Monday, March 7, 2022

What does Putin want?

 FROM THE BBC NEWS SERVICE:

Why is Russia invading Ukraine and what does Putin want?

By Paul Kirby
BBC News

Published
Related Topics
Media caption, 
Watch: Missile strikes, tanks and buildings destroyed in Kyiv

By air, land, and sea, Russia has launched a devastating attack on Ukraine, a European democracy of 44 million people. Its forces are bombing city centres and closing in on the capital, Kyiv, prompting a mass exodus of refugees.

For months, President Vladimir Putin denied he would invade his neighbour, but then he tore up a peace deal and unleashed what Germany calls "Putin's war", pouring forces into Ukraine's north, east and south.

As the number of dead climbs, Russia's leader stands accused of shattering peace in Europe. What happens next could jeopardise the continent's entire security structure.

Why have Russian troops attacked?

In a pre-dawn TV address on 24 February, President Putin declared Russia could not feel "safe, develop and exist" because of what he claimed was a constant threat from modern Ukraine. 

Immediately, airports and military headquarters were attacked, then tanks and troops rolled in from Russia, Russian-annexed Crimea and its ally Belarus. Now, warplanes have bombed major cities, and Russian forces have seized control of the key southern port city Kherson.

Russia refuses to use the terms war or even invasion; many of its leader's justifications for it were false or irrational. 

He claimed his goal was to protect people subjected to bullying and genocide and aim for the "demilitarisation and de-Nazification" of Ukraine. There has been no genocide in Ukraine: it is a vibrant democracy, led by a president who is Jewish. 

"How could I be a Nazi?" said Volodymyr Zelensky, who likened Russia's onslaught to Nazi Germany's invasion in World War Two. Ukraine's chief rabbi and the Auschwitz Memorial have also rejected Russia's slur.

Graphic showing areas of Ukraine under Russian control, March 1
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President Putin has frequently accused Ukraine of being taken over by extremists, ever since its pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych, was ousted in 2014 after months of protests against his rule. 

Russia then retaliated by seizing the southern region of Crimea and triggering a rebellion in the east, backing separatists who have fought Ukrainian forces in a war that has claimed 14,000 lives.

Late in 2021, Russia began deploying big numbers of troops close to Ukraine's borders, while repeatedly denying it was going to attack. Then Mr Putin scrapped a 2015 peace deal for the east and recognised areas under rebel control as independent. 

Russia has long resisted Ukraine's move towards the European Union and the West's defensive military alliance, Nato. Announcing Russia's invasion, he accused Nato of threatening "our historic future as a nation".

How far will Russia go?

It is now clear Russia is seeking to seize the big cities and overthrow Ukraine's democratically elected government. President Zelensky said he had been warned "the enemy has designated me as target number one; my family is target number two".

Russia's stated aim is that Ukraine be freed from oppression and "cleansed of the Nazis". Under this false narrative of a Ukraine run by fascists since 2014, Mr Putin has spoken of bringing to court "those who committed numerous bloody crimes against civilians". 

His long-term ambitions for Ukraine are unknown. He denies seeking to occupy Ukraine and rejected a UK accusation in January that he was plotting to install a pro-Kremlin puppet. One unconfirmed intelligence report says he aims to split the country in two.

He faces stiff resistance from a deeply hostile population, but he has shown he is prepared to bomb civilian areas to fulfil his goals.

There is no immediate threat to Russia's Baltic neighbours, but Nato has bolstered their defences just in case.

Ahead of the invasion, Russia's public focus was always on the areas held by Russian-backed rebels in the east. But that changed when President Putin recognised their independence.

Not only did he make clear he saw them as no longer part of Ukraine, he revealed he backed their claims to far more Ukrainian territory. The self-styled people's republics cover little more than a third of the regions of Donetsk of Luhansk and the rebels covet the rest, too. 

Map showing the Donetsk and Luhansk regions in eastern Ukraine and the Russian-backed separatist-held areas within those regions.
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War in Ukraine: More coverage 

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How dangerous is this invasion for Europe?

These are terrifying times for Ukrainians as bombs rain down on cities and civilians rush to Cold War-era bomb shelters.

Thousands have died already in what German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has dubbed "Putin's war" - civilians as well as soldiers. Russia's onslaught has prompted hundreds of thousands of people to flee across Ukraine's borders. Poland, Hungary, Romania, Moldova and Slovakia are seeing a big influx, while the EU suggests more than seven million people could be displaced. 

Women look after their babies at the paediatrics centre after the unit was moved to the basement of the hospital which is being used as a bomb shelter, in Kyiv on February 28, 2022IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
Image caption, 
The paediatrics ward of this Kyiv hospital was forced to shelter in the basement as Russian forces attacked

Russia's leader has even put his nuclear forces on high alert, days after threatening the West with "consequences the like of which you have never seen" if it stands in his way.

Such scenes are horrifying for the entire continent, witnessing a major power invading a European neighbour for the first time in decades. Recalling the Cold War, Volodymyr Zelensky spoke of Ukraine battling to avoid a new iron curtain closing Russia off from the civilised world. 

For Europe's leaders, this invasion has brought some of the darkest hours since World War Two. France's Emmanuel Macron has spoken of a turning point in Europe's history, while Germany's Olaf Scholz has warned that "Putin wants a Russian empire".

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visiting positions on the frontline with pro-Russian militants in the Donetsk region, Ukraine, 06 December 2021IMAGE SOURCE, EPA
Image caption, 
Press handout showing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on the front line

For the families of both armed forces, these are anxious days. Ukrainians have already suffered a gruelling eight-year war with Russian proxies. The military has called up all reservists aged 18 to 60 years old. 

This is not a war Russia's population was prepared for, either, as the invasion was rubber-stamped by a largely unrepresentative upper house of parliament. Thousands of anti-war protesters have been detained in a state whose main opposition leader was already behind bars. Independent Russian broadcasters Dozhd and Ekho Moskvy have also been taken off the air.

What can the West do?

Nato's defensive alliance has made clear there are no plans to send combat troops to Ukraine itself. But member countries have provided weapons and field hospitals and the EU, for the first time in its history, is to buy and send arms and other equipment.

Nato has deployed several thousand troops in the Baltic states and Poland and for the first time is activating part of its much larger rapid reaction force. Nato will not say where but some could go to Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Slovakia.

At the same time, the West is targeting Russia's economy, financial institutions and individuals:

  • The EU, US, UK, Japan and Canada are cutting off key Russian banks from the international Swift payment network, which allows the smooth and rapid transfer of money across borders
  • The EU, UK and Canada have shut off their airspace to Russian airlines
  • Personal sanctions are being imposed on President Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov by the US, EU and UK, while 351 Russian MPs are being targeted by the EU
  • Germany has halted approval on Russia's Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, a major investment by both Russia and European companies
  • Russia's state-run media Sputnik and Russia Today, seen as a Kremlin mouthpiece, are being banned across the EU
  • The Russian city of St Petersburg will no longer be able to host this year's Champions League final and the Russian Grand Prix will not take place in Sochi.
  • The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has banned Russian and Belarusian athletes from competing, and has expelled them from the Games in Beijing.
Nato and US extra troops in Eastern Europe
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What does Putin want?

He has not only demanded that Ukraine never join Nato but that the alliance turns the clock back to 1997 and reverses its eastward expansion. He has complained Russia has "nowhere further to retreat to - do they think we'll just sit idly by?".

He wants Nato to remove its forces and military infrastructure from member states that joined the alliance from 1997 and not to deploy "strike weapons near Russia's borders". That means Central Europe, Eastern Europe and the Baltics.

But this goes beyond Nato. In the words of Germany's chancellor, Russia's leader "wants to take over Europe according to his world view". 

Last year, President Putin wrote a long piece describing Russians and Ukrainians as "one nation", and he has described the collapse of the Soviet Union in December 1991 as the "disintegration of historical Russia". 

He has claimed modern Ukraine was entirely created by communist Russia and is now a puppet state, controlled by the West. It was his pressure on Ukraine not to sign an association treaty with the EU in 2013 that sparked the protests that ousted its pro-Kremlin president.

In President Putin's eyes, the West promised back in 1990 that Nato would expand "not an inch to the east", but did so anyway. 

That was before the collapse of the Soviet Union, however, so the promise made to then Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev only referred to East Germany in the context of a reunified Germany. Mr Gorbachev said later "the topic of Nato expansion was never discussed" at the time.

What has Nato said?

Nato is a defensive alliance with an open-door policy to new members, and its 30 member states are adamant that will not change.

Ukraine's president wants a clear timeline, but there is no prospect of Ukraine joining for a long time, as Germany's chancellor has made clear.

The idea that any current Nato country would give up its membership is a non-starter.

Graphic showing Nato's expansion since 1997
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What is Nato and how is it responding to the Ukraine crisis?                                                  Is there a diplomatic way out?

There seems very little chance for the moment, even if the two sides have held talks on the border with Belarus.

Russia insists Kyiv lays down its arms and demilitarises, and that will not happen.

Beyond the war, any eventual deal would have to cover the status of eastern Ukraine as wells as arms control with the West.

Russian President Vladimir Putin holds talks with U.S. President Joe Biden via a video link in Sochi, Russia December 7, 2021IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS
Image caption, 
The Russian and US presidents have spoken several times via video link and over the phone

The US had offered to start talks on limiting short- and medium-range missiles, as well as on a new treaty on intercontinental missiles. Russia wanted all US nuclear arms barred from beyond their national territories.

Russia had been positive towards a proposed "transparency mechanism" of mutual checks on missile bases - two in Russia, and two in Romania and Poland.

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Visit the BBC website for updated News.



Friday, March 4, 2022

Ukraine conflict: Who's in Putin's inner circle and running the war?

By Paul Kirby
BBC News

Published
Related Topics
Russia's President Vladimir Putin holds a meeting of the Russian Security Council at Moscow's KremlinIMAGE SOURCE, RUSSIAN PRESIDENCY
Image caption, 
In the days before the invasion, Russian TV broadcast a session of President Putin's 30-member security council

Vladimir Putin cuts a solitary figure, leading Russia's military into a high-risk war that threatens to tear apart his country's economy.

He has rarely looked more isolated than in two recent, choreographed appearances with his inner circle, where he sits at a resolute distance from his closest advisers. 

As commander in chief, ultimate responsibility for the invasion rests with him, but he has always relied on a deeply loyal entourage, many of whom also began their careers in Russia's security services. The question is who has his ear, during this most fateful moment in his presidency?

Wednesday, March 2, 2022










 

Hello Gentle People around the world!

Here is what I have learned so far from the BBC and other sources:

1.  Hundreds of Ukrainian citizens have been killed by Russian shelling. Large apartment blocks have been destroyed. Government buildings are now filled with holes.

2. To justify his ordering this attack Vladimir Putin claims the Ukrainian government is filled with Nazis. Putin is providing fake news to his own citizens utilizing his government controlled media channels. 

3. Thousands of Russian tanks have entered the Ukrain and they continue to face stiff resistance from Ukrainian fighters. It is a bitter struggle and from watching these kind of wars from the past, I  believe the Russian tanks will dominate temporarily, only to face years of street fighting and resistance. Eventually, after much death and destruction and poverty in both the Ukraine and in the Russian homeland, the force will be pulled out of the Ukrain and the Russian people will finally realize it was Putin who acted like Adolph Hitler. 

4. Countries from around the World are imposing sanctions on Russia. Even if Russia destroys and dominates the Ukrain,  Russian citizens will suffer extreme poverty for years into the future and it will be the fault of Vladimir Putin. Nobody is blaming Russian citizens.

Kherson mayor appears to suggest city has fallen.

The mayor of Kherson has appeared to suggest that the southern Ukrainian city has fallen to Russian forces. 

In a message posted to Facebook on Wednesday, Igor Kolykhaev wrote that "there were armed visitors in the city council today" and that he had told the troops "we don't have Ukrainian Armed Forces in the city, only civilians and people who want to LIVE here!". 

Kolykhaev wrote that Moscow's forces have imposed a curfew from 20:00 to 06:00 local time (22:00 - 08:00 GMT), and said cars with food, medicines and some other supplies will be allowed to enter the city. 

He added that cars within the city must drive at "minimum" speed and pedestrians are banned from moving in groups of more than two people. 

"So far this is how it is. Ukrainian flag above us. And to keep it the same, these requirements must be met. I have nothing else to offer yet", Kolykhaev said. 

The BBC cannot independently verify this statement and earlier today US defence officials said that Kherson "remains very much a contested city". 


Monday, February 21, 2022

The following Two year old article explains the facts about Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin who is the current dictator of Russia. Putin is not a President as he claims but he is an active and dangerous dictator along the lines of Stalin and Hitler. He is currently attacking the Ukrain with the full intent of annexing it back to Russia. He scorns the United Nations International treaty forbidding one country from attacking another. He is intent on rebuilding the old Soviet Empire which lasted until 1991 when, on that date, the people of the Ukrainian voted to regain their independence and leave the suffocating influence of the old Soviet Union.      N,J.R .

Hanna Kozlowska
By Hanna Kozlowska

Investigative reporter

Published This article is more than 2 years old.

Many key figures—including president Barack Obama, members of the Electoral College, and senate majority leader Mitch McConnell—have voiced concerns about Russia’s hacking campaign during the US election and its ties to the incoming administration. But leave it to Arizona senator and longtime Kremlin critic John McCain to bluntly explain why the United States should be worried.

“Vladimir Putin is a thug and a murderer and a killer and a KGB agent,” McCain said on CBS’s “Face of the Nation” on Dec. 11. Speaking two days later about Rex Tillerson, Trump’s pick for secretary of state, who received the Russian “Order of Friendship” in 2013, McCain said in a radio interview: ”Frankly, I would never accept an award from Vladimir Putin because then you kind of give some credence and credibility to this butcher, this KGB agent, which is what he is.”

Putin, who has ruled Russia since 2000, has created a regime under which his opponents are murdered; political prisoners are sent to Siberia for decades behind bars; minority rights are suppressed; opposition is quashed; foreign territory is forcefully annexed; and Syria’s bloodthirsty president, Bashar Assad, enjoys direct military support for his massacres.

Here’s a non-exhaustive list of examples of Putin’s abusive rule in Russia.

Murdering enemies.  

Putin, who has ruled Russia since 2000, has created a regime under which his opponents are murdered; political prisoners are sent to Siberia for decades behind bars; minority rights are suppressed; opposition is quashed; foreign territory is forcefully annexed; and Syria’s bloodthirsty president, Bashar Assad, enjoys direct military support for his massacres.

Murdering enemies

The list of people suspected murdered on orders from the Russian leader or people close to him is long. It includes several of Putin’s early critics among them liberal politician Boris Nemtsov, investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya, and exiled former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. A UK government report showed that Litvinenko’s death—he was poisoned using polonium in London—which was “probably” approved by Putin. 

Click on the names to find the articles pertaining to these victims.

The list of people suspected murdered on orders from the Russian leader or people close to 

Monday, February 7, 2022

Complex Three-Dimensional Kidney Tissue Created in the Lab From Scratch 

3D Kidney Generated From Cultured Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells

Researchers in Japan have generated a kidney-like 3D tissue, consisting of extensively branched tubules, from cultured mouse embryonic stem cells. Credit: Dr. Shunsuke Tanigawa

A research team based in Kumamoto University (Japan) has created complex 3D kidney tissue in the lab solely from cultured mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. These organoids could lead the way to better kidney research and, eventually, artificial kidneys for human transplant.

By focusing on an often-overlooked tissue type of organoid generation research, a type of organ tissue made up of various support and connective tissues called the stroma, Dr. Ryuichi Nishinakamura and his team were able to generate the last of a three-part puzzle that they had been working on for several years. Once the three pieces were combined, the resulting structure was found to be kidney-like in its architecture. The researchers believe that their work will be used to advance kidney research and even lead to a transplantable organ in the future.

3D Kidney Structures Generated From Cultured Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells

Researchers in Japan have generated a kidney-like 3D tissue, consisting of many types of kidney-specific structures, from cultured mouse embryonic stem cells. Credit: Dr. Shunsuke Tanigawa

The kidney is a very important organ for continued good health because it acts as a filter to extract waste and excess water from blood. It is a complex organ that develops from the combination of three components. Protocols have already been established by various research teams, including Dr. Nishinakamura’s team at the Institute of Molecular Embryology and Genetics (IMEG) at Kumamoto University, to induce two of the components (the nephron progenitor and the ureteric bud) from mouse ES cells.

In this, their most recent work, the IMEG team has developed a method to induce the third and final component, kidney-specific stromal progenitor, in mice. Furthermore, by combining these three components in vitro, the researchers were able to generate a kidney-like 3D tissue, consisting of extensively branched tubules and several other kidney-specific structures.

The researchers believe that this is the first ever report on the in-lab generation of such a complex kidney structure from scratch. The IMEG team has already succeeded in inducing the first two components from human iPS cells. If this last component can also be generated from human cells, a similarly complex human kidney should be achievable.

“We are now working very hard to generate a fully functional human kidney,” said Dr. Nishinakamura. “We hope to use our developments to screen drugs for various diseases, and for transplantation in the long run.”

Reference: “Generation of the organotypic kidney structure by integrating pluripotent stem cell-derived renal stroma” by Shunsuke Tanigawa, Etsuko Tanaka, Koichiro Miike, Tomoko Ohmori, Daisuke Inoue, Chen-Leng Cai, Atsuhiro Taguchi, Akio Kobayashi and Ryuichi Nishinakamura, 1 February 2022, Nature Communications.
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28226-7

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PIG HEART KEEPS MAN ALIVE! FANTASTIC BREAKTHROUGH!


'NEW HEART STILL A ROCK STAR': Man doing well after receiving first heart from gene-edited pig

PIG KIDNEYS PLAY A ROLE: Alabama doctors advance organ transplantation with gene-edited pig kidneys

The team said their research with the silicone cap and the drug cocktail is far from done. They add that it may be possible to strengthen or add to the drug cocktail to help regenerate fully complete limbs with actual toes and bones. Michael Levin, director of the Allen Discovery Center at Tufts and a study co-author, said the next step is to test the procedure out on mammals, which eventually could lead to human regeneration.

A team at Tufts University and Harvard University has brought scientists a step closer to the goal of regenerative medicine by using a drug cocktail to regrow a frog's amputated legs. 

Only a few animals in the world are able to regrow some limbs: salamanders, lizards and crabs. They do it through blastema cells, when a mass formation of stem cells occurs at the end of a stump almost immediately after the limb is lost, so the regrowth process can begin.

Frogs are like humans and mammals, however, in that they cannot regenerate complex limbs like arms or legs. Instead, our bodies, along with those of frogs, use scar tissue to protect wounds from blood loss and infection.

In a peer-reviewed study published in the journal Science Advances on Wednesday, scientists from the two universities wanted to see whether limbs could be regenerated on African clawed frogs with amputated legs. 

Tufts scientists created a five-drug-cocktail silicone cap. In the cap were drugs meant to reduce inflammation, a protein substance to help with scarring, and drugs meant to help the growth of blood vessels, muscles and nerve fibers. The team put the cap on the frogs for 24 hours. 

"Using the BioDome cap in the first 24 hours helps mimic an amniotic-like environment which, along with the right drugs, allows the rebuilding process to proceed without the interference of scar tissue," David Kaplan, professor engineering at Tufts and co-author of the study, said in a news release

An African clawed frog. The species was used to see if those with amputated legs could have them regrown using a drug cocktail.

The cap was taken off after the 24 hours, and the team spent the next 18 months observing any changes. At the end of the period, many of the tested frogs had not only regrown the legs, but the limbs also had become nearly fully functional.

The legs had a new bonelike structure, internal tissues and new "toes" without bones. They responded to touch, and the frogs were able to use them to swim and go back to a normal way of life. Nirosha Murugan, researcher at the Allen Discovery Center at Tufts and lead author of the study, said it was "exciting" to see the drugs helped create "an almost complete limb."

  Hello my good friend Valdemar Oliveira! I am happy to hear you had a successfull heart operation.  I hope you live to be 110. I may not be...