Anonymous ID: cbd242 July 3, 2022, 8:09 a.m. No.16588295   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8299 >>8325 >>8409 >>8446 >>8481

“If we’re allowed to seize the assets of Tenex, Chabad will be the only religious organization in the world that has its own nuclear power supply,” Lieberman said

 

The saga began in 2004 when Chabad-Lubavitch, the Brooklyn-based Hasidic movement, filed a lawsuit in US federal court to demand that Russia return the texts.

 

The court ruled in Chabad’s favor and — after Russia failed to comply — imposed a fine of $50,000 a day on the country. Today, Russia owes Chabad more than $165 million. Subsequent court orders have authorized Chabad to claim certain Russian assets in the amount of the fine.

 

But claiming those assets requires finding them first.

Known as the Schneersohn library and archive, it is a historic collection of 12,000 books and 50,000 documents named for Rabbi Joseph I. Schneersohn, who led the movement until his death in 1950. It is considered of particular sentimental value because it was amassed over 200 years and then stolen by government authorities bent on persecuting the Chabad movement and Jews in general.

Anonymous ID: cbd242 July 3, 2022, 8:34 a.m. No.16588409   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8446 >>8481

>>16588295

"Years before Russia invaded Ukraine and the Biden administration decided to capture Russian wealth held in the United States, Chabad’s lawyers were busy tracking down that wealth. They issued subpoenas to numerous financial institutions and companies seeking relevant information.

 

By late 2021, two entities had emerged as Chabad’s primary targets: Russia’s main development bank, VEB, and Tenex, a subsidiary of a Russian state-run company called Rosatom that sells uranium to nuclear power plants in the United States."

Anonymous ID: cbd242 July 3, 2022, 8:40 a.m. No.16588446   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8481

>>16588409

>>16588295

While VEB’s assets in the US are all tied up in sanctions, Tenex remains entirely unrestricted. That’s because when the Biden administration imposed sanctions on Russia’s energy industry on March 8, it exempted nuclear power, allowing the continued import of Russian uranium.

 

“If we’re allowed to seize the assets of Tenex, Chabad will be the only religious organization in the world that has its own nuclear power supply,” Lieberman said, half-jokingly.

 

https://www.timesofisrael.com/in-trying-to-seize-russian-assets-the-us-is-taking-a-page-from-chabad/

Anonymous ID: cbd242 July 3, 2022, 8:45 a.m. No.16588481   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8525

>>16588295

>>16588409

>>16588446

Kemmerer, Wyoming, a small, soon-to-be-former coal-mining and power plant town in the southwest corner of the state, is a long way from Ukraine and the Russian invasion of the former Soviet republic. But Kemmerer’s future is inextricably entwined with what happens in Ukraine — and with how the Biden administration responds to it.

 

That’s because Bill Gates-backed TerraPower hopes to construct its first advanced nuclear reactor in Kemmerer. The new reactor will run on only one type of fuel: high-assay, low-enriched uranium — HALEU — which has higher levels of uranium-235 than conventional reactor fuel. Russian company Tenex, a division of state-owned Rosatom, is currently the world’s primary commercial-scale producer of the fuel.

 

https://www.hcn.org/issues/54.5/infographic-russias-war-reverberates-in-the-west

Anonymous ID: cbd242 July 3, 2022, 9:28 a.m. No.16588728   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8755

>>16588704

 

Judah Benjamin hired him, and Benjamin worked for the Rothschilds out of London..

 

From 1948 until just recently, residents and visitors to uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, could have strolled past a Confederate monument and not even known. On a busy, commercial street, in front of a FedEx store, the tombstone-like memorial honored Judah P. Benjamin, a Jewish southerner and the Secretary of State to the Confederacy. Though Benjamin had no connection to Charlotte—his only tie was a week he spent hiding there after the end of the Civil War—the United Daughters of the Confederacy presented the granite monument to the city, choosing the spot of his supposed few days in hiding.

 

As the monument itself explains, two local synagogues, whose names were inscribed on it, provided the funding. But almost immediately after its erection, the Jews of Charlotte regretted their decision after anti-Semitic comments led them to reconsider with whom they were associating themselves.