Je, baada ya kupata pigo kwenye vita vyake na Ukraine, sasa Russia iko tayari kutafuta muafaka?

Je, baada ya kupata pigo kwenye vita vyake na Ukraine, sasa Russia iko tayari kutafuta muafaka?

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Baada ya kupigana vita vikali kwa zaidi ya miezi minane tofauti na walivyotegemea, inaonekana sasa Russia wanaweza kuwa tayari kutafuta muafaka wa namna ya kuweza kumaliza hivi vita.

Inaonekana vilevile kwamba Russia wanakiri kwamba hawataweza kufikia malengo yao waliojiwekea kufuatia matokeo yaliyojiri kwenye vita hivyo katika siku za karibuni.

=======

‘Much softer’: Is Russia eyeing a way out of the Ukraine war?​

The war’s unpredictability raises questions about whether Washington and Moscow should engage in negotiations to avoid an expansion of the conflict, including a nuclear confrontation.

picha Ukrain.jpg

A Ukrainian soldier prepares to fire a D-30 howitzer towards Russian troops in the Kharkiv region [File: Vyacheslav Madiyevskyy/Reuters]

Russian President Vladimir Putin may be softening his hardline stance on the war in Ukraine as Moscow’s defence minister held rare talks with his United States counterpart after a spate of battlefield setbacks.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has mediated between Russia and Ukraine, said on Friday that Putin appeared to be “much softer and more open to negotiations” with Ukraine than in the past.

“We are not without hope,” Erdogan said of the possibility of talks to end the conflict.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Friday that Putin has been open for negotiations “from the very beginning” and “nothing has changed”.

“If you remember, President Putin tried to initiate talks with both NATO and the United States even before the special military operation,” he said.

“Putin was open to negotiations when a document was almost agreed on between Russian and Ukrainian [negotiators]. So in that respect, nothing has changed. The position of the Ukrainian side has changed… Ukrainian law now prohibits any negotiations,” Peskov added.

Earlier this month, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an interview that Russia was willing to engage with the United States or Turkey on ways to end the war, now in its eighth month, but had yet to receive any serious proposal to negotiate.

The biggest conflict in Europe in decades has drawn comparisons with the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, which brought the world to the brink of nuclear war and raised questions about whether Washington and Moscow should engage in talks to avoid an expansion of the conflict, including a nuclear confrontation.

‘Maintaining communication’​

Russian Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu, meanwhile, spoke on the telephone with US Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin on Friday — their first call in five months.
The two talked about “international security problems, notably the situation in Ukraine”, the Russian defence ministry said.


“Secretary Austin emphasised the importance of maintaining lines of communication amid the ongoing war against Ukraine,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

It was only the second time Shoigu and Austin spoke since the start of the invasion on February 24. On May 13, Austin pressed for an immediate ceasefire and made the same request to have open lines of communication.

At the time, Russia’s invading force had been beaten back from the capital Kyiv but it was making steady gains in the eastern Donbas and Kharkiv regions and had consolidated positions in the south.

Six months on, however, Ukraine’s forces have pushed back on all fronts.

Kyiv’s military in recent weeks — aided by Western weapons — has advanced towards the southern Kherson region’s main city, also called Kherson.

Kherson was the first crucial city to fall to Moscow’s troops and retaking it would be a major victory in Ukraine’s counteroffensive. Russian-installed officials are trying to evacuate up to 60,000 people from the Kherson region for their safety and to allow the military to build fortifications.

Ukraine’s push in the south comes after a sweeping counterattack in the northeast Kharkiv region, which badly impaired Russia’s supply routes and logistics corridors in the Donbas.


INTERACTIVE - WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN UKRAINE 240



‘Meaningful diplomacy’​

Whether the military setbacks have forced Russia into looking at possible ways out of Ukraine remains to be seen.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Friday that Washington will consider every means to advance diplomacy with Russia if it sees an opening but at the moment Moscow shows no sign of willingness to engage in meaningful talks.

“Every indication is that far from being willing to engage in meaningful diplomacy, President Putin continues to push in the opposite direction,” Blinken said at a press conference.

“We consider and will consider every means to advance diplomacy if we see an opening to advance it by whatever means, of course we’ll always look at it,” he said but added Moscow was instead “doubling and tripling down” on its aggression.

Russia intensified its missile and drone attacks on Ukraine’s power and water infrastructure this week in what Ukraine and the West call a campaign to intimidate civilians ahead of the cold winter.

A new Mariupol?​

For now, the next significant battle appears to be for Kherson city.

Analyst Mykhailo Samus said Russian troops should have been evacuated “a long time ago”, but added he thought it was unlikely the Ukrainians would want to attack the Russian-held city where tens of thousands of residents remain.

“The Ukrainians won’t conduct any battle for Kherson. They don’t attack and destroy cities like Russia, like Mariupol,” Samus said, referring to the city the Russians pounded to rubble earlier in the war.

Retired US General Ben Hodges agreed the Ukrainians were likely to avoid a “giant fight inside the city” and instead are “keeping these Russian troops fixed there so that they cannot escape”.

Pierre Grasser, a researcher tied to Paris’ Sorbonne University, said Ukrainian troops were having to carefully weigh their movements outside the city. Any closer and “they will be entering the Kherson suburbs and that could be dangerous”, he said.

“Urban warfare always leads to many deaths on the attacker’s side [and] it would risk a new Mariupol” in terms of damage, said Grasser.

Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, faces a dilemma, analysts say.

“Besiege [the city] for as long as it takes or annihilate it and reduce it to rubble,” retired French General Michel Yakovleff said, calling it a “terrible choice”

Chanzo: Aljazeera
 
Wanamchelewesha sana

Ukraine war: Russia admits Kherson 'tense' under shelling​

    • Published
      3 hours ago
Sergei Surovikin (Russian Defence Ministry photo)
IMAGE SOURCE,EPA
Image caption,
Gen Surovikin - a veteran of Chechnya and Syria - has a reputation for harsh methods
By Laurence Peter
BBC News

The commander of Russian forces in Ukraine says the situation in the southern city of Kherson is "difficult" and residents are to be evacuated.
General Sergei Surovikin said Ukrainian troops using Himars rockets were hitting the city's infrastructure and housing. He spoke on Russian state TV.
"The Russian army will above all ensure the safe evacuation of the population" of Kherson, he said.
His rare admission of big problems was echoed by a top local official.
Russian-installed regional official Kirill Stremousov warned Kherson residents that "in the very near future" Ukrainian troops would launch an assault on the city.
"Please take my words seriously - I'm talking about evacuating as quickly as possible," he said on the Telegram messaging service. He added that people on the River Dnieper's west bank (called Dnipro in Ukraine) were most at risk.

This was confirmed by the region's Governor Vladimir Saldo, who was also appointed by Russia, in a video message.
Kherson was the first big city to fall to the Russians, back in February.
Ukrainian forces have been steadily retaking nearby territory for the past few weeks. They have pushed as far as 30km (19 miles) south along the Dnieper, threatening to trap Russian troops.
"As a whole the situation in the special military operation zone can be described as tense," Gen Surovikin said.
Kherson is the only Ukrainian regional capital to have been captured by the Russians in their invasion. The Kremlin now claims Kherson and three other Ukrainian regions to be part of Russia - a claim rejected internationally.

Infrastructure damage​

Gen Surovikin, who has a reputation for harsh methods, said Ukraine's volley of rockets had damaged Kherson's Antonivsky Bridge and the Kakhovka hydroelectric dam, blocking traffic along those key arteries.

That had created supply problems for essential services, namely food deliveries, water and electricity, he said.
The BBC has been unable to verify the hardship in Kherson described by the general.
He also said the Ukrainians were launching constant attacks across a wide front - in the areas of Kupiansk and Lyman in the east and, in the south, on the Mykolaiv-Krivyi Rih front.
The scale of the planned "evacuation" from Kherson is not yet clear. If Russia forces people to leave their homes it could constitute a war crime, under the UN's definition.
Kherson port view, 19 Jul 22
IMAGE SOURCE,AFP
Image caption,
Kherson is a major economic hub, with port facilities and various industries
In March, Ukraine said Russia illegally deported thousands of people to its territory from Mariupol, a city devastated by Russian shelling.
Under its definition of war crimes the UN includes: "The transfer, directly or indirectly, by the occupying power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies, or the deportation or transfer of all or parts of the population of the occupied territory".

The Russian State Duma - the lower house of parliament - discussed plans on Tuesday for transferring Kherson residents to Russia. Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said they would be offered new homes anywhere in Russia, and the government would provide financial assistance.
According to Russia's Vremya TV news, each family member will get 100,000 roubles (£1,433; $1,626) to replace household goods they were forced to abandon.
Kherson's pre-war population was nearly 300,000, but Ukrainian officials estimate that about half that number have fled the city.
Gen Surovikin is the new commander of Russia's war in Ukraine - what the Kremlin calls a "special military operation".
He is nicknamed General Armageddon and is a veteran of Russia's wars. In Syria he oversaw Russian bombing raids that killed many civilians. He has also commanded troops accused of human rights abuses in Chechnya.
Gen Surovikin was speaking on a day of further Russian drone and missile strikes on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, many of them targeting Ukraine's electricity supply. Parts of Kyiv now have no power or running water.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said that 30% of his country's power stations had been destroyed in the past eight days.
Map showing a close-up of the Kherson region in Ukraine

line

More on this story​

 

Ukraine war: Russia admits Kherson 'tense' under shelling​

    • Published
      3 hours ago
Sergei Surovikin (Russian Defence Ministry photo)
IMAGE SOURCE,EPA
Image caption,
Gen Surovikin - a veteran of Chechnya and Syria - has a reputation for harsh methods
By Laurence Peter
BBC News

The commander of Russian forces in Ukraine says the situation in the southern city of Kherson is "difficult" and residents are to be evacuated.
General Sergei Surovikin said Ukrainian troops using Himars rockets were hitting the city's infrastructure and housing. He spoke on Russian state TV.
"The Russian army will above all ensure the safe evacuation of the population" of Kherson, he said.
His rare admission of big problems was echoed by a top local official.
Russian-installed regional official Kirill Stremousov warned Kherson residents that "in the very near future" Ukrainian troops would launch an assault on the city.
"Please take my words seriously - I'm talking about evacuating as quickly as possible," he said on the Telegram messaging service. He added that people on the River Dnieper's west bank (called Dnipro in Ukraine) were most at risk.

This was confirmed by the region's Governor Vladimir Saldo, who was also appointed by Russia, in a video message.
Kherson was the first big city to fall to the Russians, back in February.
Ukrainian forces have been steadily retaking nearby territory for the past few weeks. They have pushed as far as 30km (19 miles) south along the Dnieper, threatening to trap Russian troops.
"As a whole the situation in the special military operation zone can be described as tense," Gen Surovikin said.
Kherson is the only Ukrainian regional capital to have been captured by the Russians in their invasion. The Kremlin now claims Kherson and three other Ukrainian regions to be part of Russia - a claim rejected internationally.

Infrastructure damage​

Gen Surovikin, who has a reputation for harsh methods, said Ukraine's volley of rockets had damaged Kherson's Antonivsky Bridge and the Kakhovka hydroelectric dam, blocking traffic along those key arteries.

That had created supply problems for essential services, namely food deliveries, water and electricity, he said.
The BBC has been unable to verify the hardship in Kherson described by the general.
He also said the Ukrainians were launching constant attacks across a wide front - in the areas of Kupiansk and Lyman in the east and, in the south, on the Mykolaiv-Krivyi Rih front.
The scale of the planned "evacuation" from Kherson is not yet clear. If Russia forces people to leave their homes it could constitute a war crime, under the UN's definition.
Kherson port view, 19 Jul 22
IMAGE SOURCE,AFP
Image caption,
Kherson is a major economic hub, with port facilities and various industries
In March, Ukraine said Russia illegally deported thousands of people to its territory from Mariupol, a city devastated by Russian shelling.
Under its definition of war crimes the UN includes: "The transfer, directly or indirectly, by the occupying power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies, or the deportation or transfer of all or parts of the population of the occupied territory".

The Russian State Duma - the lower house of parliament - discussed plans on Tuesday for transferring Kherson residents to Russia. Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said they would be offered new homes anywhere in Russia, and the government would provide financial assistance.
According to Russia's Vremya TV news, each family member will get 100,000 roubles (£1,433; $1,626) to replace household goods they were forced to abandon.
Kherson's pre-war population was nearly 300,000, but Ukrainian officials estimate that about half that number have fled the city.
Gen Surovikin is the new commander of Russia's war in Ukraine - what the Kremlin calls a "special military operation".
He is nicknamed General Armageddon and is a veteran of Russia's wars. In Syria he oversaw Russian bombing raids that killed many civilians. He has also commanded troops accused of human rights abuses in Chechnya.
Gen Surovikin was speaking on a day of further Russian drone and missile strikes on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, many of them targeting Ukraine's electricity supply. Parts of Kyiv now have no power or running water.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said that 30% of his country's power stations had been destroyed in the past eight days.
Map showing a close-up of the Kherson region in Ukraine

line

More on this story​


Hayo kayasema siku nyingi zilizo pita msiyafanye as if kayasema jana au leo - propaganda nyingine ni za ajabu sana - mfano nimesoma leo kwenye comments nyingine ya kutunga eti Putin kalemewa ndio maana amemwagiza waziri wake wa ulinzi afanye mazungumzo na waziri wa ulinzi wa Merikani - huo ni uongo na ulaghai ulio piiliza mipaka, ukweli ni kwamba Serikali ya Merikani kwa kupitia Waziri wake wa ulizi ndiye alimpigia simu waziri wa Ulizi wa Urusi na si kinyume chake, sijui wanao leta upotoshaji huu wana lengo gani, nafikiri baada ya NATO/US mambo yao hayawaendei vizuri huko Ukraine ndio wamehamua kuja na gea mpya ya upotoshaji -sijui hiyo wanafikiri itawasaidia vipi kwenye war efforts zao nchini Ukraine.
 
Baada ya kupigana vita vikali kwa zaidi ya miezi minane tofauti na walivyotegemea, inaonekana sasa Russia wanaweza kuwa tayari kutafuta muafaka wa namna ya kuweza kumaliza hivi vita.

Inaonekana vilevile kwamba Russia wanakiri kwamba hawataweza kufikia malengo yao waliojiwekea kufuatia matokeo yaliyojiri kwenye vita hivyo katika siku za karibuni.

=======

‘Much softer’: Is Russia eyeing a way out of the Ukraine war?​

The war’s unpredictability raises questions about whether Washington and Moscow should engage in negotiations to avoid an expansion of the conflict, including a nuclear confrontation.

View attachment 2394359
A Ukrainian soldier prepares to fire a D-30 howitzer towards Russian troops in the Kharkiv region [File: Vyacheslav Madiyevskyy/Reuters]

Russian President Vladimir Putin may be softening his hardline stance on the war in Ukraine as Moscow’s defence minister held rare talks with his United States counterpart after a spate of battlefield setbacks.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has mediated between Russia and Ukraine, said on Friday that Putin appeared to be “much softer and more open to negotiations” with Ukraine than in the past.

“We are not without hope,” Erdogan said of the possibility of talks to end the conflict.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Friday that Putin has been open for negotiations “from the very beginning” and “nothing has changed”.

“If you remember, President Putin tried to initiate talks with both NATO and the United States even before the special military operation,” he said.

“Putin was open to negotiations when a document was almost agreed on between Russian and Ukrainian [negotiators]. So in that respect, nothing has changed. The position of the Ukrainian side has changed… Ukrainian law now prohibits any negotiations,” Peskov added.

Earlier this month, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an interview that Russia was willing to engage with the United States or Turkey on ways to end the war, now in its eighth month, but had yet to receive any serious proposal to negotiate.

The biggest conflict in Europe in decades has drawn comparisons with the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, which brought the world to the brink of nuclear war and raised questions about whether Washington and Moscow should engage in talks to avoid an expansion of the conflict, including a nuclear confrontation.

‘Maintaining communication’​

Russian Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu, meanwhile, spoke on the telephone with US Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin on Friday — their first call in five months.
The two talked about “international security problems, notably the situation in Ukraine”, the Russian defence ministry said.


“Secretary Austin emphasised the importance of maintaining lines of communication amid the ongoing war against Ukraine,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

It was only the second time Shoigu and Austin spoke since the start of the invasion on February 24. On May 13, Austin pressed for an immediate ceasefire and made the same request to have open lines of communication.

At the time, Russia’s invading force had been beaten back from the capital Kyiv but it was making steady gains in the eastern Donbas and Kharkiv regions and had consolidated positions in the south.

Six months on, however, Ukraine’s forces have pushed back on all fronts.

Kyiv’s military in recent weeks — aided by Western weapons — has advanced towards the southern Kherson region’s main city, also called Kherson.

Kherson was the first crucial city to fall to Moscow’s troops and retaking it would be a major victory in Ukraine’s counteroffensive. Russian-installed officials are trying to evacuate up to 60,000 people from the Kherson region for their safety and to allow the military to build fortifications.

Ukraine’s push in the south comes after a sweeping counterattack in the northeast Kharkiv region, which badly impaired Russia’s supply routes and logistics corridors in the Donbas.


INTERACTIVE - WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN UKRAINE 240



‘Meaningful diplomacy’​

Whether the military setbacks have forced Russia into looking at possible ways out of Ukraine remains to be seen.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Friday that Washington will consider every means to advance diplomacy with Russia if it sees an opening but at the moment Moscow shows no sign of willingness to engage in meaningful talks.

“Every indication is that far from being willing to engage in meaningful diplomacy, President Putin continues to push in the opposite direction,” Blinken said at a press conference.

“We consider and will consider every means to advance diplomacy if we see an opening to advance it by whatever means, of course we’ll always look at it,” he said but added Moscow was instead “doubling and tripling down” on its aggression.

Russia intensified its missile and drone attacks on Ukraine’s power and water infrastructure this week in what Ukraine and the West call a campaign to intimidate civilians ahead of the cold winter.

A new Mariupol?​

For now, the next significant battle appears to be for Kherson city.

Analyst Mykhailo Samus said Russian troops should have been evacuated “a long time ago”, but added he thought it was unlikely the Ukrainians would want to attack the Russian-held city where tens of thousands of residents remain.

“The Ukrainians won’t conduct any battle for Kherson. They don’t attack and destroy cities like Russia, like Mariupol,” Samus said, referring to the city the Russians pounded to rubble earlier in the war.

Retired US General Ben Hodges agreed the Ukrainians were likely to avoid a “giant fight inside the city” and instead are “keeping these Russian troops fixed there so that they cannot escape”.

Pierre Grasser, a researcher tied to Paris’ Sorbonne University, said Ukrainian troops were having to carefully weigh their movements outside the city. Any closer and “they will be entering the Kherson suburbs and that could be dangerous”, he said.

“Urban warfare always leads to many deaths on the attacker’s side [and] it would risk a new Mariupol” in terms of damage, said Grasser.

Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, faces a dilemma, analysts say.

“Besiege [the city] for as long as it takes or annihilate it and reduce it to rubble,” retired French General Michel Yakovleff said, calling it a “terrible choice”

Chanzo: Aljazeera
Waukraine wanaendelea kupigwa vibaya huko kila sehemu hata Kherson na saa hivi air raids zinaendelea.
 
Hayo kayasema siku nyingi zilizo pita msiyafanye as if kayasema jana au leo - propaganda nyingine ni za ajabu sana - mfano nimesoma leo kwenye comments nyingine ya kutunga eti Putin kalemewa ndio maana amemwagiza waziri wake wa ulinzi afanye mazungumzo na waziri wa ulinzi wa Merikani - huo ni uongo na ulaghai ulio piiliza mipaka, ukweli ni kwamba Serikali ya Merikani kwa kupitia Waziri wake wa ulizi ndiye alimpigia simu waziri wa Ulizi wa Urusi na si kinyume chake, sijui wanao leta upotoshaji huu wana lengo gani, nafikiri baada ya NATO/US mambo yao hayawaendei vizuri huko Ukraine ndio wamehamua kuja na gea mpya ya upotoshaji -sijui hiyo wanafikiri itawasaidia vipi kwenye war efforts zao nchini Ukraine.
Mara nyingine ni vizuri kuchukua "ujumbe mahsusi" kuwa mhusika amekiri kuwa kuna kipigo, hata kama ni ujumbe wa Februari, ujumbe unaashiria kuwa hali si nyepesi ukilinganisha muscles walizonazo.
 
Hayo kayasema siku nyingi zilizo pita msiyafanye as if kayasema jana au leo - propaganda nyingine ni za ajabu sana - mfano nimesoma leo kwenye comments nyingine ya kutunga eti Putin kalemewa ndio maana amemwagiza waziri wake wa ulinzi afanye mazungumzo na waziri wa ulinzi wa Merikani - huo ni uongo na ulaghai ulio piiliza mipaka, ukweli ni kwamba Serikali ya Merikani kwa kupitia Waziri wake wa ulizi ndiye alimpigia simu waziri wa Ulizi wa Urusi na si kinyume chake, sijui wanao leta upotoshaji huu wana lengo gani, nafikiri baada ya NATO/US mambo yao hayawaendei vizuri huko Ukraine ndio wamehamua kuja na gea mpya ya upotoshaji -sijui hiyo wanafikiri itawasaidia vipi kwenye war efforts zao nchini Ukraine.

Ukraine war: US and Russian defence ministers discuss Ukraine in rare talks​

    • Published
      14 hours ago
Lloyd Austin
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
Lloyd Austin said he stressed the importance of maintaining communication with Russia
By Elsa Maishman
BBC News

The US and Russian defence secretaries have spoken in a phone call, in a rare moment of high-level contact between the two countries since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu spoke on Friday, the two countries confirmed.
Both sides said the situation in Ukraine was discussed.
It is the first time they have spoken since a call on 13 May.
After Friday's call, Pentagon press secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder told the BBC that the US was "eager to keep lines of communication open".
"It has been since May since the two gentlemen spoke, so Secretary Austin took today as an opportunity to connect with Minister Shoigu," he said.

Russia's defence ministry said that "current questions of international security were discussed, including the situation in Ukraine".
After their previous conversation in May, Mr Austin urged his counterpart to call an immediate ceasefire - a request that was not mentioned this time.
It comes after hints from Russian President Vladimir Putin that he may be willing to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine, and warnings against this from US President Joe Biden.
Officials in both the US and the UK say they believe the chances of Mr Putin carrying out these veiled threats are low.
Asked if the call had been scheduled as a response to this issue, Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said that while Putin's hints had been "irresponsible and concerning", the US has seen "no indication at this time" that Russia has decided to use nuclear weapons.
Already frosty relations between the US and Russia soured even further since the invasion of Ukraine.

The leaders of both countries had a meeting in mid-2021, which was heralded as a positive step towards a better relationship. But this progress stalled as tensions escalated over Ukraine.
Mr Putin and Mr Biden held several calls in the months before the war, in which the US president warned his Russian counterpart to stand down.
There have been no talks between the leaders since the invasion.
Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden shake hands
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
The US and Russian leaders last met face to face in 2021
Both men are set to attend the G20 summit in Indonesia next month, but have indicated that they will avoid a meeting.
The US responded to the war with a package of sanctions on Russia, in addition to significant military aid to Ukraine.
Earlier this week Mr Biden accused Mr Putin of trying to intimidate Ukrainians into surrendering, after Russia declared martial law in four recently-annexed regions of Ukraine.

The Russian president is now in an "incredibly difficult position", he said, and the "only tool available to him is to brutalise individual citizens in Ukraine".
Russia has previously denounced the US and the West for attempting to influence the war by supplying weapons and other aid to Ukraine.
In one of his most anti-American speeches so far, Mr Putin accused the West of being "colonial" last month, when marking the annexation of four Ukrainian regions.
 

Ukraine war: US and Russian defence ministers discuss Ukraine in rare talks​

    • Published
      14 hours ago
Lloyd Austin
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
Lloyd Austin said he stressed the importance of maintaining communication with Russia
By Elsa Maishman
BBC News

The US and Russian defence secretaries have spoken in a phone call, in a rare moment of high-level contact between the two countries since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu spoke on Friday, the two countries confirmed.
Both sides said the situation in Ukraine was discussed.
It is the first time they have spoken since a call on 13 May.
After Friday's call, Pentagon press secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder told the BBC that the US was "eager to keep lines of communication open".
"It has been since May since the two gentlemen spoke, so Secretary Austin took today as an opportunity to connect with Minister Shoigu," he said.

Russia's defence ministry said that "current questions of international security were discussed, including the situation in Ukraine".
After their previous conversation in May, Mr Austin urged his counterpart to call an immediate ceasefire - a request that was not mentioned this time.
It comes after hints from Russian President Vladimir Putin that he may be willing to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine, and warnings against this from US President Joe Biden.
Officials in both the US and the UK say they believe the chances of Mr Putin carrying out these veiled threats are low.
Asked if the call had been scheduled as a response to this issue, Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said that while Putin's hints had been "irresponsible and concerning", the US has seen "no indication at this time" that Russia has decided to use nuclear weapons.
Already frosty relations between the US and Russia soured even further since the invasion of Ukraine.

The leaders of both countries had a meeting in mid-2021, which was heralded as a positive step towards a better relationship. But this progress stalled as tensions escalated over Ukraine.
Mr Putin and Mr Biden held several calls in the months before the war, in which the US president warned his Russian counterpart to stand down.
There have been no talks between the leaders since the invasion.
Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden shake hands
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
The US and Russian leaders last met face to face in 2021
Both men are set to attend the G20 summit in Indonesia next month, but have indicated that they will avoid a meeting.
The US responded to the war with a package of sanctions on Russia, in addition to significant military aid to Ukraine.
Earlier this week Mr Biden accused Mr Putin of trying to intimidate Ukrainians into surrendering, after Russia declared martial law in four recently-annexed regions of Ukraine.

The Russian president is now in an "incredibly difficult position", he said, and the "only tool available to him is to brutalise individual citizens in Ukraine".
Russia has previously denounced the US and the West for attempting to influence the war by supplying weapons and other aid to Ukraine.
In one of his most anti-American speeches so far, Mr Putin accused the West of being "colonial" last month, when marking the annexation of four Ukrainian regions.

Source: BBC, sina shaka unajua vizuri lugha ya kiingereza - habari hizi waiingereza wameongeza maneno .mengi ya kwao mpaka article nzima inaonekana wazi wazi haina maana yoyote zaidi ya kumsema sema na kumshutumu Putin kwa mambo ya kutunga tu - si unawajua waingereza walivyo kimbele mbele na upotoshaji mwingi - walichangia sana kumpotosha regime ya Zelensky kwenye vita hii - sasa wanajuta.

Back to the main point - narudia kusema kwa mara nyingine tena kwamba aliye piga simu kwa mara ya kwanza kuanzisha mazungumzo alikuwa ni Waziri wa ulinzi wa Merikani - Waziri wa Urusi hakuhusika chochote katika hilo - cha ajabu media za nagharibi specifically BBC wana-spin taarifa nzima as if Warusi ndio waliomba kuwepo mazungumzo, si hilo tu wanakwenda mbali na kuzuga watu as if walifanya hivyo kumuonya Putin na Serikali yake - upuuzi mtupu na upotoshaji wa hali ya juu sijui wanafikiti watu hakwenda shule - NATO/US na puppet wao mkuu regime ya Zelensky wanaendeshwa puta ma majeshi ya Russia huko Ukraine wakija hapa wanakuja na adithi zao za kufikirika tu wanafikiri watu na akili zao timamu watakaa chini na kuwasikiliza.
 
Source: BBC, sina shaka unajua vizuri lugha ya kiingereza - habari hizi waiingereza wameongeza maneno .mengi ya kwao mpaka article nzima inaonekana wazi wazi haina maana yoyote zaidi ya kumsema sema na kumshutumu Putin kwa mambo ya kutunga tu - si unawajua waingereza walivyo kimbele mbele na upotoshaji mwingi - walichangia sana kumpotosha regime ya Zelensky kwenye vita hii - sasa wanajuta.

Back to the main point - narudia kusema kwa mara nyingine tena kwamba aliye piga simu kwa mara ya kwanza kuanzisha mazungumzo alikuwa ni Waziri wa ulinzi wa Merikani - Waziri wa Urusi hakuhusika chochote katika hilo - cha ajabu media za nagharibi specifically BBC wana-spin taarifa nzima as if Warusi ndio waliomba kuwepo mazungumzo, si hilo tu wanakwenda mbali na kuzuga watu as if walifanya hivyo kumuonya Putin na Serikali yake - upuuzi mtupu na upotoshaji wa hali ya juu sijui wanafikiti watu hakwenda shule - NATO/US na puppet wao mkuu regime ya Zelensky wanaendeshwa puta ma majeshi ya Russia huko Ukraine wakija hapa wanakuja na adithi zao za kufikirika tu wanafikiri watu na akili zao timamu watakaa chini na kuwasikiliza.
Mbona hata taarifa ya Aljaazera inafanana na hiyo ya BBC?;
Pitia hapa Chini

US, Russia defence chiefs discuss Ukraine war in rare phone call​

Few details have emerged of Friday’s conversation, but both sides confirmed discussing the Ukraine war in the conversation.


The Pentagon declined to offer specifics on the call but says that Austin initiated the conversation [File: Thilo Schmuelgen/Reuters]
Published On 22 Oct 202222 Oct 2022

United States defence secretary Lloyd Austin has held a rare telephone call with his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu, with the Ukraine war featuring in the talks, according to the defence ministry from both countries.
The Pentagon on Friday declined to offer specifics beyond saying that Austin, who initiated the conversation, emphasised a need for lines of communication amid the war in Ukraine.

“Topical issues of international security – including the situation in Ukraine – were discussed,” said Russia’s defence ministry.
Few details emerged of Friday’s conversation – only the second call between the ministers since Moscow invaded Ukraine on February 24. Back in May, Austin had urged Moscow to implement an “immediate ceasefire”.
The call comes as pro-Kremlin officials in Ukraine’s east said they were turning the country’s southern city of Kherson into a “fortress” as Kyiv’s forces advance. Ukraine said on Friday it had retaken a total of 88 towns and villages in the region since launching its offensive to retake Kherson in September.
Kyiv’s forces in recent weeks – aided by Western weapons – have been advancing along the west bank of the Dnieper river towards the region’s main city Kherson.
Ukraine’s push in the south comes after a sweeping counteroffensive in the northeast Kharkiv region that has badly impaired Russia’s supply routes and logistics corridors in the eastern Donbas region.

‘Russia doubling down on its aggression’​

Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington had seen no evidence that Russia is interested in ending its aggression towards Ukraine, and instead was “doubling and tripling down”. However, Austin said the US would stay in contact with Russia.
“We have seen no evidence of that at this moment. On the contrary, we see Russia doubling and tripling down on its aggression,” Blinken told a joint news conference with French foreign minister Catherine Colonna.

Russia attacks ‘horrific’​

Blinken pointed to Russia’s recent attacks on power stations and other civilian infrastructure in Ukraine and the mobilisation of troops who Blinken called “horrifically, cannon fodder that Putin is trying to throw into the war”.

“The fundamental difference is that Ukrainians are fighting for their country, their land, their future. Russia is not and the sooner President Putin understands that and comes to that conclusion, the sooner we will be able to end this war,” Blinken said.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s energy minister said that Russian air attacks have hit at least half of Ukraine’s thermal generation capacity, causing billions of dollars of damage since October 10, though not all those power units have stopped working completely.
German Galushchenko told the Reuters news agency that Ukraine may need electricity imports to get through the winter after attacks that had struck 30-40 percent of power infrastructure and traders were already holding negotiations with suppliers.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday urged the West to warn Russia not to blow up a dam in southern Ukraine that would cause severe flooding.
Russia has accused Ukraine of rocketing the dam and planning to destroy it in what Kyiv officials called a sign Russia might blow it up and blame Ukraine.
Neither side produced evidence to back up their allegations.
 
Mbona hata taarifa ya Aljaazera inafanana na hiyo ya BBC?;
Pitia hapa Chini

US, Russia defence chiefs discuss Ukraine war in rare phone call​

Few details have emerged of Friday’s conversation, but both sides confirmed discussing the Ukraine war in the conversation.


The Pentagon declined to offer specifics on the call but says that Austin initiated the conversation [File: Thilo Schmuelgen/Reuters]
Published On 22 Oct 202222 Oct 2022

United States defence secretary Lloyd Austin has held a rare telephone call with his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu, with the Ukraine war featuring in the talks, according to the defence ministry from both countries.
The Pentagon on Friday declined to offer specifics beyond saying that Austin, who initiated the conversation, emphasised a need for lines of communication amid the war in Ukraine.

“Topical issues of international security – including the situation in Ukraine – were discussed,” said Russia’s defence ministry.
Few details emerged of Friday’s conversation – only the second call between the ministers since Moscow invaded Ukraine on February 24. Back in May, Austin had urged Moscow to implement an “immediate ceasefire”.
The call comes as pro-Kremlin officials in Ukraine’s east said they were turning the country’s southern city of Kherson into a “fortress” as Kyiv’s forces advance. Ukraine said on Friday it had retaken a total of 88 towns and villages in the region since launching its offensive to retake Kherson in September.
Kyiv’s forces in recent weeks – aided by Western weapons – have been advancing along the west bank of the Dnieper river towards the region’s main city Kherson.
Ukraine’s push in the south comes after a sweeping counteroffensive in the northeast Kharkiv region that has badly impaired Russia’s supply routes and logistics corridors in the eastern Donbas region.

‘Russia doubling down on its aggression’​

Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington had seen no evidence that Russia is interested in ending its aggression towards Ukraine, and instead was “doubling and tripling down”. However, Austin said the US would stay in contact with Russia.
“We have seen no evidence of that at this moment. On the contrary, we see Russia doubling and tripling down on its aggression,” Blinken told a joint news conference with French foreign minister Catherine Colonna.

Russia attacks ‘horrific’​

Blinken pointed to Russia’s recent attacks on power stations and other civilian infrastructure in Ukraine and the mobilisation of troops who Blinken called “horrifically, cannon fodder that Putin is trying to throw into the war”.

“The fundamental difference is that Ukrainians are fighting for their country, their land, their future. Russia is not and the sooner President Putin understands that and comes to that conclusion, the sooner we will be able to end this war,” Blinken said.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s energy minister said that Russian air attacks have hit at least half of Ukraine’s thermal generation capacity, causing billions of dollars of damage since October 10, though not all those power units have stopped working completely.
German Galushchenko told the Reuters news agency that Ukraine may need electricity imports to get through the winter after attacks that had struck 30-40 percent of power infrastructure and traders were already holding negotiations with suppliers.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday urged the West to warn Russia not to blow up a dam in southern Ukraine that would cause severe flooding.
Russia has accused Ukraine of rocketing the dam and planning to destroy it in what Kyiv officials called a sign Russia might blow it up and blame Ukraine.
Neither side produced evidence to back up their allegations.

Mkuu kama hujui kwamba Al Jazeela is part and parcel ya media ambazo ni his master's Voice za ku-propagate propaganda za west-basi tena, sina shaka unajua vizuri lugha ya kingereza - labda nikukumbushe kwa mara nyingine tena kwamba aliye husika ku-initiate mazungumzo ni Wamerikani wenyewe kupitia waziri wake wa ulinzi na sio Warusi, lakini hapa waandishi wa habari for political reasons wanaongezea mambo hambayo hayakuwa kwenye ajenda wanayatunga wao wenyewe ili kuzuga Dunia kwamba Amerika zaidi - ndio walivyo walaghai kama nini.

We fikiria waliyo watu wa ajabu, wao wenyewe wanakwenda kumbembeleza Putin mwenye kupitia waziri wake wa Ulinzi baadae mavuvuzela wanaleta habari zilizo jaa upotoshaji mkubwa giving an impression simu was meant kuonyesha kwamba Amerika zaidi -ulaghai mtupu.

Nashindwa kuelewa kwa nini watu hata hawajiulizi kwa nini Biden alimwagiza waziri wake wa ulizi ndiye afanye mazungumzo/pigia simu waziri wa ulinzi wa Urusi, kwa nini Biden hakumwagiza waziri wake wa mambo ya nje na sio wa ulinzi - hata mnashindwa kutambua kinacho endelea nyuma ya pazia - mbona muda wote huo wa vita nchini Ukraine utawala wa Biden ulikuwa umekaa kimya tuuu huku ukiendelea kumimina silaha za matrillion nchini Ukraine wakiwa na imani kwamba watamshinda Putin na kumfanya apinduliwe hivi karibuni, sasa baada ya kugunduwa kwamba njama zao zimegonga mwamba hasa kwenye siku za hivi karibuni ambazo Putin na jeshi lake wamehamua kuvua velvet gloves na kupigana kavu kavu bila ya kuionea huruma utawala wa Zelensky na jeshi lake - baada ya operation za Russia za siku za hivi karibuni, basi utawala wa Amerika imechekecha ukaona kwamba operation kababe ya jeshi la Urusi inayo tegemewa kuanzishwa hivi karibuni ni wazi Zelensky na utawala wake utashindwa vita na kuondolewa fasta regardless ya msaada mkubwa wa silaha na kijeshi anao upata kutoka mataifa ya magharibi hasa hasa USA - ndio maana Waziri wa Ulinzi wa Merikani amehamua/katumwa kufanya mazungumzo fasta na waziri wa ulinzi wa Urusi, lengo likiwa hasa ni kutaka kumunusuru Zelensky na utawala wake ingawa hayo hawayasemi moja kwa moja lakini watu wenye akili wanajua hilo ndilo lengo kuu la Serikali ya Merikani - yaani kumuhokoa Zelensky na utawala wake - mtakuja kuniambia, Amerika haija kurupuka tu bila ya kuwa na sababu za dhalula za kufanya hivyo - nawambieni vyuma vimekaza kwa Zelensky si bure.
 
Mjanja huyu anataka kufanya biashara kwa urahisi ya gas kipindi hiki cha baridi, wajichanganye tu hao wa ulaya
Kumbe anatumia 'ujanja' kutaka kuuza gesi,si tuliambiwa hapa kuwa Russia itabidi apigiwe magoti kuuza gesi? Sasa ukisema anatumia ujanja maana yake anajua na yeye kuwa watu wana mbadala wa hiyo gesi yake.Yeye atulie tu na gesi yake tuone kama Bara la Ulaya litakwisha sababu halipati gesi kutoka Russia.
 
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