Media Search:



U.S. Considers Warning Ukraine of a Russian Invasion in Real-Time – The New York Times

The number one thing we can do is real time actionable intelligence that says, The Russians are coming over the berm, said Evelyn Farkas, who served as deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia in the Obama administration. We tell them, and they use that to target the Russians.

She said that weve been nervous about that in the past.

One potential problem with providing actionable intelligence, American officials acknowledge, is that it could lead Ukraine to strike first the sort of scenario Western officials believe that Mr. Putin has been trying to sell to the Russian public.

This summer, Mr. Putin argued in an article that Russians and Ukrainians were one people and said that the formation of a Ukrainian state hostile to Moscow was comparable in its consequences to the use of weapons of mass destruction against us.

He has continuously painted the Ukrainian government as the aggressor, backed by the West. But if Russian tanks are moving over the border, and Ukraine targets them, it will be hard for Mr. Putin to make that argument. Russian disinformation campaigns have attacked the Ukrainian government and accused President Volodymyr Zelensky of creating a humanitarian crisis in the countrys east, where Ukrainian government forces have been battling Russian-led separatists for years, Western officials said.

Last Friday, Mr. Putin codified what he has long been saying to American and European officials in meetings, demanding that the United States and its allies halt all military activity in Eastern Europe and Central Asia in a Cold War-like security arrangement. That the demand came when Russian troops were at Ukraines border explicitly linked the deployment to a possible invasion, American officials said.

American and NATO officials privately dismissed the main demands of the Russian proposal, which came in the form of a draft treaty suggesting that NATO should offer written guarantees that it would not expand farther east toward Russia and halt all military activities in the former Soviet republics.

Ominous warnings. Russia called the strike a destabilizing act that violated the cease-fire agreement, raising fears of a new intervention in Ukraine that could draw the United States and Europe into a new phase of the conflict.

The Kremlins position. President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, who has increasingly portrayed NATOs eastward expansion as an existential threat to his country, said that Moscows military buildupwas a response to Ukraines deepening partnership with the alliance.

But the United States also set up talks with Moscow, for January, during which officials said they would tackle the range of complaints detailed by Russia. On Wednesday, Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke with his Russian counterpart, Gen. Valery Gerasimov. Ukraine has sought NATO membership for years a move that would enrage Russia but despite the delay, the United States has balked at taking Ukraines accession off the table.

Read the rest here:
U.S. Considers Warning Ukraine of a Russian Invasion in Real-Time - The New York Times

Tough choices ahead for Canada as Ukraine and Russia teeter on brink of war – CBC News

Canada's long-standing, stalwart support of Ukraine will be under new and intense pressure early in the new year, say experts and a former top military commander, as the West braces for possible military action by Russia, perhaps as soon as late January.

There could be as many asfive possible scenarios on how the current crisis in Eastern Europe might play out,and they're almost all bad.

The assembly of over 100,000 Russian troops on Ukraine's eastern border and the possibility of a full-blown invasion has riveted the attention of western leaders and policy-makers.

It is just one of the potential scenarios, although U.S.intelligence officials say Russian President Vladimir Putin has not made up his mind to use overwhelming military force and the Kremlin denies it is planning an invasion.

Canada, which originally sponsored Ukraine's bid to join NATO, and is among the country's biggest cheerleaders and defenders, will find it faces uncomfortable choices in the new year,both internationally and domestically.

The U.S. and NATO have already said that they will not send troops to defend the country in the event of an invasion. That is cause for anxiety in the politically-active, occasionally strident, Canadian-Ukrainian diaspora population in this country.

The Liberal government will have to fall in line with other NATO allies, no matter how painful it becomes domestically.

Stefanie von Hlatky, associate professor of political studies at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., said the challenge for the government will be to "play up what it is already doing in Ukraine."

One of the things Canadais doing is helping to improve the combat skills of Ukrainian soldiers through an international training mission. It isan endeavour the Trudeau government has already signalled its willingness to renew, when the mandate expires in March of the coming year.

Defence Minister Anita Anand's mandate letter contained a reference to "extending" both Operation Unifier in Ukraine and Operation Reassurance, the overall Canadian military contribution to NATO's campaign of deterrence against Russia.

The Canadian military trainers in Ukraine, roughly 200 in all,would "quite possibly" have to be withdrawn in the event of major hostilities, said the country's top military commander.

"It is a capacity-building mission that we have there, it is not a combat mission," said Gen. Wayne Eyre, Canada's chief of the defence staff, in a recent interview with CBC News.

"We have trainers who are focused on training, not fighting and so,as with any deteriorating situation,we would have to take a look at that situation and what we do with that force on the ground."

The possibility of having to make thatdecision underlines the delicate balancing act facing not only Canada, but NATO as a whole. In the face of a military crisis, there will be the need to show resolution without antagonizing Russia,or getting drawn into one of Moscow's disinformation campaigns.

"No one has a crystal ball," said Dominique Arel, a University of Ottawa professor and the school's chair of Ukrainian Studies, who added that he found the notion of full-blown invasion to be "wildly unlikely" because of the enormous cost Russia would pay in terms of blood and treasure.

An invasion, he said, would be a complete change in policy for Moscow and the Ukrainian Army is better trained, more experienced and more effectively armed than the last time Russian forces fought them for control of Crimea and the eastern Donbass region in 2014.

"There's an actual army there and they're gonna fight," said Arel, referring to Ukrainian forces, which are now equipped with U.S.-made Javelin anti-tank rockets and Turkish missile-carrying drones. "Even if they are initially defeated, that's going to be at a serious cost to the Russian Army. Why would the Russian government do that?"

Similarly, Matthew Schmidt, an associate professor and national security expert at the University of New Haven, Connecticut, said he's doubtful we'll see the absolute worst case scenario.

"I think the scenario of a massive invasion of Ukraine is unlikely," he said. "If Putin has to take Kyiv, he's lost the war because the international response will be so devastating that he doesn't gain much benefit."

The U.S has threatened devastating economic sanctions, including the possibility of cutting Russia off from SWIFT, the messaging network used by 11,000 banks in hundreds of countries around the globe to make cross-border payments. That has been referred to as "the nuclear option," a crippling economic blow that would deliver major financial pain.

Western and Ukrainian intelligence officials have suggested, that if there is going to be conflict, expect to see it in the window from mid-January to early February when the ground is frozen and solid enough to take the weight of tanks.

There are two other scenarios that involve a limited invasion:one that sees Russia establish a land bridge to Crimea by taking the Ukrainian city of Mariupol and possibly driving further west as far as the port city of Odessa; the other notion would see some form of overt reinforcement of Russian-backed proxy forces in the breakaway oblasts of Donetsk and Luhansk,known collectively as the Donbass region.

Schmidt said both of those scenarios would likely provoke western allies.

"He may well engage in some kind of limited invasion in the east, but even there it's risky for him because of the kind of sanctions the West would bring down, particularly the risk of cutting them out of the SWIFT banking network, which woulddevastate the Russian economy," Schmidt said.

A fourth option;to use special forces and subversion to wear down Ukraine and its allies,is something that is more Moscow's speed, said Arel.

"Will Russia find other ways of ratcheting up the military pressure, while pretending it's not doing it? Possibly. Because that's been the playbook," said Arel, referring to the campaign of disinformation and confusion the Kremlin used following the annexation of Crimea.

The fifth option would be to do nothing and allow the giant military force to sit on Ukraine's border and wear down the government in Kyiv, as well as NATO, with a perpetual state of crisis.

Canada's former military representative at NATO, retired vice-admiral Bob Davidson, said he believes Putin senses weakness among the allies following the disastrous, chaotic end to the two-decade western alliance mission in Afghanistan.

For authoritarian leaders, there was an unmistakable message.

"We didn't lose the war because the Taliban won. We lost because we basically gave up on it," said Davidson. "So, that's what I think Putin and some of the others in the world are looking at: What is the real staying power of NATO when it comes to some of these issues that may turn out to be generational?"

Schmidt agreed with the assessment, saying Putin is an astute opportunist.

"Putin is often seen as some kind of grand strategist, my view is he isn't," Schmidt said. "What he is, is that he's a good reader of current events and he takes advantage of targets of opportunity."

The loss of Afghanistan and the way it has reflected on NATO and the United States"has given him an opportunity to push and do two things he's wanted to do:things that have been part of his foreign policy for a long time,which is to weaken and break apart NATO, and secondly, to weaken and break apart the European Union."

On Dec. 17, Russia published draft security demands that included: NATO denying membership to Ukraine and other former Soviet countries; a roll back of the alliance's military deployments in Central and Eastern Europe anda halt to western military drills near Russia, among other things.

The demand for a written guarantee that Ukraine won't be offered membership has already been rejected by the West and the other ultimatums are almost certainly headed in the same direction.

The attempt to link the ending of the Ukraine crisis with the wider Russian policy of stopping NATO's eastward expansion is illuminating, Davidson said.

The reality, he said, is that Ukraine is at least fifteen years away from the kind of institutional reform that would allow it to be a full-fledged NATO member and Russia knows that.

So, why now?

Putin is struggling with "a weakening economy" and the drive towards clean energy, which will have a furtherenormous impact on the Russian economy, because of its reliance on fossil fuels, limiting its ability to wage war, said Davidson.

The U.S. has said it is seeking a diplomatic solution to the crisis, but achieving one will be difficult without the willingsupport of President Volodymyr Zelensky's government.

There have been two peace accords, brokered with the help of the U.S., France and Germany, known as the Minsk agreements. The deals have been a recipe for political stalemate.

Arel said it's clear Russia is tired of the situation.

"Russia is seeking ways to ratchet up the pressure so this political impasse will crack," Arel said. "It's hard to see how it will work."

The accords propose giving the two breakaway regions so-called special status within Ukraine;something the government in Kyiv appears loath to grant.

"The word autonomy is not used in the accord, but that's what it amounts to, but that's not happening," said Arel. "Ukraine is unable, unwilling to move forward because it's seen as total capitulation."

There is good reason for the Ukrainians to be suspicious. Crimea, which was annexed by Russia, had an autonomous status before 2014.

Ironically, Arel said, France, Germany and the United States are all onboard with the notion of giving special status to the Donbass.

But with Russia's recent military buildup neither the allies, nor Canada, can openly pressure the government in Kyiv to be flexible because it would be seen as caving in to Moscow.

It would put Canada in an uncomfortable position if the U.S. pressed Ukraine to make concessions; or if NATO showed signs of walking back its commitment to eventually allow Ukraine to join.

"Were NATO to do that, that would be the end of NATO," Arel said.

In a further ironic twist, he noted how in 2008, when Ukraine was first proposed by Canada for NATO membership, the resolution was deliberately vague on the timetable and meant as a concession to ease Russian fears.

"It means Ukraine could join in 50 years, not five," Arel said.

Excerpt from:
Tough choices ahead for Canada as Ukraine and Russia teeter on brink of war - CBC News

NEW: RI GOP Rep Morgan’s Comments Racist, Says Black Lives Matter PAC – GoLocalProv

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

GoLocalProv News Team

View Larger +

RI State Rep. Patricia Morgan. PHOTO: GoLocal File

On Tuesday, Morgan Tweeted the following:

I had a black friend. I liked her and I think she liked me, too. But now she is hostile and unpleasant. I am sure I didn't do anything to her, except be white. Is that what teachers and our political leaders really want for our society? Divide us because of our skin color? #CRT

BLM RI PAC called the Tweet racist and called on House Speaker Joseph Shekarchi to take action to remove Morgan from the committees.

SEE TWEET BELOW

If Representative Patricia Morgan truly believed we shouldnt be divided by our skin color, she wouldnt have made this divisive of a comment, along with the many other similar comments she has made in the past, said BLM RI PAC in a statement, adding that the comment was offensive and deeply insulting to the Black and Brown community.

BLM RI PAC Executive Director Harrison Tuttle is running for the Rhode Island General Assembly in 2022.

The PAC continued with the following:

Not to mention the piece of legislation she introduced, that if passed, would ban Critical Race Theory in Rhode Island classrooms. Rhode Island should no longer tolerate ideologies, by any political party, that are hateful and divisivein the media, in policy proposals, and in our everyday lives. We are disappointed to see elected officials who say they are progressive seek compromise with people who make comments like these.

Condemnation in the media will no longer do. BLM RI PAC is calling for Representative Patricia Morgans immediate removal by Speaker of the House Joseph Shekarchi from the following committeesHouse Environment and Natural Resources Committee, House Health and Human Services Committee, House Labor Committee, and the House Municipal Government and Housing Committee. Anything less than these substantive actions is another tacit acceptance of racism from the General Assembly that can no longer be tolerated.

Neither Morgan nor Shekarchi responded to request for comment at time of publication.

House Minority Leader Blake Filippi also did not respond to request for comment.

Excerpt from:
NEW: RI GOP Rep Morgan's Comments Racist, Says Black Lives Matter PAC - GoLocalProv

What was Greater Taunton’s biggest story of 2021? Use this form to cast your vote – Taunton Daily Gazette

December is drawing to a close, ending another strange year in Taunton history. It was a time of political and social struggle, a time of tragedy and possibility, of endings and new beginnings. This was the second year of the COVID pandemic that still has the world in its grip, casting a specter over every aspect of life in the city. And yet there were some positive developments too.

We looked back at the past 12 months of Gazette stories and came up with a list of 10 of the most important issues and stories that affect us all. Lets look at them all briefly and wed like you to choose which are the top three stories of 2021. Vote using our form at the bottom of the story.

Perhaps the most touching article of the year is the story of a radiant little girl who loved life so much she crawled when she could no longer walk and never, never stopped dancing. Taunton Police Officer Jeremy Derosier and his wife, Jamie, lost their 6-year-old daughter Aubriella to mitochondrial disease, only a few years after they lost their son to the same illness. They held a fairy-tale wedding for Aubriella before her passing.

Tragedy strikes: Taunton cop walks 6-year-old daughter down the aisle before she loses battle with illness

After years of lingering decline, the Silver City Galleria mall finally closed and was demolished, another victim of the retail apocalypse. The two-story mall had opened its doors in 1992, and by 2021 the front door was the only part still standing from the 1.1 million square-foot building. The site was sold in the summer, and could see industrial development.

Saying goodbye to the Galleria: How many times have you walked through this door? Taunton Galleria entrance last to go

Taunton has taken the scenic route on the road to the recreational marijuana industry. Would-be marijuana business owners have long had complaints about delays, made allegations of unfairness, and faced cease-and-desist orders. Its only after two years of red tape that the citys first recreational pot shop has opened its doors.

Smoke 'em if you got 'em: Taunton's first recreational retail pot shop is open here's what the first day was like

Reckless riding of dirt bikes and ATVs on public roads has been considered a continuing nuisance in Taunton. After years of complaints, the city government created a new ordinance governing the use of these recreational vehicles, and what the city can do to those who violate the law. But some ATV riders said they have a side to the story too.

'Zero tolerance': Here are Taunton's new rules on reckless ATV driving

The COVID-19 pandemic rolled along in its second year, but people were armed with a new weapon in the fight against the highly contagious illness: three new vaccines were developed. Initially rationed to give first-dibs to those at highest risk, eventually vaccines were authorized for everyone ages 5 and older. Early shortages of vaccines have given way to public clinics, like the VaxBus, and doses available at most pharmacies and clinics. But while COVID cases dipped in the spring and summer, new variants have emerged and new cases are soaring once again.

Take your shot: Taunton lags behind Mass. in vaccinating kids against COVID; here's how to get the vaccine

The local real estate market exploded in 2021, with home prices soaring the average home price in 2018 is what the least-expensive houses are selling for now. We've been keeping an eye on the latest moves in the real estate market in our weekly updates. And while this trend has been great for sellers, its been difficult for homebuyers to find new digs.

'It was horrible': Taunton homebuyers struggle in seller's market

An off-duty Taunton police sergeant was charged with seriously injuring a motorcycle rider while driving drunk. Shawn Smith of Raynham, with 21 years on the force, was arrested in the off-duty incident. Heallegedly sideswiped motorcyclist George Haskell, 52, who faced serious injuries and underwent multiple surgeries during his over seven weeks in the hospital. Smith said he would retirefrom the force, and his case is pending.

OUI incident: Longtime Taunton cop to retire after alleged drunk driving crash with motorcyclist

A homophobic piece of hate-mail received by the town of Dighton sparked a debate in town over whether the gay pride flag should fly at town hall a debate that lasted for months, with a local election hinging on it. In the end, Dighton Town Meeting ended up shutting down the debate definitively, by passing a restrictive flag bylaw after a four-hour meeting. Taunton got in on the gay pride flag debate as well, with Mayor Shaunna OConnell opting not to fly the rainbow banner over city hall, sparking a small gay pride rally in protest.

Gay pride flag ban: Dighton Town Meeting bans flying LGBTQ and other flags on town property

The political divide was wide on other issues, as well. A mural at Taunton High School depicting the thin blue line drew complaints. Supporters called the flag a tribute to fallen police officers and a sign of support, while detractors noted that the flag has been flown in opposition to Black Lives Matter protests and has been used at white supremacist rallies. On Taunton Green, supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement and those holding Blue Lives Matter flags had dueling but peaceful rallies. In the end, the school replaced the mural with an American flag and a quote from a black soldier.

Dueling rallies: Taunton BLM and thin blue line supporters face off during peaceful but heated rallies

A year after the closing of Coyle & Cassidy, the old school got new life, as Bristol Community College opened its Taunton Center in the building. Bristol had been leasing space inside the Silver City Galleria, but the new space gives the community college access to features that werent available in the mall space.

Peek inside: Here's a look inside Bristol Community College's new Taunton Center at Coyle & Cassidy

Use this form below to cast your vote for first, second, and third place.

Dan Medeiros can be reached at dmedeiros@heraldnews.com. Support local journalism by purchasing a digital or print subscription to The Herald News today.

Read the original here:
What was Greater Taunton's biggest story of 2021? Use this form to cast your vote - Taunton Daily Gazette

BLM activists confront outgoing Saratoga Springs officials once more at meeting Tuesday The Daily Gazette – The Daily Gazette

SARATOGA SPRINGS Black Lives Matter activists and their supporters told the departing city council members just how little they would miss them during Tuesday nights meeting.

Mayor Meg Kelly and commissioners John Franck, Michele Madigan and Robin Dalton are in their final daysas they yield to newly-elected Democrats.

The activists criticism was directed at Kelly, Madigan and Dalton.

The meeting got off to a hostile start when BLM supporter Angela Kaufman tried to present the mayor with a container of cockroaches.

I was at the pet store the other day buying gifts for my boys when I found the perfect gift for a mayor who appears to not be able to tell the difference between activists and cockroaches, Kaufmantold Kelly, who didnt accept the gift.

BLM activist Samira Sangare of Clifton Park read a timeline of activists interactions with local police for which she said the council provided no accountability.

It began with a July 30 protest during which activists were met by state police, sheriffs deputies and city police in riot gear, along with a military vehicle, she said. Pepper bullets were shot at the activists.

June 28, 2021, Sangare said. [Assistant Police Chief John] Cantone and Robbins sat side by side, fear-mongering, and blamed us for fights on Caroline Street.

During the council meeting that followed those events, Sangare said, Kelly threatened to have the group arrested for being disagreeable during the meeting.

At one point, Madigan told the speaker that the activists should have accepted her invitation to meet.

You never cared about us. You never cared about the community, Sangare replied. You never cared about Darryl Mount.

Activists have been protesting on behalf of Mount, a biracial man who was pursued by police in 2013 for an alleged domestic dispute. Authorities say Mount fell from scaffoldingduring the incident.He eventually died in 2014, afternine months in a coma. Protesters contend police beat him to his death.

Referencing the state Attorney Generals office investigation of city police to assess whether protesters were targeted with excessive force and retaliatory arrests Sangare told the councilors, I cant wait for all the lawsuits that come your way.

Madigan, when referencing incoming Democratic officials, expressed with apparent sarcasm her relief that the new city council members would diversify city staffing through their appointments. She indicated that it would soon be revealed that the incoming council members hadnt chosen a diverse group of staffers.

At one point during the meeting, in an attempt to demonstrate that the activists shouldnt be treated like crap, BLM activist Lexis Figuereo revealed that his sister is a caretaker for the mayors sister.

Kelly, who said her sister is disabled, said she didnt appreciate Figuereo bringing that up, asserting, You have a hell of a nerve. She added, Thats the lowest blow that you can give anybody.

The mother of Figuereos two young children, Gabrielle C. Elliott, also played a recording of her interaction with police on Sept. 7. Elliott was arrested outside of the police station on charges of attempted assault, resisting arrest and endangering the welfare of a child. She was present that day to support her husband, who faced warrant charges from a previous protest.

The charges against Elliott were recently adjourned in contemplation of dismissal, but Elliott said she was still angered by the councils lack of accountability for the police separating her from her 6-year-old son and then-1-year-old daughter.

Your lies, your manipulation, have resulted in more trauma on all of us more than you will ever realize, Elliott said.

Shewent on to tell the departing council members not to let the door hit your a on the way out.

Figuereo then brought up that Madigans 18-year-old son had been arrested for an alleged assault and robbery earlier this year.

I havent heard much about her son in the news, the activist cracked. Im pretty sure hes facing a felony.

Madigansaid to the activist, Dont bring up my family.

Figuereo, a local bartender, asserted that he knows Madigan from frequenting the cocktail lounge.

An emotional Madigan replied, You people are abusive.

Dalton, reflecting on what she also said was abuse, told a reporter that she wouldnt advise anyone she cared about to run for the city council here.

Contact reporter Brian Lee at [emailprotected] or 518-419-9766.

Categories: News, Saratoga County

See the article here:
BLM activists confront outgoing Saratoga Springs officials once more at meeting Tuesday The Daily Gazette - The Daily Gazette