WAR IN IRAQ

WAR IN IRAQ

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Evidence of Russian soldiers inside UKRAINE:AEGIS ON STANBY BASED ON SHIPS

 

 

 

 

Ukrainian troops wrestle back large swathes of rebel-held Luhansk as 'clearest evidence yet' emerges of Russian soldiers inside the country

  • Ukrainian troops make large in-roads into rebel-held territory at Luhansk
  • More than 50 civilians die and dozens more injured in day of deadly clashes
  • Fresh allegations Russian forces are on the ground inside rebel-territory
  • An abandoned BMD-s airborne combat vehicle reportedly discovered
  • Huge convoy of Russian aid trucks has been stuck at the Ukraine border
  • Guards started to inspect them today amid hopes they will soon be on move
  • Many in Luhansk have gone without running water and electricity for weeks
  • Russia has stepped up scrutiny of McDonald's restaurants within its borders
  • Move comes after tit-for-tat sanctions by Russia and West over the conflict
  • Ukrainian Economy Minister Pavlo Sheremeta has tendered his resignation 
  • WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT

Ukrainian troops have made large in-roads into rebel-held territory as 52 civilians were killed and dozens more injured in another spell of deadly clashes.

Forces have seized control over a large part of the separatist stronghold of Luhansk and are nearly encircling Donetsk, the largest rebel-held city.

But violence has continued today with at least two people killed and an unspecified number wounded following an artillery strike on a Donetsk suburb, the mayor's office said.

It comes as new alleged 'evidence' emerged of Russian forces on the ground inside rebel-controlled Ukraine after the discovery of an abandoned BMD-2 airborne combat vehicle.

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A pro-Russian militant lies on his back with his arms tied between his back as armed Ukrainian forces stand over him in the village of Chornukhine in the Lugansk region

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A pro-Russian militant lies on his back with his arms tied between his back as armed Ukrainian forces stand over him in the village of Chornukhine in the Lugansk region

The man is told to crouch down by the roadside next a Ukrainian soldier in the village of Chornukhine. A Ukrainian warplane was blown out of the sky over rebel-held territory as fierce clashes between government troops and pro-Russian insurgents left dozens of civilians dead

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The man is told to crouch down by the roadside next a Ukrainian soldier in the village of Chornukhine. A Ukrainian warplane was blown out of the sky over rebel-held territory as fierce clashes between government troops and pro-Russian insurgents left dozens of civilians dead

A Russian airborne combat vehicle belonging to Pskov air assault division was found abandoned in the Lugansk region amid allegations Russian forces on the ground inside rebel-controlled Ukraine

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A Russian airborne combat vehicle belonging to Pskov air assault division was found abandoned in the Lugansk region amid allegations Russian forces on the ground inside rebel-controlled Ukraine

The armoured vehicle is reported to have been located in the Lutugino district of Lugansk region and allegedly belonged to elite paratroopers, the 1st Air Assault Detachment of army unit number 74268 of the Pskov air assault division.

It was said to have been abandoned some 30 miles from the Russian border, well inside Ukrainain territory, though for now there is no independent verification of the claim.

It comes as the Red Cross revealed that Ukrainian authorities have delayed the delivery of Russian aid to eastern Ukraine with many in Luhansk having gone without running water and electricity for nearly three weeks.

But this afternoon border guards had started the process of inspecting the vehicles and some have begun to clear customs, Ukrainian border guards said. The massive convoy of 200 trucks has been stuck at the border between the two nations for a week because Ukraine is worried that it could be used to deliver military supplies to pro-Russian separatists.

Moscow says the mission is purely humanitarian and intended for civilians trapped by the conflict.

In another day of turmoil in the war-torn country, it was also revealed that Ukrainian Economy Minister Pavlo Sheremeta has tendered his resignation and voiced frustration at not being able to push ahead with much-needed economic reform.

It happened on the day that alleged evidenced surfaced of Russian forces on the ground in parts of rebel-controlled Ukraine.

The armoured vehicle is reported to have been located in the Lutugino district and contained a number of documents.

Moscow has denied the reports with a spokesman for Russia's defense ministry saying the vehicle in the photos did not belong to Russia and the documents found had not been used for five years.

A Kalashnikov machine gun for tanks was found in an abandoned airborne combat vehicle in the Lugansk region. There are claims the vehicle belonged to elite Russian paratroopers

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A Kalashnikov machine gun for tanks was found in an abandoned airborne combat vehicle in the Lugansk region. There are claims the vehicle belonged to elite Russian paratroopers

Personal belongings of a senior lieutenant 'Popov' were found in the abandoned combat vehicle

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List of soldiers found inside abandoned Russian airborne combat vehicle in Lugansk region

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Personal belongings of a senior lieutenant 'Popov' (left) were found in the abandoned combat vehicle while a list of soldiers was also discovered (right)

But Ukrainian journalist Leonid Shvets claimed they included duty and holiday journals of Russian soldiers, adding: 'All documents were found inside the vehicle.

'The crew was lost somewhere on the way.'

Pictures show personal possessions of the crew including credit cards and a driving license, as well as 'a heavy Kalashnikov machine gun for tanks which belongs to the soldier N.D.Surnachev,' said another journalist Roman Bochkala who published the images.

'His name can be found in the list of the soldiers who were on duty that evening, discovered inside the abandoned combat vehicle.

'Other names of soldiers are also there, supposedly all of those are fighting in Ukraine now.'

The vehicle bears the number 275, though an effort was apparently made to daub its identification marks.

A Russian combat manual and drill regulation was also photographed.

If confirmed, the claim is damaging to Russia which has maintained that no soldiers or equipment from Vladimir Putin's forces has been sent into Ukraine.

The allegation is that these are serving troops not mercenaries.

'We see the passport of Nikolai S. Krygin who is from Pskov region, born in 1994,' wrote Bochkala.

These items were all found inside the abandoned vehicle and included a torch, clothing, a series of documents and blue berets. Blue berets are worn by Russian air assault troops

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These items were all found inside the abandoned vehicle and included a torch, clothing, a series of documents and blue berets. Blue berets are worn by Russian air assault troops

Journalists in Ukraine say this combat manual of Russian air assault forces was also discovered in the vehicle, abandoned after a clash with Ukrainian forces near Georgievka village

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Journalists in Ukraine say this combat manual of Russian air assault forces was also discovered in the vehicle, abandoned after a clash with Ukrainian forces near Georgievka village

'It tells us that Putin has problems with experienced soldiers, so he has to use young inexperienced men. There is other evidence proving that Russian army is fighting in Ukraine.'

Credit cards and a driving license belonging to an Ilya Maximov were found as well as the personal possessions of the detachment commander, a Lieutenant Popov.

The vehicle was abandoned after a clash with Ukrainian forces near Georgievka village, several miles south of Lugansk city which has been at the apex of a major operation by Ukrainian troops this week to recapture if from pro-Moscow separatists, it was claimed.

'Afterwards the battle field was full of blue berets and Rollton Chinese noodle soup boxes,' claimed Bochkala citing soldiers in the 24th brigade of the Ukrainian army and from the 'Storm' special forces unit.

Blue berets are worn by Russian air assault troops.

'The Pskov division is losing soldiers. Very soon many zinc coffins will go back to Russia and there will be not nameless rebels inside but young sons of the Motherland killed for some unknown purpose.

Included in the stash were 'Drill Regulations of Russian Army' and other documents

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Included in the stash were 'Drill Regulations of Russian Army' and other documents

Soldier Ilya Maximov's Russian driving license and other cards were also discovered

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Soldier Ilya Maximov's Russian driving license and other cards were also discovered

'And if that woman wrote me the truth, it shows the specific cynicism of Putin towards his own citizens.

'What sort of army exercise may you have abroad? This very evidence must be urgently demonstrated to the ambassadors of the foreign states and sent to international organisations where it should be properly evaluated.

'Whatever we are hoping for, we see here a true army invasion is that the Russian Federation must be called an aggressor.

Ukraine security officials said this was one of two vehicles captured recently.

'Ukrainian soldiers captured two armoured vehicles of Russia's Pskov Airborne division near Lugansk,' said security spokesman Andriy Lysenko, adding that the troops manning the vehicles had fled.

Ukrainian troops have been trying for weeks to drive the rebels out of Luhansk and cut off Donetsk, a city of a million that has shrunk by a third as frightened residents fled.

The Museum of Donetsk was one of the buildings destroyed by artillery shelling in Donetsk. In the last few days, several neighborhoods have been hit with sustained fire

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The Museum of Donetsk was one of the buildings destroyed by artillery shelling in Donetsk. In the last few days, several neighborhoods have been hit with sustained fire

Stuffed animals lie under the rubble at the Museum of Donetsk after parts of the wall and ceiling were caved in for artillery fire

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Stuffed animals lie under the rubble at the Museum of Donetsk after parts of the wall and ceiling were caved in for artillery fire

A woman sifts through the damaged artifacts in the ruins of the Museum of Donetsk after it was destroyed by artillery fire

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A woman sifts through the damaged artifacts in the ruins of the Museum of Donetsk after it was destroyed by artillery fire

Panels and electrical cables hang from the ceiling of the Museum of Donetsk while a woman walks through the room wearing a protective face mask

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Panels and electrical cables hang from the ceiling of the Museum of Donetsk while a woman walks through the room wearing a protective face mask

Clean-up operation: A woman sweeps broken glass up from the floor of the museum

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Clean-up operation: A woman sweeps broken glass up from the floor of the museum

In the last few days, several neighborhoods in Donetsk have been hit with sustained artillery fire and fighting on the city's outskirts has become more intense.

The death toll mounted quickly yesterday. In the Donetsk region, 43 locals were killed and 42 wounded in less than two days, including in two deadly artillery attacks on Wednesday afternoon in the capital of Donetsk, local authorities said.

Nine troops died and 22 were wounded in fighting in a town outside Donetsk.

Luhansk city authorities reported running battles between the two sides.

By early evening, government forces took control of 'significant parts' of Luhansk, an eastern city just 12 miles from the Russian border, said Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for Ukraine's National Security Council.

A Ukrainian SU-25 plane was also shot down near Luhansk, Lysenko told TV station 112 late last night. He said the location of the pilot was still unknown.

Hard-hit Luhansk has been without electricity, running water or phone connections for 18 days due to the fighting.

Residents line up to collect drinking water in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine. Many people in the region have gone without running water and electricity for 18 days

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Residents line up to collect drinking water in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine. Many people in the region have gone without running water and electricity for 18 days

A dead man is carried on a stretcher after shelling by the Ukrainian forces in Makiivka 16 miles from Donetsk, eastern Ukraine

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A dead man is carried on a stretcher after shelling by the Ukrainian forces in Makiivka 16 miles from Donetsk, eastern Ukraine

A woman cries near her house in the city of Makeyevka, in the Donetsk region. Street battles have been raging in nearby Ilovaysk with authorities saying nine soldiers died in the area in the last 24 hours

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A woman cries near her house in the city of Makeyevka, in the Donetsk region. Street battles have been raging in nearby Ilovaysk with authorities saying nine soldiers died in the area in the last 24 hours

Fighting was still being reported this afternoon.

'People hardly leave their homes for fear of being caught in the middle of ongoing fighting, with intermittent shelling into residential areas placing civilians at risk,' the International Committee of the Red Cross said in a statement.

Russia has sent a massive aid convoy to help residents there but it is still stuck at the border, not yet approved by Kiev because its proposed route lies through rebel-held territory.

Ukraine has accused Russia of arming and supporting the separatists, a charge Russia denies.

Ukraine and the West fear the massive aid convoy - over 200 trucks - will be used in some way to help the separatist militia.

Border guards have started the process of inspecting a convoy of Russian aid trucks and some have begun to clear customs, Ukrainian border guards said

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Border guards have started the process of inspecting a convoy of Russian aid trucks and some have begun to clear customs, Ukrainian border guards said

Ukrainian authorities were accused of delaying the delivery of Russian aid to eastern Ukraine, but efforts are under way to allow the stalled convoy to proceed, the International Committee of the Red Cross said

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Ukrainian authorities were accused of delaying the delivery of Russian aid to eastern Ukraine, but efforts are under way to allow the stalled convoy to proceed, the International Committee of the Red Cross said

A driver sets straight the flag of the Moscow region on one of the trucks of the  aid convoy parked in  a field about 17 miles from the Ukrainian border

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A driver sets straight the flag of the Moscow region on one of the trucks of the aid convoy parked in  a field about 17 miles from the Ukrainian border

Russia says the aid convoy of more than 200 trucks was sent to help alleviate the unfolding humanitarian crisis in the east

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Russia says the aid convoy of more than 200 trucks was sent to help alleviate the unfolding humanitarian crisis in the east

The International Committee of the Red Cross, an independent aid agency, has sent 35 staff to help smooth the way for the roughly 260 Russian trucks parked near Rostov.

This afternoon, some of the Russian trucks began the process of clearing customs, the Ukrainian border guard service said.

It had expected cargo inspections to begin late on Wednesday, before the convoy headed into rebel-held Luhansk in eastern Ukraine.

Luhansk has been largely cut off for weeks and is without water and regular supplies of electricity, which have hit mobile and landline phone connections.

RUSSIA DENIES CLOSING MCDONALD'S OUTLETS IN RETALIATION MOVE

Russia's health and safety agency has dismissed claims it has shut down four McDonald's restaurants in revenge for sanctions imposed on the country by the US.

Rospotrebnadzor has said there was no political motivation behind the decision to shut the fastfood chain's outlets and that it was merely a response to customer complaints over safety and quality.

It comes after Russia ramped up its scrutiny of the chain as the state food safety watchdog began unscheduled checks in several regions, a day after four branches in Moscow were shuttered by the same agency.

People sit on the terrace of a closed McDonald's restaurant in Moscow, the first to be opened in the Soviet Union in 1990

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People sit on the terrace of a closed McDonald's restaurant in Moscow, the first to be opened in the Soviet Union in 1990

The action came after Moscow and the West imposed tit-for-tat sanctions over the conflict in Ukraine.

'There are complaints about the quality and safety of the products in fast food restaurant chain McDonald's,' said the regulatory agency, known in Russian as Rospotrebnadzor. It declined to comment on the scope of the planned checks.

The regulator said on Thursday it is already conducting checks at McDonald's outlets in the Ural mountains region of Sverdlovsk, the Volga region of Tatarstan, the central Voronezh region and the Moscow region.

It also plans checks in the republic of Bashkortostan and the southern Krasnodar region. Some of the checks are unscheduled.

Natalya Lukyantseva, an official of the regulator's branch in the Sverdlovsk region, said checks had been started because of complaints from customers.

A man tries peers through the locked doors of the McDonald's restaurant in Manezh Square, Moscow. Russian authorities shut four Moscow outlets due to alleged sanitary violations

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A man tries peers through the locked doors of the McDonald's restaurant in Manezh Square, Moscow. Russian authorities shut four Moscow outlets due to alleged sanitary violations

'We are aware of what is going on. We have always been and are now open to any checks,' McDonald's Russian spokeswoman said. She could not comment on the reasons for the checks.

On Wednesday, the agency ordered the suspension of operations at four McDonald's restaurants in Moscow over what it said were 'numerous' sanitary law breaches.

The shuttered restaurants include one on Moscow's Pushkin Square, which McDonald's says is the busiest in its global network of restaurants.

For a generation of Russians who saw the first McDonald's open in the dying days of the Soviet Union in 1990, the restaurants were a symbol of American capitalism. For most Muscovites now, they are just a part of the urban landscape.

For a generation of Russians who saw the first McDonald's open in the dying days of the Soviet Union in 1990, the restaurants were a symbol of American capitalism

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For a generation of Russians who saw the first McDonald's open in the dying days of the Soviet Union in 1990, the restaurants were a symbol of American capitalism

McDonald's operates 438 restaurants in Russia and considers the country one of its top seven major markets outside the United States and Canada, according to its 2013 annual report.

Last month, Rospotrebnadzor's branch in the Novgorod region opened a court case against McDonald's as a result of the June inspections of its restaurants.

It said at the time that McDonald's was deceiving consumers about the energy value of its burgers and about nutritional value of its desserts, and that its vegetable salad were contaminated with harmful bacteria.

'An ICRC team visited Luhansk to check the roads and establish contacts for the delivery of the convoy, having received security guarantees for the mission,' ICRC spokesman Ewan Watson said.

'Local authorities' in Luhansk, a city held by the separatists, have made preliminary arrangements to receive the Russian convoy, he said.

The ICRC then called for the immediate inspection of the trucks in order to proceed as soon as possible, he added.

'Last-minute decisions from the Ukrainian side have delayed the process,' Mr Watson said, declining to elaborate. 'We hope all issues can be resolved shortly.'

Donetsk, meanwhile, has come under daily shelling attacks from all sides. On Wednesday morning, rockets slammed into residential areas, including the Donetsk suburb of Makiivka. More rockets hit in the afternoon.

Ukrainian soldiers carry an injured woman on a stretcher at a hospital in the small eastern Ukrainian city of Shastia. At least 415,800 people have fled their homes due to fighting between government forces and pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine, the UN refugee agency said

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Ukrainian soldiers carry an injured woman on a stretcher at a hospital in the small eastern Ukrainian city of Shastia. At least 415,800 people have fled their homes due to fighting between government forces and pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine, the UN refugee agency said

A nurse provides medical care to a Ukrainian soldier in a hospital in Shastia. He was injured during an 'anti-terrorist operation'

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A nurse provides medical care to a Ukrainian soldier in a hospital in Shastia. He was injured during an 'anti-terrorist operation'

A Ukrainian soldier smokes a cigarette while his colleagues clamber on top of a tank near the eastern Ukrainian city of Lugansk

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A Ukrainian soldier smokes a cigarette while his colleagues clamber on top of a tank near the eastern Ukrainian city of Lugansk

A Ukrainian soldier walks next to a destroyed tank allegedly belonging to pro-Russian militants near Lugansk

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A Ukrainian soldier walks next to a destroyed tank allegedly belonging to pro-Russian militants near Lugansk

A Ukrainian self-propelled gun sits in position near the Stanitsa Luganska village, in the Lugansk region

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A Ukrainian self-propelled gun sits in position near the Stanitsa Luganska village, in the Lugansk region

On guard: Ukrainian forces on patrol in the village of Stanitsa Luganska in the Lugansk region

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On guard: Ukrainian forces on patrol in the village of Stanitsa Luganska in the Lugansk region

The Donetsk mayor's office reported that nine people died and 13 were wounded in artillery attacks in two neighborhoods earlier in the day.

As the government sought to retake a major railroad and a highway that leads to Russia, nine troops were killed and 22 wounded overnight in Ilovaysk, a town east of Donetsk, said Lysenko, the government spokesman.

Fighting continued there Wednesday even though government forces had gained control of the town, he said.

The Kiev government is also pursuing diplomatic efforts to resolve the conflict, which the United Nations says has killed more than 2,000 people and displaced over 340,000.

The fighting began in mid-April, a month after Russia annexed Ukraine's Black Sea peninsula of Crimea.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko will host German Chancellor Angela Merkel this weekend in Kiev before meeting next week with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Minsk, the capital of Belarus.

He said this afternoon that he would call on the Russian President to take action for pro-Russian separatists to be withdrawn from Ukraine when the two men meet.

Though he did not mention Putin by name, Poroshenko was quoted by his website as saying that the Ukrainian side 'would call for the (rebel) fighters to be withdrawn from Ukraine.'

Ukrainian soldiers take on some food as they wait in a truck on the outskirts of Luhansk

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Ukrainian soldiers take on some food as they wait in a truck on the outskirts of Luhansk

A Ukrainian soldier with Ukrainian national trident tattoo on his arm smokes a cigarette on the outskirts of Luhansk. Forces have made significant in-roads in the area but fighting has cost the lives of more than 50 civilians

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A Ukrainian soldier with Ukrainian national trident tattoo on his arm smokes a cigarette on the outskirts of Luhansk. Forces have made significant in-roads in the area but fighting has cost the lives of more than 50 civilians

Ukrainian soldiers sit on a truck on the outskirts of Luhansk, Ukraine where they have made significant in-roads

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Ukrainian soldiers sit on a truck on the outskirts of Luhansk, Ukraine where they have made significant in-roads

As well as ground forces, Ukrainian military helicopters have been patrolling the part of the Luhansk region that has been recaptured from rebels

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As well as ground forces, Ukrainian military helicopters have been patrolling the part of the Luhansk region that has been recaptured from rebels

A Ukrainian serviceman rides on top of an armoured vehicle as he patrols an area in the Luhansk region

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A Ukrainian serviceman rides on top of an armoured vehicle as he patrols an area in the Luhansk region

Poroshenko's pro-Western leadership accuses Russia of orchestrating separatist rebellions in Ukraine, in which more than 2,000 people have been killed, and of arming the rebels. Moscow denies this.

Saying he was going into the talks with the intention of trying to find a peaceful end to the conflict, he added: 'In order to have solid positions in peace negotiations, it is necessary to be strong, to have the unity of the people, a strong country, a strong army.

'We are capable of defending our sovereignty, out independence and our territorial integrity. Today we are fighting for the independence of Ukraine. We together will win for sure,' he said.

Next Tuesday's meeting will be the first between Poroshenko and Putin since a frosty encounter in June in Normandy, France, during World War Two D-Day commemorations.

The meeting has raised prospects of a breakthrough to end months of confrontation between Kiev and Moscow over the future direction of Ukraine whose leadership has set out on a road of integration into mainstream Europe to the dismay of its former Soviet ruler.

In Moscow on Wednesday, protesters scaled one of the city's famed Stalin-era skyscrapers and painted the Soviet star on its spire in the national colours of Ukraine. They also attached a blue-and-yellow Ukrainian flag to the top of the 176-meter (580-foot) building. 

Elderly residents sit inside a makeshift bomb shelter in the basement of their house in the city of Makeyevka, in the Donetsk region

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Elderly residents sit inside a makeshift bomb shelter in the basement of their house in the city of Makeyevka, in the Donetsk region

People carry their belongings in front of their damaged house in the city of Makeyevka amid fierce fighting in the region

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People carry their belongings in front of their damaged house in the city of Makeyevka amid fierce fighting in the region

Terrified residents have been taking refuge in makeshift underground shelters in a bid to escape the bomb blasts and fighting

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Terrified residents have been taking refuge in makeshift underground shelters in a bid to escape the bomb blasts and fighting

A woman covers her face with her hand as she breaks down in tears near her house in the city of Makeyevka

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A woman covers her face with her hand as she breaks down in tears near her house in the city of Makeyevka

A Russian military truck carries a MSTA-S self-propelled howitzer about 10 kilometers from the Russia-Ukrainian border control point at town Donetsk, Rostov-on-Don region, Russia

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A Russian military truck carries a MSTA-S self-propelled howitzer about 10 kilometers from the Russia-Ukrainian border control point at town Donetsk, Rostov-on-Don region, Russia

While Moscow police detained four suspects and charged them with vandalism, a crime punishable with up to three years in prison, Poroshenko welcomed the flag-hoisting over the skyscraper in a video message, calling it a 'symbolic' gesture.

He then urged Ukrainians all over the world to fly Ukrainian flags at their homes in celebration of the country's Independence Day holiday on Sunday.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian Economy Minister Pavlo Sheremeta has tendered his resignation and voiced frustration at not being able to push ahead with much-needed economic reform.

After months of fighting in its eastern regions following the toppling of a government blighted by corruption and economic mismanagement, Ukraine's economy has contracted sharply, even with a multi-billion dollar financial lifeline from the International Monetary Fund.

Sheremeta had vowed to slash red tape and eliminate corrupt practices that have helped to virtually bankrupt Ukraine when he was appointed soon after the ousting of a Moscow-backed president in February.

But he has not managed to push substantive legislation through parliament.

Ukrainian Economy Minister Pavlo Sheremeta, left, has tendered his resignation and voiced frustration at not being able to push ahead with much-needed economic reform

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Ukrainian Economy Minister Pavlo Sheremeta, left, has tendered his resignation and voiced frustration at not being able to push ahead with much-needed economic reform

In a sign of frustration at the lack of broad support for reform, Sheremeta said on his Facebook page that he no longer wanted to 'fight against yesterday's system'.

Sheremeta's offer to resign follows comments from Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk on Wednesday that voiced dissatisfaction with the speed and depths of reforms.

Parliament, which is still packed with many former supporters of ex-President Viktor Yanukovich, has managed to pass legislation on taxation and sanctions on Russia in recent weeks -- but only after being bullied by Yatseniuk who at one point also threatened to resign over the legislature's inaction.

The post of economy minister was the first political appointment for Sheremeta, a former economics academic.

'There are serious and solid reasons for this resignation ... It's a good example of how very talented, popular economic commentators, are not necessarily effective reformers,' Kiev-based political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko said.

Sheremeta's resignation will have to be approved by parliament. This might be one of the last acts of the current parliament which is likely to be dissolved next week, paving the way for a new election in October.

PREPARATIONS UNDERWAY FOR UKRAINIAN INDEPENDENCE DAY

Hundreds of troops have been taking part in a series of practice drills ahead of Ukraine's Independence Day.

Rehearsals are underway with soldiers marching in the Independence Square in the country's capital, Kiev.

Ukrainian troops have been marching in Kiev as part of preparations for Independence Day

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Ukrainian troops have been marching in Kiev as part of preparations for Independence Day

Military parades will take place in the city on Sunday August 24.

In recent days there has been that speculation Ukraine will hype up its military achievements ahead of the weekend.

Forces have since made in-roads into parts of rebel-held Luhansk.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Air Defense: Aegis Goes Ashore In Romania

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The European Phased Adaptive Approach plan for missile defense calls for the first Aegis Ashore site to be operational in Romania next year, Raytheon said. The second Aegis Ashore site is on track for Poland in 2018.

The Aegis Ashore system uses the same SM-3 missiles deployed on U.S. and Japanese navy ships today. The system holds 24 SM-3 missiles at one time but has the capacity for additional launchers and missiles.

The missiles destroy incoming ballistic missile threats in space using sheer impact. Raytheon said the force is equivalent to a 10-ton truck traveling 600 mph.

Tuesday's test was the first of the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense system using a land-based missile launcher. Interceptor missiles were launched from ships in previous tests.

SM-3 missiles have successfully destroyed actual targets in 26 out of 30 attempts.

 

The only land-based Aegis anti-aircraft/missile system in existence (in New Jersey) is being taken apart, packed into 60 large (40 foot) shipping containers and sent to Romania where Aegis will be put back together and be operational some time in 2015 as an anti-missile system. The U.S. is building two more ground-based Aegis systems; one in Poland and one in Hawaii. All three, including new Aegis components for two of them and needed missiles (24 per location) and launching hardware for all of them will cost $2.3 billion.

The U.S. also wanted to put silos for the GBI (Ground Based Interceptors) in Romania but Russia was very much against this as they saw it as diluting the intimidation effect of their ICBM force. The GBI project was put on hold but may be revived. The GBI is a 12.7 ton ballistic missile that delivers a 64 kg (140 pound) “kill vehicle” that will intercept a ballistic missile before it begins its descent into the atmosphere. The GBI kill vehicle attempts to destroy the incoming missile, while avoiding decoys. The U.S. already has GBIs deployed in Alaska and California. The GBI can receive target information from a variety of source, mainly a large X-band radar and space based sensors (that can detect ballistic missiles during their initial launch.) Each GBI costs over $100 million (up to several hundred million dollars, depending on how many are built and how you allocated development costs.) The GBI can intercept ballistic missiles launched from as far away as 5,000 kilometers.

Back in 2010 Romania agreed to base American anti-missile systems on its territory. It was assumed this would include a land based Aegis system. At that time Israel also expressed an interest in buying a land based version Aegis, but that deal fell through. Since the land based Aegis in Romania will belong to the United States it was decided to use the land based development version of AEGIS for this since this New Jersey facility was still operational. With so many Aegis systems at sea, development work can be done on those.

The U.S. has long sought to put anti-missile systems in Eastern Europe to protect against ballistic missile attacks from Iran. Russia has opposed this and sees it as a subterfuge to weaken the effect of Russian ballistic missiles attacking European targets. Most Europeans don’t know what to make of that, but East European countries (like Romania) that spent 1945-89 as involuntary Russian vassal (or “satellite”) states, do see a need for protection from Russian missiles.

So far, Aegis has achieved an 83 percent success rate during live test firings. So now many countries want Aegis ABM (Anti-Ballistic Missile) ships for protection. The Aegis system was designed to operate aboard warships (cruisers and destroyers that have been equipped with the special software that enables the AEGIS radar system to detect and track incoming ballistic missiles). Currently, the U.S. Navy has 30 ships with the Aegis anti-missile system. There are over 100 American and foreign warships equipped with Aegis, but less than half of them had the software mods and anti-missile missiles that enable them to shoot down ballistic missiles and low-orbit satellites. Converting an Aegis ship to Aegis ABM costs about $15 million, mainly for new software and a few new hardware items. This is seen as a safe investment.

To knock down ballistic missiles, Aegis uses two similar models of the U.S. Navy Standard anti-aircraft missile, in addition to a modified version of the Aegis radar system, which can now track incoming ballistic missiles. The anti-missile missile is the RIM-161A, also known as the Standard Missile 3 (or SM-3). It has a range of over 500 kilometers and max altitude of over 160 kilometers. The Standard 3 is based on the anti-missile version of the Standard 2 (SM-2 Block IV). This SM-2 missile turned out to be effective against ballistic missile warheads that are closer to their target. One test saw a SM-2 Block IV missile destroy a warhead that was only 19 kilometers up. An SM-3 missile can destroy a warhead that is more than 200 kilometers up. But the SM-3 is only good for anti-missile work, while the SM-2 Block IV can be used against both ballistic missiles and aircraft. The SM-2 Block IV also costs less than half what an SM-3 costs.

The SM-3 has four stages. The first two boost the interceptor out of the atmosphere. The third stage fires twice to boost the interceptor farther beyond the earth’s atmosphere. Prior to each motor firing it takes a GPS reading to correct course for approaching the target. The fourth stage is the nine kg (20 pound) LEAP kill vehicle, which uses infrared sensors to close on the target and ram it.

There seems little doubt that the pro-Russian separatists of East Ukraine have on their hands the blood of the 298 men, women and children whom they killed when they shot down Malaysian Airways flight MH17 with a surface-to-air-missile.

And no hands are bloodier than those of their puppet-master Vladimir Putin.

However, I believe that the stain of guilt extends to Germany, France and Italy, whose leaders have disgracefully done so little to bring the Russian leader and his fellow Kremlin gangsters to heel.

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How Europe relies on doing business with Russia

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Whenever urged by the international community to punish Russia by imposing economic sanctions, the heads of these three governments have put their own countries’ prosperity before a defence of Western democratic values and, indeed, human life.

Of course, this isn’t the first time they have cynically placed their commercial interests with Moscow ahead of a principled moral stand. When the same separatists illegally annexed the Crimea from Ukraine earlier this year, a barrage of calls went up for tough financial and trade sanctions to be imposed on Russia, in order to try to force Putin to the negotiating table.

Yet the naked financial self-interest among individual nations in the Western alliance prevented any serious measures from being introduced.

America’s position, too, has been one of abject cowardice.

The U.S. president¿s main policy seems to be to leave Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, to sort out the problems with the increasingly bellicose Putin

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The U.S. president¿s main policy seems to be to leave Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, to sort out the problems with the increasingly bellicose Putin

Although notionally the leader of the international response to what is happening in Ukraine, Barack Obama’s administration has been extremely reluctant to get involved.

Although it belatedly imposed new, tougher sanctions last week just before the MH17 atrocity, those measures were pretty lame: just two Russian banks, two energy companies and some arms manufacturers being hit with sanctions.

But I suppose this was only to be expected from a White House that is incapable of running a coherent foreign policy and is self-evidently uninterested in European affairs.

As a result, it has been business as usual for Putin’s kleptocrat cronies — with only a handful being subject to minor financial restrictions imposed by the EU.

Dishonourably passing the buck, the U.S. president’s main policy seems to be to leave Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, to sort out the problems with the increasingly bellicose Putin.

As a result, Putin has been able to exploit Germany’s heavy economic dependence on Russia and treat his international critics with derision.

And I would argue that this supine approach from Obama and Merkel could have been a significant factor in encouraging the pro-Russian separatists in their campaign of reckless aggression, leading to the slaughter of the 298 aboard the Malaysian passenger jet.

Meanwhile, Germany and Italy have happily continued to benefit from huge amounts of Russian gas flowing into their homes and factories.

Last year, Germany took more than 40 billion cubic metres of gas from Russia out of a total of 127 billion exported to the whole of Western Europe, and the Italians took 26 billion.

The trade has been two-way. Germany exported 36 billion euros worth of goods to Russia last year.

The problem is that Angela Merkel knows that the Berlin-Moscow relationship is one that she destabilises at Germany’s peril.

For although Germany’s economy is strong relative to the rest of Europe’s, it is going through an extended period of low or no-growth as a result of the over-valuation of the euro, which makes its exports to outside the eurozone prohibitively expensive.

For Mrs Merkel, the priority is to shore up the European Union — rather than lead a principled international response to Russian aggression. 

Yet that is a deeply unethical attitude. Germany’s duty, surely, is to join the rest of Europe and America to be a bulwark of Western values, such as liberty and democracy, which means standing up to tyrants such as Putin.

Germany is not alone in this cowardice pact.

France is determined to sell Putin the means to wreak murder and destruction in Russia’s name against innocent people.

The French only have small reliance on Russian gas, but they have an increasing dependence on Russia’s belligerent defence ministry to keep their armaments industry going.

The Kremlin has bought two Mistral-class helicopter-carrier assault ships for deployment in the Black Sea — from where they could be used for attacks on Ukraine and, indeed, on any aircraft in danger of straying into Ukrainian airspace.

The deal guarantees 1,000 French jobs over the next four years in the otherwise run-down dockyard town of St Nazaire — vital for a country whose economy is a basket-case.

Left to right: Russian President Vladimir Putin, British Prime Minister David Cameron, U.S. President Barack Obama and French President Francois Hollande in 2013

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Left to right: Russian President Vladimir Putin, British Prime Minister David Cameron, U.S. President Barack Obama and French President Francois Hollande in 2013 

 

For once, however, it would seem that Britain is taking a serious moral lead. As well as condemning the Mistral sale by France, Mr Cameron is calling for whole sectors of the Russian economy to be put under sanctions, including financial services.

But even Britain’s moral lead has become tarnished.

For the Tory Party has been exposed for taking donations of almost £1 million from leading Russians over recent years.

The latest came earlier this month when the wife of a billionaire Russian oligarch with close links with Putin gave the party £160,000 after successfully bidding at a lavish Tory fund-raising dinner to play tennis with Mr Cameron and Boris Johnson.

Police officers secure a refrigerated train loaded with bodies of the passengers of Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 as it arrives in a Kharkiv factory

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Police officers secure a refrigerated train loaded with bodies of the passengers of Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 as it arrives in a Kharkiv factory

Ukrainian State Emergency Service employees search for bodies among the wreckage at the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17

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Ukrainian State Emergency Service employees search for bodies among the wreckage at the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17

 

Part of the wreckage at the main crash site of the Boeing 777 Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, which crashed over the eastern Ukraine region

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Part of the wreckage at the main crash site of the Boeing 777 Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, which crashed over the eastern Ukraine region

In an attempt to raise more money to bankroll the Tories’ election campaign, the services of Lynton Crosby and party co-chairman, Lord Feldman, were thrown in as ‘ball-boys’.

The woman donor is the wife of Vladimir Chernukhin, who was Russia’s deputy finance minister during Putin’s first term. He received Russia’s Order of Honour from Putin a decade ago.

And despite calls last night for the Conservatives to ‘come clean’ over other big donations from Russians and hand the money back, party officials stubbornly refused.

As for Europe’s other leaders, they must ask themselves one fundamental question: how many more plane-loads of defenceless civilians must be killed before they choose to put the values of Western civilisation, justice and democracy above money in the bank?

For that, or something like it, is what a failure to close down business with Russia now would mean — and the stain it would leave on the consciences of the Germans and the French could become indelible.

 

 

 

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