War

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
The Central Bank took emergency measures due to the sharp fall of the ruble
The Central Bank of the Russian Federation unscheduledly raised the key rate due to the fall of the ruble. Now it is 12%.

“The key rate is 12%,” the press service of the Central Bank noted. The message was published in the telegram channel of the regulator.

For several days the dollar exceeds 110 rubles. The ruble fell for the first time since March 2022. Assistant to the President of the Russian Federation Maxim Oreshkin accused the Central Bank of the depreciation of the ruble and inaction on the current situation. In response to the claim, the Central Bank noted that they did not see a threat to financial stability. The press service of the Bank of Russia clarified that they plan to hold a meeting on August 15 at the key rate . After that, the dollar fell below 100 rubles at the time of the start of trading, reports RT . Initially, it was assumed that the Central Bank would raise the rate unscheduled, reports MK.RU.
They can't prop it up forever and things are about to get very bad for them in Ukraine and that means trouble for the regime. Drafting another quarter million men will kill the economy and perhaps Vlad!
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
The Central Bank took emergency measures due to the sharp fall of the ruble
The Central Bank of the Russian Federation unscheduledly raised the key rate due to the fall of the ruble. Now it is 12%.

“The key rate is 12%,” the press service of the Central Bank noted. The message was published in the telegram channel of the regulator.

For several days the dollar exceeds 110 rubles. The ruble fell for the first time since March 2022. Assistant to the President of the Russian Federation Maxim Oreshkin accused the Central Bank of the depreciation of the ruble and inaction on the current situation. In response to the claim, the Central Bank noted that they did not see a threat to financial stability. The press service of the Bank of Russia clarified that they plan to hold a meeting on August 15 at the key rate . After that, the dollar fell below 100 rubles at the time of the start of trading, reports RT . Initially, it was assumed that the Central Bank would raise the rate unscheduled, reports MK.RU.
I wonder at what point will it be cheaper than buying toilet paper to wipe their asses with. Before this is over, they might need a shopping cart of rubles to buy a loaf of bread. They had an economy about the size of Spain's before the war FFS and that in a country of 160 million people with vast natural resources. They also inherited vast amounts of Soviet arms and munitions, which appear to be almost gone, along with a quarter million of their troops according to most reliable reports. A lot of their army could be trapped in southern Ukraine and eventually in Crimea where their equipment would remain, even if they got the troops out. They could lose half their army in Ukraine by winter I figure and most of the southern mainland, the cluster munitions are taking an awesome toll of Russians according to some reports.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
I wonder at what point will it be cheaper than buying toilet paper to wipe their asses with. Before this is over, they might need a shopping cart of rubles to buy a loaf of bread. They had an economy about the size of Spain's before the war FFS and that in a country of 160 million people with vast natural resources. They also inherited vast amounts of Soviet arms and munitions, which appear to be almost gone, along with a quarter million of their troops according to most reliable reports. A lot of their army could be trapped in southern Ukraine and eventually in Crimea where their equipment would remain, even if they got the troops out. They could lose half their army in Ukraine by winter I figure and most of the southern mainland, the cluster munitions are taking an awesome toll of Russians according to some reports.
"Want to buy a Russian sub, cheap?"
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I wonder at what point will it be cheaper than buying toilet paper to wipe their asses with. Before this is over, they might need a shopping cart of rubles to buy a loaf of bread. They had an economy about the size of Spain's before the war FFS and that in a country of 160 million people with vast natural resources. They also inherited vast amounts of Soviet arms and munitions, which appear to be almost gone, along with a quarter million of their troops according to most reliable reports. A lot of their army could be trapped in southern Ukraine and eventually in Crimea where their equipment would remain, even if they got the troops out. They could lose half their army in Ukraine by winter I figure and most of the southern mainland, the cluster munitions are taking an awesome toll of Russians according to some reports.
False economy — that filthy stuff will cause local morbidity and considerable discomfort. Hemorrubles.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
If the Ukrainians cut the Kerch bridge and take the south of Ukraine, the Russians won't be able to evacuate their equipment in the south and Crimea or supply it with fuel and ammo. They might be able to evacuate the troops, but the vast quantities of equipment and supplies are lost and would be destroyed or left for the Ukrainians.


Whatever civilians or pro Russians are in Crimea are scrambling to get out now or have already left, Crimea is a trap for the Russians and strategically it is impossible to hold once they lose the south of Ukraine.

 

printer

Well-Known Member
NATO Official Gives Ukraine 'Unacceptable' Conditions for Joining
The chief of staff for NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has angered Kyiv officials for suggesting Ukraine could become a member of NATO if it ceded some of its territory to Russia.

Stian Jenssen, who has held the title of director of the Private Office of the NATO Secretary General since 2017, reportedly made the suggestion while speaking on a recent panel in the Norwegian city of Arendal.

Ukrainian territory has been one of the driving forces in the war Russian President Vladimir Putin launched on Ukraine in February 2022. During the course of the invasion, Russia's forces have occupied various settlements throughout the country, though Ukraine has since liberated many areas during its current counteroffensive.

However, Putin illegitimately annexed four Ukrainian territories to Russia in September. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has demanded those territories back, as well as Crimea, which Russia invaded and annexed in 2014.

The Norwegian newspaper VG on Tuesday reported that while discussing Ukraine's ambitions of joining NATO to the Arendal panel, Jenssen said: "I think that a solution could be for Ukraine to give up territory and get NATO membership in return."

The paper noted that Jenssen emphasized that "it must be up to Ukraine to decide when and on what terms they want to negotiate." When a VG reporter asked the NATO adviser whether it was the alliance's view that Ukraine must give up land in order to join, Jenssen seemingly suggested others have discussed plans for Ukraine following the war.

Despite Jenssen indicating his proposal contained nuance, Ukrainian officials have already criticized his statement.

Mykhailo Podoliak, Zelensky's top adviser to the Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, denounced Jenssen's suggestion on X, formerly Twitter.

"Trading territory for a NATO umbrella? It is ridiculous. That means deliberately choosing the defeat of democracy, encouraging a global criminal, preserving the Russian regime, destroying international law, and passing the war on to other generations," Podoliak wrote.

He added, "Murderers should not be encouraged by appalling indulgences."

Newsweek reached out to NATO on Tuesday via email for comment.

A spokesperson for Ukraine's Ministry of Foreign Affairs also publicly rejected the suggestion, calling Jenssen's proposal "absolutely unacceptable" in a statement posted on Facebook.

"We have always assumed that the alliance [NATO], like Ukraine, does not trade territories. The conscious or unconscious participation of NATO officials in shaping the narrative regarding the possibility of Ukraine's giving up its territories plays into the hands of Russia," foreign ministry spokesperson Oleh Nikolenko wrote in part.

A NATO official has since remarked on the tensions created by Jenssen's remarks by reaffirming the bloc's "clear and unwavering" support of Ukraine.

"We fully support Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity, as NATO leaders reaffirmed at the Vilnius Summit in July," a NATO official was quoted as saying by Ukrainian outlet European Pravda. "We will continue to support Ukraine as long as necessary, and we are committed to achieving a just and lasting peace."

Stoltenberg has not commented on Jenssen's reported statement as of press time, but he has been a vocal supporter of Ukraine and has stated numerous times that he believes the country will eventually join NATO.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
NATO Official Gives Ukraine 'Unacceptable' Conditions for Joining
The chief of staff for NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has angered Kyiv officials for suggesting Ukraine could become a member of NATO if it ceded some of its territory to Russia.

Stian Jenssen, who has held the title of director of the Private Office of the NATO Secretary General since 2017, reportedly made the suggestion while speaking on a recent panel in the Norwegian city of Arendal.

Ukrainian territory has been one of the driving forces in the war Russian President Vladimir Putin launched on Ukraine in February 2022. During the course of the invasion, Russia's forces have occupied various settlements throughout the country, though Ukraine has since liberated many areas during its current counteroffensive.

However, Putin illegitimately annexed four Ukrainian territories to Russia in September. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has demanded those territories back, as well as Crimea, which Russia invaded and annexed in 2014.

The Norwegian newspaper VG on Tuesday reported that while discussing Ukraine's ambitions of joining NATO to the Arendal panel, Jenssen said: "I think that a solution could be for Ukraine to give up territory and get NATO membership in return."

The paper noted that Jenssen emphasized that "it must be up to Ukraine to decide when and on what terms they want to negotiate." When a VG reporter asked the NATO adviser whether it was the alliance's view that Ukraine must give up land in order to join, Jenssen seemingly suggested others have discussed plans for Ukraine following the war.

Despite Jenssen indicating his proposal contained nuance, Ukrainian officials have already criticized his statement.

Mykhailo Podoliak, Zelensky's top adviser to the Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, denounced Jenssen's suggestion on X, formerly Twitter.

"Trading territory for a NATO umbrella? It is ridiculous. That means deliberately choosing the defeat of democracy, encouraging a global criminal, preserving the Russian regime, destroying international law, and passing the war on to other generations," Podoliak wrote.

He added, "Murderers should not be encouraged by appalling indulgences."

Newsweek reached out to NATO on Tuesday via email for comment.

A spokesperson for Ukraine's Ministry of Foreign Affairs also publicly rejected the suggestion, calling Jenssen's proposal "absolutely unacceptable" in a statement posted on Facebook.

"We have always assumed that the alliance [NATO], like Ukraine, does not trade territories. The conscious or unconscious participation of NATO officials in shaping the narrative regarding the possibility of Ukraine's giving up its territories plays into the hands of Russia," foreign ministry spokesperson Oleh Nikolenko wrote in part.

A NATO official has since remarked on the tensions created by Jenssen's remarks by reaffirming the bloc's "clear and unwavering" support of Ukraine.

"We fully support Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity, as NATO leaders reaffirmed at the Vilnius Summit in July," a NATO official was quoted as saying by Ukrainian outlet European Pravda. "We will continue to support Ukraine as long as necessary, and we are committed to achieving a just and lasting peace."

Stoltenberg has not commented on Jenssen's reported statement as of press time, but he has been a vocal supporter of Ukraine and has stated numerous times that he believes the country will eventually join NATO.
They are too useful outside NATO, but inside the EU, they can respond to Russia with greater freedom than if they were part of NATO and can make them feel pain in ways NATO can't. After the war is over or they break the Russian military and state, then maybe they can get into NATO, but the EU comes first. I think you will see postwar prosperity in Ukraine both from Russian money seized by the west and investment from the EU and America, just to make Vlad look bad by making Ukraine prosper. An economically strong Ukraine will be a militarily strong one, NATO were allied with Sweden for decades before they joined NATO, so the same deal for Ukraine, an alliance, aid and arms. By the time the Ukrainians are done with the Russians they will be in pretty bad shape for a decade, after they burn through their vast Soviet arms hoard.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
PMC "Wagner" legalized in Belarus
PMC "Wagner" legalized in Belarus. The document is published on the website of the Unified State Register of Legal Entities and Individual Entrepreneurs about a legal entity.

It is noted that Wagner Group LLC (TAA Wagner Group) was registered with the Osipovichi District Executive Committee on August 4. The main activity of the Wagner Group is called "educational", it says in the document.

The HRC has figured out how to simplify the military registration of foreigners
Obtaining a Russian passport by male migrants should be combined with their military registration. This was stated by the head of the Council under the President of the Russian Federation for the development of civil society and human rights (HRC) Valery Fadeev.

“Our proposal is to synchronize the issuance of a Russian passport and military registration. How to do this formally, let the relevant services decide, ”Fadeev said at a press conference in Moscow. His words are quoted by TASS. He noted that the HRC is ready to consider the process of combining the two acts.

Fadeev stressed that foreign men forget to register with the military after receiving a passport. He noted that all men, even those with health problems, should be on the military register.

Earlier, the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region stated that a migration raid had taken place in the city. During it, about a hundred migrants with Russian citizenship were identified, 360 TV channel reports . They were sent to the military enlistment office to be registered with the military.
 
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