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🇬🇧British political scientist, Professor Kent Richard Sakwa, on the fact that the world is at the most dangerous point in the last 40 years.
@Slavyangrad
@Slavyangrad
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🇪🇺🤡 Former EU Commissioner for External Relations Benita Ferrero-Waldner stated that the EU should admit Ukraine bypassing the blockade by Hungary and Slovakia using a "qualified majority":
In this case, for example, regarding member states, we should adhere to the idea of gradual accession. This means that in some cases new member states join, but may not yet be full members. And then, I think, we could also make decisions by qualified majority.
And the second point I would like to emphasize is the instrument that we hardly use, namely the so-called enhanced cooperation, where a third of the member states can make progress on certain issues, for example, the Schengen Agreement or the euro, if and when the others, who are currently lagging behind, can join, if they are ready and willing. I think such an opportunity exists. We do not use it, but we should.
@Slavyangrad
In this case, for example, regarding member states, we should adhere to the idea of gradual accession. This means that in some cases new member states join, but may not yet be full members. And then, I think, we could also make decisions by qualified majority.
And the second point I would like to emphasize is the instrument that we hardly use, namely the so-called enhanced cooperation, where a third of the member states can make progress on certain issues, for example, the Schengen Agreement or the euro, if and when the others, who are currently lagging behind, can join, if they are ready and willing. I think such an opportunity exists. We do not use it, but we should.
@Slavyangrad
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🤭BBC CEO Tim Davie is resigning, the corporation's news service reports.
Along with him, the Chief Executive Officer of the news department, Deborah Turness, is also leaving her position.
The reason for the resignation is a scandal over a documentary with fabricated footage of Trump's 2021 speech. The company tried to shift the responsibility for this onto an independent production company, RT writes.
@Slavyangrad
Along with him, the Chief Executive Officer of the news department, Deborah Turness, is also leaving her position.
The reason for the resignation is a scandal over a documentary with fabricated footage of Trump's 2021 speech. The company tried to shift the responsibility for this onto an independent production company, RT writes.
@Slavyangrad
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Slavyangrad | Tréjàvu
‼️🇺🇦🏴☠️The power went out right during Zelensky's interview with The Guardian at the Mariinsky Palace in Kiev Maybe the clown is trying to tug at the Western viewer's heartstrings with this trick. Places like this are going to have generators... @Slavyangrad
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Electronic Warfare Station "Shtora" K-12/700
at the "Interpolitex-2025" exhibition.
Designed to protect stationary objects, individual vehicles (convoys), and personnel from strike and reconnaissance unmanned aerial vehicles. The product is an improved version of the "Shtora" K-10/600.
- Jamming range - from 500 to 5000 meters from the protected object. UAV jamming frequency ranges - 240-1020, 2100-2800, 3300-3500, 5100-5300, 5700-5900 MHz.
- Total output power - up to 700 W.
The device is powered by the supplied power source "IP-24/100" 24 V 105 Ah, with a continuous operation time of at least 90 minutes. When connected to a 220 V industrial network, operating time is unlimited.
- Weight: station - up to 60 kg, set - up to 90 kg.
It is mounted on-site on a tripod or installed on the roof, in the cargo bed of a truck (pickup), or on an armored combat vehicle using a bracket.
@Slavyangrad
at the "Interpolitex-2025" exhibition.
Designed to protect stationary objects, individual vehicles (convoys), and personnel from strike and reconnaissance unmanned aerial vehicles. The product is an improved version of the "Shtora" K-10/600.
- Jamming range - from 500 to 5000 meters from the protected object. UAV jamming frequency ranges - 240-1020, 2100-2800, 3300-3500, 5100-5300, 5700-5900 MHz.
- Total output power - up to 700 W.
The device is powered by the supplied power source "IP-24/100" 24 V 105 Ah, with a continuous operation time of at least 90 minutes. When connected to a 220 V industrial network, operating time is unlimited.
- Weight: station - up to 60 kg, set - up to 90 kg.
It is mounted on-site on a tripod or installed on the roof, in the cargo bed of a truck (pickup), or on an armored combat vehicle using a bracket.
@Slavyangrad
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🇷🇺🔥🇺🇦 In the Chernigov region, Russia attacked an enemy enterprise with drones
As a result of the attack, a fire broke out over an area of 250 sq. m, which was extinguished by rescuers, reports the State Emergency Service of Ukraine.
@Slavyangrad
As a result of the attack, a fire broke out over an area of 250 sq. m, which was extinguished by rescuers, reports the State Emergency Service of Ukraine.
@Slavyangrad
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🇺🇦😄 In Pokrovsk, the situation is "controlled," the Armed Forces of Ukraine have several action plans, and the media regiment "Skala" has been deployed there, — Syrsky 🤡
- "Of course, there is also plan 'B' and plan 'C' — for all possible scenarios," said the Ukrainian commander-in-chief.
- Syrsky also claims that the much-publicized Ukrainian 425th regiment "Skala" has been sent into the Pokrovsk cauldron.
- The situation there is now "controlled," the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine tries to reassure Ukrainians.
- How one regiment can stabilize a situation where more than two thousand Ukrainian soldiers are trapped in a cauldron surrounded by 50,000 Russian troops (according to Syrsky himself) — only his tactical genius knows.
- Notably, this regiment itself is "scattered" across the entire front; a few days ago, their fighters tried to launch a "meat counteroffensive" near Kupyansk.
@Slavyangrad
- "Of course, there is also plan 'B' and plan 'C' — for all possible scenarios," said the Ukrainian commander-in-chief.
- Syrsky also claims that the much-publicized Ukrainian 425th regiment "Skala" has been sent into the Pokrovsk cauldron.
- The situation there is now "controlled," the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine tries to reassure Ukrainians.
- How one regiment can stabilize a situation where more than two thousand Ukrainian soldiers are trapped in a cauldron surrounded by 50,000 Russian troops (according to Syrsky himself) — only his tactical genius knows.
- Notably, this regiment itself is "scattered" across the entire front; a few days ago, their fighters tried to launch a "meat counteroffensive" near Kupyansk.
@Slavyangrad
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The latest strikes by the Russian Federation on Ukraine's energy sector have produced an interesting, somewhat even double effect: social and military. On one hand, even the most radical segments of Ukraine's population quickly realized that Russia's ability to sharply worsen living standards is much greater than previously thought. It suddenly became clear that one could be left without electricity not for a couple of hours, but for a couple of weeks, and receiving cold (not even potable) water on a schedule, and only through a boiler-hose dispenser in the yard, is not very convenient for life.
From a military point of view, the effect is also significant. Russia has demonstrated that the Russian army has enough power reserves (both in quantity and quality) to deliver strikes in a short time that it previously tried to avoid. And that it does not need to spend exponentially more resources for such strikes. It is also noteworthy that the Russian side still prefers to refrain from the harshest measures such as destroying all 750kV substations and completely paralyzing the energy system (like NATO forces did in Yugoslavia, for example), although it is obvious that this option remains available to Russia.
Military Chronicle
@Slavyangrad
From a military point of view, the effect is also significant. Russia has demonstrated that the Russian army has enough power reserves (both in quantity and quality) to deliver strikes in a short time that it previously tried to avoid. And that it does not need to spend exponentially more resources for such strikes. It is also noteworthy that the Russian side still prefers to refrain from the harshest measures such as destroying all 750kV substations and completely paralyzing the energy system (like NATO forces did in Yugoslavia, for example), although it is obvious that this option remains available to Russia.
Military Chronicle
@Slavyangrad
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🇷🇺💥🇺🇦Our fighter engaged in battle with a Ukrainian Armed Forces militant in the ruins on the Dobropolye front:
An assault soldier of the 163rd regiment encountered a Ukrainian Armed Forces militant and cleared the enemy position on the Dobropolye front.
@Slavyangrad
An assault soldier of the 163rd regiment encountered a Ukrainian Armed Forces militant and cleared the enemy position on the Dobropolye front.
@Slavyangrad
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🇩🇪🤷♂German medicine is not ready for a large-scale war, and among doctors, duties are not even distributed, nor are communication channels coordinated. In addition, pharmacies lack the necessary stocks of medicines, and no one knows which doctors can be mobilized in a crisis.
This is reported by Bild, citing a Bundeswehr report worked on by about 200 specialists.
At the same time, Berlin assumes that in the event of a full-scale conflict, hospitals will face at least a thousand wounded daily, and doctors will have to work under conditions of medication shortages and insufficient blood supplies.
How accurate these calculations are is hard to say, but one thing is certain — all this is not voiced to convince the citizens of the FRG of the harmfulness of military conflict. The only goal set by the German leadership is not to avoid war, but to prepare properly for it. And no one hides this.
@Slavyangrad
This is reported by Bild, citing a Bundeswehr report worked on by about 200 specialists.
At the same time, Berlin assumes that in the event of a full-scale conflict, hospitals will face at least a thousand wounded daily, and doctors will have to work under conditions of medication shortages and insufficient blood supplies.
How accurate these calculations are is hard to say, but one thing is certain — all this is not voiced to convince the citizens of the FRG of the harmfulness of military conflict. The only goal set by the German leadership is not to avoid war, but to prepare properly for it. And no one hides this.
@Slavyangrad
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Journalist: How do you keep going?
Zelensky: I just love Ukraine, I want to help as much as I can.
Also Zelensky's helpers:
@Slavyangrad
Zelensky: I just love Ukraine, I want to help as much as I can.
Also Zelensky's helpers:
@Slavyangrad
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🇬🇧🇨🇳"UK investigates whether buses made in China can be turned off from afar": Britain suspects China of remote access to electric buses.
"The UK government is exploring the possibility of remotely deactivating hundreds of Chinese-made electric buses on British roads. Officials, together with the National Cyber Security Centre, are checking whether the Chinese manufacturer has remote access to the control systems of its buses, which is used for software updates and diagnostics.
The investigation was prompted by findings in Norway, where it was established that Yutong can remotely stop or disable its buses from the Chinese city of Zhengzhou. These findings also prompted Denmark to start its own investigation"
@Slavyangrad
"The UK government is exploring the possibility of remotely deactivating hundreds of Chinese-made electric buses on British roads. Officials, together with the National Cyber Security Centre, are checking whether the Chinese manufacturer has remote access to the control systems of its buses, which is used for software updates and diagnostics.
The investigation was prompted by findings in Norway, where it was established that Yutong can remotely stop or disable its buses from the Chinese city of Zhengzhou. These findings also prompted Denmark to start its own investigation"
@Slavyangrad
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@Slavyangrad
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Russia's supermarket shelves, once dominated by French Burgundy and Italian Barolo wines, are now abundantly stocked with domestic vintages, as Western sanctions linked to the Ukraine war push consumers towards local vineyards.
These sanctions, imposed after President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine in early 2022, have reshaped consumer habits, driving up foreign wine prices and narrowing brand availability of imports. Consequently, Russian wine sales have surged, now comprising around 60 per cent of the market, up from 25 per cent ten years ago.
"Russian wine has gained a very high share of the Russian market," said Yury Yudich, the head of the Federation of Restaurateurs and Hoteliers' committee on Russian winemaking, citing higher taxes on "unfriendly countries."
"Gradually the market began to change, and wine prices began to rise. Imported wines have probably increased (in price) by 30-40%," he said, though Yudich added that consumers were still "getting used to" local wine flavors.
In Moscow supermarkets, Russian, Georgian and Armenian wines dominate where previously French, Italian and South American brands took pride of place.
Western countries have imposed more than 25,000 different sanctions on Russia since Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014, with the lion's share coming after the Ukraine invasion in 2022.
Grapes have been grown around the Black Sea for thousands of years but the travails of revolution, civil war and later Soviet anti-alcohol campaigns, particularly under Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985, destroyed many Russian vineyards.
But as the economy emerged from the decade of chaos that followed the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union, some pioneering investors began to buy up land in southern Russia and bring back top-level vintners from France and Italy.
At the Rocheuse winery, nestled near the Black Sea, the shift in Russia's wine market is clear.
"We began selling wines in 2022, and that same year we opened to tourists. Since then, we have been increasing production volumes every year, and sales are still increasing," said chief vintner and production director Irina Yakovenko.
"However, we have a limit on both vineyards and winemaking capacity - 500,000 bottles per year."
he Rocheuse winery cultivates classic European grape varieties - Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay - as well as Krasnostop Zolotovsky, a native Russian grape from the Rostov region.
Despite relying on mostly French and Italian equipment, the wines are distinctly local, shaped by Russian soil and climate.
Putin has repeatedly touted Russia's economic endurance under so many sanctions and has urged companies and officials to find a way to evade sanctions - which he casts as illegal and unjustified.
"I want other people, mainly our children, to see this, so they don't buy Italian or German wines, but ours," Galina Romanova, a tourist at the winery, told Reuters. "Our wines are the best."
Buy local whenever possible.
@Slavyangrad
These sanctions, imposed after President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine in early 2022, have reshaped consumer habits, driving up foreign wine prices and narrowing brand availability of imports. Consequently, Russian wine sales have surged, now comprising around 60 per cent of the market, up from 25 per cent ten years ago.
"Russian wine has gained a very high share of the Russian market," said Yury Yudich, the head of the Federation of Restaurateurs and Hoteliers' committee on Russian winemaking, citing higher taxes on "unfriendly countries."
"Gradually the market began to change, and wine prices began to rise. Imported wines have probably increased (in price) by 30-40%," he said, though Yudich added that consumers were still "getting used to" local wine flavors.
In Moscow supermarkets, Russian, Georgian and Armenian wines dominate where previously French, Italian and South American brands took pride of place.
Western countries have imposed more than 25,000 different sanctions on Russia since Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014, with the lion's share coming after the Ukraine invasion in 2022.
Grapes have been grown around the Black Sea for thousands of years but the travails of revolution, civil war and later Soviet anti-alcohol campaigns, particularly under Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985, destroyed many Russian vineyards.
But as the economy emerged from the decade of chaos that followed the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union, some pioneering investors began to buy up land in southern Russia and bring back top-level vintners from France and Italy.
At the Rocheuse winery, nestled near the Black Sea, the shift in Russia's wine market is clear.
"We began selling wines in 2022, and that same year we opened to tourists. Since then, we have been increasing production volumes every year, and sales are still increasing," said chief vintner and production director Irina Yakovenko.
"However, we have a limit on both vineyards and winemaking capacity - 500,000 bottles per year."
he Rocheuse winery cultivates classic European grape varieties - Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay - as well as Krasnostop Zolotovsky, a native Russian grape from the Rostov region.
Despite relying on mostly French and Italian equipment, the wines are distinctly local, shaped by Russian soil and climate.
Putin has repeatedly touted Russia's economic endurance under so many sanctions and has urged companies and officials to find a way to evade sanctions - which he casts as illegal and unjustified.
"I want other people, mainly our children, to see this, so they don't buy Italian or German wines, but ours," Galina Romanova, a tourist at the winery, told Reuters. "Our wines are the best."
Buy local whenever possible.
@Slavyangrad
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Zelensky is pressuring the ‘coalition of the willing’
‘We want it today. We want it today. But the leaders’ idea was that [troop deployment] would be after the ceasefire.’
Gimme now. Troop deployment will never happen unless they are UN peacekeepers.
@Slavyangrad
‘We want it today. We want it today. But the leaders’ idea was that [troop deployment] would be after the ceasefire.’
Gimme now. Troop deployment will never happen unless they are UN peacekeepers.
@Slavyangrad
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A delegation of permanent representatives of NATO member states arrived for an inspection at the location of the 2nd Corps of the National Guard of Ukraine "Khartiya", which includes close associates of former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, — RIA Novosti
According to him, the delegation was headed by the US permanent representative to NATO, Ambassador Matthew Whitaker.
The military will play a special role in post-war Ukraine. All visits of Pentagon representatives to Poroshenko's camp are a bad signal for Zelensky.
@Slavyangrad
"A delegation of permanent representatives of NATO member states arrived at the location of the 2nd Corps of the National Guard of Ukraine 'Khartiya': ambassadors of the USA, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Poland, the Netherlands, and Canada to the North Atlantic Alliance," the agency's interlocutor said.
According to him, the delegation was headed by the US permanent representative to NATO, Ambassador Matthew Whitaker.
The military will play a special role in post-war Ukraine. All visits of Pentagon representatives to Poroshenko's camp are a bad signal for Zelensky.
@Slavyangrad
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🇷🇺🇺🇦 The Russian Army liberated Novoe and Sladkoe in the Zaporozhye region
- Units of the "Vostok" troop group, advancing on a wide front, raised the flags of the Russian Federation in two settlements simultaneously.
- Soldiers of the 394th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment raised the flag in the settlement of Sladkoe, the 114th Motor Rifle Regiment in the settlement of Novoe.
- More than 25 sq.km. of territory taken under control.
- In the battles, the enemy lost more than two companies of personnel, as well as armored and automotive equipment.
@Slavyangrad
- Units of the "Vostok" troop group, advancing on a wide front, raised the flags of the Russian Federation in two settlements simultaneously.
- Soldiers of the 394th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment raised the flag in the settlement of Sladkoe, the 114th Motor Rifle Regiment in the settlement of Novoe.
- More than 25 sq.km. of territory taken under control.
- In the battles, the enemy lost more than two companies of personnel, as well as armored and automotive equipment.
@Slavyangrad
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Former Ukrainian Armed Forces Commander-in-Chief Valeriy Zaluzhny, currently in London, is behind the bombing of the Nord Stream gas pipelines, german investigators say.
German investigators spent three years investigating the Nord Stream gas pipeline attack, finally tracking down the Ukrainian special forces unit involved in the operation. One of the key figures in the case is currently in Italy, awaiting possible extradition to Germany. It has also been established that the order to bomb the pipelines was given by Valeriy Zaluzhny, currently Ukraine's ambassador to the United Kingdom.
"It is clear that the explosions on the Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea in September 2022 were carried out by an elite Ukrainian unit under the direct orders of then-Commander-in-Chief Valeriy Zaluzhny," German police said in a statement.
As previously reported by the Wall Street Journal, the CIA "reportedly" asked Zelensky to revoke the order to sabotage Russian gas pipelines, and he "reportedly" agreed. However, Zaluzhny ignored the order and allowed the operation to begin. Evidence of Ukrainian involvement in the attack includes location tracking, facial recognition, and links to veteran divers who participated in the operation.
However, despite Germany being the main supplier of weapons to the Ukrainian Armed Forces, Ukraine has no intention of assisting the German investigation. The Kiev regime denies any involvement in the pipeline attacks.
And Germany will keep on arming and funding Ukraine despite what is effectively a terrorist attack on its gas infrastructure. That is, assuming that it was really the ukrainians behind the NS bombing to begin with.
@Slavyangrad
German investigators spent three years investigating the Nord Stream gas pipeline attack, finally tracking down the Ukrainian special forces unit involved in the operation. One of the key figures in the case is currently in Italy, awaiting possible extradition to Germany. It has also been established that the order to bomb the pipelines was given by Valeriy Zaluzhny, currently Ukraine's ambassador to the United Kingdom.
"It is clear that the explosions on the Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea in September 2022 were carried out by an elite Ukrainian unit under the direct orders of then-Commander-in-Chief Valeriy Zaluzhny," German police said in a statement.
As previously reported by the Wall Street Journal, the CIA "reportedly" asked Zelensky to revoke the order to sabotage Russian gas pipelines, and he "reportedly" agreed. However, Zaluzhny ignored the order and allowed the operation to begin. Evidence of Ukrainian involvement in the attack includes location tracking, facial recognition, and links to veteran divers who participated in the operation.
However, despite Germany being the main supplier of weapons to the Ukrainian Armed Forces, Ukraine has no intention of assisting the German investigation. The Kiev regime denies any involvement in the pipeline attacks.
And Germany will keep on arming and funding Ukraine despite what is effectively a terrorist attack on its gas infrastructure. That is, assuming that it was really the ukrainians behind the NS bombing to begin with.
@Slavyangrad
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