Anonymous ID: a0ec3f Dec. 13, 2024, 3:49 a.m. No.22157674   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7766 >>7902 >>8170 >>8273

Russia Launches Massive Aerial Attack on Ukraine

https://www.newsmax.com/world/globaltalk/russia-ukraine-attack/2024/12/12/id/1191501/

 

 

Russia on Friday launched a massive aerial attack against Ukraine, involving dozens of cruise missiles and drones.

 

The Russian military targeted Ukrainian power grid, energy minister Herman Halushchenko wrote on his Facebook page.

 

"The enemy continues its terror," he said.

 

Ukraine's air force reported multiple strike drones launched at Ukraine overnight followed by swarms of cruise missiles in country's air space. It said Russia also used air-launched ballistic Kinzhal missiles against Ukraine's western regions.

 

The Kremlin on Thursday reportedly was gearing up for an imminent attack on Ukraine by using its experimental intermediate-range Oreshnik hypersonic ballistic missile in response to Kyiv's successful use of U.S.-made long-range ballistic missiles to strike inside Russian territory.

 

The threat of an attack Thursday came a day after Ukraine used six U.S.-made Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) supersonic ballistic missiles to strike the Taganrog military airfield near the Azov Sea in southern Russia's Rostov Region.

 

"[Russian President Vladimir] Putin has said publicly that Russia intends to launch another experimental Oreshnik missile," Pentagon deputy press secretary Sabrina Singh said Wednesday at a briefing. "It's possible that Russia could do it in the coming days. I don't have an exact date for you. I think it's important to note that should Russia choose to launch this type of missile, it's not going to be a game-changer on the battlefield.

 

"It's just yet another attempt to inflict harm and casualties in Ukraine. You know, we've seen this before. They're trying to use every weapon that they have in their arsenal to intimidate Ukraine. But, of course, Ukraine, with the United States, other partners around the world, continues to have our support as they fight every single day on the battlefield."

 

Russia said it would definitely retaliate for the ATACMS missile attack, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, according to state-owned news outlet TASS.

 

"I'd like to recall the statement the Russian Defense Ministry made unequivocally [Wednesday] saying that there will be a response," Peskov said, adding the response will come when and how Russia sees fit.

 

"But it will definitely follow," he said.

 

Sing said an intelligence assessment concluded Russia could use the Oreshnik in the "coming days." Russia reportedly has only a handful of the missiles and they carry a smaller warhead than other missiles regularly launched at Ukraine. But because of their speed, they are much harder to defend.

 

Last month, Russia utilized the Oreshnik for the first time, striking the Ukrainian city of Dnipro. Reports from the ground described massive fireballs erupting as the missile struck its target with incredible speed. Putin called the incident part of his country's military strategy, claiming it was necessary to respond to Ukraine's use of U.S.- and British-made ballistic missiles.

Anonymous ID: a0ec3f Dec. 13, 2024, 4:42 a.m. No.22157768   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7902 >>8170 >>8273

FBI Informant Admits to Lying About Bidens, Burisma

https://www.newsmax.com/us/fbi-informant-admits/2024/12/12/id/1191449/

 

A former FBI informant is going to plead guilty to lying about criminal allegations against President Joe Biden and his son Hunter.

 

Alexander Smirnov, 43, entered into a plea agreement with special counsel David Weiss, CBS News reported Thursday.

 

Smirnov, a dual U.S.-Israeli citizen, admitted to creating "a false and fictitious record" concerning the Bidens as part of a multi-year federal probe into the first family.

 

Among the lies was allegations Burisma Holdings owner Mykola Zlochevsky paid then-Vice President Joe Biden and his son $5 million each to "protect" his firm from a looming corruption investigation.

 

Zlochevsky supposedly wanted the Bidens' help in ousting former Ukrainian Prosecutor-General Viktor Shokin sometime between 2015 or 2016.

 

In July 2023, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, released an unclassified document, an FD-1023 form, involving claims a confidential informant made in 2020 about Hunter Biden's alleged business dealings when he served on the board of Burisma.

 

In September 2023, Smirnov "promoted a new false narrative after he said he met with Russian officials," prosecutors claimed.

 

Hunter Biden, 54, sat on the board of Burisma from 2014 to 2019 and earned a salary of up to $1 million per year despite having no past experience in the energy industry.

 

President Biden has denied accusations he worked to oust Shokin and has insisted other European leaders also wanted Shokin out of his job.

 

In February, Smirnov was charged with two felonies for lying about the Biden-Burisma probe.

 

Last month, Weiss charged Smirnov with tax evasion and filing false tax returns, accusing him of concealing millions of dollars of income he earned between 2020 and 2022.

 

Smirnov agreed to plead guilty Thursday to one count of creating a false federal record and three tax-related counts.

 

Smirnov faces up to six years in prison, one year of supervised release and must pay $675,502 in restitution, pursuant to the plea deal filed in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, the New York Post reported.

 

The FBI had trusted Smirnov as an informant for almost a decade, according to GOP lawmakers, the Post reported.

Anonymous ID: a0ec3f Dec. 13, 2024, 5:05 a.m. No.22157809   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7902 >>8170 >>8273

Here we go again!

 

Deadly Virus Samples Missing from Australian Lab

https://www.newsmax.com/health/health-news/viruses-laboratory-queensland/2024/12/12/id/1191480/

 

A frightening breach of security resulted in the loss of hundreds of vials containing deadly viruses from an Australian laboratory. Queensland Health Minister Tim Nicholls announced that 323 samples of live viruses including Hendra virus, lyssavirus and hantavirus which are deadly pathogens, went mysteriously missing from a Queensland laboratory.

 

The vials went missing in 2021, but the potentially deadly violation was only discovered in August 2023, and revealed to the public just recently, according to Newsweek.

 

Hendra virus has a 57% fatality rate in humans, say experts, and was identified in the 1990’s after infecting and killing several Australian horses. Hantavirus is transmitted by rodents and causes potentially deadly Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS). This virus has a mortality rate of around 38%. Lyssavirus also has a very high mortality rate and is similar to rabies.

 

Ian Jones, a professor of virology at the University of Reading in the U.K., explained that although these are serious viruses that can be deadly to humans, infection occurs only through hand-to-mouth contamination, so the risk of spread is limited to direct contact.

 

Ther viruses do not appear to have been stolen from the lab, say authorities, but rather misplaced after a storage freezer in Queensland’s Public Health Virology Laboratory broke down and the sample vials were transferred elsewhere. Nicholls added that it also does not appear that the Hendra virus has been weaponized.

 

“They were transferred to a functioning freezer without the appropriate paperwork being completed,” he said. “The materials have been removed from that secure storage and lost, or otherwise unaccounted for.” Experts say that there is no risk to the community because of the breach because the viruses degrade quickly outside a low-temperature freezer and subsequently are harmless to people.

 

There have been no reports of Hendra virus or lyssavirus cases among humans in Queensland over the past five years, and there has never been a report of Hantavirus infections in humans even in Australia, said Queensland Chief Health Officer John Gerrard.

 

A full investigation of the breach is underway to find out exactly how these viruses went missing and why there was a two-year delay in discovering the incident.