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In The News

Two Big Signs The Ukraine War Could Last "For Years"

Photo of Ukrainian troops

Ukrainian troops in the east of the country

Emma Albright, Anna Akage and Shaun Lavelle

Two key points in the past 24 hours offer a sense that the war in Ukraine won’t be ending anytime soon. From Washington, U.S. President Joe Biden has proposed an unprecedented $33-billion military and humanitarian aid package to Kyiv. Such a financial commitment, which Biden acknowledged was “not cheap,” is part of a shift from the U.S. over the past 10 days to massive support for President Volodomyr Zelensky and the Ukrainian military, in an effort to defeat Russia on the battlefield.

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“The high dollar amount requested also sends a signal to Russia that the United States intends to back Ukraine in the fight for the long run,” writes U.S. news site Politico. “It will also likely boost Ukrainians who say they want to defeat Russia, not merely settle for a long-term stalemate.”


The second bit of perspective on the conflict came from NATO, whose Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg was speaking Thursday at a youth summit in Brussels: "We need to be prepared for the long term," Stoltenberg said. "There is absolutely the possibility that this war will drag on and last for months and years."

Yes, this may be the week where we understood the Ukraine war will last for years.

Sweden And Finland Press Ahead With NATO Membership

File:Flag of NATO.svg - Wikimedia Commonscommons.wikimedia.org


Finland and Sweden are moving closer to joining NATO as early as this summer, ahead of a summit by military alliance at the end of June. On Friday, Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Anderrson announced that if Parliament voted to join NATO, the issue would not be put to the public.

“I don’t think it is an issue suitable for a referendum,” she told reporters, pointing out that national security information is often confidential and that important facts can’t be shared with the public.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Thursday that the United States “strongly supports” Sweden and Finland should they decide to seek membership.

Both Sweden and Finland (which shares a border with Russia) have been reassessing long-held beliefs about not provoking Moscow with NATO membership in the wake of the Ukraine invasion.Public support for joining the military alliance increased dramatically following the invasion. A majority of Finns and Swedes now support membership.

Moscow has been vocal in opposing the Nordic countries NATO accession, with Russian presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov calling it an “existential threat” to the country.

Journalist Killed In Kyiv Missile Strike During Guterres Visit

Vera Hyrych/Facebook


Radio Liberty reported Friday that one of its journalists was killed during Russia’s missile strike in Kyiv that coincided with the visit of UN Secretary General António Guterres.

Vera Gyrych, a veteran of Radio Liberty (also known as Radio Free Europe, a U.S.-funded organization) was at her home when the missile hit her building.

Ukrainian officials said 10 people were also injured by two Russian missiles that had struck the capital as Guterres met for talks with UkrainianPresident Volodomyr Zelensky.

The attack, Zelensky said, is new evidence of “Russia’s true attitude to global institutions, about the efforts of the Russian leadership to humiliate the UN and everything that the organization represents.”

Ukraine Launches High-Risk Operation To Evacuate Civilians From Mariupol

Azov handout


Ukraine said it was launching a high-risk evacuation Friday of some of the last surviving civilians in the besieged southern city of Mariupol.

Several thousand soldiers and civilians have been holed up in the Azovstal steel plant in the city’s port area, considered the last bastion of the Ukrainian resistance. The evacuation of civilians from Mariuopol was high on the agenda of UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres during his past two days of visits to Moscow and Kyiv.

Ukrainian University Students Forced To Donate Blood To Wounded Russian Soldiers

Blood drive

www.schriever.spaceforce.mil


Russian authorities in Ukraine’s occupied territories of Donetsk and Luhansk regions are forcing university students to donate blood for wounded Russian soldiers, reports Kyiv-based news outlet Livy Bereg on Friday.

Lyudmila Denisova, the Verkhovna Rada Parliamentary Commissioner for Human Rights, said that there have been around 700 cases of such forced blood donations, which she says are a violation of the Geneva Conventions on wartime protocol.

Denisova had already reported that Russia had plans to force Ukrainian prisoners of war to donate blood for the wounded Russian soldiers.

Gazeta Wyborcza

img.kiosko.net


Front page of Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza as the gas crisis sparked by Russian demands that its energy exports be paid for in rubles.

Russia Deploys Dolphins In Crimea Port

Satellite images appear to show dolphin pens at Sevastopol Bay in Crimea

Maxar Technologies


Moscow has deployed trained dolphins at the entrance to a key port of Sevastopol in the Black Sea. The use of the sea mammals would be to protect a naval base from potential Ukrainian attacks, according to a review of satellite images by the commercial firm Maxar and U.S. naval institute.

The dolphins would prevent Ukrainian divers from infiltrating the harbor from underwater and sabotaging ships there. Their deep-diving abilities as well as their sonar communication system makes these dolphins more effective than any technological advancement.

Since the Cold War, both Russia and the U.S. have deployed marine mammals to carry out underwater searches.

Wagner Group Step Up Mercenary Recruitment With Higher Pay, Lower Standards

Russia’s controversial Wagner Group mercenary outfit is believed to already have between 10,000 and 20,000 troops in Ukraine, mostly in the eastern Donbas region. But now, the organization, run by Russian oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin, is multiplying its recruiting efforts to hire new mercenaries to fight in Ukraine

French-daily Le Figaro reports that Wagner is turning to social media, in particular the Russian Telegram channel, to find new recruits with both higher salaries and lower standard requirements to join. Monthly salaries have increased from about 1,900 euros to 2,800 euros and would-be mercenaries no longer have to meet special physical or psychological requirements. “We don’t look at teeth,” one advertisement says.

At the same time, the Wagner Group is particularly eager for sign-ups with specific skills, for example, professional drone pilots.

A Ceramic Rooster That Survived Russian Bombs Becomes Ukrainian War Icon

The kitchen cabinet with a ceramic rooster survived intense Russian bombing in the northern Ukrainian town of Borodyanka in the early days of the war. We know about it from a photograph by Elizaveta Servatynska that showed the surviving kitchen cabinet — a picture that went viral on the Ukrainian internet.

Now the rooster will become part of the Museum Fund of Ukraine, after the Cultural Heritage Headquarters officers dismantled a portion of the wall and the rooster that was designed by artists Valery and Nadiya Protoriev, and handed it over to the National Museum of the Revolution of Dignity.

The surrounding area and the ruins of the buildings were also documented, with the help of a drone, to create 3D models. Thanks to detailed photography and video, the location of each detail has been recorded, which in the future will allow to recreate the location and environment in the museum with maximum accuracy.

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Society

Exploiting Auschwitz — How Poland's Ruling Party Reached A New Low

Poland's ruling party has used the Nazi concentration camp, which was located in a Polish town, in one of its political campaigns to sully its opponents. It's the latest step that the ruling government is taking to attack an opposition march planned for this Sunday against a law that some say threatens democracy.

Image of the entrance gate with 'Arbeit Macht Frei' inscription in the former Nazi German Auschwitz I concentration camp at Auschwitz Memorial Site, in Oswiecim, Poland.

The entrance gate with the inscription 'Arbeit Macht Frei' (Work Will Set You Free) in the former Nazi German Auschwitz I concentration camp at Auschwitz Memorial Site, in Oswiecim, Poland.

Beata Zawrzel/ZUMA
Bartosz T Wielinski

-OpEd-

WARSAW — The short video ad hit social media on Wednesday. It begins with a clip of the railroad of Auschwitz-Birkenau, where Jews from all of Nazi-occupied Europe were transported. It is the place where those deemed unfit to work — including the elderly and mothers with children — were taken to gas chambers and murdered with zyklon B. In another shot, the release shows a clip of Auschwitz’s gates with their mocking inscription — “Arbeit Macht Frei" (Work will set you free.)

It is against this backdrop that Poland's right-wing ruling Law and Justice party (PiS) chose to show a recent tweet made by Polish journalist Tomasz Lis, who criticized the ruling party’s controversial anti-Russian investigative committee, stating “there will be a chamber for Duda and Kaczor”.

In his tweet, Lis was referring to criticisms from the Polish opposition that the new committee, also being referred to as the “Tusk Law”, will be used to target political rivals, rather than Russian colluders. Lis has since apologized for his statement, and the tweet has been removed from his social media.

“Is this the slogan you want to march under?” — asks the speaker in the advertisement, as the screen shows the date of June 4th. This is how PiS is reacting to the mass mobilization of Poles, who have agreed to come together and demonstrate against its anti-democratic policies in Warsaw.

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