VLADIMIR Putin is making a “second calamitous blunder” almost two years after invading Ukraine, the head of Britain’s armed forces has warned.
Admiral Sir Tony Radakin mocked the Kremlin despot as “no grand master of strategy” as Putin’s main gambits had failed or backfired – his army is stretched and his Black Sea Fleet scattered.
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The head of UK armed forces said Putin is making a ‘second calamitous blunder’ almost two years after invading UkraineCredit: Getty
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Admiral Sir Tony Radakin mocked the Kremlin despot as ‘no grand master of strategy’Credit: PA
But the tyrant’s biggest mistake was pushing Russia’s economy towards Soviet-style collapse.
“If his first catastrophic mistake was invading Ukraine, he is now making his he is now making his second calamitous blunder,” Admiral Radakin said when delivering the Chief of Defence Staff’s annual lecture in London.
“The Russian economy is being twisted even more out of shape.
“Nearly 40 per cent of all Russian public expenditure is being spent on defence.
More on Russia-Ukraine war
“That is more than the aggregate of health and education.
“And the last time we saw these levels was at the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union.”
He added: “This is disastrous for Russia and its people.”
Admiral Radakin admitted that Ukraine’s counter-offensive, however, gained less ground than was hoped and that Russian defences were stronger than expected.
He said Ukraine was fighting with a “citizen army” of men in their 30s and 40s with families back home.
“Ukraine is cautious with their lives. We would be too.
“And it speaks volumes about the contrasting approaches of Russian and Ukrainian leaders,” he said.
The UK armed forces boss also backed President Zelensky’s insistence that the conflict had not reached a stalemate, saying: “Territory is not the only measure of how this war progresses.
“Talk of stalemate or the advantages to Russia of settling for a long war are too superficial.”
He added Russia’s attempt to weaponise energy exports backfired when Europe reduced its dependence on Russian gas.
“Putin sought to withhold global food supplies. But the world responded with the Black Sea Grain Initiative,” Admiral Radakin said.
“He sought to coerce the West with reckless nuclear threats.
“But elicited global condemnation, including China, India and Saudi Arabia.
“And now he’s wanted by the International Criminal Court.
“He’s suffered the shock and humiliation of an attempted coup.
“Crimea is no longer safe. The Black Sea Fleet has scattered.
“He has to keep 400 thousand troops in Ukraine to hold on to what he has taken.
“And he cannot order a general mobilisation – at least ahead of next year’s election – for fear of how his own people will respond.”
He said Russia had “few real friends abroad”, with Putin increasingly “resembling a prisoner of his own making”.
It comes after Kyiv suffered a hellish night after Russia launched a massive missile attack overnight that left 53 people injured.
Ukraine’s air defences downed ten strikes – believed to be powerful Russian Iskander missiles – but damage was caused by falling rocket debris.
The horror hit damaged a children’s hospital and apartment building and wounded 53 people including six children, one aged only five.
It marked one of the biggest number of injured in the Ukrainian capital in months.
Twenty people were hospitalised as a result of the heavy bombardment of Kyiv, including two children.
The military administration in the Ukrainian capital said the city had faced “the second high-speed missile attack on Kyiv in the last two days.
Meanwhile, footage showed Russia had put its flag over the ruins of Maryinka, a hotly-disputed town in the Donetsk region, as it makes gains on the frontline.
Biden warned his foes they were making a “Christmas gift” to Vladimir Putin by refusing to sanction urgent new munitions for Kyiv and said the US would “continue to supply Ukraine with critical weapons and equipment as long as we can.”
The Ukrainian leader dismissed suggestions he could concede territory taken by Russia since its February 2022 invasion to move any ceasefire closer.
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Admiral Radakin also backed President Zelensky’s insistence that the war had not reached a stalemateCredit: AFP
With Congress divided over allocating more funding to Ukraine for its fight against Russia, President Joe Biden’s critics recently said the administration is using the threat of sending American troops to fight Russia as a bargaining chip.
Accusations that the White House is leveraging American service members’ lives to fund the Ukraine war have garnered millions of views online, so we decided to take a closer look.
What the administration’s critics have said
On Dec. 6, Tucker Carlson — the ousted Fox News host who said he will start his own network — posted on X, formerly Twitter:
“The Biden administration is openly threatening Americans over Ukraine. In a classified briefing in the House yesterday, defense secretary Lloyd Austin informed members that if they don’t appropriate more money for Zelensky, ‘we’ll send your uncles, cousins and sons to fight Russia.’ Pay the oligarchs or we’ll kill your kids.”
Elon Musk, X’s billionaire owner, asked Carlson in a reply, “He really said this?” To which Carlson responded, “He really did. Confirmed.” Despite Carlson’s assurances, we have found no news stories with named sources confirming those remarks from Austin.
Other conservative social media accounts amplified Carlson’s comments. Colin Rugg, co-owner of conservative news site TrendingPolitics, posted Dec. 7 on X that Carlson’s “revelation comes just days after White House official John Kirby said that ‘American blood’ will be the ‘cost’ of supporting Ukraine if we stop sending them money. Your government has an addiction. That addiction is war.”
Donald Trump Jr., whose father is the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, shared Rigg’s post later that day.
Trump Jr. wrote, “America doesn’t need to keep funding an endless war with no path to victory. … No more big wars no more funding the military industrial complex! For those of you who are idiots Ukraine lost this war quite some time ago we’re just keeping them on life-support with never ending money!”
Biden’s critics are called into question
The narrative from Carlson, Rigg and Trump Jr. quickly drew its own criticism.
A “community note” — a crowdsourced feature that lets X users append posts with additional context — was tacked to Carlson’s post, citing Dec. 5 coverage by the Messenger, an online news outlet. The Messenger had reported that Austin was referring to the possibility of U.S. troops being sent to defend NATO allies that “Russia may target next” if Ukraine is overrun.
Fox News Pentagon correspondent Jennifer Griffin on Dec. 7 posted on X a similar note of caution about interpreting Austin’s remarks.
“This characterization of Austin’s remarks is 100 percent not true, acc(ording) to two sources who were in the briefings,” Griffin wrote, without naming the sources. “Austin warned that it is not hyperbole to say Putin won’t stop at Ukraine. If he enters NATO territory US troops could be called to fight; cheaper to fund Ukraine now.”
What Biden administration officials have said
What Austin said to lawmakers privately remains undocumented, but Griffin’s description of his remarks tracks with the public messages that Biden and Kirby, the strategic communications coordinator for the White House’s National Security Council, have offered.
Biden and Kirby have argued that if Ukraine falls, Russia likely would attack nations such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, each a member of NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. If Russia attacks a NATO member nation, it could prompt NATO to invoke Article 5, its collective defense mechanism, opening the door to direct U.S. military assistance in the ally’s (or allies’) defense.
On Dec. 6, Biden made this point in public remarks that urged Congress to approve more money for Ukraine:
“If Putin takes Ukraine, he won’t stop there. It’s important to see the long run here. He’s going to keep going. He’s made that pretty clear. If Putin attacks a NATO ally — if he keeps going and then he attacks a NATO ally — well, we’ve committed as a NATO member that we’d defend every inch of NATO territory. Then we’ll have something that we don’t seek and that we don’t have today: American troops fighting Russian troops … if he moves into other parts of NATO.”
Kirby’s comments the same day at a White House press briefing made an identical point.
“If Putin gets all of Ukraine, then what? Then where does he go? Because right then, he’s up against the eastern flank of NATO,” Kirby said. “And if you think the cost of supporting Ukraine is high now, just imagine how much higher it’s going to be — not just in national treasure, but in American blood — if he starts going after one of our NATO Allies.”
White House allies in Congress sounded a similar refrain.
If Russian President Vladimir Putin “moves on a NATO country — and I don’t think it’s outside the realm of possibility — there is a fight involving U.S. troops if we don’t support Ukraine’s fight right now,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., in an interview after the closed-door hearing, the Messenger reported.
The upshot
The Biden administration is, as critics contend, leveraging concerns about a future boots-on-the ground presence in an effort to persuade lawmakers to approve more funding for Ukraine.
However, the framing of the critiques obscure, and sometimes twist, the administration’s logic.
Rather than reflecting an “addiction” to war, as Rugg put it, or endless funding for “the military industrial complex,” as Trump Jr. put it, the White House argument is that money and arms for Ukraine today could slow the Russian offensive in Ukraine. This, in turn, could prevent Russia from invading allies whose NATO membership entitles them to direct U.S. military assistance.
The White House’s strategy of funding Ukrainian resistance, its argument goes, is designed to reduce the likelihood of U.S. forces fighting Russia, not increase it.
KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s capital came under another ballistic missile attack early Wednesday, resulting in more than 50 injuries and several damaged buildings, officials said.
A series of loud explosions could be heard in Kyiv at 3 a.m. as the city’s air defenses were activated for the second time this week. Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 10 ballistic missiles toward the capital and all were intercepted by air defenses.
However, debris from intercepted missiles fell in the eastern Dniprovskyi district, injuring at least 53 people, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Kitschko said on Telegram. Twenty people including two children were hospitalized while 33 people received medical treatment on the spot.
An apartment building, a private house and several cars caught fire, while the windows of a children’s hospital were shattered, Klitschko said. Falling rocket debris also damaged the water supply system in the district.
It wasn’t immediately clear what type of missile was used in the attack.
In other parts of Ukraine, 10 Russian drones were shot down, most of them in the Odesa region, the Ukrainian air force said.
On Monday, a Russian missile attack destroyed several homes on the outskirts of Kyiv and left more than 100 households temporarily without electricity.
Communal workers fix broken windows in a destroyed house that was damaged as a result of a ballistic missile attack by the Russian army in Kyiv.
Sergei Chuzavkov—SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images
Wednesday’s attack came as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited Washington, where he made an impassioned plea to Congress to approve additional aid to fight Russia’s invasion.
Andriy Yermak, Zelensky’s chief of staff who was traveling with the president, said the interception of the missiles fired at Kyiv showed how Western support is helping Ukraine resist the Russian aggression.
“The effectiveness of Western weaponry in the hands of Ukrainian soldiers is beyond doubt,” Yermak wrote on Telegram.
As winter sets in and hampers troop movements, allowing little change along the front line, air bombardment plays a growing role in the war. Ukrainian officials have warned that Russia will target energy infrastructure to cause power outages and blackouts like it did last winter.
President Joe Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky depart a news conference at the White House, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023.
Cyberattacks are also a busy battleground. Ukrainian telecom provider Kyivstar, which serves more than 24 million mobile customers across the country, said its services were disrupted Tuesday by a “powerful” attack by hackers. It also disrupted the air raid warning system in part of the Kyiv region, according to the head of the Kyiv regional administration, Ruslan Kravchenko.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with President Biden and congressional leaders Tuesday hoping for vital aid. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe reports.
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UKRAINE’S President Volodymyr Zelensky urged US Republicans to show the same courage as Ronald Reagan in the Cold War and unblock £49billion in aid he needs to fight Russia.
And US President Joe Biden said a failure to do so would give tyrannical Vladimir Putin “the greatest Christmas gift”.
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President Volodymyr Zelensky urged US Republicans to show the same courage as Ronald Reagan as he met with President BidenCredit: AP
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Mr Zelensky is on his third US trip Russia’s invasion of UkraineCredit: AP
In Washington last night, Mr Zelensky invoked Reagan’s 1987 call to “tear down” the Berlin Wall.
He said: “We need no less confidence now than President Reagan had then.”
The speech by Reagan — still a hero to many Republicans — helped spark the wall’s demolition two years later and then the end of the Soviet Union.
But his successors in the party have repeatedly hampered White House plans to send the next tranche of aid to Ukraine.
Last week, they blocked the bill amid anger over the exclusion of Mexican immigration reforms they sought as part of the package.
With Mr Zelensky in the Oval Office, Mr Biden said: “Congress needs to pass supplemental funding for Ukraine before the holiday recess — before they give Putin the greatest Christmas gift they could possibly give him.”
On his third trip to the US since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Mr Zelensky told military officers at the National Defence Academy: “If there’s anyone inspired by unresolved issues on Capitol Hill, it’s just Putin and his sick clique.”
He pointed to recent drone strikes that show “Ukraine’s response to Russian barbarism can shake the ground in the heart of Moscow”.
Western intelligence sources claim Ukraine could just about hold the line against Russia but would be unable to advance if America turns off the taps.
And Ukraine’s First Lady Olena Zelenska warned her country faced “mortal danger” if the West abandons them.
Republican Speaker Mike Johnson last night insisted his party backed Ukraine but accused the White House of asking for billions of dollars without proper oversight.
He said: “We need clear articulation of the strategy to allow Ukraine to win.
“Thus far, their responses have been insufficient.”
Russia has responded to Mr Zelensky’s US visit with a huge cyber attack — with mobile and internet provider Kyivstar down and Monobank facing a massive denial of service outage.
It came as Mr Zelensky’s Foreign Minister Dmitro Kuleba urged the EU to make its own decisions and not be swayed by US wobbles.
The bloc is due release £43billion in aid and agree a route to Ukraine’s accession.
However, Hungary’s pro-Putin leader Viktor Orbán has vowed to oppose both plans — despite being pictured briefly talking with Mr Zelensky in Argentina on Sunday.
Britain has vowed to support Ukraine for as long as it takes.
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Mr Zelensky told US military officers: ‘If there’s anyone inspired by unresolved issues on Capitol Hill, it’s just Putin and his sick clique’Credit: EPA
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President Reagan’s 1987 call to ‘tear down’ the Berlin Wall helped lead to the end of the Cold WarCredit: AP:Associated Press
Moscow is ‘very attentively’ watching as US President Joe Biden and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy meet in Washington.
Any further United States aid to Ukraine will be a “fiasco”, the Kremlin has said ahead of a meeting in Washington between US President Joe Biden and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Moscow is also “very attentively” watching developments as the two leaders are set to meet on Tuesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Zelenskyy’s visit is part of a last-ditch plea to US lawmakers to keep military support flowing as he battles Russia.
As the Ukrainian leader visits the White House and Capitol Hill, Biden’s request for billions in additional aid for Ukraine and Israel is at serious risk of collapse in Congress.
“It is important for everyone to understand: The tens of billions of dollars pumped into Ukraine did not help it gain success on the battlefield,” Peskov said, speaking at a news conference in Moscow on Tuesday.
“The tens of billions of dollars that Ukraine wants to be pumped with are also headed for the same fiasco.”
The Kremlin spokesman said the outcome of the meeting would not change the situation on the front line in Ukraine, nor the progress of Russia’s “special military operation” in the country.
He added that Zelenskyy’s authority was being undermined by his government’s “failures” in the ongoing war.
Russia’s gain
On Monday, Zelenskyy warned that failing to maintain support for Ukraine would play into the hands of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“Let me be frank with you, friends. If there’s anyone inspired by unresolved issues on Capitol Hill, it’s just Putin and his sick clique,” he said, speaking to soldiers at the National Defense University in Washington, DC.
Zelenskyy and Biden have argued that helping Ukraine resist Russia’s invasion, launched in February 2022, is in the mutual interests of both countries as support for Ukrainian aid hits political snags in the US.
During their talks, the two plan to discuss a way to rally support for the military aid plan primarily focused on Ukraine and Israel.
Last week, Republicans blocked the plan after walking out of a classified briefing on Ukraine amid demands for US-Mexico border reforms. Some Republicans are opposed to giving a “blank cheque” for Ukraine.
The US Congress has approved more than $110bn in security assistance for Ukraine since Russia launched its invasion but has not approved new funds since the Republican Party gained a majority in the House of Representatives in January.
Biden has asked Congress to approve an additional $61.4bn in support for Ukraine as part of a larger $110bn package that includes more funds for Israel and other issues.
Custom: Screenshots – CNBC Television and Zelenskyy President
YouTube Videos
X CEO Elon Musk called out Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and President Joe Biden regarding the status of a jailed American journalist in Ukraine.
The journalist in question is Gonzalo Lira, a prolific online personality who was arrested back in May on charges of producing pro-Russian propaganda. He would be re-arrested trying to cross into Hungary over the summer.
Lira’s father was recently interviewed by former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, where he accused the Biden administration of “complicity” in the imprisonment of his son.
He also accused the State Department of giving Zelensky, whom he calls a “puppet,” the “green light to put my son in jail.”
The remarks are merely speculation by Lira Sr., and there is no evidence of collusion between the Biden administration and the Ukrainian government.
Ep. 47 Gonzalo Lira is an American citizen who’s been tortured in a Ukrainian prison since July, for the crime of criticizing Zelensky. Biden officials approve of this, because they’d like to apply the same standard here. The media agree. Here’s a statement from Gonzalo Lira’s… pic.twitter.com/4H2otHhYHi
Musk reposted the Carlson interview and called out both Zelensky and Biden, demanding answers on the status of American journalist Gonzalo Lira.
“An American citizen is in prison (in) Ukraine after we sent over a $100 billion?” he asked. “Is there more to this story than simply criticizing Zelensky?”
In a separate post, he tagged Zelensky and demanded, “President @ZelenskyyUa, please educate the American people about this matter.”
Musk wasn’t done there, likewise tagging Biden in looking for answers.
“What is the status of this American journalist @JoeBiden?” he asked.
Carlson responded to one of Musk’s posts saying of Lira, “Yep. Saying unapproved things. That’s his crime.”
But Musk’s own X messages were met with a Community Note fact-check in which they reduced Lira to a “YouTuber” who violated Ukrainian law by denying Russian attacks against civilians and “expos(ing) the location of Western journalists and Ukrainian soldiers, including their faces, among other crimes.”
Some critics have countered that those individuals were already exposed through public outlets.
Despite the fact-checking, Musk seemed undeterred in his criticism of Zelensky and Biden, even accusing “state actors” of gaming the Community Notes system.
“Interesting. This Note is being gamed by state actors. Will be helpful in figuring who they are,” he wrote. “Thanks for jumping in the honey pot, guys.”
Interesting. This Note is being gamed by state actors. Will be helpful in figuring who they are.
Musk again posted Sunday morning, erroneously suggesting Lira had been imprisoned for 5 years (it’s months), and claimed that he’d been “allegedly tortured” during that time.
“This is not ok,” he fumed.
In a separate X post involving a different individual who claimed Lira had been tortured, Community Notes again chimed in.
“Lira has not been tortured, neither is he in prison for the crime of criticizing Zelensky,” they wrote. “Lira is in prison because he was arrested for multiple offenses, including sharing the location of Ukrainian troops with Russia.”
“Lira was released on bail but tried to leave the country,” they added.
This is one of the most important stories inside of the most important stories of our current time in history. Huge props to Tucker for covering it when NOBODY else will. #FreeGonzaloLirahttps://t.co/US4OiPsGIm
— Beautifully Bespectacled Bar Fly (@JackMackSmack) December 10, 2023
The State Department previously issued a statement saying that they “are aware of the detention of Mr. Lira in Ukraine” and “providing all appropriate assistance.”
His father claims otherwise.
“The U.S.A. government, with its silence in the face of this scandalous incident, suggests a degree of complicity, or at least tacit approval of Gonzalo’s arrest since nothing else explains the conspicuous lack of response,” he told Carlson.
Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) previously shared a similar story about the pretrial detention in July of a senior Orthodox cleric who had been detained in Kyiv.
Remember: the Ukraine war is all about freedom. Sometimes religious freedom requires jailing priests you don’t like. Or something. https://t.co/6zIbaWNmGv
The cleric, who hails from a church with historic links to Moscow, had been arrested on suspicion of inflaming religious hatred and justifying Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“Remember: the Ukraine war is all about freedom,” Vance sarcastically wrote on X. “Sometimes religious freedom requires jailing priests you don’t like. Or something.”
And YouTubers.
Lira is reportedly being held in the Kharkiv pretrial detention center and has court hearings scheduled for December 12th and 21st.
Now is the time to support and share the sources you trust. The Political Insider ranks #3 on Feedspot’s “100 Best Political Blogs and Websites.”
BERLIN — At its summit this week, the European Union is threatening to name and shame more than a dozen Chinese companies that, it claims, are supplying critical technology to equip Russia’s war machine.
But what about the Western companies that make dual-use and other advanced gear that is subject to sanctions and yet, according to an analysis of wreckage found on the Ukrainian battlefield, is used in Russian Kalibr missiles, Orlan drones and Ka-52 “Alligator” helicopters?
Radio silence.
So here’s a trivia question for you: Which company is the leading maker of the so-called “high-priority battlefield items” trafficked to Russia that the Western coalition wants to interdict?
If you said Intel, then go to the top of the class: According to the sanctions team at the Kyiv School of Economics, the U.S. semiconductor giant again leads the pack this year. It’s followed by Huawei of China. Then come Analog Devices, AMD, Texas Instruments and IBM — all of which are American.
Russian imports of microelectronics, wireless and satellite navigation systems and other critical parts subject to sanctions have recovered to near pre-war levels with a monthly run rate of $900 million in the first nine months of this year, according to a forthcoming report from the Kyiv School’s analytical center, the KSE Institute.
All of this indicates that, while Western sanctions imposed over Russia’s full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022, had a temporary impact, Moscow and its helpers have largely succeeded in reconfiguring supply chains — with the help of China, Hong Kong and countries in Russia’s backyard like Kazakhstan and NATO member Turkey.
That in turn begs the question as to whether, as the EU strives to deliver a 12th package of sanctions against Russia in time for a leaders’ summit on Thursday, the bloc is serving up yet another case study for the definition of insanity often attributed to Albert Einstein: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.
For Elina Ribakova, director of the international program at the KSE Institute, the Western private sector must also be held to account. It should, she argues, be required to track its products along the entire value chain to their final destination — just as banks were forced to tighten anti-money laundering controls and customer checks after the 2008 crash.
“We have a policy in a void. We have put it on paper but we don’t have any infrastructure for the private sector to comply — or for us to check,” Ribakova told POLITICO. “We need to have the private sector enforce and implement this.”
Intel, responding to a request for comment, said it had suspended all shipments to Russia and Belarus, its ally, and that it was compliant with sanctions and export controls against both countries issued by the U.S. and its allies.
“While we do not always know nor can we control what products our customers create or the applications end-users may develop, Intel does not support or tolerate our products being used to violate human rights,” the company said in a statement. “Where we become aware of a concern that Intel products are being used by a business partner in connection with abuses of human rights, we will restrict or cease business with the third party until and unless we have high confidence that Intel’s products are not being used to violate human rights.”
As for Europe, while its companies may not feature among the top makers of critical technology sold to Russia, its industrial businesses are facing growing scrutiny over the supply of machinery and spare parts — often via third countries like Kazakhstan that have seen suspicious surges in imports.
It’s here, also, that Europe has fallen down.
In imposing sanctions, it’s a case of “all for one” — the bloc has jointly agreed on and implemented measures affecting everything from energy to banking.
But enforcement is a matter for individual member countries. Some are on board with the program. Others, like Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, overtly sympathize with Russia. And others, still, are conflicted — as when it emerged that the husband of hawkish Estonian premier Kaja Kallas owned a stake in a freight firm that still did business in Russia.
Then there are countries like neutral Austria, with historical ties to the Soviet military-industrial complex that have left politicians and law enforcement with a huge blind spot.
That’s important because, as independent researcher Kamil Galeev put it to POLITICO, Russia today still upholds an organizing principle dating back to the early Soviet era that civilian industry should “be able to switch 100 percent to military production should the need arise.”
Justice delayed
Despite evidence of widespread breaches, only a handful of sanctions cases are being pursued by European law enforcement. Among them, German prosecutors have secured the arrest of a businessman suspected of supplying precision lathes to two Russian companies that make sniper rifles.
But the wheels of justice turn slowly: The arrest in August of Ulli S. — prosecutors, following German tradition, have not published his full name — relates to the initial imposition of Western sanctions over Russia’s occupation of Crimea and eastern Ukraine in 2014.
The press had already cracked the case by the time the suspect appeared in court, naming DMG Mori — a Japanese-German joint venture — as the supplier. One customer was Kalashnikov, maker of the famed AK-47 rifle. The other was Promtekhnologia, which has been sanctioned by the U.S. and featured in POLITICO’s sniper bullets investigation. Promtekhnologia makes the Orsis sniper rifle promoted by action movie actor Steven Seagal — now a Russian citizen — and used by President Vladimir Putin’s men in Ukraine.
DMG Mori, formerly called Gildemeister, suspended sales to Russia after the full-scale invasion. But, because it has closed down its operations in the country, it says it is no longer able to keep control over its machines made there (although an internal probe did find that they were being used for civilian purposes). The German Federal Prosecutor did not respond to a request for comment.
The real bad actors
It’s not just in stopping imports to Russia that sanctions are falling short of their stated intention.
Vladimir Putin’s former wife, Lyudmila (left), and her new partner have splashed the cash on luxury property investments in Spain, Switzerland and France a POLITICO investigation found | Yuri Kochetkov/EPA
Russians with close ties to Putin — and their money — continue to be more than welcome in Europe despite the death and destruction his regime has unleashed. His former wife, Lyudmila, and her new partner have splashed the cash on luxury property investments in Spain, Switzerland and France, as a POLITICO investigation found at the start of the year.
And when the European Council — the intergovernmental branch of the EU — does sanction Russian business leaders suspected of aiding and abetting the Putin regime, it has often relied on slipshod evidence that makes the decisions easy to challenge in court, POLITICO has also found.
Nearly 1,600 Western multinationals continue, meanwhile, to do business in Russia. Many that announced they would pull out have struggled to do so, as POLITICO discovered when it investigated Western liquor companies that said they had quit Russia — only to find that their booze was still freely available. And some companies that did stay, like Danone and Carlsberg, have been shaken down by Putin and his cronies — a case of Russian roulette, if ever there was one.
With the EU apparently lacking the means, or the political will, to do more to economically isolate Russia, the bloc is sending its sanctions envoy, David O’Sullivan, on a mission to apply moral suasion to countries that are, as he diplomatically puts it, “not aligned” on sanctions.
On the high-priority battlefield technology, Sullivan told POLITICO’s EU Confidential podcast last month that the EU has had “a limited success — but in an area which is absolutely critical to the defense of Ukraine.”
More broadly, he said: “The sanctions are a sort of slow puncture of the Russian economy. Perhaps not the blowout that some people initially predicted, but … the air is escaping from the tire and sooner or later the vehicle is going to become impossible to drive.”
To be fair, O’Sullivan isn’t overselling the efficacy of sanctions. And he may ultimately be proven right.
But he only will be vindicated if Western governments do a better job of holding their own businesses to account in stemming the flows of technology, equipment and spare parts that sustain Putin and his war of aggression.
That will come down to whether they have the will to enforce their decisions. And the evidence so far is that they don’t.
BRUSSELS — In early August, Bulgarian officials spotted something they weren’t sure was legal.
Barrels of Russian oil were arriving in the country priced above a $60 limit allies had adopted to sap Moscow of critical revenue for its war in Ukraine.
Bulgaria was in an unusual position among its partners. It had been given an exemption to European Union sanctions barring most imports of Russian oil, ostensibly to ensure the country wouldn’t face acute energy shortages even though the EU’s broader policy aimed to crush Russia’s main cash artery following its full-scale assault on Kyiv.
But could Bulgaria still import Russian oil if it was above the price cap? Customs officials in Sofia wanted to know for sure, so they reached out to EU officials asking for “clarification,” according to a private email exchange dated August 4 and seen by POLITICO.
The answer: Let it in.
“Crude oil imported based on these derogations does not need to be at or below $60 per barrel,” came the EU’s reply.
Green light in hand, Bulgaria proceeded to import Russian crude exclusively above the price cap from August until October, according to confidential customs data seen by POLITICO. The shipments were worth an estimated €640 million, according to calculations by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) think tank. The cash went to Russian energy firms, which pay the taxes helping fill the Kremlin’s war chest.
The sanctions gap is emblematic of the broader flaws that have corroded the EU’s attempt to stymie the billions Russia earns from energy exports. Roughly a year after adopting the initial penalties, legal loopholes have combined with poor enforcement and a mushrooming parallel trade to keep Moscow’s fossil fuel revenues flowing, and feeding almost half of Vladimir Putin’s war-hungry budget.
Russian oil is likely winding up as fuel in Europe via new routes. Enforcement across the Continent is scattered and reliant on inconsistent data. And a whole new black market has sprung up to insure, ship and hide Russia’s fuel as it travels the world.
The sanctions, in other words, have come up short. Russia’s oil export earnings have dropped just 14 percent since the restrictions were imposed. And in October, Russia’s fossil fuel revenues hit an 18-month high.
It also appears the EU has run out of steam to do much about it. The latest EU sanctions package, set to be finalized at a leaders’ summit this week, is mostly focused on administrative tweaks that experts say will do little to curb widespread evasion. Absent are any efforts to drop the level of the oil price cap further.
“The whole sanction mechanism works only if you keep adopting on a regular basis decisions that close loopholes and impose new sanctions,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told POLITICO. “Every actor in the world has the capacity to adapt.”
The Bulgarian oversight
The reason behind Bulgaria’s price cap loophole is arguably a clerical oversight.
When the EU wrote the G7 nations’ price cap into law, officials expressly forbade EU shipping firms and insurance companies from trafficking Russian oil above the $60 threshold to non-EU countries. The aim was to squeeze the Kremlin’s revenues while keeping global oil flows steady.
But officials never thought to impose similar rules on shipments to EU countries, partly because Brussels had banned Russian seaborne crude oil imports that same day.
Except for Bulgaria.
The backdoor has meant millions in extra revenue for Moscow. According to CREA, Russian oil export earnings from Bulgarian sales between August to October — a third of which came from sales above the price cap — raised around €430 million in direct taxes for the Kremlin. All Russian-origin shipments delivered during this time — priced between $69 and $89 per barrel — relied on Western help, including from Greek ship operators and British and Norwegian insurers.
And it was all technically legal.
The situation “reveals that Bulgaria has aided Russia to exploit this glaring loophole to maximize the Kremlin’s budget revenues from these oil sales without any apparent benefits for Bulgarian consumers,” said Martin Vladimirov, a senior analyst at the Sofia-based Center for the Study of Democracy (CSD) think tank, which has studied the issue.
More broadly, Bulgaria’s exemption from the Russian oil ban has been lining the pockets of both Russia’s largest private oil firm, Lukoil, which dominates Bulgaria’s fuel production with its sprawling Black Sea refinery, and the Kremlin itself.
More broadly, Lukoil’s crude oil imports to Bulgaria raked in over €2 billion in export revenues for Russia since the sanctions went into effect in February, according to a new CREA and CSD analysis. And the Kremlin has made €1 billion in direct taxes from the sales, POLITICO revealed last month.
There is now mounting pressure to mend these money-making fissures.
Bulgaria has vowed to cut short its opt-out from the Russian oil ban by six months, provisionally moving the deadline up to March.
And Kiril Petkov, the former prime minister who leads one of two parties controlling Bulgaria’s current governing coalition, told POLITICO the price cap workaround should “absolutely” be closed too. He vowed to pressure the government and ask the European Commission, the EU’s executive in Brussels, to do so, while insisting that Bulgaria is accelerating its efforts to shake off its Russian energy ties, unlike nearby countries like Slovakia.
Bulgaria proceeded to import Russian crude exclusively above the price cap from August until October, according to confidential customs data seen by POLITICO | Robert Ghement/EPA-EFE
“We do not like the $60 loophole that was created by the EU Commission derogation,” Petkov said. “We don’t want Putin to receive any euro that he doesn’t have to.”
The Bulgarian case “highlights one of the many loopholes that make sanctions less effective at lowering Russian export earnings used to finance the Kremlin’s war chest,” according to Isaac Levi, who leads CREA’s Russia-Europe team.
Bulgaria’s finance ministry and Lukoil didn’t respond to requests for comment.
‘Not all rainbows and unicorns’
A major challenge is poor monitoring and enforcement.
In October, a report commissioned by the European Parliament found EU sanctions enforcement is “scattered” across over 160 local authorities, while capitals have “dissimilar implementation systems” that include “wide discrepancies” in penalties for violations.
That assumes you can find a breach to begin with. Even those involved in shipping oil get only limited access to information on trades, according to Viktor Katona, chief crude analyst at the Kpler market intelligence firm.
Insurers, for example, rely on a single document from firms buying and selling oil cargoes pledging the sale is not above $60 per barrel, which amounts to a “declaration of faith,” he said.
The EU’s upcoming 12th package of sanctions is trying to crack down on this problem with new rules forcing traders to actually itemize specific costs. The goal is to prevent buyers from purchasing Russian oil above the limit and then hiding the extra costs as insurance or transport fees. But few in the industry have high hopes the added paperwork will stop the workaround.
Several EU countries with large shipping industries are also reluctant to tighten the price cap, making things even trickier. During the latest round of sanctions, Cyprus, Malta and Greece once again raised concerns over calls to strengthen the restrictions, according to two EU diplomats, who like others in the story were granted anonymity to speak freely.
A diplomat from a major maritime EU nation said stricter sanctions would only push Russia to use more non-Western operators to ship oil. Instead, the diplomat argued, the focus should be on broadening the countries adhering to the price cap. Currently, the G7, the EU and Australia are on board.
“It would be stupid to push for price caps, and then other shipping registers do not abide by it because they are not EU members,” the diplomat said, adding that “all that will be achieved is the total destruction of the shipping industry.”
Meanwhile, EU countries are still allowing Russian oil cargoes to cross their waters on their way elsewhere.
CREA research on behalf of POLITICO found that 822 ships transporting Moscow’s crude transferred their cargo to another ship in EU territorial waters — the majority in Greek, but also Maltese, Spanish, Romanian and Italian waters — since the oil sanctions kicked off last December. The volumes were equivalent to 400,000 barrels per day.
A Commission spokesperson defended the EU sanctions, noting Russia has been forced to spend “billions of dollars” to adapt to the new reality, including on new tankers, and its oil extraction and export infrastructure as Western demand shriveled.
That has caused “serious and ongoing economic and policy consequences,” the Commission spokesperson said. And CREA did find that the oil price limit has stripped the Kremlin of €34 billion in export revenues, equivalent to roughly two months of earnings this year.
Others point out that teething issues are normal — it’s the first time the EU has deployed sanctions at such a scale.
“Let’s be fair … all of the sanctions measures are unprecedented, so there’s an element of learning by doing it, as well,” said one of the EU diplomats. “We don’t live in a perfect world: it’s not all rainbows and unicorns.”
Deep dark waters
Instead of accepting the tough rules designed to drain its finances, Moscow has sparked a sanctions circumvention arms race, looking for loopholes as part of what one senior Ukrainian official has described as a “cockroach strategy.”
To ensure it can sell its fossil fuels at whatever price it can get, in violation of the oil price cap and other restrictions, Russia has presided over the creation of a parallel shipping market that, through a mixture of law-breaking and law-bending, is lining the pockets of its state energy firms and oligarchs.
A “shadow fleet” of aging tankers has emerged, mysteriously managed through a network of companies that obscure their ownership, frequently trading their cargo of fuel with other ships at sea. To help them escape the jurisdiction of Western sanctions while meeting basic maritime requirements, a cottage industry of murky insurance firms has sprung up in countries like India.
“When they were introduced, the sanctions seemed to be having an effect for a very short time. But now the state of play is most of the sanctions that have beeninplace have not really worked — or they’ve been very limited in terms of what they’ve been able to do,” said Byron McKinney, a director at trade and commodity firm S&P.
As Russian trades move increasingly away from Western operators and traders, that makes tracking them even more difficult, said Katona, the Kpler oil analyst.
“Every single” Russian type of oil now trades above the price cap, he said, while CREA estimates only 48 percent of Russian oil cargoes were carried on tankers owned or insured in G7 and EU countries in October.
“It’s like coming to a party and telling everyone not to drink alcohol, but not coming to the party yourself,” Katona said. “How do you make sure that no one’s drinking?”
At the same time, countries like India have increased their imports of cheap Russian crude by 134 percent, CREA found, processing it and then selling it everywhere. That means European consumers could unknowingly be filling up their cars with fuel produced from Russian crude, bankrolling Moscow’s armed forces at the same time.
The waning West?
The EU is well aware of the problem.
“Unless you have big players like India and China as part of it, effectiveness sooner or later fades away,” conceded one senior Commission official.
“It shows us the limits of what the tools of Western players can achieve at a global level,” the official added, noting it’s “a lesson in how much the [global] power balance has changed compared to 10 or 20 years ago.”
Expectations are low, however, that India or China — or Turkey, another critical shipping country — will come around to the price cap any time soon.
And back in Brussels, political leaders seem to be throwing up their hands. When EU leaders gather for their summit on Thursday, the sanctions package they’re expected to endorse will do little to stanch the flow of Russia’s energy cash, omitting any measures targeting Russian oil or lowering the price cap.
Until such steps are taken, Russia’s finances won’t truly wither, said Alexandra Prokopenko, an economist and nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center.
“The oil price is now the only real channel of transmission for external risk,” she said. “Russia will feel extremely bad if the average price on its oil is $40 or $50 per barrel — that would be painful for its budget and for Putin’s ability to finance expenditures.”
Getting to that point, however, was never going to be easy.
“The Russian economy was quite a big animal,” Prokopenko said, “that makes it hard to shoot it with a single shot.”
Victor Jack and Giovanna Coi reported from Brussels. Gabriel Gavin reported from Yerevan.
Claudia Chiappa contributed reporting from Brussels.
BRUSSELS — As long as it takes? Or as long as we feel like it?
For nearly two years, the EU has promised to support “Ukraine and its people for as long as it takes” — taking in millions of Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s war of aggression, supporting Kyiv with financial and military aid, rallying diplomatic support across the world, and shrinking its economic and energy ties with Russia.
But the bloc’s 27 member states are now struggling to agree unanimously on a longer-term €50 billion aid package for Kyiv, as well as on opening the door to future membership as this week’s European Council summit commences. At a time when $60 billion in military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine is stuck in the U.S. Congress, support from Brussels is essential to Kyiv’s continuing fight against Russia.
The decision to open the EU’s door to Ukraine could also be existential to the future of the bloc, as it means incorporating a country of nearly 40 million people mired in a war with a powerful neighbor. Failure to agree on such a historic decision, meanwhile, would tarnish the image of European unity, not only on the EU’s long-term support for Ukraine but also on its overall geopolitical ambitions.
The summit will be a “decisive one,” Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said at a press conference last Friday.
The prospect of joining the bloc is the biggest support the EU can provide to Ukraine, an EU diplomat said. “Let’s not forget that a part of the reason this war started — apart from whatever went [on] in the head of Putin — is Ukraine turning to the West.”
The EU is now testing the limits of the promise “as long as it takes,” said Lithuania’s Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis, one of Ukraine’s staunchest supporters. “Apparently as long as it takes means as long as we can agree. If we cannot, obviously that will have huge repercussions, first of all in Ukraine, but not just there.”
Litmus test
It’s not the first test of the EU’s unity on supporting Ukraine. The bloc’s salvo of sanctions against Russia were oftenwatered down because of the economic concerns of various EU countries, sometimes leading to weeks of horse-trading and internal wrangling. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in particular has regularly used his veto power to win concessions for Budapest, such as exemptions for Russian oil imports, but has so far never prevented an agreement.
This time around, however, Orbán is rejecting not only extra money for Ukraine but also opening accession talks with Kyiv, calling the latter proposal “unfounded and poorly prepared.” Instead, Orbán wants a strategic debate on the EU’s Ukraine policy andis calling for a cease-fire between Russia and Ukraine.
Half a dozen senior EU officials and diplomats from across the bloc stressed that Hungary is isolated in its position, and that the 26 other member countries still support Ukraine and want Kyiv to be a part of the club in the long term.
Privately, however, many admit the war is no longer a top priority in the day-to-day of most EU leaders.
Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán | John Thys/AFP via Getty Images
“Doubts are on the rise,” said one EU official, who like the others quoted was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “How desperate is the situation on the battlefield? How much more money will we pour into this black hole? Populists across Europe will ride this wave in the coming months.”
As the June European elections approach, EU leaders are wary of favoring Ukraine over the daily concerns of their own citizens. Up to seven EU countries have stressed that the €50 billion to Kyiv must be linked to money for other European priorities such as tackling migration, precisely to avoid domestic criticism.
“We now see an emerging group of countries who sometimes look like they have second thoughts about Ukraine becoming a member of the EU,” said one senior EU diplomat, citing Austria’s desire that future membership for Ukraine be linked with next steps on Bosnia-Herzegovina’s EU membership.
Inertia
The standstill on the battlefield doesn’t help. Months of static frontline combat between Ukraine and Russia have consumed weapons and money with no sign of a military breakthrough for Kyiv.
The first six months of next year will be brutal for Ukraine, said Neil Melvin, a director at the RUSI think tank, with Russia managing to accelerate arms production and supplies while aid packages from Ukraine’s allies languish.
Ukraine and its supporters argue that is exactly why the West should quickly provide more of the weapons that are needed to win — instead of falling into Russia’s trap.
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Wednesday that now is the time to demonstrate “what it means to support Ukraine ‘for as long as it takes.’ Ukraine is not only fighting against the invader, but for Europe. Joining our family will be Ukraine’s ultimate victory.”
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told POLITICO that neither Ukraine nor the EU had a viable alternative to continuing to fight.
“The next country that Russia may attack will be a European country, it will not be somewhere else,” he said. “If one side blinks it will be a very bad moment for that side … It’s not us who has to blink, we have to make Russia blink.”
Increasingly, some EU diplomats are wondering whether Orbán has joined Putin in strategically waiting for Western support for Ukraine to disintegrate.
With the election victory of a far-right party in the Netherlands; with a Russia-friendly leader taking power in Slovakia; and with an expected far-right surge in the next European election, Orbán’s claim that “the winds of change are here” seems prescient. A victory by former President Donald Trump in next year’s U.S. election could further undermine Western support for Kyiv.
“Factors of inertia and doubt, which have characterized EU enlargement for years, are coming again to the fore and are cooling down the geostrategic rationale for opening up the EU to new members,” said Kai-Olaf Lang of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.
Hopes abide?
Europe is pulling out the stops to avoid a car-crash summit, with EU leaders and their aides in frantic negotiations with Hungary on a deal to give Orbán more EU money in exchange for lifting his veto on aid to Ukraine. If that strategy fails, leaders are cooking up alternative plans to get the money to Ukraine via bilateral funding.
A deal on enlargement will prove more difficult, EU diplomats said. In theory that could be kicked down the road until EU leaders reconvene in March.
Politically, however, such a delay would be a massive blow to Ukraine and to the EU’s image, especially as Brussels has reassured Ukraine a decision would arrive sooner than later.
Immediately after the war began in February 2022, von der Leyen said “Ukraine is one of us.” During a visit to Kyiv this fall she told the country’s parliament she was confident the decision on membership could still be taken this year. European Council President Charles Michel has said he hopes Ukraine will join the EU by 2030 — an ambitious date in any scenario.
The decision to open the door to the EU is no less important as spiritual sustenance, said Ian Bond of the Centre for European Reform. “The signal that you send by starting talks is that you are now on a train which is going towards a destination. If the Hungarians bar the door of the carriage and say you are not getting in, this is psychologically a blow to the Ukrainians.”
Joshua Posaner, Hanne Cokelaere, Pieter Haeck, Jacopo Barigazzi, Nicholas Vinocur, Aitor Hernández–Morales, Clea Caulcutt and Camille Gijs contributed reporting.
Soldiers enlisted across Ukraine after Russia’s invasion. Others, including a wedding planner, a farmer and a retiree, became civilian resistance fighters, determined to protect their country.
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Tonight, 35 million victims of Russian aggression have a new reason to worry. This past Wednesday, the U.S. Senate defeated billions in aid for Ukraine. The bill included relief for Israel and the U.S./Mexico border. But Republicans wanted more on immigration. The Senate is likely to try again. The White House says Ukraine support will run out in weeks. Ukraine has asked the West for a lot of money but not a drop of blood. Its people are doing the fighting-even civilians who chose not to flee but stay behind Russian lines and join the resistance. They include a wedding planner, an office worker and retirees who pledged “their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor” to defend the free world from tyranny.
They were typical civilians—a wedding planner, business owners and retirees. But after Russia’s unprovoked invasion, they chose to fight. Not unlike Americans after Lexington and Concord, they joined the resistance and pledged “their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor” to defend the free world from tyranny.
In February 2022, nearly 200,000 Russians invaded, and Ukrainian civilians heard the call to arms. Olha Hrynchenko went straight to enlist in the army.
Olha Hrynchenko (translated): They didn’t want me because I am a woman. But I insisted and convinced them I could help.
The wedding planner, Vitalii, organized his civilian friends to fight.
Vitalii (translated): We jammed two cars [full of] weapons, and we went to defend our city.
And 62-year-old Borys Silenkov came out of retirement to defend his country.
Borys Silenkov (translated): I told myself, “No. I won’t flee. This is my land. This is my region.”
Wedding planner Vitalii recruited 10 friends for a team of civilian resistance fighters.
60 Minutes
Their region is Kherson, a southern province with a capital of the same name on the Dnipro River. On March 2, 2022, Russia’s surprise attack overwhelmed the city. The government of Kherson surrendered, but the people rebelled.
Armed with flags, civilians confronted Russian teargas and bullets.
In secret camps, volunteers organized an underground force to harass the invaders, while others gathered windowsill intelligence to upload to the Ukrainian military.
To hear the story of how Kherson rose up, we had to head down. The Russians were one mile from here, firing artillery. So, we assembled a studio in a bunker. Here, we met Vitalii, who asked to go by his first name. He recruited 10 friends, including a coffee shop owner and a farmer. Most had never loaded a gun. He told us:
Vitalii (translated): That was our team, different people, different in age and social status. Just like that, Ukrainians.
His team of civilians improvised this base near the river. They ran hit-and-run raids including, Vitalii says, an attack on a small Russian boat.
Vitalii (translated): We [killed] all of them on the boat. A major, a captain, two lieutenants, a senior sergeant, and a soldier.
Scott Pelley: Help an American audience understand why you feel so strongly about protecting this country and these people.
Vitalii (translated): [The Russians] came to our home. Someone at the top decided that they could come to your home, tell you how to live your life, rape your wife, kill your child, smash your fields with tanks, and lay mines. You are bloody savages. No more, no less. Why defend my people? I was brought up this way.
Borys Silenkov was also brought up that way. He’s a retired politician and former governor of the province.
Borys Silenkov (translated): In my [country house], I had gasoline, and oil for my car, and so following a recipe we made Molotov cocktails in bottles.
Borys Silenkov, a retired politician and former governor of the province, was shot.
60 Minutes
He told us those cocktails went down the hatch of a Russian armored vehicle like this. This is Silenkov, who fought with a civilian team and ate food set out by villagers. He says that, one night, he was ambushed and shot.
Borys Silenkov (translated): I saw my leg and muscles were [torn] but not the bone. When I took the body armor off, my chest was covered in bruises as a result of two bullets that hit the body armor.
Silenkov told us he escaped and treated his leg.
Borys Silenkov (translated): I heated my knife, and with a stick between my teeth, I cut off all the muscles that were loose on my leg. I stitched the wound up as best I could [in the dark] with no anesthetic. I knew that if I surrendered, they would torture me to death.
Torture sets the price of freedom nearly beyond reach. Like Silenkov, this couple was burning armored vehicles and collecting weapons until they were betrayed by traitors collaborating with Russia.
Scott Pelley: After you were arrested, the Russians tried to get you to give up the names of other members of the resistance. And I wonder what the Russians did to you to try to get that information?
The pair asked not to be identified. You’ll understand why.
Male survivor (translated): Shall we tell you everything?
He asked.
Scott Pelley: Yes.
What they have to tell about Russian torture is hard to bear, but it should be heard.
A man and woman are speaking out after they say they were tortured by Russians
60 Minutes
Female survivor (translated): They poured vodka down my throat. They said, “We’ll pour a liter [of vodka] into you – and you will tell us everything.”
Male survivor (translated): They burned her legs with boiling water…
Female survivor (translated): They put a gun to my eyes and said, “I’m going to shoot you!” I wanted him to shoot me, I wanted it to happen quickly, not to be tortured. I was only thinking about my children, so that [the Russians] don’t get ahold of them. I only thought about my children.
He told us:
Male survivor (translated): They twisted my arms behind my back and started pushing them in opposite [directions] [almost] breaking them. Then, they let me go. And about thirty minutes later they took me upstairs again…
He told us the Russians tortured him with electric shock from an army field telephone like this. It has a crank that generates electricity.
Male survivor (translated): When they brought me in again, they took my trousers off. They attached the clips to my genitals and my lip and while they were setting up the wires, they were trying to take my tooth out with pliers. They would say to me, “Let’s call Biden or Zelenskyy, you chose.” Biden was when they attached the clips to my genitals and lip. And when they clipped to my ear and toe, that’s when “we called Zelenskyy.” That’s how they joke when they torture people.
Scott Pelley: You did not give up the names. And I wonder why you chose to suffer so much?
Male survivor (translated): Because they’re young guys, they have families, children. And I am Ukrainian… I just couldn’t.
The Russians released them after finding no evidence. They had had their phones wiped clean, often, to leave no clues and no leads.
Olha Hrynchenko
60 Minutes
While many fought in the underground, 34-year-old Olha Hrynchenko and 66-year-old Kostiantyn Kozak volunteered for the army. They were among the ‘overnight soldiers’ who threw on uniforms too new for insignia, picked up weapons short of ammunition, and with no training faced elite Russian paratroopers. Olha told us…
Olha Hrynchenko (translated): When the [Russians] started shooting from heavy caliber weapons, it turned into a complete nightmare because there was lots of smoke, fire everywhere around.
Our interview with Olha was one of those that was interrupted by the distant rumble of a Russian shell exploding in the city.
Scott Pelley: Why were you there the day… There go the Russians again… When you hear explosions like that in the city, what do you think?
Olha Hrynchenko (translated): Nothing. We live one day at a time today. We don’t have any plans for [the] future. We understand that we have to be strong and patient and live in this reality we have now. That’s it.
Kostiantyn told us about Lilac Park in Kherson where the overnight soldiers tried to make a stand. He said…
Kostiantyn Kozak (translated): On video you can see people who died, and you can see them lying there, weapons next to them, a horrible situation because people were torn apart. The trees were torn apart…
Kostiantyn Kozak
60 Minutes
Twenty eight volunteers were killed in the Lilac Park massacre. They never stood a chance. They knew that. But they were all that stood between the Russians and their families.
Citizens of Kherson who gave the “last full measure of their devotion” look to their city from a hill. The battle of Kherson would ultimately be their victory over the arrogance of the Kremlin.
Vladimir Putin said that Kherson would be Russian “forever.” He did not know that the Ukrainian forces outside the city and the resistance fighting within would never let up. We don’t know how many Ukrainians were killed but the fresh graves in this Kherson cemetery testify to the Russian occupation. It lasted about eight months until the Russians could no longer hang on.
A year ago, the Russians retreated across the river from Kherson city. But still, civilians continue to suffer under the Russian roulette of artillery rounds. And while we were there, a shell hit this building and riddled a city bus. Two passengers were wounded. A policeman was killed. Today, Russia still occupies nearly 20% of Ukraine — and so the resistance continues.
Of those we spoke to in the bunker, the man who suffered so much, has now joined the army. She is back in civilian life as is Olha Hrynchenko. Borys Silenkov tried to enlist but the army told him, at 62, he’s too old. Vitalii is now in the special forces and had one last thing to say.
Vitalii (translated): When misfortune came, it was America that offered help to my country. The USA and Great Britain were the first countries who came and offered their shoulder, giving us a chance at the very start to take a deep breath in order to re-group. So, thank you, to all Americans from Ukraine.
Produced by Nicole Young. Associate producer, Kristin Steve. Broadcast associate, Michelle Karim. Edited by Warren Lustig.
The visit is intended “to underscore the United States’ unshakeable commitment to supporting the people of Ukraine as they defend themselves against Russia’s brutal invasion,” the White House said in a statement Sunday. “As Russia ramps up its missile and drone strikes against Ukraine, the leaders will discuss Ukraine’s urgent needs and the vital importance of the United States’ continued support at this critical moment.”
Zelenskyy’s office confirmed that he had accepted Biden’s invitation. He also has been asked to speak to a meeting of all senators.
Biden has asked Congress for a $110 billion package of wartime funding for Ukraine ($61.4 billion) and Israel, along with other national security priorities. But the request is caught up in a debate over U.S. immigration policy and border security.
Zelenskyy traveled to Buenos Aires to witness the swearing-in on Sunday of Argentina’s new president, Javier Milei. The Ukrainian leader had been scheduled to address U.S. senators by video last week, but had to cancel the appearance, according to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks during an Anti-Corruption Champion Awards Ceremony at the State Department, Thursday, Dec. 7, 2023, in Washington.
Congress already has allocated $111 billion to assist Ukraine, and Biden’s budget director, Shalanda Young, said in a letter this past week to House and Senate leaders that the U.S. will run out of funding to send weapons and assistance to Ukraine by the end of the year, which would “kneecap” Ukraine on the battlefield.
“It’s time to cut a deal that both sides can agree to,” Young said Sunday.
The stakes are especially high for Ukraine, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said during two television interviews Sunday, given that “ we are running out of funding ” for the Ukrainians. “This is a time to really step up because if we don’t, we know what happens. (Russian President Vladimir) Putin will be able to move forward with impunity and we know he won’t stop in Ukraine.”
Earlier, he defended the emergency sale to Israel of nearly 14,000 rounds of tank ammunition and also called for quick congressional approval of the foreign assistance. Blinken said the needs of Israel’s military operations in Gaza justify the rare decision to bypass Congress. “Israel is in combat right now with Hamas,” he said. “And we want to make sure that Israel has what it needs to defend itself against Hamas.”
The tank ammunition and related support constitute only a small portion of military sales to Israel, Blinken said, and that the rest remains subject to congressional review. “It’s very important that Congress‘ voice be heard in this,” he said.
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky talks to the press, in Buenos Aires Argentina, on December 10, 2023. Volodymyr Zelensky attended the inauguration of Argentine President Javier Milei. (Photo by Mariano Sanchez/Anadolu via Getty Images)
The decision to proceed with the sale of more than $106 million for tank shells came as the administration’s larger aid package is caught up in a larger immigration debate.
Blinken noted that Biden has said he is willing to make significant compromises to get the aid package moving. “It’s something the president is fully prepared to engage on,” Blinken said.
Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said there is bipartisan agreement that something has to be done to address record numbers of migrants crossing into the United States from Mexico.
“We want to solve that, to secure the border. I just saw the president of the United States say that we’ve got to secure the border. He’s right. So, any effort that doesn’t do that will be rejected by Republicans,” Romney said.
Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, said the administration has yet to justify additional aid to Ukraine. “So what we’re saying to the president and really to the entire world is, you need to articulate what the ambition is. What is $61 billion going to accomplish that $100 billion hasn’t?” Vance said.
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said the money would make a difference because Russia is struggling to fund its war effort. “It can change the outcome of this war,” Murphy said. “Because at the very same time that we are making a renewed commitment to Ukraine, Russia’s ability to continue to fight this war is in jeopardy.”
Romney said he also supports the aid to Ukraine. “My own view is that it’s very much in America’s interest to see Ukraine successful and to provide the weapons that Ukraine needs to defend itself. Anything other than that would be a huge dereliction of our responsibility, I believe, to the world of democracy but also to our own national interest,” he said.
Blinken appeared on ABC’s “This Week” and CNN’s “State of the Union.” Romney and Murphy were on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Vance was on CNN. Young was on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”
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President Biden has invited Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to meet with him on Tuesday, the White House announced Sunday.
The meeting will take place just days after a Democratic bill with billions in aid for Ukraine and Israel failed to clear the Senate, caught up in a debate over U.S. immigration policy and border security.
Mr. Biden chided GOP lawmakers for their opposition to the package, saying that Republicans are willing to give Russian President Vladimir Putin “the greatest gift” if they don’t pass additional funding.
“Cutting off the flow of U.S. weapons and equipment will kneecap Ukraine on the battlefield,” U.S. Office of Management and Budget head Shalanda Young wrote in a Monday letter to House and Senate leaders.
“I want to be clear: without congressional action, by the end of the year we will run out of resources to procure more weapons and equipment for Ukraine and to provide equipment from U.S. military stocks,” Young wrote. “There is no magical pot of funding available to meet this moment. We are out of money—and nearly out of time.”
Zelenskyy had planned to address American lawmakers last week, but he canceled at the last moment. Before the change of plans, Sen. Chuck Schumer noted it would have been the third time Zelenskyy had addressed senators since Russia invaded Ukraine.
“The last time he spoke to us, his message was direct and unsparing,” Schumer said. “Without more aid from Congress, Ukraine does not have the means to defeat Vladimir Putin. Without more aid from Congress, Ukraine may fall.”
This week’s meeting at the White House is to “underscore the United States’ unshakeable commitment to supporting the people of Ukraine as they defend themselves against Russia’s brutal invasion,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.
“As Russia ramps up its missile and drone strikes against Ukraine, the leaders will discuss Ukraine’s urgent needs and the vital importance of the United States’ continued support at this critical moment,” Jean-Pierre added.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday announced a $175 million package of military aid to Ukraine. The aid package includes air defense munitions, additional ammunition for High Mobility Artillery Rockets Systems and artillery ammunition.
“Unless Congress acts to pass the President’s national security supplemental funding request, this will be one of the last security assistance packages we can provide to Ukraine,” Blinken said, urging Congress to “act immediately.”
Aliza Chasan is a digital producer at 60 Minutes and CBSNews.com. She has previously written for outlets including PIX11 News, The New York Daily News, Inside Edition and DNAinfo. Aliza covers trending news, often focusing on crime and politics.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A deal to provide further U.S. assistance to Ukraine by year-end appears to be increasingly out of reach for President Joe Biden. The impasse is deepening in Congress despite dire warnings from the White House about the consequences of inaction as Republicans insist on pairing the aid with changes to America’s immigration and border policies.
After the Democratic president said this past week he was willing to “make significant compromises on the border,” Republicans quickly revived demands that they had earlier set aside, hardening their positions and attempting to shift the negotiations to the right, according to a person familiar with the talks who was not authorized to publicly discuss them and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The latest proposal, from the lead GOP negotiator, Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., came during a meeting with a core group of senators before they left Washington on Thursday afternoon. It could force the White House to consider ideas that many Democrats will seriously oppose, throwing new obstacles in the difficult negotiations.
Biden is facing the prospect of a cornerstone of his foreign policy — repelling Russian President Vladimir Putin from overtaking Ukraine — crumbling as U.S. support for funding the war wanes, especially among Republicans. The White House says a failure to approve more aid by year’s end could have catastrophic consequences for Ukraine and its ability to fight.
To preserve U.S. backing, the Biden administration has quietly engaged in Senate talks on border policy in recent weeks, providing assistance to the small group of senators trying to reach a deal and communicating what policy changes it would find acceptable.
The president is trying to satisfy GOP demands to reduce the historic number of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border while alleviating Democrats’ fears that legal immigration will be choked off with drastic measures.
As talks sputtered to a restart this past week, Democrats warned Republicans that time for a deal was running short. Congress is scheduled to depart Washington in mid-December for a holiday break.
“Republicans need to show they are serious about reaching a compromise, not just throwing on the floor basically Donald Trump’s border policies,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Thursday before Republicans made their counteroffer.
But the new Republican proposal dug in on policy changes that had led Democrats to step back from the negotiations, according to the person familiar with the talks. The GOP offer calls for ending the humanitarian parole program that’s now in place for existing classes of migrants — Ukrainians, Afghans, Cubans, Venezuelans, Nicaraguans and Haitians. That idea had been all but dashed before.
Additionally, those groups of migrants would not be allowed to be paroled again if the terms of their stay expire before their cases are adjudicated in immigration proceedings.
GOP senators proposed monitoring systems such as ankle bracelets for people, including children, who are detained at the border and are awaiting parole. Republicans want to ban people from applying for asylum if they have transited through a different country where they could have sought asylum instead. GOP lawmakers also want to revive executive powers that would allow a president to shut down entries for wide-ranging reasons.
Further, after migrant encounters at the border recently hit historic numbers, the GOP proposal would set new guidelines requiring the border to be essentially shut down if illegal crossings reach a certain limit.
Lankford declined to discuss specifics after the Thursday meeting, but said he was trying to “negotiate in good faith.” He said the historic number of migrants at the border could not be ignored. The sheer number of people arriving at the border has swamped the asylum system, he said, making it impossible for authorities to adequately screen the people they allow in.
“Do you want large numbers of undocumented individuals and unscreened individuals without work permits, without access to the rest of the economy?” Lankford said.
The lead Democratic negotiator, Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, did not quickly respond to the GOP proposal.
Senators had made some progress in the talks before Thursday, finding general agreement on raising the initial standard for migrants to enter the asylum system — part of what’s called the credible fear system. The administration has communicated that it is amenable to that change and that it could agree to expand expedited removal to deport immigrants before they have a hearing with an immigration judge, according to two people briefed on the private negotiations who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Immigration advocates and progressives in Congress have been alarmed by the direction of the talks, especially because they have not featured changes aimed at expanding legal immigration.
Robyn Barnard, director of refugee advocacy with Human Rights First, called the current state of negotiations an “absolute crisis moment.” She warned that broadening the fast-track deportation authority could lead to a mass rounding up of immigrants around the country and compared it to the situation during the Trump administration. “Communities across the country would be living in fear,” she said.
“The White House is going to have to engage particularly if Senate Democrats are unwilling to do what we are suggesting be done,” said Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., at a news conference Thursday.
The White House has so far declined to take a leading role in negotiations. “Democrats have said that they want to compromise. Have that conversation,” said White House press secretary Karine-Jean Pierre.
After every GOP senator this past week voted not to move ahead with legislation that would provide tens of billions of dollars in military and economic assistance for Ukraine, many in the chamber were left in a dour mood. Even those who held out hope for a deal acknowledged it would be difficult to push a package through the Senate at this late stage.
Even if senators reach a deal, the obstacles to passage in the House are considerable. Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has signaled he will fight for sweeping changes to immigration policy that go beyond what is being discussed in the Senate. Also, broad support from House Democrats is far from guaranteed, as progressives and Hispanic lawmakers have raised alarm at curtailing access to asylum.
“Trading Ukrainian lives for the lives of asylum seekers is morally bankrupt and irresponsible,” Rep. Delia Ramirez, D-Ill., posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, as part of a coordinated campaign by Hispanic Democrats.
The unwieldy nature of the issue left even Lankford, who was one of the few senators optimistic that a deal could be reached this year, acknowledging the difficulty of finding an agreement in the coming days.
“There’s just a whole lot of politics that have been bound up in this,” he said as he departed the Capitol for the week. “Thirty years it hasn’t been resolved because it’s incredibly complicated.”
Associated Press writers Rebecca Santana and Seung Min Kim contributed to this report.
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VLADIMIR Putin’s alleged long-time gymnast lover has finally reappeared following rumours that she was under “house arrest” at his secret forest palace.
Russia’s so-called “First Mistress”, Alina Kabaeva, 40, was last seen on October 22 – the same day that wild conspiracies surfaced that the Russian president, 71, had suffered a heart attack.
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Putin’s rumoured lover, Alina Kabaeva, finally re-appeared this week after 40 days hidden from viewCredit: East2West
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In the new videos, she was filmed grumpily coaching her gymnastics students after various claims she was locked away in Vlad’s secret forest estateCredit: East2West
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Kabaeva, who is 31 years younger than Putin, has been romantically linked to the despot since 2008Credit: East2West
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The brunette stunner is alleged to be the mother of Putin’s three youngest kidsCredit: East2West
Three videos, released by the academy, show her unsmiling and stern-faced – a stark contrast to her demeanour in past public appearances.
Looking tired, she issued instructions often impatiently to three female students.
read more on alina kabaeva
Her reappearance came exactly 40 days on from outlandish reports that Putin had croaked.
The Kremlin was forced to issue an extraordinary denial in October that the despot had died at his Valdai palace, north of Moscow, and that his body was being kept in a freezer.
Since the rumours of Putin’s death – largely dismissed as conspiracy theories by analysts – broke, Alina had disappeared from view until this week.
Forty days is seen as the mourning period by the Russian Orthodox Church.
In the first new video issued on 7 December, Kabaeva is seen wearing a wedding ring – which is often used as evidence to bolster the claim she married Putin in a secret ceremony years ago.
Kabaeva had been unusually visible mainly at her gymnastics academy – called Heavenly Grace – in the run-up to her disappearance.
One theory is that she absented herself to undergo her latest new round of plastic surgery.
“She has had long absences before for pregnancies and plastic surgery,” said one observer.
Both political analyst Dr Valery Solovey and General SVR Telegram channel (which claims to have have insider knowledge from Putin’s circle) alleged that Kabaeva had been under virtual house arrest in Putin’s forest palace.
One report alleged that Kabaeva had strongly objected to being holed up in the high security estate, where she is believed to live in a separate wing with her kids.
General SVR claimed she had turned from a “shadow first lady into a prisoner”.
“Alina suddenly began breaking dishes and randomly throwing cutlery, after which she began to cry hysterically,” said the account.
“Security service representatives tried to calm Kabaeva down and urgently called doctors.”
The Russian tyrant is all but certain to be elected for a fifth time, which would see him become the longest serving Russian president.
For over two brutal decades, the despot has ruled over Russia with iron-first and despite rumours of his ailing health – Putin appears determined to cling onto power as his war in Ukraine grinds to a stalemate.
Putin and his alleged gymnast lover were first linked 15 years ago after a report in a Moscow newspaper run by media tycoon and former KGB spy Alexander Lebedev.
The despot was still married to his first wife at the time, Lyudmila Putina, whom he later divorced in 2014.
Kabaeva, who is 31 years younger than Putin, shot to fame as “Russia’s most flexible woman” and went onto become one of Russia’s most decorated gymnasts in history.
The Biden administration announced Saturday that it took the unusual step of bypassing Congress and approving the sale of $106 million worth of tank ammunition to Israel. It comes as Congress is at a standstill over a $106 billion package that would provide aid to Ukraine and Israel. Willie James Inman has more.
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