Miscellaneous News

RedBaron

Junior Member
Registered Member
The United States is ready to go "all in" on sanctions against Russia, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent declared, signaling the administration's readiness to impose even harsher measures to pressure Moscow into peace negotiations.

Speaking at the Economic Club of New York, Bessent addressed the ongoing situation in Ukraine, emphasizing that the Biden administration is prepared to enact stronger sanctions in response to Russia's continued aggression, Caliber.Az reports via Ukrainian media.

His comments followed a Reuters report revealing that the White House is considering a plan to ease sanctions against Russia as part of a broader deal aimed at ending the war in Ukraine.

Bessent was critical of former US President Joe Biden's sanctions approach, describing them as "egregiously weak," particularly when it came to Russian energy. He argued that the weakness in these sanctions allowed Russia's military operations to continue, largely because of concerns about rising energy prices in the US.

"A major factor that has enabled the Russian war machine's continued financing was the Biden administration's egregiously weak sanctions on Russian energy, stemming from worries about upward pressure on US energy prices," Bessent stated.

Despite Biden's sanctions on Russia’s oil sector toward the end of his presidency, Bessent suggested that these actions came too late. He indicated that the current administration's stance would be different, reiterating that the enhanced sanctions imposed by President Biden would remain in place.

"This administration has kept the enhanced sanctions in place and will not hesitate to go 'all in' should it provide leverage in peace negotiations," Bessent asserted.

His remarks also served to draw a contrast with the Trump administration's approach. Bessent alluded to criticism of Trump’s policy shift on Ukraine, which had been seen as more lenient toward Russia. In response to this criticism, Bessent portrayed the Biden administration as having a harder stance on Russia while reinforcing Trump's willingness to take stronger measures.

"Sanctions on Moscow will be used explicitly and aggressively for immediate maximum impact," Bessent said.
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manqiangrexue

Brigadier
CIA update ASAP
What about all these public wargamesTM??
So when he said the US was ready to fight a war with China, he meant the US was ready to lose a war with China? I'm not even trying to be clever or fresh; this is all him speaking very clearly.
An American Airlines aircraft burst into flames while near a passenger terminal at Denver International Airport in Colorado.

Aand we've made it back from Kazakhstan with our 3 child. Airbus A350 to and from the US to Qatar, A320 to and from Qatar to Kazakhstan. And that's why we survived.
 

manqiangrexue

Brigadier
How many times did you shit your pants on the trip due to turbulence.
None.
1. First thing I did after getting sat in the aircraft is open the safety instructions. Saw Airbus model on top. I'm cool.
2. Newborn baby crying every 45 minutes, needs diaper changes every 3-4 hours, milk every 2-3 hours, basically so sleep deprived and miserable on a 15 hour flight of a 22 hour trip, death doesn't really scare you.
 

RedBaron

Junior Member
Registered Member
MOSCOW, March 14. /TASS/. An unidentified assailant in Odessa shot dead Ukrainian neo-Nazi Demyan Ganul, who helped set fire to the city’s Trade Union building in 2014, the RBC-Ukraine news agency reported, citing police sources.
According to the report, the assailant fled the scene after firing shots. Investigators and crime scene experts are working at the scene.
The Strana news outlet published photos of the victim and said that the tattoos on his body are proof that it indeed belonged to Ganul. According to the report, until recently Ganul was fighting with opponents of the so-called decommunization and mobilization. The news outlet Insider reported that officials introduced measures to locate the attacker. According to preliminary reports, the shooter was dressed in military uniform.
Ganul is a neo-Nazi and the former security chief of the Odessa cell of Right Sector (designated extremist and banned in Russia), and also the leader of the Street Front grassroots initiative. He was one of the organizers and perpetrators of the May 2, 2014 murders in Odessa's Trade Union building. He said on television that he did not regard the victims as people, then published ironic posts on this subject in social media. On April 9, the Moscow’s Basmanny Court ruled to arrest Ganul in absentia. He was put on an international wanted list as part of an investigation into the destruction of monuments to Russian military glory.
On May 2, 2014, radicals from Right Sector and the so-called Maidan self-defense group attacked a tent city in Odessa, where residents were collecting signatures for holding a referendum on federalization of Ukraine and designating the Russian language as official. Supporters of federalization took refuge in the Trade Union building, but the radicals surrounded the structure and set it on fire. The tragic events left 48 people dead and more than 240 injured, according to the Ukrainian Internal Affairs Ministry. The authorities blamed the riots solely on the opponents of the Maidan uprising. However, a years-long investigation failed to prove their guilt in court. As a result, all those who were initially detained were later acquitted.
On Thursday, the ECHR found the Ukrainian authorities guilty of failing to prevent violence and save lives during those events. The court unanimously ruled that there had been a violation of Article 2 (on the right to life) of the European Convention on Human Rights due to the failure of the authorities to do everything that could have been expected of them to prevent the violence, to stop the violence once it had started and to ensure timely rescue measures. In addition, it was stated that Kiev failed to conduct a proper investigation into the events.
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FriedButter

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Pete Hegseth shutters Pentagon office that helped military leaders plan for possible future wars​

The office is often referred to as the Pentagon’s internal think tank and strategizes for possible future conflicts

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has moved to shutter the Pentagon office that helped military leaders plan for possible future wars.

A memo signed by Hegseth dated March 13 reportedly said that civil employees in the Pentagon’s Office of Net Assessment will be reassigned to other “mission critical positions” as it is dismantled. The office is often referred to as the Pentagon’s internal think tank.

After reports of the memo were published, chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell issued a statement about the “restructuring.”

“As part of the Department's ongoing commitment to strengthening our national defense, the Secretary of Defense has directed the disestablishment of the Office of Net Assessment (ONA) and the development of a plan to rebuild it in alignment with the Department's strategic priorities,” Parnell said.

“The Department remains committed to conducting rigorous, forward-looking strategic assessments that directly inform defense planning and decision-making,” he added.

The Office of Net Assessment, founded in 1973, plays a crucial strategic role in planning and preparing for possible conflicts.

The timing of the restructure was questioned by defense experts. “We’re in a period that looks a lot like the Cold War, and we’re doing away with an office that for decades helped senior leaders navigate that conflict,” former Pentagon strategist Thomas G. Mahnken of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments think tank told the New York Times.

Democratic Sen. Jack Reed, ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, called it “shortsighted” and said it “undermine[d] our ability to prepare for future conflicts.”

But some Republicans have been pushing for the office to close. Sen. Chuck Grassley said he personally discussed “ONA waste” with Hegseth in January, where he recommended shuttering the office.

“After years raising Cain about the Office of Net Assessment’s failure to strengthen our national defense and its rampant abuse of taxpayer dollars, I’m thrilled to hear the news that President Trump is abolishing this wasteful and ineffective office,” Grassley said in a statement.

He claimed that shutting the office would save American taxpayers over $20 million a year. The Pentagon’s annual budget is around $850 billion.

Hegseth has looked for ways to cut the military’s budget as he follows the efforts of President Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.

Retired Air Force lieutenant colonel Jim Baker was appointed director of the Office of Net Assessment by former Defense Secretary Ash Carter in 2015. He took over from the late Andrew W. Marshall, dubbed the “Pentagon’s Yoda” because of his experience and strategic, forward thinking.

The decision to hire Baker reflected a desire to change the focus of the office to more immediate threats and concerns, the Washington Post reported at the time.
A memo signed by Hegseth dated March 13 reportedly said that civil employees in the Pentagon’s Office of Net Assessment will be reassigned to other “mission critical positions” as it is dismantled. The office is often referred to as the Pentagon’s internal think tank.
 
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