Tag: war

  • Meet the Russian shadow delegation in Munich

    Meet the Russian shadow delegation in Munich

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    MUNICH — “I’ve discovered I’m popular with Munich taxi drivers,” chortled Mikhail Khodorkovsky. He’s surprised they recognize him. They have been peppering him with questions about the future of Russia and whether its President Vladimir Putin will resort to nuclear weapons or can remain in power. 

    They aren’t the only ones curious to get Khodorkovsky’s answers here at the Munich Security Conference. In the margins of the conference Khodorkovsky, former Russian tycoon, onetime political prisoner and now a leading Putin critic, is being sought out. And in bilateral chats, to the last query about whether Putin can hold on to power, Khodorkovsky says the only way the Russian leader will is if the West offers a helping hand by losing its nerve, engaging in premature negotiations and pushing Ukraine into a dubious deal.

    “Let’s call it Minsk 6,” he tells me as I sit with him and other Russian opposition figures in a hotel bar after an exhausting day in the bustling Bavarian capital. The bar is full of other huddles deep in earnest discussion.

    While conference organizers spurned a delegation from the Russian government, Russia’s opposition politicians and activists, including former World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov and former independent Duma deputy Dmitry Gudkov, have been welcomed. Khodorkovsky’s first session was packed out.

    Ukraine’s leaders remain wary of Russia’s dissidents, arguing they aren’t immune from chauvinism and “largely ignored the eight years of war waged against us, even before the February invasion,” as Ukrainian lawmaker Lesia Vasylenko recently told me. “In order to be a Russian whom we can trust,” Vasylenko said, “you have to really prove that you’re not just against your own regime in Russia, but you oppose the war in Ukraine and that you stand for all the values Ukraine is defending — namely territorial integrity, Ukraine’s independence within the internationally recognized borders.”

    Here in Munich, though, what Khodorkovsky and the others have been saying is music to the ears of the Ukrainians. On the spectrum between hard-liners and doubters who worry about escalation, they are among the most militant and are determined to bolster Western nerve and dispel fears of nuclear escalation.

    It goes back to Khodorkovsky’s “Minsk 6.” As ever, he argues in a methodical way, inviting his interlocutor to follow his argument step by step in imitation of the Socratic method, asking and answering questions to draw out ideas and underlying presuppositions.

    Some Western leaders have expressed their worries to him about a coup in Moscow. They are fearful that Putin will be replaced by someone worse. To this, Khodorkovsky says it can’t get any worse. He trawls through his cell phone to show me a bizarre video clip posted to the internet where one of Putin’s top nuclear advisers enthusiastically discusses how Russia will soon be able to racially improve future generations by cloning and incubating through planned eugenics. Presumably the dissident gene will be extracted.

    He senses some in the West want negotiations, are putting out feelers and are under the impression Putin might want soon to negotiate. “They’re testing the waters,” he says. But he is adamant that talks would end badly for Ukraine, the West and Russians.

    “Let us assume we have negotiations for a peaceful settlement. Let’s call it Minsk 6,” Khodorkovsky says, a hypothetical resurrection of the Minsk agreements that sought to end the war in Donbas but that were declared dead by Putin on February 22 last year, days before he launched his invasion.

    He went on: “What does Putin get from this? He says, okay, I get to keep Crimea and give me all of Luhansk and Donetsk and I’ll return most of what I captured along the Black Sea coast, but leave me a corridor to Crimea. Let’s say Zelenskyy is squeezed and agrees to negotiate. You would destabilize Ukraine, which would be thrown into civil conflict as 87 percent of Ukrainians would not stomach such a deal — it would have the equivalent effect of, say, if Zelenskyy had taken up the American offer at the start of the war and taken a lift out of the country.”

    Khodorkovsky outlines what would then happen. Putin would regroup, mobilize more, and draft people in the occupied territories, build up his arsenal and replenish his depleted munitions. The Russian leader would then accuse the Ukrainians of not holding up their part of Minsk 6, as civil conflict raged in Ukraine, which he would say is a threat to Russians in the occupied territories and likely there would be occasional attacks on border posts staged or otherwise.

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    Dmitry Medvedev recently warned that Moscow’s defeat in Ukraine could spark a nuclear war | Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP via Getty Images

    “You see Putin has no choice but to wage wars. His base of support now is restricted to the the so-called national patriots — to get more support, he needs to improve the economic well-being of Russians and he can’t do so because of corruption and cronyism and things like that,” Khodorkovsky says. At the same time, he would have to deal with the destroyed regions of Ukraine he occupies, and he’s faced with Western sanctions “and nobody will be in a hurry to lift them.” And his base of support will say he has failed to de-Nazify Ukraine or get NATO to move away from Russia’s borders.

    “He will have absolutely no choice. He will have to start a new war. Only now his eyes are going to be on NATO countries, mainly the Baltics,” Khodorkovsky concludes.

    After Khodorkovsky breaks off to talk with more interlocutors, Dmitry Gudkov tells me he agrees with his compatriot. And he also shares his view that it is unlikely Putin will resort to using tactical nuclear weapons, despite the threats and saber-rattling and comments by the likes of Dmitry Medvedev, Putin’s sidekick and now deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council.

    Medvedev recently warned that Moscow’s defeat in Ukraine could spark a nuclear war. “The defeat of a nuclear power in a conventional war may trigger a nuclear war,” he said in a post on the Telegram messaging app. Gudkov sees such threats as empty but an exercise in intimidation aimed at frightening doubters and faint hearts in the West, and strengthening their hand in urging a winding down and cautious calibration of support for Ukraine.

    But Gudkov says Western leaders should hammer home a frequent warning of their own to everyone in Russia’s nuclear chain of command. “They should say repeatedly, ‘we know exactly who you are and where you live and if you push any buttons, we will target and get you — and you will never escape justice and revenge’,” says Gudkov.  

    Medvedev is one of Putin’s lieutenants who draws special derision from the Russian dissidents in Munich. Once keen to present himself as a moderate, Western-tilted modernizer and reformer, his recent furious tirades have prompted many in the West to scratch their heads and ponder, “Whatever happened to Dmitry Medvedev?”

    The overall view is that he has gone through a makeover to accord with his master’s voice but is also positioning himself to be more relevant, much like the technocrat Sergey Kiriyenko, the former prime minister and current first deputy chief of staff in the Presidential Administration. Kiriyenko has taken to macho-posturing around the occupied territories of Ukraine’s Donbas decked out in camouflage.

    But Medvedev’s comments have had a special poisonous and extreme flavor of their own. He’s described Joe Biden as a “strange grandfather with dementia,” dubbed EU leaders as “lunatics,” and promised Russia will ensure Ukraine “disappears from the map.” All his genocidal rhetoric contrasts with the hip image he once presented with his love for blogging and gadgets and a visit to Silicon Valley to be handed a new iPhone 4 by Steve Jobs.

    So crazed has Medvedev seemed in recent months that it provokes Anastasia Burakova, founder of the NGO Kovcheg (The Ark), which supports Russian political refugees overseas, to joke that he “must be an American spy using his tirades to send secret information to the CIA.” Or maybe Putin wants him to say especially mad things “to make him look sensible as a way to say to the West look, I could be replaced by someone worse than me.”

    And here we come full circle. Ultimately how long Putin rules will largely be determined by whether the West holds its nerve, say the Russians in Munich.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • China talks ‘peace,’ woos Europe and trashes Biden in Munich

    China talks ‘peace,’ woos Europe and trashes Biden in Munich

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    MUNICH — China is trying to drive a fresh wedge between Europe and the United States as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine trudges past its one-year mark.

    Such was the motif of China’s newly promoted foreign policy chief Wang Yi when he broke the news at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday that President Xi Jinping would soon present a “peace proposal” to resolve what Beijing calls a conflict — not a war — between Moscow and Kyiv. And he pointedly urged his European audience to get on board and shun the Americans.

    In a major speech, Wang appealed specifically to the European leaders gathered in the room.

    “We need to think calmly, especially our friends in Europe, about what efforts should be made to stop the warfare; what framework should there be to bring lasting peace to Europe; what role should Europe play to manifest its strategic autonomy,” said Wang, who will continue his Europe tour with a stop in Moscow.

    In contrast, Wang launched a vociferous attack on “weak” Washington’s “near-hysterical” reaction to Chinese balloons over U.S. airspace, portraying the country as warmongering.

    “Some forces might not want to see peace talks to materialize,” he said, widely interpreted as a reference to the U.S. “They don’t care about the life and death of Ukrainians, [nor] the harms on Europe. They might have strategic goals larger than Ukraine itself. This warfare must not continue.”

    Yet at the conference, Europe showed no signs of distancing itself from the U.S. nor pulling back on military support for Ukraine. The once-hesitant German Chancellor Olaf Scholz urged Europe to give Ukraine even more modern tanks. And French President Emmanuel Macron shot down the idea of immediate peace talks with the Kremlin.

    And, predictably, there was widespread skepticism that China’s idea of “peace” will match that of Europe.

    “China has not been able to condemn the invasion,” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told a group of reporters. Beijing’s peace plan, he added, “is quite vague.” Peace, the NATO chief emphasized, is only possible if Russia respects Ukraine’s sovereignty.

    Europe watches with caution

    Wang’s overtures illustrate the delicate dance China has been trying to pull off since the war began.

    Keen to ensure Russia is not weakened in the long run, Beijing has offered Vladimir Putin much-needed diplomatic support, while steering clear of any direct military assistance that would attract Western sanctions against its economic and trade relations with the world.

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    Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitro Kuleba is expected to hold a bilateral meeting with Wang while in Munich | Johannes Simon/Getty Images

    “We will put forward China’s position on the political settlement on the Ukraine crisis, and stay firm on the side of peace and dialogue,” Wang said. “We do not add fuel to the fire, and we are against reaping benefit from this crisis.”

    According to Italy’s Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, who met Wang earlier this week, Xi will make his “peace proposal” on the first anniversary of the war, which is Friday.

    Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitro Kuleba is expected to hold a bilateral meeting with Wang while in Munich. He said he hoped to have a “frank” conversation with the Beijing envoy.

    “We believe that compliance with the principle of territorial integrity is China’s fundamental interest in the international arena,” Kuleba told journalists in Munich. “And that commitment to the observance and protection of this principle is a driving force for China, greater than other arguments offered by Ukraine, the United States, or any other country.”

    EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell is also expected to meet Wang later on Saturday.

    Many in Munich were wary of the upcoming Chinese plan.

    German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock welcomed China’s effort to use its influence to foster peace but told reporters she had “talked intensively” with Wang during a bilateral meeting on Friday about “what a just peace means: not rewarding the attacker, the aggressor, but standing up for international law and for those who have been attacked.”

    “A just peace,” she added, “presupposes that the party that has violated territorial integrity — meaning Russia — withdraws its troops from the occupied country.”

    One reason for Europe’s concerns is the Chinese peace plan could undermine an effort at the United Nations to rally support for a resolution condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which will be on the U.N.’s General Assembly agenda next week, according to three European officials and diplomats.

    Taiwan issue stokes up US-China tension

    If China was keen to talk about peace in Ukraine, it’s more reluctant to do so in a case closer to home.

    When Wolfgang Ischinger, the veteran German diplomat behind the conference, asked Wang if he could reassure the audience Beijing was not planning an imminent military escalation against Taiwan, the Chinese envoy was non-committal.

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    Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said “what is happening in Europe today could happen in east Asia tomorrow” | Johannes Simon/Getty Images

    “Let me assure the audience that Taiwan is part of Chinese territory. It has never been a country and it will never be a country in the future,” Wang said.

    The worry over Taiwan resonated in a speech from NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, who said “what is happening in Europe today could happen in east Asia tomorrow.” Reminding the audience of the painful experience of relying on Russia’s energy supply, he said: “We should not make the same mistakes with China and other authoritarian regimes.”

    But China’s most forceful attack was reserved for the U.S. Calling its decision to shoot down Chinese and other balloons “absurd” and “near-hysterical,” Wang said: “It does not show the U.S. is strong; on the contrary, it shows it is weak.

    Wang also amplified the message in other bilateral meetings, including one with Pakistani Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari. “U.S. bias and ignorance against China has reached a ridiculous level,” he said. “The U.S. … has to stop this kind of absurd nonsense out of domestic political needs.”

    It remains unclear if Wang will hold a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken while in Germany, as has been discussed.

    Hans von der Burchard and Lili Bayer reported from Munich, and Stuart Lau reported from Brussels.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Russia envoy accuses US of fueling Ukraine war with ‘crimes against humanity’ charge

    Russia envoy accuses US of fueling Ukraine war with ‘crimes against humanity’ charge

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    Washington is trying to “demonize Russia” and “fuel the Ukrainian crisis” by accusing Moscow of crimes against humanity, Russian Ambassador to the U.S. Anatoly Antonov said on Sunday.

    U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris announced Saturday that Washington has formally determined that Russia is committing crimes against humanity in Ukraine, in an address at the Munich Security Conference in Germany.

    In a message on the social media network Telegram, Antonov said: “We consider such insinuations as an attempt, unprecedented in terms of its cynicism, to demonize Russia in the course of a hybrid war, unleashed against us. There is no doubt that the purpose of such attacks is to justify Washington’s own actions to fuel the Ukrainian crisis,” he said.

    Harris had said Russia is responsible for a “widespread and systematic attack” against Ukraine’s civilian population, committing war crimes — as the administration formally concluded last March — and illegal acts against non-combatants. She cited evidence of execution-style killings, rape, torture and forceful deportations.

    The Biden administration will continue to assist Ukraine in investigating these alleged crimes, she said, pledging to hold “to account” the perpetrators and “their superiors.”

    “Let us all agree: on behalf of all the victims, both known and unknown: justice must be served,” Harris added.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Putin is staring at defeat in his gas war with Europe

    Putin is staring at defeat in his gas war with Europe

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    There’s more bad news for Vladimir Putin. Europe is on course to get through winter with its vital gas storage facilities more than half full, according to a new European Commission assessment seen by POLITICO.

    That means despite the Russian leader’s efforts to make Europe freeze by cutting its gas supply, EU economies will survive the coldest months without serious harm — and they look set to start next winter in a strong position to do the same.

    A few months ago, there were fears of energy shortages this winter caused by disruptions to Russian pipeline supplies.

    But a combination of mild weather, increased imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG), and a big drop in gas consumption mean that more than 50 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas is projected to remain in storage by the end of March, according to the Commission analysis.

    A senior European Commission official attributed Europe’s success in securing its gas supply to a combination of planning and luck.

    “A good part of the success is due to unusually mild weather conditions and to China being out of the market [due to COVID restrictions],” the official said. “But demand reduction, storage policy and infrastructure work helped significantly.”

    Ending the winter heating season with such healthy reserves — above 50 percent of the EU’s roughly 100bcm total storage capacity — removes any lingering fears of a gas shortage in the short term. It also eases concerns about Europe’s energy security going into next winter.

    The positive figures underlie the more optimistic outlook presented by EU leaders in recent days, with Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson saying on Tuesday that Europe had “won the first battle” of the “energy war” with Russia.

    EU storage facilities — also vital for winter gas supply in the U.K., where storage options are limited — ended last winter only around 20 percent full. Brussels mandated that they be replenished to 80 percent ahead of this winter, requiring a hugely expensive flurry of LNG purchases by European buyers, to replace volumes of gas lost from Russian pipelines.

    The wholesale price of gas rose to record levels during storage filling season — peaking at more than €335 per megawatt hour in August — with dire knock-on effects for household bills, businesses’ energy costs and Europe’s industrial competitiveness.

    Gas prices have since fallen to just above €50/Mwh amid easing concerns over supplies. The EU has a new target to fill 90 percent of gas storage again by November 2023 — an effort that will now require less buying of LNG on the international market than it might have done had reserves been more seriously depleted.

    “The expected high level of storages at above 50 percent [at] the end of this winter season will be a strong starting point for 2023/24 with less than 40 percent to be filled (against the difficult starting point of around 20 percent in storage at the end of winter season in 2022,” the Commission assessment says.

    Analysts at the Independent Commodity Intelligence Services think tank said this week that refilling storages this year could still be “as tough a challenge as last year” but predicted that the EU now had “more than enough import capacity to meet the challenge.”  

    Across the EU, five new floating LNG terminals have been set up — in the Netherlands, Greece, Finland and two in Germany — providing an extra 30bcm of gas import capacity, with more due to come online this year and next.  

    However, the EU’s ability to refill storages to the new 90 percent target ahead of next winter will likely depend on continued reduction in gas consumption.

    Brussels set member states a voluntary target of cutting gas demand by 15 percent from August last year. Gas demand actually fell by more than 20 percent between August and December, according to the latest Commission data, partly thanks to efficiency measures but also the consequence of consumers responding to much higher prices by using less energy.

    The 15 percent target may need to be extended beyond its expiry date of March 31 to avoid gas demand rebounding as prices fall. EU energy ministers are set to discuss the issue at two forthcoming meetings in February and March.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Pence moves to claim culture war lane before DeSantis gets there

    Pence moves to claim culture war lane before DeSantis gets there

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    Iowa’s Linn-Mar Community School District, which educates close to 8,000 children just northeast of Cedar Rapids, is now at the center of a Republican school takeover campaign. And Pence and conservative groups are fighting in court to stop the school system from enforcing a policy that directs educators to protect the gender identities of their students on campus, raising questions about whether families have a right to know about their child’s requests.

    The lawsuit showcases Pence’s culture-driven education agenda and dovetails with his decades-long focus on everything from railing about adultery to criticizing Disney’s “Mulan” in the 1990s. Most of all, the case is tied to a state in the American heartland still crucial to the Republican presidential nominating calendar.

    While the conservative Parents Defending Education organization launched the lawsuit last year, the Pence-backed Advancing American Freedom organization and a coalition of Christian groups have filed legal briefs similarly opposed to the school district’s policy. A group of Republican state attorneys general have also supported halting the policy in court.

    But the legal battle is also the focus of a Pence political initiative — funded with an initial budget of $1 million — that aides say will utilize digital advertising, rallies and volunteer advocacy efforts to advocate for parental rights policies.

    The focus, as Pence characterized it, is a broader battle over young people that has engulfed schools and colleges.

    “We’re told that we must not only tolerate the left’s obsessions with race and sex and gender but we must earnestly and enthusiastically participate or face severe consequences,” Pence said Wednesday. “Nowhere is the problem more severe, or the need for leadership more urgent, than in our public school classrooms.”

    Prominent Democrats and LGBTQ advocacy groups denounced the Pence-style agenda on Wednesday, a sign that disagreements over what children learn and who they are will fuel both parties in the runup to 2024.

    “It’s disappointing that someone who professes a deep love for the U.S. Constitution would so venomously assault the rights of the most marginalized,” American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten said in a statement. “Sadly, Mike Pence is mimicking the Trump-DeSantis playbook, rather than blazing a path that builds on the patriotism and courage he demonstrated on January 6, 2021, to thwart the overthrow of our democracy.”

    Illinois Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker, during his budget address Wednesday, said the “real intention” of the broader conservative ideological battle “is to marginalize people and ideas they don’t like.”

    Correct pronouns can be a lifesaving prospect for transgender and nonbinary youth, who are more vulnerable than their peers to suicidal ideations, according to The Trevor Project’s 2022 report on LGBTQ youth mental health. The suicide risk is higher for LGBTQ kids ages 13 to 17, the group’s survey found.

    “The only thing radical is to suggest that schools have a duty to forcibly out transgender students to their parents, without regard to their safety, and to turn a blind eye to harassment by their peers, in the name of free speech,” said Peter Renn, senior counsel at the Lambda Legal gay rights organization.

    Pence is comfortable in this space, dating back to his time as a talk radio show host and columnist, when he criticized “Mulan” for depicting women in the military. As governor of Indiana, his education agenda focused primarily on advancing charter schools and vouchers.

    Last year, Pence issued what he called a “freedom agenda” that included “patriotic education” for high school students to have knowledge of the Federalist Papers and the Constitution. But it was the battle over his Religious Freedom and Restoration Act — a measure that critics said would have resulted in the LGBTQ discrimination — that became one of the hallmarks of his gubernatorial administration. The episode caused Indiana to lose $60 million in convention business.

    Then, in April 2022, the Linn-Mar Community School District board approved policies and regulations intended to support students who are transgender, nonbinary or questioning their gender identity. The policy would allow affected students to ask administrators or counselors for a “Gender Support Plan,” and let students agree whether their parents or guardians would be part of subsequent meetings to discuss the request.

    The policy would have teachers ask students how they wanted to be addressed in class and in communications with their families. It noted that “intentional” or “persistent” refusals by staff and other students to respect a student’s gender identity would violate school anti-bullying and harassment rules.

    Linn-Mar’s policy also stated that parents and guardians would have the right to review their student’s education records, in accordance with federal law.

    Parents Defending Education filed a federal lawsuit in August on behalf of seven unnamed parents who alleged the policy violated their constitutional rights by depriving them of information related to their students, and control over decisions related to their gender identity, while also threatening to illegally discipline students based on their speech.

    A federal district court judge in September rejected a request to halt the policy while the lawsuit proceeded in court, prompting an appeal to an 8th Circuit panel that was heard Wednesday.

    “I believe it’s an issue, not that the majority of the American people stand with us on, but I think it’s got to be almost every parent in America,” Pence said Wednesday. “You do not craft a gender transition plan for my child without my knowledge or consent. I believe the American people believe that.”

    Pence’s path to his party’s nomination centers on reaching Evangelical conservatives in Iowa and South Carolina, early primary states where he has lavished voters and activists with attention. After making the Minneapolis speech, he traveled to Cedar Rapids, where he rallied with parents in opposition to policies like the Linn-Mar Community School District’s. The school district did not respond to requests for comment.

    Pence’s splash in eastern Iowa likely resonates in that part of the state, where coverage of the parental rights movement has saturated local media, said David Kochel, a veteran Iowa Republican strategist.

    “The fact that he’s moving towards the race and he’s in Iowa as opposed to Tallahassee, it’s more intentionally political in terms of the ’24 race,” Kochel said. “He’s taking advantage of an opportunity in Iowa that DeSantis has chosen not to take advantage of yet, but they’re gonna end up in basically the same place on the issue.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 358 of the invasion

    Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 358 of the invasion

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  • Russian forces are mounting “round-the-clock” attacks on Ukrainian positions in the east, Ukraine’s deputy defence minister Hanna Maliar has said. “The situation is tense. Yes, it is difficult for us,” Maliar posted to Telegram. The situation in Luhansk remained difficult, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s office said, without mentioning any retreats in eastern Ukraine.

  • Russia is sending heavy equipment and mobilised troops into the Luhansk region but Ukrainian forces continue to defend the eastern Ukrainian region, its governor, Serhiy Haidai, has said. The Russian defence ministry claimed earlier its troops had broken through two fortified lines of Ukrainian defences on the eastern front of Luhansk. It said Ukrainian troops had retreated in the face of Russian attacks, but did not say in which part of the region. Haidai said Russia’s claim that Ukrainian troops had pulled back “does not correspond to reality”.

  • The Wagner boss, Yevgeny Prigozhin, has admitted that his mercenary group is facing difficulties in Ukraine. “The number of Wagner units will decrease, and we will also not be able to carry out the scope of tasks that we would like to,” Prigozhin said, amid growing evidence that his political influence in the Kremlin is waning.

  • Six aerial targets were spotted over Kyiv during an air alert in the Ukrainian capital, and most were shot down after being engaged with air defences, according to the Kyiv military administration. In a Telegram post, it said the six Russian balloons may have been carrying corner reflectors and reconnaissance equipment. It did not specify when they flew over the capital.

  • Ukraine’s allies have said it is unlikely they will be able to supply the number of tanks previously promised. After a meeting in Brussels of western defence ministers, the German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, said they would not be able reach the size of a battalion. The bad news comes just after the Nato chief, Jens Stoltenberg, announced that Russia had begun a renewed offensive in the east in an attempt to take more territory before new western equipment arrives in the spring.

  • Nato countries are increasing the production of 155mm artillery rounds and need to ramp up that production even further to help Ukraine, Stoltenberg has said. Stoltenberg said allies have not reached conclusions on a new pledge for defence spending, but it was “obvious that we need to spend more”.

  • The US defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, has said Ukraine has a “real good chance” of taking the initiative on the battlefield. Speaking after a meeting with Nato defence ministers in Brussels, Austin said that for every system that Nato provided, it would train troops on that system. “We’re laser-focused on making sure that we provide a capability and not just the platform,” he said.

  • Russia’s army is estimated to have lost nearly 40% of its prewar fleet of tanks after nine months of fighting in Ukraine, according to a count by the specialist thinktank the International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS). That rises to as much as 50% for some of the key tanks used in combat, forcing Russia to reach into its still sizeable cold war-era stocks. Ukraine’s tank numbers are estimated to have increased because of the number it has captured, as well as supplies of Soviet-era tanks from its western allies.

  • Ukraine will receive a package of support worth £200m from the UK and other European nations for military equipment, including spare parts for tanks and artillery ammunition, the British government has announced. Britain agreed with the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland and Lithuania to send an initial package of support to Ukraine, the UK’s Ministry of Defence said.

  • The European Commission has called for a ban on the export of vital technology to Russia worth €11bn to further weaken the Kremlin’s war effort, cementing what EU officials have called the bloc’s toughest-ever sanctions. The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said the EU was targeting industrial goods that Russia needed, such as electronic components for drones and helicopters; spare parts for trucks and jet engines; and construction equipment such as antennas or cranes that could be turned to military uses.

  • Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has welcomed Sweden’s prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, in Kyiv. Zelenskiy praised Sweden’s assistance, saying: “Archer is one of the best artillery pieces in the world. Sweden is a top five supplier of support to Ukraine and I thank Sweden for that support.” Kristersson did not rule out sending JAS 39 Gripen fighter jets, but cautioned that the west’s response had to be coordinated.

  • The Netherlands has said it has not changed its stance on the possible delivery of Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, following a report that it had rolled back on its support. It leases 18 Leopards from Germany, and the Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, has said the Netherlands is willing to deliver them to Ukraine.

  • Ukraine’s defence minister, Oleksii Reznikov, has said that Zelenskiy has asked him to remain in his current post, after a corruption scandal beset his ministry and put his role in doubt. Asked whether he expected to continue as defence minister in the months to come, Reznikov replied: “Yes, it was the decision of my president.”

  • A British national who was killed in Ukraine has been named by family and friends as Jonathan Shenkin. Shenkin, 45, from Glasgow, “died as a hero in an act of bravery as a paramedic”, his family wrote in a tribute on social media. He is the eighth Briton to be killed in Ukraine since the conflict began.

  • At least 6,000 children from Ukraine have attended Russian “re-education” camps in the past year, according to a new report published in the US. Since the start of the war, children as young as four months living in the occupied areas have been taken to 43 camps across Russia, the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab report says. Russia has also unnecessarily expedited the adoption and fostering of children from Ukraine in what could constitute a war crime, it said.

  • Switzerland has said the seizing of private Russian assets would undermine the country’s constitution. In a statement, the Swiss government said “the expropriation of private assets of lawful origin without compensation is not permissible under Swiss law”.

  • The journalist Maria Ponomarenko has been sentenced to six years in prison in Russia for “distributing false information about the Russian army” after she posted on social media about the attack on the drama theatre in Mariupol. She has also been banned from journalism for five years.

  • The UN’s humanitarian aid and refugee agencies have said they are seeking $5.6bn (£4.6bn) to help millions of people in Ukraine and countries that have taken in fleeing Ukrainians. The bulk of the joint appeal is for the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, which aims to help more than 11 million people by funnelling funds through more than 650 partner organisations.

  • [ad_2]
    #RussiaUkraine #war #glance #day #invasion
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘It’s a War.’

    ‘It’s a War.’

    [ad_1]

    lede2 iav2

    WATERLOO, Iowa – On the day the Democratic National Committee voted to strip Iowa of its first-in-the-nation presidential caucuses, a former congressman named Dave Nagle thumbed through a Rolodex full of faded contact cards at his desk on the seventh floor of an old department store building here.

    Frost clung to the windows. Nagle knew what was coming. In Philadelphia, where the DNC met, everyone was writing Iowa’s obituary. And when the <a href="https://www.politico.com/news/2023/02/04/dnc-presidential-primary-calendar-00081206" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"vote went as expected","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.politico.com/news/2023/02/04/dnc-presidential-primary-calendar-00081206","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630000","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630001","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>vote went as expected, his wife, Debi, who was following the proceedings on Twitter from the next room over, came to the door.

    Nagle sighed.

    image00034

    “So,” he said, looking up from his desk. “It’s a war.”

    For half a century, Iowa had gone first in the presidential nominating process, a <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/Iowa-caucuses" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"fluke of the calendar","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.britannica.com/event/Iowa-caucuses","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630002","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630003","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>fluke of the calendar that revolutionized the modern White House campaign. It was in Iowa that Jimmy Carter, a peanut farmer and former governor of Georgia, catapulted himself to the presidency in 1976, demonstrating that even a relative nobody could make a name for himself here. The result was a quadrennial spectacle in which presidential candidates crammed into every corn- and soybean-sprouting inch of this small, rural state, transforming Iowa into the presidential campaign’s biggest stage.

    But Democrats nationally had for years been tiring of Iowa, which had fallen out of step with the party’s diversifying base. Demographically, Iowa was too white; politically, it was becoming too red. President Joe Biden <a href="https://www.politico.com/news/2022/12/01/michigan-poised-to-replace-iowa-as-early-state-00071677" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"wanted to drop Iowa and put South Carolina first","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.politico.com/news/2022/12/01/michigan-poised-to-replace-iowa-as-early-state-00071677","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630004","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630005","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>wanted to drop Iowa and put South Carolina first in the nominating process, and the outcome seemed inevitable.

    waterloo iowa map

    Unlike in New Hampshire – whose early primary also was being pushed back, and where Democrats were protesting loudly — Iowa never looked like it had much of a leg to stand on. Democrats here had been embarrassed by a botched caucus in 2020, in which the flubbing of the presidential preference count was so severe that the <a href="https://apnews.com/article/bernie-sanders-iowa-ap-top-news-ia-state-wire-politics-fc6777e93b8c50b2fd20e0d31fcc43b3" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"Associated Press could not even declare a winner","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://apnews.com/article/bernie-sanders-iowa-ap-top-news-ia-state-wire-politics-fc6777e93b8c50b2fd20e0d31fcc43b3","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630007","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630008","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>Associated Press could not even declare a winner. They had few allies in Washington, and even fewer after the midterm elections, in which Democrats were swept out of all but one statewide executive office, auditor. Biden, if he runs for re-election as expected, is not likely even to compete here.

    “It’s a wasteland,” one Democratic strategist told me. Iowa, he said, is one not-unlikely step from “becoming Idaho.”

    Even in Iowa’s home-state media, it seemed as if the battle was over. “Iowa Democrats Lose First in the Nation,” read the ticker on one local TV broadcast. Said another: “Caucuses kicked.” Iowa’s loss of its favored spot on the nominating calendar had seemed like a forgone conclusion for so long in Iowa that the Des Moines Register’s front page account — “Dems drop Iowa from ’24 leadoff spot” — didn’t even run above the fold.

    secondary2 siders

    But between the lines in all of that coverage, there was a sign that Iowa might not take the loss of its early caucuses lying down.

    The casting off of Iowa, Democrats here said, would damage the party’s standing with white, rural voters in the Midwest – the kind of people Democrats had ceded to Donald Trump in 2016. In carefully worded statements, Iowa Democratic Party officials expressed an openness, at least, to hosting an unsanctioned caucus in the state, ignoring the national party calendar and pressing forward on their own.

    In Waterloo, perhaps the most unfortunately named city to wage hostilities from, Nagle was overtly calling for exactly that.

    Early on the morning of the DNC vote, he had leaned against a bench on his porch at home while his wife fed deer out back a mix of protein pellets, apples, carrots and corn. He pulled a news story up on his phone about how the caucuses were coming to an end.

    “Physically, it hurt,” he said. “I put 40 years into this thing, and to have the president of the United States toss us under the bus. I felt like he’d walked into my own house and told me to leave.”

    image00076

    The national party, Nagle said, was abandoning the Midwest, acting as if “rural America’s gone.”

    Scott Brennan, a member of the Democratic National Committee and former chair of the Iowa state party, told me when he got back from Philadelphia that between the Mountain and Central time zones, “they’ve turned a vast swath of the nation into flyover country.”

    But Nagle didn’t think Iowa was done yet. He’d driven to the office with his wife. He took a phone call from a local reporter while we spoke. And then he walked across the hall to smoke a Marlboro Light in a storage room, looking out through a small window over Waterloo.

    Forty years ago, Nagle had been chair of the state Democratic Party when it <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1983/11/17/us/a-democratic-dispute-turns-nasty.html" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"prevailed in a dispute with the DNC","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.nytimes.com/1983/11/17/us/a-democratic-dispute-turns-nasty.html","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2630009","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead263000a","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>prevailed in a dispute with the DNC over a proposal to change the calendar. National Democrats had wanted Iowa to change its date then, too, and Iowa said ‘No.’”

    “It’s the same,” he told me, when I asked him how this year’s disagreement with the DNC compared to that one. “We’ll go, and they’ll get mad.”

    secondary5 siders

    Biden probably wouldn’t come to Iowa for the caucuses, anyway, if his re-election is uncontested. In 2028, the state would be sitting there for any candidate who saw an opening and was willing to buck the DNC.

    Nagle, who will turn 80 in April, stubbed out his cigarette in a trash can on the floor.

    “We only lose it when we give it up,” he told me. “And we’re not going to give it up. I hope.”

    image00027

    Nagle’s office is a couple of hours’ drive from Des Moines, where at the Des Moines Marriott, once described as a “‘<a href="https://www.poynter.org/reporting-editing/2012/des-moines-marriott-a-star-wars-bar-scene-for-journalists-covering-iowa-caucus/" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"Star Wars’ Bar Scene for journalists covering Iowa Caucus","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.poynter.org/reporting-editing/2012/des-moines-marriott-a-star-wars-bar-scene-for-journalists-covering-iowa-caucus/","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead263000b","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead263000c","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>Star Wars’ Bar Scene for journalists covering Iowa Caucus,” no one complained when I asked the bartender to switch the TV to the local news. But in February of the off year and with no presidential contenders in the immediate vicinity, no one was paying much attention to the plight of the caucuses, either.

    A woman visiting from out of town told me she wasn’t “following that.” And even among home-staters, it isn’t clear there will be a mass uprising if the caucuses go.

    In a <a href="https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2022/10/27/iowa-poll-most-iowans-think-iowa-caucuses-should-remain-first/69561842007/" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2022/10/27/iowa-poll-most-iowans-think-iowa-caucuses-should-remain-first/69561842007/","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead263000d","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead263000e","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll in October, just 53 percent of Iowans said it would be best for the country if Iowa holds its nominating contest first, down from 69 percent in 2015. And Iowa Democrats were far less likely than Iowa Republicans — who will still hold their 2024 caucuses here first — to care. Just 44 percent of Iowa Democrats thought the state should go first.

    It isn’t just the politically uninformed who feel this way, either.

    Not far from the Marriott, at the bar he owns across the street from former President Barack Obama’s old state campaign headquarters, I was speaking with Jeff Link, a veteran Democratic strategist, about the caucuses one recent afternoon when friends of his started dropping by.

    secondary7 siders

    There was Steve Logsdon, the owner of Lucca, a mainstay for candidates and reporters, who, when asked if he sensed the caucuses were done, didn’t pause for a second.

    “Oh, yeah,” he told me.

    “Of course, I want it here,” Logsdon said, but “it’s pretty white here, and pretty rural.”

    “As a strategy for Democrats,” Logsdon said, it made more sense to start in a more diverse state.

    Then came Loyd Ogle, a lawyer and owner of a cocktail lounge in town, who said, “From a local perspective, sure it’s really sad to see this happen.”

    However, he said, given “all the money that campaigns pour into an [early] state — voter registration and everything else … it kind of makes sense” to go somewhere more competitive.

    secondary10 siders

    Iowa, he said, is “going meat red … going the way of Kansas.”

    John Deeth, who <a href="http://jdeeth.blogspot.com/2021/07/fixing-caucuses-part-5-friendly-advice.html" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"runs a Democratic political blog","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"http://jdeeth.blogspot.com/2021/07/fixing-caucuses-part-5-friendly-advice.html","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640000","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640001","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>runs a Democratic political blog in Iowa City, told me, “Frankly, there are a lot of people who like having [presidential candidates’] cell phone numbers and like feeling important, and they, I think, are the ones who are embittered by this.”

    “A lot is lost,” he said. “I mean we’re not talking about just losing who votes first. Everything about the way Iowa Democrats have done business for the last 50 years has changed. The whole model of organizing was based around that ‘first’, and now we’ve got to build a new model.”

    He added, “But it’s inevitable that this is going to happen, because we are in too weak of a position to prevent it.”

    It was Biden, the sitting president, after all, who proposed that South Carolina go first — no skin off his back after finishing fourth in Iowa and fifth in New Hampshire in the 2020 primary, before a primary victory in South Carolina resurrected his campaign. The DNC would move South Carolina to the front of the line, followed by New Hampshire and Nevada, then Georgia and Michigan, a state that has its own share of rural voters.

    At the bar, Link shook his head.

    secondary3 siders

    It’s true that Democrats don’t find much support in rural areas. In the 2020 election, Biden carried the nation’s cities and suburbs but <a href="https://www.cnn.com/election/2020/exit-polls/president/national-results" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"lost rural America by 15 percentage points","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.cnn.com/election/2020/exit-polls/president/national-results","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640002","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640003","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>lost rural America by 15 percentage points. But in a competitive state — and Iowa is bordered by two of them, Minnesota and Wisconsin — even marginal differences in the rural vote can tip an election. A rural Democrat in those states, or in Pennsylvania or Michigan, can see just as well as an Iowan where Democrats are or aren’t holding their early primaries, and draw judgments from that about where the party’s priorities lie.

    Link, who has studied voters who flipped from Obama to Trump in 2016, said, “It’s not only our presidential interests that would benefit, but it would certainly make it easier to maintain a Senate majority if we could do somewhat OK in a rural state.”

    “Nationally,” he said, “Democrats think that we should write off certain parts of the country and double down on other parts” — the latter being urban centers and their diversifying suburbs, the former being rural, white, non-college educated swaths of the country where Democrats have been losing in recent years.

    For Iowa Democrats who care about preserving an early caucus, one significant problem is that there aren’t as many of them in elected office as there once were to get upset about it. Trump beat Biden in the state by more than 8 percentage points in 2020. In November, Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds beat her Democratic challenger by nearly 20 points, and Republicans hold every U.S. Senate and House seat here.

    There’s Nagle and Brennan and the state party chair, former state Sen. Rita Hart. And there are concerned Democrats like Link. In the run-up to the DNC meeting, Nagle and two former leaders of the Iowa Republican Party had <a href="https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/elections/presidential/caucus/2023/01/26/party-vets-make-appeal-for-keeping-iowas-caucuses-first-in-the-nation/69842582007/" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"held a news conference at the state Capitol","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/elections/presidential/caucus/2023/01/26/party-vets-make-appeal-for-keeping-iowas-caucuses-first-in-the-nation/69842582007/","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640004","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640005","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>held a news conference at the state Capitol to rally public support for the caucuses.

    But it’s been 30 years since Nagle left Congress. No one here — on the issue of the caucuses, at least — has the White House on speed dial.

    image00001

    Following the DNC vote, Jaime Harrison, the chair of the DNC, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OiOnO_hs-3g" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"went on MSNBC","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OiOnO_hs-3g","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640008","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead2640009","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>went on MSNBC for a victory lap. The party’s new nominating calendar “looks like the Democratic Party, and it reflects the diversity of America,” he said. For 50 years, he said, Iowa and New Hampshire had been the “one-two step” in the process, and “we are just changing that.”

    It may not be that straightforward. <a href="https://www.politico.com/news/2023/02/04/dnc-presidential-primary-calendar-00081206" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"New Hampshire party officials say they can’t comply","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.politico.com/news/2023/02/04/dnc-presidential-primary-calendar-00081206","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead264000a","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead264000b","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>New Hampshire party officials say they can’t comply with the new calendar because it conflicts with a state law. For Georgia to hold an earlier primary, it <a href="https://www.politico.com/news/2023/02/04/dnc-presidential-primary-calendar-00081206" target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"will require the cooperation of Republican elected officials","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://www.politico.com/news/2023/02/04/dnc-presidential-primary-calendar-00081206","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead264000c","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead264000d","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>will require the cooperation of Republican elected officials there.

    That uncertainty has left Iowa in something of a holding pattern. As Brennan told me, “Nothing is settled.”

    secondary8 siders

    In a prepared statement issued the day of the DNC vote, Hart, like her counterparts in New Hampshire, raised the issue of state law, saying it “requires us to hold precinct caucuses before the last Tuesday in February, and before any other contest.” But there’s a lot of gray area there. Those caucuses could be limited to more routine party business. Or, as Nagle is suggesting, the party could run them as an unsanctioned, full-blown presidential contest, risking losing delegates or other punishments from the DNC.

    When I asked Hart about it last week, after she returned from the DNC meeting in Philadelphia, she said, “We do have a bit of flexibility here.”

    Regarding the prospect of a rogue caucus, she said, “We are certainly open to that conversation.”

    There’s another, longshot possibility, too. It’s not hard to imagine the party acquiescing if it was offered a later date on the early-state calendar — not the first nominating contest, but one of them, if Georgia or New Hampshire falls out of the early state window.

    “Iowans are practical people, right?” Hart said. “We’re willing to work with people.”

    image00110

    In a bid to make some headway with the DNC, Iowa Democrats proposed dramatically changing their caucuses, a process that traditionally required voters to spend long evenings in church basements or gymnasiums to express their preferences. The arcane procedure had come under criticism from Democrats who worried it disenfranchised voters with jobs or children or less than a full evening in the middle of winter to devote to the task.

    Instead, in filings with the DNC, Iowa Democrats proposed a vote-by-mail process. They emphasized the ability in Iowa of lesser-known candidates to make an impression in a small state, as Carter had, without requiring wheelbarrows full of money. And, cognizant of their electorate’s relative lack of diversity, they noted the success of Obama, a Black man, Hillary Clinton, a woman, and Pete Buttigieg, a gay man, here.

    The national party does have some incentive to work with Iowa. That’s because Republicans will be caucusing here first in 2024 as usual, an extended campaign that will draw enormous media attention that Democrats will not want to be entirely cut out of.

    The DNC could send messengers to Iowa to counter Republican talking points without sanctioning their own caucuses here. Still, there haven’t been any signs from the DNC that it would welcome Iowa back into an early state spot, and few people here are counting on it.

    The calendar change was a “mistake,” said Tom Miller, Iowa’s longtime Democratic state attorney general who was defeated in November. “They’ve thrown out rural America.”

    But, he told me, “They seem to be set in their ways.” Unlike years ago, Miller said, the DNC has “more power, and they have more allies.”

    secondary6 siders

    “They have pretty much everybody against us and New Hampshire,” he said.

    The result is that Iowa Democrats — and especially caucus stalwarts like Nagle — have been backed into a corner.

    “Just duck this time,” Nagle said. Biden almost certainly won’t campaign in the state. But it’ll be an open primary four years later.

    “We’ll go in ’28,” he said.

    And if sanctions from the DNC, including the loss of delegates, results in candidates not competing that year, so be it. Some year, a credible Democratic candidate — perhaps trying to appeal to rural voters, or to anti-Washington sentiment — might see Iowa as Carter did, as an opening.

    secondary1 siders

    One recent morning in Des Moines, Link offered to drive me around to see some old caucus sites. We walked into the hotel where Hillary Clinton conceded defeat to Obama in the caucuses in 2008. We drove up to the Val Air Ballroom, site of the “<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_scream#:~:text=The%20Dean%20scream%2C%20also%20known,wanted%20to%20reassure%20his%20supporters." target="_blank" link-data="{"linkText":"Dean scream","link":{"target":"NEW","attributes":[],"url":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_scream#:~:text=The%20Dean%20scream%2C%20also%20known,wanted%20to%20reassure%20his%20supporters.","_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead264000e","_type":"33ac701a-72c1-316a-a3a5-13918cf384df"},"_id":"00000186-54e2-d9b8-a7a7-d7ead264000f","_type":"02ec1f82-5e56-3b8c-af6e-6fc7c8772266"}”>Dean scream,” and past Jeb Bush’s old Iowa headquarters, which is now a Pilates studio. At the Iowa State Fair, snow piled up in the parking lot in front of the giant slide and tables were stacked inside a vacant Bud Tent. Nearby, an RV show was going on.

    I suggested to Link that the idea of Iowa keeping its early caucus date in 2024 seemed a bit like putting a terminal patient on life support.

    It was 13 degrees out, and Link took a more optimistic view. The more accurate description, he said, was that the caucuses would be “hibernating.”

    In an open primary in 2028, he suspected, a candidate like Kamala Harris, the vice president whose own presidential run didn’t even make it to Iowa in 2020, might follow the DNC’s prescribed calendar and spend her time in South Carolina or whichever state the DNC chooses to go first that year.

    “But if it’s the next Bernie [Sanders], who gets dismissed by the establishment but catches fire and has the ability to raise funds online?” he asked. “Who knows?”

    AC/DC was playing on the radio. Link turned his Cadillac SRX back towards town. So long as the state doesn’t surrender its position on the calendar, he said, all it really would take is the right candidate.

    secondary9 siders

    Iowa, Link said, needed a candidate — if not a party — who understood it.

    He said, “We need a new Jimmy Carter.”

    [ad_2]
    #War
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Russian casualties highest since first week of Ukraine war

    Russian casualties highest since first week of Ukraine war

    [ad_1]

    London: Russian soldiers are dying in “greater numbers in Ukraine this month than at any time” since the first week of the invasion, according to Ukrainian data.

    The Ukrainian data shows 824 Russian soldiers dying per day in February.

    The figures were highlighted by the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MoD). The figures cannot be verified – but the UK says the trends are “likely accurate”, BBC reported.

    The increase comes amid talk of a spring offensive by Russian forces in the east of the country.

    Last week, Ukraine’s outgoing defence minister, Oleksiy Reznikov, said they were anticipating a new Russian offensive around 24 February – the anniversary of the full-scale invasion.

    But some local politicians, including the governors of Luhansk and Donetsk, claimed the offensive had already begun, the media outlet reported.

    Some of the fiercest fighting has been around Bakhmut in the east of the country.

    On Sunday, the head of Russia’s Wagner mercenary force said the group had seized a settlement near the devastated city.

    Yevgeny Prigozhin said on Telegram: “Today, the settlement of Krasna Hora was taken by assault detachments of the Wagner PMC.”

    Prigozhin also gave his group credit for the offensive on Bakhmut, downplaying the Russian army’s role: “Within a radius of 50 km, plus or minus, there are only Wagner PMC fighters,” he wrote.

    According to the Ukrainian data, highlighted by the UK, 824 Russian losses a day is more than four times the rate reported in June and July, when around 172 Russian soldiers died each day.

    The Ukrainian military claims 137, 780 Russian military deaths since the full-scale invasion began.

    The UK’s MoD pointed out the recent increase could be due to “a range of factors, including lack of trained personnel, coordination, and resources across the front”.

    Ukraine “also continues to suffer a high attrition rate”, the UK’s MoD was quoted as saying by the media outlet.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Berlin’s plan for a car-free city prompts bitter war of words

    Berlin’s plan for a car-free city prompts bitter war of words

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    Many visitors to Graefekiez, a lively cobbled-road neighbourhood just south of Berlin’s centre, come in search of something new: a tattoo from an authentic Japanese parlour, a rare print from an off-grid gallery, a dive-bar encounter over a 4am beer.

    This summer, they can brace themselves for another novelty: for at least three months, local authorities are planning to scrap almost all of the neighbourhood’s parking spaces as part of a social experiment designed to chart the waters of the German capital’s car-free future.

    Exactly how long the trial will last, how many of the neighbourhood’s roads it will include, and whether the vacant parking spaces will be filled with ping-pong tables, plant pots or dining tables instead, the council will not reveal until after Sunday’s Berlin state elections, a repeat of the September 2021 vote that was marred by delays and logistical errors.

    The decision to hold back information may well be politically motivated: the business of getting from A to B has become the subject of a bitter culture war between car lovers and car haters in the runup to the vote. And Berlin’s experimental approach to ushering out the age of the automobile isn’t only alienating petrolheads.

    The metropolis on the river Spree used to be feted for its public transport links, its densely woven web of underground and overground trains, trams, buses and ferries guaranteeing that getting from one corner of the city to the next usually took less than an hour. Wide roads make cycling popular and relatively safe.

    “Berlin has lots of space and barely any commuters – a lot of people live close to where they work,” said Prof Andreas Knie, a mobility researcher at the WZB Social Science Center that will supervise the Graefekiez project. “In theory, it has all the right conditions in place to become a model ‘city of short distances’,” he added, citing the concept of compact living spaces that urban planners have championed for more than a decade.

    Berlin car-free section of Friedrichstrasse
    Only cyclists can ride bicycles in the Berlin car-free section of Friedrichstrasse – a significant culture and shopping hotspot. Photograph: Michael Kuenne/PRESSCOV/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock

    Yet recently Berlin has struggled to convert its advantages into real change. In inner London and Paris, car ownership is in decline. Berlin may still have the lowest car ownership rate in Germany, with 337 vehicles registered per 1,000 inhabitants in 2022, but the number of automobiles on its roads has been rising steadily.

    “Five years ago, we were top of the pops,” said Knie. “Now London and Paris have overtaken us.”

    The means that German cities have at their disposal to shape movement on their roads is limited by federal laws that prioritise free flow of vehicles. Municipalities can’t impose 30 km/h zones on main roads unless they can prove a high risk of accidents. The liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), in charge of the ministry at federal level, has shown no signs of willingness to rewrite the all-powerful road traffic act.

    While their hands remain tied, Green councillors in Berlin have resorted to guerrilla tactics aimed at nudging cars out of the city centre. During the first coronavirus lockdown in 2020, several Berlin districts redrew road markings to create “pop-up” cycle lanes, supposedly to help cyclists physically distance on their commutes to work. Many of the new lanes have become popular permanent fixtures.

    At the start of the year, the senate went further: as of 2023, two-wheeled vehicles – including bikes, motorbikes and electric scooters – are allowed free use of parking spaces previously reserved exclusively for cars across the city.

    But this experimental approach has also left parts of Berlin in a what locals perceive as a state of permanent flux. A section of the Bergmannstrasse thoroughfare in Kreuzberg has undergone two attempts at a cycle-friendly redesign in the last four years, first with psychedelic-looking polka-dot road markings and then with a two-way cycle lane pushing cars on to a one-way single lane.

    Further north, cars were banished from a 500-metre stretch of the Friedrichstrasse boulevard for two years until a local wine dealer last November won a court case to let automobiles back in. At the end of January, Berlin’s Green party senator for mobility and climate protection, Bettina Jarasch, shut cars out again, against the will of the incumbent city mayor Franziska Giffey, of the centre-left Social Democratic Party.

    The hypothesis behind the latest experiment in Graefekiez is that most residents who leave their Autos on the side of its tree-lined streets don’t actually need them to get around town. A summer of seeing spaces previously hogged by boxes of steel used by playing children and al-fresco diners, the thinking goes, may encourage them to ditch them for good.

    “The idea we are pursuing is whether public spaces can be experienced and used in more efficient ways than keeping them reserved for parked cars,” said Annika Gerold, Kreuzberg’s Green district councillor in charge of transport affairs.

    But with the details of the car-free experiment kept under wraps, scepticism in the neighbourhood is tangible. Florian Eicker, who runs a small lunchtime eatery serving Hawaiian poké bowls on Graefestrasse, says he would welcome additional space for tables outside his restaurant, and could imagine switching to a car-sharing scheme to buy and deliver his ingredients.

    But a lack of information about another temporary state that could be rolled back again by the autumn has left him frustrated: “What’s the point if we merely push the problems three months into the future?” The attitude among his neighbours and guests was broadly negative, Eicker said. “I’d say it’s 30% in favour to 70% against. And those people aren’t especially wedded to car ownership on principle.”

    The Christian Democratic Union (CDU), a conservative party whose core voters could not be further from the bohemian crowd on the Graefekiez’s streets, has been making hay of local frustration, collecting 1,450 signatures in favour of scrapping the trial in the neighbourhood of approximately 18,000.

    Instead of banishing parking spaces altogether, local CDU candidate Timur Husein advocates charging car owners to use them like they do in other cities – because for now, parking in the Graefekiez remains mostly free. If polls are anything to go by, his party’s pitch is proving surprisingly resonant in a city usually famed for its countercultural ways.

    The most recent surveys show the Christian Democrats in the lead on 26% of the vote, and within a realistic chance of unseating the incumbent left-green senate as long as it can sway one of the coalition parties to switch sides.

    “Adding a few bollards here and there is absolutely fine,” Husein said. “But an entire neighbourhood without cars – that’s even too much for Green voters.”

    This article was amended on 13 February 2023 to correct the spelling of Graefekiez.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Ajit Doval meets Russian President Putin amid Russia-Ukraine war

    Ajit Doval meets Russian President Putin amid Russia-Ukraine war

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    New Delhi: National Security Advisor Ajit Doval met Russian President Vladimir Putin amid the Russia-Ukraine war on Thursday, informed the Indian Embassy in Russia.

    Doval is in Moscow to attend a meeting on multilateral security in Afghanistan.

    The Indian Embassy in Russia, on Twitter said that Doval had a comprehensive discussion on bilateral and regional issues during the meeting with President Putin.

    It was also agreed upon to continue working towards the implementation of the strategic partnership of India-Russia.

    Doval reached Russia on his two-day official visit on Wednesday.

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    #Ajit #Doval #meets #Russian #President #Putin #RussiaUkraine #war

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )