Whats going on in the World

God Bless Them. Given the opportunastely to flee to safety - they instead chose to stay & defend their country. I am hard pressed to see that ever happening here.

Ukrainian women take up arms and join men in the war effort against Russia

Niamh Cavanagh
·Producer
Tue, March 22, 2022, 12:04 PM·5 min read

When Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began nearly a month ago, the country’s State Border Guard Service announced that all men ages 18 to 60 were banned from leaving Ukraine and must serve in the war effort. Heartbreaking images showed fathers saying goodbye to their families and sending their loved ones off to safety in neighboring countries — while they stayed to fight Russian forces from taking their home.

According to the U.N., more than 3.5 million people have made perilous journeys and fled Ukraine. Over 2 million have crossed the border into Poland. While the majority of that number is made up of women and children, there have been reports of women who have stayed behind to join their fellow Ukrainians.

More than 15% of Ukraine’s army is made up of women, a recent survey conducted by the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs showed. And since the invasion began on Feb. 24, more women have taken up armed resistance against Kremlin-led forces. Women who are not official members of the Ukrainian army have been taking crash courses in battlefield medicine and how to use guns.
A column of male and female soldiers armed with rifles stride ahead, with trees behind.

Soldiers in Uzhhorod, western Ukraine, march at a ceremony on the return of a brigade from an operation in the east of the country. (Serhii Hudak/Ukrinform/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

One woman defending Kyiv is 29-year-old Daria Vasylchenko, who has been responsible for maintaining security in a neighborhood north of the capital. Speaking to the Washington Post, Vasylchenko, who worked in public relations before the war, described how men waiting to enlist in the forces question why she is in the army. “They say something like, ‘Lady, why are you doing this, when we are here for that?’” she said. “I just smile and say that everyone has their own job and everything will be fine.”

Alona Bushynska, 32, a professional makeup artist, also joined the Territorial Defense Forces in Kyiv when the war began. She helps her country by preparing medicines and making hot food and drinks. However, she also has experience with guns, because her grandparents, who were competitive sport shooters, showed her how to use different types of weapons. She told the Post she does not want to use her gun, but that she is ready to “protect myself” if necessary.

In western Ukraine, Kate Matchyshyn told the British newspaper the Sun that she had never imagined she would join the country’s armed forces, but that she now understands how to use basic weapons, including how to assemble an AK-47.

“It is a very hard thing for a woman to kill, and I never thought that I would ever have to do it,” she said. “But we have been forced to train for such a terrible thing by Russia. Russians are killing Ukrainian children, so Ukrainian women will do what they have to do to protect them.”
With one strap in each hand, Tetiana Chornovol, in camouflage jacket and hat, holds carries an anti-tank guided missile.

Tetiana Chornovol, a Ukrainian soldier and former Parliament deputy, carries an antitank guided missile near Kyiv on Sunday. (Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images)

Bohdana Ostapyk, a 23-year-old businesswoman who worked in public relations, now helps coordinate weapon training sessions in Lviv. About 40 local residents attend the sessions every day, the Sun reports. “The war might end in a few weeks, or it might go on for years, and if that is the case, every single person needs to know how to use a weapon — including women,” Ostapyk said.

While the country remains under attack, female politicians have turned to defend Ukraine in other ways.

Kira Rudik, a Ukrainian member of Parliament who has taken up arms since the first day of the invasion, told CNN on International Women’s Day: “On the first day of war, we all gathered together … and decided … how we can be the most useful to our country. So I am most useful here where I can bear arms and I can motivate others to do the same.” She added: “I can make sure that [Russian President Vladimir] Putin has much more people to fight than he originally thought that he would have, because along with Ukrainian men, there are women who are standing up, bearing arms and adding to those numbers — because we are enormously strong and we are enormously brave.”
Kira Rudik, in bare feet in what appears to be a residential apartment, stands by a glass sliding door to a deck with a pet carrier behind her.

Kira Rudik, a Ukrainian member of Parliament who armed herself at the beginning of the war, says she stands ready. (Via Twitter)

Following suit is Tetiana Chornovol, a former deputy in Ukraine’s Parliament and now a lieutenant. As the threat of the Russian invasion escalated, Chornovol enlisted in the army and trained as an antitank-missile operator. Fighting from Kyiv, the mother of two told the New York Times she had sent her children to safety before “reporting for duty as a reserve officer.” Now she commands two teams making up a dozen soldiers.

It wasn’t until recently that women in Ukraine were given full equality in the armed forces. When Russia invaded the southern peninsula of Crimea in 2014, hundreds of women left their jobs as students, office workers and mothers and joined the army as “volunteers.” According to Defense One, of the 54,000 women who served in the armed forces in 2017, just 6,282 had “combatant status” — leaving the rest of those women without full benefits from the government that their male counterparts would receive.

This dramatically changed that year, after the military opened more training programs for women — recognizing those who had put their lives on the line for their country.

On Monday, the United Nations human rights office confirmed that 925 civilians have been killed since Russia invaded on Feb. 24. This includes 850 adults and 75 children. Most casualties were caused by explosive weapons, including shelling from artillery and missile and airstrikes.

 
Associated Press

Live updates: Russians destroy Chernobyl laboratory​


LVIV, Ukraine -- Russian military forces have destroyed a new laboratory at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant that among other things works to improve management of radioactive waste, the Ukrainian state agency responsible for the Chernobyl exclusion zone said Tuesday.

The Russian military seized the decommissioned plant at the beginning of the war. The exclusion zone is the contaminated area around the plant, site of the world’s worst nuclear meltdown in 1986.

The state agency said the laboratory, built at a cost of 6 million euros with support from the European Commission, opened in 2015.

The laboratory contained “highly active samples and samples of radionuclides that are now in the hands of the enemy, which we hope will harm itself and not the civilized world,” the agency said in its statement.


Radionuclides are unstable atoms of chemical elements that release radiation..

In another worrying development, Ukraine’s nuclear regulatory agency said Monday that radiation monitors around the plant had stopped working.
 
its would seem "the Bear's" claws have dulled........................

The New York Times

As Russia Stalls in Ukraine, Dissent Brews Over Putin's Leadership​


Anton Troianovski and Michael Schwirtz
Wed, March 23, 2022, 4:47 AM

n January, the head of a group of serving and retired Russian military officers declared that invading Ukraine would be “pointless and extremely dangerous.” It would kill thousands, he said, make Russians and Ukrainians enemies for life, risk a war with NATO and threaten “the existence of Russia itself as a state.”

To many Russians, that seemed like a far-fetched scenario, since few imagined that an invasion of Ukraine was really possible. But two months later, as Russia’s advance stalls in Ukraine, the prophecy looms large. Reached by phone this week, the retired general who authored the declaration, Leonid Ivashov, said he stood by it, although he could not speak freely given Russia’s wartime censorship: “I do not disavow what I said.”

In Russia, the slow going and the heavy toll of President Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine are setting off questions about his military’s planning capability, his confidence in his top spies and loyal defense minister, and the quality of the intelligence that reaches him. It also shows the pitfalls of Putin’s top-down governance, in which officials and military officers have little leeway to make their own decisions and adapt to developments in real time.

The failures of Putin’s campaign are apparent in the striking number of senior military commanders believed to have been killed in the fighting. Ukraine says it has killed at least six Russian generals, while Russia acknowledges one of their deaths, along with that of the deputy commander of its Black Sea fleet. U.S. officials say they cannot confirm the number of Russian troop deaths, but that Russia’s invasion plan appears to have been stymied by bad intelligence.

The lack of progress is so apparent that a blame game has begun among some Russian supporters of the war — even as Russian propaganda claims that the slog is a consequence of the military’s care to avoid harming civilians. Igor Girkin, a former colonel in Russia’s FSB intelligence agency and the former “defense minister” of Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine, said in a video interview posted online on Monday that Russia had made a “catastrophically incorrect assessment” of Ukraine’s forces.

“The enemy was underestimated in every aspect,” Girkin said.

The Russian forces’ poor performance has also surprised analysts, who predicted at the start of the war that Russia’s massive, technologically advanced military would make short work of Ukraine. Putin himself seems to have counted on his troops quickly seizing major cities, including the capital, Kyiv, decapitating the government and installing a puppet regime under the Kremlin’s control.

“Take power into your own hands,” Putin urged Ukrainian soldiers on the second day of the invasion, apparently hoping Ukraine would go down without a fight.

Instead, Ukraine fought back. Nearly a month has passed, and Russian troops appear bogged down in the face of relentless attacks from a much weaker, though far more maneuverable, Ukrainian military.

“There was probably the hope that they wouldn’t resist so intensely,” Yevgeny Buzhinsky, a retired lieutenant general and a regular Russian state television commentator, said of Ukraine’s forces. “They were expected to be more reasonable.”
As if responding to criticism, Putin has said repeatedly in his public comments about the war that it is going “according to plan.”

“We can definitively say that nothing is going to plan,” countered Pavel Luzin, a Russian military analyst. “It has been decades since the Soviet and Russian armies have seen such great losses in such a short period of time.”

Russia last announced its combat losses three weeks ago — 498 deaths as of March 2. U.S. officials now say that a conservative estimate puts the Russian military death toll at 7,000. Russia says it lost a total of 11,000 service members in nearly a decade of fighting in Chechnya.

The failures in Ukraine have started to create fissures within Russian leadership, according to Andrei Soldatov, an author and expert on Russia’s military and security services. The top Russian intelligence official in charge of overseeing the recruitment of spies and diversionary operations in Ukraine has been put under house arrest along with his deputy, Soldatov said. Even Russia’s defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, who vacations with Putin and has been spoken of as a potential presidential successor, has suffered a loss of standing, according to Soldatov’s sources.
“It looks like everybody is on edge,” Soldatov said.

Soldatov’s claims could not be independently verified, and some independent experts have challenged them. But Shoigu has not been shown meeting with Putin in person since Feb. 27, when he and his top military commander, Gen. Valery Gerasimov, sat at the end of a long table as Putin, on the opposite end, ordered them to place Russia’s nuclear forces at a higher level of readiness.

“The war has shown that the army fights poorly,” Luzin, the Russian military analyst, said. “The defense minister is responsible for this.”

The battlefield deaths of senior Russian commanders also reflect poorly on the Kremlin’s war planning. Capt. Andrei Paliy, the deputy commander of Russia’s Black Sea fleet, died in combat over the port city of Mariupol, Russian officials said Sunday.

After Maj. Gen. Andrei Sukhovetsky, the deputy commander of the 41st Combined Arms Army, was killed four days into the war, the city of Novorossiysk, where he was previously based, issued a statement remembering him as “a faithful comrade, a valiant warrior, a wise commander and a selfless defender of the Fatherland.”

“Epaulets give no protection to terrorists,” Ukraine’s military intelligence service said in its statement announcing Sukhovetsky’s death.

There was also Maj. Gen. Oleg Mityayev, among the Russian military’s most seasoned commanders. He had led Russia’s largest foreign military base in Tajikistan and was second in command of Russia’s forces in Syria. When Putin ordered his troops to invade Ukraine, Mityayev was tapped to lead the storied 150th Motorized Rifle Division, whose soldiers helped take the Reichstag building in Berlin precipitating Nazi Germany’s defeat in 1945.

According to Kyiv, he lasted less than three weeks in Ukraine. After he was killed in battle, either Russian forces left his body behind, or it was captured by the far-right Azov Battalion, which posted a photo of the bloody corpse on Telegram with the caption, “Glory to Ukraine.”

Russian officials have not confirmed his death — or those of another four generals that Ukraine claims to have killed. But even accounting for the fog of war, experts say that Russia has suffered a damaging death toll among its military leaders on the ground in Ukraine, which could soon erode Russia’s military effectiveness.

The deaths reflect operational security failures as well as the challenges of the Russian military’s top-heavy command structure in the face of a much nimbler Ukrainian fighting force.

“In modern warfare, you don’t have a lot of generals getting knocked off,” said Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, the former commander of the U.S. Army in Europe. “But this is a very lethal battlefield.”

Gen. Joseph L. Votel, the former commander of U.S. Central Command, said that the deaths could reflect Russia’s challenges on the ground — and reports that some Russian units did not understand the mission at hand and had even abandoned equipment. As a result, he said, military leaders appeared to be operating closer to the front to “supervise and keep their troops in the fight, by personal example or intimidation.”

“Continuing to lose senior leaders is not good,” he said in an email. “Eventually, loss of leadership affects morale, fighting prowess and effectiveness.”

For Russia’s generals, part of the problem is that many of them have spent recent decades fighting a different type of war. In Chechnya at the beginning of the 2000s, Russia succeeded in pacifying a separatist uprising in a small territory by resorting to scorched-earth decimation of entire cities. More recently in Syria, Russia’s operations have been driven by airstrikes against a population that lacks sophisticated weapons or even a regular army.

Ukraine, while far weaker militarily, has been learning from its eight-year war against Russian-backed separatist forces in the country’s east — a similar war, in miniature, to the one being fought now. Ukraine has its own air force, which remains largely intact, and modern anti-aircraft systems. As convoys of Russian armor have lumbered along Ukrainian highways, Ukrainian forces have deployed drones and highly maneuverable infantry units to devastating effect, leaving abandoned and burning vehicles.

Throughout Ukraine, Russian forces have now largely stalled. But analysts caution that the military setbacks will not deter Putin — who has cast the war at home as an existential one for Russia, and is increasingly signaling to the Russian public to prepare for a long fight.

The question is whether heavy losses and the pain of Western sanctions could force Putin to accept some kind of compromise to end the war — and whether President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine would be prepared to offer concessions to satisfy him. On Tuesday, Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin’s spokesperson, played down any hopes of an imminent cease-fire, describing talks with Ukraine as going “much more slowly and less substantively than we would like.”

“The Russian leadership can’t lose,” said Andrei Kortunov, director-general of the Russian International Affairs Council, a research organization close to the Russian government. “No matter what, they will need to end this whole story with some kind of victory.”

© 2022 The New York Times Company
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I'll agree with Lindsey Graham - someone in Russia needs to take out Putin & bring this debacle to a close..............
(y)









 
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The bear still has some devastating weapons in his arsenal that he has yet to use. Let's hope he doesn't resort to that out of frustration. History (Checnya, Syria) tells me otherwise.
 
it's hard to believe that this has to ve considered - let us hope it does not come to this


BRUSSELS — The White House has quietly assembled a team of national security officials to sketch out scenarios of how the United States and its allies should respond if Russian President Vladimir Putin — frustrated by his lack of progress in Ukraine or determined to warn Western nations against intervening in the war — unleashes his stockpiles of chemical, biological or nuclear weapons.

The Tiger Team, as the group is known, is also examining responses if Putin reaches into NATO territory to attack convoys bringing weapons and aid to Ukraine, according to several officials involved in the process. Meeting three times a week, in classified sessions, the team is also looking at responses if Russia seeks to extend the war to neighboring nations, including Moldova and Georgia, and how to prepare European countries for the refugees flowing in on a scale not seen in decades.

Those contingencies are expected to be central to an extraordinary session here in Brussels on Thursday, when President Joe Biden meets leaders of the 29 other NATO nations, who will be meeting for the first time — behind closed doors, their cellphones and aides banished — since Putin invaded Ukraine.

Just a month ago, such scenarios seemed more theoretical. But today, from the White House to NATO’s headquarters in Brussels, a recognition has set in that Russia may turn to the most powerful weapons in its arsenal to bail itself out of a military stalemate.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg underscored the urgency of the preparation effort Wednesday, telling reporters for the first time that even if the Russians employ weapons of mass destruction only inside Ukraine, they may have “dire consequences” for people in NATO nations. He appeared to be discussing the fear that chemical or radioactive clouds could drift over the border. One issue under examination is whether such collateral damage would be considered an “attack” on NATO under its charter, which might require a joint military response.
====================

much more at the link assuming the above isn't scary enough for you...........
 
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Joseph Mazur, professor emeritus at Marlboro College, wonders how much the average American knows about the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. For a piece on “The Madness of Nuclear Threats,” published in Psychology Today’s online blog, Mazur conducted an informal (but telling) survey.

Mazur questioned 12 adults and four teenagers, none of them experts, on what happened to Hiroshima after the U.S. dropped “the bomb.” They knew what happened in broad terms, but had little inkling of the extent of human suffering and destruction. The adults guessed that the “Little Boy” bomb dropped over Hiroshima killed between 1,000 and 25,000 people. The teens guessed 5,000. In reality, the atom bomb destroyed five square miles of the city and killed between 130,000 and 225,000 people.

“Today, the tiniest tactical nuclear weapon is capable of destruction far worse than what happened in Hiroshima,” Mazur wrote. “Even if just one ‘small’ nuclear weapon were to be launched in the current conflict, there would not be enough therapists in the world to deal with the mental health trauma that would come from watching the aftermath in real-time.”
 

Pentagon confirms Kremlin has REJECTED multiple calls from Gen. Mark Milley and Defense Secretary Austin: Lack of communication between world's biggest nuclear powers sparks even more fear of a catastrophe as missiles fly in Ukraine​

  • The Pentagon said Thursday efforts to set up calls with top Russian military officials had been ignored
  • It comes as Russian jets operate close to NATO borders with Ukraine increasing chances of a miscalculation
  • 'We've made multiple attempts here but they have not answered up,' said Pentagon spokesman John Kirby
  • It means the world's two largest nuclear powers are in the dark about each other's moves
  • Kirby also said Ukrainian armed forces had pushed Russian ground forces further back from Kyiv
 

U.S. jobless claims plunge to lowest level since 1969​

Last Updated: March 24, 2022 at 9:25 a.m. ETFirst Published: March 24, 2022 at 8:37 a.m. ET
By

Greg Robb​


23

Continuing claims fall by 67,000​

 
this is the line that sends chills down my spine......
And to think that we as humans have evolved to this!

My wife tells me that the world would be a better place with women at the helm because they dont have BALLS to get in their way.(or something like that) Im starting to believe her!
 
And to think that we as humans have evolved to this!

My wife tells me that the world would be a better place with women at the helm because they dont have BALLS to get in their way.(or something like that) Im starting to believe her!

She's obviously never worked with a bunch of competitive women. The prosect of an atomic cat fight would be very real.
 
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The United Kingdom’s Foreign Office signaled Thursday that it believes Russia is using the Wagner Group, a shadowy Kremlin-linked mercenary organization, to hunt down and kill Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Since the start of the war, Zelenskyy has said he is Russia’s “No. 1 target,” and U.S. officials have voiced repeated concerns about his safety. But the Ukrainian leader has refused to flee his country, choosing instead to stay in Kyiv, the capital, as it continues to ward off a Russian takeover.

The alleged founder and leader of the Wagner Group, Dmitry Utkin, is believed to have Nazi sympathies ― an irony if true considering how Russian President Vladimir Putin has justified his aggression in Ukraine by claiming it needs to be “de-Nazified.”

British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss announced that the Wagner Group numbered among dozens of individuals and businesses to be newly sanctioned, describing it as “the organisation of Russian mercenaries reportedly tasked with assassinating President Zelenskyy.”
 
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