Not much here really so if you don't have 3 min then don't bother watching.
#Putin’s need to create negotiating leverage means over the next 10-15 days we face the growing possibility of #Russia conducting:
— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) March 23, 2022
= chemical &/or biological attack they would try to blame on #Ukraine &/or #NATO
= cyber attack on U.S. banking,technology &/or energy sector
MeatDr said:I think this is the first major admission of how taken aback Moscow was by western sanctions.
— max seddon (@maxseddon) March 23, 2022
Lavrov: "When they [froze] the central bnak reserves, nobody who was predicting what sanctions the west would pass could have pictured that. It's just thievery."https://t.co/5Js2Ktc1b7
MeatDr said:wangus12 said:I get the feeling that Ukes are a spiteful lot and I love it.MeatDr said:Wartime taxi driver conversation in Ukraine.
— Oliver Carroll (@olliecarroll) March 23, 2022
— Lovely day today at least
— It’s terrible
— What do you mean? The sun is out, it’s warm
— It would be better if it was cold and raining. More mud, more dead Russians.
In that same vein...Sounds of nearby combat have been constant in Kyiv all day — clear day without a cloud in the sky, but lots of smoke in the air. Recent Russian missile strikes seem to be hardening people’s resolve, rather than breaking their spirit.
— Nolan Peterson (@nolanwpeterson) March 23, 2022
LinkQuote:
Chubais, 66, is one of the few 1990s-era economic reformers who'd remained in Putin's government and had maintained close ties with Western officials. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
Known as the architect of Russia's 1990s privatizations, Chubais gave Putin his first Kremlin job in the mid-1990s and initially welcomed his rise to power at the end of that decade. Under Putin, Chubais took top jobs at big state companies until the president named him envoy for sustainable development last year.
You are missing the point. The guy who built the Russian economy from the ashes of the Soviet Union has abandoned ship and not just Putin's government, he has fled Russia.Ag In Ok said:
Envoy for sustainable development? Sounds like an outer circle guy.
Compared to what he started with, it was a damn miracle. The ability to attract foreign investment, through privatization was key. In one month, Putin has ensured there will not be any sizeable foreign investment in Russia for possibly decades to come.Zobel said:
not sure I'd claim privatization of the 1990s Russian economy on my resume...
There was a time when crossbows were illegal in many parts of Europe because they could pierce armor.techno-ag said:Kinda reminds of when longbow archers started picking off armored knights back in the day.Eliminatus said:Captain Positivity said:
Saab and the Swedes hit it out of the park with the NLAW. I think it was co-developed by the Brits.
Cheap, portable, deadly, guided using a novel method, easy to pick up and use with minimal training.
It's incredible. It, and others like it sure to follow shortly, may be the final death knell of the large conventional mechanized militaries we are used to. I don't say that lightly as that raging debate has fascinated me for years but I try to stay as objective as possible.
Economies of scale. Take a motivated individual, teach them how to use it in under an hour, said individual is able to eliminate a multimillion dollar MBT with a highly trained crew, effortlessly and reliably. Do that over several hundred people and you can stop an army.
Anti armor has always been a huge danger but we have never seen them used in the numbers we have until this war. Every military in the world is taking notes on this fight and I will poop slap if there is not doctrinal and planning changes somewhere for someone moving forward. These weapons proven lethality is a new thing to factor. Especially since they are passive.
Salute CornPops Message said:
I think they are already ramping cyber attacks, large uptick in Ransomware attacks. My wife's company was hit yesterday, plus Toyota, Okta, and others in the past week.
One more reason Putin must be killed, the sooner the better.aggiehawg said:Compared to what he started with, it was a damn miracle. The ability to attract foreign investment, through privatization was key. In one month, Putin has ensured there will not be any sizeable foreign investment in Russia for possibly decades to come.Zobel said:
not sure I'd claim privatization of the 1990s Russian economy on my resume...
"The invaders tried to advance into the area of the settlement of Teterivske, however due to limited forces they were unsuccessful and were forced to withdraw."
— Michael MacKay (@mhmck) March 23, 2022
–General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
RU military in Bucha/Hostomel/Irpin are surrounded
–Bucha city council pic.twitter.com/mQhA8Xm9aL
Quote:
. . .
The latest Western intelligence reports and military analyses indicate that Russian forces remain stalled across much of the Ukrainian battlefield four weeks after the invasion began.
A report on Wednesday from British defense intelligence suggested that the battlefield in the north of the country has stayed largely static for days. Russia is "likely conducting a period of reorganization before resuming large-scale offensive operations," the assessment said.
. . .
The governor of the Chernihiv region in northern Ukraine said the Russians had bombed and destroyed a key bridge in the area that connected the city of Chernihiv to the capital, Kyiv. The bridge has been used to evacuate civilians and bring humanitarian aid into the city, some 80 miles northeast of Kyiv, where a lack of electricity and shortages of key supplies have left civilians in crisis.
Ukrainian forces conducted several counterattacks on Tuesday against Russian forces around two southern cities, Mykolaiv and Kherson. The Russians have also kept up an assault on the southern city of Mariupol.
In the suburbs northwest of Kyiv, Ukrainian forces said they retook the towns of Moshcun and Makariv from Russian forces.
Overnight between Tuesday and Wednesday, the Ukrainian military reported that its counterattacks around Mykolaiv, a strategically located port on the Black Sea, had pushed Russian forces out of some defensive positions there.
British intelligence suggested that Russian forces are attempting to push westward toward Odessa, an economically vital port on the Black Sea. Analysts said this was part of an attempt to link up the separatist enclaves in the eastern Donbas region, which are controlled by pro-Russian forces, and Crimea in the south, which was annexed by Russia in 2014.
Russian forces are still trying to fully surround Ukrainian forces in the east of the country, as well, pushing south from the northeastern city of Kharkiv.
. . .
The mayor of Kyiv, Vitali Klitschko, said on Wednesday that Ukrainian forces had succeeded in pushing back Russian troops from part of a northwestern suburb but warned that the battle for his country could take weeks more, even months.
"Almost the whole of Irpin is in Ukrainian hands," the mayor said, naming the suburb where Ukrainian and Russian troops have been engaged in street fighting for weeks. Russian troops were close to the eastern suburb of Brovary, he added, and a "big battle" was taking place behind the northern district of Lutezh.
. . .
Another senior Russian officer killed in Mariupol, Russian officials confirm. Col. Aleksey Sharov, commander of the 810th Black Sea Marines Brigade. https://t.co/VTkhMC4b4p
— Yaroslav Trofimov (@yarotrof) March 23, 2022
Another senior Russian officer dies in #PutinsWar
— Tim White (@TWMCLtd) March 23, 2022
Major Aleksiy Osokin, Commander of the 1st Battalion Ulyanovsk, 31st Brigade of the Airborne Battalion died in #Ukrainehttps://t.co/ZuqDSFlCDk pic.twitter.com/KWQV2jjn0K
Meanwhile on Russian state TV: military expert Igor Korotchenko says, in part: "The West will never lift the sanctions from Russia... This is war. What should be our reaction? Tactical nuclear weapons as battlefield arms... Re-arming Iskanders with special munitions..." pic.twitter.com/WnVNZUZ7O3
— Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) March 22, 2022
BREAKING — Russia says it is having some issues funding Russian embassies abroad — IFX
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) March 23, 2022
Just want to point out that the tweeter here is a founder and Chief of CrowdStrike.MeatDr said:- One column was hit with Grad rockets. Can’t even figure out if it was friendly fire
— Dmitri Alperovitch (@DAlperovitch) March 23, 2022
- Medics only have bandages. Can’t help with frostbite
- No hot stove
- Digging trenched to sleep in
- Commander of 49th CAA told troops on 4th day that war will be over in hours- TV says we are moving forward. But we just drive through without clearing up villages. And now we have to defend from all sides because they are attacking everywhere
— Dmitri Alperovitch (@DAlperovitch) March 23, 2022
- They thought this would be like a parade ride
- Our task was to get to Mykolaiv. And we are sitting here
aggiehawg said:
Nothing to see here, nosirree.Meanwhile on Russian state TV: military expert Igor Korotchenko says, in part: "The West will never lift the sanctions from Russia... This is war. What should be our reaction? Tactical nuclear weapons as battlefield arms... Re-arming Iskanders with special munitions..." pic.twitter.com/WnVNZUZ7O3
— Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) March 22, 2022
MeatDr said:BREAKING — Russia says it is having some issues funding Russian embassies abroad — IFX
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) March 23, 2022
Good.
This Stations a NATO Multinational Battlegroup in Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Poland originally with the new 4 going to Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia. The Number of Troops in these Battlegroups are Classified with the Countries that will Participate to be Announced. pic.twitter.com/L4OlfEzx3E
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 23, 2022
Maybe taking a play or two from Russia building up to all this 😉
— The Intel Hub (@The_IntelHub) March 23, 2022
🇺🇦⚡🇷🇺Russia uses white phosphorus bombs in Hostomel and Irpin.
— The RAGE X - Conflict News - ❌ (@theragex) March 23, 2022
Russian forces targeted Kyiv’ suburbs with phosphorus bombs on the night of March 22, according to Irpin Mayor Oleksandr Markushin.
Ukraine making big gains around kyiv. I got a brief (with an unclassified map) from two top municipal officials pic.twitter.com/zASEbmISyJ
— Richard Engel (@RichardEngel) March 23, 2022