Russian-Ukrainian Conflict News

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BBC News:
20:00: Nato is concerned Russia may move into eastern Ukraine, Nato's Rasmussen says.

19:56:
_73690249_021594403-1.jpg

Nato chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen calls the Crimea crisis "a wake-up call... for the Euro-Atlantic community. For Nato. And for all those committed to a Europe whole, free and at peace". He is in Washington to discuss Ukraine with US officials.

19:51: Mark Lowen, Sevastopol When I asked the sailor if he thought this was the end, he told me it's the "end of this chapter" but that Ukraine would not accept the loss of Crimea.

19:50: A Ukrainian sailor holed up inside Sevastopol's naval HQ tells the BBC's Mark Lowen there are only a handful of servicemen still left inside, who have been instructed to stay overnight to protect equipment. The sailor says he expects an order to come through on Thursday to withdraw.

19:46: "We are not seeing broader global financial repercussions. But if this were to escalate, that would certainly be something that would be on our radar screen," Ms Yellen tells reporters.

19:46: US Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen says the central bank is watching the situation in Ukraine "very closely" amid concerns of an escalation in the crisis.
 
The New York Times article mentioned by the BBC earlier: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/20/world/europe/crimea.html?hp&_r=1
 
http://www.defencetalk.com/forums/geo-strategic-issues/ukranian-crisis-12973-15/#post276233
 
Daily Telegraph:
22.00 President Barack Obama has ruled out US military involvement in Ukraine, emphasising diplomacy in the US standoff with Russia over Crimea.

"We are not going to be getting into a military excursion in Ukraine," he told KNSD, San Diego's NBC affiliate, in an interview.

Mr Obama, who imposed sanctions on 11 Russian and Ukrainian officials on Monday, said the United States will push diplomatic efforts to bring pressure on Russia to loosen its grip on the Crimea region of southern Ukraine.

"There is a better path, but I think even the Ukrainians would acknowledge that for us to engage Russia militarily would not be appropriate and would not be good for Ukraine either," he said.

21.40 Moscow has called on Crimea's pro-Russian leaders to free the captured head of the Ukrainian navy Sergiy Gayduk.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said he had "asked the leaders of the Crimean Republic to release the commander-in-chief of Ukraine's naval forces... and not to prevent his departure for Ukraine," according to a statement.
 
Not sure why you felt it necessary to start a new topic concerning the Russian-Ukraine conflict/crisis after Paul closed the other one, GrayHavoc.
 
Glad you liked them!

Hopefully we can keep this topic reasonably on track.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ukraine/10710268/EU-leaders-divided-over-new-sanctions-to-punish-Russia-for-annexing-Crimea.html
 
http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?236054-2nd-attempt-at-the-Ukraine-discussion-thread&p=7097109&viewfull=1#post7097109
 
Again, via MilitaryPhotos: http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/03/19/ukraine-withdraws-its-troops-from-crimea-and-waits-for-russias-next-move/
 
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26659578

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Russia will face escalating EU sanctions if it does not take steps to ease the crisis over Crimea.

Mrs Merkel, speaking ahead of an EU summit in Brussels, said the current political situation also meant the G8 effectively no longer exists.

Tensions remain high in Crimea after its leaders signed a deal with Moscow to split from Ukraine and join Russia.

Pro-Russian forces took over at least two military bases there on Wednesday.

Ukraine's navy commander, Serhiy Hayduk was detained, but has now been released.

One perhaps inevitable howler:
Crimea's battleship Slavutich remains blocked in by Russian ships in the harbour at Sevastopol

If the Ukrainian Navy had a battleship, or indeed a few heavy cruisers, it's situation wouldn't be quite as hopeless...
 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ukraine/10707473/Ukraine-crisis-live.html
 
10.26 Will Ukraine's eastern regions eventually fall to Russia too? Russian TV channel REN apparently thinks so, expanding its report on Russian weather to include the cities of Donetsk, Luhansk and Kharkiv.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Po9iBcof5gM

09.27 Ukraine's interim prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk now says he "won't hurry" to impose a visa regime on Russia. Our correspondent Roland Oliphant in Simferopol says this sounds like a U-turn. "It could be a bit like burning down the house," he notes of the visa threat.
 
11.24 The new authorities in Crimea have announced a weapons amnesty, Roland Oliphant reports from Simferopol:

Any resident of Crimea with an unregistered weapon should hand it in by March 30, Crimea's new prosecutor general. Natalia Poklonskaya has said.

It's not clear if this amnesty extends to the shiny new Kalashnikovs some "self defence" and Cossack units have been seen with in recent weeks. Or the shiny nickel-plated 9mm pistol one was wearing on his hip at the storming of the Ukrainian Navy Headquarters in Sevastopol yesterday.
 
Thanks to Sorc at MilitaryPhotos.net for this:
attachment.php
 
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26662721
 
Daily Telegraph:
13.19 Ukrainian border guards in Crimea have begun redeploying to regions on the mainland following the Russian annexation of the Black Sea peninsula.


"We have started the gradual redeployment of our servicemen to the territory of Kherson and Mikolayiv regions," Pavlo Shysholin, deputy head of the state border guard service, told a news conference.


Mr Shysholin also said about 1,000 civilians had so far left Crimea
 
13.40 The official newspaper of the US armed forces, Stars and Stripes, has details on the forthcoming military exercise involving the US, UK and Ukraine announced by Kiev yesterday. Downing Street has yet to confirm British involvement in the July war games. But the US military seems fairly sure we're going...:


ICENZA, Italy — Atlas Vision is canceled. But Rapid Trident is still a go.


The status of two annual U.S. Army Europe military exercises that were scheduled for July — one in Russia, one in western Ukraine — is being affected differently by the situation in Ukraine, which has been described as the worst crisis since the end of the Cold War. The fact that the U.S. and its allies chose to go ahead with an exercise in Ukraine while canceling the one in Russia demonstrates Western support for Kiev in its confrontation with Moscow.


On March 3, the Pentagon announced that all exercises, bilateral meetings, port visits and planning conferences with Russia were off.


Air Force Lt. Col. David Westover, a spokesman, said the U.S. European Command had been in the planning stages for Atlas Vision 2014, which was to take place in July in Chelyabinsk, in northeastern Russia, and focus on joint peace-keeping operations. But because of the crisis, “all planning for this exercise has been suspended,” he said.

However, planning for Rapid Trident 2014 — a large, USAREUR-led multinational exercise scheduled for July — is ongoing, he said.

That exercise, in Lviv, near the Polish border, is to “promote regional stability and security, strengthen partnership capacity, and foster trust while improving interoperability between USAREUR, the land forces of Ukraine, and other (NATO and partner) nations,” according to the USAEUR website.

In addition to USAREUR troops, Rapid Trident 2014 will include units from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Canada, Georgia, Germany, Moldova, Poland, Romania, the United Kingdom and Ukraine, Westover said. It will feature a combined U.S. and Ukrainian battalion headquarters practicing a peacekeeping operation, he said. “Exercise planning will continue until we are told otherwise.”

Last year’s exercise lasted two weeks and included about 1,300 troops. It focused on “airborne and air-mobile infantry operations,” according to a report on the Rapid Trident website.

In the meantime, the crisis in Ukraine shows few signs of a quick resolution. Russian troops are occupying the country’s Crimean peninsula, and a disputed referendum there will decide whether the region will secede from Ukraine and eventually join with Russia.

On Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is considered key in dealing with Russian President Vladimir Putin, said that “the territorial integrity of Ukraine cannot be called into question.” The same day, President Obama vowed to “stand with Ukraine” during a White House visit by Arseniy Yatsenyuk, the besieged country’s pro-Western acting prime minister.

Westover said if relations were normalized between the West and Russia, Atlas Vision might or might not be rescheduled.

“Obviously without proper prior planning, conducting an exercise of this nature becomes difficult and jeopardizes our ability to participate,” he said.
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=TB2k4cmvJJ0
http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?236054-2nd-attempt-at-the-Ukraine-discussion-thread&p=7097441&viewfull=1#post7097441
 
"Crimea's battleship Slavutich remains blocked in by Russian ships in the harbour at Sevastopol"

Not necessarily. There were some ships in the area on the 17th but they were much further away than when they were blatantly sitting right in front of the Ukrainian berth on the 3rd.
 
On a lighter note for a moment:

sj6obhwft4ogc47otan8.jpg

http://kotaku.com/crimeas-attorney-general-spawns-anime-fan-art-1547001178

The "terrible Face of Occupation", as our friends over at MilitaryPhotos.net have put it.​
 
Daily Telegraph:
15.08 The Russian Duma has ratified the treaty to incorporate Crimea into Russian territory, the penultimate legislative hurdle for the annexation of the strategic Black Sea peninsula. The treaty must still be given the go-ahead by the upper house of the Russian parliament tomorrow, but given that 445 out of 446 members of the lower house approved it, the vote is a foregone conclusion.

MPs got to their feet for a standing ovation and sang the national anthem after the vote this afternoon.
russia-duma-clappi_2858257c.jpg



14.50 The Ukrainian soldier killed on Tuesday during a raid by pro-Russian forces on an Ukrainian military base in Simferopol has been named in Ukrainian and Russian media as Sergei Viktorovich Kokurin, a 36-year-old father of one. A native Crimean reportedly of ethnic Russian descent, he leaves behind his pregnant wife and four-year-old son.
ukraine-crimea-sho_2858179c.jpg

Sergei Viktorovich Kokurin has been celebrated as a fallen hero on Facebook
 
http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?236005-Situation-in-the-Ukraine-Crimea-*Photos-Videos*-ONLY&p=7097643&viewfull=1#post7097643

http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?236054-2nd-attempt-at-the-Ukraine-discussion-thread&p=7097620&viewfull=1#post7097620
 
http://www.yapfiles.ru/show/829334/5890ed3187fc3cf7397f582c81d9b01c.flv.html
http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?236054-2nd-attempt-at-the-Ukraine-discussion-thread&p=7097688&viewfull=1#post7097688

Not good.
 
I guess they aren't able to pull out the heavy equipment in this case at least?
 
Grey Havoc said:
On a lighter note for a moment:

sj6obhwft4ogc47otan8.jpg

http://kotaku.com/crimeas-attorney-general-spawns-anime-fan-art-1547001178

The "terrible Face of Occupation", as our friends over at MilitaryPhotos.net have put it.​
 

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Avimimus said:
I guess they aren't able to pull out the heavy equipment in this case at least?

Krivoy Rog (Kryvyi Rih) is in eastern Ukraine rather than the Crimea. If this was sabotage, the implications aren't pleasant, to put it mildly.
 
"Moldova's Trans-Dniester region pleads to join Russia"

Source:
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26627236

Pro-Russian politicians and activists in Moldova's breakaway Trans-Dniester region have asked the Russian parliament to draft a law that would allow their territory to join Russia.

The Trans-Dniestrian appeal comes as Moscow moves towards absorbing Crimea into the Russian Federation. Ukraine, the EU and US say that move is illegal.

Russian loyalists dominate Trans-Dniester, with support from Moscow.

The region split from Moldova in a war in 1991-92, as the USSR was collapsing.

Moldova's President Nicolae Timofti said in a news briefing on Tuesday that any decision by Moscow to accept Trans-Dniester "would be a step in the wrong direction".
Map of Trans-Dniester

In a September 2006 referendum, unrecognised by Moldova and the international community, the region reasserted its demand for independence.

Irina Kubanskikh, spokeswoman for the Trans-Dniester parliament, told Itar-Tass news agency that the region's public bodies had "appealed to the Russian Federation leadership to examine the possibility of extending to Trans-Dniester the legislation, currently under discussion in the State Duma, on granting Russian citizenship and admitting new subjects into Russia".

A pro-Kremlin party, A Just Russia, has drafted legislation to make it easier for new territories to join Russia. The party told the Vedomosti newspaper that the text was now being revised, in order not to delay the rapid accession of Crimea to Russia.

The Duma - Russia's lower house - and the Federation Council (upper house) are dominated by supporters of President Vladimir Putin.

Vedomosti reports that the Trans-Dniester appeal to Russia also warns about a possible further deterioration if Moldova signs an association agreement with the EU.

Moldova's leaders plan to do so. The crisis in neighbouring Ukraine erupted after former President Viktor Yanukovych was expected - and then refused - to sign such an agreement.
 
http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?236054-2nd-attempt-at-the-Ukraine-discussion-thread&p=7097723&viewfull=1#post7097723
Interesting website, enumerating Ukrainian Navy latest status.

http://www.vmsu.info/

Moved to Russian control - 3 ships
Blocked in Sevastopol harbor - 36 ships and vessels
Blocked in Donuzlav harbor -14 ships and vessels
Still in Ukrainian control - 5 ships (frigate Hetman Sahaidachny, a Zhuk class patrol boat and several auxilliaries)

With the latest updates from Sevastopol, expect more ships officially under Russian control.
 
20.00 The Russian embassy in London is not happy about the British embassy in Moscow's language on Twitter.


ukinrussia UK in Russia
Russian armed forces installed pro-Russian puppet administration and rail-roaded through referendum vote illegal. #Crimea #Ukraine


This press release is worth reading in full but here are the highlights.


It seems that the harsh rhetoric, quite beyond the pale, is meant to cover up the gross inaptitude of the Brussels bureaucracy, who badly mismanaged the entire EU Ukrainian enterprise, and its zero-sum motive to engineer a Cold War type geopolitical grab on Russia’s borders to be financed by EU taxpayers’ money.

...

As is known, the British sense of style doomed Sir Oswald Mosley’s guys. Does the same sense put up with the sight of Svoboda thugs, armed with baseball bats, roughing up Ukrainian TV Channel One head Panteleymonov and others who disagree with them? We have not seen London’s reaction to that.



19.40 The Ukrainian prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, has warned that Ukraine's forces will resist any move by Russian troops beyond Crimea.

I want to officially warn Russia: we will respond firmly, including through military means, against any attempt to seize Ukraine, to cross borders, or annex eastern or other regions by Russian troops.
 
"The Pentagon Isn’t Ready for a New Cold War"
by Jacob Siegel 03/20/14

Source:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/03/20/the-pentagon-isn-t-ready-for-a-new-cold-war.html

The U.S. military spent decades pivoting away from its Cold War stance. Now the Pentagon is less prepared than it has been in generations for a confrontation with Russia.

There’s an old saying in the military that we’re always training for the last war, so fixated on the lessons of our most recent conflict that we’re blind to the emerging threat.

For years, that last war was the Cold War, and the emerging threat was the insurgents of Iraq and Afghanistan. Slowly, painfully, eventually, the military reoriented itself. The result? After more than two decades of post Cold War re-alignment, the military is less prepared than it has been in generations for a confrontation with Russia.

No one in Washington is calling for the U.S. to go to war over Crimea and there are plenty of reasons why, at this point, military intervention could be a dangerous and foolhardy course. But if circumstances change and political leaders start looking to the military or the bargaining power that comes from a credible threat of force, they will find their options severely limited.

Over the course of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq soldiers and marines have trained for maneuvering and fighting in small units over the landscape of the Middle East. Counter-insurgency (“COIN”) doctrine, which stresses engagement with local civilian populations and tactics for fighting loosely organized forces employing light weapons, has become the military’s new bible. It’s about as far away as you can get from the principles used in the Cold War.

According to retired General David Deptula, who served as the Air Force’s top intelligence officer, “we’ve been focused on the far left end of the spectrum of operations,” by which he means the protracted, low-intensity conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. But, he says, “if we want to maintain superpower status we need to be prepared to succeed across the full range of operations, not just the left end of it.”

Even the few strategists that weren’t pre-occupied by Iraq and Afghanistan were planning for the much-touted Asia pivot, envisioning a future, one they’d argue is still looming, defined by Chinese hegemony. Russia, meanwhile, was considered by many to be an historical relic; still big enough to wield real power but no longer capable of threatening U.S. vital interests and a second or third order afterthought when evaluating threats the military needed to plan for.

“For years there have been only a handful of people consistently talking about Russia and China building highly advanced systems for use against our ‘Cold-War era’ aircraft, missiles and ships,” Deptula says.

He’s talking about himself and some of his closest confidants at the Air Force, who pushed for continued production of high-end weaponry like the F-22 stealth fighter—right when the Iraq insurgency was at its peak. It made Deptula and his gang seem like they were fantasizing about an imaginary enemy while the real bad guys were blowing up Marines in Fallujah. Understandably, Robert Gates, the Defense Secretary of the time, wanted the military to focus on the wars America was actually fighting at the moment. And so eventually, many of Deptula’s colleagues—including Gen. Michael “Buzz” Moseley, the Air Force’s top officer—were shown the door when they opposed Gates once too often. According to Deptula, “those people were ignored by [former Defense Secretary] Gates, and some were fired because they had the courage to speak truth to power.”

As the White House and Pentagon planners consider what to do if Russia invades Eastern Ukraine or deploys its forces elsewhere in the region, the limited choices available reveal just how profoundly the military has changed since the Cold War.

For half a century, Cold War military strategy focused on containing Russia and winning in clashes between large conventional forces. On the ground, that strategy called for mass formations organized around tanks and heavy weaponry. In the skies it relied on dominance in Top Gun style style air-to-air fighting prowess, radar evading stealth technology, and powerful bombers that could drop massive munitions to destroy enemy armor and fortified installations.

Since the end of the Cold War, that strategy has been completely overhauled. Training and doctrine have focused on small unit tactics while new weapons and vehicles have been designed with squads in mind rather than divisions. Super-sophisticated dogfighters, like the $187 million-a-pop F-22, suddenly seemed too fancy to actually use. Instead, drones costing less than a tenth the price littered the skies over Afghanistan and Iraq.

But those drones are useless against any military with a half-decent system for shooting down enemy aircraft. And Russian has one of the best air defenses on the planet.

“Hopefully the situation with Russia and Ukraine will be a bucket of cold water on those who believe all we need to be able to do is counter-insurgency operations,” Deptula told The Daily Beast.

And now, there are signs that the U.S. Air Force’s long-held technological advantage may be eroding.

The new generation of Russian fighter plane, the T-50, isn’t yet fully operational but it “will be produced much sooner that Gates and his crowd predicted,” Deptula says. He adds that “once the T-50s are produced in sufficient numbers there won’t be anything in the NATO fleet that can deal with them except the F-22s and F-35s.”

David Axe, the long-time military tech writer notes that the T-50, which can fire long-range missiles while flying both high and fast, may be able to “exploit critical vulnerabilities in U.S. and allied forces and level the air power playing field for the first time in a generation.”

An independent Australian think tank, Air Power Australia, drew a more severe conclusion. “If the United States does not fundamentally change its planning for the future of tactical air power, the advantage held for decades will be soon lost and American air power will become an artifact of history.”

While Russian aircraft rely on speed and long flight times, the U.S. fleet is largely built for stealth so it can evade detection and anti-air weapons to engage targets at closer ranges. But the stealth capability, is now being challenged by advances in Russia’s radar detection platforms and anti-aircraft weapons.

“Today,” Deptula said, “the Russians have an extant significant advantage in their surface to air capabilities.” And that with the exception of the U.S.’s small number of highly advanced 5th generation aircraft, “the Russians can conduct area denial of any airspace within range of their defenses if they want to deny access to aircraft.”

Since 2001, the Pentagon has had good reasons for prioritizing spending for troops on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan over speculative needs for future wars, but a consequence has been that we now have what Deptula calls “a geriatric Air Force and Navy fleet.”

No one, not even Deptula, is suggesting that there’s about to be some all-out showdown between Moscow’s military and Washington. But it’s possible that in the future American forces and allies could wind up in skirmishes with proxies equipped and trained by Russia. The U.S. used to be able to count on an overwhelming technological advantage. Tomorrow, maybe not.

Foreshadowing possible future scenarios, already Russia is outfitting the Assad regime in Syria while America runs guns to the rebels there. It’s the Russian side that’s winning.

The change isn’t just about equipment or tactics, though, American forces trained in counter-insurgency who are stationed in Europe could still be deployed to hold the line against Russian advances. But there are drastically fewer forces left in Europe available to be called upon in such an event.

An analysis of Defense cuts published by the conservative American Enterprise Institute in 2013 reported that “the Army alone has closed 100 installations in Europe since 2003 and plans on returning an additional 47 installations to host nations by 2015.” The same report notes, “the Navy has also been consolidating and decreasing its European bases” and “since 1990, the Air Force has reduced aircraft and forces stationed in Europe by 75 percent.” Addressing the future of America’s military footprint in Europe, the paper concludes that the Pentagon is “planning to continue reducing the US presence in Europe by approximately 15 percent over the coming decade.”

The military can’t be equally prepared for every threat and if its focus has been on counter-insurgency, that’s because those are the wars we’ve been fighting for the past twelve years.

Generations of veterans who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan have been raised and bled on COIN doctrine but, as combat demands, they have also learned how to be agile. Individual leaders on the battlefield are able to adapt quickly; it’s the military bureaucracy that’s like a tank: a slow, immensely powerful machine that’s only capable of plotting one course at a time. Quick turns are not possible.

Without many viable military options to counter Russian aggression what’s left for U.S. leaders seeking to punish Russia and assure our NATO allies that we’ll protect them? Cunning diplomacy, maybe.

Crimea is Russian now; that’s not changing any time soon. Condemning the invasion and the fixed terms of the referendum have no more bearing on the current situation than the reasons Russia gave for annexing Crimea—some of them legitimate—ultimately had to do with the duplicity and force they used to take it.

The real question, and the subtext in much of the current talk about Crimea, is whether Russia will stop there or proceed to further conquests.

Despite it’s show of force in Crimea, Moscow has a lot to lose if the conflict broadens and draws in the U.S. and NATO. Russia has gas to sell to Europe, oligarchs counting on feeling comfortable in their London townhouses, a new middle class looking for normalcy that’s already taken to the streets in protest, and the memory of Chechnya, a brutal war that took thousands of lives, fresh in the national memory.

If U.S. officials can present a deal that satisfies American aims while appealing to Russia’s self-interest, they may be able to prevent a larger conflict. But a new age of competition with Russia? That may be even harder to head off.
 
Russian Airborne Troops near Dzhankoy, Crimea, March 20th (h/t Djoker over at MilitaryPhotos.net).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wH0xhaNG-Zg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=pmmvWo7uXZw


EDIT: Same source:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=X-sCFwCKrbo
 
Daily Telegraph:
20.25 Less than a week after the referendum and authorities in Crimea are already issuing Russian passports to (former?) Ukrainian nationals. Here's Sergei Aksyonov, the Crimean premier, proudly brandishing his.
crimea-ukraine-pas_2858728c.jpg
 
:)

In another development:
They just plain can't afford to spend anything on the military right now. Things will get much worse from now on, to be honest.

Also, here's a funny aside. Those who've been following zero hedge might have already heard of it...

Remember that $3 billion loan Putin gave to Yanukovych last December? Apparently, it has a clause that stipulates that as soon as Ukraine's debt-to-GDP ratio exceeds 60%, that loan goes into immediate redemption. If IMF actually loans that promised $15 billion to Ukrainian government, that ratio would certainly be achieved, so the IMF money would go straight into Russia.

Turns out, that loan was secured under UK law, which means that there is almost no way for Ukraine and/or IMF to avoid this.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-14/will-first-3-billion-ukraine-bailout-immediately-go-russia
http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?236054-2nd-attempt-at-the-Ukraine-discussion-thread&p=7098008&viewfull=1#post7098008
 
Daily Telegraph:
21.45 Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has apparently promised his Chuck Hagel, his US counterpart, that Moscow has no plans to invade eastern Ukraine. This from AFP:


Hagel voiced concern about Russian military movements but Shoigu assured him that "the troops he has arrayed along the border are there to conduct exercises only and they have no intention of crossing the border into Ukraine and that they would take no aggressive action," Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby told reporters.


The US defense secretary also asked how long the military "exercise" would last but Shoigu "didn't have a firm time frame for that," Kirby said.


Shoigu had pledged that Russia would not send troops into Ukraine's east and Hagel's "expectation is that he'll live up to those words," he said.


Washington has watched a Russian build-up on Ukraine's eastern border with growing dismay after Moscow's military intervention in Crimea.

YMMV.
 
"Putin’s rating climbs to 5-year peak"
Published time: March 20, 2014

Source:
http://rt.com/politics/putin-rating-crimea-peak-041/

Over three quarters of the Russian public approve of President Putin’s work, according to the mid-March public opinion poll. Most respondents connected with a good handling of the Ukrainian political crisis and the help extended to the people of Crimea.

According to the VCIOM All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center, since the beginning of 2014 Vladimir Putin’s rating has risen 15 percent and stands at 75.7 percent – the highest in the last five years.

The pollsters say this is caused first of all by the complicated political situation in Ukraine and the Autonomous Republic of Crimea that was preparing to hold a referendum on joining Russia. 63 percent of respondents mentioned this as a primary reason of their support of the presidential course.Another large group - 32 percent - mentioned the victory of the Russian team at the Sochi Paralympics.

Putin’s rating in major cities was slightly lower at 71.3 percent but also reached a five-year peak.

The previous peak in Vladimir Putin’s popularity was in May 2012. 68.8 percent of Russians voiced their support for the president around the date of his inauguration.

A different poll conducted by VCIOM on March 14 and 15 showed that 91.4 percent of Russian citizens approve of Crimea becoming a part of the Russian Federation. Only 5 percent said they were against such an outcome. 86 percent of respondents claimed they already consider Crimea - home to an ethnic Russian majority - a part of Russia.

Crimea was caught in the turmoil that engulfed Ukraine after opposition leaders supported by rightist extremists ousted President Viktor Yanukovich in late February this year. On March 16 the republic held a referendum on joining Russia in which over 96 percent of voters supported such a move.

Vladimir Putin addressed the Federal Assembly on March 18 pledging full support to Crimeans and praising their decision to return to Russia after about 60 years of separation. On the same day the Russian President and Crimean leaders signed a treaty that makes the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol new parts of the Russian Federation.

After the ceremony Putin asked Russian parliamentarians to ratify the treaty as fast as possible.

The Lower House will hold a vote on ratification on Thursday and the Upper House is scheduled to vote on Friday.
 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/vladimir-putin/10712866/Vladimir-Putin-held-secret-meeting-to-agree-Crimea-annexation-weeks-before-referendum.html
 
http://www.defencetalk.com/forums/geo-strategic-issues/ukranian-crisis-12973-16/#post276332
 
The loan clause has been doing the rounds on financial blogs for a couple of weeks, there is potentially more too it than Russia simply being able to call it in. Things could get complicated.
 
does anybody know the disposition of ukraine's airforce?
 
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