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Spies — Russia, China and the long intelligence war with the west


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The secret report about Ukraine reached British intelligence in February. It said that the Russians knew the Ukrainians were “hostile to them and their ideas”, and that the Ukrainians wanted to know what foreign support they would receive. The spy who wrote the report continued: “I pointed out to him [the Ukrainian source] that no power would intervene against Russia now, and that the Russians . . . would never permit the Ukraine to separate itself entirely from Russia.”

Remarkably, that was written in 1922, a century before Moscow launched its full scale-invasion of Ukraine. It is also just one of the many revealing anecdotes that make Calder Walton’s book Spies such an engrossing history of the century-long intelligence war between the US, Britain and Russia. The book gains extra, grim relevance today given Russia’s assault on Ukraine and the unfolding cold war with China.

Walton is a British barrister, author and distinguished historian, currently at Harvard, who previously spent several years in MI5’s archives as a researcher for the official history of the UK’s domestic secret service. His own book ranges across continents and decades, from the 1917 Bolshevik revolution to the second world war, from proxy conflicts in the developing world to present-day Russian and Chinese cyberwarfare. Some of the material was declassified as recently as 2022. Interviews with intelligence officers add further actualité.

China and its spies, Walton writes, have become like the ‘Soviet Union on steroids’

What lessons does Walton learn from a hundred years of rival spookery? The biggest is how often the west failed to realise it was in a spy war at all — a failing as true of a century ago as today.

The cold war started long before 1947, when the phrase was coined by Bernard Baruch, a financier and adviser to several US presidents. As early as the 1920s, Lenin’s secret police, the Cheka, had more than 100,000 agents at home and a dedicated unit to co-ordinate operations abroad. In contrast, MI5’s counter-espionage unit had five officers. The US was little better. In 1929, secretary of state Henry Stimson had closed the government’s code-breaking department because “gentlemen do not read each other’s mail.”

Nor did cold war espionage end in 1991 with the Soviet Union’s collapse. If anything, Russian spying became “more aggressive”, Walton writes. In 2003, three years after Vladimir Putin, a former KGB agent and spy chief, became president, an estimated 2.5 per cent of Kremlin staff had a security background. By 2019, that number had reached an incredible 77 per cent.

Western countries acted as if they were unaware of the threat. Even as the Kremlin and its special services became, in Walton’s words, “the hooligans of international relations”, using all the tools of KGB trade craft — espionage, deep-cover illegals, money-laundering, assassinations, disinformation and other active measures — the west was looking elsewhere.

Book cover of Spies

It believed the cold war with Russia was over. Then, after the terrorist attacks of September 2001, western countries diverted the bulk of their security resources into counter-terrorism. By 2006, just 4 per cent of the work done by GCHQ, Britain’s cyber intelligence spy agency, was concerned with hostile foreign nations. By comparison, at the height of the cold war, 70 per cent of its work had focused on the Soviet bloc.

Spies contains valuable lessons for the present. As with the Soviet Union and Putin’s Russia, the US and its allies have been slow to recognise China’s threat. Its economic weight makes the country more challenging and potentially dangerous than the Soviet Union. Beijing, like Moscow, has also engaged in massive technological transfer from the west, or “spying and buying” as Walton calls it.

In 2021, the FBI opened a China-related investigation every 12 hours. This year, the British parliament’s intelligence committee warned that China’s spy services were the largest in the world. China and its spies, Walton writes, have become like the “Soviet Union on steroids”. Western intelligence is now “chasing a horse that has already bolted the stables”. He warns that it will be hard for the US and its allies to catch up.

Walton’s agents sometimes suffer from a needless spooned-on glamour that can spoil the book’s many sharply etched profiles: the word “handsome” appears 11 times, “debonair” twice, even “dashing” gets an outing. But his central conclusion is crisp and authoritative. Western countries insist they do not want a cold war with China. Yet as history shows, “western powers can be in a Cold War irrespective of whether they seek one and before they recognise it”.

Spies: The Epic Intelligence War Between East and West by Calder Walton Abacus £25, 640 pages

John Paul Rathbone is the FT’s security and defence editor

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US Senate to hold hearings on Azerbaijan’s Karabakh


The US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations will hold hearings on the situation in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region. 

The hearing will be held on September 14, News.Az reports citing the website of the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.

Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations at the US Department of State Louis Bono and Acting Assistant Secretary at Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs of the US Department of State Yuri Kim are expected to deliver speeches at the hearing.

News.Az 


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The Last Hour of Prigozhin’s Plane


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At around 5:30 pm Moscow time on August 23, the Embraer Legacy 600 private business jet took to the skies. Launching from an airport near the Russian capital, the 13-seater plane, which has a white body and blue tail, has been linked to Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the brutal Russian mercenary outfit Wagner Group.

At 5:46 pm, once the plane was clear of Moscow—an area where location-tracking GPS signals are frequently blocked—receivers belonging to flight-tracking network Flightradar24 started picking up signals from the Embraer Legacy. For the next 34 minutes, Prigozhin’s plane was sending out data about its altitude, speed, and autopilot settings that allowed its movements to be tracked.

During this time, the Embraer Legacy appeared to be fine. It reached a cruising altitude of 28,000 feet before briefly climbing to 30,000 feet, and it was traveling at around a ground speed of around 513 knots. Its flight path headed northwest, away from Moscow and in the direction of Russia’s second-largest city, St. Petersburg.

At 6:19 pm, around 30 seconds before the plane stopped transmitting data altogether, it plunged 8,000 feet toward the ground. Its last recorded altitude was 19,725, as it flew by the Kuzhenkino village in the Tver Region. The descent was “dramatic,” according to Flightradar’s analysis.

Since the plane smashed into the earth, killing all those onboard, Russian aviation services, Telegram channels linked to Wagner, and the country’s state-controlled media have reported that Prigozhin was listed as a passenger. The country’s aviation agency named the Wagner boss among 10 people on the plane, along with other senior Wagner members, including cofounder Dmitri Utkin and three crew members.

Officials, according to Russian state media, are investigating the crash and what may have caused it, and have reportedly recovered the bodies. It has been widely speculated that the plane could have been shot down by Russian air defenses, perhaps in response to Prigozhin’s attempted coup two months ago. No evidence to back this up has been presented yet, with Russian president Vladimir Putin saying he has sent his condolences to the families of the dead and investigations are looking into what happened. (One anonymous Western intelligence official told The New York Times that they believe Prigozhin was on the plane. Meanwhile, US president Joe Biden has said there is “not much that happens in Russia that Putin’s not behind.“)

Thanks to Russia’s heavy censorship and propaganda machines, the verifiable truth of what happened to the Embraer Legacy may never be known, experts say.

Amid the dramatic and unfolding incident, there has been a void of official information and a swirl of unconfirmed theories. However, the event highlights how powerful Russia’s grip on its information space is: The country controls its media, has banned independent outlets, and tightly censors the internet and online services available in the country. The episode also continues to show how useful even small amounts of open source information—such as photos or videos posted to social media and open source data, such as flight information—can be in establishing what may have happened. Open source intelligence, known as OSINT, is already being inspected by researchers.

FlightRadar is one of a tiny number of sources of verifiable information about the fate of the Embraer Legacy 600 and, by extension, those onboard the plane. Since the plane stopped transmitting data, one video has emerged on social media showing a plane in pieces dramatically falling toward Earth.

OSINT investigators have confirmed that this happened around the Tver region, the plane’s last known location, by comparing landmarks in the video, such as trees and metal pylons, with existing photos of the location. Another video of the crash site reportedly shows parts of the wreckage matching previous images of Prigozhin’s Embraer Legacy 600. (However, one false video posted to X, the platform previously known as Twitter, has been viewed around a million times.)

Elise Thomas, an investigator at the Centre for Information Resilience, a nonprofit that conducts open source research to expose human rights abuses and counter disinformation, says that within hours the FlightRadar data and confirmed videos from the site gave people a glimpse of what may have happened. “But at the end of the day, we are probably going to be dependent on Russian sources at some level,” she says. These could include Russian government agencies or Telegram channels, which may not be trustworthy. “In some ways, maybe the most likely outcome here is that we just never know the absolute truth of what happened,” she says.

Getting factual information out of Russia isn’t easy—and it has become harder since the country’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine started in February 2022. “The information space has been tightening over time,” says Natalia Krapiva, tech-legal counsel at digital rights nonprofit Access Now. Over the past decade, Krapiva says, the Kremlin has passed laws and taken other measures to control the internet, censor what people can access, throttle the media, and outlaw independent reporting.

Almost all independent media in Russia has been “banned, blocked” or declared “foreign agents” since February of last year, according to media freedom organization Reporters Without Borders. “Those that survive have belonged to allies of the Kremlin for a few years, or they are forced to strict self-censorship, because of banned subjects and terms,” it says in its 2023 annual ranking. Freedom House, an organization that tracks threats to democracy and freedom, ranks Russia as one of the worst countries for online freedoms.

On top of this, Russia has for years run disinformation campaigns and appeared to lie about public incidents at home and abroad. Prigozhin ran the notorious Internet Research Agency, which created reams of fake news and meddled in the 2016 US elections. Two Russian agents who walked into the UK in 2018 and poisoned Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia later appeared on Russian state television and claimed that they were simply in the country to visit the British city of Salisbury to see its cathedral. And Russian officials changed their story multiple times around the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 in 2014, which killed 298 people—reams of open source evidence were presented by investigative journalism unit Bellingcat.

When it comes to Prigozhin and the crash, Russia’s informal network of so-called military bloggers is also involved. In the void of official information about Russia’s war, these military correspondents have appeared on Telegram, in some cases pushing their updates to more than a million people. These accounts are largely pro-Russia, although they often have different allegiances that further muddy the waters. “Some of these people were working for Prigozhin,” says Thomas. “Some of them we know have links to the FSB or GRU,” referring to Russia’s intelligence services. “Some of them probably have links to the Russian security services that we don’t know about.”

These channels have pushed a range of theories about the crash, claiming to have confirmed that Prigozhin is dead and suggesting that they would “march” on Moscow. There have also been reports on possible causes of the crash. According to Meduza, the widely read independent Russian news source, suggestions are being circulated on Telegram that investigators suspect a bomb could have been attached to the plane and that law enforcement may have a suspect in mind. Neither claim has been officially confirmed, Meduza notes.

“Looking at the information that is either available or not available is not enough,” says Tanya Lokot, an associate professor in digital media and society at Dublin City University who researches internet and media freedom. Lokot says it’s essential to consider the context of any information published from official Russian sources or in Telegram channels. For instance, she says, it is important to scrutinize why certain information—such as a list of names—may have been released at a particular time.

Lokot says it is also important to understand the motives of whoever is in control of this kind of information and how and when they decide to release it, as that helps shape a bigger narrative. “How they are presenting this incident and the fallout from this incident is really important to understand because it helps us also understand how they’re trying to control the information space to make sure that it fits their broader strategic narrative,” she says. “The desired at least strategic narrative is the Russian state wants to show that it remains in control of the situation, whatever that situation is.”


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Kolomoyskiy Arrest Seen As A ‘Key Test’ Of Zelenskiy’s Anti-Corruption Campaign


For right or wrong, Ukrainian tycoon Ihor Kolomoyskiy has come to epitomize for many in Washington and Brussels the endemic corruption that has held Ukraine back economically and politically since its independence more than three decades ago.

The 60-year-old businessman, who is blacklisted by the United States, has over the years sent armed men to take over companies, threatened officials, cheated state-owned companies, and bought off parliamentarians to stall crucial Western-backed reforms, among other brazen acts. “He is really numero uno in terms of doing active damage. He is the one protecting corrupt interests against the reform tide,” John Herbst, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, told RFE/RL. But Kolomoyskiy’s Teflon-like ability to escape criminal consequences for decades may have come to an end on September 2, when he was arrested in Ukraine on suspicion of fraud and money laundering in relation to a state-owned company and handed a 60-day, pretrial detention. The dramatic jailing of Kolomoyskiy, once the nation’s third-richest man according to Forbes, is the latest in a series of high-profile arrests in Ukraine over the past year as President Volodymyr Zelenskiy tries to portray himself as an anti-corruption crusader.

While Ukrainian leaders have for decades promised to tackle corruption with little to show for all their talk, the issue has grown in urgency since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Kolomoyskiy arrives at the courtroom in Kyiv on September 2. "This is a signal that in the fight against corruption, the state is ready to take action against very influential people from big business in Ukraine," a Kyiv-based analyst said.


Kolomoyskiy arrives at the courtroom in Kyiv on September 2. “This is a signal that in the fight against corruption, the state is ready to take action against very influential people from big business in Ukraine,” a Kyiv-based analyst said.

Ukrainian citizens, suffering from the deprivation of war, are showing little patience for graft. Meanwhile, some politicians in the West are trying to use Ukraine’s reputation as endemically corrupt as an excuse to curtail crucial military aid. For both Ukrainians and their Western allies, no other arrest could send such a strong signal that Ukraine is determined to fight corruption than that of Kolomoyskiy.

“He is the most well-known name in Ukraine and abroad to showcase the fight against corruption,” Tetiana Shevchuk, a lawyer with the Anti-Corruption Action Center, a Kyiv-based NGO, told RFE/RL.

It was always toxic for Zelenskiy that the oligarch closest to him was being investigated by the United States.”

In an interview with Current Time — the Russian-language network run by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA — Vladimir Fesenko, a Kyiv-based political analyst, said his arrest was “a demonstration that there are no untouchables.” Ukraine is scheduled to hold elections in the spring of 2024 and, while the war could push it back indefinitely, the spate of corruption-related arrests will undoubtedly bolster Zelenskiy’s ratings.

For those politicians in Washington who back aid to Ukraine, Kolomoyskiy’s arrest is a “wonderful talking point,” Herbst said.

Congress is currently debating whether to approve President Joe Biden’s $40 billion emergency spending bill, more than half of which will go toward crucial military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine as it tries to drive Russian forces out of its territory. A vocal minority of Republicans have balked at giving so much aid to Ukraine, often highlighting the country’s notorious reputation for corruption despite notable improvements in anti-graft reform and investigations.

Kolomoyskiy is arguably the most notorious of the Ukrainian tycoons who emerged from the wreckage of the Soviet Union’s collapse and snapped up former state assets at rock-bottom prices, sometimes deploying extralegal or violent methods.

Kolomoyskiy, the former governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region, poses for a photo in his office in Dnipro in May 2014.


Kolomoyskiy, the former governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region, poses for a photo in his office in Dnipro in May 2014.

A native of Dnipro, a major industrial city in southeastern Ukraine, Kolomoyskiy has owned banks, energy firms, metals companies, airlines, and one of the nation’s most influential television channels. Over the years, as they consolidated their assets, many of the original tycoons tried to clean up their image, stepping back from bare-knuckle tactics. Kolomoyskiy, for the most part, did not, experts say. Until Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, those tycoons wielded immense power behind the scenes, using their wealth and media assets to win the loyalty of politicians, judges, and parliamentarians and push policies that benefited their companies. Kolomoyskiy’s television station backed Zelenskiy’s presidential election campaign in 2019 and is credited with helping the political novice win in a landslide against the incumbent, President Petro Poroshenko.

It raised alarm at home and abroad that Zelenskiy might be beholden to Kolomoyskiy, especially after he tapped the tycoon’s former lawyer as his chief of staff. Foreign executives working in Ukraine feared it represented “a return to the old ways of doing business,” according to a 2019 U.S. Embassy cable. Zelenskiy continued to be dogged by suspicion even after he passed legislation hurting Kolomoyskiy’s interests.

The pressure on Zelenskiy to publicly distance himself from the notorious tycoon only grew after the FBI announced in August 2020 that it was investigating Kolomoyskiy for allegedly embezzling hundreds of millions of dollars from his Ukrainian bank and using the proceeds to purchase commercial real estate in the United States. Seven months later, the U.S. State Department blacklisted Kolomoyskiy for corruption and undermining democracy at home, in what many experts viewed as a signal to Zelenskiy to bring him to heel.

“It was always toxic for Zelenskiy that the oligarch closest to him was being investigated by the United States,” Shevchuk said.

In 2021, Zelenskiy signed into law an “anti-oligarch” bill that essentially gives tycoons a tough choice: either refrain from politics or sell your media assets. However, the bill was criticized by experts at home and abroad as a “populist” measure that could be abused to target political opponents or their backers. The bill was part of a broader campaign that Zelenskiy called “de-oligarchization,” or the curtailing of tycoons’ power.

Then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (left) meets with Kolomoyskiy in Kyiv in March 2015. One analyst says that Kolomoyskiy's ties to current President Volodymyr Zelenskiy have been exaggerated. He didn't so much support Zelenskiy as he sought the ouster of Poroshenko.


Then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (left) meets with Kolomoyskiy in Kyiv in March 2015. One analyst says that Kolomoyskiy’s ties to current President Volodymyr Zelenskiy have been exaggerated. He didn’t so much support Zelenskiy as he sought the ouster of Poroshenko.

In a 2021 report, Andrew Wilson, a Ukraine expert at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said the “key test” of Zelenskiy’s campaign to rein in tycoons would be how he handled Kolomoyskiy.

“The Ukrainian government had to pursue [Kolomoyskiy] to demonstrate its reformist credentials to the U.S.,” he wrote at the time. As Zelenskiy pursued his campaign, Kolomoyskiy appeared to carry on as usual. Former U.S. Ambassador Herbst told RFE/RL that “it was Kolomoyskiy who seemed to act as if he could do what he wants.” The tycoon continued his fight to recover Privatbank, the nation’s largest lender, which was taken over by the state in 2016 after the central bank said it was on the verge of bankruptcy. The West, which has given billions of dollars over the years in financial aid to Ukraine, vehemently opposed any move to return Privatbank to Kolomoyskiy.

Kolomoyskiy was also making new enemies. According to Forbes’ sources, Zelenskiy’s administration was angered that Kolomoyskiy did not step up enough in the early phases of the 2022 war to help the government financially. The tycoon did play a large role in helping Ukraine defend its territories in 2014-15 when Russian fighters first tried seizing land.

Five months after the start of Russia’s 2022 invasion, rumors spread that Zelenskiy had revoked Kolomoyskiy’s Ukrainian citizenship, though there has never been confirmation from either side. As Ukraine does not extradite its own citizens, such a move potentially opens the door to Kolomoyskiy’s extradition to the United States should the FBI ever file criminal charges.

Analyst Fesenko said that Kolomoyskiy’s ties to Zelenskiy had always been exaggerated. He didn’t so much support Zelenskiy as he sought the ouster of his nemesis, Poroshenko, he said. In a clear reference to Kolomoyskiy’s arrest, Zelenskiy thanked Ukrainian law enforcement for bringing cases to court “that have been hindered for decades.” While Kolomoyskiy’s arrest sends a strong message, there are still voices who doubt the sincerity of Zelenskiy’s commitment to the anti-corruption cause. Western officials have long viewed the Ukrainian Prosecutor-General’s Office, the security services (SBU), and the courts as mired in corruption and incapable of going after high-profile figures. No tycoons had ever been convicted by a Ukrainian court. In exchange for much-needed financial aid following Ukraine’s 2014 revolution, the West required Kyiv to create independent anti-corruption bodies.

But rather than being seen as onboard with those initiatives, Zelenskiy set off alarm bells in the West with what appeared to be attempts to control these new, supposedly independent institutions. After failing to put his preferred choices at the helm of the anti-corruption bodies, two weeks ago, Zelenskiy proposed equating large-scale graft to treason. That would allow the SBU, which is overseen by the presidential administration, to take over cases from the anti-corruption bodies, experts said. The president’s plan was met with pushback from activists and officials at home and abroad.

In a possible sign of Washington’s concern about the proposed legislation of equating graft with treason, U.S. national-security adviser Jake Sullivan met at the White House on September 1 with the heads of the anti-corruption institutions to discuss “safeguarding [their] autonomy.”

The following day, Kolomoyskiy was detained by the SBU.

A placard depicting Kolomoyskiy and then-presidential candidate Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Lviv in February 2019. It reads: "Servant of Oligarch, Doll of Oligarch." Kolomoyskiy's television station is credited with helping the political novice win in a landslide against incumbent Petro Poroshenko.


A placard depicting Kolomoyskiy and then-presidential candidate Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Lviv in February 2019. It reads: “Servant of Oligarch, Doll of Oligarch.” Kolomoyskiy’s television station is credited with helping the political novice win in a landslide against incumbent Petro Poroshenko.

The Ukrainian anti-corruption investigative body NABU, which had been investigating Kolomoyskiy since 2019, announced on September 7 that Kolomoyskiy was a suspect in a case involving alleged embezzlement at Privatbank. Fesenko said he expects to soon see more examples of this type of competition between the independent, anti-corruption institutions and the SBU over high-profile corruption cases. As for Kolomoyskiy’s future, analysts are hesitant to predict what will happen next. Herbst said Kolomoyskiy is “not the type of personality who backs down.”

And Fesenko said the tycoon has the resources and the lawyers to drag out the case in Ukraine for a long time.

“The topic of Kolomoisky is not closed. I think this is just the beginning of this [television] series,” he said.


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Azerbaijan Bolsters Cooperation With Balkan Countries


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On July 6, Albanian President Bayram Begai visited Azerbaijan and engaged in discussions with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev on bilateral political relations, joint activities in international organizations, trade, economic matters and investment opportunities (Kaspi.az; Report.az, July 8). These talks underlined Baku’s increased attention to deepening its partnerships with countries in the Balkans. In the case of Albanian-Azerbaijani relations, Aliyev declared, “I would call these relations excellent.”

In recent years, official visits between Azerbaijan and the countries in the region have been steadily intensifying (President.az, July 7). For example, during the 2022 Francophonie Summit, Albania blocked a special resolution that included a clause that Baku characterized as “anti-Azerbaijan.” Interestingly, despite internal conflicts and disagreements in the Balkans, Azerbaijan has managed to establish balanced and rapidly developing relations with each country in the region. Recently, the Azerbaijani president embarked on visits to Albania and Serbia, and, on April 13, he made a trip to Bosnia-Herzegovina (Azertag, November 24, 2022; see EDM, April 24). These visits built on past progress made by Azerbaijan during official talks in Bulgaria, Albania, Serbia and Romania in the latter part of 2022, as well as meetings with the prime ministers of Croatia and Montenegro during the World Economic Forum in January 2023. Equally important are the recent visits of the Albanian, Bulgarian and Romanian presidents as well as Serbian prime minister to Baku (Report.az, April 25).

In 2011, Azerbaijan was selected as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council from Eastern Europe for a two-year term; currently, Albania is fulfilling this role, and this shared designation in and of itself gives special meaning to the two countries’ diplomatic relations (News.un.org, October 24, 2011). Azerbaijan opened its embassy in Albania in 2022, and in a reciprocal gesture, Albania plans to open its embassy in Baku sometime in 2023 (President.az, July 7).

Beyond Albania, in 2022, Azerbaijan and Serbia signed a memorandum on strategic partnership and cooperation. Earlier, in 2021, they signed an agreement on military-technical cooperation (Azertag, November 24, 2022). Additionally, during Aliyev’s visit to Bulgaria in 2015, a joint declaration on strategic partnership was signed, establishing the Azerbaijan-Bulgaria Strategic Dialogue (Musavat.com, accessed August 17).

In recent years, the expansion of relations between Azerbaijan and the Balkan countries has been influenced not only by traditional factors but also by increasing regional tensions, especially Russia’s ongoing war against Ukraine and the recent disputes of Albania and Azerbaijan with Iran. Their growing closeness is additionally influenced by geography, shared interests and security concerns, as well as a common history under Soviet influence. For Azerbaijan, the region is significant as it provides access to the Black, Aegean and Adriatic seas. While not having direct access, Azerbaijan benefits from export and transit opportunities through ports in Georgia and Turkey, enabling the transportation of its goods to Balkan countries. Additionally, critical transit corridors from Asia to Europe pass through Azerbaijan further enhancing its pivotal role (1news.az, December 23, 2022).

Indeed, Baku plays a key role in helping the Balkans states diversify their energy sources. Particularly, amid the war in Ukraine, Moscow’s threats to Europe’s energy security have elevated the importance of alternative sources. The Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), which transports Azerbaijani natural gas to Europe, passes through the Balkans via Greece and Albania. In 2022, Azerbaijan supplied 1 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas from only its Shah Deniz field to Bulgaria through the TAP via the Greece-Bulgaria gas interconnector (Musavat.com, accessed August 17). Currently, Azerbaijani gas is being transported to Albania, also through the TAP. The primary goal is to eventually transport this gas from the Adriatic to Italy. Additionally, using Albania as a transit point, other Balkan countries can receive gas from Azerbaijan, as they have expressed interest in expanding the transit of hydrocarbons.

New perspectives in energy cooperation between Azerbaijan and the countries in the region have become ever-more relevant since Baku began utilizing the Greece-Bulgaria gas interconnector in 2022. Azerbaijani gas supplied via this interconnector will enter the Romanian market sometime this year. Moreover, efforts are underway to connect Serbia to the overall system through an additional interconnector. Albania’s gasification campaign, including the establishment of gas pipelines and supporting infrastructure, is being carried out through investments from Baku and the involvement of Azerbaijani companies (President.az, July 7). In this, the realization of the Ionian-Adriatic Pipeline will create opportunities to transport Azerbaijan’s energy resources deeper into Europe (Azertag, April 13).

In April 2023, a memorandum of understanding was signed in Sofia between Bulgartransgaz (Bulgaria), Transgaz (Romania), FGSZ (Hungary), Eustream (Slovakia) and the State Oil Company of the Republic of Azerbaijan to promote cooperation on energy matters (President.az, April 25). The memorandum outlines joint development and use of the Southern Gas Corridor, with energy resources being delivered through the enhanced transmission systems of Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia.

Furthermore, in July 2022, Azerbaijan and the European Commission signed a Memorandum of Understanding on Strategic Partnership in Energy. According to the document, plans are in place to double Azerbaijan’s gas supply to European markets by 2027. In 2021, Azerbaijan exported 8 bcm of natural gas to Europe. This year, the target is set at 12 bcm (525.az, April 27).

With Europe’s green energy policies, Azerbaijan and the Balkan countries have initiated collaboration in this direction as well (see EDM, March 21). As part of this effort, a working group was formed this year to lay a 1,195-kilometer electricity cable along the bottom of the Caspian to connect Azerbaijan, Georgia, Romania and Hungary. Currently, Azerbaijan’s export capacity is around 1,000 megawatts (MW). However, Baku is engaged in several projects that will increase Azerbaijan’s green energy export capacity by an additional 700 MW in the coming months (Renewables.az, January 11). Furthermore, Azerbaijan has signed contracts and memorandums of understanding to produce more than 25 gigawatts (GW) of recovered energy. The estimated potential for recovered energy in Azerbaijan is around 200 GW, with 157 GW located in the Caspian. Overall, Europe has been designated as the primary destination for Azerbaijan’s green energy exports, with the first recipients being the Balkan countries (Azertag, April 26).

In recent years, Baku’s relations with the Balkan states have experienced dynamic growth, characterized by reciprocal visits that have significantly expanded diplomatic ties and strengthened transportation connections. For Azerbaijan, the Balkan region serves as a strategic gateway to European markets for its energy resources. The countries of the region in turn have actively collaborated with Azerbaijan, particularly in aligning with Europe’s shift toward green energy. This cooperation has not only facilitated improved energy security in the Balkans by reducing over-reliance on only a couple external suppliers but has also fostered increased investments and the further development of key infrastructure projects. As this cooperation continues to deepen, it will play a central role in easing and increasing the delivery of goods and energy resources from Asia to Europe, to the mutual benefit of Baku and its Balkan partners.


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Yerevan “confused and disappointed” over Russian Foreign Ministry blaming Armenia for situation in Lachin Corridor


Yerevan “confused and disappointed” over Russian Foreign Ministry blaming Armenia for situation in Lachin Corridor
12:27, 31 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 31, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has responded to the Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova who claimed that the situation in the Lachin corridor is a consequence of the fact that referring to the Alma-Ata Declaration, in Prague, October 2022 Armenia recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan.

The Armenian foreign ministry said that Zakharova’s comments cause “confusion and disappointment.”

Below is the full statement by Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan.

“Another comment by the official representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia of similar content claiming that the situation unfolded in the Lachin corridor is a consequence of the fact that referring to the Alma-Ata Declaration, in Prague, October 2022 Armenia recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan, and after that, the task of the Russian peacekeepers became the possible influence on the issues of rights and security of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, causes confusion and disappointment.

We are compelled to recall the following, already well-known chronology and important circumstances.

  • The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has never been a territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In essence, it has always been and remains an issue of the rights and security of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.
  • In August 2022, Armenia agreed to Russia’s draft proposal on the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, according to which the discussion of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh was supposed to be postponed for an indefinite period. Azerbaijan rejected the proposal, simultaneously announcing (as it did on August 31 in Brussels) that it is not going to discuss anything related to Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, and days later, on September 13, it launched military aggression against the sovereign territory of Armenia.
  • Russia not only did not pursue its proposal after Azerbaijan’s refusal, but also showed absolute indifference to the aggression against the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia, leaving Armenia’s official letter to support the Republic of Armenia on the basis of the bilateral legal framework unanswered. Moreover, Russia conditioned the lack of stating the fact of the attack on Armenia and the resulting inaction under the false excuse that the interstate border between Armenia and Azerbaijan is not delimited. By this approach it either intentionally or not supports the obviously false and extremely dangerous thesis which claims that there is no border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, therefore, attacking the border and the invasion into the territory of Armenia are difficult to verify. With the same mindset, Armenia’s similar application in the framework of the CSTO did not receive a proper response either.
  • Under these conditions, on October 6, 2022, in Prague, Armenia and Azerbaijan reaffirmed their loyalty to the Alma-Ata Declaration, which was signed back in 1991 by the former Soviet republics, including Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia, who recognized each other’s territorial integrity along the former administrative borders of the Soviet states. Therefore, nothing new was decided in Prague: as of October 2022, the Alma-Ata Declaration had been in force for about 31 years. The agreements in Prague did not change anything in the text of the Trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, either. The only novelty was that, based on the results of the Prague meeting, the EU decided to deploy a monitoring mission on the Armenian side of the interstate border between Armenia and Azerbaijan to contribute to the stability at the border.
  • The Russian Federation recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan multiple times, including after the signing of the Trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, and the most recent and perhaps most significant one: it stated that it recognizes the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan in the document on establishing strategic relations with Azerbaijan.
  • On December 12, 2022, the Lachin corridor was blocked, under the false pretext of protests organized by the authorities of Azerbaijan in the area of the control of the Russian peacekeeping contingent. Already in April 2023, in the presence of Russian peacekeepers, Azerbaijan installed an illegal checkpoint in the Lachin corridor. Although these actions were a clear and gross violation of the Trilateral statement, the Russian Federation took no counteractions. Instead, Russian peacekeepers on June 15, 2023, actively supported the attempt to raise the Azerbaijani flag on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia, which is outside the scope of their mission and geographical area of responsibility. This was immediately followed by the total blockade of the Lachin corridor, bringing the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh closer to a true humanitarian catastrophe.
  • In the conditions of such arbitrariness in the presence of Russian peacekeepers, the Azerbaijani side resorts to steps such as the abduction of residents of Nagorno-Karabakh at the illegal checkpoint in the Lachin corridor: the case of abduction of Vagif Khachatryan on July 29, followed by the case of three students on August 28.
  • Unfortunately, such practices of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh are nothing new. On December 11, 2020, the violation of the contact line in Nagorno-Karabakh, the illegal occupation of Khtsaberd and Hin Tagher villages, the capture and transfer of 60 Armenian servicemen to Baku took place in Nagorno-Karabakh with the presence and permission of representatives of the Russian peacekeeping contingent. At that time, the agreements of October 6, 2022, were not reached. The same applies to the events of Parukh on March 24, 2022, and Saribab on August 1, 2022, when Azerbaijan again violated the contact line in Nagorno-Karabakh. The logical continuation of this are the shootings by Azerbaijani armed forces in the presence of Russian peacekeepers towards people carrying out agricultural works, one of which ended with the killing of a tractor driver from Martakert; the intimidation of the Nagorno-Karabakh population with night lights and loudspeakers again in the presence of Russian peacekeepers; the thousands of violations of the ceasefire regime by the Azerbaijani armed forces again in the presence of Russian peacekeepers.

We advise the representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry to refrain from maneuvering the circumstances of the situation and thereby further complicating it in the absence of actions from Russian peacekeepers towards the prevention of the blockade of the Lachin corridor or its opening afterwards.

We also reiterate that the Republic of Armenia is faithful to its commitment towards establishing stability in the region on the basis of mutual recognition of territorial integrity and borders. At the same time, we consider imperative for lasting peace the reopening of the Lachin corridor in accordance with the Trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, and in line with the Orders of the International Court of Justice, the prevention of a humanitarian catastrophe in Nagorno-Karabakh and addressing of all existing problems through the Baku-Stepanakert dialogue under international auspices.”


Categories
Selected Articles

Kolomoyskiy Arrest Seen As A ‘Key Test’ Of Zelenskiy’s Anti-Corruption Campaign – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty


Kolomoyskiy Arrest Seen As A ‘Key Test’ Of Zelenskiy’s Anti-Corruption Campaign  Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Categories
Selected Articles

Selected Articles: Wagner fighters arrive in Central Africa: Russian security group – Arab News | Putin appeared paralyzed and unable to act in first hours of rebellion – The Washington Post


Selected Articles – Michael Novakhov’s favorite articles on Inoreader – The News And Times 
Wagner fighters arrive in Central Africa: Russian security group – Arab News
Wagner fighters arrive in Central Africa: Russian security group  Arab News
Putin appeared paralyzed and unable to act in first hours of rebellion – The Washington Post 
Putin appeared paralyzed and unable to act in first hours of rebellion  The Washington Post
Russia’s war in Ukraine: Live updates – CNN International
Russia’s war in Ukraine: Live updates  CNN International
SPECIAL ANALYSIS: Countering Xi Jinping’s China: An Existential … – America First Policy Institute
SPECIAL ANALYSIS: Countering Xi Jinping’s China: An Existential …  America First Policy Institute
Early Edition: July 24, 2023 – Just Security
Early Edition: July 24, 2023  Just Security
Putin warns Poland against ‘unleashing aggression’ against Belarus – The Guardian
Putin warns Poland against ‘unleashing aggression’ against Belarus  The Guardian
British SAS ‘leads’ the advance towards the Crimean Peninsula – Bulgarian Military
British SAS ‘leads’ the advance towards the Crimean Peninsula  Bulgarian Military
Biden names CIA Director William Burns as a member of his Cabinet – PBS NewsHour
Biden names CIA Director William Burns as a member of his Cabinet  PBS NewsHour
CIA Director William Burns: Putin is ‘the apostle of payback’ – SDPB Radio
CIA Director William Burns: Putin is ‘the apostle of payback’  SDPB Radio
Germany: Far-right AfD picks EU election candidate – DW (English)
Germany: Far-right AfD picks EU election candidate  DW (English)
The perils of the great age of global incoherence – The Australian Financial Review
The perils of the great age of global incoherence  The Australian Financial Review
Russia in Review, July 14-21, 2023 – Russia Matters
Russia in Review, July 14-21, 2023  Russia Matters
Ukraine’s counteroffensive lurches forward: Key moment looms as … – Kyiv Independent
Ukraine’s counteroffensive lurches forward: Key moment looms as …  Kyiv Independent
Zelensky: Special Operations Forces inflict particularly tangible blows on Russian terrorists – Ukrinform
Zelensky: Special Operations Forces inflict particularly tangible blows on Russian terrorists  Ukrinform
Paris 2024: The war in Ukraine shows no sign of ending. That leaves a dark cloud over the Olympic Games – CNN
Paris 2024: The war in Ukraine shows no sign of ending. That leaves a dark cloud over the Olympic Games  CNN
Ukraine war latest: Kyiv says soldiers will enter Crimea ‘soon’; Wagner boss gives interview; Russian missile hits … – Sky News
Ukraine war latest: Kyiv says soldiers will enter Crimea ‘soon’; Wagner boss gives interview; Russian missile hits …  Sky News
Zelensky vows ‘retaliation’ for destruction of historic church in Odessa – Yahoo Finance
Zelensky vows ‘retaliation’ for destruction of historic church in Odessa  Yahoo Finance
Zelensky visits soldiers near front line in Donetsk Oblast – Yahoo News
Zelensky visits soldiers near front line in Donetsk Oblast  Yahoo News
Ukraine’s NATO membership would be bad for Putin, but great for the Russian economy, professor says – Yahoo Finance
Ukraine’s NATO membership would be bad for Putin, but great for the Russian economy, professor says  Yahoo Finance
Putin Ally Helping Enemy Ukraine? Zelensky’s Men Attack Russian Forces With North Korean Rockets – Hindustan Times
Putin Ally Helping Enemy Ukraine? Zelensky’s Men Attack Russian Forces With North Korean Rockets  Hindustan Times
Instead of obtaining a warrant, the NSA would like to keep buying your data – Ars Technica
Instead of obtaining a warrant, the NSA would like to keep buying your data  Ars Technica
Psyops cia
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) lists the tactical goals of psychological warfare (PSYWAR) or psychological operations (PSYOP) as: Assisting in …
The Langley Files: CIA’s Podcast – Podcast Addict
In the Central Intelligence Agency’s first public podcast, you will. Let us be your guides around the corridors of CIA Headquarters in Langley, …
Burns joins the cabinet, Dong Jingwei takes charge of Hong Kong, and the Sino-US …
Washington. Recently, U.S. President Joe Biden announced the nomination of Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director Bill Burns as a cabinet …
The Sneaky Way Joe Biden Could Pardon Hunter Biden
With Hunter Biden facing a possible ten years in jail for his gun charge felony, speculation is growing as to whether the president will pardon his only living son.  The post The Sneaky Way Joe Biden Could Pardon Hunter Biden appeared first on 19FortyFive.
The Joe Biden White House Is a Mess
The larger issue is that the Bidens do not behave in a responsible manner. Raising a dog requires time and attention and love. Any inability to do so is not because Joe Biden is the leader of the Free World. It is because the Bidens seem preternaturally incapable of doing the right thing. The post The Joe Biden White House Is a Mess appeared first…
Granting Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping Nuclear Superiority and the … – RealClearDefense
Granting Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping Nuclear Superiority and the …  RealClearDefense
Azerbaijan restricts inappropriate use of radio electronic equipment – AzerNews.Az
Azerbaijan restricts inappropriate use of radio electronic equipment  AzerNews.Az
Is there a way to get Russia to pay for the war? – The Week
Is there a way to get Russia to pay for the war?  The Week
Ukrainian intelligence: Saboteurs blow up warehouse in occupied Crimea – Kyiv Independent
Ukrainian intelligence: Saboteurs blow up warehouse in occupied Crimea  Kyiv Independent
US intelligence report says China giving Russia military tech, aiding in sanctions evasion – Reuters
US intelligence report says China giving Russia military tech, aiding in sanctions evasion  Reuters
Zelensky Says Visiting Positions Of Ukraine Special Forces Near Bakhmut – Barron’s
Zelensky Says Visiting Positions Of Ukraine Special Forces Near Bakhmut  Barron’s
5 deadliest Western-provided weapons Ukraine is using to fight Russia – Business Insider
5 deadliest Western-provided weapons Ukraine is using to fight Russia  Business Insider
Russia Strikes Ukrainian Ports With Onyx Anti-Ship Missiles: How … – Kyiv Post
Russia Strikes Ukrainian Ports With Onyx Anti-Ship Missiles: How …  Kyiv Post
Ukrainian air defenses in Odesa outgunned as Russia targets global grain supply – AOL
Ukrainian air defenses in Odesa outgunned as Russia targets global grain supply  AOL
Seymour Hersh: Opera Buffa in Ukraine – Scheerpost.com
Seymour Hersh: Opera Buffa in Ukraine  Scheerpost.com
Eight Popular Misconceptions About Human Intelligence – Forbes
Eight Popular Misconceptions About Human Intelligence  Forbes
Russia’s war in Ukraine: Live updates – CNN International
Russia’s war in Ukraine: Live updates  CNN International
UFO hearing was ‘insulting’ to U.S. employees, official says – The Garden Island
UFO hearing was ‘insulting’ to U.S. employees, official says  The Garden Island
Russia’s war in Ukraine – CNN
Russia’s war in Ukraine  CNN
Ukraine war: Dnipro attack, Zelenskyy in Bakhmut, North Korean … – Euronews
Ukraine war: Dnipro attack, Zelenskyy in Bakhmut, North Korean …  Euronews
US Says Russia Looking For Weapons In North Korea To Aid Ukraine Invasion – NDTV
US Says Russia Looking For Weapons In North Korea To Aid Ukraine Invasion  NDTV
Biden admin unveils plan to give some migrants in Mexico refugee status in the US – NBC Connecticut
Biden admin unveils plan to give some migrants in Mexico refugee status in the US  NBC Connecticut
Opinion: Congress Needs Real Intelligence to Address Artificial … – Prescott eNews
Opinion: Congress Needs Real Intelligence to Address Artificial …  Prescott eNews
‘Exiled’ Russian Mercenary Boss Prigozhin Hails Niger Coup, Touts … – Asharq Al-awsat – English
‘Exiled’ Russian Mercenary Boss Prigozhin Hails Niger Coup, Touts …  Asharq Al-awsat – English
Putin is becoming the problem that Russia needs to solve – but the West must hold its nerve – Sky News
Putin is becoming the problem that Russia needs to solve – but the West must hold its nerve  Sky News
Russia lifts restrictions for cargo vessels transiting Kerch Strait – Reuters
Russia lifts restrictions for cargo vessels transiting Kerch Strait  Reuters
Grassley releases internal FBI document about unverified Biden bribery allegations – AOL
Grassley releases internal FBI document about unverified Biden bribery allegations  AOL
Germany’s Near-Recession Isn’t Its Only Economic Problem – Bloomberg
Germany’s Near-Recession Isn’t Its Only Economic Problem  Bloomberg
Russo-Ukrainian War. Day 518: Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant … – Euromaidan Press
Russo-Ukrainian War. Day 518: Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant …  Euromaidan Press
Taking a Khan(s) – what did Crime Intelligence boss do at EFF … – News24
Taking a Khan(s) – what did Crime Intelligence boss do at EFF …  News24
What will it take to pass a bipartisan defense spending bill? – NPR
What will it take to pass a bipartisan defense spending bill?  NPR
FBI Director Christopher Wray, who is a Republican, says it’s … – Yahoo! Voices
FBI Director Christopher Wray, who is a Republican, says it’s …  Yahoo! Voices
President Zelensky visits wounded troops at military hospital in under-siege Odesa… – The Sun
President Zelensky visits wounded troops at military hospital in under-siege Odesa…  The Sun
Ukraine Won’t ‘Barter’ Territory for NATO, EU Status: Crimea Envoy – Newsweek
Ukraine Won’t ‘Barter’ Territory for NATO, EU Status: Crimea Envoy  Newsweek
FBI facilitated social media ‘takedown requests’ made by Ukrainian spy agency
The FBI colluded with a Ukrainian intelligence agency to pressure social media companies into taking down accounts accused of spreading Russian disinformation — some of which belonged to Americans, a House committee said. The report issued by the House Judiciary Committee and the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization…
FBI facilitated social media ‘takedown requests’ made by Ukrainian spy agency: report – New York Post
FBI facilitated social media ‘takedown requests’ made by Ukrainian spy agency: report  New York Post
Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 521 – Al Jazeera English
Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 521  Al Jazeera English
The UFO congressional hearing was ‘insulting’ to US employees, a … – The Associated Press
The UFO congressional hearing was ‘insulting’ to US employees, a …  The Associated Press
Opinion: Here’s what America’s allies think about a potential Trump second term – AOL
Opinion: Here’s what America’s allies think about a potential Trump second term  AOL
Ukraine: Russian missile attack targets apartment block and security … – Crisis24
Ukraine: Russian missile attack targets apartment block and security …  Crisis24
Ukraine and Russia Race to Sustain the Drone War
Now, some 17 months after Russia’s full invasion, the use of expendable, unmanned systems on Ukraine’s battlefields has exponentially expanded on both sides, replacing many roles previously held by manned aircraft and more expensive unmanned platforms. The post Ukraine and Russia Race to Sustain the Drone War appeared first on 19FortyFive.
Russia: Putin ‘threatening civilian ships in Black Sea’ as Ukraine advances – latest – The Independent
Russia: Putin ‘threatening civilian ships in Black Sea’ as Ukraine advances – latest  The Independent
I infiltrate incel groups posing as a man: my life undercover – The Times
I infiltrate incel groups posing as a man: my life undercover  The Times
Ukraine war latest: Russia hits Dnipro with missiles, at least 5 injured – Kyiv Independent
Ukraine war latest: Russia hits Dnipro with missiles, at least 5 injured  Kyiv Independent
Coup attempt in Niger could shape US counterterrorism efforts in … – Yahoo News
Coup attempt in Niger could shape US counterterrorism efforts in …  Yahoo News
Russian forces strike Dnipro as Moscow accuses Ukraine of missile strike – The Guardian
Russian forces strike Dnipro as Moscow accuses Ukraine of missile strike  The Guardian
Will Hurd says CIA experience helps prepare him to handle border, be president – WMUR Manchester
Will Hurd says CIA experience helps prepare him to handle border, be president  WMUR Manchester
The CIA Director Should Not be Part of the Policy Process – CounterPunch
The CIA Director Should Not be Part of the Policy Process  CounterPunch
Zelensky meets with PM of Qatar | UkrInform – UAZMI – Ukraine News
Zelensky meets with PM of Qatar | UkrInform  UAZMI – Ukraine News
Zelensky praises Ukraine troops after village reclaimed from Russia – Metro.co.uk
Zelensky praises Ukraine troops after village reclaimed from Russia  Metro.co.uk
Ukraine war latest: Kyiv’s air defences ‘repelling attack’ from Russia … – Sky News
Ukraine war latest: Kyiv’s air defences ‘repelling attack’ from Russia …  Sky News
Valerie Plame: The Controversial CIA Agent and Her Impact on National Security
After completing her education, Plame joined the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in 1985 and began her career as an operations officer.
Ukraine’s navy is no match for Russia, but it has made waves in the … – ABC News
Ukraine’s navy is no match for Russia, but it has made waves in the …  ABC News
Reframed: Marilyn Monroe review – a persuasive look at the icon’s ferocious intelligence – The Guardian
Reframed: Marilyn Monroe review – a persuasive look at the icon’s ferocious intelligence  The Guardian
Russia in Review, July 21-28, 2023 – Russia Matters
Russia in Review, July 21-28, 2023  Russia Matters
US Faces Unprecedented Foreign Threats, Counterintelligence … – BNN Bloomberg
US Faces Unprecedented Foreign Threats, Counterintelligence …  BNN Bloomberg
Zelensky meets with PM of Qatar – Ukrinform
Zelensky meets with PM of Qatar  Ukrinform
Venezuelan spymaster ‘El Pollo’ accused of flooding US with cocaine – Financial Times
Venezuelan spymaster ‘El Pollo’ accused of flooding US with cocaine  Financial Times
Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, July 10, 2023 – Critical Threats Project
Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, July 10, 2023  Critical Threats Project
Kerch Strait Bridge – Global Security
Kerch Strait Bridge  Global Security
DOJ says Trump’s request to delay classified documents trial has … – Axios
DOJ says Trump’s request to delay classified documents trial has …  Axios
Wang Yi, the return of China’s tough foreign minister – Financial Times
Wang Yi, the return of China’s tough foreign minister  Financial Times
GOP might stop FBI from moving headquarters in wake of agency’s Trump probes – FOX 10 News Phoenix
GOP might stop FBI from moving headquarters in wake of agency’s Trump probes  FOX 10 News Phoenix
Zelensky signs law moving Christmas in Ukraine to Dec. 25 – Yahoo News
Zelensky signs law moving Christmas in Ukraine to Dec. 25  Yahoo News
NATO will step up security in Black Sea region after Russia declares parts are unsafe for shipping – Yahoo Life
NATO will step up security in Black Sea region after Russia declares parts are unsafe for shipping  Yahoo Life
Why Mark Zuckerberg is having Meta give away its most advanced AI models – Vox.com
Why Mark Zuckerberg is having Meta give away its most advanced AI models  Vox.com
Ukraine war latest: ‘Bomb’ blast reported deep in Russian territory … – Sky News
Ukraine war latest: ‘Bomb’ blast reported deep in Russian territory …  Sky News
War: Zelensky declares victory over Russia is national goal | – The Eagle Online
War: Zelensky declares victory over Russia is national goal |  The Eagle Online
Zelensky signs law moving Christmas in Ukraine to Dec 25 – Yahoo News
Zelensky signs law moving Christmas in Ukraine to Dec 25  Yahoo News
Moldova cuts Russian Embassy staff after spying allegations – msnNOW
Moldova cuts Russian Embassy staff after spying allegations  msnNOW
Ukraine says its forces liberated the Russian-occupied Staromaiorske – UPI News
Ukraine says its forces liberated the Russian-occupied Staromaiorske  UPI News
Western Tanks Ineffective Against Russian Minefields: Ukrainian … – Business Insider
Western Tanks Ineffective Against Russian Minefields: Ukrainian …  Business Insider
Zelensky visits Odesa cathedral damaged in Russia strike – Times of Malta
Zelensky visits Odesa cathedral damaged in Russia strike  Times of Malta
Zelensky: Russia won’t stop aggression against Ukraine even after it’s defeated – Yahoo News
Zelensky: Russia won’t stop aggression against Ukraine even after it’s defeated  Yahoo News
As ‘Oppenheimer’ movie debuts, FBI’s secret search for lesbians in … – Centralia Chronicle
As ‘Oppenheimer’ movie debuts, FBI’s secret search for lesbians in …  Centralia Chronicle
FBI Director Christopher Wray, who is a Republican, says it’s ‘somewhat insane’ to suggest he’s biased against conservatives – Yahoo! Voices
FBI Director Christopher Wray, who is a Republican, says it’s ‘somewhat insane’ to suggest he’s biased against conservatives  Yahoo! Voices
An America First Approach to End the War in Ukraine › American … – American Greatness
An America First Approach to End the War in Ukraine › American …  American Greatness
Predicting landslides through artificial intelligence – Spectrum News
Predicting landslides through artificial intelligence  Spectrum News
Sweden and Finland’s accession to NATO strengthens Turkey’s … – DiEM25
Sweden and Finland’s accession to NATO strengthens Turkey’s …  DiEM25
Review: Is Ireland Neutral? The Many Myths of Irish Neutrality – Irish Legal News
Review: Is Ireland Neutral? The Many Myths of Irish Neutrality  Irish Legal News
Russia And The World – Links | RussianWorld.net
 Russia And The World – Links | RussianWorld.netMichael Novakhov (Mike Nova) 7/28/2023 12:02:00 PMLinks and Pages – The News and TimesJuly 14, 2026 6:54 PM | Links and Pages – The News and Times Blog |Posts | Links – thenewsandtimes.comLinks and Pages – The News and Times Blog |Posts RUSSIA and THE WEST – РОССИЯ и ЗАПАД – BlogNews and Opinions – Новости…
Is the CIA the Biggest Funder of Journalism Around the World? – The European Conservative
The CIA and its puppet organizations exert a powerful influence on what we … dozens of individuals from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), …
Russia And The World – Links | RussianWorld.net
Links and Pages – The News and TimesJuly 14, 2026 6:54 PM | Links and Pages – The News and Times Blog |Posts | Links – thenewsandtimes.comLinks and Pages – The News and Times Blog |Posts RUSSIA and THE WEST – РОССИЯ и ЗАПАД – BlogNews and Opinions – Новости и Мнения: A blog about Russia and her relations with The WestThe Russian WorldThe Russian World –…
Venezuelan Police Arrest 33 Men at Gay Sauna – OutSFL
Venezuelan Police Arrest 33 Men at Gay Sauna  OutSFL
Intelligence report accuses China of acting as sanctions backdoor for Russia – Fox News
Intelligence report accuses China of acting as sanctions backdoor for Russia  Fox News
Ex-Trump Official Explains Grave Danger of Mishandling Classified … – PEOPLE
Ex-Trump Official Explains Grave Danger of Mishandling Classified …  PEOPLE
WATCH: Former Intelligence Agent Testifies Under Oath That US Has ‘Nonhuman Biologics’ From UFOs – Washington Free Beacon
WATCH: Former Intelligence Agent Testifies Under Oath That US Has ‘Nonhuman Biologics’ From UFOs  Washington Free Beacon
Putin thanks North Korea for ‘unwavering support’ for Ukraine war – The Independent
Putin thanks North Korea for ‘unwavering support’ for Ukraine war  The Independent
NATO-Ukraine Council condemns Russia’s withdrawal from Black … – The Ukrainian Weekly
NATO-Ukraine Council condemns Russia’s withdrawal from Black …  The Ukrainian Weekly
The head of the US CIA said that China has made progress in rebuilding the spy network …
The head of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Boss, shamelessly showed off the US intelligence network in China, claiming that …
US Army general dies in plane crash near Aberdeen Proving Ground – Defense News
US Army general dies in plane crash near Aberdeen Proving Ground  Defense News
This is a critical month for Ukraine – The Telegraph
This is a critical month for Ukraine  The Telegraph
WORLD: Leadership – Air & Space Forces Magazine
WORLD: Leadership  Air & Space Forces Magazine
Influential Albanian Politician Led Organized Crime Group in Australia, Intelligence Reports Claim
Australia’s top criminal intelligence agency suspected Tom Doshi, a leading Albanian businessman and politician with ties to the prime minister, of leading a criminal group in the country that perpetrates immigration fraud, drug trafficking, and money laundering.
An introduction to the New York-Albanian mob
New York City has the largest Albanian population in the United States, and for 25 years a small number of them have been popping up in spectacular ways on the blotter: shooting up Scores strip club; putting a hit out on Giuliani and his prosecutor; employing an active-duty cop for crime jobs; muscling in on and pulling guns on the Gambino family…
Influential Albanian Politician Led Organized Crime Group in Australia, Intelligence Reports Claim
Australia’s top criminal intelligence agency suspected Tom Doshi, a leading Albanian businessman and politician with ties to the prime minister, of leading a criminal group in the country that perpetrates immigration fraud, drug trafficking, and money laundering. Key Findings Confidential intelligence documents from Australia claimed that Tom…
Britain investigates after Mali gets defence emails meant for Pentagon
LONDON, July 28 (Reuters) – UK authorities said on Friday they were investigating defence ministry emails that were mistakenly sent to the wrong recipient, after reports that messages intended for U.S. military intelligence ended up with Russian ally Mali.Ministry of Defence officials were trying to contact the Pentagon, whose domain name is “.mil”,…
Putin rains missile terror on Ukraine: Russian strikes on SBU security service building and residential complex wound at least nine people including two children
Dnipro Mayor Borys Filatov said it was the third time the SBU security service building had been targeted. Internal Affairs Minister Igor Klymenko reported ‘a Russian strike on a building in Dnipro’.
Trump says his lawyers have met with prosecutors ahead of possible 2020 election indictment – Roanoke Times
Trump says his lawyers have met with prosecutors ahead of possible 2020 election indictment  Roanoke Times
Trump says will continue his 2024 White House bid even if convicted and sentenced
Former US president and rival Republican hopefuls for US presidential race take to the stage in Iowa; as DeSantis slumps, evangelicals may turn to South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott
Bryan Kohberger defense: Was his DNA planted at the crime scene? – FOX 6 Milwaukee
Bryan Kohberger defense: Was his DNA planted at the crime scene?  FOX 6 Milwaukee
U.S. President Biden Says Deal May Be on the Way With Saudi Arabia, Rapprochement With Israel – U.S. News – Haaretz
U.S. President Biden Says Deal May Be on the Way With Saudi Arabia, Rapprochement With Israel – U.S. News  Haaretz
The FBI watched Oppenheimer and alleged he spread US nuclear secrets. – Business Insider
The FBI watched Oppenheimer and alleged he spread US nuclear secrets.  Business Insider
Ukraine war latest: ‘Drone attack’ in Moscow – as Russian strategy … – Sky News
Ukraine war latest: ‘Drone attack’ in Moscow – as Russian strategy …  Sky News
The Great Transition: Non-alignment and the Rise of the Global South – IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters
The Great Transition: Non-alignment and the Rise of the Global South  IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters
Ex-Puerto Rico boxer Félix Verdejo found guilty on two charges tied to death of his pregnant lover
The 12 jurors could not reach unanimous verdicts on the charge of intercepting and stealing vehicle with the consequence of causing a death or the …
Russian Drones Strike Kyiv As Fighting Intensifies In East; Zelenskiy Visits Odesa – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Russian Drones Strike Kyiv As Fighting Intensifies In East; Zelenskiy Visits Odesa  Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Where Trump’s legal issues stand as he sees more charges in … – WWNO
Where Trump’s legal issues stand as he sees more charges in …  WWNO
Pentagon Approves Hazard Pay For US Troops In Ukraine, Paving Way For Possible Expanded Presence
Pentagon Approves Hazard Pay For US Troops In Ukraine, Paving Way For Possible Expanded Presence There’s been more confirmation to emerge concerning the American military presence in Ukraine, and its expanding role in the conflict, bringing NATO dangerously closer into a potential hot war with Russia. “The Pentagon has authorized additional…
Justice Department opposes Trump’s request to view classified documents at Mar-a-Lago – CBS News
Justice Department opposes Trump’s request to view classified documents at Mar-a-Lago  CBS News
How Politicians Use Your Tax Dollars to Buy Votes
Still haven’t subscribed to The Heritage Foundation on YouTube? Click here ► https://bit.ly/2otKliy Follow The Heritage Foundation on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/heritagefoundation/ Follow The Heritage Foundation on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Heritage Follow The Heritage Foundation on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/heritagefoundation/?hl=en
Bryan Kohberger case: Suspect in Idaho murders seeks indictment dismissal
MOSCOW, Idaho — Defense attorneys in the case of Bryan Kohberger, the man accused of killing four University of Idaho students in the fall, filed a motion Tuesday seeking to dismiss the indictment against Kohberger, arguing “the Grand Jury was misled as to the standard of proof required for an indictment.”Defense attorneys argue the Idaho state Constitution…
RUSSIA and THE WEST – РОССИЯ и ЗАПАД – Blog
Links and Pages – The News and TimesJuly 14, 2026 6:54 PM | Links and Pages – The News and Times Blog |Posts | Links – thenewsandtimes.comLinks and Pages – The News and Times Blog |Posts News and Opinions – Новости и Мнения: A blog about Russia and her relations with The WestThe Russian World – russianworld.net | The News And Times >> Mike Nova’s…
What Would Statehood Mean for Puerto Rico’s Criminal Justice Reforms? – Common Dreams
What Would Statehood Mean for Puerto Rico’s Criminal Justice Reforms?  Common Dreams
Biden orders changes to the military code of justice for sexual assault victims – Yahoo News
Biden orders changes to the military code of justice for sexual assault victims  Yahoo News
44 Charged by U.S. in New Jersey Corruption Sweep (Published 2009)
SKIP ADVERTISEMENTAgents led suspects from F.B.I. headquarters in Newark on Thursday. The inquiry began with questions on money laundering.Credit…Louis Lanzano/Associated PressA two-year corruption and international money-laundering investigation stretching from the Jersey Shore to Brooklyn to Israel and Switzerland culminated in charges against 44…
Religious Jews Don’t Launder Money
We in the Orthodox community have been very badly hurt of late. Five rabbis were arrested in New York and New Jersey for allegedly laundering money and another for organ trafficking. The fact that rabbis, who must be held to a higher standard of morality and ethics, have been accused of such crimes is deeply troubling. Let’s start with the “religious”…
America’s health care crisis is much deeper than COVID-19
The coronavirus pandemic presents a challenge unlike anything we’ve faced in this country for generations. But to be clear, COVID-19 didn’t create the problems in our health system, it revealed them in a way that can no longer be ignored. The U.S. health system that exists today is a hodgepodge of ideas, programs and regulations that is both extraordinarily…
Orthodox Jews and money laundering
Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) 7/27/2023 07:12:00 PM
Trump hit with new charges as special counsel expands Mar-a-Lago documents case
By Robert Legare, Melissa Quinn, Kathryn Watson Updated on: July 27, 2023 / 6:58 PM / CBS News Washington — Prosecutors with special counsel Jack Smith’s office have added new charges against former President Donald Trump in the case involving documents with classified markings discovered at this Florida resort of Mar-a-Lago, according to court…
My Opinion: Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn, NY is plagued with mental health and drug addiction problems due to the social isolation, oppression, and indoctrination. Orthodox Judaism as the creation of Abwehr; Orthodox Jews and money laundering for the New Abwehr and Russian mob: “Orthodox Judaism” as a sect was created by the German Military Intelligence for the money laundering and espionage purposes after WW1 …
Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn, NY is plagued with mental health and drug addiction problems due to the social isolation, oppression, and indoctrination – Google Search https://t.co/1Ste2oMZf0 pic.twitter.com/v5RTpq1QqE— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) July 27, 2023 –  “Orthodox Judaism” as a sect was created by the German Military Intelligence…
Trump says his lawyers have met with prosecutors ahead of … – KSAT San Antonio
Trump says his lawyers have met with prosecutors ahead of …  KSAT San Antonio
“Putin gets it”: Right-wing media champion Russian law banning … – Media Matters for America
“Putin gets it”: Right-wing media champion Russian law banning …  Media Matters for America
In Norway, Russians Keep the Free Press Flame Alive – Voice of America – VOA News
In Norway, Russians Keep the Free Press Flame Alive  Voice of America – VOA News
Russia-Ukraine War LIVE: Putin warns Poland over ‘aggression’ against ally Belarus | WION LIVE
President Vladimir Putin on Friday accused NATO member Poland of having territorial ambitions in the former Soviet Union, and said any aggression against Russia’s neighbour and close ally Belarus would be considered an attack on Russia. #RussiaUkraineWar #Poland #WIONLIVE About Channel: WION The World is One News examines global issues with…
Putin says Ukrainian attacks intensify as Kyiv touts steady gains
2023-07-27T16:40:44ZRussian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday (July 27) that Ukrainian attacks had intensified in recent days, primarily on the frontline running through Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region.Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks at a session of Russia-Africa summit in Saint Petersburg, Russia, July 27, 2023. Sputnik/Alexei Danichev/Pool…
Donald Trump Hints He’s Willing To Testify If Indicted Over January 6 – OK Magazine
Donald Trump announced on Tuesday, July 18, that he was the target of an investigation related to the events of January 6, 2021.
When will Donald Trump be indicted in Jan 6 probe? | The Independent
Republican front-runner’s legal problems continue to mount with indictments potentially looming in both Georgia and in federal court.
Unanswered questions about Trump’s looming January 6 indictment – The Independent
Special counsel Jack Smith expected to unveil charges imminently but what they will be and what impact the case will have on the Republican …
The Jew Who Spied for the Nazis
During World War II, Jews were overrepresented in combat units in Allied armies and in resistance forces operating all over Europe. Many Jews carried rifles, parachuted behind enemy lines, flew fighter and bomber aircraft, and did a host of other jobs that helped the war effort. But a few managed to make an impact in a much bigger way. This is the story…
The Rival Jewish Spies Who Almost Changed the Course of WWII – Israel News – Haaretz.com
The story of the bitter rivalry between two Jewish agents in World War II has led one historian to speculate on the many different ways the war could have played itself outGet email notification for articles from Liza Rozovsky FollowAug 6, 2022Get email notification for articles from Liza Rozovsky FollowAug 6, 2022At the height of World War II, Samson…
Alcohol and Substance Use in the Jewish Community: A Pilot Study
1University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, CanadaFind articles by Melanie Baruch2Jewish Child and Family Service, Winnipeg, MB, CanadaFind articles by Abraham Benarroch3Department of Psychology, University of Winnipeg, 515 Portage Avenue, Winnipeg, MB, Canada R3B 2E9Find articles by Gary E. RockmanReceived 2015 May 12; Accepted 2015 Jun 7.Copyright © 2015…
Orthodox Jews break through stigma to advocate for addiction education
Elana Forman, 23, hit rock bottom near Palm Beach, Florida, where she stayed in motels for two weeks with someone she met in a recovery program.”We left treatment to go shoot up heroin, pretty much,” she said. “And we were running in the streets down here. It was the worst, like, two weeks of my life. The two of us kind of went to a motel. It got really…
Money Laundering Keeps ultra-Orthodox Families Afloat – Business – Haaretz.com
The deliberations in the Knesset Finance Committee took a personal earlier this month when lawmakers raised the issue of giving the Israel Tax Authority the right to examine private bank accounts in its battle against money laundering and tax evasion.Where Will 2 Million ultra-Orthodox Live? The idea behind the draft legislation is that the tax collectors…
A Portrait of American Orthodox Jews
Credit: Alexander Spatari via Getty Images American Jews tend to be more highly educated and politically liberal than the U.S. public as a whole, as well as less religiously observant, at least by standard measures such as belief in God and self-reported rates of attendance at religious services. The U.S. Jewish population also is older than the general…
Tim Scott sparks fresh GOP interest as DeSantis stumbles – The Hill
Tim Scott sparks fresh GOP interest as DeSantis stumbles  The Hill
Hunter Biden pleads not guilty in court, judge defers new plea deal | Morning in America
Hunter Biden pleaded not guilty to the charges against him when a Delaware judge deferred the new, “more limited” plea deal that was thrown together after the original deal fell apart in court earlier on Wednesday. #HunterBiden #PleaDealHearing #BidenProbe Watch #MorningInAmerica: https://www.newsnationnow.com/joinus Start your day with “Morning…
Forensic psychologist analyzes Gilgo Beach, Atlantic City murders | Banfield
Long before Rex Heuermann’s arrest, detectives had looked at the possible ties between Long Island’s Gilgo Beach killings and a string of unsolved homicides some 170 miles away in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Dr. Katherine Ramsland, a forensic psychologist who has spent decades researching serial killers, joins “Banfield” to discuss what the position…
Kyiv launches a major push against Russian forces, officials and analysts say – Yahoo News
Kyiv launches a major push against Russian forces, officials and analysts say  Yahoo News
Member of white supremacist prison gang convicted of murder – KOKI FOX 23 TULSA
Member of white supremacist prison gang convicted of murder  KOKI FOX 23 TULSA
Jewish man stabbed in Crown Heights, New York attack on Shabbat – The Jerusalem Post
Jewish man stabbed in Crown Heights, New York attack on Shabbat  The Jerusalem Post
Doctor’s receptionist who stole more than $44,000 from unsuspecting patients arrested: Police – ABC News
Doctor’s receptionist who stole more than $44,000 from unsuspecting patients arrested: Police  ABC News
McCarthy, House GOP tiptoe toward Biden impeachment inquiry – The Washington Post
McCarthy, House GOP tiptoe toward Biden impeachment inquiry  The Washington Post
Donald Trump wants to see Biden impeached, and other … – The Review
Donald Trump wants to see Biden impeached, and other …  The Review
NYC crane snaps, crashes into street
Six people were injured in New York City when the top portion of a construction crane caught fire and crashed into a Manhattan street during the morning rush hour https://reut.rs/3O2gEgw Keep up with the latest news from around the world: https://www.reuters.com/ #News #Reuters #newsfeed #NewYork #Manhattan #Crane Subscribe: http://smarturl.it/reuterssubscribe…
Air Pollution in Brooklyn: Real-time Air Quality Index Visual Map
GoodModerateUnhealthy for sensitive groupsUnhealthyVery UnhealthyHazardousShare: “ Air Pollution in Brooklyn: Real-time Air Quality Index Visual Map ”https://aqicn.org/map/brooklyn/Share: “How polluted is the air today? Check out the real-time air pollution map, for more than 100 countries.”https://aqicn.org/here/🇺🇸The GAIA air quality monitoring stations…
Judge vacates desertion conviction for former US soldier captured in Afghanistan
FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday vacated the military conviction of Bowe Bergdahl, a former U.S. Army soldier who pleaded guilty to desertion after he left his post and was captured in Afghanistan and tortured by the Taliban.The ruling from U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton in Washington says that military judge Jeffrey Nance, who…
Putin Is in a Spy Mess of His Own Making
Less than two years ago Russian President Vladimir Putin sat alone at a desk in a palatial room lecturing his top national security goons about how Ukraine needed to be invaded. He was an imposing, menacing presence. One of his top spy chiefs, Sergei Naryshkin—himself a hawkish figure who bears more than a passing resemblance to Nosferatu—was reduced…
The News And Times
The FBI ruins people’s lives routinely – GS The #FBI “ruins people’s lives” routinely, as the result of their predatory vicious stupidity and as the matter of their policies and institutional culture. Ruin the FBI in return, and ruin their lives! The miseries that they inflict on their victims, the innocent people, will return to them and land on…
Пропавший чеченский певец Зелимхан Бакаев, вероятно, был убит
Чеченский певец Зелимхан Бакаев, который бесследно пропал в 2017 году, вероятно, был убит сотрудниками правоохранительных органов. Об этом говорится в расследовании Кризисной группы “СК SOS”. За Бакаевым вели слежку из-за подозрения в гомосексуальности, уверены правозащитники. Певец большую часть времени проводил в Москве и не верил, что его могут…
Russia claims Ukrainian drone strikes hit two non-residential buildings in Moscow
Ukrainian drones struck two non-residential buildings in Moscow in the early hours of Monday morning and were “suppressed” by defenses there, Russian authorities said, describing the incident a “thwarted” attack. The strikes caused no serious damage or casualties, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said…
Запад бросит Зеленского на произвол судьбы
Материалы ИноСМИ содержат оценки исключительно зарубежных СМИ и не отражают позицию редакции ИноСМИ После саммита НАТО в Вильнюсе Владимир Зеленский публично раскритиковал Запад за неготовность принять Украину в альянс. США и ЕС сдержали свое раздражение, но лишь потому, что готовятся бросить союзника на произвол судьбы, — он ставит их в слишком тяжелое…
Russia accuses Ukraine of ‘terrorism’ after drone strike near Moscow army HQ
MOSCOW, July 24 (Reuters) – Russia accused Kyiv of “terrorism” saying that two Ukrainian drones had damaged buildings in Moscow, including one close to the Defence Ministry’s headquarters on Monday, a day after Ukraine promised payback for Russian strikes on Odesa.Nobody was reported hurt in the attack, but one of its targets – close to the Moscow building…
Why the Alliance between Stalin and Hitler Must Never Be Forgotten | Benjamin Williams
World War II was one of the most catastrophic periods in human history, marked by unprecedented violence, genocide, and destruction. Yet, while the war’s narrative is dominated by the Axis and western Allied powers, the role of the Soviet Union, particularly under Joseph Stalin, in indirectly supporting Nazi Germany’s campaign of terror and conquest,…
Who polices the police? Public hearing on oversight for Monterey … – Voices of Monterey Bay
Who polices the police? Public hearing on oversight for Monterey …  Voices of Monterey Bay
Wagner mutiny: Junior commander reveals his role in the challenge to Putin – BBC
Wagner mutiny: Junior commander reveals his role in the challenge to Putin  BBC
НАПАДЕТ ЛИ ЧВК ВАГНЕР НА ПОЛЬШУ? ОПАСНОСТЬ ДЛЯ ТРАМПА | Интервью @DailyTVEurope
Будапештский меморандум – гарантия безопасности Украины. Заседание СОВБЕЗа. Ходорковский. Шендерович. Гиркин – преступник, инструмент пропаганды. ПОМОЩЬ КАНАЛУ Borovoy Live и помощь в сборе средств для фильма о Валерии Новодворской: PayPal – knbor8@gmail.com Сбербанк РФ перевод по телефону +7(903)107-4477 для Константина Натановича Б. Полезные…
Что Путин сказал про потери ВСУ во время контрнаступления – 23 июля 2023 – Фонтанка.Ру
Что Путин сказал про потери ВСУ во время контрнаступления – 23 июля 2023  Фонтанка.РуПутин и Лукашенко заявили о рекордном количестве уничтоженной иностранной техники за сутки  ИнтерфаксПутин и Лукашенко назвали потери украинской армии с начала контрнаступления  Ведомости
Владимир Путин прокомментировал рекордные потери ВСУ западных танков и БМП за минувшие сутки – Кубанские Новости
Владимир Путин прокомментировал рекордные потери ВСУ западных танков и БМП за минувшие сутки  Кубанские Новости
Путин объяснил, почему выходит к людям, несмотря на карантин. Видео – URA.RU
Путин объяснил, почему выходит к людям, несмотря на карантин. Видео  URA.RU
Путин: ВСУ потеряли более 26 тысяч человек | ИА Красная Весна – ИА Красная Весна
Путин: ВСУ потеряли более 26 тысяч человек | ИА Красная Весна  ИА Красная Весна
The Sunday Read: ‘The Trillion-Gallon Question’
Extreme weather is threatening California’s dams. What happens if they fail?
Turkiye intelligence agency kills PKK’s mastermind of 2021 forest fires – Middle East Monitor
Turkiye intelligence agency kills PKK’s mastermind of 2021 forest fires  Middle East Monitor
Missile barrage batters Odesa, heavily damaging cathedral
The Russian attack comes hours before Putin is to meet with Belarusian President Lukashenko.
Russia, NATO Positioned For Clash Over Black Sea Amid Putin’s ‘Blockade’ On Ukraine
Russia, NATO Positioned For Clash Over Black Sea Amid Putin’s ‘Blockade’ On Ukraine Authored by M.K. Bhadrakumar via RPI/Indian Punchline, The NATO Summit in Vilnius (July 11-12) signaled that there is absolutely no possibility of talks to settle the Ukraine war in a foreseeable future. The war will only intensify, as the US and its…
NYPD Granting Fewer Gun Permits After Supreme Court Ruled It … – THE CITY
NYPD Granting Fewer Gun Permits After Supreme Court Ruled It …  THE CITY
Ukrainian forces are biding time in counteroffensive to thin Russia’s … – Milwaukee Independent
Ukrainian forces are biding time in counteroffensive to thin Russia’s …  Milwaukee Independent
Monkeypox: A Re-Emerging Zoonotic Disease – Fagen wasanni
Monkeypox: A Re-Emerging Zoonotic Disease  Fagen wasanni
Former Ukrainian Presidents Since Russian Invasion: Stepping Up … – Worldcrunch
Former Ukrainian Presidents Since Russian Invasion: Stepping Up …  Worldcrunch
Igor Girkin’s Arrest Points to Kremlin Power Struggles – Newsweek
Igor Girkin’s Arrest Points to Kremlin Power Struggles  Newsweek
Під час атаки на Одесу росіяни зруйнували Спасо-Преображенський собор та Будинок вчених
В ніч на 23 липня внаслідок чергової ракетної атаки Росії в Одесі було зруйновано Спасо-Преображенський кафедральний собор, а також Будинок вчених Про це повідомляє Одеська міська рада. Зазначається, що окрім значних пошкоджень будівлі, постраждали православні святині: з-під завалів…
Russia-Ukraine war news: Kremlin launches deadly strikes on Odessa – The Washington Post
Russia-Ukraine war news: Kremlin launches deadly strikes on Odessa  The Washington Post
FBI reportedly used its intelligence powers “inappropriately” – Morning Express
The document said the FBI had searched using the surnames of a US senator and a state senator “targeted by a foreign intelligence service”, …
Putin has become a global bogeyman. Russians must exorcise this ghoul | Simon Tisdall
Everyone wants a piece of Russian president Vladimir Putin. Vira Chernukha, defiant amid the ruins of her village in north-east Ukraine, curses him each morning. She wants to see him spinning in his coffin, tormented, unshriven and damned for all eternity. Chernukha might be said to speak for her nation if not the entire western world.The International…
Putin has become a global bogeyman. Russians must exorcise this ghoul – The Guardian
Putin has become a global bogeyman. Russians must exorcise this ghoul  The Guardian
Russian missile attack on Odesa kills one, damages cathedral
Published On 23 Jul 202323 Jul 2023A Russian missile attack on the Ukrainian port city of Odesa has killed at least one person, wounded 19 and badly damaged an Orthodox cathedral, according to officials. Oleg Kiper, the governor of Odesa, said on the Telegram messaging app that those wounded in Sunday’s air attack included several children. “Odesa,…
Attack on Odesa: 1 killed, 22 injured
In Odesa, one person was killed and 22 people, including four children, were injured in yet another enemy nighttime attack.

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