Categories
Sites

Moscow Calling


TASS: Ukrainian Armed Forces conceal captivity to save on payments

The command of the 95th Air Assault Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces is allegedly changing the status of captured soldiers to “missing in action” after Russian media published video evidence of their captivity, TASS reports citing Russian security forces. According to the news agency’s source, these actions are motivated by a desire to reduce the number and size of payments to families. According to TASS, relatives of Ukrainian military personnel are also complaining about similar cases on social media (TASS).

Intended effect:

The material undermines trust in the Ukrainian command, portraying it as indifferent to the fate of its soldiers. This aims to demoralize society and reinforce the perception that the Russian side is more “humane.”

Zakharova: The West threatens to recognize Palestine, disregarding human rights

Speaking on Sputnik radio, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova criticized the West for trying to use the possible recognition of Palestine as a tool to pressure Israel. According to her, this demonstrates disregard for human rights and international law. Zakharova commented on a statement by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s office saying that London may recognize Palestine in September if Israel does not agree to a ceasefire in Gaza (TASS).

Intended effect:

The material aims to discredit Western foreign policy, presenting it as hypocritical and cynical. It emphasizes that human rights are merely a tool of political bargaining for the West, rather than a real value.

Kiselyov called on Baku to release Sputnik journalists, not to worsen relations with Moscow

In his comments to RIA Novosti, Dmitry Kiselyov, head of the Russia Today media group, demanded that the Azerbaijani authorities immediately release the arrested Sputnik Azerbaijan journalists, Igor Kartavykh and Evgeny Belousov. He stated that the charges against them are unfounded and that their arrest, without any objective complaints about their work, is leading to a deterioration in Russian-Azerbaijani relations. According to Kiselyov, the editorial office acted within the framework of an agreed, albeit temporary, scheme, but Baku did not fulfill its obligations (ria.ru).

Intended effect:

The article puts pressure on Azerbaijan by emphasizing the political nature of the arrest of the Russian journalists. This is an attempt to portray Moscow as a party seeking constructive dialogue and to shift responsibility for the deterioration of relations to Baku.

50 years of the Helsinki Act: from a symbol of détente to a reset

In an article on RIA Novosti dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), Alexander Yakovenko, former rector of the Diplomatic Academy of the Russian Foreign Ministry, writes that this document became a symbol of hope for the creation of a space of peace in Europe — from Lisbon to Vladivostok. However, the article notes, the potential of the Helsinki process was not realized: instead of equal cooperation, the West chose a strategy of unilateral domination and containment of Russia. According to him, the OSCE did not become a full-fledged institution of collective security, and the achievements of the era of détente were rolled back. As a result, the article argues, the continent has returned to confrontation and proxy wars, and Europe has fallen into the trap of Atlanticism and Russophobia (ria.ru).

Intended effect:

The article justifies Russia’s foreign policy isolation as a response to the West’s betrayal of the ideals of détente. It promotes the idea that only a Eurasian vector can ensure genuine security.

Russian State Duma MP concerned over anti-Soviet words in Taliban anthem

Speaking on the program Govorit Moskva, Russian State Duma MP Alexey Chepa expressed concern about the content of the unofficial anthem of the Taliban (an organization recognized as terrorist in a number of countries), which mentions “Russian skulls” and Afghanistan as “a grave for Russians.” This was previously reported by blogger Sergei Kolyasnikov, who published the text of the nasheed, which, according to him, was played at the opening ceremony of the movement’s embassy in Qatar. According to Gazeta.ru, some experts emphasized that such motives were more characteristic of the former, pro-Western regime, and that the current Taliban has no reason to be hostile toward Russia, which they view as a potential partner. Russia recognized the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan on July 3, 2025 (Gazeta.ru).

Intended effect:

The article balances between a call for caution in rapprochement with the Taliban and a justification for political recognition of their regime. This allows Russia to maintain its image as a pragmatic partner, ready to cooperate even in the presence of uncomfortable historical or ideological nuances.

The post Moscow Calling – July 30 first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.


Categories
Sites

The Philippine Missile Crisis: U.S. Deployed Arms to the Philippines and No One Noticed But China


Last spring, the United States quietly placed long-range missile launchers within reach of China’s mainland — and almost no one noticed. There was no congressional debate, no televised announcement, and no vote.

It was the latest step of a growing military partnership with the Philippines, just across the South China Sea.

The U.S. has been steadily expanding its military footprint in the Philippines as part of its broader strategy against China, a nuclear-armed rival. With little public scrutiny or accountability, Washington is now preparing to deploy a second Typhon missile system to the Philippines. Experts and U.S. officials have widely acknowledged that the confrontational policy could bring the U.S. into direct conflict with China.

“The United States has been fighting shoulder-to-shoulder with the Philippines since World War II,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said during a joint press conference in Manila earlier this year. “Our partnership not only continues today, but we are doubling down on that partnership, and our ironclad alliance has never been stronger.”

Filipino activists, for their part, want the U.S. military out.

“We are being used as a training ground, as an experiment ground for the U.S. missile system.”

“We are being used as a training ground, as an experiment ground for the U.S. missile system,” Mong Palatino, the secretary-general of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, a progressive civil society coalition, told The Intercept. “It endangers our population, it undermines our security. The lesson here is that we will not be able to be self-reliant as long as we are dependent on a former colonial master like the U.S. in protecting our sovereignty.”

The U.S. and Philippine governments spread misleading narratives to hype the threat posed by China threat as a means of justifying the U.S. military presence, he said.

The deployment of the offensive weapons system has already triggered a forceful response from China, which now publicly warns that these systems risk “self-inflicted destruction” for the Philippines and could upend fragile regional stability. Without naming Washington directly, China’s most recent national security white paper condemns the regional buildup of “intermediate-range missile systems” and the return of a “Cold War mentality.”

With the Philippines already embroiled in a maritime dispute over China’s claim to the entire South China Sea, the document warns that deploying missiles in the Philippines would lead to “aggravated regional tensions,” making maritime disputes “more difficult and complicated” to resolve.

Last year, China’s defense ministry spokesperson noted a pattern: “wherever US weapons are deployed, the risk of war and conflicts will rise, and the local people will suffer undeserved suffering from war.”

It’s difficult to imagine an American official accepting the deployment of Chinese or Russian missile systems in Mexico or Cuba; in one of those cases, obviously, not much of an imagination is needed. Yet Washington expects Beijing to tolerate precisely this scenario on its own doorstep.


Related

Pete Hegseth Is Mad the Media Won’t Celebrate U.S. War With Iran


The vast majority of Americans have little or no awareness of the U.S. expanding military posture in the Philippines, or what it could trigger. The American public has barely been informed that it may soon be underwriting another confrontation with a nuclear peer.

Once committed to confrontation, Manila’s leaders may gamble on indefinite U.S. support. If that support wavers, whether due to domestic politics, a loss of public appetite, or economic factors, the consequences could be ruinous for a country that will bear the brunt of any direct clash between the two giants.

The war in Ukraine serves as a cautionary tale. After years of war and staggering losses, Ukraine’s bargaining position is arguably worse than it was before the invasion, a tragic outcome that might have been avoided with early diplomacy.

The danger in the South China Sea is that Washington is encouraging a similar trajectory: backing increasingly aggressive stances from regional partners without fully grappling with the risks or leveling with the public about where this path could lead.

Once again, escalation is all happening in the absence of serious public debate.

“We’re Back With Them”

The first Typhon missile launcher, which can fire missiles as far as 1,200 miles, including Tomahawk cruise missiles, was stationed in the Philippines last year as part of annual joint military exercises between American and Filipino troops.

Washington has had a mutual defense treaty with the Philippines since 1951. In recent years, the U.S. military has expanded its presence, adding new bases and committing $82 million to build out infrastructure at those sites. The U.S. and the Philippines have also quietly approved a new ammunition manufacturing hub — funded by the U.S. and set to be built beside Subic Bay, which was once home to the largest U.S. naval base in Asia.

“They’re a very important nation militarily and we’ve had some great drills lately.”

The expansion of the security partnership accelerated under President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., the son of longtime dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who has embraced Manila’s historic ties with Washington after a period of drift under his predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte.

After meeting with Marcos last week, President Donald Trump announced that the U.S. will lower its tariff rate for the Philippines from 20 percent to 19 percent.

“They’re a very important nation militarily and we’ve had some great drills lately,” Trump said after the meeting. “We’re back with them. I think I can say that the last administration was not getting along with them too well.”

“And Pete, I would say that you were — you couldn’t be happier, right, with the relationship,” Trump added, nodding to the defense secretary.

At the helm of this growing security relationship is Hegseth, a controversial appointment with little background in Southeast Asia. Hegseth, a former Fox News host, has even gone viral for his lack of familiarity with the region. During his confirmation hearing, he couldn’t name a single member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Meanwhile, activists in the Philippines — from fisherfolk and environmentalists to labor leaders — have been speaking out against the growing U.S. military presence. When 18,000 troops from the U.S., Philippines, and Australia took part in a military exercise in the South China Sea in 2023, protesters marched outside the U.S. Embassy in Manila, warning that the Philippines would be the most devastated if conflict broke out between the U.S. and China.

The U.S. military presence in the Philippines has long been resisted by the Filipino public, with mass movements successfully pressuring the government to expel American bases in the early 1990s. That victory came after decades of struggle under a U.S.-backed dictatorship and, today, with a Marcos back in power, the U.S. is strengthening its alliance even as authoritarianism tightens its grip.

As Washington turns the Philippines into a potential battleground for great-power conflict, Filipino activists hope Americans will also confront the long-buried history of how the U.S. first came to occupy the archipelago — through invasion, colonization, and the mass killing of Filipinos in the name of empire.

Most of all, though, they want those lessons to be transposed to the present, to stop the looming threat that their country could be sacrificed to war with China in the name of that same empire.

“Of course, we have a maritime dispute with China, but that maritime dispute should not be used as a justification to allow a country like the U.S. to use the Philippines as its forward military base,” Palatino said. “We should resolve our maritime dispute with China diplomatically and peacefully.”

The post The Philippine Missile Crisis: U.S. Deployed Arms to the Philippines and No One Noticed But China appeared first on The Intercept.

The post The Philippine Missile Crisis: U.S. Deployed Arms to the Philippines and No One Noticed But China first appeared on Audio Posts – audio-posts.com.


Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

Is firmware code or data? – Electrical Engineering Stack Exchange


When someone says they “flashed” firmware to a device, I’m curious as to what this actually implies. Is firmware just a native binary that is stored in memory and that can be interpreted by the device’s CPU (like any other EXE on a computer)?

Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

YouTube


Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

YouTube


Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

Categories
Sites

Azerbaijan to reach 2,000 MW of renewable energy capacity by 2027


The initiative reflects Azerbaijan’s broader commitment to diversifying its energy mix, reducing carbon emissions, and enhancing energy security through the development of wind, solar, and other clean energy sources.

The post Azerbaijan to reach 2,000 MW of renewable energy capacity by 2027 first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.


Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

📖 Antes de que las altas temperaturas te saquen de la rutina, haz hueco en tu mochila para estas cinco obras ➡️ Cada una trata sobre cómo funciona un pilar distinto de la #inteligencia: #OSINT, #HUMINT, #SOCMINT, #IMINT y #contrainteligencia 👇 lisanews.org/actualidad/los…


The post 📖 Antes de que las altas temperaturas te saquen de la rutina, haz hueco en tu mochila para estas cinco obras ➡️ Cada una trata sobre cómo funciona un pilar distinto de la #inteligencia: #OSINT, #HUMINT, #SOCMINT, #IMINT y #contrainteligencia 👇 lisanews.org/actualidad/los… first appeared on JOSSICA – jossica.com.


Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

X (formerly Twitter) knows a lot about you – and there’s no way to hide it! Here’s a strategic method to uncover anything on X: https://t.co/9TiXjhqnmf @three_cube https://t.co/FkzwLOdpeH


The post X (formerly Twitter) knows a lot about you – and there’s no way to hide it!

Here’s a strategic method to uncover anything on X:
https://t.co/9TiXjhqnmf
@three_cube https://t.co/FkzwLOdpeH
first appeared on JOSSICA – jossica.com.


Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

X (formerly Twitter) knows a lot about you – and there’s no way to hide it! Here’s a strategic method to uncover anything on X: https://t.co/9TiXjhqnmf @three_cube https://t.co/FkzwLOdpeH


The post X (formerly Twitter) knows a lot about you – and there’s no way to hide it!

Here’s a strategic method to uncover anything on X:
https://t.co/9TiXjhqnmf
@three_cube https://t.co/FkzwLOdpeH
first appeared on JOSSICA – jossica.com.


Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

@m_t_mask @CarstenVollSand So gesehen die zZ beste “Schweizer Taschenmesser” #OSINT Tool was speziell für Militär und Verfolgungsbehörden entwickelt wurde. Wer glaubt mit einer VPN Software zu arbeiten wäre sicher, hat noch nie einen eigenen VPN endpoint bedient oder konfiguriert. https://t.co/FAIxYccOtt


The post @m_t_mask @CarstenVollSand So gesehen die zZ beste “Schweizer Taschenmesser” #OSINT Tool was speziell für Militär und Verfolgungsbehörden entwickelt wurde.
Wer glaubt mit einer VPN Software zu arbeiten wäre sicher, hat noch nie einen eigenen VPN endpoint bedient oder konfiguriert.
https://t.co/FAIxYccOtt
first appeared on JOSSICA – jossica.com.