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Isa Khan

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MOSCOW, May 24. /TASS/. Another round of Russian-Chinese consultations on strategic security will take place on Tuesday, May 25 in Moscow, the Russian Security Council’s press service informed on Monday.

"On May 25, Moscow will hold the 16th round of Russian-Chinese consultations on issues of strategic security," the message says.

It is noted that the consultations will be held by Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev and Director of China’s Central Foreign Affairs Commission Yang Jiechi. The talks will involve a number of Russian and Chinese ministries and agencies.

 

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SOCHI, May 25. /TASS/. An overwhelming majority of commanders of large military formations and regiments in the Russian Army have gained combat experience in Syria and are using it in troop training, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin said while opening a series of defense meetings in Sochi on Tuesday.
The Russian leader also pointed to the qualitative growth in the level of the command staff’s training.

"All the commanders of all-arms, Air Force and Air Defense Armies, over 85% of the commanders of military formations and regiments have gained combat experience in the Syrian Arab Republic and are now relying on it in the course of maneuvers, command and staff drills and exercises and in training the personnel of military units and formations," the head of state noted.

 

TR_123456

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SOCHI, May 25. /TASS/. An overwhelming majority of commanders of large military formations and regiments in the Russian Army have gained combat experience in Syria and are using it in troop training, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin said while opening a series of defense meetings in Sochi on Tuesday.
The Russian leader also pointed to the qualitative growth in the level of the command staff’s training.

"All the commanders of all-arms, Air Force and Air Defense Armies, over 85% of the commanders of military formations and regiments have gained combat experience in the Syrian Arab Republic and are now relying on it in the course of maneuvers, command and staff drills and exercises and in training the personnel of military units and formations," the head of state noted.

I wonder what kind of combat experience he is talking about,all they did was directing bombers?
 

Kartal1

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I wonder what kind of combat experience he is talking about,all they did was directing bombers?
I am also wondering. When it comes to the SOF (Spetsnaz) units tied to different services yes they played a serious role in coordinating airstrikes, reconnaissance, doing raids etc. Air defence units also played a critical role especially in Hmeymim which was facing different air threats a couple of times per week at periods. Military police gained combat experience with their "peace keeping" and humanitarian aid. Helicopters and fighter jets were extensively used for CAS and also a transport helicopter fleet is operating to but even with all that experience the statement seems like inflated one. Maybe they used SAA units and the Tiger Force to gain combat experience for the commanding staff but still 85% is to big number to be true the way I see it.
 

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I am also wondering. When it comes to the SOF (Spetsnaz) units tied to different services yes they played a serious role in coordinating airstrikes, reconnaissance, doing raids etc. Air defence units also played a critical role especially in Hmeymim which was facing different air threats a couple of times per week at periods. Military police gained combat experience with their "peace keeping" and humanitarian aid. Helicopters and fighter jets were extensively used for CAS and also a transport helicopter fleet is operating to but even with all that experience the statement seems like inflated one. Maybe they used SAA units and the Tiger Force to gain combat experience for the commanding staff but still 85% is to big number to be true the way I see it.
They ruled the air because there was no opponent,thats not combat experience in my book.
When and where did the SOF come in action,Hezbollah and Iranian ''militias'' did all the work as far as i know.
Air units didnt really face any real threats.
Military police did some patrolling,still not exactly combat experience.
 

Kartal1

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They ruled the air because there was no opponent,thats not combat experience in my book.
When and where did the SOF come in action,Hezbollah and Iranian ''militias'' did all the work as far as i know.
Air units didnt really face any real threats.
Military police did some patrolling,still not exactly combat experience.
SOF did a good job in Latakia, Palmyra, Aleppo and Idlib mainly. As far as I remember SOF and VDV (airborne) were sent to rescue the pilots of the downed jet by the TuAF in 2015 and managed to rescue one of them for example. They played a critical role in the capturing of Aleppo and defending the captured territories. Not to long ago they also gave casualties in Idlib when HTS managed to cut their infiltration at night and targeted them with accurate fire from thermal sights. After the whole situation was shared HTS even published captured equipment.
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Armenia - Russian soldiers march during an official Armenian ceremony to mark the 76th anniversary of Soviet victory in World War Two, Yerevan, May 9, 2021.

Russia will take steps to ensure its national security if Turkey opens a military base in Armenia, the Kremlin said on Friday.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan did not rule out Turkey’s permanent military presence in Azerbaijan after visiting on Tuesday the Nagorno-Karabakh town of Shushi (Shusha) captured by Azerbaijani forces during last year’s war.
In a joint declaration signed there, Erdogan and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev pledged to further deepen military and other ties between their nations. Aliyev said the declaration calls for their “mutual military assistance” in the event of an armed conflict with third states.
Erdogan on Thursday did not exclude a Turkish military base in Azerbaijan. “There may be development, expansion here later,” he told Turkey’s NTV channel.
Commenting on Erdogan’s statement, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “The deployment of military infrastructure by the [NATO] alliance countries near our borders is cause for our special attention as well as a reason for us to take steps to ensure our security and interests.”
Peskov also said Russia is “in close contact” with Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia on “further stabilizing the situation” in the South Caucasus after the Armenian-Azerbaijani war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire in November. Regional players must not take actions containing “any elements that could cause a rise in tensions,” Russian news agencies quoted him as saying.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was more dismissive of the talk of Turkish military presence in Azerbaijan. “We have not discussed that issue and do not comment on rumors,” he told a news conference on Friday.

 

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The source is unreliable. It is blowing things out of proportion. I do believe that Russia is critical of any foreign deployment in any neighboring country but a Turkish base in Azerbaijan is going to be accepted by Moscow eventually. There's a difference between American and Turkish presence in Azerbaijan.
 

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The source is unreliable. It is blowing things out of proportion. I do believe that Russia is critical of any foreign deployment in any neighboring country but a Turkish base in Azerbaijan is going to be accepted by Moscow eventually. There's a difference between American and Turkish presence in Azerbaijan.

If was Russia could they would take Istanbul. Russians will oppose Turkey everywhere they can, Turkey should actively be doing the same to Russia everywhere she can. Where it makes sense to do business with Russia do it, just like the americans, english, germans and french do good business with Russia. But where it doesnt make sense go as hard as possible against Russia.
 

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The Russian leader is convinced that "political will and readiness for compromises can yield a positive result"

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© Alexei Nikolsky/Russian Presidential Press and Information Office/TASS

MOSCOW, June 23. /TASS/. Russia cannot but be concerned over NATO’s ongoing military buildup near its borders, but Moscow hopes that the alliance will consider its initiatives on de-escalating tensions, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a video message to the participants and guests of the IX Moscow Conference on International Security posted on the Kremlin website on Wednesday.


"Of course, we cannot but be concerned about the never-ending buildup of NATO's military capabilities and infrastructure near Russian borders, as well as the fact that the alliance refuses to constructively consider our proposals on de-escalating tensions and reducing the risk of unpredictable incidents," the Russian leader said.


Putin stressed that Moscow "expects that common sense and a desire to develop constructive relations with us will eventually prevail".


According to the president, Russia’s efforts are aimed at reducing risks, ensuring predictability and ironing out differences through dialogue and particular agreements, including in the field of arms control.

Against this background, he stressed that the new "security equation" should take into account all factors affecting strategic stability. "Earlier Russia put forward a proposal on developing a new ‘security equation’. It should take into account all factors affecting strategic stability in their interrelationship".


The Russian leader is convinced that "political will and readiness for compromises can yield a positive result". According to him, a clear example of this is the extension of the Russian-US New START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) until 2026.

 

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The US Navy Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Porter sails in formation during the multinational maritime exercise Sea Breeze 2020, co-hosted by Ukraine and the United States, in the Black Sea July 25, 2020. © Ukrainian Defence Ministry/Handout via REUTERS

Moscow’s diplomatic mission in Washington has reacted furiously to news that American sailors are set to take part in major war games in the Black Sea, practicing naval battles and troop landings, close to Russia’s coastline.
In a statement posted to Twitter on Wednesday, the Russian Embassy said that “the scale and aggressive nature of the ‘Sea Breeze’ exercises in no way helps with the real challenges of ensuring security in the Black Sea region.” Ukrainian forces will also take part in the drills.
According to the envoys, the NATO drills will “increase the risk of unintentional incidents” and simultaneously “encourage militaristic sentiments in Kiev.” A spokesman for the US Sixth Fleet had previously said that Washington is “proud to partner with Ukraine in co-hosting the multinational maritime exercise.”

The Russian diplomats went on to urge the US and other NATO members “to refuse to practice military operations in the Black Sea.” Instead, they said, multilateral formats that aim to preserve peace in the sensitive area should be championed. “Any problems in the region can be championed by Black Sea states without the need to ‘impose’ outside assistance,” the embassy added.

Vessels and personnel from 32 separate nations will participate in the Sea Breeze drills, including both the US and Ukraine, as well as the UK, France, Poland, Georgia, Senegal, South Korea, Pakistan, Japan, and Morocco, among others.

The war games will run from June 28 to July 10 and, according to US military chiefs, will see sailors rehearse “multiple warfare areas including amphibious warfare, land maneuver warfare, diving operations, maritime interdiction operations, air defense, special operations integration, anti-submarine warfare, and search and rescue operations.”

Russian sailors conducted a series of their own exercises off the country’s south coast in April. Destroyers, landing vessels, and hovercraft took part in the wargames, which were announced shortly after reports that the US had ordered two warships into the region amid tensions over the shared border between Russia and Ukraine.

 

xizhimen

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US still tries to pick fights in every corner of the world, it should know by now that it's no longer an undisputed sole global power able to hijack the world at its will. This Covid crisis stripped US naked and the world is no longer afraid of its bluffing.
 

Azeri441

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US still tries to pick fights in every corner of the world, it should know by now that it's no longer an undisputed sole global power able to hijack the world at its will. This Covid crisis stripped US naked and the world is no longer afraid of its bluffing.

Lol yes, COVID impacted only USA and no one else.
 

Gary

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US still tries to pick fights in every corner of the world, it should know by now that it's no longer an undisputed sole global power able to hijack the world at its will. This Covid crisis stripped US naked and the world is no longer afraid of its bluffing.
It's a superpower thing, China did pick fight with almost all it's neighbor too.
 

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Sale of German Aluminum Company to Russia Raises Security Concerns​



United States President Joseph Biden’s European meetings with the G7 and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) earlier this month highlighted some of the extant policy differences between the US and its allies despite the positive PR assaults that sought to minimize them. One well-known transatlantic bone of contention has been Germany’s growing economic rapprochement with Russia, particularly its commitment to the Nord Stream Two subsea natural gas pipeline. The US has long perceived this project as a security risk to European allies, but the Biden administration has now apparently chosen to deemphasize it in order to preserve Washington’s working relationship with Berlin (see EDM, May 27, June 10).

Another concern has been the recent acquisition of Germany’s Aluminium Rheinfelden GmbH by the Russian aluminum conglomerate United Company (UC) RUSAL. The corporate takeover has raised broad anxieties that the German firm’s advanced fabrication and design technology could be used to execute Russia’s armaments plans—particularly for potential upgrades to its tank armada.

Aluminium Rheinfelden GmbH was founded in 1898, when aluminum production was launched near Europe’s first riverine hydroelectric power plant in Rheinfelden, on the Rhine River. In 2019, Aluminium Rheinfelden GmbH’s income reached €159 million ($190 million) (RBC, February 11). But its sales were heavily impacted last year by the global business slowdown stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic, forcing the company to declare bankruptcy in September 2020 (Alu-web.de, February 16).

A sale of the aluminum smelter was organized by a court-appointed bankruptcy administrator. The winning bid was submitted by Russia’s UC RUSAL, at a reported price of roughly €13 million ($15.5 million) for the entire company, which has 250 employees and an estimated annual turnover of approximately €110 million ($131 million) (Frankfurter Allegemeine Zeitung, April 8). The UC RUSAL bid won out over a counter-offer made by the EuroAtlantic Group, supported by the former German company owner’s daughter (Südkurier, April 9).

Under Germany’s Foreign Trade Act, the sale of an advanced industrial company with “dual-use” commercial/military technology required the agreement of the Federal Cartel Office and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy, both of which eventually approved the acquisition in mid-April (Aluminum Insider, April 18). Yet despite the governmental approval of the transaction, questions about the wisdom of allowing the sale have continued to emerge. For example, former Green Party politician and head of the think tank Center for Liberal Modernism, Ralf Fücks, expressed concern that German metallurgical expertise could be diverted to military use: “It would be negligent to deliver security-relevant know-how of a German company to a group that supplies the Russian armaments industry” (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, March 29). Despite the bland assurances from the German government, the fact that the high-grade Rheinfelden aluminum has potential military applications continued to elicit concerned commentary (Stuttgarter Zeitung, March 19).

The German press noted that the purchase raised apprehension in Washington as well (News.de, March 19). US concerns with UC RUSAL are long-standing, as its founder, Oleg Deripaska, is a member of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle. In April 2018, Washington imposed sanctions on UC RUSAL, Deripaska, and 23 other Russian citizens and entities “to punish Moscow for its alleged meddling in the 2016 US election and other ‘malign activity,’ ” thus banning US companies from doing business with them (Treasury.gov, April 6, 2018).

UC RUSAL asserts that the sale predated Alu-Rheinfelden’s economic downturn. According to Eric Martinet, the former director for automotive and transportation operations at UC RUSAL and the new CEO of Aluminium Rheinfelden, in 2017 UC RUSAL had already agreed about a takeover with Alu-Rheinfelden’s then-owner, Alois Franke, who died in 2019. However, the purchase was delayed by the US’s 2018 sanctions against Deripaska and his UC RUSAL company, which were lifted the following year, after Deripaska divested his majority share in the company (snanews.de, April 8).The implications of the purchase have roiled Germany’s economic and political circles. The daughter of the Rheinfelden aluminum smelter’s former owner hired former chief detective Klaus-Dieter Matsche from Frankfurt as a security advisor to examine the court-appointed bankruptcy administrator’s sale of the company to UC RUSAL. Matsche commented, “I think one should prevent this company from being sold to Russia now […] the company has 70 patents, including so-called dual-use patents, which can also be used militarily. This knowledge is now flowing to Russia. […] With its decision, the Federal Cartel Office has finally made the Russian group a world market leader in the manufacture of specialized aluminum alloys” (Nachrichten Regional, March 19)

Some Central and Eastern European analysts see the Aluminium Rheinfelden GmbH sale as indicative of a larger issue of German foreign policy becoming subordinate to Russian regional policy considerations—particularly vis-à-vis Ukraine and Europe’s East (Rzeczpospolita, April 11). Whatever UC RUSAL’s long-term intentions are, its acquisition of Aluminium Rheinfelden GmbH adds to the firm’s international portfolio, consisting of enterprises in 13 countries, including two European alumina refineries (in Italy and Ireland), along with an aluminum factory in Sweden (Rzeczpospolita, February 12).

UC RUSAL is the world’s largest aluminum producer outside of China and Russia’s only significant producer of this industrially crucial lightweight metal. As a part of its long-term development strategy, RUSAL plans to increase the production of Rheinfelden’s specialized aluminum alloys up to 30,000 tons per year (TASS, April 16). It seems highly unlikely to presume that—Kremlin ally Oleg Deripaska’s “divestiture” from the company notwithstanding—UC RUSAL is sufficiently free to forestall diverting any Aluminium Rheinfelden output to future Russian military needs.
 

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Wayne Marotto wrote on Twitter earlier that "US forces are in northeastern Syria under international law"

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Embassy of Russia
© Anatoliy Bochinin/TASS

WASHINGTON, August 10. /TASS/. US armed forces have no legal mandate to stay in Syria, the Russian embassy in Washington said on Twitter, responding to a tweet by Official Military Spokesman for US Operation Inherent Resolve Wayne Marotto.


Marotto wrote on Twitter earlier that "US forces are in northeastern Syria under international law - UN Security Council Resolution 2254 adopted December 2015."


"It’s a matter of fact that US armed forces have no legal mandate to stay in Syria. Your interpretation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2254 is just ridiculous. Please, read the document thoroughly," the Russian embassy said, posting a link to the resolution.

US-backed Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces currently control most of Syria’s eastern and northeastern Al-Hasakah, Deir ez-Zor and Raqqa provinces. The US military command has established nine military bases there, four of which are located near oil fields in the Deir ez-Zor province and another five in the neighboring Al-Hasakah region. In late 2019, then US President Donald Trump approved a plan, which said that several hundred US troops would remain in Syria, tasked with ensuring control of oil fields in the country’s east and northeast. Damascus views US military presence in Syria as occupation because US troops entered Syria without an invitation from the government.

 

xizhimen

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After pullin out of Afghanistan and Iraq, Syria will be the next of US global withdrawal, a fast declining US can't hold on for long.
 

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