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PostPosted: Fri Feb 18, 2022 10:07 am
 


Separatists to evacuate civilians from Eastern Ukraine to Russia amid crisis


$1:
Russia plans to give its nuclear weapons apparatus a practice run this weekend



What could go wrong?


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 18, 2022 5:28 pm
 




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PostPosted: Fri Feb 18, 2022 11:20 pm
 


U.S. approves $6B tank deal with Poland


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PostPosted: Sat Feb 19, 2022 3:25 am
 


Ukraine reports a soldier killed in separatists shelling


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PostPosted: Sat Feb 19, 2022 5:38 pm
 


Scape Scape:



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PostPosted: Sat Feb 19, 2022 8:35 pm
 


Shelling Escalates in Ukraine, as Thousands Flee Fearing Attack
$1:
Artillery fire escalated sharply in eastern Ukraine on Saturday and thousands of residents fled the region in chaotic evacuations — two developments rife with opportunities for what the United States has warned could be a pretext for a Russian invasion.

Russian-backed separatists, who have been fighting the Ukrainian government for years, have asserted, without evidence, that Ukraine was planning a large-scale attack on territory they control.

Western leaders have derided the notion that Ukraine would launch an attack while surrounded by Russian forces, and Ukrainian officials dismissed the claim as “a cynical Russian lie.”

But separatist leaders on Saturday urged women and children to evacuate, and able-bodied men to prepare to fight. And the ginned-up panic was already having real effects, with refugees frantically boarding buses to Russia and refugee tent camps popping up across the Russian border.

At the same time, the firing of mortars, artillery and rocket-propelled grenades by separatist rebels along the front line roughly doubled the level of the previous two days, the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs said. Two Ukrainian soldiers were killed and five wounded, the military said.


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PostPosted: Sat Feb 19, 2022 9:33 pm
 




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PostPosted: Sat Feb 19, 2022 9:36 pm
 




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PostPosted: Sun Feb 20, 2022 12:21 am
 




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PostPosted: Sun Feb 20, 2022 1:35 pm
 


Hypothesis - this is all happening because Putin's been in COVID isolation for far too long, the pressure's gotten to him, and he might now be legitimately fucking insane:

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2022/02 ... -sane.html

$1:
The New York Times has broached the awkward question that has been on the minds of anyone who has paid even passing attention to Vladimir Putin recently: Has he lost his marbles? The Times reports that people have noticed that Putin “has fundamentally changed amid the pandemic, a shift that may have left him more paranoid, more aggrieved, and more reckless.” Two years since the onset of COVID, the Russian leader remains severely isolated, interacting with cabinet officials largely via video and keeping trips abroad to a minimum.When he does have to meet people face-to-face in Moscow, whether it’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov or French president Emmanuel Macron, they must first pass through a “disinfection tunnel” and then sit at a social distance of Olympian proportions, at tables so long that they have become a physical manifestation of Putin’s remoteness from the rest of the world. The tables have naturally become a meme:

Much ink has been spilled over why Putin seems so eager to invade Ukraine, a risky move that could blow back badly in his face and thus runs counter to Russia’s “interests” — that old and crumbling pillar of the foreign-policy universe, where nation-states are considered fundamentally rational actors that obey the iron logic that governs matters of war and peace. The idea that statecraft (to use another grand term of art) is a kind of science, determined with cold precision by unsentimental analysts, has always been false. “Policy is not a dry, airless product that emerges full-blown from the heads of people,” Richard Holbrooke once said. “It is often the product of accidents, egos and ambitions in conflict, misunderstandings, and deception, as well as careful plans.” To this list, we might add the febrile imaginings of a person who is lacking the kind of grounded perspective that comes from regular human interaction. Putin’s “circle of contacts is getting smaller. It affects his mind,” a former government official told the Financial Times. “He used to see things in 360 degrees — now it’s more like 60.”

No one can see into another person’s mind from afar, of course. And plenty of perfectly sane leaders, including our own, have made catastrophic foreign-policy decisions that, in retrospect, seem quite bonkers. But as the will-he-or-won’t-he predicament over Ukraine continues, the possibility that Putin is not playing with a full deck of cards at the very least robs the conflict of the narrative power that has been invested in it by those in the West who see it as a battle between the forces of good and evil, and who imagine Putin in his lair hating freedom the way the Grinch hates the singing of the Whos. Even more terrifying, this extremely powerful, extremely horrible person might invade Ukraine for reasons that are as unhinged as they are inscrutable — and maybe even understandable. As we all know by now, isolation is a hell of a drug.


And Putin came out of the KGB, where paranoia was the rule & not the exception. And, simply put, Russia is an extremely brutal society. It has been for centuries - Stalinism & then the Cold War merely made it much worse than it was under the czars. They've always been like this, and so have their leaders.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 20, 2022 5:52 pm
 




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PostPosted: Mon Feb 21, 2022 1:01 pm
 


Putin recognizes independence of Russian-backed separatist regions in East Ukraine

Now he's backed himself into a corner. War may be the only way he can get himself out.


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