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Tag: ukraine

  • Ukraine’s Drone Academy is in session

    Ukraine’s Drone Academy is in session

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    KYIV — As the distant howl of air raid sirens echoes around them, a dozen Ukrainian soldiers clamber out of camouflaged tents perched on a hill off a road just outside Kyiv, hidden from view by a thick clump of trees. The soldiers, pupils of a drone academy, gather around a white Starlink antenna, puffing at cigarettes and doomscrolling on their phones — taking a break between classes, much like students around the world do.

    But this isn’t your average university.

    The soldiers have come here to study air reconnaissance techniques and to learn how to use drones — most of them commercial ones — in a war zone. Their training, as well as the supply chains that facilitate the delivery of drones to Ukraine, are kept on the down low. The Ukrainians need to keep their methods secret not only from the Russian invaders, but also from the tech firms that manufacture the drones and provide the high-speed satellite internet they rely on, who have chafed at their machines being used for lethal purposes.

    Drones are essential for the Ukrainians: The flying machines piloted from afar can spot the invaders approaching, reduce the need for soldiers to get behind enemy lines to gather intelligence, and allow for more precise strikes, keeping civilian casualties down. In places like Bakhmut, a key Donetsk battleground, the two sides engage in aerial skirmishes; flocks of drones buzz ominously overhead, spying, tracking, directing artillery.

    So, to keep their flying machines in the air, the Ukrainians have adapted, adjusting their software, diversifying their supply chains, utilizing the more readily available commercial drones on the battlefield and learning to work around the limitations and bans foreign corporations have imposed or threatened to impose.

    Enter: The Dronarium Academy.

    Private drone schools and nongovernmental organizations around Ukraine are training thousands of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) pilots for the army. Dronarium, which before Russia’s invasion last year used to shoot glossy commercial drone footage and gonzo political protests, now provides five-day training sessions to soldiers in the Kyiv Oblast. In the past year, around 4,500 pilots, most of them now in the Ukrainian armed forces, have taken Dronarium’s course.

    What’s on the curriculum

    On the hill outside Kyiv, behind the thicket of trees, break time’s over and school’s back in session. After the air raid siren stops, some soldiers grab their flying machines and head to a nearby field; others return to their tents to study theory.

    A key lesson: How to make civilian drones go the distance on the battlefield.

    “In the five days we spend teaching them how to fly drones, one and a half days are spent on training for the flight itself,” a Dronarium instructor who declined to give his name over security concerns but uses the call sign “Prometheus” told POLITICO. “Everything else is movement tactics, camouflage, preparatory process, studying maps.”

    Drone reconnaissance teams work in pairs, like snipers, Prometheus said. One soldier flies a drone using a keypad; their colleague looks at the map, comparing it with the video stream from the drone and calculating coordinates. The drone teams “work directly with artillery,” Prometheus continued. “We transfer the picture from the battlefield to the servers and to the General Staff. Thanks to us, they see what they are doing and it helps them hit the target.”

    Private drone schools and nongovernmental organizations around Ukraine are training thousands of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) pilots for the army | John Moore/Getty Images

    Before Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, many of these drone school students were civilians. One, who used to be a blogger and videogame streamer but is now an intelligence pilot in Ukraine’s eastern region of Donbas, goes by the call sign “Public.” When he’s on the front line, he must fly his commercial drones in any weather — it’s the only way to spot enemy tanks moving toward his unit’s position.

    “Without them,” Public said, “it is almost impossible to notice the equipment, firing positions and personnel in advance. Without them, it becomes very difficult to coordinate during attack or defense. One drone can sometimes save dozens of lives in one flight.”

    The stakes couldn’t be higher: “If you don’t fly, these tanks will kill your comrades. So, you fly. The drone freezes, falls and you pick up the next one. Because the lives of those targeted by a tank are more expensive than any drone.”

    Army of drones

    The war has made the Bayraktar military drone a household name, immortalized in song by the Ukrainians. Kyiv’s UAV pilots also use Shark, RQ-35 Heidrun, FLIRT Cetus and other military-grade machines.

    “It is difficult to have an advantage over Russia in the number of manpower and weapons. Russia uses its soldiers as meat,” Ukraine’s Digital Transformation Minister Mykhailo Fedorov said earlier this month. But every Ukrainian life, he continued, “is important to us. Therefore, the only way is to create a technological advantage over the enemy.”

    Until recently, the Ukrainian army didn’t officially recognize the position of drone operator. It was only in January that Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Valerii Zaluzhnyi ordered the army to create 60 companies made up of UAV pilots, indicating also that Kyiv planned to scale up its own production of drones. Currently, Ukrainian firms make only 10 percent of the drones the country needs for the war, according to military volunteer and founder of the Air Intelligence Support Center Maria Berlinska.

    In the meantime, many of Ukraine’s drone pilots prefer civilian drones made by Chinese manufacturer DJI — Mavics and Matrices — which are small, relatively cheap at around €2,500 a pop, with decent zoom lenses and user-friendly operations.

    Choosing between a military drone and a civilian one “depends on the goal of the pilot,” said Prometheus, the Dronarium instructor. “Larger drones with wings fly farther and can do reconnaissance far behind enemy lines. But at some point, you lose the connection with it and just have to wait until it comes back. Mavics have great zoom and can hang in the air for a long time, collecting data without much risk for the drone.”

    But civilian machines, made for hobbyists not soldiers, last two, maybe three weeks in a war zone. And DJI last year said it would halt sales to both Kyiv and Moscow, making it difficult to replace the machines that are lost on the battlefield.

    In response, Kyiv has loosened export controls for commercial drones, and is buying up as many as it can, often using funds donated by NGOs such as United24 “Army of Drones” initiative. Ukraine’s digital transformation ministry said that in the three months since the initiative launched, it has purchased 1,400 military and commercial drones and facilitated training for pilots, often via volunteers. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s Serhiy Prytula Charitable Foundation said it has purchased more than 4,100 drones since Russia’s full-scale invasion began last year — most were DJI’s Mavic 3s, along with the company’s Martice 30s and Matrice 300s.

    But should Ukraine be concerned about the fact many of its favorite drones are manufactured by a Chinese company, given Beijing’s “no limits” partnership with Moscow?

    Choosing between a military drone and a civilian one “depends on the goal of the pilot,” said Prometheus, the Dronarium instructor | Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP via Getty Images

    DJI, the largest drone-maker in the world, has publicly claimed it can’t obtain user data and flight information unless the user submits it to the company. But its alleged ties to the Chinese state, as well as the fact the U.S. has blacklisted its technology (over claims it was used to surveil ethnic Uyghurs in Xinjiang), have raised eyebrows. DJI has denied both allegations.

    Asked if DJI’s China links worried him, Prometheus seemed unperturbed.

    “We understand who we are dealing with — we use their technology in our interests,” he said. “Indeed, potentially our footage can be stored somewhere on Chinese servers. However, they store terabytes of footage from all over the world every day, so I doubt anyone could trace ours.”

    Dealing with Elon

    Earlier this month, Elon Musk’s SpaceX announced it had moved to restrict the Ukrainian military’s use of its Starlink satellite internet service because it was using it to control drones. The U.S. space company has been providing internet to Ukraine since last February — losing access would be a big problem.

    “It is not that our army goes blind if Starlink is off,” said Prometheus, the drone instructor. “However, we do need to have high-speed internet to correct artillery fire in real-time. Without it, we will have to waste more shells in times of ongoing shell shortages.”

    But while the SpaceX announcement sparked outcry from some of Kyiv’s backers, as yet, Ukraine’s operations haven’t been affected by the move, Digital Transformation Minister Fedorov told POLITICO.

    Prometheus had a theory as to why: “I think Starlink will stay with us. It is impossible to switch it off only for drones. If Musk completely turns it off, he will also have to turn it off for hospitals that use the same internet to order equipment and even perform online consultations during surgeries at the war front. Will he switch them off too?”

    And if Starlink does go down, the Ukrainians will manage, Prometheus said with a wry smile: “We have our tools to fix things.”

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    Veronika Melkozerova

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    February 21, 2023
  • Ukraine 1 year later: The mass exodus

    Ukraine 1 year later: The mass exodus

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    Ukraine 1 year later: The mass exodus – CBS News


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    Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine sparked the biggest and fastest mass exodus of civilians since World War II, forcing 8 million Ukrainians to leave the country and leaving a further 8 million internally displaced. Charlie D’Agata was there to see the mass exodus firsthand. One year later, he revisited some of those affected.

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    February 21, 2023
  • CBS Evening News, February 20, 2023

    CBS Evening News, February 20, 2023

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    CBS Evening News, February 20, 2023 – CBS News


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    Biden makes unannounced visit to Ukraine; Octogenarians to travel around the world in 80 days

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    February 21, 2023
  • Biden’s trip to Kyiv delivers the starkest rebuke possible to Putin | CNN Politics

    Biden’s trip to Kyiv delivers the starkest rebuke possible to Putin | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    There is no more powerful symbol of Vladimir Putin’s failure.

    A year ago, the Russian leader launched a blitzkrieg against Ukraine, mocking its history and sovereignty, sending his tanks churning toward Kyiv to obliterate the democratically elected government led by a former comic actor. His purpose was clear: To crush once and for all Ukraine’s dreams of joining the West and to force it to return to the orbit of greater Russia.

    Back then, anyone predicting how the anniversary of the war would be marked might have mused about a Russian military parade and a visit by Putin himself to a puppet leader he installed in a nation again under Moscow’s iron fist.

    The reality is far different following heroic Ukrainian resistance bolstered by weapons sent by NATO members.

    The president of the United States, in overcoat and shades, strolled through Kyiv in daylight, visiting a historic church as air raid sirens wailed and standing exposed alongside President Volodymyr Zelensky in the city’s vast, open and iconic St. Michael’s Square.

    His presence sent a message of defiance to Putin most directly and a cherished sign of resolve and empathy for the people of Ukraine. His audience also included European powers in a western alliance that Biden has led and invigorated like no president since the end of the Cold War. And every time a commander-in-chief makes such an audacious splash on the world stage he’s also making a point to Americans – on whose support continuing extraordinary support for Ukraine’s war effort depends – and to his own fervent domestic critics.

    Biden deliberately contrasted the sense of then and now that his visit, just before the anniversary of Russia’s invasion, conjured.

    “That dark night one year ago, the world was literally at the time bracing for the fall of Kyiv,” Biden told Zelensky at a news conference flanked by the Stars and Stripes and Ukraine’s distinctive blue and yellow national flag. The event itself carried its own symbolism – it did not feature two leaders cowering in a bunker, but went ahead in an ornate room like any other leaders’ press conference in any other capital.

    “One year later, Kyiv stands. And Ukraine stands. Democracy stands,” he declared. “The Americans stand with you and the world stands with you.”

    Biden’s words might have lacked the poetry of “Ich bin ein Berliner,” or “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” But Biden’s visit instantly went down in history alongside two defining trips to divided Berlin by Presidents John Kennedy and Ronald Reagan that were flashpoints of the Cold War and each of which sent their own image of US resolve to the Kremlin.

    Those events made clear that the United States stood with its Western allies for as long as it took to prevail over the Soviet Union. Biden’s visit was meant to give similar historic heft to his comment Washington is there for “as long as it takes” — though it’s unlikely that it will assuage fears in Kyiv and Europe that a change in president might weaken that US vow.

    In photos: President Biden visits Ukraine and Poland

    Biden’s secret visit, which involved the president leaving the US unannounced and heading to an active war zone, matched some of the colorful stagecraft that Zelensky – a master of public relations – has used to maintain Western support for his people and the multi-billion-dollar pipeline of weapons and aid.

    During America’s Middle East wars of the last 20 years, Americans became accustomed to Presidents George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump leaving Washington in the dead of night and popping up in Baghdad or Kabul to visit US troops and US-backed leaders. And while those trips had their own measure of daring and danger, Biden’s visit went a step further – venturing into a foreign capital that is often under air attack and lacks the security offered by large garrisons of American troops and air assets. The US did inform Russia of the plans to visit for “deconfliction purposes,” according to Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan.

    Biden had always planned to visit Europe this week to mark the anniversary of the Russian invasion — though his public program mentioned only a trip to neighboring Poland. But a journey across the Atlantic that lacked a Ukrainian component would have been unsatisfactory given that fact that many European leaders have already visited Kyiv. Still, the security footprint of the US president is far greater than the one accompanying those leaders, and his position as the leader of the West leaves him far more exposed.

    But by not visiting Ukraine, Biden would have been implicitly admitting that there were some things that Putin could prevent him from doing – in effect showing US weakness.

    Ukrainians understood the intent better than anyone.

    “The tipping point in this war will not be when we receive another set of weapons but when our alliance will stop playing reactive roles to what Putin will do,” Kira Rudik, a member of the Ukrainian parliament, told “CNN This Morning.”

    “President Biden has claimed the upper hand … and tomorrow Putin will have to reply to what happened today,” Rudik said, referring to a speech in which Putin is expected to rally the Russian people on Tuesday.

    Political symbolism is only effective if it gets results, drives policy and changes an entrenched situation.

    So, like the Berlin visits of Kennedy and Reagan, the true historic sweep of Biden’s perilous journey to Ukraine can only be judged in the light of subsequent events. In other words, his gesture will be an empty one if Russia – which appears to be mustering for a spring offensive – wins the war.

    And while the pictures of Biden in Kyiv were remarkable, they cannot disguise real questions and uncertainties surrounding the US approach to the war and differences with the Ukrainians. This plays out both in the types of weapons the US is prepared to offer and potentially in divergent scenarios about how the war could end. The phrase “as long as it takes” can mean different things to different people and there is every sign that this war, which Putin cannot afford to lose, could grind on for many bloody more years, testing Western resolve.

    The personal nature of the president’s rebuke to Putin is meanwhile likely to trigger a response from a ruthless leader who has shown no mercy to civilians and a cruel indifference to the value of human life – Russian as well as Ukrainian. One potential way Biden’s visit could backfire is that it could bolster Putin’s claim that he is really fighting a war against the West rather than an independent sovereign nation – a framing that is popular among some Russians and is one Biden has tried to avoid.

    The president’s visit only served to expose growing opposition to the war among conservative Republicans at home – which, if not yet near the levels that could force him to desert Ukraine, is sufficient to raise concerns about the size of future aid packages and what a new president after 2024 – Trump or a GOP leader who shares his “America First” tendencies – could mean for Ukraine.

    The most glaring difference between Biden and Zelensky lies in the kind of weapons the US president is willing to provide. The government in Kyiv is ratcheting up its campaign for the West to send F-16 jets and is now getting increasing buy-in from some influential bipartisan members of Congress.

    Biden has so far declined to agree to the request, which gets to the heart of a dilemma that defines his war strategy: How far to go to help Kyiv win while avoiding a direct clash between the West and Russia.

    Texas Rep. Mike McCaul, the chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, complained on CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday that Washington had taken too long to send game-changing weapons to Ukraine in the past and should not make the same mistake with warplanes. Asked if the Biden administration was now considering the dispatch of F-16 fighter planes, the Texas Republican replied: “I hope so,” and added, “I think the momentum is building for this to happen.”

    Sending US-made jets to Ukraine could be even more sensitive than the dispatch of the tanks to which the president just agreed.

    This is because they would enhance Ukraine’s capacity to potentially strike at Russian jets and air defense systems inside Russia. The use of NATO aircraft in such operations – even with Ukrainian pilots – could prompt the Kremlin to conclude the alliance has directly intervened in the war, increasing the risk of a disastrous escalation of the conflict Biden has tried to avoid.

    But retired US Brig. Gen. Steve Anderson told CNN’s Poppy Harlow Monday that Biden’s visit came at another turning point in the war.

    “This is a great show of leadership by President Biden. Good leaders always go to the sound of the guns.” But, Anderson added: “The United States needs to make a decision. Are we in it to ensure the Ukrainians simply not lose? Or are we in it so they can actually win?”

    Less importantly globally but still significantly, Biden’s trip to Ukraine had domestic political implications.

    A grueling and dangerous journey that required energy and endurance felt like a jab at critics who question whether Biden should be contemplating a reelection race at the age of 80.

    And like Biden’s State of the Union address earlier this month, his stagecraft infuriated the most extreme wing of the Republican Party, which Biden has said is a danger to US democracy and values. Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, for instance, quickly slammed Biden for journeying to Ukraine and other GOP figures accused him of caring more for Kyiv’s borders than those in the US.

    “This is incredibly insulting. Today on our President’s Day, Joe Biden, the President of the United States chose Ukraine over America, while forcing the American people to pay for Ukraine’s government and war. I can not express how much Americans hate Joe Biden,” Greene said in a tweet.

    There are many Americans on the right who agree that Biden has not done enough to secure the southern border and the issue will be at the center of the 2024 election. But Greene’s comment did not just exemplify the deterioration in civility in US politics. It was revealing from a pro-Trump Republican who has been supportive of the insurrectionists who tried to destroy American democracy on January 6, 2021.

    There may be nothing more presidential than standing for the foundational US values of freedom and democracy and the right of a people to repel tyranny enforced at the point of the gun from a more powerful foreign oppressor whose fight for independence mirrors America’s own.

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    February 21, 2023
  • Biden to deliver remarks in Poland ahead of one-year mark of Russia’s war on Ukraine

    Biden to deliver remarks in Poland ahead of one-year mark of Russia’s war on Ukraine

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    President Biden was to address the world Tuesday from Warsaw, Poland, ahead of the one-year mark of Russia’s brutal full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The president will deliver his speech Tuesday after meetings with Polish President Andrzej Duda, and a day after he made a surprise visit to Kyiv. 

    Mr. Biden on Monday said more sanctions would be coming, though Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo, in a phone call with reporters Monday, declined to give details ahead of a formal announcement. 

    In his speech, the president is expected to recap how the U.S. has supported Ukraine and rallied European allies to the cause, as well as what the U.S. has done so far to sanction Moscow. Adeyemo said Mr. Biden will talk about how the U.S. is making it harder for Russia to conduct the war, both by isolating Moscow economically and making it tougher for President Vladimir Putin’s regime to fund its military operations. 

    Adeyemo said Russia had lost about 9,000 pieces of equipment on the battlefield and struggled to find money to replace the equipment. Going forward, the U.S. will continue its cooperation with allies as it sanctions Russia and increase pressure on companies doing business with Moscow. 

    Mr. Biden’s trip to Kyiv was held closely, with the president accompanied only by his closest aides, his security detail and two journalists. More of the president’s aides met up with him once he reached Poland on Monday evening, after the Kyiv stop. 

    Mr. Biden spent about six hours in Kyiv, much of it with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whom he promised unwavering support and another tranche of American military aid.  

    White House aides stressed that the trip to Kyiv was still a risky one despite months of planning, noting that, unlike other war zones that past U.S. presidents have visited, the U.S. lacks a military presence in Ukraine. Mr. Biden, those aides told reporters, made the final decision to travel on Friday. 

    National security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters Monday that the U.S. notified Russia of Mr. Biden’s trip to Ukraine some hours ahead of the president’s departure, for “deconfliction purposes.”

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    February 21, 2023
  • CNBC Daily Open: The Fed wants inflation at 2%. But the economy might be fine with higher inflation

    CNBC Daily Open: The Fed wants inflation at 2%. But the economy might be fine with higher inflation

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    United States Federal Reserve building, Washington D.C.

    Lance Nelson | The Image Bank | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    The Fed wants to bring inflation down to 2%. But the economy may be fine with higher inflation.

    What you need to know today

    • HSBC, Europe’s largest bank by assets, reported a fourth-quarter profit of $5.2 billion before tax. That’s a 108% jump year over year, beating analysts’ estimates of an 87% increase. More good news: The bank is one of the few companies optimistic about its performance this year.
    • Markets in the U.S. were closed on Monday for Presidents Day, but stock futures dropped overnight. In Asia-Pacific, markets traded mixed Tuesday. Japan’s Nikkei 225 dipped 0.23% as the country’s flash purchasing managers’ index fell to 47.4 in February, indicating a contraction.
    • The U.S. Federal Reserve — and many other central banks in the world — have been proclaiming their determination to bring inflation down to 2%. But it’s an arbitrary target criticized by some economists.
    • PRO The U.S. economy could avoid a recession this year — or crash. These stocks let investors “expect the best … but insure against the worst,” according to Goldman Sachs.

    The bottom line

    The 2% inflation target has been repeated so often by Fed officials and central bankers worldwide that it seems absolutely crucial to a healthy economy. But “the 2% inflation target, it’s relatively arbitrary,” said Josh Bivens, director of research at the Economic Policy Institute.

    In fact, it was invented in New Zealand in the 1980s. Arthur Grimes, professor of wellbeing and public policy at Victoria University, said that New Zealand was experiencing skyrocketing inflation then, and the central bank picked an inflation target — seemingly out of nowhere — so that it could work toward a goal.

    Other central banks followed suit. In 1991, Canada announced its inflation target; the United Kingdom followed a year later. It was not until 2012 that the U.S. declared its 2% inflation target, but that number has remained stubbornly alive in the minds of the Fed ever since.

    But if the 2% target is arbitrary, it implies that the economy could function normally at a higher level of inflation. Indeed, in 2007, some economists wrote a letter to the Fed arguing for a higher ceiling. “There’s no evidence that 3% or 4% inflation does substantial damage relative to 2% inflation,” said Laurence Ball, professor of economics at Johns Hopkins University, who was among those who signed that letter.

    The Fed, however, is unlikely to change its target amid the current hiking cycle — it might look like it’s caving to investor demands for lower rates. Reconsidering what healthy inflation means will be a task left to another generation of central bankers.

    —CNBC’s Andrea Miller contributed to this report.

    Subscribe here to get this report sent directly to your inbox each morning before markets open.

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    February 20, 2023
  • Why the US is accusing Russia of crimes against humanity and what that means | CNN Politics

    Why the US is accusing Russia of crimes against humanity and what that means | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    A year into Russia’s brutal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, the US has seen enough.

    “In the case of Russia’s actions in Ukraine, we have examined the evidence, we know the legal standards, and there is no doubt: These are crimes against humanity,” Vice President Kamala Harris said at the Munich Security Conference this weekend.

    “To all those who have perpetrated these crimes, and to their superiors who are complicit in those crimes, you will be held to account.”

    The declaration marks the strongest accusation yet from the US as it seeks to punish Moscow for its war of aggression.

    The US government declared last March that members of the Russian armed forces had committed war crimes in Ukraine. President Joe Biden has gone as far as saying that atrocities at the hands of Moscow’s troops qualify as “genocide.”

    While the “crimes against humanity” determination is significant, it remains largely symbolic for now. It does not immediately trigger any specific consequences, nor does it give the US the ability to prosecute Russians involved with perpetrating crimes.

    However, it could provide international bodies, such as the International Criminal Court, with evidence to effectively try to prosecute those crimes.

    Here’s what you need to know about how these kinds of crimes are prosecuted on the international stage.

    A crime against humanity is defined by the International Criminal Court as an act “committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack.”

    This can include, among other things, murder, extermination, torture, enslavement, sexual violence, deportation or forcible transfer of population or other inhumane acts.

    “We reserve crimes against humanity determinations for the most egregious crimes,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement Saturday. “These acts are not random or spontaneous; they are part of the Kremlin’s widespread and systematic attack against Ukraine’s civilian population.”

    Harris in her speech outlined specific instances that have peppered news clips and official reports.

    “First, from the starting days of this unprovoked war, we have witnessed Russian forces engage in horrendous atrocities and war crimes,” Harris said.

    “Russian forces have pursued a widespread and systemic attack against a civilian population – gruesome acts of murder, torture, rape, and deportation. Execution-style killings, beating and electrocution,” she added.

    “Russian authorities have forcibly deported hundreds of thousands of people from Ukraine to Russia, including children. They have cruelly separated children from their families.”

    Harris’ speech cited evidence of indiscriminate Russian attacks that deliberately targeted civilians, including the bombing of a maternity hospital that killed a pregnant mother and of a theater in Mariupol, where hundreds were killed.

    The vice president spoke of the horrific images out of Bucha that showed men and women shot and left to rot in the streets and reports by the United Nations of a 4-year-old girl who was sexually assaulted by a Russian soldier.

    As it was when the US government declared that Russia committed war crimes last March, it remains to be seen whether there will be any accountability and whether Russian President Vladimir Putin himself will be forced to bear any responsibility.

    “We will continue to support the judicial process in Ukraine and international investigations because justice must be served. Let us all agree, on behalf of all the victims, known and unknown: Justice must be served,” Harris said.

    Located in The Hague, Netherlands, and created by a treaty called the Rome Statute first brought before the United Nations, the International Criminal Court operates independently.

    Most countries on Earth – 123 of them – are parties to the treaty, but there are very large and notable exceptions. That’s key for this story, as neither Russia nor Ukraine — nor for that matter, the US — are part of the agreement.

    The court tries people, not countries, and focuses on those who hold the most responsibility: leaders and officials. While Ukraine is not a member of the court, it has previously accepted its jurisdiction. Accused Russian officials could theoretically be indicted by the court. However, the ICC does not conduct trials in absentia, so they would either have to be handed over by Russia or arrested outside of Russia. This seems unlikely.

    An ICC investigation could affect any diplomatic space for negotiations, with Putin and other accused perpetrators not wanting to risk arrest if they travel outside the country. It could also weaken Putin’s popularity at home, with Russians losing faith in his ability to lead.

    If justice in general moves slowly, international justice barely moves at all. Investigations at the ICC take many years. Only a handful of convictions have ever been won.

    A preliminary investigation into the hostilities in eastern Ukraine lasted more than six years – from April 2014 until December 2020. At the time, the prosecutor said there was evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Next steps were slowed by the Covid-19 pandemic and a lack of resources at the court, which is conducting multiple investigations.

    Anatoly Antonov, Russia’s ambassador to the United States, cast the crimes against humanity accusation as an attempt to “demonize” Russia, according to state news agency TASS.

    “We consider such insinuations as an attempt, unprecedented in terms of its cynicism, to demonize Russia,” Antonov said this weekend.

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    February 20, 2023
  • How Biden’s wartime visit to Kyiv came together

    How Biden’s wartime visit to Kyiv came together

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    US President Joe Biden walks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during an unannounced visit in Kyiv on Feb. 20, 2023.

    Evan Vucci | AFP | Getty Images

    President Joe Biden’s decision to make a risky wartime visit to Kyiv took root after a similarly clandestine mission just two months ago — when Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy came to Washington and addressed a joint meeting of Congress, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

    Senior members of Biden’s national security team who helped arrange the travel at the end of last year were heartened — and pleasantly surprised — by how powerful and positive the reaction to Zelenskyy’s trip seemed to be among the American people, said the sources, who, like others in this article, were granted anonymity to discuss internal planning. It was Zelenskyy’s first travel outside Ukraine since the start of the war.

    Hoping to sustain momentum for efforts to keep the fragile Western alliance together in support of Ukraine, the officials began discussions about using the anniversary of Russia’s invasion to make a similarly bold gesture.

    Publicly, the planning would play out in the trip officials formally announced 10 days ago — that Biden would make a second trip to Poland, Ukraine’s neighbor, to meet with its president and other NATO allies who have most to lose from any weakening of Western resolve.

    But privately, among a small universe of senior officials, the thinking was that this might be the moment to realize a long-held hope among some officials for an even more potent demonstration of U.S. solidarity: having Biden visit Ukraine.

    “Discussions about possibly going have been underway for months and really accelerated in recent weeks,” a senior administration official said.

    Officials across the government had long made it clear that it was nearly impossible to guarantee Biden’s safety heading into a war zone in which the U.S. is not an active partner.

    Other leaders of NATO and the G-7 group of major industrial nations, senior members of Congress and the secretaries of defense and state had all made the long, secretive journey to Kyiv. First lady Jill Biden made a surprise Mother’s Day visit to western Ukraine, spending two hours in the border town of Uzhhorod to meet first lady Olena Zelenska. 

    But the level of security needed for the president of the U.S. had long been considered incompatible. Even until the end, discussions about security measures were “intense,” as another official put it. They even included a call to Russian officials hours before Biden departed for “deconfliction” purposes, national security adviser Jake Sullivan would later tell reporters. 

    “[It] required a security, operational and logistical effort from professionals across the U.S. government to take what was an inherently risky undertaking and make it a manageable level of risk,” Sullivan told reporters after Biden left Kyiv on Monday afternoon local time. “But, of course, there was still risk and is still risk in an endeavor like this.”

    Biden spent about five hours in the capital, meeting with Zelenskyy and other Ukrainian officials. The two leaders visited St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Monastery and then walked to the nearby Wall of Remembrance, which honors those who have died in the war.

    Sullivan and his deputy, Jon Finer, said that while planning involved officials from across the government, it was a very closely held among every agency involved.

    At a White House news briefing Friday, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby flatly denied that Biden would detour to Ukraine on his Poland trip. 

    Typically, it would be Sullivan who briefed reporters ahead of a Biden foreign trip, but he did not this time so he would not be in the position of misleading reporters, two sources familiar with the matter said.

    As planning reached the late stages, aides to Vice President Kamala Harris were told that her itinerary for the Munich Security Conference needed to be trimmed to ensure that she returned to U.S. soil by Saturday night. They were not given a reason, only that it was “nonnegotiable,” according another administration officials.

    On Sunday, the White House released a public schedule that had Biden scheduled to depart for Poland late Monday — well after he had already quietly left Washington.

    Instead, a handful of officials gathered at the White House before dawn, along with others in Europe, to track his journey every step of the way, two officials said.

    Sullivan was among the small number of staff members who traveled with Biden on Monday; others who were due to travel to Poland will still travel, without Biden, as scheduled Monday night. 

    White House officials did not immediately provide additional details of the precautions taken to minimize the security risks. But one obvious hurdle was how to provide security without committing U.S. air assets in the region.

    Ukraine can lose this war — but Russia can't win, Eurasia Group CEO says

    Biden took a 10-hour train ride from the Polish border into Kyiv. A source familiar with the matter said that while Biden could have gone to other locations in Ukraine that would have been easier to reach, he chose Kyiv to highlight that the capital is still standing after Ukraine’s forces proved to Russian President Vladimir Putin that the country would be more different to topple than anticipated.

    For Jill Biden’s visit to Ukraine in May, military aircraft tracked her motorcade as it made its way from a Slovakian airport up to the border but did not follow along as she drove across Ukraine’s border. The first lady’s trip was made public only as she prepared to cross back into Slovakia hours later.

    When Joe Biden, then the vice president, last traveled into a war zone, a trip to Baghdad and Erbil, Iraq, in April 2016, his arrival was disclosed after he had safely arrived in the Green Zone, with subsequent movements covered by the traveling media pool.

    Biden noted that Monday’s trip was his eighth to Ukraine, and his first words after he stepped off the train were, “It’s good to be back in Kyiv,” according to the media pool.

    Biden last visited the country in his final days as vice president.

    This time, he “was very focused on making sure that he made the most of his time on the ground, which he knew was going to be limited,” Sullivan said.

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    February 20, 2023
  • 2/20: CBS News Prime Time

    2/20: CBS News Prime Time

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    2/20: CBS News Prime Time – CBS News


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    John Dickerson speaks with John Kirby about President Biden’s trip to Ukraine, reports on Jimmy Carter’s hospice care, and discusses censorship claims about Roald Dahl’s books.

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    February 20, 2023
  • Biden makes unannounced visit to Ukraine

    Biden makes unannounced visit to Ukraine

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    Biden makes unannounced visit to Ukraine – CBS News


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    President Biden made an unannounced visit to Ukraine to mark the one year anniversary of the start of the war. It was the first time in modern history that an American president traveled to a war zone without a U.S. military presence on the ground. Charlie D’Agata reports.

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    February 20, 2023
  • Biden’s Kyiv visit took months of secret planning

    Biden’s Kyiv visit took months of secret planning

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    Biden’s Kyiv visit took months of secret planning – CBS News


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    Sneaking President Biden into an active war zone in Ukraine was risky and took months of secret planning by a small team. Nancy Cordes has the details of how they did it.

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    February 20, 2023
  • “A very close-held operation”: How Biden made his unannounced visit to Ukraine

    “A very close-held operation”: How Biden made his unannounced visit to Ukraine

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    Sneaking the leader of the free world into an active war zone in Ukraine isn’t easy. 

    It took months of secret planning by a handful of officials from the Pentagon, Secret Service, intelligence community and White House. Amanda Sloat, a top adviser to President Biden on European affairs, told CBS News that “an incredibly small team” was involved in the planning. 

    “It was a very close-held operation, and I think everybody wanting to do everything they could to get the president there and back safely,” Sloat said. 

    Here’s how they did it:

    Before dawn on Sunday, Mr. Biden and his team boarded an Air Force plane that had its shades drawn and sat in a dark hanger at Joint Base Andrews. Instead of flying on the usual 747, Mr. Biden flew on a smaller C-32. The plane’s call sign was changed from “Air Force One” to “Special Air Mission 60.” 

    The group traveling with Mr. Biden was also kept to a minimum and sworn to secrecy. Instead of the larger group of press that travels with the president, two journalists were allowed to document the trip — Wall Street Journal reporter Sabrina Siddiqui and Associated Press photographer Evan Vucci. 

    The plane stopped briefly in Germany — still with its shades down — to refuel before the aircraft’s transponder was turned off for the next flight to a Polish airbase near the Ukraine border. 

    From there, Mr. Biden, his aides, security apparatus and the press drove about an hour to Przemyśl Główny train station, located near the border of Poland and Ukraine. The motorcade of at least 20 vehicles did not use sirens — as the president’s motorcade usually does — to avoid drawing attention to itself. 

    The motorcade pulled up to a train that also had its shades mostly drawn and the occupants boarded for a 10-hour journey to Kyiv. Along the way, the train stopped a handful of times, at least once to pick up more security. All the while, U.S. surveillance flights kept watch from Polish airspace. 

    A couple of hours before Mr. Biden arrived in Kyiv, the U.S. gave Russia a heads up in a brief and “very straightforward way” through a “deconfliction channel,” Sloat said. 

    The train pulled into the Kyiv-Pasazhyrsky station after sunrise Monday. U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Bridget Brink awaited Mr. Biden and his staff on the platform. 

    “It’s good to be back in Kyiv,” Mr. Biden said after stepping off the train. 

    Mr. Biden was then ushered away in another motorcade to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. He spent about six hours in Kyiv before heading to the train station for the 10-hour journey back to Poland. 


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    Nancy Cordes


    Nancy Cordes

    Nancy Cordes is CBS News’ chief White House correspondent.

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    February 20, 2023
  • CNBC Daily Open: The Fed wants inflation at 2%. But the economy may be fine with higher inflation

    CNBC Daily Open: The Fed wants inflation at 2%. But the economy may be fine with higher inflation

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    The Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building in Washington, D.C.

    Stefani Reynolds | Bloomberg Creative Photos | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    The Fed wants to bring inflation down to 2%. But the economy may be fine with higher inflation.

    What you need to know today

    • Markets in the U.S. were closed on Monday for Presidents Day. In Asia-Pacific, Chinese markets jumped. The Shenzhen Component popped 2.03% and the Shanghai Composite rose 2.06%.
    • The U.S. Federal Reserve — and many other central banks in the world — have been proclaiming their determination to bring inflation down to 2%. But this 2% target is relatively arbitrary.
    • Darktrace, a U.K. cybersecurity firm, was accused by Quintessential Capital Management, a New York-based short seller, of accounting flaws that inflate revenue. Darktrace denied the allegations and appointed EY to review its processes.
    • PRO It’s unclear if the recent rise in markets is a bear market rally or the start of a new bull market. In this volatile environment, it’s best to be “defensively offensive,” according to a portfolio specialist.

    The bottom line

    The 2% inflation target has been repeated so often by Fed officials and central bankers worldwide that it seems absolutely crucial to a healthy economy. But “the 2% inflation target, it’s relatively arbitrary,” said Josh Bivens, director of research at the Economic Policy Institute.

    In fact, it was invented in New Zealand in the 1980s. Arthur Grimes, professor of wellbeing and public policy at Victoria University, said that New Zealand was experiencing skyrocketing inflation then, and the central bank picked an inflation target — seemingly out of nowhere —so that it could work toward a goal.

    Other central banks followed suit. In 1991, Canada announced its inflation target; the United Kingdom followed a year later. It was not until 2012 that the U.S. declared its 2% inflation target, but that number has remained stubbornly alive in the minds of the Fed ever since.

    But if the 2% target is arbitrary, it implies that the economy could function normally at a higher level of inflation. Indeed, in 2007, some economists wrote a letter to the Fed arguing for a higher ceiling. “There’s no evidence that 3% or 4% inflation does substantial damage relative to 2% inflation,” said Laurence Ball, professor of economics at Johns Hopkins University, who was among those who signed that letter.

    The Fed, however, is unlikely to change its target amid the current hiking cycle — it might look like it’s caving to investor demands for lower rates. Reconsidering what healthy inflation means will be a task left to another generation of central bankers.

    —CNBC’s Andrea Miller contributed to this report.

    Subscribe here to get this report sent directly to your inbox each morning before markets open.

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    February 20, 2023
  • After one year of war, how to break the stalemate in Ukraine?

    After one year of war, how to break the stalemate in Ukraine?

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    February 24 will mark one year since Russian tanks rolled over the border into Ukraine. As it stands there is still no end in sight and the U.S. is facing increasing pressure to provide military aid in the form of high tech equipment such as F-16 fighters and M1 Abrams tanks.

    David Silbey is an associate professor of history at Cornell University where he specializes in military history, defense policy and battlefield analysis. He says the war in Ukraine is starting to resemble the kind of proxy conflicts we saw during the Cold War.

    Silbey says:

    “The United States is gaining a substantial geopolitical advantage at low cost to itself while the Russians are bleeding themselves dry against a defiant enemy.  

    “For 2023, I wouldn’t be surprised if the U.S. eventually sends fighter jets, though like tanks, it’s going to take them a while to get there and then train Ukrainians on them. They would be a substantial military help but also a challenging logistics burden for Ukraine.

    “I seriously doubt American forces will get sent to Ukraine. I suspect there may already be U.S. special forces in-country, (though I have no evidence). It would escalate the war massively if regular troops were sent in, which is something the U.S. doesn’t need to do at the moment.”

    Cristina Florea is an assistant professor and historian of Central and Eastern Europe.

    She says the Russian-Ukrainian war has become a war of attrition, where a Ukrainian victory is far from guaranteed.

    Florea says:

    “Despite Ukrainians’ unwavering will to fight, the fact of the matter remains that over one fifth of Ukraine’s territory is currently in Russian hands. What worries me is that after one year of fighting, the conflict will gradually recede into the background, and concern will give way to complacency.

     “The war’s end will be decided on the battlefield. Since there are no signs that Russian support for the war is any weaker today, it is imperative that the U.S. and NATO throw their weight fully behind Ukraine. Halfway measures will simply prolong the conflict and put Ukraine at risk of running out of military equipment before Russia does.”

     

    Cornell University has dedicated television and audio studios available for media interviews.

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    February 20, 2023
  • U.K. National Health Service delays drive some Ukrainian refugees to return to war zone for quick care

    U.K. National Health Service delays drive some Ukrainian refugees to return to war zone for quick care

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    London — Sasha has been struggling to sleep for weeks. She escaped the bullets and bombs raining down on her hometown of Zaporizhzhya, in eastern Ukraine, and reached the U.K. as a refugee in December, but the effects of the war have left her with severe PTSD and anxiety.

    “I’m living on three to four hours of sleep on good days, and on a bad day, I don’t have any sleep at all and just feel like blacking out,” she told CBS News.

    Depression and panic attacks drove Sasha to seek an emergency appointment through Britain’s National Health Service, the NHS, hoping to get a new prescription for medication. But Sasha found herself on a lengthy waiting list for an appointment, and now, despite the war still raging in her country, she’s considering a drastic alternative — going back home to get immediate medical treatment.

    “It would be faster for me just to fly over to Ukraine than to wait for these appointments,” she told CBS News.

    NHS crisis
    Ambulances waiting at the Royal London hospital in London, Jan. 6, 2023, as flu cases continued to rise amid a winter surge, ambulance delays, and a hospital bed shortage.

    Aaron Chown/PA Images via Getty


    “I come from quite a hot region in terms of the scale of the war you have over there, as it’s in the very east of Ukraine,” Sasha said. But still, she said she could “get an appointment just the next day.”

    It’s a familiar story to some of the estimated 162,700 Ukrainians who have come to Britain seeking an escape from the dire conditions back home.

    Sasha and other Ukrainian refugees who spoke to CBS News have painted a picture of a speedy and resilient Ukrainian health care system still able to provide routine care despite the war, which enters its second year later this week. But they also provided a damning insight into the crisis engulfing Britain’s cherished but beleaguered NHS. The refugees all asked to be identified only by their first names for privacy reasons.

    Critics say the 75-year-old public health service has been plagued by underfunding for more than 12 years under governments run by the Conservative Party, and it has come under enormous strain in recent months, struggling to recover from the onslaught of the coronavirus pandemic amid staff shortages and a series of labor strikes as public sector workers demand pay rises to help them cope with record-high inflation and a severe cost of living crisis.


    Up to half a million workers strike across U.K.

    03:43

    It’s a crisis evident in data: According to the British Medical Association, a record-high 3.1 million people were waiting over 18 weeks for non-urgent treatment as of December 2022.

    The average wait time for non-urgent treatment is 14 weeks — significantly higher than the median pre-COVID wait of eight weeks in December 2019, the BMA data show.

    Analysis by the U.K.’s Office for National Statistics shows more than 1 in 10 job vacancies posted online in December were in health care — more than in any other sector in the country’s economy.

    “For the last 15 years, our nurses’ pay and doctors’ pay has dropped by 30%,” Dr. Andrew Meyerson, an emergency room doctor, told CBS News in January. “We have half of our hospital setting up food banks for NHS staff. … We just can’t afford to live.”

    There have been some improvements recently, with patients waiting less time for ambulances and receiving faster emergency care in January compared to December 2022, according to the most recent NHS data.

    Olha, another Ukrainian refugee, told CBS News she had returned home multiple times for health care appointments since the war began.

    “It has become a meme amongst the Ukrainians living in the U.K., but the reality of undiagnosed diseases due to lack of accessibility to the NHS is scary,” she said.

    Maiia left Kyiv not long after the war started and found refuge in east London. In December, she experienced “very strong pain simultaneously in my ears, teeth, and near my eye,” and she tried to get treatment from her local NHS doctor.

    Despite multiple attempts, she said she was unable to get a face-to-face appointment with a doctor. Over-the-counter painkillers didn’t help, so she decided to go to the emergency room as “the pain was so strong that I could not bear it.”

    After a four-hour wait, she was handed more over-the-counter painkillers despite insisting to staff that she had already tried them. They still didn’t help.

    Maiia expressed praise for the fact that Britain’s universal health care system is accessible to everyone and free at the point of care, including to herself and other refugees, but she “decided that the best option would be to go to Ukraine and see the doctors there.”

    After a dangerous trip to Ukraine, driving from Poland to Kyiv, Maiia was referred to a local dentist who quickly diagnosed the problem. The pain was coming from pulpitis, a condition where the innermost tissue in your tooth becomes inflamed. A Ukrainian doctor extracted her tooth almost immediately.

    Mariia Kaschenko, Anhelina Shamlii and Victoria Stepanets contributed to this report.


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    February 20, 2023
  • Biden’s Surprise Ukraine Visit Sends a Message: Ignore the MAGA Haters

    Biden’s Surprise Ukraine Visit Sends a Message: Ignore the MAGA Haters

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    President Joe Biden arrived in Ukraine on Monday with a message: “Kyiv stands.” 

    “Ukraine stands,” Biden said during a surprise visit to the nation’s capital, days before the one-year anniversary of Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression against its democratic neighbor. “Democracy stands. The Americans stand with you, and the world stands with you.”

    It was Biden’s strongest show of support yet for Ukraine and its president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy. But it comes at a point in the war when the extent of the United States’ continued support is less certain, as a new Republican House majority seeks to flex its muscle against the Biden administration. Indeed, while leading Republicans like Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham have promised that the U.S. remains committed to Ukraine aid—and have criticized Biden for not going further in helping its military—a vocal contingent of the GOP’s MAGA caucus, operating under the nationalist banner of “America First,” has tried to put that assistance on the chopping block. 

    Among the most outspoken is Marjorie Taylor Greene, the eccentric congresswoman from Georgia who has been elevated by Kevin McCarthy as part of his bid to secure the speaker’s gavel. “Biden didn’t go to East Palestine, Ohio on President’s Day,” Greene tweeted on Monday, referring to the site of a train derailment earlier this month that has triggered deep public health and environmental concerns. “He went to Ukraine, a NON-NATO nation, whose leader is an actor and is apparently now commanding our United States military to world war.”

    “We must impeach this America Last fool before it’s too late,” Greene added. 

    It might be easier to dismiss Greene’s ravings, even with her recent ascendancy in the GOP House, were it not for the foothold such sentiments have found within the lower chamber’s Republican majority. McCarthy himself put Ukraine assistance in question last fall, when he warned that Zelenskyy would not get a “blank check” from the U.S. under his leadership. The California Republican later walked those comments back a bit—mostly in the form of private assurances to national-security leaders in his party that he was merely expressing a need for spending oversight, not suggesting he’d try to withdraw support for Ukraine. “What we’re saying is there’s going to be some thought, there’s going to be accountability, and taxpayer dollars are going to be used appropriately,” one Republican lawmaker told CNN at the time. Nevertheless, McCarthy’s public remarks seemed to expose deepening fault lines in the US government’s Ukraine policy. “These guys don’t get it,” Biden said on the midterm campaign trail in October. “It’s a lot bigger than Ukraine. It’s Eastern Europe. It’s NATO. It’s real serious, serious, consequential outcomes. They have no sense of American foreign policy.”

    For now, the US and Europe remain firmly behind Ukraine, which has continued to mount a formidable defense against Putin’s invaders. Germany last month sent tanks to the Ukrainian defense forces in a significant boost for the nation’s army, something Republicans including Graham have called on the Biden administration to do. Biden is still toeing the line, seeking to aid Ukraine without escalating the conflict beyond its borders. But his administration did take a major step over the weekend, when Vice President Kamala Harris formally accused Russia of committing crimes against humanity in Ukraine and warned China against aiding Putin. “Their actions are an assault on our common values,” Harris said of Russia in an address to the Munich Security Conference on Saturday, “an attack on our common humanity.” 

    With his surprise Ukraine visit—which included a tour of Kyiv’s St. Michael’s Cathedral and a stop at the Wall of Remembrance, as air raid sirens sounded through the city—Biden underscored US support for the war-torn country at a particularly perilous moment, as it braces for another aggressive Russian offensive expected this spring. “I thought it was critical that there not be any doubt, none whatsoever, about US support for Ukraine in the war,” Biden said, promising that western backing for Ukraine would “endure.” So far, it has, thanks to Ukraine’s strength and to Biden’s efforts to hold together an international coalition of democracies. “Putin’s war of conquest is failing,” Biden said Monday. The challenge ahead will be for Ukraine to continue its resistance and for its allies to remain unified as the conflict slogs on into its second year, with no clear end in sight.  

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    Eric Lutz

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    February 20, 2023
  • President Biden visits Ukraine for the first time since Russian invasion began

    President Biden visits Ukraine for the first time since Russian invasion began

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    President Biden visits Ukraine for the first time since Russian invasion began – CBS News


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    President Biden made an unannounced trip to Kyiv, his first since the Russian invasion, to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Charlie D’Agata reports.

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    February 20, 2023
  • President Joe Biden makes surprise visit to Kyiv just days before one-year anniversary of Ukraine war

    President Joe Biden makes surprise visit to Kyiv just days before one-year anniversary of Ukraine war

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    U.S. President Joe Biden on Feb. 16, 2023.

    Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

    U.S. President Joe Biden made a surprise visit to Kyiv, Ukraine Monday in a show of solidarity, nearly a year after Russia began its full-scale invasion of the country.

    Biden said in a White House statement that he was meeting with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to “reaffirm our unwavering and unflagging commitment to Ukraine’s democracy, sovereignty, and territorial integrity.”

    “I will announce another delivery of critical equipment, including artillery ammunition, anti-armor systems, and air surveillance radars to help protect the Ukrainian people from aerial bombardments,” he added. “And I will share that later this week, we will announce additional sanctions against elites and companies that are trying to evade or backfill Russia’s war machine.”

    Zelenskyy described Biden’s visit — the first by a U.S. president in almost 15 years — as “the most important visit in the history of Ukrainian-American relations.”

    “At this time, when our country is fighting for its freedom and freedom for all Europeans, for all people of the free world, it emphasizes how much we have already achieved and what historical results we can achieve together with the whole world, with Ukraine, with the United States, with the whole of Europe,” he said on Telegram, according to a NBC translation.

    The U.S. head of state left the Ukrainian capital after a more than five-hour visit, according to the Associated Press. Biden said that he will continue on to Poland where he will meet his counterpart Andrzej Duda. The Polish president could press Biden on post-war “security guarantees” for Ukraine, which he on Sunday told the Financial Times would be “important” for Kyiv.

    Biden’s visit to Ukraine comes after a concerted show of international support from global leaders and politicians during the Munich Security Conference over recent days. Allied forces have pledged financial support and weapons for Ukraine, but have fallen short of Zelenskyy’s pleas for the supply of jet fighters.

    On Feb. 18, Biden’s second-in-command, Vice President Kamala Harris, announced that Washington had determined that Russia had committed crimes against humanity in Ukraine, upgrading the U.S. administration’s March pronouncement that Moscow had committed war crimes.

    The latest round of U.S. sanctions will follow the EU’s tenth round of penalties against Russia for its war in Ukraine. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said last week that the sanctions will target exports worth 11 billion euros ($11.78 billion), dual use and advanced tech goods, as well as Russian propagandists. The latest EU package is subject to the approval of EU member countries.

    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg on Saturday expressed doubts to CNBC’s Hadley Gamble that financial repercussions will deter Putin, however.

    “What we have seen is that Russia is actually willing to pay a hard price for this war,” he said.

    “There are no signs that President Putin is preparing or planning for peace. He is preparing for more war, or new offensive, mobilizing more troops, setting the Russian economy on a war footing and also actually reaching out to other authoritarian regimes like North Korea and Iran to get more weapons.”

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    February 20, 2023
  • How One Besieged Hospital in Ukraine Treated Wounded Citizens, Soldiers, and Invading Russian Troops

    How One Besieged Hospital in Ukraine Treated Wounded Citizens, Soldiers, and Invading Russian Troops

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    At one point, the doctors overheard that the occupying authorities, appointed by the Russians in consultation with Ukrainian collaborators, had become unhappy with the arrangement of payments. So these authorities started pressuring Volodymyr Todosenko, the acting chief of the hospital, to reregister the facility, placing it under Russian jurisdiction. Todosenko’s saving grace: There was no coherent procedure for such a transfer, according to Ukrainian experts on the region, since the Russians, who had enough trouble running the war, had not set up a clear system for governing the area. To some of the members of Snihurivka’s medical team, this bureaucratic conundrum seemed like a bad joke reminiscent of a scene in a novel by Gogol.

    Still, as hospital insiders recalled, the Russians persisted in trying to take over the monetary reins of the hospital and its employees. In the middle of August, these sources said, representatives of the occupying authorities came to Todosenko with a Russian FSB officer. The men went into Todosenko’s office while two men with rifles were positioned outside. 

    The Russian officer—according to Todosenko, whose account was later corroborated by others—said that after the weekend, the chief doctor or one of his designees was to go to Kherson and finally reregister the hospital as a Russian facility. “Otherwise,” the officer declared, “it will become an execution pit.” 

    Todosenko, chastened, considered his options. Only two other doctors remained in Snihurivka. And he could not imagine that Dvoretska, being a nurse, would be allowed to sign documents, given the hidebound traditions of Russian bureaucracy. Todosenko, sizing up the situation and realizing he had no easy choices left open to him, asked if he could resign and leave. He was informed that if that was his plan, he would first have to report to the so-called mayor of the occupying authorities. Todosenko said that this was indeed his plan. And, taking his leave of the Russian officer, he knew that in deciding to resign he would be risking detention, interrogation, and far worse. Even so, in the back of his mind he suspected that, given the institutionalized chaos of Russian governance, it would take weeks or months for Snihurivka to be reregistered.  

    Todosenko gathered the hospital staff to explain his decision. He said that his wife, a nurse, instrumental to the functioning of the hospital, needed to go with him as well. “We came to say goodbye and explain our actions,” he told the assembled teams. “We couldn’t just flee. But there was no choice left to us.” He promised to return as soon as he could.

    It took the Todosenko family weeks to make it safely into government-controlled territory, including the time they spent in a processing center in the Zaporizhzhya region. And as he had hoped, the procedure for reregistering the hospital stalled, dragging on and on. 

    The passage of time proved to be a blessing for the Todosenkos—and the hospital. By November, a campaign by Ukrainian forces—coupled with a retreat by Russian troops, who refocused their efforts on the fighting to the east—put Snihurivka back in Ukrainian hands. And after nine devastating, grueling months, the town and hospital were liberated.

    Shortly thereafter, the Todosenkos returned to their posts, even though the town still had no electricity or running water, and despite the fact that the region had been heavily mined and was not fully opened for civilians. They were among the exceptions. Of the prewar staff of 215 employees at Snihurivka hospital, only a small number came back. The rest had settled elsewhere, realizing that much of their town had been decimated and knowing the tragic consequences of life in a war zone.

    Upon his return, Volodymyr Todosenko learned what had transpired in his absence. For the final three months of the occupation, Natalia Dvoretska, the chief nurse, took charge, even as tensions with the occupying forces remained high. “They hated us and this hospital so much,” recounted Natalia Libedenko, the head surgical nurse. “When there were signs they were leaving, me and Natalia Anatoliivna [Dvoretska] thought that they had left us for the end. Once, when they were walking around, searching, they told us they didn’t like how we behaved and said that the next time our staff didn’t smile at them, they’d undress us and chase us around the city naked.” 

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    Nataliya Gumenyuk, via The Reckoning Project

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    February 20, 2023
  • EU top diplomat says China will cross ‘red line’ if it sends arms to Russia

    EU top diplomat says China will cross ‘red line’ if it sends arms to Russia

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    BRUSSELS — It would be a “red line” for the European Union if China sends arms to Russia, the EU’s foreign policy chief said Monday.

    Josep Borrell’s warning came two days after U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken expressed “deep concern” that China was considering providing potentially “lethal assistance” to Russia for its war against Ukraine.

    Recalling a meeting he held on Saturday with top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi, Borrell told reporters: “I expressed our strong concern about China providing arms to Russia. I asked him not to do that, and expressing not only our concern, but the fact that for us, it would be a red line in our relationship.

    “He told me that they’re not going to do it, that they don’t plan to do it,” Borrell said, adding: “But we will remain vigilant.”

    Other EU foreign ministers attending a Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels also warned Beijing not to cross that line.

    “If such a decision is taken [by China] it will definitely have consequences, of course,” Tobias Billström, foreign minister of Sweden, which holds the rotating presidency of the Council of the EU, said. “We stand side by side with the United States on that message.”

    Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said the EU would be on the same page as the U.S. should Chinese arms end up in Russian hands.

    “There were those who expected the West … not to be united when it came to the Russian attack on Ukraine, but we were united. So I would think that, drawing from this lesson, there would be enough arguments for China not to assist Russia in its genocidal war in Ukraine,” Landsbergis said.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also urged China to remain “pragmatic.”

    “I personally have appealed to the Chinese leadership through direct channels and publicly not to offer any support to the Russians in this war. My hope is that Beijing will maintain a pragmatic attitude, because otherwise we are risking World War III, I think they are well aware of that,” he said in an interview with Italian media. “Our relationship with China has always been excellent, we have had intense economic relations for many years, and it is in everyone’s interest that they do not change.”

    Chinese state-owned defense companies were found to be shipping navigation equipment, jamming technology and jet-fighter parts to sanctioned Russian government-owned defense companies, Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month.

    Nicolas Camut contributed reporting.

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    Stuart Lau

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    February 20, 2023
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