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#1132
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07-26-2023, 05:00 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
2+2 does not equal 4 with him. There's only so much time I can spend trying to debate him. ______________ "We support the counteroffensive — we send 1,700 drones to the front. Among them are attack and reconnaissance copters. "Birds" with artificial intelligence, which will help to effectively recognize and then destroy enemy targets. All drones were purchased within the framework of the State Drone Army program. Thank you to the President for supporting the program and personal attention!"
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#1133
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07-26-2023, 05:46 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
Russian propagandist and miliblogger Daniel, owner of the channel Karlsonnews with 43k followers has died. He fought for an Akhmat detachment and died near Klishchiivka.
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#1134
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07-26-2023, 10:21 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
"Battles in the South. Soldiers of the 47th "Magura" brigade, together with the 78th assault battalion of the Armed Forces, in the area of the settlement of Robotino, still have a few kilometers to advance." _____ "In the area of the village of Staromayorske in the Berdyansk direction, Ukrainian units continue to expand the area of the liberated territory" #liberated
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#1135
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07-26-2023, 10:40 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
"Joe Biden ordered the transfer of evidence of war crimes committed by the Russian Armed Forces in Ukraine to The Hague Court , — The New York Times. Previously, the USA did not want to take such a step." Full article below. Source (paywall): https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/26/u...mes-hague.html Biden Orders U.S. to Share Evidence of Russian War Crimes With Hague Court The step signals a major shift in American policy and ends months of resistance by Pentagon officials who feared setting a precedent that could pave the way for the court to prosecute U.S. troops. By Charlie Savage Reporting from Washington July 26, 2023 Updated 6:00 p.m. ET President Biden has quietly ordered the U.S. government to begin sharing evidence of Russian war crimes in Ukraine with the International Criminal Court in The Hague, according to officials familiar with the matter, signaling a major shift in American policy. The decision, made by Mr. Biden in recent days, overrides months of resistance by the Pentagon, which had argued that it could pave the way for the court to prosecute American troops, according to the officials. It was unclear why Mr. Biden let the impasse linger or what finally led him to resolve it, but he has been under mounting bipartisan pressure to act. Last week, for example, a Senate committee approved a government funding bill that had a provision stating that the president “shall provide information” to the court to assist with its investigations into war crimes in Ukraine. American intelligence agencies are said to have gathered information including details about decisions by Russian officials to deliberately strike civilian infrastructure in Ukraine and forcibly deport thousands of Ukrainian children from occupied territory. Already, they have shared some of that evidence with Ukrainian prosecutors but had refrained from doing so with The Hague. Since the International Criminal Court was created by a 1998 treaty to investigate war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity, administrations of both parties have viewed it with wariness and sometimes hostility. But Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 has helped thaw those relations. After the war began, American officials applauded the court’s chief prosecutor, Karim Khan, for his investigation into possible war crimes in Ukraine. In December, Congress eased restrictions that barred it from providing aid to the court for its investigation into Russian atrocities. And the Biden administration expressed support for the court when it issued arrest warrants in March for top Russian officials, like President Vladimir V. Putin, accusing them of orchestrating the abduction and deportation of Ukrainian children. Behind the scenes, however, there was fierce internal debate over whether to share intelligence shedding light on the actions of Russian officials. While the Justice and State Departments supported doing so, the Pentagon resisted such a step, officials have said. The dispute led the National Security Council to convene a cabinet-level “principals committee” meeting on Feb. 3 in an attempt to resolve the matter, officials have said, but Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III continued to object. The White House has yet to announce the policy reversal or the assistance it will now provide, but it began notifying members of Congress on Tuesday, according to the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter. The Pentagon press office did not respond to a request for comment. Adrienne Watson, a National Security Council spokeswoman, expressed a broader commitment to holding Russia to account for atrocities but declined to address the International Criminal Court issue. “We support a range of international investigations to identify and hold accountable those responsible,” she said in a statement. “On the I.C.C. specifically, we are not going to discuss the specifics on any cooperation, which is consistent with the court’s practice of treating requests for cooperation in a confidential manner.” John Bellinger, a former top lawyer at the National Security Council and State Department during the George W. Bush administration who favored sharing evidence with the court, embraced word of the decision. “It’s too bad that they are not announcing that publicly, because it’s the right thing to do,” he said. Senators Richard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, and Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, the top lawmakers on the Judiciary Committee, have repeatedly sought to call attention to the impasse and shame the Pentagon for standing in the way. In a joint statement, they praised the shift as they recounted documented Russian war crimes. “Ensuring that the United States is doing all that it can to hold the perpetrators of atrocities in Ukraine accountable is essential to help our Ukrainian friends and to send a clear message to Putin: The United States will not tolerate these horrific crimes,” they said. “After pressing the administration for months, we are pleased that the administration is finally supporting the I.C.C.’s investigation.” In a letter to Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken released Wednesday, Senator Bob Menendez, Democrat of New Jersey and the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, urged the administration to cooperate with the court when it came to the deportation of Ukrainian children, thousands of whom have been sent to Russia since the invasion. In an interview, he said he had not yet heard of the policy change but that it would be “welcome news,” calling the Pentagon’s stonewalling “unacceptable.” The bipartisan legislation Congress enacted in December, embedded in a large appropriations bill, created an exception to prohibitions on funding and certain other aid to the court. It allows the government to assist with “investigations and prosecutions of foreign nationals related to the situation in Ukraine, including to support victims and witnesses.” Despite that signal of support, Pentagon leaders had continued to oppose such a step. They wanted to maintain the position taken by previous administrations: that the court should not exercise jurisdiction over citizens from a country that is not a party to the treaty that created it, like the United States or Russia. Some legal specialists, like Mr. Bellinger, have maintained that the United States can help the court with its investigation into Russian actions while arguing that it should not investigate American forces because the United States has military and criminal justice systems that investigate allegations of wrongdoing by its own personnel. But Pentagon leaders are said to have argued that sharing evidence would set a precedent that would make it harder for the United States to argue that the court should not investigate and prosecute Americans. Regardless, the move is a significant step, as the government has been changing its approach toward the court. Before the International Criminal Court was created, the United Nations Security Council relied on ad hoc tribunals to address atrocities in places like the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Many democracies welcomed the idea of creating a standing body at The Hague and signed the 1998 treaty, known as the Rome Statute, including close American allies like Britain. But the United States has long kept its distance. President Bill Clinton signed the Rome Statute in 2000 but called it flawed and did not send it to the Senate for ratification. In 2002, President George W. Bush essentially withdrew that signature. And Congress enacted laws in 1999 and 2002 that limited what support the government could provide. Relations began to ease under the Obama administration, which showed support by offering rewards for the capture of fugitive warlords in Africa whom the court had indicted. But tensions again flared after top prosecutors for the court in 2017 tried to investigate the torture of detainees during the Bush administration as part of an inquiry into the war in Afghanistan. The Trump administration imposed sanctions on the court’s personnel, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo denounced it as corrupt. In 2021, the Biden administration revoked President Trump’s sanctions, and the newly appointed prosecutor, Mr. Khan, dropped the investigation. Julian E. Barnes contributed reporting. #warcrime
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#1136
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07-26-2023, 11:37 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
another video and the following was posted in the very next post: "To the post above. Here, the Washington Post wrote an interesting article about Ukrainian drones. Thesis about the main thing: ✅Ukrainians have successfully tested a technology that, with the help of AI algorithms, brings strike drones even to a moving target, if the control is interrupted by EW; ✅such technology is being developed by a growing number of Ukrainian companies and is one of several breakthroughs that accelerate and democratize the lethality of drones; ✅Ukraine has turned into a super laboratory of inventions, more than 200 Ukrainian companies cooperate with the military to improve products and attract investments from well-known Western entrepreneurs; Eric Schmidt, former CEO of Google, invested $10 million in D3, a Ukrainian start-up accelerator of defense technologies; ✅ Eric Schmidt was an adviser to the Pentagon on AI technologies, believes that AI-based drones are the future, visited Ukraine several times and met with Reznikov, and is said to be interested in investing millions of dollars more in the scaling of Ukrainian manufacturers; ✅United 24 helped private companies train 10,000 drone operators last year and plans to help train the same number of operators in the next 6 months; ✅ co-founder of Warbirds, Dmytro Kovalchuk, says that the Ministry of Statistics helped speed up the terms of procurement of MOU drones from 12 months to 2; ✅Ukrainian private drone manufacturers, thanks to the MoU, have the opportunity to test drones on training grounds against the Russian REB, which gives them a great advantage over Western manufacturers, says the former top manager of Uber, who returned from Silicon Valley to help Ukraine in the war; ✅FPV drones will not help win the war by themselves, the role of aerial reconnaissance, which guides artillery and other powerful weapons, is very important; ✅ the rapid improvement of the design of drones, software and the experience of tens of thousands of Ukrainians and Russians in controlling drones will create many new risks around the world from separatists, cartels and other extremists; ✅Fedorov says that he understands the risks of the proliferation of combat technologies based on AI, but for Ukraine the priority is survival, especially against the background of a lack of weapons."
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#1137
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07-27-2023, 02:21 AM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
"The Prime Minister inspects a drone similar to those seen during strikes on the far Russian rear, mainly Moscow. Denys Shmyhal also said that the government has allocated 40 billion hryvnias, which it will invest in drone manufacturers."
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#1138
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07-27-2023, 02:38 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
"British intelligence reports on the relocation of Russian Black Sea Fleet vessels after the disruption of the "grain deal", which may indicate an increase in the risk of violence in the Black Sea" Crazy weather in Crimea today! Flooding and power outages. "Hail the size of a small egg fell in Sevastopol near Cape Fiolent There is a thunderstorm and heavy rain in the city now, our subscribers report. Serious flooding is expected, storm sewers, where it is, can no longer cope."
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#1139
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07-27-2023, 05:12 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II
"Russian intelligence services installed dozens of antennas and satellite dishes on the roof of the Russian embassy in Moldova to monitor the Moldovan authorities - an investigation by Jurnal TV and The Insider. According to the investigators, classified liaison officers from the GRU and SVR can also be spotted periodically on the roof of the diplomatic mission and on neighboring buildings. Antennas and dishes allow to listen to telephone conversations and intercept conversations on the radio of the local police" AND "Moldova is reducing the number of diplomats at the Russian Embassy in Chisinau. The country's foreign minister responded to a journalist investigation that revealed that the authorities, police, and foreign delegations were being monitored by a large number of antennas on the embassy's roof. Popescu did not say how much the number of embassy staff would be reduced."
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