Friday, June 30, 2023

Arming Ukraine is a cynical and dangerous NATO ploy RT reporter tells UNSC

RT

The Western “proxy conflict” is costing Ukrainian and Russian lives and may lead to decades of instability, UN delegations heard

Western nations are pushing Ukrainian soldiers into suicide missions against Russian forces after providing them with outdated and often inoperative weapons, RT correspondent Chay Bowes has told the UN Security Council.

The Irish journalist was among the speakers invited to address to the Council on Thursday, sharing his views on Western lethal aid to Ukraine and the related proliferation risks. The gathering was attended by ambassadors including Russian Permanent Representative Vasily Nebenzya and his UK counterpart Barbara Woodward.

Bowes told the delegations that NATO nations have been helping Kiev to build up its military since 2014, training thousands of troops each year. He described the current hostilities as “a proxy conflict, where Ukraine supplies manpower… to support a de-facto NATO operation to prevent a Russian military victory”. A defeated Ukraine would undermine the US-led military bloc itself, he predicted, which explains the escalation of arms supplies from the West.

Many of the weapons provided to Kiev, especially by smaller nations, are often in a poor state of repair, Bowes said, citing multiple reports from the Western media and officials. Some are “outright lethal” to the Ukrainians using them. The sub-par weapons are being “dumped” as part of schemes by the larger powers, primarily the US, to replace and upgrade their own stocks.

Meanwhile on the frontline, Kiev’s troops have paid a heavy price for “strategically insignificant” territorial gains during this month’s counteroffensive, he said. Ukrainian action essentially amounts to a “suicidal full-frontal attacks on in-depth prepared defenses”, and allowing them to occur is “deeply cynical” and “sinister”, the reporter argued.

“No modern NATO military strategist or senior officer would suggest these maneuvers are anything but an inhumane ticket to tragedy, when commanding their own troops,” Bowes claimed. “Yet when it comes to Ukrainian young men mounting these assaults being decimated – they are silent.”

Continued hostilities are also taking a toll on civilians in Russia, some of which Bowes said he had met personally in places including Belgorod Region.

READ MORE: Israel warns of Ukraine weapons spillover

“I’ve seen [Russian] villages burning, I’ve heard artillery strikes, and I have to tell you that weapons being supplied by NATO and their allies to Ukraine are being wilfully targeted against civilian populations on a daily basis… all miraculously invisible to the Western media,” he told the UNSC.

Historical precedents, such as the Troubles in Northern Ireland or the terrorist attack on the 2015 Bataclan Theater in Paris, show that even a small number of weapons can cause much suffering by civilians, Bowes warned. The arming of Ukraine may lead to decades of instability in the region and cause spillover effects in far-away nations, he added.



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June 30, 2023 at 01:16AM
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Eyes on extremism in Florida as Moms for Liberty summit new immigration law arrive

USA TODAY  Eyes on extremism in Florida as Moms for Liberty summit, new immigration law arrive

Plus: Guilty plea in LGBTQ nightclub shooting; antisemitism in Germany. It's the week in extremism, from USA TODAY.

     

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June 30, 2023 at 12:30AM
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Ukraine issues ultimatum to NATO

RT

President Zelensky will not attend the bloc’s summit unless it shows “courage” on the accession process, a top official has said

Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky will only attend NATO’s summit next month if the bloc begins to seriously consider Kiev’s request for membership, a deputy head of the country’s presidential office said on Thursday.

“The president will not travel... to the summit [on July 11-12] if the leaders will tend to or will show a deficit of courage,” Igor Zhovka told Reuters, explaining that there would be “no point.”

He noted that the US-led military alliance has already received an application from Ukraine, and that “the Vilnius summit would be a very good start” to respond to it. “And by respond, we mean an invitation for membership, which is only the first stage,” Zhovka stressed, adding that Ukraine only wants the bloc “to start the procedure.”

Ukraine formally applied to join NATO last autumn, after four of its former territories overwhelmingly voted to join Russia in public referendums, which were not recognised by Kiev or its allies. While NATO maintains its “open door” policy on Ukraine’s membership, it has not officially granted the request.

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NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg talks to the media as he arrives with European Council President Charles Michel for a European Council Summit, on June 29, 2023.
NATO chief makes promise to Ukraine

Moreover, while Zelensky has claimed that Ukraine is fully ready to join the alliance, he has acknowledged that it will be impossible while the conflict with Russia continues.

Earlier this week, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said serious discussions on the accession process could start on the condition that Kiev “prevails as a sovereign and independent nation in Europe,” and pledged that the bloc would “address Ukraine’s membership aspirations” only after the Vilnius summit.

Russia has for many years warned NATO against further eastward expansion, viewing the alliance as a security threat. Senior officials in Moscow have repeatedly cited Kiev’s desire to join the bloc as one of the reasons Russia launched its military operation in February 2022.



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June 30, 2023 at 12:50AM
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People are fleeing Cuba's economic collapse. Here's what life is like for those left behind.

Lillian Perlmutter  People are fleeing Cuba's economic collapse. Here's what life is like for those left behind.

Some 305,000 Cubans have crossed the U.S.-Mexico border during the past year, most of them asking for asylum. Here is what life is like for the people left behind.

     

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June 25, 2023 at 02:03AM
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Russia owes West no explanation about Wagner mutiny Lavrov

RT

Moscow has been extremely transparent about recent events in the country, the foreign minister has said

Russia has no obligation to reassure the West that the political situation in the country is stable in the aftermath of Wagner private military group uprising last week, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Thursday.

DETAILS TO FOLLOW



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June 29, 2023 at 11:56PM
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Thursday, June 29, 2023

U.S.-Iran pact: Trump destroyed it. Biden wants to restore it. Just don't call it a deal

Kim Hjelmgaard, USA TODAY  U.S.-Iran pact: Trump destroyed it. Biden wants to restore it. Just don't call it a deal

The Biden administration has long promised to restore the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran. It's getting closer. This is what it means.

     

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June 29, 2023 at 12:08AM
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NATO believes Ukraines counteroffensive unsuccessful so far FT

RT

Long-term Western support likely depends on the outcome of the operation, a source has told the newspaper

Western officials have privately acknowledged that Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russia is not going well, and that future military assistance to Kiev may diminish as a result, the Financial Times has reported.

“Russia still has the advantage of mass,” General Christopher Cavoli, NATO’s top commander in Europe, told a private gathering last week, the FT claimed on Thursday. He reportedly added that Ukraine has not achieved any significant success in its operation.

“For better or worse, the outcome [of the operation] is going to impact everything we do regarding Ukraine, and we are all aware of that,” a senior European diplomat told the FT on condition of anonymity. “Funding, support, political engagement… and most importantly the peace talks that are coming whether we like them or not.” 

Publicly, Western officials have pledged to support Ukraine for “as long as it takes” to defeat Russia. However, Moscow has warned that by arming and training Ukrainian troops, the US and its allies are prolonging the conflict and will not alter its outcome. The Western approach amounts to “fighting to the last Ukrainian,” Russian officials have stated.

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Secretary of the National security and defence council of Ukraine Alexey Danilov speaks to journalists during an interview in his office, in Kiev on December 24, 2021.
Counteroffensive is ‘hard work’ – top Kiev official

The FT cited the assessments to illustrate internal discussions in the West. EU leaders are set to offer formal security commitments to Ukraine, and the newspaper said it had obtained a draft copy of the final statement being considered at an ongoing summit in Brussels.

EU members France and Germany, along with the UK and the US, are seeking to provide bilateral security arrangements. The deal would serve as a “stopgap” to give Kiev “confidence in enduring Western support” and ensure that the EU is not sidelined by NATO, the report said. Ireland, Malta and Austria are reportedly against extending vaguely defined commitments.

Ukrainian officials have insisted they will pursue military action until they have reclaimed all the territory lost to Russia. A Ukrainian law also bans any negotiations with Moscow as long as Russian President Vladimir Putin remains in office.

Moscow has said it is prepared for peace talks under certain conditions, and that Kiev’s uncompromising stance, calcified by continued Western support, stands in the way of diplomacy.



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June 29, 2023 at 12:13AM
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Will Biden allow Trump to go to prison? US politics is at a danger point.

John Wood Jr., USA TODAY  Will Biden allow Trump to go to prison? US politics is at a danger point.

President Biden has seen fit to allow the federal prosecution of his foremost political opponent as we move toward the 2024 election.

     

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June 29, 2023 at 12:02AM
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China tests weapons for total war scenario media

RT

A simulation has looked into the possibility of a regional conflict escalating into a global confrontation, South China Morning Post says

Programs to test and evaluate new Chinese weapons have been expanded to include a scenario of a global conflict amid rising tensions between Beijing and Washington, the South China Morning Post reported on Wednesday.

According to the article, the latest computer-based wargames and filed tests have been focused on assessing the capabilities of Chinese warships in a doomsday situation.

The so-called ‘Z-war’ scenario “is a clash of strategic willpower. The regional conflict escalates to a total war,” the team of researcher Fang Canxin from the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA), which carried out the simulation, told the outlet.

Fang’s team declassified its work in a peer-reviewed article published in the Chinese Journal of Ship Research earlier this month. They didn’t identify any specific countries in their paper, but the potential adversaries, who had been designated as the “Blue Alliance,” were armed with the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers used by the US and its allies, the SCMP wrote.

As part of the simulation, a Chinese destroyer was attacked by more than a dozen missiles and three torpedoes. The Blue Alliance generated jamming noises that were over 30 times stronger than the signal used by the ship to communicate, while also reducing the range of its radars by 60%, according to the article.

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FILE PHOTO: Chinese Defense Minister Li Shangfu delivers a speech during the 20th Shangri-La Dialogue summit.
China offers US military cooperation deal

In the conditions of such an all-out attack, the destroyer’s combat capabilities were severely reduced. The Chinese vessel lost a third of its air defense potential, while only half of the surface-to-air missiles were able to hit incoming targets, Fang’s team pointed out.

The researchers said that Chinese naval experts had independently assessed the results of their test and found them to be “realistic.” 

“It is unlikely that this paper is intended as a horror movie,” an unnamed computer scientist who helped develop a commercial war-game software told the newspaper about the work done by Fang’s team.

Researchers often look into worst-case scenarios because it helps them better understand the strengths, weaknesses and limitations of weapons, he explained.

Last week, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken made his long-delayed trip to China in an attempt to defuse mounting tensions between Washington and Beijing over American support for Taiwan, the Chinese balloon incident in February, and other issues.

However, whatever progress Blinken made appears to have been undone by US President Joe Biden, who labeled his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping a “dictator” just a day after Washington’s top diplomat returned from Beijing. China called the “extremely absurd” comment by Biden “an open political provocation” and summoned the US ambassador for an official reprimand.

READ MORE: Macron issues warning over US-China feud

Earlier this year, media reports claimed that the head of US Air Mobility Command, General Mike Minihan, stated in a memo that Washington and Beijing could be at war over Taiwan by 2025.



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June 28, 2023 at 11:56PM
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Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Chile's stolen children: How they were taken and adopted to families in the US and beyond

Amanda Lee Myers, USA TODAY  Chile's stolen children: How they were taken and adopted to families in the US and beyond

Human rights groups believe at least 20,000 babies were taken from mostly low-income mothers in Chile and adopted out in foreign countries.

     

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June 27, 2023 at 11:06PM
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At least a year younger on paper: South Korea makes changes to age-counting law

Kim Hjelmgaard, USA TODAY  At least a year younger on paper: South Korea makes changes to age-counting law

South Korean formally abandoned some traditional methods for determining a person's age and replaced it with the international standard.

     

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June 28, 2023 at 01:23AM
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