LIVE Special Thread: Yanayojiri Mgogoro wa Ukraine na Urusi. Nini chanzo na hatma ya mzozo?

LIVE Special Thread: Yanayojiri Mgogoro wa Ukraine na Urusi. Nini chanzo na hatma ya mzozo?

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Hawa wahuni siku watakayoamua kuingiana mwilini hakuna atakayebaki salama.

Kuna mambo mengi yanafanyika nyuma ya pazia tusipyafahamu yanayowahusu mabwana hawa.
Ukrainian missiles would not have reached their targets, including in Sevastopol, without direct U.S. involvement in targeting, and as for Russia's response,

"you will find out in the foreseeable future" — Lavrov.
 
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Ndio maana nimemwambia mtoa mada ya kwamba Urusi inaweza isiivamie Ukraine kwa sababu zingine hasa za kiuchumi .

Lakini hoja ya kwamba Urusi inaogopa kuivamia eti kwa sababu ya kugopa Marekani itatuma wanajeshi wake sio kweli.

Na ndio maana nimemwambia ya kwamba Urusi ikiamua kuivamia Ukraine Marekani hatofanya chochote zaidi ya kuweka vikwazo vya kiuchumi ikiwemo kusitisha hilo bomba la gesi.

Na kama umeufatilia huu mgogoro hakuna kiongozi yeyote yule wa Urusi aliye sema ya kwamba Urusi inataka kuivamia Ukraine zaidi ya kusema wanafanya mazoezi ya kijeshi ya kawaida, hizo tuuma za Urusi kutaka kuivamia Ukraine zimekuwa zikitolewa na nchi magharibi na viongozi wa Urusi Mara kwa mara wamekuwa wakikanusha.

Na sisitiza USA na washirika wake wange kuwa na nia ya kuisaidia Ukraine wangeisaidia kwanza kukomboa majimbo mawili yanayo shikiliwa na waasi.
🙌🙌🙌
 

West ‘jealously’ watching Modi’s Moscow trip – Kremlin​


Mkakati wa kuitenga Russia umefeli vibaya sana.
Team kivu wa jf hawaamini
Na katika nchi ambayo west hawathubutu kuiekea kikwazo hata kimoja basi ni INDIA
Maana wakiweka kikwazo kwa INDIA wataifanya ijongee karibu zaidi na UCHINA na RUSSIA na hii ni hatari kwa upande ule unaozamia jua
 
Ukrainian attempt to hijack Russian strategic bomber thwarted – FSB

Kiev’s spies tried to bribe the pilot of a Tu-22M3 aircraft, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) has said

A Russian pilot standing in front of a Tu-22M3 strategic bomber. © Russia’s Federal Security Service
A plot by Ukraine’s intelligence services to hijack a Russian Tu-22M3 nuclear-capable strategic bomber has been intercepted, the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) has said.

Kiev’s spies offered a Russian air force pilot money and Italian citizenship if he agreed to fly the aircraft to Ukraine, the agency said in a statement on Monday.

The involvement of special services of NATO countries in the failed hijacking was uncovered, the FSB said. It did not name specific members of the US-led military bloc.

During the “operational game,” Russian counterintelligence officers were able to obtain information that helped the military to carry out a successful strike again the Ukrainian armed forces’ Ozernoye airfield, it added.

The facility is located near the city of Zhytomir in northwest Ukraine.

The FSB also published a video of the Russian pilot, who helped the agency with the operation. His identity was concealed and voiced changed in the clip.

Ukrainian spy network busted in Crimea – FSB READ MORE Ukrainian spy network busted in Crimea – FSB
The airman said he had been contacted on Telegram by a person who revealed he was working for Ukrainian intelligence.

According to the Russian serviceman, the man – who identified himself as Pavlo – started to threaten his relatives and demanded information about the Russian aircraft or to set the planes on fire.

Pavlo later “offered to hijack a warplane to the territory of Ukraine, and not any warplane, but a nuclear-capable strategic long-range bomber,” the pilot stated.

The Russian serviceman said that instead of cooperating with the Ukrainian spy, he “went to his superiors and told them everything.”

The clip also included screenshots of conversations between the pilot and Ukrainian officer. Judging by the texts, the reward promised to the Russian sericeman for stealing the plane was $3 million.

The FSB reported foiling a similar plot by Ukrainian intelligence in July 2022. Back then, several Russian pilots were offered up to $2 million, EU passports and a comfortable life in the West for flying their planes to Ukraine. But the airmen instead worked with Russian counterintelligence officers, helping them to obtain information about Kiev’s forces.

The Kremlin said the FSB deserved “top marks” for carrying out the sophisticated operation. According to RT’s sources, the Ukrainians was especially interested in Su-34 fighter-bombers and Tu-22M3 strategic aircraft.
 
UKRAINIAN ATTEMPT TO HIJACK RUSSIAN STRATEGIC BOMBER THWARTED – FSB


Ukrainian plot to hijack Russian warplanes exposed by Moscow
According to information shared with RT, Kiev’s spies offered Russian pilots money and EU citizenship as a reward
Ukrainian plot to hijack Russian warplanes exposed by Moscow
Russian intelligence has claimed that it foiled a sophisticated plot from Ukrainian spies to hijack several military jets. A security official official and a pilot, who is said to have been targeted by Kiev's agents, have shared details of the operation with RT.

Russia's Federal Security Service (the FSB) has sensationally added that a leading figure from the US-government funded investigative organization Bellingcat – which presents itself as a journalistic grouping – was also involved in the scheme, which it believes was "supervised by NATO intelligence agencies." The FSB specifically pointed the finger at British operatives.

It explained that Russian pilots were promised passports from EU members states, and substantial cash rewards in order to participate in the plot.

Early in the ongoing conflict, the Ukrainians compiled a list of Russian military hardware, using publicly available information. They promised monetary rewards for potential defectors who managed to bring the equipment with them. The more elaborate the weapons were, the better the rewards that were promised, with warplanes, helicopters and tanks fetching the top payment of up to $1 million.

When the public call for defectors fell flat, Ukraine’s security service targeted individual Russian servicemen – pilots in particular – directly. They apparently traced and identified the airmen through the digital trail they left online, an operative with the Russian Security Service (the FSB) told RT TV reporter Maria Finoshina. Kiev appeared to be specifically interested in Russian Su-34 fighter-bombers and Tu-22M3 strategic aircraft, according to the source.

A Su-34 pilot targeted in the plot told RT that he was initially reluctant to speak with the Ukrainian spies, believing the promise of $1 million for stealing warplanes and defecting to Kiev to be a prank. After realizing his interlocutors were serious about the proposal, he tipped off Russian intelligence, which then monitored subsequent conversations.

“Initially, of course, I took it as a joke, but after a period of talking it became clear that I was dealing with representatives of the Ukrainian intelligence service and their Western partners,” the pilot said. “Also, I was supposed to get passports of European states and a comfortable life abroad was promised.”

Kiev's intelligence operatives apparently believed the Russian pilots who they contacted were ready to commit treason and hijack their own warplanes, putting them in touch with a Ukrainian pilot to discuss technical details.

“They believed so much in the possibility of organizing the hijacking that they revealed the layout of their defense systems, altitude maps, and lots of other useful information to us,” the Russian airman said, adding that the information obtained from the Ukrainians was used during the military operation.

To prove that the pilots were actually able to pull off the hijacking and had access to the specific warplanes, Ukrainian intelligence demanded video proof from them. The pilots were paid between $4,000 and $7,000 per video, which showed them getting into the planes while holding pieces of paper with specific numbers.

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Since most financial transactions between Russia and foreign countries has been heavily restricted under Western sanctions, the pilots were to be paid in cash through an elaborate network of couriers. The FSB says it has detained the man who had allegedly hired the couriers to deliver the money, and the suspect made a rather unexpected revelation.

The middleman claimed he had received orders directly from Christo Grozev, the Bulgarian ‘lead Russia investigator’ with Bellingcat, a controversial Western state-funded organization that was labeled “undesirable” in Russia earlier in July. Moscow has repeatedly questioned the independence of the investigative group, citing its close ties with intelligence agencies.

“Grozev… did not actually explain anything to me, he just told me the name of the courier who would deliver the money by train,” the suspect claimed.

The alleged involvement of Grozev is not the only suggestion of Western influence in hijacking the planes. During the negotiations with the pilots, Ukrainian intelligence was able to procure two legitimate EU passports – one Slovakian and one Romanian – for wives of the pilots, as a guarantee for the would-be ‘defectors’.

Leaving Russia with such documents would have immediately turned the pilots’ families into “hostages” of Ukrainian intelligence, the FSB operative told RT, as “methods of blackmail, threats and pressure on relatives” have long been standard practice for them.

US general reveals Ukraine fighter jets proposalREAD MORE: US general reveals Ukraine fighter jets proposal
“Obviously, the operation itself was carried out with the support of Western and, primarily, British intelligence services. We know about Grozev’s involvement and MI6 not only from these statements,” he added, claiming that Ukrainian intelligence had recently “ceased hiding” its ties with foreign spies.

The plot also described an even a darker element, as the would-be-defectors were supposed to somehow deal with their fellow crew members, it was revealed. While the Su-34 has two crew members, the Tu-22M3 has four.

Ukrainian intelligence reportedly suggested that Russian pilots should drug their comrades with Clophelin (Clonidine), a medication used to treat high blood pressure and other ailments. In high doses, however, it has a strong sedative effect, which makes the drug ‘popular’ among criminals wishing to knock out their victims to rob them. Very high doses can also be lethal.

Since the medication is not easy to come by in Russia, Ukrainian intelligence is said to have arranged a dead drop involving the substance. The FSB says it later recovered a stash of the product.

“As the pilot, I was asked to knock out my co-pilot, and what would happen to him after that is not clear – even whether he would be kept alive,” the Russian serviceman said.

According to the FSB’s information, the Ukrainian side insisted the betrayed crew members would be safe and exchanged as POWs later on. The Russian pilot, however, expressed strong doubts about
 
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