IT.COM

analysis World War III

NameSilo
Watch

oldtimer

SaveThyWorld.com Let's not leave anyone behindTop Member
Impact
6,497
I believe that President Biden was right when he said that Russia is going to Invade Ukraine.

Any intelligent person is going to come to the same conclusion knowing that Russia has already decided to pay any price imposed on it by the West through sanctions.

Short of full military confrontation by the West there is nothing that can make Russia to change its mind as they see this as a golden opportunity to resurrect the once powerful superpower that was equal to the USA.

But Russia’s ambitions are not going to stop with taking over Ukraine since it already has made plans to increase its sphere of influence to Asia, Middle East, and South America and perhaps the whole World knowing that the West is most likely not going to do anything beyond just imposing sanctions which ultimately will hurt the West itself by effecting the Global economy in an adverse way the longer that they go on.

I personally don’t like any of the old ideologies, philosophies, and doctrines of Capitalism, Communism, Socialism, Religious Fundamentalism and all the other “ism” that are derived from the bad human characteristics of Greed, Lust, Hate, Cruelty, Jealousy, Prejudice, and lack of Empathy and that have been infringing on our rights in one way or another throughout the history because they can only exist through supporting inequality, oppression, suppression, torture, killing, and War.

When it comes to saving the World the last thing that I want to see is the further expansion of these old systems that have all already proven to be a failure in dealing with the existential problems that are currently facing Humanity and the Environment.

We don’t want all these political, Religious, and Racial parties and groups to resurrect their past, we want something new that can propel the World into the next Era that is based on the Universal Principles and Values that have been derived through Logic and Compassion and not through Force and Violence.

By “We” I mean all the Intelligent, Righteous, and Peace loving people of the World.

IMO

Thread rules: everyone is invited to participate as long as things are kept on topic and are on the constructive, professional, and respectful side (personal attacks and demeaning of others will not be tolerated). Do not overwhelm this thread with memes and if you provide a link to an article you must give a brief explanation as to what it is about so that people know ahead of time what they are clicking on.
 
Last edited:
3
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Mikhail Podolyak, the adviser to the head of the Presidential Office, stressed that Ukraine could, by military means, unblock the seaports that export Ukrainian grain, and thereby prevent a food crisis in the world. He wrote it in Twitter.

Podolyak drew attention to the publication of The Economist, which discussed the need for peace to agree with Ukraine and Russia on international food convoys in the Black Sea.

He, in turn, stressed that the de-blockade of the sea is possible, but for this, the Armed Forces of Ukraine need appropriate weapons.

Bargain with a country that has taken hundreds of millions of people hostage? We have a better idea: the world should agree on transferring MLRS systems and other necessary heavy weapons to Ukraine to unlock the Black Sea. Then we will do everything ourselves
Mikhail Podolyak

black-sea-blockade.jpg


Earlier, President Volodymyr Zelensky also expressed confidence in opening ports by military means:

“22 million tons are blocked today, and the Russians are still constantly stealing and exporting it somewhere … We need to unblock these routes because there will be a crisis in the world. You can unlock it in different ways, and one of the ways is the military. Therefore, we turn to partners with such requests regarding the appropriate weapons.”

https://army.com.ua/diplomacy/podol...ves-mlrs-systems-and-other-heavy-weapons.html
 
2
•••
1
•••
1
•••
2
•••
1
•••
1
•••
Zelensky-3-222x148.jpeg


https://army.com.ua/forum/threads/p...he-rights-of-polish-citizens-in-ukraine.8891/


President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced the signing of Decree № 355/2022 on the establishment of the honorary title "Rescuer City", and the first to receive this title was the Polish city of Rzeszów. The Head of State said this in a speech in the framework of joint participation with President of the Republic of Poland Andrzej Duda in the plenary session of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine.


“Before this speech, I signed a decree noting the special role of the Polish city of Rzeszów. I have introduced a special honorary title of "rescuer city" for the partner cities of our state, which today do the impossible to help us, to help our people, to help our army. On behalf of the entire Ukrainian people, I would like to express great gratitude to the city of Rzeszów, the first rescuer city,” Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.


The President noted that almost all Ukrainian cities are sister cities of those in Poland. Our nations are also brothers, and our countries are sisters.


“We are relatives. And there should be no borders or barriers between us. The Ukrainian and Polish nations have not been mentally separated for a long time. So we agreed to implement this in the near future in the relevant bilateral agreement. First on joint border and customs control, and later on the conditional border when Ukraine becomes a member of the European Union,” the Head of State stressed.


Volodymyr Zelenskyy also thanked Andrzej Duda for his readiness to visit the European capitals together with President of Slovakia Zuzana Čaputová in order to lobby for Ukraine's membership in the EU.


The Head of State also thanked Polish cultural figures, sportsmen, clergy and ordinary people who support Ukrainians: organize big concerts, take part in competitions with the Ukrainian ribbon, or come from Poznań to Bucha just to bake bread.


d33993003e187bf312d9341bcf42350f_1653222527_extra_large.jpeg



The President noted the decision of the Polish Sejm, which grants Ukrainian citizens, who were forced to move temporarily to Poland due to the aggression of the Russian Federation, almost the same rights and opportunities as Polish citizens have: legal residence, employment, education, medical care, social guarantees.


“This is a great step, a great gesture of a great soul, which only a great friend of Ukraine is capable of. And this step will not remain unilateral. I believe that in the near future we must submit to the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine a similar - mirror - bill. God forbid that Polish citizens will ever need all these advantages in such conditions, in conditions of war. But these laws are of great symbolic significance. They show that Ukrainians and Poles are native and equal. And I am sure that the parliamentary corps of Ukraine will support this law - quickly and, I am sure, by a majority of votes,” Volodymyr Zelenskyy emphasized.


“The unity of our nations must remain constant. Neither now nor in the future does anyone have the right to break this unity. Neither our politicians, nor hostile agents, nor even members of the jury at Eurovision. The Ukrainian and Polish nations gave each other 12 points - today and forever,” he added.


ff3efdf015b39e7d9698652bc4147380_1653219260_extra_large.jpeg



For his part, Andrzej Duda assured in his speech that Poland will never leave Ukraine alone. He stressed that the free world today has the face of Ukraine.


"I believe that this new friendship between millions of Ukrainians and Poles will lead to the fact that we will be good neighbors forever. This is a great historical chance," said the President of Poland.


He also thanked the Ukrainian people for their courage, love of freedom, heroic resistance and protection of their Homeland and the whole of Europe from Russian barbarism and imperialism.


Andrzej Duda expressed confidence that Ukraine will receive the status of a candidate for EU membership, and later will definitely become a member of the European Union.


https://army.com.ua/news/president-...the-rights-of-polish-citizens-in-ukraine.html
 
2
•••

Russia’s Kramatorsk ‘Facts’ Versus the Evidence​

https://army.com.ua/ukraine/russias-kramatorsk-facts-versus-the-evidence.html

On April 8, 2022, a Tochka-U short-range ballistic missile struck the main railway station in Kramatorsk in the Donetsk region of government-controlled Ukraine. The missile killed at least 50 people, including five children. Civilians had gathered at the station to flee the approaching Russian offensive, which has pivoted to the country’s east in recent weeks.

A recent BBC report stated it had found “clear evidence” that the missile which struck the station had a cluster munitions warhead.​

Russian officials have blamed the strike on Ukraine, citing claims that the Russian military does not use the Tochka-U. Pro-Russian media cited other assertions relating to the missile’s serial number, and a hypothesised flight path of the missile.
Bellingcat, and others in the open source community, have cross-referenced these claims with publicly available footage in an attempt to establish the origin of the Tochka-U missile that took dozens of lives at the Kramatorsk railway station on April 8.

At the time of writing, the available open source evidence remains insufficient to reveal all details about the strike, including the direction of origin of the missile. However, it does appear to debunk a central argument by the Russian state in its defence: that its military does not operate the Tochka-U missile system.

Social media images and videos as well as Russian news reports from 2021 show the country’s forces displaying Tochka-U launchers, while satellite imagery from February 2022 seems to depict military vehicles consistent with the appearance and dimensions of the launchers at a base in south-western Russia. Experts Bellingcat spoke to also said that even though Russia has reportedly phased out the Tochka-U missile in recent years, that doesn’t render Russia’s stock of the weapons inoperable or mean they cannot still be deployed. Amnesty International, meanwhile, stated that a Tochka-U missile was used by Russia in Donetsk on 24 February 2022.

Before the Attack

On April 7, the day prior to the strike on the Kramatorsk station, the chairman of the board of the Ukrainian railroads Oleksandr Kamyshin wrote on Telegram that a Russian airstrike at Barvinkove station in the neighbouring Kharkiv region had blocked trains evacuating civilians from Slovyansk and Kramatorsk. Later that night, Kamyshin reported that the obstacle had been cleared and that the affected trains were able to complete their journeys.
That same day, a popular Russian pro-war Telegram channel advised civilians evacuating the two cities against travelling by rail, likely in light of the air strike.
On the morning of April 8, at 10:13 am Kyiv time, the Russian Ministry of Defence claimed in a Telegram post that it had carried out “air-based” missile strikes against materiel for Ukrainian military reserves arriving at Pokrovsk, Slovyansk and Barvinkove railway stations. In the minutes that followed, local Telegram channels in non-government controlled areas of the Donetsk region were flooded with footage of missile launches.
Less than 20 minutes later, reports emerged that Kramatorsk was under fire. By 10:44 am, Kamyshin announced on his Telegram channel that two missiles had struck the Kramatorsk railway station.
At 11:01 am Dmitry Steshin, a correspondent for the pro-Kremlin tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda, posted a video to his Telegram channel adding that explosions had been heard 10 minutes prior at the Kramatorsk railway station, apparently targeted at a large group of Ukrainian soldiers. The fact that Steshin deleted the post shortly afterwards did not go unnoticed by journalists.

It seems implausible that Steshin, widely known for his strongly pro-Russian positions, could have filmed the video himself in a city then under Ukrainian control. Nevertheless, the video he uploaded and the caption he added were widely shared by pro-Kremlin Telegram channels. As Russian independent news outlet MediaZona noted, these posts can still be found online.


An hour later, the Russian Ministry of Defence (MoD) denied any culpability. Its statement emphasised that the missile found in Kramatorsk was a Tochka-U — a type which it claimed Russia did not operate. Steshin also made this claim on his Twitter account, alleging that the Russian military had not used the Tochka-U for 30 years.
In an updated statement, the Russian MoD later claimed that the Ukrainian 19th Missile Brigade had fired the Tochka-U missiles at Kramatorsk from Dobropillya, a town to the southwest of Kramatorsk.
The statement also insisted that open source videos showing Russian-operated Tochka-Us in fact showed the same model of missile operated by the Belarusian military during joint Russian-Belarusian exercises leading up to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. However, other open source evidence appears to contradict this.
This is not the first time that Russia has denied operating the Tochka-U missile system. On March 16, two days after a missile struck the centre of Donetsk, Russia’s mission to the UN also denied that its military used the weapon.
See Also: Russia’s QAnon Followers Can’t Make Up Their Minds About Ukraine
Screenshot-2022-04-14-at-16.21.44.png

A map of eastern Ukraine. Credit: Logan Williams / Bellingcat / Natural Earth.

The Tochka-U Question

The Tochka-U missile plays a central role in the Russian authorities’ insistence that their armed forces could not possibly have been behind the missile strike on Kramatorsk. Namely, they insist that the Russian military has phased out use of this ballistic missile.
These claims are seemingly in line with a recent modernisation drive for Russia’s military. In June 2020, state media website Interfax reported that the entire Russian military had updated its missile systems, replacing the Tochka-U with the more modern Iskander.
Scott LaFoy, Director of Nuclear and Technology Security Programs at Exiger Government Solutions, who has spent his career as an open source analyst focusing on ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons systems, told Bellingcat that Russia “didn’t exactly throw them all in a river” when describing what it may have done with the leftover Tochka series.
“We’ve seen legacy equipment deployed by Russia before, and Tochka-Us are valuable munitions that can offset expensive Iskander costs, allowing Russia to burn legacy inventory instead of purely new, expensive munitions”, he added.

Open source evidence also indicates that Tochka-U missiles have been spotted on several occasions during the invasion of Ukraine.
According to the Conflict Intelligence Team (CIT), a reporting partner of Bellingcat, a train loaded with Tochka-U launchers and loader vehicles (based on the BAZ 5921 and 5922 chasses, respectively) moved from Homyel in Belarus to the Russian city of Belgorod in late March. CIT cited a March 30 video which was posted to Twitter by the prominent user GirkinGirkin, showing the launchers being transported by train.


This would be in line with the ongoing Russian retreat from the Kyiv front and consolidation in the east. The vehicles were marked with ‘V’ tactical marks, which are used by the Russian armed forces involved in the war against Ukraine. The Belarusian military, which has not formally entered the war, is not known to use these markings.
The Hajun Project, a group of anonymous Belarusian researchers, posted images of these same vehicles on Twitter on March 18. The team claimed that the launchers had arrived in Belarus’ Minsk region on a Russian Air Force An-124 as an additional batch to supplement Russian Tochka-Us which had already arrived earlier in the month. Bellingcat was unable to independently verify this claim.
In the March 18 pictures, the vehicles did not yet have their ‘V’ tactical marks and still had their original numbers painted on. Judging by their similar wear and camouflage patterns, these vehicles appeared to be the same as those seen heading towards Belgorod by railway.




Screenshot-2022-04-14-at-16.28.36.png

Comparison between Russian Tochka-U launchers seen in Belarus on March 18 and heading towards Belgorod on March 30, 2022. Note the seemingly identical wear and camouflage markings. The painted number two appears to have been replaced by a number four in the bottom image comparison, although the other wear and markings on the side remain identical.
In addition to these images of Tochka-U launchers, further open source evidence indicates that the Russian military has by its own admission fielded this particular missile system as recently as last year.

As pointed out by CIT, the Russian 47th Missile Brigade still appears to operate the systems. In February 2021 they appeared in a broadcast by the Kuban 24 news station from an open house day at the 47th Missile Brigade’s garrison.

Furthermore Rob Lee, a Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI) wrote that in April 2021, during a previous Russian military buildup on its border with Ukraine, vehicles which he believed resembled Tochka-Us could be seen moving through Rostov Oblast.
Tochka-Us could again be seen in May 2021 when they took part in a Victory Day parade in the southern city of Krasnodar. The narrator of this video, once again broadcast by Kuban 24, clearly names the missile systems as a Tochka-U.
The 47th Missile Brigade falls under the 8th Combined Arms Army, which is reportedly currently fighting in the Donbas. In a 2020 presentation to the Organisation for Security Cooperation in Europe (OCSE), the 8th Combined Arms Army was accused by Ukrainian military representatives of having command over the “separatist” 1st and 2nd Army Corps of the self-proclaimed “Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics,” respectively.
See Also: Kalush Orchestra wins Eurovision song contest, calls for international community to help Ukraine
An image uploaded on October 3, 2021, to the Russian social media network VK showed two soldiers atop what appeared to be a Tochka-U loader vehicle. The user’s profile indicates that he has recently served in the Russian armed forces. The image was geotagged to the 47th Missile Brigade’s garrison.
Screenshot-2022-04-14-at-16.30.17.png

An image taken from the VK page that appears to show Russian soldiers atop a Tochka-U laoder vehicle posted in October 2021.
On January 21, 2022, TASS reported that Iskander-M missiles were delivered to the 47th Missile Brigade ahead of schedule. Given how recently the delivery apparently occurred, it is unclear whether the brigade has completed training and adoption of the Iskander-M systems from Tochka-U, as pointed out by CIT.
Satellite imagery of the 47th Missile Brigade’s garrison (45.5207962801, 39.3634004539) also shows that vehicles with measurements (six wheels, approximately 9.5 metres in length) consistent with Tochka-U launchers and loaders as recently as February 2022. However, more detailed imagery would be required to be absolutely conclusive about the Tochka-U’s presence there at this time.
Screenshot-2022-04-14-at-16.33.53.png

Left: Satellite imagery from Google Earth showing vehicles that match the dimensions of Tochka-U launchers and loaders near Korenovsk. Right: The dimensions of the Tochka-U launchers and loaders are listed on the Bastion Karpenko website (“длина в походном положении 9486”, which translates as length in the stowed position 9,486 cm).
More recently, according to Amnesty International, Russia deployed Tochka-U missiles during the first days of the invasion. Amnesty’s weapons investigator found that remains of the weapon that hit a hospital in Vuhledar in Eastern Ukraine bore the hallmarks of a Tochka-U missile.

The Aftermath

In addition to the spot where the missile body of the missile landed, about 50 metres south-west of the main station building in Kramatorsk, five impact points were clearly identifiable.
Screenshot-2022-04-14-at-16.38.49.png

A map detailing impact sites around the Kramatorsk railway station (Image: Google Earth. Markings: Bellingcat).
In footage showing the aftermath of the strike, the roof of a building to the northernmost part of the affected area suffered damage, likely due to impact from a submunition.
Further south, a crater appeared on the ground, at the base of another south-southeast facing wall. Several casualties were also observed at this location.
On the western side of the station building, a line of parked cars were seen burning, and human remains were visible in later open source imagery from this area.

It is likely one of the vehicles was hit directly with a submunition. A clear splash mark indicating cluster munition use was visible to the south of the station building. A large number of casualties were initially observed at this location.
Nearby, the east-southeast facing wall of a building appeared to have been hit directly by a submunition, damaging a car. This could potentially be read as indicating a launch direction. However, when asked by Bellingcat, Markus Schiller of ST Analytics, a Munich-based consultancy that specialises in space technology and rocketry, stated that it is far more likely that the submunition detonated on the car given the angle at which the submunitions from the Tochka-U would have been released .

“The missile probably triggered the cluster explosion at 2,250 m(etres) at an angle of around 80 degrees, so the cassettes with their stabilisers will be falling down at very close to 90 degrees. With that, it seems more plausible to me that the car was hit by the cassette, not the wall. The wall just broke due to the shockwave”, Schiller said. This would mean it would likely not be possible to assess a launch direction from damage seen on the wall.
Information shared on pro-Russian Telegram channels, meanwhile, compared the area where the missile’s missile body landed with the general impact zone of the cluster munitions. Several versions exist of these graphics, but the general trend has them pointing in a south-westerly direction, back into government-held territory.
Screenshot-2022-04-14-at-16.54.24.png

Sample images used to blame Ukrainian forces for the attack. Source: Telegram left, right
However, the experts contacted by Bellingcat again suggested that the direction of the submunitions and missile fragments are not in themselves useful evidence of its precise origin.
According to Schiller, once the submunitions are deployed (at around two kilometres from impact), the remaining body of the missile likely becomes far less stable due to the change in weight dispersal. After this, it will not behave like a traditional projectile when falling down, Schiller said. “With that, I would not interpret anything into the impact position of the missile body,” he added.
LaFoy broadly agreed. “The orientation of the booster on the ground will have basically no indication of the trajectory,” he said.

“While the orientation points to a generally eastern point of origin, it is not clearly determinable because the booster has a lot of room to tumble off-trajectory”, La Foy stated. “So if it is laying north-south, east, west, backwards, doesn’t really matter”.
See Also: Boris Nemtsov Tailed by FSB Squad Prior to 2015 Murder

A Soviet Serial Number

Another claim circulating on pro-Russian Telegram groups and Twitter was that the serial number visible on the missile wreckage southwest of the station building was allegedly in the same range as missiles used by the Ukrainian military.
While serial number ranges might be useful to determine ownership of other weapons, this does not appear to be the case for Tochka-U missiles. The Ukrainian Ministry of Defence told Bellingcat in email correspondence that the missiles were manufactured within Soviet Russia and delivered to storage bases, arsenals, and missile brigades across the USSR.
unnamed-1.png

Image allegedly proving Ukrainian culpability in the missile strike on Kramatorsk. From the Telegram channel of Russian state official Alexey Rogozin, son of Dmitry Rogozin, former director of Russia’s space agency Roskosmos.
To prove this point, they added that a Tochka-U missile with the number VG910840 was used by Ukraine in 2014, landing in the town of Snizhne, while also pointing out that another was documented four years later in Syria (where Russia has militarily backed President Bashar al Assad) with a serial number just 25 digits higher (VG910865).
This appears to match open source evidence from both Snizhne and Syria.
Large amounts of footage emerged from the separatist-held towns of Khartsyzk, Zuhres, Shakhtyorsk, and Torez on 8 April showing several missile launches in the minutes preceding the Kramatorsk hit from areas south of the towns. Due to limited visibility, it was not possible to determine which missiles were used, or what they targeted.
However, no footage has emerged of a launch site located south-west of Kramatorsk, whether in Ukraine-held or in Russia-held territory. This still leaves the biggest question regarding the April 8 strike on Kramatorsk station open, exactly where the missile originated.

Still, efforts to spread disinformation about the tragedy continue. Most recently, a clip distributed on social media bearing the BBC’s logo claimed Ukrainian responsibility for the missile strike on Kramatorsk railway station. The news network has clarified that it did not create the clip, which The Guardian noted was broadcast on Russian state media.

Correction: This article previously stated that the missile body landed north-west of the Kramatorsk railway station building when it landed to the south-west. The text has been updated to reflect this.

https://army.com.ua/forum/threads/russias-kramatorsk-facts-versus-the-evidence.8955/
 
2
•••

Russia continues to receive money from energy exports, which are used to finance the war against Ukraine, – Minister of Finance Marchenko​

https://army.com.ua/news/russia-con...st-ukraine-minister-of-finance-marchenko.html

Serhiy-Marchenko-222x114.jpg


In an interview with the Japanese newspaper Nikkei Asia, the Minister of Finance of Ukraine Sergii Marchenko called on Japan and other countries to impose a full embargo on russian oil and gas, in order to stop funding for russia’s military machine.

“russia continues to receive money from oil and gas exports, which are used to finance the war against Ukraine. That is why a full embargo is our main priority,” Sergii Marchenko said.

The Minister of Finance also stressed that russia must pay for the damage caused by the destruction of military facilities, transport infrastructure, schools, hospitals and other ruined infrastructure.

“We expect Japan and other countries to send frozen russian assets for reconstruction. It is critical to act quickly – now, instead of waiting until we win this war,” said Sergii Marchenko. This is a difficult political decision, on which the Government of Ukraine continues to work actively with foreign partners, in particular with the G7 countries.
 
2
•••
11
•••
Last edited:
2
•••
3
•••
1
•••
1
•••
1
•••
1
•••
1
•••
1
•••
5
•••
5
•••
Although In-n-Out makes the best double cheeseburger on the planet, I will start going to McDonalds again (rarely eat there) as a show of support for their actions.

Starbucks is also leaving Russia.

Starbucks is leaving Russia for good​

https://edition.cnn.com/2022/05/23/business-food/starbucks-russia/index.html

The coffee company paused its operations and stopped shipments of its products to Russia in March. Now, it "has made the decision to exit and no longer have a brand presence in the market," Starbucks said in a brief statement Monday.
Employees in the country, which number about 2,000, will get paid for six more months. Starbucks will also help them look for new jobs outside of the company.

Starbucks first opened in Russia in 2007. As of March, it had 130 Russian locations, all owned and operated by a partner.
The move follows a similar one by McDonald's.
Last week, the burger chain said that it is selling its Russia business after operating for more than 30 years in the region. McDonald's said that the "humanitarian crisis caused by the war in Ukraine, and the precipitating unpredictable operating environment, have led McDonald's to conclude that continued ownership of the business in Russia is no longer tenable, nor is it consistent with McDonald's values."
 
1
•••
3 long, horrible months with completely unnecessary death and mutilation suffered by both sides.
Agree, if you refer to the suffering of the army of both sides. But I wouldn't compare the global suffering by both sides. There's only one side where innocent civilans are being tortured, raped and murdered in mass by an invading army of terrorists specifically targeting and killing innocent civilians. Russian civilians are not suffering this atrocities in Russia.
 
0
•••
0
•••
0
•••
0
•••
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back