According to The Associated Press, Ukrainian Health Minister Viktor Lyashko said 57 Ukrainians have been killed as a result of Russia’s attack on the country, and 169 more have been wounded.
Earlier, Oleksii Arestovich, an advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, said up to 10 civilians have been killed.
Ukrainian officials said they are fighting Russia on multiple fronts. Ukraine said Russia attacked the Chernobyl nuclear plant, which is about 80 miles north of Kyiv. Another advisor to Zelensky said Ukrainian forces lost control of the Chernobyl nuclear site after a “fierce battle” with Russian troops.
A Pentagon official told reporters that Russia has launched “more than 160 missiles” in airstrikes across Ukraine. The official said most of the missiles are “short-range ballistic missiles” but some medium-range and cruise missiles have also been launched.
Russia’s Defense Ministry has said the Russian military has taken out 74 “ground facilities” that belong to Ukraine’s military, including 11 airfields and 18 radar stations.
President Biden delivered remarks on the Russian attack on Thursday and announced new sanctions against Moscow. The Pentagon said he ordered 7,000 US troops to be deployed to Germany.
The Kremlin said it’s willing to negotiate terms of surrender with Kyiv and wants Ukraine to declare neutrality and promise not to host weapons in its territory, according to RT.
US military officials are telling the media that Russia’s offensive is the beginning of what will likely be a “multiple phased, large-scale invasion.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered a “special operation” to “defend” people in the breakaway Donbas republics, which Russia recognized on Monday.
Horrible developments. A major crime and a paradigm shifting event are taking place in Ukraine. I can only for the best for the people of Ukraine and that the conflict does not spill outside the borders of the country. Sad day for mankind. Antiwar.com will be a critical resource, among others, for people in the West to stay informed on the events to come, as well as to develop a critical perspective that enables it to promote a course of action that does not further escalate the war in each respective country.
I hope that Antiwar.com will do all it can to offset the very one-sided propaganda that the major media outlets are putting out.
By sucking Putin’s cock just like RT
My sympathy isn’t with any of the warring gangs, but with the non-combatants caught in the middle.
I’ve made a small contribution to Nova Ukraine’s humanitarian aid fund for victims of the war. I encourage others to do likewise (or to pick a charity they trust to deliver humanitarian aid — Doctors Without Borders is a good one IMO) if you can afford it.
I’ve been supporting “Doctors without borders” for over 30 years now.
You mean the Antiwar.com whose Editorial Director was on Fox Business on the 18th February insisting that Russia wouldn’t invade Ukraine. And then there’s his trusty sidekick, Ray McGovern, who for weeks has been ridiculing anyone who suggested that Russia might invade (Godot Likely To Arrive Before Russia Invades Ukraine – McGovern article title, January 22nd). Meanwhile the professional and amateur (OSINT) intelligence communities were posting overwhelming evidence on social media that Russia was building for massive invasion. Yea, Antiwar.com is a “critical resource” for anyone who wants to ignore the facts. Horton and McGovern should be ashamed of themselves.
I happen to agree that McGovern is an absolute idiot, as his Horton, for going on cable news, the most brain-dead type of media ever invented (until Twitter came along, that is) where you have to, above all, “look cool” over provinding interesting commentary (which there is too much of anyways). But Antiwar.com is, as I said, a critical resourse as it provides crucial updates on world developments, either by their own articles (which are little more than digests of the work of the major news agencies and publications) or by linking directly to other websites stories, and they also provide interesting (though often disagreable) opinion pieces that help put into context the developments at hand. You should note, as well, that pretty much everybody outside of the mainstream presuation got this one wrong (myself included). I think this shows, in part, above all the failure of the current media ecossystem, where people who have an alternative point of reference in this international matters are put in a position of constantly having to react to what the mainstream is saying, by, to put it quite simple, attempting to debunk it. It is a sad reality, but that should make Antiwar.com in itself invalid. Best.
I think other Web sites – notably The Saker, Moon of Alabama, and even Andrei Martyanov’s site – got this much more correct than Antiwar.
I do agree that Antiwar posted a number of articles that got it correct. However, I don’t think it covered the crisis in as much detail as it might have.
I did a lot of research on this issue personally. I originally followed the civil war in 2014, so I had a head start on what the background was. Then after 2015, since nothing basically changed for eight years, I let it slide. Then in spring, 2021, when Ukraine moved its forces to the contact line and Russia built up its forces on the border, I got interested again. Following Alexander Mercouris, The Saker, Moon of Alabama, and Andrei Martyanov pointed me in the direction of the research I needed to do. Mercouris and Moon were good at covering the political side. The Saker and Martyanov were good at covering both the political and the military side.
I guess it depends on your research and your sources where one comes down on the issue.
Moon of Alabama is solid for certain. Good independent journalism.
Facts.
You get your news from social media?
Nice straw man you’ve got there. But if it makes you feel better then keep trying to deflect the argument from the Horton/McGovern fiasco.
McGovern should not have been so determinative, certainly, as no one knew the outcome of Russia’s effort to get NATO to back down. They probably thought that Russia’s timeline was longer here … that they would put pressure on and wait. For whatever reason, Russia decided to settle the issue once and for all sooner than expected.
I would still trust the judgement of Horton and McGovern over the MSM and govt pundits (or do I repeat myself) any day of the week.
Russia has been an expansionist power for 1100 years,noted for brutality against its own people.It is now lead by a very tough,shrewd capable nationalist,who resents loss of empire. The CIA and American power elite have been poking at him for decades, and he has responded. Russia will have a very important role in World Energy resources, as it becomes apparent that the Green revolution will be very difficult to achieve,if not an illusion.
The expansion that produced this was was NATO expansion, which insisted upon the right to include Ukraine even when it admitted it can’t do it now.
Terms of surrender always get worse, as fighting drags on. Ukraine can make this worse, and right now it is still digging its hole, trusting to Biden to get them out of it.
It is true what you say, but is there any alternative? Do you have any doubt at this moment that regime change is the choosen path for the Kremlin?
Russia has been offering Ukraine a chance to surrender, implement Minsk, become neutral and give up NATO aspirations. If Ukraine doesn’t want to take that offer, that’s on them. They’ve refused this offer for eight years.
Anyone who thinks Biden can save them will buy a piece of a famous bridge. As I said, Putin has been poked at.
This doesn’t make any sense…
>>>
On Twitter, Zelensky said Russia was trying to seize the Chernobyl
nuclear power plant, which is about 80 miles north of Ukraine’s capital
Kyiv.
<<< Why would Russia want anything in the Chernobyl area?
I can think of 2 reasons, but neither is super convincing. 1) to exert total control of the Ukrainian power grid. 2) to keep nuclear materials away from the Ukrainian government.
OTOH, I expect Zelensky was trying to use Chernobyl to scare the West. But you could be right, too – Russia might well be concerned about some “false flag” operation concerning Ukraine’s nuclear power plants. That’s been discussed before in some forums.
Update: Apparently confirmed Russia controls Chernobyl area with a tank unit.
Peacekeepers Likely also seized the Pentagon’s Biowarfare labs too to prevent misuse
This would coincide with reports that Putin also took out one or more bioweapons labs. They obviously know all our tricks and are taking few chances.
They shut the last reactor down there over twenty years ago. If they wanted nuclear waste, they can visit any former Soviet weapons dump.
The other 3 are still being decommissioned, so there might be nuclear waste still there or other dangerous materials.
Oh, it’s going to be piping hot for another 20,000 years. You can scoop up as much radioactive lava as you want- just don’t expect to live long enough to sell it.
I would agree with that but to the Russians I imagine that the Chernobyl area represents a potential site for Ukrainian nuclear weapons development. Who knew?
That’s an interesting theory. Any weapons development there would be just more background radiation, ignored by spy satellites.
It’s awful to see the situation devolve from border skirmishes to all-out war. But I’m much more scared of UK PM and Biden using rhetoric that could escalate this regional issue into WW3.
And, will China use this as an opportunity to start an operation of their own in their region?
Doubtful. But anything is possible.
They don’t work that way. More likely to take advantage by price-gouging EU/NATO and screwing with the supply chain to the USA.
Rhetoric doesn’t matter. What Biden did today proves the US and NATO will do absolutely nothing on the ground re Ukraine.
Ditto that! My thoughts exactly…
Peacekeepers stabilizing the region is a good thing. the regular Ukrainian military appears to be helping the Peacekeepers. Azov Battalion, Eric Prince’s Mercs, and the English military ‘trainers’ not so much,
Let’s Hope this is the end of 8 years of torment for the Ukrainian people
Pathetic.
A peaceful war, like the peaceful BLM protests.
Hope so as well. Something has to happen to concentrate minds.
And in Ukraine it will be hard, Current elite cannot survive the popular rejection,
There are several neuralgic points in Ukrainian complexity.
One, there are many more regions with Russian ethnic, or Ukranian Russian soeakers in Ukraine, I do not think they want to pass the opportunity. To either have Ukraine federalized or safer bet, join the Donetsk/Lughansk path.
Second, the Western Ukraine, the source of Nazi sentiments — had a triubled history. Stalin added that to Ukraine for one reason — to facilitate chasing Hitler’s forces, and to gather randomly a collectiin of communities. Polish, old school Ukrainian, Hungarian, Carpathorussunes, Belirussians, Romanians, Moldivan. It was the so called Greek Catholic Ukranians that became Hitkers alues and their rear guards against advancing Siviets. There were war crimes committed there, agaist Poles snd Russians.
It really was a mistake to just dump all in Ukraine. This is still a very tense region, Being. focused in abusing Russians with impunity just put off regional anymosity.
This problem needs solving. Federalization will help to insure vengeful anti-Russian sentient to get out of its confines. Chernibyl must be inspected, and Russia uscqualified to do it.
Ukraine, as a country of regions would have a natural balancing mechanism, back to bickering over resources and nit having any one entity domiate politics and foreign relatiins,
Let’s hope that 8 years of war in the region are ending.
RT website is down.
Earlier this morning I tried to access the Russian Ministry of Defense – that was inaccessible. Just tried again – it’s still inaccessible. No 404, no nothing. Either they’ve disconnected from the Internet completely or the West is cutting them off.
RT is back up but I don’t think that’s their normal home page.
Some serious diplomacy by all parties could have prevented this. It’s hard to tell who’s being honest, but I think the Russians actually tried but could get no decent response from Winken, Blinken and Nod. Maybe I’m just a Putin apologist, but I think the Russians have some legitimate gripes starting with NATO’s expansion and including the 2014 coup that supposedly established democracy from the barrel of a gun and replaced “the Russian stooge” with America’s stooge..
Ah, I finally remembered SouthFront. I used to follow them during the 2014 conflict. Good sources of information. Here’s the latest:
Military Situation In Eastern Ukraine On February 24, 2022 (Map Update)
https://southfront.org/military-situation-in-eastern-ukraine-on-february-24-2022-map-update/
Map of the situation:
https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/95b5550b3200a1e6ad76a3e45e16ea4b350c081164197750f1fba1723ff9c14b.jpg
More from SouthFront. Lots of videos and pictures (for what they’re worth, since cell phone camera users suck at taking videos.)
Ukraine: Results Of First Day Of Russia’s Military Operation (Videos)
https://southfront.org/ukraine-results-of-first-day-of-russias-military-operation-videos/
Many videos of Kalibr missiles hitting Ukrainian targets including Ukraine’s naval base at Odessa:
Kiev Regime Forces’ Defense Collapses. Russians In Kharkov, Kalibr Strikes And More (VIDEO)
https://southfront.org/kiev-regime-forces-defense-collapses-russians-in-kharkov-kalibr-strikes-and-more-video/
I’m seeing stories plastered all over mainstream media sources recounting how the US has helped the Ukraine prepare for this very day. It’s not a large leap of the imagination to think we have covert operatives on the ground inside the Ukraine as we speak. This is all well and good- and exactly what I would expect from the US- but more than a few of us are old enough to remember what happened long after we helped the Mujihadeen fight the Soviets in Afghanistan. It didn’t take long for them to turn and bite the hand that fed them, and it’s not difficult to imagine the same thing happening in the Ukraine.
Funny comment from a poster at Moon:
British Deputy Defense Minister James Hippie said that NATO will not establish a no-fly zone over Ukraine
lol
well, there’s a surprise
Brits wisely decide not to declare a NoFlyZone which they would not
have even the most minute chance of enforcing against a clearly vastly
superior RFASF
Posted by: YourMom | Feb 24 2022 21:54 utc | 126
Good point. Be wary of fake images and videos from older conflicts. Some examples shown in the article.
Ukraine conflict: Many misleading images have been shared online
https://www.bbc.com/news/60513452
This blog post is being constantly updated. It’s in Russia, so use Google Translate. Lots of bits of news.
https://aftershock.news/?q=node/1068185
From a Saker commentator:
Military correspondent Kitten Z
forwarded from Fisherman /Z/
Video message from President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky
Key quotes:
▪️Subversive forces of the RF Armed Forces entered Kiev.
▪️I stay in the capital with my people, my family is also in Ukraine.
There is information that the enemy has designated me as target number
1, and my family as target number 2.
▪️We were left alone. Nobody wants to fight for us. They don’t want to take us to NATO.
▪️We are not afraid of Russia, we are not afraid to talk with Russia,
to talk about everything: security guarantees for our country and a
neutral status (we are not in NATO now), but what kind of guarantees
will we have.
▪️On the first day, 137 Ukrainian servicemen were killed, 316 were
injured. All the defenders of the Serpent’s Island died and became
Heroes of Ukraine posthumously.
https://t.me/s/voenkorKotenok
My note: This is one sad dude. He has zero future except maybe in exile in Europe if the Russians let him leave – which I doubt. Most likely he’s looking at a long prison term in Russia or suicide.
Just like 9/11 was blowback for decades of policy in the middle east that resulted in the deaths of millions of innocent people, this is blowback from decades of aggression against Russia and, ultimately, the U.S. backed overthrow of the democratically elected government of Ukraine in 2014. When will we ever learn?
Cannot learn. System is not designed for learning. It is a nineteenth century system better geared for destructive reconstructioon. industrial revolution of cinstsntly chsnging tehnoligucal, glibal and technoligical private initiative, Times have changed cammungvfor a more structured econimic, scientific and technoligical environments and political unity needed for strstegic horiizin.
We have nimiw gigantic corporations that are stepping into the institutionsl breeach, taking in the role of a state. Resulting mix — institutionsl inadequacy and corporate thinking with the grandeur syndrome — cannot check each other, but compete destructively. Reconstruction — ie learning cannot happen.
This is a duopoly withi plutocracy.
What would be the point of learnining.
Hi Bianca:
I think that in this instance the reference to “when will we ever learn” is more rhetorical or at least an open ended question…
The US and NATO are trying to implement feudalism and Russia doesn’t feel like playing along.
Shh, you’re not supposed to mention the coup. Or the 13,000 people in the Donbas killed in eight years of fighting.
The Telegram channel IntelSlava Z has live updates from Ukraine with video and still images.
Speaking of Moon of Alabama, as I did below, here is Bernhard’s post today:
Disarming Ukraine – Day 1
https://www.moonofalabama.org/2022/02/disarming-ukraine-day-1.html
After 8 Years Of War Russians Are Finally Here
https://southfront.org/russians-are-finally-here/
Interesting how neither Biden nor the western press make a single reference to Russia’s two demands: keep Ukraine neutral and do not post offensive long-range weapons there. Same two demands he made directly to NATO leaders all along. He has offered to cease hostilities as soon as Kiev’s regime agrees. The real question is: how many civilians will Ukraine’s puppet leader be willing to sacrifice to stay on the happy side of his American handlers?
From a post at Moon:
For those who don’t remember the 2014 conflict:
Igor Vsevolodovich Girkin, also known by the alias Igor Ivanovich Strelkov, is a Russian army veteran and former Federal Security Service officer who played a key role in the Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation, and later the War in Donbas as an organizer of the Donetsk People’s Republic’s militant groups.
How this is going to affect you at the gas pump:
Gasoline Prices Are On The Rise And Biden’s Hands Are Tied
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Gasoline-Prices-Are-On-The-Rise-And-Bidens-Hands-Are-Tied.html
Least they can do… 🙂
Ukraine-Russia Latest Updates: U.S. Ready to Accept Ukrainian Refugees
https://www.newsweek.com/ukraine-live-russia-updates-putin-war-summary-biden-zelensky-nato-2-24-22-1682148
“Victory is upon us!” LOL
Unusual Russian Navy Concentration Seen In Eastern Mediterranean
https://www.navalnews.com/naval-news/2022/02/unusual-russian-navy-concentration-seen-in-eastern-mediterranean/
Pepe Escobar weighs in – always the man to look to for context.
From the Black Sea to the East Med, don’t poke The Russian Bear
https://thecradle.co/Article/columns/7266
Andrei Raevsky (The Saker) weighs in:
A few disjointed thoughts about the current military situation
https://thesaker.is/a-few-disjointed-thoughts-about-the-current-military-situation/
The Faker, a Florida-residing Russian “patriot”, is an idiot and his commentary reflects that. He uses idiotic terms like ‘Uncle Shmuel’, ‘Eurorodents’ and ‘Anglozionist Empire’ and “predicts” that Russia will win every conflict it is involved in. The man is a joke.
He’s been right so far and that’s all that matters. I don’t agree with some of his attitudes – his muscular Christianity, for one – but his military analyses are good and so is his geopolitical analyses.