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#2776 | |
Silent Hunter
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Posthumously, Navalny creates biggest political rally in Russia in years. The Kremlin initially did not want to release the body of opposition politician Navalny, much less a public funeral. Yet Navalny's funeral Friday became Russia's largest political event in years, with an unexpectedly large number of Russians coming to pay their last respects to him. Hours in advance, they lined up for the funeral of the man who has been the greatest threat to President Putin's omnipotence for the past decade. The large turnout underscores the fact that there is still much opposition to Putin. Several thousand visitors, of course, are not even that many people, given the sheer size of Russia. But we are no longer living in 2012 or even 2022, when demonstrating was easier than now. Russians in recent years have been arrested and even jailed for much smaller offences than shouting slogans.
It is thanks to Navalny's mother Lyudmila that there was any public ceremony at all. She complained of being pressured in recent weeks to accept a secret ceremony, for intimates only, or an anonymous burial in a mass grave in the penal colony. She then made that intimidation public, the authorities must have thought afterwards: we are not going to take this risk. Paying a last salute to a dead person is extremely important according to Christian morality in Russia. If the authorities had refused to do so, they would probably have suffered more trouble than they would have on Friday. Once the authorities had given in to Navalny's mother's demand to release his body, they also had to accept that it would become a demonstration of sorts. What helped Navalny's supporters in this regard is that the funeral was also a Christian ceremony. It looks very bad if you start cracking down on that. I am convinced that the police were instructed to restrain themselves. As far as we know, no one was arrested around Navalny's funeral in Moscow. Elsewhere in Russia, however, people were arrested, reports human rights organization OVD-Info. These would have been mostly people who wanted to lay flowers at monuments to the victims of Soviet repression. The fact that there was no police intervention around the funeral, however, does not mean that participants need not worry about the consequences. It is quite conceivable that participants could be tracked down through video footage and still be searched at home by the police. Nor does the large turnout mean that serious opposition to Putin is still possible, at this point. They have no hope of achieving anything in the upcoming presidential election, and not much says about the opposition as an organized movement. After all, there is none. But today's turnout does say something about the covert mood in Russia. It's good to be reminded again that you shouldn't lump all Russians together, they are not either fully supportive of Putin and his war or opposed to it. According to many polls, Russians are not very much in favour of the war. Nor are they against it, but they look away. A small group of Russians is openly against the war, but even they look away from making that known in the streets. That mood, that the war must end, it does increase. Many people have taken advantage of this ceremony to make this known indirectly. Blush of flowers on Navalny grave grows, Russian opposition leader also remembered elsewhere. Flowers continue to be laid at Aleksey Navalny's grave in Moscow this morning. This morning, his mother returned under police escort to the Borisov cemetery in the southeastern part of the capital to mourn her son. She was accompanied by Navalny's mother-in-law. Together they set bowls of food at the grave and watched as people laid flowers. Flowers were also laid elsewhere in Russia and other countries in memory of the opposition leader who died in a penal camp two weeks ago. At least 91 people were arrested in Russia yesterday who wanted to honour Navalny, according to human rights organization OVD-Info.
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#2777 |
Soaring
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The door-kicking will take place when the cameras of the world have turned elsewhere again. Every face has been recorded by the FSB, you can bet money on that. They did not just made statements about Navalny, but also against the war, which is against the law and under punishment in fascist Russia.
Nobody will be forgotten. Nobody will be forgiven.
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#2778 | |||
Silent Hunter
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Russia sets the pace in Ukraine for now: 'War is going to last a long time' While the Ukrainian army struggles with shortages of ammunition and men, Russia continues to attack. Analysts expect the Russian military to continue to slowly advance the front line in the coming months. It has the resources and military to sustain this pressure, albeit at a high price, for now. Russian President Putin boasted in his annual speech to parliament this week that his country is stronger than ever, both economically and militarily. "It's not the polished army he thought he would have at the 2022 invasion," said Russia expert Mark Galeotti. "But we have to recognize that Russia probably has an advantage in Ukraine this year."Despite heavy sanctions, Russia's production of missiles and artillery ammunition has surged, writes British think tank RUSI, to which Galeotti is affiliated. The recruitment of new military personnel allows the invasion force to continue to attack in small groups. "This year is Putin's chance," says Galeotti, "before the West can get its ammunition production in order by 2025. Only, I don't think anyone has the capacity for a major offensive for now." Ukraine's main objectives for now are to strengthen, inflict losses on Russian forces, and hold out until more equipment and ammunition arrives from the West. The country likes to point to its successes in the Black Sea. It is waiting for another opportunity for a counterattack. This time with F-16s from European countries like the Netherlands. But it will be a big challenge from the Ukrainian perspective, says analyst Riley Bailey. He contributes daily updates on developments on the front lines for the U.S. think tank Institute for the Study of War. "Ukraine has very difficult decisions to make in the coming months. Including how many people and weapons it deploys to frustrate the Russian advance, which is crucial." Constantly defending costs a lot of effort and also comes at the expense of future strike power, Bailey explains. There is also the mobilization issue in Ukraine. The government is applying more force to deal with the urgent shortage of military personnel. Russia currently reportedly has some 470,000 military personnel in occupied Ukrainian territory. That is more than 100,000 more than a year ago, according to think tank RUSI. Russia's army leadership has learned from the many mistakes in the first phase of the war. To reduce losses, attack groups are now much smaller and tanks are mostly kept behind. Depleted units are relieved more quickly, experts explain. This allows the Russian army to keep pressing at the front. On the other hand, there is scepticism, because can Russia sustain the current pace in the long term? There are also indications that the war industry will find it difficult to scale up further, for example, due to labour shortages. In any case, the course of a war is difficult to predict because there are so many variables. "Currently, we see the Russians gradually gaining ground," says analyst Bailey. "They are not major breakthroughs, but they have the initiative. The Russian military determines where to fight and the pace." According to him and other analysts, Russia still loses relatively large numbers of soldiers in these attacks, but hard figures are not available. It is estimated that for every Ukrainian soldier killed, two to three Russians were killed, Galeotti said. But Russia's population is more than three times that of Ukraine, he adds. Bailey and Galeotti agree that the battle is likely to go on for a long time. For Ukraine, everything depends on Western allies: without their support, winning is seen as impossible. "Even if the equipment comes in, there is no automatic counteroffensive," Bailey says. "And probably no counteroffensive will completely end the Russian campaign." https://nos.nl/collectie/13965/artik...nog-lang-duren Ukraine must make do with wooden-rope equipment from the West Is Western aid to Kyiv tailored to the war that is actually being fought? Experts see Russia reclaiming the initiative and Ukraine not getting what it needs. "Give us wings to protect freedom," insisted the Ukrainian pilot's helmet that President Volodymyr Zelensky presented as a gift to British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in London last year. The long discussions on providing modern tanks were just over, although the first Leopard had yet to arrive in Ukraine. But tank formations can hardly do without air superiority, and now Zelensky came begging the West to expedite delivery of fighter jets as well. Ukrainian pilots are now training in Romania with the F-16s that the Netherlands and Denmark finally pledged, but they won't be active over Ukraine until the summer, it seems. Meanwhile, the war is going sharply differently than the West hoped as recently as last year. Russian tank trenches and minefields proved an insurmountable obstacle for Ukraine, which is now on the defensive itself. From a "war of movement," the battle has now become more of a "war of position" with firmer positions. In retrospect, smart drones and electronic warfare and demining equipment might have been of more value to Kyiv than tanks.And it was also foreseeable, conclude three American experts in a study for the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), a British defense think tank. Weathering the storm; Western security aid on the defensive, it is tellingly called. "At the heart of the problem is the tendency for Western aid to reflect the war Western policymakers and planners would like to fight, rather than the war Ukrainian forces are fighting," the study says. The most glaring example of wishful thinking was the long-awaited Ukrainian summer offensive, for which thousands of Ukrainian soldiers had been trained in England and Bavaria with Western equipment and according to NATO methods, with the West "pressuring Kyiv to get results with the tens of billions in military aid." Showing someone off with a new tank in Bavaria's Grafenwöhr - the largest US Army training ground in Europe - is one thing. "But a well-oiled operation of a large formation of tanks and armored infantry in a war situation, the [Western] combined arms model in which the Ukrainians underwent a crash course, is something else again," said Brigadier General Han Bouwmeester, a former staff officer at NATO and now a professor of military-operational science at the Netherlands Defense Academy. American generals would have preferred that Ukraine begin its offensive as early as spring and concentrate it on one point rather than attack across a broad front later, a reconstruction by The Washington Post revealed late last year. The question is whether it would have made a difference, RUSI researchers believe. The Russians, while worse trained and armed, were "well entrenched." Unlike Ukraine, Russia had plenty of attack aircraft and helicopters. And, decisively, so many observation drones that Ukraine could never prepare an attack undetected. As a result, the researchers write, "the offensive was doomed to failure from the start." Two years after the beginning of Russia's "special military operation," Ukraine is struggling with severe ammunition shortages and war fatigue, and must watch with allies as the Russians have taken the initiative this winter. After the recent conquest of Avdiivka, Putin sees no reason to give his troops a rest; he seems intent on taking maximum advantage of Ukraine's weakened position due to faltering Western arms supplies. Kyiv's European allies would like to supply, but do not (yet) have the ammunition; the U.S. does, but Republicans there are obstructive. But what Ukraine receives in military support is thus not always what it needs, RUSI experts conclude after talking to hundreds of military planners and commanders in Ukraine and Kyiv's allies. A Ukrainian colonel cited as an example late last year that his troops can do significantly more damage to Russian tanks with a hundred kamikaze drones at two thousand dollars each than with one Javelin anti-tank missile - which is a hundred times more expensive than one such drone. The Javelins were a wonder weapon at the beginning of the war, but Russian tanks now operate more circumspectly; attack drones have radically changed the battlefield. On the front lines, Ukrainian soldiers feel daily the difference between their needs and what they are given. There, they are simply concerned with sufficient shells for their howitzers and mortars. Not about cruise missiles and sophisticated anti-aircraft systems that protect Ukrainian cities - relatively stunningly effective. Ukrainian front units even rely on volunteers or non-governmental organizations. In part through social media, these raise money to buy SUVs that can handle Ukrainian mud, energy bars, combat clothing, medicines, bandages, night vision goggles, drones or candles for the trenches. "We are doing what NATO should be doing," Rima Ziuraitiene, director of the NGO Blue/Yellow Ukraine told platform War on the Rocks last year. One NGO, Come Back Alive, even bought mortar shells. From a NATO point of view, the difference between what Ukraine is getting and what it needs is easily explained, says Brigadier General Bouwmeester. "The Americans designed the Air-Land Battle concept in the Cold War, where all their weapons systems were coordinated to achieve maximum efficiency against the huge conventional force they saw behind the Iron Curtain. That requires a technologically advanced armed force. In the West, you have that." But in Ukraine, far from it. True, it has organized its armed forces increasingly Western since independence, but the equipment is still largely Soviet-made. Since the 2014 invasion of Crimea, Ukraine has been switching gears at an accelerated pace. But since the Feb. 24, 2022 invasion, it has been denied precisely weapons that are crucial for "NATO-style" operations. Like long-range missiles that can hit the Russian war machine far behind the lines, or fighter jets that can shoot down Russian bombers. Moreover, the Western arsenal that Kyiv does have at its disposal is of an unreal colorful composition. According to Bouwmeester, it involves as many as six hundred different systems, from infantry fighting vehicles, anti-aircraft, tanks, guns, artillery, mortars, each with its own ammunition and from different countries. "Everything works differently and each system has its own logistics chain," says Bouwmeester. "Even the Leopard tank; almost every country has its own version." Amid mounting ammunition shortages, Ukrainian frontline soldiers and maintenance technicians just have to deal with it. On top of that, the RUSI experts say with a sense of understatement, many Western weapons are not top-of-the-line. Like the 31 U.S. Abrams tanks. Ukraine received an older and "stripped down" version, to prevent modern technology from falling into Russian hands. The Bradley infantry fighting vehicles were far from ready to start after arrival. And of the howitzers and machine guns delivered, many should have been rejected before export. Bouwmeester: "And then spare parts were often lacking as well. "Repairing battlefield damage then becomes woodwork." Taken together, it underscores what Zelensky has been saying for some time: the West provides enough to keep Ukraine from losing, but too little to let it win. Or as Gabrielius Landsbergis, the Lithuanian foreign minister, said on X this week, "We tell how far we want to go ourselves, but do not draw a red line for Russia. We publicly tie our hands but leave Putin free to destroy, pillage and rape. [...] Time to change course." Still, there was hope that even without air superiority, Ukraine would break through Russian lines in at least one place. "They tried," Bouwmeester says. "But they figured out pretty quickly that with that mishmash of resources they couldn't fight the type of battle the Americans had wanted." Putin's army is known as a cumbersome machine that relies on mass - firepower and physical exhaustion of the opponent, regardless of its own losses. But the war in Ukraine has shown that the Russians do adapt to changing circumstances. For example, they quickly copied the smart Ukrainian drones that collect intelligence and drop explosives. The Russians now probably produce more drones than Ukraine. This also includes 'land drones' that transport weapons and ammunition and can shoot. Russia is also making great strides in electronic warfare, a traditional specialty. In this way, it can better disrupt Ukrainian communications and – as it turned out last year – divert 'smart' GPS-guided artillery shells away from their target. It also caused numerous Ukrainian drones to crash out of control in recent months by blocking communications with the operator. According to a previous RUSI study, the Russians could sometimes take control of Ukrainian drones. In January this year, Ukrainian forces discovered another Russian invention: a brand new command and control system that uses AI to detect and jam enemy radars and radio signals on its own, potentially from hundreds of kilometers away. That was destroyed, by the way. The West must also adapt to the changing force field, writes RUSI. In part, this comes down to what Russia did before: digging in behind minefields. And arm yourself against drones. As the then commander of the Ukrainian armed forces, General Valery Zaluzhny, argued last year in The Economist: innovation in drones and improvement of electronic warfare are a prerequisite for the West to force a breakthrough. The American experts predict that Ukraine will have to deploy “about ten thousand drones every week.” These are drones that - thanks to AI - can operate autonomously, that are invulnerable to electronic jammers, and that have sufficient firepower to destroy enemy lines - although drones of the latter type probably do not yet exist. Bouwmeester thinks that Ukraine's allies will not deliver such innovations - given the sensitivity of the technology and the conservative attitude so far. “The know-how in the field of AI is still in its infancy. The Americans are already afraid that a tank will fall into Russian hands, after which it will be completely dismantled. That is one of the reasons that Ukraine gets the basic configuration of everything, not with the full on-board computers and communication systems. You will also see this with AI and new drones.” Ukraine will mainly rely on its own proven innovative capacity and efficiency, which, according to British defense specialist Phillips O'Brien, is three times higher than that of the Russians. Ukraine manages to have a major impact with limited resources; the large number of Russian naval vessels sunk in the Black Sea testifies to this. As does the recent spike in the number of crashed Russian fighters and other aircraft, which – although a conclusive explanation is still lacking – cannot be solely the result of friendly fire, as Russian military bloggers insist. What the West can now mainly help Ukraine with, according to the RUSI researchers, is a rapid adjustment of the "dated Western way of training" according to the unfeasible combined arms method in which all parts must work together seamlessly. "This means that Western trainers and advisors instruction programs must be continuously updated in view of the actual war situation in which Ukrainian soldiers find themselves. [...] Current Western efforts to train the Ukrainian armed forces are inadequate, and come too late,” the experts said.https://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2024/03/02...esten-a4191838
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#2779 | |
Chief of the Boat
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Zelensky appeals to West over deadly Russian drone attack on Odesa
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#2780 |
CINC Pacific Fleet
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#2781 |
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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-68457087
The story develops to become a Super-GAU for Germany, a super-worst-case-of-accident. The chief of the German Luftwaffe was set to become a very-high-ranking NATO military chief next year. I think that goal has been fumed up in a pipe now. Just days ago Babble-Olaf upset Paris and London about hinting in a public speech at their military personnel participating in the Ukrainian war by implying they have troops in the country that codes the target data into their missiles. Now this. And the German reputation of being security-wise very unreliable already existed and was a strong suspicion before, a request by Germany to become member of the Five-Eyes-Club has been rejected by all five member states some years ago. Lets face it, the rputaiton of the German intel services is - lousy, to put it mildy. The socialists have also tried to turn them into an exclusive anti-right policing force. And laws bind both their hands on their backs, ruling that wire tappoing and overhearing other country's services and officials shall not be done, never. If you wodner why all anti-terror operaitons inside Germany are beign always triggered by hitns form forign services, emnver by German detective work - now you know why. The german services have been crippled to impotence. The conversation also revealed that between 100 and 200 Taurus could be delivered, and that Scholz' lie about that they would require German specialists being sent to ukraine, was right that: another of his many lies. Finally the Germans also said that a destruction of the Kerch bridge would require more Taurus missiles than is usually assumed in media and public debate. The timing fo the Russians to reveal this intel coup points at the close Russian elections, is meant to mobilise voters for Putin by showing Russians that their old enemy, the evil Germans, is back. It also seems to show that the Russians really fear the Taurus and want to prevent its delivery at all cost - by intimidating fearsome Scholz once again, who easily fell for Russian intimidation from beginning on of this war. The German officers in that conversation confirmed assessments that Taurus nevertheless would and could not be a war-deciding weapon. There was speculation that maybe a Western intel service has leaked this info, to make Germany comply with demands to deliver Taurus by showing that Scholz had told lies about the need to send German troops along with it. And this on a day when a few media printed a suspicion that the local residents of the island of Rügen in the Baltic Sea have, about the Green economy destruction minister Habeck enforcing the building of an LNG terminal there despite its capacity apparently not being needed: people think and claim he does so because even the Greens have realised that their high-flying energy transformation plans have collapsed and cannot be realissed the way they planned it - and they therefore want to accept the import of Russian gas again in the future, after the war "ended". I dont say this is true, I can imagine it is and dont rule it out, but dont know whether it is true. But it illustrates to what degree the climate and public opinion has turned against the government over here. This is a new experience for the Greens: to have strong wind frontally into the face and rightout hate being thrown at them from all camps of the population. Well. My heart is bleeding.
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#2782 | |
Silent Hunter
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#2783 | |
Silent Hunter
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#2784 | |
Chief of the Boat
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Ukraine’s troops are rationing ammunition. Yet House Republicans plan to take weeks to mull more aid
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#2785 | |
Chief of the Boat
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Everything you need to know about Russia’s 2024 presidential election
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#2786 |
CINC Pacific Fleet
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Here is what I think is going to happen after Putin win the election.
He will declare war on Ukraine and thereby open up for massive mobilization. Markus
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#2787 |
Soaring
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+1 .
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#2788 |
Soaring
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https://www-focus-de.translate.goog/...en&_x_tr_hl=de
That German spies are seen as blasée and arrogant by other Western intel agencies, I knew. That he claims the others see the Germans as potentially potent and would like to increase cooperation with them, is surprising to me. That he says Five Eyes would love to have the Germans aboard but that the Germans were the ones who refused membership, is by 180° a reverse narration than the one I recall: Germany appealed for membership and all members of Five Eyes rejected the Germans due to their notorious inherent security problems. What is not being reflected is that in recent years more and more laws have forbidden German intel agencies more and more activities that are vital for collecting any useful intel at all, or conducting counter espionage. It has mostly been banned and verboten, due to overboarding political correctness. The current socialist interior minster als wants to use her term to turn the whole apparatus into an exclusive suppressive powertool to gag the political conservative and right, while not caring for left-winged political violence and Islamic violence. Even investigating clan crime is being seen as practiced racism - even speaking of clan crime is called racism. I think the ex-CIA man has a very strange view of the German services, and he sees them as much better than they are. They are politically gagged. And practically all terror plots that got spoiuled in the past twnety years in germany have been spiled due to forejg servioces putting the Ger,mans on track. Without this foreign help, we would have seen a wave of successfully carried out terror strikes the German, if left to themselves, would not have been able to learn about while they had still time. Thank you, foreign services! We owe you more than just one beer. What the Germans were good in, is to have contacts to all sides in the Middle East, this allowing them to initiate opening contacts between varipous parties and sides. For this ability they were - probbaly correctly - respected in the 80s and 90s. I have no idea however if this still is the case. As I see it form media reports iof the past 20 years, the German services in general have suffered tremendously in competence and ability. But that is no qualified judgement, just my personal subjective and media-based opinion. Secrecy is their business, so what can we know...
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#2789 |
CINC Pacific Fleet
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My little lovely female cat |
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#2790 | |
Chief of the Boat
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Russia to cut oil output, exports by additional 471,000 bpd in Q2
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