Has the Ukraine downed four Russian military aircraft?
Germany will forward the Ukraine a amount in one shot that doubles their aid to the Ukraine…..
Look for more…
Ukraine President Zelensky IS telling European leaders he need ALL he can get as soon as possible against a possible slow down in aid from the Biden admin or even a Republican one in 2025…..The US has begun to train Ukraine troops on Abrams tanks….
But ?
The Ukraine maybe looking to lanuch MORE attacks into Russia to be levearge in the final settlement bargaining …
The Brit’s have sent longer range missiles Biden won’t…..
Zelensky IS traveling around and getting the reception’s that Russian President used to get…..
The Ukraine President has meet the Pope who has ‘prayers for Peace’
Ukraine forces ARE gaining ground around Bakhmut…..
Moscow appears to have lost four military aircraft in downings on Saturday in the Bryansk region of Russia, some 50 kilometers northeast of the border with Ukraine.
Two Mi-8 military helicopters and two fighter jets — an Su-34 and an Su-35 — suffered crashes on Saturday, according to reports by Russian state media and pro-Kremlin bloggers. All crew members of the aircraft died, according to the reports.
“Two Mi-8s, one Su-34, and one Su-25 were lost. Tragedy,” Russian propagandist Andrei Rudenko reported. “They were hit near the border of the Russian Federation and most likely with air-to-air missiles,” he said. The cause of the downings could not be confirmed…..
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Germany on Saturday sent the strongest signal yet of its commitment to backing Ukraine in its battle against Russian occupiers, promising more tanks, armored vehicles and substantial air defense systems in its largest weapons package for Kyiv.
The arms package, totaling 2.7 billion euros, or about $2.95 billion, amounted to roughly as much as Germany’s total military aid to Ukraine since the war began in February 2022.
The move was part of a budding effort by Chancellor Olaf Scholz and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine to draw a line under a year of rocky relations over Germany’s hesitancy to provide weapons and solidify a partnership that may prove increasingly critical to maintaining European unity in backing the war.
With elections looming in the United States next year, concern is growing in European capitals that President Biden will become less willing to showcase support for Ukraine, given the potential for Republicans to use the issue against him during the presidential campaign. Europe fears an even sharper drop in support for Ukraine should a Republican win the presidency next year….
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has won the trust of Western governments by refusing to use the weapons they provide for attacks inside Russia and prioritizing the targeting of Russian forces inside Ukraine’s borders.
But behind closed doors, Ukraine’s leader has proposed going in a more audacious direction — occupying Russian villages to gain leverage over Moscow, bombing a pipeline that transfers Russian oil to Hungary, a NATO member, and privately pining for long-range missiles to hit targets inside Russia’s borders, according to classified U.S. intelligence documents detailing his internal communications with top aides and military leaders….
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Here’s the latest on the war and its ripple effects across the globe.
- The pope told Zelensky that he was in “constant prayer” for peace, according to a Vatican news release. “The Pope stressed in particular the urgent need for ‘gestures of humanity’ in favor of the most fragile people, innocent victims of the conflict,” the news release said in Italian. The pope has frequently called for an end to the war and has cast himself in the role of peacemaker, though some analysts question whether there is a viable mediator role for the Vatican in a part of the world dominated by the Russian Orthodox Church.
- The Ukrainian president thanked Francis for his support and requested more. “I’m grateful for his personal attention to the tragedy of millions of Ukrainians,” Zelensky said in a statement published after their meeting. “In addition, I asked to condemn crimes in Ukraine. Because there can be no equality between the victim and the aggressor.”
- Zelensky described his trip as “an important visit for approaching victory of Ukraine.” He is rallying his European allies for a planned counteroffensive on the battlefield and is looking for sustained military support from Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. In their “fruitful” meeting, Zelensky said, the leaders discussed Ukraine’s bids to join NATO and the European Union, punitive sanctions against Russia, potential peace plans and postwar reconstruction.
- Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella stressed to Zelensky that peace in Ukraine “must be a true peace and not a surrender,” according to an account of the meeting provided by a source in the presidential office, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly. Mattarella also confirmed Italy’s readiness to provide “military, financial, humanitarian and reconstruction aid” to Kyiv in the long and short term, the source added.
- At least four people were injured after Russian strikes in Ukraine early Saturday, according to Ukrainian officials. Injuries were reported in Nikopol and Mykolaiv in the south, while in the western city of Khmelnytskyi multiple people were injured, its mayor said, adding that educational, medical and residential buildings, along with industrial facilities, were damaged. One person was also killed by Russian shelling in the village of Cherneshchyna in central Ukraine, the regional governor said.
- The Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant faces “a very difficult staffing situation,” said Rafael Mariano Grossi, the International Atomic Energy Agency’s director general. Europe’s largest nuclear power plant has seen considerable reduction in staffing numbers since the conflict began, and “in the medium and longer term, this is increasing the risk of a nuclear accident,” he said. The plant in southern Ukraine is controlled by Russian authorities, who are planning to evacuate 3,100 staffers, Ukrainian officials say.
- Six children and a senior Russian lawmaker were injured due to the blasts in Russian-occupied Luhansk, local pro-Kremlin officials said. Russian state media said another strike took place Saturday morning and claimed that both days’ attacks involved long-range Storm Shadow missiles provided by the United Kingdom. A U.K. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, said of the missiles: “We’ve provided them [Ukraine] a capability. We’d expect them to deploy it, in line with the objective of repelling Russia’s illegal invasion of sovereign Ukrainian territory.”
- A Russian Defense Ministry spokesman appeared to tacitly acknowledge that Russian forces had retreated from positions at a reservoir three miles northwest of Bakhmut. Troops have “taken advantageous decisions” in the area to “enhance defense lines,” spokesman Igor Konashenkovsaid during a news briefing Friday. Several Russian military bloggers have reported Ukrainian advances and suggested that Ukraine’s counteroffensive has begun. Ukrainian officials have said their offensive has not started.
- Ukraine regained at least one kilometer (0.6 miles) of territory around Bakhmut this week, the British Defense Ministry said Saturday. According to the ministry’s daily update, “elements” of a Russian rifle brigade “likely withdrew in bad order” from the southern flank of Russian and pro-Russian forces in the city — showing “Russia’s severe shortage of credible combat units.” On Friday, the head of Russia’s mercenary Wagner Group, Yevgeniy Prigozhin, said Ukrainian forces had conducted “a number of successful counterattacks” on Russian forces, while Kyiv’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said Ukrainian troops advanced two kilometers over the past week.
- Germany was also slated to host Zelensky in the coming days — but uncertainty surrounds that visit after details of his itinerary leaked to the press. Kyiv was “furious” after arrival details and the name of hotel where the Ukrainian president was planning to stay were published by a Berlin newspaper this month, according to a Ukrainian official, who said the trip was almost called off as a result. German government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit said he could not confirm that the visit would go ahead.
- Germany is sending a further $3 billion in military aid to Ukraine, news agencies reported Saturday. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said the new package would show “that Germany is serious in its support” for Kyiv, according to the Associated Press. Zelensky’s chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, said on Telegram that the latest package would include 30 Leopard tanks, air defense systems, reconnaissance drones and armored vehicles.
- Poland’s Defense Ministry said Saturday that an unidentified object, probably an observation balloon, flew into its airspace from the direction of Belarus. The ministry tweeted that radar contact with the object was lost near Rypin, in central Poland, and that its forces were conducting a search for the object.
- The U.S. ambassador to South Africa met with his host country’s foreign minister, after causing controversy by publicly accusing his host country of supplying weapons to Russia. U.S. envoy Reuben Brigety tweeted late Friday that he was “grateful” to be able to “correct any misimpressions left by my public remarks,” after his comments caused anger in Pretoria, which is investigating the allegations. In a statement, the South African government said it found the ambassador’s behavior “puzzling and at odds with the mutually beneficial and cordial relationship” between the two countries…..