Washington Post: CIA-Supported Ukrainian Intel Behind Murder of Darya Dugina

Russia’s Federal Security Service’s (FSB) claim that the assassination of Darya Dugina, the daughter of the political philosopher and idealogue Aleksandr Dugin, had been “prepared and perpetrated by the Ukrainian special services” appears to have been confirmed days ago by a report published days ago by The Washington Post.

Citing unnamed “security officials with knowledge of the operation,” the report, titled “Ukrainian spies with deep ties to CIA wage shadow war against Russia,” states that Ukrainian intelligence operatives used a secret compartment inside a cat crate to smuggle bomb components into Russia; parts that were used to produce the car bomb that murdered Dugina in the summer of 2022.

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Canadians want Trudeau to keep same levels of Ukraine aid, poll shows

A new survey suggests more Canadians want Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to maintain Canada’s current level of spending on helping Ukraine fight Russia’s ongoing invasion, rather than boosting financial support.

Polling firm Leger recently asked Canadians about their country’s presence on the world stage, including Canada’s efforts to assist Ukraine defend against Russia, which began its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

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Is Ukraine now the ‘Other War’

The first indication that this was a literary festival like no other came with the request to provide “proof of life” questions in case of kidnap. I’ve been to some unusual festivals — earlier this year I found myself discussing war-rape, ancient and modern, with the classicist Mary Beard on a barefoot island in the Maldives — and had some unusual festival encounters, such as the woman who asked me to sign a book to her dead husband, adding that he was reading it when he died. This, however, was my first in a war zone. There was a polite warning from the Lviv Book Forum organizers: “If there is an airstrike, we will interrupt the event.” It’s all part of the resilience of Ukrainians, determined in the face of Russian aggression that life must go on.

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Finland intelligence says ‘state actor’ may have sabotaged gas pipeline

Finland’s security service has said a “state actor” may have sabotaged the undersea gas pipeline that was torn open on Sunday, amid speculation that Russia was behind the incident.

The Balticconnector pipeline between Finland and Estonia is likely to be out of action for several months after a “mechanical force” ripped apart its concrete casing and cracked open the pipe at a depth of about 60 metres, a few miles outside Finnish territorial waters.

The same night, a submarine data cable between the two countries was knocked out by unspecified damage in Estonia’s maritime economic zone.

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Nazi in Parliament had major impact on Canada’s international reputation: Nanos poll

Nearly one in two Canadians say the recent errant honouring of a 98-year-old Nazi veteran in Parliament has had a major impact on Canada’s reputation abroad, while one third think Canada is providing too much financial support to Ukraine, recent Nanos polling finds.

Recent polling by Nanos Research, commissioned by CTV News to gauge Canadians’ views on the level of impact the widely-condemned Yaroslav Hunka invitation by former speaker Anthony Rota has had, indicates that 48 per cent of respondents felt it had a “major impact.”

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Nato ‘will not abandon Ukraine during Israel-Hamas war’, Zelensky told

Nato has sought to assure President Zelensky that the escalation in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will not deflect from the western military alliance’s support of Ukraine.

On his first visit to Nato headquarters in Brussels since Russia launched its invasion last year, the Ukrainian leader warned that Russia was planning a new wave of attacks on his country’s energy infrastructure.

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Victims of Ukrainian cafe attack were neo-Nazis, says Russian UN ambassador

The Russian ambassador to the United Nations has claimed that dozens of people killed when a missile struck a cafe in eastern Ukraine were neo-Nazis, in a speech to the UN security souncil in New York.

A Russian missile struck the cafe in Hroza, in Kharkiv, on Thursday as locals in the village turned out for the funeral of a soldier named Andriy Kozyr. The blast killed 52 people in one of the deadliest attacks since the war began.

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Ukraine’s female soldiers complain of discrimination

Lesya Ganzha joined the Ukrainian army right at the start of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine on February 24, 2022, and was assigned to the infantry, serving in the Kyiv and Kharkiv regions.

“Unfortunately, the company commander is categorically anti-women,” said Ganzha, adding that she had wanted to switch to air reconnaissance in a different brigade of the army.

“I joined the army to defend Ukraine, to go into combat,” she stressed. She told DW she was repeatedly offered assignments in the hinterland, but finally managed to get into the air reconnaissance unit of a brigade in Donetsk.

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Chrystia Freeland Must Account For Her Nazi Collaborator Grandfather

Chrystia Freeland, the member of parliament for University—Rosedale and former minister of foreign affairs, is a political star. In the last year alone, she has been promoted to deputy prime minister, and in the wake of the WE Charity scandal, to finance minister. There’s no indication her ascent will stop any time soon. Few would be surprised to see her eventually become the leader of the federal Liberal Party.

With that in mind, it’s important that Freeland, like all other politicians, is held to account for her troubling decisions and views. Thus far, however, Freeland has managed to avoid any serious scrutiny for something that has been career altering for politicians in other countries. That, of course, is her response to the fact that her grandfather, Michael Chomiak (Mykhailo Khomiak), was a Nazi collaborator. Rather than owning up to and condemning his past, she concocted conspiracy theories that shifted attention elsewhere and smeared those that brought the issue to light.


This is an older post dating from the time the Freeland Granpa story broke. Yes it has a leftist agenda but offers among other insights how left and right Ukraine organizations were treated by the government during the cold war era.  Not to mention Freeland’s efforts to suppress the story.

I received a number of emails from an unknown source prior to the Freeland Granpa story going mainstream however they all linked to a very sketchy site that reduced whatever credibilty the information had. Pity I chose not to run with it. The article is worth a read. 

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Cracks are showing in support of the war in Ukraine

The U.S. has kept Ukraine’s armed forces in the field, but support for the war among Americans is falling.

The future does not look good for those battling the Russians in Ukraine. The long-promised spring offensive against the Russians has never really taken place.

Over the past few months there have been some pitched battles that have cost Moscow much. But so far, the Russians still control much of Ukraine’s territory. More important, there are divisions developing within the anti-Moscow coalition.

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Can Putin keep Crimea? Russia’s retreat marks another blow for the Kremlin

The retreat by Russia’s Black Sea fleet from Crimea after weeks of Ukrainian missile attacks is another major setback for President Putin in a war of repeated humiliations for the Kremlin dictator.

The redeployment of the fleet to the Russian port of Novorossiysk and a new naval base in Abkhazia, the Georgian breakaway region that is propped up by Moscow, will not deprive the Kremlin of the ability to strike Ukrainian cities.

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When Canadian politicians applauded a Nazi

Historically ignorant parliamentarians are now trying to memory-hole the whole affair.

When Prince Harry dressed up as a Nazi at a fancy-dress party in 2005, it didn’t go down very well. Doug Henderson, the former UK armed-forces minister, went as far to suggest that the young prince should be prevented from joining the army.

How times have changed. In 2005, dressing up as a Nazi at a party was an unforgivable sin. But in 2023, giving standing ovations to an actual Nazi – a former member of the Waffen-SS, no less – is just ‘complicated’.

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Russian attack kills 49 in northeast Ukraine, officials say

A Russian attack killed at least 49 people, including a six-year-old boy, in a village in the Kharkiv region of northeastern Ukraine on Thursday, Ukrainian officials said.

Kharkiv region governor Oleh Synehubov said that a cafe and a shop had been attacked at around 13:15 (10:15 GMT) in the village of Hroza in the Kupyansk district of Kharkiv, and that many civilians had been there at the time.

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Trump’s NATO Warning Comes Back to Bite Ukraine

Speakers at a European security conference on Tuesday warned that Ukraine’s allies are running out of ammunition to give to Kyiv in its war against Russia.

One thread of these discussions at the Warsaw Security Forum was the need for NATO members to increase defense spending, an argument Donald Trump made years ago about the military alliance.

Speaking at a NATO summit in 2017, then-President Trump criticized NATO countries for not devoting more money to their defense spending. NATO members agreed in 2014 to use 2 percent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on defense, but at the time of Trump’s remarks, only the United States and a few other NATO allies had met the goal.

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