What’s slowing Ukraine’s counteroffensive? Russia is fighting smarter

A month into Ukraine’s counteroffensive, Kyiv’s forces continue to advance, especially in their effort to retake Bakhmut. Despite the turmoil behind the Russian lines, with the mutiny by the Wagner mercenary group, there have not yet been the dramatic breakthroughs some had once predicted. In part this reflects a Ukrainian focus not on taking ground but degrading capabilities, but also unexpected Russian tenacity.

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Fearful Germany preparing to block Ukraine’s Nato membership bid

Germany is set to insist on delaying Ukraine’s accession to Nato over fears the move could take the alliance to war with Russia.

An alliance source said Berlin would use the annual Nato summit in Vilnius, Lithuania this week to urge others to focus on security assurances, rather than membership proposals, to help Ukraine defend itself in the absence of accession.


Bad choice there Ukraine – Ukraine looks to Trudeau to play key role in NATO membership bid

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Ukraine looks to Trudeau to play key role in NATO membership bid

More than 500 days after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the embattled country’s political leaders say they expect Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to be in their corner at next week’s NATO summit.

The leaders of the western military alliance are set to debate the timing and conditions of Ukraine’s admission to NATO.

Some members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have deep reservations about how quickly the eastern European country should be given membership guarantees.

I doubt Junior pulls weight with anyone.

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Why no one can end the Ukraine war

Five hundred days on, both sides are caught in the same paradox

At an otherwise newsy event last month, Jens Stoltenberg, the Nato chief, made a low-key administrative announcement: “We are working on a multi-year package with substantial funding…”

Not the stuff of headlines, but a rather sobering admission that, as the war approaches its 500th day tomorrow, there is no end in sight. Not this year, or next year or the year after. That should be deeply concerning, especially because, contrary to received wisdom, all those who really matter — the Ukrainians, Russians and the Americans — are actually trying very hard to end it.

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Secret Meetings, Friction Over Ukraine’s Place in NATO Hint at New Phase of War

Joe’s “Depends” are leaking again.

Is the end in sight? With the shock of Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine long since replaced by Europe’s exhaustion with war, reports of secret talks between former American national security officials and Kremlin insiders hint at an impending hairpin turn in the conflict.

Separately, less than a week before a much-anticipated NATO summit at Vilnius, there is growing tension on the Continent over the prospect of Ukraine joining the military bloc. That too is an indication that a different dynamic is afoot, and one that spells the expiration if not of the war itself, then of certain expectations as to what the end of the ordeal might look like.


This is convenient, the Democrats don’t really want the Ukraine-Russia war hanging round old Joe’s neck during the next election.

And what’s Joe doing hyping EU Queen Ursula von der Leyen for NATO’s top Spot angering Great Britain?

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Large objects seen on roof of Ukraine nuclear reactor increase fears of Russia attack

Five large objects have been photographed on the roof of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, increasing fears that Russia may be preparing to blow it up.

Satellite images of Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, taken by San Francisco-based Planet Labs on 5th July, showed that packages had been placed on the roof of Reactor No. 4.

None of the objects can be identified but this week, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky warned that Russia was planning on blowing up the plant and then blaming it on Ukraine.

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Biden Weighs Giving Ukraine Weapons Banned by Many U.S. Allies

Biden is in charge of tapioca

For more than six months, President Biden and his aides have been wrestling with one of the most vexing questions in the war in Ukraine: whether to risk letting Ukrainian forces run out of the artillery rounds they desperately need to fight Russia, or agree to ship them cluster munitions — widely banned weapons known to cause grievous injury to civilians, especially children.

On Thursday, Mr. Biden appeared on the verge of providing the cluster munitions to Ukraine, a step that would sharply separate him from many of his closest allies, who have signed an international treaty banning the use, stockpiling or transfer of such weapons.

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Prigozhin still in Russia, says Lukashenko as mansion raid photos emerge

Yevgeny Prigozhin is still in Russia, the Belarusian president has claimed as bizarre photographs emerge of the Wagner mercenary leader disguised in wigs.

“He is not on the territory of Belarus,” President Lukashenko told a news conference on Thursday, saying that Prigozhin was in St Petersburg, Russia’s second city, or even Moscow.

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Xi to Putin: If You Use a Nuke, We Won’t Have Your Back

For a long while now, Secretary of State Antony Blinken has made oddly optimistic comments about China playing some sort of useful role in bringing the Russian invasion of Ukraine to an end. For much of the war, the Chinese government has combined bland calls for peace with criticism of NATO supplying Ukraine with weapons, declaring, “the continued supply of heavy weapons to one side of the war is not conducive to the end of the war as soon as possible, it is adding fuel to the fire.” (Indeed, a rapid Russian conquest of Ukraine would end the war quickly, but it’s hard to blame the Ukrainians or the West for attempting to avert that outcome.)

Trust in Xi?

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‘It’s Not A Chess Game, It’s Pure Madness’: Residents Near Russian-Controlled Nuclear Plant In Ukraine Fear Catastrophe

NIKOPOL, Ukraine — The vast windows of Yevhen Yevtushenko’s Soviet-era office overlook Europe’s largest nuclear power plant. Its round cooling towers stand less than 10 kilometers away, across a broad stretch of the Dnieper River that is now almost dry after a disastrous dam breach downstream.

A tough-looking man with a bushy beard, an air of mild irritation, and a pistol strung on his belt, Yevtushenko, who heads the Nikopol District Military Administration, offered his assessment of the chances of a nuclear disaster. “I do think it is very probable,” he told RFE/RL on July 3.


Nuclear Falseflag on Zaporozhye NPP Heats Up + Major Wagner Updates and More

The situation can only be considered urgent as Ukraine has now made their full intentions crystal clear. If before we suspected with high confidence, now it is plain fact. They intend to destroy the ZNPP plant as a last ditch attempt to ‘activate NATO’ by blaming Russia.

A completely coordinated campaign over the last few days has affirmed this. Not only was Budanov’s maiden speech after reappearing from his Kalibrated cranial trepanation centered on Russia’s alleged ‘mining of the ZNPP’ basement, but now several new instances of highly coordinated messaging have been released by Ukraine and its Western controllers.


SITREP 7/4/23: Final Hour of Zelensky’s Terror Ploy

The most exigent matter on the table is once again the brewing Zaporozhye plant showdown. It’s now believed by some that Zelensky is planning to carry out the ZNPP falseflag in the next few days on the eve of the big NATO summit in Vilnius, which is on July 12. The purpose would be to galvanize the NATO members and shape the entire policy discussion of the summit around Ukraine and the “nuclear disaster”.

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Yevgeny Prigozhin says Wagner will return to the front soon

Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of the Wagner mercenary group, has vowed that his fighters will soon enjoy “new victories,” as Russia said it had shot down suspected Ukrainian drones near Moscow.

Prigozhin’s comments were his first for a week and came as his approval ratings plummeted among Russians because of his aborted mutiny against Moscow on June 24.

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Inside a partisan group fighting Ukraine’s counteroffensive behind enemy lines

Hunted tirelessly by Putin’s men, their work is dangerous and secret. Now is their time to speak

Sidling through the door of the Russian military recruitment centre in occupied Donetsk, Dmitri was glad to have the summer sun to blame for the nervous sweat on the back of his neck.

He was barely old enough to vote, yet this was already the second time Dmitri would swear allegiance to a flag. His handler in Ukrainian military intelligence was waiting with bated breath to discover whether their ruse would dupe President Putin’s forces.

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Majority of Canadians fear Ukraine war will go nuclear, but don’t want to give in to Russia: poll

Nearly a year-and-a-half since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the majority of Canadians fear the conflict could go nuclear — but want a Western-backed Ukraine to press on against Russian aggression.

New numbers released last week in a Maru Public Opinion poll suggests 63 per cent of Canadians are watching news of the war closely, with 43 per cent of respondents believing the conflict is deadlocked.

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Wagner: Russians reflect on group’s advance towards Moscow

Wagner troops enroute to Moscow

A week on from the dramatic mutiny by Wagner forces, residents in Rostov-on-Don – the city the mercenary troops seized – have been reflecting on the events that rocked Russia.

In just 24 hours, leader of the Wagner group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, staged an insurrection, sending troops into the city of a million people and further on towards Moscow.

Due to the current laws against criticising the so-called “special military operation” in Russia, the BBC has chosen to protect the identities of the citizens who spoke to us.

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