'Russia ready to discuss temporary ceasefire with Ukraine'
Russia is ready to discuss a temporary ceasefire in Ukraine if progress is made toward a permanent peace deal, Bloomberg reported, citing people in Moscow familiar with the matter.
Agreeing to the ceasefire would require a clear agreement on the principles of the eventual peace deal, two people familiar with the matter said.
Russia would particularly push to spell out the parameters of any peacekeeping mission, including agreement on which countries would participate, another person familiar with the matter said. Russia has previously made it clear that it does not want NATO troops on Ukrainian soil.
The Kremlin has not yet officially commented on the news.
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Re: War! The Russian Invasion of Ukraine.
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#1116692 03/08/2509:23 PM03/08/2509:23 PM
NATO chief praises Trump: 'You broke the deadlock' on Ukraine
Trump praised for getting NATO allies to bolster defense spending: 'really staggering' 'We will have a NATO which is really invigorated' By Diana Stancy Fox News Published March 13, 2025 4:56pm EDT | Updated March 13, 2025 5:15pm EDT
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte lauded President Donald Trump’s efforts to push NATO allies to increase defense spending, amid efforts to end the war in Ukraine.
Trump has long advocated for NATO allies to ramp up defense spending to between 2% and 5% gross domestic product — and has made it clear that European nations need to shoulder greater responsibility for the security of their continent.
"You're starting to hear the British prime minister and others all committing to much higher defense spending," Rutte told reporters Thursday at the White House. "We're not there. We need to do more, but I really want to work together with you . . . to make sure that we will have a NATO which is really reinvigorated, under your leadership. And we are getting there."
"When you look at Trump 47, what happened the last couple of weeks is really staggering," Rutte said.
‘MAKE NATO GREAT AGAIN’: HEGSETH PUSHES EUROPEAN ALLIES TO STEP UP DEFENSE EFFORTS
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte visited the White House on March 13, 2025.
Rutte’s comments come as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen put forth an $841 billion proposal on March 4 for European Union nations to bolster defense spending.
Likewise, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer pledged in February to boost his country's defense spending to 2.5% of its gross domestic value. That is an increase from the 2.3% the U.K. currently spends, and amounts to a nearly $17 billion increase.
Still, Rutte emphasized the need to strengthen the defense industrial base in both the U.S. and Europe, and cautioned they were falling behind Russia and China in defense production.
As of 2023, the U.S. spent 3.3% of its GDP on defense spending — totaling $880 billion, according to the nonpartisan Washington, D.C.-based Peterson Institute for International Economics. More than 50% of NATO funding comes from the U.S., while other allies — like the United Kingdom, France and Germany — have contributed between 4% and 8% to NATO funding in recent years.
NATO comprises more than 30 countries and originally was formed in 1949 to halt the spread of the Soviet Union.
ecretary of Defense Pete Hegseth also encouraged NATO allies to beef up defense spending during a trip to Brussels in February.
"NATO should pursue these goals as well," Hegseth said. "NATO is a great alliance, the most successful defense alliance in history, but to endure for the future, our partners must do far more for Europe’s defense."
Pledges from European and allied nations to increase defense spending coincide with negotiations to end the war in Ukraine.
Nations including the U.K. and France have proposed deploying troops to ensure that Ukraine is protected from future Russian aggression under a peace negotiation.
Rutte is a very clever and loyal guy prime minister of the Netherlands from 2010 to 2024. We did have some major problems and many blame him but I blame the system more. To run the Netherlands for 14 years is not an easy job real leaders like Angela Merkel, Macron and even Trump know that DJT would love to rule the USA for 14 years haha..
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#1117168 03/14/2504:44 PM03/14/2504:44 PM
A new deal with the Greens could allow for as much as €1 trillion in new spending for defense and infrastructure over the next decade.
Germany’s conservative Chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz has reached a breakthrough with the Greens on a massive spending plan to unleash hundreds of billions of euros for defense and infrastructure.
“Germany is back,” Merz told reporters in Berlin on Friday. “Germany is making its great contribution to the defense of freedom and peace in Europe.”
Separate peace talks, US-Russia confrontation in Riyadh: Trump wants truce by Easter Washington's goal is to achieve an immediate partial ceasefire in the war in Ukraine, followed by a comprehensive peace agreement
by Benedetta Guerrera
March 24, 2025
A symbolic date, April 20, when both Catholic and Orthodox Easter will fall. With this limit on the horizon to achieve peace in Ukraine, talks between Donald Trump's team and Volodymyr Zelensky's team took place in Saudi Arabia, ahead of the meeting between Washington and Moscow's representatives today. "The discussion was productive and focused: we addressed key points, including energy," reported Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov, who heads the Kiev team, at the end of the meeting with the American delegation.
"President Volodymyr Zelensky's goal is to secure a just and lasting peace for our country and our people, and, by extension, for all of Europe. We are working to make this goal a reality."
The US president and his team, special envoy Steve Witkoff, have sounded optimistic about ending Europe's worst conflict since World War II, despite renewed mutual attacks on the ground, but have slammed British- and French-led efforts to shore up Ukraine's defenses and Europe's plan to build long-term security guarantees as "posturing." "Putin doesn't want to conquer all of Europe. The situation is very different today than it was in World War II," the tycoon's right-hand man for foreign policy said, arguing that the Kremlin leader is "not a bad person, he's very intelligent." "I have the impression that he wants peace," Witkoff told Fox News, saying he was confident that Monday's talks with Moscow would yield "concrete progress" such as "a first ceasefire in the Black Sea that will then lead to a full truce."
The Kremlin has scaled down American expectations for a quick resolution to the conflict, saying that negotiations with the United States "will be difficult." "We are only at the beginning of this path," spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, confirming however that Moscow's "main" focus will be on resuming an agreement to ensure safe navigation for commercial ships in the Black Sea, especially for grain, as has already been the case between 2022 and 2023.
Announcing the start of the Riyadh talks, Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov, who led the Kiev delegation, said on Facebook: "We are implementing our president's directive to move closer to a just peace and strengthen security." Zelensky, who in his usual evening speech called the ongoing talks in Riyadh with the Americans "useful," continued to push for "sanctions against Russian terrorists. New solutions and new pressure on Moscow are needed to stop these attacks and this war. We need to strengthen Ukraine and our army: more air defense and real assistance," the Ukrainian leader urged, commenting on Moscow's attacks over the past 48 hours. Ukrainian authorities reported that a Russian drone attack in Kiev overnight killed at least three people, including a 5-year-old boy, causing fires in buildings and damage throughout the capital. Meanwhile, Russian air defenses said their air defenses destroyed 59 Ukrainian drones targeting the country's southwestern regions, adding that the strikes killed one person in Rostov.
A situation of very high tension, far from the peace in the short term hoped for by Trump. The American president has, however, assured that efforts "to avoid a further escalation of the conflict are underway". "I have a good relationship with Putin and Zelensky and no one else, apart from me, is capable of stopping the war in Ukraine", reiterated the commander-in-chief who is already thinking of being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. "Obama got it for no reason, he didn't even know it, he didn't do anything. If I were a democratic president I would win it".
"The king is dead, long live the king!"
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#1118252 03/26/2501:22 AM03/26/2501:22 AM
The United States said on Tuesday it has reached separate agreements with Ukraine and Russia to ensure safe navigation in the Black Sea and to implement a ban on attacks by the two countries on each other's energy facilities.
The agreements, if implemented, would represent the clearest progress yet towards a wider ceasefire that Washington sees a stepping stone towards peace talks to bring an end to Russia's three-year-old war in Ukraine.
The United States said on Tuesday it has reached separate agreements with Ukraine and Russia to ensure safe navigation in the Black Sea and to implement a ban on attacks by the two countries on each other's energy facilities.
The agreements, if implemented, would represent the clearest progress yet towards a wider ceasefire that Washington sees a stepping stone towards peace talks to bring an end to Russia's three-year-old war in Ukraine.
A ‘coalition of the willing’ mulls more aid for Ukraine and a possible European armed force
By JOHN LEICESTER and SAMUEL PETREQUIN Updated 2:10 PM CET, March 27, 2025 Share PARIS (AP) — Ukraine’s allies from across Europe gathered for talks in Paris on Thursday about how to strengthen Kyiv’s hand and its military as it pushes for a ceasefire with Russia, and to consider proposals to deploy European troops in the country in tandem with any peace deal.
French President Emmanuel Macron is hosting the leaders of nearly 30 countries plus NATO and European Union chiefs. The summit comes at a crucial juncture in the more than three-year war, with intensifying diplomatic efforts to broker ceasefires, driven by pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to end the fighting.
But the conflict is raging on.
Before the leaders met in the luxury of the French presidential palace, Russian drone attacks overnight wounded more than 20 people and heavy shelling Thursday afternoon killed one person and knocked out electricity in parts of Kherson, Ukrainian officials said.
U.S.-brokered agreements this week to safeguard shipping in the Black Sea and last week to halt long-range strikes on energy infrastructure were greeted as a first step toward peace. But Ukraine and Russia have disagreed over the details and accused each other of deal violations, foreshadowing a long and contentious process ahead.
Europe mulls boots on the ground France and the United Kingdom are pushing a separate initiative to build a coalition of nations willing in one way or another to support the deployment of a European armed force in Ukraine, with the aim of securing any peace deal by dissuading Russia from attacking the country again.
Some European countries are more comfortable with a potential deployment than others — not least because a big unknown is whether Trump would allow American forces and intelligence agencies to back up any European contingent with air and logistical support and other assistance.
Building a force big enough to act as a credible deterrent — U.K. officials have talked about possibly 10,000 to 30,000 troops — would also be a considerable effort for nations that shrank their militaries after the Cold War but are now rearming. There would also be questions to resolve about who would command the force and how it might respond to a major violation by Russia of any peace agreement.
The office of U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who’s driving the European initiative together with Macron, said that military planners from Europe and beyond have been drilling down into details of how such a force might be put together, examining “the full range of European military capabilities including aircraft, tanks, troops, intelligence and logistics.”
A litmus test for Europe In the face of enduring pressure from Trump on European nations to increase military spending and rely less on U.S. forces, dating back to his first presidency, the proposed contingent is also seen as a test of Europe’s ability to defend itself and its interests.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy posted an image from inside the summit of him and other leaders standing together with the caption: “Europe knows how to defend itself. We must prove it.”
Macron said Wednesday that the proposed European force could deploy to “important towns, strategic bases” in Ukraine and that it could “respond” to a Russian attack if Moscow launched one.
Macron didn’t specify what sort of response he envisaged. But he suggested that a Russian attack might not go unanswered, even though the European troops wouldn’t be deployed to the front lines.
“If there was again a generalized aggression against Ukrainian soil, these armies would, in fact, be under attack and then it’s our usual framework of engagement,” Macron said. “Our soldiers, when they are engaged and deployed, are there to react and respond to the decisions of the commander in chief and, if they are in a conflict situation, to respond to it.
“So we are not on the front lines, we don’t go to fight, but we are there to guarantee a lasting peace. It’s a pacifist approach,” he said. “The only ones who would, at that moment, trigger a conflict, a bellicose situation, would be the Russians if they decided again to launch an aggression.”
How Russian sanctions could affect a ceasefire The meeting in Paris came as Russia has demanded lifting sanctions to meet its terms for the Black Sea ceasefire.
Sanctions imposed by the U.S. and Europe have punished Russia’s economy and limited its access to global markets.
Zelenskyy accused Moscow of attempting to add conditions to what should be an unconditional agreement.
While the White House said that it would help restore Russia’s access to the world market for fertilizer and farm exports, it didn’t validate Moscow’s conditions. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that Russia’s demands would be evaluated and presented to Trump.
There has been a growing chorus of opposition in Europe to lifting the sanctions, which remain their main leverage against Moscow.
António Costa, the president of the European Council representing the EU’s 27 member states, said that sanctions are crucial to support Ukraine and reach a lasting peace.
“This means keeping up the pressure on Russia through sanctions,” Costa said Thursday.
More aid and more attacks As ceasefire efforts gather steam, Ukraine’s allies in Europe are working to strengthen Kyiv’s hand militarily. Their aim is to enable it to keep fighting until any broad peace takes hold and also to turn the Ukrainian army into the first line of defense against any future Russian aggression.
Macron announced a new package of defense aid for Ukraine that he said was worth 2 billion euros ($2.15 billion) and will include light tanks, air defense and anti-tank missiles and other weaponry and support.
Russian drone attacks overnight wounded at least 18 people in the Kharkiv region and three people in Dnipro, officials said. Shelling in a front-line community in the Zaporizhzhia region knocked out electricity and phone coverage, regional head Ivan Fedorov said on Telegram.
Zelenskyy said that the attacks were further evidence that the U.S. and Europe shouldn’t ease sanctions on Moscow.
“Russia is killing every day and prolonging this war,” Zelenskyy said on social media. “The American proposal for an unconditional ceasefire has been on the table for half a month now.”
Separately, the Ukrainian Army General Staff said that its attack at Engels military airfield in Russia on March 20 had destroyed 96 air-to-air cruise missiles and significant reserves of aviation fuel.
Satellite imagery taken the next day by Maxar Technologies appeared to show damage to ammunition and weapons storage at Engels, the main base for Russia’s nuclear-capable strategic bombers.
A search for four U.S. soldiers continued in Lithuania after their vehicle was found submerged in a training area, the U.S. Army said on Wednesday. "The M88 Hercules armored recovery vehicle the four missing U.S. Soldiers were operating during a training exercise has been located in Lithuania," it said in a statement. The military search and rescue operation has been ongoing since Tuesday, after the soldiers and their vehicle went missing at Pabrade training ground, about 15 kilometers (nine miles) from Belarus.
"The king is dead, long live the king!"
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#1118406 03/27/2507:54 PM03/27/2507:54 PM
Zelensky sees new US commodity deal proposal as 'completely different': 'Very unfavorable for Ukraine'
According to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, the new draft for a comprehensive raw materials deal with the United States is "completely different" from an earlier concept. The proposal requires further assessment by lawyers, Zelensky said.
The president emphasized that Ukraine will not accept an agreement that would jeopardize accession to the European Union. A day earlier, the American news agency Bloomberg reported that the Americans are demanding even more economic power in Ukraine. Washington sees this partly as compensation for military aid to Ukraine in the fight against Russia.
The United States would insist on control over all major future investments in infrastructure and minerals. According to Bloomberg, Washington could even undermine Ukraine's efforts to become a member of the EU. The Americans would gain enormous power in projects such as roads and railways, ports, mines, oil and gas and the extraction of important minerals.
Zelensky did not provide details about the deal, but according to Ukrainian media it would be "very unfavorable" for the country. Ukrainian parliamentarians have also already expressed criticism and called the document "unacceptable".
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#1118493 03/28/2504:50 PM03/28/2504:50 PM
Nixon of all people warned us, but the West thought to could deal with them and ofcourse their oil and gas was more than welcome and the oligarchs spending their money in Western Europe.
Last edited by Hollander; 03/29/2507:50 PM.
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#1118913 04/01/2505:13 PM04/01/2505:13 PM
Russia says it 'cannot accept' US proposals on Ukraine 'in their current form'
Russia cannot accept the US proposals to end the war in Ukraine in their current form because they do not address the problems that Moscow says caused the conflict, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov has said, suggesting that US-Russian talks on the issue have stalled.
UK, Germany take over Ukraine arms aid talks from US, uncertainty over future meetings
The United Kingdom will take on joint responsibility with Germany for the periodic consultations on military aid to Ukraine. Until US President Donald Trump took office, the United States led these meetings. It is now uncertain whether the US will even attend the consultations of around fifty allies of Ukraine next week.
The British defence minister took over the chairmanship of the so-called Defence Contact Group for Ukraine (UDCG) from the US in February. That did not necessarily mean that the Americans were giving up that role for good, it was said at the time. It would fit in with the American aim of having European allies pay more for their own defence and aid to Ukraine, NATO sources say.
The UK will share the chair of the next meeting of the UDCG on Friday 11 April at NATO headquarters in Brussels with Germany, both countries say. It is not yet clear whether US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth will attend, a NATO diplomat says.
The UDCG started almost three years ago, after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The US brought together supporters at its main military base in Europe, in Ramstein, Germany, to periodically collect and coordinate weapons for Ukraine.
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#1119042 04/02/2508:08 PM04/02/2508:08 PM
Putin worked as a KGB foreign intelligence officer for 16 years, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel. He resigned in 1991 to begin a political career.
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#1119340 04/05/2508:29 PM04/05/2508:29 PM
So far, EU member states have trained more than 70,000 Ukrainian soldiers. I watched the other day a report on how the Ukrainian secret service tried to convince the AIVD and CIA they could be trusted. There was widespread distrust about them because they were part of the KGB. The CIA set up a safehouse in the heart of Amsterdam where a dozen people or so would meet. Cold war stuff lol..
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#1119563 04/07/2506:02 PM04/07/2506:02 PM
European Commission: Putin lacks interest in peace talks
Russian President Vladimir Putin has "a total lack of respect" for the talks on a possible ceasefire, a European Commission spokesperson said. "He shows every day that Russia is not interested in continuing with this." She referred to recent Russian attacks in Ukraine that have killed Ukrainian citizens. Nevertheless, the European Commission said it was important that these talks continue. "Nobody wants peace more than Ukraine."
The outcome of peace talks should make Ukraine stronger, "because Putin does not respect weakness". With additional arms supplies from the EU, Ukraine should be put in a strong position, she added.
She stressed the importance of a ceasefire to achieve a just, long-lasting and comprehensive peace. "But we cannot be naive because we are dealing with Putin and seeing his murderous attacks."
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#1119589 04/07/2508:49 PM04/07/2508:49 PM
Zelensky confirms Ukrainian troops active in Russia's Belgorod region It is the first time in the more than three years since Russia's invasion that Kyiv has explicitly mentioned a Ukrainian presence in the region located on the border with Ukraine. The Russian military acknowledged facing Ukrainian land attacks in the area in March.
This will give the European allies a good reason to continue to support the fight.
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#1119825 04/10/2501:31 PM04/10/2501:31 PM
Russian offensive in Kharkiv, 'disaster if city falls' Author : BNR Web Editors Russia is said to have launched a new offensive in Ukraine, a top commander of the Ukrainian ground forces reports in an interview. The fighting is said to be in the Sumy and Kharkiv regions in northeastern Ukraine, says correspondent Chris Colijn in Kyiv. 'Russia is attacking much more often.'
According to the commander, in addition to the increasing number of shellings, troop movements are also taking place in the region. Colijn sees that Ukraine is anticipating by launching an attack of its own in the Russian region of Belgorod. 'They are trying to thwart the Russians and thus delay the offensive.'
'Pro-Ukrainian city' Kharkiv is, after Kyiv, the second city of Ukraine. It has almost one million inhabitants. It would be 'disastrous' if this city were to fall into Russian hands after three years of war. 'It is a very pro-Ukrainian city, a city where people are really proud to belong to Ukraine. So you can hardly imagine that city falling into the hands of the Russians.'
Read also Many questions about Chinese soldiers fighting for Russia, US 'concerned'
According to Colijn, however, Kharkiv is under almost constant fire. 'It is a heavily damaged city, the question is whether Ukraine can defend this city without help.'
Over the past year, the Ukrainians have built many additional defensive positions in the area, including trenches, bunkers and anti-tank barriers. 'Everything to make it as difficult as possible for the Russians to break through there,' says Colijn. Kharkiv is 30 kilometres from the Russian border, making it easily accessible for Russian artillery and drones.
Chinese soldiers According to President Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine has identified 155 Chinese who are fighting for Russia. Russia is allegedly recruiting new soldiers in China with the knowledge of the Chinese government, the president claims. Yesterday he announced that two men of Chinese descent had been arrested in Ukraine. He says he assumes that there are many more Chinese active in Ukraine than the 155 who are currently identified.
According to Colijn, it is possible that the two captured soldiers voluntarily joined the Russian army, 'as individuals in a personal capacity'. In that case, it would not be official Chinese involvement in the war. 'It is not the case that the Chinese government is sending people now.'
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#1119901 04/11/2509:51 AM04/11/2509:51 AM
US envoy Witkoff talks to Putin in Moscow US envoy Steve Witkoff is in Russia for talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The trip was first reported by US news site Axios. Russian state news agency RIA confirmed that Witkoff had arrived in Russia.
Witkoff first met with Kirill Dmitriev, Putin's envoy for foreign investment and economic cooperation, on Friday in St. Petersburg.
According to Axios, a meeting with the Russian president is planned for later in the day. Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov did not want to confirm this yet. "If there is one, we will let you know," he said when asked. According to the Kremlin, Putin will lead an "extremely important meeting" in St. Petersburg later in the day that will have to do with the Russian naval fleet.
Russian and American diplomats held talks this week in Istanbul, Turkey. There, they are trying to improve ties between the countries, including by giving diplomats more space. It was said beforehand that there would be no discussion about the war in Ukraine. On Thursday, a prisoner exchange between the countries did take place.
Trump has said he wants to end the war in Ukraine quickly. According to him, restoring contact with Russia would help with that. US Secretary of Defense Marco Rubio said last week that the US wants to see within a few weeks whether Moscow is also prepared to take steps towards peace.
A spokesman for the Kremlin confirmed Witkoff's visit. He says that the conversation between the Russian envoy and Putin will not be groundbreaking and that no major breakthroughs are expected.
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#1120076 04/12/2511:38 PM04/12/2511:38 PM
Economy • Apr 12 18:12 • Modified on Apr 12 18:12 Russian economy takes heavy hit from import duties Author : BNR Web Editors Although Donald Trump has not imposed tariffs on Russia, Moscow will suffer greatly from the trade war, write Alexandr Kolyandr of the Center for European Policy Analysis and Alexandra Prokopenko of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. Russian oil revenues will fall, making it very difficult for the Russian central bank to cut interest rates.
Now that Trump has unleashed a global trade war, global growth will slow down sharply, especially in China and other Asian countries. This low growth will translate directly into a drop in the price of oil, Russia's main export product. And with that, the country's main source of income will take a big hit.
Read also Putin clashes with top banker, blames her for spiralling inflation Bot interest weapon As a result, it will become more difficult for the Russian central bank to lower interest rates. The current high interest rate of 21 percent is playing tricks on Russia, making borrowing very expensive and putting a brake on economic growth. Russian businesses are persistently lobbying President Putin for interest rate cuts, reportedly with success; there are persistent rumors that Putin is already putting pressure on the president of the central bank Elvira Nabiyellina to do something about the sky-high interest rates.
Nabiyellina told the TASS news agency that the central bank is "analyzing" the consequences of the trade war. "The main aspect that can have an impact is the change in oil prices," Nabiyellina told members of the Russian parliament. Nabiyellina acknowledged that a "decline in world trade" could potentially lead to "a decrease in demand for our energy resources."
Nabiyellina said he was "concerned" that inflation in Russia, which rose above 10 percent in February, has been above the target for four years and stressed that he wanted to prevent inflation "from spiralling out of control and ending up in double digits."
Read also Putin publicly calls central bank to order, interest rates remain at 21 percent Achilles heel Oil is Russia’s Achilles heel, oil revenues account for 30 percent of the total state budget, for the war in Ukraine the Kremlin has allocated 32 percent of the state budget for 2025. And that is problematic, when drawing up the budget for 2025 the Kremlin assumed an oil price of 70 dollars a barrel. But on April 7, the price of Russian Ural oil plummeted to a 21-month low of 51.54 dollars a barrel.
“If the average price is below $70 per barrel all year round, Russia will have less money to earn and spend, especially to cover the growing expenses related to illegal actions against Ukraine,” The Kyiv Independent quotes a Polish energy expert as saying.
Exports to Europe are falling The weakened position of Russian oil and gas “not only reduces the chance that Russia can export more to the European Union, but also makes it more likely that Asian buyers will be willing to pay even less,” said Bloomberg economist Alexander Isakov. “The fact is that the EU, China and others will want to reduce their trade imbalances with the U.S., and one way to do this is to increase imports of oil and LNG from the U.S..” And because a euro can only be spent once, this comes at the expense of imports from Russia.
Read also Russia struggles with huge inflation: 'Will continue to rise' Another effect is that Russia will become even more dependent on China. Beijing is looking for other markets now that the US dollar has been locked down and the yuan is devaluing. Both are causing China to focus more on Russia as a market. Russia's revenues from oil and gas exports fell by 10 percent in the first quarter of this year to 2.6 trillion rubles (81.2 billion euros). That was 65.6 billion rubles (632 million euros) less than anticipated in the Russian budget plan, according to the Ministry of Finance.
Read also Food Russia is extremely expensive, butter theft is reaching epidemic proportions “The deficit means that the Ministry of Finance, according to the budget rules it has imposed on itself, will have to switch from buying gold and yuan to selling liquid assets from the rapidly shrinking National Welfare Fund. This is happening for the first time in a year,” Kolyandr and Prokopenko said. Therefore, from April 7 to May 12, gold and foreign currency equivalent to 1.6 billion rubles will be sold every day. At the same time, the Central Bank will sell 8.86 billion rubles of yuan per day until the end of the second quarter to provide some support to the ruble.
"The king is dead, long live the king!"
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#1120077 04/13/2512:00 AM04/13/2512:00 AM
“He's a smart guy, and he's a tough guy.” Trump said of Zelensky. He is right not calling him a dictator Trump took that back, but Zelensky is just as tough as Putin.
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#1120099 04/13/2501:44 PM04/13/2501:44 PM
NOS News • today, 18:06 'Every standard of decency exceeded', US envoy also condemns Russian attack
The Russian missile attack on the center of the Ukrainian city of Sumy has led to angry reactions among European leaders. The US special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, also condemned the airstrike on civilian targets. He did so in remarkably sharp language.
"This Palm Sunday attack by Russian forces on civilian targets in Sumy has exceeded all standards of decency," Kellogg said on X. "Dozens of civilians have been killed and wounded." According to Ukraine, at least 32 people were killed and more than a hundred wounded.
Until now, US top officials and the White House have been very reluctant to condemn Russian war violence in Ukraine, in light of the rapprochement between Washington and Moscow at the expense of Kyiv and ongoing ceasefire talks.
'Weak' President Zelensky called the U.S. response to a deadly Russian missile attack last week "unpleasantly surprising" and "weak." In contrast to the U.S. ambassador's response at the time, Kellogg explicitly called Russia the aggressor in an attack on civilians.
President Macron of France goes a few steps further. "This war was started by Russia, and the attack on Sumy makes it clear that only Russia chooses to continue." According to Macron, the attack shows that the Russians are ignoring Trump's diplomatic efforts.
Prime Minister Schoof also responded to the "horrible Russian attack" on Sumy this morning. "We must continue to increase the pressure on Russia and continue to support Ukraine. For example, with air defense, so that Ukraine can defend itself against this violence," says Schoof. The Russian attack on civilians in Sumy has also been condemned by NATO, Germany and the United Kingdom, among others.
The White House has not yet responded officially. Since Trump took office, the US has made all sorts of concessions to Russia and has openly insulted Zelensky on several occasions. Trump spoke of Putin with admiration. But recently, the American president also seems to be exerting some pressure on Russia at the negotiating table. Presumably because the talks have yielded little in the way of concrete results so far.
Trump 'angry' over Putin's comments "Russia needs to move," Trump said on social media last Friday. "Too many people are dying, thousands a week, in a terrible and senseless war." That day, his top negotiator Steve Witkoff had another hour-long meeting with Putin in Russia. The president said the next day that the talks had gone "fine."
In late March, Trump had said in an interview with NBC News that he was "angry" about statements made by Putin. The US president then mentioned sanctions against Russia as an option, but played down the likelihood of it happening.
Earlier that month, the White House said that Ukraine and Russia had reached an agreement to limit attacks on each other's energy infrastructure. In practice, nothing has come of it. Both sides accuse each other of ignoring the agreements. The Russian missile attack on civilians in Sumy underscores that the war is in full swing.
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#1120163 04/13/2510:00 PM04/13/2510:00 PM
Ukraine should hit the big cities in Russia send drones to the heart of Moscow or even missiles. Let the Russians suffer they do the same to civillians in Ukraine. They are the agressors and should pay !