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Anna from Ukraine is an amazing vlogger from Ukraine with loads of nice videos in her channel in YouTube

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Borrell (twitter.com)
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Borrell: ▪️EU plans to train 40,000 Ukrainian soldiers in the coming months ▪️We are ready to provide Ukraine with long-term support in order to resist the destabilization arranged by Russia

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"Moldova is no longer going to buy gas from Gazprom", - the country's Energy Minister

Now the country will buy fuel in Europe. Instead, the Kremlin said that Gazprom's contract with Moldova is still valid.

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VISUAL INVESTIGATIONS

Russia May Be Planning to Test a Nuclear-Powered Missile Visual evidence from a remote base in the Arctic shows launch preparations mirroring those that preceded earlier tests.

Oct. 2, 2023, 5:01 a.m. ET Satellite imagery and aviation data suggest that Russia may be preparing to test an experimental nuclear-powered cruise missile — or may have recently tested one — with a theoretical range of thousands of miles.

Movements of aircraft and vehicles at and near a base in Russia’s remote Arctic region are consistent with preparations that were made for tests of the missile, known as the Burevestnik or SSC-X-9 Skyfall, in 2017 and 2018, according to a New York Times analysis.

U.S. surveillance planes have also been tracked in the area over the last two weeks, and aviation alerts have warned pilots to avoid nearby airspace.

Russia previously conducted 13 known tests between 2017 and 2019, all of which were unsuccessful, according to a report from the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a nonprofit group focused on arms control. And mishaps can be deadly. A missile launched in 2019 crashed and eventually exploded during a recovery attempt, killing seven people, according to U.S. officials.

“It is exotic — it is dangerous in its testing and development phase,” Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, said. Whether the Burevestnik has been tested again since 2019 isn’t clear, but even with a successful launch, the missile would still be years away from “operational deployment,” Mr. Kimball added.

In previous tests, the missile failed to fly a distance anywhere close to the designed range, estimated to be around 14,000 miles. U.S. officials assessed that during its most successful test flight, lasting just more than two minutes, the missile flew 22 miles before crashing into the sea. In another test, the missile’s nuclear reactor failed to activate, causing it to go down only a few miles from the launch site. For a test to succeed, the missile’s nuclear reactor would need to initiate in flight, so that the missile can cover much more ground.

More on Russia Viktor Bout’s New Life: As an arms trafficker, he became one of the world’s most wanted men. But now, months after returning to Russia in a prisoner exchange, the “Merchant of Death” is reinventing himself — as a local politician. Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Death: The death of the mercenary leader has spurred a shadowy fight for control of his sprawling interests among major players in Russia’s power structure. A Pessimistic View: Ksenia Sobchak, a well-known Russian media personality and liberal politician, has embraced the fatalistic stance that resistance to the Kremlin is futile. Some liberals call her a stooge, while hawks see her as disloyal. Putin’s Forever War: The conflict in Ukraine is hardly felt in Moscow. How long the toll can be obscured could determine the fate of the Russian leader and his country. Follow our coverage of the war here. Visual Investigations Our investigative journalists use evidence that's hidden in plain sight to present a definitive account of the news. Get an email as soon as our next Visual Investigation is published. Get it sent to your inbox. According to the Nuclear Threat Initiative report, the missile is a “second-strike, strategic-range weapon,” intended to be launched after a wave of nuclear strikes have devastated targets in Russia. The missile could carry a conventional warhead but, in practice, would likely carry a nuclear payload, albeit a smaller one than most other nuclear-capable weapons. If used in wartime, the missile could have the potential to destroy large urban areas and military targets, experts say.

While Russia has shared little about the Burevestnik’s specific design, President Vladimir V. Putin has said it is nuclear-powered. The missile is thought to be launched by a solid-fuel rocket motor before a small nuclear reactor activates in flight, theoretically allowing the missile to stay aloft indefinitely.

16 Dishes to Make for Someone Going Through a Hard Time The Burevestnik is one of six strategic weapons, along with others such as the Kinzhal ballistic missile and the Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle, that Mr. Putin introduced in a 2018 speech. He asserted that the weapons could overpower and outmaneuver existing U.S. defenses. Addressing the West, he said, “You have failed to contain Russia.”

Visual evidence of testing preparations includes before-and-after satellite images.

Imagery taken on the morning of Sept. 20 shows numerous vehicles present on a launchpad at the base, including a truck with a trailer that appears to correspond to the dimensions of the missile. A weather shelter that typically covers the specific launch site had been moved about 50 feet. By the afternoon, the trailer was gone and the shelter was moved back to its original position.

Additional imagery captured on Sept. 28 shows the launchpad active again, with a similar trailer present and the shelter again drawn back.

On Aug. 31, the Russian authorities issued an aviation notice for a “temporary danger area,” advising pilots to avoid part of the Barents Sea off the coast and 12 miles from the launch site, known as Pankovo. The notice has since been extended several times and, as of Sunday, was scheduled to be in force through Oct. 6. Russia issued a similar notice before a Burevestnik test in 2019.

Additionally, two Russian aircraft specifically used for collecting data from missile launches were parked about 100 miles south of the launch site in early August, at the Rogachevo air base, according to analysis of satellite images by Bellona, a Norwegian environmental organization. The aircraft are owned by Rosatom, the Russian atomic energy company. They remained at that base at least through Sept. 26, according to additional satellite imagery. During Burevestnik tests in 2018, aircraft of the same type were also in the vicinity.

A U.S. Air Force reconnaissance aircraft, an RC-135W Rivet Joint, also flew at least two missions off the coast of the Arctic island where the launch site is, on Sept. 19 and Sept. 26, according to the tracking platform Flightradar24. The two missions represented a slight uptick from usual known activity.

The highly secretive nature of the Burevestnik missile initiative and the remote launch location make it difficult to determine if a test is forthcoming or if the weapon may have already been recently retested — or perhaps both. While launch tests of the Burevestnik have been conducted at the Arctic base in the past, Russia could also test just the missile’s rocket motor or a component of the missile itself.

The White House declined to comment on The Times’s findings.

Experts said the missile is dangerous not only in its ability to carry a powerful nuclear warhead but in its potential to release harmful radioactive emissions if the missile were to explode or malfunction during a test.

If put into use, the Burevestnik would be considered part of Russia’s nuclear arsenal, making it subject to a nuclear arms reduction treaty that Moscow signed in 2011. That agreement limits the total number of warheads and delivery vehicles the country can deploy.

But with the treaty, known as New START, set to expire in February 2026, the missile could contribute to “the leading edge of an uncontrolled arms race” if no new agreement were to replace the expiring treaty, Mr. Kimball said.

Ultimately, he said, a test of the missile would be a “sign that Russia is moving in the wrong direction.”

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Hopefully winter uniforms. Also a pretty good sign Russia is at the point of partisan movements claiming credits for attacks against military targets.

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Ukraine fulfilled Hungary's demand (glavcom-ua.translate.goog)
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NACP removed the Hungarian OTR Bank from the list of international sponsors of the war

The National Agency for the Prevention of Corruption removed the Hungarian OTR Bank from the list of international sponsors of the war. NAZK reports this on Twitter.

The department's statement says that during the discussions that took place over the past few days with the participation of the European External Action Service, the bank made a number of commitments regarding its future plans on the Russian market.

According to NAZK, having fulfilled its part of the agreements, the department excluded the bank from the list of international sponsors of the war.

"NAZK expects that OTP Bank will comply with the reached agreement without delay," the message reads.

Hungary, on the other hand, stated that Ukraine's temporary exclusion of the Hungarian OTP Bank from the list of "international war sponsors" in an attempt to unblock EU military aid does not significantly change the situation.

We will remind you that Hungary is currently the biggest obstacle in the European Union's attempt to help Ukraine.

On May 4, the National Agency for the Prevention of Corruption (NACP) added the Hungarian OTP Bank to the list of international sponsors of the war. This decision was made due to the position of the bank's management to continue operations in Russia and the actual recognition of the so-called Donetsk and Luhansk "people's republics". After that, Hungary began to block tranches for Ukraine in exchange for the exclusion of OTP Bank from the list of war sponsors.

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Russia lacks sufficient air defence systems so is redeploying them from Far East – Ukraine's Defence Intelligence TETYANA OLIYNYK — MONDAY, 2 OCTOBER 2023

Ukraine’s Defence Intelligence has said that events in Russia indicate that it lacks sufficient air defence systems of its own and is transferring them from [Russia’s] Far East.

Source: Andrii Yusov, representative of Defence Intelligence of Ukraine, on the 24/7 national joint newscast

Quote: "Events in Moscow itself, or in Bryansk or Kursk oblasts, show that the enemy does not have enough air defence systems to protect its territory. And they are being forced to redeploy air defence systems from other places, in particular from the Far East.

This is a reason for the military-political command and, above all, for Russian society itself to think about what is more important to them: to place air defence systems in the temporarily occupied territories or to cover their own."

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EU proposes €5bn military aid package for Ukraine after ‘historic’ meeting Josep Borrell condemns ‘inhumane’ Russia as bloc offers training for soldiers and fighter jet pilots

Ukraine is set to receive billions of euros more in military aid, as well as training for fighter pilots, the EU’s top diplomat has said, after a “historic” meeting of EU foreign ministers in Kyiv.

Josep Borrell, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs, said on Monday the 27-nation bloc remained committed to helping Ukraine defeat a “brutal and inhumane” Russia.

“I don’t see any member state faltering,” he said, reinforcing a declaration by the Nato secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, on Friday that he was confident Slovakia and Poland would continue to support the fight against Russia despite political wavering in both countries.

Borrell said the EU had proposed a “bilateral envelope” worth €5bn (£4.3bn) for Ukraine’s armed forces. EU countries would train 40,000 soldiers, provide “special training” for fighter pilots and deepen ties between EU and Ukrainian defence companies.

His comments came after EU foreign ministers held talks with Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Apart from meetings at the United Nations, it was the first time they had gathered outside EU territory and the first informal summit to take place in a war zone, Borrell said.

The meeting “sent a strong message of solidarity and support”, he added, more than 18 months after Russia’s full-scale invasion. Ukraine was fighting for survival in the face of an “unjust and illegitimate” attack, he said.

Borrell called Vladimir Putin’s assault an “existential threat” for Europeans. He said Russia had attacked Odesa minutes after he left the Black Sea port city on Saturday. Addressing Moscow directly, he said: “We will not be intimidated by your missiles and drones.”

The pledge of further EU military assistance will cheer Ukraine’s government after a bumpy few days, characterised by external political setbacks. On Sunday, Joe Biden, the US president, pressed congressional Republicans to back a deal to provide more aid to Ukraine after provisions for Kyiv were left out of a bill to avoid a US government shutdown.

In Slovakia, meanwhile, a pro-Russian populist party won the most votes in an election on Saturday. Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said it was too early to say what impact the vote in Slovakia might have. He played down the row in the US Congress, driven by hard-right Republicans, describing it as an “incident”.

Kuleba said: “We don’t feel that the US support has been shattered … because the United States understands that what is at stake in Ukraine is much bigger than just Ukraine, it’s about the stability and predictability of the world. And therefore I believe that we’ll be able to find the necessary solutions.”

Russia-Ukraine war: Ukrainian victory depends on cooperation with Europe, Zelenskiy tells EU foreign ministers in Kyiv – as it happened

There has been some criticism in Washington over the slow pace of Ukraine’s summer counteroffensive. On Monday Zelenskiy told EU foreign ministers that Ukraine’s ability to defeat Russia on the battlefield depended on the support it received from allies. “Our victory directly depends on our cooperation. The more strong and principled steps we take together, the sooner this war will end,” he said.

The Netherlands and Denmark have pledged to supply Kyiv with F-16 jets, a move that would make it easier for Ukraine’s land forces to advance. Ukraine is hoping for further commitments including Taurus long-range cruise missiles from Germany, and ATACMS missiles from the US – promised but not yet delivered.

On Monday Borrell dismissed the idea – floated by Roberta Metsola, the president of the European parliament, and academics recently – that Kyiv might join in stages, with access to the single market first, followed by political integration. “Membership is membership,” Borrell said. There could be no talk of half, or 25% membership, he said, adding: “[It’s] the strongest security commitment we can give to Ukraine.”

Visiting Kyiv, Germany’s foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, described Ukraine as the “beating heart of Europe”. In a tweet, she suggested the eastern city of Luhansk – occupied by Russia since 2014 – could in future be a part of an expanded EU that stretched from Lisbon to Russia’s border.

In November the EU will publish its first formal report on progress Ukraine has made so far on required reforms. These include strengthening the independence of the judiciary and media, deoligarchisation and greater recognition of minority nationalities.

Brussels has already indicated that Ukraine has met some targets. It now needs to build up a track record; for example, in building up a back catalogue of convictions in the courts.

Zelenskiy said there was no reason to delay. “Ukraine is ready for the membership negotiation to start and we hope that they start this year. The political solution is needed from Europe. This integration step would help show that Europe would never become weaker,” he said.

The summit also endorsed Zelenskiy’s 10-point peace plan. It was the “only game in town”, Borrell said. The plan calls for Ukraine’s 1991 borders to be fully restored and for Russian troops to return home. It has been discussed twice by national security representatives in the past year but not at this level.

Without referring directly to the US bill, Zelenskiy said on Sunday that nothing would weaken his country’s fight against Russia and no one could “shut down” Ukraine’s stability, endurance, strength and courage.

EU enlargement will be top of the agenda at two summits in Spain this week, one of member state prime ministers and a second wider meeting involving leaders of up to 46 European countries including the nine countries in the queue to join the EU such as Moldova and the western Balkan states.

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Zelensky calls for cooperation, new sanctions against Russia at EU foreign ministers meeting

by Nate Ostiller and The Kyiv Independent news desk October 2, 2023

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke about the need for a new round of European Union sanctions against Russia during a historic joint meeting of EU foreign ministers in Kyiv on Oct. 2.

"Any pauses in sanctions prolong Russian aggression, and the pause after the 11th sanctions package has dragged on too long already," he said. The previous round of sanctions was approved June 23, and was aimed at countering sanctions circumvention through third-party countries.

Zelensky emphasized that the fact that the meeting was taking place in Ukraine was a vital symbol of European solidarity, and said that a Ukrainian victory was a common cause for Europe as a whole. "Russia has become an anti-European force that terrorizes and tries to undermine all the foundations of a stable and peaceful life in Europe," he added.

Importantly, Zelensky also explicitly noted his gratitude for the level of support that Ukraine has already received from its European allies, saying that "we appreciate the efforts of every country, every leader, every European company."

Amidst the dispute between Poland and Ukraine regarding grain exports, Polish Secretary of State and Head of the International Policy Bureau Marcin Przydacz suggested on July 31 that Kyiv should "start appreciating the role that Poland has played for Ukraine in recent months and years."

Oleh Nikolenko, a spokesperson for the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, said that "statements about the alleged ingratitude of Ukrainians for Poland's help are false and unacceptable."

In concluding remarks, Zelensky expressed confidence in the ability for Ukraine to defeat Russia, but stressed that "our victory explicitly depends on our cooperation."

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If I am right this is the first footage of the converted Ukrainian ground-to-ground S-200 missile. Lately Ukraine has been using these to target both targets inside Russia and occupied Crimea with various success.

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GOP senators weigh go-big-or-go-home strategy on Ukraine The GOP confrontation last week over continued aid was a rude awakening for Mitch McConnell and other senators who back Ukraine funding.

By BURGESS EVERETT and URSULA PERANO

10/02/2023 05:00 AM EDT

From Mitch McConnell on down, the Senate’s pro-Ukraine coalition is trying to reassure the U.S. ally that help will soon be on the way — even after a bruising GOP confrontation over keeping the government open snuffed out billions in immediate new aid.

But for that bipartisan group — which has served as a bulwark against growing House Republican opposition to continued aid — the past week has been a rude awakening. Not until now has the depth of division and tricky politics within the Republican Party been so apparent. And Senate leaders are now doing damage control after the omission of Ukraine aid and plotting to ensure a continued stream of military aid to Ukraine.

The next three months are critical, according to interviews with more than a dozen lawmakers and aides in both parties, and Republicans are signaling that the best shot at delivering Ukraine the weapons it needs will require a single funding bill that can last through the 2024 election, avoiding a series of protracted battles that could sap momentum.

“It’s obvious that there’s some fatigue. And so my own view is we need to do it one time,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas). “We don’t want to do this again every three months. Obviously, that’s open for discussion. But I’m for one and done.”

Democrats’ anger over the episode over the past few days is palpable. Mild-mannered Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado was so upset by the lack of Ukraine funding that he delayed action on the bill until late Saturday night. The majority party is now recalibrating how to move forward.

“We need a little time to go back to the drawing board,” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) said late Saturday. “A lot of us were caught off guard by how the last 24 hours went.”

In the House Republican Conference, even some of Ukraine’s once-strongest allies have revolted against more cash. Many Republican senators are still on board with helping the country, but they turned against their own bill on Saturday in support of a Ukraine-free House funding bill to avoid a shutdown.

Meanwhile, former President Donald Trump, a Ukraine aid skeptic, is marching toward the party’s presidential nomination.

“There’s going to have to be a major debate in this country,” added Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), the No. 3 Senate leader and one of the many Republicans who retreated from insisting on Ukraine funding when the alternative was a potential shutdown. It was an argument many made privately over the past week — but not McConnell.

At first it looked as though Congress might shelve the debate over Ukraine and disaster money until later in the fall. In fact, that was the initial plan as Democratic and Republican senators devised their government funding legislation. The Biden administration had other ideas.

McConnell, the chief GOP proponent of defending Ukraine against Russia, spoke to both national security adviser Jake Sullivan and Secretary of State Antony Blinken in the days before the Sept. 30 shutdown deadline, according to people familiar with the conversations in Congress and the Biden administration.

McConnell informed the administration that its three-month, $24 billion Ukraine request could never ride on a short-term stopgap bill, and argued for the legislation to instead provide flexibility and transfer authority — flexibility to move around existing money and resources — to buy time; he did not want a shutdown over Ukraine aid.

On Sept. 24, Blinken told McConnell that Ukraine needed money; McConnell ultimately agreed to support the request.

Two days later, the bill came out with $6 billion for Ukraine and was dismissed out of hand by the House GOP. Then, on Friday, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) told House Speaker Kevin McCarthy that Senate Republicans could get behind a funding bill that was silent on Ukraine but included billions in disaster relief, according to a person familiar with the conversations. McCarthy introduced it a day later; only nine Senate Republicans ended up opposing that bill.

“Republicans listened and coordinated our efforts with the House,” said Scott, who regularly hosts conservatives in both chambers at his Capitol Hill townhouse.

Still, McConnell kept advocating for the Senate’s bill and its Ukraine funding up until Saturday’s party lunch, when it became clear the rest of the party simply wanted to avoid a shutdown. That sets the stage for a Ukraine fight later this year, possibly around the new Nov. 17 funding deadline or perhaps the end of the calendar year if Congress punts again.

McConnell insists his party will stick with it regardless of the political pain, declaring he’s “confident the Senate will pass further urgent assistance to Ukraine later this year.” And there’s an argument that McConnell was just sticking to his word to the White House over the past week.

Yet some took the snub of Ukraine aid in the new funding law as a sign of things to come.

“Senate leadership tried to get Ukraine jammed into the CR and they just got bucked. McConnell negotiated it in the CR. And he couldn’t carry the caucus,” said Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), who opposes more Ukraine funding. “That’s a big deal.”

Senate Democrats are trying to jump-start a standalone Ukraine funding bill this month in the aftermath of the failed effort to send $6 billion to Ukraine. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) said she believes there is bipartisan support for such a bill, though the timing and structure of the bill is “part of what all needs to be worked out.”

At some point Ukraine backers will have to decide whether attaching money to a must-pass spending bill is the best strategy given the pressures on McCarthy to keep his speakership. Ukraine funding opponent Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said any Senate action only “puts more pressure on [McCarthy] and makes his job harder.”

Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.), the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs panel who attended a private meeting McCarthy arranged with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in September, said that he “was present when [McCarthy] told Zelenskyy that he’d be fighting for him to get the money.” Another Democrat in the room, who was granted anonymity, also said that McCarthy committed aid to Zelenskyy, even as publicly he remained noncommittal and suggested he wanted more accountability for any funds.

Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) hopes to add his proposal with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) for an inspector general to any Ukraine bill to ease concerns over wasteful spending — an idea also popular among some House conservatives. Even then, would the House GOP go along? “There’ll be a big appetite in the Senate — I don’t know about the House,” Kennedy said.

Perhaps an even grander bargain might be necessary. Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), the No. 4 GOP leader, supports an effort to combine the Ukraine debate with a border security bill. The law that funds the government through mid-November is silent on the border despite the Biden administration’s funding request for billions more and a last-minute effort in the Senate GOP to marry border security with Ukraine funding.

Sarah Ferris contributed to this report.

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EU foreign policy chief proposes new €5 billion military aid package for Ukraine 02.10.2023, 18:27

The head of European diplomacy, Josep Borrell, has proposed a new bilateral European Peace Facility package of up to €5 billion ($5.26 billion) in military aid to Ukraine next year, the EU official announced at a briefing in Kyiv.

"I hope we can reach an agreement before the end of the year," he said.

According to Borrell, this will be in addition to the funds that EU countries are ready to discuss as part of the broader negotiations on the general budget between now and 2027.

He also announced that in the coming months there are plans to train 40,000 Ukrainians, including fighter pilots.

Borrell also mentioned the desire to strengthen cyber defense and the defense sector of Ukraine.

A meeting of EU foreign ministers took place in Kyiv today. This is the first time such an event is held in Ukraine.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock stated that soon the EU will expand "from Lisbon to Luhansk".

Oksana Zhitnyuk

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THREE PUPILS FROM MARIUPOL ARRESTED BY OCCUPIERS FOR TELEGRAM MESSAGES

This is reported by the Mariupol City Council and publishes an excerpt of a news story by rossmi about the incident.

The occupiers detained three 9th grade students who allegedly "created a negative image of Russia" and "spread nationalist symbols" in a closed tg-group.

"They spit on the V symbol, 'mocked' the St George's ribbons, the Russian tricolour and drew the sign of the Azov battalion", - this is how Russian propagandists describe the "crimes" of the Ukrainian children.

According to the city council, the occupants continue to fight against so-called "extremist materials". They become library books. In particular, historical editions and Ukrainian classics. Earlier, it could be seen that the invaders threw out books even by Lesya Ukrainka.

Recall that according to preliminary estimates, the Russian occupiers destroyed 180 thousand books and 4 libraries in Mariupol.

READ ALSO:

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Zelenskyi held a telephone conversation today with the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen. They discussed alternative corridors for the export of Ukrainian agricultural products. The parties agreed to maintain a constructive dialogue regarding the removal of unilateral restrictions by EU member states on the export of Ukrainian agricultural products and agreed on the need to find measures to support Ukrainian farmers.

https://president.gov.ua/news/glava-derzhavi-obgovoriv-iz-prezidentkoyu-yevropejskoyi-komi-86033

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Correction. Actually yes it did!

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Russia 10Y Bond Yield was 13.08 percent on Monday October 2, according to over-the-counter interbank yield quotes for this government bond maturity.

Russian government 10yr bonds above 13% yield. Yields were ~10.8% in June and are now above the official interest rate. The rouble is approaching 100 per $ again.

A good week in the finance numbers but Brent oil is still too high, which is no doubt propping up Russia's war crimes machine.

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To those who keep saying the "mighty" Russia can fight a long war. The accumulative effects of sanctions, conscription and military demands on infrastructure is causing a slow motion implosion in Russia. Putin is possibly preparing the option to withdraw and announce he won by defeating Ukraine and has fought NATO to defeat an invasion of Russia. THese lines have been emerging on Russia state media for months.

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Senior Ukrainian official weighs in on US Congress' move to exclude aid in funding deal

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Putin is offering double pay to attract officials to jobs in occupied Ukraine, but many are scared of being killed: report Thibault Spirlet Oct 2, 2023

Russia is facing personnel shortages in occupied regions of Ukraine, per independent outlet Meduza. Meduza cited two officials who described fears of new Ukrainian attacks among Russian officials. Russian officials have died in Ukraine's counteroffensives in the occupied regions, the outlet said.

Russian officials are reluctant to take jobs in occupied regions of Ukraine, despite promises of higher pay, out of fear of Ukrainian attacks, according to a Russian media report.

The threat of more Ukrainian counteroffensives in the annexed regions, which include Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, have made Russian officials reluctant to take jobs there, two sources close to the Kremlin told independent outlet Meduza.

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree last September formally annexing the four Ukrainian regions, with plans to bring them closer to Russia and pay their employees double, per the outlet.

But higher pay does not make up for the risk of Ukrainian attacks, the two unnamed officials told Meduza.

Since late last year, Ukraine has retaken parts of eastern Ukraine. An unspecified number of Russian officials, including Alexei Katerinichev, a Russian-installed official in Kherson, have also been killed, per the outlet.

At the same time, an unnamed Russian-installed official appointed to a ministerial role in one of the occupied regions told the outlet that leaving a position there for Russia is considered "desertion," which is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

To make up for the personnel shortages, the Kremlin is holding electoral contests modeled on the "Leaders of Russia" competition, which is seen as a career springboard for Russian officials, Meduza reported, without giving details on the number of participants.

Russia's Defense Ministry also announced last month that people in the four occupied regions will be included for the first time in its conscription campaign.

The draft, which started on October 1 and lasts through the end of the year, aims to call up 130,000 additional soldiers, according to Russian state media outlet TASS.

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"So when a Ukrainian tanker with the callsign “Kochevnik” ran into problems with his captured Russian T-72B3—problems local expertise couldn’t immediately solve—he called Russian Uralvagonzavod tech support. And incredibly, the help line actually helped."

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Oil prices have fallen back towards nearly $90/barrel in the last few days (for Brent crude).

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The EU foreign ministers' meeting in Kyiv adds strength, leadership, and initiative to Europe.

Active European leadership is essential.

The more joint and principled steps in defense, diplomacy, economy, and sanctions we take together, the sooner the war will end in just peace.

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Poland handed over a batch of repaired Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine.

"While others make statements about the future, we act in agreement with the Ukrainian side," the message reads.

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