Код Прохоровке је већ првих дана рата оверен један тенк.Del Cap wrote:Kurska bitka na repeat.
Само не код оне, већ код неке друге.
Код Прохоровке је већ првих дана рата оверен један тенк.Del Cap wrote:Kurska bitka na repeat.
Према речима Дмитрија Пескова, Русија може да прекине специјалну операцију ако Украјина пристане на услове развијене током преговора делегација две земље. Русија жели да заврши војну операцију у Украјини преговорима и заинтересована је да украјински председник Владимир Зеленски пристане на предлоге Москве. Ово је изјавио прес-секретар председника Дмитриј Песков у интервјуу за ТВ канал ЛЦИ. „Ово је председник Украјине и ми смо заинтересовани да он пристане на услове Руске Федерације, о чему га је руска делегација јасно обавестила. Преговорима желимо да ставимо тачку на војну операцију“, рекао је Песков (цитирао РИА Новости). Истовремено, према његовим речима, одлука Русије да повуче своје трупе из Кијевске области је настала због жеље да се створе услови за преговоре. „Можемо да доносимо озбиљне одлуке током преговора, због чега је председник [Вл
адимир] Путин наредио нашим трупама да се повуку из региона“, рекао је портпарол Кремља.
Zus wrote:Nema kod Solaka labavo. Odmah spicara u dupe legende kluba. A posle Admin Pantokrator neumoljiv
Био је један случај још у Авганистану, погођен стингером, идентично оштећење, пилот исто слетео.Del Cap wrote:Zanimljiv snimak, nisam ranije viđao ovako teško oštećeni Su-25 (razvaljeni desni motor, gotovo sigurno od IC rakete sa zemlje) da se uspeo vratiti na aerodrom
Mario Draghi: “Do you prefer peace or the air conditioning on? That’s the question we should ask ourself”. pic.twitter.com/ErT6E5X4aq
— David Carretta (@davcarretta) April 6, 2022
bojim se da su zakasnili za toCousin Billy wrote:Neće javnost u EU pristati ni na najmanju žrtvu kada je životni standard u pitanju, mislim da je to non-starter.
Cousin Billy wrote:pa neće se voljno odreći ničega, to je izvesno. ako ih događaji nateraju, hoće, ali da traže od ljudi da oblače džempere, manje voze itd, to se neće dogoditi. videli smo tokom korone koji su dometi solidarnosti u našem delu sveta.
President Zelenski just abused the Greek Parliament's invitation by sharing its platform with members of the neoNazi Azov Battalion, thus undermining the Ukrainian people's heroic resistance to Putin's criminal invasion. We stand with Ukraine, not with the Azov neoNazi Battalion
— Yanis Varoufakis (@yanisvaroufakis) April 7, 2022
In the days after the Ukraine war began, the ruble’s collapse was a potent symbol of Russia’s newfound financial isolation.
International sanctions on Vladimir Putin’s regime sank it to a record low of 121.5 rubles per dollar, triggering memories of the battering it took during the 1998 Russian financial crisis.
Things looked dire enough that U.S. President Joe Biden said the ruble had been reduced to “rubble.”
Now, though, it sure hasn’t. The ruble has surged all the way back to where it was before Putin invaded Ukraine, extending its recent rally to trade as strong as 74.2625 per dollar in early Moscow trade on Thursday.
What’s become clear is that despite an incredibly wide-ranging package of sanctions on the Russian government and its oligarchs, and an exodus of foreign businesses, the actions are largely toothless if foreigners keep guzzling Russian oil and natural gas -- supporting the ruble by stocking Putin’s coffers.
Even as Russia remains mostly cut off otherwise from the global economy, Bloomberg Economics expects the country will earn nearly $321 billion from energy exports this year, up more than a third from 2021.
The rapid ruble recovery gives Putin a major victory back in Russia, where many people fixate on the currency’s ups and downs, even as his military gets bogged down in Ukraine and outrage mounts across the globe over atrocities it’s committed.
In response to this year’s sanctions, Russia has enacted capital controls that also appear to be supporting the ruble. That includes freezing the assets held by nonresident investors, and telling Russian companies to convert 80% of the foreign currencies they hold into rubles.
This has some observers doubting the significance of the ruble’s recovery to pre-invasion levels -- which is also happening amid the lightest trading volume in a decade. “It is not a free-floating currency given all the measures imposed by the authorities,” Tresca said. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said basically the same thing Wednesday when testifying before Congress, warning against drawing deeper messages about sanctions from the ruble’s rebound.
Still, it’s hard to ignore the lifeline other nations are tossing Putin by purchasing his country’s oil and gas. Doing so gives Russia a current-account surplus -- economics jargon for exporting more than you import, which tends to lift a the country’s currency -- and undermines the attempt to pummel Russia with sanctions.
“A current-account surplus should actually be another source of stability for the ruble,” said Brendan McKenna, a strategist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC. “If energy prices remain high and major importers of Russian energy and commodities continue to purchase, the current account should stay in surplus.”
Russia has been able to stabilize local markets and even stave off a messy foreign default -- at least for now. This means that if the coalition of governments who oppose Putin want to hurt the ruble again, they’ll likely have to change tack. Just this week, the U.S. Treasury barred dollar debt payments from Russian accounts at U.S. banks, an attempt to make Russia drain its domestic dollar reserves or default.
“As Russia’s economy and financial sector adapt to a new equilibrium of capital controls, managed prices, and economic autarky, it is not surprising that some of the domestic markets stabilize,” said Elina Ribakova and Benjamin Hilgenstock, economists at the Institute of International Finance. “Sanctions have become a moving target and will require adjustments over time to remain effective.”
They pointed to the likelihood of more tightening of financial sanctions, perhaps even disconnecting additional Russian institutions from SWIFT, the communications system banks use to move money around the world.