Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 10:46 a.m. No.18284512   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4523 >>4625 >>4695 >>4809 >>4956 >>5115 >>5197 >>5205

4 Feb, 2023 10:02

Dozens of Russian soldiers return from Ukrainian captivity – Moscow

The release of 63 POWs was possible partly thanks to mediation efforts from the UAE, the Defense Ministry said

 

More than 60 Russian servicemen have been freed from Ukrainian captivity, it was announced on Saturday. The Russian Defense Ministry said the swap deal included “persons of a sensitive category” who were released following mediation efforts by the United Arab Emirates.

 

According to the ministry, 63 service members of the Russian Armed Forces have returned from Kiev-controlled territories “as a result of a complex negotiation process.”

 

All the freed service members are now in Russia and are being provided with “all necessary physiological and medical assistance,” officials stated. The former captives have also had the opportunity to contact their families.

 

The Defense Ministry released a video of what appeared to be POWs boarding buses in Russia’s Belgorod Region, which borders Ukraine.

 

Later on Saturday, Andrey Yermak, the chief of staff to Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky, stated on Telegram that Kiev had secured the release of 116 people. He said 87 of them were Ukrainian Army service members, including two special forces troops. The rest belonged to territorial defense forces, the National Guard, police, the State Border Guard, the Navy, and the State Emergency Service.

 

According to the official, Kiev also retrieved thebodies of two foreign volunteers, as well as one Ukrainian soldier who served with the French Foreign Legion.

 

Since the start of the conflict last February, Russia and Ukraine have negotiated numerous POW swaps, with the agreements often being brokered by third parties, most notably Türkiye and Saudi Arabia.

 

In mid-January, Türkiye’s chief ombudsman for human rights, Seref Malkoc, said that Kiev and Moscow had compiled a list for a potential prisoner exchange involving around 1,000 people. However, Russian human rights commissioner Tatyana Moskalkova indicated at the time that no agreement had been reached.

 

The previous prisoner swap took place in early January, with the Russian Defense Ministry saying it had secured the return of 50 service members who had been facing “deadly danger” while in captivity.

 

https://www.rt.com/russia/570950-russia-ukraine-prisoner-swap/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 10:50 a.m. No.18284530   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4625

4 Feb, 2023 10:07

 

Germany considers diverting ‘green’ subsidies to arms production – Bloomberg

 

The move would allow more weapons and ammunition to be manufactured for the Ukraine conflict

 

Germany may use funds intended for the phasing out of coal-fired power plants to help defense companies build additional production facilities, Bloomberg reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter.

 

According to the report, the measure is being discussed between the government in Berlin and regional authorities in Germany’s individual states. The move would allow manufacturers tomake more weapons and ammunition, as well as create jobsin the areas worst affected by the shift from coal.

 

It comes as Western countries are ramping up military aid to Kiev. Germany pledged last month to deliver Leopard 2 main battle tanks and Marder armored vehicles to Ukraine.

 

Berlin also allowed companies this week to transfer the older Leopard 1 tanks.

 

However, according to multiple reports, the efforts to assist Kiev and ensure that the Bundeswehr remains combat-ready have beenimpeded by munitions and equipment shortages. Business Insider cited defense industry and parliamentary sources in October as saying that the army had enough ammunition for only one or two days of warfare.

 

The continuing energy crisis prompted Germany to relaunch several reserve coal-fired plants last year. The government has also extended the operation of existing plants up to the end of March 2024. The decisions came as Berlin was looking for ways to conserve energy during winter.

 

In June, the German Economy Ministry said that, despite concerns over energy supplies stemming from the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Germany would stay committed to phasing out coal as a power source by 2030.

 

(Duhhhh)

 

https://www.rt.com/news/570951-germany-green-subsidies-ammunition/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 10:55 a.m. No.18284558   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4625 >>4695 >>4809 >>4956 >>5115 >>5197 >>5205

4 Feb, 2023 08:08

 

China reacts to Blinken visit delay

 

Neither side had evenannouncedthat such a trip was planned, Beijing has claimed

 

China has said it respects the Biden administration's decision to postpone a visit by Secretary of State Anthony Blinken to Beijing, after a Chinese high-altitude balloon was spotted in US airspace.

 

The role of both Chinese and American diplomats is to “properly manage bilateral relations, particularly to manage some unexpected situations in a cool-headed and prudent manner,” China’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

 

“In fact, neither side has ever announced that there would be a visit,” the ministry pointed out.

 

As for Washington postponing Blinken’s trip, “it is a matter for the US to make its latest announcement, and we respect that,” the statement said.

 

The ministry reiterated that the balloon spotted in American airspace on Wednesday, which the US claimed to be a spying device, was actually a Chinese civilian airship used for research, mainly meteorological purposes. “This is entirely an unexpected situation caused by force majeure and the facts are very clear,” it stressed.

 

Blinken said he phoned high-ranking Chinese diplomat Wang Yi to inform him that he would not be traveling to Beijing on Friday. The secretary of state claimed he told Wang that “the presence of this surveillance balloon in US airspace is a clear violation of US sovereignty” and that Beijing’s “decision to take this action on the eve of my planned visit is detrimental to the substantive discussions that we were prepared to have.”

 

During the call, Wang assured Blinken that China was a responsible country that respects international law, Chinese English-language newspaper the Global Times reported. The Chinese diplomat insisted that the sides maintain their focus and avoid misjudgments when dealing with “unexpected situations,” the paper added.

 

Blinken’s visit to China was allegedly arranged by US leader Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Indonesia last November, and was due to become the first trip to Beijing by a US secretary of state since 2020.

 

Late on Friday, the Pentagon said it had detected another object,assessed as “a Chinese surveillance balloon,” flying above Latin America, although it did not appear to be heading towards US territory.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/570948-china-us-blinken-balloon/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 11:02 a.m. No.18284581   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4619 >>4625 >>5236 >>5240

 

4 Feb, 2023 05:45

 

==Bill Gates lectures Musk on spending

 

A real philanthropist would abandon Mars dreams for vaccines, the Microsoft mogul says==

 

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates believes the SpaceX CEO’s self-declared mission to save humanity from extinction by colonizing Mars is not a good use of Elon Musk's fortune, which would be better spent on goals like mass vaccination to save people’s lives back on Earth.

 

Gates said he does not consider Musk to be a real philanthropist, while acknowledging in an interview with the BBC released on Friday that some of his endeavors, like the electric vehicle company Tesla, “are having a positive impact.”

 

“I think some day he will join the ranks of philanthropists using his ingenuity,” Gates added, because “at the end of the day” he can’t possibly spend all of his money on himself, “other than going to Mars a few times, which might cost a little bit.”

 

Gates argued that there are more immediate and pressing issues facing humanity than a Mars mission, such as mass vaccination. “It’s actually quite expensive to go to Mars,” he said in the interview. “You can buy measles vaccines and save lives for a thousand dollars per life saved. It just kind of grounds you, as in – don't go to Mars.”

 

The two billionaires have had tense relations in recent years, and this is not the first time Gates has gone on the offense against the SpaceX creator. In May, media reports claimed that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation spent millions to attempt to block Musk from acquiring Twitter.

 

The new Twitter owner, in turn, accused Gates of hypocrisy. “Sorry but I cannot take your philanthropy on climate change seriouslywhen you have a massive short position on Tesla,”Musk wrote in a leaked private message later confirmed to be real.

 

Musk has made no secret of his desire for humans to colonize Mars, insisting it’s the only way the species will escape a “mass extinction crisis.” In a 2022 TED interview, Musk outlined his dream of sending thousands of Starship rockets to Mars by the year 2050, calling them “modern Noah's Arks,” even though the spacecraft is still in its experimental phase.

 

(Gates punishment for killing millions should every vaccine he’s created with others, be jabbed in him every hour daily, until he admits he is a mass murderer, and then let him die in a cell with no medical treatment. Along with all the others that participated!)

 

@FuckBillGates

 

https://www.rt.com/news/570939-bill-gates-musk-mars-vaccines/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 11:07 a.m. No.18284618   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4625 >>4695 >>4809 >>4956 >>5115 >>5197 >>5205

3 Feb, 2023 16:48

Sanctions on Russian oil not working – analysts

The restrictions were invented by bureaucrats who do not understand how markets work, industry experts tell CNBC

 

Sanctions imposed by the West on Russian crude oil exports have so far “failed completely,” and new price caps could also prove ineffective, according to a CNBC report on Friday, citing analysts.

 

The report comes as the European Union plans to ban imports of Russian refined petroleum products, including diesel and jet fuel, from February 5.

 

The bloc had already prohibited imports of seaborne crude oil from Moscow in December. The EU, G7 countries, and Australia have also set a $60-per-barrel price cap, which blocks Western companies from providing insurance and other services to shippers of Russian oil unless the cargo is purchased at or below the set price.

 

The price cap “was invented by bureaucrats with finance degrees. None of them really understand oil markets,” Paul Sankey, president and lead analyst at Sankey Research,told CNBC. “It’s been a total bomb; it has failed completely,” he stressed.

 

According to Sankey, Russian oil supplies have not been significantly interrupted and “they’ve sustained exports at high levels.”

 

“I heard it from a great source that the Saudis have been asking around as to how come Russian oil is still flowing,” he said. “That brings the question of what will happen with the sanctions coming up on products, because it just doesn’t seem to work.”

 

The founder of analytics firm Vanda Insights, Vandana Hari, also told the US broadcaster she was skeptical about the upcoming restrictions on Russian refined oil products, noting that “the crude price cap was pretty inconsequential.”

 

“I think the refined product caps that they’re planning – about a $100 [per barrel] for diesel and clean products and perhaps around $45 for dirty fuels like fuel oil – are probably going to be immaterial as well,” the analyst explained.

 

According to Hari, Russian oil will find its way into the markets that are “still welcoming it”such as China and India.

 

“China and India have benefited quite a big deal last year from heavily discounted Russian crude prices and the same’s going to happen to Russian refined products,” Hari predicted, adding that it could be more complicated for Moscow to find markets for such products.

 

Paul Sankey also noted that “oil friendships are greasy” andthere’s a lot of different waysto move Russian oil around the world, bypassing the price caps.

 

Meanwhile, the EU has been struggling to agree on the price cap for Russian oil products, with some members reportedly claiming the proposed level is too generous for Moscow, and seeking a lower ceiling. The measures are expected to come into effect on February 5 after gaining the approval of all 27 EU member states.

 

https://www.rt.com/business/570896-western-sanctions-russian-oil-fail/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 11:15 a.m. No.18284672   🗄️.is 🔗kun

3 Feb, 2023 21:53

EU agrees on new price caps for Russian oil

Limits on refined oil products will go into effect on February 5

 

The European Union will set the price of refined petroleum products imported from Russia at $100 per barrel for diesel and $45 a barrel for fuel oil, officials in Brussels confirmed on Friday.

 

The measure will go into effect on Sunday, two months after the original $60 price cap on seaborne crude oil. The US, Australia and other G7 members have already adopted the cap, as part of sanctions designed to limit Moscow’s energy revenues amid the conflict in Ukraine.

 

The expected embargo has fueled fears of global supply disruptions. Diesel is currently trading at $110-$120 a barrel, while crude oil is hovering around $80.

 

The G7 has sought to enforce the measure by banning shipping companies from accessing Western insurance, brokerage and financing services unless they abide by the price cap.

 

Moscow has responded byoutlawing the sale of oil and petroleum productsto anyone who chooses to comply with the price ceiling. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandr Novak said in December that oil can and will be redirected to Asia, Africa and Latin America instead.

 

Getting all 27 EU members to agree took some time due to the hard line of Poland and the Baltic states, anonymous officials told Financial Times. Brussels will review the cap every two months, taking into account its effect on both Russian revenue and “possible turbulences” in the global energy markets, according to the outlet.

 

As a concession, Warsaw and its allies agreed to discuss sanctions against Belarus later this month, as part of a new package of anti-Russian measures.

 

EU officials speaking to FT described the price cap as a “well-balanced restrictive measure which will keep the price of oil and derived products low enough to reduce Russia’s income while guaranteeing access for third countries.”

 

(Stupid! They don’t get it, Russia has ways to move any products, and allies that will help them.)

 

Market analysts are skeptical, however. One analyst told the US outlet CNBC on Friday that the embargo has been “pretty inconsequential”so far. Another noted that it was “invented by bureaucrats with finance degrees” who did not understand the oil markets, and has “failed completely.”

 

(The EU is falling apart and losing influence around the world. The whole Union should crash and burn.What stops other countries on putting price caps in EU products?Like Mercedes, Wine, Cheese, wheat, rice etc. This will come back to bite them!)

 

https://www.rt.com/business/570933-eu-russian-refined-oil-caps/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 11:20 a.m. No.18284707   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4809 >>4956 >>5115 >>5197 >>5205

4 Feb, 2023 13:04

Türkiye gives timeline for Russian-proposed gas hub

The major gas project is expected to handle supplies previously directed through the Nord Steam 1 pipeline

 

A major natural gas hub in Türkiye, proposed by Russian President Vladimir Putin and backed by his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is expected to start operatingas soon as this year, according Ankara’s energy minister.

 

Fatih Donmez also said the issue had been discussed with several nations, which expressed their readiness to support the Turkish gas hub project, adding that ensuring energy security remained a priority for Türkiye.

 

“A common opinion has been formed on doubling supplies via TANAP (Trans Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline Project),” the minister said, according to Anadolu news agency, adding that the work was ongoing.

 

He predicted an increase in gas production over the next few years, contributing to energy security for both Türkiye and Europe.

 

In January, Donmez said work on the gas hub had begun, and that the country's interest in the project could grow over time.

 

In October, the Russian head of state proposed the Türkiye-based project, saying Moscow could redirect gas transit from the two Nord Stream pipelines, which were damaged by explosions classified by Kremlin as an act of terrorism. Ankara embraced the plan, saying it would link Russia and Türkiye through Europe.

 

The hub’s TurkStream pipeline starts on the Russian coast, runs over 930 kilometres under the Black Sea, and comes ashore in the Turkish region of Eastern Thrace. It directly connects the largest gas reserves in Russia to the Turkish gas transportation network, providing reliable energy to Turkey, and southern Europe.

 

https://www.rt.com/business/570952-turkiye-russian-gas-hub-timeline/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 11:37 a.m. No.18284823   🗄️.is 🔗kun

4 Feb, 2023 04:43

US-China war by 2025: A self-fulfilling prophecy?

When a general predicts inevitable conflict, he risks inviting pre-emptive attacks

American Four-Star General Mike Minihan, head of the US Air Force Air Mobility Command (AMC) believes the US and China will go to war by 2025.

“I hope I am wrong. My gut tells me we will fight in 2025,” Minihan reportedly wrote in a memo to his officers, obtained by media outlets. The message instructs AMC personnel to train and get their affairs in order so that they are “legally ready and prepared.”

This prediction is the most direct and blunt yet from an American official on the prospect of a potential conflict between the US and China, besides President Joe Biden’s indications that the US would intervene on the side of Taiwan if China invaded. Of course, Minihan is not a policymaker, and the memo is not an official statement of US military policy towards China. But the influence of the US military and by extension, the military-industrial complex, on US foreign policymaking and on the mood in Washington in general, should not be underestimated.

The reality is, especially as seen in Ukraine, that the risk of a major-power conflict is arguably at the highest it has ever been since the end of World War II or the height of the Cold War. That is because the US sees itself as a rightful and permanent global hegemon. It also sees the competition catching up, however, and is ready to use all means necessary, and to take massive risks, to prevent the rise of rival powers. As such, the US and China risk falling into the so-called, “Thucydides Trap,” which is described as “an apparent tendency towards war when an emerging power threatens to displace an existing great power as a regional or international hegemon”.

The current distribution of power in the world is described as “emerging multipolarity”. Following three decades of American unipolarity, when the US ruled unchallenged, a number of emerging powers are changing the international order. Multipolarity differs from “bipolarity,” where two powers compete for hegemony, the best known example being the US and the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

While bipolarity brings a form of stability, as the military capabilities of both powers are evenly matched and the stakes of a potential conflict are extremely high, history shows multipolarity typically brings instability as it creates an insecure, unpredictable, and competitive international environment. The world of 1914, where a theatre of competing European powers scrambled for international dominance, ultimately combusted into the First World War. As competing world powers expanded their imperialist ambitions, they sought to contain others by forming alliances and starting arms races. Today’s world has some disturbing parallels. The US - an insecure hegemon whose relative power is diminishing as other world powers emerge - is desperately seeking to degrade, undermine and contain its rivals by triggering arms races and expanding alliance systems. Already, the focus on expanding NATO has provoked the conflict in Ukraine, but worse still, the Biden administration is actively seeking to expand that model to East Asia against China, in the form of blocs such as the Quad and AUKUS.

While these alliance systems are in theory supposed to establish deterrence and project American power, in practice history showsthis behaviour only provokes, rather than prevents, conflict. Because when one state seeks to arm itself with the focus of deliberately targeting another, the other responds, creating an escalatory cycle. Each state therefore races to enhance their capabilities with the goal of responding to the other, and the cycle becomes self-reinforcing.

How do arms races break out into wars? The answer is that in a climate of growing political paranoia, suspicion and distrust which comes with these military tensions, some states like to ask themselves “what happens if they attack me first?” or “are they planning an attack?”this is, again, rooted in the lessons of history from World War I. Why is this relevant today? Because what if at some point, China decides it has no choice but to attack the US or Japan first, before they step in with force of arms to protect Taiwan?

The comments by the US general are, of course, overly dramatic, at least at this point. Yet they are dangerous because they reflect the sentiment that sooner or later, war is inevitable, and when it is believed that war is inevitable, it is treated as such, and thus war becomes a reality. Right now, it might seem unthinkable, but so were many other wars in the past. As the US continues to drive up tensions with Beijing, a tipping point, or a miscalculation, becomes ever more likely, and that’s where the danger lies.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/570870-us-china-war-prediction/

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 11:43 a.m. No.18284870   🗄️.is 🔗kun

 

𝐉Δ𝐍𝓘𝓷𝔼

 

@j9orange13

Fellow #Pennsylvania residents

@SenFettermanPA

wants to make sure we have “clean, safe, umm, drinking WERK!”

 

joPwF9A2_normal.jpg

Mary

@matjendav4

·

9h

~ ~ @JohnFetterman says we have to ensure"everyone has clean, safe, [awkward pause] clean drinking werk"Credit: @RNCResearch

 

9:06 AM · Feb 4, 2023

 

https://twitter.com/j9orange13/status/1621872760946311169

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 11:49 a.m. No.18284909   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4956 >>5115 >>5197 >>5205

4 Feb, 2023 13:52

Planet smashes record for most moons in solar system

Jupiter moves ahead of the pack after the discovery of more natural satellites

 

Jupiter has officially become the planet with the most moons in the solar system,now counted at 92, thanks to the discovery of 12 more natural satellites, astronomers have said.

 

The previous record-holder, Saturn, has dropped to second spot, being orbited by 83 confirmed moons.

 

Jupiter’s newly found companions were recently added to a list kept by the International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center, Scott Sheppard of the Washington-based Carnegie Institution, who took part in tracking the moons down, told AP on Friday.

 

The moons were spotted with telescopes in Hawaii and Chile in 2021 and 2022, but the scientists needed to follow their entire orbits in order to make the discovery official.

 

Those new satellites range from 1km to 3km (0.6 miles to 2 miles) in diameter, Sheppard said. Only half of them will be named however, the rest being below the minimum diameter of 1.5km for naming, he added.

 

Three moons traveling in a prograde direction – the same as the planet's rotation – were especially tough to detect, the scientist said in an earlier interview with the Sky and Telescope website. “The reason is that they are closer to Jupiter and the scattered light from the planet is tremendous,” he explained.

 

The large number of small satellites around both Jupiter and Saturn are believed to befragments of larger moons that crashed into each otheror collided with comets, according to Sheppard.

 

“I hope we can image one of these outer moons close-up in the near future to better determine their origins,” he told AP.

 

The European Space Agency is sending a spacecraft to study Jupiter and one its biggest moons in April, while NASA’s mission to the planet's Europa satellite, which could host an ocean under its ice crust, is planned for 2024.

 

Jupiter and Saturn vastly outnumber the rest of the planets in our system when it comes to the number of natural satellites. Uranus is orbited by 27 confirmed moons, Neptune by 14, Mars two and Earth one. Venus and Mercury have no moons.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/570956-moon-jupiter-record-saturn/

 

Jupiter in Astrology means enthusiasm,abundance, luck, responsibility, exuberance, expansion.

Anonymous ID: fe6fd4 Feb. 4, 2023, 12:14 p.m. No.18285091   🗄️.is 🔗kun

4 Feb, 2023 15:24

France comments on Ukraine’s NATO prospects

Kiev’s membership in the US-led military bloc is not on the table for now, the French Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said

 

Ukraine’s accession to NATO is not being discussed right now, given the ongoing hostilities between Moscow and Kiev, the French Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said on Saturday.

 

Speaking to the Russian RTVI Channel, Anne-Claire Legendre was asked about Ukraine’s bids to join the European Union and the US-led military alliance. She described the EU’s decision to grant Ukraine candidate status in June 2022 as “very important,” sending a signal of “serious political support” for Kiev’s course and reflecting Ukrainians’ desire to embrace European values.

 

However, she refrained naming exact dates for Kiev to become part of the EU, saying Brussels is formulating a roadmap which could take “more or less time.” The spokeswoman noted that EU members are seeking to “move towards a very specific cooperation with our Ukrainian friends.”

 

The spokeswoman’s comments came after the European Commission determined on Thursday that Ukrainewas only at an “early stage”of readiness to meet EU standards in many key areas. The bloc’s top executive body notably highlighted Kiev’s shortcomings in labor and gender equality legislation.

 

Legendre also signaled that Ukraine should not expect to join NATO in the near future, cautioning that accession is “is not on the agenda now. There is a war going on now.”However, she stressed that the alliance still adheres to its open-door policy, citing the 1975 Helsinki Accords, which stipulate that every state is free to choose its own allies.

 

Ukraine’s potential accession to NATO has long been a key security concern for Russia, and was cited as one of the factors prompting Moscow to launch its military operation in February 2022.

 

In December 2021, before large-scale hostilities broke out, Moscow submitted draft documents on security guarantees to NATO and the US, demanding that Ukraine be barred from entering the alliance, and insisting that the bloc itself should retreat to the borders of 1997. The initiative, however, was rebuffed.

 

https://www.rt.com/russia/570959-france-ukraine-nato-eu-accession/

 

They are never going to let Ukraine join NATO or EU, for many reasons, they are mafia and criminals, and Ukraine is not an independent country. They never submitted the documents in 1991 to split from Russia, therefore they are still Russian territory.