Krieg in der Ukraine
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Eröffnet am: | 11.03.22 21:45 | von: LachenderHa. | Anzahl Beiträge: | 56.009 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 19.11.24 10:31 | von: Tony Ford | Leser gesamt: | 8.235.860 |
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.......hat der Waldi nun geändert um den Weicheiern wie Scholz und Konzorten wieder ein bisschen Angst einzujagen.
A Hund isser scho der Waldi.
Wenn es ihm Spaß macht!
Er weiß doch ganz genau was passiert, sollte er seine Drohung wahr machen!
Jetzt weiß ich auch, warum er immer so dicke Backen hat ;-))
Die Russen sollten mal die verrosteten Schlösser von ihren Atomaren Bodensilos erstmal prüfen ob die sich überhaupt noch öffnen lassen.
Putin hat mit allem gerechnet, dass sein Land nach 2,5 Jahren wirtschaftlich in den Abgrund taumelt bestimmt nicht.
Ich kann aber jeden russischen Freund russische Staatsanleihen mit 16% und 20 Jahre Laufzeit empfehlen. Eigentlich ein muss für Mister Magicc.
https://www.fr.de/politik/...eten-fehlstart-gedemuetigt-93315507.html
https://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/...urch-ukraine-krieg/
Die Anzahl der getöteten Kinder im Krieg Hamas gegen Israel stand April 2024 ca. 13800 Tote Kinder.
https://www.zeit.de/news/2024-04/04/...ieg-mehr-als-13800-tote-kinder
Ich weiß, Äpfel mit Birnen!
Gazprom mit DEUTLICHEM VERLUST!
https://www.handelsblatt.com/unternehmen/energie/...st/100036652.html
Woran das wohl liegen mag? ;-)))))))
So einfach ist das!
https://www.spiegel.de/ausland/...e29da95-a6dc-46bd-9c87-7c02b2eb879d
https://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/europa/...e-angriff-klinik-102.html
https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/...hen_im_Russisch-Ukrainischen_Krieg
Nicht nur wehrlose Soldaten werden grausam hingerichtet, auch vor der Zivilbevölkerung macht das Mörderpack kein halt!
https://youtube.com/watch?v=nlv4pEaFVk8&si=woK1e9V3CeSAfCmq
Lange kann Putin den Krieg nicht mehr aufrecht erhalten, die Zeit drängt und er kann diese Masse an toten Russen nicht mehr verbergen.
Und was macht man in dem Fall, einfaches russisches Konzept, man droht der gesamten westlichen Welt.
Meine Meinung, primitiver geht es nimmer.
Soldaten: 647.800 (+ 1400 zum Vortag)
Panzer: 8.825 (+10 zum Vortag)
Gepanzerte Fahrzeuge: 17.348 (+44)
Artilleriesysteme: 18.620 (+71)
Luftabwehrsysteme: 959 (+7)
Drohnen: 15.946 (+67)
Versorgungsfahrzeuge 25.353 (+105)
https://www.fr.de/politik/...unition-spionage-ostsee-zr-93316027.html
https://x.com/EuromaidanPR/status/1839246115813707845/photo/1
Quelle: Ukrainischer Generalstab am 26. September 2024
Returning from their summer recess, European Union leaders have a packed agenda. At the top of the list are strengthening the bloc’s readiness for conflict and bolstering its economic competitiveness.
For decades, the EU relied on economic influence as a substitute for hard power. But in an era of renewed geopolitical tensions, soft power is not sufficient. The evidence of this comes in many forms. If Europe’s shrinking industrial base and scramble to adjust to the reality of de-globalization are not convincing enough, Russia's war against Ukraine surely must be.
That conflict has not only upended the long-held belief that full-scale wars in Europe belonged to the past; it has also demonstrated the limits of economic ties and levers to shape countries’ behavior. Despite facing one of the most expansive sanctions regimes in history, Russia’s economy grew by 5.4% in the first quarter of this year, and 4% in the second – well above the global average.
A key reason for this resilience is that Russia has found ways to circumvent sanctions and acquire restricted goods, including defense and high-tech products. More than half of the battlefield equipment that Russia obtained between February and August of 2022 contained components made in Europe or the United States. And the majority of the semiconductors being exported from China and Hong Kong to Russia – a trade that has surged tenfold since the war started – originated with U.S. manufacturers.
The Western firms producing those goods, however, are not reaping the full profits of this trade, which is happening largely through complex networks involving third countries. It is no coincidence that Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey, and several Central Asian countries have drastically increased their trade with both Russia and Europe since the 2022 invasion. Kazakhstan has a relatively small tech industry, yet its tech exports to Russia surged from $40 million in 2021 to $298 million in 2023.
Russia’s success at circumventing sanctions – often at high cost to Western businesses – has forced European policymakers to scramble to adapt. While 14 rounds of sanctions have been introduced in two and a half years, Europe’s leaders have so far failed to devise effective solutions. The new trade with Russia is simply too lucrative for intermediary countries to pass up. While the EU could step up its pressure on these countries, using either carrots (like aid packages) or sticks (secondary sanctions), coercion would create its own challenges, and it could undermine Europe’s economic and security interests.
Intermediaries are also handling goods headed in the opposite direction: as the EU has sought to reduce its energy dependence on Russia, it has often ended up importing refined Russian fuel at inflated prices via third countries, such as India. Even in terms of direct energy imports, many EU countries continue to rely on Russia. Austria now gets a staggering 98% of its natural gas from Russia’s state energy company, Gazprom, with the share having risen since the start of the Ukraine war. Moreover, the EU’s imports of liquefied natural gas from Russia surged by 37.7% between 2021 and 2023. Given that LNG is particularly expensive, this has further exacerbated energy costs – and internal discord.
The EU’s failure to update its fragmented and reactive energy framework has left it unable to balance geopolitical considerations with economic realities. This has not only eroded the bloc’s soft power – including its international credibility and its economic competitiveness – but also has undermined its ability to invest in strengthening its hard power.
This situation calls for a fundamental rethink of Europe’s priorities and policies, argues Mario Draghi, a former head of the European Central Bank and prime minister of Italy, in a just-released report. For example, he suggests that the EU should break its habit of blocking mergers over competition concerns – a practice that has often kept European firms too small to compete globally – and instead introduce a new regime for monitoring potentially problematic mergers after they happen.
More broadly, Draghi argues that the EU must urgently strengthen its industrial base, simplify its regulatory framework, and increase investment in defense and innovation. Without these reforms – designed carefully and implemented quickly – the EU risks falling even further behind at a time when it can ill afford to. The stakes will grow only higher if Donald Trump returns for a second term in the White House, which would surely lead to the U.S. becoming a far less reliable partner, leaving Europe’s security and economy even more vulnerable than they already are.
https://kyivindependent.com/...s-europe-faces-a-strategic-crossroads/
Explosions were reported in Kyiv on the morning of Sept. 26 almost immediately after an air raid alert went off in the city, but authorities later denied Russia had attacked the capital.
Ukraine's Air Force said that the alert had been prompted by the launch of a Mig-31K aircraft, a carrier of Kinzhal ballistic missiles that Russia uses to attack Ukraine.
At least two missiles were launched, according to the statement, but the Kyiv City Military Administration later said that Kyiv was not the target of the attack, and air defense systems were not activated.
"The enemy did not use missile weapons on the territory of Kyiv," it said.
No damage or casualties have been reported in Kyiv at this time.
Serhii Popko, head of the Kyiv City Military Administration, said that sounds of explosions could have been caused by the Kinzhal missile "breaking the sound barrier while flying over Kyiv" or "another physical phenomenon."
Explosions were also reported in the town of Starokostiantyniv in western Khmelnytskyi Oblast, which is the home of a Ukrainian air base.
Overnight, more than 15 drones were spotted near Kyiv, with around 10 of them downed by air defenses, the Kyiv City Military Administration said.
No casualties were reported.
https://kyivindependent.com/explosions-reported-in-kyiv-amid/
Ukraine's 72nd Mechanized Brigade on Sept. 26 refuted reports that it was retreating from the embattled town of Vuhledar in Donetsk Oblast.
The brigade released a video purportedly from Vuhledar saying it had been filmed there earlier in the day.
"We want to dispel all doubts and the pseudo-experts' thoughts that the 72nd Brigade withdrew from Vuhledar," a Ukrainian soldier said. "Despite heavy assaults and difficult circumstances, we are still there."
The statement came after a media report suggested Ukrainian soldiers had begun to withdraw from the town, adding Vuhledar was "about to fall."
The 72nd Mechanized Brigade has defended Vuhledar for nearly two years, as Russian forces have been trying to capture the town since the start of the full-scale invasion in 2022.
The front-line town lies about 50 kilometers (30 miles) southwest of occupied Donetsk and roughly 40 kilometers (25 miles) east of the administrative border with Zaporizhzhia Oblast.
Vuhledar has withstood numerous attacks since the outbreak of the full-scale war in 2022 and has become key to Ukrainian defenses in the southern part of Donetsk Oblast.
The crowd-sourced monitoring website DeepState reported that Russian forces are aiming to encircle Vuhledar.
Russian troops had not reached the outskirts of town as of Sept. 25, Donetsk Oblast Governor Vadym Filashkin.
"Sabotage and reconnaissance groups are coming in, but our defenders are trying to knock them out. This means that the town is not yet captured," he added.
https://kyivindependent.com/...hledar-denies-claims-about-withdrawal/
https://youtube.com/watch?v=8YdxtXTYPFM&si=9c6JZCpAMvNKdYC0
Gut zu wissen was die meisten Menschen inzwischen darüber denken.
Danke
https://www.n-tv.de/wirtschaft/der_boersen_tag/...rticle25255230.html