YouBet said:
aggiehawg said:
German intel have communications intercepts of Russian troops in Bucha.
Quote:
The intercepted comments now appear to completely refute Russia's denials. DER SPIEGEL has learned that the BND briefed parliamentarians on Wednesday about its findings. Some of the intercepted traffic apparently matches the locations of bodies found along the main road through town. In one of them, a soldier apparently told another that they had just shot a person on a bicycle. That corresponds to the photo of the dead body lying next to a bicycle that has been shared around the world. In another intercepted conversation, a man apparently said: First you interrogate soldiers, then you shoot them.
Quote:
The BND material also apparently provides evidence that members of the Russian mercenary unit called the Wagner Group played a leading role in the atrocities. The group is known to have perpetrated similar atrocities in Syria.
Eyewitnesses recently reported that the occupying force in Bucha was initially made up of "young soldiers." Once they were replaced by other units, the witnesses said, the attacks on civilians grew more frequent. Some eyewitnesses have said that Chechen units were in the town. The accounts raise the question as to whether this progression was part of the occupation plan.
The radio traffic intercepted by the BND makes it seem as though the atrocities perpetrated on civilians in Bucha were neither random acts nor the product of individual soldiers who got out of hand. Rather, say sources familiar with the audio, the material suggests that the troops spoke of the atrocities as though they were simply discussing their everyday lives.
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Seems like Germany is putting itself into a conundrum here. Not sure what to think.
Refuses to back away from taking Russian energy (understandable considering it would completely stop the country from functioning) yet reports war crimes by the very country it's beholden to.
Germany isn't "refusing" but is caught between a rock and a hard place. It's a predicament of its own making, for sure, but that doesn't change the economic consequences of abruptly cutting off Russian energy. In the meantime, here's what Berlin plans:
"By the middle of the year, Russian
oil imports to Germany are expected to be halved. By the end of the year, we aim to be almost independent," a document published by the Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action said. The plan also calls for
coal deliveries from Russia to end by the autumn.
Habeck confirmed that current contracts with Russian companies to import energy will not be renewed. He also acknowledged that Germany would only be able to wean itself off Russian
gas deliveries by mid-2024."
That's not "immediate", but it still represents a big economic hit to Russia on a short timeline. Further on the upside, the weaning process is already underway, with Russian gas imports expected to drop by two-thirds by the end of '22.
Overall, Germany is acting quicker to eliminate Russian energy imports than the recently enacted EU energy plan calls for.
WEANING