War Invasion of Ukraine News Megathread - Thread is only for articles and discussion of articles, general discussion thread is still in Happenings.

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President Joe Biden on Tuesday said that the United States will impose sanctions “far beyond” the ones that the United States imposed in 2014 following the annexation of the Crimean peninsula.

“This is the beginning of a Russian invasion of Ukraine,” Biden said in a White House speech, signaling a shift in his administration’s position. “We will continue to escalate sanctions if Russia escalates,” he added.

Russian elites and their family members will also soon face sanctions, Biden said, adding that “Russia will pay an even steeper price” if Moscow decides to push forward into Ukraine. Two Russian banks and Russian sovereign debt will also be sanctioned, he said.

Also in his speech, Biden said he would send more U.S. troops to the Baltic states as a defensive measure to strengthen NATO’s position in the area.

Russia shares a border with Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.

A day earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops to go into the separatist Donetsk and Lugansk regions in eastern Ukraine after a lengthy speech in which he recognized the two regions’ independence.

Western powers decried the move and began to slap sanctions on certain Russian individuals, while Germany announced it would halt plans to go ahead with the Russia-to-Germany Nord Stream 2 pipeline.

At home, Biden is facing bipartisan pressure to take more extensive actions against Russia following Putin’s decision. However, a recent poll showed that a majority of Americans believe that sending troops to Ukraine is a “bad idea,” and a slim minority believes it’s a good one.

All 27 European Union countries unanimously agreed on an initial list of sanctions targeting Russian authorities, said French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, and EU foreign affairs head Josep Borell claimed the package “will hurt Russia … a lot.”

Earlier Tuesday, Borell asserted that Russian troops have already entered the Donbas region, which comprises Donetsk and Lugansk, which are under the control of pro-Russia groups since 2014.

And on Tuesday, the Russian Parliament approved a Putin-back plan to use military force outside of Russia’s borders as Putin further said that Russia confirmed it would recognize the expanded borders of Lugansk and Donetsk.

“We recognized the states,” the Russian president said. “That means we recognized all of their fundamental documents, including the constitution, where it is written that their [borders] are the territories at the time the two regions were part of Ukraine.”

Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Putin said that Ukraine is “not interested in peaceful solutions” and that “every day, they are amassing troops in the Donbas.”

Meanwhile, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky on Tuesday morning again downplayed the prospect of a Russian invasion and proclaimed: “There will be no war.”

“There will not be an all-out war against Ukraine, and there will not be a broad escalation from Russia. If there is, then we will put Ukraine on a war footing,” he said in a televised address.

The White House began to signal that they would shift their own position on whether it’s the start of an invasion.

“We think this is, yes, the beginning of an invasion, Russia’s latest invasion into Ukraine,” said Jon Finer, the White House deputy national security adviser in public remarks. “An invasion is an invasion and that is what is underway.”

For weeks, Western governments have been claiming Moscow would invade its neighbor after Russia gathered some 150,000 troops along the countries’ borders. They alleged that the Kremlin would attempt to come up with a pretext to attack, while some officials on Monday said Putin’s speech recognizing the two regions was just that.

But Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters Tuesday that Russia’s “latest invasion” of Ukraine is threatening stability in the region, but he asserted that Putin can “still avoid a full blown, tragic war of choice.”

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Poland, right next to Ukraine and realizing this feels awfully familiar:


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Vladimir Putin says violence 'will get worse' and plans to take over all of Ukraine​

The Russian President made his comments to Emmanuel Macron, his French counterpart, during a phone call on Thursday

Russia’s attack on Ukraine is going ‘according to plan’ and the violence will ‘get worse’ , Vladimir Putin warned today.

The Russian President made the alarming comments to Emmanuel Macron, his French counterpart, during a phone call on Thursday afternoon.

After hanging up the phone at the end of the exchange, which lasted for an hour and a half, Mr Macron said "the worst is yet to come".

An Elysee Palace spokesman explained: ‘President Putin expressed his very great determination to continue the offensive, the aim of which is to take control of the whole country.

"President Putin said the Russian Army operation was developing according to the plan’ and that it would ‘get worse if the Ukrainians do not accept surrender terms’."

The ominous sentiment is a particularly unwelcome one as it comes as the Russian and Ukrainian sit down together for a second time to try and reach a ceasefire agreement.

There appears to be significant distance between the two side's demands.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has said that while his country was ready for talks to resume, Russia's demands hadn't changed and that he wouldn't accept any ultimatums.

Russian officials said Moscow's demands include Ukraine's recognition of Russia's hold on Crimea, independence for the separatist-controlled areas of Donetsk and Luhansk, as well as "de-militarisation" and "de-nazification".

Yesterday Mr Macron denounced ‘the lies’ spread by the Russian government to justify a war in Ukraine, while saying he would continue to lobby Mr Putin for a ceasefire.

While also speaking to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, Mr Macron blamed the hostilities on Mr Putin.

"It is alone, betraying his international commitments one by one, that President Putin chose this war," Mr Macron said in a nationwide TV address.

"This war is not a conflict between the West and Russia, as some would like us to believe.

"There is no NATO base in Ukraine. These are lies. Russia is not aggressed; it is the aggressor."

In turn, Mr Putin said his forces were conducting a ‘special military operation’ aimed at disarming Ukraine and capturing the ‘neo-Nazis’ running the country.

The news come as Russia's bombardment of Ukraine intensifies, with residential districts reduced to rubble even as defiant Ukrainian President Zelensky insists the capital will not fall.

Kremlin forces have resorted to heavy bombing of Kyiv and Kharkiv causing thousands of civilian casualties, after failed attempts to take both cities with ground forces.

Today 22 people were killed when a Russian airstrike hit an apartment block in Chernihiv.

Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia would pay for the damage caused:

"We will restore every house, every street, every city and we say to Russia: learn the word of reparations and contributions. You will reimburse us for everything you did against our state, against every Ukrainian in full."

Kherson, in the south of Ukraine, became the first major city to be captured by the Russians since the invasion began.

Residents have reported that there are Russians all over the city and that a curfew is now in place.


They have been told not to turn their lights on in the evening amid a shortage of food and medicine.

"The bigger shops are closed or already robbed," a man who asked to be referred to as Jimmy said.

"What's open is smaller shops, smaller groceries."

 

Vladimir Putin says violence 'will get worse' and plans to take over all of Ukraine​

The Russian President made his comments to Emmanuel Macron, his French counterpart, during a phone call on Thursday

Russia’s attack on Ukraine is going ‘according to plan’ and the violence will ‘get worse’ , Vladimir Putin warned today.

The Russian President made the alarming comments to Emmanuel Macron, his French counterpart, during a phone call on Thursday afternoon.

After hanging up the phone at the end of the exchange, which lasted for an hour and a half, Mr Macron said "the worst is yet to come".

An Elysee Palace spokesman explained: ‘President Putin expressed his very great determination to continue the offensive, the aim of which is to take control of the whole country.

"President Putin said the Russian Army operation was developing according to the plan’ and that it would ‘get worse if the Ukrainians do not accept surrender terms’."

The ominous sentiment is a particularly unwelcome one as it comes as the Russian and Ukrainian sit down together for a second time to try and reach a ceasefire agreement.

There appears to be significant distance between the two side's demands.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has said that while his country was ready for talks to resume, Russia's demands hadn't changed and that he wouldn't accept any ultimatums.

Russian officials said Moscow's demands include Ukraine's recognition of Russia's hold on Crimea, independence for the separatist-controlled areas of Donetsk and Luhansk, as well as "de-militarisation" and "de-nazification".

Yesterday Mr Macron denounced ‘the lies’ spread by the Russian government to justify a war in Ukraine, while saying he would continue to lobby Mr Putin for a ceasefire.

While also speaking to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, Mr Macron blamed the hostilities on Mr Putin.

"It is alone, betraying his international commitments one by one, that President Putin chose this war," Mr Macron said in a nationwide TV address.

"This war is not a conflict between the West and Russia, as some would like us to believe.

"There is no NATO base in Ukraine. These are lies. Russia is not aggressed; it is the aggressor."

In turn, Mr Putin said his forces were conducting a ‘special military operation’ aimed at disarming Ukraine and capturing the ‘neo-Nazis’ running the country.

The news come as Russia's bombardment of Ukraine intensifies, with residential districts reduced to rubble even as defiant Ukrainian President Zelensky insists the capital will not fall.

Kremlin forces have resorted to heavy bombing of Kyiv and Kharkiv causing thousands of civilian casualties, after failed attempts to take both cities with ground forces.

Today 22 people were killed when a Russian airstrike hit an apartment block in Chernihiv.

Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia would pay for the damage caused:

"We will restore every house, every street, every city and we say to Russia: learn the word of reparations and contributions. You will reimburse us for everything you did against our state, against every Ukrainian in full."
Again, this will just speed up Russia's inevitable demise.

The harder they go on the Ukrainians, the more the West piles on the sanctions, leaving Russia a desolate backwater reliant on China for everything. Making China their boss, and Russia into China's bitch.

If they use extreme force to take over Ukraine, then they will end up sharing a border with Poland, which means the likelihood of WW3 and the nukes flying on both sides becomes even more likely. Given the fact that Putin is delusional, this can all end with the world reduced to a radioactive glass ball within weeks.
 

Vladimir Putin says violence 'will get worse' and plans to take over all of Ukraine​

The Russian President made his comments to Emmanuel Macron, his French counterpart, during a phone call on Thursday

Russia’s attack on Ukraine is going ‘according to plan’ and the violence will ‘get worse’ , Vladimir Putin warned today.

The Russian President made the alarming comments to Emmanuel Macron, his French counterpart, during a phone call on Thursday afternoon.

After hanging up the phone at the end of the exchange, which lasted for an hour and a half, Mr Macron said "the worst is yet to come".

An Elysee Palace spokesman explained: ‘President Putin expressed his very great determination to continue the offensive, the aim of which is to take control of the whole country.

"President Putin said the Russian Army operation was developing according to the plan’ and that it would ‘get worse if the Ukrainians do not accept surrender terms’."

The ominous sentiment is a particularly unwelcome one as it comes as the Russian and Ukrainian sit down together for a second time to try and reach a ceasefire agreement.

There appears to be significant distance between the two side's demands.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has said that while his country was ready for talks to resume, Russia's demands hadn't changed and that he wouldn't accept any ultimatums.

Russian officials said Moscow's demands include Ukraine's recognition of Russia's hold on Crimea, independence for the separatist-controlled areas of Donetsk and Luhansk, as well as "de-militarisation" and "de-nazification".

Yesterday Mr Macron denounced ‘the lies’ spread by the Russian government to justify a war in Ukraine, while saying he would continue to lobby Mr Putin for a ceasefire.

While also speaking to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, Mr Macron blamed the hostilities on Mr Putin.

"It is alone, betraying his international commitments one by one, that President Putin chose this war," Mr Macron said in a nationwide TV address.

"This war is not a conflict between the West and Russia, as some would like us to believe.

"There is no NATO base in Ukraine. These are lies. Russia is not aggressed; it is the aggressor."

In turn, Mr Putin said his forces were conducting a ‘special military operation’ aimed at disarming Ukraine and capturing the ‘neo-Nazis’ running the country.

The news come as Russia's bombardment of Ukraine intensifies, with residential districts reduced to rubble even as defiant Ukrainian President Zelensky insists the capital will not fall.

Kremlin forces have resorted to heavy bombing of Kyiv and Kharkiv causing thousands of civilian casualties, after failed attempts to take both cities with ground forces.

Today 22 people were killed when a Russian airstrike hit an apartment block in Chernihiv.

Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia would pay for the damage caused:

"We will restore every house, every street, every city and we say to Russia: learn the word of reparations and contributions. You will reimburse us for everything you did against our state, against every Ukrainian in full."

Kherson, in the south of Ukraine, became the first major city to be captured by the Russians since the invasion began.

Residents have reported that there are Russians all over the city and that a curfew is now in place.


They have been told not to turn their lights on in the evening amid a shortage of food and medicine.

"The bigger shops are closed or already robbed," a man who asked to be referred to as Jimmy said.

"What's open is smaller shops, smaller groceries."

An important lesson to all: never surround yourself with yes-men. It warps your perspective and decision making abilities.
 
For me I want this conflict to end. Without American forces involved. That doesn't mean I want Russia to win of course. I want Ukraine to somehow pull a victory.
That and for Putin to leave office. Who knows; if he fucks this up enough, it may end with him being dragged out of the Kremlin and put before a tribunal.
 
Anyone who knew anything about Russia's military was predicting this from the start. The reality is that the actual personel are mostly conscripts, with a small cadre of professional special forces, and they have no functional NCOs. All of this together explains everything about Russian military doctrine and performance. When you see russians being brutally competent, it's their special forces in action. When you see them falling apart and bartering diesel for vodka, it's the conscripts. The lack of NCOs means there is no way to instil unit discipline and loyalty, nor is there a mediating interface between the officer corps and the ranks. Without that, overall discipline is poor, meaning maintenance isn't performed, and the result is things like this. The Russians traditionally made up for these shortcomings with sheer weight of numbers and brutal punishments for disobeying orders, but their armed forces are tiny now, in comparison to the glory days of the soviet union, and whatever political officers still exist have little power to enact punitive discipline.

Recall that the Russians could only maintain a couple of days of war-time carrier operations in Syria, before they had to send the Admiral Kuznetsov back to port for repairs. On paper they're a peer of the US, but that appearance is mostly an illusion.
And you know what's worse? We are talking about Russia here, where their military has some actual experiences in wars before and after the fall of Soviet. Now what about China? We might be seeing the truth that America might be the only country with actual military power in size, firepower, and experience
This is what happens when you let corruption get so out of hand, it goes to the military, too. Their lack of maintenance is probably due to embezzlement of funds that were meant to go to the military. And the fact that their forces are poorly trained outside of their spec-ops units goes to show that 99% of Russia's military is hot gas and little else, composed mostly of peasant recruits that can easily get steamrolled by an actual military with real training and discipline. Their numbers are used to scare foreigners into thinking that the country's military is hot shit, little else.

Dunno if anyone mentioned it, but China pulled a Sun Tzu on Putin. They're geopolitical allies - since Russia doesn't have many friends on the world stage, they're doing stuff like selling resources to China below market price to buy their friendship, and ignore their shenanigans in Siberia. China doesn't make friends, they're opportunistic cunts taking advantage of relationships.

Basically, I have no doubt that Putin ensured diplomatic support from China in his war on Ukraine. All they had to do is remain neutral and refuse to support any actions against Russia by international community.
In the end, Russia is bashing its head against Ukraine, depletes its military and exposes its weaknesses for everyone to see.
Most importantly, Russia gets economically severed from the West, while China keeps its position. If current trajectory continues, Russia's dependence on China will increase tremendously. It won't be a partnership, China will abuse the fuck out of Russia as they would have little in terms of alternatives. Like they've already been doing all this time.

Never interrupt your enemy "friend" when he is making a mistake. Well, it was Napoleon Bonaparte who said it, actually, not Sun Tzu.
I have little doubt that China has plans on Russia and are just waiting for the opportunity to strike, pull their own Crimea. Perhaps when Russia is at its weakest.
They're just waiting for the chance to seize Siberia from the Russians once the Russian economy collapses and takes the state with it. It's already mostly Chinese in fact, China is only waiting until they can make it Chinese in name, as well.

An important lesson to all: never surround yourself with yes-men. It warps your perspective and decision making abilities.
That's because a madman like Putin sees all criticism as treason. He got rid of anyone criticizing him, so now he's only left with ass-kissers and yes-men who hide all these unfortunate facts about his military from him. This really is turning into a Downfall Hitler parody; the great leader is surrounded by generals who know the army is fucked, but they don't say a word because it will piss off the big cheese, and they don't want to be put in front of a firing squad.

That and for Putin to leave office. Who knows; if he fucks this up enough, it may end with him being dragged out of the Kremlin and put before a tribunal.
That's the hope with these sanctions, that the soldiers and commoners of Russia will inevitably turn on their leader, drag him out, and either kick him out of office or decapitate him, Byzantine-style.
 
Historically, the Russkies are not above giving their own wounded a "merciful" bullet and a posthumous decoration. I've seen a few screenshots suggesting this is still happening, but like 99% of what we are seeing, it could be propagandist bullshit, so grain of salt.
Some of the captured russians are claiming it...

Yet, as you say, could be propaganda.
 
Some of the captured russians are claiming it...

Yet, as you say, could be propaganda.
I buy it. With all their economic shortcomings and all the shits their military got in this war, lack of proper medical care might be one of it. If you consider those stories about mobile crematoriums to be true as well, not to mention the fact that many Russian soldiers were forced to participate in this invasion, it really shows that Russia doesn't care about its troops.
 
Pretending that Ukraine doesn't have the same problem with Oligarchs is retarded though. Whataboutism is stupid,, but Ukraine not only suffers from the same problems as Russia, but it also is facilitating neoliberal corruption too.

I'm just interested to see if this showcase of Russian incompetence would actually reduce the perception of Russia as a threat to the West. doubt it though.
What a laughably bad post. I'm convinced this is bait but this lacks so much self awareness it could only come from a poltard.
Pretending that Ukraine doesn't have the same problem with Oligarchs is retarded though.
I'm not pretending anything.

I never once mentioned Ukraine in my post so this is just bizarre and irrelevant. The point was that Russia was run by the richest 1% who are seen as the architects and beneficiaries of globalism / globo homo world order or whatever.

But if we are going to compare them, Ukraine is a democracy with corrupt officials. But anti corruption candidates like Zelenskyy can still beat old incumbents fairly in elections. Meanwhile Russians will have no chance voting out their president who has been insistent on tanking their economy for the past 8 years or so.

I wouldn't want to live in either but Ukraine is clearly the better choice if you hate big government and censorship. They have a chance of fixing their problems with voting rather than armed revolution
Whataboutism is stupid,, but Ukraine not only suffers from the same problems as Russia, but it also is facilitating neoliberal corruption too.
>Whataboutism bad
>Whatabout Ukraine?! It has corruption too!

How does this have any relevance to anything? Why do you think people are on Ukraine's side and not Russia's? Do you really think it is unfair that people are willing to look past Ukraine's faults to support it's government and people in their time of crisis, entirely created through Russian aggression?

Howabout you stop drawing a false equivalence between the two nations when one clearly needs aid and the other is clearly an aggressive dictatorship run by a madman.
I'm just interested to see if this showcase of Russian incompetence would actually reduce the perception of Russia as a threat to the West. doubt it though.
This is devastating for Russia and might be damaging to liberal institutions.. Russia just showed that it is willing to tank it's economy for the sake of Putin's imperial aspirations. Liberal International relations theory is based off the idea that people are rational and want what's best for their country and people, namely a good economy. If war = economic ruin then governments will seek cooperation which benefits everyone, though to different degrees of course.

Putin showed that none of this means anything if you just don't give a fuck. While the "haha Russian army weak" meme seems funny at first, the humiliation leads to retaliation against civilians. Putin is already punishing Ukraine by hitting their civilians with more missile attacks as he become more desperate for victory and upset with their resistance.

He will put his whole nation at risk for irrelevant farmland, since he believes his own propaganda that he is some great rebuilder of the Russian Empire. Baltic states better watch themselves. A competent Russian army creates more fear and would seek out increased NATO protection. A weak Russian showing in Ukraine just vindicates NATO / other institutions for their sanctions and aid, which they will claim was the key to stopping Russia.

But to get back on topic: Hang yourself.
(or just stop getting geopolitics takes from /pol/.)
 
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RUSSIA'S SECOND-LARGEST OIL PRODUCER CALLS FOR PEACE IN UKRAINE​



Russia’s second-largest oil producer Lukoil has called for the war in Ukraine to end, while the country’s other leading oil and gas companies have remained silent on the issue.

The board of directors at Lukoil “expresses herewith its deepest concerns about the tragic events in Ukraine," according to a company statement on March 3.

“Calling for the soonest termination of the armed conflict, we express our sincere empathy for all victims, who are affected by this tragedy,” the private company said in a statement on March 3. “We strongly support a lasting ceasefire and a settlement of problems through serious negotiations and diplomacy.”

Lukoil stopped short of attributing any blame to Russia, however, unlike many of the international oil companies working in the country that have commented on the crisis. Many of those companies have said they intend to withdraw from the Russian oil and gas industry.

Lukoil's shareholders include Russian billionaires Vagit Alekperov and Leonid Fedun.


FM7liLQXIAMXqOG.jpeg

 

RUSSIA'S SECOND-LARGEST OIL PRODUCER CALLS FOR PEACE IN UKRAINE​



Russia’s second-largest oil producer Lukoil has called for the war in Ukraine to end, while the country’s other leading oil and gas companies have remained silent on the issue.

The board of directors at Lukoil “expresses herewith its deepest concerns about the tragic events in Ukraine," according to a company statement on March 3.

“Calling for the soonest termination of the armed conflict, we express our sincere empathy for all victims, who are affected by this tragedy,” the private company said in a statement on March 3. “We strongly support a lasting ceasefire and a settlement of problems through serious negotiations and diplomacy.”

Lukoil stopped short of attributing any blame to Russia, however, unlike many of the international oil companies working in the country that have commented on the crisis. Many of those companies have said they intend to withdraw from the Russian oil and gas industry.

Lukoil's shareholders include Russian billionaires Vagit Alekperov and Leonid Fedun.

That's not the first time I've seen one of Russia's wealthy turn against the war. Although, this isn't as specific as the other time I saw it:

 
Historically, the Russkies are not above giving their own wounded a "merciful" bullet and a posthumous decoration. I've seen a few screenshots suggesting this is still happening, but like 99% of what we are seeing, it could be propagandist bullshit, so grain of salt.
I remember seeing it. Timestamped: https://youtu.be/nYyEA8xvOko?t=82
Captured soldier says that Russian forces aren't retrieving bodies and even kill wounded.

I buy it. With all their economic shortcomings and all the shits their military got in this war, lack of proper medical care might be one of it. If you consider those stories about mobile crematoriums to be true as well, not to mention the fact that many Russian soldiers were forced to participate in this invasion, it really shows that Russia doesn't care about its troops.
Well, considering they're carrying ammunition and weapons on medical trucks... https://youtu.be/mFbPyBiI4_o?t=663
 

Ukraine, Russia Agree on ‘Humanitarian Corridors’ for Civilians​

The second round of talks between Ukrainian and Russian delegations on Thursday ended without a ceasefire agreement, but the two sides agreed to set up humanitarian and evacuation corridors, according to a top Ukrainian official.

Ukraine’s presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said the two sides will together provide humanitarian corridors to evacuate civilians, deliver food, and deliver medicine to areas with heavy fighting across the country.

“The second round of negotiations is over,” Podolyak wrote on Twitter. “Unfortunately, the results Ukraine needs are not yet achieved. There is a solution only for the organization of humanitarian corridors.”

Previously, the Ukrainian delegation said they were seeking an immediate ceasefire, a temporary peace agreement, and the humanitarian or evacuation corridors for civilians. The first round of talks held in Belarus on Monday resulted in no progress.

The announcement comes as Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country’s military has offered safe corridors to civilians to allow them to leave. During a call with members of his Security Council, Putin alleged without evidence or details that Ukrainian nationalist groups are preventing civilians from leaving areas.


Putin again said the Russian military is fighting “neo-Nazis,” while asserting that some Ukrainians were “fooled by nationalist propaganda.”

During a news conference on Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the prospect of another round of talks between the two sides lacks promise. But he said that the two still need to negotiate because “any words are more important than shots.”

Hundreds of Russian and Ukrainian soldiers, as well as civilians, have died since Russia invaded the country starting in the early morning hours of Feb. 24. The move prompted widespread condemnation and a number of Western countries hit Russia’s financial sector with significant sanctions, with likely more on the way.

The United Nations reported more than 1 million refugees have fled the country in the past week, adding that the humanitarian crisis on the ground appears to be growing worse.

Washington has repeatedly warned that it is prepared to take further measures to hold Moscow to account over its invasion of Ukraine.

With its main assault force halted on a highway north of Kyiv, the capital, Russia has changed its strategy and has opted to bombard cities such as Kharkiv and others, according to the U.S. Department of Defense officials and independent military analysts.

The EU on Monday imposed sanctions on 26 prominent people over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, including oligarchs and businesspeople active in the oil, banking, and finance sectors.

Several people included on the EU’s list on Monday have not yet been designated by the United States, including Nikolay Tokarev, the chief executive of energy giant Transneft, Dmitry Chernyshenko, Russia’s deputy prime minister, and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

The United States and its allies last week announced they would launch a task force to identify and freeze the assets of sanctioned Russian companies and oligarchs.


No Commitment to Lift Russia Sanctions in Case of Peace Deal: IOC​

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has not made a commitment to lift sanctions on Russia in case of a ceasefire or peace deal following its invasion of Ukraine, IOC President Thomas Bach said on Wednesday.

The IOC said on Monday it was recommending that sports organizations do not allow the participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes and officials in international competitions.

The announcement led to a host of sports announcing such sanctions, including FIFA and UEFA which suspended Russian national teams and clubs from international football.

Asked if the IOC had made any commitment to lift the sanctions in the event of a ceasefire or peace deal, Bach said that, after long deliberation, the organization had opted against such an approach.

“We have left this open … it was very difficult either to set a deadline or to define an event, what could either lead to heavier sanctions or what could lead to a lifting of some of the sanctions,” Bach told reporters.


“This is why you find in general terms the formula that we are keeping to closely monitor the situation and will adapt depending on the further developments,” he added.

Bach said no sanctions had been taken directly against the Russian Olympic Committee because it was not responsible for the invasion.

“You can only hold those responsible who are responsible for a breach of the Olympic Charter. And not the Russian people, nor the athletes, nor the Russian Olympic Committee is responsible for this,” he said.

Bach said he had not spoken to Russian President Vladimir Putin since the invasion, that Putin has called “a special military operation,” adding that he had not been on speaking terms with him “for a number of years”.

Sports organizations have been cutting commercial ties with Russian companies, including UEFA cancelling its sponsorship deal with energy firm Gazprom.

The German said the IOC had no deals with firms from Russia, but that Russian and Belarusian territories had been removed from the European tender for Olympic broadcast rights which was launched last week.

Belarus has been a key staging area for the invasion of Ukraine.

Bach had made an appeal to “give peace a chance” at the closing ceremony of the Beijing Winter Olympics last month but said the events of the past week had left him horrified.

“Sometimes you wish you could do more and this was the wish I expressed in the in the closing ceremony… then you see that all the efforts were for nothing, that this inspiration was not was not strong enough and then it’s horrifying. It’s really horrifying,” he said.

The Olympic chief repeated his support for athletes speaking out for peace, but said there was little the IOC could do to protect Russian athletes who might face repercussions for such views.

“Again, we are coming to our limits. We have no police force, we have no military. There we can only offer moral support and can help to shed the light on this situation, but there our influence ends,” he said.

“We can argue as we did in other humanitarian cases affecting athletes, by trying to intervene and to again, to shed light, to ask for exceptions or to call for mildness, but this is all we can do, we can only appeal,” he said.


Russian Companies Barred From UK Insurance Market, Isolation Proving Costly to Economy​

London has announced its decision to prohibit Russian entities in the aviation and space industries from accessing its insurance market as part of sanctions against Moscow for invading Ukraine.

“The UK Government will bring in legislation to prohibit UK-based insurance and reinsurance providers from undertaking financial transactions connected with a Russian entity or for use in Russia,” the treasury department said on March 3.

“Further details of the legislation will be available in due course. Coupled with similar actions by the EU, this move further isolates Russia’s economy from the international financial system,” it said, adding that the sanctions demonstrate the UK’s “commitment” to subject Russia to “severe economic sanctions.”

The UK is a leader in insurance and reinsurance services with firms like Lloyd’s of London, a major player in aviation insurance. Insurance services for marine, aviation, and transport netted Lloyd’s 3 billion pounds ($4.01 billion) in gross written insurance premium in 2020, with reinsurance bringing in an additional 1.5 billion pounds ($2 billion).

“We are in regular communications with the UK government and international regulators, and are working closely with the Lloyd’s market to uphold the implementation, at pace, of sanctions applied by governments around the world,” said Patrick Tiernan, Lloyd’s Chief of Market, reported Reuters.


It is unclear whether the UK’s new rules would require insurers to only avoid new transactions or cancel existing contracts. The legislation will be brought forth before the parliament in coming days, with the rules potentially being implemented as early as next week. The UK, like the European Union, has avoided imposing sanctions on Russian shipping as it would add upward pressure to already-high energy prices.

Cut off from UK insurance providers, Russian aviation businesses are likely to look for coverage elsewhere, such as China. Fearful of sanctions, other western insurers are expected to avoid getting into Russia-related contracts.

Global insurers have stopped issuing certain insurance to companies that trade with Russia. When Jerry Paulson, senior vice president at Chicago insurance brokerage HUB International Ltd., attempted to secure political-risk coverage for an industrial client from the United States that has a factory and several distribution centers in Russia, he found it difficult to secure insurance, with six insurers turning down his client or pausing talks.

“It’s amazing how quickly the spigot turns off in our world,” Paulson told The Wall Street Journal. “Everything is coming to a halt, and this is just one more thing that will negatively affect commerce with Russia.”

 
Ahh yes, fascist progressive liberals, being a history major and conservative who loves watching overweight black men fuck my wife, I can confirm that its absolutely something that we saw in the nazi party. Nazi germany was well known for flying both the LGBTSRVNBBQLettuce@Tomato++ and swastika together in one unified cause. /sneed

Putin in general is trying so hard to say this is to fight Nazi's like lol my guy nobody believes you. We can see through this buddy. Everyone knows you're working with them too. Maybe your lies work on dipshits, but not the world. Zelenski is literally a jew who is openly pro jew.
 
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https://twitter.com/Shtirlitz53/status/1499442942037172236?s=20&t=dbPmL84Xkr66dPMhzhO9DA

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- Rating of russian state bonds go into shitlevel - BBB AFAIK.
- sanctions against Russia are hitting also other regional countries - just look on BUX, WSE and exchenge ratio for czehs koruna, hungarian forint and polish zloty in relation to Euro. Up and down, up and down.
- first big city of Ukraine has fallen - Kherson. Mariupol and Kharkov are till fighting.

Uncofrimed:

- Russia has little more to send into Ukraine - they are using around 90% forces prepared to invasion. If thi will be confirmed that probably Ukraine will stand over Dnieper river (at least) and war will go into long and nasty war, like Bosnia or Karabach. This suggest, that Russia wasn't ready for any war - they probably was thinking, that they be able to install new regime after 2-3 days from inwasion OR be able to force Ukraine into capitulation just from bombing cities.

Well... not so smart idea in that part of Europe. Nearly always in that part of worl wars ore based on fight for the bitter end one of sides.

- small to none russian gains on north. Mediocre gains on south
- loooong russian kawai is til getting longer and longer, but don't make any moves into ukrainian territory
- more and more troubles into Moscow
- Ukrainians took control over at least one big russian rocket launcher - probably Toczka type
 
not sure because I don't pay attention. what I can say are those regions have historically been pro Russian, and may have been seriously put down by aggressive Ukrainization.
They're pro-Russian if they're ethnically Russian, it's a lot rarer for Ukrainians to be pro-Russian and if Russia moves more to the west they'll find more Ukrainians than Russians. I've already seen clips of regular Ukranians protesting outside the city council of Kherson and that city should have a lot more ethnic Russians. Honestly this invasion might just be more like a civil war between Ukrainians and Russians.
 
Russians are now complaining about the 'tolerant' left trying to cancel them.
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To be quite honest, that is exactly what is happening. You're seeing pushback from so many companies and organizations that should find this war completely inconsequential to their bottom line block russia from their business to the point of absurdity. All for the sake of virtue signaling and to sow dissent among its populace.

This is one of the most concerning facets of this whole ordeal. The future implications of it are unsettling.
 
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