Putin Recognizes Donbass Republics, Sends Russian Military to 'Denazify' Ukraine

Crypto currencies - 'a bridge to nowhere'...


Just like anonymous, they will take off the mask they wear and let their true face be seen. It is time for all the revelations of these media that claim to defend some kind of "freedom" when deep down they are part of continuing the control and lead people to a dead end. I would like to know Max Keiser's opinion, he must be with his hands on his head, cryptocurrencies were supposed to avoid government intervention affecting people's pocket. They must be at war internally among themselves and Bukele should no longer be so confident either.

Supposed groups that were formed to defend some kind of economic "freedom" or freedom of speech sooner or later reveal who they are by their own clumsy actions. If they were so infallible, fear would not be an excuse to do that, they are simply the same, they are the CIA. How symbolic that they use aliases/pseudonyms and masks, isn't it?
 
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Very good idea! I would be especially interested in regular updates/posts here for anyone able to access en.kremlin.ru since there we can find out what Putin and co are actually doing and saying in transcript form. The last time I was able to go to the website I copy pasted Putins second „empire of lies“ speech and postet it here. At that time I saw that there was also a new update/transcript of the russian security council meeting and wanted to copy/paste it here. Unfortunately by then the website wasn’t (and still isn’t) available anymore. It would be highly appreciated if some of our russian members in russia (or anyone able to access it) could look up the website (if that’s possible) and regularly copy/paste relevant transcripts here!

I've just upgraded my VPN to try for you and sadly it seems I can't access it even from a Russian location. I tried pinging the domain and that didn't resolve either. I do have a lot of access to various countries now though so I'm happy to do some data collection for the forum. If there's any sites in particular you'd like me to try and grab articles from please let me know! Cig's rolled and ready! :cool2:

I'll keep trying en.kremlin.ru everyday and see if it returns.

Interestingly I can still get RT from a Ukraine VPN, and it's also still accessible from the UK.
 
COINBASE is clearly a Wall Street operation. No big surprise at their actions. Eventually the whole space will be compromised except the private block chains for the elite controller A-holes. At least I think that is the plan. Ultimately chaos may/should/will intervene to disrupt that plan.
 
When China is accused of censorship, there are ways to bypass their internet firewalls. So, it would be the same to bypass American attempts to block information, it would seem.

So, we could get Russian news through China or India, or any other country who isn't blocking Russian news.

So, that's probably why the sites are still available, but interrupted often. If they closed these channel permanently, a workaround would be established. It is more of a harrasment and inconvenience that these censorship measures take place.

The U.S. are the ones who have abridged censorship in the past - citing free speech. So, it is at best a inconvenience. So, America is going against its own ideals over this matter.
 
Sorry if someone has mentioned this as im still catching up on the fun.

It's not on my email subscription level to confirm but ProtonMail have Russian servers.

View attachment 56004

I've used their email servers for a few year now and had no issue. The VPN is a relatively new service. They are based in Switzerland and their privacy policy is good in my opinion but I'm no expert.

My general rule of thumb with VPNs is stay away from any advertised by YouTubers. Hopefully Proton haven't started doing that too :cool2:

I believe you need their plus package for the Russian servers. It's €8 euros a month last I checked.

Edit: forgot the link

I currently use their VPN. At the moment all the fast Russian servers show as running at 100% There are a few slow ones with capacity
 

How to access RT.com

This is an actual news article on RT. :)
Serious attempts have been made in Western nations to silence RT, following Russia’s military offensive in Ukraine. The EU Commission has given regulators in the bloc’s nations powers to ban the media outlet. If you’ve faced difficulties accessing RT’s content due to those restrictions, here are some steps you can take to bypass them.
1. If you’re reading RT on your smartphone, you can use our Android app, which can be downloaded via this link.
2. On your PC, you can use the Tor browser, which can be downloaded here. RT’s website address in Tor remains the same: www.rt.com. If Tor doesn’t work for you, or is unavailable via regular means, you can resolve this issue by sending an empty email to gettor@torproject.com and you will be sent the necessary link.
3. Another way of circumventing restrictions is to use the Psiphon censorship-bypass tool, which can be downloaded for Windows, Android, and other systems. Alternatively, you can use a VPN service of your choice. (Windows download here, direct Android download here, and other options here).
4. You can also stay in touch with RT through Telegram by subscribing to RT’s soon-to-be-reborn channel there.
 
Latest from RT

Kremlin reacts to US senator’s call to assassinate Putin​



Not everyone is able to remain cool-headed in a tense situation, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said
Kremlin reacts to US senator’s call to assassinate Putin

FILE PHOTO. © Global Look Press / Chromorange / Bilderbox
US Senator Lindsey Graham has been driven crazy by the ongoing tensions between Moscow and the West, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov implied, following calls from the politician for the assassination of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“Not everyone can remain cool-headed these days, some [people] lose their senses,” Peskov told a press conference, commenting on Graham’s statements made on Thursday during an appearance on Fox News. Graham suggested during the show that “somebody in Russia” should kill Putin.
Peskov pointed to the “hysterical stirring-up” of anti-Russian sentiment in the US, calling it a “Russophobic meltdown” of sorts. Earlier on Friday, Russia’s ambassador to Washington, Anatoly Antonov, called the senator’s comments “unacceptable and outrageous.” Moscow has also demanded an official explanation from the US over what it called de-facto advocating an act of terrorism.
Russia reacts to US senator’s Putin assassination plea
Read more
Russia reacts to US senator’s Putin assassination plea

On Thursday, Graham claimed “the only way” to end Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has sparked widespread condemnation among western nations and seen unprecedented sanctions being imposed against Russia, was to kill Putin. He also wondered aloud if Russia has its own “Brutus” or “a more successful Colonel Stauffenberg” ready to do the world “a great service.”
The US has previously made attempts on the lives of foreign leaders. Cuba’s revolutionary leader Fidel Castro was targeted in numerous plots orchestrated by the CIA, as revealed by the Church Committee in the 1970s. The US military has not shied away from openly hunting foreign leaders in more recent times, as was the case with Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi, who was the target of NATO airstrikes in 2011.
Moscow maintains its military offensive in Ukraine is a “special operation” aimed at the “demilitarization” and “denazification” of the nation in the name of protecting the people of the two Donbass republics Russia has recently recognized.


Putin should not be assassinated, Boris Johnson says​


Russia’s president should be tried by an international court for his “horrific acts” instead, UK prime minister believes
Putin should not be assassinated, Boris Johnson says

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a press conference at an airbase in Tallinn, Estonia on March 1, 2022. © AP / Leon Neal
Britain’s prime minister does not support the idea of trying to kill Russian President Vladimir Putin, a spokesperson for Boris Johnson said on Friday. Asked by reporters whether he agrees with US Senator Lindsey Graham, who called for “somebody in Russia” to assassinate the country’s leader, the spokesperson firmly rejected the idea.
“No. We stand with the Ukrainian people in demanding the immediate end to the Russian invasion,” the spokesperson stated. “We have said before that Putin must be held to account before an international court for the horrific acts he has committed.”
The bizarre call was issued by the top senator on Wednesday, with Graham invoking the assassination of Roman dictator Julius Caesar and the botched plot to kill Nazi German leader Adolf Hitler as examples of what should be done in his opinion.
Zelensky urges Putin to talk
Read more
Zelensky urges Putin to talk

“Is there a Brutus in Russia? Is there a more successful Colonel Stauffenberg in the Russian military?” Graham asked. “The only way this ends is for somebody in Russia to take this guy out. You would be doing your country – and the world – a great service.”
The open call for the assassination of the Russian president provoked fury in Moscow, with Russia’s Embassy in the US strongly condemning such statements, as well as demanding Washington to hold the official accountable for his remarks.
“The degree of Russophobia and hatred towards Russia is going through the roof in the United States. It is unbelievable that a senator from a country that preaches its moral values as a ‘guiding light’ for all of mankind could allow himself call for terrorism as a means to achieve Washington’s goals on the international stage,” Russia’s Ambassador in the US Anatoly Antonov said.
The hasty exchange came amid the Russian offensive in neighboring Ukraine, launched by Moscow last week. Explaining the decision to begin the large-scale military operation, Russia’s president said it was the only option left to protect the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Lugansk in Ukraine’s east. He also set out the goals of “demilitarizing” and “denazifying” the neighboring country.
Kiev said the attack was unprovoked, insisting it had not been seeking to retake Donetsk and Lugansk by force. The two republics split from Kiev back in 2014 in the aftermath of the Maidan coup, which ousted Ukraine’s government.
Chechen leader makes Ukraine plea to Putin

Ramzan Kadyrov claims his solution is the only one that will save the Russian state and its people
By Alexey Viryasov
Chechen leader makes Ukraine plea to Putin

Head of the Chechen Republic Ramzan Kadyrov. © Sputnik/Press service of the Head of the Chechen Republic
If Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to put a quick end to the country’s military operation in Ukraine, he should give Chechen troops the go-ahead to seize the Eastern European nation’s major cities, the leader of Chechnya has claimed.
In a statement on Friday, Ramzan Kadyrov asked for Chechen soldiers to be given the green light to capture towns across the former Soviet republic.
“Give an order to our fighters to seize Kharkov, Kiev, and all the other cities quickly, accurately, and efficiently,” he insisted.
“Comrade President, Comrade Supreme Commander, I have said more than once that I am your infantryman, I am ready to give my life for you,” Kadyrov insisted. “But I cannot watch how our fighters are dying. I beg you turn a blind eye to everything and let them finish in a day or two what is happening there.”
According to Kadyrov, “only this will save our state and people.”
“I ask you to give our fighters the opportunity to prove themselves to the fullest, to give them the opportunity to use all their possible and impossible force in order to finish this once and for all,”
he pleaded.
Kadyrov confirms Chechen casualties READ MORE: Kadyrov confirms Chechen casualties
In response to Kadyrov’s request, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin was considering all options when it came to Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine.
“It is not my competence to comment on questions of military art. The Commander-in-Chief receives information, including about such proposals. And it is up to him to decide how to conduct the special operation,” he said.
Kadyrov had previously declared that Chechnya was willing to send volunteers from the region to the most dangerous combat zones of Ukraine to fight shoulder to shoulder with the Russian Army. According to the head of the republic, there are currently 12,000 Chechen troops in the Eastern European country.
Putin ordered the incursion into Ukraine on February 24. According to the Kremlin, the goal of the intervention is “to protect the people [of Donbass] who have been tortured for eight years by the Ukrainian regime.” It came after requests from the leaders of the breakaway Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics for assistance in combatting what they claimed was an uptick in “aggression” from Kiev’s armed forces.

Experts tell RT how Russian offensive in Ukraine will end​


Experts tell RT how Russian offensive in Ukraine will end​

Russian analysts weigh in on the advance of Moscow's troops in Ukraine
Experts tell RT how Russian offensive in Ukraine will end

A Russian armored vehicle is pictured near the Ukrainian border. © Sputnik / Konstantin Mikhalchevsky
As Russia's armed forces conduct an attack designed to cripple Ukraine's military, delegations from Moscow and Kiev have held two rounds of high-stakes peace talks in Belarus. RT got in contact with Russian experts about when and how the so called "special operation" is likely to draw to a close, what this could mean for Ukraine's sovereignty, and what lessons can be learned in relation to information warfare.

Moscow's mission to demilitarize Ukraine​

Russia's Permanent Representative to the UN Vasily Nebenzya has insisted that, through the invasion of Ukraine, Moscow is exercising its right to defend itself from a neighboring country that is seeking to acquire an arsenal of nuclear weapons. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference last month, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky touched on Kiev's decision to hand over its atomic armaments under the Budapest Memorandum, inked in 1994, in exchange for security guarantees.
Some observers interpreted this as the former Soviet Republic looking to renounce its non-nuclear status.
“As soon as there is an understanding that the Ukrainian authorities are willing to start the demilitarization and denazification process, it’ll be a step towards wrapping up the operation,” Nebenzya claimed.
The Head of the Center for Comprehensive European and International Studies at the Higher School of Economics (HSE), Vasily Kashin, explained to RT that analysis of the military intervention in Ukraine should be based on President Vladimir Putin’s statements.
Russia reveals number of troops killed and injured in Ukraine READ MORE: Russia reveals number of troops killed and injured in Ukraine
“We have limited understanding of Russia’s goals here. It seems that we’re talking about moving through all of Ukraine’s territory and changing its political system. I suppose the point is to make Ukraine into something it would’ve become had it been observing the Minsk Agreements – a country with a weak center and strong regions. That would make it impossible for Ukraine to single-mindedly pursue a bloc-oriented foreign policy. Moreover, the nationalists would be cut off from politics. How exactly Russia intends to achieve that is still unclear to me, considering Ukraine is a big country and the Russian forces are limited,” he said.
Moscow has repeatedly insisted that it has no intentions of occupying Ukraine, but is working to demilitarize Ukrainian territory. Commenting on what sort of timescale could be expected to achieve this objective, Kashin referred to the US military's 2003 Operation Iraqi Freedom, which lasted for 21 days.
“It’s likely that Kiev will be first surrounded and then taken, but I don’t think it will be that soon, since the locals were given weapons there. Russia is mostly focused on other parts of the country now. In a week or two, Ukraine’s organized defense will probably crumble, and then there will be the issue of bringing the country under control and establishing a new regime,” the HSE expert claimed.
Valdai Discussion Club program director Oleg Barabanov told RT he believes that the outcome of the intervention in Ukraine will depend on how successful the Russian military operation is, specifically whether or not Kiev's forces and militia will halt their armed resistance.
“If the operation is going well in the next couple of days and military objectives are achieved, Ukraine will have no choice but to start discussing Russia’s demands on demilitarization. But if the operation starts stalling, the shock of the first few days will dissipate, and Ukraine will be able to shore up its defense. Then this will turn into a prolonged military conflict where negotiations won’t play a decisive role,” he said.

Casualties​

The Ukrainian leadership is doing everything in its power to make Russia's advance through the country “as costly as possible,” Kashin claims.
“Handing out guns to untrained civilians outside the army structure doesn’t make much sense defense-wise. But they will get killed if they try to resist and every such death will lead to several dozen more people getting involved in anti-Russian activities – every person killed has loved ones and friends, after all. This is the reasoning behind the unrelenting defense of Kiev instead of retreating west and holding the line at the border there."
According to him, “it is a mass sacrifice meant to complicate the situation for Russia and make it hard for it to achieve its goals.” He went as far to claim that “Kiev doesn’t care about its people.”
Barabanov argues that Moscow should have carried out a similar operation in 2014 in the wake of the Maidan, when violent street protests ousted the elected government. The Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republic's (DPR and LPR) subsequently declared their independence from Kiev, which the Kremlin has recently recognized.
“Russian troops try to avoid entering Ukrainian cities, encircling and blocking them instead. It may be right from the tactical standpoint. But the question is whether Zelensky’s government will remain in power by the end of it or some new alternative center of power will emerge. Zelensky and his circle won’t back down that easily, judging by how valiant and organized they are now. This is the key difference from 2014. Back then, the elites and the army were likely to flee, so an eight-year-long delay is a big mistake. I would say there is no chance of Zelensky running away. Even if his actions are contradictory sometimes, he’s doing everything he can,” Barabanov said.

Ukraine's future​

On February 28, Russia and Ukraine had their first round of talks in the Gomel region of Belarus. According to the head of the Russian delegation, Vladimir Medinsky, the two parties discussed a wide range of issues during the five-hour summit.
However, some analysts speculate that any negotiations with the current Ukrainian leadership could be redundant, since the nation might soon be governed by different officials.
Russia may invade close ally, Western media claims READ MORE: Russia may invade close ally, Western media claims
Barabanov believes, a new ‘Novorussian’ people’s republic, with a capital situated near Kherson in the south, or Kharkov in the east, could be an alternative to the incumbent Kiev government. He also noted that there’s been much speculation in the media that a potential new state could be headed by former Novorossiya parliament speaker and Verkhovna Rada member, Oleg Tsaryov, or the former Ukrainian prime minister, Nikolay Azarov.
“In this case, they can even negotiate with Russia, practically dividing Ukraine. I don’t believe there’s a chance somebody could just oust Zelensky, despite Putin’s calls to the military to seize power. I see it as the least likely scenario,” the expert said.
According to Kashin, there are some allegedly Russian-controlled anti-fascist organizations in Ukraine that could theoretically be involved in running the country.
“This is a very peculiar idea of Ukraine’s future,” Kashin said.
The HSE expert alleges that Tsaryov could be taking part in developments from behind the scenes. He also pointed out that MP Ilya Kiva has been very vocal over the past few days, criticizing both Zelensky and Kiev Mayor Vitaly Klitschko.
Kiva was once in charge of the Poltava branch of the Right Sector, an ultra-right Ukrainian organization. He previously supported the Ukrainization of the Donbass and worked as an adviser to former minister of internal affairs Arsen Avakov. In 2014-2015, he participated in the so-called anti-terrorist operation in DPR and LPR from the Ukrainian side.
In recent years, Ukrainian nationalists began to condemn Kiva for his political U-turn. He joined the ranks of the allegedly pro-Russian Opposition Platform – For Life – the political party headed by Viktor Medvedchuk, who is currently under house-arrest. In an interview in 2021, Kiva said that “for me, Russia is a chance to save the future of my country,” while “the US is sowing seeds of Nazism in Ukraine.”

Media and public opinion​

Barabanov claims that the Russian media may have kept a lower profile in its coverage of the war based on the need to keep tactical plans secret over the course of the attack.
“However, the Ukrainian leadership and talking heads have been working hard to keep up the morale, regularly thanking their troops for their heroism and for defending their homeland. We don’t see enough of that in Russia, except that one time President Putin thanked them. When it comes to boosting morale, the Ukrainian propaganda machine trumps the Kremlin one,” he said.
Kashin also asserts that Russian press is not adequately covering the offensive, but he stopped short of declaring Ukraine as the winner on the media campaign.
“Russia should be showing not only more videos, but also various interviews. What we’ve seen so far are mostly strange statements. But Ukraine is not handling it all that well either. Perhaps it’s because their propaganda infrastructure was hit at the very beginning of the operation. The statements coming from Ukraine now are chaotic and unconfirmed,” he said.
‘Pro-Russian’ hacking group hits back at Anonymous READ MORE: ‘Pro-Russian’ hacking group hits back at Anonymous
A lack of what Kashin believes to be official information coming from Moscow, has contributed to the controversial reaction many are observing within the country, according to the expert.
“Russia should’ve prepared detailed reference materials that would be widely available and contain all the information about how the talks broke down, who was responsible, and who and how made the decision to launch the current military operation. Most importantly, there should be a clear explanation about why Ukraine is so important to Russia that we started the biggest war in Europe since 1945 over it.”
Despite the advances of Moscow's armed forces on the ground, Russian society does not receive enough insight on how the war is going, Kashin claims, adding that it will take time to fully grasp just how successful the operation is going.
By Maxim Hvatkov, a Russian journalist focusing on post-Soviet space and Russian military forces
 
Some more

https://www.rt.com/news/551225-nato-expansion-lead-conflict/

NATO talks options but sees no place for own troops in Ukraine​

The alliance should not have the bloc’s planes operating in Ukrainian airspace or boots on the ground, its secretary general said
NATO talks options but sees no place for own troops in Ukraine

FILE PHOTO. Nato General Secretary Jens Stoltenberg visits Poland. ©DAMIAN BURZYKOWSKI via Global Look Press
NATO members discussed Ukraine’s pleas to establish a ‘no-fly zone’ over the country, but the alliance is determined not to engage directly in the military confrontation between Moscow and Kiev, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said on Friday, after a meeting of foreign ministers of the allies.
“NATO is a defense alliance. Our core task is to keep our 30 nations safe. We are not part of this conflict. And we have a responsibility to ensure it does not escalate and spread beyond Ukraine,” he said. “NATO is not seeking a war with Russia.”
That said, Stoltenberg added, the alliance has stepped up consultations with non-members Sweden and Finland, which are now taking part in all NATO events. It also ramped up support for Georgia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, he said.
Kiev calls for UN peacekeeping mission
Read more
Kiev calls for UN peacekeeping mission

The option of a ‘no-fly zone’, which Kiev has been requesting from NATO members, was “mentioned” during the meeting, Stoltenberg said, but member states “agreed that we should not have NATO planes operating over Ukrainian airspace or NATO troops on Ukrainian territory.”
A ‘no-fly zone’ would require NATO to shoot down Russian military aircraft involved in the Ukraine offensive, Stoltenberg pointed out. Russian President Vladimir Putin warned as he announced the invasion last week that any third party trying to intervene in the operation would have consequences “unlike anything they had in their history.” Many Western nations took it as a thinly-veiled threat to use nuclear weapons.
Stoltenberg claimed credit for training and arming tens of thousands of Ukrainian troops over the years, saying this allowed them to fend off the Russian attack now. Putin cited NATO’s creeping expansion into Ukraine as a major reason for ordering the attack in the first place. Russia for years said that dragging its western neighbor into NATO would cross a red line and that Russia would have to respond to what it views as an existential threat to its national security.

https://www.rt.com/news/551225-nato-expansion-lead-conflict/

Leading experts warned NATO expansion would lead to conflict. Why did no one listen?​

From Kennan to Kissinger, Western foreign-policy thinkers saw NATO’s eastward march was a dangerous game
Bradley Blankenship
Bradley Blankenship is an American journalist, columnist and political commentator. He has a syndicated column at CGTN and is a freelance reporter for international news agencies including Xinhua News Agency.
@BradBlank_
Leading experts warned NATO expansion would lead to conflict. Why did no one listen?

© AFP / EMMANUEL DUNAND
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has provoked serious backlash around the world, particularly in the Western world – an understandable reaction against a war of aggression in violation of international law. However, it’s also true that this outcome had been predicted by the world’s foremost foreign-policy experts for decades.
Specifically, experts have consistently warned that NATO’s eastward expansion would provoke conflict with Russia. So, this begs the question, how did we get here if so many people warned about it? Before getting into the answer, here are some examples of those warnings.
For starters, the top American Russia scholar George Kennan, the man who laid the foundation for US Cold War foreign-policy strategy, said NATO’s expansion into Central Europe in the 1990s was “the most fateful error of American policy in the entire post-Cold War era.” He warned that expanding NATO would damage the US-Russia relationship so deeply that Russia would never become a partner and would remain an enemy.
The US Ambassador to the Soviet Union from 1987 to 1991 penned an essay nine days before the invasion, answering the question of whether the brewing crisis was, at that point, avoidable. “In short, yes,” he explained. On whether it was predictable, “Absolutely. NATO expansion was the most profound strategic blunder made since the end of the Cold War.”
Leading international relations scholar John Mearsheimer gave an interview after the Russian invasion, explaining that the situation “started in April 2008, at the summit in Bucharest, where afterward NATO issued a statement that said Ukraine and Georgia would become part of [NATO].”
On Ukraine, Biden’s State of the Union address was just ‘good vs. evil’
Read more
On Ukraine, Biden’s State of the Union address was just ‘good vs. evil’

According to him, “The Russians made it unequivocally clear at the time that they viewed this as an existential threat, and they drew a line in the sand.” Mearsheimer discussed in the interview, as he has maintained for years on this issue, that the issue of Ukraine joining NATO is key to Russia’s core national security interests.
The famed Russian-studies scholar Stephen Cohen likewise warned in 2014, during that year’s conflict in Ukraine involving Russia, that “if we move NATO forces toward Russia's borders ... it’s obviously gonna militarize the situation [and] Russia will not back off. This is existential.”
Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, one of the most widely regarded American strategic thinkers of all time, said in a 2014 op-ed that “Ukraine should not join NATO.” This is because it would make Ukraine a theater in an East-West confrontation. He said that “to treat Ukraine as part of an East-West confrontation would scuttle for decades any prospect to bring Russia and the West – especially Russia and Europe – into a cooperative international system.”
There are many others, including former US Secretary of Defense William Perry, Russian-American journalist Vladimir Pozner Jnr., economist Jeffrey Sachs, former United Nations Under-Secretary-General Pino Arlacchi, former CIA director Bill Burns, former US Secretary of Defense Bob Gates and others listed by Arnaud Bertrand in a great Twitter thread on this topic.
With all of this out there, widely known and heavily discussed, we arrive back to that question: why? Well, it most likely has to do with controlling Europe and making sure that NATO itself doesn’t fall apart. In that sense, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has ensured this goal and then some.
Madrid will host a major NATO summit this June that will see the formation of the first NATO strategic concept document since 2010, which had been a major issue of contention both on the European continent and across the pond in Washington. It will be the alliance’s working strategic framework for at least the next decade and will clearly define its goals.
We had seen, prior to this, that Europe, particularly France, was pushing for a common European defense strategy – which, to be fair, was said to “complement NATO” but was so clearly in spite of it that Washington routinely resisted this stance. After actions by the US that rattled European leaders, particularly the AUKUS agreement, the administration of President Joe Biden made clear concessions that it probably didn’t enjoy.
This was clear from the read-out of a conversation between Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron in September 2021, which included the sentence, “The United States also recognizes the importance of a stronger and more capable European defense that contributes positively to transatlantic and global security and is complementary to NATO.”
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has seemingly rejuvenated NATO overnight and put Europe on high alert. This is evident in Germany’s foreign-policy pivot and the announcement that it will be increasing its military spending to over 2% of its GDP in direct response to the situation in Ukraine; Sweden and Finland having reportedly given consideration to joining NATO; and even Switzerland ending its neutral status and joining the EU’s sanctions on Russian assets.
Fyodor Lukyanov: The end of an era
Read more
Fyodor Lukyanov: The end of an era

The June summit in Madrid will undoubtedly elevate pro-NATO voices that would otherwise be regarded as extreme, discussion of more bifurcation of the international system and, no doubt, direct mentions of Russia – maybe even China – in the organization’s strategic concept document. All of this falls neatly in line with US foreign policy.
At the same time, this all has the benefit of increasing dependency on America – especially in the case of natural gas, with Nord Stream 2 now scrapped and Russia being choked economically – and on military hardware, which the military-industrial complex is surely happy about.
None of this minimizes Russia’s role in the conflict. It invaded Ukraine and, whatever the justifications, committed a violation of international law. But strategic thinkers in the West clearly predicted this would happen and, because of that, we may only assume that it fits into the larger agenda described here.
With that in mind, it’s clear that anyone who really supports the Ukrainian people must be principally against NATO’s expansion. EU residents will also suffer the fallout, both economically and perhaps even in their basic physical safety. But let’s remember that, until Russia’s invasion, Europe – mainly Germany and France – was doing all it could to diffuse the situation in spite of Washington’s brinkmanship.
 
I've just upgraded my VPN to try for you and sadly it seems I can't access it even from a Russian location. I tried pinging the domain and that didn't resolve either. I do have a lot of access to various countries now though so I'm happy to do some data collection for the forum. If there's any sites in particular you'd like me to try and grab articles from please let me know! Cig's rolled and ready! :cool2:

I'll keep trying en.kremlin.ru everyday and see if it returns.

Interestingly I can still get RT from a Ukraine VPN, and it's also still accessible from the UK.

Thank you for looking into it! So basically the kremlin website, which is our main source for what Putin and co are actually saying and doing, seems to have been permanently hacked and unavailable ever since Putin announced the special operation in Ukraine and gave his empire of lies speech.
 
Currently Russia (77%) is in the top 3 attack targets for Cyber attacks along with Ukraine (16%) and USA (4%)

Top attackers are Germany (28%), USA (21%) and Singapore (9%)

Top attack as usual is DDOS with 92% of all attacks.

You can watch the attacks in real time and see some stats here.

I personally prefer this one.

I just want to note this is a global figure of all detected attacks, it doesn't specifically show the good old who, what, where, when or why.
 
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