What Will Actually Happen if Russia Invades Ukraine

The real reason Putin played a pussycat during the Trump presidency

Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump.

Illustrated | Getty Images, iStock

Republicans have long had a toughness fetish. Going back to the early days of the Cold War, its flip side has been the insinuation that Democrats are weaklings ready to sell out the country to its enemies, with the GOP eager to serve proudly and unapologetically as America's lone defenders abroad.

No one should be surprised that the script has already been updated to account for recent distressing events on the border separating Russia and Ukraine.

Late last week, conservative talk-show host Hugh Hewitt observed in a tweet that "the tyrant Putin invaded Ukraine in 2014 and will do so again in 2022 but did not do so between 2017 and 2020." Without mentioning his name, Hewitt implied Putin became a pussycat because of Donald Trump's steadfast leadership as president.

But wait — wasn't Trump Putin's lapdog for the entirety of his presidency, famously refusing to say anything remotely critical about him and even siding with Putin's denial of Russian interference in the 2016 election against evidence provided by America's own intelligence services?

No doubt realizing the absurdity of the claim, National Review's Rich Lowry (and others) leapt in a few days later to add a layer of nuance to the assertion. It's not that Trump was tougher than President Biden, but that he was more erratic: "The sheer unpredictably of Trump, his anger at being defied or disrespected, his willingness to take the occasional big risk (the Soleimani strike), all had to make Putin frightened or wary of him in a way that he simply isn't of Joe Biden."

There may be some truth in this revision of the thesis. Trump was indeed volatile, impulsive, and capricious. It's certainly possible that Putin feared a move against Ukraine could spark a massive military response from Trump.

But it's far more likely he hoped for something very different. As Jonathan Last pointedly suggested on Tuesday in his newsletter for The Bulwark, Trump expressed his desire on numerous occasions for the United States to withdraw from NATO altogether. He did so while campaigning for president in 2016. He did so as president. And apparently, he even made clear to advisers he hoped to make it a reality after he won re-election in 2020.


Since such a withdrawal is Putin's fondest wish, it makes far greater sense to suppose his relative restraint during the Trump presidency was a function of a reasonable expectation he might get everything he wanted without having to fire a shot. Only now, with a less … unorthodox American president in charge, has war become Putin's only means of advancing his more immediate aim of ensuring NATO moves no closer to Russian territory.

Putin didn't play nice guy from 2017 to 2020 because he was afraid of Donald Trump. He did so because he knew he had nothing to fear from the fanboy in the Oval Office.



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Germany announces MAJOR defense policy shift in face of Russia's Ukraine invasion

  • Scholz said Saturday that Germany would be sending 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500 Stinger missiles directly to Ukraine.
  • His government has also removed some restrictions on German-made weapons being sent to conflict zones, enabling more third-party countries to send weapons to Ukraine as well.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz arrives for a statement on Ukraine at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, February 24, 2022.
© Provided by CNBCGerman Chancellor Olaf Scholz arrives for a statement on Ukraine at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, February 24, 2022.

Germany is committing 100 billion euros ($112.7 billion) to a fund for its armed services and will ramp up its defense spending above 2% of its gross domestic product, Chancellor Olaf Scholz said during a special session of the Bundestag on Sunday.

It has become clear that "we need to invest significantly more in the security of our country, in order to protect our freedom and our democracy," Scholz said.

Germany has been widely criticized for what many describe as meager investment in its military and its slow and lackluster response to Russia's military buildup around, and subsequent invasion of, Ukraine. The announcement Sunday followed the German government's decision Saturday to send weapons and other supplies directly to Ukraine.

Scholz said Saturday that Germany would be sending 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500 Stinger missiles directly to Ukraine. His government has also removed some restrictions on German-made weapons being sent to conflict zones, enabling more third-party countries to send weapons to Ukraine as well.

The move signaled a major shift in a German defense policy that's been in place since the end of World War II that prevented the exporting of locally made weapons to conflict zones.

Riho Terras, a member of the European Parliament and former defense chief for Estonia, wrote on Twitter praising Germany's decision.

"Chancellor @OlafScholz just made a super strong statement at the Bundestag. Military expenditure to more than 2% of GDP, thoroughly strengthening the Bundeswehr, building new LNG terminals to break free from Russian gas."

Germany was among the NATO member states criticized by former President Donald Trump for failing to meet the organization's minimum commitment of 2% of GDP to defense spending. It's also been called out for its apparent reluctance to levy strong sanctions on Russia, given Germany's heavy reliance on Russian gas, which makes up about 30% of its energy supplies.

Much controversy surrounded Germany's NordStream 2 gas pipeline from Russia, a joint project costing $11 billion that would have doubled Russian gas exports to Germany, and further tying the countries in terms of economic and energy reliance and weakening Ukraine. Following Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to send troops into Ukraine, Scholz last week announced he was halting the pipeline project.

In late January, as Russian troops along Ukraine's borders grew to what some estimated to be as many as 150,000 and NATO leaders emphasized the risks of a Russian invasion, Germany refused to provide weapons to its ally and offered to send 5,000 helmets instead.

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko called the offer an "absolute joke," saying that Ukraine needed weapons rather than protective gear.




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Russian POWs Say They Were Tricked, Threatened During Invasion

The Ukrainian Interior Ministry has set up a Telegram channel with videos that it says show captured, injured, and dead Russian soldiers. This video shows Russian soldiers being interrogated. The prisoners are being questioned by their Ukrainian captors. Originally published at - https://www.rferl.org/a/russian-pows-...
 
Lisa Lozoya Wilkins
All the other countries including ours need to do what they can to help the Ukraine people. Couldn't just a dictator he doesn't like the fact that Ukraine's an independent country and you jealous the Russian people need to wake up to their dictator that is destroying Russia along with trying to destroy Ukraine.. Russian people stand up against the dictator get rid of him for once in your lifetime. That's why Trump loved him so much cuz Trump wanted to be just like him
 
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Elon Musk says his SpaceX company's Starlink satellite internet service is now "active" in Ukraine. The tech billionaire made the announcement on Twitter in response to a tweet by Ukraine's minister of digital transformation saying that while Musk tries to "colonize Mars," Russia is trying to occupy Ukraine. https://7ny.tv/3hs37Pe
 
TOGETHER FOR PEACE: Tens of thousands of protesters in Berlin come together in support of Ukraine. https://fxn.ws/3M8SM96
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Seymour Stuart
“•The EU, US, UK, Japan and Canada are cutting off key Russian banks from the international Swift payment network, which allows the smooth and rapid transfer of money across borders
•Much of Europe has shut off its airspace to Russian airlines
•The US, EU and UK are imposing personal sanctions on President Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
•Germany has halted approval on Russia's Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, a major investment by both Russia and European companies
•The EU has already targeted 351 Russian MPs and aims to limit Russian access to finance, technology and defence
•The UK says all major Russian banks will have their assets frozen, with 100 individuals and entities targeted; Russia's national airline Aeroflot will also be banned from landing in the UK
•The US is targeting 10 of Russia's biggest financial institutions
•The Russian city of St Petersburg will no longer be able to host this year's Champions League final and the Russian Grand Prix will not take place in Sochi.”
^BBC News
“As Europe’s biggest economy, which had long been the key obstacle to more decisive action against Russia, Germany dramatically changed course this weekend as Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced a vast increase in the country’s defense spending and greenlighted arms deliveries to Ukraine. Not long after, the European Union announced it will finance and deliver weapons, even fighter jets, to Ukraine — a “watershed” move for the bloc.”
^Washington Post
 
POTENT PROTEST: Some bars and liquor stores think they've found a potent way to punish Russia for invading Ukraine: They're pulling Russian vodka off their shelves and promoting Ukrainian brands instead. --> https://7ny.tv/3srmKO4

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Michael Acton
What do Russian care it was already paid for.

Rue Brown
Michael Acton flushing it down the toilet definitely made me feel better!


Sylvia Doyle
Michael Acton I guess they’ll care when no more is ordered!
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“•The EU, US, UK, Japan and Canada are cutting off key Russian banks from the international Swift payment network, which allows the smooth and rapid transfer of money across borders
•Much of Europe has shut off its airspace to Russian airlines
•The US, EU and UK are imposing personal sanctions on President Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
•Germany has halted approval on Russia's Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, a major investment by both Russia and European companies
•The EU has already targeted 351 Russian MPs and aims to limit Russian access to finance, technology and defence
•The UK says all major Russian banks will have their assets frozen, with 100 individuals and entities targeted; Russia's national airline Aeroflot will also be banned from landing in the UK
•The US is targeting 10 of Russia's biggest financial institutions
•The Russian city of St Petersburg will no longer be able to host this year's Champions League final and the Russian Grand Prix will not take place in Sochi.”
^BBC News
“As Europe’s biggest economy, which had long been the key obstacle to more decisive action against Russia, Germany dramatically changed course this weekend as Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced a vast increase in the country’s defense spending and greenlighted arms deliveries to Ukraine. Not long after, the European Union announced it will finance and deliver weapons, even fighter jets, to Ukraine — a “watershed” move for the bloc.”
^Washington Post


Serious Question: Is this man sane?

Do the Russians have some kind of fail-safe procedure to check him before we all end up, TOASTED ? ? ?

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Serious Question: Is this man sane?

Do the Russians have some kind of fail-safe procedure to check him before we all end up, TOASTED ? ? ?


A former US ambassador to Russia says Putin is becoming 'increasingly unhinged' and 'disconnected from reality'

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  • Michael McFaul, a former US ambassador to Russia, says Putin is becoming "increasingly unhinged."
  • "He's out at his compound, doesn't come into town very much, and under COVID, he's been more isolated," he said.
  • McFaul added in a tweet that Putin might be disconnected from reality after decades in power.
A former US ambassador to Russia said Sunday that, after decades in power and intense isolation from COVID-19, Russian President Vladimir Putin was becoming "increasingly unhinged."

Michael McFaul, an Obama-era ambassador to Russia, made the observation during an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press."

When asked whether Putin was a "rational actor," McFaul said: "To get kicked out of SWIFT as it happened to Russia yesterday, and then to have the president of Russia get in front of his generals and say, 'We need to prepare for nuclear war.' That doesn't sound very rational to me."

On Saturday, Western nations announced that some Russian banks would be removed from SWIFT, a global financial messaging system.

McFaul, who said he first met Putin in 1991, expressed concern that the Russian leader had believed his own propaganda "for decades."

"Remember, this guy's been in power for 22 years. He doesn't listen to his aides. Even when I was ambassador eight years ago, he was very dismissive of anybody around him. He's out at his compound, doesn't come into town very much, and, under COVID, he's been more isolated," McFaul said.

"I sat in the room with him for five years when I worked in the Obama administration. I speak Russian. I listened to him, and I know what he says — he's increasingly unhinged in the way that he talks about the regime," McFaul added.

The former ambassador also highlighted Putin's claims that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky — a Jewish man — is a neo-Nazi addicted to drugs. "That doesn't sound like somebody who's going to sit down and negotiate a peaceful outcome," McFaul said, referring to Putin.

In a separate tweet Monday, McFaul reiterated why he thought people like Putin couldn't be reasoned with.
"When dictators rule for decades, they (1) stop listening to advisors, (2) become disconnected from reality, (3) spend a lot of time alone, and (4) overreach," he wrote. "This is exactly what has happened to Putin."

Early Thursday morning, Putin announced a sudden military assault on Ukraine, saying he wanted to "demilitarize and denazify" the country.

Insider's live blog of the invasion is covering developments as they happen.
Read the original article on Business Insider
 
RUSSIA-UKRAINE CONFLICT

The West finally throws a punch in its face-off with Russia
A rash of weekend moves on sanctions, airspace, military aid and more showed that the United States and its allies aren’t afraid to escalate when it comes to helping Ukraine.


By NAHAL TOOSI
Politico
02/28/2022

The gloves are off, at least for now.

After months of making careful, measured moves that failed to persuade Russia to halt plans to invade Ukraine, the United States and its European allies have tossed aside caution in favor of a more ruthless strategy.

Over the weekend, Washington and its partners unveiled a raft of measures — from new weapons transfers to anti-corruption punishments to powerful sanctions on Russian banks to the shutting of the European Union’s airspace to Russian flights — that are sure to make Moscow suffer economically even as it struggles to tame Ukraine militarily. Not only did once-hesitant countries like Germany, shocked by images of a Russian assault on the Ukrainian capital, take the lead on certain fronts, but some of the penalties are directly aimed at Russian leader Vladimir Putin himself.

At times, it was hard to keep up with all the announcements of new anti-Kremlin moves that landed in recent days, the sum of which was arguably historic in size and scope. Even some private companies and international sports organizations took steps to punish Russia. Countries friendly or neutral toward Moscow, meanwhile, largely stayed silent or are offering to help mediate an end to his latest attack on Ukraine. And Putin’s hints that he might be willing to take the nuclear route didn’t prompt any sudden kowtowing from his detractors.

The Russian economy immediately felt the impact, with the country’s currency, the ruble, crashing as Russians rushed to get cash and the country’s stock market was kept shut. U.S. officials on Monday, meanwhile, laid out new details of sanctions imposed on Russia’s financial institutions, including its central bank, finance ministry, National Wealth Fund and Direct Investment Fund. The sanctions will make it much harder for the Russian government to access and move around many of its assets.

“Russia has become a global, economic and financial pariah,” a senior Biden administration official told reporters in a weekend briefing. “This is not where we wanted to be, but this is Putin’s war of choice, and only Putin can decide how much more cost he is willing to bear.”

No one claims that victory is near: Putin is stubborn, and he has few, if any, checks on his power in Russia. His troops have been instructed to capture Kyiv and oust the government of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Russian forces still have the upper hand over Ukraine’s troops, despite years of funding and support for the latter from Washington, and neither the United States nor its NATO allies are willing to send their troops to directly fight Russia. Ukraine’s leaders, meanwhile, are calling for more international help.

Still, the growing anti-Putin international bloc’s willingness to escalate — and escalate dramatically — over the weekend drew cheers and sighs of relief from Russia and sanctions hawks, many of whom had long insisted that the United States and Europe should take the measures they announced over the weekend.

“This is the most devastating package of sanctions on Russia that I have ever seen. It demonstrates a sea change in the West’s Russia policy,” said Paul Massaro, a top Capitol Hill staffer and advocate for anti-corruption sanctions included in the weekend roll-out. “I’m thrilled to see these policies implemented. I’m sorry that this is what it took.”

Current and former U.S. officials said the weekend moves came about for an array of reasons. Chief among them were events on the ground: Skeptics, especially in Europe, can no longer ignore nor minimize Putin’s intentions when Russian troops, tanks and missiles are assaulting major Ukrainian cities, including Kyiv.

“It’s the reality of what was happening in Ukraine. It changes the politics of it overnight,” a second senior Biden administration official told POLITICO.

Zelenskyy’s decision to stay in Kyiv and rally his fellow citizens added to the pressure other capitals felt to do something, as did Ukrainian forces unwillingness to fold on the battlefield, officials and analysts said. Among those praising Zelenskyy was Republican Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, who said the Ukrainian had shown “remarkable courage” and blasted Putin as a “small, evil, feral-eyed man.”

Through social media accounts, viral videos and other means, Zelenskyy, who reportedly rejected a U.S. offer to help him evacuate, has been a relentless voice for Ukrainians, even courting countries such as Azerbaijan and Turkey. Those countries have generally tried to have good relations with Moscow. Over the weekend, Zelenskyy said they’d offered to mediate an end to the fighting.

“Zelenskyy has rallied even traditional partners of Putin to his cause and helped buy political space for the West to take a hatchet to the Russian economy,” said Brian O’Toole, a former Treasury Department sanctions official.

A U.S. defense official agreed, adding that the “stiff Ukrainian resistance is galvanizing European public support.”

Zelenskyy also said Sunday that Russian and Ukrainian delegations were planning to meet for peace talks along the Ukrainian-Belarusian border, likely on Monday. Belarus has remained in Moscow’s corner amid the fighting.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Russian General Staff Valery Gerasimov speak while leaning toward each other.
President Joe Biden and his aides’ efforts to rebuild alliances in Europe that had been frayed during the U.S. presidency of Donald Trump also paid off, current and former U.S. officials said.​

The Biden team has spent the past several months ramping up its discussions with allies in Europe, such as Germany and France, in an effort to unite the capitals to stand up to Russia. That included sharing significant amounts of U.S. intelligence about Russia’s plans with those countries.


MORE> The West finally throws a punch in its face-off with Russia - POLITICO

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BUSINESS
Here’s where Russian oligarchs and their families own property in NYC
By
Jennifer Gould
February 27, 2022 5:47pm
Updated

11-year-old Poppy is a hair-donation trailblazer



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American policy makers, including some senators — like Republican Roger Wicker of Mississippi — are calling for the full “Navalny 35” list of Vladimir Putin cronies to be officially sanctioned by the US.
That’s a list of the top individual alleged “key enablers” of Putin’s kleptocracy, compiled by Russian opposition leader Alexi Navalny, who survived a near-fatal nerve agent poisoning by Putin thugs after he exposed the extent of the dictator’s corruption and money laundering — including the construction of a billion dollar presidential palace — and who is still speaking out even from prison during a kangaroo court hearing.
There is a push for several top Russian oligarchs and cronies of President Vladimir Putin to be sanctioned by the US government.There is a push for several top Russian oligarchs and cronies of President Vladimir Putin to be sanctioned by the US government.Sputnik/AFP via Getty Images
After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the US has now sanctioned Putin and some of his cronies — but not all. And the UK, Canada and more than 15 other countries have already agreed to ban Russian private planes from flying over “democratic skies.” Still, many prominent oligarchs have not been touched and are still enjoying their private planes and megayachts — although that could change.
Several Russian oligarchs own property in New York City. Several Russian oligarchs own property in New York City.New York Post
Sanctions don’t just hurt oligarchs’ pocketbooks. The travel bans also hurt their worldwide standing.
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“The oligarchs are deeply concerned about travel bans because they undermine their reputations and philanthropy, which they use to bolster their public image,” said Louise Shelley, director of the Terrorism, Transnational Crime and Corruption Center at George Mason University.
At the top of the Navalny 35 list is Roman Abramovich, the billionaire oligarch and British soccer club owner known as “Putin’s banker.”
Many on the Navalny 35 list — compiled by Russian opposition leader Alexi Navalny — have residencies in New York City.Many on the “Navalny 35” list — compiled by Russian opposition leader Alexi Navalny — have residencies in New York City.EPA
Abramovich, worth more than $13.8 billion, recently nabbed citizenship in Portugal. In late 2017, Abramovich transferred $92 million worth of New York City property to his ex-wife, Dasha Zhukova — just before a 2018 round of sanctions was announced. Those sanctions penalized people close to Putin and were intended “to counter and deter malign Russian activities” that harm democracy around the globe.
Oligarchs’ ability to transfer wealth to others is another loophole that can’t be ignored, Shelley said. “This ability of politically exposed people to transfer property to friends and family is a way to get around the law, and we need legislation to address it,” she contended.
On Friday, UK members of parliament named Abramovich one of the “key enablers” of the Putin regime — something Abramovich has in the past denied. He has also been effectively barred from entering the UK, where he owns a $170 million mansion near Kensington Palace as well as the Chelsea soccer club. (He handed the “stewardship and care” – or direct control – of the club to a group of trustees on Saturday.)
He also owns a $600 million megayacht, Solaris, which boasts its own missile detection system; his other megayacht, Eclipse, was spotted docked in the tiny island of Saint Martin earlier this week, sources tell The Post. Meanwhile, UK prime minister Boris Johnson mistakenly said last week that Abramovich was already on the UK’s sanctions list; British foreign secretary Liz Truss then said the country wasn’t ruling out adding him in the future, according to reports.
Billionaire Roman Abramovich is considered one of the top enablers of Putin's regime.Billionaire Roman Abramovich is considered one of the top enablers of Putin’s regime.Photo credit should read GLYN KIRK/AFP/Getty Images
Paul Massaro, a US Congressional counter-corruption and foreign policy adviser, claims that Abramovich and others in Putin’s orbit are in the Russian dictator’s wallet – “acting on behalf of the Russian state to infiltrate Western society and push Putin’s agenda.”
“They are part of the Russian governing apparatus and we don’t even see it, but they are infiltrating their way in to subvert democracy,” he contends. “They are his arms abroad – and they are in our system. We have come to rely on them for raw materials, and as the people running Russian state-owned or influenced companies. But they are appendages of the Russian state.”
One Russian political activist, Ilya Zaslavskiy, calls them “kremligarchs” because “oligarchs implies some independence, which they do not have.”
Many of these so-called oligarchs own property in New York. But it’s difficult to connect them to their holdings because they have been successful in hiding their identities behind multiple layers of anonymous shell companies and trusts, thanks to the fact that the real estate industry has managed to nab “temporary exemptions’’ — for two decades — from American anti-money laundering laws since the Patriot Act of 2002.
“The people sanctioned this week — by this point eight years after the first sanctions — don’t have traceable property in their names in the United States, which makes it difficult to seize,” said Tom Firestone, a partner at Stroock & Stroock & Levin, who specializes in transnational investigations and co-chairs the firm’s white-collar and internal investigations practice.
Global Witness, a non profit investigating the secret offshore world, says there is at least $12 trillion hidden in offshore accounts. That includes trillions of dollars allegedly stolen from the people of Russia and used, in part, to strengthen Putin’s autocracy at home while destabilizing — and even invading — democracies abroad.
Here are the Oligarchs of New York:
Roman Abramovich
Estimated Worth: $13.8 billion

Not currently on a US sanctions list. Owns two yachts and owns the Chelsea soccer club in Britain. Known as Putin’s banker. Shortly before an earlier sanctions round in 2018, Abramovich transferred $92.3 million worth of real estate to his ex-wife, Dasha Zhukova, who is on the board of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Shed.
Zhukova, now married to shipping heir Stavros Niarchos, is also a New York real estate developer. She is currently building “Ray Harlem,” a 21-story new-construction building with 222 apartments that will also house the National Black Theater, at 2033 Fifth Avenue at 125th St. In addition, she is founder of Moscow’s Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, Garage magazine and the digital platform Artsy.
Abramovich transferred about $92 million in New York City property to his ex-wife Daria Zhukova in 2017.Abramovich transferred about $92 million in New York City property to his ex-wife Dasha Zhukova in 2017.Photo by Alexander Fyodorov/Epsilon/Getty Images
Zhukova has condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on her museum’s Instagram site, stating that they have “decided to stop work on all exhibitions until the human and political tragedy that is unfolding in Ukraine has ceased. We cannot support the illusion of normality when such events are taking place.” Zhukova declined to comment on her ex-husband’s status, however, and whether or not she agrees with policy makers who want family members of sanctioned oligarchs to also be deprived of illicit wealth and its accouterments — property, yachts, art, jets and jewels — obtained and retained thanks to direct ties to dirty deals and dictators.
In a statement, she told the Post: “The brutal and horrific invasion taken by Russia against Ukraine is shameful. As someone born in Russia, I unequivocally condemn these acts of war, and I stand in solidarity with the Ukrainian people as well as with the millions of Russians who feel the same way.”
HOMES CONNECTED TO HIM:
  • *9, 11, 13 East 75th St. ($74 million)
  • *15 East 75th St. ($16.5 million)
  • *215 E. 73rd St., fourth floor ($900,000)
  • *Ownership of the three properties above all was transferred to Zhukova.
Abramovich is connected to several homes on  East 75th St in Manhattan.Abramovich is connected to several homes on East 75th St. in Manhattan.DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHTOleg Deripaska
Estimated Worth: $4.1 billion

On a US sanctions list: Barred from entering the United States. Began as a metals broker, trading aluminum. US officials say Deripaska is close to Putin and the Russian mob and is wanted for murder, money laundering, bribery and racketeering.
The US froze his assets but let his business partner’s ex-wife, Dasha Zhukova, live in his East 64th Street mansion for a time. She is no longer there. His companies were taken off the sanctions list when he reduced his ownership (but allegedly not his control) to under 50% His partners include Abramovich and Len Blavatnik.
In 2000, Deripaska founded Rusal — a partnership between Sibirsky Aluminium and Abramovich’s Millhouse Capital. By 2007, Rusal merged with SUAL Group, which is owned by sanctioned oligarch Viktor Vekselberg and his partner and friend, the Ukrainian born American and British citizen, Len Blavatnik. Deripaska’s ex-wife Polina Yumasheva is the daughter of the late Boris Yeltsin’s right hand, Valentin Yumashev.
Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska has been barred from entering the US as part of sanctions against him.Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska has been barred from entering the US as part of sanctions against him.Photo by Alexander ShcherbakTASS via Getty ImagesOleg Deripaska owns a home at 11 E. 64th St. in Manhattan.Oleg Deripaska owns a home at 11 E. 64th St. in Manhattan.DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHTHOMES CONNECTED TO HIM:
  • *11 E. 64th St. (bought for $42.5 million in 2008) It’s the former home of Alec Wildenstein and Jocelyn Wildenstein.
  • *12 Gay St $4.5 million, once raided by the FBI in October 2021
  • *The ownership of the above two properties was transferred to relatives of Deripaska.
Len Blavatnik
Estimated worth: $34.2 billion

Not on a US sanctions list. His yacht is named after his birthplace, Odessa. One of the world’s richest men — said to be the richest in Britain, where he also has citizenship and a knighthood from the queen — Blavatnik is a metals and energy tycoon who also owns Warner Music. He has given controversial donations to the Council on Foreign Relations, the Hudson Institute, Harvard, Yale and Oxford, which now has the Blavatnik School of Government, to name a few.
Len Blavatnik, one of the world's richest people, has not been sanctioned.Len Blavatnik, one of the world’s richest people, has not been sanctioned.Photo by Gregg DeGuire/Getty Images
When he gave $12 million most recently to CFR, 56 high-profile members, including Russian chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov, wrote an explosive letter to the group’s head, Richard Haas, urging him to return the money. He “acquired his initial wealth by way of highly questionable transactions in tandem with the regimes of [ex-Kazakhstan president] Nursultan Nazarbayev and Vladimir Putin,” according to the September 2019 letter, obtained by The Post: “Blavatnik protected that wealth in part through strategic alliances with security personnel and practices that would surely be considered criminal in any democracy.”
Blavatnik declined to comment at the time, Haas did not address the allegations against Blavatnik. Instead, he touted Blavatnik’s other donations, to Harvard, Yale and Oxford: “We are proud to find ourselves in such distinguished company,” he said.
In the past, Blavatnik’s spokesman told the Post that Blavatnik has not spoken to Putin since 2000 and “plays no role in Russian politics.”
Blavatnik made his first fortune buying up ex-Soviet state natural resources and companies as the Soviet empire collapsed. His empire now extends to property, film, music, biotech and hotels around the world. In 2013, the Russian government paid Blavatnik $7.5 billion for his share in TNK-BP, a Russian oil company. (His partners were sanctioned oligarchs Viktor Vekselberg and the founders of the EU and US sanctioned Alfa-Bank: Mikhail Fridman, German Khan and Alexei Kuzmichev.)
HOMES CONNECTED TO HIM:
  • 2 E. 63rd St., a 75 foot-wide townhouse, the former New York Academy of Sciences, 2005 purchase, $31.25 million After buying the New York Academy of Sciences building, Blavatnik launched the Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists, established by the Blavatnik Family Foundation in 2007, and administered by the New York Academy of Sciences
  • 15 E. 64th St., a $51 million purchase in 2007. The seller was Edgar Bronfman. After buying Bronfman’s townhouse, Blavatnik bought his company, Warner Music, for $3.3 billion.
Blavatnik purchased 19 E. 64th St. in 2007 for $51 million.Blavatnik purchased 19 E. 64th St. in 2007 for $51 million.DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHTBlavatnik purchased 2 E. 63rd St. in 2005 for $31.25 million.Blavatnik purchased 2 E. 63rd St. in 2005 for $31.25 million.DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
Alexei Kuzmichev
Estimated worth: $5.8 billion

Not on a US sanctions list. Kuzmichev is a co-founder of the Alfa Bank, Russia’s largest private bank and the fourth largest in that country. Alfa is on US and EU sanctions lists. He co-controls Alfa Group and LetterOne — which has interests in banking telecom and natural resources — with sanctioned oligarchs Mikhail Fridman and German Khan. The trio have been partners since 1989. They were part of the oil consortium TNK-BP with Blavatnik and Vekselberg.
Alexey Kuzmichev is the co-founder of the Alfa Bank.Alexey Kuzmichev is the co-founder of the Alfa Bank.REUTERSKuzmichev paid $42 million for 33 E. 74th St. in 2016.Kuzmichev paid $42 million for 33 E. 74th St. in 2016.DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHTHOMES CONNECTED TO HIM:
Eugene Shvidler
Estimated net worth: $1.7 billion

Not on a US sanctions list. Oil tycoon and childhood friend and partner of Roman Abramovich; Shvidler is chairman of Abramovich’s Millhouse and Highland Gold Mining.
Eugene ShvidlerBillionaire Eugene Shvidler (right) is a close associated of Abramovich (left).EMPICS/PA Images via Getty ImageShvidler purchased a 785 Fifth Avenue apartment in 2018.Shvidler purchased a 785 Fifth Avenue apartment in 2018.DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHTHOMES CONNECTED TO HIM:
Dmitry Rybolovlev
Estimated net worth: $6.7 billion

Not on a US sanctions list. Rybololev is a fertilizer oligarch and president of the Monaco Football Club. He made his fortune thanks to his ties to Putin, said Russian political activist IIlya Zaslavsky, who has written extensively on oligarchs.
In 2008, Rybololev famously paid $95 million for Donald Trump’s Palm Beach mansion at 515 N. Country Road — $13 million more than the most expensive home sale ever in Palm Beach at the time. (Trump had paid just $41 million for the house four years earlier, in 2004.)
Dmitry Rybololev reportedly made his fertilizer industry fortune thanks to help from Putin. Dmitry Rybolovlev reportedly made his fertilizer industry fortune thanks to help from Putin.Photo by FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty ImagesRybololev paid $88 million for an apartment at 15 Central Park West.Rybololev paid $88 million for an apartment at 15 Central Park West.DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
Rybololev also owned a battery factory in North Carolina: It went through a name change — from “Alevo” to “Innolith’’ after its assets were sold and it was reformed after a bankruptcy — but the Alevo leadership and Russian ties are still in place, Russia watchers say. It helps power the US electric grid and policy experts have reportedly said that its Russian links are a threat to national security.
HOMES CONNECTED TO HIM:
 
Defiant Ukrainian border guards killed after telling Russian warship to ‘go f–k yourself’
By
Patrick Reilly
February 24, 2022 9:35pm
Updated

Defiant Ukrainian border guards killed after telling Russian warship to ‘go f–k yourself’






Ukrainian border guards defending a Black Sea island defiantly told an invading Russian warship to “go f–k yourself” when asked to surrender and were killed when the warship opened fire.
SEE ALSO

Scenes from Russia-Ukraine War protests around the world

The 13 guards were posted on the small but strategic Snake Island off Ukraine’s southeastern border when they were approached by two vessels on Thursday, according to Ukrainian media outlets.
The Russians contacted the guards and identified themselves as a “Russian warship,” demanding that the Ukrainians surrender or they would open fire, according to audio of the exchange.
“This is a Russian warship, I repeat. I suggest you surrender your weapons and capitulate otherwise I will open fire. Do you copy?” the Russians told the border guards.
00:0201:36





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“This is it,” one of the Ukrainian guards can be heard saying in the clip.
“Should I tell him to go f–k himself?” he appears to ask a comrade.
Russian forces have launched assaults across multiple fronts and cities in Ukraine.Russian forces have launched assaults across multiple fronts and cities in Ukraine.NY Post Illustration
“Just in case,” another guard responds.
The guard then turns up the volume on his comms and bluntly responds, “Russian warship, go f–k yourself.”
Get the latest updates in the Russia-Ukraine conflict with the Post’s live coverage.
The Russians reportedly bombarded the 42-acre island with barreled guns from the warship. They then bombed the island with aircraft.
Video apparently taken by one of the guards killed during the attack shows the guard outdoors, wearing a military helmet. He can be heard yelling out and hitting the ground as loud gunfire erupts.

All of the guards were killed, officials said.
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Thursday that the 13 border guards will receive a posthumous Hero of Ukraine medal for “heroically” defending the island.
“On our Zmiinyi Island, defending it to the last, all the border guards died heroically,” Zelensky said. “But [they] did not give up.”
“May the memory of those who gave their lives for Ukraine live forever,” he said.
By late Thursday, Ukraine’s state border service lost all communication with the guards. The island is believed to be occupied by Russian forces.
Ownership island has been hotly disputed in the past between Ukraine and Romania.

Ukrainians who told Russian warship ‘go f–k yourself’ are still alive: officials
By
Emily Crane
February 28, 2022 8:55am
Updated

Drunk driver crashes head-on into police car in Wisconsin













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MORE ON:UKRAINE WAR
The Ukrainian border guards who told a Russian warship to “go f–k yourself” as they defended Snake Island in the Black Sea are still alive and being held captive by the invading forces, Kyiv’s navy revealed Monday.
The 13 guards were initially presumed dead after they defiantly refused to surrender their post on the small island near the Romanian border when two Russian vessels approached last Thursday.
The Ukraine Navy said in a Facebook post that the guards had been “taken captive by Russian occupiers.”
“We are very happy to learn that our brothers are alive and well,” the post said.
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Ukrainian officials had declared last week that the guards had all been killed after Moscow’s forces opened fire with barreled gunships and airstrikes, cutting of all communication with the 42-acre island.
But the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine revealed on Saturday that the guards could still be alive.
Ukrainian servicemen.The 13 guards were initially presumed dead after they defiantly refused to surrender their post.Russian Defense Ministry/TASS via Getty ImagesSnake Island.The Ukrainian guards were defending Snake Island in the Black Sea.Facebook/Armed Forces of Ukraine
Russia claimed on Friday that the Ukrainian guards had actually surrendered — and made no mention of carrying out strikes.
The story of the brave soldiers made international headlines when an audio clip emerged of the exchange between Ukrainian and Russian forces.
“This is a Russian warship,” an unidentified voice can be heard saying. “I propose you lay down your weapons and surrender to avoid bloodshed and unnecessary victims. Otherwise you will be bombed.”
Get the latest updates in the Russia-Ukraine conflict with the Post’s live coverage.
“Russian warship, go f–k yourself,” the Ukrainians replied.
In the wake of the clip going viral, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy promised to decorate the presumed-dead border guards with the nation’s highest honor.
“On our Zmiinyi Island, defending it to the last, all the border guards died heroically. But they did not give up. All of them will be posthumously awarded the title of Hero of Ukraine,” he said on his website.
Ukraine border guard.A video clip of the Ukrainian service members saying “Russian warship, go f–k yourself,” went viral.Twitter/COUPSUREUkrainian servicemen board a bus.Ukrainian servicemen board a bus after being taken by Russian troops.Russian Defense Ministry/TASS via Getty ImagesUkrainian servicemen.Russia claimed on Friday that the Ukrainian guards had surrendered.Russian Defense Ministry/TASS via Getty Images
It was not immediately clear if Zelensky’s promise would remain in effect if the guards returned home alive.
 
RUSSIA-UKRAINE CONFLICT

The West finally throws a punch in its face-off with Russia
A rash of weekend moves on sanctions, airspace, military aid and more showed that the United States and its allies aren’t afraid to escalate when it comes to helping Ukraine.


By NAHAL TOOSI
02/28/2022 04:30 AM EST
Updated: 02/28/2022 08:00 AM EST

The gloves are off, at least for now.

After months of making careful, measured moves that failed to persuade Russia to halt plans to invade Ukraine, the United States and its European allies have tossed aside caution in favor of a more ruthless strategy.

Over the weekend, Washington and its partners unveiled a raft of measures — from new weapons transfers to anti-corruption punishments to powerful sanctions on Russian banks to the shutting of the European Union’s airspace to Russian flights — that are sure to make Moscow suffer economically even as it struggles to tame Ukraine militarily. Not only did once-hesitant countries like Germany, shocked by images of a Russian assault on the Ukrainian capital, take the lead on certain fronts, but some of the penalties are directly aimed at Russian leader Vladimir Putin himself.

No one claims that victory is near: Putin is stubborn, and he has few, if any, checks on his power in Russia. His troops have been instructed to capture Kyiv and oust the government of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Russian forces still have the upper hand over Ukraine’s troops, despite years of funding and support for the latter from Washington, and neither the United States nor its NATO allies are willing to send their troops to directly fight Russia. Ukraine’s leaders, meanwhile, are calling for more international help.

Still, the growing anti-Putin international bloc’s willingness to escalate — and escalate dramatically — over the weekend drew cheers and sighs of relief from Russia and sanctions hawks, many of whom had long insisted that the United States and Europe should take the measures they announced over the weekend.

“This is the most devastating package of sanctions on Russia that I have ever seen. It demonstrates a sea change in the West’s Russia policy,” said Paul Massaro, a top Capitol Hill staffer and advocate for anti-corruption sanctions included in the weekend roll-out. “I’m thrilled to see these policies implemented. I’m sorry that this is what it took.”

Current and former U.S. officials said the weekend moves came about for an array of reasons. Chief among them were events on the ground: Skeptics, especially in Europe, can no longer ignore nor minimize Putin’s intentions when Russian troops, tanks and missiles are assaulting major Ukrainian cities, including Kyiv.

“It’s the reality of what was happening in Ukraine. It changes the politics of it overnight,” a second senior Biden administration official told POLITICO.

President Joe Biden and his aides’ efforts to rebuild alliances in Europe that had been frayed during the U.S. presidency of Donald Trump also paid off, current and former U.S. officials said.

The Biden team has spent the past several months ramping up its discussions with allies in Europe, such as Germany and France, in an effort to unite the capitals to stand up to Russia. That included sharing significant amounts of U.S. intelligence about Russia’s plans with those countries.

Some private companies and international groups also are taking steps to punish the Kremlin. British energy giant BP, for instance, said it was abandoning its 20 percent stake in Rosneft, a Russian state-controlled oil producer. The move could cost BP billions of dollars. The International Judo Federation announced it was suspending Putin as an honorary president.
Russia also appears increasingly isolated at the United Nations.
Because it has veto power as a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, Russia last week was able to block a resolution demanding it end its aggression against Ukraine. But countries including China, India and the United Arab Emirates — which have sought good ties with Moscow — chose to abstain rather than voting against the resolution.
Russia also was unable to stop the scheduling of an emergency session of the U.N. General Assembly on Monday. That will offer a high-profile forum for more of the world’s countries to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.



The West finally throws a punch in its face-off with Russia - POLITICO
 
OPINION
EDITORIAL
Drill, baby, drill: Cut off Putin’s power by cutting off Russian gas
By
Post Editorial Board
February 28, 2022 7:34pm
Updated
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his annual end-of-year news conference.
Vladimir Putin's regime gets much of the wealth that funds its military from energy sales.MAXIM ZMEYEV
MORE ON:ENERGY
Free-world financial sanctions are hitting Russia hard, but the best long-term way to pull Vladimir Putin’s teeth remains more rational energy policies, in the United States and across the West.
The ruble tanked Monday, and Russia’s stock market didn’t even open. All in reaction to the far tougher sanctions the West announced Sunday — drastic measures inspired by the brutality of Putin’s invasion and Ukraine’s heroic resistance.
Yet it’s not enough: Putin’s regime gets much of the wealth that funds its military from energy sales. And he uses energy as a weapon, blackmailing Europe in particular.
No less than Germany’s Social Democratic leader, Olaf Scholz, is facing these facts. In his stunning speech Sunday, he vowed “to eliminate our dependence on imports from individual energy suppliers.”
Germany still aims to be carbon-neutral by 2045, but Scholz committed to “building up a reserve of coal and gas” and constructing two new Liquid Natural Gas terminals to allow imports.
“Responsible, forward-looking energy policy is not just crucial for our economy and our climate. It is also crucial for our security,” he declared.
Fuel prices at a 7-Eleven gas station in Las Vegas, Nevada.Gas prices in the US have remained steadily high over the past few months.Bloomberg
Hear, hear. But America needs to do its part. That means abandoning Democrats’ short-sighted efforts to strangle the US energy sector, which is producing 1.2 million fewer barrels a day in oil than it did at peak under the last president.
SEE ALSO
gas prices
US gas prices could hit $5 a gallon or more after Russia’s Ukraine invasion

As Steve Moore notes for The Post, with oil at $100 a barrel, that’s $120 million in lost US income every day.
It also leaves us importing from Russia — and forced to turn to also-tyrannical regimes in Venezuela or Iran if we boycott the warmonger.
Like Germany, we’re burning carbon fuels no matter where they come from. Doesn’t it make more sense to burn our own — and to supply the needs of allied nations who lack these resources?
And, yes, renewed US production matters for our economy, too: More good jobs, lower prices at the pump and helping slow out-of-control inflation.
This does not mean giving up the fight against climate change, let alone resorting to denial about the planet’s warming. But it does require recognizing the simple truth that solar, wind and other alternate energy sources aren’t yet remotely where we need them to heat our homes and power our factories, computers and cars. (Nuclear power deserves another look, too: It works great for the French.)





Putin’s invasion has been a wake-up call for on many fronts. Shifting to a “responsible, forward-looking energy policy” has to be one of them.
 
Ukrainian government agency removes road signs to confuse Russian troops
By
Yaron Steinbuch
March 1, 2022 8:36am
Updated
an edited photo of a standard road sign
An altered photo of a road sign that has been replaced with profanities directed at Russian forces.Facebook / Ukravtodor
A Ukrainian government agency responsible for the country’s road system has vowed to help send Russian troops “straight to hell” by removing traffic signs to confuse the invaders.
“The enemy has poor communications, they cannot navigate the terrain,” the Ministry of Infrastructure agency Ukravtodor said on Facebook.
“Let us help them get straight to hell,” it added.
Ukrainian road sign changedThe traffic tactic has been backed by the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense.Facebook / Ukravtodor
The agency posted an edited image of a standard road sign in which directions to cities were replaced with profanities that could be translated as “Go f— yourself,” “Go f— yourself again” and “Go f—- yourself back in Russia,” Reuters reported.
The traffic tactic has been backed by the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense, which called on civilians to remove any signs that may help the Russians, ITV reported.
tags RussiaRussia has started leaving signs of their own to help them navigate the country.Facebook / Ukravtodor





“To confuse and disorient the enemy who is illegally moving around Ukraine, we call on [people to] remove signs with numbers and names of streets/cities/villages in their regions,” it said.

“Let’s do everything possible to get rid of Ukraine from the Russian occupier as soon as possible,” the ministry added.
Ukrainian signsThe tactic of Ukrainians removing road signs is designed to “confuse and disorient the enemy.”
 
Piers Morgan
PIERS MORGAN
UNCENSORED

OPINION
Since when did America stand by as dictators cluster-bombed innocents? It’s time Biden called Putin’s bulls–t nuke bluff
By
Piers Morgan
February 28, 2022 4:37pm
Updated
russia-putin-041.jpg
It's time for President Biden to stand up to Russian President Vladimir Putin and his aggression in Ukraine.REUTERS
Piers Morgan

MORE FROM:PIERS MORGAN
What will it take, America?
Seriously, what more does Vladimir Putin need to do before the world’s No. 1 superpower, leader of the free world, and possessor of the greatest military force in history, stops him?
The cowardly Russian gangster has illegally invaded a sovereign democratic country and is using illegal cluster bombs to murder innocent women and children in Ukrainian cities.
Everyone seems in agreement that this is a flagrant breach of international law, a disgustingly immoral act, and Putin’s a despicable war criminal.
But nobody dares stop him.
Oh, the Ukrainians are trying to, and my God, what a magnificently courageous and resilient people they’re showing themselves to be, led by their stupendously inspiring president, Volodymyr Zelensky.
I’m in awe of their heroism, their determination, their stomach for the fight despite overwhelmingly bad odds against a far larger and better-equipped enemy.
Sadly, that awe doesn’t extend to President Biden, who seems to think Putin can be defeated by Ukrainian resistance and Western financial punishment alone.
He can’t.
Putin’s one of the world’s richest men thanks to decades of ruthlessly feathering his own nest with the ill-gotten gains of his corrupt regime.
He doesn’t give a damn about sanctions, or the collapsing price of the ruble, or a few of his oligarch cronies getting a pain in the wallet. He’s priced all the economic fallout into his evil master plan.
As the former KGB assassin reaches his presidential dotage, all he cares about is his legacy, and he wants to go down as the Russian leader who restored the Soviet Union to what he sees as its rightful size and power.
Biden seems to think that sanctions alone can stop Putin's war.Biden seems to think that sanctions alone can stop Putin’s war.AP Photo/Patrick SemanskyA school destroyed as a result of an attack not far from the center of Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, located some 50 km from Ukrainian-Russian border, on February 28, 2022.A school destroyed as a result of an attack not far from the center of the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, located some 30 miles from the Russian border, on February 28, 2022.AFP via Getty ImagesUkrainian service members look for and collect unexploded shells after a fighting with Russian raiding group.Ukrainian service members look for and collect unexploded shells after a fight with a Russian raiding group.AFP via Getty Images
Putin is a dictator — a vile, soulless, cynical bullyboy who doesn’t care how many corpses he creates to achieve his imperial ambitions.
The only language men like him understand is force, not being told he’s temporarily down to his last $50 billion.
But right now, he senses weakness among those with the capability to curb his warmongering, and especially in an American president whom he witnessed desert the Afghan people to the Taliban wolves last summer.
Putin’s calculated that the US doesn’t have the will to take him on, hence his preposterous saber-rattling rhetoric suggesting he’ll unleash Russia’s nuclear arsenal if America, or anyone else, tries.
By threatening this, he’s confirmed himself to be a delusional monster, but not one who’s stupid or mad enough to start something he knows can’t finish in anything but the immediate destruction of everything he’s fighting for.
Putin’s not to going to be nuking anyone, not so long as America has the power to vaporize him and his entire country in seconds.
People removing debris from a military base that was hit by a Russian air strike in Okhtyrka, Ukraine on February 28, 2022.People removing debris from a military base that was hit by a Russian airstrike in Okhtyrka, Ukraine, on February 28, 2022.via REUTERS
That’s the whole point of the nuclear deterrent, not that it gets used as a protective shield for demented despots to invade countries and wage genocide on their populaces.
Yet that’s exactly what Putin’s doing, and it’s time to call his bullsh–t bluff.
Last night, billionaire US investor Bill Ackman tweeted Biden, urging him to do more.
“Is there a point at which we say it is un-American to sit back and watch this transpire?” he asked. “Putin is rallying the nuclear saber as he gets more desperate. What if? Do we wait for him to kill millions before we intervene? What precedent are we continuing to set by allowing this to play out? The defense of Ukraine is a just war. It is not about oil or money. It is about right and wrong, and those are the wars that we should fight. And if we take the long-term view and punish madmen for their actions, we can deter their larger ambitions.”
He’s right, isn’t he?
And there’s a good precedent for this.
When Saddam Hussein invaded Iraq’s neighboring state of Kuwait in 1990, America led a NATO military intervention, Desert Storm, that sent him and his forces packing in just 43 days.
There is precedent that supports the US stepping in to help defend Ukraine from Russia. There is precedent that supports the US stepping in to help defend Ukraine from Russia.Sergei Guneyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP
President George H.W. Bush explained his decision by saying: “The terrible crimes and tortures committed by Saddam’s henchmen against the innocent people of Kuwait are an affront to mankind and a challenge to the freedom of all … no nation will be permitted to brutally assault its neighbor.”
Bush then quoted two members of the US forces tasked with liberating Kuwait.
“Listen to one of our great officers out there, Marine Lieutenant General Walter Boomer. He said: ‘There are things worth fighting for. A world in which brutality and lawlessness are allowed to go unchecked isn’t the kind of world we’re going to want to live in.’ And listen to Jackie Jones, an Army lieutenant, when she says, ‘If we let him get away with this, who knows what’s going to be next?'”
Exactly.
The only difference between Saddam Hussein and Vladimir Putin is that the latter has nuclear weapons.
Get the latest updates in the Russia-Ukraine conflict with the Post’s live coverage.
But the moral argument for America intervening militarily in Ukraine is the same as it was in Kuwait 32 years ago.
If the US lets Putin use his nuke threats to scare them off, Russia will continue its nation-seizing rampage like the Nazis did in 1938-9, and other foes like China and North Korea may feel emboldened to start doing the same.
It will be like waving a white flag of surrender.





And as Bill Ackman said, this feels very un-American.
 
CNN


2h ·

Following

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky received a standing ovation after delivering an emotional speech to the EU Parliament on the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine.
 
With the sanctions, Russia will become super insulated economically, I have alot of experience being blacklisted, it does not take much money to survive. If I wasn't, I would have an expensive EV, house, and other nonsense that will end up in a landfill.

Yandex will explode in the country and reduce Google/Apple role in information dissemination, a major national security concern.

orig


With the ruble tanking, these tech companies are pulling out because they get paid in this currency than turn them into dollars. They did some PR claiming it was due to Russia invasion rather than raising prices and not selling any products. To compensate they would have to raise prices significantly, making their products unaffordable. A Russian company can just take Rubles and chill out.

I suspect this was another objective of Putin to rid his country of these companies just like China that did it covertly. Edward Snowden getting asylum and him building a Russian made car instead of buying a Maybach are definite clues. He was also showcasing some Yota phone that did not sell, it will now after prices of foreign product jump up.
 
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Apple was getting equivalent of $900 per Iphone, now it is $500 and dropping. They would have to increase prices to 100,000 rubles or more just to break even. This PR about the invasion is bullshit, rather than closing stores due to lost sales. Would you buy an Iphone that is $2,200; Hell No!!!!

This war propaganda is getting out of control, these sanctions are hurting us. Zelenskyy is not worth it for higher gas prices and now lost business in Russia ($7 billion). What other head of state is he going to entrap like President Trump.

How is the United States going to let another country disrespect your leadership like that? Once they see weakness like that, it will be car bombings and sniper attacks; knowing nothing will be done in retaliation.

He should have known better...
 
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Russia's Closest Allies Desert Putin
as Country Humiliated at UN
BY DARRAGH ROCHE ON 3/4/22 AT 9:26 AM EST


Some of Russia's closest allies abandoned the country on Friday during a vote of the United Nations (U.N.) Human Rights Council to condemn alleged human rights violations in Ukraine.

Only Eritrea joined Russia in voting against the resolution as 32 countries of the 47-member body based in Geneva, Switzerland, voted in favor of establishing an independent commission to investigate the allegations against Russia.

Thirteen countries abstained from the vote, including some nations generally considered close to Russia. China, Cuba and Venezuela all abstained.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed the vote on Friday, tweeting: "I welcome the establishment by the #UN Human Rights Council of the International Commission of Inquiry to investigate facts of Russian war crimes against Ukraine.

"Evidence will be documented and used in international courts. Russian war criminals will be held accountable," he wrote.

Ukrainian Ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Yevheniia Filipenko, had told the council there was "irrefutable evidence of gross and systematic human rights violations as well as war crimes and crimes against humanity by Russia."


Russia's Closest Allies Desert Putin as Country Humiliated at UN (newsweek.com)
 
Russia and Ukraine agree to temporary ceasefire to let civilians leave two Ukraine cities

PUBLISHED SAT, MAR 5 2022 1:55 AM EST


KEY POINTS
  • Russia and Ukraine have agreed to a temporary ceasefire in Ukraine to allow civilians to leave the cities of Mariupol and Volnovakha.
  • The ceasefire was expected to begin at 10 a.m. Moscow time (2 a.m. ET) Saturday.
  • An adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy tweeted that "humanitarian corridors" were being prepared in the two cities.
RT: Mariupol: damaged residential building: Ukraine Russia Conflict 220226

A view shows a residential building, which locals said was damaged by recent shelling, in Mariupol,

Ukraine February 26, 2022.
Nikolay Ryabchenko | Reuters


Russia and Ukraine have agreed to a temporary ceasefire in Ukraine to allow civilians to leave the cities of Mariupol and Volnovakha.

The ceasefire was expected to begin at 10 a.m. Moscow time (2 a.m. ET) Saturday, but there was no immediate confirmation that attacks by Russian forces had stopped.





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US-UK-France-military-presence-in-%C4%B1raq.jpg


I wanted to address this nuclear power station debacle that could have spread radiation all over the place and guerilla warfare. Eventually, the military will setup into bases outside the city for protection after deposing the government. They will make little errand trips into the city or resupply where they will be attacked. They may setup in the city with a light presence. This is how you resist the Russian military, not when they are running full on into the city if you feel some type of way where you will certainly die You hide your weapon caches where the Russian military will not find them, these Javelin missiles are a huge liability due to their size. These should have been stored throughout the country side.

Putting up these cheesy barriers, molotov cocktails, and small arms fire is not resisting the military. They should have vacated that nuclear plant a long time ago. When it is military on military, than you could maintain control of something. You are appearing compliant with your occupiers after the government is deposed/killed than covertly attacking them with your weapon caches.

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