Russia hits back at US intelligence claims that Putin was ‘misled’ over Ukraine war
Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with members of the Security Council at the Kremlin in Moscow on April 5, 2019.
Alexei Druzhinin | Afp | Getty Images
Russia’s Kremlin has rebuffed claims made by the US that President Vladimir Putin felt he was “misled” by his military commanders over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
“To our regret and even concern neither the Department of State nor the Pentagon have authentic information about what is happening in the Kremlin,” Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters at a briefing Thursday.
“They just do not understand what is happening in the Kremlin, they do not understand Russian President Vladimir Putin, they do not understand the mechanism of decision-making and they do not understand the style of our work,” Peskov added, according to state news agency TASS.
“This is not just regrettable. It causes our concern, because such utter misunderstanding results in wrong decisions, in careless decisions that have very bad consequences.”
The comments came after a declassified US intelligence assessment released Wednesday suggested that Putin had not been given the whole truth about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
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— Holly Ellyatt
Russian gas continues to flow into Europe, Russia’s Gazprom says
Russian state-owned energy giant Gazprom said Friday that it was continuing to supply Europe with natural gas, Reuters reported.
Andrey Rudakov | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Russian state-owned energy conglomerate Gazprom said Friday that its natural gas continued to flow into Europe via Ukraine, Reuters reported.
It comes as European countries face a deadline to start paying for gas in rubles on Friday, or have existing contracts with Russia halted. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on Thursday that said foreign buyers would have to pay in rubles for Russian gas from April 1, Reuters reported.
European countries seem relatively unfazed by Putin’s rhetoric, however, and appeared to have found a workaround.
A German government readout of a call with Putin on Wednesday said the Russian president had informed Scholz gas deliveries would have to be settled in rubles from April 1. “At the same time, [Putin] emphasis in the conversation that nothing would change for the European contractual partners,” the readout said.
— Chloe Taylor and Sam Meredith
Russia-Ukraine talks to continue
Ukrainian and Russian flags are seen on a table before talks between officials of the two countries in Belarus on March 3, 2022.
Maxim Guchek | Reuters
Talks between Russian and Ukrainian officials are set to resume today, according to a member of Ukraine’s delegation.
David Arakhamia, a Ukrainian official who has taken part in the negotiations, said on Ukrainian television earlier this week that Russia and Ukraine would resume their talks on April 1.
A round of in-person talks between the two sides took place in Istanbul, Turkey, earlier this week. It is not clear whether the talks slated to start Friday are in-person or virtual.
— Chloe Taylor
Ukraine regains control of some villages near Chernihiv, Britain says
Maxar satellite multispectral image shows burning homes in residential area of Chernihiv on March 16, 2022.
Satellite image (c) 2022 Maxar Technologies | Getty Images
Ukrainian forces have retaken two villages along one of the main supply routes between Kyiv and the northern city of Chernihiv, according to the UK Ministry of Defense.
The villages are Sloboda and Lukashivka, which are south of Chernihiv, the ministry said in its daily update.
“Ukraine has also continued to make successful but limited counter attacks to the east and north east of Kyiv,” the defense ministry said.
“Both Chernihiv and Kyiv have been subjected to continued air and missile strikes despite Russian claims of reducing activity in these areas,” it added.
Military developments are difficult to confirm as the situation on the ground in Ukraine changes constantly.
— Abigail Ng
Anonymous targets Western companies still doing business in Russia
Online “hacktivist” collective, Anonymous, is now targeting Western companies that are still doing business in Russia.
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images
Anonymous, the “hacktivist” collective, has a new target in its “cyber war” against Russia. This time, it’s Western companies that are still doing business there.
A post on March 21 From a Twitter account named @YourAnonTV stated: “We call on all companies that continue to operate in Russia by paying taxes to the budget of the Kremlin’s criminal regime: Pull out of Russia!”
The tweet gave companies 48 hours to comply. The threat also included a photo with logos of some 40 companies, including household names such as Burger King, Subway and General Mills. A second batch of target companies was published on March 24, which included Emirates airline, the French gardening retailer Leroy Merlin and the essential oil company Young Living.
However, some companies that were mentioned refuted Anonymous’ claims.
For example, tire firm Bridgestone and Dunkin’ said before they were targeted by Anonymous, they had already publicly announced that they were pulling business from Russia. Three targeted oil field service companies — Halliburton, Baker Hughes and Schlumberger — had also issued announcements previously. Others soon announced they were cutting ties with Russia, including the Canadian oilfield service company Calfrac Well Services and the sanitary product maker Geberit Group
Even so, a quick exit may be complicated for franchises. That’s the position that targeted companies like Burger King, Subway and Reebok’s owner Authentic Brands Groupsaid they are in.
— Goh Chiew Tong, Monica Buchanan Pitrelli
Reuters reports Japan’s decision to keep using Russian gas was made weeks ago
Japan’s prime minister, Fumio Kishida, decided weeks ago that he would not abandon a Russian gas project, Reuters reported, citing three sources.
The report said Kishida in early March told top officials that he wouldn’t risk Japan’s energy security, and would stay in the Sakhalin-2 liquefied natural gas project.
On Thursday, the prime minister told that “it is not our policy to withdraw” from that Russian LNG project.
Japan has targeted Russian banks and oligarchs with sanctions, but doesn’t have much leeway to cut off gas from Russia. The Asian country became more reliant on Russian energy after it shut down nuclear reactors following the 2011 Fukushima disaster.
— Abigail Ng
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