NATO chief floats 100-billion-euro fund to arm Ukraine

NATO chief floats 100-billion-euro fund to arm Ukraine
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg has proposed creating a 100-billion-euro ($108-billion), five-year fund for Ukraine in a push to get the alliance more involved in sending weapons to Kyiv, officials said Tuesday. (Reuters)
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Updated 02 April 2024
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NATO chief floats 100-billion-euro fund to arm Ukraine

NATO chief floats 100-billion-euro fund to arm Ukraine
  • NATO foreign ministers will hold preliminary talks on the plan in Brussels Wednesday
  • They seek to forge a support package for Ukraine by a July summit in Washington

BRUSSELS: NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg has proposed creating a 100-billion-euro ($108-billion), five-year fund for Ukraine in a push to get the alliance more involved in sending weapons to Kyiv, officials said Tuesday.
NATO foreign ministers will hold preliminary talks on the plan in Brussels Wednesday as they seek to forge a support package for Ukraine by a July summit in Washington.
“Foreign ministers will discuss the best way to organize NATO’s support for Ukraine, to make it more powerful, predictable and enduring,” a NATO official said.
“No final decisions are to be taken at the April ministerial meetings, and discussions will continue as we approach the Washington summit in July.”
Officials and diplomats said the proposal was for NATO’s 32 countries to contribute to the fund according to the size of their economy.
But several cautioned that there remain major questions over how any financing would work and the plan would likely change markedly by the summit in Washington.
“There is still a long way to go — numerous allies have questions on practical arrangements,” a NATO diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The officials said Stoltenberg’s proposal also envisions NATO taking more control of coordinating arms supplies to Kyiv from a US-led grouping that currently helps oversee support.
Stoltenberg has argued this could help insulate the flow of weaponry to Ukraine from any political changes in NATO countries, with Donald Trump pushing to return to White House at November elections, officials said.
The move would mark a major shift for the Western military alliance which has so far refused as an organization to send weapons to Ukraine for fear it would drag NATO closer to a conflict with Russia.
Up until now NATO has only sent non-lethal aid to Ukraine, while its individual members have supplied weaponry worth tens of billions of dollars.
The proposal comes as Ukraine’s outgunned forces are struggling to hold back Russia in the face of dwindling supplies from Kyiv’s Western backers.
A $60-billion US funding package is currently stalled in Congress but there are hopes lawmakers could move to pass it in the coming weeks.
NATO foreign ministers are also expected to discuss the race to replace Stoltenberg after Romanian President Klaus Iohannis launched a surprise challenge against the frontrunner, Dutch premier Mark Rutte.
Diplomats said Rutte now has the support of some 90 percent of NATO countries, but Hungary and Turkiye remain holdouts blocking a swift nomination ahead of the summit.


Russia backs Kamala Harris in US election, says Putin

Russia backs Kamala Harris in US election, says Putin
Updated 18 sec ago
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Russia backs Kamala Harris in US election, says Putin

Russia backs Kamala Harris in US election, says Putin
  • Putin: As Biden had recommended his supporters to back Kamala Harris, ‘we will do the same, we will support her’
  • Putin says Donald Trump had introduced more sanctions against Russia than anyone in the White House before him
VLADIVOSTOK, Russia: Russia wants Kamala Harris to win the US presidential election, President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday in an apparently ironic comment, citing her “infectious” laugh as a reason to prefer her over Donald Trump.
Putin was speaking a day after the US Justice Department charged two Russian media executives over an alleged illegal scheme to influence the November election with pro-Russian propaganda.
The Kremlin leader had said earlier this year, before President Joe Biden withdrew from the race — also with apparent irony — that he preferred him over Trump because Biden was a more predictable “old school” politician.
Asked how he viewed the election now, Putin told an economic forum in Russia’s far east that it was the choice of the American people.
But he then added that as Biden had recommended his supporters to back Harris, “we will do the same, we will support her.”
“She laughs so expressively and infectiously that it means that everything is fine with her,” Putin said, adding that maybe this meant she would refrain from further sanctions against Russia.
US intelligence agencies believe Russia wants Trump to win because he is less committed to supporting Ukraine in the war against Russia.
But Putin said Trump, as president, had introduced more sanctions against Russia than anyone in the White House before him.

Toll in Russian strike on Ukraine’s Poltava rises to 54

Toll in Russian strike on Ukraine’s Poltava rises to 54
Updated 05 September 2024
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Toll in Russian strike on Ukraine’s Poltava rises to 54

Toll in Russian strike on Ukraine’s Poltava rises to 54
  • Putin says Russia’s ‘primary objective’ is to capture Ukraine’s Donbas region

Kyiv: The death toll from a Russian missile strike on the Ukrainian city of Poltava rose to 54 with nearly 300 wounded, Ukrainian officials said Thursday.
The strike hit the Poltava military communications institute, according to Ukrainian officials who did not specify how many of the victims were military or civilians.
“The death toll rises to 54 after the Russian strike on educational institution in Poltava. Another 297 people were injured,” Ukraine’s emergency services said.
Up to five people could be trapped under the rubble, it added, two days after two ballistic missiles hit the central city of Poltava, in one of one of the single deadliest strikes of the two-and-a-half-year war.
The attack triggered widespread condemnation, including from Washington which denounced it as “another horrific reminder of (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s brutality.”
It also prompted criticism in Ukraine after unconfirmed reports said the strikes had targeted an outdoor military ceremony, with many blaming reckless behavior from officials who allowed the event to take place despite the threat of attacks.
President Volodymyr Zelensky has ordered an investigation into the circumstances of the strike.
Capture the Donbas region
President Vladimir Putin said Thursday Moscow’s main Ukraine aim was to capture the Donbas region and that Russia’s army was “gradually” pushing back Kyiv’s forces from the Kursk region after their surprise incursion.
“The aim of the enemy was to make us worry... and to stop our offensive in key areas, especially in the Donbas, the liberation of which is our main primary objective,” Putin said at a forum in Vladivostok, adding: “Our armed forces have stabilized the situation (in Kursk) and started gradually squeezing (the enemy) out from our territory.”


Police shoot suspicious person near a museum and Israeli Consulate in Munich

Police shoot suspicious person near a museum and Israeli Consulate in Munich
Updated 13 min 20 sec ago
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Police shoot suspicious person near a museum and Israeli Consulate in Munich

Police shoot suspicious person near a museum and Israeli Consulate in Munich

BERLIN: German police opened fire on a suspect after seeing someone who appeared to be carrying a gun near the Israeli consulate and a Nazi history museum in central Munich on Thursday.
The suspect was wounded, and there were no indications of other suspects or incidents in the Bavarian state capital, Munich police said on social media platform X. No further details of what happened were immediately available.
The incident occurred on the anniversary of the 1972 attack at the Olympic Games in Munich in which Palestinian gunmen murdered 11 Israeli athletes.
The museum and research institute, which focuses on the history of Germany’s 1933-45 Nazi regime, is located near the Israeli consulate in Munich’s Maxvorstadt neighborhood.
Police said earlier a large operation was underway in response to an incident and asked the public to avoid the area in a post on social media platform X. A helicopter had been deployed to provide a better overview of the situation.


Bangladesh election chief quits, denies poll interference for Sheikh Hasina’s fourth term

Bangladesh election chief quits, denies poll interference for Sheikh Hasina’s fourth term
Updated 05 September 2024
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Bangladesh election chief quits, denies poll interference for Sheikh Hasina’s fourth term

Bangladesh election chief quits, denies poll interference for Sheikh Hasina’s fourth term
  • Kazi Habibul Awal and the country’s four other election commissioners all tendered their resignation
  • They are the latest of several Sheikh Hasina-appointed public officials to quit their posts since her departure

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s elections chief quit Thursday after denying political interference in January polls that re-elected autocratic leader Sheikh Hasina, who has since fled the country after a student-led revolution.
Kazi Habibul Awal and the country’s four other election commissioners all tendered their resignation, citing the ex-premier’s ouster as the reason for doing so.
They are the latest of several Hasina-appointed public officials to quit their posts since her departure, including the central bank boss and supreme court judges.
“I and the other commissioners intended to resign given the changed scenario of the country,” Awal told reporters.
The five commissioners presided over a January election that guaranteed Hasina a fourth consecutive term and her Awami League party and its allies a near-monopoly on seats.
The vote was marred by low turnout and was boycotted by the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) after thousands of members were arrested in a pre-emptive crackdown.
Rights groups and Western governments criticized the vote as unfree and unfair.
But Awal said the lack of genuine political opposition to Hasina meant that the vote itself was conducted with integrity.
“The main opposition party BNP and like-minded parties didn’t participate,” he said.
“As it was a one-party election, there was no necessity to influence the election.”
Hasina’s 15-year rule saw widespread human rights abuses, including the mass detention and extrajudicial killings of her political opponents.
She fled to India by helicopter last month, where she remains, and was replaced by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, who is heading an interim government.
Yunus faces the monumental task of charting democratic reforms after years of repression but his caretaker cabinet has yet to give an indication of when fresh elections will be held.
Senior bureaucrats who quit their posts last month had been given ultimatums to do so by leaders of the student protests which toppled Hasina.


Putin says Russia ready for talks with Ukraine

Putin says Russia ready for talks with Ukraine
Updated 22 min 32 sec ago
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Putin says Russia ready for talks with Ukraine

Putin says Russia ready for talks with Ukraine
  • Preliminary agreement reached between Russian and Ukrainian negotiators in the first weeks of the war could serve as the basis for talks

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday he was ready for talks with Ukraine, after having previously rebuffed the idea of negotiations while Kyiv’s offensive into the Kursk region was ongoing.

Ukraine launched an unprecedented cross-border incursion into Russia’s Kursk region in August, sending thousands of troops across the border and seizing several villages. Putin said shortly after there could be no talk of negotiations.

Speaking at a question and answer session at Russia’s Eastern Economic Forum in the city of Vladivostok, Putin said Russia was ready for talks but on the basis of an aborted deal between Moscow’s and Kyiv’s negotiators reached in Istanbul in 2022, the terms of which were never made public.

“Are we ready to negotiate with them? We have never refused to do so, but not on the basis of some ephemeral demands, but on the basis of those documents that were agreed and actually initialed in Istanbul,” Putin said.

China, India and Brazil could act as mediators in potential peace talks over Ukraine.

The Kremlin has repeatedly claimed Russia and Ukraine were on the verge of a deal in the spring of 2022, shortly after Moscow launched its offensive in Ukraine.

“We managed to reach an agreement, that is the whole point. The signature of the head of the Ukrainian delegation who initialed this document testifies to this, which means that the Ukrainian side was generally satisfied with the agreements reached,” Putin said.

“It did not come into force only because they were given a command not to do so, because the elites of the United States, Europe — some European countries — wanted to achieve a strategic defeat of Russia,” Putin added.