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Tag: ukraine

  • Massive Ukrainian effort underway to clear millions of landmines spread across country

    Massive Ukrainian effort underway to clear millions of landmines spread across country

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    No matter how Russia’s war in Ukraine ends, Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov will be battling Vladimir Putin’s madness for years. Kuznetzov is a Ukrainian surgeon and a national hero who stayed beside his patients as they were attacked. Now, heroism is a virtue that must endure. His city was liberated, but Dr. Kuznetzov sees victims every week or so — civilians who step on one of the millions of Russian landmines across about a third of Ukraine. There’s a massive effort to clear the mines but that will take a generation or more. Until then, there will be Dr. Kuznetzov with healing hands and eyes that have seen too much.

    Half his life he’s devoted to Central Hospital and here in its basement, with Putin’s bombs overhead, all he’d become in 52 years was laid down in service to his home. 

    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov (translation): We didn’t imagine, until the end, that Russia would attack our country. When you’re sitting in a basement at night and a plane is flying over you, it was impossible to predict whether you would wake up to see another day.

    In 2022, the basement became Dr. Kuznetzov’s operating room. That’s him dressed in white. The wounded were endless—a close friend’s wife he could not save and this man, who was shot, and lived. 

    Scott Pelley: Did you save more patients than you lost?

    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov (translation): We saved significantly more people, definitely.

    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov
    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov

    60 Minutes


    Scott Pelley: Many of your colleagues evacuated and you did not. I wonder why you stayed. 

    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov (translation): When you have patients and you’re the only doctor or the only person who can treat them, I didn’t understand how you could leave.

    He could not leave Izium. His city of 40,000 was occupied for six months. The Russians laid landmines here as they ran from Ukraine’s counterattack. Putin’s unprovoked war on an innocent people destroyed 80% of Izium and killed 1,000, leaving apartment buildings cleaved in two and this school, built in 1882, a hollow corpse.  

    The people of Izium clothe themselves in liberation and yet, they are not entirely free. 

    Demining teams are still fighting Russia here. Izium, 20 miles from the front, is one of the worst areas for mines and unexploded ordnance. Throughout Ukraine, more than 1,000 civilians have been wounded by mines. Lidia Borova, a 70-year-old widow, was picking mushrooms in a forest. 

    Lidia Borova (translation): I turned by the tree and then there was an explosion. I looked [down] at myself and I was bleeding, my arm was injured, my leg was injured. I was losing strength.

    Her right foot and ankle were ripped away.

    Lidia Borova
    Lidia Borova

    60 Minutes


    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov (translation): First of all, the most difficult thing, is to persuade a patient that their leg needs to be amputated. It’s very difficult to explain to them that the leg is no good, no good to use 

    He told us a prosthetic is ultimately easier to live with.  

    Lidia Borova (translation): Dr. Kuznetzov saved me. I didn’t realize how much blood I lost. I don’t know how I managed to survive.

    Ihor Bogoraz was with his wife in their garden. They found 12 mines. But there were 13. 

    Ihor Bogoraz (translation): I decided to mow the weeds. And one [mine] was under my foot. I stepped on it and it exploded instantly. And that’s it – no leg. 

    Serhii Nikolaiv was walking in leaves from the autumn while uncovering grapevines for the spring. 

    Serhii Nikolaiv (translation): If it had been green, I would have noticed it. But it was brown – I didn’t see it. It blended in with the leaves. I stepped on it. And I knew right away.

    Prosthetic after landmine injury in Ukraine
    Scott Pelley with Serhii Nikolaiv

    60 Minutes


    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov (translation): The majority are those who stepped on “Petal” [mines] or anti-personnel mines – the person who invented them was an evil genius because they only weigh [two ounces] but what they can do when triggered is terrifying.

    Petal mines, 5 inches long, flutter from aircraft by the thousands, like flower petals. Eleven pounds of pressure will set them off. 

    Vasyl Solyanik found them on his roof and in his garden. 

    Vasyl Solyanik (translation): There’s 18 here,  but in all, there were over 50. 

    He showed us his video. That’s a petal mine right there. They are so common that we were told the story of a 70-year-old woman who gathered them in a basket and took them to a police station. 

    Vasyl Solyanik (translation): There’s some left in the bushes over here, so don’t walk around there.

    He dialed 101 and emergency services sent deminers Ivan Shepelev and Ihor Ovcharuk.

    Ihor Ovcharuk (translation): We encounter every type of munition – anti-infantry and anti-tank mines, mortars, artillery shells, [rockets]. It’s all here.

    At Solyanik’s home, a sweep revealed an unexploded cluster bomb. Those are tricky. So they blew it in place.

    Ivan Shepelev and Ihor Ovcharuk
    Ivan Shepelev and Ihor Ovcharuk

    60 Minutes


    Ivan Shepelev told us, as the Russians fled, they also left boobytraps. 

    Ivan Shepelev (translation): We have seen cases, unfortunately, where explosives were found in civilian homes. 

    Ihor Ovcharuk (translation): My [team] also had to work on removing our dead Ukrainian soldiers whose bodies had been mined. 

    In 2022, Ihor Ovcharuk’s kneecap was shattered when a fellow deminer stepped on a mine and lost his foot.  

    Ivan Shepelev (translation): We know every explosive we remove means that someone’s life is saved. 

    A few weeks after our visit, a Russian missile wrecked the fire station where they’re based. Some were injured but not Shepelev or Ovcharuk.

    Scott Pelley: What is the scope of the mine threat in Ukraine?

    Pete Smith: I think the scope is unrecognizable in modern times.

    Pete Smith heads demining here for the HALO Trust, a charity founded in 1988 to demine warzones. Smith was 33 years in the British army and awarded by Queen Elizabeth for disarming an IRA timebomb in a train station. Today, he says, Ukraine is the most heavily mined country.

    Pete Smith: In some areas, the minefields are three or four mines deep, in areas, maybe a dozen mines deep. But that’s just the first line of defense. Then, several kilometers behind that, there are other layers of– of minefields, as well.

    Smith took us to a farm sown with Russian anti-tank mines. You have to step carefully. Right there, in the center, is a mine packed with 17 pounds of high explosive. With three weeks of training behind her, Yulia Yaroshchuk was probing for any tripwire that would detonate a mine near her. She threaded the grass… feeling for the slightest resistance. Only the day before, a HALO deminer was killed and two were wounded in another part of Ukraine. 

    Deminer Yulia Yaroshchuk in Ukraine
    Deminer Yulia Yaroshchuk

    60 Minutes


    Scott Pelley: Doing this by hand with that wand, it seems to me that you have an awfully big field to cover. 

    Yulia Yaroshchuk (translation): Well, of course. It will be a very long process.  As far as I know, it will take many, many years. Each day [of war] means years of de-mining.   

    Scott Pelley: Why do you do this work?

    Yulia Yaroshchuk (translation): I didn’t have to do it. I wanted to do it. this is my contribution to victory. 

    Scott Pelley: Will Ukraine ever be without mines?

    Pete Smith: I think what I have seen in my time in Ukraine is the innovation, the patriotism, and just the sheer will of the people, that I’m confident that they will be able to remove the last mine from Ukraine.

    Scott Pelley: Does this war make any sense to you?

    Serhii Nikolaiv (translation): Not to a single person here, or anywhere. What kind of mind? What kind of moron or idiot do you have to be to even wish something like this on your enemies? You can’t. Even now, someone could drop a fork or a spoon and it makes a loud noise. And in your soul, you feel pain, and bitterness, and fear. It’s a real horror. [my sister-in-law] was ripped apart by a mine in front of her children. In front of their eyes. 

    Of all of Vladimir Putin’s war crimes in Ukraine, one was the bombing of Izium’s Central Hospital. 

    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov (translation): After this part of the hospital was damaged, a lot of medical services simply became unavailable. Here we had both intensive care and three operating rooms.  

    When Yuriy Kuznetzov was 14 years old, his grandmother died in his arms. He told us that’s why he became a doctor. And we suspect that’s why he stayed through the bombardment and occupation and the battle of the mines. 

    Scott Pelley: When a town loses its hospital, it doesn’t just lose the medical care – it loses hope. 

    Dr. Yuriy Kuznetzov (translation): The best praise for me was when a woman told me in April of 2022 that “when we heard the hospital was still open, we realized that our town had hope, it could withstand, survive, and [have a] future.”

    The future of Ukraine will demand devotion and heroic patience. On this day, Yulia Yaroshchuk slowly teased out one Russian mine, with millions more receding from its edge. 

    Produced by Maria Gavrilovic. Associate producer, Alex Ortiz. Broadcast associate, Michelle Karim. Edited by Sean Kelly.

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  • Russian sentenced to 10 months in gulag for ‘tickling breast’ of war statue

    Russian sentenced to 10 months in gulag for ‘tickling breast’ of war statue

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    A RUSSIAN influencer has been sentenced to prison for “tickling the breast” of a famous war statue.

    Alena Agafonova, 23, will be sent to Vladimir Putin’s infamous gulag jail where she will be forced to do 10 months of hard labour.

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    Alena Agafonova, 23, weeping after being convicted of the ‘Rehabilitation of Nazism’ by a Russian court todayCredit: East2West
    She has also been banned from social media for two years and will lose ten per cent of her future earnings

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    She has also been banned from social media for two years and will lose ten per cent of her future earningsCredit: East2West
    She filmed herself pretending to 'tickle' the breast of a Russian war statue

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    She filmed herself pretending to ‘tickle’ the breast of a Russian war statue
    A Russian law enforcement officer taking her up to the court

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    A Russian law enforcement officer taking her up to the courtCredit: East2West

    She has been convicted of the “Rehabilitation of Nazism” by a Russian court for a social media video she filmed last year at the famous war statue of The Motherland Calls.

    The memorial, a 279ft statue of a woman brandishing a sword, commemorates the “Heroes of the Battle of Stalingrad” – one of World War 2’s most epic battles.

    In the video, which is now officially banned in Russia, Alena appears to “tickle” the figure’s right breast.

    She has also been banned from social media for two years – and will now have to pay 10 per cent of her future earnings as a fine to the state.

    Previous footage showed Alena handcuffed as a law enforcement officer read out her indictment.

    He said: “I am informing you that the investigative department for the Central District of Volgograd has a criminal case against you for the desecration of a symbol of military glory of Russia, an insult to the memory of defenders of the fatherland, committed with the use of the internet…”

    The influencer appeared to cry in court hearings as she promised to not make the same mistake again.

    She said: “I address all residents of Russia and Volgograd and ask everyone not to commit the acts I did last year because of my stupidity.

    “I didn’t even think that I could insult someone’s feelings. I ask all Russian citizens for forgiveness.”

    Separately, she offered “deep apologies” for her stunt.

    Russian rapper Vacio who wore just a SOCK to Moscow elite’s ‘naked party’ is ‘conscripted to fight in Ukraine’

    Alena was put on Russia’s wanted list after the incident – and was accused of  “desecration of a burial site” and “cynical actions that disregard the norms of morality”.

    She went into hiding in Sri Lanka to avoid an action by Putin’s brutal force.

    However, she was detained as soon as she entered Russia – and was immediately transported to Volgograd for further action.

    The Motherland Calls statue is among the most famous in Russia and commemorates those who fought and died in one of the bloodiest battles in the Second World War, resulting in a decisive Soviet victory against Adolf Hitler.

    The USSR suffered more than one million casualties during the Battle of Stalingrad, which lasted from August 1942 until February 1943.

    Alena’s punishment shows the new morality in Russia under Putin amid the war with Ukraine.

    The dictator has been cracking down any behaviour deemed as debauched despite being no stranger to going topless himself.

    While the despot is known for stripping down and showing off his impressive but steroid-infused physique, he has earned himself a “prudish” reputation for imposing an unprecedented new drive on traditional values.

    His new morality hounds anyone who defies “traditional values”, imposing tough sentences on them.

    Russian rapper Maxim Tesli was recently charged with “petty hooliganism” after he appeared in a concert wearing nothing but a sock over his manhood back in January.

    Another influencer also faced a potential six-year jail sentence in Russia for using Instagram after the app was banned by Putin.

    Elsewhere, a pair of female Russian influencers were forced into abject apologies and will face hefty fines over a kiss they posted on social media.

    She has been sentenced to 10 months hard labour in Putin's infamous gulag

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    She has been sentenced to 10 months hard labour in Putin’s infamous gulagCredit: East2West
    The influencer was detained in Moscow and was forced to apologise to the Russians

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    The influencer was detained in Moscow and was forced to apologise to the RussiansCredit: East2West
    Alena is a popular influencer and blogger in Russia

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    Alena is a popular influencer and blogger in RussiaCredit: East2West
    She will now be forced to do hard labour in gulag for 10 months

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    She will now be forced to do hard labour in gulag for 10 monthsCredit: East2West

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    Sayan Bose

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  • How blue-check users blamed Israel, Ukraine for bridge crash

    How blue-check users blamed Israel, Ukraine for bridge crash

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    At 1:29 a.m. March 26, the Dali, a large container ship, struck the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, causing its collapse. 

    Within hours — as many Americans slept — misinformers on X and other platforms posted wild theories, unsubstantiated claims and speculation about who was to blame for the catastrophe.

    Without evidence, misinformers coalesced around the idea that the bridge collapsed because of a coordinated attack. PolitiFact repeatedly saw social media users falsely assign blame to two nations: Israel and Ukraine. 

    “If you’re pro-Russia and anti-Ukraine, then it was a Ukrainian attack,” said Mike Rothschild, a journalist and conspiracy theory expert who has written books about conspiracy theories.

    As of April 1, there have been no credible reports or evidence that the ship’s collision with the bridge was linked to terrorism or an attack.

    Nevertheless, the invented narratives proliferated — often customized to suit individual posters’ preexisting beliefs and brands, researchers said.

    Sara Aniano, a disinformation analyst at the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism, said these claims often came from people who make it their literal business to spread conspiracy theories. 

    “A content creator who does makeup tutorials is not much different than the content creator who is selling conspiracy theories,” Aniano said. “These theories and these events are the equivalent of their products.”

    We found that X subscribers paying for blue check marks that guarantee greater reach from the platform’s algorithm were responsible for nearly all of the most popular posts linking Israel or Ukraine to the bridge collapse. 

    X promotes subscribers’ posts even if they contain unverified or false information. The platform also shares ad revenue with “blue check” subscribers, letting them earn profit when people interact with their posts. 

    On X, rampant unverified and false claims persisted, even as verified information emerged

    Misinformation experts said bridge collapse conspiracy theories were widespread and also successfully reached a larger, more mainstream audience on X.

    PolitiFact used advanced searches on X to analyze more than 100 posts and create a timeline of the anti-Ukraine and anti-Israel narratives that emerged immediately following the incident. Misinformation experts also shared some examples with us.

    Here’s our timeline of the day’s events and examples of anti-Ukraine and anti-Israel claims:

    1:29 a.m. The Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed.

    3:02 a.m. The earliest posts mentioning Ukraine or Israel did not immediately assign blame, but brought both countries into the bridge collapse discussion.

    “Collapse of a Bridge in Baltimore after being hit by a ship. US infrastructures emblematic of a declining/collapsing empire,” one paid X subscriber posted. “Money spent in endless wars, to finance Nazis in Ukraine and baby killers in Gaza rather than taking care of US citizens.”

    3:22 a.m. A paid X user with 185,000 followers and a Russian flag emoji in its name asked, “Did Israel just hit the US over not using the Veto power yesterday?”

    The U.S. on March 25 abstained from voting on a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. Three times prior, the U.S. vetoed similar resolutions.

    (Screenshots from X.)

    4:07 a.m. A paid X subscriber with 24,000 followers posted, “Israel cancels its visit to Washington after the US allows the UN Gaza cease-fire resolution to pass and then the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore is attacked? This is not a coincidence, nor was it an accident!” 

    7:21 a.m. Andrew Tate, a conservative internet personality who is facing rape, human trafficking and gang activity charges in Romania, said to his 9 million followers on X that the ship “was cyber-attacked,” before claiming that “foreign agents of the USA attack digital infrastructure.” We rated his claim False.

    9:11 a.m. Alex Jones, a conservative radio host with 2.2 million X followers who is known for spreading conspiracy theories, reshared Tate’s post, adding that the incident “looked deliberate.”

    (Screenshots from X.)

    9:17 a.m. A paid X user whose account description includes “tweeting for Palestine,” replied to Jones’s reply to Tate, expressing doubt that the ship’s collision with the bridge was a coincidence. 

    9:53 a.m. Federal and Maryland state officials said during a press conference that no credible information suggested a terrorist attack caused the collapse.

    9:57 a.m. “Our supposed ‘friends’ from Ukraine are enjoying the news of 20 Americans missing after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore,” one blue check X subscriber posted. “They are claiming it’s punishment for not sending them more billions of our tax dollars.” 

    9:59 a.m. An anti-Gov. Katie Hobbs, D-Ariz., blue check subscriber X account with nearly 56,000 followers said “it’s not plausible” that the bridge collapse was accidental “during an election season and in the middle of two theaters or combat in Ukraine and Israel.”

    10 a.m. An X subscriber falsely claimed the container ship’s captain was Ukrainian. 

    “Here is information circulating regarding the container ship that hit the Francis Scott Key Bridge and its alleged drivers,” read the post. “One is reportedly from Ukraine. The information does not account for any remote operating. Developing.”

    Posts shared at 10:11 a.m. and 10:24 a.m. used nearly identical language. 

    (Screenshots from X.)

    The vessel was crewed by 22 Indian nationals, according to the ship’s management company.

    10:24 a.m. A blue check X subscriber whose account features hallmarks of the discredited QAnon conspiracy theory movement posted that something seemed “very off” about the collapse because of a “vessel operator” with “ties to Ukraine.” 

    11:31 a.m. “The captain of the ship that hit the bridge in Baltimore is Ukrainian,” wrote one blue check subscriber with 362,500 followers.

    12:46 p.m. President Joe Biden said the incident was “a terrible accident,” adding that there was no indication it was caused by “any intentional act.” 

    1:10 p.m. An X subscriber account whose name includes Nigerian and Russian flags posted that the Dali’s captain was, “a citizen of Ukraine.” 

    We found three more posts echoing the false Ukrainian captain theory before 3 p.m.

    (Screenshot from X.)

    2:51 p.m. DC Draino, a blue check X subscriber who frequently shares misinformation to approximately 1.4 million followers, amplified claims that the collapse was an attack and questioned who was to blame: “Iran for our support of Israel? Russia for Biden’s support of Ukraine? China … just because?” 

    3:54 p.m. The news website Voice of Europe, which has 182,500 followers on X, posted that the captain “may be a citizen of Ukraine.” 

    Less than 12 hours later, on March 27, the Czech Foreign Ministry announced that it had sanctioned the leader of Voice of Europe for using the site to spread anti-Ukrainian disinformation. As of April 1, Voice of Europe’s website had been taken down. The site’s X account — which has a gold X verification badge signaling that it is “an official organization on X” — temporarily stopped posting.

    (Screenshot from X.)

    6:45 p.m. “The Baltimore bridge terror attack stems from the United States didn’t veto a U.N. Resolution on the Gaza ceasefire,” wrote a blue check subscriber whose bio includes a Russian flag before the words “defeat NATO.” “And the U.S. didn’t send Ukraine the $60 billion.”

    False claims linked to pro-Russia and paid “MAGA” and QAnon accounts

    Some posts sharing anti-Ukraine or anti-Israel sentiment came from accounts that declared support for the conservative “MAGA” movement or used language linked to the QAnon conspiracy theory.

    Pro-Russia accounts also promoted these narratives. 

    The 3:22 a.m. X post that questioned whether Israel “hit” the U.S. came from a user NewsGuard analyst Coalter Palmer described as a “notorious purveyor of misinformation related to the Russia Ukraine war.” Coalter pointed to two other X posts in which that user falsely claimed the Bucha massacre was a false flag operation and that Ukraine is a “Nazi state.” 

    Memetica, a digital investigations company that studies disinformation and violent extremism, found that the false Ukrainian ship captain claim was pushed by pro-Russia accounts and QAnon conspiracy theory promoters, said Adi Cohen the company’s chief operating officer. 

    Looking at a sample of X posts from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 26, Cohen said Memetica found that 7% of the accounts sharing that narrative had zero followers, suggesting what researchers call “inauthentic amplification” — accounts created solely to boost the narrative.

    Cohen said that the Ukrainian captain claim was promoted by a known element of the Russian disinformation ecosystem, SouthFront, a website the State Department described in a 2020 report as “a multilingual online disinformation site registered in Russia.” 

    Where were misinformers most successful and why? 

    Most researchers identified Telegram, 4Chan and X as places where this misinformation flourished most, crediting those platforms’ permissive policies about what can be posted and X’s reputation as the go-to platform to discuss breaking news events. 

    It’s hard to definitively say where misinformation was worst, because not every platform shares the same data or is easily searchable, experts said. 

    Conspiratorial content might have been more contained to fringe platforms once, but such theories are now widespread on platforms including X and TikTok, said the ADL’s Aniano. 

    Memetica analysts observed conspiratorial content about the bridge collapse right away on all social media platforms, but especially X, Telegram and TikTok, Cohen said.

    Misinformers can use events like the bridge collapse as “another plot point in their broader narrative that the mainstream media is not to be trusted, that our government is not to be trusted, that experts like us are not to be trusted, and that there is always an active attack against America happening,” Aniano said. 

    In this image taken from video released by the National Transportation and Safety Board, the cargo ship Dali is stuck under part of the structure of the Francis Scott Key Bridge after the ship hit the bridge, March 26, 2024, in Baltimore. (AP)

    Once misinformers seize on an event, experts said, they often assign blame to entities — people, groups, countries — that have also been in recent news headlines.

    “Given that the conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine are ongoing and continued funding to support these various efforts remains a major wedge issue in the United States, it makes sense that they would become fodder for conspiracies and false claims,” said Valerie Wirtschafter, a Brookings Institution fellow in foreign policy and the artificial intelligence and emerging technology initiative. 

    Wirtschafter said she suspects this “will likely continue to be the way that these types of narratives take shape — by leveraging prominent and polarizing political topics in times of uncertainty and incomplete information.”

    PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

    RELATED: Edited Wikipedia entry doesn’t prove Israel caused the Baltimore bridge collapse

    RELATED: No, the captain of the container ship that hit the bridge in Baltimore wasn’t Ukrainian

    RELATED: Baltimore bridge collapse: A cyberattack, a movie and other false claims about the ship accident

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  • Antony Blinken Fast Facts | CNN

    Antony Blinken Fast Facts | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Here is a look at the life of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

    Birth date: April 16, 1962

    Birth place: Yonkers, New York

    Birth name: Antony John Blinken

    Father: Donald Blinken, investment banker and US ambassador to Hungary

    Mother: Judith (Frehm) Pisar, UNESCO Special Envoy for Cultural Diplomacy

    Marriage: Evan Ryan

    Children: Two

    Education: Harvard College, A.B., 1984; Columbia Law School, J.D., 1988

    Religion: Jewish

    His stepfather, Samuel Pisar, was a famed lawyer and Holocaust survivor.

    Attended grade school and high school in Paris.

    Was a writer for The Harvard Crimson. Worked as a reporter at The New Republic and has written about foreign policy for publications such as The New York Times and Foreign Affairs.

    Before his career in government, Blinken practiced law in New York and Paris.

    Former CNN global affairs analyst.

    Blinken is visible in the famous photo of the “Situation Room” during the raid which killed Osama bin Laden in 2011.

    1987 – His thesis, “Ally Versus Ally: America, Europe and the Siberian Pipeline Crisis,” is published.

    1993-1994 – Special assistant to the assistant secretary of state for European and Canadian Affairs at the State Department.

    1994-2001 – Holds multiple roles in the administration of President Bill Clinton, including special assistant to the president, senior director for speech writing and member of the National Security Council staff.

    2001-2002 – Senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a policy research institute in Washington.

    2002-2008 – Democratic staff director for the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    2008 – Works on Sen. Joe Biden’s presidential campaign.

    2009-2013 – National security adviser to Vice President Biden.

    January 2013-2015 – Deputy national security adviser to President Barack Obama.

    January 9, 2015-2017 – Deputy secretary of state.

    2017 – Co-founds WestExec Advisors, a consulting firm that offers geopolitical risk advisement.

    January 26, 2021 – Is sworn in as the 71st secretary of state.

    April 15, 2021Blinken arrives in Kabul, Afghanistan, in an unannounced visit less than 24 hours after the United States and the NATO coalition formally announced they would withdraw their troops from the country after nearly two decades. During remarks to Afghan political leaders, Blinken underscores the United States’ commitment to the people and the country.

    May 25, 2021 – Blinken meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other senior Israeli officials, marking his first official visit to the Middle East. His trip will take him to Israel, the West Bank, Egypt and Jordan. Blinken pledges that the United States will make “significant contributions” to rebuild Gaza and reopen its consulate in Jerusalem following the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas.

    March 23, 2022 – In a statement, Blinken announces the US government has formally declared that members of the Russian armed forces have committed war crimes in Ukraine.

    April 24, 2022 – Blinken and US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin make an unannounced trip to Kyiv and meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

    May 4, 2022 – Blinken tests positive for Covid-19, according to State Department spokesman Ned Price.

    September 8, 2022 – Blinken makes an unannounced visit to Kiev – his second since the war with Russia began more than six months ago – which coincides with the announcement of an additional $625 million tranche of security assistance to support Ukraine, as well as an intended $2.2 billion in long-term investments to bolster the security of Ukraine and 18 other regional countries.

    January 30-31, 2023 – Blinken makes his first visit to Israel since the new Israeli government, which includes ultra-nationalists and ultra-religious parties, took power.

    March 2, 2023 – Blinken meets with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov for the first time since the war in Ukraine began more than a year earlier.

    March 28, 2023 – House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul subpoenas Blinken for a dissent cable written by US diplomats in Kabul criticizing the Biden administration’s plans to withdraw troops in 2021. On March 7, 2024, McCaul announces the House Foreign Affairs Committee has postponed a meeting for the markup to consider holding Blinken in contempt of Congress after Blinken agrees to deliver documents pertaining to the 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan.

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  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 769

    Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 769

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    As the war enters its 769th day, these are the main developments.

    Here is the situation on Wednesday, April 3, 2024.

    Fighting

    • Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said Russian forces had captured 403 sq km (156 sq miles) of territory since the start of the year and last month, secured control over five towns and villages in eastern Ukraine.
    • Ukraine rejected Shoigu’s claims, saying its troops continued to defend Tonenke and Nevelske, which Shoigu mentioned among the settlements taken by Russia.
    • At least 18 people, including five children, were injured after a Russian missile attack damaged a college and a kindergarten in the central Ukrainian city of Dnipro.
    • About a dozen people were injured after Ukrainian drones struck several industrial sites in the Russian region of Tatarstan, about 1,300km (800 miles) from the front lines, including Russia’s third-largest oil refinery and a factory producing Shahed drones.
    • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed a bill lowering the mobilisation age for combat duty from 27 to 25 years old.
    • Russia named Sergei Pinchuk as the new commander of the Black Sea Fleet after a spate of Ukrainian attacks on its military ships.

    Politics and diplomacy

    • Andriy Kostin, Ukraine’s top prosecutor, told the Reuters news agency that there were “hallmarks of genocide” in Russian crimes across Ukraine, including the mass killings of civilians in Bucha outside Kyiv in 2022. Kostin said such crimes should be tried domestically and by the International Criminal Court.
    • A Moscow court sentenced Pyotr Verzilov, a Russian-Canadian activist and independent news site founder, to eight years and four months in prison for social media posts criticising the Ukraine war. Verzilov, 36, rose to prominence as the unofficial spokesperson of the feminist opposition group Pussy Riot and left Russia in 2020.

    Weapons

    • NATO foreign ministers will meet on Wednesday to discuss a proposal for a 100 billion euro ($107bn) five-year fund to provide aid for Kyiv that would give the security alliance a more direct role in coordinating the supply of arms, ammunition and equipment to Ukraine.
    • Germany’s Defence Ministry said Berlin will provide Ukraine with 180,000 rounds of artillery shells through a Czech-led plan to buy ammunition for Ukraine.
    • Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said it had seized 70 kilos (154 pounds) of home-made explosives and explosive devices “hidden in icons and ready for use” following a cargo inspection near the Latvian border. It alleged the explosives had been sent from Ukraine through multiple European Union countries.

     

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  • American sniper in Ukraine says he couldn’t care less about expensive weapons like tanks. ‘Give me artillery’ and ammo, he says.

    American sniper in Ukraine says he couldn’t care less about expensive weapons like tanks. ‘Give me artillery’ and ammo, he says.

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    • Ukraine needs artillery and ammunition rather than tanks, a US veteran there said.

    • He said Ukraine has been rationing supplies and not hitting targets.

    • While vehicles are “important” shortages mean Ukraine needs what can keep soldiers alive now.

    An American veteran fighting in Ukraine said soldiers are desperate for artillery and ammunition. He doesn’t care about getting more expensive equipment like tanks right now because that isn’t what they need most.

    Jonathan Poquette told Business Insider that Ukraine’s ammunition shortages mean its soldiers have had to become much more picky about what targets to hit, even sometimes not engaging groups of advancing Russians that they would have hit earlier in Russia’s invasion.

    And as he watches Ukraine’s allies debate what further aid to give Ukraine, he has a clear plea.

    “With the West, you see so much stuff about, ‘Oh yeah, they’re donating these vehicles, these vehicles, these vehicles.’ And it’s like, bro, I don’t give a fuck about the vehicles to a certain extent.”

    “Give me bullets, give me mortars, give me artillery, give me things that’ll allow the individual soldiers to fight and kill the Russians.”

    Poquette is a sniper with Chosen Company — an international force within the Ukrainian army’s 59th Motorized Brigade officially designated as a recon unit but often used more for front-line assaults and defensive missions — and has been recovering from an injury in Kyiv since the end of January.

    He said that long-running shortages of weaponry and equipment means the weapons that can keep soldiers alive and stop Russia from taking territory are needed more urgently than anything that can help longer-term planning or aid long-distance attacks.

    Ukrainian tank crews T64 battle tank fires on the Russian troops position on January 9, 2024, in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.

    Ukrainian tank crews T64 battle tank fires on the Russian troops position on January 9, 2024, in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.Roman Chop/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images

    He said that while expensive vehicles like tanks “do matter, I think it overshadows the complete picture.”

    What matters right now is “ammunition, grenades, claymores or other types of mines, rockets, various different rocket systems.”

    “What can one tank do?” he asked rhetorically, saying: “Not as much as 50,000 artillery shells, 5,000 mortar shells.”

    Not enough ammunition

    He said that with enough ammunition, when Russia sends waves of men, “we could literally just smash them to pieces.”

    But he said there simply is not enough. He said that when turning over a position to another group, the soldiers taking over from him would ask for his ammunition and grenades.

    “That’s how desperate it was getting, to where literally just before we leave, we’re taking all our magazines and out all the bullets and then putting empty magazines back in our kit and then taking all our grenades and it’s like ‘Here, you guys need it.’”

    Ukraine has received tanks and armored vehicles from allies, but they arrived after long debates over whether to send them. Many war analysts have said the delay meant Russia had more time to prepare for their arrival, making them less effective for Ukraine.

    Artillery and ammunition have had a much more decisive impact on the battlefield.

    Insufficient help from allies

    Ukraine is suffering from critical shortages as House Republicans in the US stall $60 billion worth of further aid to Ukraine. That package includes nearly $14 billion for Ukraine to purchase weapons and munitions.

    And while help from European nations continues, many say they don’t have enough equipment in their arsenals to fix Ukraine’s dearth.

    Germany announced this week that it will give Ukraine 10,000 artillery rounds in the coming days, but that’s a tiny amount of what Ukraine needs: Conflict analysts said last month that Ukraine “needs around 75,000–90,000 artillery shells per month to sustain the war defensively, and more than double that – 200,000–250,000 – for a major offensive.”

    Some wider plans are also underway, including a Czech Republic-led plan to source ammunition from outside of the EU, which sources told The Guardian will start delivering shells to Ukraine before June.

    But the effect of the shortages, Poquette said, is that soldiers are rationing their ammunition.

    Ukraine has to pass on some targets

    He said they stopped firing on small groups of advancing Russian soldiers like they would have earlier in the conflict.

    “It started getting to the point to where if the group was small enough that was assaulting, then the Ukrainians would evaluate it and be like, well, it’s only two or three guys, maybe four, is that really worth an artillery round or a mortar round?”

    Instead, they would consider if infantry could take them on. That strategy puts greater risks on Ukraine’s soldiers.

    He said his unit had to become far more choosy when it came to hitting targets with US-provided HIMARS, a game-changing weapon when it first arrived in Ukraine.

    Ukraine M142 HIMARS BakhmutUkraine M142 HIMARS Bakhmut

    Ukrainian troops fire M142 HIMARS rockets toward Bakhmut in May 2023.Serhii Mykhalchuk/Getty Images

    Ukraine would be in “a much better place” if it weren’t dealing with the shortages, he said.

    He said the US is “somewhat responsible for our lack of ability to hold ground,” though he added that he thinks some poor Ukrainian tactics and actions have at times hampered its progress.

    And the problem is wide: European officials have spent months acknowledging the continent’s insufficient ammunition production. The European Commission earlier this month announced $540 million to fast-track arms manufacturing, including artillery ammunition.

    Can’t plan for the future

    Poquette said the issue with Western aid is that it has come in “tidbits,” with long debates before certain equipment is sent and different levels of support arriving in different packages.

    He asked “how much more would we have been able to achieve?” in the summer 2022 offensive in which Ukraine was successful at taking back swathes of territory before, Poquette said, it was “stalled” due to a lack of equipment.

    He said “it feels like everything that we’ve been getting has been either too late or it’s just enough to barely hold on to where it feels like whenever they donate things, it’s kind of just enough to keep Ukraine standing, but without thought of the long term.”

    That means Ukraine’s soldiers often have to plan for survival, rather than long-term success. That’s where they’re at right now.

    He described Ukraine as trapped in a cycle of not getting enough Western help to plan ahead when it gets new aid: “These rounds are going to be good for two months, but what about five months from now and then five months later goes by and it’s just right back to the same thing. Well, we’re short again on rounds.”

    It is an issue many in the West point to, including the prime minister of Ukrainian partner Lithuania, who told BI last month it was “so sad” to watch the same scenario repeatedly play out.

    She said this includes when Ukraine’s allies say they will not give it an advanced type of weaponry it’s asking for, afraid of provoking Russia, only to do so months later, when many Ukrainians have died and the weapon may not be as relevant anymore.

    Poquette’s concerns about ammunition echo the deep problems Ukraine is facing.

    A bird's-eye view of the destroyed buildings of the city of Avdiivka on October 26, 2023 in Avdiivka, Ukraine.A bird's-eye view of the destroyed buildings of the city of Avdiivka on October 26, 2023 in Avdiivka, Ukraine.

    A bird’s-eye view of the destroyed buildings of the city of Avdiivka in October 2023.Kostya Liberov / Libkos via Getty Images

    Ukraine pulled out of the town of Avdiivka in February, giving Russia its first major victory in months. The White House said it was because Ukraine’s soldiers had to ration ammunition “due to dwindling supplies as a result of congressional inaction.”

    In January, Ukraine’s defense minister said his forces could only fire a third of what Russia could fire every day.

    Ukraine has been increasing its own weapons manufacturing, but Russia has, too. Experts say Russia has huge manpower, materiel, and industrial advantages here with a much larger population and far more resources.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • How to 3D-print a school in a war zone

    How to 3D-print a school in a war zone

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    With its soft gray lines and sleek, curving exterior, Project Hive looks less like a school and more like a wellness retreat or modern art museum.The structure’s distinctive appearance, with a texture resembling a cocoon or the structure’s namesake beehive, is down to the construction method used to build it: 3D printing.Standing less than 200 feet from School No.23 in Lviv, Ukraine, the walls of the 3,983-square-foot educational facility were printed in just 40 hours with a COBOD gantry printer, which follows digital blueprints to lay concrete like piping icing onto a cake.Video above: How 3-D printing expedites the home and community building processIt’s the first 3D-printed education center in Europe and the first building to be 3D-printed in a war zone, according to Jean-Christophe Bonis, founder of Team4UA, the non-profit responsible for the pilot project.”I’m not a builder; I don’t want to be an architect or a developer… But through robotics and AI, through technology, we can accelerate the (building) process,” Bonis told CNN in a video interview.Soon after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, places in eastern Ukrainian like Lviv faced a huge problem: how to cope with tens of thousands of people fleeing to — and through — the city. In the Lviv region alone, there were 173,000 internally displaced people as of December last year, according to the latest figures from the United Nations’ International Organization for Migration.Project Hive will provide the school with four extra classrooms to help it accommodate additional students displaced by the war, said Bonis. He hopes that, if successful, the project will enable “3D printing to be one of the tools of local construction in Ukraine.”Blackouts and bombings3D-printed construction can be significantly faster and, some experts believe, more sustainable than traditional building methods.Team4UA collaborated with Ukrainian studio Balbek Bureau on the school’s design, and architecture firm Ars Longa on the engineering. The single-story project broke ground in September 2022, and the entire project, from foundations to finishings, was originally expected to take just three months.But Russian air strikes and bombing across the country through October and November 2022 hit major civilian infrastructure, including the power grid, causing widespread blackouts in Lviv. With local communities turning to power generators, Project Hive was paused while electricity supply became unstable and conditions made it unsafe for the printer to be delivered.It wasn’t until last summer that the situation stabilized in Lviv and the power supply was fully restored, finally allowing the printer to be delivered. Although it took less than two days, cumulatively, to print the building’s concrete frame, Team4UA spread this across six weeks so it could deliver training and development sessions on site.After revising its opening date to January 2024, the project hit another roadblock: funding. Construction costs in Ukraine have risen sharply in the past year, and to complete the final finishing work, such as roofing, windows, doors and interior design, project organizers say they need to raise another $400,000.”I’m facing challenges on a daily basis,” said Bonis. But he continues undeterred: “(This) is also a way of taking technology to give back hope.”A costly optionAs a relatively new technology, and with limited data on the resulting buildings’ safety and stability, 3D-printed construction has predominately been used for one-off projects or research collaborations.Dutch architecture firm DUS has been experimenting with 3D-printed houses since 2015, and Texas-based construction firm ICON has 3D-printed entire communities in Austin, Texas and Nacajuca, Mexico. In 2020, the Dubai Future Foundation became the world’s first 3D-printed commercial building, and in 2021, the world’s first 3D-printed school was completed in Malawi, with the walls laid in just 18 hours.However, when it comes to large-scale construction, the technology is “still in its infancy,” said Christian Lange, an associate architecture professor at Hong Kong University, where he oversees the Robotic Fabrication Lab.Lange is skeptical about the benefits of using 3D printing to build in regions with ongoing conflict or disruption.While technology has the potential to be cheaper than conventional building methods, the up-front costs of the printers can be extremely high, and their size can make them difficult and costly to move.According to Lange, there are cheaper, faster alternatives to 3D printing, such as prefabricated and modular buildings. Made using parts that are constructed in factories and quickly assembled on site, prefabs were popular in the early 20th century, when they were used to rebuild after World War II and provide cheap housing for displaced people.”Temporary shelter doesn’t need to be permanent shelter,” said Lange in a phone interview. “Where 3D printing is really great is when you have special geometries and shapes, because you’re totally free — the robot or the machine doesn’t care if you build a straight wall or a curved wall.”But in Ukraine, where many technicians, construction workers and industry experts are fighting on the front lines, automation may help counter labor shortages, said Olga Gavura, managing partner at 7CI Group, a contractor on Project Hive.”The fact this technology helps to build with a smaller number of specialists is a significant advantage,” said Gavura, adding that just four experts were required for the construction phase of Project Hive.As Russian airstrikes continue to devastate the nation’s infrastructure — 2024 has already seen multiple attacks targeting cities, including Lviv, killing civilians and destroying homes — Gavura believes that, for the number of structures needing to be rebuilt, 3D printing will become essential.She believes pilots like Project Hive can not only test construction processes but will help train a generation of Ukrainian specialists who “can apply the technology, on their own, in future,” she added.Reconstructing communitiesTeam4UA is not the only organization to see the potential of 3D-printed construction in disaster and conflict zones.Arizona-based construction company Diamond Age is currently in discussion with Ukrainian officials about printing bomb shelters and military infrastructure, said the firm’s CEO Jack Oslan.Diamond Age uses a patented 3D printing system that, it claims, insulates the buildings’ walls. Oslan said his company’s structures are 30% more energy efficient than those made from lumber frames and are strong enough to withstand a Category 5 hurricane or moderate earthquake.”It’s this climate resiliency that gives us the perfect platform to transition into military and humanitarian applications,” he said, adding that automation could help reduce causalities when building in war zones: “There (will) be fewer people in harm’s way, which we think is important.”Damage to Ukrainian infrastructure between Russia’s full-scale invasion and September 2023 — including homes, schools, energy grids and transport networks — will cost an estimated $151.2 billion to replace, according to a study by the Kyiv School of Economics. Researchers found that over 3,500 educational facilities were among the buildings damaged or destroyed, along with over 160,000 homes.Oslan sees huge opportunity for 3D printing to help begin rebuilding the nation. “We would expect that anything we deliver to Ukraine today to build military or humanitarian structures would ultimately transition into the building of homes, for the reconstruction of (the country’s) communities,” he added.’A vision for this country’Back in Lviv, there’s more excitement around Project Hive than one might expect for a primary school building, according to Bonis.”When I’m on the site, I have children coming to me with their parents and telling me in Ukrainian, ‘I will be in this school, I’m so excited, my school is unique in the country’,” he said.In an email to CNN, the head of Lviv City Council’s education department, Andriy Zakaliuk, said the project offered “a unique opportunity” to custom-build an environment for young students.”It is symbolic that they will begin their new stage of life in a new, modern environment,” said Zakaliuk. “Now these children have the opportunity to see that, with the help of a 3D printer, you can build real buildings.”While he awaits yet another revised opening date for the new school building, Bonis is already planning two more ambitious 3D printing projects — a bridge in Kherson, and an eight-story building in the center of Kyiv.Team4UA hopes these pilot schemes can help it increase its speed and efficiency while cutting costs for future projects. Bonis is meanwhile establishing a private company that will purchase two 3D printers to offer “printing as a service” in Ukraine, with profits helping to support Team4UA’s humanitarian aid work.”It’s not only a concept of printing a school — it’s a vision for this country,” said Bonis. “This war will be over sooner or later. At that moment, we need to get back to life, to build back and turn the page.”

    With its soft gray lines and sleek, curving exterior, Project Hive looks less like a school and more like a wellness retreat or modern art museum.

    The structure’s distinctive appearance, with a texture resembling a cocoon or the structure’s namesake beehive, is down to the construction method used to build it: 3D printing.

    Standing less than 200 feet from School No.23 in Lviv, Ukraine, the walls of the 3,983-square-foot educational facility were printed in just 40 hours with a COBOD gantry printer, which follows digital blueprints to lay concrete like piping icing onto a cake.

    Video above: How 3-D printing expedites the home and community building process

    It’s the first 3D-printed education center in Europe and the first building to be 3D-printed in a war zone, according to Jean-Christophe Bonis, founder of Team4UA, the non-profit responsible for the pilot project.

    “I’m not a builder; I don’t want to be an architect or a developer… But through robotics and AI, through technology, we can accelerate the (building) process,” Bonis told CNN in a video interview.

    Team4UA via CNN Newsource

    Project Hive employed a gantry-style COBOD printer to layer a concrete mixture with a nozzle.

    Soon after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, places in eastern Ukrainian like Lviv faced a huge problem: how to cope with tens of thousands of people fleeing to — and through — the city. In the Lviv region alone, there were 173,000 internally displaced people as of December last year, according to the latest figures from the United Nations’ International Organization for Migration.

    Project Hive will provide the school with four extra classrooms to help it accommodate additional students displaced by the war, said Bonis. He hopes that, if successful, the project will enable “3D printing to be one of the tools of local construction in Ukraine.”

    Blackouts and bombings

    3D-printed construction can be significantly faster and, some experts believe, more sustainable than traditional building methods.

    Team4UA collaborated with Ukrainian studio Balbek Bureau on the school’s design, and architecture firm Ars Longa on the engineering. The single-story project broke ground in September 2022, and the entire project, from foundations to finishings, was originally expected to take just three months.

    But Russian air strikes and bombing across the country through October and November 2022 hit major civilian infrastructure, including the power grid, causing widespread blackouts in Lviv. With local communities turning to power generators, Project Hive was paused while electricity supply became unstable and conditions made it unsafe for the printer to be delivered.

    Once completed, the educational facility will leave some concrete walls exposed with others clad in wood, shown in this digital rendering.

    balbek bureau via CNN Newsource

    Once completed, the educational facility will leave some concrete walls exposed with others clad in wood, shown in this digital rendering.

    It wasn’t until last summer that the situation stabilized in Lviv and the power supply was fully restored, finally allowing the printer to be delivered. Although it took less than two days, cumulatively, to print the building’s concrete frame, Team4UA spread this across six weeks so it could deliver training and development sessions on site.

    After revising its opening date to January 2024, the project hit another roadblock: funding. Construction costs in Ukraine have risen sharply in the past year, and to complete the final finishing work, such as roofing, windows, doors and interior design, project organizers say they need to raise another $400,000.

    “I’m facing challenges on a daily basis,” said Bonis. But he continues undeterred: “(This) is also a way of taking technology to give back hope.”

    A costly option

    As a relatively new technology, and with limited data on the resulting buildings’ safety and stability, 3D-printed construction has predominately been used for one-off projects or research collaborations.

    Dutch architecture firm DUS has been experimenting with 3D-printed houses since 2015, and Texas-based construction firm ICON has 3D-printed entire communities in Austin, Texas and Nacajuca, Mexico. In 2020, the Dubai Future Foundation became the world’s first 3D-printed commercial building, and in 2021, the world’s first 3D-printed school was completed in Malawi, with the walls laid in just 18 hours.

    However, when it comes to large-scale construction, the technology is “still in its infancy,” said Christian Lange, an associate architecture professor at Hong Kong University, where he oversees the Robotic Fabrication Lab.

    Lange is skeptical about the benefits of using 3D printing to build in regions with ongoing conflict or disruption.

    The concrete walls were built, layer by layer, in just 40 hours. Construction was spread out over the course of six weeks to allow for training sessions on how to use the equipment.

    Team4UA via CNN Newsource

    The concrete walls were built, layer by layer, in just 40 hours. Construction was spread out over the course of six weeks to allow for training sessions on how to use the equipment.

    While technology has the potential to be cheaper than conventional building methods, the up-front costs of the printers can be extremely high, and their size can make them difficult and costly to move.

    According to Lange, there are cheaper, faster alternatives to 3D printing, such as prefabricated and modular buildings. Made using parts that are constructed in factories and quickly assembled on site, prefabs were popular in the early 20th century, when they were used to rebuild after World War II and provide cheap housing for displaced people.

    “Temporary shelter doesn’t need to be permanent shelter,” said Lange in a phone interview. “Where 3D printing is really great is when you have special geometries and shapes, because you’re totally free — the robot or the machine doesn’t care if you build a straight wall or a curved wall.”

    But in Ukraine, where many technicians, construction workers and industry experts are fighting on the front lines, automation may help counter labor shortages, said Olga Gavura, managing partner at 7CI Group, a contractor on Project Hive.

    “The fact this technology helps to build with a smaller number of specialists is a significant advantage,” said Gavura, adding that just four experts were required for the construction phase of Project Hive.

    As Russian airstrikes continue to devastate the nation’s infrastructure — 2024 has already seen multiple attacks targeting cities, including Lviv, killing civilians and destroying homes — Gavura believes that, for the number of structures needing to be rebuilt, 3D printing will become essential.

    She believes pilots like Project Hive can not only test construction processes but will help train a generation of Ukrainian specialists who “can apply the technology, on their own, in future,” she added.

    Reconstructing communities

    Team4UA is not the only organization to see the potential of 3D-printed construction in disaster and conflict zones.

    Arizona-based construction company Diamond Age is currently in discussion with Ukrainian officials about printing bomb shelters and military infrastructure, said the firm’s CEO Jack Oslan.

    Diamond Age uses a patented 3D printing system that, it claims, insulates the buildings’ walls. Oslan said his company’s structures are 30% more energy efficient than those made from lumber frames and are strong enough to withstand a Category 5 hurricane or moderate earthquake.

    “It’s this climate resiliency that gives us the perfect platform to transition into military and humanitarian applications,” he said, adding that automation could help reduce causalities when building in war zones: “There (will) be fewer people in harm’s way, which we think is important.”

    Damage to Ukrainian infrastructure between Russia’s full-scale invasion and September 2023 — including homes, schools, energy grids and transport networks — will cost an estimated $151.2 billion to replace, according to a study by the Kyiv School of Economics. Researchers found that over 3,500 educational facilities were among the buildings damaged or destroyed, along with over 160,000 homes.

    Oslan sees huge opportunity for 3D printing to help begin rebuilding the nation. “We would expect that anything we deliver to Ukraine today to build military or humanitarian structures would ultimately transition into the building of homes, for the reconstruction of (the country’s) communities,” he added.

    ‘A vision for this country’

    Back in Lviv, there’s more excitement around Project Hive than one might expect for a primary school building, according to Bonis.

    “When I’m on the site, I have children coming to me with their parents and telling me in Ukrainian, ‘I will be in this school, I’m so excited, my school is unique in the country’,” he said.

    In an email to CNN, the head of Lviv City Council’s education department, Andriy Zakaliuk, said the project offered “a unique opportunity” to custom-build an environment for young students.

    “It is symbolic that they will begin their new stage of life in a new, modern environment,” said Zakaliuk. “Now these children have the opportunity to see that, with the help of a 3D printer, you can build real buildings.”

    While he awaits yet another revised opening date for the new school building, Bonis is already planning two more ambitious 3D printing projects — a bridge in Kherson, and an eight-story building in the center of Kyiv.

    Team4UA hopes these pilot schemes can help it increase its speed and efficiency while cutting costs for future projects. Bonis is meanwhile establishing a private company that will purchase two 3D printers to offer “printing as a service” in Ukraine, with profits helping to support Team4UA’s humanitarian aid work.

    “It’s not only a concept of printing a school — it’s a vision for this country,” said Bonis. “This war will be over sooner or later. At that moment, we need to get back to life, to build back and turn the page.”

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  • It’s “Possible” Mike Johnson Will Lose Speakership Over Ukraine: Rep. Don Bacon

    It’s “Possible” Mike Johnson Will Lose Speakership Over Ukraine: Rep. Don Bacon

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    Representative Don Bacon acknowledged Sunday that it is “possible” that Speaker Mike Johnson will lose the top House job over an impending vote on aid to Ukraine. “I’m not going to deny it,” the Nebraska conservative told NBC’s Kristen Welker.

    The comment comes as the House enters the second half of a two-week recess, which came on the heels of a tense fight over a government funding bill that barely averted a shutdown. Johnson entered the break promising to “turn our attention” to Ukraine, an issue that has divided the fractious House GOP caucus and kept the U.S. government from approving an aid package, even as the Senate passed a $95 billion bill in February.

    George Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has long been staunchly opposed to U.S. aid to Ukraine, filed a motion to vacate Johnson’s speakership right as the House went into recess, warning that Johnson “should not bring funding for Ukraine” to the House floor. Greene has yet to say when she plans to move forward with the motion.

    “We have one or two people that are not team players. They’d rather enjoy the limelight, the social media,” Bacon said Sunday, without calling out any of his House GOP colleagues by name. “It’s a very narrow majority, and one or two people can make us a minority.”

    Republicans’ razor-thin House majority means that members who support Ukraine aid have had to work with Democrats, further enraging parts of the far-right GOP flank. Bacon called for a “bicameral, bipartisan solution” to the issue on Sunday. “We put a bill together that focuses on military aid — a $66 billion bill that provides military aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan,” he said, referencing a bipartisan House national security package released in February. “If we do this bill, and I think we will, there’s enough support in the House to get this done. And I want to make sure that we have support in the Senate.”

    How exactly Johnson plans to proceed when the House returns from its recess is still being determined. CNN reported Sunday that the Speaker has been strategizing on the issue with a surprising ally: Florida Representative Matt Gaetz, who helped orchestrate the ouster of Johnson’s predecessor Kevin McCarthy last fall.

    Gaetz is reportedly pushing Johnson to move forward with an aid package that is fully funded by spending decreases elsewhere. “If there were no offsets, we’d be really disappointed,” he told CNN Sunday. “I think we need to not deficit-spend to fund Ukraine. I also think that we need to have our own border prioritized. And I think Speaker Johnson shares that viewpoint.”

    But such a move would immediately alienate House Democrats, whom Johnson may have to rely on to save his job if Greene pushes forward with the motion to vacate. “I do think there will be Democrats, though, who do not want to see this dysfunction,” Bacon said of a potential vote on Johnson’s leadership. “And I think they’ll probably vote present or maybe not be there for a vote.”

    On Sunday, South Carolina Representative Jim Clyburn told NBC’s Welker that “if [House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries] were to call me and say, ‘Look, I would like to have your vote in support of Johnson,’ he’s got it.” Jeffries said in February that if Johnson does “the right thing” on Ukraine, enough Democrats will likely vote to save his speakership if it comes to that point.

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Israeli airstrikes kill 44 people in Syria, war monitor says

    Israeli airstrikes kill 44 people in Syria, war monitor says

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    Israeli airstrikes kill 44 people in Syria, war monitor says – CBS News


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    A U.K. war monitor says Israeli airstrikes killed 44 people near the Syrian city of Aleppo early Friday. Human rights groups have called it the deadliest attack in Syria in years. CBS News national security contributor Sam Vinograd joins with analysis.

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  • 1 year after Evan Gershkovich’s arrest in Russia, Biden vows to “continue working every day” for his release

    1 year after Evan Gershkovich’s arrest in Russia, Biden vows to “continue working every day” for his release

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    Washington — President Biden pledged Friday to “continue working every day” to secure the release of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich from Russian detention, as the American journalist’s time imprisoned in Russia hit the one-year mark.

    “We will continue to denounce and impose costs for Russia’s appalling attempts to use Americans as bargaining chips,” Mr. Biden said in a statement released Friday that also mentioned the case of Paul Whelan, another U.S. citizen who has been held in Russia since 2018.

    Gershkovich — whom the U.S. State Department deemed “wrongfully detained” soon after his arrest — is still awaiting a trial on espionage charges that the White House, his family and his employer all insist are fabricated, but which could still see him sentenced to decades in prison.

    The U.S.-born son of Soviet emigres covered Russia for six years, as the Kremlin made independent, on-the-ground reporting increasingly dangerous and illegal.

    TOPSHOT-RUSSIA-US-JOURNALIST
    Journalist Evan Gershkovich, arrested on espionage charges, stands inside a defendants’ cage before a hearing to consider an appeal on his arrest at the Moscow City Court in Moscow, April 18, 2023.

    NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA/AFP/Getty


    His arrest in March 2023 on charges of spying — the first such charge against a Western journalist since the Soviet era — showed that the Kremlin was prepared to go further than ever before in what President Vladimir Putin has called a “hybrid war” with the West.

    The Journal and the U.S. government dismiss the espionage allegations as a false pretext to keep Gershkovich locked up, likely to use him as a bargaining chip in a future prisoner exchange deal.

    Putin said last month that he would like to see Gershkovich released as part of a prisoner swap, but the Biden administration has said Moscow rejected the most recent exchange offer presented to it.

    The 32-year-old, who has been remanded in custody until at least the end of June, faces up to 20 years in prison if found guilty.

    The Gershkovich family said in a letter published by the Wall Street Journal on Friday that they would pursue their campaign for his release.

    “We never anticipated this situation happening to our son and brother, let alone a full year with no certainty or clear path forward,” they said. “But despite this long battle, we are still standing strong.”

    Gershkovich reported extensively on how ordinary Russians experienced the Ukraine conflict, speaking to the families of dead soldiers and Putin critics. Breaking stories and getting people to talk was becoming increasingly hard, Gershkovich told friends before his arrest.

    But as long as it was not impossible, he saw a reason to be there.


    Zelenskyy on Ukraine’s ability to win war against Russia

    02:15

    “He knew for some stories he was followed around and people he talked to would be pressured not to talk to him,” Guardian correspondent Pjotr Sauer, a close friend, told AFP. “But he was accredited by the foreign ministry. I don’t think any of us could see the Russians going as far as charging him with this fake espionage.”

    Speaking to CBS News’ Leslie Stahl last week, the reporter’s sister Danielle said the family back in the U.S. was still worried, despite Gershkovich’s repeated assurances to them of his accreditation, which he thought would keep him safe, as it always had.

    But as Stahl reported, what used to be unprecedented in Russia has become almost routine under Putin. Gershkovich is only the most recent American to inadvertently become a pawn on Putin’s geopolitical chessboard against the West.

    Whelan, a U.S. Marine veteran, has been jailed in Russia for five years. Russian-American ballerina Ksenia Karelina was arrested in January, accused of treason for helping Ukraine. And basketball star Brittney Griner, imprisoned for nine months on drug charges, was finally freed in an exchange for a notorious arms dealer known as the “Merchant of Death.”

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  • 3/28: CBS Evening News

    3/28: CBS Evening News

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    3/28: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warns Putin’s war could spread to NATO territory

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warns Putin’s war could spread to NATO territory

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    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warns Putin’s war could spread to NATO territory – CBS News


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    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy tells CBS News’ Charlie D’Agata in an exclusive interview that, without more U.S. help “now,” Ukraine won’t be able to stop Vladimir Putin from pushing his war onto NATO soil.

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  • Ukraine qualify for Euro 2024: ‘The world is going to watch and see we never give up’

    Ukraine qualify for Euro 2024: ‘The world is going to watch and see we never give up’

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    More than 40 members of Ukraine’s national-team party were spread around the centre circle of Wroclaw’s Tarczynski Arena.

    Players, coaches and backroom staff locked their gaze on the 30,000 spectators sporting blue and yellow as they revved up their version of the Viking thunderclap. Iceland, the architects of that celebration during the 2016 European Championship, could only listen in despair having lost this Euro 2024 play-off final to a late strike from Chelsea forward Mykhailo Mudryk.

    Strangers embraced. Families posed for photographs draped in Ukraine flags. Others video-called, possibly home to war-torn Ukraine, sharing the moment with others unable to experience first-hand this release of emotion around 600 miles (1,000km) away in south-west Poland.

    Ukraine had done it.


    Ukraine’s players address the crowd (Sergei Gapon/AFP via Getty Images)

    Despite enduring over two years of Russian invasion and indiscriminate bombing with millions of its citizens displaced, a weakened domestic league and home advantage for matches long since diluted, Serhiy Rebrov’s side had come through two tense play-off matches to qualify for this summer’s Euros — a mountain they had failed to climb two years ago when pursuing a World Cup spot, losing to Wales at this final stage.

    As Oleksandr Zinchenko, the captain, led his team around the pitch to celebrate a second comeback victory in five days, the 2-1 win over Iceland following a similar late success by the same scoreline away against Bosnia & Herzegovina, a guttural chant reverberated around the arena.

    Z-S-U! Z-S-U! Z-S-U!

    The acronym stands for ‘Zbronyi Syly Ukrainy’ — the Armed Forces of Ukraine. These Ukrainian supporters — almost all draped in the nation’s blue and yellow flag — were reminding the world of why this victory was not just a footballing triumph.

    This was not so much a lap of honour as a vignette of how conflicting it is to be Ukrainian today; jubilant at a second major finals qualification via play-offs from seven attempts, yet acutely aware of how small sport seems in the shadow of war. United in a foreign city, but separated from loved ones across the border; grateful for international support, yet fearing that their struggle is fading from the public consciousness.

    “I’m all emotioned out — it’s one of the most important, if not the most important, win for Ukraine in its history,” says British-Ukrainian journalist Andrew Todos, founder of Ukrainian football website Zorya Londonsk.

    “It is the context of having to make the tournament to give the country a massive important platform. People are going to see the country and hear about the war carrying on during the build-up and the weeks that they are in the tournament.”


    English-born drummer Andriy Buniak (bottom) of Ukrainian folk band Cov Kozaks with Andrew Todos (third right) and Myron Huzan (right) (Jordan Campbell/The Athletic)

    The Ukraine FA, drawn as the hosts, chose Wroclaw for this play-off final because they knew it would be their best chance of approximating a home advantage. The 1-1 group-phase draw with England here in September attracted a crowd of 39,000 and Wroclaw has been one of the main cities to which Ukrainians have fled over the past two years.

    Since the invasion, more than 17.2million Ukrainians have been recorded crossing their country’s border with Poland, which stretches for more than 530 kilometres.

    In 2018, there were already suggestions that one in every 10 Wroclaw residents was Ukrainian. The city’s university status means family reunions have driven that number up to around a third of the population. It would have been slightly higher again on Tuesday, with the city transformed into a ‘Little Kyiv’.

    go-deeper

    Drummers dressed in traditional attire beat a rhythm for jolly sing-alongs and heartfelt rallies in the market square. Every act of joy from the Ukrainian contingent quickly felt like an expression of defiance.

    The constant was a sense of unity, captured by the charity match played earlier in the day between a team of former players and the ‘potato soldiers’, a nickname coined by organiser Mykola Vasylkov for the amount of food his team have delivered to the front line thanks to fundraising assistance from national-team players.

    “‘No Football Euro without Ukraine’ has been our message — now we’ve done it, ” says Vasylkov, who was part of Andriy Shevchenko’s setup during his five years as Ukraine manager.


    Vasylkov helped then manager Shevchenko in the Ukraine setup (Jordan Campbell/The Athletic)

    The majority of the Ukrainians in attendance at last night’s play-off had lived elsewhere in Europe for some years before the conflict. Unless they receive special dispensation, males between the ages of 18 and 60 are banned from leaving the country.

    Unable to fight for the cause in the conventional sense, this was the day when the diaspora played their part. Goalscorers Viktor Tsygankov and Mudryk, who play for clubs in Spain and England, and an eclectic fanbase combined to put their country on the map at this summer’s tournament in Germany.

    “There were amazing emotions and atmosphere in the dressing room — these days wearing the Ukrainian badge on our chest is something special,” says Zinchenko. “The feelings inside are so hard to describe as, today, every Ukrainian was watching our game.

    “All the video messages we received before the game from Ukrainians, in the country and abroad, from the military who are staying on the front line fighting for our independence and freedom… they were all supporting us. It was extra motivation for us.”


    Zinchenko applauds the fans after Ukraine’s win (Andrzej Iwanczuk/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    It was only last summer that Zinchenko used Arsenal’s pre-season tour in the United States to call for American F-15 fighter jets to be given to Ukrainian forces. He did not want the world to become fatigued and forget his compatriots’ suffering.

    “It (Euro 2024) will be so important,” he says. “We all understand that. All the world is going to watch this competition as it’s one of the biggest in the sport. It’s an unreal opportunity to show how good we are as a team and how good it is to be Ukrainian.

    “Our people are about never giving up and fighting until the end.”

    go-deeper

    Iceland’s population of 375,000 is dwarfed by Ukraine’s estimated 34million and their FIFA ranking of 73rd is well below their opponents’ 24th, so Zinchenko and his team-mates were hardly underdogs last night — but Ukraine’s players still have to cope with the mental toil of having family members enduring life in a war zone.

    When Ukraine missed out on a place at the most recent World Cup in its June 2022 play-offs, winning 3-1 away to Scotland in their semi-final but then being beaten 1-0 in Cardiff by a Gareth Bale shot that took a big deflection, their domestic-based players had only been able to feature in friendlies against club sides for the previous seven months. That was not the case this time, but four of the starting XI and 11 of the 23-man squad are based in Ukraine.

    The domestic league resumed in that summer of 2022 but it has dropped in quality as most of its top foreign players have left, and only in the last month have small crowds been allowed into top-flight games again. They are only able to do so with the provision of air-raid sirens, and with bunkers to shelter in readily available.


    Ukrainian fans celebrate qualification (Andrzej Iwanczuk/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    During that play-off final, footage appeared of Ukrainian soldiers in the trenches watching the match on their phones. That connection to home was strong in Wrocław on Tuesday.

    “I work in the army and brought a flag that Ukrainian soldiers signed,” says Artem Genne, a London-based fan, holding up the message “Keep up the good work for peace and prosperity in Ukraine”, sporting the signatures of different regiments. “We went to visit the team the day before the game and we got a picture of them with the flag to send back to the troops and boost morale.

    “Some family members live near some military facilities and they have been witnessing lots of attacks. Many of my friends live in Kyiv (the capital) and they were sending me footage from their balconies of windows being smashed. It goes on every day and, even though we are not there, it still affects you knowing your friends are in underground shelters.”


    Artem Genne and a friend hold up their flag signed by Ukrainian soldiers (Jordan Campbell/The Athletic)

    Roman Labunski travelled from Berlin in West Germany, over 200 miles, with his wife and two sons to be at the game.

    His eldest son Nathan, 13, has only ever been to Ukraine twice, but was on his father’s shoulders during the 2014 Maidan revolution. He witnessed something en route to the stadium that served as a wake-up call.

    “We saw lorries carrying tanks to the border,” Roman says. “It reminded us that we’re still able to do something safe and fun. I sometimes feel guilty that I am not living it, as my cousins came to stay with us after the invasion but went back after they thought it was safe. Now they are facing rockets again.

    “It is not just football that we wanted to win for, and the team know that. It is no longer that they are up here and the fans are down there. We feel together with them now. The Euros will bring everyone back home some hope and happiness.”


    Aron, Natan and Roman Lanunski travelled to Wroclaw from Berlin (Jordan Campbell/The Athletic)

    Although most at the game had moved away from Ukraine years earlier, there are those who only narrowly avoided life on the front line.

    Serhii was a 16-year-old living in a village 5km from Kyiv when a column of Russian tanks started moving towards the capital.

    “It was the last town not to be occupied. If that had happened, it would have been a big problem for Kyiv,” he says. “Once the war started, I moved west; then to Germany for seven months before going home.

    “Now I have been living in Chelm (just over the border from Ukraine in eastern Poland).”


    Fedir (centre) and Serhii (right) in Wroclaw’s market square (Jordan Campbell/The Athletic)

    His friend Fedir is from Vinnytsia, a city south-west of Kyiv.

    “The Polish people have been very kind and welcoming to us,” Fedir says. “We appreciate this support from them, but it is lower than it was two years ago. This war is making everyone tired. Ukrainians, Polish. People are starting to forget about it. We are not.”

    Vitaliy is part of the select group of fighting age who has permission to cross the border, due to his work in Denmark dating back to 2010.

    “I grew up with the stories of my grandparents not being able to read Ukrainian books, so it was not a surprise to me when war came,” he says.


    Vitaliy (left) with his family outside the stadium (Jordan Campbell/The Athletic)

    “They try to tell us that western Ukraine is not the same as the east — whether it’s language, culture, history.

    “That is why football is so important. Since we got independence, we are more able, as a people, to resist and see things for ourselves. We have our own identity and this summer is our chance to show that to the world.”

    (Top photo: Sergei Gapon/AFP)

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  • Clips of Macron and Zelenskyy dancing are fake

    Clips of Macron and Zelenskyy dancing are fake

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    As the Russian offensive against Ukraine continues, Instagram users reacted to a video showing what looks like the presidents of France and Ukraine having the time of their lives. 

    Part of the clip showed a montage of what looked like French President Emmanuel Macron dancing in different outfits and hairstyles, wearing makeup and wigs. Another portion showed someone resembling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy belly dancing in a red outfit.

    “Presidente de Francia Macron??? Presidente de Ucrania Zelenski???” read the text in the March 19 Instagram video. Translated from Spanish, it says, “President of France Macron??? President of Ukraine Zelensky???”

    (Screenshot from Instagram)

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    Reverse-image search results show these clips are fake. 

    Most clips from the Macron dancing montage appear to have been altered from videos uploaded by YouTube channel StratusDanceClub in a series called “Circa 1986-1987.” We skimmed this series and saw 14 out of 20 clips from the Instagram video — and none of them show Macron. ​

    (Screenshots from Instagram, StratusDanceClub’s YouTube channel)

    According to the YouTube channel’s bio, the Stratus dance club opened in San Diego in 1978 and closed in June 1987. Macron was born in December 1977 and would’ve been 9 years old when the club shuttered.

    The video supposedly showing Zelenskyy belly dancing was also altered. We found a copy of the original video posted on Instagram Feb. 7, 2022, and the person dancing bears no resemblance to Zelenskyy. Fact-checkers found that TikTok user @vusaaal first posted the video in October 2020.

    We rate the claim these videos show Macron and Zelenskyy dancing Pants on Fire!

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  • Inside Biden’s Private Rivalry With Obama, Whose Staff Thought Biden ‘Would Suck As President’

    Inside Biden’s Private Rivalry With Obama, Whose Staff Thought Biden ‘Would Suck As President’

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    Source: ABC News YouTube

    There is reportedly a “rivalry” between Joe Biden and Barack Obama that goes back many years, with the current president frequently comparing himself to the former one.

    Obama And Biden’s ‘Rivalry’

    “Obama would be jealous,” Biden has allegedly said in the past “when speaking about a perceived accomplishment,” according to two Biden aides who spoke with Axios

    Other Biden aides lamented that “Obama and his team did not fully appreciate Biden’s experience with foreign policy, Congress and grip-and-grin politicking — and were disrespectful.”

    “The Obama people thought Biden would suck as president,” said one former Biden aide. “They didn’t think he’d be organized enough to execute.”

    We do have too many Obama people who don’t care about Joe Biden. It’s about them,” another former White House official added.

    “When people say, ‘This is what worked for Obama,’ their first response is often, ‘We’re not Obama,’” claimed one “senior” Democrat, referring to Biden staffers.

    Related: Biden Told Obama He Was Right And Barack Was Wrong After Hillary Lost In 2016 – ‘People Just Don’t Like Her’: Report

    Disagreement Between Obama And Biden

    The disagreements between Obama and Biden reportedly go back over a decade to when the latter was the former’s vice president. In his book “The Internationalists: The Fight to Restore Foreign Policy After Trump,” Politico’s Alexander Ward revealed a private argument between the two men back in 2014 when the Russian forces invaded Crimea and later annexed the peninsula, making it part of Russia in the process.

    “The United States might have done more had Barack Obama’s vice president, Joe Biden, been in charge. Russia should ‘pay in blood and money’ for its actions, Biden told his boss as the 2014 invasion began,” Ward wrote. “Obama disagreed, but he made Biden his effective ambassador to Ukraine during the crisis.”

    White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates denied that Obama and Biden have a contentious relationship.

    “We recognize that the actual level of drama in this White House is insufficient to meet some reporting quotas, but President Biden does not make such comments in private,” Bates told Fox News. “As President Biden has said, President Obama is family to him.” 

    Bates went on to claim that Obama and Biden have a strong “personal bond” and agree “overwhelmingly on the issues facing the country, including building an economy that works from the bottom-up and middle-out, protecting our critical freedoms, and opposing attacks on our democracy.” 

    “There are no stronger supporters of President Biden’s leadership and agenda than President Obama, his team, and alumni of the Obama-Biden Administration – many of whom serve during this presidency,” he continued. “And the President talks to both former President Obama and President Clinton often.” 

    Obama’s spokesperson also denied tensions between himself and Biden, saying that the Obama Alumni Association hosted an event for Biden’s re-election campaign in which attendees chanted “Fired up, ready to go” in support of the president.

    Related: Trump Fires Back After Report Indicates Obama Is Worried Biden Losing Would Be ‘Dangerous For Democracy’

    Previous Reports Of Tensions Between Obama And Biden

    However, reports of Obama and Biden having a contentious relationship go back many years. In his 2017 memoir “Promise Me, Dad,” Biden admitted that Obama “had been subtly weighing in against” him running for president in 2015, and that he believed the former president preferred Hillary Clinton as a candidate over him, according to The Hill.

    In his 2023 book “The Last Politician,” author Franklin Foer wrote that after becoming president, Biden was determined to treat Kamala Harris better than he feels Obama treated him.

    “[Biden] wanted to treat Harris with the respect that he felt Barack Obama hadn’t accorded him,” Foer wrote. “He a made a point of referring to her as the vice president, as opposed to my vice president. He was a stickler for asking her opinion in meetings — and making sure that her office was kept in the loop.” 

    Obama and Biden can present a united front all that they want to, but it seems clear that there is no love lost between them behind the scenes. It seems that Obama may not even be able to deny that Biden is one of the worst presidents our country has ever seen!

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  • Russians vote in an election that Putin will win, but the Kremlin is looking for a landslide victory

    Russians vote in an election that Putin will win, but the Kremlin is looking for a landslide victory

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    Vladimir Putin at a rally at Manezhnaya Square near the Kremlin on March 18, 2018.

    Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images

    There are no surprises over who will win Russia’s presidential election this coming weekend with incumbent, Vladimir Putin, set to win a fifth term in office, keeping him in power until at least 2030.

    The heavily stage-managed vote taking place from Friday to Sunday is not expected to throw up any nasty surprises for the Kremlin which told CNBC months ago that it was confident Putin would win the vote comfortably.

    That’s particularly the case in a country where Russian opposition figures are not represented on the ballot paper or in mainstream politics, with most activists having fled the country. Those that have stayed have found themselves arrested or imprisoned or have died in mysterious circumstances, as was the case with jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny. The Kremlin denied it had any hand in his death.

    In the 2024 election, there’s no doubt who will win the vote; Putin’s name is on the ballot paper along with only three other candidates who are part of Russia’s “systemic opposition”: Vladislav Davankov of the New People party, Leonid Slutsky from the Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR) and Communist Party candidate Nikolay Kharitonov.

    Seen as token political opponents whose parties are generally supportive of the government, their inclusion on the ballot paper is designed to lend a degree of respectability to the vote, and a semblance of plurality to Russia’s effectively autocratic political system.

    Putin has been in power either as president or prime minister since late 1999 and shows no sign of being ready to relinquish control of the country. He’s backed by a loyal inner circle and retains the support of Russia’s security services.

    Reflecting the Kremlin’s nervousness over any potential for an electoral upset, however, even candidates who were only marginally representative of the “non-systemic opposition,” such as anti-war hopefuls Yekaterina Duntsova and Boris Nadezhdin, were barred from participating in the election by Russia’s Central Election Commission. The ban was widely seen as politically-motivated.

    Looking for a landslide

    Over 110 million Russian citizens are eligible to vote in the election, as well as an estimated 6 million people living in four partially Russian-occupied territories in the south and east of Ukraine, much to Kyiv’s disdain.

    Putin’s approval rating in Russia stands at the highest level since 2016, at 86% in February, according to the independent Levada Center, although analysts like Andrei Kolesnikov, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, note that Putin’s “power model” is heavily reliant on two unstable mainstays: “passive conformism and fear.”

    Both factors have certainly been amplified since Russia invaded its neighbor Ukraine in February 2022, with any perceived criticism of Russia’s “special military operation” — portrayed as a glorious and patriotic defense of Russia’s homeland — potentially landing citizens in jail. That 315,000 Russian soldiers are estimated to have been wounded or killed in the conflict is not a subject the Kremlin will go near in public; Russia does not release death or casualty figures.

    Ukrainian soldiers fire with D-30 artillery at Russian positions in the direction of Klishchiivka as the Russia-Ukraine war continues in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine on August 12, 2023. 

    Diego Herrera Carcedo | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    The Kremlin will be hoping to see high voter turnout this election — the first time a presidential vote has been held over three days — and is looking for a momentous win for Putin in order to legitimize the war, analysts note.

    “The Kremlin seeks an election result that would demonstrate overwhelming public support for Putin and, by extension, his domestic and foreign policy agenda,” Andreas Tursa, central and eastern Europe advisor at consultancy Teneo, commented Thursday.

    “The Kremlin is using the electoral contest to reaffirm Putin’s legitimacy, mobilize public support for his policies, and showcase unity and determination to its external adversaries,” he added, with the Kremlin looking for a “landslide victory.”

    “According to official data, Putin received 77.5% of valid votes in the 2018 presidential election that saw a turnout of 67.5%. This year, both figures could be even higher,” he said.

    “Putin does not face any real competition in the vote and, if needed, electoral authorities have various tools at their disposal to engineer the desired turnout and result. However, the preference is to generate the result with as little interference as possible,” he noted.

    Widespread criticism

    Rising authoritarianism in Russia, and the erosion of the last vestiges of democracy in the country during Putin’s tenure, have provoked widespread criticism and consternation. As such, it’s no wonder that the 2024 vote has already been condemned by opposition activists, as well as neighboring Ukraine.

    Kyiv has been scathing about voting taking place in Crimea, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, Donetsk and Luhansk this week. There have already been reports of coercion and illegitimate voting practices including evidence of armed soldiers accompanying pro-Russian officials, holding ballot boxes, as they go door-to-door to gather votes.

    Ukraine’s foreign ministry said in a statement Thursday that Russia’s attempt to “imitate” presidential elections on its territory “demonstrates the Russian Federation’s continued flagrant disregard for international law norms and principles.” It called the votes illegal and urged citizens in occupied regions not to participate.

    Russian opposition activists, most in self-imposed exile in order to evade arrest, imprisonment or attack, have also condemned the election.

    Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny, pleaded with Russian voters to vote for “any candidate except Putin” and called on citizens to vote en masse at midday local time on March 17, with the intention of overwhelming polling stations. She also asked the West to not recognize the election result. Kremlin opponents have also called on supporters abroad to protest outside Russian embassies this coming Sunday.

    Dmitrii Moskovii, an opposition activist and representative of the Russian Democratic Society in London, said the protests offered people a chance to show their opposition to Putin and the war.

    When we’re talking about Russia, we’re always talking about an almost authoritarian regime in which there is no freedom of election, we’re talking about an election that is obviously and for sure going to be faked by the Russian authorities,” he told CNBC Thursday.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during a meeting with participants of the International Youth Festival, March 6, 2024 in Sirius territory, Sochi, Russia. Putin is visiting the Stavropolsky Krai and Krasnodar Krai regions in the southern part of the country ahead of the presidential elections scheduled March 15-17. 

    Contributor | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    The semblance of free and fair elections appears to be something the Kremlin is little concerned about, with analysts noting that the 2024 vote is taking place with far less scrutiny than previous ballots, reflecting Russia’s increasingly indifferent attitude toward international democratic norms.

    “Recent changes to Russia’s electoral laws make it virtually impossible to conduct any meaningful monitoring, and have significantly restricted the role of the media,” Anna Caprile, a policy analyst with the European Parliament, said in analysis Wednesday.

    “The reappointment of Vladimir Putin seems inexorable. The objective of the Kremlin, however, is not just victory, but a landslide result, both in turnout and percentage of votes. This would legitimise Putin’s legacy and his war of aggression, relegating the remaining opposition to an even more marginalised role, and allowing Putin to implement, unchecked, his vision for the next six years,” she noted.

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  • Three killed, 38 injured in Russian attack on Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih

    Three killed, 38 injured in Russian attack on Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih

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    Ten children are among those injured in the missile attack on apartment buildings as rescue teams search for survivors.

    A Russian missile has hit two apartment buildings in the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih, killing three people and injuring at least 38, with rescue teams sifting through rubble in a night-time search for survivors.

    Serhiy Lysak, governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region, put the provisional injury toll from the attack on Tuesday at 28 adults and 10 children.

    “Two buildings were hit, one five storeys, one nine storeys,” Lysak wrote on Telegram.

    “The number of injured is constantly rising as is the number of children injured.”

    Video of the scene showed a blaze that erupted at the top of one apartment block and rescue teams carrying the injured out of shattered building entrances.

    “The emergency services and residents who care are rescuing residents blocked in their apartments and are continuing to search for anyone who might be under the rubble,” Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko wrote.

    “Four people have already been rescued.”

    Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who was born and raised in Kryvyi Rih, said on Telegram that search operations “will continue as long as they are needed.”

    In his evening address, he said: “We will inflict losses on the Russian state in response – quite rightly. They in the Kremlin must learn that terror does not go unpunished for them.”

    The city of Kryvyi Rih has been frequently targeted by Russian forces throughout the conflict.

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  • 3/10/2024: Rise; Jeff Koons

    3/10/2024: Rise; Jeff Koons

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    3/10/2024: Rise; Jeff Koons – CBS News


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    First, a report on a camp for grieving Ukrainians in the Austrian Alps. Then, Jeff Koons: The 60 Minutes Interview.

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  • Letters: How are these two “old farts” America’s only options?

    Letters: How are these two “old farts” America’s only options?

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    2024 election is stuck in loop from 2020

    Well, it looks like it’ll come down to the same song and dance this November with Donald Trump and Joe Biden. I’m really angry that both parties couldn’t find stronger, better, younger candidates than these old farts! Don’t these two have lives like normal older people who want to retire and spend time with family, travel, or just relax? Or is it just the egomaniacal want for power that they just keep on (and on and on)?

    I don’t want either one of them again, but I really can’t stand another four years of constant anxiety, dreading reading the daily news and seeing that loud, obnoxious Trump spouting off every single day. And that’s not even to mention his numerous financial litigations and sexual scandals that he is currently in court for!

    What a world we live in.

    Liz Boswell, Denver

    It looks like we’re stuck with the so-called match-up “nobody wants.” The GOP is stuck with “the mouth” and the Dems are stuck with cartoon dummy “Walter” look alike. I still can’t believe that out of the 350 million plus people in this country, we can’t come up with two truly qualified people to run for POTUS. Since these knuckleheads ran against each other back in 2020, we haven’t learned anything.

    Yes, I voted for Donald Trump against Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden, but not because I wanted him; it was because I couldn’t see either of those other two in office.

    If we have the 2020 rematch, I won’t be voting for president at all. I’ll vote for everything else on the ballot. I honestly believe that the leaders of both parties created the “mouth” that Trump has become — granted, he always had a big egotistical mouth. All the top dogs in the GOP, starting with the Bushes, John McCain, and Mitt Romney, wouldn’t support his election. He had to fight for everything with opposition from all corners; it’s no wonder he turned into someone I would no longer support for the next election.

    I also find it hard to believe that after so many times Biden was rejected for the nomination by the Democrats, they couldn’t find a better nominee back then. As far as I’m concerned, neither one of them would make a pimple on Richard Nixon’s butt.

    Peter Beckley, Aurora

    Goody. In 2024, Americans are now facing a repeat of the delightful 2020 presidential election, only this time the Packard with a hole in its muffler will have 810,000 miles on it, and the Edsel that leaks oil everywhere will have 780,000.

    Some choice.

    Craig Marshall Smith, Highlands Ranch

    Who is calling whom “ideological”

    Re: “Which Colorado Republicans will carry Trump’s bromance for Putin to Congress?” March 3 commentary

    It’s laughable to hear liberals like Doug Friednash pining for Ronald Reagan in his approach to Russia and insulting Donald Trump and Tucker Carlson, respectively, for their “bromance” and “propaganda” with Putin. I often hear liberals say they want a Republican from years ago, like Reagan or Ike, while not pining for Democrats like Walter Mondale or Jimmy Carter. Are they dishonest, or do they genuinely not realize that times and issues change?

    For Friednash to call Russia “ideological” shows him to be uninformed. Russia isn’t communist, and it’s hard to know what their ideology is other than authoritarianism and social conservatism. That’s the case in most of the non-western world. Russia and China are famously hands-off about the governance in countries they deal with. China is criticized for apathy in Africa, where they have mining concessions. They extract minerals, pay royalties, and don’t give political lectures. Russia’s Wagner group recently replaced French anti-terrorism forces in Niger and Mali, likely due to French political interference regarding corruption. Wagner doesn’t care.

    Ironically, it’s now the U.S. as the ideological actor on the world stage. We fly pride flags at embassies and meddle in LGBTQ, diversity and immigration issues. That’s why we’re finding it hard to recruit allies in the developing world against Russia. Friednash implicitly recognizes this with several references to LGBTQ rights in Russia. That’s what “our democracy” now means and why he hates Putin.

    The reality is that this war could have been prevented if we had merely agreed not to admit Ukraine into NATO. In February of ’22, I remember distinctly U.S. officials making comments about our commitment to a rules based order where countries can choose their allies and security partners. Who’s the ideologue? Making enemies and risking WWIII for pride flags and Drag Queen Story Hour is foolish.

    Jim Hemenway, Niwot

    Editor’s note: Hemenway is a candidate for Colorado’s 7th Congressional District.

    A tale of two classified-documents leakers

    Re: “Pentagon leaker pleads guilty, faces 11-plus years in prison,” March 5 news story

    On Tuesday, there was an article about the Massachusetts Air National Guard member who leaked highly classified documents and shared them with other users on a social media platform. He pled guilty and will serve up to 17 years.

    We have a candidate running for president who removed many boxes of highly classified documents from the White House when he previously served as president. This classified information was available to many people who visited his place of business and residence as it was not kept in a secure area. This man also showed highly classified documents to a foreign citizen and others.

    Why the unfairness in our society? Should he not be in prison as well? Why would anyone vote for a person who jeopardizes the secrets and safety of our country?

    Norma Anderson, Lakewood

    Editor’s note: Anderson is a former state senator.

    A few words on behalf of Oct. 7 victims

    Re: “Local cease-fire resolutions are statements of humanity,” March 3 commentary

    I was struck by the excuses for the lack of decorum at the Denver City Council meeting for the insistence on the council to pass a resolution calling for a cease-fire in Gaza. Clearly, the disruptions of these protesters caused the council to feel threatened and bullied. Good for the council to resist these threats as undemocratic. We have had many protests at many city council hearings across the country and all have been similar in nature to what happened in Denver. This strategy of rage and bullying is right out of Hamas’s playbook.

    In fact, while the commentators continue to condemn Israel’s actions, there is often no mention of Oct. 7, nor the loss of lives of women and children, the torture, rape, and brutality by Hamas perpetrated on Israel that fateful day. No mention of the hostages that Hamas kidnapped and is now using as pawns in their game to vilify Israel. Not one.

    If these protesters were interested in a cease-fire, they should rightfully be protesting against Hamas. If Hamas were to release all of the hostages, both dead and alive, and surrender, there would be a cease-fire immediately. In fact, there had been a cease-fire on Oct. 6. Hamas’ bloodthirsty savagery in its attack against the sovereignty of Israel and the massacre of Israeli civilians the following day had more than provoked the Israel Defense Forces (not the “Israel Occupation Forces” as sarcastically noted in the guest commentary).

    We are all concerned about the deaths of the Gazans, well, except for Hamas. This poor excuse for the lack of decorum and protest against Israel’s military actions, etc., is just one more example of what these protests are truly about: Jew hatred.

    ER Miller, Denver

    If Hamas surrenders and releases the hostages, there will be a cease-fire. Instead of telling Israel to stop firing, tell Hamas to stop firing.

    Gary Wachter, Centennial

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    TJ Hutchinson

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    Grieving Ukrainians attend Austrian Alps climbing camp to recover from war | 60 Minutes

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