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Putin says the West is to blame for mob storming Russian airport; U.S. calls the accusation ‘absurd’


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Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov discussed the Israel-Hamas conflict with his Syrian counterpart, Faisal Miqdad Tuesday, the ministry of foreign affairs said, according to a Google translation of the ministry’s statement.

“The government officials paid special attention to the dramatic development of the situation in the Israel-Hamas conflict zone,” a press statement said, following a telephone conversation between the pair.

Lavrov and Miqdad agreed that “an immediate end to the bloodshed in Gaza, a solution to all humanitarian problems arising as a result of the fighting, and a transition to discussing a long-term settlement through political and diplomatic methods” was needed.

The impacts of the Israel-Hamas war on neighboring countries, such as Syria, is being closely watched as the violence continues in the Gaza Strip.

— Hannah Ward-Glenton

LVIV REGION, UKRAINE – AUGUST 3: Russian POWs are seen waiting in line to call home to Russia in a prisoner of war detention camp on August 3, 2023 in the Lviv region, Ukraine. Hundreds of captured Russian POWs including conscripts, mercenaries, Wagner militia and Storm-Z Russian prisoners are being held in up to 50 sites around Ukraine. Storm-Z is a series of penal military units established by Russia since April 2023. (Photo by Paula Bronstein /Getty Images

Paula Bronstein | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Russian forces composed of former prisoners, known as “Storm-Z” units, are suffering heavy losses, according to the Institute for the Study of War.

Analysts at the think tank said Russia continues to use “Storm-Z” assault units, predominantly made up of prisoner recruits, “in highly attritional infantry-led frontal assaults.” 

It noted that Ukrainian army spokesperson for the Tavria region, Colonel Oleksandr Shtupun, said Monday that Russian forces were preparing to conduct so-called “meat assaults” (colloquial jargon for infantry-led frontal assaults) near Avdiivka, a fighting hotspot in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, and were training “Storm-Z” assault units for future assaults without equipment.

The ISW noted that a Russian milblogger reportedly serving in the Avdiivka area claimed that “meat assaults” are when Russian infantry forces attack without artillery support to suppress Ukrainian firing positions. 

Another Russian milblogger claimed that “Storm-Z” assault detachments in the Avdiivka direction and on Bakhmut’s southern flank “are often destroyed after a few days of active operations and on average lose between 40-70 percent of their personnel,” the ISW said.

Russian milbloggers have criticized the poor training given to “Storm-Z” units, making them both vulnerable and ineffective.

“Both milbloggers noted the lack of proper artillery support for Russian attacks and counterattacks, the ISW said, with one noting that “these factors contribute to “Storm-Z” units being turned into “trash” before achieving any significant results.”

— Holly Ellyatt

Emergency workers search for victims of a Russian rocket attack in the village of Hroza near Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 5, 2023.

Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP

The United Nations human rights office has found “reasonable grounds” to conclude a missile strike that killed 59 people in a cafe in the Ukrainian village of Hroza was launched by Russia’s armed forces, the office said on Tuesday.

“Today, we are publishing a report into the events of Oct. 5 that concludes there are reasonable grounds to believe that the missile was launched by Russian armed forces,” Liz Throssell, spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, told reporters in Geneva.

In an aerial view, gravediggers make new graves for the victims of a recent Russian missile strike at Hroza cemetery on October 09, 2023 in Hroza, Ukraine.

Diego Fedele | Getty Images

She added that “there was no indication of military personnel or any other legitimate military targets at or adjacent to the cafe at the time of the attack.”

Ukraine said a Russian missile hit a cafe in the village in the Kharkiv region this month as people gathered to mourn a fallen Ukrainian soldier. Moscow denies targeting civilians in its invasion, a position it repeated in relation to the strike on Hroza.

— Reuters

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a meeting of Russian President and Armenian Prime Minister at the Kremlin in Moscow on May 25, 2023. 

Ilya Pitalev | AFP | Getty Images

An antisemitic mob incident at an airport in Russia’s republic of Dagestan will be analyzed to deter similar incidents in the future, the Kremlin said Tuesday.

“The relevant authorities will take investigative actions. And after that, of course, the situation will be analyzed,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in Google-translated comments reported by Russian state news agency Tass. “What is necessary to minimize or completely eliminate such illegal manifestations in the future.”

Kremlin officials held a special closed meeting following the unrest in Dagestan, where an anti-Israel group stormed an airport on Sunday, reportedly looking for passengers that had come on a flight from Tel Aviv. Russian President Vladimir Putin levelled accusations at the U.S., claiming it had orchestrated the incident in Dagestan — which Washington denies.

Demonstrations either against Israel or supporting Palestinian people have been on the rise since the start of the Israel-Hamas conflict and Israel’s siege of the Gaza Strip enclosure.

Ruxandra Iordache

Russian tycoon Alexey Kuzmichev has been detained for questioning in France in connection with alleged tax evasion and money laundering and for violating international sanctions.

Sergei Karpukhin | Reuters

Russia will be able to defend the rights of Russian businessman Alexey Kuzmichev, who has been detained in France, once Paris provides detailed information about his case and if he wants help, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday.

Kuzmichev is being questioned in France in connection with alleged tax evasion, money laundering and breaches of international sanctions, the French financial prosecutors’ office said. Kuzmichev used to be one of the main shareholders of Russia’s Alfa Bank.

A cyclist rides past the 24-meter long “La Petite Ourse” yacht, belonging to Russian oligarch Alexei Kuzmichev, and which would have a value of four million euros, according to a source close to the case and which was frozen on March 16, 2022, docked in the harbour of Antibes, south of France, on March 24, 2022. – Two new yachts belonging to Kuzmitchev, among the most influential in Russia, have been “frozen” on the French Riviera, as part of the sanctions taken by the European Union after the invasion of Ukraine, government sources said on March 24, 2022. (Photo by Valery HACHE / AFP) (Photo by VALERY HACHE/AFP via Getty Images)

Valery Hache | Afp | Getty Images

“As far as I understand, he is a citizen of the Russian Federation so we should receive information about the detention through our diplomatic mission,” Peskov told reporters.

“Once we receive the information, and if the detainee so wishes, we will of course assist in protecting his rights as a Russian citizen.”

Reuters

The Kremlin said Russian President Vladimir Putin and top government and security officials discussed bolstering measures to counter external “interference” after a riot at an airport in Dagestan on Sunday.

Putin met senior officials on Monday evening to discuss the incident, which involved several hundred protesters storming the Makhachkala airport, targeting passengers who arrived on a flight from Israel.

During the televised meeting, Putin blamed the West and Ukraine for inciting unrest and division in Russia and for stirring up tensions that led to conflict in the Middle East.

Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on Feb. 8, 2023.

Grigory Sysoev | Sputnik | via Reuters

Ukraine and the U.S. both rejected the allegations, with the White House calling them “absurd.”

On Tuesday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters that top Russian officials had discussed “strengthening measures to counteract that same outside interference, including external information manipulations that can provoke the situation in our country, exploiting the theme of the same events in the Middle East,” according to comments reported by RIA Novosti.

— Holly Ellyatt

Russian investigators in part of eastern Ukraine controlled by Moscow said late on Monday that they had detained two soldiers on suspicion of killing a family of nine people, including two children.

The statement said the soldiers were from a region in Russia’s far east and that the reason for the murders appeared to be some kind of personal conflict.

LUBERTSY, RUSSIA – SEPTEMBER 2 (RUSSIA OUT) A veteran of Russian military invasion of Ukraine looks at a road sign reading “Volnovakha” stolen in Ukraine, September 2, 2023, in Moscow, Russia. An event promoting assistance to the Russian army fighting in Ukraine was held in festival in the suburbs of Moscow. (Photo by Contributor/Getty Images)

Contributor | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The killings took place in Volnovakha, an industrial town between Donetsk and Melitopol.

Russian media reported that the murderers had used machine guns with silencers to kill the family at night.

Ukraine’s prosecutor’s office said in a statement that it had also begun investigating the crime.

— Reuters

Russian servicemen in the Kherson region on May 19, 2022.

Olga Maltseva | AFP | Getty Images

A recent Russian military reshuffle in occupied parts of Kherson likely reflects pressures in defending occupied areas, Britain’s Defense Ministry said Tuesday.

Russian media reported recently that the deputy commander of Russian forces in Ukraine, Colonel General Mikhail Teplinsky, was taking over command of Russia’s Dnipro grouping of forces in Kherson, a region partially occupied by Russia. Teplinsky replaced Colonel General Oleg Makarevich.

The force is responsible for the occupied areas of Kherson region, including the eastern bank of the Dnipro River, and a location where fighting has intensified in this area in recent weeks as Ukrainian forces have contested Russian control of the river’s eastern bank, the U.K. noted.

Remarking on the reshuffle, the ministry said “Teplinsky is likely held in high regard by the Russian General Staff and has experience commanding operations in the area: he was the officer on the ground in charge of Russia’s relatively successful withdrawal from west of the Dnipro in November 2022.”

“It is almost certain that repelling Ukrainian attacks across the Dnipro and holding territory in occupied Kherson Oblast remains a high priority objective for Russian forces in Ukraine,” the U.K. said in an intelligence update on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“Teplinsky’s appointment is likely an indication of increased pressure on Russian forces defending the area,” it added.

— Holly Ellyatt

Moscow is coming under increasing pressure to protect the country’s Jewish community after the latest episode of antisemitism highlighted growing interethnic tensions in Russia.

An angry anti-Israel mob stormed an airport in the Russian republic of Dagestan on Sunday, reportedly looking for passengers that arrived on a flight from Tel Aviv. Russian media reported that at least several hundred pro-Palestinian “protesters” stormed the airport terminal and runway in the Muslim-majority republic because of their opposition to the war between Israel and Hamas.

Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Kremlin in Moscow on January 30, 2020.

Maxim Shemetov | Afp | Getty Images

Some of the group shouted antisemitic slogans, reports and social media footage suggested, while others waved Palestinian flags and shouted “Allahu Akbar,” (“God is the greatest” in Arabic). A plane from Tel Aviv was surrounded, with passengers forced to hand over their passports for their nationality to be checked.

The incident has put divisions in Russia’s ethnically and religiously diverse population in the spotlight, with tensions rising between Russia’s rapidly declining Jewish community (both in terms of practicing and ethnically Jewish people) and its Muslim populace, with Islam being the second-largest religion in Russia, after Orthodox Christianity.

Read more on the story here: Rampage by antisemitic mob puts pressure on Moscow to confront rising ethnic tensions in Russia

White House National Security Council Strategic Communications Coordinator John Kirby.

Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

The U.S. rejected accusations by Russian President Vladimir Putin that the West and Ukraine had orchestrated an anti-Israel riot in an airport in the Russian republic of Dagestan over the weekend, calling the allegations “absurd.”

In a televised meeting, Putin said the West and Ukraine had organized the “deadly chaos,” saying it is “the current ruling elites of the U.S. and their satellites who are the main beneficiaries of world instability.”

John Kirby, spokesperson for the U.S. National Security Council, told reporters at a White House briefing on Monday that the claims were “classic Russian rhetoric.”

“When something goes bad in your country, you blame somebody else, blame it on outside influences” he said, adding that “the West had nothing to do with this. This is just hate, bigotry and intimidation, pure and simple.”

Kirby said a good leader “would call it out for what it is.”

— Holly Ellyatt

Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with members of Security Council, Russian government and law enforcement agencies in Moscow on Oct. 30, 2023.

Gavriil Grigorov | Afp | Getty Images

Russian President Vladimir Putin accused the West and Ukraine of orchestrating an anti-Israel riot in an airport in the Russian republic of Dagestan over the weekend, claiming they stood to benefit from a divided Russia.

In a televised meeting with senior officials, Putin said the West and Ukraine organized the “deadly chaos” at the Makhachkala airport, saying it is “the current ruling elites of the U.S. and their satellites who are the main beneficiaries of world instability.”

“Who is organizing the deadly chaos, and who benefits from it. Today, in my opinion, this has already become obvious and clear to everyone,” he said, according to comments published on the Kremlin website.

Putin also told members of the Security Council, Russian government and law enforcement agencies present at the meeting — which focused on the situation in Dagestan — that attempts were being made to use conflict in the Middle East “against Russia.”

“I have already spoken about attempts to use the dramatic situation in the Middle East, other regional conflicts against our country, against Russia. To destabilize and split our multinational and multi-religious society. To do this, they use a variety of means, as we see, the best provocations and sophisticated psychological technologies and information aggression.” Putin did not provide evidence for his claims.

The White House rejected the allegations with John Kirby, spokesperson for the U.S. National Security Council, describing them as “classic Russian rhetoric” and saying “the West had nothing to do with this. This is just hate, bigotry and intimidation, pure and simple.”

— Holly Ellyatt

Ukrainian presidential advisor Mykhailo Podolyak denied Russian accusations Monday that Ukraine had a role in anti-Israel unrest in the Russian republic Dagestan at the weekend.

 “The storm is certainly already raging,” Podolyak commented on X, formerly known as Twitter, adding that the “preconditions” for the riot in Dagestan in which a mob of pro-Palestinian protestors stormed an airport, some chanting antisemitic slogans and reportedly seeking Jewish passengers off a flight from Tel Aviv had been “formed by decades of wrong.”

“‘Pseudo-assimilative’ policies, toleration of the lawless behavior of aggressive regimes that violate global rules, and obvious flirting with Russian plans to ‘change the world order,’ have led to today’s sad consequences and tragedies,” he said.

Law enforcement officers patrol an area outside the airport in Makhachkala on October 30, 2023. Russian police on October 30, 2023 said they had arrested 60 people suspected of storming an airport in the Muslim-majority Caucasus republic of Dagestan, seeking to attack Jewish passengers coming from Israel. (Photo by STRINGER / AFP) (Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images)

Stringer | Afp | Getty Images

“We are reaping increasingly bitter fruits: the rooting of hatred towards various ethnic groups with subsequent attempts to destroy them; residual destruction of world institutions; media bravado with outright atrocities against the civilian population and escalation of war with a genocidal component,” he added.

Podolyak’s comments come after Russia accused the West, and Ukraine, of orchestrating the unrest in Dagestan and of trying to divide Russian society, without presenting any evidence to back up its claims. Russian President Vladimir Putin is due to meet senior officials Monday evening to discuss the incident in Dagestan.

— Holly Ellyatt

Russia has significantly bulked up its forces around the devastated city of Bakhmut in the east and has switched its troops from a defensive posture to taking “active actions”, a Ukrainian military commander said on Monday.

Russia captured Bakhmut, the scene of some of the bloodiest fighting of the 20-month war, in May. Ukraine has been on the counteroffensive since June to try to retake occupied land in the south and east, including the town.

An aerial view of the city of Bakhmut totally destroyed from heavy battles on September 27, 2023 in Bakhmut, Ukraine. 

Libkos | Getty Images

“In the Bakhmut area, the enemy has significantly strengthened its grouping and switched from defence to active actions,” General Oleksandr Syrskyi, commander of the ground forces, wrote on Telegram messenger.

He described the situation in the east as difficult with Russian forces particularly active near the northeastern Ukrainian-held town of Kupiansk, where he said Moscow’s troops were trying to advance simultaneously in several directions.

Russian troops have suffered heavy losses, he said. Reuters could not independently verify that assertion or the battlefield account.

In its daily report on the fighting, the Ukrainian General Staff said Russian forces continued in their attempts to regain control over Andriivka to the south of Bakhmut, which Kyiv’s forces said they had retaken in September.

It said that Ukraine’s troops continued to conduct their own assault operations south of Bakhmut and were inflicting losses in manpower and equipment. Russia has also been pushing in recent weeks to encircle and capture the eastern town of Avdiivka.

— Reuters

A day after an angry anti-Israel mob stormed a Russian airport, President Vladimir Putin is to hold a meeting with senior officials in which he’ll discuss what the Kremlin described as Western attempts to “split Russian society.”

The Kremlin said Monday that the meeting comes after an angry mob stormed an airport in Russian republic Dagestan, reportedly looking for passengers arriving on a flight from Tel Aviv.

People shouting antisemitic slogans at an airfield of the airport in Makhachkala, Russia, on Oct. 30, 2023.

AP

The Kremlin appeared to blame the West for the incident, claiming it had used the escalating tensions in the Middle East to sow discord in Russia itself, without providing evidence to back the claim.

“Putin plans to hold a large representative meeting today at approximately 19:00 Moscow time and discuss the West’s attempts to use events in the Middle East to split Russian society. A detailed conversation will take place,” the Kremlin’s Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov said, in comments published by Russian news agency Tass.

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his press conference at the Third Belt and Road Forum on Oct. 18, 2023, in Beijing.

Contributor | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Putin will speak and the meeting will be held behind closed doors. Russia’s defense minister and the heads of the intelligence services will attend the meeting.

— Holly Ellyatt

Russia’s foreign ministry claimed Ukraine had a “direct and key role” in a riot in Dagestan in which anti-Israel rioters stormed an airport reportedly looking for passengers who had arrived on a flight from Tel Aviv.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova claimed Monday that the riot in Dagestan on Sunday was “the result of an external provocation planned and carried out with an aim to undermine the harmonious development and ethnic … unity of the people of the Russian Federation.”

“In the implementation of their next destructive action, a direct and key role was assigned to the criminal Kyiv regime, which in turn acted through the hands of notorious Russophobes who settled there,” she said. Zakharova did not present evidence for her claims.

A New Year decoration stylized as the “Kremlin Star,” a tactical insignia of Russian troops in Ukraine, in Moscow, on Jan. 2, 2023.

Natalia Kolesnikova | Afp | Getty Images

Earlier, the Kremlin appeared to blame the West for the incident, saying it was trying to “split Russian society.”

Ukraine has not yet responded directly to Russia’s comments but President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, described video footage of the mob at the Makhachkala airport as “appalling” and said it was “not an isolated incident … but rather part of Russia’s widespread culture of hatred toward other nations, which is propagated by state television, pundits, and authorities.”

“For Russian propaganda talking heads on official television, hate rhetoric is routine. Even the most recent Middle East escalation prompted antisemitic statements from Russian ideologists,” he said.

— Holly Ellyatt


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Michael Novakhov's favorite articles

Putin death rumors were spread by Russian officials: Ukraine intel


A Ukrainian intelligence representative on Wednesday accused Moscow officials of orchestrating the widespread circulation of false rumors that Russian President Vladimir Putin had died.

Last week, multiple Telegram channels falsely reported Putin’s death, and these messages claimed that his demise resulted in Kremlin officials scrambling to devise a succession plan. The rumors quickly spread across various social media platforms, triggering the false report to trend.

The Kremlin soon found itself responding to questions about Putin’s death, calling the rumor a “hoax,” and Putin has since made public appearances.

Andriy Yusov, representative of Ukraine’s Defense Ministry’s Main Intelligence Directorate (GUR), told NV Radio that Moscow officials spread the rumors in an attempt to see how the Russian public would react to the news.

Yusov said that while Putin’s death would be “good news” for Ukrainians, the rumor was actually part of Russia’s disinformation “playbook.”

Vladimir Putin speaks in Korolev, Russia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is pictured in Korolev, Russia, on October 26, 2023. A Kyiv official accused the Kremlin of spreading the recent false rumors that Putin had died.
Photo by Getty Images

“This is sweet music for Ukrainian listeners, and it should have been good news,” Yusov told NV Radio, according to a translation by Ukrainska Pravda. “It’s an internal story that is intended for an internal Russian audience.”

He continued: “Of course, it does little to help Putin personally, because there are many supporters of conspiracy theories in Russia.”

Yusov also explained why he believes Russia would circulate such an untruth.

“The basic purpose of fake news is to look at how society reacts in terms of numbers and dynamics—whether they believed it, how they reacted, what they are ready for—and to look at the reactions of individuals, the elite and the media (even propaganda outlets),” he said.

“In this way, the empire, which is built on the work of the secret services, learns how to continue to rule.”

Newsweek reached out to the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs via email for comment Wednesday night.

Yusov noted that such disinformation has an affect on Putin as well as on Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov.

“It is also an instrument of influence on Putin himself or someone like him. He is forced to react, and Peskov is forced to react and prove that this is not the case. That is, he is led down a certain corridor,” Yusov said.

The intelligence official concluded by stating: “It’s obvious that this is not the end of this story, but a particular playbook.”

Though how the Russian public reacted to the rumors is unclear, it has certainly been searching for information regarding their leader’s supposed passing.

The Russian investigative site Agentstvo reported that the search terms “dead Putin,” “dying Putin” and “Putin died” had more than 417,000 impressions on Russia’s most popular search engine, Yandex, last month. Agentstvo added that the majority of these searches were made from October 23 to October 29, coinciding with the first posts about the rumors published on Telegram.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.


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Putin is expected to seek reelection in Russia, but who would run if he doesn’t?


Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year]  

TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Vladimir Putin isn’t quite the man he used to be — more than a decade has passed since the Russian president engaged in public stunts to boast of his vigor by hugging a polar bear or riding a horse barechested in the mountains. The war in Ukraine has further dented that strongman image.

Putin is still expected to seek another term when Russia holds presidential elections next March. In fact, he has pushed through changes in the constitution to allow him to run for two more six-year terms.

But 71 is an age when death or serious illness are hardly distant concerns for the man who has ruled Russia for 24 years. If Putin was not on the ballot for some reason, it’s not clear who might take his place.

At the national level, Russia’s political system is hermetic. There are no primary elections where voters can choose a candidate; political parties select their own contenders and then present them to the electorate.

In Putin’s absence, the loyalist United Russia party could put forth a candidate, although there’s no fixed procedure for it to choose one. Officially, Putin ran in 2018 as an independent, a precedent adding uncertainty to how a replacement could emerge.

However it plays out, a candidate almost certainly would come from within the current power structure, as none of the lesser parties’ candidates would have wide recognition or support.

Some potential contenders if Putin isn’t in the election:

DMITRY MEDVEDEV

Medvedev has unique experience as a Putin surrogate, becoming president in 2008 when Putin could not seek reelection because of term limits. Despite the post, he was widely regarded as secondary to Putin, who became prime minister and effectively still led the country.

He submissively acceded to Putin’s desire to run for a new term in 2012, serving as prime minister until 2020. He was then appointed to the new position of deputy head of the national security council.

FILE - Russian Security Council Deputy Chairman and the head of the United Russia party Dmitry Medvedev speaks to employees of the military-industrial corporation NPO Mashinostroyenia in Reutov, outside Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, April 25, 2023. Medvedev could be an establishment-supported candidate for Russian president if Vladimir Putin does not run for reelection or becomes incapacitated before the vote in March 2024. (Ekaterina Shtukina/Sputnik, Government Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE – Russian Security Council Deputy Chairman and the head of the United Russia party Dmitry Medvedev speaks to employees of the military-industrial corporation NPO Mashinostroyenia in Reutov, outside Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, April 25, 2023. (Ekaterina Shtukina/Sputnik, Government Pool Photo via AP, File)

Although that post was low-visibility and often seen as a sinecure, Medvedev’s prominence soared last year when he abandoned his normally mild persona and became one of the most vehement defenders of the war in Ukraine, vividly denouncing the West.

That posture has appeal for Russian nationalists, but Medvedev could be tarnished by the perception he was too accommodating to the United States as president during the Obama administration’s “reset” initiative, as well as a high-profile expose alleging corruption and garishly lavish living.

ALEXEI DYUMIN

As governor of the Tula region, Dyumin does not have wide public visibility, but he has been tipped for years as possible Putin successor due to his close relationship with the president, including serving as his bodyguard.

FILE - Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, stands next to Tula Region Governor Alexei Dyumin as he visits the Situational Center of the Tula Region Governor, in Tula, Russia, Friday, Dec. 23, 2022. Dyumin could be an establishment-supported candidate for Russian president if Vladimir Putin does not run for reelection or becomes incapacitated before the vote in March 2024. (Russian Presidential Press Office, Sputnik Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE – Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, stands next to Tula Region Governor Alexei Dyumin as he visits the Situational Center of the Tula Region Governor, in Tula, Russia, Friday, Dec. 23, 2022. (Russian Presidential Press Office, Sputnik Pool Photo via AP, File)

Dyumin did come to public notice with his dramatic claim that he had once saved Putin from a bear. In Dyumin’s telling, he was at a mountain residence where Putin was sleeping when he was informed a bear was outside the door.

“The bear and I looked each other in the eyes. He backed off a little, I opened the door and discharged the entire clip of my pistol at his feet,” he said.

Dyumin was the leader of special forces of the military intelligence agency, in Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, giving him an aura of valor and success related to Ukraine, in contrast to the grim struggles and failures of the current war.

SERGEI SOBYANIN

If visuals matter in a Russian presidential race, Sobyanin could have the strongest portfolio of anyone. As mayor of Moscow since 2010, the Russian capital has undergone remarkable and visible changes.

FILE - Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin sit in a railway carriage exploring the Manezh Metro Station exhibition prior to the ceremony to launch passenger traffic on the Line D3 of Moscow Central Diameters via videoconference, at the Manezh Central Exhibition Hall in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, Aug. 17, 2023. Sobyanin could be an establishment-supported candidate for Russian president if Vladimir Putin does not run for reelection or becomes incapacitated before the vote in March 2024. (Kristina Kormilitsyna, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE – Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin sit in a railway carriage exploring the Manezh Metro Station exhibition prior to the ceremony to launch passenger traffic on the Line D3 of Moscow Central Diameters via videoconference, at the Manezh Central Exhibition Hall in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, Aug. 17, 2023. (Kristina Kormilitsyna, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

New recreation areas, pedestrian zones, sports facilities and other amenities have flourished. Electric buses replaced rattling old trolleys, new commuter rail lines reduced the city’s notorious traffic jams, and once-ragged parks were tidied up and enhanced.

Sobyanin offended Western-leaning liberals by banning LGBTQ+ parades in the city, but tolerance of gay rights is not a winning stance in Russia. Sobyanin also has avoided the flamboyance and divisiveness of his predecessor, Yuri Luzhkov.

MIKHAIL MISHUSTIN

Russia’s prime minister since 2020, Mishustin has provoked no excitement and relatively little notice, but he does have one significant potential advantage: if Putin were to die or become unable to fulfill his duties before the election, Mishustin would become acting president. That’s the same path Putin took when he became acting president upon Boris Yeltsin’s resignation on New Year’s Eve 1999, then capitalized on the position to win election the following year.

FILE - Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin visits the secondary school No 1579 on the first day of the new academic year in Moscow, Russia, Friday, Sept. 1, 2023. Mishustin could be an establishment-supported candidate for Russian president if Vladimir Putin does not run for reelection or becomes incapacitated before the vote in March 2024. (Dmitry Astakhov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE – Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin visits the secondary school No 1579 on the first day of the new academic year in Moscow, Russia, Friday, Sept. 1, 2023. (Dmitry Astakhov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

Mishustin doesn’t appear to have that ambition, however. He is a quiet technocrat, regarded as highly competent in his previous post as head of the national tax service. As prime minister, he has received approval ratings of up to 70% for supervising the administration and ministries.

Although many observers think he was blindsided by Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine, he has continued his tasks stolidly.

NIKOLAI PATRUSHEV

The parallels between Putin and Patrushev are striking. They were born in Leningrad 10 months apart, and Patrushev became head of the Federal Security Service, the main KGB successor agency, in 1999 when Putin became prime minister. Now head of the national security council, he echoes and sometimes amplifies Putin’s hawkish views and animosity toward the West.

FILE - Russian President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Russian Security Council chairman Nikolai Patrushev, left, as he greets senior military officers during a meeting in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2019. Patrushev could be an establishment-supported candidate for Russian president if Vladimir Putin does not run for reelection or becomes incapacitated before the vote in March 2024. (Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE – Russian President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Russian Security Council chairman Nikolai Patrushev, left, as he greets senior military officers during a meeting in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2019. (Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

Although Patrushev initially demurred on recognizing the independence of the rebel leadership in Ukraine’s separatist regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, which preceded the invasion by a few days, he later became a strong proponent of the war, arguing that Russia needed to wipe out what he called “neo-Nazis” on its doorstep and claiming that Ukraine and its Western orientation was a clear security threat.

He also denounced the alleged creep of Western neo-liberal ideas into Russia and defends preservation of the country’s traditions, a philosophical stance identical to Putin’s.


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US Intelligence Agency Optimistic It Can Gauge China’s ‘Will to Fight’ 


A top U.S. intelligence official is confident his agency will not fall victim to the same mistakes that allowed the United States to misjudge the military will of allies and adversaries in recent years.

U.S. intelligence has been widely criticized for overestimating the “will to fight” of the Afghan military, which collapsed as U.S. forces were withdrawing from the country, and for underestimating the ability of Ukrainian forces to hold off the Russian invasion.

But Defense Intelligence Agency Director Scott Berrier told an audience Wednesday that he was confident the assessment of China’s growing military would hit the mark.

“With the growth of the PRC [People’s Republic of China] military across all spectrums, we have had our eye on this for the last five or six years with a high degree of intensity,” he said during a talk at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. 

“I think we’re taking a different view of this,” he said. “We know that they are pulling together a lot of capabilities … so we have to watch them very, very carefully as they continue to grow and develop.”

U.S. officials have been increasingly concerned about China’s military modernization efforts, especially given intelligence suggesting the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is under orders to be ready to take Taiwan by force as early as 2025.

The Pentagon’s annual China Military Power Report, issued last month, warned that China’s nuclear arsenal was growing faster than expected. It further warned that China was looking to expand its conventional missile forces, while continuing to grow its navy and improve its aerial capabilities. 

But while Beijing’s capabilities are significant, there are questions about how the PLA would fare in an actual conflict. The last time Chinese forces saw combat was in 1979 against Vietnam.

China’s forces “still have a long way to go in terms of having the level of military capability that we judge that they think that they need to advance their global security and economic interests,” a senior defense official said last month, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the assessment.

Berrier said Wednesday that it was clear that some of China’s military goals remained aspirational. However, he cautioned that Beijing has been watching recent conflicts, like Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and learning.

“What we’re seeing on the Russian side is, ‘Hey, get in that tank and go.’ There’s really not a whole lot of training,” he said. “That is not the way to do it. And so, I think the Chinese are also taking lessons from this … thinking through what a potential scenario would be in warfare in the Indo-Pacific region, whatever, however that may unfold.”

Current and former U.S. intelligence officials have long said assessing a military’s will to fight is one of their more problematic tasks.

“It has always been a difficult problem,” said James Clapper, former director of national intelligence, speaking at a virtual event hosted by the Washington-based Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in 2022.

“We underestimated will to fight of the Taliban and overestimated the will to fight of the Afghan military and the viability of its government,” he added. “We did it again with Ukraine and Russia. … The bottom line should be: When combat is joined, all bets are off.”

Berrier has publicly admitted his skepticism about Ukraine’s readiness to take on Russia was “a bad assessment.”

On Wednesday, he said in the case of Russia, intelligence analysts focused too heavily on Moscow’s improved military hardware and failed to see gaps in training and leadership.

“Honestly, through years of counterterrorism analysis and operations, we kind of took our eye off the ball,” he said.


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#IsraelWar #Hamas #Gaza #Palestine #Conflict #Israel

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#Israel #aid #Housespeaker

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Donald Trump Jr. takes stand in fraud suit against his father | Vargas Reports


Donald Trump Jr. took the witness stand Wednesday at the civil fraud trial over whether his father overstated his wealth to banks and insurers, a case that threatens former President Donald Trump’s real estate empire.

#DonaldTrump #Trial

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Hamas official: ‘We will attack Israel again’ | Vargas Reports


Senior Hamas official Ghazi Hamad vowed to continue striking Israel and claimed that the militant group’s actions were justified in a recent television appearance.

Robert Sherman is live in Tel Aviv to discuss the latest video and how Hamad uses his media background to his advantage.

Anchor Elizabeth Vargas delivers the biggest stories, without bias or opinion. Watch “Elizabeth Vargas Reports” every weeknight at 6p/5C on NewsNation. #VargasReports

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@NewsNation: Hatred toward Jews, Muslims on the rise amid Israel-Hamas war https://t.co/FbYEuvmSpx


Hatred toward Jews, Muslims on the rise amid Israel-Hamas war https://t.co/FbYEuvmSpx

— NewsNation (@NewsNation) November 1, 2023