Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine water pipe explodes, surveillance camera catches it all – KRQE News 13


KRQE News 13
Ukraine water pipe explodes, surveillance camera catches it all
KRQE News 13
KIEV, Ukraine (KRQE) Luckily no one is hurt Wednesday morning after this incredible scene in Kiev after an underground pipe suddenly bursts. The massive, underground water main explosion was caught by surveillance cameras at the precise moment it ...
MUST-SEE VIDEO: Underground water pipe bursts in Ukraine streetMy Fox Boston
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Ukraine water pipe explodes, surveillance camera catches it all - KRQE News 13

Rivas: Outright warfare continues in Eastern Ukraine – ERR News

A Ukrainian soldier in a trench in Avdiivka, Eastern Ukraine.

"Seeing the massive destruction wrought on the city of Sloviansk and speaking to local residents helps to grasp the seriousness of the ongoing conflict and is an important addition to the briefings on slides and paper," Rivas said according to spokespeople for the Riigikogu.

"For the Ukrainian soldiers I visited, military actions are a daily reality despite the international protests and the Minsk Agreements," he said.

The assault unit visited by Rivas and other participants in a recent security conference held in Kharkiv had participated in the battles for Donetsk Airport and has lost altogether more than one hundred personnel in combat, with many more injured.

"It is absolutely clear that the European Union must continue supporting Ukraine in every way it can, including through sanctions against Russia," Rivas said speaking at the Sloviansk crisis center after visiting the Ukrainian assault unit.

"I hope that Estonia continues to stand by Ukraine," he continued. "I would also like to remind my colleagues who miss good economic relations with Russia that Ukraine is still at war caused by Russia's intervention to derail development toward Western freedom and market economy as chosen by the Ukrainian people."

The Riigikogu vice-president visited Eastern Ukraine in order to attend a security conference in Kharkiv organized by the Friedrich Naumann Foundation.

"It is not possible that there is a military conflict in one part of Europe, and the other part of Europe is not touched by it," Rivas stressed in a speech at the conference on Monday. "The security of Europe is one whole, and the events in Ukraine are the concern of all of us."

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Rivas: Outright warfare continues in Eastern Ukraine - ERR News

Trump’s surprise bid to broker Ukraine peace – New York Post

In their Oval Office meeting in March, President Trump told German Chancellor Angela Merkel that the Ukraine crisis was Europes responsibility and the United States wouldnt get heavily involved, according to two officials briefed on the discussion. Two months later, the

Trump administration is reversing course and planning to re-engage on Ukraine in a significant way.

For Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who is leading the behind-the-scenes effort, Ukraine is where Trumps so-far thwarted plan to improve US-Russian relations can be kick-started. Although still in its early stages, Tillersons idea is to restart a version of the peace negotiations the Obama administration was engaged in last year, hoping new circumstances and personalities might produce better results, according to US officials and outside experts.

There are skeptics across the administration who believe pursuing any type of Russia reset in a domestic political environment dominated by investigations of Russias interference in the US political system is a fools errand. But Trump and Tillerson are determined to give it try.

European officials, for their part, are cheering. We very much appreciate that the new administration will be more engaged in the Ukraine issue. In the beginning they seemed not to be so interested in this issue. Thats changed a lot, German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel told The Washington Post after meeting with Tillerson on May 17.

Germany and France have been involved in whats called the Normandy Format, an effort to implement the 2015 Minsk agreement, which is stalled due to cease-fire violations on the ground primarily by Russian-backed forces and a lack of Ukrainian political progress. Their hope is that the United States can break the impasse.

We know that Russia will only move if the Americans will be on board and press them to do more for a cease-fire and for a withdrawal of heavy weapons from the region, Gabriel said. The Russians know that the behavior of Russia in Ukraine is a precondition to [US] cooperation with Russia in other fields.

Trumps shift became evident on May 10, when he held a widely reported discussion with Russia Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and a less-noticed meeting with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin.

I said, fellas you got to make peace, you got to get peace, Trump later told Fox News.

Though the White House and State Department declined to comment, US officials and others confirmed Tillerson has had multiple discussions about the way forward with Lavrov. Theres a robust interagency process to chart the new strategy, and Vice President Mike Pences office is also involved.

Tillerson is looking to tap a special envoy at the State Department to manage and lead the new Ukraine effort. That new envoy would reinvigorate the US-Russian diplomatic channel with Vladislav Surkov, known as the Kremlins gray cardinal. President Barack Obamas assistant secretary of state for Europe, Victoria Nuland, was ultimately unable to make progress through that channel last year.

Whats different now, officials say, is that Russian President Vladimir Putin can no longer bide his time waiting for a more favorable US administration, as he did last year. The German and French governments are not getting more Russia-friendly any time soon.

But Trumps domestic problems due to the Russia scandal complicate everything. Congress is champing at the bit to apply more sanctions to Russia, not lift them. Lawmakers in both parties are going to be hugely skeptical of any deal Trump tries to strike with Moscow.

John Herbst, a former US ambassador to Ukraine, said Trump could use the threat or even implementation of new sanctions as leverage to give Putin more incentive to make concessions.

Diplomacy without changing the conditions on the ground is less likely to succeed, he said.

The details matter. If the Trump team sets out a principled approach based on offering limited sanctions relief only after Russia enforces a cease-fire and removes heavy weapons from eastern Ukraine, a deal might be possible, said Alexander Vershbow, a former senior Pentagon and NATO official.

Its a long shot, he said. But the best way for Trump to disarm his critics would be to defy expectations and negotiate a good deal that gets the Russians out of eastern Ukraine.

If the Trump team does its best to strike a deal with Moscow and fails, at least Putins true intentions will be laid bare. Then the administration will have little choice but to pursue a path of actively pushing back on Russian aggression, increasing support for Ukraines government and military and abandoning the idea of yet another Russian reset.

2017, The Washington Post

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Trump's surprise bid to broker Ukraine peace - New York Post

Ukraine shut down Russian social media outlets – Washington Times

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

Russia is attempting to weaponize the way people share information. The West is only now understanding what this new form of warfare is and how to defeat it.

Long before Russia intervened in the U.S. presidential election last year and in the French elections this year, Ukrainian lawmakers were sounding the alarm over Russian interference. The Ukrainian term for Russian cyberattacks is hybrid warfare and the Ukrainian government finally took action against it this month.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko following a decision by the National Security and Defense Council banned Russian social media sites and propaganda outlets that were masquerading as legitimate news sources. The decision is part of a larger set of sanctions against Russia designed to restore nothing short of the cyber sovereignty of Ukraine.

The ban affects Russias equivalents of Facebook called Vkontakte (aka VK) Odnoklassniki and Yandex. These sites have been routinely monitored and mined for data by Russias spy agency, the Federal Security Service. The danger to Ukrainians from this activity cannot be overstated. Ukraine has long been a testing ground for new types of Russian aggression. In Ukraine, Russia has employed both physical and psychological methods. The goal: to sew discord and destabilize Ukraine.

During Russias 2014 invasion of Ukraines Crimean Peninsula and the ongoing conflict in East Ukraine, Russia has marshaled a smorgasbord of propaganda techniques and cyberattacks. Using personal data gleaned by mining the Vkontakte and Odnoklassniki social-media platforms, it has targeted ethnic Russians with carefully tailored messages in an attempt to ignite ethnic tensions. In addition, a pro-Russian terrorist group called the Somalia Battalion, which has fought Ukrainian troops in eastern Ukraine, used Vkontakte to recruit unwitting volunteers into military service.

More recently, an online phenomenon known as Blue Whale that encourages children and teens to commit suicide was propagated and promoted by some of these same Russian outlets. On Vkontakte, Blue Whale looks like an online game, but it has caused many, tragic deaths. Worse yet, the Russians ability to target young people has undoubtedly been bolstered by the Kremlins ability to collect and analyze personal data from Ukrainian users of Russian based social media sites, such as Vkontakte and Odnoklassniki.

Russian media outlets such as Russia Today, the television network, have also been blacked out in Ukraine. RT has been the cornerstone of recent Russian propaganda blitzes. Russia uses RT and similar television channels to spread false information and fake news. Democratically elected Ukrainian leaders are routinely referred to as the Kiev junta in power illegitimately. The stations are also fond of describing U.S. and Ukrainian policy as similar to that of Nazi Germany.

Ukraine is happy to push back against such dangerous lies. Its national security is at stake.

To be clear, Ukraine continues to uphold the rights of freedom of speech and freedom of expression. But those freedoms dont apply in this case. No one has the right to spread falsehoods nor can anyone collect personal data to promote them. Even the director of Ukraines Mohyla School of Journalism, Yevhen Fedchenko, defended the Russian media shutdowns as the greatest contribution to the protection of information sovereignty of Ukraine ever.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) came to a similar conclusion: The Ukrainian government has made clear that this decree is an issue of security, not one of freedom of speech. Neither the United Nations nor any government in the West has spoken out against Ukraines actions.

Critics from Russia and its allies will no doubt continue to compare Ukraine to North Korea and its far-reaching media controls. But they miss the real comparison to South Korea, which routinely blocks the propaganda websites peddled by its northern neighbor. They also surely will neglect to mention that there is one easy way for Russia to have the sanctions removed. All it has to do is end its war with Ukraine and withdraw its soldiers from Ukrainian soil.

Dmytro Shymkiv is the deputy head of the presidential administration of Ukraine and secretary of the National Reform Council.

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Ukraine shut down Russian social media outlets - Washington Times

LATEST: Dutch Senate backs EU-Ukraine trade deal – POLITICO.eu

Tom Cullem

Because, as so often has been the case, the EU and its minions in members government, doesnt give a tinkers curse with those in these alleged democracies really want.

If Juncker told me it was raining, I wouldnt pull the umbrella out until Id opened the window and checked for myself.

Well, Dutch voters, you backed off voting for the people who would never have agreed to this, and now you have your reward. The EU iron fits comes down again: our way or the highway.

Posted on 5/30/17 | 3:00 PM CEST

Oof. Common sense prevails in the Senate.

We need to support the Ukraina for ethical, moral, and geopolitical reasons. This is a way to do that that wont cost us very much but will help the Ukraina significantly.

Any concerns that this treaty is a backdoor to get another poor country into the EU have been adequately addressed by means of a claryfying treaty addendum.

So, there is no longer any reason to be against, and the Netherlands Senate just now agreed after the House earlier came to the same conclusion.

Alls well that ends well, one might say.

Not so for professional EU-bashers apparently. They are disappointed and as determined as ever to find fault with the EU no matter what. They are also determined never to let any facts or balanced reflection to get in their way.

Well, at least they are consistent and predictable.

Posted on 5/30/17 | 3:27 PM CEST

Well, another affirmation of the famous European values: the people vote in one way, and the government decides the opposite.

And consider that they are the same gentlemen who then hold political ethics lessons for the governments of Hungary and Poland !

Posted on 5/30/17 | 4:03 PM CEST

Together with Brexit and the Turkey escalation, thats now 3 major ongoing debates around a country bordering EU and wanting a deep EU trade agreement but without political union or freedom of movement. As an EU citizen, I continue to think there would be a lot of value in handling this through a regional FTA or customs union between EU / EFTA countries / UK / Turkey / Ukraine, without any goal of political union. Decision making on standards and regulations should not be centered around EU like EFTA is today, but it should have EU as one of the equal partners around the table. It could be an evolution of EFTA or a separate treaty altogether, that would probably be up to the EEA and EFTA members to decide.

In retrospect, I wish _that_ was the vision that Theresa May would have pushed for when she made her big Global Britain speech, positioning the UK as the leading EFTA member, pushing for trade without political union.

Posted on 5/30/17 | 4:07 PM CEST

@Jodocus4

The EU megaphone has spoken and as usual uses 100 words but 10 will do.

Posted on 5/30/17 | 4:18 PM CEST

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LATEST: Dutch Senate backs EU-Ukraine trade deal - POLITICO.eu