A pregnant woman and her unborn child were killed, and three other people were injured, during the shelling of the village of Novaya Tavolzhanka in Russia's Belgorod region by the Ukrainian Armed Forces, according to the governor.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π€¬88π11π€2π2π1
βοΈThe Russian air defense systems have shot down a Ukrainian Su-25 aircraft and 213 drones, as well as 5 French-made AASM Hammer guided bombs, the Russian Ministry of Defense has announced.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π63β€11π₯2
Sputnik International
βοΈThe Russian air defense systems have shot down a Ukrainian Su-25 aircraft and 213 drones, as well as 5 French-made AASM Hammer guided bombs, the Russian Ministry of Defense has announced. Subscribe to @SputnikInt
βοΈRussian troops hit the Ukrainian aviation fuel storage and two military transport facilities.
π·πΊπͺ More statements from the daily briefing of the Russian Defense Ministry on the progress of the special military operation in Ukraine:
πΊRussian Battlegroup Zapad repelled three Ukrainian attacks, resulting in the deaths of 30 Ukrainian militants.
πΊUkrainian losses amounted to 120 militants and 4 ammunition depots due to the work of the Russian Battlegroup Vostok.
πΊUkraine lost up to 355 militants due to the active combat operations of the Russian Battlegroup Tsentr.
πΊRussian Buttlegroup Youg has improved its position along the front line, resulting in Ukraine losing its 610 militants.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π·πΊπͺ More statements from the daily briefing of the Russian Defense Ministry on the progress of the special military operation in Ukraine:
πΊRussian Battlegroup Zapad repelled three Ukrainian attacks, resulting in the deaths of 30 Ukrainian militants.
πΊUkrainian losses amounted to 120 militants and 4 ammunition depots due to the work of the Russian Battlegroup Vostok.
πΊUkraine lost up to 355 militants due to the active combat operations of the Russian Battlegroup Tsentr.
πΊRussian Buttlegroup Youg has improved its position along the front line, resulting in Ukraine losing its 610 militants.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
β€31π21π€1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
π·πΊ Direct fire from the Russian crew of the Nona-S self-propelled gun destroyed the Ukrainian observation post on the right bank of the Dnepr
During the reconnaissance and search operations, a Ukrainian nationalist observation post was discovered. The crew of the Nona-S from the Black Sea Fleet engaged the stronghold with direct fire, destroying the manpower of Ukrainian militants who were stationed there.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
During the reconnaissance and search operations, a Ukrainian nationalist observation post was discovered. The crew of the Nona-S from the Black Sea Fleet engaged the stronghold with direct fire, destroying the manpower of Ukrainian militants who were stationed there.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π46β€11
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Betrayal of the year?
US House Speaker Mike Johnson has spent months promising Republican voters that he will not support any Ukraine aid package until Americaβs southern border is secured.
Now heβs pushing a $61 billion Ukraine funding package with no strings attached.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
US House Speaker Mike Johnson has spent months promising Republican voters that he will not support any Ukraine aid package until Americaβs southern border is secured.
Now heβs pushing a $61 billion Ukraine funding package with no strings attached.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π©97π€¬23π18π₯΄11β€6π6π₯1
Sputnik International
π΅πΈ Palestine will not back down despite the US veto at the UN Security Council of a resolution recommending its admission to the United Nations, Palestinian Permanent Observer to the UN Riyad Mansour said at a meeting of the UNSC. "The fact that this resolutionβ¦
The Palestinian authorities will be reviewing bilateral relations with the United States in light of the veto on Palestine's admission to the UN, Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas says.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π76π4π€1π1
Houthis too hot to handle? German warship ends mission against Yemeni militia, heads home
The Hessen, a German frigate deployed to the Red Sea in late February to take part in Operation Aspides β the European Union-led mission to protect regional shipping against attacks by Yemenβs Houthi militiamen, wrapped up its mission and departed from the region early Saturday morning.
The Bundeswehr said the 143 meter-long anti-air and anti-ship missile-equipped warship was heading back to Germany after roughly eight weeks of service escorting 27 merchant ships β the equivalent of about one commercial vessel every two days.
The Hessen is the latest warship from two separate Western coalitions (the EUβs Operation Aspides and the US-UK Operation Prosperity Guardian) to leave the Red Sea region.
The German warship reported intercepting a Houthi missile on April 6. Before that, on March 21, the Bundeswehr reported that the Hessen had destroyed an unmanned sea vehicle launched by the militia.
The Houthis have forced US, British and European warships to expend missiles worth $1 million or more to destroy aerial and naval drones which cost thousands of dollars to make. Since January, the US and the UK have attempted to degrade Houthi capabilities through a series of air and missile strikes inside Yemen, but have so far failed to lift what is effectively a partial blockade of the Red Sea enforced by the militia since November 2023.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
The Hessen, a German frigate deployed to the Red Sea in late February to take part in Operation Aspides β the European Union-led mission to protect regional shipping against attacks by Yemenβs Houthi militiamen, wrapped up its mission and departed from the region early Saturday morning.
The Bundeswehr said the 143 meter-long anti-air and anti-ship missile-equipped warship was heading back to Germany after roughly eight weeks of service escorting 27 merchant ships β the equivalent of about one commercial vessel every two days.
The Hessen is the latest warship from two separate Western coalitions (the EUβs Operation Aspides and the US-UK Operation Prosperity Guardian) to leave the Red Sea region.
The German warship reported intercepting a Houthi missile on April 6. Before that, on March 21, the Bundeswehr reported that the Hessen had destroyed an unmanned sea vehicle launched by the militia.
The Houthis have forced US, British and European warships to expend missiles worth $1 million or more to destroy aerial and naval drones which cost thousands of dollars to make. Since January, the US and the UK have attempted to degrade Houthi capabilities through a series of air and missile strikes inside Yemen, but have so far failed to lift what is effectively a partial blockade of the Red Sea enforced by the militia since November 2023.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π87π10π9β€5π€1π«‘1
The Ukrainian army lost five Abrams tanks in two months mainly due to drones β The New York Times
"Depending on their size and technological sophistication, the drones can cost as little as $500 β a paltry investment for taking out a $10 million Abrams tank," the NYT added.
The New York Times also reports that Ukraine has lost 796 tanks in total since the beginning of the conflict.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
The drone combat in Ukraine that is transforming modern warfare has begun taking a deadly toll on one of the most powerful symbols of American military might β the tank β and threatening to rewrite how it will be used in future conflicts.
"Depending on their size and technological sophistication, the drones can cost as little as $500 β a paltry investment for taking out a $10 million Abrams tank," the NYT added.
The New York Times also reports that Ukraine has lost 796 tanks in total since the beginning of the conflict.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π51π20β€5
US-greenlit Israeli strike on Iran βnot game changerβ - former Netanyahu advisor
Israelβs airstrike against Iran in response to Tehran's retaliatory missile and drone attack is βnot a game changer,β Aviv Bushinsky, a former media advisor and chief of staff for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told Sputnik.
βI don't think that this is a unique event that [β¦] will change the face of the Middle East,β he said. βI assume that the US administration did give a green light for such an operation,β Aviv Bushinsky underscored. βI think that the request by the American administration was, βIsrael, please do not lead to an escalation, to a real big war in the Middle East.β And I think that Netanyahu did obey and adhere to President Biden's request,β he emphasized.
US media reported that Israel on Friday carried out a βlimitedβ retaliatory strike on sites in Iran, with explosions reported near the city of Isfahan. Tasnim reported that nuclear facilities in Isfahan province were unharmed.
Iranian MP Abolfazl Abu Tarabi, for his part, told Sputnik that some Western media outlets seek βto exaggerate the significance of the Israeli strikeβ¦ seeking to sow panic among the Iranian population.β
He added that Tehran has βvery advanced weaponsβ capable of repelling any air attack.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Israelβs airstrike against Iran in response to Tehran's retaliatory missile and drone attack is βnot a game changer,β Aviv Bushinsky, a former media advisor and chief of staff for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told Sputnik.
βI don't think that this is a unique event that [β¦] will change the face of the Middle East,β he said. βI assume that the US administration did give a green light for such an operation,β Aviv Bushinsky underscored. βI think that the request by the American administration was, βIsrael, please do not lead to an escalation, to a real big war in the Middle East.β And I think that Netanyahu did obey and adhere to President Biden's request,β he emphasized.
US media reported that Israel on Friday carried out a βlimitedβ retaliatory strike on sites in Iran, with explosions reported near the city of Isfahan. Tasnim reported that nuclear facilities in Isfahan province were unharmed.
Iranian MP Abolfazl Abu Tarabi, for his part, told Sputnik that some Western media outlets seek βto exaggerate the significance of the Israeli strikeβ¦ seeking to sow panic among the Iranian population.β
βIran has always displayed strategic patience and acted very prudently. But its patience is not infinite, and when someone crosses our 'red lines', they must understand how we will respond. Iran has already proven this by attacking Israeli military targets,β the Iranian MP noted.
He added that Tehran has βvery advanced weaponsβ capable of repelling any air attack.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π45π©10π7β€3
France is growing poorer through continued financial and military support of Ukraine, The Patriots party leader Florian Philippot warned, challenging the French prime minister's refusal to advocate for peace.
Prime Minister Gabriel Attal insisted this week that Ukraine would continue to hold out as long as France continued supporting it.
Philippot argued that Ukrainians would "continue dying" instead.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
"This stubborn refusal of negotiations and peace worsens the human toll of this war by the day, while impoverishing France by the day and putting us in serious danger! Stop sending weapons and money to Ukraine," Philippot wrote on social media.
Prime Minister Gabriel Attal insisted this week that Ukraine would continue to hold out as long as France continued supporting it.
Philippot argued that Ukrainians would "continue dying" instead.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π55π20π€2π2β€1π€¬1
On the hook: why US cannot abandon Russia's unique nuclear fuel HALEU
President Joe Biden announced on Friday that a domestic US firm had managed to produce its first 200 pounds (90 kilograms) of high-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU), insisting that the US could no longer rely on Russia's nuclear fuel. Is the US ready to dump it?
The future of the US nuclear industry depends on HALEU β uranium enriched to between 5 percent and 20 percent β which allows smaller designs of reactors with longer operating cycles and increased efficiencies over their predecessors.
In 2020 the US Department of Energy (DOE) projected that more than 40 metric tons of HALEU will be needed before the end of the decade β with additional amounts required each year β to launch a new fleet of advanced reactors in the US and meet Washington's net-zero targets by 2050.
According to Biden, the plant in Ohio will produce "nearly a ton by the end of the year" β a far cry from the declared goal. In the most optimistic scenario it would take at least five years for the US or its Western allies to launch the production of HALEU on a commercial scale. That will not be an easy task, given that US production of nuclear materials has been in steep decline since the 2000s.
The crux of the matter is that Russia has a monopoly on HALEU: only Tenex, part of Russia's Rosatom corporation, sells the fuel on a commercial basis.
That may be why the Prohibiting Russian Uranium Imports Act is still stalled in the US Senate. Even if passed, the legislation would allow a temporary waiver until January 2028 and does not target high-assay low-enriched uranium.
Despite threatening to stop buying Russian uranium, the EU and the US actually doubled purchases of the fuel from the nation in 2023 as they are struggling to step up their own uranium enrichment and meet 2050 zero-net targets.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
President Joe Biden announced on Friday that a domestic US firm had managed to produce its first 200 pounds (90 kilograms) of high-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU), insisting that the US could no longer rely on Russia's nuclear fuel. Is the US ready to dump it?
The future of the US nuclear industry depends on HALEU β uranium enriched to between 5 percent and 20 percent β which allows smaller designs of reactors with longer operating cycles and increased efficiencies over their predecessors.
In 2020 the US Department of Energy (DOE) projected that more than 40 metric tons of HALEU will be needed before the end of the decade β with additional amounts required each year β to launch a new fleet of advanced reactors in the US and meet Washington's net-zero targets by 2050.
According to Biden, the plant in Ohio will produce "nearly a ton by the end of the year" β a far cry from the declared goal. In the most optimistic scenario it would take at least five years for the US or its Western allies to launch the production of HALEU on a commercial scale. That will not be an easy task, given that US production of nuclear materials has been in steep decline since the 2000s.
The crux of the matter is that Russia has a monopoly on HALEU: only Tenex, part of Russia's Rosatom corporation, sells the fuel on a commercial basis.
That may be why the Prohibiting Russian Uranium Imports Act is still stalled in the US Senate. Even if passed, the legislation would allow a temporary waiver until January 2028 and does not target high-assay low-enriched uranium.
Despite threatening to stop buying Russian uranium, the EU and the US actually doubled purchases of the fuel from the nation in 2023 as they are struggling to step up their own uranium enrichment and meet 2050 zero-net targets.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π37π©21π8β€1
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Marjorie Taylor-Greene scorches new Ukraine aid package
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
"The youngest generation don't even think they're going to be able to buy a home in their life and today in Congress the most important thing to be done is to send another $60 billion to a war in Ukraine."
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π53π24π14π€1π©1
The US House votes 360-58 to pass a bill to give frozen Russian assets to Ukraine and compel the sale of TikTok.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π€¬65π©7π4π₯΄3π₯1π1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
π€‘ US Congressman forgets to take his medication this morning
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
"Some say, well, we have to deal with our border first. The Ukrainian-Russian border is OUR border!"
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π©98π26π€¬6π4π2π₯΄2π1
Russian air defences downed two Ukrainian balloons over Moscow and Tula regions, the Russian defence ministry says.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π53π3π€1
The US bill to give $60.84 billion in aid to Ukraine gains enough votes to pass the House of Representatives, and voting continues.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π41π€¬23π©5π2π1
Sputnik International
The US bill to give $60.84 billion in aid to Ukraine gains enough votes to pass the House of Representatives, and voting continues. Subscribe to @SputnikInt
β‘οΈThe US House passes the $60.84 billion Ukrainian aid bill in a 311β112 vote, sending it to the Senate.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π€¬50π7π©7π1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Tucker Carlson: US Deep State blackmails Congress into submission
βMembers of Congress are terrified of the intel agencies. I'm not guessing at that. They've told me that, including people on the intel committee, including people who run the intel committee.β
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
βMembers of Congress are terrified of the intel agencies. I'm not guessing at that. They've told me that, including people on the intel committee, including people who run the intel committee.β
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π₯57π25π3π€¬1π₯΄1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
America Last, Zelensky First:
US Congressmen celebrate the approval of a $61 billion aid package to Ukraine.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
US Congressmen celebrate the approval of a $61 billion aid package to Ukraine.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π©86π25π8π3
The US House passes the $26.38 billion Israel aid bill in a 366-58 vote, sending it to the Senate.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π44π©20π4β€1
$61 billion in false promises: What will the new Ukraine aid package actually accomplish?
The vast majority of the aid package will go directly to US military contractors and into the Pentagon budget itself, retired US Air Force Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski told Sputnik. The rest will be used to pay Ukrainian bureaucrats, leaving very little for the needs of frontline soldiers.
No less significantly, the new aid package does nothing to resolve Ukraineβs biggest military problem, which is a lack of manpower, former Pentagon analyst Mike Maloof told Sputnik.
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
The vast majority of the aid package will go directly to US military contractors and into the Pentagon budget itself, retired US Air Force Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski told Sputnik. The rest will be used to pay Ukrainian bureaucrats, leaving very little for the needs of frontline soldiers.
βIt looks like $45 billion stays in the US and that leaves about $16 billion to Ukraine in the form of direct aid.,β she said. βThe 2024 Ukrainian budget is $82 billion and about half of this is unfunded by tax revenue. Likely the $16 billion that makes it to Ukraine will be instantly absorbed to pay government bills rather than go to the war effort.β
No less significantly, the new aid package does nothing to resolve Ukraineβs biggest military problem, which is a lack of manpower, former Pentagon analyst Mike Maloof told Sputnik.
βThey have no means to undertake a counter-offensive, and just given the amounts of artillery that they burn through, what even the US is proposing probably wouldn't last more than six months at best.β
Subscribe to @SputnikInt
π48π13π©6