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U.S. President Joe Biden addresses the 78th Session of the U.N. General Assembly in New York City, U.S., September 19, 2023. But given the geopolitical backdrop for Biden's speech, there will be little time for victory laps. Since Biden's last UNGA address in September 2023, ongoing wars in Ukraine and Sudan have persisted, while long-simmering tensions in the Middle East have erupted into deadly conflicts. Still, the Biden administration regularly emphasizes its commitment to a ceasefire and hostage deal. "This is one of the advantages of the UN General Assembly: You literally have the whole world here," said the administration official, who was granted anonymity to preview the president's agenda.
Persons: Joe Biden, it's, Biden, they'll Organizations: General Assembly, United Nations General Assembly, UN, Assembly, Republicans Locations: New York City, U.S, East, Ukraine, Sudan, New York, China, Gaza, Russia, Nations
But Moscow doesn't appear ready to acknowledge that it's not in a financial position to cut Europe off from its natural gas exports completely. Russia's oil and gas revenues hit 8.82 trillion rubles, or $94.6 billion, in 2023. That's 24% lower than the 11.6 trillion rubles it recorded in 2022, when revenues jumped due to oil price volatility. In 2021, Russia's oil and gas sales revenue stood at 9 trillion rubles. To be sure, other geopolitical factors could also be playing into Russia's decision to keep natural gas exports moving into Europe.
Persons: , it's, Sergey Lavrov, Lavrov, It's, There's, Naftogaz Organizations: Service, Sky News Arabia, Russian, Business, West, P, Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, Bloomberg Locations: Moscow, Russia, Europe, United States, Ukraine, Nord, Ukraine's
Read previewA Ukrainian battalion shared nighttime footage of one of its "dragon drones" breathing fire on a Russian position in Ukraine, setting a line of trees ablaze. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Nighttime footage of a Ukrainian dragon drone covering a Russian-held treeline with molten thermite, setting multiple Russian positions ablaze. However, news reports suggest Russia may also have produced its own version of the "dragon drone," DW reported. AdvertisementJames Patton Rogers, a drone expert and executive director of the Cornell Brooks Tech Policy Institute, told Business Insider this month that the tactic can force a retreat.
Persons: , it's, James Patton Rogers, Patton Rogers Organizations: Service, 205th, Territorial Defense Forces, Business, 241st, 92nd Assault Brigade, Russian, Deutsche Welle, Cornell Brooks Tech Policy Institute Locations: Ukraine, Ukrainian, Russian, Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine's, Donetsk, Kursk, Russia
Read previewIn just a matter of months, Ukraine may no longer need pilots for its drone force, a special drone unit commander said recently. One Ukrainian company's AI drones have already been used on the battlefield to carry out autonomous strikes on Russian forces. Both sides in this conflict are using unmanned systems en masse and developing new countermeasures. MAHMUD HAMS/AFP via Getty ImagesDiscussions around AI in drones and other weapons systems have been ongoing in recent years. The AI race in militaries has also led to international disputes about whether to impose regulations on how to develop and use AI weapons.
Persons: , Robert Brovdi, Brovdi, MAHMUD HAMS, Kathleen Kicks Organizations: Service, Business, MikeMareen, Getty, Pentagon Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Ukrainian, Israel, AFP
Ukraine struck a Russian missile storage facility in Russia's Tver region last week. Analysts said it destroyed enough ammo to impact Russian attacks for two to three months. The Institute for the Study of War said more strikes would cause operational pressures for Russia. AdvertisementUkraine's strike on a Russian missile storage facility in Russia's western Tver region destroyed enough ammunition to impact Russian attacks for months, military analysts said. The Institute for the Study of War made the assessment in an update on Sunday, based on Estonian estimates.
Persons: , Ants Kiviselg Organizations: Analysts, Service, Estonian Defense Forces Intelligence Center, Business Locations: Ukraine, Russian, Russia's Tver, Russia, Russia's, Tver, Toropets
Read previewNew satellite images show extensive damage at an ammunition depot inside Russia after long-range Ukrainian drones struck the facility. AdvertisementThe aftermath of a Ukrainian attack on a Russian ammunition depot in Toropets. Just days after the Toropets attack, over the weekend, Ukraine said it struck two more ammunition depots inside Russia. AdvertisementThe attacks over the past week mark Ukraine's latest long-range strikes targeting key military and energy facilities inside Russia. Britain's defense ministry said Russia's air defenses "continue to struggle with Ukrainian deep strike operations," even though Moscow claimed to have shot down dozens of Ukrainian drones in the Toropets attack.
Persons: Organizations: Service, Business, Ministry of Defense, Security Service, Ukraine Locations: Russia, Toropets, Russia's, Tver, Ukraine, Russian, Ukrainian, Tikhoretsk, Krasnodar Krai, Kyiv, Moscow, Kursk
Three former chairs of the Maine Republican Party "enthusiastically endorsed" Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris for president over GOP nominee and former President Donald Trump in an opinion piece published by Bangor Daily News on Monday. "We see these same positive characteristics are on full display in Vice President Harris and her candidacy. A spokesperson for the Trump campaign did not immediately reply to a request for comment on the op-ed. Additionally, the former chairs took a jab at the broader Republican party in their letter, claiming that much of the leadership of the party "has joined the cult of Trump." Both Cole and O'Meara chaired the Maine Republican Party in the 1990s.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Robert A.G, Monks, Ken Cole, Ted O'Meara, Harris, Cole, O'Meara, Trump, Trump's, Susan Collins, Obama, Dick Cheney, George W, Bush Organizations: Cobb Energy Center, Maine Republican Party, Democratic, GOP, Bangor Daily, Republican, U.S ., Republican Party, Trump's MAGA Republican, Maine Republicans Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Maine, Ukraine, Philadelphia, United States, Russian
Ukraine has carried out a string of attacks on Russian ammunition depots over the past week. Newly released satellite images taken before and after the attacks reveal extensive damage at three sites. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementNewly published satellite imagery shows extensive damage at three large ammunition depots inside Russia in the aftermath of multiple Ukrainian attacks over the past week.
Persons: Organizations: Service, Business Locations: Ukraine, Russia
The US is likely to send Ukraine AGM-154 glide munitions, Politico reported. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementThe US will likely send Ukraine an unspecified number of AGM-154 glide munitions as part of a new $375 million aid package, Politico reported, citing two US officials and a person familiar with the matter. While the contents of the package are still subject to change, the people said, it will likely also include air defense missiles, rockets, and artillery weaponry.
Persons: Organizations: Ukraine, Politico, Service, Business Locations: Ukraine
Ukraine's intelligence chief predicted that ground drones in battle will increase "in the order of tens" this year. Kyrylo Budanov said much of Ukraine's impetus for these drones is to avoid sending troops to die. Some of Ukraine's experimental ground drones, which it calls "iron soldiers," can be fit with guns or explosives. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! AdvertisementUkrainian intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov expects the war to enter a new phase — one that will see far more land-based drones replacing soldiers on the front lines.
Persons: Kyrylo Budanov, , Budanov Organizations: Service, Yalta European Locations: Yalta, Kyiv
Read previewWestern restrictions on how Ukraine can hit targets in Russia make its F-16 fighter jets less effective, military experts told Business Insider. This, in turn, leaves Russia's weaponry more free to hit Ukrainian jets, making them more vulnerable and less able to fly close to the front lines. A still from footage by Ukraine's air force that shows a Storm Shadow missile being launched. A limited number of F-16sThe effectiveness of Ukraine's F-16s faces other challenges, too. Ukraine and its allies, as well as warfare experts, also describe Ukraine's F-16 program as being in its infancy.
Persons: , George Barros, Barros, DIMITAR DILKOFF, Michael Bohnert, Gordon B, Skip, Davis, Jr, Volodymyr Zelenskyi, Vitalii, it's, Czarek, Michael Clarke, Volodymyr Zelensky, Keir Giles, Oleksiy, Zelenskyy, Ukraine's Organizations: Service, Business, Getty, RAND Corporation, Shadow, YouTube, Ukrainian Air Force, AP, Chatham House's, Air, Libkos, Ukraine US Locations: Ukraine, Russia, AFP, Kursk, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Netherlands, Poland, Chatham House's Russia, Eurasia, Russian, Ukrainian, Shepetivka, Britain
Related storiesFranchetti referenced that assessment again in her speech, saying that it's "what Chairman Xi told his forces, that they should be ready for war by 2027." Fears of a US-China war have further been stoked by Beijing turning more hostile in its territorial disputes with Japan and US allies in the South China Sea. "By 2027, the Navy will be more ready for sustained combat," she said. The admiral aims to have 80% of US naval forces ready to deploy and fight anytime. "We have learned a great deal about the future of war at sea," Franchetti said.
Persons: , Lisa Franchetti, Franchetti, Xi Jinping, Xi, Joe Biden, It's, Yemen's Houthi, we've Organizations: Service, US Navy, Business, Naval War College, Democratic Progressive Party, Navy, Star, Pacific Fleet, Russia, Associated Press, 6th, Joint Chiefs, Staff Locations: China, Beijing, Taiwan, Rhode Island, People's Republic of China, Japan, South China, Russia, Iran, Republic of China, Washington, Ukraine
Ukraine hit a Russian arsenal this week with long-range attack drones. The extent of the damage is unclear, but analysts say similar attacks could put Russia in a bind. A campaign against ammunition depots in Russia could force it to disperse logistics. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy .
Persons: Organizations: Service, Analysts, Ukraine, Business Locations: Ukraine, Russian, Russia
Read previewUkrainian forces used long-range drones to strike a key Russian ammunition depot overnight, destroying missiles, bombs, and artillery. The warehouse was "literally wiped off the face of the earth," the source said, according to a translation of their remarks. AdvertisementAn image of the Toropets facility on September 7. The facility after the Ukrainian attack on Wednesday. A former Ukrainian military officer who goes by the social media handle Tatarigami called the Toropets attack "a very significant achievement."
Persons: , Russia's, Volodymyr Zelenskyy Organizations: Service, Security Service, Ukraine, Business, Arsenal GRAU, GRAU Arsenal, Defense Forces, Maxar Technologies, Technologies Locations: Toropets, Russia's, Tver, Moscow, Ukraine, Belarus, Tver Oblast, Russia, Ukrainian, Kyiv
Read previewA top US Air Force general said that Ukraine is not using its F-16s for the most dangerous missions because the pilots flying them are still new to the fighter jet. Given the vulnerabilities of more offensive missions, it was thought that Kyiv would use the fighter jets in an air-defense role. Before Ukraine received its long-sought-after F-16s from NATO, one of the big questions surrounding the much-hyped transfer of the fighter aircraft was how Kyiv would actually go on to use them in combat. AdvertisementThe Ukrainian F-16s flew their first combat mission in late August as they helped defend the country against a massive Russian aerial bombardment. It's still unclear what caused the crash, but Ukraine dismissed the commander of its air force and said it would investigate the incident.
Persons: , James Hecker, haven't, they're, " Hecker, that's, Ogirenko, Oleksandr Syrskyi, It's Organizations: Service, US Air Force, Business, US Air Forces, NATO Allied Air Command, Tuesday's Air & Space Forces Association's Air, Air & Space Forces Magazine, Ukraine, NATO, REUTERS, Former US Locations: Ukraine, Russian, Europe, Ukrainian, Kyiv
Read previewA Ukraine war analyst told Business Insider that while watching this conflict, Russia has continually surprised him with how poorly trained its soldiers are. AdvertisementCaptured Russian soldiers, war experts, Ukrainian troops, and Western intelligence have all pointed to Russian troops being poorly trained and treated as disposable throughout the war. Related storiesRussia's losses have risen recently as Russian troops continue to suffer from deficiencies in training. The UK Ministry of Defence said in July that more than 70,000 Russian troops were likely killed or wounded between May and June. It blamed "an effective Ukrainian defense and a lack of Russian training" as Russia fought in multiple sectors.
Persons: , George Barros, it's, Barros, Vladimir Putin, Matthew Savill Organizations: Service, Business, Russia, Russian Army, Russian Defense Ministry Press Service, AP, UK Ministry of Defence, Royal United Services Institute Locations: Russia, Russian, US, Ukraine, Soviet, Soviet Union, Cuba, Kursk
On Monday, Putin ordered the army to increase its troops by 180,000, per a decree published by the Kremlin. This will raise the overall number of Russian military personnel to 2.38 million people, with 1.5 million of them being active soldiers. AdvertisementThe gear coming off the production line "will still be substantial," Reynolds told BI in an interview on Wednesday. Russia has "adapted much better than predicted to some of the pressures it's been put under," Reynolds told BI. Other experts BI spoke to said that while Putin might still be able to grow Russia's army, it may only add more strain to the already-stretched Russian labor force.
Persons: , Vladimir Putin, Putin, Nick Reynolds, Reynolds, That's, It's, it's, Artem Kochev, Kochev, Benjamin Hilgenstock, Jeremy Morris Organizations: Service, Kremlin, Business, International Institute for Strategic Studies, Royal United Services Institute, Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, Kommersant, Kyiv School of Economics Institute, Bloomberg, Russian Armed Forces, Aarhus University Locations: Russia, China, India, Ukraine, Moscow
Read previewThe Ukrainian army is extending the period of training for its new recruits after months of reports have shown that their soldiers are ill-trained for combat and risk dying out too quickly. The current training period for new recruits is three months, which includes one month of basic military training and two months of vocational training, according to Ukrainian news outlet Ukrainska Pravda. The news of the extended training period comes after months of reports have shown that Ukraine's soldiers do not have the adequate training required to be on the front lines. And according to a June Washington Post report, Ukrainian commanders often had to dedicate time to training recruits basic skills like how to shoot. Ukrainian soldiers, according to the Kyiv Independent, are worried that the army will run out of trained people to continue fighting.
Persons: , Oleksandr Syrskyi, Schmidt, Chasiv Yar, didn't Organizations: Service, Facebook, Business, General Staff of, Armed Forces, Ukraine's Facebook, Ukrainska, Associated Press, AP, 47th Brigade, Washington Post, 93rd Mechanized Brigade, Post, Kyiv Independent, Kyiv, Mechanized Brigade Locations: Ukrainian, Chasiv
Read previewSatellite images newly released by the British defense ministry show several destroyed bridges in Russia after Ukrainian strikes. The satellite images, which were captured last month but only released on Saturday, show the aftermath of Ukrainian strikes on one road bridge and two pontoon bridges in Kursk. AdvertisementRussia can use its floating pontoon bridges, which are temporary, to ferry personnel and military equipment across the Seym. These bridges came into play as Ukrainian strikes knocked out some of the more permanent structures. Related storiesUkraine has also used ground-launched weapons like the US-provided High Mobility Rocket Artillery System, or HIMARS, to strike bridges in Kursk.
Persons: , ike, remlin, ince Organizations: Service, Business, Ministry of, Ministry of Defense, " Aviation, Air Force Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Kursk, Moscow
Read previewThe deaths of two seasoned Russian drone operators in Ukraine have stirred a frenzy among pro-Kremlin military bloggers, who say the specialists were sent to fight as regular infantrymen. As for Gritsai, Russian military bloggers who claimed to personally know him reported that he was a career officer. AdvertisementRussian backlash and an official responseThe footage sparked an outcry over the weekend among Russian military bloggers, many of whom independently reported that the two men had been killed in battle. Part of the backlash stems from assessments by on-the-ground pundits that Lysakovsky and Gritsai had been two of the best drone operators at the frontline. Nothing," Lysakovsky wrote in a message dated September 10.
Persons: , Dmitry, Goodwin, Lysakovsky, Sergei, Ernest, Gritsai —, Gritsai, Igor Puzyk, Puzyk, WarTranslated, Dmitri, Alexander Kots, Viktor Goremykin, Valery Gerasimov, Svyatoslav Golikov Organizations: Service, Kremlin, Business, Russian Telegram, 87th Rifle Regiment, Donetsk People's, Kommersant, Russian Defense Ministry Locations: Russian, Ukraine, Pokrovsk, Donetsk, Estonian, Donetsk People's Republic, Moscow
Read previewIn the wake of the Ukraine war, Russia has formed a close alliance with China, the world's second-biggest economy, and boosted trade ties with other major economies, such as India. AdvertisementFor decades, North Korea has been among the poorest and most isolated Asian countries, with the UN imposing severe sanctions to curtail its nuclear weapons program. However, the Ukraine war enabled North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to improve his situation, forming a valuable security pact with Russian President Vladimir Putin's Russia in June. AdvertisementIn return, Kim has secured new security pledges from Putin, alongside access to valuable Russian military technology. Ukraine is currently battling to hold back intensifying Russian attacks in Donetsk, east Ukraine, but has seized control of a swath of Russian territory in Kursk.
Persons: , GUR, Kyrylo Budanov, Budanov, Kim Jong, Vladimir Putin's, Kim, Putin Organizations: Service, Business, Kyiv, Reuters, North, US Defense Intelligence Agency Locations: Ukraine, Russia, China, India, North Korea, Vladimir Putin's Russia, Korea, Iran, Donetsk, Kursk
Iran recently transferred Fath-360 close-range ballistic missiles to Russia, weapons that can blast fortified positions or cities near the frontlines and which could strain Ukraine's air defenses. An Israeli soldier examines part of an Iranian ballistic missile fired at Israel during Iran's direct attack in April. Russia already acquired KN-23 ballistic missiles from North Korea. Consequently, while these close-range ballistic missiles could contribute to some Russian tactical victories, they are certainly no game-changers. Advertisement"It seems dubious that several hundred of these munitions could have a significant impact on the war," Orr said.
Persons: , Fath, Nicholas Heras, Matthew Orr, RANE, OREN ZIV, RANE's Orr, Orr, Heras Organizations: Service, Business, New Lines Institute, Associated Press, Israel, Getty, Ukraine, Ukrainian Locations: Iran, Tehran, Fath, Russia, Ukraine, Israel, Israeli, Eurasia, Iranian, North Korea, Ukrainian, Russian
Geolocated video shows that Russian units have retaken a couple of villages, but the situation remains fluid. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has acknowledged the start of Russia’s counteoffensive and says it intends to deploy 60,000 – 70,000 troops in the Kursk region. An armed Ukrainian soldier stands on the street on September 10, 2024 in Sudzha, Kursk Region, Russia. There are also signs that Ukrainian units may be developing a new assault route into a different part of Kursk, near the town of Veseloe. War-displaced people spend time in a centre for displaced people in undisclosed location in Kursk region on August 29, 2024, following Ukraine's cross-border offensive into Russia's western Kursk region.
Persons: Volodymyr Zelensky, counteoffensive, , Major, Pat Ryder, Oleg Palchyk, Wagner, , Robert Rose, Zelensky, Vladimir Putin, CNN’s Fareed Zakaria, ” Zelensky, Tatyana Makeyeva, Fareed Zakaria, Russia’s, Keir Starmer, Joe Biden, , Biden, Rose, Matthew Schmidt, Schmidt Organizations: CNN, Ukraine, Defense, 51st Airborne Regiment, for, Russian, Getty, Modern, Institute, Washington DC, Biden Administration, NATO, Modern War Institute, University of New Haven, National Security, Locations: Kursk, Russia, Kursk “, Russian, Korenevo, Ukrainian, Sudzha, Kursk Region, Ukraine, Snahost, Veseloe, West, Donetsk, Pokrovsk, Kyiv, , Washington, AFP, ” Kursk, Iraq
President Vladimir Putin has warned Russia would be “at war” with the United States and its allies if they lift restrictions on Ukraine's use of long-range Western weapons. “We are not talking about allowing or not allowing the Ukrainian regime to strike Russia with these weapons,” Putin said Thursday in comments to propagandist Pavel Zarubin. Stefan Rousseau / WPA Pool via Getty Images"This will mean that NATO countries, the U.S. and European countries are at war with Russia," Putin said. Putin added that the Ukrainian army does not have the ability to program long-range missiles or the satellite data necessary for their targeting, relying on NATO military personnel for those tasks. It’s been pleading for that policy to change so it can strike military assets deeper inside Russia that are used to launch attacks on Ukrainian cities.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, , Kyiv —, Sir Keir Starmer, Joe Biden, ” Putin, Pavel Zarubin, ” Starmer, David Lammy, Stefan Rousseau, Putin, Vyacheslav Volodin, ” Volodin, , Dmitry Peskov, ” Peskov, Oleg Palchyk, It’s, Antony Blinken, Biden, Starmer Organizations: NATO, Kyiv, British, U.S, Duma, Kremlin, West, Getty, U.S ., Congressional Ukraine Caucus, America, NBC News Locations: Russia, United States, Washington, Ukraine, , U.S, Ukrainian, Kursk, Ukraine's, Pokrovsk, Sudzha, Kyiv, Israel, “ Russia, Moscow
Read previewRussia is sending troops with no combat experience to reinforce attacks in northern Ukraine, a Ukrainian military spokesperson said. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Ukraine and Russia have spent much of the summer fighting for control of Vovchansk, a city in the Kharkiv region about three miles from the border. Speaking on Thursday, Sarantsev said that the newer Russian troops reinforcing Vovchansk are very inexperienced. "It is our understanding that this newly arrived personnel is a mobilization resource raised by Russia," he said, per Ukrainska Pravda.
Persons: , Vitaliy, Ukrainska, Sarantsev Organizations: Service, Kharkiv Operational Strategic Group of Forces, Business, Vovchansk, Ukrainska Pravda Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Ukrainian, Kharkiv, Russian, Belgorod, Vovchansk, Kursk
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