Research, editing : Gan Yung Chyan, KUCINTA SETIA
News on U.S., Ukraine, Russia, disease control, Solomon Islands, CCP
News (1)
Worried that he "couldn't sleep", Trump exposed fear of a third world war in either Taiwan or Ukraine
Source : China Times / Editor : Chu Tian / https://www.aboluowang.com/2022/0928/1809121.html
News (2)
American polling experts admit: The number of MAGA voters is greatly underestimated
Source : Eiffel Tower Li2020 / Editor : Fang Xun / https://www.aboluowang.com/2022/0929/1809484.html
The desperate Russian tyrant ordered the mobilisation of 300,000 extra troops last week in a bid to reverse the fortunes of his botched invasion, in a move which spooked thousands who fled the country but other hardy civilians decided to join the war effort despite their age, health and limited training, to bolster troop numbers after Kyiv's stunning counter-offensive.
In Sevastopol in Crimea, silver-haired and wrinkled recruits stood in line in their uniforms at a ceremony before they took a much-needed cigarette break and then made their way to the front lines.
The images, taken on Tuesday less than a week after Putin's order, shows how rushed the mobilisation has been, compared to the six months' minimum training usually provided.
The men drafted into the war effort are among the working class rural communities who have been unable to join the masses escaping over the border into neighbouring Georgia, Kazakhstan and Finland.
The number who have fled now likely exceeds the number of troops in Putin's original invasion forces, military intelligence suggests.
The British Ministry of Defence said in its daily update today, "In the seven days since President Putin announced the 'partial mobilisation' there has been a considerable exodus of Russians seeking to evade call-up.
"Whilst exact numbers are unclear, it likely exceeds the size of the total invasion force Russia fielded in February 2022.
"The better off and well educated are over-represented amongst those attempting to leave Russia.
"When combined with those reservists who are being mobilised, the domestic economic impact of reduced availability of labour and the acceleration of 'brain drain' is likely to become increasingly significant.'
Those sent to war were already lamenting the outdated equipment and poor morale just weeks after the outbreak of war, an investigation by the New York Times claims.
Unauthorised phone calls made by soldiers to their families in March via shared cell phones among units near Bucha were intercepted by Ukraine and translated by the Times.
Many troops revealed the Kremlin had lied about the purpose of the war, showing an early insight into the reality on the ground.
One man named Sergey told his girlfriend, 'Some guys took armour off of Ukrainians' corpses and took it for themselves. Their NATO armour is better than ours.'
Another named Roman told his friend, "Everything here is ancient. It's not modern like they show on Zvezda [state TV].'
A different Sergey told his mother, 'There were 400 paratroopers. And only 38 of them survived. Because our commanders sent soldiers to the slaughter."
The dire situation for the troops has led to Putin's mobilisation order, which came as Ukrainian forces dealt heavy battlefield setbacks to Moscow.
The mass exodus has created miles-long lines for days at some borders, and local Russian authorities on one area along the border with Georgia said they would start providing food, water, warming stations and other aid to those in line.
Moscow also reportedly set up draft offices at borders to intercept some of those trying to leave.
The mobilisation prompted the U.S. Embassy in Moscow to warn Americans in Russia to leave immediately because "Russia may refuse to acknowledge dual nationals' U.S. citizenship, deny their access to U.S. consular assistance, prevent their departure from Russia, and conscript dual nationals for military service."
Previous embassy security alerts issued during the war also advised Americans to leave.
The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, cited an online video by a man who identified himself as a member of Russia's 1st Tank Regiment, visibly upset, saying he and his colleagues wouldn't receive training before shipping out to Russian-occupied parts of the Kherson region.
'Mobilised men with a day or two of training are unlikely to meaningfully reinforce Russian positions affected by Ukrainian counteroffensives in the south and east,' the institute said.
Meanwhile, the EU expressed outrage over the suspected sabotage Tuesday of two underwater natural gas pipelines from Russia to Germany, and warned of retaliation for any attack on Europe's energy networks.
'All available information indicates those leaks are the result of a deliberate act,' EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said. Perpetrators have not been identified.
News (5)
Moscow called for U.N. Security Coucil meeting after sabotage of two underwater natural gas pipelines
Kremlin spokesman Peskov said allegations that Russia could be behind the incidents were 'predictable and stupid,' saying the damage has caused Russia huge economic losses. A U.N. Security Council meeting was called for Friday at Moscow's request.
The damage makes it unlikely the pipelines will be able to supply any gas to Europe this winter, according to analysts.
On the battlefield, the U.K. Ministry of Defence said Ukraine's counteroffensive is advancing slowly, meeting a stouter Russian defence.
Local Ukrainian officials reported Russian attacks in the partially occupied Donetsk region that killed five people, and artillery strikes in the southern Ukrainian city of Nikopol.
That city saw 10 high-rises and private buildings hit, as well as a school and power lines, said Valentyn Reznichenko, the head of the local military administration.
Western leaders also fear Putin is planning a huge escalation of Russia's faltering invasion with a deadly nuclear strike or an attack on European interests.
British and American spies believe there is "credible intelligence' to suggest the Russian president is preparing an attack that will turn the war effort in his favour after coming to the realisation that the war was 'a colossal mistake'."
Putin is understood to be planning land-grab of four regions said to have voted overwhelmingly to join Russia after sham referendums in which residents were marched to the ballot box at gunpoint.
Hastily arranged votes had taken place over five days in the four areas - Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson - that make up about 15 per cent of Ukrainian territory but there is concern that Putin is planning a nuclear attack west of the regions that would create a radiation dead zone and put a halt to Ukraine's so far successful counter-offensives.
Another fear is that Russia is preparing a strike on western interests such as maritime communications cables.
News (6)
Singapore reports new 3431 covid cases, transmission rate soared to level of 1.29
Image of Singapore : Researcher's Picture There were 3,431 new covid cases in Singapore, with no deaths for two consecutive days, and the weekly case transmission rate rose to a level of 1.29, the highest in at least a month.
According to the latest data released by the Ministry of Health, as of 12 pm of 29 September 2022, 295 new cases were detected by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) tests, and 3136 cases were detected by Antigen Rapid Test (ART).
There are 3,219 local cases and 212 inbound covid cases.
According to statistics from the Ministry of Health, Singapore has recorded an average of 2,586 new local cases per day in the past seven days. There are currently 1,904,192 confirmed cases in Singapore, and the cumulative number of deaths remains at 1,617.
A total of 247 people are currently hospitalized, one more than yesterday (28th); 15 people in the general ward need oxygen supply, one less than yesterday; there are three to nine more coronavirus patients in the intensive care unit. A total of 1,707 people have completed isolation or been discharged from hospital in the past day.
Of the 57,945 confirmed cases in the past 28 days, 99.8% were asymptomatic or only mildly symptomatic, 0.2% required oxygen, 0.03% were admitted to intensive care units, and 0.02% died.
In addition, based on the revision of the age group that can be vaccinated by the authorities, it also affects the proportion of the vaccinated population. According to the latest data, the proportion of the local population who have completed the vaccination is 92%, and 79% of the population has received booster doses, compared with 93% previously and 80%.
News (7)
U.S. and Pacific Islands hold first summit
Reporter : Tao Ming / https://www.ntdtv.com/gb/2022/09/29/a103539941.html
As the CCP continues to expand in the Pacific region, the strategic position of Pacific island countries has become increasingly important in recent years. The U.S. government on Wednesday invited leaders of various Pacific island nations to Washington for a summit where they are expected to sign a joint statement.
The US government held a summit with leaders of Pacific island countries on the 28th and 29th. This is also the first large-scale summit between the United States and a country in the Pacific region.
It is reported that the United States is expected to invest more than 860 million U.S. Dollars in aid to Pacific island countries.
Secretary of State Blinken said, "This vision recognizes that only by working together can we truly address the greatest challenges facing our citizens in this era, from responding to the climate crisis and public health emergency, to boosting the economy, to maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific where every country, no matter how big or small, has the right to choose its own path."
Secretary of State Blinken said the participating countries will sign a joint statement on the partnership between the United States and the Pacific region, expressing a shared vision and working together in the future.
Blinken said, "So I'm very happy that today we have this, we've agreed on this, and it's going to provide a roadmap for our future work."
"We've been able to come to an agreement on a shared vision, and we're very pleased with that," State Department spokesman Price.
All Pacific island nations have sent leaders or representatives to the summit, including Solomon Islands Prime Minister Sogavare, who has recently swayed. The Solomon Islands signed a secret security agreement with CCP China in April, and in August refused to allow U.S. and British warships to dock.
On Thursday, U.S. President Joe Biden will hold a summit with world leaders and issue a joint statement with 11 points expected to include human-centered development, geopolitical security, commerce and industrial trade relations.
However, Solomon Islands has issued a diplomatic note announcing that it will not sign the joint declaration.
News (8) to (9) / Reporter : Chen Beichen / Editor : Yun Tao / https://www.ntdtv.com/gb/2022/09/29/a103539991.html
News (8)
Russia: Willing to talk face-to-face with the US on nuclear weapons treatyImage : File photo of Russian President Vladimir Putin. (GAVRIIL GRIGOROV/SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images)
The men drafted into the war effort are among the working class rural communities who have been unable to join the masses escaping over the border into neighbouring Georgia, Kazakhstan and Finland.
The number who have fled now likely exceeds the number of troops in Putin's original invasion forces, military intelligence suggests.
The British Ministry of Defence said in its daily update today, "In the seven days since President Putin announced the 'partial mobilisation' there has been a considerable exodus of Russians seeking to evade call-up.
"Whilst exact numbers are unclear, it likely exceeds the size of the total invasion force Russia fielded in February 2022.
"The better off and well educated are over-represented amongst those attempting to leave Russia.
"When combined with those reservists who are being mobilised, the domestic economic impact of reduced availability of labour and the acceleration of 'brain drain' is likely to become increasingly significant.'
Those sent to war were already lamenting the outdated equipment and poor morale just weeks after the outbreak of war, an investigation by the New York Times claims.
Unauthorised phone calls made by soldiers to their families in March via shared cell phones among units near Bucha were intercepted by Ukraine and translated by the Times.
Many troops revealed the Kremlin had lied about the purpose of the war, showing an early insight into the reality on the ground.
One man named Sergey told his girlfriend, 'Some guys took armour off of Ukrainians' corpses and took it for themselves. Their NATO armour is better than ours.'
Another named Roman told his friend, "Everything here is ancient. It's not modern like they show on Zvezda [state TV].'
A different Sergey told his mother, 'There were 400 paratroopers. And only 38 of them survived. Because our commanders sent soldiers to the slaughter."
The dire situation for the troops has led to Putin's mobilisation order, which came as Ukrainian forces dealt heavy battlefield setbacks to Moscow.
The mass exodus has created miles-long lines for days at some borders, and local Russian authorities on one area along the border with Georgia said they would start providing food, water, warming stations and other aid to those in line.
Moscow also reportedly set up draft offices at borders to intercept some of those trying to leave.
The mobilisation prompted the U.S. Embassy in Moscow to warn Americans in Russia to leave immediately because "Russia may refuse to acknowledge dual nationals' U.S. citizenship, deny their access to U.S. consular assistance, prevent their departure from Russia, and conscript dual nationals for military service."
Previous embassy security alerts issued during the war also advised Americans to leave.
The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, cited an online video by a man who identified himself as a member of Russia's 1st Tank Regiment, visibly upset, saying he and his colleagues wouldn't receive training before shipping out to Russian-occupied parts of the Kherson region.
'Mobilised men with a day or two of training are unlikely to meaningfully reinforce Russian positions affected by Ukrainian counteroffensives in the south and east,' the institute said.
Meanwhile, the EU expressed outrage over the suspected sabotage Tuesday of two underwater natural gas pipelines from Russia to Germany, and warned of retaliation for any attack on Europe's energy networks.
'All available information indicates those leaks are the result of a deliberate act,' EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said. Perpetrators have not been identified.
News (5)
Moscow called for U.N. Security Coucil meeting after sabotage of two underwater natural gas pipelines
Kremlin spokesman Peskov said allegations that Russia could be behind the incidents were 'predictable and stupid,' saying the damage has caused Russia huge economic losses. A U.N. Security Council meeting was called for Friday at Moscow's request.
The damage makes it unlikely the pipelines will be able to supply any gas to Europe this winter, according to analysts.
On the battlefield, the U.K. Ministry of Defence said Ukraine's counteroffensive is advancing slowly, meeting a stouter Russian defence.
Local Ukrainian officials reported Russian attacks in the partially occupied Donetsk region that killed five people, and artillery strikes in the southern Ukrainian city of Nikopol.
That city saw 10 high-rises and private buildings hit, as well as a school and power lines, said Valentyn Reznichenko, the head of the local military administration.
Western leaders also fear Putin is planning a huge escalation of Russia's faltering invasion with a deadly nuclear strike or an attack on European interests.
British and American spies believe there is "credible intelligence' to suggest the Russian president is preparing an attack that will turn the war effort in his favour after coming to the realisation that the war was 'a colossal mistake'."
Putin is understood to be planning land-grab of four regions said to have voted overwhelmingly to join Russia after sham referendums in which residents were marched to the ballot box at gunpoint.
Hastily arranged votes had taken place over five days in the four areas - Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson - that make up about 15 per cent of Ukrainian territory but there is concern that Putin is planning a nuclear attack west of the regions that would create a radiation dead zone and put a halt to Ukraine's so far successful counter-offensives.
Another fear is that Russia is preparing a strike on western interests such as maritime communications cables.
News (6)
Singapore reports new 3431 covid cases, transmission rate soared to level of 1.29
There were 3,431 new covid cases in Singapore, with no deaths for two consecutive days, and the weekly case transmission rate rose to a level of 1.29, the highest in at least a month.
According to the latest data released by the Ministry of Health, as of 12 pm of 29 September 2022, 295 new cases were detected by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) tests, and 3136 cases were detected by Antigen Rapid Test (ART).
There are 3,219 local cases and 212 inbound covid cases.
According to statistics from the Ministry of Health, Singapore has recorded an average of 2,586 new local cases per day in the past seven days. There are currently 1,904,192 confirmed cases in Singapore, and the cumulative number of deaths remains at 1,617.
A total of 247 people are currently hospitalized, one more than yesterday (28th); 15 people in the general ward need oxygen supply, one less than yesterday; there are three to nine more coronavirus patients in the intensive care unit. A total of 1,707 people have completed isolation or been discharged from hospital in the past day.
Of the 57,945 confirmed cases in the past 28 days, 99.8% were asymptomatic or only mildly symptomatic, 0.2% required oxygen, 0.03% were admitted to intensive care units, and 0.02% died.
In addition, based on the revision of the age group that can be vaccinated by the authorities, it also affects the proportion of the vaccinated population. According to the latest data, the proportion of the local population who have completed the vaccination is 92%, and 79% of the population has received booster doses, compared with 93% previously and 80%.
News (7)
U.S. and Pacific Islands hold first summit
Reporter : Tao Ming / https://www.ntdtv.com/gb/2022/09/29/a103539941.html
As the CCP continues to expand in the Pacific region, the strategic position of Pacific island countries has become increasingly important in recent years. The U.S. government on Wednesday invited leaders of various Pacific island nations to Washington for a summit where they are expected to sign a joint statement.
The US government held a summit with leaders of Pacific island countries on the 28th and 29th. This is also the first large-scale summit between the United States and a country in the Pacific region.
It is reported that the United States is expected to invest more than 860 million U.S. Dollars in aid to Pacific island countries.
Secretary of State Blinken said, "This vision recognizes that only by working together can we truly address the greatest challenges facing our citizens in this era, from responding to the climate crisis and public health emergency, to boosting the economy, to maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific where every country, no matter how big or small, has the right to choose its own path."
Secretary of State Blinken said the participating countries will sign a joint statement on the partnership between the United States and the Pacific region, expressing a shared vision and working together in the future.
Blinken said, "So I'm very happy that today we have this, we've agreed on this, and it's going to provide a roadmap for our future work."
"We've been able to come to an agreement on a shared vision, and we're very pleased with that," State Department spokesman Price.
All Pacific island nations have sent leaders or representatives to the summit, including Solomon Islands Prime Minister Sogavare, who has recently swayed. The Solomon Islands signed a secret security agreement with CCP China in April, and in August refused to allow U.S. and British warships to dock.
On Thursday, U.S. President Joe Biden will hold a summit with world leaders and issue a joint statement with 11 points expected to include human-centered development, geopolitical security, commerce and industrial trade relations.
However, Solomon Islands has issued a diplomatic note announcing that it will not sign the joint declaration.
News (8) to (9) / Reporter : Chen Beichen / Editor : Yun Tao / https://www.ntdtv.com/gb/2022/09/29/a103539991.html
News (8)
Russia said on Thursday (29 September) that it is studying the possibility of face-to-face talks with the United States over the nuclear arms control treaty, the US-Russia New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty.Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Maria Zakharova said in a briefing that Russia is open to reviving START inspections and intends to support face-to-face negotiations by a joint committee of U.S. and Russian representatives.Zakharova said, "We are considering the issue of recovery and also looking into the possibility of holding a face-to-face meeting of the bilateral advisory committee."This is one of the few and major diplomatic agreements since U.S.-Russian relations hit rock bottom due to the Russia-Ukraine war.The New START Treaty limits the number of nuclear weapons the United States and Russia can deploy, as well as the conditions for inspecting their nuclear arsenals.Affected by the epidemic, Washington and Moscow have only conducted two nuclear inspections each since 2020, after which the inspections were interrupted.News (9)Ukraine holds "homeland" emergency security meetingPresident Vladimir Putin will sign an official document on Friday (September 30) announcing the annexation of four Ukrainian regions, the Kremlin confirmed on Thursday. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy immediately announced an emergency meeting with senior security, political and defense officials on Friday.Zelenskyy's spokesman, Sergei. Serhiy Nykyforov said, "The president has called an emergency meeting of the Ukrainian National Security and Defense Council tomorrow. The agenda and other details will be announced later."Members of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine include: the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, the Minister of Defense, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Prime Minister, as well as the head of the Security Service of Ukraine. Its mission is to work with the President to develop and coordinate national security policy.Zelenskyy has repeatedly said the so-called referendum was illegal and warned Ukraine would respond strongly. "Ukraine will recover its territory in its entirety. Our response to Russia's recognition of these referendum results will be very harsh," he told Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi by phone on Thursday.Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said Putin would address the ceremony and meet the leaders of the four occupied territories supported by Russia.Leaders of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, as well as the self-styled Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics, rushed to Moscow after the results of the vote were announced.These four regions together account for about 18% of Ukraine's territory. Most recently, they all held a "referendum" on whether to join Russia with the support of Moscow. Western leaders have widely denounced the referendum as a "hoax".News (10)More than 1.43 million people were arrested before the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of ChinaReporter : Tang Zheng / Editor : Li Quan / https://www.ntdtv.com/gb/2022/09/29/a103539600.html / Image : The picture is a data photo. Chinese police conduct security checks in Tiananmen Square on March 10, 2022. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Before the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, Beijing's security management has been upgraded, and it is like a big enemy. According to the Chinese Ministry of Public Security, more than 1.43 million criminal suspects have been arrested in the past three months. The Chinese people said that this action is obviously related to the stability maintenance of the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China. In order to achieve the so-called "target", the police in various places have indiscriminately arrested innocent people.On 27 September 2022, the Ministry of Public Security of the Communist Party of China held a press conference. Qiu Baoli, director of the "Hundred Days Action" Office of the Ministry of Public Security of the Communist Party of China and director of the Public Security Administration, said that so far, more than 1.43 million criminal suspects have been arrested in the "Hundred Days Action".The 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China was held on October 16, and the Ministry of Public Security of the Communist Party of China deployed control in advance, and started on June 25 this year, announcing the launch of the so-called "Hundred Days Action", and public security everywhere frantically arrested people.According to a report by Overseas Radio Free Asia, Beijing resident Wang Jiangqing said that the police across the country arrested more than one million people at once, which is obviously related to the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China to maintain stability.Wang Jiangqing said that now the authorities are all soldiers. Before the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, there will definitely be many actions by the authorities. The more they are like this, the more it shows domestic instability. The 20th National Congress is getting closer and closer, and they must be more nervous.A resident of Liaoning said that the police arrested people everywhere in the "Hundred Days Operation". This method is similar to the "Strike Hard" operation. There is no legal basis for arresting people.In fact, this so-called operation by the CCP has also targeted dissidents, petitioners, human rights defenders, Falungong practitioners, and Christians, and conducted severe monitoring and arrests.Li Ning, a resident of Beijing's Mentougou, said that in the past month, the police have not only checked outsiders and banned Christian gatherings, but they have now banned people from playing mahjong.She said that because the police at the police station have indicators for arresting people, there will be indiscriminate arrests of innocent people. "I heard from ordinary people in Beijing that now every police station has the task of (arresting people), and a policeman has to arrest several people and solve several cases. Now arresting people is all about making up the number, and arresting even the smallest things. This is the first time for Sun Cheng from Yancheng, Jiangsu. When he came to Beijing, he said: "They came in two police cars, took people away, and they detained you for three months without saying anything. "Ms. Liu, a resident of Shenyang, also said that the police arrest people now just to make up the numbers. They arrest whoever they want, and arrest those who report problems at any meeting or movement.The CCP is currently caught in the dilemma of internal and external aggression. Internationally, the CCP regime, which pursues communist ideology, has become increasingly isolated, and countries are countering the CCP. In China, faced with fierce high-level infighting, the "zero-covid" policy hit the economy and other crises.Wu Shaoping, a human rights lawyer based in the United States, told The Epoch Times on September 28 that the CCP wants to maintain stability because its totalitarian rule has no legitimacy, and the legitimacy of the source of power at the highest level has also been widely questioned. In the process of changing the top leadership of the CCP at the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, the CCP must prevent "foreign enemies", because "the people of the entire society are actually the enemies of the CCP, and the dissatisfaction and protest of the people may lead to the collapse of the CCP regime."He said that public security is a weapon of the CCP, and the CCP uses it to maintain the stability of the entire society. But the current bad social environment in China is created by the CCP. The CCP is doing perverse actions, judicial injustice, corruption, and especially the use of the epidemic to clear the society to maintain social stability. In order to ensure its own rule, the CCP uses this high-intensity method of maintaining stability to control the entire society, making the entire society in a state of tension and anxiety.In June 2022, current affairs commentator Li Lin told The Epoch Times that before the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, Wang Xiaohong arranged for the Ministry of Public Security's "Hundred Days of Action", the focus of which was to "strengthen political security measures". The so-called "political security" includes internal and "internationally". In terms of the CCP’s logic, the CCP must suppress and crack down on dissidents within the CCP, and also prevent subversion from overseas. The so-called crackdown on "underworld forces" and its protective umbrella involves infighting within the CCP.As the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China approaches, various controls in Beijing have been upgraded. In addition to the ban on flying drones, the security inspections of express delivery to Beijing have been upgraded, and "secondary security inspections" have been carried out for express mail entering Beijing. In addition, it is very difficult for people to enter and leave Beijing, and they are all blocked by the "Beijing Health Treasure Pop-up 3", which hinders their travel.News (11)Conspiracy theories point figer of blame at Biden for the blow-up of Nord Stream gas pipelines amid riddle of blasts at the BalticReporter : Mark Nicol, Daily Mail / https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11264547/Who-DID-blow-Nord-Stream-gas-pipelines-Russia-America.html / Image : Daily Mail
Deep beneath the Baltic Sea, a remotely controlled submarine releases a mine which nestles beside a gas pipeline.
Other mines are laid at critical junctures along hundreds of miles of piping connecting Russia and Germany. They contain the equivalent of hundreds of pounds of TNT.
When they are detonated – either by a timing device or remotely from a secret control room – the aftershocks are felt 800 miles away and seismologists liken the blasts to earthquakes.
Within seconds Nord Stream 1 and 2 begin to leak. Within days, millions of cubic metres of natural gas have been released into Danish and Swedish waters.
Mission accomplished for whoever instigated this unprecedented act of industrial terrorism.
But was it also the staggering act of self-sabotage by Vladimir Putin that the world assumes it to have been?
After all, the president who threatened to ‘end’ Nord Stream earlier this year resides not in the Kremlin but the White House. US President Joe Biden could not have been clearer when, in early February, he promised to bring Nord Stream ‘to an end’ should Russian troops and tanks enter Ukraine.
The invasion happened. So did Mr Biden take revenge as he promised to?
At the time he dismissed suggestions such an operation would be too complicated to carry out or too damaging diplomatically given Nord Stream 2 was controlled by Germany. To the doubters, he added: ‘We will, I promise you. We will be able to do it.’
These remarks have proved a propaganda gift to the Kremlin in the aftermath of the leaks.
Russia’s foreign ministry mouthpiece Maria Zakharova mocked the blunder-prone US President, challenging him to account for his words and actions.
It may appear fanciful to look anywhere other than Moscow to find the perpetrators. However, these incidents occurred in areas of the Baltic Sea belonging to the US’s allies Denmark and Sweden.
While Russian vessels are entitled to enter these ‘exclusive economic zones’, the US and its friends would be expected to closely monitor their activity. Perhaps the US stood by, permitting the plot to be actioned?
The thinking in Washington DC might have been that such an incident would convince those European states with the greatest reliance on Russia for energy supplies to redouble their efforts to achieve energy-independence.
It is no coincidence that these states, such as Germany, have been the most reluctant to actively challenge Russia’s military supremacy in Ukraine and the keenest for President Volodymyr Zelensky to negotiate with President Putin.
Certainly there is consternation in continental Europe following the attack on the pipelines. The natural gas being released is 90 per cent methane, a key driver of global warming. So Putin, or whoever, has weaponised pollution.
Denmark has said the discharge could account for a third of its greenhouse gas emissions. Norway put its oil and gas facilities on alert for attacks. Lithuania boosted security at its liquefied natural gas import terminal.
But whose long-term strategic goals are achieved by the attacks, Russia’s or the US’s? The plot thickened on Tuesday when a former Polish minister thanked the US for the Nord Stream explosions.
On Twitter Radoslaw Sikorski posted a picture of a massive methane gas spill on the surface of the Baltic Sea with the comment: ‘Thank You USA’. The hawkish MEP later tweeted that if Russia wants to continue supplying gas to Europe it must ‘talk to the countries controlling the gas pipelines’.
Whatever did he mean? Both Russia and the U.S. have the technology and the wherewithal to pull off such an attack while surveillance of the North Sea and Baltic Sea is said to be patchy.
Many Russian surface naval vessels carry miniature submarines such as the Harpsichord unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV), the Klavesin and the Losharik. These intelligent "marine robots" can be used for deep-sea surveillance and delivering explosive payloads.
Historically, submarine warfare has been a Russian strong suit, a tradition which continues today. These UUVs are equipped with precision navigation and communication equipment and their dive capability puts the bottom of the Baltic Sea within their reach.
The attacks also highlighted the vulnerability of the underwater cable networks relied on by Britain and other countries.
Retired Rear Admiral Chris Parry told the Daily Mail, the UK is "wide open" to a similar attack.
He sounded a shocking warning last night, saying, "The protection and defence of these vital energy and communication arteries have been neglected, even as military and civilian technologies and platforms, both manned and unmanned, capable of disrupting and damaging them have multiplied significantly. It is not just the UK that is at risk in this regard, but the whole international community."
Fears of internet and mobile phone blackouts this winter have intensified recently – as Europe does not have enough back-up systems to rely upon in the event of power cuts.
By targeting key infrastructure a hostile state – particularly one that like Russia has suffered setbacks on the battlefield – can bring another state to a standstill. Cutting energy supplies is just one way of achieving this.
Russia, or whoever, has put Britain and Europe on high alert for further attacks, perhaps to sub-sea data cables which carry financial information across the Atlantic – which would play havoc with stock markets.
News (12)
Russian missiles hit "humanitarian convoy" leaving at least 23 Ukrainians dead in Zaphorizhzhia
Reporter : Chris Pleasance, Daily Mail / https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11265723/Russian-missiles-hit-humanitarian-convoy-Zaporizhzhia-killing-civilians.html
A Russian airstrike has destroyed a humanitarian convoy in southern Ukraine leaving dozens of civilians dead and wounded, Ukrainian officials said today.
Images show how a single rocket landed close to a queue of cars waiting at a checkpoint as they drove out of the Ukrainian-controlled city of Zaporizhzhia into nearby Russian-occupied territory in the early hours of Friday, shredding the vehicles with shrapnel.
Oleksandr Starukh, the Zaporizhzhia regional governor, said at least 23 people were killed and another 28 were wounded in the strike, all of whom were civilians. They were on their way to distribute aid to those living under Russian occupation and to try and get their relatives out, he added.
Kyrylo Tymoshenko, a senior adviser to President Zelensky, said Russia had fired a total of 16 S-300 anti-aircraft missiles at Ukrainian territory, four of which landed - destroying the queue of cars along with a nearby car market.
The attack took place just hours before a speech by Vladimir Putin in which he will announce Zaporizhzhia - along with Donetsk, Luhansk and Kherson regions - are being annexed to Russia under the guise of protecting them.
Photos from Zaporizhzhia showed a road littered with blown-out cars and at least two bodies lying on the ground, as survivors picked their way through the rubble.
One witness reported seeing about 12 bodies, four of them in cars, and said a missile had left a crater in the ground near two lines of vehicles at a car market.
The impact had thrown chunks of dirt ino the air and sprayed the vehicles with shrapnel. The windows of the vehicles - mostly cars and three vans, were blown out.
The vehicles were packed with belongings, blankets and suitcases.
In one of them, the body of a man was leaned from the driver's seat into the passenger seat, his left hand still clutching the steering wheel.
Oleksandr Starukh, governor of Zaporizhzhia, wrote on Telegram: " The enemy launched a rocket attack on a civilian humanitarian convoy on the way out of the regional center.
"People stood in line to leave for the temporarily occupied territory, to pick up their relatives, to take away aid.
"Rescuers, medics, and all relevant services are currently working at the site."
Plastic sheets were draped over the bodies of a woman and young man in a green car in the next car in front. A dead cat lay next to the young man in the rear seat.
Two bodies lay in a white mini-van in front of that car, its windows blown and the sides pitted with shrapnel.
A woman who gave her name as Nataliya said she and her husband had been visiting their children in Zaporizhzhia.
'We were returning to my mother who is 90 years old. We have been spared. Itâs a miracle,' she said, standing with her husband beside their car.
Russia denied being responsible for the strike, instead blaming it on Ukraine.
It came ahead of a major speech that Putin will give in the Kremlin today, officially announcing his intention to annex occupied regions of Ukraine to Russia.
Russian-backed proxy-governments in four regions of Ukraine that Russian troops at least partially occupy - Kharkiv, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia - have spent recent days staging referendums on the issue.
Conducted at gunpoint, they claim the ballots returned overwhelming majorities for joining the 'motherland'.
Ukraine and its allies have denounced the votes as a sham and say they will never recognise the results, but the move never-the-less marks a turning point in the war.
From today, Putin will be able to spin the lie - to his own people at least - that Ukrainian efforts to liberate these regions are in fact attacks on Russia.
Provided the public buy into the lie, that would allow him to escalate the war in response - potentially up to and including the use of nukes.
Putin himself threatened to use nuclear arms in a speech last week, and his allies - including Dmitry Medvedev, head of the security council - have repeated the threat several times since then.
The Kremlin dictator last night signed decrees recognising Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the country's south and east as states independent of Volodymyr Zelensky's Government - a precursor to Putin's deranged plot to illegally absorb 15% of Ukrainian territory into the Russian Federation.
Under an amendment to the Russian constitution made in 2020, Putin and his predecessors are forbidden from ceding any territory once acquired - meaning once the annexation is completed today, it will be irreversible unless Ukraine can successfully recapture the stolen land. Even a partial withdrawal as part of a future peace deal with Kyiv will become impossible.
At an official ceremony in St George's Hall in the Grand Kremlin Palace today, where marble plaques engraved in gold commemorate Russian military heroes, Putin will preside over a treaty-signing proclaiming the annexation of four regions of Ukraine - the breakaway People's Republics of Luhansk and Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.
The Russian annexation will then be followed by planned celebratory concerts and rallies in the occupied territories and Moscow's Red Square, where Putin is expected to outline his view on why Ukraine has no right to an independent existence.
The stage-managed exercise follows a bogus five-day voting process across Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk that was entirely rigged in favour of becoming part of Putin's Russia. Moscow's proxies in the occupied regions claimed majorities of up to 99% in favour of joining. However, Ukraine and Western governments described those votes as bogus, illegitimate and conducted at gunpoint.
MPs in the Duma, Russia's puppet parliament, are expected to rubber stamp the move next week. It is a carbon copy of Moscow's approach in 2014 when it held a fake referendum in Crimea as a pretext for moving in and seizing the Ukrainian peninsula.
The annexation comes at a perilous moment for Putin. After months of grinding, attritional warfare, Ukraine seized the initiative this month by routing Russian forces in the northeastern Kharkiv region.
And Putin last week declared an unpopular partial mobilisation, prompting thousands of fighting-age men to flee the country. Even staunch Kremlin allies have criticised the chaotic nature of the call-up, while Putin himself said yesterday 'all mistakes must be corrected'.
Kyiv said that the annexation votes will not stop their armed forces from trying to retake its illegally stolen land, vowing a 'harsh' response. For its part, Russia pledges to defend all its territory - including newly annexed regions - by all available means, including nuclear weapons.
Ukraine's Western supporters have described the stage-managed referendums on whether to live under Russian rule as a bald-faced 'land grab' based on lies.
They say some people were forced to vote at gunpoint in an election without independent observers on territory from which thousands of residents have fled or been forcibly deported.
Reporter : Mark Nicol, Daily Mail / https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11264547/Who-DID-blow-Nord-Stream-gas-pipelines-Russia-America.html / Image : Daily Mail
Deep beneath the Baltic Sea, a remotely controlled submarine releases a mine which nestles beside a gas pipeline.
Other mines are laid at critical junctures along hundreds of miles of piping connecting Russia and Germany. They contain the equivalent of hundreds of pounds of TNT.
When they are detonated – either by a timing device or remotely from a secret control room – the aftershocks are felt 800 miles away and seismologists liken the blasts to earthquakes.
Within seconds Nord Stream 1 and 2 begin to leak. Within days, millions of cubic metres of natural gas have been released into Danish and Swedish waters.
Mission accomplished for whoever instigated this unprecedented act of industrial terrorism.
But was it also the staggering act of self-sabotage by Vladimir Putin that the world assumes it to have been?
After all, the president who threatened to ‘end’ Nord Stream earlier this year resides not in the Kremlin but the White House. US President Joe Biden could not have been clearer when, in early February, he promised to bring Nord Stream ‘to an end’ should Russian troops and tanks enter Ukraine.
The invasion happened. So did Mr Biden take revenge as he promised to?
At the time he dismissed suggestions such an operation would be too complicated to carry out or too damaging diplomatically given Nord Stream 2 was controlled by Germany. To the doubters, he added: ‘We will, I promise you. We will be able to do it.’
These remarks have proved a propaganda gift to the Kremlin in the aftermath of the leaks.
Russia’s foreign ministry mouthpiece Maria Zakharova mocked the blunder-prone US President, challenging him to account for his words and actions.
It may appear fanciful to look anywhere other than Moscow to find the perpetrators. However, these incidents occurred in areas of the Baltic Sea belonging to the US’s allies Denmark and Sweden.
While Russian vessels are entitled to enter these ‘exclusive economic zones’, the US and its friends would be expected to closely monitor their activity. Perhaps the US stood by, permitting the plot to be actioned?
The thinking in Washington DC might have been that such an incident would convince those European states with the greatest reliance on Russia for energy supplies to redouble their efforts to achieve energy-independence.
It is no coincidence that these states, such as Germany, have been the most reluctant to actively challenge Russia’s military supremacy in Ukraine and the keenest for President Volodymyr Zelensky to negotiate with President Putin.
Certainly there is consternation in continental Europe following the attack on the pipelines. The natural gas being released is 90 per cent methane, a key driver of global warming. So Putin, or whoever, has weaponised pollution.
Denmark has said the discharge could account for a third of its greenhouse gas emissions. Norway put its oil and gas facilities on alert for attacks. Lithuania boosted security at its liquefied natural gas import terminal.
But whose long-term strategic goals are achieved by the attacks, Russia’s or the US’s? The plot thickened on Tuesday when a former Polish minister thanked the US for the Nord Stream explosions.
On Twitter Radoslaw Sikorski posted a picture of a massive methane gas spill on the surface of the Baltic Sea with the comment: ‘Thank You USA’. The hawkish MEP later tweeted that if Russia wants to continue supplying gas to Europe it must ‘talk to the countries controlling the gas pipelines’.
Whatever did he mean? Both Russia and the U.S. have the technology and the wherewithal to pull off such an attack while surveillance of the North Sea and Baltic Sea is said to be patchy.
Many Russian surface naval vessels carry miniature submarines such as the Harpsichord unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV), the Klavesin and the Losharik. These intelligent "marine robots" can be used for deep-sea surveillance and delivering explosive payloads.
Historically, submarine warfare has been a Russian strong suit, a tradition which continues today. These UUVs are equipped with precision navigation and communication equipment and their dive capability puts the bottom of the Baltic Sea within their reach.
The attacks also highlighted the vulnerability of the underwater cable networks relied on by Britain and other countries.
Retired Rear Admiral Chris Parry told the Daily Mail, the UK is "wide open" to a similar attack.
He sounded a shocking warning last night, saying, "The protection and defence of these vital energy and communication arteries have been neglected, even as military and civilian technologies and platforms, both manned and unmanned, capable of disrupting and damaging them have multiplied significantly. It is not just the UK that is at risk in this regard, but the whole international community."
Fears of internet and mobile phone blackouts this winter have intensified recently – as Europe does not have enough back-up systems to rely upon in the event of power cuts.
By targeting key infrastructure a hostile state – particularly one that like Russia has suffered setbacks on the battlefield – can bring another state to a standstill. Cutting energy supplies is just one way of achieving this.
Russia, or whoever, has put Britain and Europe on high alert for further attacks, perhaps to sub-sea data cables which carry financial information across the Atlantic – which would play havoc with stock markets.
News (12)
Russian missiles hit "humanitarian convoy" leaving at least 23 Ukrainians dead in Zaphorizhzhia
Reporter : Chris Pleasance, Daily Mail / https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11265723/Russian-missiles-hit-humanitarian-convoy-Zaporizhzhia-killing-civilians.html
A Russian airstrike has destroyed a humanitarian convoy in southern Ukraine leaving dozens of civilians dead and wounded, Ukrainian officials said today.
Images show how a single rocket landed close to a queue of cars waiting at a checkpoint as they drove out of the Ukrainian-controlled city of Zaporizhzhia into nearby Russian-occupied territory in the early hours of Friday, shredding the vehicles with shrapnel.
Oleksandr Starukh, the Zaporizhzhia regional governor, said at least 23 people were killed and another 28 were wounded in the strike, all of whom were civilians. They were on their way to distribute aid to those living under Russian occupation and to try and get their relatives out, he added.
Kyrylo Tymoshenko, a senior adviser to President Zelensky, said Russia had fired a total of 16 S-300 anti-aircraft missiles at Ukrainian territory, four of which landed - destroying the queue of cars along with a nearby car market.
The attack took place just hours before a speech by Vladimir Putin in which he will announce Zaporizhzhia - along with Donetsk, Luhansk and Kherson regions - are being annexed to Russia under the guise of protecting them.
Photos from Zaporizhzhia showed a road littered with blown-out cars and at least two bodies lying on the ground, as survivors picked their way through the rubble.
One witness reported seeing about 12 bodies, four of them in cars, and said a missile had left a crater in the ground near two lines of vehicles at a car market.
The impact had thrown chunks of dirt ino the air and sprayed the vehicles with shrapnel. The windows of the vehicles - mostly cars and three vans, were blown out.
The vehicles were packed with belongings, blankets and suitcases.
In one of them, the body of a man was leaned from the driver's seat into the passenger seat, his left hand still clutching the steering wheel.
Oleksandr Starukh, governor of Zaporizhzhia, wrote on Telegram: " The enemy launched a rocket attack on a civilian humanitarian convoy on the way out of the regional center.
"People stood in line to leave for the temporarily occupied territory, to pick up their relatives, to take away aid.
"Rescuers, medics, and all relevant services are currently working at the site."
Plastic sheets were draped over the bodies of a woman and young man in a green car in the next car in front. A dead cat lay next to the young man in the rear seat.
Two bodies lay in a white mini-van in front of that car, its windows blown and the sides pitted with shrapnel.
A woman who gave her name as Nataliya said she and her husband had been visiting their children in Zaporizhzhia.
'We were returning to my mother who is 90 years old. We have been spared. Itâs a miracle,' she said, standing with her husband beside their car.
Russia denied being responsible for the strike, instead blaming it on Ukraine.
It came ahead of a major speech that Putin will give in the Kremlin today, officially announcing his intention to annex occupied regions of Ukraine to Russia.
Russian-backed proxy-governments in four regions of Ukraine that Russian troops at least partially occupy - Kharkiv, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia - have spent recent days staging referendums on the issue.
Conducted at gunpoint, they claim the ballots returned overwhelming majorities for joining the 'motherland'.
Ukraine and its allies have denounced the votes as a sham and say they will never recognise the results, but the move never-the-less marks a turning point in the war.
From today, Putin will be able to spin the lie - to his own people at least - that Ukrainian efforts to liberate these regions are in fact attacks on Russia.
Provided the public buy into the lie, that would allow him to escalate the war in response - potentially up to and including the use of nukes.
Putin himself threatened to use nuclear arms in a speech last week, and his allies - including Dmitry Medvedev, head of the security council - have repeated the threat several times since then.
The Kremlin dictator last night signed decrees recognising Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the country's south and east as states independent of Volodymyr Zelensky's Government - a precursor to Putin's deranged plot to illegally absorb 15% of Ukrainian territory into the Russian Federation.
Under an amendment to the Russian constitution made in 2020, Putin and his predecessors are forbidden from ceding any territory once acquired - meaning once the annexation is completed today, it will be irreversible unless Ukraine can successfully recapture the stolen land. Even a partial withdrawal as part of a future peace deal with Kyiv will become impossible.
At an official ceremony in St George's Hall in the Grand Kremlin Palace today, where marble plaques engraved in gold commemorate Russian military heroes, Putin will preside over a treaty-signing proclaiming the annexation of four regions of Ukraine - the breakaway People's Republics of Luhansk and Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.
The Russian annexation will then be followed by planned celebratory concerts and rallies in the occupied territories and Moscow's Red Square, where Putin is expected to outline his view on why Ukraine has no right to an independent existence.
The stage-managed exercise follows a bogus five-day voting process across Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk that was entirely rigged in favour of becoming part of Putin's Russia. Moscow's proxies in the occupied regions claimed majorities of up to 99% in favour of joining. However, Ukraine and Western governments described those votes as bogus, illegitimate and conducted at gunpoint.
MPs in the Duma, Russia's puppet parliament, are expected to rubber stamp the move next week. It is a carbon copy of Moscow's approach in 2014 when it held a fake referendum in Crimea as a pretext for moving in and seizing the Ukrainian peninsula.
The annexation comes at a perilous moment for Putin. After months of grinding, attritional warfare, Ukraine seized the initiative this month by routing Russian forces in the northeastern Kharkiv region.
And Putin last week declared an unpopular partial mobilisation, prompting thousands of fighting-age men to flee the country. Even staunch Kremlin allies have criticised the chaotic nature of the call-up, while Putin himself said yesterday 'all mistakes must be corrected'.
Kyiv said that the annexation votes will not stop their armed forces from trying to retake its illegally stolen land, vowing a 'harsh' response. For its part, Russia pledges to defend all its territory - including newly annexed regions - by all available means, including nuclear weapons.
Ukraine's Western supporters have described the stage-managed referendums on whether to live under Russian rule as a bald-faced 'land grab' based on lies.
They say some people were forced to vote at gunpoint in an election without independent observers on territory from which thousands of residents have fled or been forcibly deported.
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