UK Rules Out Deploying HMS Prince of Wales to Ukraine Conflict
UK Rules Out Deploying HMS Prince of Wales to Ukraine Conflict
Sputnik International
The United Kingdom has no plans to redeploy the HMS Prince of Wales aircraft carrier from the Indo-Pacific region to Europe for involvement in the Ukraine conflict, UK Chief of the Defense Staff Admiral Tony Radakin said on Saturday.
“We have no plans to use our aircraft carrier in the Russia-Ukraine context. And I do not think that we have any expectation that [the] Russia-Ukraine [conflict] is going to suddenly erupt into something that is pressing us with our aircraft carrier,” Radakin said at the Shangri-La Dialogue security forum in Singapore. The admiral commented on media reports that claimed the United States was dissatisfied with London’s decision to send the royal navy’s flagship to the Indo-Pacific region. HMS Prince of Wales left Portsmouth in April to participate in the large-scale Operation Highmast, during which the aircraft carrier strike group will be deployed in the Indo-Pacific region. Additionally, the strike group will make port calls in the Indian Ocean alongside military forces from the US, India, Singapore and Malaysia. UK forces will take part in Exercise Talisman Sabre near Australia alongside 19 other allies, followed by joint training with Japan’s self-defense forces.
uk, british army, hms prince of wales, ukraine, ukrainian conflict, black sea
uk, british army, hms prince of wales, ukraine, ukrainian conflict, black sea
MOSCOW (Sputnik) – The United Kingdom has no plans to redeploy the HMS Prince of Wales aircraft carrier from the Indo-Pacific region to Europe for involvement in the Ukraine conflict, UK Chief of the Defense Staff Admiral Tony Radakin said on Saturday.
“We have no plans to use our aircraft carrier in the Russia-Ukraine context. And I do not think that we have any expectation that [the] Russia-Ukraine [conflict] is going to suddenly erupt into something that is pressing us with our aircraft carrier,” Radakin said at the Shangri-La Dialogue security forum in Singapore.
The admiral commented on media reports that claimed the United States was dissatisfied with London’s decision to send the royal navy’s flagship to the Indo-Pacific region.
HMS Prince of Wales left Portsmouth in April to participate in the large-scale Operation Highmast, during which the aircraft carrier strike group will be deployed in the Indo-Pacific region. Additionally, the strike group will make port calls in the Indian Ocean alongside military forces from the US, India, Singapore and Malaysia. UK forces will take part in Exercise Talisman Sabre near Australia alongside 19 other allies, followed by joint training with Japan’s self-defense forces.
Trump Not Properly Informed on Russia-Ukraine Conflict – Kremlin Aide
Trump Not Properly Informed on Russia-Ukraine Conflict – Kremlin Aide
Sputnik International
US President Donald Trump makes many statements, and Moscow monitors them, but comes to conclusion that he is not sufficiently informed about what is really happening in context of Ukrainian-Russian confrontation, Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov said on Wednesday.
US President Donald Trump makes many statements, and Moscow keeps track of them, yet it has come to the conclusion that he is not sufficiently aware of what is really happening in context of the Ukrainian-Russian conflict, Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov said on Wednesday.
Other statements by Yuri Ushakov:
Trump makes many statements, Moscow monitors them
Trump still fails to understand that Russia only strikes military infrastructure targets in Ukraine
It appears that Trump is not being informed about Ukraine’s terrorist attacks against Russian cities—only about Russia’s retaliatory measures
Putin Thanks Brazil, China’s Leaders for Desire to Help Resolve Ukraine Conflict
Putin Thanks Brazil, China’s Leaders for Desire to Help Resolve Ukraine Conflict
Sputnik International
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva held a phone call during a technical stop of a Brazilian government plane in Moscow on its way from China.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva held a phone call during a technical stop of a Brazilian government plane in Moscow on its way from China, and the Russian leader expressed gratitude to the leadership of Brazil and China for their desire to contribute to the settlement of the conflict in Ukraine, the Kremlin said on Tuesday. Silva told Putin that he intended to do everything possible to promote the success of direct talks between Russia and Ukraine on May 15 in Istanbul, the statement said, adding that the leaders confirmed their commitment to developing the Russian-Brazilian strategic partnership.
china brazil ukrainian crisis, vladimir putin lula da silva conversation
china brazil ukrainian crisis, vladimir putin lula da silva conversation
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva held a phone call during a technical stop of a Brazilian government plane in Moscow on its way from China.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva held a phone call during a technical stop of a Brazilian government plane in Moscow on its way from China, and the Russian leader expressed gratitude to the leadership of Brazil and China for their desire to contribute to the settlement of the conflict in Ukraine, the Kremlin said on Tuesday.
“Vladimir Putin expressed gratitude to the leadership of Brazil and China for their sincere desire to make a constructive contribution to finding ways to resolve the [Ukraine] conflict,” the Kremlin said.
Silva told Putin that he intended to do everything possible to promote the success of direct talks between Russia and Ukraine on May 15 in Istanbul, the statement said, adding that the leaders confirmed their commitment to developing the Russian-Brazilian strategic partnership.
The worry is running deep in the parts of Kashmir and the rest of India that are in range of Pakistani weapons — and beyond them, too.
The India-administered region of Jammu and Kashmir has been under artillery bombardment by Pakistan since earlier this week. A broader swath of India, from Kashmir in the north to the desert towns of Jaisalmer and Bhuj in the west, are said to be within range of Pakistani drone and missile attacks.
In Poonch, in the India-governed part of Kashmir, six miles from the “line of control” with the Pakistani part, Narinder Singh, a retired school principal, said that 13 people had been killed since India launched Operation Sindoor, aimed at avenging the victims of the terrorist attack in Kashmir on April 22.
Pakistani shells have fallen on the Poonch district before, Mr. Singh said, but he noted, “This kind of shelling never has never taken place in Poonch town.” Five of his neighbors have been killed by shrapnel in the past three days, he added. “I don’t remember that kind of shelling even during the 1971 war.”
Mr. Singh said that the market in his town had closed and that very few people were in the streets. “Only some medical and grocery shops are open,” he said. By Friday though, the shelling had intensified again, he said, and so had the sense of fear. During the later bombardments, he added, “No one was killed, because people had moved to safer houses and learned better how to stay safe.”
Damage in Poonch on Thursday after Pakistani shelling.Credit…Channi Anand/Associated Press
In bigger cities of the northern Indian plains, 12 of which government officials said were the targets of Pakistani drone and missile attacks on Wednesday night, it also seemed that no one had been harmed. The sense of fear is real but vague, fed by a nationalistic press and social media.
In the northern Indian city of Gwalior, which is home to an air base, a civilian hospital had painted its rooftop with a red cross on a white field. Blackouts farther north, in Chandigarh, another city with a big military presence, were intended to protect sites from aerial attack. The measures have left Neha Chaudhary, a housewife, wondering what to tell her two sons.
“A sense of stress has crept into them,” she said.
Ajay Sharma, a physiotherapist in Jaipur, capital of Rajasthan State, which shares a 665-mile border with Pakistan, said “I have been stocking up on rations like rice and lentils and flour. I have withdrawn cash from banks.”
Families in New Delhi, 220 miles from the border, are doing the same — and keeping their gas tanks filled, too. In response to the anxiety, India’s national oil company posted that its reserves were sufficient and that there was “no need for panic buying.”
Technology has changed perceptions of risk since the 1971 war between India and Pakistan, and even since the countries’ high-intensity clash in Kashmir in 1999. Then, the two countries’ nuclear arsenals were new. And the news media was relatively contained, too. Now, the flow of information — and disinformation — is constant.
And though the possibility of escalation remains as untested as it was 26 years ago, the fact that both sides have access to nuclear weapons has become strangely familiar.
“Although we have full faith in our army, one cannot predict what will happen, given the circumstances,” Dr. Sharma, the physiotherapist in Jaipur, said. “There is a sense of panic.”
Trump Reiterates That Putin Wants to Stop Ukraine Conflict
Trump Reiterates That Putin Wants to Stop Ukraine Conflict
Sputnik International
Russian President Vladimir Putin is ready to end the conflict in Ukraine, US President Donald Trump said in an interview with ABC News, aired on his 100th day in office.
“I would say that he [Putin] would like to stop the war,” Trump told ABC News’ Terry Moran. “He could be tapping me along a little bit,” Trump admitted, but added later on in the interview “I do believe that — he’s willing to stop the fighting.” Trump blamed his predecessor, Joe Biden, for the start of the armed conflict in Ukraine and said that he believed that Putin had wanted to “take over the whole country [of Ukraine].” Last week, Trump criticized Volodymyr Zelensky’s “inflammatory” remarks about Kiev’s refusal to recognize Crimea as part of Russia, saying that they were detrimental to peace negotiations and could further prolong the Ukraine conflict. Earlier this week, Trump said in an interview with US media personality Glenn Beck that Zelensky kept making increasing demands despite having no bargaining power. The US president told Beck that Putin was willing to conclude an agreement on Ukraine and was “easier to deal with than Zelensky.”
peaceful resolution, ukrainian conflict, ukraine conflict, nato’s proxy war against russia, russia-ukraine war, war of attrition, us-russia war, us aid, military aid
peaceful resolution, ukrainian conflict, ukraine conflict, nato’s proxy war against russia, russia-ukraine war, war of attrition, us-russia war, us aid, military aid
MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Russian President Vladimir Putin is ready to end the conflict in Ukraine, US President Donald Trump said in an interview with ABC News, aired on his 100th day in office.
“I would say that he [Putin] would like to stop the war,” Trump told ABC News’ Terry Moran. “He could be tapping me along a little bit,” Trump admitted, but added later on in the interview “I do believe that — he’s willing to stop the fighting.”
Trump blamed his predecessor, Joe Biden, for the start of the armed conflict in Ukraine and said that he believed that Putin had wanted to “take over the whole country [of Ukraine].”
“When Biden got involved, I won’t say whether or not he handled it properly, but obviously it wasn’t good, because the war started,” Trump said. “I think if I didn’t win the election, he [Putin] would have gotten all of Ukraine,” the US president added.
Last week, Trump criticized Volodymyr Zelensky’s “inflammatory” remarks about Kiev’s refusal to recognize Crimea as part of Russia, saying that they were detrimental to peace negotiations and could further prolong the Ukraine conflict.
Earlier this week, Trump said in an interview with US media personality Glenn Beck that Zelensky kept making increasing demands despite having no bargaining power. The US president told Beck that Putin was willing to conclude an agreement on Ukraine and was “easier to deal with than Zelensky.”
A permanent ceasefire and the initiation of immediate negotiations between Russia and Ukraine;
Ukraine must give up all NATO aspirations;
Witkoff proposals advocate for de jure recognition by the US of Russia’s control over Crimea, plus de facto recognition of the new Russian territories of the DPR, the LPR, as well as the Zaporozhye and Kherson regions;