Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine war latest: ‘Particularly concerning development’ for the West as Russia changes nuclear thinking; Putin faces … – Sky News

Prominent jailed Kremlin critic 'forced to listen to pro-Putin singer at 5am every morning'

Alexei Navalny has faced a series of hardships, apparently as a result of his role as Vladimir Putin's most prominent political rival.

Having previously been poisoned, assaulted and deprived of proper medical care, the jailed Kremlin critic today revealed he faced a new challenge: being forced to listen to a pro-Putinpop singer at 5am every day.

The 47-year-old, a former lawyer who rose to prominence more than a decade ago by lampooning the Russian president's elite circle and voicing allegations of vast corruption, is currently in a prison about 40 miles north of the Arctic Circle.

He is sentenced to stay in prison until he is 74 on charges widely thought to be trumped up to keep him out of politics.

But now Navalny has revealed that his morning regime consists of listening to the Russian national anthem before being played I am Russian, a patriotic song performed by a pro-Putinsinger called Shaman.

Shaman, whose real name is Yaroslav Dronov, has ridden a wave of war-fuelled patriotism to become a staple on state TV and is one of the celebrities officially puttingPutinforward to run again for the presidency in March.

His signature song, which he sometimes performs dressed in a black leather outfit with an arm band in the colours of the Russian flag talks of how Russians cannot "be broken", and will "go to the end" and carry the blood of their fathers.

The 32-year-old singer courted controversy in November when he simulated setting off a nuclear bomb at a concert broadcast on state TV, pushing a red button in a mock nuclear suitcase before fireworks erupted around him.

In a message on X facilitated by his allies, Navalny described a surreal morning routine.

"The singer Shaman came to prominence when I was already in prison so I could neither see him nor listen to his music," he wrote.

"But I knew he had becomePutin's main singer. And that his main song was I am Russian.

"Of course I was curious to hear it, but where could I listen to it in prison. And then they brought me to Yamal [the location of his Arctic prison].

"And here, every day at 5 o'clock in the morning, we hear the command, 'Get up!', followed by the Russian national anthem and then immediately afterwards, the country's second most important song is played - I am Russian by Shaman."

The irony, said Navalny, was that state propaganda had once highlighted the fact that he used to march with Russian nationalists on annual marches and now, years later, he was being played an ultra-nationalist pop song for educational purposes while doing his morning prison exercises.

He quipped: "To be honest, I'm still not sure that I correctly understand what post-irony and meta-irony are. But if that's not it, what is it?"

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Ukraine war latest: 'Particularly concerning development' for the West as Russia changes nuclear thinking; Putin faces ... - Sky News

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Angry wives tell Putin: bring our men back from Ukraine – The Times

The woman was standing alone near the Kremlin with a protest sign in her hands when she was abruptly detained by police. The arrest of demonstrators is nothing unusual in Moscow, but this was different because Maria Andreeva is the wife of a Russian soldier who is fighting in Ukraine.

Our guys are busting their arses off at the front for the authorities and they have detained the wife of a mobilised soldier can you believe it? she shouted as she was frog-marched away. Her sign read: Freedom for mobilised troops! Bring back our husbands, fathers and sons! She was later released without charge, possibly because the Kremlin is keen to avoiding drawing attention to such protests.

In recent weeks Andreeva, 34, has become

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A New Concern on the Ukrainian Battlefield: North Korea’s Latest Missiles – Yahoo News

BERLIN When Russia turned to Kim Jong Un of North Korea to help it through its war with Ukraine, it came with a big shopping list that included 1 million rounds of artillery to shoot at Ukrainian troops dug into trenches across the south and east, and dozens of North Koreas newest, barely tested missiles.

Now those weapons are beginning to show up, deeply worrying U.S. and European officials who say they fear the Norths ammunition could prove important on the battlefield at a huge moment of vulnerability for Ukraine.

While many of the North Korean artillery rounds are proving to be duds some appear to have been manufactured decades ago they are giving the Russians something to fire at Ukrainian forces, who are rationing their own dwindling supply. European nations promised Ukraine a huge resupply, but for now seem to have been able to scrounge up only 300,000 or so artillery shells.

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But it is the missiles that raise the most concern, from the Pentagon to NATOs headquarters in Brussels. In interviews, a range of officials said they fear the Russians hope to use missiles to overwhelm Western air defenses. While so far the number of missiles transferred is small, likely fewer than 50, U.S. and European officials believe there could be far more to come.

And unlike with the artillery rounds, North Korea is not shipping its older equipment. An analysis by Conflict Armament Research, an organization that has documented the arms used in Russias war in Ukraine, showed the missiles being provided to Russia are more recent in their design. And U.S. officials say the missiles are proving as accurate as Russias home-built equipment. Three barrages of North Korean-made missiles targeted Ukrainian positions around the new year, U.S. officials say, and they believe more were used on the battlefield Sunday.

In South Korea, officials and analysts say the Ukraine war is giving the North something it desperately needs: a testing ground to see how its new missile arsenal, designed for a conflict with South Korea and the United States, fares against Western-designed air defenses.

The turn to North Korea, as the war approaches its second anniversary, reflects Russias own struggle to keep up with the pace at which both sides are burning through their stocks of arms. Russia has also turned to Iran for drones, and is reportedly seeking Iranian missiles as well though there is no evidence it has yet gotten them.

The bulk of the missiles being fired at Ukraine are still produced in Russia. But if North Korea steps up its supply, Ukraine could be forced to shoot off precious rounds of air defenses, a development that could be devastating to Ukraine if additional military funding is not approved by Congress, U.S. officials said. The imports have especially alarmed leading members of NATO, who have declined to speak publicly but say they worry the infusion of the North Korean arms could prove particularly troublesome at a time when Ukraine is uncertain about when, or from whom, it will receive its next supplies.

For now, the air defenses are holding. Last Tuesday, Gen. Christopher Cavoli, the top U.S. commander in Europe, told Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin that he believed the Ukrainian military had enough air defenses to survive the winter, two senior U.S. officials said.

But if North Korea increases its missile shipments, and Congress fails to pass additional aid, that calculation could change.

Russia has already obtained several dozen North Korean missiles and is hoping to acquire more. President Vladimir Putin of Russia said he planned to visit North Korea soon, according to North Korean state media. Russia has fired North Korean missiles against Ukraine at least three times since late December, including attacks on Dec. 30, Jan. 2 and Jan. 6.

The missiles come on top of a steady stream of artillery shells, as many as 1 million rounds, that North Korea has agreed to ship to Russia. But the quality of those rounds is poor. Some have exploded inside Russian guns, and many of the rest have fallen harmlessly in underpopulated areas.

Quantity itself, however, matters on the battlefield. Last summer, Ukraine was firing as many as 7,000 artillery shells a day and had managed to damage Russias ammunition supplies to the point that Russia was firing about 5,000 rounds a day, according to U.S. and other Western analysts. Now the Ukrainians are struggling to fire 2,000 rounds daily, while Russian artillery, augmented by the North Korean shells, is reaching about 10,000 a day, analysts said.

Still, U.S. officials are far more worried about North Korean missiles.

After the first barrage, Jake Sullivan, the U.S. national security adviser, began working on an intensified effort to gather international support condemning the weapons transfer, and trying to increase pressure on North Korea to stop providing the missiles.

U.S. officials believe that at times since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, U.S. disclosures of North Korean shipments have caused North Korea to halt or delay further transfers.

The Russian transfers are coming at a critical time in the war in Ukraine, as further U.S. support hangs in the balance, subject to intense political debates on Capitol Hill. Ukraines ammunition needs will be a main focus of a virtual meeting of the countrys allies on Tuesday, to be led by Austin.

The United States has provided myriad air defense systems and ammunition to Ukraine. And U.S. officials have said those systems including Patriot batteries have proved capable of blunting the damage of Russian missile attacks.

But U.S. officials said that in order to provide more air defense systems and ammunition, Congress needs to approve an additional aid package.

U.S. officials say Ukrainian air defenses are a critical area of concern. After initial setbacks because of Western sanctions, Russia has rebuilt its industrial capacity and stockpiled missiles. But if Russia can get even more North Korean missiles, it will be able to more easily overcome Ukrainian defenses.

The Ukrainians continue to get attacked, John Kirby, a spokesperson for the National Security Council, said Wednesday. They continue to come under artillery shell, air attacks, ballistic and cruise missile, as well as drone attacks from the Russians.

It will be difficult for the United States to stop those additional shipments. North Korea has been taking a more belligerent position in its foreign policy in recent days. It has declared that it would no longer seek reconciliation with the South, prompting some experts to speculate that the country may be seeking to provoke a new conflict although the evidence for that is fragmentary at best. Without question, though, it has focused on strengthening its ties with Russia.

Yet the nature of the renewed relationship is not clear. Russia is promising an array of technology in return for the Norths ballistic missiles, including aircraft and advanced technological know-how. But U.S. officials do not believe Russia has yet provided the weaponry or additional ballistic missile technology.

c.2024 The New York Times Company

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Ukraine drones hit St Petersburg gas terminal in Russia – BBC.com

Ukraine drones hit St Petersburg gas terminal in Russia  BBC.com

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Zelensky signs decree recognizing some Russian territories as historically inhabited by Ukrainians – Kyiv Independent

Ukraine will take steps to research, publicize, and protect the histories of Ukrainians living in parts of modern-day Russia that have been historically inhabited by Ukrainians, according to a decree signed by President Volodymyr Zelensky on Jan. 22.

Zelensky announced he had signed the decree during his address on Unity Day, a national holiday celebrated on Jan. 22 that marks the unification of the Ukrainian People's Republic and the Western Ukrainian People's Republic in 1919 into one independent country.

The decree "On the Territories of the Russian Federation Historically Inhabited by Ukrainians" stipulates that the government should cooperate with international experts to create a plan "to preserve the national identity of Ukrainians" in specific territories of what is now Russia.

The decree listed the regions of Kuban, a historical region to the east of the Crimean Peninsula, Starodubshchyna, to the north of Chernihiv, and northern and eastern Slobozhanshchyna.

Also known as Sloboda Ukraine, Slobozhanshchyna was a significant and semi-autonomous region under Tsarist rule that extended across what is now northeastern Ukraine, predominantly Sumy, Kharkiv, and Luhansk oblasts, and southwestern Russia.

Krasnodar Krai covers most of what was once Kuban, while Starodubshchyna now lies predominantly in Bryansk Oblast.

The decree also declares that the government should preserve the history of Ukrainians in these regions. Their testimonies on the forced Russification, political repression, and deportations they suffered should be recorded, according to the decree.

More work should also be done to counter "disinformation and propaganda of the Russian Federation regarding the history and present of Ukrainians in Russia" and to develop relations between Ukrainians and other "peoples enslaved by Russia," the decree says.

The government should work with the National Academy of Sciences to develop materials about the "more than a thousand-year history of Ukrainian state formation, the historical connections of lands inhabited by ethnic Ukrainians, and Ukrainian national state formations in various historical periods."

The "true history of ethnic Ukrainians in the lands historically inhabited by them within the borders of the Russian Federation" should also be included in educational textbooks, according to the decree.

Everything you didnt know about Ukraines flag

At a small exhibit at the National History Museum in Kyiv on Ukraines flag, one notices something particular about the flags from the Soviet times and early days of independence: theyre homemade sewn by hand with different fabrics of slightly different blues and yellows, the result of a

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