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Sotomayor Offers a Preview of What Trump Could Do as President – The Daily Beast


The post Sotomayor Offers a Preview of What Trump Could Do as President – The Daily Beast first appeared on The Trump Investigations – trumpinvestigations.net – The News And Times.


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@fakeofforg: RT by @mikenov: В 2022 американский журналист послал FOIA в ЦРУ по запросу MIKHAIL YURIYEVICH LESIN и получил ответ. В основном, как водится, «рассекреченные» документы выглядят так, как на картинке. Но из тех, которые прочитать всё-таки возможно, становится ясно, что советник президента и…


В 2022 американский журналист послал FOIA в ЦРУ по запросу MIKHAIL YURIYEVICH LESIN и получил ответ. В основном, как водится, «рассекреченные» документы выглядят так, как на картинке. Но из тех, которые прочитать всё-таки возможно, становится ясно, что советник президента и… pic.twitter.com/dX4F5O2Ino — FAKE OFF (@fakeofforg) July 1, 2024

The post @fakeofforg: RT by @mikenov: В 2022 американский журналист послал FOIA в ЦРУ по запросу MIKHAIL YURIYEVICH LESIN и получил ответ. В основном, как водится, «рассекреченные» документы выглядят так, как на картинке. Но из тех, которые прочитать всё-таки возможно, становится ясно, что советник президента и… first appeared on Idaho Murders – The News And Times.


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@mikenov: Search | CIA FOIA (foia.cia.gov) cia.gov/readingroom/se…


Search | CIA FOIA (https://t.co/cmYlHDyf7I) https://t.co/SGdhHMVUTr — Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) July 1, 2024

The post @mikenov: Search | CIA FOIA (foia.cia.gov) cia.gov/readingroom/se… first appeared on Idaho Murders – The News And Times.


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@mikenov: Встреча с Министром науки и высшего образования Валерием Фальковым


Встреча с Министром науки и высшего образования Валерием Фальковым • Президент России https://t.co/z30Mu81u48 pic.twitter.com/kDrAhbM77B — Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) July 1, 2024

The post @mikenov: Встреча с Министром науки и высшего образования Валерием Фальковым first appeared on Idaho Murders – The News And Times.


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@mikenov: Встреча с главой КПРФ Геннадием Зюгановым


Встреча с главой КПРФ Геннадием Зюгановым • Президент России https://t.co/dhRZa6QOAu pic.twitter.com/9LBlqxOZVx — Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) July 1, 2024

The post @mikenov: Встреча с главой КПРФ Геннадием Зюгановым first appeared on Idaho Murders – The News And Times.


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@haaretzcom: RT by @mikenov: Amid abysmal polling results following Thursday’s presidential debate, U.S. President Joe Biden can console himself a tiny bit in the fact that there’s at least one leader who is even less trusted by his country’s citizens to lead them / @amirtibon haaretz.com/israel-news/ha…


Amid abysmal polling results following Thursday’s presidential debate, U.S. President Joe Biden can console himself a tiny bit in the fact that there’s at least one leader who is even less trusted by his country’s citizens to lead them / @amirtibon https://t.co/Rw63J05DdU — Haaretz.com (@haaretzcom) July 1, 2024

The post @haaretzcom: RT by @mikenov: Amid abysmal polling results following Thursday’s presidential debate, U.S. President Joe Biden can console himself a tiny bit in the fact that there’s at least one leader who is even less trusted by his country’s citizens to lead them / @amirtibon haaretz.com/israel-news/ha… first appeared on Idaho Murders – The News And Times.


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Ukraine is releasing thousands of prisoners so they can join the fight against Russia – KTVN


The post Ukraine is releasing thousands of prisoners so they can join the fight against Russia – KTVN first appeared on JOSSICA – The Journal of the Open Source Strategic Intelligence and Counterintelligence Analysis.


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В правительстве предложили расширить отправку россиян на принудительные работы


Министр юстиции Константин Чуйченко предложил чаще использовать принудительные работы в качестве наказания за уголовные преступления. По его словам, ведомство уже готовит соответствующий законопроект. Согласно документу, принудительные работы должны стать основным наказанием по более чем 65 составам преступлений. Конкретики Чуйченко не привел.

The post В правительстве предложили расширить отправку россиян на принудительные работы first appeared on The News And Times.


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The Russian-North Korean alliance requiring the U.S. to allocate more attention and resources to the Asia-Pacific


The growing cooperation between Russia and North Korea, especially the potential deployment of North Korean troops to Ukraine, challenges the United States on two different fronts: Ukraine and the Asia-Pacific, specifically the Korean Peninsula. This alliance underscores a Kremlin strategy to strain U.S. resources and attention across these strategically significant regions.

In this context, the recent unofficial visit of Russian nuclear submarines to Cuba, indicating Moscow’s intent to challenge Washington within the U.S. sphere, indicating a consistent pattern of provocative manoeuvres that aim to test both the White House’s determination and ability to address numerous threats concurrently.

The defence agreement between Russia and North Korea, entailing mutual assistance, acts as a deterrent for Pyongyang against Seoul and its allies, particularly Washington. While it could be speculative, the potential deployment of North Korean troops to Ukraine would represent a significant step up and a broader coalition in opposition to Western influence.

The Russian-North Korean alliance complicates the situation in the Korean Peninsula, potentially causing instability in the region and requiring the U.S. to allocate more attention and resources to the Asia-Pacific.

The post The Russian-North Korean alliance requiring the U.S. to allocate more attention and resources to the Asia-Pacific first appeared on The News And Times.


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The Coming Russian Escalation With the West


RUSSIA-US-POLITICS-WEATHER

To judge from the editorial pages and Capitol Hill currents that both shape and reflect Washington’s perceptions of the world, the doomsayers sounding alarms over the risk of direct military conflict between the U.S. and Russia over Ukraine have been proved wrong. Despite many Russian warnings and much nuclear saber-rattling, the United States has managed to supply advanced artillery systems, tanks, fighter aircraft, and extended-range missiles to Ukraine without an existential contest—or even significant Russian retaliation.

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For Washington’s hawkish chorus, the benefits of providing increasingly greater lethality to Ukraine outweigh the dangers of provoking a direct Russian attack on the West. They insist that the U.S. not allow fears of an unlikely Armageddon to block much-needed aid for Ukraine’s defense, particularly now that battlefield momentum has swung toward Russia. Hence the White House’s recent decision to green-light Ukraine’s use of American weapons to strike into internationally recognized Russian territory and its reported deliberations over putting American military contractors on the ground in Ukraine.

Read More: Inside Ukraine’s Plan to Arm Itself

There are several problems with this reasoning. The first is that it treats Russia’s redlines—limits that if crossed, will provoke retaliation against the U.S. or NATO—as fixed rather than moveable. In fact, where they are drawn depends on one man, Vladimir Putin. His judgments about what Russia should tolerate can vary according to his perceptions of battlefield dynamics, Western intentions, sentiment inside Russia, and likely reactions in the rest of the world.

It is true that Putin has proved quite reluctant to strike directly at the West in response to its military aid for Ukraine. But what Putin can live with today may become a casus belli tomorrow. The world will only know where his red lines are actually drawn once they have been crossed and the U.S. finds itself having to respond to Russian retaliation.

The second problem is that by focusing narrowly on how Moscow might react to each individual bit of American assistance to Ukraine, this approach underestimates the cumulative impact on Putin and the Kremlin’s calculations. Russian experts have become convinced that the U.S. has lost its fear of nuclear war, a fear they regard as having been central to stability for most of the Cold War, when it dissuaded both superpowers from taking actions that might threaten the other’s core interests.  

A key question now being debated within Russia’s foreign policy elite is how to restore America’s fear of nuclear escalation while avoiding a direct military clash that might spin out of control. Some Moscow hardliners advocate using tactical nuclear weapons against wartime targets to shock the West into sobriety. More moderate experts have floated the idea of a nuclear bomb demonstration test, hoping that televised images of the signature mushroom cloud would awaken Western publics to the dangers of military confrontation. Others call for a strike on a U.S. satellite involved in providing targeting information to Ukraine or for downing an American Global Hawk reconnaissance drone monitoring Ukraine from airspace over the Black Sea. Any one of these steps could lead to an alarming crisis between Washington and Moscow.

Underlying these internal Russian debates is a widespread consensus that unless the Kremlin draws a hard line soon, the U.S. and its NATO allies will only add more capable weapons to Ukraine’s arsenal that eventually threatens Moscow’s ability to detect and respond to strikes on its nuclear forces. Even just the perception of growing Western involvement in Ukraine could provoke a dangerous Russian reaction.

These concerns undoubtedly played a part in Putin’s decision to visit North Korea and resurrect the mutual defense treaty that was in force from 1962 until the Soviet Union’s demise. “They supply weapons to Ukraine, saying: We are not in control here, so the way Ukraine uses them is none of our business. Why cannot we adopt the same position and say that we supply something to somebody but have no control over what happens afterwards? Let them think about it,” Putin told journalists after the trip.

Last week, following a Ukrainian strike on the Crimean port of Sevastopol that resulted in American-supplied cluster munitions killing at least five Russian beachgoers and wounding more than 100, Russian officials insisted that such an attack was only possible with U.S. satellite guidance aiding Ukraine. The Foreign Ministry summoned the U.S. ambassador in Moscow to charge formally that the U.S. “has become a party to the conflict,” vowing that “retaliatory measures will definitely follow.” The Kremlin spokesperson announced that “the involvement of the United States, the direct involvement, as a result of which Russian civilians are killed, cannot be without consequences.”

Are the Russians bluffing, or are they approaching a point where they fear the consequences of not drawing a hard line outweighs the dangers of precipitating a direct military confrontation? To argue that we cannot know, and therefore should proceed with deploying American military contractors or French trainers in Ukraine until the Russians’ actions match their bellicose words, is to ignore the very real problems we would face in managing a bilateral crisis.  

Unlike in 1962, when President John F. Kennedy and his Russian counterpart Nikita Khrushchev famously went “eyeball to eyeball” during the Cuban missile crisis, neither Washington nor Moscow is well positioned to cope with a similarly alarming prospect today. At the time, the Soviet ambassador was a regular guest in the Oval Office and could conduct a backchannel dialogue with Bobby Kennedy beyond the gaze of internet sleuths and cable television. Today, Russia’s ambassador in Washington is a tightly monitored pariah. Crisis diplomacy would require intense engagement between a contemptuous Putin and an aging Biden, already burdened with containing a crisis in Gaza and conducting an election campaign whose dynamics discourage any search for compromise with Russia. Levels of mutual U.S.-Russian distrust have gone off the charts. Under the circumstances, mistakes and misperception could prove fatal even if—as is likely—neither side desires a confrontation.

Pivotal moments in history often become clear only in hindsight, after a series of developments produce a definitive outcome. Discerning such turning points while events are in motion, and we still have some ability to affect their course, can be maddeningly difficult. We may well be stumbling toward such a moment today.

The post The Coming Russian Escalation With the West first appeared on The News And Times.