Germany to send anti-tank weapons and missiles to Ukraine

Business Insider

Germany to send anti-tank weapons and missiles to Ukraine, in major reversal of restrictive arms export policy that ‘marks a turning point’ for the country

Bethany Biron – February 26, 2022

Germany to send anti-tank weapons and missiles to Ukraine, in major reversal of restrictive arms export policy that ‘marks a turning point’ for the country
  • Germany is sending 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500 Stinger missiles to Ukraine.
  • The announcement marks a reversal of restrictive policies in Germany that prohibited sending arms to conflict areas.
  • “The Russian attack marks a turning point,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Saturday.

Germany is planning to send 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500 Stinger missiles to Ukraine, according to a statement made by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Saturday.

“The Russian attack marks a turning point,” Scholz wrote in a statement shared on Twitter. “It is our duty to do our best to help Ukraine defend against the invading army of Putin. That’s why we’re supplying 1000 anti-tank weapons and 500 stinger missiles to our friends in Ukraine.”

The announcement marks a significant shift of Germany’s restrictive arms export policy. The country has previously said it held “historical responsibilities” that prevented it from sending weapons and arms to conflict areas, often citing guilt for crimes committed against the Soviet Union during World War II.

As part of the new stance, Germany is also lifting restrictions it previously held among NATO allies that prohibited sending German-based arms to conflict areas. This will allow countries like the Netherlands to ship 400 rocket-propelled grenades to Ukraine, Axios reported.

Ukranian officials and leaders in allied countries banned from sending arms expressed frustration over the strict policies in recent weeks, heading into Russia’s attack against Ukraine on Thursday. The reversal comes as Russian forces continue their advance into the Ukranian capital of Kyiv, where the mayor announced a strict curfew on Friday.

The decision could also foster wider support from the European Union, particularly given Germany’s vast economic power and stature. The country also holds a large percentage of the continent’s arms and ammunition, according to Politico.

Ex-Trump aide says Michelle Obama would put Republicans in ‘a very difficult position’ if she ran for president in 2024

Insider

Ex-Trump aide says Michelle Obama would put Republicans in ‘a very difficult position’ if she ran for president in 2024

John L. Dorman – February 26, 2022

Monica Crowley
Monica Crowley.AP Photo/Evan Vucci
  • Monica Crowley said that a Michelle Obama presidential bid would put the GOP in “a very difficult position.”
  • The former Treasury spokesperson made the comments during the 2022 CPAC conference in Florida.
  • While Obama’s name is often floated as a candidate, she has expressed little desire to run for office.

The conservative commentator Monica Crowley, a former Trump administration aide, on Saturday said that a presidential run by former first lady Michelle Obama would put Republicans in “a very difficult position.”

“If they [Democrats] were to run Michelle Obama, that would put us in a very difficult position because they’d reach for a candidate who is completely plausible, very popular, and immune to criticism,” she said. “Also, when you think about her positioning, she spoke as a DNC [Democratic National Convention] keynote speaker in 2020, she wrote her autobiography and did a 50-city tour, she has massive Netflix and Spotify deals, and she’s got a voting-rights group alongside Stacey Abrams.”

Crowley made the remarks during a panel discussion at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Florida featuring her alongside Republican Rep. Ronny Jackson of Texas, conservative activist Jack Posobiec, and attorney Kurt Schlichter. She also spoke of the complications that Democrats might face in 2024 if President Joe Biden chooses not to run for reelection. (He has so far committed to running for a second term.)

Pointing to Vice President Kamala Harris and some of her first-year stumbles in office, Crowley argued that Democrats nonetheless would be hard-pressed to deny her a presidential nomination for fear of alienating Black women, who have been the most loyal segment of the party for years.

Crowley, who served as an assistant secretary for public affairs for ex-Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, then said that Democrats might seek another scenario that would thrill the party − the candidacy of former first lady Michelle Obama.

Obama, who was the first lady while her husband — former President Barack Obama – served president from 2009 to 2017, has long expressed her distaste for politics. She has also enjoyed moderate to high favorability among the general public in various polls.

But, the former first lady has continually stated that she does not foresee her name being on a presidential ballot. Many Democrats, though, cannot help but envision her running for a White House bid given her status as a highly-regarded first lady with universal name recognition and an appeal that can cut across demographic and political lines.

Although conservatives are eager to regain the White House after former President Donald Trump’s 2020 presidential loss, Crowley, during the forum, refused to underestimate Obama’s potential appeal as a candidate.

“For all of these people who say, ‘Michelle Obama isn’t political’ [and] ‘They’re making too much money now,’ keep a very close eye on her because her trajectory is exactly what Barack Obama did before he ran for president and what Bill and Hillary Clinton both did,” she said. “I think if she were to run, that would be a very difficult situation for us.”

The former first lady has never held elective office, but some of her major speeches — beginning at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver to her deeply personal video at the DNC in support of Biden during the 2020 presidential race — have been praised by many voters from across the political spectrum.

However, during the 2018 Simmons Leadership Conference in Boston, she threw cold water on the idea of a presidential run, as she has often done when asked since leaving the White House.

“The reason why I don’t want to run for president — and I can’t speak for Oprah [Winfrey] — but my sense is that, first of all, you have to want the job,” she said at the time, referencing calls for media mogul to run for office.

She continued: “And you can’t just say, ‘Well, you’re a woman, run.’ We just can’t find the women we like and ask them to do it, because there are millions of women who are inclined and do have the passion for politics.”

Estonia and Romania ban Russian airlines from their airspace, after the UK, Poland, Moldova and the Czech Republic

Insider

Estonia and Romania ban Russian airlines from their airspace, after the UK, Poland, Moldova and the Czech Republic

Taylor Ardrey – February 26, 2022

Aeroflot.
Aeroflot.Media_works/Shutterstock
  • Estonia and Romania have barred Russia from their airspace, officials announced Saturday.
  • The move comes after other countries, including the UK and Poland, did the same this week.
  • The US State Department said it’s in ‘regular dialogue with our Ukrainian partners’ regarding a no-fly zone over Ukraine.

Estonia and Romania on Saturday banned Russian airlines from their airspace after the U.K., Poland, Moldova, and the Czech Republic did the same.

Romania’s foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu tweeted Saturday morning that the country “just joined other EU member states in banning (Russian) airlines from our airspace.” Aurescu went on to say Romania encourages all partners and allies “to take such action, as we stay resolute in our support for #UkraineUnderAttack.”

Kaja Kallas, Estonian Foreign Minister, echoed similar sentiments, stating there’s”no place for planes of the aggressor state in democratic skies.”

After Russia attacked Ukraine on Thursday, United Kingdom officials issued a ban restricting Russian-owned airlines from the country’s airspace.

“This means that Aeroflot will not be permitted to operate flights to or from the United Kingdom until further notice,” the UK Civil Aviation Authority said in a Feb. 24 announcement.

In response, Russian officials decided to bar any aircraft owned, leased, or operated by individuals associated with the UK from its airspace, as Insider reported.

Additionally, as Aljazeera reported, Russia also placed the ban on other European countries, including Poland, the Czech Republic, and Bulgaria, aviation officials said Saturday.

GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger has called on the US to enforce a no-fly zone over Ukraine to aid in their fight against Russia, according to Yahoo News.

“The fate of #Ukraine is being decided tonight, but also the fate of the west. Declare a #NoFlyZone over Ukraine at the invitation of their sovereign govt,” Kinzinger tweeted Friday. “Disrupt Russia’s air ops to give the heroic Ukrainians a fair fight. It’s now, or later.”

When asked Saturday if the US has given any consideration to Ukraine’s call for a no-fly zone, spokesperson for the US Department of State Ned Price responded, “We are in regular dialogue with our Ukrainian partners. We are looking at a range of ways we can continue to support them.”

GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger calls for U.S.-enforced no-fly zone over Ukraine

The Week

GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger calls for U.S.-enforced no-fly zone over Ukraine

Grayson Quay, Weekend editor – February 26, 2022

Russian fighter jets
Russian fighter jets LEONID SHCHEGLOV/BELTA/AFP via Getty Images

Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) called for the U.S. to declare a no-fly zone over Ukraine to give the country’s military a “fair fight” against invading Russian forces.

“The fate of #Ukraine is being decided tonight, but also the fate of the west. Declare a #NoFlyZone over Ukraine at the invitation of their sovereign govt,” Kinzinger tweeted on Friday.

In addition to serving in Congress, Kinzinger is a lieutenant colonel in the Air National Guard.

According to Politico, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has asked NATO to “close the skies,” but as of Friday the alliance remained unwilling to take the risk.

Critics were quick to point out that Kinzinger’s proposed no-fly zone would likely require the U.S. to fire on Russian aircraft, which could lead to a war between Russia and NATO.

“No. This is insane,” tweeted Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), who is known for his non-interventionist views on foreign policy.

Buzz Patterson, a former U.S. Air Force pilot who ran unsuccessfully for Congress as a Republican in 2019, wrote that a no-fly zone would force American pilots “to shoot down Russian aircraft” and called the proposal “the dumbest s–t I’ve ever heard [Kinzinger] say … And that’s a pretty high bar.

In an Feb. 13 appearance on CBS’ Face the Nation, Kinzinger accused Republicans who disagreed with his hawkish stance of “naivety” and “affection for authoritarianism.”

Trump took documents to Mar-a-Lago that are so sensitive they may not be described in public. Was he keeping them safe for Putin?

Insider

Trump took documents to Mar-a-Lago that are so sensitive they may not be described in public, report says

Alia Shoaib – February 26, 2022

Former President Donald Trump
Then-President Donald Trump speaks in the Diplomatic Room of the White House on Thanksgiving on November 26, 2020 in Washington, DC.Erin Schaff/Getty Images
  • Trump took documents of the “very highest levels of classification” to Mar-a-Lago, per The Washington Post.
  • Some of the documents are so sensitive that they may not be described in upcoming inventory reports.
  • The details emerge as a congressional committee intensifies its investigation into Trump’s handling of White House records.

Former President Donald Trump took documents to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida that are “so sensitive” they might not be able to be described in public, The Washington Post reported Friday, citing two unnamed sources.

After leaving office in January 2021, Trump took 15 boxes of documents to his Florida resort, which National Archives officials said contained some classified information.

Some of the documents were of the “very highest levels of classification,” two sources told The Post, and therefore might not be able to be described in upcoming inventory reports in an unclassified manner.

One source informed The Post that there are records “that only a very few have clearances” to review.

The details have emerged as a congressional committee ramps up its investigation into Trump’s handling of White House records.

On Friday, Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York, the Democratic chairwoman of the House Oversight Committee, wrote to the National Archives and Records Administration to request a “detailed description” of the contents of the recovered boxes.

The National Archives had previously set Friday as a deadline to provide an inventory of the contents, which are expected to offer more information on the volume and scope of classified documents, according to The Post.

Maloney also requested details about all presidential records that Trump “had torn up, destroyed, mutilated, or attempted to tear up, destroy or mutilate.”

“I am deeply concerned that former President Trump may have violated the law through his intentional efforts to remove and destroy records that belong to the American people,” she wrote in a letter. “This Committee plans to get to the bottom of what happened and assess whether further action is needed to prevent the destruction of additional presidential records and recover those records that are still missing.”

Maloney also asked for details about any probes conducted by other federal agencies into the contents of the boxes, along with communications between the Trump administration and NARA linked to the Presidential Records Act.

The congresswoman also called for the prioritization of records from former White House chiefs of staff Reince Priebus, John Kelly, and Mark Meadows; along with those from former White House counsel Don McGahn; former deputy White House counsel Stefan Passantino; and ex-aides Nicholas Luna, Derek Lyons, Robert Porter, and Madeleine Westerhout.

In the Thursday letter to the National Archives, Maloney described Trump’s handling of records as “what appears to be the largest-scale violations of the Presidential Records Act since its enactment.”

The Presidential Records Act requires presidents and White House staff to preserve official documents and communications, and turn those items over to the National Archives at the end of a president’s term.

8 Places With Awesome and Innovative Public Transportation

EcoWatch

8 Places With Awesome and Innovative Public Transportation

Linnea Harris – February 26, 2022

The Metrocable public transportation lift in Medellín, Colombia

Cable cars of the Metrocable, a gondola lift system that links the city with the neighborhoods and suburbs in Medellin, Colombia. EyesWideOpen / Getty Images

In cities across the globe, urbanites rely on public transportation to get around. More than 55% of the global population lives in urban areas, a number that is expected to increase to nearly 70% by 2050, according to the UN. As our cities grow, so must public transportation capacity, while also addressing the mounting impacts of climate change and the role of our fossil fuel powered transportation system. 

A few cities and countries are already accommodating the needs of their occupants and our climate by building innovative systems of transport.

Luxembourg

If you’re planning a journey to Luxembourg, scratch “book rental car” off of your to-do list. In March 2020, this small European country became the first to offer free public transportation to its citizens and visitors.

The free access to buses, trains, and trams for all 630,000 Luxembourgers makes it possible to explore the entire Rhode-Island-sized country without a car. Bike paths and hiking trails stretch between the stations, and riders can travel to neighboring countries at a reduced price. 

Luxembourg – a country with many job opportunities and a high GDP – is infamous for congestion issues, with 681 cars per 1,000 people. Dany Frank of the Ministry of Mobility and Public Works cites environmental benefits and reduced traffic as major motivations for the change, reports CNN. 

Switzerland

Home to the Alps and the Jura Mountains, Switzerland boasts stunning alpine views and picture-perfect destinations – if you can get to them. Its windy mountain passes are often difficult to traverse by car, especially in adverse weather conditions.

For decades, the Swiss have avoided this conundrum with their iconic car trains. Personal vehicles and buses alike can drive right onto one of six trains (two of which travel to Italy) and enjoy the ride from the comfort of their car or a passenger sitting area as they travel through tunnels and mountain passes. During busy hours, some trains run as often as every 15 minutes, making this form of transport a viable option for travel while cutting down on emissions and overall transportation time. 

Shanghai, China

While standing on the train platform in Shanghai, you won’t hear the deafening racket expected of most trains; the levitating Maglev train arrives quickly and quietly.

Maglev trains – whose name is an abbreviation of “magnetic levitation” – employ magnetic technology to levitate the frictionless, wheel-less trains over the tracks. The trains utilize the concept of electromagnetic propulsion, by which superconducting magnets repel one another and suspend the train over the guideway. 

Powered entirely with electricity, these trains are both environmentally friendly and extremely fast. In 2015, one Maglev train broke the all-time speed record for trail vehicles, hitting 603 kph (375 mph). The Shanghai line running between the Longyang Road Station and Pudong International Airport stretches 19 miles (30 km), and the trip takes only seven and a half minutes from end to end. If Maglev technology were used to build high-speed trains in the U.S., travelers leaving New York City could expect to reach Los Angeles in seven hours. 

The network of Maglev lines in China is still small, but spreading. A line connecting Shanghai and Hangzhou is under construction, reports CNN, with another between Chengdu and Chongqing. Maglev trains also run in Japan and South Korea, and a new line is expected to link Tokyo and Nagoya by the year 2027 with a total travel time of only forty minutes.

Hamburg, Germany

Hochban – the transit authority that runs much of the public transportation in Hamburg – is replacing its entire fleet of 1,100 diesel buses with zero-emission vehicles by 2030. The e-buses create 75% fewer emissions than their diesel counterparts, and a total fleet-wide conversion would reduce CO2 emissions by 65,000 tonnes every year (the equivalent of 32500 gasoline-powered cars driving for one year). 

The transition to carbon-neutral transportation is made possible in part by the recharging stations for buses located in the city. The interoperability of the system is the real innovation, and allows buses – regardless of their manufacturer – to pull into a charging station and refuel in only six minutes: enough for an entire day on their route. This means the city can source buses from different suppliers moving forward and still function with their existing charging technology.  

Trondheim, Norway

While not exactly a large-scale public transportation system, this Norwegian city is transforming bicycle commutes for its citizens. 

Trondheim is famous for the Trampe Bicycle Lift, invented and installed by Jarle Wanwik in 1993, who was tired of biking up a huge hill every morning on his way to work. The lift is, basically, an escalator for all self-propelled vehicles, like scooters, strollers, skateboards, and, of course, bikes. Rides place one foot on a small, moving platform that travels up the track, pulling the cyclist up with it. 

Since its original installation, the Trampe has been upgraded by the French company SKIRAIL, and can carry five people up the hill at once. 

Adelaide, Australia

Adelaide – the capital city of South Australia – is the fifth most populous in the country at 1.3 million inhabitants, and home to the brilliant green, solar-powered Tindo buses

Tindo – the Aboriginal word for “sun” – doesn’t have a combustion engine, and is the first 100% solar-powered electric bus in the world. Unlike other solar-fueled vehicles that sport solar panels on their bodies, these buses are charged with solar power at bus stations and can travel up to 200 kilometers between charges. These buses were commissioned from New Zealand’s Designline International, and are run by the city council as a part of the Adelaide Connector Bus service. 

They produce no emissions, can transport up to 40 people, and cost nothing for the traveler. The buses are also cheaper for the city, and cost 50% less per kilometer to operate than diesel vehicles. They also employ a regenerative braking system, which reduces energy consumption by 30%. 

Amsterdam, Netherlands

You’ve seen self-driving cars, but what about a self-driving boat?

The Roboat (pun intended) was designed by scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions. Two full-scale Roboats were launched in 2021 to traverse the 100 kilometers of waterways in Amsterdam, capable of transporting up to five people, carrying goods, and collecting waste. These totally autonomous, wirelessly-charged boats are powered by propellers and thrusters, and are monitored on shore from a central location that can oversee dozens of boats at once. 

The self-driving technology uses a GPS and sensors referred to as “perception kits,” which can detect unknown objects and categorize them for future encounters. While not yet used for transporting the public, these innovative boats are making cleaner, water-based urban travel a greater possibility for Netherlanders and the world. 

Medellín, Colombia

This city of two and a half million stretches up the slopes of the Andes, along which floating gondolas travel up and down. 

Instead of bringing people up and down ski slopes, the Metrocable connects isolated areas of the city, allowing people who live in the informal dwellings on the hillsides to reach the city center. Buses were once the only way to reach the city below, requiring multiple fees and nearly two hours, while the cable cars take as little as 30 minutes on one of four lines. 

Medellín was once the world’s most dangerous city, but these gondolas are credited with the massive transformation of the area, giving its citizens greater access to work, education, and health care. City tour guide Pablo Alvarez Correa calls the cable cars “an innovative solution to the problems of geographic and economic exclusion,” reports Business Insider. 

West unleashes SWIFT bans, more crushing penalties on Russia

Associated Press

West unleashes SWIFT bans, more crushing penalties on Russia

Zeke Miller – February 26, 2022

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States and European nations agreed Saturday to impose the most potentially crippling financial penalties yet on Russia over its unrelenting invasion of Ukraine, going after the central bank reserves that underpin the Russian economy and severing some Russian banks from a vital global financial network.

The decision, announced as Ukrainian forces battled Saturday to hold Russian forces back from Ukraine’s capital and residents sheltered in subway tunnels, basements and underground garages, has potential to spread the pain of Western retaliation for President Vladimir Putin’s invasion to ordinary Russians far more than previous rounds of penalties.

“Putin embarked on a path aiming to destroy Ukraine, but what he is also doing, in fact, is destroying the future of his own country,” EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said.

The European Union, United States, United Kingdom and other allies have steadily stepped up the intensity of their sanctions since Russia launched the invasion late last week.

While U.S. and European officials made clear they still were working out the mechanics of how to implement the latest measures, and intend to spare Russia’s oil and natural gas exports, the sanctions in total potentially could amount to some of the toughest levied on a nation in modern times. If fully carried out as planned, the measures will severely damage the Russian economy and markedly constrain its ability to import and export goods.

The U.S. and European allies announced the moves in a joint statement as part of a new round of financial sanctions meant to “hold Russia to account and collectively ensure that this war is a strategic failure for Putin.”

The central bank restrictions target access to the more than $600 billion in reserves that the Kremlin has at its disposal, and are meant to block Russia’s ability to support the ruble as it plunges in value amid tightening Western sanctions.

The ruble and Russia’s stock market both declined sharply immediately after Russia launched military action in Ukraine on Thursday. The ruble recovered slightly but is still down more than 6 percent from before Putin’s announcement, trading at nearly 84 rubles to the dollar.

U.S. officials said Saturday’s steps were framed to send the ruble into “free fall” and promote soaring inflation in the Russian economy.

The decline of the ruble would likely send inflation soaring, which would hurt everyday Russians and not just the Russian elites who were the targets of the original sanctions. The resulting economic disruption, if Saturday’s measures are as harsh as described, could leave Putin facing political unrest at home.

Analysts predicted intensifying runs on banks by Russians, and falling government reserves as Russians scrambled to sell their targeted currency for safer assets.

The U.S. officials noted that previously announced sanctions have already had an impact on Russia, bringing its currency to its lowest level against the dollar in history and giving its stock market the worst week on record.

Saturday’s move also includes cutting key Russian banks out of the SWIFT financial messaging system, which daily moves countless billions of dollars around more than 11,000 banks and other financial institutions around the world.

The fine print of the sanctions was still being ironed out over the weekend, officials said, as they work to limit the impact of the restrictions on other economies and European purchases of Russian energy.

Allies on both sides of the Atlantic also considered the SWIFT option in 2014, when Russia invaded and annexed Ukraine’s Crimea and backed separatist forces in eastern Ukraine. Russia declared then that kicking it out of SWIFT would be equivalent to a declaration of war. The allies — criticized ever after for responding too weakly to Russia’s 2014 aggression — shelved the idea back then. Russia since then has tried to develop its own financial transfer system, with limited success.

The U.S. has succeeded before in persuading the Belgium-based SWIFT system to kick out a country — Iran, over its nuclear program. But kicking Russia out of SWIFT could also hurt other economies, including those of the U.S. and key ally Germany.

Only rarely has the West and its allies fired a full salvo of its available financial weapons on a country. Iran and North Korea, two previous targets, had far smaller roles in the world economy, while Russia, with its enormous petroleum reserves, plays a much bigger role in global trade, and parts of Europe depend on its natural gas.

The disconnection from SWIFT announced by the West on Saturday is partial, leaving Europe and the United States room to escalate penalties later. Officials said they had not fully settled on which banks would be cut off.

Announcing the measures in Brussels, the EU Commission president, von der Leyen, said she would push the bloc to “paralyze the assets of Russia’s Central bank” so that its transactions would be frozen. Cutting several commercial banks from SWIFT “will ensure that these banks are disconnected from the international financial system and harm their ability to operate globally,” she added.

“Cutting banks off will stop them from conducting most of their financial transactions worldwide and effectively block Russian exports and imports,” she added.

Getting the EU on board for sanctioning Russia through SWIFT had been a tough process since EU trade with Russia amounted to 80 billion euros, about 10 times as much as the United States, which had been an early proponent of such measures.

Germany specifically had balked at the measure since it could hit them hard. But Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said in a statement that “after Russia’s shameless attack … we are working hard on limiting the collateral damage of decoupling (Russia) from SWIFT so that it hits the right people. What we need is a targeted, functional restrictions of SWIFT.”

As another measure, the allies announced a commitment “to taking measures to limit the sale of citizenship — so-called golden passports — that let wealthy Russians connected to the Russian government become citizens of our countries and gain access to our financial systems.”

The group also announced the formation this week of a trans-Atlantic task force to ensure that these and other sanctions on Russia are implemented effectively through information sharing and asset freezes.

“These new sanctions, which include removing several Russian banks from SWIFT and sanctioning Russia’s central bank, are likely to cause serious damage to the Russian economy and its banking system,” said Clay Lowery, executive vice president of the Institute of International Finance. “While details on how the new sanctions affect energy are still emerging, we do know that sanctions on its central bank will make it more difficult for Russia to export energy and other commodities.”

Rachel Ziemba, an adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, said that even without a complete SWIFT ban, “these measures will still be painful to Russia’s economy. They reinforce the measures already taken earlier this week by making transactions more complicated and difficult.”

Ziemba says how much pain the sanctions render on the Russian economy will depend on which banks are restricted and which measures are taken to restrict the ability of the Central Bank to operate.

“Regardless, these sort of escalating sanctions, removing banks from SWIFT, restricting the Central Bank, this will all make it more difficult to get commodities from Russia and will increase the pressure on the financial market.”

Meantime, the U.S. Embassy in Russia is warning Americans of multiple reports of non-Russian credit and debit cards being declined in Russia. In a tweet Saturday night, the American Embassy said the problem appears to be related to recent sanctions, imposed on Russian banks following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The embassy says U.S. citizens in Russia should be prepared with alternate means of payment should cards be declined. It also reminded U.S. citizens that the State Department advises against travel to Russia.

___

Casert reported from Brussels and Sweet from New York. Associated Press writers Frank Jordan, Fatima Hussein and Josh Boak contributed to this report.

Wealthy Russians who parked money in Florida’s ‘Little Moscow’ worry they’ll be blacklisted from buying luxury real estate

Insider

Wealthy Russians who parked money in Florida’s ‘Little Moscow’ worry they’ll be blacklisted from buying luxury real estate

Hillary Hoffower – February 25, 2022

sunny isles beach
Sunny Isles, Florida.Meinzahn/Getty Images
  • Sunny Isles, Florida, is known as “Little Moscow” because of the many Russian elites who live there.
  • They’re worried sanctions could prevent them from buying real estate.
  • Experts say it’s likely they won’t be severely affected.

Sunny Isles, Florida, has long been an escape for Russia’s wealthy and elite, who have purchased so much luxury property in the area that it’s become known as “Little Moscow” and “Moscow by the Sea.”

“They love to be here, and they like to spend their money and enjoy their life,” Lana Bell, a Russian real-estate agent, told the News Nation correspondent Brian Entin on Monday.

President Joe Biden issued sanctions this week that target Russia’s elite and their families and restrict the Kremlin’s ability to access Western financial institutions. Though people in Little Moscow have been worried the escalating Russia-Ukraine conflict will threaten their lifestyle and blacklist them from buying American real estate, Entin reported, Bell said it hadn’t been a problem. Experts told the Miami Herald’s Michael Wilner the sanctions in place were unlikely to have a strong effect in South Florida. But Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Thursday showed the tensions were far from over.

“We are extending the reach of US sanctions to prevent the elites close to Putin from using their kids to hide assets, evade costs, and squander the resources of the Russian people,” a National Security Council official told the Miami Herald. “This is a new approach.”

Anders Åslund, a Swedish economist and the author of “Russia’s Crony Capitalism: The Path from Market Economy to Kleptocracy,” doesn’t think this will affect the Russian rich in the greater Miami region that Little Moscow is in. He told Wilner that the Miami Russians weren’t powerful enough to feel the sanction burn.

“These are comfortable people, rather than the top people,” he said.

Florida’s Russian rich

In Sunny Isles, condos can cost as much as $35 million. The most expensive home in the area listed on Sotheby’s is $13.9 million. It’s an area where the Trump brand is dominant, which The Washington Post reported was part of the appeal among Russian investors looking to move their money in the post-Soviet economy.

Jose Lima, a salesperson for the company that developed the region’s Trump towers, told The Post in 2016 that Russian speakers bought about one-third of the 500 units he sold.

But Russian influence stretches beyond Sunny Isles. From Hollywood to Fisher Island, Russians have spent years snapping up properties along Florida’s southeastern coast. Experts told Wilner that illicit financing had helped fuel the trend, though it’s not all related to dirty money. They estimated that Russia’s elite had more than $1 trillion in offshore accounts, which they said was disproportionally held in South Florida property.

So far, Russia’s richest billionaires have been affected by the rising conflict the most. Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the richest 22 of them lost $39 billion in one day.

While many of the Little Moscow Russians didn’t want to be identified when talking to News Nation’s Entin, they did tell him off camera that they supported Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Ukraine slows Russian advance as tens of thousands of Ukrainians flee the country

CBS News – Ukraine War

Ukraine slows Russian advance as tens of thousands of Ukrainians flee the country

February 26, 2022 – CBS News

Kyiv — After three days of fighting, Ukraine continues to push back against Russia’s unrelenting assault. The United Nations said Saturday that it had confirmed at least 240 civilian causalities.

Oksana Markarova, Ukraine’s ambassador to the U.S., told reporters Saturday that Ukrainian forces have destroyed 102 Russian tanks, 14 fighter jets, 11 helicopters, 15 artillery pieces and 536 armored vehicles.

“We are defending our homes, we are defending our families, we are defending democracy, we are defending our choice to be sovereign, but we are also defending Europe,” the ambassador said.

CBS News’ Christina Ruffini reported Saturday that for the first time since Russia’s attack began Thursday, people were lined up at a crossing station on the Ukraine-Poland border trying to get back into Ukraine. Many of them were military-aged men who wanted to return to join the fight. However, tens of thousands of Ukrainians are still fleeing their country, prompting fears of a possible refugee crisis.

Meanwhile, dozens of residents still in the capital of Kyiv were sheltering in underground metro stations as Russian forces launched coordinated artillery and missile attacks on key sites in the city. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had warned Friday night that the city could fall to the Russians overnight. Instead, fighting broke out in the streets of Kyiv as Ukrainians stood up to defend their country.

Entertainers and companies condemn Russia’s actions
Russian forces destroy gas pipeline in Kharkiv

The Ukrainian president’s office said Russian forces blew up a gas pipeline in Kharkiv, the country’s second-largest city.

The State Service of Special Communication and Information Protection warned that the explosion, which it said looked like a mushroom cloud, could cause an “environmental catastrophe” and advised residents to cover their windows with damp cloth or gauze and to drink plenty of fluids.

Ukraine’s top prosecutor, Iryna Venediktova, said the Russian forces have been unable to take Kharkiv, where a fierce battle is underway.

The city of 1.5 million is located 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the Russian border.BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

U.S. diplomat says local staffers at U.S. embassy in Ukraine left behind

The U.S. has evacuated American staff members from its embassy in Ukraine, but as many as 600 local personnel were given no guidance as to what they should do in the lead up to the Russian invasion, one U.S. diplomat told CBS News. Staff were even warned that they would not get paid if they lift Kyiv, the diplomat said.

In an interview with CBS News’ Lana Zak, President of the American Foreign Service Association and former ambassador to Bulgaria Eric Rubin said locals who worked at the U.S. embassy could be in danger should Kyiv fall to Russian forces.

“What we’re hearing from both our American colleagues who have left Ukraine and from our more than 600 Ukrainian colleagues … is there was no information when it was decided that the American employees would leave,” Rubin said. “They left with very little notice. They shut down the embassy, they welded the doors shut, and our local employees did not have information about what to do and where to go, if anywhere, would they be paid, and how they were going to be protected.”

Rubin said all this happened “several weeks ago” and there still hasn’t been any support given to the local embassy employees who may wish to leave Kyiv. 

The U.S. State Department told CBS News it is “exploring all legal options” to assist the remaining employees. The department also said that special immigrant visas are available, but it was not clear how many embassy employees would qualify for them. 

Rubin called the measures “good,” but noted they should have been implemented before the invasion began. 

“Pretty much no one can leave Kyiv now,” he said. “So, if you’re in Kyiv, you’re stuck there because the city is surrounded. You can’t drive out anymore. There are no flights. There are no trains.” 

Rubin noted that the U.S. doesn’t have any legal obligations to help the local staffers to leave, but said there is a moral one. BY JORDAN FREIMAN

Thousands of Ukrainians flee to neighboring countries as Russia ramps up invasion

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/thousands-of-ukrainians-flee-to-neighboring-countries-as-russia-ramps-up-invasion/

Russian vodka taken off some U.S. and Canadian shelves in support of Ukraine

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine and New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu on Saturday directed state agencies to stop selling Russian-made vodka throughout the state. The orders come as bars around the country and officials in Canada have taken similar measures to support Ukraine. 

DeWine on Saturday said he had directed the state chamber of commerce to “cease both the purchase and sale” of vodka made by Russian Standard  the only overseas Russian-owned distillery that sells vodka in Ohio, according to the governor. The distillery has approximately 6,400 bottles for sale in the state across 487 liquor agencies, the governor said. 

Earlier Saturday, Sununu signed an executive order directing New Hampshire liquor and wine outlets to remove any spirits made in Russia and with Russian branding from its shelves until further notice. 

“New Hampshire stands with the people of Ukraine in their fight for freedom,” Sununu said Saturday on Twitter. 

Virginia state Senator Louise Lucas called on Governor Glenn Youngkin to enact similar orders. 

“We need to take strong actions to support Ukraine, so I am calling on @GovernorVA to order the removal of all Russian Vodka and any other Russian products from our ABC stores immediately,” she wrote on Twitter Saturday. BY TORI B. POWELL

More than 350,000 children don’t have access to education in Ukraine, report finds

The affects of Russia’s attack on Ukraine trickle down to Ukraine’s youngest residents. The invasion has left more than 350,000 school children without access to education, a new report from UNICEF finds. 

The organization is calling for donations to help fund humanitarian assistance in the region.

“The direct and indirect effect of the protracted conflict in eastern Ukraine continues to significantly impact the lives of children and young people. Leaving families on both sides of the contact line in urgent need of sustained humanitarian assistance,” UNICEF said.

Read the full story here. BY TRE’VAUGHN HOWARD

198 Ukrainians killed, over 1,000 injured since attack began, Ukrainian ambassador says

Oksana Markarova, Ukraine’s ambassador to the U.S., accused Russia of committing crimes against humanity in a speech at the Ukrainian embassy in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. She said 198 Ukrainians have died, including three children, and 1,115 have been injured since Russia began attacking the country.

“Ukrainians are fighting with everything for our homes, and the support that we need is yesterday,” she said, calling for world leaders to impose “severe financial sanctions” on Russia and disconnect them from “the majority of the civilized world.”

Since fighting began, Ukrainian forces have destroyed 102 Russian tanks, 14 fighter jets, 11 helicopters, 15 artillery pieces and 536 armored vehicles, according to Markarova. 

“We are defending our homes, we are defending our families, we are defending democracy, we are defending our choice to be sovereign, but we are also defending Europe,” the ambassador said.

Markarova added that, according to reports obtained by the Security Service of Ukraine, the Russians are handing out gas masks to local militants and the Russian military in Donetsk. “We are making this information public to warn that there might be a possibility of provocation,” she said.

A Ukrainian general also spoke Saturday, saying that Ukraine is following the Geneva Conventions in defending itself. He said Ukraine’s forces have captured around 200 Russian soldiers, who he described as not trained, badly equipped and as young as 19.BY PAULINA SMOLINSKI

Aid groups arriving at Poland-Ukraine border to help

Aid groups have flocked to the Medyka border crossing in Poland to greet and help Ukrainians arriving in the country, CBS News’ Christina Ruffini reported on Saturday. The previous day, there had only been one woman handing out tea.

In a video posted on Twitter, Ruffini said the footbridge crossing was much busier on Saturday than previous days. Aid groups handed out jugs of water and clothing, and bathrooms had been installed near the border.

“It’s kind of amazing how quickly this all has mobilized in the last 12 hours,” she said.

Also, on Saturday, there was not only a line of people arriving from Ukraine, but a line of people trying to get into Ukraine. Ruffini reported that some wanted to get family members and military-aged men were trying to go back to fight. CHRISTINA RUFFINI

Kyiv residents remain in underground metro stations on third day of Russian attack

On the third day of Russia’s attack on Ukraine, about 100 people were sheltering in the deepest subway station in Kyiv. They had either gone to the station voluntarily, or gotten stuck there when trains were stopped because of air raids.

Angelina, who moved into the station with her mother and dog on Friday, said that she was originally from Crimea, a part of Ukraine that was annexed by Russia in 2014. She said her family had moved to Kyiv to escape the Russians during that invasion.

“I know that it will be different. I believe in this,” she told CBS News when how she felt about experiencing a Russian invasion for the second time in her life.

Read the full story here.

American business owners warned to be on the alert for Russian cyberattacks

In the leadup to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, there were concerns about widespread Russian cyberattacks.

Chris Krebs, the former director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), said Saturday those threats may soon be directed at the United States and other Western allies who have issued sanctions against Russia.

“What I would expect is as sanctions and other lethal aid support increases to Ukraine, you may see ransomware attacks, like the Conti group has indicated yesterday,” Krebs told “CBS Saturday Morning,” referring to a Russia-based cybercrime group that vowed retaliation Friday for any cyberattack against Russia.

He said if there are increased attacks in Ukraine, operational control errors could allow malware and other destructive activity to “jump the rails” and impact other countries.

“So, every business leader here in the U.S. needs to be prepared,” he said. “This is not business as usual.”

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has issued a “SHIELDS UP” advisory warning Americans to be prepared in case of ransomware attacks.

“So the idea is be prepared, don’t panic,” Krebs said. BY ANALISA NOVAK

Russia mounts sophisticated disinformation campaign as it invades

In 2014, Russia flooded the internet with fake accounts pushing disinformation about its takeover of Crimea. Eight years later, experts say Russia is mounting a far more sophisticated effort as it invades Ukraine.

Armies of trolls and bots stir up anti-Ukrainian sentiment. State-controlled media outlets look to divide Western audiences. Clever TikTok videos serve up Russian nationalism with a side of humor – all part of Russia’s war arsenal, alongside actual troops and weapons.

Analysts at several different research organizations contacted by The Associated Press said they are seeing a sharp increase in online activity by groups affiliated with the Russian state. At the same time, there’s been a rapid uptick across the internet in suspicious accounts spreading anti-Ukrainian content, according to a report from Cyabra, an Israeli tech company that works to detect disinformation.

The work has been underway for some time. Researchers at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab analyzed 3,000 articles by 10 state-owned Russian news outlets and noticed a big increase in unfounded claims that Ukraine was poised to strike separatist groups. Overall, Russian media claims of Ukrainian aggression surged by 50% in January, according to the research.

Read the full story here.BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

Malware targeting Ukrainian organizations could affect other countries, CISA warns

In the days and weeks before Russia attacked Ukraine, “threat actors deployed destructive malware against organizations in Ukraine to destroy computer systems and render them inoperable,” the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) said on Saturday. And it warned that such attacks are likely to continue, possibly affecting organizations in other countries.

On January 15, the Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center reported that malware known as WhisperGate was deployed against Ukrainian organizations. On February 23, cybersecurity researchers said malware called HermeticWiper was being used for similar purposes.

The CISA said these malware attacks — which threaten to disrupt an organization’s daily operations — are likely to continue and could “unintentionally spill over to organizations in other countries.” It advised organizations to assess their security and prepare for possible attacks.

For more information on how to protect yourself against such attacks, view the CISA bulletin here.BY SOPHIE REARDON

Kirby: U.S. security assistance to Ukraine totals $1 billion over past year

Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said Saturday the $350 million in U.S. military aid to Ukraine that President Biden authorized on Friday brings the total security assistance approved for Ukraine to $1 billion over the past year.

“And, as I have said before, the U.S. is not supporting Ukraine alone,” Kirby said. “Many other countries are contributing to Ukraine’s ability to defend itself from the unprovoked Russian aggression.”

“We, along with our Allies and partners, are standing together to continue to expedite security assistance to Ukraine, and are employing all available security cooperation tools in support of the Ukrainian people as they defend themselves against Russian aggression.”

The $350 million includes body armor, munitions and other equipment.

Russian official issues stark threats to the West

Moscow may respond to Western sanctions by opting out of the last nuclear arms deal with the U.S., cutting diplomatic ties with Western nations and freezing their assets, a senior Russian official warned Saturday.

Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy head of Russia’s Security Council chaired by President Vladimir Putin, also warned that Moscow could restore the death penalty after Russia was removed from Europe’s top rights group.

The sanctions placed new tight restrictions on Russian financial operations, imposed a draconian ban on technology exports to Russia and froze the assets of Putin and his foreign minister. Washington and its allies say that even tougher sanctions are possible, including kicking Russia out of SWIFT, the dominant system for global financial transactions.

In sarcastic comments posted on a Russian social platform, Medvedev dismissed the sanctions as a show of Western “political impotence” that will only consolidate the Russian leadership and foment anti-Western feelings.

“We are being driven out of everywhere, punished and threatened, but we don’t feel scared,” he said, mocking the sanctions imposed by the U.S. and its allies as an attempt to vindicate their past “shameful decisions, like a cowardly retreat from Afghanistan.” BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

Finland, Sweden brush off Moscow’s warning on joining NATO

Finland and Sweden have brushed off warnings from neighboring Russia that their possible joining of NATO would trigger “serious military-political consequences” from Moscow for the two countries.

A statement from the Russian Foreign Ministry Friday voiced concern about what it described as efforts by the United States and some of its allies to “drag” Finland and Sweden into NATO and warned that Moscow would be forced to take retaliatory measures if they join the alliance.

Finnish Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto said Saturday that “we’ve heard this before.”

“We don’t think that it calls for a military threat,” Haavisto said in an interview with the Finnish public broadcaster YLE. “Should Finland be NATO’s external border, it rather means that Russia would certainly take that into account in its own defense planning. I don’t see anything new as such” in the statement delivered by Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, Haavisto said.

Haavisto’s words were echoed by the Finnish President Sauli Niinisto who said on Friday that he didn’t see the statement meaning Moscow was threatening Finland militarily but rather what kind of “countersteps” Russia would take should Finland join NATO.  BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

Prince William and Duchess Kate stand with “all of Ukraine’s people”

Prince William and Kate, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, said in a tweet Saturday that they stand with the president of Ukraine and all of Ukraine’s people.

“In October 2020 we had the privilege to meet President Zelenskyy and the First Lady to learn of their hope and optimism for Ukraine’s future,” they said.

“Today we stand with the President and all of Ukraine’s people as they bravely fight for that future.” 

Thousands flee Ukraine for Poland, Moldova, other countries

Countries bordering Ukraine have seen an influx of people driven from their homes. More than 120,000 Ukrainians have left the country for Poland, Moldova and other neighboring nations, according to U.N. officials. 

The U.N. refugee agency says it has seen incredible hospitality and solidary from governments and local communities as families open their homes and share their food. The U.N. estimates that up to 4 million could flee if the fighting escalates. 

Refugees arriving in the Hungarian border town of Zahony said men of fighting age were not being allowed to leave Ukraine.

“My son was not allowed to come. My heart is so sore, I’m shaking, I can’t calm down, they did not let him come,” said Vilma Sugar, 68.

People are also on the move within Ukraine, where the U.N. refugee agency says it has more than 115 staff. 

Many Kyiv residents spent another night in basements, underground parking garages and subway stations, heeding the warnings of city officials.

“We’re all scared and worried. We don’t know what to do then, what’s going to happen in a few days,” said Lucy Vashaka, 20, a worker at a small Kyiv hotel. 

-CBS/AP

Stricter curfew ordered for Kyiv

The mayor of the Ukrainian capital is imposing an intensified curfew as Russian troops press on the city.

Mayor Vitaly Klitschko said on Telegram that the curfew will extend from 5 p.m. until 8 a.m. and “all civilians on the street during the curfew will be considered members of the enemy’s sabotage and reconnaissance groups.”

The previous curfew imposed two days ago was from 10 p.m. until 7 a.m. BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ukrainian lawmaker posts photo, says “mothers are now giving birth in shelters” amid Russian strikes in Kyiv

Ukrainian lawmaker Anastasia Radina called on Friday for Western military powers to enforce a no-fly zone in her nation’s airspace to ease Russia’s artillery bombardment. 

Radina issued the call in a tweet that included a photo of a woman giving birth, saying: “Ukrainian mothers are now giving birth in shelters and metro stations during air raids. The Blitz of London 1940 is being repeated by Russia in Ukraine in 2022.”

“NATO must make UA [Ukraine] no fly zone,” she said. 

NATO’s deployment of thousands of troops in neighboring nations continues to grow, but none of the members states have sent troops into Ukraine, which is not a NATO member, to back up its forces. The U.S. and some of its European allies have sent millions of dollars worth of weapons and other equipment into Ukraine, in addition to providing training and other support.BY TUCKER REALS

France intercepts cargo ship suspected of link to “Russian interests targeted by sanctions”

French naval forces have intercepted in the English Channel a cargo vessel loaded with cars heading for the Baltic port city of Saint Petersburg after the EU slapped sanctions on Russia, officials said Saturday. The Russian-flagged Baltic Leader, which had set sail from the French city of Rouen, was escorted to the port of Boulogne-sur-Mer by French forces, the maritime prefecture told AFP.

It is suspected of belonging to a company targeted by the sanctions. 

A French customs patrol vessel backed by a police surveillance ship and a navy patrol boat stopped the Baltic Leader, said Veronique Magnin of the regional prefecture.

The 417-foot vessel is “strongly suspected of being linked to Russian interests targeted by sanctions,” she said, adding that while such a measure was “rare” it is “a sign of “firmness.” 

The move comes after the European Union on Thursday adopted unprecedented sanctions against Russian individuals, companies and other entities to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine.

A spokesperson for the Russian embassy in Paris told the TASS news agency the boat’s captain had telephoned the embassy, which then contacted the French authorities to ask for an explanation of the incident.BY AFP

U.K. says “bulk” of Russian invading force within 20 miles of downtown Kyiv

Britain’s defense ministry said on Saturday morning that the “bulk” of Russia’s invading military force in Ukraine was within 20 miles of the capital Kyiv. Localized street fighting has been reported since early on Friday in north and eastern Kyiv, within just a couple miles of the heart of the city. 

“Russian forces have continued their advance on Kyiv with the bulk of their forces now 30 km [19 miles] from the center of the city,” the defense ministry said in an “Intelligence Update” posted to its official Twitter page. Russia has yet to gain control of the airspace over Ukraine greatly reducing the effectiveness of the Russian Air Force.” 

Citing what it called “a staunch resistance across the country” by Ukrainian forces, the British military said its intelligence showed Russia was likely to suffer “heavy and greater” casualties than had been “anticipated or acknowledged by the Kremlin.” BY TUCKER REALS

Poland refuses to play Russia in soccer World Cup qualifier, citing “aggression” in Ukraine

Poland is refusing to play its World Cup qualifier against Russia in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Polish soccer federation president said Saturday.

Cezary Kulesza made the announcement on Twitter, citing Russia’s assault, and indicated Poland was in talks with other federations to present a unified position to FIFA.

“No more words, time to act!” Kulesza wrote, saying the move was prompted by the “escalation of the aggression.”

Previously, Poland had only said it didn’t want to play the qualifying playoff semifinal in Moscow on March 24.

The winner plays Sweden or the Czech Republic for a place at the Qatar World Cup.

Poland’s move comes a day after Europe’s top soccer body, UEFA, decided to move a major soccer final from Russia to France. The decision on Friday to move the 2021/22 Men’s Champions League final from St. Petersburg, Russia to Paris followed UEFA’s condemnation of the ongoing Russian invasion.

 – CBS/AP

Russia claims “military infrastructure” targeted, Ukrainians say apartment building hit

There were no casualties from a missile attack on a residential building in Kyiv early on Saturday, Anton Gerashenko, an advisor to Ukraine’s interior minister, said. Gerashenko said Russian troops were shelling civilian sites, and that at least 40 had been hit.

Images showed a massive, smoking hole in the apartment building.   

Russia’s ministry of defense said it launched attacks from land and sea targeting Ukraine’s “military infrastructure” overnight. The ministry claimed it had destroyed “14 military airfields, 19 command posts and communication centers,” along with anti-aircraft missile systems, radar stations, 14 Ukrainian military aircraft and dozens of tanks and other equipment. 

TOPSHOT-UKRAINE-RUSSIA-CONFLICT
Ukrainian service members look for and collect unexploded shells after fighting with a group of Russian forces that launched a raid into the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, February 26, 2022, according to Ukrainian service personnel at the scene.SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP/GETTY

Ukraine’s Health Ministry was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying the death toll from Russia’s assault, as it entered a third day, had climbed to at least 198 Ukrainians, including three children. The head of the ministry said 1,115 people had been wounded, including 33 children.BY HALEY OTT

Russia’s media watchdog bans reports on “invasion” or “assault” in Ukraine

Russia’s communications regulator on Saturday ordered media to remove reports describing Moscow’s attack on Ukraine as an “assault, invasion, or declaration of war” or face being blocked and fined.

In a statement, Roskomnadzor accused a number of independent media outlets including television channel Dozhd and the country’s top independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta of spreading “unreliable socially significant untrue information” about the shelling of Ukrainian cities by the Russian army and civilian deaths.

Citing a request from the General Prosecutor’s Office, the communications regulator said the media outlets, which also include Echo of Moscow radio, will be blocked unless they remove the “unreliable information.”

Worldwide protests after Russia invades Ukraine
Worldwide protests after Russia invades Ukraine35 PHOTOS

“Roskomnadzor also launched an administrative investigation into the dissemination of unreliable publicly significant information by the above-mentioned media,” the watchdog said. The offense is punishable by a fine of up to five million rubles ($60,000), it said.

Roskomnadzor said “reliable information” could be found in “official Russian information outlets.”BY AFP

Biden authorizes another $350 million in military aid for Ukraine

President Biden on Thursday authorized the the U.S. government to deliver another $350 million worth of weapons and equipment from Pentagon stocks to Ukraine, to help the country’s forces repel Russia’s invasion.

Mr. Biden issued a memorandum to Secretary of Stage Antony Blinken authorizing the State Department to “provide immediate military assistance to Ukraine… in defense articles and services of the Department of Defense, and military education and training.”

While the White House has said it will not send American forces to back up Ukraine’s military, as the country is not a NATO member, the U.S. has steadily increased its material support for President Volodymyr Zelensky’s government and military.

The last announcement of military aid came from Mr. Biden in January, when he promised a $200 million aid package as Russia massed forces around Ukraine’s borders. BY TUCKER REALS

Ukraine claims forces have killed 1,000 Russian troops

CBS News’ Holly Williams said she and her team heard what sounded like more airstrikes overnight in Kyiv as sirens wailed. Ukraine’s government said the fighting was now on the streets of the capital, and officials claimed the country’s forces had shot down two Russian planes carrying paratroopers.

U.S. and British officials have said the Ukrainian forces are putting up a much tougher resistance than many – including in Russia – expected.

Ukrainian officials claim their military has killed more than 1,000 Russian troops, which CBS News cannot independently verify.

The Ukrainians have dug in deep to defend their country. In Kyiv, the government said it had handed out 18,000 guns to volunteers, and arriving into the city from the east on Thursday, CBS News found checkpoints manned by reservists.

Russia vetoes U.N. resolution condemning Ukraine attack; China abstains

Russia has vetoed a resolution brought up in the U.N.’s Security Council that would have condemned its invasion of Ukraine. Russia cast the sole vote against the measure. The surprising vote was the abstention by China, which effectively cast Russia as alone among the world powers. 

“China is deeply concerned about the latest developments of the situation in Ukraine. Currently, it has come to the point which we do not want to see,” Chinese Ambassador Zhang Jun wrote in a statement after the vote. “We welcome and encourage all efforts for a diplomatic solution, and support the Russian Federation and Ukraine in resolving the issue through negotiations.”

In total, 11 nations voted in favor, with the United Arab Emirates and India also abstaining.

Council members knew that this would be the fate of the measure — but the results of the vote were seen by supporters of the resolution as a win for the U.S. and Albania, the lead sponsors. U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield said that the sponsors would now introduce a similar resolution in the 193-nation General Assembly where there are no vetoes.

“You cannot veto our principles. You cannot veto the Ukrainian people. You cannot veto the UN Charter. And you will not veto accountability,” Thomas-Greenfield told the diplomats. 

“We are united behind Ukraine and its people, despite a reckless, irresponsible Permanent Member of the Security Council abusing its power to attack its neighbor and subvert the UN and our international system,” she added. 

Before the meeting began, representatives from 27 European nations as well as the Ukrainian U.N. Ambassador held up a Ukrainian flag in front of the anti-war tapestry Guernica to show solidarity with Ukraine. BY PAMELA FALK

Ukraine and Russia “consulting” about a place and time to hold negotiations, Zelensky spokesman says

Representatives from Ukraine and Russia have contacted each other and are discussing a place and time for potential negotiations, a spokesperson for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Facebook. A Ukrainian official confirmed the authenticity of the post to CBS News’ Camilla Schick. 

The spokesman, Sergii Nykyforov, said in the post that “Ukraine was and remains ready to talk about ceasefire and peace. This is our constant position,” according to a translation of his remarks.   

“We responded in agreement to the proposal of the President of the Russian Federation,” Nykyforov continued. “Directly at these hours, the parties are consulting about the place and time of the negotiation process. The sooner the negotiations begin, the more chance there will be to restore normal life.” 

NATO to use response force for the first time to defend allies

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the 30-nation organization will send parts of the NATO Response Force and elements of a quickly deployable spearhead unit to the alliance’s eastern flank. It’s the first time the force has been used to defend NATO allies.

Stoltenberg did not say how many troops would be sent or where they might go, but he did confirm that the move would involve land, sea and air power.

In response to Europe’s biggest security crisis in decades, Stoltenberg said, “We are now deploying the NATO Response Force for the first time in a collective defense context. We speak about thousands of troops. We speak about air and maritime capabilities.”

“There must be no space for miscalculation or misunderstanding. We will do what it takes to protect and defend every ally, and every inch of NATO territory,” he said.

The NRF can number up to 40,000 troops, but Stoltenberg said that NATO would not be deploying the entire force. Parts of a spearhead unit known in NATO jargon as the Very High Readiness Joint Task Force, which is currently led by France, will also be sent.

Ukrainian soldier livestreamed from Snake Island during heroic stand against Russia

Fox News

Ukrainian soldier livestreamed from Snake Island during heroic stand against Russia

Peter Aitken – February 25, 2022

Ukrainian soldier on the ill-fated Snake Island was livestreaming as Russian warships opened fire and wiped out the 13 soldiers stationed there.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine Thursday local time. World leaders and diplomats widely condemned the attack and promised strong sanctions in response.

A Russian warship issued a warning to the Ukrainian border guards at Zmiinyi Island – also known as Snake Island – only to be told by one of the guards, “Russian Warship, go f— yourself.”

One of the soldiers was livestreaming at the time, capturing the sounds and chaos of the opening salvo.

Social media identified the soldier as a 23-year-old among the troops. All 13 soldiers died “without surrender,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said during an update on Thursday night.

The video has gone viral, with almost 900,000 views on Twitter, 2,200 retweets and over 6,400 likes.

A copy of the audio was posted on the website of Ukrainian news outlet Ukrayinska Pravda, and a Ukrainian official confirmed the authenticity to The Washington Post.

POPE FRANCIS CALLS FOR DIALOGUE TO END RUSSIA AND UKRAINE CONFLICT

Zelenskyy hailed the 13 soldiers and said they would all receive the honor “Hero of Ukraine.”

Snake Island sits around 30 miles off the coast of Ukraine and is less than 0.1 square mile in area, according to Axios. Despite its remote location and miniscule size, the island helped to connect a shipping corridor to multiple Ukrainian cities.

The Soviet Union handed over control of the island to Ukraine after the union’s dissolution in 1991.