Tag: War

  • War: Germany dares Russia, offers to supply weapons to Ukraine

    War: Germany dares Russia, offers to supply weapons to Ukraine

    Despite Russia’s warnings that it will attack any country supplying weapons to Ukraine, Germany has agreed to supply weapons to Ukraine to prosecute the war.

    Germany’s Defense Ministry has announced that the country has finally agreed to deliver anti-aircraft tanks to Ukraine.

    Germany’s intention to supply Ukraine with weapons was made known on Tuesday.

    Germany defence minister, Christine Lambrecht made the announcement to deliver the Gepard anti-aircraft systems to Ukraine during a meeting of international defense officials at the Ramstein US Air Force base on Tuesday.

    “We decided yesterday that we will support Ukraine with anti-aircraft systems … which is exactly what Ukraine needs now to secure the airspace from the ground,” Lambrecht said during the meeting at the base.

    This is coming at a time Russia warned that any country who does so risk being attacked.

    The Gepard systems were phased out from active duty in Germany in 2010.

    Meanwhile, it’s the first time Germany is doing so as it had earlier resisted temptation to provide weaponry to Ukraine.

    Germany has only focused on providing humanitarian help and medical equipment to Ukraine all through the War.

    However, Russia is yet to respond to Germany’s offer to supply weaponry to Ukraine despite its warning for European countries not to do so

  • British defence minister backs Ukraine strikes on Russian sites

    British defence minister backs Ukraine strikes on Russian sites

    A British defence minister has backed Ukrainian strikes on military targets behind Russian lines, even if the weapons used had been supplied by Britain.

    Armed Forces Minister James Heappey said on Tuesday that there was “every chance’’ that Moscow’s forces would be repelled with the support being supplied to Kiev by allies.

    But he dismissed Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s claim that Western allies were pouring oil on the fire by providing Ukraine with firepower.

    Heappey said of course Britain backed reported strikes on fuel depots in Russia.

    He told Times Radio “it is completely legitimate for Ukraine to be targeting Russia’s depth in order to disrupt the logistics that if they weren’t disrupted will directly contribute to death and carnage on Ukrainian soil.’’

    And the minister said it was not necessarily a problem if British-donated weapons were used to hit sites on Russian soil.

    He said after accepting weapons being supplied by allies to Ukraine and they had the range to be used over borders.

    “There are lots of countries around the world that operate kits that they have imported from other countries.

    “When those bits of kit are used we tend not to blame the country that manufactured it, you blame the country that fired it,’’ he added.

    The comments mark a further strengthening of Britain’s position, as allies shifted from caution against antagonising Russian President Vladimir Putin to supplying more and more lethal aid.

    Lavrov had warned that the threat of nuclear conflict should not be underestimated.

    He accused NATO forces of pouring oil on the fire by providing weapons, as he warned against provoking “World War III.’’

    But Heappey told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the chances of nuclear warfare were vanishingly small.

    He told Lavrov to reflect on the reason there was a war in Ukraine was that Russia invaded, telling Sky News.

    “All of this noise from Moscow about somehow their attack on Ukraine being a response to NATO aggression is just utter, utter nonsense.’’

    Heappey had said there was every chance that the Ukrainians would see off the Russians in the invasion, arguing that Moscow’s victory in the east of Ukraine was not inevitable.

    “We’ll see a conflict between two forces that are much more evenly balanced, where the Ukrainians have the advantage of defensive positions that have been dug in and prepared over the last eight years.

    “And that’s going to make it an extraordinarily difficult nut for the Russians to crack.

    “And with all the support that the Ukrainians are getting from around the world, there’s every chance the Ukrainians can see them off.’’

  • War: Russia warns U.S. against sending more arms to Ukraine

    War: Russia warns U.S. against sending more arms to Ukraine

    Russia on Monday warned U.S. against sending more arms to Ukraine.

    The country’s ambassador to Washington warned that large Western deliveries of weapons were inflaming the conflict and would lead to more losses.

    Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine has killed thousands of people, displaced millions more and raised fears of a wider confrontation between Russia and the U.S., by far the world’s two biggest nuclear powers.

    The U.S. has ruled out sending its own or NATO forces to Ukraine but Washington and its European allies have supplied weapons to Kyiv such as drones, Howitzer heavy artillery, anti-aircraft Stinger and anti-tank Javelin missiles.

    Anatoly Antonov, Russia’s ambassador to the U.S., said such arms deliveries were aimed at weakening Russia but that they were escalating the conflict in Ukraine, while undermining efforts to reach some sort of peace agreement.

    “What the Americans are doing is pouring oil on the flames.”

    “I see only an attempt to raise the stakes, to aggravate the situation, to see more losses,” Antonov told the Rossiya 24 TV channel.

    Antonov, who has served as ambassador to Washington since 2017, said an official diplomatic note had been sent to Washington expressing Russia’s concerns, and that no reply had been given.

    “We stressed the unacceptability of this situation when the United States of America poured weapons into Ukraine, and we demanded an end to this practice,” Antonov said.

    The interview was replayed on Russian state television throughout Monday.

    U.S. President, Joe Biden, pledged 800 million dollars in more weaponry for Ukraine on Thursday and said he would ask Congress for more money to help bolster support for the Ukrainian military.

    President Vladimir Putin says the “special military operation” in Ukraine was necessary because the U.S. was using Ukraine to threaten Russia and Moscow, who had to defend the persecution of Russian-speaking people.

    Putin said Ukraine and Russia were essentially one people, describing the war as an inevitable confrontation with the U.S., which he accused of threatening Russia by meddling in its backyard and enlarging the NATO military alliance.

    Ukraine added that it was fighting an imperial-style land grab and that Putin’s claims of genocide were nonsense.

    Zelenskiy has been pleading with U.S. and European leaders to supply Kyiv with heavier arms and equipment.

    Putin warned in February that there would be no winners in a conflict between NATO and Russia, which had the world’s biggest arsenal of nuclear warheads.

  • WAR: Russia relaunch attack in  Ukraine to claim Donbass region

    WAR: Russia relaunch attack in Ukraine to claim Donbass region

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has announced on Monday that Russia has started the battle to claim Donbass region in eastern Ukraine adding that Ukrainian forces will continue to fight against a Russian incursion in the region.

    Recent satellite images have shown Russian military convoys moving towards Donbas in preparation for a large-scale invasion one that is likely to shape the fate of the war.

    Reports have it that the control of Kreminna has been lost but the Russian forces are not relenting in its effort to re-capture the city.

    According to Serhii Haidai, the head of the Luhansk Regional Military Administration. It comes as Russian forces try to break Ukrainian resistance in the country’s east, and Haidai urged civilians on Tuesday to evacuate the Luhansk region.

    Meanwhile America’s president Joe Biden has released a statement through white house that he doesn’t have plans to visit Ukraine.

    White House press secretary Jen Psaki mentioned on Monday that there were no plans for US President Joe Biden to travel to Ukraine, following comments from Zelensky encouraging him to do so.

    However, talks are still ongoing in white house to take a decison on whether a team from the US will visit the war ravaged Ukraine.

     

     

     

     

  • War: Ukrainian forces  kill another top Russian Army general

    War: Ukrainian forces kill another top Russian Army general

    Russian has confirmed the death of one of its top general, Vladimir Petrovich Frolov, who was killed in the Ukraine-Russia war.

    Frolov, who was the Deputy Commander of the 8th army of Russia’s armed forces, died in the war in Ukraine, the Russian news agency TASS reported on Sunday.

    The governor of St Petersburg Alexander Beglov confirmed the death of Vladimir Petrovich Frolov on Sunday.

    In his words “Vladimir Petrovich Frolov died a heroic death in battle with Ukrainian nationalists.”

    He added that Frolov “sacrificed his life so that children, women and the elderly in the Donbas would no longer hear bomb explosions. To stop waiting for death and leaving home, to say goodbye as if it were the last time.”

    Recall that another Russian Lieutenant-General, Yakov Rezantsev, was killed in Ukraine last month.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin had ordered the invasion of Ukraine over its decision to pitch tent with North Atlantic Treaty Organization. (NATO)

    The Russian-Ukraine War started in February, 2022 and has lingered on for 2 months.

  • WAR: Russian missiles shot down by Ukrainian Army in Lviv

    WAR: Russian missiles shot down by Ukrainian Army in Lviv

    Russian cruise missiles have been fired and brought down by Ukrainian forces in the Lviv Region of the country.

    The cruise missies were downed on Saturday morning during opearations.

    Ukraine regional military governor Maksym Kozytsky responsibility of the attack. he said Ukraine’s anti-aircraft systems downed the missiles

    “In the morning of April 16, missiles were fired at the Lviv region from Su-35 aircraft of the Russian occupiers,” Kozytsky said.

    “Units of anti-aircraft missile forces Air Command West of the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine destroyed four cruise missiles.”

    Furthermore, Kozytsky claimed that the Russian aircraft that fired the missiles had taken off from Baranovichi airfield in neighbouring Belarus.

    The Ukrainian military previously said it has shot down several missiles fired towards its territory from Belarus.

    “In the morning of April 16, missiles were fired at the Lviv region from Su-35 aircraft of the Russian occupiers,” Kozytsky said.

    “Units of anti-aircraft missile forces Air Command West of the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine destroyed four cruise missiles.”

    Furthermore, Kozytsky claimed that the Russian aircraft that fired the missiles had taken off from Baranovichi airfield in neighbouring Belarus.

    The Ukrainian military previously said it has shot down several missiles fired towards its territory from Belarus.

    that were fired on Saturday morning toward the Lviv Region.

     

    “In the morning of April 16, missiles were fired at the Lviv region from Su-35 aircraft of the Russian occupiers,” Kozytsky said.

    “Units of anti-aircraft missile forces Air Command West of the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine destroyed four cruise missiles.”

    Furthermore, Kozytsky claimed that the Russian aircraft that fired the missiles had taken off from Baranovichi airfield in neighbouring Belarus.

    .

  • Putin’s Hellish War Upon Ukraine Evokes Memories Of America’s Anti-War General Tecumseh Sherman – By Dennis Onakinor

    Putin’s Hellish War Upon Ukraine Evokes Memories Of America’s Anti-War General Tecumseh Sherman – By Dennis Onakinor

    As the Russian war machine continues to unleash death, destruction, and misery upon Ukraine, following President Vladimir Putin’s February 24th “Special Operation” that has so far witnessed thousands of civilian casualties (especially children, women, the elderly and infirm), humanity is once again reminded that war, irrespective of efforts by the 1949 Geneva Convention to humanize its conduct, is an aberration symbolizing the descent of man into the abyss of abasement and bestiality. And, as the American Civil War hero, General Tecumseh Sherman, aptly stated about a century and half ago, “war is hell” where unimaginable cruelties and barbarities occur.

    Unfortunately, humanity is often quick to succumb to the lure of militarism and war in order to resolve inevitable conflicts arising from self-aggrandizing power-struggles. President Putin provides the latest example, having unwisely resorted to a demonstration of Russian military might, rather than seek a diplomatic solution to the long-running Russo-Ukraine crisis.

    Steeped in Russian nationalism and irredentism, Putin is, undoubtedly, a “student” of the 19th Century theoretical school of General Carl von Clausewitz, which holds that “war is a continuation of politics by other means.” But, events in Ukraine have shown that he hasn’t properly digested Clausewitz’s war-diplomacy nexus, developed when war was fought by infantry soldiers armed with Dane guns and bayonets hence, its destructiveness was insignificant compared to present-day armed conflicts featuring various types of lethal weapons.

    There is no gainsaying the fact that the Russian military (2nd only to the US’) boasts some of the world’s most technologically-advanced lethal weapons, including those of mass-destruction – biological, chemical, and nuclear. In light of this situation, it is predictable that a Russian invasion force can wreak unprecedented havoc on a militarily inferior Ukraine, in a manner that the world is currently witnessing in the cities of Bucha, Chernihiv, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Mariupol, etc.

    Putin, a trained lawyer and a Soviet-era KGB spy, may have heard of General Tecumseh Sherman and his American Civil war exploits, even though he is not likely to be an admirer of the war hero. For, while General Sherman eventually turned a pacifist, who denounced war, Putin is a militarist who glorifies war as demonstrated in the events leading up to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and subsequent actions.

    An apostle of the concept of “Total War,” General Sherman is reputed for originating the aphorism “War is hell.” Paradoxically revered and hated for his brutal war tactics, he won the decisive Georgian campaign of 1864, which heralded the Union army’s eventual triumph over the secessionist Confederate forces in the American civil war of 1861 – 1865. Interestingly, in the post-war period, he stridently denounced war as a barbarous and cruel affair. An extract from a personal letter written in May 1865 reads:

    “I confess, without shame, I am sick and tired of fighting – its glory is all moonshine; even success the most brilliant is over dead and mangled bodies, with the anguish and lamentations of distant families … it is only those who have never heard a shot, never heard the shriek and groans of the wounded and lacerated, that cry aloud for more blood, more vengeance, more desolation … I declare before God, as a man and a soldier, I will not strike a foe who stands unarmed and submissive before me, but would rather say – ‘Go, and sin no more’ …”
    In his capacity as the Commanding General of the US’ Army, Sherman, on June 19, 1879, addressed graduating students of the Michigan Military Academy, thus:

    “I have been where you are now and I know just how you feel. It’s entirely natural that there should beat in the breast of every one of you a hope and desire that someday you can use the skill you have acquired here. Suppress it! You don’t know the horrible aspects of war. I’ve been through two wars and I know. I’ve seen cities and homes in ashes. I’ve seen thousands of men lying on the ground, their dead faces looking up at the skies. I tell you, war is hell!”

    Perhaps, prior to launching his self-styled “Special Operation” in Ukraine, President Putin might have done well to learn a few lessons on the horrors of war from General Sherman. Alas, the world is now coming to terms with the fact that Putin disdains pacifism and glorifies militarism, and that he firmly believes in the example of Russian power rather than the power of Russian example.

    With benefit of hindsight, Yours Sincerely now conveniently asserts that the US and its NATO allies should have paid close attention to the military swagger of President Putin, especially after March 2014, when he annexed the Ukrainian city of Crimea and stirred up separatist revolts in the Donbas region, thus occasioning the breakaway Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics – both of which he formally recognized on February 21, 2022, three days before launching the ongoing war.

    Had NATO subjected Putin’s utterances to close scrutiny, it would have realized that his aggressive Russian irredentist militarism was bound to spark off a major conflagration in Europe, sooner than later. Of specific note was his address to the Russian Federal Assembly on March 1, 2018, during which he gloated about Russia’s development of hypersonic weapons that were unrivalled in terms of speed, maneuverability, precision, and lethality:

    “Countries with high research potential and advanced technology are known to be actively developing so-called hypersonic weapons … Of course this kind of weapon provides substantial advantages in an armed conflict. Military experts believe that it would be extremely powerful, and that its speed makes it invulnerable to current missile and air defence systems, since interceptor missiles are, simply put, not fast enough. In this regard, it is quite understandable why the leading armies of the world seek to possess such an ideal weapon. Friends, Russia already has such a weapon.”

    In a bellicose and overconfident tone, amidst cheers from the audience, he issued a veiled threat to the US and its NATO allies:
    “I hope that everything that was said today would make any potential aggressor think twice … Now we have to be aware of this reality and be sure that everything I have said today is not a bluff ‒ and it is not a bluff, believe me …”
    Again, on December 24, 2019, in a meeting with Russia’s top military brass, Putin enthused that Russia’s hypersonic weapons was a game-changer in terms of global military rivalry, noting that the US was now playing catch-up. Gleefully, he announced that one of the missiles, the “Avangard,” had an intercontinental range and can fly at 20 times the speed of sound:

    “Now we have a situation that is unique in modern history when they are trying to catch up to us … Not a single country has hypersonic weapons, let alone hypersonic weapons of intercontinental range … It’s not a chess game where it’s OK to play to a draw … Our technology must be better.”
    Suffice to say that in its ongoing onslaught on Ukraine, Russia has twice deployed hypersonic missiles: On March 19, 2022, it reportedly used a “Kinzhal” missile, which flies at 10 times the speed of sound, to destroy a fuel depot in the city of Mykolaiv; and a similar missile to destroy an underground arms deport in the village of Deliatyn on March 20, 2022.

    In an article titled “President Putin and The Resurgence of Global Geopolitical Gangsterism,” published in THENEWSGURU on March 1, 2022, Yours Sincerely likened Putin’s disdain for diplomacy to the hawkish militarism of former US’ Presidents Reagan, Bush (Sr.) and Bush (Jr.), all of whom respectively oversaw various military operations in Grenada, Libya, and Nicaragua; Panama; Afghanistan and Iraq. But, as Putin’s barbaric and brutal war upon Ukraine now shows, the American trio deserves commendation (ironically though) for having taken the trouble to minimize both military and civilian casualties during the said operations.

    It’s a truism that Putin firmly believes in Russia’s deployment of devastating firepower in order to overcome enemy forces in a war situation. In 1999 – 2000, Russian troops bombarded the regional capital city of Grozny into submission as they sought to flush out tenacious Chechen Islamist rebels from Chechnya region. Also, in the Syrian civil war, Russian intervention forces literally reduced to rubble the rebel-held cities of Aleppo, Homs, Hama, etc. in order to turn the scales in favour of embattled President Bashir al-Assad. In light of the foregoing, Russia’s ongoing bombardment of Ukrainian towns and cities is not unexpected.

    Some analysts opine that Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is designed to test the plausibility of his claims to Russia’s global military superiority. But, the reality is that Russia’s scotched earth tactics involving the indiscriminate bombing of civilian targets, including residential buildings, hospitals, schools, churches, etc., has only served to detract from that vaunted claim. More so, it has revealed the Russian authoritarian leader’s true identity: a barbarian of the wickedest type.

    Like Adolf Hitler’s, Putin’s aggressive nationalism and irredentist militarism cannot be pacified through peaceful overtures. He must be defeated militarily, so as to realize that barbaric militarism is an aberration in a 21st Century globalized society. Hitler-type aggressors understand only the language of counter-aggression; pacifism signifies weakness.

    Meanwhile, the West, especially the US, would do well to also show high-level concern towards violent conflicts in Africa, where irreconcilable ethnic and religious antagonisms often boil over into war. In truth, Africa’s wars are much more brutal and barbarous than Putin’s ongoing hellish war on Ukraine: witness the unending bloodletting in Congo, Sudan, South Sudan, Libya, Ethiopia, etc.
    In any case, as pacifists such as General Sherman have rightly pointed out, “war is hell,” and its only antidote is avoidance. Vladimir Putin and other war-mongers of his ilk must be made to learn this vital lesson.

    Dennis Onakinor, a global affairs analyst, writes from Lagos – Nigeria. He can be reached via e-mail at dennisonakinor@yahoo.com

  • 2 Ukrainian helicopters shot down

    2 Ukrainian helicopters shot down

    The Russian military has shot down two Ukrainian combat helicopters, according to Defence Ministry spokesperson, Igor Konashenkov.

    Konashenkov said the Russian forces fired on 81 military targets on Thursday, with Moscow intensifying its attacks on Ukraine.

    On Thursday, the military reported the targeting of 29 objects the day before.

    As well as the Mi-8 and Mi-24 combat helicopters, the targets hit on Thursday included Ukrainian military command posts and bases, as well as heavy artillery and rocket launchers in the Donbas, Konashenkov said.

    In addition, Russia’s Black Sea Fleet had destroyed a training camp for “foreign mercenaries” near Odessa, he said.

  • ‘For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power’ – Biden sends warning to Putin

    ‘For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power’ – Biden sends warning to Putin

    President Joe Biden declared forcefully Saturday that Russian President Vladimir Putin should no longer remain in power, an unabashed challenge that came at the very end of a swing through Europe meant to reinforce Western unity.

    “For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power,” Biden announced at the conclusion of a capstone address delivered in the cold outside the Royal Castle in Warsaw.

    The White House afterward downplayed the remark: “The President’s point was that Putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbors or the region,” a White House official said. “He was not discussing Putin’s power in Russia, or regime change.”

    The line was not in Biden’s prepared remarks, a separate White House official said.

    But his remark was already reverberating as Biden departed Poland to return home to Washington after his last-minute trip to attend snap summits in Brussels and to reassure allies along NATO’s eastern edge.

    It was the furthest he had gone in calling for changes atop Russia’s government and reflected a significant escalation in his rhetorical approach to Moscow. US officials had said previously said removing Putin from power was not their goal.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov responded to Biden, saying, “This is not to be decided by Mr. Biden. It should only be a choice of the people of the Russian Federation.”

    In his speech, which drew a sharp line between liberal democracies and the type of autocracy Putin oversees, Biden warned of a long fight ahead.

    “In this battle we need to be clear-eyed. This battle will not be won in days, or months, either,” he said.

    Just before Biden was set to speak in Poland, an airstrike struck a fuel depot just outside Lviv, Ukraine — about 200 miles away from where the

    President would speak. The strike caused billowing smoke and flames to rise above the western Ukrainian city, which had largely been seen as a safe haven during the war given its distance from the Russia-Ukraine border.

    It was a surprising attack, coming just a day after the Russian military said the first phase of the conflict had ended andthat it was shifting its attention to the disputed eastern parts of Ukraine. After days of Western leaders displaying their united front against Russia, the strike could be seen as a response from Putin and his military to Biden and the West.

    Biden, standing along NATO’s eastern edge, in Poland, issued a stern warning during his speech, telling Putin: “Don’t even think about moving on one single inch of NATO territory.” He said the US was committed to the collective protection obligations laid out in NATO’s charter “with the full force of our collective power.”

    But Biden made clear the current conflict in Ukraine — not a NATO member — doesn’t require America to become directly involved.

    “American forces are not in Europe to engage in conflict with Russian forces, American forces are here to defend NATO,” he said.

    CNN reports that Biden opened his address saying that Ukraine is now a front line battle in the fight between autocracy and democracy, casting Russia’s invasion of its neighbor as part of the decades-long battle that has played out between the West and the Kremlin.

    “My message to the people of Ukraine is … we stand with you. Period,” said Biden.

     

  • Russia vs Ukraine War:  President Zelensky escapes death

    Russia vs Ukraine War: President Zelensky escapes death

    “They wanted to assassinate the leadership of Ukraine: our President and Prime Minister,” he said

    “That was the goal and a couple of them were sent to Ukraine without any success,” he said.

    Lubkivskyi mentioned that the plot to assasinate Zelensky and the prime minister was confirmed by Ukraine’s intelligence service and special forces in charge of protecting Zelensky.

    “All these documents and the necessary proof will be presented to the International Court,” he said, adding that he could not reveal more due to operational reasons.

    The war between Russia and Ukraine is already entering its second month, with many Ukrainian towns and cities destroyed and casualties now counted in thousands.