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The Russian currency hit its lowest level against the dollar since March 2022 this week. The Russian currency traded at 114 to the dollar on Wednesday, its weakest level since March 2022, shortly after the Ukraine invasion began. AdvertisementA Wednesday headline in the state newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta read, "Panic attack for Russia's currency market." Other countries, such as India, have snapped up Russian oil instead, tempering the impact of price caps and other penalties. The collapse of Russia's Ruble (black) is a reminder how badly the EU failed on Russia.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Putin, Gazeta, Russia Robin Brooks, XbOwqiABRd — Robin Brooks, George Pavel, Brent, Kathleen Brooks, Brooks, Trump Organizations: Analysts, RIA Novosti, Kommersant, Brookings Institution, EU, Russia Locations: Russia, Russian, Ukraine, Russia's, India
AdvertisementUS wants Ukraine to lower the conscription age to 18 amid a manpower shortage. The White House said aid to Ukraine will not be tied to the conscription age. The current minimum conscription age is 25, but an anonymous US administration official told reporters on Wednesday that reducing it would help Ukraine keep up with Russia's military. The White House clarified that US aid to Ukraine will not be dependent on whether the conscription age is lowered. In the months he has left, Biden has been scrambling to push measures to aid the war effort in Ukraine.
Persons: Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Dmytro Lytvyn, Zelenskyy, Pokrovsk, Michael Kofman, John Kirby, we're, Kirby, Biden, Antony Blinken Organizations: US, Russia, Financial Times, CNN, Manpower, Ukraine, Security, AFP Locations: Ukraine
Each time, when the West finally accepted Ukraine’s requests, Russia’s most catastrophic threats did not materialize. Although Putin said the attack was “a response from our side” to the Biden administration’s decision on longer-range weapons, Russia has not needed a pretext for such strikes in the past. By providing Ukraine with ATACMS but only allowing it to strike parts of Ukraine occupied by Russia, “we sent Russia the message: ‘You know what? The decision to fire slightly longer-range Western weapons is a difference of degree, not of kind. By law, Russia considers these territories its own, and warned of dire consequences if Ukraine targeted them with Western weaponry.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Kyiv’s, Biden, Putin, Kateryna, ” Stepanenko, Alina Smutko, , , , William Alberque, ” Alberque, “ I’m, couldn’t, Ukraine can’t, Radek Sikorski, Roman Pilipey, ATACMS, Joe Biden, Alberque, Donald Trump, they’re Organizations: CNN, Institute for, Russia, Korean, Kremlin, Army Tactical Missile Systems, NATO’s, Disarmament, Proliferation, Poland’s, Russia –, Kyiv, NATO Locations: Russian, Ukraine, Russia, Kyiv, Russia's, “ Russia, AFP, Crimea, Washington, Ukraine’s, Kharkiv, Albuquerque, United States
AdvertisementTrump has boasted about his chemistry with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un. Donald Trump has long reminisced about the unlikely bromance he formed with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un while president. His comments suggest that Trump will find Kim a much tougher and more emboldened character to deal with this time around. North Korea's Kim Jong Un and Russia's Vladimir Putin at a military parade in Pyongyang in June. "Kim likely sees in Trump a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to remake his country's relationship with the US, and thereby the wider world," said Chan.
Persons: Kim Jong Un, Kim, Donald Trump, Kim Jong, Kim hasn't, Trump, Jeremy Chan, Bruce Bennet, Kim overplayed, Bennet, Kim Jae, Vladimir Putin, Putin, Chan, Daniel Salisbury, Russia's Vladimir Putin, GAVRIIL GRIGOROV, , Ellen Kim Organizations: Trump, North, North Korean, Eurasia Group, Getty, Reuters, RAND Corporation, UN Security Council, South, Centre for Science & Security, King's College, Center for Strategic, International Studies Locations: North Korean, Korean, Pyongyang, North Korea, Russia, Ukraine, China, Asia, Hanoi, Anadolu, South Korea, King's College London, Trump, Korea
Kyiv, Ukraine CNN —Russian President Vladimir Putin has threatened to strike Ukraine again with a new nuclear-capable ballistic missile following Moscow’s latest widespread attack on critical energy infrastructure. He also warned he would consider further launches of Russia’s new “Oreshnik” medium-range ballistic missile, first fired at Ukraine’s Dnipro region last week. A view shows a thermal power plant damaged by a Russian missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, at an undisclosed location in Ukraine November 28, 2024. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich Gleb Garanich/ReutersA view shows a part of Russian missile at a thermal power plant damaged by Russian missile strike in an undisclosed location of Ukraine, in an undisclosed location of Ukraine November 28, 2024. He said he couldn’t tell if the blasts were from missiles or Ukrainian air defense interceptions.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, It’s, Putin, , , Donald Trump, ” Putin, Gleb Garanich Gleb Garanich, Reuters Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky, German Halushchenko, Zelensky, Joe Biden, Valeriy, ” Dorotiy, Yuriy Dyachyshyn, Olha Vaynrikh, ” Turiy Organizations: Ukraine CNN —, Energy Ministry, Ukraine’s, Russia’s Ministry of Defense, REUTERS, Russian, Reuters, Energy, German, Ukrainian Interior Ministry, CNN, Getty, Kyiv, Frankivsk, Ukrainian Air Force Locations: Kyiv, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Ukraine’s Dnipro, Western, Moscow, Russia, Russian, Dnipro, Lviv, Volyn, Rivne, Vinnytsia, Kharkiv, Lutsk, Ukraine’s Volyn, AFP, Ivano
A timeline of eventsThe Chinese bulk carrier Yi Peng 3 is anchored near Denmark amid an investigation. Ritzau Scanpix/Mikkel Berg Pedersen via ReutersOn November 15, Yi Peng 3 departed from Russia's Ust-Luga port on the Baltic Sea carrying Russian fertilizer. The Ust-Luga port is the largest universal port on the Baltic Sea and the Kremlin's second-largest port after Novorossiysk on the Black Sea. Since Sweden and Finland joined the alliance, the Baltic Sea has been referred to as "NATO lake" because it is almost entirely populated by alliance members. Two days later, investigators established that the Chinese vessel dropped its anchor around 9 p.m. local time, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
Persons: Yi Peng, Ritzau Scanpix, Mikkel Berg Pedersen Organizations: Reuters, NATO, Street, Investigators, Danish Locations: Denmark, Russia's Ust, Novorossiysk, Sweden, Finland, Baltic, Lithuania, Germany, Kattegat
Mikkel Berg Pedersen | Ritzau Scanpix | Afp via Getty ImagesGeopolitical tensions are brewing globally over the cutting of subsea cables — critical infrastructure powering cross-border internet connectivity — in the Baltic Sea. Zoom In Icon Arrows pointing outwards A data visualization map showing the C-Lion1 undersea cable which connected Finland and Germany. Arelion, the company which owns it, told CNBC data traffic was rerouted to alternative links as it worked to repair the cable. Repairing subsea cables is no mean feat, according to Andy Champagne, senior vice president and chief technology officer of Akamai Labs. And, when there is an issue with a subsea cable, repairing it is a non-trivial job."
Persons: Mikkel Berg Pedersen, Ritzau Scanpix, it's, Andy Champagne, Martin Lee, Lee, Elina Valtonen, CNBC's, Valtonen Organizations: Afp, Getty, CNBC, Cinia, BCS, West, Telia, Akamai Labs, Cisco Locations: Baltic, Finland, Sweden, Ukraine, Russia, Germany, Finnish, Central Europe, Lithuania, West Interlink, Telia Lithuania, China, London
It's been a truism that Ukraine has needed the capability to strike the Russian rear for many years at this point." Related storiesA pattern of late aidThe US and other allies have been repeatedly criticized for slowness and hesitancy in giving Ukraine aid and permissions. One American fighting in Ukraine told BI, "It feels like everything that we've been getting has been either too late or it's just enough to barely hold on." AdvertisementA US Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) firing a missile into the East Sea during a South Korea-US joint missile drill. Savill said of Biden's missile decision that "the impact may be more political, albeit with a narrowing window of opportunity."
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump, George Barros, It's, Lockheed Martin, Matthew Savill, Michael Bohnert, ISW, we've, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, There's, Barros, Putin, Bohnert, counterattacking, Savill, Ukraine Biden, Trump Organizations: MGM, Tactical Missile Systems, Lockheed, Storm, UK Ministry of Defence, Royal United Services Institute, Russian Defense Ministry Press Service, AP, Biden, Politico, Reuters, RAND Corporation, NATO, Army Tactical Missile, Korean Defense Ministry, Getty, Ukraine, Trump Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Russian, Kursk —, Ukrainian, Kursk, Russia's Kursk, South Korea
Anthony Wallace | Afp | Getty ImagesThe shipping industry is contending with a worldwide shortage of seafarers, and it's fueling a troubling mix of fake resumes, accidents at sea, and elevated freight rates. "We have been seeing a consistent shortage of seafarers," Rhett Harris, senior manning analyst at Drewry, told CNBC. The Philippines, China, Russia, Ukraine and Indonesia are the largest suppliers of the world's seafarers, according to the most recent seafarer workforce breakdown report by the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) and BIMCO in 2021. Before Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Russian and Ukrainian seafarers made up almost 15% of the global shipping workforce, ICS data showed. "Policymakers need to create national strategies to address the seafarer shortage," the shipping organization said.
Persons: Anthony Wallace, Rhett Harris, Harris, Daejin Lee, Henrik Jensen, Danica Crewing, FertiStream's Lee, Drewry's Harris, Jensen, Caitlin Ochs Organizations: Afp, Getty, Drewry, CNBC, International Chamber of Shipping, ICS, Group, , CVs Locations: Busan, Russian, Ukraine, Russia, Philippines, China, Indonesia, Iran, Red, New York
AdvertisementA Russian deserter who was an officer at a top-secret nuclear weapons facility spoke to the BBC. A Russian deserter who once served as an officer at a top-secret nuclear weapons facility in Russia said that everybody at the base was regularly subjected to lie-detector tests. The deserter, identified only as Anton for his protection, revealed little-known details about guarding Russian nuclear weapons to BBC News. "There are constant checks and lie-detector tests for everyone," Anton said, offering rare insight into the pervasive paranoia and surveillance on a Russian nuclear base. AdvertisementSince the 2022 invasion, Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly threatened to use nuclear weapons against Ukraine and the West.
Persons: Anton, Vladimir Putin, Putin, he'd Organizations: BBC, BBC News, of American Locations: Russian, Russia, Ukraine
Ukraine's European allies, hampered by low military production capacity, have been struggling to produce the weapons needed for Kyiv to fight against Russia. Ukraine already has a strong weapons manufacturing industry. An Institute for the Study of War report said Ukraine's defense industry employed 300,000 workers within about 500 different companies in 2023. AdvertisementHe added that supporting Ukraine's defense industry lets the West help ensure Ukraine is self-sufficient. Meanwhile, the US has accused China of providing dual-use goods for Russia's military industry to overcome sanctions.
Persons: Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Vladimir Putin, Eric Ciaramella, Zelenskyy, Sinead Baker Organizations: Russia, Wall Street, Denmark, Carnegie Endowment's, Eurasia Program, Reuters, Storm Shadow, North Locations: Danish, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Lithuania, Ukraine, Kyiv, Russian, Moscow, Carnegie Endowment's Russia, Russia, North Korea, China
AdvertisementRussia is considering deploying missiles in Asia if the US stations more systems there, a top official said. The remark hints at a potential for Russia to enter the fray in a region fraught with US-China tensions. Sergei Ryabkov, one of Russia's deputy foreign ministers, said on Monday that Moscow is considering deploying its short- to medium-range missiles in the Asia-Pacific. He had been asked by a reporter if Russia might station its missiles in Asian countries, according to the agency. Meanwhile, the US Army would respond by deploying long-range units from its Multi-Domain Task Force to the Philippines, per Kyodo News.
Persons: Sergei Ryabkov, Ryabkov, Trump Organizations: TASS, Kyodo, US, Kyodo News, Marine Littoral Regiment, High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, Marine, Regiment, US Army, Domain, Force, Associated Press, Xinhua, Nuclear Forces, Soviet Locations: Russia, Asia, China, Moscow, Washington, Beijing, Tokyo, Taiwan, Philippines, Japan's, Okinawa, Manila, Soviet Union
A senior Russian commander who was responsible for troops fighting in eastern Ukraine has been removed from his position, according to reports from several Kremlin-aligned news outlets. Anashkin’s appointment as commander of the army's Southern Group had never been officially announced by the ministry. The Russian news outlet RBC reported that Anashkin was dismissed as part of a “planned rotation,” citing anonymous sources within the Defense Ministry on Saturday. However, Rybar, a popular Telegram channel close to the ministry, reported that Anashkin was “removed from his post for false reports in the Seversk direction,” using the Russian version of the region's name. Russian forces fire a Howitzer toward Ukrainian positions during a mission in the Kursk region Sept. 9.
Persons: Gen, Gennady Anashkin's, Vladimir Putin, Anashkin, , ” Rybar, , Oleksandr Syrskyi, Sergey Bobylev, Biden Organizations: Russian Defense Ministry, army's Southern Group, RBC, Defense Ministry, Russian, NBC News, U.S . Treasury Department, Kremlin, Sputnik, AP Putin, Kyiv Locations: Russian, Ukraine, Siversk, Ukraine's, Donetsk, Rostec, United States, Russia, Russia's Kursk, Kursk, Moscow, U.S, American
North Korea is providing crucial support to Russia in Ukraine, and is getting favors in return. China is increasingly concerned about the alliance between Kim Jong Un's North Korea and Vladimir Putin's Russia, according to Kurt Campbell, the US deputy secretary of state. AdvertisementMeanwhile, Russia is providing North Korea with economic and diplomatic support. "But the Chinese are waiting for an opportunity where North Korea, Russia, and China can come stronger together, and I think North Korea sending the troops to Russia is a testimony to that." The growing alliance between North Korea and Russia, he said, is a step toward that.
Persons: Kurt Campbell, Kim Jong, Vladimir Putin's, Putin, Campbell, Donald Trump, Ali Wyne, Jagannath Panda Organizations: Center for Strategic, International Studies, Guardian, Russia, Crisis, North, Stockholm Center, South, Pacific Affairs Locations: China, East Asia, North Korea, Russia, Ukraine, Vladimir Putin's Russia, Kursk, DPRK, Pyongyang, Moscow, Beijing, North, South Korea, Korea
CNN —Ding Liren slumped over the board with fallen chess pieces scattered in front of him in the moments after he won the Chess World Championship last year. The Chess World Championship is an extraordinary, singular event. Zhang Shuo/China News Service/VCG/Getty Images“You lose weight during a chess tournament of this intensity. Several questions are running through a chess player’s head when an opponent makes a move, says Pein, rattling them off. Qualifying is so difficult that one appearance at a world championship might be all that a chess player can hope for.
Persons: CNN — Ding Liren, Ian Nepomniachtchi, , Bobby Fischer, ” Viswanathan “ Vishy ” Anand, China’s Ding, India’s Gukesh, Ding Liren, Russia's Ian Nepomniachtchi, Zhang Shuo, ” Malcolm Pein, Magnus Carlsen –, Ding, , Gukesh, Garry Kasparov, Anatoly Karpov, Karpov, Kasparov, Danny Rensch, it’s, Rensch, Vishy, Dipayan Bose, What’s, Carlsen, Nepomniachtchi, They’re, ” Rensch, ” Pein Organizations: CNN, Olympus, CNN Sport, China News Service, English, Daily Telegraph, YouTube Locations: Singapore
AdvertisementUkraine said on Monday that it found Western-made parts inside North Korean ballistic missiles. Ukraine's military intelligence agency said that it found Western-made parts inside North Korea's KN-23 and KN-24 short-range ballistic missiles. Kyiv said that it had previously found Western technology in the North Korean missiles. The Monday statement marks Ukraine's latest announcement on the finding of Western-made parts inside weapons used by Russia in this war. NATO said the introduction of North Korean troops into the war marked a "significant escalation" in the grinding conflict.
Persons: HUR, Organizations: North, XP, Anadolu, Getty, North Korean, Korean, NATO Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Kyiv, Europe, Russian, North Korea, China, Japan, Switzerland, British, North Korean, DPRK, Iran, Pyongyang, Moscow, Russia's, Kursk
Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty ImagesCustomers shop for milk and dairy items inside an Auchan Retail International hypermarket in Moscow, Russia. Russia's leadership has looked to dodge criticism for the price rises, blaming "unfriendly" countries (that is, Ukraine's allies) for the conflict, sanctions and supply shortages. "Smart people ... understand what is happening with the economy, but most people accuse foreign 'unfriendly' countries [of being to blame for the price rises]. Last year, a shortage of eggs — and price rises of more than 40% — prompted the government to remove import duties on the product. Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with First Deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov in Moscow, Russia November 20, 2024.
Persons: Anton Barbashin, Riddle, Ukraine's, Vladimir Putin, Putin, Stanislav, Denis Manturov, Vyacheslav Prokofyev Organizations: Getty, Bloomberg, CNBC, Ukraine, International Monetary Fund, TASS, Reuters Locations: St . Petersburg, Moscow, Russia, Russian, Europe, Ukraine, Belarus, Azerbaijan, Turkey
But it needs to invest more in quantity if it wants to defend against Russia, warfare experts said. Russia's invasion of Ukraine is showing the West the value of quantity over quality. AdvertisementAnd in the aftermath of the Cold War, Western stockpiles of weaponry diminished and industry shrunk, leaving it less prepared to build large quantities of munitions and equipment. Advertisement"Assuming that you don't decisively defeat the Russians in the opening phase of the war," Barros said, "you're going to burn through all your ATACMS and HIMARS missiles and artillery ammunition." In an image taken from a video distributed by the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service in October, a Russian 120mm mortar crew fires toward a Ukrainian position.
Persons: Zelenskyy, Mick Ryan, George Barros, Abrams, Michael O'Hanlon, Barros, ANATOLII STEPANOV, that's, isn't, O'Hanlon, William Alberque, Alberque Organizations: Australian Army, Institute for, NATO, American, Brookings Institution, Getty, Stimson Center, Russian Defense Ministry Press Service, AP Locations: Ukraine, Western, Russia, China, West, Soviet, Ukraine Russia, Russian, Ukrainian, North Korea, Iran
AdvertisementRussia could hand China technology that would cut into US undersea dominance, a US admiral said. At a security forum, he said exchanges among Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China have intensified. Adm. Samuel Paparo, the US Navy's top commander in the Indo-Pacific, said that Russia will likely give submarine technology to China that would undercut the US' undersea dominance. According to Paparo, Russia is not only exchanging military capability and technology with China but also with North Korea and Iran. In return, according to Paparo, Russia would likely provide missile and submarine technology to the North Korean state.
Persons: Adm, Samuel Paparo, Paparo, Kurt Campbell, Kim Jong Un, Vladimir Putin Organizations: Halifax Security Forum, US Navy, North Locations: Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, Halifax, People's Republic of China, Taiwan, South China, Philippines, Japan, South Korea, Paparo, Korea, Ukraine, Korean, Russian, Pyongyang, Moscow
Meet the Press – November 24, 2024
  + stars: | 2024-11-24 | by ( ) www.nbcnews.com   time to read: +57 min
[END TAPE]KRISTEN WELKER:According to the Washington Post, President-elect Trump plans to fire the team that worked with the special counsel. So, I think President Trump is picking reformers for these Cabinet positions. After the midterms Joe Biden said that there was no way President Trump would ever be back in the White House. He's going to sign some executive actions, but he's also going to then begin to roll out this plan. I also think he's going to face some skepticism by Republicans on using the military, for instance, going kind of into different states.
Persons: KRISTEN WELKER, MATT GAETZ, Donald Trump’s, Matt Gaetz, SEN, KEVIN CRAMER, RON JOHNSON, PETER WELCH, Will Mr, Donald Trump, STEPHEN MILLER, Vladimir Putin, Adam Schiff of, Eric Schmitt of Missouri, Kelly O’Donnell, Jeh Johnson, Anna Palmer, Stephen Hayes, it’s, Kristen Welker, reconsidering, DONALD TRUMP, Gaetz, MARKWAYNE MULLIN, Trump, Pam Bondi, Bondi, Eric Trump, they're, Jack Smith, Pete Hegseth, Tulsi Gabbard, Bashar Assad, Nikki Haley, NIKKI HALEY, DNI, TOM HOMAN, Trump's, Russell Vought, Russ, who's, That's Russ, Schmitt, Press . SEN, ERIC SCHMITT, he's, Pam, should've, You've, everybody's, it's, Joe Biden, Merrick Garland, Kristen, Alvin Bragg, General Merrick Garland, I've, Jane Doe, Hegseth, didn't, there's, It's, She's, maybe's, Tulsi, I'm, We've, There's, He's, they've, Adam Schiff, Adam Schiff of California, Schiff, ADAM SCHIFF, Bashar al, Assad, Marco Rubio, Rubio, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Gabbard, That's, , Adam, Shifty, Donald Trump's, , Harris's, Kamala Harris didn't, Joe Biden's, Biden's, Pelosi, Biden, Nancy Mace, Mace, Sarah McBride, McBride, Johnson, Kelly O'Donnell, KELLY O’DONNELL, Anna, we're, ANNA PALMER, JEH JOHNSON, we've, Lindsey Graham, I'd, Steve, STEPHEN HAYES, We're, Eric Schmitt, you've, Kelly, Scott Bessent, Newt Gingrich, Gingrich, NEWT GINGRICH, KELLY O'DONNELL, Let's, it's Trump, Obama, Tom Homan, Rand Paul, let's, Bob Gates, Leon Panetta, McConnell, They're, he'll, Mitch McConnell, Mitch McConnell's, Stephen, John Thune, Thune Organizations: Republicans, Biden Administration, Democratic, Adam Schiff of California, NBC, White, Homeland, Punchbowl News, The, Press, Justice Department, Pentagon, Republican Senators, BONDI, The Department of Justice, Washington Post, Trump, OMB, Press ., NBC News, Gaetz, DOJ, Patriot, White House, Department, Senators, Armed Services Committee, DNI, Democrat, intel, United States Senate, it's, Services, Judiciary, NATO, Capitol, Intelligence, Democratic Party, Homeland Security, Senate Republicans, Senate, Sears, Roebuck, FBI, Department of Defense, New, New York Cities, Biden, DOD, Republican Conference, Defense Locations: Ukraine, Washington, Florida, PRES, Pennsylvania, United States of America, New York, Atlanta, China, Russian, Hawaii, American, Europe, U.S, Russia, United States, America, Tulsi, , Guantanamo
AdvertisementRussian President Vladimir Putin signed a law on debt forgiveness for certain recruits on Saturday. It allows for up to $96,000 in debt forgiveness for those who sign a minimum one-year contract to fight in Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a law allowing debt forgiveness for certain troops who sign up to fight in Ukraine. The new law, which also extends to the spouses of recruits, comes amid mounting Russian combat losses in Ukraine. The latest legislation follows President Joe Biden's decision to allow Ukraine to strike Russia with US-provided long-range missiles.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Putin, Carl Bildt, Russia's, Bildt, Tony Radakin, Mark Rutte, Joe Biden's, Biden scrambles, Donald Trump's Organizations: Saturday, Duma, European Council, Foreign Relations Council, Defence Staff, NATO, Ukraine's Ministry of Defense, General Staff, Ukrainian Armed Forces Locations: Ukraine, Sweden, Russia, Moscow
Russian President Vladimir Putin this week indicated he's willing to take part in negotiations. "Given its own track record in Ukraine, Russia has a history of taking 'a crunch at a time,'" Paul Cormarie, a policy analyst at the RAND Corporation, told BI. AdvertisementPutin has said that as a condition of any peace deal, Ukraine must agree to remain neutral. If Trump takes Ukrainian NATO membership off the table, a different type of security deal could still be negotiated, said Cormarie. A truce containing a watered-down security deal for Ukraine would likely only mean a pause in the war while Russia regathers its strength.
Persons: Trump, Donald Trump's, Vladimir Putin, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Paul Cormarie, Putin, JD Vance, Trump's, Vance, Timothy Ash, Margus, Cormarie Organizations: Trump, RAND Corporation, Ukraine NATO, Ukraine, NATO, Kyiv Independent, London's, Ukrainian NATO, Financial Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Crimea, Russian, Kyiv, Western, Moscow
But a new US Army contract for a TNT production facility in Kentucky will change that. The US intends to start making TNT at home again. The US Army plans to build a domestic production facility for the explosive compound, which the Pentagon has long been forced to obtain from overseas. Restarting domestic TNT production is an investment in the country's industrial base, she said. The new TNT production facility is expected to help strengthen the US military's preparation for large-scale conflict.
Persons: It's, John T, Kevin Sterling Payne, Bradley Martin, Oleg Petrasiuk, Cynthia Cook, Cook, Reim Organizations: TNT, US Army, Pentagon, Factory, Army, USA, Defense, Armaments and, US, Russia, 24th Mechanised Brigade, AP, Industrial, Group, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Operation Locations: Kentucky, Russia, China, Ukraine, Army's, Germany, Navy, Kyiv, South Korea, Poland
Microsoft President Brad Smith has urged Donald Trump to protect the US from Russian, Chinese, and Iranian cyber attacks. He said that Joe Biden's administration had made "tremendous progress" on the issue, but added that more steps were needed to dissuade and deter countries from "unleashing these cyber attacks." Smith's appeals come as the US faces an ongoing wave of cyber attacks that have targeted government agencies, election campaigns, and businesses. and in some cases even facilitated" such attacks, Smith told the FT. The review found that a Microsoft security breach by a Chinese-affiliated hacking group in 2023 was "preventable and should never have occurred."
Persons: Donald Trump, Cybersecurity, Smith, Brad Smith, Trump, Joe Biden's, Christopher Wray, cyberattacks, Satya Nadella Organizations: Microsoft, Financial Times, Cyber Safety Locations: Russia, China, Iran
AdvertisementRussia has sent North Korea 1 million barrels of oil since March, according to satellite imagery analysis. An analysis of satellite images shows Russia defying sanctions to supply North Korea with at least one million barrels of oil this year, according to a new report. In the imagery, vessels would set out from North Korea riding high in the water, but on their return would appear fully laden, the group said. In this image marked up by the Open Source Centre, the Yu Son was deemed to be carrying oil to North Korea. The new findings also give further insight into the continued material exchanges between Russia and North Korea.
Persons: Yu Son, Yu, David Lammy, Ursula Hyzy, Vostochny, Kim Jong Un, Vladimir Putin, Kim, hasn't, Joseph Byrne, Kim it's, Joseph S, Bermudez Jr Organizations: North, BBC, Canadian Armed Forces, UN, UN Security, Getty, Reuters, Carnegie Endowment, Center for Strategic, International Studies Locations: Russia, North Korea, Korea, Ukraine, Vostochny, AFP
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