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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Russia hits new bottom. In Kazan, they used kids from child hospice to paint Russia's new swastika for propaganda purposes.

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BREAKING: Sergeant Jake Chandler, expert sniper from US, joined International Legion of Ukraine to fight against Russians

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This whole everyone taking a side is bullshit on a scale I never thought possible. I'm just doing my weekly end of the work week job look, and what do I fucking notice...View attachment 3044542
Mother-fucking indeed has to Ukranianize their logo. No one fucking cares, unless they're posting mercenary positions... ...

Hang on, need to check something. ... No, they're not that cool. Anyway, fucking knock it off!
Offtopic but I fucking hate Indeed.
 

Missile interrupts Kharkiv blogger's live recording – video​

A blogger in Ukraine's second-largest city of Kharkiv had been recording a video message to his followers as an airstrike hit near him. Nikita Demenkov was telling his followers about the use of donations they had sent when a missile exploded above him on Wednesday. The blast sent him scrambling to seek shelter in a basement.

Ukrainians in Mariupol in "desperate need," according to Doctors Without Borders​

Staff members of Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have reported "dire conditions" on Saturday in Mariupol, Ukraine.

In a statement issued Saturday, one staff member of MSF gave the following account:

"The situation is the same as in recent days. This night the shelling was harder and closer. We collected snow and rain water yesterday to have some utility water. We tried to get free water today but the queue was huge. We also wanted to get ‘social’ bread but it is not clear the schedule and the places of distribution. According to people, multiple grocery stores were destroyed by missiles and the remaining things were taken by people in desperate need. Still no power, water, heating and mobile connection. No one heard about any evacuation yet. Pharmacies are out of medicine."
MSF said in the statement that people are now effectively trapped in Mariupol, where the war arrived so suddenly that many could not even flee.

MSF Director of Operations Christine Jamet on Saturday called for safe routes to allow civilians to flee from Mariupol, including MSF staff and their families.

"Civilians must not be trapped in a war zone," Jamet said, adding that "people seeking safety must be able to do so, without fear of violence”.

Spanish clothing retailer Inditex suspends activity at more than 500 stores in Russia​


Spain’s Inditex, the global fashion giant whose brands include Zara, announced Saturday it is “temporarily suspending” activity in its 502 stores in the Russian Federation, Inditex said in a statement.

“Inditex reports that in the current circumstances it cannot guarantee the continuity of its operations and the commercial conditions in the Russian Federation,” the statement said, adding that the suspension also applies to the firm’s online sales there.

Of the 502 stores, 86 are of the Zara brand, the company said, adding that Russia accounts for about 8.5% of the company’s pre-tax profits, as measured by EBIT. Inditex has more than 9,000 employees in the Russian Federation and is developing a “special support plan” for them, the statement said.

Inditex sent its statement to Spain’s stock market regulator, known by its Spanish initials, CNMV, on Saturday.

Inditex has eight brands that sell online globally, and also in some 7,000 stores in 96 countries, according to the firm’s website.

Germany's military says more reservists are reaching out following Russia's invasion of Ukraine​


Germany's armed forces (Bundeswehr) say ''an increasing number of reservists'' are coming forward to offer support for the country's military services following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

''Following the start of the war of aggression on Ukraine, an increasing number of reservists are contacting various departments of the Bundeswehr to offer their support,'' the Bundeswehr website said Friday.

''Currently, a concrete requirement for the Bundeswehr is not yet foreseeable; on the other hand, the development of the situation is characterized by high dynamics,'' the statement on the Bundeswehr website added.

The Bundeswehr also said that communications channels have now been set up on its website for inquiries.

According to the Bundeswehr website, Germany introduced conscription in 1956 with men over the age of 18 expected to serve in the military for a year -- although they could claim exemption due to moral obligations.

Germany scrapped compulsory military service in 2011 in a step that marked a historic change for the country's post-World War II forces. Since 2011, Germany's armed forces has relied on volunteers to fill its ranks. In the event of a national defense emergency, an automated reactivation of conscription takes place.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has reignited a debate in Germany, however, about whether young men and women should be required to fight for their country.

Ukrainian government alleges Russian shelling violates agreement on two evacuation corridors​

A Ukrainian minister has accused Russian forces of shelling the city of Volnovakha in the eastern Donetsk region, where an evacuation corridor was due to allow civilians to escape fighting on Saturday.

"At 11:45 the Russian Federation began shelling the city of Volnovakha with heavy weapons," said Iryna Vereshchuk, Minister of Reintegration of Temporarily Occupied Territories, in a video posted on Facebook. "As you know, we had a preliminary agreement that from 9:00 we will create two humanitarian corridors -- Volnovakha and Mariupol."

Russia violated agreements even with the mediation of the Red Cross, [and] failed to fulfill its commitments and shelled the city of Volnovakha."
Vereshchuk said that fighting was also preventing the second corridor from the besieged city of Mariupol from operating.

"There is fighting taking place in the direction of Mariupol-Zaporizhzhia, near Pology-Orikhove, which prevents the movement of the column from Mariupol to Zaporozhzhia," she said.

"We call on the Russian side to end the shelling, return the ceasefire and allow columns of the humanitarian corridor to form so that children, women and the elderly can leave the settlements.
"We also appeal to the Russian Federation to provide the opportunity to send humanitarian aid from the city of Dnipro and the city of Zaporizhzhia, especially those ones consisting of medicines and food.”



Haas F1 team terminates contracts with Russian driver Nikita Mazepin and title sponsor Uralkali​


The Haas Formula One team has terminated the contract of Russian driver Nikita Mazepin and its title sponsor, Russian chemical giant Uralkali, due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the team announced on Saturday.

"Haas F1 Team has elected to terminate, with immediate effect, the title partnership of Uralkali, and the driver contract of Nikita Mazepin," the team said in a statement. "As with the rest of the Formula 1 community, the team is shocked and saddened by the invasion of Ukraine and wishes for a swift and peaceful end to the conflict."

A replacement driver is expected to be named next week.

On Tuesday, the FIA said that Russian and Belarusian drivers could continue to race, but only under a neutral “FIA flag” and without displaying any Russian/Belarusian national symbols, colors or flags on their uniform, equipment and car "until further notice." This ruling also extends to individual competitors and officials.

Mazepin tweeted that he was "very disappointed" that his contract had been terminated.

While I understand the difficulties, the ruling from FIA plus my ongoing willingness to accept the conditions proposed in order to continue were completely ignored and no process was followed in this unilateral step," he said.
"To those who have tried to understand, my eternal thanks. I have treasured my time in F1 and genuinely hope we can all be together again in better times. I will have more to say in the coming days."

CNN has reached out to the Haas team for comment.

Formula One terminated its contract with the Russian Grand Prix promoter on Thursday, meaning Russia will no longer have a future race.

The 2022 Formula One season starts on March 20 in Bahrain.

Russian forces "are bombing critical infrastructure," Ukraine's defense chief says​

Ukraine's Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said Saturday that Russian forces have "advanced in some directions" but that Ukrainian defenders are "countering and ousting the occupiers."

"Obviously, the enemy has advanced in some directions, however, it controls only small areas. Our defenders are severely countering and ousting the occupiers," he said in a statement, adding that because of the "slow-down of the offensive pace and resistance of the Ukrainians, Russia is changing tactics."

"As of today, the Ukrainian sky is the most vulnerable," he said. "The aggressor uses its aerial and missile potential comprehensively and actively. All types of aviation are bombing our cities, towns and civilian infrastructure, including critical infrastructure and dangerous infrastructure, among them -- nuclear and hydro power plants."

Reznikov said Russian forces were targeting residential apartment buildings, schools, kindergartens and hospitals. "The enemy is destroying churches and cathedrals. It is shelling railway stations with thousands of evacuating women and children," he said.

"These are the tactics of frightened jackals," he said. "I am confident that the enemy will pay for every life and for every tear."

Reznikov said Mariupol, Volnovakha, Kharkiv, Chernihiv, Mykolayiv and Kherson are among the cities where currently the situation is "most complex," adding: "We really hope that the humanitarian corridor will work and we will be able to evacuate civilians."

Reznikov said the main efforts of the Russian forces continue to be focused on the encirclement of Kyiv and suppressing resistance in cities and towns.

Some context: Russia routinely denies causing civilian casualties in Ukraine. International media and observers have extensively documented civilian casualties and damage to civilian infrastructure.

The cost of supporting Ukraine is rising, as US gas prices surge​


Americans along with much of the Western world have been united in condemning Russia for invading Ukraine.

Now they might have to start putting their money where their mouth is as US lawmakers consider an embargo on Russian oil.

High inflation and rising energy prices amid the economy's pandemic recovery were already making life more expensive.

Now, a little more than a week into Russian President Vladimir Putin's war, California has become the first US state to have an average gas price above $5 per gallon.

Gas prices are surging nationwide. The national average record for gasoline -- $4.11, set in 2008 -- is within sight. That would be a huge jump from a year ago, when the national average price was $2.75 a gallon.

The average price of diesel is also skyrocketing, which will drive up transportation costs for businesses.

What Congress is doing: American lawmakers are pushing a bipartisan effort to end all imports of Russian oil and sanction Russia's energy sector.

That the energy sector has so far been left mostly untouched speaks to the nature of the global energy supply. Russia was the world's No. 2 oil producer last year, behind the US. A disruption in oil exports would drive up costs everywhere.

But politicians are willing to pay the price. "I'm all for that. Ban it," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said this week on Capitol Hill.

"I would gladly pay 10 cents more per gallon," Sen. Joe Manchin, the West Virginia Democrat, said at a Thursday press conference.


Elon Musk declines to block Russian propaganda from Starlink​


In a tweet Friday night, Elon Musk claimed foreign government officials had asked his satellite internet company Starlink "to block Russian news sources" following the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

"We will not do so unless at gunpoint," Musk said in the tweet. "Sorry to be a free speech absolutist."

It's unclear which governments Musk is referring to in the tweet, though he added it was not Ukraine.

Amplifying propaganda: Russian news sources, such as RT, serve as Russian President Vladimir Putin's global megaphone, misleading audiences and deflecting from the issues at hand. On Friday, Putin signed a censorship bill into law making it impossible for news organizations to accurately report the news in or from Russia.

Delivery to Ukraine: Musk sent a truckload of Starlink antennas — which can be used to connect to the company's satellite-based internet service — to Ukraine this week, responding to a plea from the country's vice prime minister amid fears that Ukrainians could lose internet access if Russia continues its attacks on communication infrastructure.

Turn down the heat to stop Putin? Europe wrestles with its Russian gas addiction​


When you turn on the heating in your home, you may not think much about where your energy comes from, let alone where the money you pay for it goes. For millions of people living in Europe, there's a good chance that money is flowing to the Russian state — much of it into President Vladimir Putin's war chest.

Russia has been building a network of natural gas pipelines throughout Europe since the 1960s. Washington has been warning its Western allies ever since that more Russian gas will only make Europeans more vulnerable to Moscow.ere are fears now that the Kremlin may turn off the supply of natural gas to the European Union, in retaliation for its support for Ukraine — Europe, among other allies, has been sending weapons and aid to Ukraine to help it defend itself against Russia's invasion.

It's only been just over a week, but so far, Russia has let the gas flow. But that presents another problem.

Money into the war chest: Russia is earning hundreds of millions of dollars a day from its oil and gas exports, undermining the financial sanctions Western powers have introduced to choke off financing for Putin's war effort.

The European Union, Russia's biggest gas customer, is now grappling with the reality that its energy spending has helped empower Putin to carry out a bloody war on its borders.

According to the European think thank Bruegel, with prices at record highs, the value of Russian natural gas exports to the European Union has soared to about €500 million ($545 million) every day. That's up from about €200 million ($220 million) in February. Before the invasion, Russia was also exporting oil worth hundreds of millions a day to Europe.

Putin threatens Ukraine with loss of statehood

President Vladimir Putin of Russia said that Ukraine might lose its statehood, reports The New York Times. “The current leadership needs to understand that if they continue doing what they are doing, they risk the future of Ukrainian statehood,” . Putin said at a meeting in Moscow on Saturday, in his first extended remarks since the start of the war. “If that happens, they will have to be blamed for that.”

Western sanctions on Russia akin to declaration of war, says Putin

President Vladimir Putin said western sanctions on Russia were akin to a declaration of war, reports Reuters. He said Moscow needed to defend Russian speakers in Ukraine’s east as well as its own interests. In televised comments to female flight attendants he said Russia wanted Ukraine to be “demilitarised”, “denazified” and to have neutral status. He also said he has no plans to declare martial law in Russia, reports AFP.

Italy seizes $156 million in oligarch wealth, pressing Putin

European governments are moving against Russian oligarchs to put pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin to back down on his war in Ukraine, seizing superyachts and other luxury properties from billionaires on sanctions lists. Italy since Friday has seized 143 million euros ($156 million) in luxury yachts and villas in some of its most picturesque destinations, including Sardinia, the Ligurian coast and Lake Como. "We must be able to stop Putin's attack, bringing him to the table, and he wont go with niceties," Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio told Italian state TV on Friday, announcing Italy's plans to begin the seizures of property belonging to oligarchs close to Putin.

Citizens hold protest rally in Russia-occupied Berdyansk


Bread Consumers to Swallow the Cost of Russia-Ukraine War​

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, one of the world’s breadbasket nations, has driven wheat prices to 14-year highs, forcing bread consumers to eat the cost.

Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion has severely hampered trade from Black Sea ports, driving up global Chicago benchmark wheat prices by 40 percent and further pushing global food inflation that was already the highest in a decade.

Supply disruptions from Russia and Ukraine, which together account for 30 percent of world wheat exports and 20 percent of corn exports, will erode food security for millions of people, with the Middle East and north Africa especially vulnerable due to their reliance on imports, said Julie Marshall, spokesperson for the World Food Programme.

Oil and gas prices have also spiked due to sanctions against Russia, while costs of freight and raw materials like steel were already soaring due to pandemic-related supply chain breakdowns.

Even consumers in two of the world’s biggest wheat-growing nations, Canada and the United States, are paying the price.


“Unfortunately for the short and intermediate-term, food inflation and the cost of baked goods in the United States will go up more. This will impact the most vulnerable in our society the most,” said Robb MacKie, president and chief executive of the American Bakers Association.

Weeks before the latest wheat price spike, Calgary Italian Bakery in Alberta raised prices 7 percent to keep pace with costs associated with last year’s Canadian drought and inflation in prices of flour and yeast.

Now Louis Bontorin, co-owner of the 60-year-old family business, fears he will need to raise prices significantly again, once he has depleted his four to five months’ flour supply.

“This could be really, really devastating,” Bontorin said. “Bread is one of the fundamentals, the essentials, and that’s the hard part. You’re trying to just take what you need, but you’re also cognizant of what effect (higher price) has on the consumer.

“The buying power of everybody is just being eroded.”

The threat to wheat supplies from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has been exacerbated by a drop in global stocks of major exporters.

Supplies in the European Union, Russia, the United States, Canada, Ukraine, Argentina, Australia, and Kazakhstan are set to fall to a nine-year low of 57 million tonnes by the end of the 2021/22 season, International Grains Council (IGC) data shows.

‘Pay the Cost or Don’t Get Your Flour’​

Some mills signed contracts with farmers last autumn for the wheat they are currently using, insulating them for now from spikes related to the Russia-Ukraine war.

After Russia invaded, Rogers Foods’ President Joe Girdner’s phone started lighting up. The bakers who buy flour from his two British Columbia mills are now looking to secure supplies further out than before, on fears that prices could escalate even more.

It is also a problem for the miller. Spring wheat supplies were already running thin because of drought last year, and now global buyers who were depending on Black Sea supplies, may turn to Canada for wheat and compete with domestic mills, Girdner said.

“It’s a really big concern,” Girdner said of the Russia-Ukraine war. “And the real story will be if this situation drags on.”


Elon Musk Warns Ukraine Starlink Users Could Be Targeted by Russia, Asks to Take These Precautions​


Tesla Inc and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on Thursday urged Ukrainians to use Starlink with caution, saying the high-speed internet service could be targeted by Russian troops and gave a few pointers on how to go about it.

What Happened​

Musk on Twitter said that Starlink was currently the only non-Russian communications system still working in parts of Ukraine and flagged a security warning.

He advised Starlink users in Ukraine to turn on the service only when needed and place its antenna as far away from people as possible.

Musk also recommended users place a light camouflage, which could include spraying paintwork without any metal over the antenna to avoid visual detection.

Why It Matters​

Starlink beams down high-speed internet, especially in remote areas including those ravaged by war or natural calamity, via satellites in orbit to Earth.

The world’s richest person quickly reacted to Ukraine’s plea to provide Starlink stations and shipped terminals over the weekend.

Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov later published on Twitter to show a military truck carrying a cargo of Starlink terminals.

Starlink is known to have launched over 2,000 satellites, with SpaceX hoping to have 4,425 satellites in orbit by 2024. The Federal Communications Commission has approved 11,943 satellites to be launched by Starlink.


UK Journalist Shot and Wounded in Ambush Near Ukrainian Capital​


A British journalist was shot and wounded in a violent ambush near the Ukrainian capital.

Stuart Ramsay, chief correspondent at Sky News, was hit by a bullet in the lower back as shooting rained down on a car carrying his crew towards Kyiv on Monday.

Camera operator Richie Mockler was also hit with two rounds to his body armour before the team managed to escape and take cover. They were later rescued by Ukrainian police.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has praised the “courage” of the journalists.

He said on Twitter on Saturday: “The courage of these journalists, putting themselves in terrifying and dangerous situations, is astonishing to watch. They’re risking their lives to ensure that the truth is told. Free press will not be intimidated or cowed by barbaric and indiscriminate acts of violence.”


It is understood that the whole crew, including Sky News’ Dominque van Heerden and Martin Vowles and local producer Andrii Lytvynenko, are now safe.

Shocking footage of the incident was played out on Sky News on Friday evening.

It showed the team under heavy fire, with glass smashing around them.

In a written account of the ambush, Ramsay said his team had been heading for the town of Bucha, where they were intending to learn more about the destruction of a Russian convoy by the Ukrainian army the previous day.

Despite their destination only being around 30 kilometres from the centre of Kyiv, Ramsay said the trip took hours, with the crew held up by road closures and redirections.

It was suggested at the last Ukrainian checkpoint that they should not proceed any further, and the team decided to head back to the city centre, re-entering from a different direction to avoid what they now knew to be dangerous routes.

After getting the go-ahead from a police officer to take a road to Kyiv, Ramsay said they proceeded cautiously towards an intersection.

It was then that, “out of nowhere”, there was a “small explosion”. Ramsay said a tyre burst, the car stopped, and “our world turned upside down”.

“The first round cracked the windscreen. Camera operator Richie Mockler huddled into the front passenger footwell. Then we were under full attack,” he said.

“Bullets cascaded through the whole of the car, tracers, bullet flashes, windscreen glass, plastic seats, the steering wheel, and dashboard had disintegrated.

“We didn’t know it at the time, but we were later told by the Ukrainians that we were being ambushed by a saboteur Russian reconnaissance squad. It was professional, the rounds kept smashing into the car—they didn’t miss.”

Ramsay said the team thought a Ukrainian army checkpoint might be behind the shooting, but their panicked attempts to explain they were journalists did nothing to deter the attackers.

“I do recall wondering if my death was going to be painful,” he said.

Some of the crew had managed to escape, but Ramsay was hit by a bullet in the lower back.

“Richie says I then got out of the car and stood up, before jogging to the edge of the embankment and then started running. I lost my balance and fell to the bottom, landing like a sack of potatoes, cutting my face. My armour and helmet almost certainly saved me,” he said.

The team eventually made it to a factory unit, where they took cover. They were later rescued by Ukrainian police.

The Sky News crew has now arrived back in the UK, while Lytvynenko is with his family in Ukraine.

“The point is we were very lucky,” Ramsay said.

“But thousands of Ukrainians are dying, and families are being targeted by Russian hit squads just as we were, driving along in a family saloon and attacked.

“This war gets worse by the day.”


US B-52 Bombers Fly in Country Bordering Ukraine​

U.S. B-52 bombers flew over a country that borders Ukraine, the U.S. military announced March 4.

The B-52 Stratofortress aircraft conducted a long-range “integration flight,” according to U.S. Air Forces in Europe and Africa.

The bombers took off from a base in England and headed to Germany to conduct an exercise alongside U.S. and German troops known as joint terminal attack controllers, who call strikes down from forward positions in the field.

The training mission included training in conjunction with Romania, a NATO ally that shares a border with Ukraine.

a critical opportunity to integrate and train with our allies and partners, especially during this difficult time,” Gen. Jeff Harrigian, commander of U.S. Air Forces in Europe and Africa and NATO’s Allied Air Command, said in a statement.


“Training together ensures the defensive power of NATO remains unmatched,” he added.

Russia invaded Ukraine, which is not in NATO, on Feb. 24, and fighting has continued in the country since then.

According to the Air Force, the Stratofortress is a long-range bomber that can fly at “high subsonic speeds at altitudes of up to 50,000 feet” and can carry nuclear or conventional bombs.

In a conflict, the military says, the B-52 “can perform strategic attack, close-air support, air interdiction, offensive counter-air, and maritime operations.”

U.S. President Joe Biden has refused to send the U.S. military into Ukraine to help the Ukrainians, a position supported by most Americans, but ordered the deployment of troops to Poland and other NATO allies to be prepared to join the fray should Russia attack a NATO member.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky and other Ukrainian officials have repeatedly called on NATO to impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine, which would likely lead to U.S.-Russia battles in the air.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told a briefing in Brussels on Friday that “We are not part of this conflict, and we have a responsibility to ensure it does not escalate and spread beyond Ukraine,” in answering why NATO is not going to enforce a no-fly zone. U.S. officials have outlined similar reasoning.

Zelensky later criticized NATO, alleging the alliance’s members “want to continue” the “harsh war” by making the decision “not to close the airspace in Ukraine.”

“We believe that NATO member states have created themselves a narrative that the closure of the airspace in Ukraine would provoke direct aggression from Russia against NATO. It’s self-induced hypnosis of those who are weak and lack confidence, even though they can possess arms stronger than ours,” he said in Kyiv, adding, “All the people who die from this day forward will also die because of you, because of your weakness, because of your lack of unity.”

U.S. military spokesman John Kirby, meanwhile, said during a briefing Friday that U.S. officials and Russian counterparts had established a “deconfliction line” amid the war.

“We think it’s valuable to have a direct communication vehicle … to reduce the risks of miscalculation,” Kirby told reporters in Washington,” and to be able to communicate in real time if need be, particularly because now the airspace over Ukraine is contested by both Russian and Ukrainian aircraft, so that contested airspace now buttresses right up against NATO. Smart thing to do, and we’re glad it’s in place, we’re glad that the Russians have acknowledged that they will use it.”


Japan to Supply Bulletproof Vests and Other Defense Equipment to Ukraine​

Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Friday that his government will supply Ukraine with defense equipment, such as bulletproof vests and helmets, in what was seen as a rare move by Japan amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Kishida said that defense equipment, including bulletproof vests, helmets, tents, winter clothing, food items, hygiene products, cameras, and power generators, will be sent to Ukraine by Japan’s Self Defense Forces.

“We hope to deliver the goods to support the people of Ukraine who are facing difficulties as soon as possible,” Kishida was quoted saying by local media Kyodo News.

The announcement was made after the National Security Council’s meeting on Friday.

This is an uncommon move for Japan, as the country had long banned the export of defense equipment. The ban was overturned by former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in 2014, who allowed exports in cases that contribute to global peace and serve Japan’s security interests.


Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said that the decision was made at the request of Ukraine and is in accordance with Japan’s war-renouncing Constitution, adding that Japan will not provide weapons to Ukraine.

“As a nation that experienced the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident [in 2011], Japan condemns [Russia’s invasion of Ukraine] in the strongest possible terms,” Kishida said.

Japan is following the lead of numerous Western countries in providing military assistance to Ukraine, including the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Sweden.

U.S. President Joe Biden ordered the State Department on Feb. 26 to deploy $350 million worth of weapons to Ukraine, including Javelin anti-tank weapons, anti-aircraft systems, ammunition, and body armor.

The Canadian government is sending an additional $25 million in military aid to Ukraine on Feb. 27, while the United Kingdom pledged to provide both lethal and non-lethal aid to Ukraine.

The Swedish government approved the shipment of 5,000 anti-tank weapons, 135,000 field rations, 5,000 helmets, and 5,000 pieces of body armor.

Japan’s government has also pledged to extend $100 million in emergency humanitarian assistance to Ukraine and to accept Ukrainians who are seeking refuge in a third country.

The United Nations has estimated that close to 700,000 people have fled Ukraine to neighboring countries since the invasion began nearly a week ago, in what the U.N. Refugee Agency says looks set to become Europe’s largest refugee crisis this century. Around half of the refugees are currently in Poland.

Japan has also banned Russian banks from the SWIFT global interbank network and froze the assets of seven Russian banks. It also blocked the assets of several Russian leaders, including President Vladimir Putin, and prohibited exports to 49 Russian entities.


Ukraine Crisis May Hurt Japan’s Economy via Fuel Spike, Says BOJ Policymaker​

The crisis in Ukraine could hurt Japan’s economy by driving up the price households and companies pay for fuel and commodities, a central bank policymaker said on Thursday.

Japan’s consumer inflation could briefly approach the central bank’s elusive 2 percent target due in part to sharp rises in energy costs triggered by the crisis, Bank of Japan (BOJ) board member Junko Nakagawa said.

But such a rise in inflation alone would not be reason to dial back stimulus, Nakagawa said, adding that Japan’s economy was still in the midst of recovering from the pandemic’s wounds.

More time was needed to gauge the Ukraine war’s impact on Japan’s economy, which may come not just through trade but market volatility and rising raw material costs, she said.

“While energy and food prices may rise, such moves could weigh on Japan’s economy if they hurt corporate profits and household income,” Nakagawa told a briefing.


“We need to scrutinize developments [in Ukraine] more to determine whether they warrant a big change in monetary policy,” said Nakagawa, the first BOJ policymaker to elaborate on the economic outlook since Russia invaded Ukraine.

While soaring raw material costs have pushed up wholesale prices in Japan, core consumer inflation stood at 0.2 percent in January on weak household spending and wage growth.


But analysts expect core consumer inflation to pace up towards the BOJ’s 2 percent target from next month, as the drag from cellphone fee cuts dissipates and rising oil costs boost gasoline and electricity bills.

“For the time being, inflationary pressure will remain strong, mainly for energy, food, and industrial goods,” Nakagawa said in a speech prior to the briefing, adding that year-on-year growth in core consumer prices may “briefly rise close to 2 percent.”

“Even if that happens, what’s important is to scrutinize the factors [driving up prices] and whether Japan’s economic fundamentals are strong enough to make such price rises sustainable,” she said.

The remarks heighten the chance the BOJ will upgrade its inflation forecast in a quarterly review of its projections in April. In current forecasts, it expects core consumer inflation to hit 1.1 percent in the fiscal year beginning in April.

Japan’s reliance on fuel and food imports makes its economy vulnerable to higher commodity prices, adding to woes for policymakers fretting about the hit to growth from the pandemic.

Given Japan’s low inflation and fragile recovery, BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has repeatedly said the bank has no intention of following in the footsteps of the U.S. Federal Reserve in tightening policy.

 

China-Backed Infrastructure Banks Halt Lending to Russia, Belarus Over War in Ukraine​

The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank has decided to put all activities relating to Russia and Belarus “on hold” due to the war in Ukraine, the China-backed institution said on March 3.

The announcement comes a day after China’s top banking regulator said the country would keep up normal trade with Russia and Ukraine amid Western sanctions.

In a statement published on its website, the Beijing-headquartered bank said its management would do utmost to “safeguard the financial integrity, against the backdrop of the evolving economic and financial situation.”

China is the largest shareholder of the multilateral lender, with a stake of over 30 percent, according to the official website.


Given that it holds 26.5 percent of voting rights, China has veto power over major decisions, which requires a 75 percent majority.

“Under these circumstances, and in the best interests of the Bank, Management has decided that all activities relating to Russia and Belarus are on hold and under review,” read the statement.

Russia is a founding member of the AIIB, and the third-largest shareholder after China and India. Belarus and Ukraine are not members of the bank.

AIIB was proposed by the leader of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping in 2013, the year that he launched the Belt and Road Initiative, a multi-continent infrastructure project which has been labeled as a vehicle used for building up the regime’s economic and political influence worldwide.

Meanwhile, the Shanghai-headquartered New Development Bank (NDB) also announced on Thursday that it has put new transactions in Russia “on hold,” citing “unfolding uncertainties and restrictions.”

NDB was established by China, Russia, India, Brazil, and South Africa in 2014 to fund infrastructure projects, a similar purpose to the AIIB.

The move by the two banks follows a spate of Western sanctions on Russia in response to the invasion. The United States, European Union, and other Western allies have cut key Russian banks out of an international payments system known as SWIFT and limited Russia’s central bank’s ability to draw over $600 billion in foreign currency reserves.

The response from the communist regime in Beijing has come under growing scrutiny, given its deepening ties with Moscow. Bilateral trade surged nearly 36 percent in 2021 to record $146.9 billion, according to China’s official customs data. The two neighboring countries aim to boost it to $240 billion in 2024, Xi said during the summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Beijing earlier this month.

Guo Shuqing, the head of China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, said on Wednesday that the country opposed unilateral sanctions and wouldn’t join Western nations’ restrictions.

The Chinese regime hasn’t condemned Russia’s attack and declined to call it an invasion.

Disclosures on AIIB’s website shows the institution in 2019 and 2020 approved two projects in Russia worth $800 million. The bank announced last October it was due to hold its annual meeting in Russia this year, though no specific date provided.


China Changed Supply Chain Strategy With Russia 3 Months Ahead of Ukraine Invasion, Suggesting It Had Foreknowledge: Analyst​


Around three months ago, China changed how it ordered goods from Russia in a way that would insulate Beijing in the event of Western sanctions on Moscow, according to a supply chain analyst citing insider information.

This move suggested that China had foreknowledge of Russia’s plan to invade Ukraine, and had made contingencies to ensure it could still import Russian commodities amid sanctions, he said.

In about November or December, China began buying all of their Russia-origin cargoes—grains, crude oil, and petrochemical products—on a “free on board origin” basis, meaning that China would hold claim to the goods as soon as they were loaded onto the ship, said Ross Kennedy, founder of Fortis Analysis.

This an unusual choice in international trade, Kennedy told NTD, an affiliate of The Epoch Times, on March 3.

In large shipments by sea, sellers, rather than buyers, would commonly assume responsibility for the goods until they are delivered to the purchaser, he said. They also typically cover the cost of shipping and insurance, and warrant that the goods will safely reach the destination.

“Now, what you’re seeing is the buyer stepping up and saying we’re going to take the risk,” he said in the interview.
“And the reason you would see that happening is because there is a fear that sanctions on products coming from a certain country, in this case, Russia, would impact those country’s ability to buy those products.”

The switch indicated to Kennedy that China’s authorities have, “at least for some amount of time, been certainly aware of Russia’s plans with regard to Ukraine—if not outright complicit in it.”

The growing friendship between Russia and China has fueled questions about what role Beijing could have played leading up to the invasion of Ukraine.
Worried about Russian President Vladimir Putin mounting a “reckless invasion,” White House officials had engaged China in advance in the hopes it could help avert a war, but China had declined, a top U.S. policy advisor recently said in a panel event.

Instead, senior Chinese officials reportedly asked Russia to postpone making a military move until the end of the Beijing Winter Olympics.

On Feb. 21, one day after the Olympics concluded, Putin deployed troops to two breakaway regions in the eastern part of Ukraine. The Russian military officially launched the attack three days later.

About 1.2 million people have fled the war in Ukraine, a United Nations official said on Friday. The agency has recorded 1,006 casualties as of March 3, including 331 deaths and 675 injuries, but believes that the real toll is much higher.

Most of the victims were killed by explosives such as multi-launch rocket systems and missile and airstrikes, the office said.


Most Americans Oppose Sending US Troops to Ukraine to Fight Russia: Polls​


Most Americans don’t support the idea of sending U.S. troops to Ukraine to help Ukrainian forces fight against Russian personnel, according to surveys.

Just 19 percent of respondents to an Economist/YouGov poll said sending U.S. soldiers to Ukraine is a good idea, compared to 54 percent who thought it was a bad idea. The rest weren’t sure.

More respondents, 33 percent, said it was a good idea to send soldiers to Ukraine “to provide help,” but not to fight Russian soldiers.

Sixty-three percent of respondents to a Reuters/Ipsos poll (pdf) said the United States should not send troops to Ukraine to help defend Ukraine from the Russians. The rest said troops should be sent.

The same division was seen when asked if the United States should conduct airstrikes against Russian forces, and a plurality of respondents to the YouGov survey opposed the United States conducting drone strikes against the Russians.


A majority of respondents to a poll (pdf) from SSRS for CNN also opposed the United States taking military action to stop Russia.

President Joe Biden has vowed not to send U.S. troops to Ukraine in the wake of the Feb. 24 Russian invasion.

“Let me be clear: Our forces are not engaged and will not engage in the conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine,” the Democrat said during his State of the Union speech.

Biden’s administration has sent troops to Europe and the president has committed to joining the fight if Russia attacks any North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) allies.

The administration has also shipped weapons and other military aid to Ukraine to help Ukrainian troops fight back against the invasion.

According to the surveys, most Americans support helping Ukraine.

A plurality of respondents told YouGov that it would be a good idea to impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine, even though many experts have warned that would mean the United States had joined the war on the Ukrainian side.

Many respondents to the polls support providing weapons to Ukraine and imposing additional sanctions against Russia. Nearly half of respondents to YouGov said Ukraine should be allowed to join NATO; about a third were unsure.

A minority of U.S. lawmakers say the United States should impose a no-fly zone or otherwise get more directly involved in the war, but most have said the current level of involvement is appropriate.

The YouGov poll was conducted from Feb. 26 to March 1 and had 1,500 respondents and a margin of error of about 3 percent. The Ipsos survey was conducted from Feb. 28 through March 1, had a sample of 1,005 adults, and had a margin of sampling error of 3.8 percent. The SSRS survey was conducted on Feb. 25 and Feb. 26, with a sample of 1,001 respondents. It had a margin of sampling error of about 4 percent.

Other countries have also opposed so far sending their troops to Ukraine, including 40 percent of British respondents to a poll by Redfield and Winton.


Chinese Communist Party Wants Isolated Russia to Become Dependent on Beijing: Expert​


The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) hopes to capitalize on Russia’s current isolation by rendering it more dependent on Beijing, according to one expert.

To achieve that goal, however, Beijing will need to provide Russia with assistance that flies under the radar of Western nations, which has leveled a slew of sanctions on Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.

“It’s not that China isn’t willing to help Russia,” said David Goldman, deputy editor of the Asia Times during a recent interview with “China in Focus,” a program of The Epoch Times’ affiliate NTD. “China doesn’t want to help Russia in a way that attracts the anger of the West at this point and makes its own situation more difficult.”

“China will take no overt measures to help Russia evade the sanctions regime, but in many quiet and undetectable ways. China will help Russia sell oil, sell its exports, and so forth,” he added.


Goldman’s comments touch upon the growing question of just how far the CCP might be willing to go to provide Russia with relief from Western sanctions in the wake of Russian President Vladamir Putin’s war on Ukraine.

CCP leader Xi Jinping welcomed Putin to the Beijing Olympics in early February, where the two announced a partnership between their respective nations that would know “no limits.”

As it turns out, “no limits” may be too strong a phrase, however, and initial signs of strain between the two appear to be beginning to show. Notable among them: China’s reticence to provide any overt support to Russia.

Western nations led the most comprehensive coordinated sanctions in history against Russia over the last week, in an effort to punish the regime for its war of aggression in eastern Europe. How far China will go to ease the effects of those sanctions on its partner is an open question.

Analysts note that China is unlikely to be comfortable drawing international attention for its partnership given that Russia is now facing an international investigation following allegations that it is committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in Ukraine, including the bombing of schools and hospitals.

Nevertheless, the CCP refuses to label Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as an “invasion,” and within mainland China is actively censoring coverage of the war that is critical of the conflict and Putin.

Though the CCP is not currently giving overt support to Russia, it is providing a level of cover by refusing to participate in Western sanctions. Retired Air Force Brigadier General Robert Spalding noted the Russian war effort was dependent on the continued “tacit approval” of the CCP.

Indeed, just last month, the CCP signed an energy deal with Russia to build a new pipeline that will deliver 1.8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas to China from Russia every year.

At the onset of the war, the CCP lifted wheat import sanctions on Russia, providing Moscow with increased cashflow and Beijing with a vital product amid its ongoing food shortages.

Since then, the CCP’s financial regulator announced that it would not join in any of the West’s financial sanctions on Russia, claiming them to be without legal merit.

“We will not join such sanctions,” said Guo Shuqing, Chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission on March 2. “We will keep normal economic, trade, and financial exchanges with all the relevant parties.”

Goldman said that the deepening China-Russia partnership would be a “formidable” strategic threat to the West. Despite what Russia may think, however, the CCP has every intention of dominating that partnership, and it is using Western sanctions to do so.

“If you read the Beijing media, their belief is that the consequence will be that Putin turns towards the east and that Russia will become overwhelmed or dependent on trade with China,” Goldman said. “China will be the main buyer of oil and raw materials, and the main provider of high-tech products.”

“The Western sanctions cut Russia off from many high technology products, including computer chips, which are the building blocks of a modern economy. China certainly can be an alternative source from him.”

As part of this effort, Goldman warned that the CCP could attempt to subvert the Western ban on Russia’s participation in SWIFT, the global messaging system that enables bank transactions.

To achieve this, he said, the CCP could use its own systems as a replacement to SWIFT that was based on local currencies rather than the dollar.

“In theory, the Chinese international payment system could be used as an alternative to SWIFT and, in fact, international trade finance transactions could be financed in [renminbi] instead of dollars, presuming that Chinese banks are willing to do that financing,” Goldman said.

“This is not a technical issue … It’s a political issue. China is very reluctant to appear as the helper of Russia when the entire West is determined to punish Russia. China is clearly afraid that sanctions might be applied to Chinese banks were they to step in and help Russia to evade the Western sanctions.”


Pro-Russia Propaganda Proliferates in China as Moscow’s Isolation Grows​


If Russia needs to find some support amid the piling Western condemnation for its invasion of Ukraine, all it takes is a browse of the Chinese internet.

In China’s tightly controlled online space, pro-Moscow sentiment dominates. Celebrities have been chastised for voicing sympathy for Ukraine. Hawkish Russian remarks are cheered. And some Chinese users have described Russian President Vladimir Putin as a hero standing up to the West.

The enthusiasm has extended to e-commerce. Some Chinese have flocked to a Russian-owned online store that was said to be endorsed by the Russian Embassy in China, clearing shelves for most of its products from chocolates, to wafers and vodka.

“Every chocolate is a bullet fired at the nazis, ypa!” wrote one buyer in the store’s review section, in an apparent reference to Putin’s claim that he wanted to “denazify” the country in justifying the invasion.


The outlet, known as the Russian National Pavilion, saw its online following soar three fold within a day, and received a total of 50,000 orders placed since Feb. 28, according to Chinese media reports. By Wednesday, a video has popped up from Sergey Batsev, an ambassador to China for the Russian nonprofit Business Russia, thanking “Chinese friends” for supporting his country in such “difficult times.”

“During this complicated and ever-changing international situation, we have seen our old Chinese friends’ camaraderie,” he said. “ˇThere’s an old Chinese saying that a goose feather sent from far away conveys profound affections. We will cherish this deep friendship in our hearts.”

Meanwhile, nationalist voices on social media have cheered a strong Russia-China partnership.

“I said long ago that with China acting as a shield for Russia, whatever Western sanctions will dissolve to nothing,” wrote a nationalist Chinese scholar on Weibo, China’s Twitter-equivalent. The post attached photos that appeared to show long lines of shoppers inside a Russian store in northern China. He had visited the website of the Russian National Pavilion twice without finding anything available to buy, he said.

It’s unclear to what extent these viewpoints reflect the broader public sentiment in China due to Beijing’s heavy censorship that has silenced voices from the other side.

Several Chinese actors have been censured on Weibo after posting pro-Ukraine remarks. Social media posts by prominent Chinese scholars opposing Russia’s invasion were taken offline, as with suggestions of Russia being on the losing end. A video by a Ukrainian vlogger popular in China, entreating her fans in Mandarin to “respect lives” and “not take war as a joke,” was largely erased from the Chinese internet and only viewable on Twitter, a platform banned in China.

When the English Premier League announced plans to show solidarity with Ukraine this weekend by having club captains wear armbands in colors of the Ukraine flag, blue and yellow, and displaying on stadium screens the slogan “Football Stands Together” printed on a Ukraine flag, the league’s Chinese broadcast partner reacted by pulling the scheduled coverage.

Fostering a pro-Russian mood, or at least the impression of it, appears to be Beijing’s designs from the beginning.

Two days before Putin started bombing Ukraine, leaked censorship rules showed Chinese state media had been told to ensure that its content not appear anti-Russia or pro-Western.

As the Chinese regime has refused to use the word “invasion” to characterize Russia’s attack, the word is taboo in coverage across Chinese media. When a reference is necessary, media outlets have adopted Moscow’s descriptor of “special military operation,” or used the vague phrase “the current situation.”

In recent press conferences and public statements, Chinese officials have taken an awkward line of refusing to open back either side. They have, simultaneously: refused to denounce Russia’s attack, recognized that Russia has legitimate security concerns, maintained that all countries’ sovereignty should be respected, called for a peaceful settlement to the crisis, and blamed the United States for inflaming the prospect of war.

But its propaganda machinery has taken on a more fiery tone.

While most media coverage in the country is focused on the Beijing Paralympics, the relatively few Chinese state media reports on the crisis have played down criticism of Russia. The hashtag “multiple countries refuse to sanction Russia,” pushed by nationalist tabloid Global Times, got 120 million views in a day on Weibo.

"Russians, please aim your bullets more accurately,” a reporter from the Chinese Communist Party-owned newspaper, Jinhua News, wrote in a post upon learning that 70 Japanese have volunteered to join the Ukrainian army.

Crude jokes online about welcoming beautiful Ukrainian women refugees to China and pro-Russia remarks have made lives more difficult for Chinese nationals stuck in Ukraine. Some said they were threatened by angry Ukrainians when going to supermarkets.

Beijing’s stance did not go unnoticed in Russia.

Maria Zakharova, the country’s foreign ministry spokesperson, on Thursday said they “appreciate Beijing’s impartial and unbiased vision of the Ukrainian issue.”

China “avoids being misled by Western ploys,” she told a news briefing.


US Company Taking Aim at Russia Invasion With 1 Million Bullets For Ukraine​


One million American-made bullets will soon be in the hands of Ukrainian soldiers thanks to an Arizona company and a legendary NASCAR team owner.

Fred Wagenhals, the owner of the Scottsdale-based Ammo in Arizona, told The Epoch Times that it is his honor to supply Ukrainian soldiers with the ammunition—enough he said to “arm 34,000 AK-47s with a clip of 30 rounds in each gun.”

With some irony, the AK-47 assault rifle is known in Russia and Ukraine as the Kalashnikov and was developed in the Soviet Union by a Russian small arms designer.

“As a company, we like freedom. We believe in democracy,” Wagenhals told The Epoch Times, “Because of the Second Amendment, you can’t land on one our shores and try to take over this country because there are too many guns and too much ammunition.”

In likening Russia’s attack on Ukraine to the Vietnam War, Wiggenhals added, “you can’t just go into another country and take it over like that.”


Ammo. is the fifth-largest U.S. maker of ammunition and the parent company of GunBroker.com, the largest online marketplace for firearms.

While he couldn’t reveal all the details about getting the ammunition to the soldiers, Wagenhals told The Epoch Times his shipment is already in Europe and expects the bullets to be distributed to Ukraine’s ground forces by this weekend.

The idea to send it came from his good friend Richard Childress who serves on Ammo’s board of directors. To race car fans, Childress’ name will be immediately recognizable.

His NASCAR team Richard Childress Racing (RCR) is a six-time winner of the Cup Series, all with fabled race car driver Dale Earnhardt, and a three-time winner of the Daytona 500.

In an interview with The Epoch Times, Childress said he was inspired by Ukraine President Voldomyr Zelinsky’s response to President Joe Biden’s offer to fly him out of his war-torn country during the ongoing Russian attack there.

Putin a ‘Schoolyard Bully’​

“I need ammunition, not a ride,” Zelinsky said in a heroic battle stance broadcasted around the world.

“It’s an inhumane thing that’s going on right now from Russia.”

Childress told The Epoch Times, “We got to help them and they need help bad right now.”

He likened Putin to a “schoolyard bully” who is serving his own self-interests.

Ammo joins with a number of countries that have sent ammunition and weaponry including the United States.

Last week, the Biden administration reported that it had sent anti-aircraft missiles as well as firearms and ammunition to Ukraine and Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced the United States was providing $54 million in what he called “humanitarian assistance to those affected by Russia’s further invasion.”

On Mar. 2, the House overwhelmingly passed a bill calling for “additional and immediate defensive security” by the U.S. to Ukraine. It also called for a ceasefire and full withdrawal of Russian forces.

The bill, titled HR 956, was passed with a 426-3 vote with only three Republicans dissenting, one of them being Wigenhall’s own Congressman Arizona Republican Paul Gosar.

Gosar tweeted that while he supported Ukrainians, he found the resolution to be potentially dangerous to Americans.

“I will not send constituents to die in another unconstitutional war with no U.S. national security interest,” Gosar tweeted.

Former US Paratrooper Joins Fight​

In addition to the proposed resolution and existing funding, the Biden administration has also asked Congress to approve $6.4 billion to support a U.S. response to Russia’s attack on Ukraine.

Wiggenhals told The Epoch Times that he feels the United States and other countries haven’t done enough to help Ukraine and strongly believes NATO forces should deploy forces to help Ukrainians.

On Tuesday, a former U.S. paratrooper from the 101st Airborne Division who has been living in Ukraine, told Fox News in a live TV interview, that he has decided to fight along with the Ukrainian soldiers out of a “moral obligation.”

The U.S. combat veteran, who said he has helped train Ukrainian civilians in combat, called Ukraine some of the best people in the world “as good as any of our friends and allies of America.”

He also called upon help from the United States noting that historically American presidents have always been an arsenal of democracy to their European allies.

“This is another epic time in history and Americans need to show military leadership and courage and stand with their European allies and brothers.”

Wiggenhals, a die-in-the-wool Republican, believes Putin is striking now because he recognizes he has a rare window to escape punishment from the largest military forces in the world—being the United States—because he knows the current administration won’t use it to stop him.

It is one of a myriad of opinions among conservatives camps about the Russian attacks on Ukraine with others blaming Ukraine for defying Putin’s historic opposition to bringing NATO closer to western borders.

Many fear that any aggressive allying by world forces will bring on a war that could lead to a nuclear holocaust.

Flood of Support​

Wigenhals and Childress both said they have received support from several U.S. lawmakers, including Congresswoman Mary Miller of Illinois and Indiana Congresswoman Victoria Spartz, who has been especially outspoken against Russia’s attack on Ukraine.

Spartz and Wigenhals could not be reached for comment by The Epoch Times.

According to Childress, when they ran into some obstacles in transporting the donated ammunition to Ukraine, Spartz commented “she would carry it to Ukraine herself if need be.”

Miller, in a series of recent tweets on Russia’s invasion, has been especially critical of the Biden administration, stating “none of this would be happening if President [Donald] Trump was still in the White House.”

In a recent press release, Miller blamed the Green New Deal, a largely-Democratic supported public policy under which the United States continues to buy about 10 percent of its oil from Russia instead of tapping into America’s oil reserves.

Wagenhals told The Epoch Times that since announcing the ammunition donation on the company’s website he has received a flood of support and offers of financial support from shareholders, customers, and complete strangers from around the world who back sending bullets to Ukraine.

One businessman, he said, called to send him a check for $25,000 to help pay for the ammunition he’s sending to Ukraine’s armed forces.


London Stock Exchange Suspends More Trade In Russia Stocks, As Insurers Pull Coverage Over Ukraine​


The London Stock Exchange (LSE) on Mar. 4, suspended trading on a second round of Russian stocks, because of continuing market deterioration and as some insurers withdrew coverage from exporters due to increasing sanctions over the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The LSE had earlier suspended trading on Mar. 3 for 27 Russian companies, to prevent investors both buying and selling Russian securities in and out of the country.

Western banks, investors, and insurers have in recent days have been pulling their investments from Russia and halting the provision of services, as more sanctions were placed on Moscow.

The governments of the UK, the European Union, and the United States are continuing to roll out more financial sanctions on Russia to prevent its companies from accessing Western markets.

Global depositary receipts (GDRs) which represent shares in a foreign company, were no longer accepted for eight Russian stocks including Sistema, Etalon Group, and Magnit, preventing them from trading on the LSE.


The trading authorities said that it was acting to “maintain orderly markets,” amid mass selling of Russian stocks and “ongoing deterioration of market conditions,” as foreign investors cut ties with the country.

High-profile Russian banks, such as Sberbank, and major companies like Evraz, Gazprom, En+, and Rosneft were also penalized by the trading suspensions in London.

There are currently no Russian securities trading on the LSE following the move.

“This captures all Russian GDRs on our markets,” said a London Exchange spokesperson.

The LSE followed the lead of the Deutsche Boerse AG in Germany, which shut its doors earlier in the week to Russian securities listed on its market due to the sanctions.

The ability of investors to trade Russian stocks is further limited by a decision from the Russian Central Bank to keep the country’s stock market largely closed for the fifth day in a row.

Trade credit insurers, who provide a financial safety net for exports and imports, are pulling back from covering businesses that export to Ukraine and Russia given the risks of sanctions, high claims, or missed payments.

The move in the nearly $3 trillion global market is expected to add pressure on Russia’s weakened economy.

The UK-based Institute of Directors and the European Confederation of Directors’ Associations urged their nationals to quit Russian boards, saying it was “no longer tenable” for them to remain and adding that any directors of Belarusian firms should also quit.

European Union officials are also examining whether to curb Russian influence and access to finance at the International Monetary Fund following the Ukraine invasion.

The United States is expected to continue with similar multilateral sanctions to target the wealth of Russian oligarchs as part of its campaign to pressure the Kremlin.

Some investors are buying into devalued funds linked to Russia, seeing current distressed levels as a potentially cheap way to acquire Russian assets if the crisis subsides.

However, the majority of big investors are rushing to divest themselves of their now worthless Russian assets as fast as possible, as future business with Moscow appears dormant for now.


World Bank Worried About Global Food Supply and Increasing Prices as War Rages in Major Exporter Ukraine​

The Russian incursion into Ukraine is a “catastrophe” for the world, said the president of the World Bank, David Malpass, while warning about the negative impact of the war on global food supplies, prices, and further supply chain crunches.

Stressing that his biggest concern was the “pure loss of human lives,” Malpass pointed out that the Ukraine war comes at a “bad time” as the world is grappling with rising inflation. The economic fallout stretches beyond the borders of Ukraine, with the rising energy prices and inflation particularly hitting the poorest the most, he told BBC.

The invasion has pushed up food prices, which is a “very real consideration” for those living in poor nations, Malpass said while adding that both Ukraine and Russia are some of the largest producers of food.

Combined together, the two nations account for 19 percent of global corn supply, 29 percent of the world’s wheat exports, and 80 percent of worldwide sunflower oil exports. Around 70 percent of Russian wheat exports last year went to the Middle Eastern and African nations.

Fourteen countries currently depend on Ukraine for over 10 percent of their wheat consumption, with Lebanon importing around half of its wheat from the country. Libya imports 43 percent, followed by Malaysia and Indonesia with 28 percent each.


Ukraine’s supplies have been blocked as ports are shut down because of the conflict. Russian supplies are now restricted due to the western sanctions which make it harder for countries to buy from Moscow. “There’s no way to adjust quickly enough to the loss of supply from Ukraine and from Russia, and so that adds to prices,” Malpass said.


The disruption in Russian energy supplies is also concerning, the World Bank president said. The situation is particularly problematic for Western Europe, Malpass noted as he criticized the region’s governments for neglecting “other aspects” of generating electricity.

Roughly 39 percent of the European Union’s electricity comes from fossil fuel-burning power stations. Russia accounts for around 40 percent of the EU’s natural gas imports and about a quarter of its oil imports. Rising energy prices will push up food prices, increasing supply chain disruptions.

A decline in inventories has complicated the issue. For instance, stocks of wheat among major exporters like Russia, Ukraine, Canada, EU, Australia, United States, Kazakhstan, and Argentine are expected to fall to a nine-year low for the 2021/22 season according to the International Grains Council (ICG).

Inventories from these eight nations make up 20 percent of global inventories. Excluding Russia and Ukraine, the rest of the exporters only account for 16 percent of global wheat stocks which is just enough to feed the world for less than 21 days. Wheat futures are up by around 40 percent in 2022.

There are worries that the war will prevent many farmers in Ukraine and Russia from planting crops for the upcoming spring season, which can also negatively affect food availability.

 
Sweden and Finland, both of which are not Nato members, have announced that they will further strengthen their security cooperation following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Reuters reports that the Finnish prime minister, Sanna Marin, made the announcement at a joint news conference with Swedish prime minister, Magdalena Andersson, today.

Only about 400 people were evacuated from Volnovakha and nearby areas during today’s ceasefire, BBC News reports, citing Ukrainian officials.

Authorities had been aiming to evacuate more than 15,000 civilians from the region during the partial ceasefire, which began at 7am GMT.

But regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said: “Although we had the intention and necessary transport to evacuate a lot more people, we had to stop the movement of the column, because the Russians once again started shelling Volnovakha mercilessly, and it was very dangerous to move there.”

US secretary of state Antony Blinken has spoken with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi about Moscow’s “premeditated, unprovoked, and unjustified war against Ukraine,” a US state department spokesperson said in a statement reported by Reuters.

“The secretary noted the world is watching to see which nations stand up for the basic principles of freedom, self-determination and sovereignty,” spokesperson Ned Price said in a statement.

“He underscored that the world is acting in unison to repudiate and respond to the Russian aggression, ensuring that Moscow will pay a high price.”
Your usual diplomatic "warning, not a threat"?

Not withstanding his past achievements, his decision to invade Ukraine and his beliefs surrounding what would happen were completely retarded. Putin is just a man, just as fallible as anyone else, especially given he has surrounded himself with yes men and murdered his opposition, made it illegal to question the war - how can he have a seperate point of view challenge his own?

Much less Putin derangement syndrome, there are people who see him as this almost infallible chess master with another trick up his sleeve. When perhaps he's a ruthless tyrant who has become more unhinged over the years as he became increasingly isolated. Either way, invading Ukraine will be his undoing.

INTERESTING UPDATES:
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Notable: Point 1 suggests potential in Ukrainian success in attacking artillery, but more likely artillery is running out of munitions.

It was suggested by one of the Bellingcat investigators that Russian supplies for the war are running low. They did expect a quick victory so this isn't that surprising.
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Further to evidence this, the convoy attempting to encircle Kyiv in the North has seemingly either been attacked head on and destroyed at least up to this bridge, or part of it has been isolated from resupply. This is a very large portion of said convoy and a huge amount of men and materiel.
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Russia is still pressing forward in the South, but to take Odessa they are going to need to take another city, hold their supply lines and then take Odessa. Given it's taken them a week to take Kherson which was far smaller than Odessa it's quite a tall ask. Their greater success in the South is a combination of better ground as it is dry, shorter supply lines to Crimea and probably less resistance than other areas of the country. Smaller population, more russian support.

Regardless of success in the South, this has and will continue to be a complete disaster for the Russians unless they can change their momentum in the North or East, but I doubt that is going to be possible in the short term. Much more difficult in the long term with Western support and sanctions.

EDIT:
Another thread on why Russia logistics are fucked in the North and East due to the muddy season they didn't factor in - despite it being a thing in Russia too. Builds on evidence that Russia has fucked the invasion, and why we are only seeing appreciable gains in the dry Southern part of Ukraine. Even then, it took them 7 days to capture a small city - I don't think Odessa will fall at this rate.


I know people are claiming it's unbelievable Russia are being btfo, but this what happens when you give expensive toys to amateurs. They break them.
Interesting. Now that we're seeing Russian losing more planes, the British MoD's update about the airspace still being contested is proven true. So is it possible we're going to see the Russian army having trouble with lack of amunition? The Bellingcat's info also reminded me of the supposedly captured Russian battle plan, it also said the the last day of their planned operation was Sunday
 
I'm not surprised that China wants Russia to be isolated so it can become their personal bitch kind of like a bigger North Korea. So I'm suspecting China knew about Russia's invasion of Ukraine and were secretly hoping that Russia would be sanction so hard that they would have to relie on them and basically become a bigger version of North Korea.

I can belive China making their big alley into a complete puppet works well for their agenda.
 

Putin warns third parties against creating Ukraine no-fly zone​

Putin's push to stave off further international aid for Ukrainians followed the failure of a limited cease-fire agreement between Russia and Ukraine after Putin's forces continued to shell cities.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Saturday that Moscow would consider any third-party declaration of a no-fly zone over Ukraine as “participation in the armed conflict.”

Speaking at a meeting with female pilots on Saturday, Putin said Russia would view “any move in this direction” as an intervention that "will pose a threat to our service members.”

“That very second, we will view them as participants of the military conflict, and it would not matter what members they are,” the Russian president said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has pushed NATO to impose a no-fly zone over his country, warning that “all the people who die from this day forward will also die because of you” as Russian forces were battering strategic locations in Ukraine.

NATO has said a no-fly zone, which would bar all unauthorized aircraft from flying over Ukraine, could provoke widespread war in Europe with nuclear-armed Russia.

The latest war of words followed a limited cease-fire that Russia declared to allow civilians to evacuate two cities in Ukraine quickly fell apart Saturday, and Ukrainian officials blamed Russian shelling for blocking the promised safe passage as Moscow tightened its grip on the southern coast and residents raced to escape areas not under siege.

The Russian defense ministry said it had agreed on evacuation routes with Ukrainian forces for Mariupol, a strategic port in the southeast, and the eastern city of Volnovakha. The two cities have been under attack for days, producing scenes of desperation, destruction and death that mirrored those elsewhere from the war in Ukraine.

The struggle to enforce the cease-fire showed the fragility of efforts to stop fighting across Ukraine as the number of people fleeing the country reached 1.4 million on the 10th day after Russian forces invaded its neigbor.

“We are doing everything on our part to make the agreement work,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s said. “This is one of the main tasks for today. Let’s see if we can go further in the negotiation process.”

“The Russian side is not holding to the cease-fire and has continued firing on Mariupol itself and on its surrounding area,” said Kyrylo Tymoshenko, the deputy head of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s office. “Talks with the Russian Federation are ongoing regarding setting up a cease-fire and ensuring a safe humanitarian corridor.”

Russia breached the deal in Volnovakha as well, Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk told reporters. “We appeal to the Russian side to stop firing,” she said. Meanwhile, Moscow outlet RIA Novosti carried a Russian defense ministry claim that the firing came from inside both cities against Russian positions.

Mariupol had been the scene of growing misery in recent days amid an assault that knocked out power and most phone service and raised the prospect of food and water shortages for hundreds of thousands of people in freezing weather. Pharmacies are out of medicine, Doctors Without Borders said.


A top official in Mariupol, Pavlo Kirilenko, the head of the Donetsk military-civil administration that includes the city, had said the humanitarian corridor would extend to Zaporizhzhia, 226 kilometers (140 miles) away.

In comments carried on Ukrainian television, Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko said thousands of people had gathered for safe passage out of the city and buses were departing when shelling began.

“We value the life of every inhabitant of Mariupol and we cannot risk it, so we stopped the evacuation,” he said.

Before Russia announced the limited cease-fire, Ukraine had urged Moscow to create humanitarian corridors to allow children, women and the older adults to flee the fighting, calling them “question No. 1.”

But Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Saturday asserted that “the Ukrainian side, the most interested side here, it would seem, is constantly making up various pretexts to delay the beginning of another meeting.” He said Russia was ready for a third round of talks.

Diplomatic efforts continued as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Poland to meet with the prime minister and foreign minister, a day after attending a NATO meeting in Brussels in which the alliance pledged to step up support for eastern flank members.

Aeroflot, Russia’s flagship state-owned airline, announced that it plans to halt all international flights. except to Belarus, starting Tuesday in the wake of Western sanctions imposed on Russia.

While a vast Russian armored column threatening Ukraine’s capital remained stalled outside Kyiv, the new shelling in Mariupol showed Russia's determination to cut Ukraine off from access to the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, further damaging the country’s economy.

Despite the shelling, presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovich said the situation was generally quiet Saturday and Russian forces “have not taken active actions since the morning."

Ukraine's president has lashed out at NATO for refusing to impose a no-fly zone over his country, warning that “all the people who die from this day forward will also die because of you.”

NATO has said a no-fly zone, which would bar all unauthorized aircraft from flying over Ukraine, could provoke widespread war in Europe with nuclear-armed Russia. But as the United States and other NATO members send weapons for Kyiv and more than 1 million refugees spill through the continent, the conflict is already drawing in countries far beyond Ukraine’s borders.

Russia continues to crack down on independent media reporting on the war, also blocking Facebook and Twitter, and more outlets say they are pausing their work inside the country.

And in a warning of a hunger crisis yet to come, the U.N. World Food Program has said millions of people inside Ukraine, a major global wheat supplier, will need food aid “immediately.”

Ukraine’s president was set to brief U.S. senators Saturday by video conference as Congress considers a request for $10 billion in emergency funding for humanitarian aid and security needs.

In a video message to antiwar protesters in several European cities, Zelenskyy appealed for help. “If we fall, you will fall,” he said.

The U.N. Security Council scheduled an open meeting for Monday on the worsening humanitarian situation. The United Nations estimates that 12 million people in Ukraine and 4 million fleeing to neighboring countries in the coming months will need humanitarian aid.

At least 351 civilians have been confirmed killed since Russia’s invasion on Feb. 24, but the true number is probably much higher, the U.N. human rights office has said. Russia said Wednesday 498 of its troops had been killed and has not updated since.

As homes in the northern city of Chernihiv burned from what locals blamed on the Russian shelling that's targeted Ukraine's urban areas from the start, one resident accused Europe of merely looking on. “We wanted to join NATO and the EU and this is the price we are paying, and NATO cannot protect us," she said.

Kyiv’s central train station remained crowded with people desperate to flee. “People just want to live,” one woman, Ksenia, said.

Elsewhere in the capital, in a sign of nerves near breaking point, two people on a sidewalk froze in their tracks at the sound of a sharp bang. It was a garbage truck upending a bin.

 
I'm not surprised that China wants Russia to be isolated so it can become their personal bitch kind of like a bigger North Korea. So I'm suspecting China knew about Russia's invasion of Ukraine and were secretly hoping that Russia would be sanction so hard that they would have to relie on them and basically become a bigger version of North Korea.

I can belive China making their big alley into a complete puppet works well for their agenda.
year 20xx: "Russia was always a rightful part of China. Russia is China"
 
Novopskov in the Luhansk region, Russian soldiers shoot a civilian, then start shooting in the air it seems, can't tell what happens next:
What appears to be the same protest earlier:

They're shouting pro-Ukranian chants. Russia claims that Luhansk is entirely pro-Russian.
I still find it weird that their are people on the thread defending Russia. I mean I'm against U.S intervention that's one thing. But defending what Putin is doing is entirely different thing.
 
year 20xx: "Russia was always a rightful part of China. Russia is China"
At this point, no matter how this war ends, Putin's goal of a stronger Russia has already failed. There won't be a Russia anymore. Just Northern China.

Siberia is already swamped with Chinese migrants; if Russia becomes dependent on China for economic activity, China will end up owning their neighbor to the north.

I still find it weird that their are people on the thread defending Russia. I mean I'm against U.S intervention that's one thing. But defending what Putin is doing is entirely different thing.
That's because they're too blinded by their hate of woke leftism, and they bought into the whole "based Russia" meme, despite Russia being a country of godless heathens killing their young in the womb while consuming vodka like water, and their oligarchs are former Commies who wax nostalgic about the USSR days.

I mean, come on, the West has its many, many flaws, but Russia takes those flaws and amplifies them to an insane degree.

Novopskov in the Luhansk region, Russian soldiers shoot a civilian, then start shooting in the air it seems, can't tell what happens next:
What appears to be the same protest earlier:

They're shouting pro-Ukranian chants. Russia claims that Luhansk is entirely pro-Russian.
They're about as pro-Russian as the average Polish citizen. By which I mean, they're not pro-Russian at all.
 
He might if the Ukrainians keep putting up a hard fight.

Have a Finnish friend who I occasionally play games with and just talked to him last night about this mess. Was told there are rumors flying around that Russia will invade very soon and their manufacturers are prepping for war production.

Well, that's not quite correct. Mood in Finland is currently that right now we are safe, since even the majority of forces Russia keeps normally around Finnish border are in the Ukraine, but if Putin isn't stopped in Ukraine now, then we will be the next target, in few years. Especially if we don't join NATO right away.

Stopping Russia at Ukraine will avoid this. The moment they share a border with NATO, WW3 will start. Because Putin sure as fuck won't stay on his side of the border, and neither will NATO, after seeing what they did to Ukraine. If the NATO countries don't start the war, Putin will, and once that happens, nukes fly.

I don't believe that Putin would have resources or willingness to attack NATO countries, but like I said, if Finland and Sweden don't join NATO quite fast, we might be the next target.
 
I still find it weird that their are people on the thread defending Russia.
Are they? Or are they simply not jerking off to West and jerking off their hateboner for Putin. The issue here is far more complex than many posters pretend it is. It's not simply "west good, Putin bad, lets start a nuclear war for democracy/freedom"
 
@Rezza
I do wonder if Russia has managed to take out some of the Ukrainian drones as less footage is coming out of those videos, but US int seems to confirm that "a significant majority" of the Ukrainian Air Force is still flying.

With that said, even if they weren't the Russian's will never achieve complete dominance of the Air Space. The proliferation of MANPADs, and Ukraine's sizeable number of AA systems that operate at Medium/Long range, means that the air will continue to be contested in the weeks and months to come - even if Ukraine's air assets do eventually get put out of action.

Just today I believe Russia has lost something like 4 fixed wing, and 3 helicopters. They've lost close to 80 aircraft in total, fuck knows how many are damaged and not safe to function. The 40 or so helicopters they have shot down represents something like 10% of the total force of attack helicopters that Russia use, and again - this is talking about total stock, ignoring serviceability, or those that have been damaged but not shot down so are no longer airworthy.

With western sanctions, the servicing and maintenance of these fleets of aircraft will probably be nigh on impossible. Much of the advanced avionics are reliant on Western technology. I do not think Russia can maintain this tempo for very long, they have a lot of aircraft but losing 2 a day will deplete them quickly. More importantly, their experienced pilots will be few and far between, and many captured or dead.
 
At this point, no matter how this war ends, Putin's goal of a stronger Russia has already failed. There won't be a Russia anymore. Just Northern China.

Siberia is already swamped with Chinese migrants; if Russia becomes dependent on China for economic activity, China will end up owning their neighbor to the north.


That's because they're too blinded by their hate of woke leftism, and they bought into the whole "based Russia" meme, despite Russia being a country of godless heathens killing their young in the womb while consuming vodka like water, and their oligarchs are former Commies who wax nostalgic about the USSR days.

I mean, come on, the West has its many, many flaws, but Russia takes those flaws and amplifies them to an insane degree.


They're about as pro-Russian as the average Polish citizen. By which I mean, they're not pro-Russian at all.
I mean I hate woke Leftism as any other guy on here. But that doesn't mean I want to defend someone like Putin. Seriously woke leftism may be offer but so is the Russian government.
 
Are they? Or are they simply not jerking off to West and jerking off their hateboner for Putin. The issue here is far more complex than many posters pretend it is. It's not simply "west good, Putin bad, lets start a nuclear war for democracy/freedom"
Some of us used to be pro-Putin. Heck, I used to think he was a rational, if not harsh, ruler. That he was a necessary evil that keeps Russia in line.

Now? The dude's an idiot. His invasion of Ukraine does nothing to benefit the average Russian, his economy is tanking, and he's currently in the process of selling his country to China. All for what? To gain a country where everyone there wants him dead? There's no logic in that line of thinking at all.

As I said before, no matter what Putin's goals in this war are, he's already lost. This war was meant to show the world that Russia is a serious world power that shouldn't be messed with. But after this war? They'll be China's bitch, whether or not they take Ukraine.

I mean I hate woke Leftism as any other guy on here. But that doesn't mean I want to defend someone like Putin. Seriously woke leftism may be offer but so is the Russian government.
The Russian government, ironically enough, is run by members of the old USSR Communist Party, or their kids. The kind of people that once used the woke Americans as a tool.
 
Shockingly, I find the Happenings thread less propagandized than this one. Certain posters are completely ignoring the West pouring gas on this fire and preventing meaningful dialogue from taking place.
If we're not one hundred percent Putin Shields will preventing meaningful dialogue
No people criticizing Vladimir Putin for being a massive idiot
It's only the United States is fault that someone is invading a sovereign country
Those damn Anglo liberals
 
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