Russia arrests US citizen on treason charges for charity donation

Russia has arrested an American–Russian dual citizen on treason charges after she allegedly donated about $50 to a Ukrainian charity.

Video released by Russia’s federal security services showed a 33-year-old woman, identified by the First Department, a collective of lawyers, as Ksenia Khavana, being handcuffed and escorted out of a building in the Ural city of Yekaterinburg with a cream-coloured hat pulled down over her eyes. The video then cuts to a shot of the woman standing inside a glass courtroom cage.

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Canada to donate 800 drones to Ukraine: Blair

Canada will donate more than 800 drones to Ukraine as part of an additional aid package to the country, Defence Minister Bill Blair announced on Monday.

The drones, worth an estimated $95 million, are paid for by the $500 million package unveiled by the prime minister during his visit to Kyiv last June. Since February, 2022, Canada has spent $9.7 billion supporting Ukraine, including $2.4 billion on military aid.

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With American aid to Ukraine stuck in limbo, Blair says others must step up

Defence Minister Bill Blair says NATO countries like Canada must ramp up their aid to Ukraine as support from the United States languishes in a legislative quagmire.

In an interview that aired Sunday on Rosemary Barton Live, Blair expressed optimism that the U.S. would eventually pass a significant aid bill to provide billions of dollars worth of military support to Ukraine, which is set to mark its second full year of full-scale warfare following Russia’s invasion on Feb. 24, 2022.

“We’re very confident the Americans are going to get through that political process as quickly as possible, and in the interim, the rest of us are all stepping up,” Blair told CBC chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton.

But Canada is a deadbeat on the promised 500 million dollar air defense system it promised Zelensky. Don’t Liberals read the news?

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Zelenskyy offers Trump a tour of Ukraine’s front line

MUNICH — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy wants Donald Trump to come and see the war against Russia with his own eyes.

“If Mr. Trump will come I am ready even to go with him to the front line,” Zelenskyy said Saturday morning at the Munich Security Conference.

Trump is leading in the polls to run as the Republican Party’s nominee in this November’s U.S. presidential election and has pledged repeatedly to stop aid to Ukraine and force Kyiv to the negotiating table with Russia.

I’d like to see this.

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Ukraine war: Is Avdiivka’s fall a sign Russia is turning the tide?

“In order to preserve life and encirclement, I have withdrawn our units from Avdiivka.”

When he was appointed this month, Ukraine’s new head of the armed forces, Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, said he would “rather retreat than sacrifice lives”, and that is what he has finally done with this eastern city.

Despite Russians suffering enormous losses, four months of relentless attacks have left Ukrainian troops there outnumbered, outgunned, and with dwindling ammunition.

It is Moscow’s biggest victory since Ukraine’s failed counter-offensive last year.

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London, Ont., police training with Putin allied Chechen paramilitary group damages Canada’s image, researcher warns

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov is Putin’s ally

London, Ont., police officers participating in a competition in Dubai alongside a Chechen group accused of committing atrocities in the conflict with Ukraine “damages the image of Canada,” says a University of Toronto professor with expertise in international relations and political science.

“When you are doing anything internationally, you have to also be aware of the image of the country, it’s not just a local matter. And so there’s an extra duty,” said Aurel Braun, who’s also an associate with the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University.


Ramzan Kadyrov: The Chechen Warlord Who Does Putin’s Dirty Work in Ukraine

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Canadian academics involved in joint research with Iranian counterparts on drone research

Canadian academics have been collaborating with Iranian universities on drone technology and other research that could benefit Tehran’s armed forces and that country’s allies.

Moscow’s war on Ukraine has led to unprecedented levels of Russian-Iranian co-operation in the military, economic and political spheres, according to the European Council on Foreign Relation think tank.

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‘One shot, one kill’: How Ukraine-Russia war is changing warfare

In today’s world, the battlefield has become transparent, the warheads much more precise and the weapons very cheap.

With each passing day, the battlefield in Ukraine is becoming more and more like the trenches of World War I. Artillery rains on static front lines, troops live in squalid, sodden hovels and the mine-strewn landscape is cratered with shell holes.

Forward progress is measured in meters, and retaken villages become less consequential, quickly forgotten as the days pass.

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Russian landing ship Caesar Kunikov sunk off Crimea, says Ukraine

A big Russian amphibious ship, the Caesar Kunikov, has sunk off the coast of Russian-occupied Crimea, according to Ukraine’s armed forces.

Powerful explosions were heard early on Wednesday, according to local social media, which suggested the landing ship was hit south of the town of Yalta.

Ukraine’s intelligence directorate released video of what it said were Magura V5 sea drones striking the ship.

Ukraine has repeatedly hit Russia’s Black Sea fleet in occupied Crimea.

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Russian-Canadian woman, 32, admits helping her husband send $7MILLION worth of drone and guided missile parts to Moscow

A Russian-Canadian national has admitted scheming to violate US sanctions by exporting $7 million in weapons to the Russian military for use in the Ukraine war.

Kristina Puzyreva, 32, pleaded guilty in a Brooklyn court to money laundering as part of a shadowy global conspiracy to send technology to blacklisted entities in Moscow.

Exports included components used in unnamed aerial vehicles (UAVs) and guided missile systems which were later found to have been used in Ukraine.

Seems like she gets things done, maybe put her in charge of procurement for the armed forces.

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Ukraine’s missing children tracked down in Russia by digital sleuths

An international team of investigators say they have tracked down eight Ukrainian children, believed to have been abducted during Russia’s invasion.

More than 60 detectives used digital open source techniques to trace the missing children who are understood to have appeared in Russian propaganda.

Experts from 23 countries joined forces at Europol’s headquarters in The Hague.

They used advanced facial recognition to find recent images of the children online.

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The political tides of war are shifting — and may be taking Ukraine with them

We have been warned — over and over again lately — that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is an inflection point in history.

And while the soaring political rhetoric may have sounded good over the last few years, it’s very likely that this week — after a cascade of events in Kyiv, Moscow, Washington and, yes, even Ottawa — we truly arrived at that turning point.

We just might not like where it’s going.

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Ukraine’s mass conscription quandary

In World War Two, the average age of a combat soldier was twenty-six. In the Falklands, it was twenty-three. For Ukrainian soldiers, it’s forty-three. The war in Ukraine has been, so far, fought mostly by fathers so their sons and daughters can rebuild the country when the fighting ends. But resisting Russia has cost so much and has continued for so long that the Ukrainian army is depleted. What to do next is a question that’s not just dividing the country but its two foremost leaders: President Volodymyr Zelensky and Valery Zaluzhny, the head of the military.

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The United States Has Been a Bulwark for Ukraine. What Happens if Support Collapses?

A year ago, when Washington and much of Europe were still awash in optimism that Ukraine was on the verge of repelling Russia from its territory, it seemed inconceivable that the United States would turn its back on the victim of Vladimir V. Putin’s aggression.

Now, even as Senate Democrats try to salvage an aid package for Ukraine, that possibility remains real. And the political moment feels a long way from 14 months ago when President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine stood before a joint session of Congress, wearing his signature drab green sweater, and basked in a minute-long standing ovation.

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