A senior U.S. defense official said Wednesday that 80 percent of the Russian forces arrayed near Ukraine’s borders have moved into forward operating positions, suggesting that an invasion could take place if and when Russian President Vladimir Putin gives an order to strike.
Here’s what to know
Ukraine imposes state of emergency amid fears of Russian attack
Return to menuKYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s parliament approved a nationwide state of emergency that takes effect Thursday amid fears that Russian forces could push deeper into Ukraine.
The state of emergency — backed by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky — puts some restrictions on movement and imposes other limits “in the interests of national security and public order.”
The move also placed some controls on political activity, apparently aimed at pro-Moscow parties. Ukrainian leaders have raised alarms over potential efforts by the Kremlin to use allies in Ukraine to stir unrest or push Russian propaganda.
The decision was the latest sign that Ukraine was bracing for a possible full-scale Russian invasion after Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized the independence of separatist regions in eastern Ukraine and sent in Russian forces.
Biden imposing sanctions on company building Nord Stream 2
Return to menuPresident Biden said Wednesday that he will move forward with sanctions against a company that is building the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline between Russia and Germany, as part of continued repercussions the United States is levying against Russia for its aggressions toward Ukraine.
In a statement, Biden said he had directed his administration to impose sanctions on Nord Stream 2 AG and its corporate officers. He also explained why he was reversing his administration’s decision from last year, when he waived sanctions against the pipeline.
“These steps are another piece of our initial tranche of sanctions in response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine,” Biden said. “As I have made clear, we will not hesitate to take further steps if Russia continues to escalate. Through his actions, President Putin has provided the world with an overwhelming incentive to move away from Russian gas and to other forms of energy.”
Biden thanked German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, whose administration announced Tuesday that it would halt certification of the pipeline as part of the U.S. and its allies’ response to Russia.
Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan lands in Moscow, says he’s excited
Return to menuPakistan’s prime minister, Imran Khan, landed in Moscow on Wednesday and became the first foreign leader to meet with Putin after Russia acknowledged and entered Ukraine’s separatist regions Monday.
“What a time to come, so much excitement,” Khan can be heard saying as he walked away from his plane in Moscow, where he was received with pomp.
Khan is the first Pakistani prime minister to visit Moscow in 23 years. His two-day visit had been scheduled before Russia’s actions in Ukraine.
“We are so excited to come to Moscow,” he added to a member of his welcoming entourage.
Khan and Putin will hold a bilateral summit Thursday, the top item on their agenda. In it they will discuss energy cooperation and other regional and international issues, including the situation in the Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, according to India Today.
In an interview with Russian state-run network RT, which aired Tuesday, Khan said he hopes for a “peaceful solution” to the situation in Ukraine.
“I am not a believer in military conflicts,” Khan said. “I believe civilized societies resolve the difference through dialogues, and countries that rely on military conflicts have not studied history properly.”
On Poland’s border with Ukraine, U.S. military helps plan for possible war refugees
Return to menuRZESZOW, Poland — The domed chrome-and-glass exhibition center in the southeastern Polish city of Rzeszow has hosted Iron Maiden vocalist Bruce Dickinson, mixed martial arts bouts and trade fairs.
Now, U.S. military Humvees are parked behind newly erected barriers outside. Rooms are lined with cots for thousands of soldiers from the U.S. Army’s 82nd Airborne Division. And the ground floor is outfitted to receive people who may flee Ukraine, about 30 miles to the east.
A new war on the edge of Europe has the potential to unleash the continent’s biggest humanitarian crisis since the Syrian civil war triggered the arrival of more than 1 million refugees in 2015. At every level, plans are complicated by huge unknowns. Could there be a trickle of people seeking safety inside the borders of the European Union — or potentially millions?
Polish officials have indicated that a worst-case scenario could see as many as 1 million people arriving from Ukraine in case of a full-scale Russian invasion. Hungary, which also borders Ukraine, has said it is sending troops to the border, partly in preparation for refugees. Romania has said it is considering refugee camps.
Analysis: Republicans view Putin more favorably than they do leading Democrats
Return to menuPutin operates within a well-established political framework. He is an autocrat with near-unilateral control over his country. Russia has elections, but no one is under the impression that the results will be allowed to pose a threat to Putin’s power. Personal freedoms are constrained significantly; opponents of Putin’s regime have a habit of succumbing to sudden illness and accidents.
Yet American Republicans view him slightly more positively than they do leading Democratic officials. Between Putin and Biden, it’s a toss-up that leans in Putin’s favor.
Polling from YouGov conducted for the Economist magazine in January compares Putin and various American leaders. Among Republicans, Putin is viewed far less positively than Donald Trump — but more positively than sitting Democratic leaders.
Pelosi denounces ‘very evil’ move by Putin, defends Biden’s handling of sanctions
Return to menuHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Wednesday denounced Russian President Vladimir Putin’s aggression toward Ukraine as “very evil” and defended how President Biden has approached the issue of sanctions thus far.
“It’s not just about when you do the sanctions or how you support the people,” Pelosi said at the Capitol. “It’s about how the world views what Putin is doing. This is a very evil move on the part of Vladimir Putin. He’s a KGB guy who happens to be probably the richest man in the world because of his exploitation of his own people.”
Pelosi and other lawmakers addressed reporters after returning from a congressional delegation that included stops in Israel, Germany and Britain.
“This, my friends, is our moment. This is the Sudetenland — that’s what people are saying there,” she said, referring to Hitler’s 1938 annexation of an area of what was then Czechoslovakia bordering Germany. “You cannot ignore what Putin is doing. And nobody’s of course ignoring it, but you cannot take it any lighter than what it is: a total assault on democracy.”
Pelosi said Biden’s “leadership has been outstanding” and described the response to Russia’s actions as a “unified effort” with NATO allies. In a sharp contrast to former president Donald Trump’s recent statements, she also condemned Putin, calling him “the same tyrant who attacked our democracy in 2016.”
“This is the same tyrant who is opposed to democracy and wants to trivialize it, to downgrade it in the eyes of the Russian people,” Pelosi said.
Pentagon official: 80 percent of Russian forces around Ukraine are ready to attack
Return to menuA senior defense official said Wednesday that 80 percent of the Russian forces arrayed around Ukraine have moved into forward operating positions, suggesting that an invasion could take place if and when Russian President Vladimir Putin gives an order to strike.
“It is our assessment that he is fully prepared to conduct a large-scale invasion,” said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive details of a developing situation. The official added: “That is a likely option.”
The official said that Putin had mobilized “dang near 100 percent” of the forces the Pentagon had expected he would move into the area, and that they believed the Russian president had made a decision in favor of an invasion, as President Biden has stated in recent days. But the official would not specify the number or type of Russian assets they were seeing coalesce, although such troops have not yet moved westward past the territories controlled by pro-Russian separatists.
The official nonetheless warned that Putin “is as ready as he can be” and that the troops “could go at any hour now.”
“Whether they actually go or not is up to Mr. Putin,” the official added.
At the State Department, spokesman Ned Price was asked about reports that the U.S. issued warnings to the Ukrainian government that intelligence points to a wider invasion of Russia imminently, particularly, the northeastern city of Kharkiv.
"For several days now, we have said the invasion is potentially imminent, meaning it could start today, tomorrow or next week,” he said. “What we haven’t seen is any indication that the Russians are backing away from this.”
Russian soldiers mark Defender of the Fatherland Day, stock up on food, with possibility of invasion
Return to menuNEKLINOVKA — Dozens of Russian soldiers were celebrating Defender of the Fatherland Day in a village about 30 miles from the border between Russia and the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, as heavy military equipment stood on train tracks, their barrels pointing toward eastern Ukraine.
The equipment, which included an array of howitzers and armored vehicles, was moved there in the past few days on tow trucks from fields and woods in the Rostov region. U.S. officials have warned about Russia’s near-complete military buildup and the possibility of a large-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Shelves of a local grocery store in Neklinovka were emptied by soldiers who appeared to be stocking up for several days, grabbing instant noodles, water, bread and condensed milk.
Across the road, young men in uniforms lined up in front of a liquor store. A canteen next door quickly ran out of food as soldiers gathered for dinner.
“Today, it is like a field kitchen out here,” one man standing in line joked. Music blasted from parked cars and smartphones as soldiers smoked outside.
Locals say that troops camping there began arriving about a month ago but appear to be loaded up into convoys and preparing to leave on Thursday.
The holiday commemorates soldiers who lost their lives in various conflicts throughout Russia’s history and is now celebrated across several post-Soviet countries.
Russian YouTuber, popular with Russian urban youth, condemns Putin’s ‘imperial frenzy’
Return to menuMOSCOW — Russian celebrity YouTuber Yury Dud, who has a massive following of more than 10 million subscribers, condemned President Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine policy in an Instagram post, calling it “imperial frenzy.”
Dud suggested that Putin’s recognition of two breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine would have immense historical implications.
“I am writing this with exactly one motive: when my children grow up, get to this piece of history, go nuts and ask, ‘Dad, what were you doing then?' I will have a written proof.
“I did not support this imperial frenzy,” he wrote.
Dud, 35, who is of Ukrainian descent, was born in Eastern Europe but has lived in Russia since childhood. He began the post describing a recent trip to Norway where every village showed prosperity. The contrast with Russia, also rich in oil and gas, was obvious.
The photograph he used with the post showed Russian President Vladimir Putin sitting at a table in the Kremlin with his National Security Council on Monday. Putin called on the members, perched faraway on chairs, and asked whether they supported his move to recognize the separatist regions. Not one dissented.
According to Dud, Russia saw: “An emperor fascinated by history. A retinue with an amputated opinion and will. A propaganda escort, so smoothly and so sweetly approving the war from warm metropolitan apartments.
“Well, the decisions that this whole party takes. The decisions are not to convert natural resources into the well-being of Voronezh, Kamchatka, Nikel and Zapolyarny, but to grow rich ourselves and stay longer in the control of these resources.”
It is becoming increasingly difficult for Russian YouTubers and bloggers to express dissent. Comedians have been charged over satirical videos.
Correction: An earlier version of this post inaccurately referred to Dud’s trip abroad. He traveled to Norway, not Finland, and the post has been corrected.
Twitter says it deleted accounts outing Russian disinformation by mistake
Return to menuWe’re closely investigating — but mass reporting is not a factor here.
A small number of human errors as part of our work to
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