This is a blog dedicated to a personal interpretation of political news of the day. I attempt to be as knowledgeable as possible before commenting and committing my thoughts to a day's communication.
"A Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicle [drone] was shot down at low altitude while approaching the Engels military airfield in the Saratov region."
"Three Russian servicemen of the technical staff who were at the airfield were fatally wounded as a result of falling drone wreckage."
Russian Defence Ministry
"Unfortunately challenges and threats in this area, especially from the outside, are only growing each year."
"We also have to acknowledge unfortunately that disagreements also arise between member states of the commonwealth."
"We are ready to negotiate with everyone involved about acceptable solutions but that is up to them -- we are not the ones refusing to negotiate, they are."
Russian President Vladimir Putin
"Russia single-handedly attacked Ukraine and is killing citizens."
"Russia doesn't want negotiations, but tries to avoid responsibility."
Mykhailo Podolyak, advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy
A
Ukrainian soldier watches a drone feed from an underground command
center in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2022. (AP
Photo/Libkos)
There you have it. Speaking authoritatively, confidently before a gathering of former Soviet state leaders in St.Petersburg at a summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States group, Putin deplored growing insecurity threatening the stability of the Eurasian region. People should be reasonable, talk to one another, use diplomacy not threats, and above all avoid the violence of conflict.
The other states, still faithful to the Russian Federation as allies from the old Soviet-era days purporting now to be autonomous, look upon Vladimir Putin as their role model, the authority figure they emulate. Russia's adventure in Ukraine has been scrutinized by them and not found wanting. In recent months fighting has surged between Armenia and Azerbaijan despite the presence of Russian peacemakers.
Other members of the CIS group see Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan engaged in a border dispute. Such disagreements, Putin admonished them, should be resolved through "comradely help and mediating action". The Russia-Ukraine model, for example. For, as Mr. Putin explained, he was open to negotiations over Ukraine, but it is Kyiv and its Western backers who have failed to engage in diplomatic talks. Moscow's conciliatory overtures to Kyiv have been rejected.
It is Kyiv's fault that the conflict continues. It could stop, if Kyiv was amenable. All it has to do is agree that it will no longer contest Russia's annexation of a fifth of Ukrainian territory. But no, Kyiv insists it will fight to the end, until its sovereign territory has been restored to Ukraine, its rightful owner. What can you do with some unreasonable adversaries, but carry on?
Kyiv, in fact, has been engaging in some pretty unsavoury action. Sending penetrating drones hundreds of kilometres through Russian airspace. For the second time this month penetrating drones crossing into Russia have caused a deadly explosion, an attack on the Dyagilevo airfield, close by the city of Ryazan where three people were killed and six injured in the explosion of a fuel tanker. How can one negotiate with such treachery?
Residents view a destroyed apartment building following overnight
shelling in Kherson, Ukraine, on 21 December 2022. [ EPA-EFE/Maria
Senovilla]
Still, according to the Russian defence ministry no planes were damaged. Yet both Russian and Ukrainian social media accounts reveal that several planes were destroyed. Although there has been no formal acknowledgement of responsibility by Ukraine, Yuril Ihnat, spokesman for the Ukrainian air froce spoke of the incident as a "consequence of what Russia is doing on our land".
Not only a consequence but a repeat of the missile attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure that has denied Ukrainian civilians winter heat, electrical connections and water.
The Ukrainian military, unlike its Russian counterpart, aims for military infrastructure, not civilian enclaves. Unlike Russia's military which deliberately carries out attacks against civilian infrastructure, including hospitals, shopping centres, schools, apartment buildings, government buildings and above all energy facilities with an aim to create chaos and terror, to intimidate and to terrorize to make people suffer privation. In an effort to break the Ukrainian resolve to defend itself from a ruthless aggressor.
Ukraine carried out the attack with drones and the help of a military
reconnaissance unit coordinating it deep inside Russian territory |
Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images
"{The situation there [in the Eastern Donbas] is difficult, painful. The occupants are spending
all the resources available to them — and these are significant
resources — to squeeze out at least some progress."
"As of this evening, about 9 million people are cut off in different
regions of Ukraine. But the number and duration of outages is gradually
decreasing. I am grateful to each and every person who ensured this
result."
"Today, I held a special meeting with government officials on the
situation in the energy sector and infrastructure. We are preparing for
the next year — and not only for the winter months. There are threats
that must be eliminated. There are steps to be taken. And the state will
definitely make them."
"Air defense is preparing, the state is preparing, and everyone must be prepared. Please pay attention to the sirens."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy
Ukrainian soldiers with the 43rd Heavy Artillery Brigade fire a rocket
from a self propelled cannon on the front line in Bakhmut on Monday, 26 December.
(Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters)
With his return back to Ukraine, President Zelenskyy spoke of his forces "working toward victory", contradicting Russian President Putin's warning no end to the war would occur until Russia's military aims were achieved. On his trip to Washington, President Zelenskyy was awarded a new $1.8 billion military aid package to which he pledged "we'll overcome everything". Strategic agreements with Washington, he announced later to Ukrainian ambassadors, would strengthen Kyiv's defence forces for the year to come.
Mr. Zelenskyy also thanked the Netherlands which pledged up to $2.65 billion for 2023 to help in financing military equipment and the rebuilding of critical infrastructure. Relentless Russian artillery, rocket and mortar fire is continuing in Ukraine's east; airstrikes on the eastern and southern fronts are also ongoing. Dmitry Peskov, spokesman for the Kremlin stated the war would end once the "special military operation" reached "the goals that the Russian Federation has set. A significant headway has been made on demilitarization of Ukraine".
Of course in that same sense, Ukraine has succeeded in its self-defence in making headway in 'demilitarizing' Russia. There are all the Russian tanks and other military hardware Ukraine destroyed, along with the battlefield hardware that Russian troops abandoned in their haste to retreat before the forward action of the Ukrainian counteroffensive. And finally all the missiles shot down by Ukraine that Russia has sent whizzing over Ukrainian towns and cities.
According to the Ukrainian military, Russian forces fired multiple rocket launchers "more than 70 times" across Ukrainian geography in one night alone [Russia busy 'demilitarizing' itself, depleting its missile stockpiles], while battles raged fiercely around the city of Bakhmut in eastern Donetsk province. Bakhmut and Lyman in neighbourimg Luhansk region together with the Kharkiv region have borne the brunt of Russian strikes, explained the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
In a 24-hour period. up to 61 Russian rocket, artillery and mortar fire attacks were launched in the Kherson region with regional Kherson Governor Yaroslav Yanushevych posting that Russian forces attacked from dug-in positions on the Dnieper river to hit educational institutions, apartment blocks and private homes. Russian strikes on Kherson have been constant since the Ukrainian military succeeded in freeing the city from Russian occupation.
Russia continues to target civilian areas, with Ukrainian forces repelling Russian ground attacks on or close to 19 settlements in Ukraine's north and east. A district hospital in the city of Volchansk, Kharkiv region, was struck by Russian shelling. Several factory buildings housing Russian troops in the occupied city of Tokmak in southern Zaporizhzhia region on Thursday were hit with several blasts, sparking a fire.
In the city of Melitopol a car used by Russian occupation forces exploded, a day after a car bomb killed the Russian appointed head of the village of Lyubymivka in Kherson region.
For months, Ukrainian guerrillas have operated behind Russian lines in the occupied south and east of Ukraine. Their target: Kremlin-installed officials, institutions and key infrastructure, like roads and bridges. And in Mariupol, its famed theatre, the site of a deadly airstrike where up to 600 people were killed sheltering in the theatre transformed into a bomb shelter, its remaining walls are being destroyed. Moscow faces accusations of destroying evidence of its war crimes.
Today, Monday 26 December, a Ukrainian drone struck within Russia. It was shot down by Russian air defences when it approached a military airfield in Saratov Oblast, deep inside Russian territory,
in the western port city of Engels, some 500 miles southeast of Moscow, located on the Volga River. Nothing is more geared to making Moscow furious with indignation; than that Ukraine would dare to strike Russian territory. This was the second such drone strike on the city, which houses the Engels-2 military airfield, a strategic bomber airbase.
"[The attack was the] consequence of what Russia is doing."
"If the Russians thought that the war would not affect anyone in the deep rear [of Russia] or anywhere else, they were deeply mistaken."
"Therefore, as we see, such things are happening more and more often, and let's hope that this will only benefit Ukraine."
Ukrainian Air Force spokesperson Yurii Ihnat
The Engels air base has been repeatedly used by Russia to carry out missile strikes on various targets in Ukraine Reuters
"Bakhmut Fortress. Our people. Unconquered by the enemy. Who with their bravery prove that we will endure and will not give up what's ours."
"Since May, the occupiers have been trying to break our Bakhmut, but time goes by and Bakhmut is already breaking not only the Russian army, but also the Russian mercenaries who came to replace the wasted army of the occupiers."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zenenskyy
"Our country has often faced challenges and defended its sovereignty."
"Now Russia is again facing such a challenge. Soldiers, officers and volunteers are showing outstanding examples of courage and self denial on the front line."
"People living there, Russian citizens, [in the four Ukrainian regions Putin summarily declared Russian territory] count on being protected by you [Russian servicemen]."
Russian President Vladimir Putin
"Not one single operational commander then in place on February 24 is in charge now."
"Russia has lost significant numbers of generals and commanding officers."
"[Some 100,000 Russian troops were] dead, injured or have deserted [since the invasion began]."
U.K. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace
Firefighters work to put out a fire at a residential building hit by a Russian missile strike in Bakhmut on December 7.
According to the Kremlin there is one way its conflict in Ukraine can be brought to a halt. And it is entirely up to Ukraine. The invaded nation must meet the conditions Moscow has set for the fighting to end. Kyiv must recognize Crimea is no longer a Ukrainian peninsula, but part of Russia. All other annexations must be accepted by Kyiv as Russian gains. Ukraine must disarm and not plan to join NATO..
The government of Ukraine, however rejects such conditions; the war will end when the occupied territories are retaken, or Russian forces are ordered to leave. And so, each leader, the aggressor and the defensive aggressed, praises their troops' heroic efforts to pursue the goals of their respective leaders. Russia which envisions complete control of Ukraine, a goal Putin is fiercely determined to reach, speaks of the Ukrainian unwillingness to accept Russia's conditions as the reason the conflict was launched.
Thwarted Russian troops by the Ukrainian counteroffensive placing Russia on retreat in a conflict it launched with the assurance it would have no opposition longer than a few weeks, represent an inconvenient reality that Vladimir Putin prefers to skirt around. It is not Russia that is responsible for the deadly nature of the conflict, but Ukraine, intransigent and vicious in its response to Russia's totally reasonable effort to relieve it of a third of its vast territory.
An aerial view of Bakhmut on December 9. The city
has been all but emptied of its 70,000 residents, and its buildings and
houses are -- or are steadily being reduced to -- rubble.
The city of Bakhmut, "the hottest spot on the entire frontline", about 600 kilometres east of Kyiv, remains in Ukrainian hands despite Moscow's intention of capturing what remains of Donetsk still in Ukraine's possession, at a time when the entire Donbas has been declared a part of Russia, while Ukraine begs to differ. Denying Russia the momentum it feels it deserves, the annexed provinces of Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia remain fiercely contested.
With the capture of Bakhmut, Ukraine's supply lines would be severed, opening a route for Russian forces to press forward on cities that remain key Ukrainian strongholds in Donetsk province. Wagner Group mercenaries have been leading the charge in Bakhmut where prior to the invasion Donetsk separatists had controlled parts of Donetsk and Luhansk since 2014.
Mr. Putin gave out awards to the Moscow-appointed heads of the four regions of Ukraine Russia has illegally annexed, at a Kremlin ceremony in honour of Russia's military and security agencies. Russia remains in control of roughly 18 percent of internationally recognized areas of Ukraine inclusive of the 2014 parts seized of the Donbas and Crimea.
A
Ukrainian artilleryman carries a 122-mm shell for a 2S1 Gvozdika
self-propelled howitzer at a position along the front line near Bakhmut
on December 10
"I last spoke with the boat's captain on December 18 and he told me that at least 17 people on board had died due to a lack of food and water."
"They have only been able to drink water when it rains."
"Please tell me, I just want to know if my family is alive or dead. We all want to see our families, that is all we request from the world. Just help us."
Sham Shur Alom, Rohingya refugee in Malaysia
"Several reports indicate dozens of people have already died during this ordeal, while survivors are hungry and thirsty without access to food and water and suffering from sickness."
United Nations' refugee agency
"Father, please send a boat or I will jump into the ocean. I can't tolerate the pain and struggle anymore. There is no food or water to drink. People are drinking salt water. People are close to dying and mental breakdown. They're going to bite each other."
"Baba. I don't know why I am here. My teeth are dry from the lack of drinking water. Please do whatever is humanly possible for you."
Mosharrof Ullha, to his father Ata Ullha, Rohingya, Cox's Bazar Refugee Camp, Bangladesh
"We urge the Government of India to urgently coordinate and cooperate with other regional governments on the search and rescue operations of Rohingya refugees who are currently stranded in Indian waters with no medical support, food and water" Amnesty India
The world of the unwanted homeless is ever on the move, hoping to find surcease from their stateless status, their unwanted presence, their suffering and their timeless dilemma. They aspire to live, to have a future, they are not economic migrants but refugees. As it happens, refugees who are Muslim, whom the Myanmar military expunged violently from the country where they were living. Originally from Bangladesh, the Rohingya lived for generations in Myanmar. But Buddhism and Islam oppose one another.
Living for years since their expulsion from Myanmar on the border in Bangladesh in an immense squalid refugee camp teeming with refugees whom no one wants responsibility for, there are those who dream of escape, of finding a new life and opportunity elsewhere in the world where they will be accepted, where human aspirations to belong and to succeed in life can be found. And in following that dream they sacrifice themselves to chance and fortune, and sometimes lose.
A boat stranded for close to three weeks in the Indian Ocean is desperate for rescue. So far a dozen of the Rohingya refugees populating the wooden craft open to the air, directionless, have died. With no humanitarian intervention from nearby nations fears are that more people will die in the next few days. And the unthinkable, that the hopeful refugees on board will all perish from neglect by those who could mount a rescue. Indonesia, the nation with the largest Muslim population globally has seen fit not to respond.
Predictably, India, with the world's third largest minority population of Muslims has no wish to acquire more people of the faith its own majority Hindu population is hostile to. Late November saw the open wooden boat set off from Bangladesh for Malaysia, yet another majority Muslim population, with over 150 asylum seekers aboard. On December 4 its engine failed, leaving the vessel to drift at sea, its food and water supplies steadily diminishing.
Most of the people on the ship had set out to meet family in Malaysia, anxious to flee the sprawling Cox's Bazar refugee camp in Bangladesh with its hundreds of thousands of hopeless people languishing there for the past five years. The boat captain refused to allow those who have managed to make contact with the boat by satellite phone, to speak with their relatives. Open to the elements, conditions on the boat are unspeakably urgent.
The Indian navy and coast guard say no information about the adrift ship has reached them; wide-spread media coverage of the crisis aside. "We have no information about the issue", a spokesperson for the Indian navy responded, to a query. To the present, it is believed that approximately two thousand Rohingya refugees have opted to risk a sea voyage in 2022 as conditions in the refugee camps both in Myanmar and Bangladesh continue to deteriorate.
Although Sri Lanka's navy rescued a boat of 104 Rohingya a week ago, other nations have no wish to encourage the mass flow of people by intervening to offer support. Bangladesh, the Muslim country from which the Rohingya originated has not seen fit to integrate them back into its society as a Muslim-to-Muslim responsibility. Nor have Indonesia or Malaysia recognized their religious responsibility to embrace fellow Muslims.
"Many more will die soon if they are not rescued, due to dehydration."
"We have approached the Indian coast guard and the Thai and Indonesian governments."
"None of them responded."
Mohammed Rezuwan Khan, Rohingya refugee, Cox's Bazar
"It ]Mariupol] is horror. Wherever you look,whichever way you look. Everything is black, is destroyed."
"Our lives have been taken from us. Our child was taken from us."
"It's so ridiculous and stupid. How do you restore a dead city where people were killed at every turn?"
Lydya Erashova, Mariupol, Ukraine
"There is no discussion, people aren't prepared."
"People still live in the basements. Where they can go is unclear."
Mariupol activist
"They spend an inordinate amount of time focusing on things like erasing demonstrations of Ukrainian identity and very little time tending to the needs of the Mariupol people."
"It's really a very brutal, inhuman colonial experiment unfolding before our eyes."
Michael Carpenter, U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
A man pulls a cart toward a destroyed suburb of Mariupol on October 29.
Back in November Russian President Vladimir Putin praised the heroism of those he spoke of as Mariupol's 'defenders' -- aka the Russian military that had laid siege to the city since February 24 -- as he awarded the ruined city the title of "City of Military Glory". The actual defenders of the Ukrainian city, now in Russian hands were needless to say, Ukrainians themselves determined not to allow Russia to take ownership of Mariupol.
But back in 2014 when Vladimir Putin annexed the Crimean Peninsula as part of Russia, he planned to advance to Donetsk's Mariupol on the Azov Sea as a land bridge between Russia and Ukraine. The Ukrainian military resisted Moscow's early siege of the city but months later the siege concluded with orders from Kyiv for the city defenders -- laid up, along with city dwellers at the Azovstal steel mill basement corridors -- to retreat and the ruined city fell to the invaders.
Moscow has ordered that Mariupol be scrubbed of all identification of its historic role as an industrial city of Ukraine's Donbas region. Plans for the destroyed iron works is to turn the site into an industrial park. The famed Mariupol theatre which had become the major bomb shelter of the city of close to a half-million residents which was destroyd when airstrikes hit it and hundreds died, is to be restored. OnlyRussian construction workers are permitted within its precincts.
Construction workers in a war-damaged apartment building.
According to Petro Andryushchenko, aide to Mariupole's exiled mayor, the reason that Ukrainian labour is excluded, not permitted the enter the ruins, is to ensure that only Russians are exposed to the sight of rotting corpses hauled away with the construction debris. For Moscow has undertaken a massive reconstruction of the city, to expunge its historic Ukrainian heritage status and completely Russify it.
Mariupol is now a garrison city with Russian soldiers, builders, administrators replacing the tens of thousands of Ukrainians who died there, or fled the Russian occupation. Ukrainian street names are converted to Soviet names. The Avenue of Peace to be renamed Lenin Avenue. The signage announcing the name of the city has been Russified, repainted with red, white and blue of the Russian flag. All vestiges of Ukrainian heritage obliterated.
The schools that remain open now teach a Russian curriculum, telephone and television networks are Russian, Ukrainian currency fading, and the city time zone now reflects Moscow's. Russia plans to demolish 50,000 homes in the city. The stench of death lingers over the city, fading out with winter's onset. One resident, Lydya Erashova saw her five-year-old son Artem and her seven-year-old niece Angelina die when a Russian shell hit their home.
A photo taken on October 19 shows Russian military trucks in front of a heavily damaged building in the center of Mariupol.
Her family buried the children in makeshift graves in a backyard and fled the city of death, returning in July to rebury the children. They discovered their bodies had been dug up and brought to a warehouse. Neither Lydya Erashova nor her sister-in-law were able to force themselves into the warehouse to retrieve the bodies of their children. The children's fathers chose tiny coffins to be placed side-by-side in a single grave.
During the months'-long siege the city was relentlessly targeted with airstrikes and artillery, food and water cut off along with communications. For 86 days of hardship and agony the city held itself together. In the eventual May surrender Mariupol made its way into history as a symbol of Ukrainian resistance. Over 500 buildings have now been identified as awaiting demolition, each holding 180 apartments. In many of them corpses still decompose.
A child's playground in the courtyard of a ruined apartment block on October 29.
Mariupol was once home to around 431,000 people. Less than a quarter of that number are estimated to remain in the city today
The fate of one of those ruined buildings took place in mid-March when Russian tanks rolled in. One tank raised its gun at a building on Mytropolytska Streeet and fired shattering walls and windows, obliterating apartments, and killing residents, though most by then were huddled in the building basement. Russian soldiers set to work dismantling Mariupol's memorial to the Holodomor, the Soviet famine that killed millions of Ukrainians.
Two murals commemorating victims of the 2014 attack on Ukraine were painted over. Russia has formulated a plan for a new, Russian city, with a new population. The Russian military forces will be replaced by Russian citizens. Ukrainians who are content to live under Russian rule will be permitted to live there as well. The thousands of Mariupol's residents who were were sent to Russia may return, while those who fled to other areas of Ukraine may not.
The heavily damaged Azovstal steel mill photographed on October 29.
The historic Azovstal metalworks was the final holdout for members of
Azov, a controversial Ukrainian regiment that previously used neo-Nazi
imagery on its uniforms.
"We are not in an easy situation. The enemy is increasing its army."
"Our people are braver and need more powerful weapons. We will pass it on [Ukrainian flag ] and pass it on from the boys [Ukrainian servicemen at the front] to the Congress, to the president of the United States."
"We are grateful for their support, but it is not enough."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Washington visit
"We have no restrictions on funding. The country and the government are giving the army everything it is asking for."
"We're not going to militarize our country or our economy. We simply don't need it."
"[Russia's nuclear arsenal remains the main guarantee for our security and territorial integrity".
Russian President Vladimir Putin
The launch of Russia’s new ‘Sarmat’ or ‘Satan II’ intercontinental
ballistic missile from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Arkhangelsk on 20
April 2022
While Russia is destroying its neighbour's territorial integrity, its president remains focused on his own 'territorial integrity'. Which includes of course annexed territories Putin has torn from its rightful owner. Both countries have exhausted their supplies of munitions. Hundreds of missiles are shot off by both sides daily; from the Russian military to strike at Ukraine's civilian infrastructure; from the Ukrainian counteroffensive to rout the Russians and to strike down their missiles before they hit their targets.
Western intelligence estimates that 100,000 servicemen on both sides have died in this contest of wills and war machinery. On average 500 members of each side's military are killed daily. Numbers hard to credit considering the wholesale bloodbath they represent. Which does not include the tens of thousands of civilians injured and killed by continual Russian attacks and deliberate murder.
Ukraine's dire need for additional munitions to allow it to continue its hugely successful counteroffensive which has succeeded in good measure in pushing back Russian troops, securing some of the territory that Russia had declared incorporated into the Russian Federation. The rate at which munitions are being used is unsustainable. The manufacture of replacement weapons in the West is unable to keep pace with the dwindling arsenals.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin, left, and Chief of the General Staff Gen. Valery
Gerasimov in Moscow, Russia, on Dec. 21, 2022. (Mikhail Kuravlev,
Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)
Vladimir Putin has declared yet again his intention to continue pursuing his goal; destroying Ukraine and enriching Russia in the process. He is now claiming that he has the most profound love for Ukraine, brotherly love that moans in pain at Ukraine's losses. But it is not his fault that Russia's 'special military operation' has destroyed Ukraine's power grids leaving its people to freeze in the dark without water and sufficient medical supplies.
The nefariously malicious actions of the United States whose purpose it is to destroy Russia is to blame, along with its manipulations through NATO, intruding on Russia's near abroad despite Moscow's warning that it was intolerable, that its incursions toward the former Soviet satellites' wish to join NATO impairs Russia's security. Leaving the Kremlin no option but to impose its own response on Ukraine as a lesson to the Baltic nations that their future is with Russia, not NATO.
Russia's defence minister Sergei Shoigu, has requested that his army's strength be increased from a million to one-and-a-half million troops. When it was announced months ago that new recruits were needed, a rushed stampede of Russian men sought to salvage their futures by fleeing abroad. New recruits were brought to the front insufficiently trained and ill equipped. Where will another half-million fighting men be drawn from?
Mercenaries and reluctant holdbacks, raising the age of acceptable qualifications to fight the noble fight until the goal has been achieved. The earlier mobilization saw drafted men reporting reluctantly at the front lines lacking adequate kit, but this is not to happen again; corruption and inefficiency and poor management are to become the sins of the past. In praising the performance of the Russian army, no mention was made of Russian losses in Ukraine on the battlefield.
Next on the agenda for the Russian Army, receipt of state-of-the-art Sarmat (Satan II) intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of carrying ten nuclear warheads and decoys.
"The
student voice was all that mattered, and basically they silenced the
teachers' voices. We were always questioned, we were always undermined,
we were always told [the bad behaviour] must be our bias, or our
classroom management, or it must be because we're not listening to the
students."
"We were telling the kids, 'Go into the class, this is a secure school. And [they said] 'No, we don't have to."
"They had so much control, the kids then wouldn't listen to the vice-principal and principal, that's how bad it was."
"Some
of our neediest kids who we were working with and we were keeping them
in the class. But then they started being oppositional with us and
started hanging out in the hall, too."
"Our students thrive on rules and routines, structure and clear guidelines. And they had none of that."
"The
board's stated mission is 'creating a culture of innovation, sharing
and social responsibility/. Our school did not uphold any of those
pillars. It's outrageous that there was so much chaos, that the school
was totally unsafe and that the kids were not learning."
Michael Sterrberg, Grade 5 and 6 teacher, Pinecrest Public School, Ottawa
"[There]
appears to be a poisoned working and learning environment at Pinecrest.
[We are examining] interactions and conduct throughout Pinecrest
amongst and between staff, students and families."
"[Staff
were invited to speak confidentially to investigators and directed to]
refrain from yelling or raising voices at students and each other [and
to] continue to stop, interrupt and appropriately address the use of
slurs and hate-related incidents."
"[There will be] communication with the school community [when the investigation is completed]."
"As that investigation is active, it is not appropriate to comment on specific details."
Ottawa-Carleton District School Board, Office of the Human Rights and Equity Advisor
"[Investigation-solicited comments were] red flags that something is seriously wrong and it's not being dealt with."
"[Some
of the older students] would just wander the school all day. We're
talking about defiant: 'I'm not going to class, I'm going to sit here on
my phone, I'm going to do whatever I want, and I don't have to listen
to any adult in this building'."
"[We
stopped imposing much discipline for fear of] being accused by
administrators of targeting [a child and being sent home to be
investigated]. It's self-preservation."
Pinecrest teacher, unauthorized to speak
Disruptions
in elementary school classes of a type and duration never before
experienced in Canada. A country which historically built its population
on a tradition of immigration. Where immigrants stemmed mostly from
Europe and those coming into the country made an effort to understand
the prevailing culture, the nation's laws and its values, to commit
themselves to following them to successfully integrate into the
prevailing social system.
On
average, Canada's intake of immigrants and refugees are well over
350,000 a year. People coming into the country whose heritage,
languages, ethnicities, religions and cultural values do not always mesh
with that of native Canadians or Canadians from immigrant backgrounds
who have adjusted to Canadian society. And they make no effort to
integrate. Along with the fact that many bring cultural baggage inimical
to Canadian values of equality and human rights with them. Inclusive of
tribal and religious animosities.
This
elementary school is a living laboratory of what can gp wrong in a
growing atmosphere of cosmopolitan liberal progressivism that has been
labelled 'woke'. This 'relaxed' attitude of non-judgemental conditioning
views the still, but barely majority 'white' population as guilty of
privileged and colonialist attitudes, while people of colour, Blacks and
Indigenous and LGBTQ-2 communities now have rights denied to the
white-privileged who must expiate the sins of their ancestors committed
against the culturally and societally 'underprivileged'.
Teacher
Michael Sternberg sent an email to all staff at the school he was
teaching in; Pinecrest Public School; the subject line read: "Students reporting they don't feel safe!" In the email he explained that a number of students informed him they felt unsafe at the school. "I am not making this up! Please help! Someone!", he wrote. Other teaching staff, taking care to withhold their names, validated the statements made by Mr. Sternberg.
Some
older students at the school had taken to roaming the halls at class
time, bullying other students, intimidating staff and ignoring requests
to follow basic rules such as not using cellphones. At the same time,
teachers found themselves thwarted in efforts to deal with the situation
under an administration that insisted on giving students a voice. What
was born out of that sentiment, carried too far, was disruptive,
disrespectful and dangerous behaviour.
Physical
violence broke out among students. There was a "swarming" attack.
Several students brought knives to school with them, and some made
racial and antisemitic slurs against both other students and teaching
staff. A number of teachers at the school were taken out of their
classrooms and ordered to remain at home while they were being
'investigated'. A succession of replacement teachers were brought in to
take their place. Which led to several staff teachers suddenly leaving,
others replacing them.
Students
were increasingly unruly, speaking loudly in class, arguing with
teachers, throwing around food and paper, and playing with balls in
their classrooms. When journalists heard of the problems, they sought
answers from the school board which refused to comment on any of the
issues claiming it must protect the privacy of staff and students, along
with the confidentiality of an internal investigation into the school's
problems.
The
neighbourhood surrounding Pinecrest School is home to many new
immigrants. Students are bused in from two community housing
developments. 40 languages are spoken at the homes of these students,
many of whom are 'racialized'. "They are beautiful kids and they want to learn",
said Mr. Sternberg. Among a handful of students, teachers try to deal
with behaviour problems while the majority are anxious to be taught. Yet
th edisruptive students were essentially permitted to control the
school teaching environment.
Students
in grades 5 to 8 are where the problematical behaviour is erupting. The
school principal asked teaching staff to submit comments to a digital
message board: "Jamboard". Resulting posts made mention of students
congregating in hallways using cellphones, bullying, intimidation,
attacks and weapons were also issues raised by commenting teachers:
"I
am worried about my safety and the safety of students I teach when a
student brings in a weapon and there is no consequence [this is a repeat
offender]";
"Students are verbally abusive to staff and
students daily. These students do whatever they want with no
repercussion to their actions. How is this a safe learning and working
environment?";
"Students are being physically assaulted and
sexually harassed in the bathroom. Students report that they don't feel
safe going to the bathroom at school.";
Student safety is at
risk, because students are gathering in the bathrooms, recording fights
and posting videos of other children online without permission from
those children's parents.";
"Students in my class are getting into physical fights and aren't having consequences. How is anyone supposed to feel safe?"
According
to one teacher, what was occurring was patently unfair to the majority
of the students who wanted to be in school and felt that the teaching
staff were concerned about their welfare. The children, like their
teachers, were left feeling frustrated, watching this kind of commotion
to their school days happen continually, leaving them feeling unhappy
and insecure.
Several teachers said they had never experienced situations like this at any other school.
"You could send them to the office, nothing was done. Last year, the
kids were running the school. When kids don't have a structure and
guidelines to follow that's how they're going to behave. I'm not blaming
the kids."
And
then the teachers stopped trying to impose punishment for misbehaviour,
fearing they would be accused and 'investigated' and sent home to stew.
The school board issued a statement that Pinecrest has "made changes both big and small". Staff now stand in hallways to "greet students warmly",
and teachers engage in connection-building activities, celebrating the
diversity of students' backgrounds listening to name histories and
pronunciations.
Community
'partners' are now being brought in to the school to speak with
students; representatives from the Somali Centre and a Black male mentor
group, for example. "We want kids to see excellence in the community they can relate to",
said the school principal. After a student brought a knife to school
Pinecrest was locked down while police investigated. Some teachers
reacting to a directive to act out a "Third Path" by not asserting power
and authority in the classroom, responded it was unclear to them how
the principles translated to life in the classroom.
Misbehaviour,
they pointed out, escalated as students understood there would be no
consequences for acting out. Some of the students picked up the
educational terminology in The Third Path: "They would actually use the term, 'Are you policing us'?", pointed out Mr. Sternberg. One teacher, referring to the sudden disappearance from class of a teacher sent home remarked: "How
do we squash the shock and concern for our colleague, put on a brave
smile and do our best with our students coming to us in a few minutes?
How do we respond when the students ask where their teacher has gone?"
As
for teacher Sternberg, the superintendent responsible for the school,
after reading his original emailed message, concluded he had contributed
to a poisoned work environment. Sternberg was told to leave and not
inform anyone why it was that he was leaving. He was on "home
assignment", he was told, but was given no work to do except complete
his report cards. 23 years in the classroom as a teacher, his experience
at this school led him to retire from teaching.
"We're
dealing with human beings who come to school with many experiences, and
trauma, that impact how they're going to be showing themselves at
school."
"Kids
are kids. And I think the way we speak to them, and we respond to them,
is very important to de-escalate students and how they're responding
back to us. What we do, too, if kids don't feel heard, or seen with
their actions, and if they feel triggered, they'll show them with their
actions and their words."
"They're
telling us something then they're walking out of the room [to roam the
school hallways]. Are they engaged? Are they looking for something? Is
the work too hard? Is the work too easy? Did they have breakfast this
morning? Was there a huge fight in their home this morning or last
night? Did their sibling run away?"
"Or
were there gunshots in the night before? I hear kids talk about, 'Did
you hear the gunshots?' when they're getting on the bus, right? They
live in communities where kids carry a lot with them when they come to
school. And they show us that with their actions."
"We
are in service of children. We are not in this work to police children
or to approach situations from a place of distrust and assumptions."
"If students feel that we do not trust them, they will show us that through escalated dysregulated behaviours."
Naya Markanastasakis, principal, Pinecrest School, Ottawa, Canada's Capital City
"This operation, they added staff from the Marine Corps and Air and Coastal Defense Command, about 30 people. This is why I think there were not enough life=jackets."
"We have not found any dead yet. The 31 sailors remain missing persons. We have not found anyone dead from where the incident occurred and from the search area."
Navy Commander Adm. Choengchai Chomehoengpset
"[A big wave] took me, threw me under the ship. The ship went vertical and pulled me down."
"I struggled to get up and held on to someone who had a life-jacket."
Ship sinking survivor
"The waves are still high and we cannot search for them from the horizontal line."
"We have to fly the helicopters and search for them from a bird's-eye view instead."
"Our top priority now is to rescue all the sailors. We will plan to have the ship salvaged later."
Adm. Pokkrong Monthatphalin, navy spokesman
Courtesy Royal Thai Navy
A Thai warship sank on Sunday and by Monday night 75 sailors from the HTMS Sukhothai corvette were rescued, while 31 were missing in the high waves that caused the accident in the Gulf of Thailand. The turbulence had decreased since the sinking on Sunday night, but waves remained high enough to endanger small boats.
The warship had been deployed on patrol some 32 kilometres from the Bangsaphan district pier in Pachuap Khiri Khan province where it had been on a regular patrol for the purpose of lending assistance to any fishing vessels in distress. And that's when it turned out that the warship itself needed help and none, given the weather, was immediately forthcoming.
The country's Meteorological Department had issued a weather advisory for the area a few hours before the accident occurred. The advisory was meant to warn that waves in the Gulf of Thailand were expected to be 2 to 4 metres in height, accompanied by thunderstorms. All ships "proceed with caution" warned the advisory; small craft warned not to venture to sea until Tuesday.
The Sukkhothai had been built in a Tacoma, Washington shipyard and in 1987 was commissioned. It had a maximum displacement of 959 tons, with a length of 788 metres, roughly midsized for a corvette as an armed vessel typically in use to patrol close off-shore waters.
On Sunday evening strong winds blew seawater onto the HTMS Sukhothai, knocking out its electrical system and making control of the ship difficult. Three frigates and two helicopters were dispatched by the navy, equipped with mobile pumping machines to try to assist the disabled ship, removing the seawater, but due to the strong winds the strategy could not be carried through.
With the loss of power, more seawater flowed into the vessel -- the cause of it listing and finally sinking. Sailors who were rescued spoke to the media, interviewed by Thai TV stations, from a makeshift rescue centre on shore. One of the sailors explained that he had to float in the sea for three hours before being rescued. The ship, he said, had been buffeted by waves three metres high, complicating rescue efforts.
Normally, the ship carried 87 crew and officers. Another survivor said that as the vessel was listing, the waves swept people away. Eleven of the rescued sailors were taken to hospital for treatment. The search was being conducted in a 15-square kilometre area surrounding the sinking site. Thailand's far southern area has been experiencing storms and flooding recently, while northern and central Thailand are in the throes of their coldest temperatures of the year.
Some survivors of the warship's sinking were found after hours at sea Thai Navy, Twitter
Russian Drone Manufacturing Chain ... Toronto, Hong Kong Connection
"Due to the high demand for Orlans, we do not have the resources to do something else now. The demand for it is much bigger than we can produce."
"Sanctions were imposed on us by one of the most powerful countries in the world."
"We should be proud of this."
Alexey Terentyev, major shareholder, top scientist, Special Technology Centre
"[We are] very concerned [to hear of the shipments and would investigate. We do not have customers in Russia nor any products or services intended for Russia'."
"We will take all appropriate action to address any identified diversion of products from lawful end use."
Gumstix circuit board manufacturer, California
FT montage: Dreamstime
Evasion and subterfuge are big when it comes to working around sanctions when there's money to be made. Commerce drives the world. National economies depend on it. Multinational corporations will do anything to fatten their bottom line. International corporate interests take little notice of whether the client they're selling to or investing in has irked other nations sufficiently to warrant blanket sanctions. Sanctions are bad for business, and best skirted if possible. And, it seems, regardless of the urgency of situations that merit sanctions to apply pressure on a rogue nation, there are always ways to skirt sanctions.
Business as usual is the key. And to that end, covert actions are polished up and life goes on. Just such a sanctions-evading supply chain threading through a Hong Kong marketplace operated by an expatriate Russian living in Toronto has been established in the best practise of underhanded business enterprises. Another connection runs through a contact in suburban Florida. The end game is the production of a Russian drone critical to Moscow's war effort in Ukraine.
Hundreds of those drones hover ominously over the battlefields in Ukraine. They're called "Sea Eagle" Orlan 10 UAVs, low-tech, inexpensive, killer drones involved in any of the 20,000 artillery shells fired daily by Russia on Ukrainian positions. Throughout 2022, up to 100 soldiers every day have been killed. according to Ukrainian commanders. A Russian media outlet, iStories, along with Reuters collaborated on an investigation.
A defence think tank in London -- Royal United Services Institute -- has also involved itself, and together a logistical trail spanning the globe, ending at the Orlan production line has been uncovered. The Special Technology Centre located in St.Petersburg, Russia. Russian customs filings and bank records revealed to the investigation a unique supply route for American technology, traced to a Russian manufacturer.
At one time the Special Technology Centre produced a variety of surveillance items for the Russian government; its focus currently is on drones for the military. It first came under notice during the Obama administration when it was revealed it worked with Russian military intelligence in an effort to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
2017 sanctions barred U.S. citizens or residents or U.S. firms from supplying technology that could end up with the Special Technology Centre. Those sanctions were further tightened in March following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. All sales of high-technology items were blocked for sale to Russia, including microchips and communications and navigation equipment. Despite which production of the Orlan drone continues. The company is in the process of experiencing a "high demand" for its drones.
A Hong Kong-based exporter, Asia Pacific Links Ltd., is among the most important suppliers to the drone production program. According to Russian customs and financial records the Hong Kong exporter provided millions of dollars in parts indirectly. Many parts are in fact microchips produced by American manufacturers. An importer located in St.Petersburg with close ties to the Special Technology Centre is the recipient of Asia Pacific's Russian exports.
A semiconductor lithography machine produced by Mapper, of which TSMC
was a customer. Along with rivals, the Taiwanese chipmaker has halted
business with Russia Mapper Lithography/Reuters
Expatriate Russian Anton Trofimov is Asia Pacific's owner. He graduated from a Chinese university and has business interests in China, along with a company in Toronto. Public records reveal that Trofinov resides in a modes East York neighborhood of Toronto, Canada. $1.8 million worth of chips made by Analog Devices were among parts sent by Asia Pacific to iLogic in 2022 made by Texas Instruments. Model aircraft engines made by a Japanese company, Saito Seisakusho, used in the Orlan 10 were included in the supplies. The Japanese company was unaware of the shipments.
And according to Texas Instruments no direct shipments or approval of shipments into Russia had taken place, the company was in complete compliance with all U/S. sanctions and export controls that would benefit Russia in its 'special military operation'. The Special Technology Centre's most important client is Russia's Ministry of Defence, which paid it close to 6 billion rubles between February and August of 2022.
51-year-old Igor Kazhdan, a U.S.Russian citizen, owns 1K Tech, which sold some $2.2 million of electronics to Russia between 2018 and 2021, over 98 percent of which were sold to iLogic. 1K Tech sold iLogic about a thousand U.S.-made circuit boards at a time that federal law banned whether directly or through another company any such technology to the Special Technology Centre. Valued at about $274,000, the boards were produced by California manufacturer Gumstix.
All together a sordid tale of circumvention and evasion with a profit motive more urgent than being in compliance with a sanctions protocol imposed on Russia for its violent conflict in Ukraine, destroying the country's civil infrastructure, killing tens of thousands of Ukrainian citizens as the Kremlin orders the unrestrained bombing of hospitals, schools, theatres, shopping centres, multiple apartment blocks and strategic energy lines, depriving the civilian population of the embattled country of winter heating and potable water.
"China remains, as it has these 3,000 years, one of the world's most important nationalities, but it retains the unseemly disadvantages of a totalitarian power."
"No one can believe a word the Chinese government says on any subject or a number that it publishes."
"Hundreds of millions of Chinese essentially still live as they did a thousand years ago, the whole country is debt-ridden, prominent citizens not infrequently just disappear, and the government is thoroughly corrupt by Western standards."
"In the same measure that China should not be underestimated, nor should it be blindly cited as giving any indication of the way forward in policy terms for other states."
Conrad Black, National Post
Chinese
President Xi Jinping, meets with representatives of the aircraft carrier
unit and the manufacturer at a naval port in Sanya, south China's
Hainan province Li Gang/Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images
China, at one time in its past elevated to positions of power and influence in government and its civil service, individuals with outstanding intellectual achievements whose grasp of the elements of their special interests were recognized for their excellence and performative quality. It was merit and merit alone that qualified people for the positions they occupied. The wisdom of Chinese sages came from a place of experience and creative thought.
It was a time before the ideological messages of totalitarian communism led its proponents to shed their pride in their heritage and the achievements of merit and intelligent reasoning. The creative arts and philosophical advances made by a once-great society were all sacrificed to the cutting block of shunning the old and bringing in the new. And with the 'Cultural Revolution' a great broom of mass sacrifice of humanity swept the stage clean for mass indoctrination.
The world now sees the results; a vast population living under a humanity- and human-rights-hostile regime of total command. Mind control, population control, control of adversarial proponents of human rights and liberties. The Chinese Communist Party heralds itself as having manipulated events to combat and conquer poverty and ignorance, raising its countless millions of indigent poor to a middle-class position.
Chinese aircraft carrier, Liaoning, arrives in Hong Kong waters ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Beijing lauds itself for becoming, through clever exploitation of the free world's willingness to trust that its openness to the vast world of communism that accommodated enterprise and capitalism under a veneer of open cooperation in trade and production, a world colossus of manufacturing and trade. Powerful enough that its cheap and abundant labour was able to shutter factories all over the world whose production, labour and transport costs resulted in consumer goods unmatched in scale and prominence.
Beijing's growing self-confidence in league with its contempt for open, democratic societies led to an inflation of its superiority complex to feed its hunger for greater global respect, a larger power base and a voracious territorial ambition. Its grasp for power and influence continues to surge. Its self-entitlement to great power status unabated, its long arms of espionage, military and commercial, continue unabated.
The world now recognizes a China that several decades of accommodation has transformed immeasurably. A totalitarian government that exploits other nations' advances in science and technology, a government that victimizes its people into submission, a government that interferes in the internal affairs of other nations creating instability and hostility wherever it intrudes.
In this April
12, 2018, file photo released by Xinhua News Agency, Chinese President
Xi Jinping, left, speaks after he reviewed the Chinese People's
Liberation Army (PLA) Navy fleet in the South China Sea. From Asia to
Africa, London to Berlin, Chinese envoys have set off diplomatic
firestorms with a combative defense whenever their country is accused of
not acting quickly enough to stem the spread of the coronavirus
pandemic. Li Gang/Xinhua/AP