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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 382.87-0.8%Nov 13 4:00 PM EST

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To: ggersh who wrote (198384)4/24/2023 8:24:18 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
ggersh

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Re <<Does Russia have any ammo, missiles left? I'm agnostic>>

... am also agnostic, and so first thing in the morning I check the 150 - 300 overnight hobbyist news postings on the controversial Telegram Channel DD (donbass girl) Message 34264853

spoiler, DD keeps tabs on the pulse of the conflict, truth or fake, time shall tell. I cannot tell. Remain agnostic and watchful.
This day seems to indicate Russia is not yet running low on munitions. Perhaps tomorrow be different.

This day Team Hungary noted ...

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Absolutely tragic
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... the above video makes it obvious that neo-modern battlefield is essentially a set TV stage and anyone running around in the arena is lit-up thermally. Even once dispersed, the several combatants can be and were taken out with fairly common place pinpoint munitions (by looks of earlier DD postings), or whenever concentrated in some pre-attack formation, by one gigantic fuel-air bomb.

Had to look up AGS-17 en.wikipedia.org apparently an old Soviet era automatic grenade system, but am suspicious that the system updated w/ smarter grenades, because by the looks of the video, one salvo took out widely dispersed combatants hiding behind various positions separated by some distance. Seems to me that the only way to avoid casualty is to be absent from the arena at that moment.

NOT video game :0[ t.me


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... aside from munitions issue
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Re the UN meeting in progress t.me
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Re above heads of FT article, I attach here ... and I am guessing that as long as the allies are not willing to all-out sanction India and China, then the allies shall resist sanctions against Turkey and UAE and such minor states. However I do note that likely much strategic material transiting Turkey and UAE to Russia, am guessing

ft.com

Allies resist US plan to ban all G7 exports to Russia
EU and Japanese diplomats say that Washington’s proposal is ‘simply not do-able’

4 hours ago
A shipping terminal in Yokohama, Japan. G7 leaders meet in Hiroshima in May for a summit on the effects of Russia’s war against Ukraine © Kiyoshi Ota/BloombergThe EU and Japan have pushed back against a US proposal for G7 countries to ban all exports to Russia, as part of negotiations ahead of a summit of the world’s most advanced economies.

A G7 leaders’ statement being drafted for their meeting in Hiroshima next month includes a pledge to replace the current sector-by-sector sanctions regime against Russia with a complete export ban with a few exemptions, according to documents seen by the Financial Times. The full export ban would include exemptions for agricultural, medical and other products.

The proposal was made by the US, according to two officials. It comes amid rising frustration in Washington with the existing system riddled with loopholes that allow Russia to continue to import western technology.

But representatives from Japan and EU countries suggested in a preparatory meeting last week that such a move would not be feasible, according to three people briefed on the discussions.

“From our perspective it is simply not do-able,” said one of the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The White House’s National Security Council declined to comment on conversations with G7 partners but said the US would “continue to look for ways to hold Russia accountable”.

“In coordination with our G7 partners have put in place the largest set of sanctions and export control actions ever imposed on a major economy,” said an NSC spokesperson. “These actions have had a significant impact, undercutting Russia’s ability to fund and fight its unjust war.”

The disagreement over the measure underscores the lack of additional options available to G7 leaders as they seek to increase the economic punishment for Vladimir Putin’s regime after 14 months of war, following a number of sanctions measures that were designed to cut off vast swaths of Russia’s economy from western imports of technology, machinery and finance.

Cracking down on sanctions evasion and circumvention by third countries is the main focus of the US, UK, EU and other allies, with increased pressure on states such as Turkey, the UAE and countries in central Asia that have increased trade with Russia since western sanctions were imposed.

G7 leaders will meet in Hiroshima on May 19 for a three-day summit set to focus on the effects of Russia’s war against Ukraine, economic security, green investments and the Indo-Pacific region.

The EU, which is a member of the G7 alongside the US, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada, requires all of its 27 members to agree on sanctions policy.

It has agreed on 10 packages of sanctions against Russia since February 2022, but only after weeks of wrangling between member states, some of whom have secured carve-outs and exemptions for their industries by threatening to veto the restrictions.

Replacing that regime with a full export ban plus exemptions would risk reopening those debates and the potential weakening of already-existing measures, officials said.

Other less-contested proposals listed in the draft statement, which could change before the summit, include more measures to restrict “evasion and circumvention” of existing sanctions and against those “wilfully supporting the financing of Russia’s war,” including financial transactions facilitators.

G7 countries will also continue to reduce their Russian energy imports and prevent “the reopening of avenues previously shut down by Russia’s weaponisation of energy,” the draft statement says. In addition, leaders will announce plans to introduce a “traceability mechanism” on Russian diamonds to reduce the Kremlin’s earnings from their export.

Additional reporting by Leo Lewis in Tokyo
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