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  • (September 28, 2024, 09:49:53 PM)

RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine

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RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« on: March 05, 2022, 12:24:52 AM »
The War in Ukraine Could Change Everything | Yuval Noah Harari | TED




War in Ukraine: NATO united over conflict




War in Ukraine: Sky travels to nuclear plant shelled by Russians




Russia Ukraine conflict: Cities hit by new wave of deadly strikes




War in Ukraine: Women take up arms in Kyiv







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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #1 on: March 05, 2022, 12:43:26 AM »
War in Ukraine: What happened on Day Nine?




Soldier to Vladimir Putin: 'We will come kill you'




Missile Strikes as Ukrainian Man Shoots Selfie Video




13 Ukrainian Troops Tell Off Russian War Ship in Final Act




ITV News witnesses fighting between Ukrainian and Russian troops closing in on Kyiv | ITV News




Ukrainian drone hits Russian missile launchers north of Kyiv




Kherson seized: First Ukrainian city falls to Russia




Russian troops leave trail of destruction as convoy enters Kyiv capital region




Top Russian general killed by Ukrainian sniper in major blow for Putin

"


They abandoned us" - Russian soldier in Ukraine




Ukrainians take Russian TANK for joyride & burn £11m missile launcher as resistance




Russia’s secret plot to invade second nation leaked




How Russians Reacted When We Showed Them Pictures From Ukraine




Ukrainian President Zelensky moves translator to tears in speech to European Parliament

« Last Edit: February 20, 2023, 07:02:01 PM by Administrator »

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Furbalz

Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #2 on: March 05, 2022, 05:42:49 AM »
Bastard Putin! Here's my long tweet thread from days of watching and talking to some furries in Ukraine and Russia.
https://twitter.com/DogpatchPress/status/1497118143784775683

Here's my news story with contribution from a furry in Kazakhstan.
https://dogpatch.press/2022/02/25/russia-invasion-ukraine/
« Last Edit: March 05, 2022, 05:44:32 AM by Furbalz »

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Offline droidrage

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #3 on: March 06, 2022, 11:30:32 PM »
Bastard Putin! Here's my long tweet thread from days of watching and talking to some furries in Ukraine and Russia.
https://twitter.com/DogpatchPress/status/1497118143784775683

Here's my news story with contribution from a furry in Kazakhstan.
https://dogpatch.press/2022/02/25/russia-invasion-ukraine/

WOW - I had no idea the furry population was so large and all over the world.

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #4 on: March 17, 2022, 02:35:47 AM »
Zelensky says ‘peace is more important than profit.’ Koch Industries disagrees.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/03/16/boycott-companies-business-russia-putin-ukraine-war/


In his gut-wrenching address to Congress, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky asked the United States for more — and more he will get.

U.S. leaders across the spectrum saluted Zelensky after he spoke to them Wednesday from Kyiv in his olive-drab T-shirt — part Winston Churchill and part Che Guevara. For all the cheap politics of the moment (Republicans reflexively blaming President Biden and refusing to applaud when Zelensky thanked Biden), Washington is uncommonly unified in purpose. Neither lawmakers nor the administration support a U.S.-led no-fly zone or any other troop commitment, and congressional hawks are successfully pushing Biden toward giving Ukraine whatever weaponry it desires, likely including aircraft.

But Zelensky made another ask on Wednesday morning, and it’s something all Americans can help with. We can stop buying the products of businesses that continue to fund Vladimir Putin’s war machine, even after its full horrors — indiscriminately targeting civilians, murdering children — are obvious to the world.

“All American companies must leave Russia. … Leave their market immediately, because it is flooded with our blood,” the young leader said, asking lawmakers “to make sure that the Russians do not receive a single penny that they use to destroy our people in Ukraine, the destruction of our country, the destruction of Europe. … Peace is more important than income.”

Most American companies get that. Some 400 U.S. and other multinational firms have pulled out of Russia, either permanently or temporarily, according to Yale’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, who has kept the authoritative list of corporate actions in Russia. Oil companies (BP, Shell, ExxonMobil) and tech companies (Dell, IBM, Apple, Google, Facebook, Twitter) led the way, and many others (McDonalds, Starbucks, Coca-Cola) eventually followed.

But, according to Sonnenfeld, there are, at the other extreme, 33 companies (as of Wednesday afternoon) that form a “hall of shame,” defying demands that they exit Russia or reduce their activities there.

“They are funding the Russian war machine, and they are undermining the whole idea of the sanctions," Sonnenfeld told me. “The whole idea is to freeze up civil society, to get people out on the streets and outraged. They’re undermining an effective resolution” and increasing the likelihood of continued bloodshed.

Those who want to stop Russia’s murderous attack against Ukraine should stop investing in or buying the products of these companies.



Koch Industries, whose owners gave to right-wing causes for years, is now financing Putin’s war. The people who make Brawny paper towels, Dixie cups, Quilted Northern toilet paper, Vanity Fair napkins and Georgia-Pacific lumber are abetting the spilling of Ukrainians’ blood.

Like Reebok shoes? They’re being used to stomp on Ukraine. Authentic Brands Group, which also owns Aeropostale, Eddie Bauer, Brooks Brothers and Nine West, among others, is in the hall of shame.

Before you bite into a Cinnabon (or Carvel ice cream, Schlotzsky’s sandwich or Auntie Anne’s pretzel) consider that parent company Focus Brands is taking a bite out of democracy in Ukraine.

So is Subway. While selling you the All-American Club, it’s giving Ukrainians the Cold-Cock Combo by refusing to cut loose its 446 Russian franchises.


Several other household brands — Truvia and Diamond Crystal salt (Cargill), Avon cosmetics (Natura), LG appliances, ASUS laptops, Mission tortillas (Gruma) and Pirelli tires — are produced by companies on the shameful list.

Are you or your mutual fund invested in Halliburton, Baker Hughes or Schlumberger? Then you should know that these oil-services companies could deal a huge blow to Putin’s ability to wage war — but they choose profit instead.




Let’s name and shame all the others among the 33: Advertising firms BBDO, DDB and Omnicom; accountant Baker Tilly; industrial companies Air Liquide, Air Products, Greif, IPG Photonics, Linde, Mettler Toledo, Nalco and Rockwool; French hotelier Accor and retailers Auchan, Decathlon and Leroy Merlin; German wholesaler Metro; cloud service Cloudflare; International Paper; and Sweden’s Oriflame Cosmetics.

Another 72 multinationals have made only partial pullbacks from Russia, such as reducing current operations or holding off on new investments — actions Sonnenfeld calls “very questionable” and “smokescreens.” Included here: Dunkin Donuts, General Mills, Mondelez (Oreos and other Nabisco products), candymaker Mars, Procter & Gamble, Yum Brands (Pizza Hut, Taco Bell), Hilton, Hyatt and Marriott.

All these businesses could be doing more to stop Putin’s savagery and war crimes. Because they won’t, we all should do more to stop them. Go to Sonnenfeld’s website via Yale’s School of Management to make sure you aren’t funding the businesses that are funding Putin’s war machine — and reward the vast majority of companies that share Zelensky’s belief that peace is more important than profit.



DON'T BUY OR SUPPORT THESE COMPANIES IN THE USA UNLESS THEY EXIT RUSSIA IMMEDIATELY!

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #5 on: April 06, 2022, 12:44:59 AM »
The truth about Putin's Oligarchs and where all that money comes from that funds his war in Ukraine

Londongrad: How the U.K. became a laundromat for Russian oligarchs’ dirty money
For years, the UK has welcomed oligarchs with few questions asked about their fortunes. Billions of dollars poured in. Now, British intelligence is warning that Russian money is propping up Putin’s regime -- and that some of it is helping fund the war in Ukraine.

CBS 60 Minutes

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/londongrad-united-kingdom-russian-oligarchs-60-minutes-video-2022-04-03/#x




« Last Edit: May 20, 2022, 04:42:29 PM by Administrator »

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Offline droidrage

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #6 on: May 20, 2022, 04:34:53 PM »
LOL - A David Attenborough parody video about how Russian tanks 'end their lives' goes viral on Twitter

David Attenborough narrates how Russian tanks end their life in Ukraine




ALL SPECIES OF RUSSIAN TANK DIE’ IN THIS GENIUS PARODY VIDEO || 2022








Russia's Putin authorises 'special military operation' against Ukraine

MOSCOW, Feb 24 (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin authorised "a special military operation" against Ukraine on Thursday morning to eliminate what he called a serious threat, saying his aim was to demilitarise Russia's southern neighbour.

In an early morning address on state television, Putin said he had been left with no choice but to launch the operation, the scope of which was not immediately clear but appeared to go well beyond helping Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

"I have decided to conduct a special military operation," said Putin, seated at a desk in the Kremlin next to a battery of telephones, with the Russian flag behind him.

"Its goal is to protect people who have been subjected to bullying and genocide... for the last eight years. And for this we will strive for the demilitarisation and denazification of Ukraine.

"And to bring to court those who committed numerous bloody crimes against civilians, including against citizens of the Russian Federation."

Ukraine dismisses as invented Russian accusations of genocide against people living in parts of its east seized by Russian-backed separatists in 2014. Kyiv has said Putin was looking for an artificial pretext to attack it. read more

The Kremlin chief's announcement followed an appeal from the Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine for military help against what they said was growing Ukrainian aggression.

Kyiv has denied any such aggression.

Putin told the Ukrainian military to lay down its weapons and go home.

SNL Church Lady Well Isn't That Special

« Last Edit: February 20, 2023, 07:04:33 PM by Administrator »

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #7 on: August 12, 2022, 10:24:45 PM »
The apocalyptic vision behind Putin’s ‘golden billion’ argument

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/07/22/putin-golden-billion-russia/



For Russian President Vladimir Putin, a two-word phrase sums up the current state of world geopolitics: “golden billion.”
Speaking this week in Moscow, Putin declared that the “model of total domination of the so-called golden billion is unfair. Why should this golden billion of all the population on the globe dominate over everyone and impose its own rules of behavior?”

The golden billion “divides the world into first- and second-class people and is therefore essentially racist and neocolonial,” Putin continued Wednesday, adding that “the underlying globalist and pseudo-liberal ideology is becoming increasingly more like totalitarianism and is restraining creative endeavor and free historical creation.”

For most readers in the United States or Europe, a “golden billion” probably means nothing. But in Russia, this phrase has been around for decades as a doom-saying shorthand to describe a future battle for resources between a global elite and Russians. And since February, the Russian government has been deploying the theory to argue that Russia’s isolation after its invasion of Ukraine was not because of its actions — but because of an inevitable global conspiracy against it.

These complaints about inequality may seem rich coming from a man who has led an invasion that could help partially restore an empire, who has clung to power for decades while banishing his biggest opponent to prison and whose personal wealth was once estimated to be $200 billion. But at least some members of the Russian government seem to sincerely believe in the ethos behind these theories. And it may not just be Russians who find the idea persuasive.

Putin’s vague allusions to a golden billion over recent months obscure a far more conspiratorial history.
The phrase comes from an apocalyptic book published in 1990, just as the Soviet era came to a crashing halt. Titled “The Plot of World Government: Russia and the Golden Billion,” the book was written by a Russian publicist named Anatoly Tsikunov under the pen name A. Kuzmich.

Tsikunov described an end-times conspiracy against Russia, with the wealthy Western elite realizing that ecological change and global disaster would see further competition for world resources, ultimately rendering the world uninhabitable for all but a billion of them. This elite realize Russia, with its natural resources, immense mass and northern location, needs to be brought under their control by any means necessary for their own survival.

This thesis was a twist on the widely disputed fears about global overpopulation developed by British cleric Thomas Robert Malthus in the late 18th century. However, it’s been given a modern, Russocentric update. In his 2019 book “Plots against Russia: Conspiracy and Fantasy After Socialism,” New York University scholar Eliot Borenstein writes that the idea fits into a broader, paranoid history.

The golden billion “gathers together many of the most important tropes of benighted, post-Soviet Russia (the need to defend the country’s natural resources from a rapacious West, the West’s demoralization of Russia’s youth, destruction of Russia’s economy, and destruction of public health) into one compelling narrative, a story combining historical touchstones (the Great Patriotic War) with science and pseudoscience,” Borenstein wrote.

Tsikunov died in unclear circumstances a year after his book was published, only adding to the mystique. But his idea was soon popularized by the anti-liberal Russian intellectual Sergey Kara-Murza, who stripped away its stranger edges and wrote in the later 1990s that the golden billion meant the population of higher-income democracies like those in the OECD or G-7 who consume an unfair proportion of the world’s resources.

More than two decades later, the theory is everywhere in the Russian government.
Despite its conspiratorial beginnings, high-ranking Russian officials like former president Dmitry Medvedev and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov have repeated it in public settings since the Feb. 24 invasion.

“You can proclaim yourself a golden billion as much as you like, but the population on the globe is many times larger, and metals are much more expensive than gold,” Medvedev, now deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council, said on March 19. That no one would actually refer to themselves as the golden billion seems to be beside the point.

More worrying to some experts is the talk from Nikolai Patrushev, the lesser known but powerful Security Council secretary who is viewed by some as, remarkably, a potential successor of Putin. In an interview with the state-owned newspaper Argumenty i Fakty published in May, Patrushev said the West may talk about “human rights, freedom and democracy,” but secretly it was working toward the doctrine of the golden billion.

Patrushev suggested the coronavirus pandemic could have been orchestrated for the cause and warned that a global economic crisis was being created for “a handful of magnates in the City of London and Wall Street.”

“I fear this smart and driven man actually believes … his analysis of current global events,” Mark Galeotti, an honorary professor at University College London and senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, wrote on Twitter about the interview.

Even wild theories can have tactical uses.
When Putin speaks about a golden billion, he uses it to tie Western exploitation of Africa and Asia recently with the backlash to the conflict in Ukraine. Though Putin has long presented himself as a voice of global conservatism, the righteous anger of anti-colonialism is no doubt a more potent force globally.

“Of course, this golden billion became golden for a reason. It has achieved a lot. But it not only took such positions thanks to some implemented ideas, to a large extent it took its positions by robbing other peoples: in Asia, and in Africa,” Putin said Wednesday. “Indeed, it was like that. Look at how India has been plundered.”

In South Asia, Africa and Latin America, stories of anger against domination and colonialism find a receptive audience. And these are three regions where countries have so far failed to rally behind Western efforts to isolate Moscow.

But the contradictions in Putin’s logic could undermine his story. Another tale of colonialism and domination is playing out now in Ukraine, which Putin has suggested is rightfully Russian land. As The Post’s Robyn Dixon reports, Putin is moving rapidly to annex and absorb the parts of Ukraine it currently holds, “casting himself as a new version of the early-18th-century czar Peter the Great recovering lost territory.”

Many analysts view the root cause of the war not even as Putin’s desires for Russians, but as Putin’s desire for continuing domestic legitimacy. “The war allowed Putin to return to the fore of Russian politics as the person in charge who is irreplaceable,” historian Yakov Feygin wrote this week.

Can this imperial, great man style of politics coexist with apocalyptic, anti-colonial fears of the golden billion? For now, the Kremlin hopes so.

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #8 on: February 20, 2023, 07:19:33 PM »
Opinion  The Ukraine war is a slugfest that Ukrainians will win

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/02/20/ukraine-military-strategy-adaptation-victory/



Ukrainian soldiers take part in a trench-warfare training exercise on Thursday in Britain.


Retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling commanded the 1st Armored Division during the Iraq surge and later commanded U.S. Army Europe.

Looks have always been deceiving when it comes to Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression in Ukraine. From the start, Russia’s capacities were overestimated. Both the size of its army, and the modernization it had supposedly undergone indicated to many observers that Russia would triumph easily. But since the invasion began, the Russian military has failed to adapt its strategy and operational objectives to battle conditions and circumstances.

Today, ahead of the one-year anniversary of the conflict, coverage of the war’s battles mostly focuses on the fighting along the central and southern front, with cities such as Bakhmut and Vuhledar dominating headlines. Russia has been making small gains at great human cost to its troops around the former, and has squandered thousands of its soldiers for nothing at the latter. This might look like an emerging stalemate, but it is anything but. It is, in fact, a slugfest.

The war has gone through five phases and, through each one, Ukraine’s forces have significantly outperformed Russia’s, in no small part because of a military culture of adaptability. Russian forces continue to be hampered by a lack of that very same culture, as well as by a lack of leadership and initiative.

During my time as commander of U.S. Army forces in Europe, I got to know Ukrainian leaders and soldiers during various training missions, and saw this culture of adaptability grow and develop. I also had the opportunity to closely watch Russia “demonstrate” (but not properly train or exercise) its military capacity on several occasions, and frequently noted the deep and pervasive corruption that bedeviled its armed forces.

So, before even knowing the details of Putin’s strategy or his military’s operational objectives, I knew immediately the invasion would not end well for the Russian leader. “Ukraine will fight above its weight class,” I told a colleague on the first night of the war. “And Russia will be embarrassed.”

Opinions on the war in Ukraine after one year

One year ago, Russia invaded Ukraine. Post Opinions is marking the anniversary with columns looking at all that has transpired and what may lie ahead.


Putin never officially announced his strategic goals. To try to understand what his generals might do, I tried to ascertain what those might be. He seemed to want regime change in Kyiv, the destruction of Ukraine’s army, the subjugation of Ukraine’s population, control of the Black and Azov Sea ports (and perhaps of Moldova, as well). It was obvious Russia didn’t have the number of soldiers or the combined arms effectiveness to achieve Putin’s ambitious war aims.

Worse, Putin’s army ignored one of the most important principles of war: unity of command. The generals planned an attack on nine different axes of advance, but were never able to coordinate ample naval and air forces into a massed assault.

The war started on Feb. 24. It took about six weeks for Phase 1 of Putin’s campaign to fail.

On April 2, Putin was forced to try a different approach. He shifted Russian forces to the east, while placing new generals in charge. But he did little to address the damage inflicted on the army by such a catastrophic beginning. Estimates vary, but up to 40 percent of front-line Russian combat units appear to have been mauled, with supply lines and effective command decimated. Putin moved most of his army east, and subsequently ordered his army to be rebuilt in weeks. Any general familiar with the physical and psychological demands associated with regeneration of a force this severely degraded would tell you this would not work.

On April 18, Putin launched a new Russian offensive in the east — the start of Phase 2 of the war. New arrows and circles were drawn on Russian maps, but the Russian generals and their troops on the ground continued to underperform. There was no meaningful adaptation and no attempt to learn hard lessons from earlier setbacks. Pieced-together, low-morale units were thrown into the fight with little planning, bad reconnaissance and ineffective battlefield leadership. Ukraine, on the other hand, was not complacent. Its generals were fast learners, and Ukrainian soldiers were innovative and adaptive. The Russian forces continued to suffer huge losses.

Phase 3 began in July and lasted through September. Ukraine’s army forced a large-scale withdrawal in the northeast in the Sumy and Kharkiv oblasts, using small-scale counterattacks directed at just the right locations, aided by a large-scale operational deception in the south. Ukrainian special operations forces also contributed significantly to this phase, using stealth and disciplined operational security to ensure that Russia was embarrassed behind its own lines. For most of the summer, the Russians sustained casualties that far exceeded those suffered during the disastrous Phase 1 and 2.

Phase 4 began in late September, when Putin announced that several of the partially occupied southern regions of Ukraine would undergo annexation. This was accompanied by Putin’s order to mobilize an additional 300,000 Russians for the fight. The referendums in the occupied territories, in preparation for months, were met with an effective insurgency by Ukraine’s population and territorial forces, and were delayed multiple times. And the mobilization, while successful in bringing a limited number of “fresh” but unwilling soldiers to the front line, was still plagued by the same deficiencies that characterized Russia’s war effort from the start. The mobilizations were rushed and improvised, recruits were poorly trained and equipped, and Russian leadership was still lacking.

In contrast, Ukraine’s actions during this period consisted of an impressively coordinated use of conventional forces that had successfully incorporated newly arrived Western weapons, most notably precision-guided artillery and rockets. In addition, this phase featured more Ukrainian special operations activity, and the continued use of territorial resistance fighters. Russia responded to all this by lobbing missiles into densely packed Ukrainian cities to target critical infrastructure and Ukrainian civilians. The war crimes committed by Russian leadership and their forces continued.

Since December, we have been in Phase 5 of this war. Though the front might not have moved much, there has been significant fighting and extensive casualties on both sides. This phase is best understood not as a stalemate, but as Ukraine struggling to survive a Russian onslaught. Putin continues his messy mobilization and is sending fresh cannon fodder (or “cannon meat,” as Russians call these wretches) at Ukrainian lines in assault waves.

Ukrainian generals have balanced limited but continuous counterattacks with an active defense, while also being forced to allocate scarce air-defense capabilities to protect civilians. Ukrainian forces are also continuing to conduct intelligence operations to identify targets they will likely strike in the near future. It’s a delicate balance for the decision-makers in Kyiv. They are trying to hold the defensive lines while training and equipping their forces with newly obtained, advanced Western materiel that will make a qualitative difference in the looming counteroffensive.

Ukraine’s armed forces have admirably adapted in each phase of this fight, learning lessons from training they received over the last decade, and from the scars earned on the battlefield itself. And Russia has repeatedly demonstrated an inability to do the same.

It will remain difficult for Russia to change — simply because it can’t. A nation’s army is drawn from its people, and a nation’s army reflects the character and values of the society. While equipment, doctrine, training and leadership are important qualities of any army, the essence of a fighting force comes from what the nation represents. Putin’s autocratic kleptocracy is thus far proving no match for Ukraine’s agile democracy.


War in Ukraine: What you need to know

The latest: Fighting in eastern Ukraine continues as Russian forces make minor gains in their attempt to encircle the city of Bakhmut. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has asked Western allies for fighter jets as Russia mounts a spring offensive.

The fight: Russia has been targeting Ukrainian civilian infrastructure with missile and drone strikes since October, often knocking out electricity, heating and water in the country. Despite heavy fighting, no side has made significant gains for months. Western allies agreed to a new wave of elaborate weapons, including Leopard tanks, hoping it may change the balance on the battlefield.




On surprise trip to Kyiv, Biden vows enduring support for Ukraine

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/02/20/president-biden-kyiv-ukraine-visit-war/



KYIV, Ukraine — President Biden made a dramatic, unannounced visit to Kyiv on Monday, in a display of robust American support for Ukraine just four days before the anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion.

The high-risk visit to the historic Ukrainian capital — where air raid sirens blared as Biden walked the streets with President Volodymyr Zelensky — signaled continued commitment from the United States, the largest financial and military backer of Ukraine’s effort to repel Russian invaders from its territory.

Biden was spotted with the Ukrainian leader outside St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Monastery shortly before noon local time, his appearance capping hours of speculation during an intense security lockdown that had blocked car traffic and even pedestrians from parts of central Kyiv.

Following talks with Zelensky and a visit to the U.S. Embassy, Biden departed Kyiv several hours later, according to a reporter traveling with him. Biden’s visit, however brief, represented one of the most remarkable presidential trips in modern history, sending him into a country at war and a city under regular bombardment without the heavy U.S. military presence that provided a protective shield during previous stops in Iraq or Afghanistan.



Biden and Zelensky in Kyiv on Monday. Biden went to a country at war without a heavy U.S. military presence for protection. (Evan Vucci/AP)
« Last Edit: February 20, 2023, 07:21:36 PM by Administrator »

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #9 on: February 22, 2024, 02:34:37 AM »
Opinion  Ukraine remains stronger than you might think

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/02/21/ukraine-russia-war-strengths/


Two years since Russia invaded Ukraine and 10 since Vladimir Putin seized Crimea, the war is at a difficult standstill — not least because of wavering U.S. support. If Congress cuts off support, Ukraine could well collapse later this year. Yet Ukraine remains strong in many ways. It has continued to stymie the Kremlin’s greatest ambitions for taking over the country. While the going is tough today, there is no cause for fatalism.

Much has been made of Ukraine’s disappointing 2023 counteroffensive. But given the strength of defenses on both sides, its failure was no huge surprise. Defense is simply stronger than offense at this stage of the war and, because of this, Ukraine might be able to hang on to most or all of the 82 percent of the pre-2014 territory it now holds, even with constrained military supplies. Yet, as the recent loss of Avdiivka demonstrates, Ukraine might struggle in the event of a complete cutoff of U.S. assistance. The pace of setbacks could accelerate with little warning; like Ernest Hemingway’s quip about bankruptcy, defeat could occur gradually, then suddenly.

Ukraine needs more artillery and other key weaponry. According to the Royal United Services Institute in London, it can now fire only about 2,000 artillery rounds each day — compared with 3,000 or more in much of 2022 and as many as 7,000 during last summer’s counteroffensive. Russia is currently firing up to 10,000 rounds a day. But, like Russia, Ukraine was probably wasting much of its firepower on barrage attacks, so scaling back does not necessarily lead to big losses. It does, however, lower the odds of success in a future counteroffensive. And if the shortages worsen, all bets are off.

Consider next the country’s demographics. Not counting refugees now living abroad, Ukraine has only one-fourth of Russia’s population. This is a serious disadvantage, to be sure. But the country’s army will not run out of people anytime soon. About 100,000 Ukrainian soldiers a year are now being killed or wounded. This is a tragic human toll. But the military is about 750,000-strong, and approximately 200,000 young men are becoming draft-eligible each year. If Ukraine lowers its conscription age from 27 to 25, as it is considering, almost 400,000 additional men would be eligible in the coming year.

Shipping grain out of Ukraine remains difficult, because Russia controls many of the country’s ports on the Black Sea. But Ukraine has dramatically increased its exports via the western Black Sea, including through Romanian ports and territorial waters. This helps explain why its stressed economy has stabilized and even partly recovered over the past year. Europe’s new aid package worth 50 billion euros (about $54 billion) should help Ukraine muddle ahead. Alas, Russia’s economy has recovered even more than Ukraine’s has.

Foreign assistance to Ukraine has been robust — totaling at least $100 billion a year since the war began. Europe has been most generous, emphasizing economic and humanitarian assistance, along with more than $40 billion in security aid. The United States has prioritized security assistance.

Yes, political and military elites in Ukraine are quarreling more now than they were a year or two ago. President Volodymyr Zelensky is has replaced his top general, and he has squabbled with the mayor of Kyiv and with members of the media, among others. But frustration and tough debate are to be expected in a democracy two years into a brutal war. Overall, Ukrainians remain unified. Zelensky’s approval rating is no longer at 90 percent, where it stood a year ago, but it remains high. Seventy-seven percent of Ukrainians surveyed say they trust him.

Ukraine’s defenses against drones and cruise missiles are good. Unfortunately, though, more Russian ballistic missiles are getting through and hitting Ukrainian cities. On some days, no more than 50 percent are intercepted. Yet even here there is a silver lining: Ukraine is making it through another winter with most of its power and heating systems intact.

So there is no reason for fatalistic thinking about Ukraine. It might very well hold on to at least 82 percent of its territory and eventually gain a strong security link with the West, especially if the United States again leads in addressing the Russian threat to Ukraine. At the moment, however, the U.S. Congress is playing with fire in threatening to end U.S. assistance to Kyiv. Ukraine is resolute in this struggle, but so, alas, is Russia, and if Putin winds up winning this war, NATO’s own security might soon be at risk, too.

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #10 on: August 14, 2024, 02:37:42 PM »
Ukraine turns the tables on Russia

A bold Ukrainian operation in Kursk has humiliated Russian President Vladimir Putin and upended some of the logic of the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/08/14/ukraine-kursk-putin-analysis/




Russia’s Kursk oblast is no stranger to war. In medieval times, the district was overrun by the Mongol horde, and was claimed and ceded down the centuries by Eurasian empires. During World War II, the environs of the city of Kursk became the site of the greatest tank battle in history, as Nazi Germany suffered a grievous strategic defeat at the hands of the bloodied yet unbowed Soviet Union.

This past week, Kursk has been the site of the first major invasion of Russian territory since then. This time, it’s not the Nazi war machine rolling in — no matter what Kremlin propagandists insist — but a bold Ukrainian operation that has humiliated Russian President Vladimir Putin and upended some of the logic of the war between Russia and Ukraine.

Kyiv’s foray into Kursk began Aug. 6. Tanks and other armored vehicles surged into Russia; Ukrainian artillery and drone strikes struck at Russian positions. Six days later, Ukrainian officials said they were in control of some 1,000 square kilometers of Russian territory. Tens of thousands of Russian residents have evacuated amid growing fears that Ukraine would consolidate its presence and press its advantage.

On Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky posted on social media that Ukrainian forces had seized some 74 settlements in Kursk and were treating civilians there humanely. He nodded to reports of hundreds of Russian soldiers who had surrendered to the advancing Ukrainians, describing them as part of the “exchange fund” that would enable the return of myriad Ukrainian soldiers in Russian captivity. Ukrainian officials were guarded about their plans for the region.

“Unlike Russia, Ukraine does not need other people’s property,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Heorhii Tykhyi told reporters in Kyiv. “Ukraine is not interested in taking the territory of the Kursk region, but we want to protect the lives of our people.”





For the Kremlin, the developments are a stinging blow. Putin launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 in a fit of neo-imperialist revanchism, dismissing Ukraine’s sovereignty and independent identity and casting the country as part of a greater Russia that would naturally return to the bosom of its compatriots next door. Those delusions were dispelled by Ukraine’s dogged resistance and the surge of Ukrainian nationalism that has accompanied its war effort. And now, rather than having redeemed Russia’s vanished imperium, Putin finds his country’s own vulnerabilities more exposed.

By one estimate, Ukraine has seized more Russian territory in a week than Russia has captured in Ukraine in this whole calendar year. Russian military bloggers speculated over which officials would lose their jobs over the debacle, while furious residents have complained about the lack of coordination and information during evacuations, according to my colleagues. Officials in Moscow cast the incursion as an act of “terrorism” and vowed swift retaliation.

The operation has led Russia’s forces to carry out bombing raids on its own territory — after months of pummeling Ukraine. “The incursion clearly has achieved at least one Ukrainian objective: breaking through the haze of Russian complacency about the war — which has had limited impact on the lives of most ordinary Russians,” my colleagues wrote earlier this week.

“Since last week, Russians, rather than Ukrainians, have taken to social media and blogs to wonder whether the nuclear plant nearest the combat area is safe, to watch videos of their young conscript soldiers taken prisoner and civilians stripped of shelter as the Kursk region disappears behind an active front line,” wrote Anna Nemstova in the Atlantic.

What Ukraine’s end goal in the current campaign may be is not totally clear. The incursion has been a significant morale boost at a time when Kyiv has struggled to break through Russia’s fortifications and make much progress in reclaiming lost territory. It creates a greater buffer zone that diverts, at least temporarily, Russian airstrikes and artillery bombardments away from Ukrainian cities and territory. And it may potentially see Russia pull some of its troops out of Ukraine to fight battles in Kursk and other endangered border regions.

Russia has relocated some of its units from both Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions of Ukraine’s south,” Dmytro Lykhoviy, a Ukrainian army spokesman, told Politico on Tuesday.

Given the possibility of Western support for Kyiv waning in the coming months — not least if the U.S. election returns former president Donald Trump to power — the raid into Kursk gives Ukraine a bit more leverage for any future peace talks. “With the growing uncertainty of the political landscape in the West and increased pressure to enter peace negotiations with Russia, Ukraine may seek to establish control over Russian territory, which it will use as a bargaining chip in exchange for land now occupied by Russia,” wrote Mark Temnycky, a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council.

Substantive diplomacy is not on the horizon, though. As Russia plots a crushing response, Western commentators point to Ukraine’s Kursk success as proof that Kyiv should be allowed to use more long-range Western weapons to hit targets across the border. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s forces, outmanned and outgunned, are still battling against the odds on other fronts. “I’m glad our boys are having success in Kursk,” a senior Ukrainian officer on the front line in Donetsk region told the Financial Times. “We still have a hot fight here. I hope [Ukrainian military commander Oleksandr] Syrsky remembers this.”

The Kursk incursion is the latest blow to Putin’s prestige since the short-lived 2023 insurrection of Wagner mercenary company chief Yevgeniy Prigozhin, who rampaged his way through the heart of Russia before camping out 100 miles outside Moscow. The mutiny was dispelled — and Prigozhin later died in murky circumstances — but it represented a shock to the system and illustrated the inherent weakness of the Kremlin’s security apparatus.

“Whether Ukrainian forces remain in Russia or pull back, they have demonstrated the fragility of the entire Putin system — not just its intelligence and military capabilities but the viability of top-down dictation,” noted Harvard academic Walter Clemens.

Ukraine may not achieve much more on the Kursk front, but even now, the operation marks a grim inflection point. “In the end, it has become just another flashpoint in a long, drawn-out struggle that has already devastated Ukraine, and is now coming back home to Russia to claim a bloody dividend,” wrote Johns Hopkins scholar Sergey Radchenko. “Putin wanted to beat the living hell out of Ukraine. Well, now, he too has learned that what goes around, comes around.”

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #11 on: August 15, 2024, 07:49:48 PM »
Opinion  How an emboldened Ukraine caught Russia flat-footed

A swift incursion into Russia’s Kursk region exposes the country’s fragility under Putin.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/08/15/ukraine-kursk-russia-war-putin/





Ukraine’s swift military incursion into Russia’s Kursk region is barely a week old but already offers important lessons about the war. The surprise attack across a thinly defended border shows that asymmetric tactics — a shock strike using a small and mobile force — can help Ukraine fend off its larger adversary. It also exposes Russia’s fragility under President Vladimir Putin, who after months of grinding losses along static front lines was hit with his guard down by the counterpunch.

This attack, in which Ukraine’s troops have taken roughly 400 square miles, causing more than 120,000 Russian civilians to flee, is a bold move by President Volodymyr Zelensky and his military commander, Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrsky, appointed in February. Long urged by the United States to avoid escalation, Ukraine had been exceedingly cautious about taking the fight across the border into Russia. Now, it is displaying audacity with the Kursk offensive, which will certainly provide a psychological boost to the nation and might help tilt the balance of the war. On top of that, Ukraine has now also taken delivery of the first F-16 fighter planes.

Daring, nimble tactics help Ukraine compensate for several disadvantages: a much smaller population than Russia’s, making troop recruitment more difficult; its own resources are thin, and it depends almost entirely on underwriting and supply from the West. The surprise incursion also recalls Ukraine’s success in the first year of the war, when its flexible and aggressive moves expelled Russia from the Kharkiv region. Such adventuresome thinking will be needed more than ever if Ukraine is to avoid defeat.

Escalation has risks, and we can’t know how the Kursk operation will turn out. It is not clear whether Ukraine intends to further expand what’s been seized, nor what the opportunity costs might be. A Russian response is highly likely. Mr. Putin frequently blames NATO and the West for Ukraine’s actions; it is still not certain how he would react if he felt Russia was losing or backed into a corner.

Still, the incursion casts light on some significant Russian weaknesses. After two years in which Russian citizens were mostly supportive of the war or at least passive, the attack prompted outspoken protests on social media from citizens in the affected regions. The attack also showed that the Russian border was poorly defended. Most of the troops were lightly armed conscripts, with little or no military training. Hundreds have been captured by Ukraine; others fled. That Russia’s supposedly impregnable borders could be so easily breached was extremely embarrassing to Mr. Putin; this is the first time since World War II that a foreign army has crossed into the country.

Mr. Putin has tried to show resolve but clearly was rattled in television appearances after the attack. He has called the Ukraine war a “special military operation” and avoided using the word “war”; now, he has ordered the Federal Security Service to impose an “anti-terrorist operation” in the Kursk, Belgorod and Bryansk regions, again avoiding the word “war.” Mr. Putin told his advisers, “One of the obvious goals of the enemy is to sow discord, strife, intimidate people, destroy the unity and cohesion of Russian society.” These have been exactly what Russia has inflicted upon Ukraine through 2½ years of destruction. “Russia brought war to others, and now it is coming home,” Mr. Zelensky said of the Kursk operation in his nightly televised address.

Mr. Zelensky’s decision to move now was surely made with an eye on the U.S. political calendar and worries that Ukraine will face pressure to negotiate with Russia after the November election, especially if Republican nominee Donald Trump wins. Mr. Trump’s continuing praise of Mr. Putin and his party’s reluctance this year about aid to Ukraine are worrisome signs of what they would do given more power.

Mr. Zelensky might be thinking practically about how to save Ukraine regardless of who wins in November. If Ukraine manages to hold a sizable chunk of Russian territory, it could provide valuable leverage for a land-for-land trade in any future peace negotiations. Meanwhile, Ukraine is sending drones deep into Russian territory and might renew its request for permission to use longer-range U.S. missiles to target Russian air bases that have been used to stage the bombing of Ukrainian civilians.

Ukraine has proved yet again its determination to resist Russian aggression despite long odds, discrediting those who argue its cause is unworthy or futile. The United States and Europe should give Ukraine all possible means to end the war in a position of strength and as a functioning, prosperous democracy aligned with the West.


Ukraine offensive in Russia larger than Kursk region, soldiers say

Ukraine says Russia has been in contact about a new prisoner exchange amid reports that hundreds of Russian servicemen have been seized in the Kursk operation.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/08/15/russia-ukraine-kursk-captured-soldiers/


SUMY, Ukraine — Ukraine solidified its control over the parts of Russia’s Kursk region it has taken in a 10-day offensive, announcing Thursday the appointment of a military commander to manage the area as well as new battlefield successes.

In the city of Sumy, not far from where Ukrainian forces surprised the world by storming into Russia, wounded soldiers also described operations in the Belgorod region to the south, suggesting an even larger scale to the offensive, which is changing perceptions abroad that Ukraine has been on the losing end of the conflict.

In contrast to the relatively easier time had by Ukraine’s forces in Kursk — including news of another 100 Russian troops captured, the intelligence service announced Thursday — the fighting in Belgorod has been fierce.

Three soldiers, including one commander, described how after months of being deployed along the border, they were sent into Russia. They crossed in a fleet of armored vehicles in broad daylight four days ago, said Hacker, 24, speaking on the condition that he only be identified by his first name or call sign, in keeping with Ukrainian military rules.
« Last Edit: August 15, 2024, 07:55:23 PM by Administrator »

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Re: RED DAWN 2022: Ukraine
« Reply #12 on: December 22, 2024, 02:41:03 AM »
Does Trump want Putin to get Ukraine’s $26 trillion in gas and minerals?

Kyiv controls vast gas and mineral deposits. Does Trump want those flowing west, or to Russia and China?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/12/18/trump-ukraine-gas-mineral-russia-peace-deal/


Donald Trump often says that liberating Iraq without getting its oil resources was one of America’s biggest foreign policy blunders. He has a chance to avoid a similar mistake in Ukraine.

Ukraine is not only the breadbasket of Europe; it is also a mineral superpower, with some of the largest reserves of 117 of the 120 most widely used minerals in the world. Of the 50 strategic minerals identified by the United States as critical to its economy and national security, many of which are quite rare yet key to certain high-value applications, Ukraine supplies 22.

Ukraine possesses the largest reserves of uranium in Europe; the second-largest reserves of iron ore, titanium and manganese; and the third-largest reserves of shale gas — as well as large deposits of lithium, graphite and rare earth metals, according to a 2022 report by the Canadian geopolitical risk-analysis firm SecDev. These minerals are essential to the production of vital goods ranging from airplanes, cellphones and electric vehicles to steel and nuclear power.

The question for the president-elect is: Does he want Russia and China to get that treasure trove of natural resources? Or does he want to develop them with Ukraine to the benefit of the American people?

One of the main reasons Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine (aside from his delusional historical fantasies about how Ukrainians and Russians are “one people”) was to seize these natural resources, which are valued at an estimated $26 trillion, according to SecDev.

That effort nearly succeeded. In early 2022, Russian forces reached the outskirts of Kyiv and came close to taking the capital and installing a puppet regime. But with U.S. assistance — including the Javelin missiles that Trump supplied (reversing Barack Obama’s lethal weapons ban) — Ukraine forced Russia back. In so doing, it not only liberated its citizens from brutal Russian occupation but also successfully defended roughly 80 percent of Ukraine’s known mineral deposits, according to the SecDev report — including 73 percent of its iron ore, 75 percent of its lithium and graphite, 90 percent of its titanium, and 92 percent of its uranium and other radioactive elements.

Early on, Russia seized control of an estimated 80 percent of Ukraine’s massive offshore hydrocarbon deposits. But over the past three years, Ukraine has wiped out roughly half of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet using explosive sea drones to drive the Russian navy from its territorial waters. With that successful offensive, Ukraine has reopened its shipping lanes and recaptured many of its Black Sea oil and gas deposits.

Today, Ukraine maintains control of 96.5 percent of its proven oil reserves and 96 percent of its proven natural gas reserves — as well as all of its aluminum, cobalt, copper, nickel, tin and beryllium deposits.

Natural gas

About 96 percent of Ukraine’s natural gas reserves remain under Ukrainian control.



Russia did succeed in seizing about 57 percent of the country’s known coal reserves (worth about $11.9 trillion) and about half of its deposits of certain rare earths (though many of those were captured in 2014 when Russia first invaded and seized Crimea). But those losses notwithstanding, Ukraine has prevented Russia from seizing $13.6 trillion in mineral and hydrocarbon wealth.

That has been a massive defeat for Putin — and a huge opportunity for the United States.

The American people have already invested about $183 billion to help Ukraine defend its mineral-rich land from Russian aggression. Though the vast majority of the military portion of that aid has been spent here in the United States — strengthening our defense production capacity and creating good manufacturing jobs for American workers — that amount remains a staggeringly large investment in helping Ukraine defend itself from unjust aggression. Shouldn’t U.S. taxpayers get a return on that investment? Do we want Ukrainian titanium going into American planes, or into Russian and Chinese fighter jets that will threaten the United States and its allies? Do we want Ukraine’s lithium and rare earths powering American-made electronics and electric vehicles, or Chinese ones?

Trump has pledged to “bring Americans the lowest-cost energy and electricity on Earth” as well as expand artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency mining, which require data centers that consume vast amounts of electricity. The only proven way to lower electricity costs while simultaneously increasing electricity demand is to dramatically boost our supply of clean nuclear power. And Trump has pledged to approve the construction of nuclear plants powered by small innovative reactors.

That would dramatically increase U.S. demand for uranium. The United States is already the largest purchaser of Russian-enriched uranium, dependent on Moscow for nearly one-quarter of its supply. It is not in our strategic interest to allow Putin to seize control of the largest uranium reserves in Europe. The United States needs that Ukrainian uranium to lower energy costs for Americans and fuel AI and crypto innovation.

Trump has also set a priority of reducing America’s economic dependence on Communist China. Beijing is the largest source of more than half of the critical minerals the United States imports, including 72 percent of rare earth imports. China is trying to corner the global market on lithium, actively buying mines across the world, as well as mines for other critical minerals, such as cobalt and nickel. And demonstrating its growing power over the U.S. economy, Beijing recently tightened export controls on critical minerals such as aluminum and titanium, banned the export of gallium and severely restricted the export of graphite to the United States. Ukraine has all of these minerals in abundance.

Were Ukraine’s mineral wealth to fall into Russian hands, it would be a strategic and economic boon to China, which has established a “no limits” partnership with Russia. Meanwhile, the United States needs friendly, reliable sources of these critical minerals. If we help Ukraine secure and develop its natural resources, we can also deal a strategic blow to Beijing and Moscow, while bringing enormous financial benefit back to the American people.

But to do so, Ukraine needs Trump’s help to secure a just and lasting peace.

After Russia’s full-scale invasion, metallurgical production in Ukraine fell by an estimated 80 percent — from 20 million tons in 2021 to just 2.5 million by the middle of 2023. It is hard to mine for minerals while missiles are being fired at your critical infrastructure. It is impossible to develop offshore oil and natural gas in the waters Ukraine controls in the North Crimean Basin under the shadow of Russian forces within firing range.


Ukraine has some of the world’s largest reserves of minerals, such as lithium, titanium and uranium, which are deemed strategic for growing technologies.



American businesses can develop those resources for the benefit of the American and Ukrainian peoples — but only if the fighting ends on terms that give investors confidence the Russian assault won’t resume.

The reality is that Putin won’t willingly give up on his quest to conquer Ukraine and its mineral wealth. He will violate any international agreement Russia signs to achieve his objective. The only way to stop him is to make his objective impossible to achieve. Putin no doubt hopes to use any cessation of hostilities to pause, reconstitute his forces and resume his invasion in a few years’ time — just like he did after his 2014 invasion and annexation of Crimea.

So, Trump needs to do more than simply stop today’s war in Ukraine; he must create conditions that make a resumption of war impossible.

That will require creating defensible borders. During this year’s CNN presidential debate, Dana Bash asked Trump whether Putin’s demands that Russia “keeps the Ukrainian territory it has already claimed and Ukraine abandons its bid to join NATO” were acceptable to him. Trump responded, “No, they’re not acceptable.” He’s right. A good deal that truly secures Ukraine and its resources requires that Kyiv get back critical areas in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. It will also need security guarantees backed up with Western military might — whether through NATO membership for Ukraine, serious bilateral security commitments or a demilitarized zone enforced by an international peacekeeping force made up of European, not American, troops. (Poland will soon have the third-largest military in NATO and could lead a European peacekeeping operation.)

But another key to a lasting peace is a well-armed Ukraine, so that Kyiv possesses a military powerful enough to deter Russia. The United States will need to arm Ukraine regardless of what happens at the negotiating table — either to stop Russia from resuming the war once Trump has left office or to force Putin to the negotiating table if he refuses to agree to peace. So we must find mechanisms to increase the flow of U.S. weapons to Kyiv that do not require U.S. taxpayers to bear the cost. One way to do so? Loans backed by Ukraine’s mineral and fossil fuel resources as collateral.

By creating confidence that attracts private investment, a Trump-brokered peace accord will help the United States and Ukraine jointly develop Ukraine’s mineral and hydrocarbon resources, allowing it to provide for its own defense, just as Poland and the Baltic states do today.

A stable, sovereign and prosperous Ukraine will be an essential partner for America in extracting this natural resource wealth. An unstable Ukraine under constant threat from Russia will lead to a resumption of war when Trump leaves office, and ultimately allow Putin to seize that wealth for Russia and China’s benefit.

Who will benefit from Ukraine’s oil, gas and mineral wealth? The choice belongs to Trump.
« Last Edit: December 22, 2024, 02:46:22 AM by Administrator »