Ukraine calls for the new European military Alliance and Security Architecture. Sullivan warns Russia and China. Putin and Schroeder: each other's useful idiots. | News Review

Ukraine calls for the new European military Alliance and Security Architecture. Sullivan warns Russia and China. Putin and Schroeder: each other's useful idiots. | News Review - 12:47 PM 3/17/2022


Michael Novakhov @mikenov

Will it be: Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova,
Israel
Turkey
Gulf Arabs & possibly SA
Others, e.g. Greece?
Some type of the Mediterranian "mini-Nato", (with watchful eyes toward Russia & Iran)?
DW: Time to make new alliances? European diplomacy in the Ukraine
https://t.co/qJQn2JpaC3

FOEAeAWVsAUtdhF.jpg:large

Ukraine wants to create a specific mechanism that will be written in the peace agreement to guarantee Ukraine's security in the future. The office of the President predicts the creation of a new alliance in Europe to ensure security.
Michael Novakhov @mikenov
a new alliance in Europe to ensure security of Ukraine - Google Search google.com/search?q=a+new… dw.com/en/time-to-mak…
Iuliia Mendel @IuliiaMendel
Michael Novakhov retweeted:
Ukraine wants to create a specific mechanism that will be written in the peace agreement to guarantee Ukraine's security in the future. The office of the President predicts the creation of a new alliance in Europe to ensure security.
Michael Novakhov @mikenov
pasmi.ru/archive/342817…
JZ Murdock-Writer/Filmmaker @jzmurdock
Michael Novakhov retweeted:
TO BE CLEAR... Donald #Trump is #Putin's BIGGESST "Useful Idiot" but not his most dangerous (any longer).
And I'm sure Putin NEVER liked the man.
Who does (who isn't mentally disturbed)? twitter.com/mikenov/status…
Michael Novakhov @mikenov
Russian talk about the biological weapons labs in Ukraine is the psychological projection and the hidden threat - Google Search google.com/search?q=Russi… bbc.com/news/60711705
Michael Novakhov @mikenov
Russian talk about the biological weapons labs in Ukraine is the psychological projection and the hidden threat - Sullivan - Google Search google.com/search?q=Russi… washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/…
Michael Novakhov @mikenov
tvzvezda.ru/news/202231717…
Michael Novakhov @mikenov
Und VICE VERSA, which makes both of them even more dangerous.

telegraph.co.uk/business/2022/…
Michael Novakhov @mikenov
telegraph.co.uk/business/2022/…
The Hill @thehill
Michael Novakhov retweeted:
Ex-RNC Chairman blasts Trump: "Not fit to lead this nation" hill.cm/ASY7sVX

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President’s Office: Ukraine wants to end war by forming coalition able to stop Russia in future

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Ukraine intends to end the war with the Russian Federation by forming a new international security coalition.

“What matters to us is not status, but allies who are really ready to fight alongside us. The invasion of Ukraine has shown that the whole architecture of European security must be reconsidered. We know that Putin can only be stopped by force. NATO does not have that force. In our opinion, this is an organization whose main activity is to organize summits where the generals show that they are cool… So we want to end this war with a new coalition, so powerful that it will be able to stop Russia if it wants to attack someone again," Mykhailo Podolyak, Adviser to the Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, said in an interview with the Wiadomości Polish newspaper, Ukrinform reports.

He explained that the basis of the coalition would be fundamentally different from the Budapest Memorandum but would provide a specific condition in line with all the rules of international law. According to the Adviser to the Head of the President’s Office, the document will describe the mechanisms that should be implemented if an attack on Ukraine occurs again. "We want to make sure that we will not be left alone on the battlefield again. The guarantor states will make certain commitments. In the future, this document can be developed and underpin a completely new alliance to ensure security all over Europe," Podolyak added.

He declined to name the states that expressed readiness to join the coalition as talks continue. At the same time, the representative of the President’s Office assured that President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky would present the whole concept when they ended.

In addition, Podolyak noted that the formation of the coalition was one of the key topics of the meeting of the President of Ukraine with Prime Minister of Poland Mateusz Morawiecki, Prime Minister of the Czech Republic Petr Fiala, and Prime Minister of Slovenia Janez Janša in Kyiv on March 15.

Podolyak stressed that Poland's accession to the new union was very important for Ukraine. "Poland is one of Ukraine's best friends today. We are infinitely grateful for the help provided and we believe that Poland and Ukraine should participate together in all negotiations on security in Europe," he said.

On February 24, Russian president Vladimir Putin announced the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine. Russian troops destroy key infrastructure, massively shell residential areas of Ukrainian cities and villages using artillery, multiple launch rocket systems, and ballistic missiles.

Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine repels Russian invaders.

Read the whole story
 
· ·

Russian Ministry of Defense publishes documents received from employees of US biological laboratories in Ukraine

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The Russian Defense Ministry published documents received from employees of US biological laboratories in Ukraine

17:45 17.03.2022
The causative agents of the Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever, leptospirosis and hantaviruses were studied in the laboratories.
© Video: Russian Ministry of Defense © Photo: Russian Ministry of Defense
Read us on:   

The Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation has published new documents on the secret military biological activities of the United States in Ukraine. The corresponding package of documents was at the disposal of Zvezda.

As Igor Kirillov, head of the radiation, chemical and biological defense forces of the RF Armed Forces, said at a briefing, components of biological weapons were created in Ukraine , and documents confirm the participation of the Pentagon in financing and conducting research.

According to him, biolaboratories in Kyiv, Odessa, Lvov and Kharkiv received a total of $32 million from the United States.

“It is no coincidence that these biolaboratories were selected by the US Department of Defense Threat Reduction Administration (DTRA) and the contractor Black and Witch as the executors of the U-P-8 project, aimed at studying the pathogens of Crimean Congo hemorrhagic fever, leptospirosis and hantaviruses. ", - said Kirillov.

According to Kirillov, the interest of American military biologists in the project is due, among other things, to the fact that pathogens have natural foci both in Ukraine and in Russia. He also pointed to the possibility of using them under the guise of natural diseases.

The head of the Radiation, Chemical and Biological Defense Forces of the Russian Armed Forces said that Ukraine had transferred five thousand samples of blood serum from Ukrainian citizens to the Pentagon-affiliated Lugar Center in Tbilisi, and another 773 bioassays were sent to the UK.

“An agreement was signed for the export of unlimited quantities of infectious materials to the Loeffler Institute in Germany. An analysis of the information received suggests that Ukrainian specialists are not aware of the potential risks of transferring biomaterials, are essentially used "in the dark" and have no real idea about the true goals of the ongoing research," Kirillov said.

In addition, he stated that in 2018 more than 70 residents of the Donetsk People's Republic died from multidrug-resistant strains of tuberculosis , which may also indicate the secret activities of Ukrainian biological laboratories.

“During the mass outbreak recorded in the area of​​the settlement of Peski, more than 70 cases of the disease were detected, which ended in a quick death,” Kirillov stated.

He stressed that the US-led Western third countries are ignoring Russia's call to release data on the secret military-biological activities of the Pentagon in countries. Kirillov also promised that the Russian Ministry of Defense would continue to study the evidence and inform the world community about Washington's illegal activities on Ukrainian territory.

Material prepared by: Andrey Arkadiev, Nikolay Baranov 

Read the whole story
 
· · · ·

The West closes in on Russia's last lifeline

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News

Tuesday, March 8th 2022, 1:37 PM CST

Updated:

Tuesday, March 8th 2022, 1:37 PM CST

Yegor Aleyev/TASS/Getty Images

By David Goldman, CNN Business

The United States and Europe have pummeled Russia with unprecedented sanctions over the past several weeks as Vladimir Putin's army bears down on Ukraine. But the West has largely left Russia's largest export untouched: energy.

European Union officials on Tuesday said the bloc would slash imports of Russian natural gas by two thirds this year, and the EU announced a plan to achieve energy independence from Moscow "well before 2030." That would separate Europe from its single biggest energy supplier.

Separately, President Joe Biden announced Tuesday a ban on Russian oil, natural gas and coal imports to the United States. And the UK government said Tuesday it would phase out Russian oil imports by the end of 2022 and explore ways of ending natural gas imports as well.

America's ban is largely symbolic. The United States relies very little on Russian energy: The country's crude represented less than 2% of all US oil imports in December, according to the US Energy Information Administration. Overall, Russian crude and petroleum products made up about 5% of US imports at the end of 2021. Similarly, just 8% of UK demand is supplied by Russian oil, according to UK Business and Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng.

By contrast, the European Union depends foundationally on Russia for its energy. About 40% of Europe's natural gas and 27% of its oil imports come from Russia. And Russia supplies Europe with 46% of its coal.

That's why Europe has been so hesitant to take action against Russia's energy sector. Yet as its war on Ukraine continues to shock the world, western countries are running out of other options to add pressure on Russia for the assault.

Existing sanctions have already created a kind of shadow-ban on Russian oil. Traders have grown concerned about access to financing for Russian oil purchases as well as the availability of ports willing to ship it. Urals oil has lately traded at about a $25 discount to Brent crude, the global benchmark. About 70% of Russian seaborne oil was struggling to find buyers, according to JPMorgan.

But gas continues to flow to Europe, and enough Russian crude and gas is finding buyers to make a difference to the Russian economy. Russia has been bringing in between $500 million and $1 billion a day in crude and gas exports during the war, according to Charles Lichfield, deputy director of the GeoEconomics Center for the Atlantic Council, an international think tank.

Restricting energy exports would severely limit Russia's options to keep its economy afloat. Its central bank has been sanctioned, limiting the government's access to cash reserves designed to insulate the country from reliance on the West. Businesses are pulling out or suspending operations in the country and shunning Russian exports.

"Energy has been Russia's final lifeline," said Lichfield. "Sanctions on oil and gas would put Russia in a much more vulnerable situation."

The Russian economy isn't very diverse. It relies heavily on energy exports, and many of its other key industries, including metals and other raw materials, have been sanctioned or shunned.

Despite the sanctions, the Russian central bank has so far been able to meet many of its debt obligations. Reducing the market for oil and gas could force Russia to rein in spending. For example, government wages and pensions may not be paid on time.

"Russia has managed to find quick fixes," said Lichfield. "Those won't be available to Russia anymore if its energy is restricted."

One reason Europe is working to act quickly on energy independence: It fears Vladimir Putin could turn it into a weapon, cutting off its gas supply before Europe is ready to act.

Russia has already threatened to beat Europe to the punch: Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said in a statement on state television Tuesday that Russia could retaliate against Europe's sanctions by turning off Germany's access to Nord Stream 1, the gas pipeline that supplies the country with Russian natural gas.

Novak said Russia would be entirely within its rights to retaliate against the European Union after Germany last month froze the certification of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline.

"If you want to reject energy supplies from Russia, go ahead. We are ready for it," Novak said. "We know where we could redirect the volumes to."

-- CNN's Chris Liakos and Reuters contributed to this report

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a WarnerMedia Company. All rights reserved.

Sheriff: Explosives, guns and drugs found in Kansas home

‘Little Miss Nobody’ identified over 60 years later with DNA

‘I’m throwing a party!’ Kansas man thrilled new bill will save his classic Corvette

Senate unanimously passes bill to make Daylight Saving Time permanent

9 killed, including 6 college students, in Texas collision

Standard Time or Daylight Saving Time? Soon, states may have to choose one or the other

Read the whole story
 
· · · · · ·

Ex-Black Ops Agent: This Is How Putin Could Meet His End

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·4 min read

Spooks from Langley to Kyiv are likely to be quietly untangling an espionage conundrum that dare not speak its name, according to a former senior intelligence agent who was once regularly involved in such discussions: “Could President Putin really be assassinated?”

“The operation is on every intelligence agency’s design table,” a veteran clandestine operative for France’s General Directorate for External Security (DGSE) told The Daily Beast. “I know this because I used to plan them.”

To be sure, killing Putin as a means of ending his war in Ukraine is a volatile topic to raise officially. It’s also diplomatically discourteous. “Oh, wouldn’t it be great if someone internally just took this guy out and eliminated him,” Florida Republican Senator Marco Rubio recently mused, hurriedly adding, “that’s not the official policy, obviously, of the United States, no one’s talking about the U.S. doing it.”

The retired DGSE agent—an elimination specialist whose attention to detail receives high praise from his fellow liquidators—said the most efficient method would be poison.

“The attempt will be from within the Kremlin. This is not an outside job,” he said.

This would certainly not be the first attempt to assassinate a sitting Russian leader. Back in 1866, the revolutionary nihilist Dmitry Karakozov tried and failed to murder Tsar Alexander II in St. Petersburg. He was executed for his effort.

Arguably the most curious effort merely resulted in a catastrophic change of menu at the only Chinese restaurant in Moscow. The year was 1952 and the Hotel Peking on Mayakovsky Square was nearing its completion to celebrate Sino-Soviet friendship. Although the hotel didn’t open until 1955, two years after the death of Joseph Stalin, Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong sent a favorite chef to Moscow to open a restaurant just off the hotel’s lobby.

The story—endlessly told by the Peking’s staff and management during the nearly two years that I lived in one of the hotel’s apartments—had all the trappings of an espionage horror movie. The chef was not really a cook. He was an assassin sent to kill Stalin. But the KGB got to him first, slamming a kitchen cleaver into his head, and—according to hotel legend—leaving his ghost, ax-in-head, to haunt the hallways in search of Stalin.

How today’s spooks might be proposing to take out Putin—deniably, of course—is another mystery, but a stroll down memory lane in the assassination business inspires recollections of classics like the ice-ax, the roof-toss and, the favorite of Genovese crime family hitman Richard “the Iceman” Kulinski, a nasal spray bottle filled with cyanide.

“Russian intelligence is likely the only one left that deploys poison as a default,” says the Frenchman, citing a long roster of Russian potions used to eradicate Kremlin enemies from 1957 KGB defector Nikolai Khokhlov (coffee laced with thallium) to a 2004 assassination attempt on Ukrainian presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko (dinner seasoned with dioxin).

Watch: Boris Johnson compares Putin to a drug dealer who has the West 'hooked on his oil and gas'

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Johnson compares Putin to a drug dealer who has the West 'hooked on his oil and gas'
 possible coalition to ensure 
 that Vladimir Putin does not 

Johnson compares Putin to a drug dealer who has the West 'hooked on his oil and gas'

Boris Johnson compared Vladimir Putin to a drug dealer who had got western nations hooked on his supply of oil and gas. “Vladimir Putin over the last yeast has been like a pusher, feeding an addiction in western countries to his hydrocarbons,” the Prime Minister told reporters at Lancaster House, London.

Johnson compares Putin to a drug dealer who has the West 'hooked on his oil and gas'
Scroll back up to restore default view.

Putin prefers poison. Polonium-210 triggered the 2006 death of Alexander Litvinenko and Novichok was responsible for the nearly fatal 2018 attack on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal in England. Back on home turf, Prince Felix Yussupov in 1916 allegedly took out the mad monk Grigori Rasputin with cyanide and a few bullets in the head; more recently, Putin’s people in 2020 attacked opposition leader Alexei Navalny with Novichok. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov at the time disagreed it was a “trend,” adding, “you’ll agree that in many countries in the world, everyday a lot of poisonings happen,” he said.

“All true,” says the DGSE agent, “but nobody does it better than the Russians.”

Yet poisoning Putin wouldn’t be an easy task. According to a source who works in the upper echelons of a Russian ministry, Putin in February allegedly sacked the some 1,000 people—from cooks to launderers to secretaries to bodyguards—who catered to his daily personal and professional needs, and replaced them with a new group of attendants.

“Putin is of course aware someone is coming after him,” says the Frenchman. “Killing Putin is not an easy task, but Putin knows it can be done, and that’s guaranteed to scare him.”

Scheduling is everything. Would-be assassins like to “gather information. Determine habits. Correlate all of Putin’s back-up options,” the covert operator adds, ticking the boxes. “Doubt Putin will travel far by vehicle. There’s no armored vehicle that can survive a few tons of explosives buried under the street.”

The former DGSE black-operations planner says any hit on Putin most likely will have someone in his inner circle, or a phantom just outside the perimeter, as the trigger man. “It will be an expensive job, a fortune,” he says. “In my experience, I’d wager an asset is already in place. There always is.”

Read more at The Daily Beast.

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· · · · · ·

What’s wrong with Russian soldiers?

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“Success [in war] never did and never will depend on position, or on ammunition, or even on number. [It depends] on the feeling that’s in me, in him, in every soldier.”

So says Prince Andrei on the eve of battle in Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace. He predicts that the outnumbered and outgunned Russian soldiers defending their homeland will defeat the superior invading force led by Napoleon because the defenders have the stronger will to fight. The French forces won the battle but lost so many men in the process that their invasion ultimately stalled.

With that in mind, the Pentagon claimed this week that US intelligence sees a potentially debilitating low morale among some Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine. The publicly cited evidence includes reports that substantial numbers of Russian troops have surrendered their weapons with little or no fight, that some have sabotaged their own vehicles and equipment to stall their advance toward Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, and anecdotal reports of lost and demoralized Russian troops begging for food.


Is the evidence credible?

Pentagon officials leave us to guess how they know all this or why they believe it. Is US intelligence relying on the testimony of captured soldiers? Electronic eavesdropping? Media and social media reports from Ukrainians?

GZERO can’t confirm official US assertions or assess the scale of this problem for Russia’s military. But military experts are at a loss to explain why Russia’s advance toward Kyiv has stalled, and why clearly superior numbers and weaponry have failed to score a quick victory.

We should all be wary of information that might be distorted by the fog that shrouds all wars while they’re in progress. Perhaps the Russians’ sluggish performance can be blamed more on poor planning and the unexpected intensity of Ukrainian military and civilian resistance than on the mood of troops.

We should also expect that levels of morale can vary widely across groups of soldiers. Russian forces who have scored successes in the east and south of the country, for example, are likely in a better mood than those now grinding their way toward confrontation in Kyiv.

We should also note that the US Defense Department, which sides with the Ukrainians, has reason to try to create Russian morale problems that may not yet exist.

But there have also been past reports of low Russian military morale even in peacetime. And no one has adequately explained why Russian forces have moved so slowly toward Kyiv, failed to control Ukraine’s airspace, and held back on using some of their more destructive weapons.

Why might Russian forces be demoralized?

First, by some estimates, 30 percent of Russia’s fighting force consists of lightly trained conscripts. These draftees have heard the same Kremlin propaganda that other Russians have:

This isn’t a war, it’s a special operation to be conducted with surgical precision. Its purpose is to liberate the great mass of our friendly Ukrainian brothers from the clutches of Western-backed neo-Nazis bent on doing vile things to Mother Russia. Ukrainians will cheer your arrival. Move in, restore order, and come home.

A confident soldier reassured by this message as he entered Ukraine might well be confused at this point, and when poorly trained, under-equipped soldiers discover that Ukrainians are screaming — or shooting — at them, rather than greeting them as liberators, it’s easy to imagine they might lose confidence in the mission.

What might this tell us about where the war is headed?

Those cheering the Ukrainian resistance might be encouraged by news that many Russian soldiers don’t want to fight. Not so fast.

If Moscow’s military strategists doubt the willingness of Russian soldiers to take Kyiv’s streets from Ukrainian soldiers determined to protect their homes and homeland, they may decide they need to rely more heavily on indiscriminately destructive weapons, which can be fired from a distance into the heart of the capital. This strategy, which we’ve already seen in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second city, can be far deadlier and more destructive than the large-scale entry into cities of Russian troops.

Tolstoy never imagined the heavy weapons at the disposal of today’s Russian commanders — and the will and morale of Vladimir Putin and his generals matter too.

Tweets 

  1. National security adviser Jake Sullivan spoke to the Russian Security Council on Wednesday & reiterated U.S. disapproval of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, according to the White House.
    Jake Sullivan holds highest-level U.S. talks with Russia since invasion https://www.axios.com/jake-sullivan-russia-ukraine-invasion-c5981fc3-3744-4ca0-8af2-ee31730f3739.html 

    •  
  2. The invasion of Ukraine has shown that the whole architecture of European security must be reconsidered - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=The+invasion+of+Ukraine+has+shown+that+the+whole+architecture+of+European+security+must+be+reconsidered&source=lmns&bih=714&biw=1536&rlz=1C1ONGR_enUS949US949&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjQ4LrDxM32AhVokmoFHUesCxMQ_AUoAHoECAEQAA 
    2 days ago
    The Hill
    Russia-Ukraine war: US must change its role in Europe's defense | TheHill

    View image on Twitter
    •  
  3.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    In Mariupol, 80-90% of the city was bombed by Russian fascists. There is not a single house without damage — Mariupol deputy mayor Serhiy Orlov. video via @ua_parliament

    Embedded video
    •  
  4.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    View image on Twitter
    •  
  5. Will it be: Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova,
    Israel
    Turkey
    Gulf Arabs & possibly SA
    Others, e.g. Greece?
    Some type of the Mediterranian "mini-Nato", (with watchful eyes toward Russia & Iran)?
    DW: Time to make new alliances? European diplomacy in the Ukraine https://twitter.com/IuliiaMendel/status/1504481173933740045  https://twitter.com/IuliiaMendel/status/1504481173933740045

    View image on Twitter
    •  
  6.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    Ukraine wants to create a specific mechanism that will be written in the peace agreement to guarantee Ukraine's security in the future. The office of the President predicts the creation of a new alliance in Europe to ensure security.

    •  
  7.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    TO BE CLEAR... Donald is 's BIGGESST "Useful Idiot" but not his most dangerous (any longer).
    And I'm sure Putin NEVER liked the man.
    Who does (who isn't mentally disturbed)? https://twitter.com/mikenov/status/1504474646636245000

    •  
  8.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    Ex-RNC Chairman blasts Trump: "Not fit to lead this nation" http://hill.cm/ASY7sVX 

    View image on Twitter
    •  
  9.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    Uh. Looks like the Russian ultra wealthy are bailing out. https://twitter.com/OAlexanderDK/status/1504416951518564360

    •  
  10.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    The world is united in our support for Ukraine — and in our determination to make Putin pay a very heavy price for attacking Ukraine.

    America is leading this effort — together with our allies and partners — providing enormous levels of security and humanitarian assistance.

    View image on Twitter
    •  
  11.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    Thank you, @JaroNad for the warm welcome. I’m honored to be in Slovakia for this crucial moment in European security. I wanted to be here in person as a sign of our unity and the strength of America’s relationship with Slovakia.

    Embedded video
    •  
  12.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    ⚡President of Syria Bashar al-Assad promised Putin to send 40,000 militants for war in Ukraine - Defence Intelligence of Ukrainehttps://www.facebook.com/DefenceIntelligenceofUkraine/posts/272485005062927 

    •  
  13.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    The statement followed President Volodymyr Zelensky’s address to Bundestag, where he said that Germany shares blame for the delays in Ukraine’s NATO and EU integration, which made Russia’s aggression against Ukraine possible.

    •  
  14.  Michael Novakhov Retweeted

    ⚡️Scholz: NATO will not intervene militarily in Russia’s war against Ukraine.

    During a press conference on March 17, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that his country will, however, continue to support Ukraine.

    •  

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