Battered Ukrainian City of Mariupol Braces for Worst as Rebels Close in Again | NYT > Europe: Negotiators meeting in Belarus were said to have reached a tentative deal on Tuesday night, setting the stage for a meeting of the leaders to sign the agreement on Wednesday. | Carter Strikes Forceful Tone on Russia: "I reject the notion that Russia should be afforded a 'sphere of influence,' " Carter wrote. "If confirmed, I will continue to encourage US partners, such as Moldova, Georgia, and Ukraine, to build their security capacity and military interoperability with NATO." | US Embassy in Yemen Closing Due to Turmoil

Carter Strikes Forceful Tone on Russia

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A Pro-Russian separatist tank on Monday in Uglegorsk.(Photo: DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON — The United States and NATO should reject Russian assertions that Moscow is entitled to a "sphere of influence" in Eastern Europe — and build militaries capable of handling "any opponent," said the nominee to be the next US defense secretary.
Ash Carter, in a 42-page document prepared for the Senate Armed Services Committee, addresses issues from Russia to Afghanistan to cyber war to the US defense budget.
In the responses, obtained by Defense News, the nominee struck a forceful tone about Russia and its recent aggression in Ukraine.
"I reject the notion that Russia should be afforded a 'sphere of influence,' " Carter wrote. "If confirmed, I will continue to encourage US partners, such as Moldova, Georgia, and Ukraine, to build their security capacity and military interoperability with NATO."
Carter also said the US should maintain its lead role in "collective defense planning" among NATO allies, and that he would urge allies "to invest in military capabilities that that can impose costs on any opponent" while pushing large and small NATO allies to invest more money and resources "in capabilities that are needed by the alliance."
On Feb. 5, the alliance announced the formation of a 5,000-troop international "Spearhead Force" that would be supported by air, sea and special operations forces. The lead element of the brigade-sized force will be ready to deploy within 48 hours of getting the call, and the entire unit could move out within a week, NATO leaders said at a conference in Brussels.
“I reject the notion that Russia should be afforded a 'sphere of influence.'”
Ash Carter, US defense secretary nominee
All told, the NATO Response Force will number roughly 30,000 troops once it is fully fielded.
SASC Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., told reporters last week that if members are collectively satisfied with the additional information supplied by Carter's answers, the panel could vote as soon as Tuesday to move his nomination to the Senate floor. The full chamber could confirm Carter by week's end before leaving on a week-long recess.
The 42 pages feature questions committee members did not have a chance to ask Carter during his hours-long confirmation hearing last Wednesday.
In response to Russia's violation of the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty with the United States, Carter said Washington should consider further sanctions against Moscow and its economic interests.
The US "should consider a comprehensive strategy of diplomatic, economic, and military responses" to Russia's violations, since "Russia's continued disregard for its international obligations and lack of meaningful engagement on this particular issue require the United States to take actions to protect its interests and security as well as those of its allies and partners."
And if Russia fails to bring its policy back into line with the Cold War-era treaty, he insisted that the Pentagon should bolster US defenses against Russian weapons systems.
"The range of options we should look at from the Defense Department could include active defenses to counter intermediate-range ground-launched cruise missiles; counterforce capabilities to prevent intermediate-range ground-launched cruise missile attacks; and countervailing strike capabilities to enhance US or allied forces," Carter wrote. "US responses must make clear to Russia that if it does not return to compliance our responses will make them less secure than they are today."
He also opened a window into his thinking about acts of aggression in cyberspace.
Asked by one senator "when would you consider a cyber attack to be an act of war?" Carter replied that such a determination should be made "on a case-by-case and fact-specific basis."
He does offer some idea about potential red lines in his thinking, however.
"Malicious cyber activities could result in death, injury or significant destruction, and any such activities would be regarded with the utmost concern and could well be considered 'acts of war,' " he wrote, adding "an attack does not need to be deemed an 'act of war' to require a response."
Carter made a plea to lawmakers to make any cuts to the department's 2016 Pentagon budget plan via a back-and-forth with lawmakers.
"Should the Congress choose to appropriate only the amount allowed by the [2011 Budget Control Act] for FY2016, the Congress would make its own decisions on how to reduce the department's budget," he wrote. "My hope is that we would not face this alternative but, if we do, that those actions would be taken in consultation with the department."
A healthy chunk of his confirmation hearing was devoted to questions from SASC members about being candid with the president after two former Obama-era defense secretaries have publicly griped about White House micromanagement.
As he did during the hearing, Carter vowed to be honest with his boss. He promised to give President Barack Obama "my best strategic advice as to how to most effectively counter the [Islamic State] threat," adding he will "not hesitate to consider all options."
The nominee also reiterated his vow to advise Obama to make changes to his Afghanistan withdrawal plan should circumstances warrant such advice.
On the homefront, Carter issued a full-throated endorsement of the Navy's next-generation submarine program and promised to watch for deterioration of the US defense sector.
He called the Ohio-class replacement program "a vital component of our nuclear deterrence strategy."
And amid talk in some defense circles about paying for it outside the Navy's shipbuilding budget, Carter weighed in.
"The Ohio-replacement program will present challenges to the Navy's shipbuilding plan, particularly in the years after 2020," the nominee wrote. "The department needs adequate resources for modernization in order to insure we can make the transition to the new generation ballistic missile submarine.
"Which account it is funded in is of lesser importance. It makes the most sense to include the Ohio-replacement in the shipbuilding account but this is a decision that can be made in the future," he said. "If confirmed, I will work within the department and with the Congress to explore options to address this challenge."
On the industrial base, the former Pentagon acquisition executive said "healthy" US companies are "critically important to the department's long-term success." He promised to keep an eye on "risks" and to "preserve critical capabilities."
On China, Carter first noted the importance of diplomacy before stating "the United States should deter assertiveness in the region with a robust force posture, sustained presence, and commitment to building the capacity of its partners and allies."
Washington should "continue to modernize and strengthen its security alliances with Australia, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Philippines, and Thailand," he told the committee. "The United States should also deepen relationships with and among its partners in South and Southeast Asia to build capacity and reduce vulnerabilities."
With Moscow re-asserting itself in eastern Europe, Carter told the panel he would "work personally to encourage all [NATO] allies to meet" their promises.
"I would urge allies with larger economies to invest in military capabilities that that can be used to impose costs on any opponent with minimal cost and risk to alliance forces," Carter wrote to the lawmakers. "For allies with smaller economies, I would encourage them to invest in capabilities that are needed by the alliance, and in which they may have a comparative advantage."
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Carter Strikes Forceful Tone on Russia - DefenseNews.com

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DefenseNews.com


Carter Strikes Forceful Tone on Russia
DefenseNews.com
WASHINGTON — The United States and NATO should reject Russian assertions that Moscow is entitled to a "sphere of influence" in Eastern Europe — and build militaries capable of handling "any opponent," said the nominee to be the next US defense ...

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Доктрина мира или войны? - YouTube

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Published on Feb 10, 2015
Американские эксперты спорят о главном военном документе РФ
Originally published at - http://www.golos-ameriki.ru/media/vid...

Доктрина мира или войны? 

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Американские эксперты спорят о главном военном документе РФ Originally published at - http://www.golos-ameriki.ru/media/video/new-russian-doctri...
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По перронам и переходам многих станций подземки в городе Большого яблока можно прогуливаться как по художе...
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Is America in a Math Crisis?

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It is often said mathematics is a cornerstone of learning. Communications, computer science, the arts, the Internet, space exploration - all are based on underlying mathematical concepts. In its most recent international survey, the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) ranked the United States in 27th place for student performance in math. What are the causes and what is being done about it? VOA’s Bernard Shusman has more from New York.

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Why Is The Death Toll Tumbling In The North Caucasus?

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Expert opinions differ on the reasons for a decline in the total number of people killed and wounded in the North Caucasus in clashes between the Islamic insurgency and police and security forces, and on whether the drop is likely to be sustained in 2015.

The Guardian view on Bashar al-Assad’s BBC interview: the lies of a tyrant | Editorial 

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The Syrian dictator is profiting from the west’s lack of strategy, while the bloodshed he unleashes leads a country to ruin
Bashar al-Assad’s BBC interview may not have broken any new ground regarding what the Syrian leader thinks about the tragic situation in his country or in the wider region. But it did portray a man of utter cynicism and terrifying self-confidence.
The crisis in Syria is approaching its fourth anniversary. It started in March 2011 with a popular peaceful uprising against Mr Assad, which six months later morphed into a civil war after the regime began using snipers, machine guns and tanks against the crowds. The death toll now stands at over 210,000. There are around 3 million refugees in neighbouring states and a third of the 22-million-strong Syrian population, trying to flee the fighting, is internally displaced.
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Britain not ruling out providing 'lethal force' in Ukraine

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Foreign Secretary suggests UK could be prepared to assist Ukrainian government in its fight against pro-Russian forces








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Has Russia Divided the West?

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On February 6, German Chancellor Merkel, French President Hollande, and Russian President Putin spent five hours negotiating a Ukraine peace deal in Moscow. At the end, the only thing they agreed on was to continue negotiations. Donald Jensen, resident fellow at the Center for Transatlantic Relations, reviews the West’s latest diplomatic activity.

Battered Ukrainian City of Mariupol Braces for Worst as Rebels Close in Again 

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Mariupol, a strategic port on the Sea of Azov, has seen periodic fighting over the last year, and may now face a full assault from Russian-backed rebels.






Ukraine: workers take cover as rockets hit soup kitchen - video

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Rockets slam into a soup kitchen in eastern Ukraine, forcing terrified workers to duck for cover. The building in Pervomaisk is hit by two separate rocket attacks within hours of each other. Amateur footage shows people scrambling under tables and later hiding in a basement. The conflict between pro-Russian rebels and the Ukrainian government has left more than 5,000 people dead Continue reading...

Egypt, Russia Sign Military, Economic and Nuclear Accords

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Russia and Egypt signed several agreements to reinforce military and economic ties, along with a deal to help Cairo develop nuclear power capabilities.  The agreements capped a two-day visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin. The audience applauds Putin and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi as they agree to strengthen mutual ties in the face of a growing terrorist threat and outside economic pressures. At a news conference Tuesday, the two leaders also announced a nuclear deal to help Egypt develop its power capabilities. Putin said both sides had agreed to intensify cooperation in various areas, including Russian investments in Egypt, tourism, and cooperation in the battle against terrorism. He says he and Sissi discussed in detail the regional and international situation and agreed to increase mutual efforts in fighting terrorism. He stressed the need to resolve both the Syrian and regional Middle East conflicts was imperative. Putin said Russia had shared details of recent Syria peace talks in Moscow and he and Sissi would like to see a peaceful resolution to the four-year-old conflict. Mark Katz, Professor of Government and International Affairs at George Mason University, said Putin wanted to show that Russia continued to be involved in the Middle East. "So the visit is meant to make a positive statement about Russian-Egyptian relations,”
he said . Without giving specific details, Sissi said the battle the Egyptian Army is waging against Islamist militants in the Sinai and elsewhere created an urgent need for Egypt to increase military cooperation with Russia. Russia "can’t offer all that much (to Egypt), said Katz. "Obviously there was the arms package the Russians have offered and the Saudis have indicated in the past that they will pay for it, but now they can’t, so it seems that the deal is not going well." Katz says that Egyptian officers believe they don’t see Russia as an alternative to the U.S. "They would much rather continue to deal with the U.S. and while the U.S. is not happy with the way Sissi came to power  or the way he ruled, the U.S. has very little choice but to work with him,” he said. But many observers were caught by surprise by Sissi's announcement that Egypt and Russia had signed a nuclear power agreement. He says both parties have agreed to strengthen cooperation regarding various sorts of power, including peaceful nuclear generation due to Russia's long experience in this field and Egypt's need to develop its power capabilities. Egypt ended its nuclear power program in the 1980s, following the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl in Ukraine.  Former President Hosni Mubarak announced a resumption of Egypt's nuclear program in 2006.   Mohamed Elshinnawy contributed to this report from Washington

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Stripped bare: Dominique Strauss-Kahn forced to reveal his sexual proclivities

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Dominique Strauss-Kahn could have been explaining a point to a dim world leader at a world summit.

Putin, Sisi Discuss Nuclear Cooperation In Cairo

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Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed Moscow's involvement in building atomic energy plants with his Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in Cairo on February 10.

Russia's Sudden Spate of Treason Cases Are Scare Tactic, Analysts Say 

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As the gulf between Russia and the West continues to deepen over the Ukraine crisis, the list of Russians being charged with treason has suddenly and visibly begun to expand.
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Ukraine peace talks threatened by deadly attacks

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Desperate four-way peace talks planned today in Minsk appeared increasingly doomed to failure last night after fighting intensified in eastern Ukraine.

On Ukraine Battle Fringes, Civilians Struggle for Normalcy

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While battles rage daily in some parts of eastern Ukraine, not far away -- in areas the government took back from the Russian-backed rebels last summer -- people are doing their best to live normal lives, while keeping a wary eye on the shifting front lines. In Kramatorsk, a statue of the Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin still stands proudly in the main square, but someone has painted his trousers Ukrainian yellow and blue. Just 100 kilometers to the east, Ukrainians fight Russian-backed rebels. But here, Lenin presides over families trying to keep to their normal routines, taking advantage of a mild winter day to go for an outing. Still, concern that the rebels could fight their way back to the city is not far from their minds. “I’m anxious, a little bit anxious. But still, we’re hoping people won’t want them anymore, and won’t let them come back," says Alyona, a homemaker, who brought her daughter to the square for a pony ride on a mild winter day. “Of course I’m concerned, just like everyone else here," says Anton, an electronics repairman. "I can’t make any predictions. We’re getting too little information. But I hope they will protect us.  I will try to help as best I can.” Traumatized by fighting Local people have been traumatized by the daily reports from the nearby battlefields, says Alexander Kihtenko, Donetsk regional governor. “It affected the psychological state of the people very negatively," Kihtenko says. "People are almost constantly under the threat of shelling, under threat of losing their homes, their relatives and friends. Now, the citizens of Donetsk region want only one thing. They want peace,” he says. And they're just trying to find some peace when they can. However, Ukrainian officials say these people will put up stiff resistance if the rebels and the Russians come to big cities like Kramatorsk, which has a population of more than 150,000. Still, here, like farther east, not everyone opposes the rebels. There is considerable pro-Russian sentiment, and an overlay of Soviet-built factories and symbols of a time when Ukraine and Russia were both part of the Soviet Union. Pro-Russian sentiment Forty kilometers closer to the battlefront, in the town of Artemivsk, a group of women protested the Ukrainian government’s conscription program. They don’t want their husbands and sons to fight against Russia, they say. One says if people in Kyiv want to fight Russia, they should send their sons to do it. Those women are not alone, but their views appear to be in the minority. Most people in government-held areas don’t want the rebels to return. Vasily, a retired pipefitter, says, "When [the rebels] left, it was horrible. Now, it’s very good. May they never return!" Alyona, the homemaker, says, “In the past, they had some support from people. Now people have seen that it’s bad, that war means destruction, disaster, tears. We hope that it’s just threats and it won’t become reality.” That’s the hope. But as convoys head east from the city, and the dead and wounded come back, it’s difficult to know how many more peaceful Saturdays there will be for pony rides in the square. Read about a rocket attack in Kramatorsk, view a related photo gallery by VOA's Daniel Schearf.

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Russia's Space Startup Dauria Lowers Horizons Amid Crisis

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Russia's first private commercial satellite company, Dauria Aerospace, has made the drastic decision to redefine itself as a space technology export firm in the face of low funding and tough U.S. competition.

Russia's Putin, Egypt's Sisi say committed to fighting terrorism - Reuters

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Reuters

Russia's Putin, Egypt's Sisi say committed to fighting terrorism
Reuters 

CAIRO (Reuters) - United by a deep hostility toward Islamists, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Russia's Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday they were both committed to fighting the threat of terrorism. The general and the former KGB officer
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The Fiscal Times- Daily News Egypt
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Greece threatens tilt to Russia and China unless Europe yields - Telegraph.co.uk

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Telegraph.co.uk

Greece threatens tilt to Russia and China unless Europe yields
Telegraph.co.uk
Greece's radical new government has threatened to seek money from Russia and China to avert a financial crisis rather than yield to austerity demands from Europe, risking a dangerous political rift with the leading EU powers and a full-blown NATO crisis.
Greece could seek funding from Russia if Europe doesn't budge, says defence ...CITY A.M.
Russia, China have offered Greece economic support-ministerReuters

all 3,273 news articles »

Ukraine crisis: Amateur video shows deadly shelling in Kramatorsk 

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Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said Pro-Russian separatists launched a rocket strike on the town of Kramatorsk






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Opposing Lawyer on Strauss-Kahn’s Claims

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A lawyer representing some of the prostitutes in the trial of Dominique Strauss-Kahn argued that the former I.M.F. chief must have known their profession when he met them.






Agreement on Tentative Deal for Ukraine Cease-Fire Is Reported 

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Negotiators meeting in Belarus were said to have reached a tentative deal on Tuesday night, setting the stage for a meeting of the leaders to sign the agreement on Wednesday.

US Embassy in Yemen Closing Due to Turmoil

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The United States Embassy in Yemen is closing due to deteriorating security conditions since the resignation of the country’s president. A U.S. official who spoke on the condition of anonymity, confirmed an earlier statement by Yemeni employees at the embassy in Sana'a. The employees said the ambassador had informed staff the mission was closing and he would leave Yemen by Wednesday. Ambassador Matthew Tueller also informed them that Washington may ask the embassies of Turkey and Algeria in Sana'a to represent U.S. interests in the country while the mission remained closed. The U.S. Embassy had reduced its staff after Shi'ite Muslim rebels moved against President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi last month, forcing him and his government to resign. On Sunday, the U.S. Embassy announced on its website it had "suspended all consular services until further notice," because of the security situation in Sana'a. Some information for this report comes from AP and Reuters.

Newsweek Twitter Feed Hacked By Pro-IS Group

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Newsweek's Twitter account was apparently hacked, posting threatening messages toward U.S. President Barack Obama's family and in support of the militant group Islamic State (IS).

White House Confirms American Woman Held By IS Killed

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U.S. President Barack Obama has confirmed the death of Kayla Jean Mueller, a 26-year-old American woman was held hostage in Syria by the Islamic State (IS) militant group.



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