out.

• Now the overstretched central bank is being ordered to step up long-term financing to designated industries.

STORY: On Top of a War, Ukraine Faces a Mortgage Crisis
As relations with the West deteriorate, economic xenophobia seems to be taking root. In recent weeks, Putin has called for restrictions on imports of advanced technologies, in an effort to stimulate domestic technology development. He’s set up a state-run payments system to compete with Visa (V) and MasterCard (MA). And a law taking effect on Aug. 1 will require foreign companies operating messaging and social networking services in Russia to store user data and messages on servers within the country.

Ultimately, these steps will probably hurt Russia more than its trading partners. “The measures the president is proposing will certainly limit competition and freeze modernization. They will lead to an increase in market regulation and protectionism.” No, that’s not a wild-eyed government critic speaking—it’s Alexei Kudrin, a member of Putin’s economic council who was Russia’s finance minister from 2000 to 2011, speaking to Bloomberg News in an interview.

About $90 billion in capital is expected to flee Russia this year, and higher borrowing costs have largely shut Russian companies out of external debt markets since the annexation of Crimea. That leaves Russian companies scrambling to find other sources of financing. Just today, state-run oil company Rosneft (ROSN:RM)raised at least $1.5 billion by getting BP (BP) to prepay for fuel it expects to receive over the next five years.

STORY: In Ukraine, Signs of a Truce Unraveling
Most Russian companies, though, aren’t sitting on billions of dollars worth of oil. Instead, they’re turning to domestic lenders such as state-controlled Sberbank (SBER:RM) and VTB Bank (VTBR:RM). Central bank financing to commercial lenders has more than doubled in the past year, to $142 billion in April. Adding to pressure on the central bank, Putin has ordered it to set up a new financing mechanism for Russian industry.

“The banking system is close to having a deficit of assets that can be used as collateral to get funds from the central bank, while demand for refinancing is continuously increasing,” Sberbank Chief Executive Officer Herman Gref told Bloomberg News.

Why aren’t more business leaders sounding the alarm? Fear of Kremlin retaliation is certainly one factor. Another is Putin’s 86 percent approval rating—which has been strengthened, at least in the short term, by a population rallying around its embattled leader.

STORY: The Russian Forces on Ukraine's Border May Not Be as Formidable as They Look
Time is running short, though. “The geopolitical tension is bad, but the problem with financing is far more serious,” says Alexey Vedev, head of the Gaidar Institute’s Center for Structural Research in Moscow. “This can’t go on forever.”

http://www.businessweek.com/article...is-spurned-by-foreign-banks?cmpid=fb.campaign
 
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Putin's Economic Model Showing Strain as Russia Is Cut Off From Global Finance
By Carol Matlack June 27, 2014
0627_putin_econ_bunker_970-630x420.jpg

Photograph by Yuri Kadobnov/AFP via Getty Images

Russia President Vladimir Putin at the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow, on June 27

Russia warned Ukraine today that it faces “grave” economic consequences, including potential new restrictions on trade, after President Petro Poroshenkosigned a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

Such retaliation would certainly harm Ukraine, which sends about one-fourth of its exports to Russia. But the construction of new trade barriers only underscores the bunker mentality that underlies President Vladimir Putin’s management of Russia’s economy—and the increasing risk it poses to the country’s economic health.

In an eye-opening report today, Bloomberg News journalists in Moscow describe an economic system that’s increasingly run by the Kremlin, isolated from global markets, and starved for financing. Among the key points:

STORY: Why Russia Probably Won't Get the Gas Deal It Wants From Ukraine
• State-controlled enterprises now account for more than half the national economy, up from 30 percent when Putin came to power in 1999.

• The central bank is pouring unprecedented sums into a troubled banking system that’s largely under state control after foreign competitors were squeezed out.

• Now the overstretched central bank is being ordered to step up long-term financing to designated industries.

STORY: On Top of a War, Ukraine Faces a Mortgage Crisis
As relations with the West deteriorate, economic xenophobia seems to be taking root. In recent weeks, Putin has called for restrictions on imports of advanced technologies, in an effort to stimulate domestic technology development. He’s set up a state-run payments system to compete with Visa (V) and MasterCard (MA). And a law taking effect on Aug. 1 will require foreign companies operating messaging and social networking services in Russia to store user data and messages on servers within the country.

Ultimately, these steps will probably hurt Russia more than its trading partners. “The measures the president is proposing will certainly limit competition and freeze modernization. They will lead to an increase in market regulation and protectionism.” No, that’s not a wild-eyed government critic speaking—it’s Alexei Kudrin, a member of Putin’s economic council who was Russia’s finance minister from 2000 to 2011, speaking to Bloomberg News in an interview.

About $90 billion in capital is expected to flee Russia this year, and higher borrowing costs have largely shut Russian companies out of external debt markets since the annexation of Crimea. That leaves Russian companies scrambling to find other sources of financing. Just today, state-run oil company Rosneft (ROSN:RM)raised at least $1.5 billion by getting BP (BP) to prepay for fuel it expects to receive over the next five years.

STORY: In Ukraine, Signs of a Truce Unraveling
Most Russian companies, though, aren’t sitting on billions of dollars worth of oil. Instead, they’re turning to domestic lenders such as state-controlled Sberbank (SBER:RM) and VTB Bank (VTBR:RM). Central bank financing to commercial lenders has more than doubled in the past year, to $142 billion in April. Adding to pressure on the central bank, Putin has ordered it to set up a new financing mechanism for Russian industry.

“The banking system is close to having a deficit of assets that can be used as collateral to get funds from the central bank, while demand for refinancing is continuously increasing,” Sberbank Chief Executive Officer Herman Gref told Bloomberg News.

Why aren’t more business leaders sounding the alarm? Fear of Kremlin retaliation is certainly one factor. Another is Putin’s 86 percent approval rating—which has been strengthened, at least in the short term, by a population rallying around its embattled leader.

STORY: The Russian Forces on Ukraine's Border May Not Be as Formidable as They Look
Time is running short, though. “The geopolitical tension is bad, but the problem with financing is far more serious,” says Alexey Vedev, head of the Gaidar Institute’s Center for Structural Research in Moscow. “This can’t go on forever.”

http://www.businessweek.com/article...is-spurned-by-foreign-banks?cmpid=fb.campaign
was actually going to post this article. same shyt i was saying earlier in the thread. these russia stans live in a fantasy world.
 
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