Canada’s plan to donate refurbished armour to Ukraine is still spinning its wheels

Globo Homo or what?

A plan to rebuild and modernize two dozen decommissioned Canadian light armoured vehicles for donation to Ukraine is stuck in bureaucratic limbo more than nine months after the defence department handed the vehicles over to an Ontario company that specializes in restoration, CBC News has learned.

Defence Minister Bill Blair signed off on the transfer last January. He said negotiations between Armatec Survivability in Dorchester, Ont., and the Canadian Commercial Credit Corporation (CCC), an arm of the federal government, are still ongoing.

Zelensky loves Justin and Freeland but I suspect he will only accept cash support in future.

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Russia may have shared nuclear secrets with Iran in exchange for missiles

Pentagon officials say US can’t supply many more long-range missiles to Ukraine because it needs to keep a ‘healthy reserve’

Britain and the US fear Russia may have shared nuclear secrets with Iran in exchange for missiles to use in its war against Ukraine.

At their summit in Washington DC, Sir Keir Starmer and Joe Biden discussed the threat from the strengthening military cooperation from two of the West’s biggest adversaries.

It comes days after it was revealed Iran has accumulated four “significant quantities” of enriched uranium which could each be used to make a nuclear bomb.


No worries Ukraine! Canadian military Second World War pistols slated for destruction will instead be sent to Ukraine

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West emboldening Putin, says Zelensky, as US delays missile approval

Volodymyr Zelensky accused the West of emboldening Vladimir Putin as the United States put off a decision to arm Ukraine with long-range missiles amid escalating tensions.

The Ukrainian president questioned Britain and America’s commitment to supporting Ukraine’s defence against Russia, expressing frustration at the time it was taking for them to authorise the use of western-supplied missiles to strike targets across the border.

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TIFF cancels screenings of controversial Russians at War documentary, citing security concerns

Citing security concerns, organizers of the Toronto International Film Festival have paused the upcoming North American premiere of the new documentary Russians at War, which has been heavily criticized by members of the Ukrainian community.

The decision, which affects the three public screenings of the film set for Friday, Saturday and Sunday, arrives one day after TIFF issued a statement standing firm on its decision to screen the film following a storm of controversy over the production, including the decision by Ontario’s public broadcaster TVO, which helped fund the documentary, to pull its support.

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Putin: Long-range missile approval would put Nato at war with Russia

Storm Shadow Missile

Vladimir Putin has warned that Nato would be “at war” with Russia if the West gives Kyiv a green-light to use longer-range weapons to strike targets inside his country.

“This would in a significant way change the very nature of the conflict… It would mean that Nato countries are at war with Russia,” the Russian president told a state television reporter on Thursday afternoon.

The United States may allow Ukraine to use British and French missiles but not its own longer-range weapons inside Russia, according to two sources familiar with discussions that have taken place.

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Putin escalating conflict, say western allies as missile approval moves closer

Britain and the United States are on the verge of allowing Ukraine to use long-range missiles against targets in Russia after accusing President Putin of “escalating” the conflict by accepting ballistic missiles from Iran.

David Lammy, the foreign secretary, and Anthony Blinken, the US secretary of state, said they would return to their respective countries to inform their leaders of the “operational details” surrounding Ukraine’s use of weapons such as Storm Shadow missiles after meeting President Zelensky in Kyiv.

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Freeland states ‘grave concerns’ over TIFF film about Russian soldiers

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland is denouncing a documentary about Russian soldiers screening at the Toronto International Film festival (TIFF) this year.

Speaking with reporters Tuesday, Freeland — who is of Ukrainian heritage — noted that both diplomats and the Canadian-Ukrainian community have expressed “grave concerns” about the film Russians at War.

“I share those concerns,” Freeland said.


I am not sure I get her reasoning if it is indeed an anti-war film that meets with Moscow’s disapproval.

This article offers clarity – Remove film about Russian soldiers, Ukraine officials tell TIFF

You be the judge.

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Ottawa warned release of names of Nazi war criminals who settled in Canada could help Russia

Russian propaganda in the war against Ukraine could get a boost from the release of a secret report naming hundreds of alleged Nazi war criminals who later came to Canada, the federal government has been warned.

Ottawa has been considering releasing the remainder of an inquiry report that has been kept secret for decades and contains the names of around 900 alleged war criminals who came to Canada after the Second World War, including members of a Ukrainian SS division.

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Poltava attack: at least 51 dead as Russian missiles hit central Ukraine

A Russian missile attack in central Ukraine has killed 51 people and injured more than 200, Ukrainian officials have said.

President Zelensky said that Russian forces struck “an educational institution and a neighbouring hospital” with two ballistic missiles in the city of Poltava. The educational facility in question is understood to be the Poltava Military Institute of Communications.

Video from the scene showed destroyed buildings and the wounded being treated on the street. The death toll is expected to rise.

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Russia’s Pokrovsk advance could be pivotal in the war

Things are starting to heat up on the Ukrainian front line once more. After a long period of attrition warfare and static front lines, we are starting to see movement that could bring the war to its next phase. The Russians are now advancing on Pokrovsk, a key transport and logistics hub in Donetsk. Some analysts think that if Pokrovsk falls, the entire Ukrainian front line in the Donbas will start to collapse.

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Canada took 4 months to send money after deciding to buy air defence system for Ukraine

Unseemly.

It initially took Canada four months to get into the queue after deciding to join a plan by the United States to buy urgently needed National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile Systems (NASAMS) for Ukraine.

Defence Minister Bill Blair insists the lag did not contribute to the slow pace of acquiring the high-tech defensive capability, which is still months away from being delivered.

Trudeau is always full of shit.

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Friendly fire accusation embarrasses Zelensky

On Friday evening, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced his decision to replace the commander of the country’s air forces, Lt Gen Mykola Oleshchuk. Lt Gen Anatolii Kryvonozhko has been appointed interim commander and, while Zelensky did not provide any explanation for the change, he stressed his responsibility to “take care of all our warriors”.

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Ukraine war highlights mutated superbugs that can resist antibiotics

The case of a soldier whose leg was amputated by the NHS because antibiotics could not treat his infection is a sign of a growing crisis, doctors say

When the soldier arrived from the battlefields of Ukraine, the NHS team was — at first — most concerned about his extensive shrapnel wounds.

But when they had cleaned up the 35-year-old’s injuries, the doctors at St George’s Hospital in south London realised they had a bigger problem on their hands. Deep within the blast wounds on his left leg, a bacterial infection had taken hold.

An initial cocktail of five different antibiotics failed to kill the bacteria. With the wound still festering, they switched regimens to try four other drugs, including colistin, a “top shelf” antibiotic with severe side effects, reserved for cases where nothing else will work. But those, too, had a limited impact.

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Ottawa extend some measures from emergency visa program for Ukrainians

The federal government is allowing more Ukrainians fleeing the war to enter Canada this year while making it easier for some of those who have already arrived to stay longer, including some whose status was set to expire next year.

The government announced new measures last week following months of uncertainty about whether it would extend the Canada-Ukraine Authorization for Emergency Travel program (CUAET), which has allowed about 300,000 Ukrainians and their family members to enter the country in the past two years with a deadline of March 31 for successful applicants.

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Ukraine attacks second Russian border region

Ukrainian forces have launched a new attack on Russia’s border, attempting to break through the Belgorod region southeast of the Kursk region they entered and occupied three weeks ago.

Russian Telegram channels with links to the security services said Ukrainians attacked the Nekhoteyevka border checkpoint, prompting Russian artillery to fire back. The Mash Telegram channel said that about 200 Ukrainian troops and infantry fighting vehicles had attacked the checkpoint at Nekhoteyevka.

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