Putin Ask Biden For ‘Full List Of Ukraine Invasion Dates’ For Year Ahead

Wednesday, February 16 is currently reaching a conclusion (neighborhood time in Kiev and Moscow) – and there’s not been anything of the “normal” Russian invasion that Washington has for days been breathlessly predicting. To review, below is Politico’s reporting from last Friday – the afternoon where White House officials spread panic into the markets and the population: Russia will start a physical assault on Ukraine as soon as Feb. 16, numerous U.S. officials affirmed to POLITICO, and Washington conveyed to allies that it very well may be gone before by a torrent of missile strikes and digital attacks. One person said the leaders’ call demonstrated that digital attacks are “inescapable” and another said the knowledge is “specific and disturbing.” Sullivan referenced that any assault on Ukraine could start with “flying besieging and missile attacks.” War on all front Russia’s Foreign…

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Update: False Flag, More Fear Porn Coming Out of The White House: Biden Rambling, Russia Might Invade Ukraine “As Soon As Tomorrow” or Next Week, or Sometime!

The White House’s New Friday Ukraine Panic Porn Is Called “Distraction & Disinformation” by Russia Despite the administration’s usual contradictory message, on the one hand serving up another dose of afternoon panic and market turmoil over reports that Russia will invade Ukraine in a matter of days (it’s been “days” and “imminent” for several weeks at this point), nothing appears to have changed on the ground at the Russia-Ukraine border. Russian forces have reportedly pushed closer to the border, according to Blinken. Multiple White House officials have told various major US news outlets that the US now believes Putin has chose to invade Ukraine – though in a public news briefing, Jake Sullivan painted a mixed picture, telling US citizens to leave Ukraine immediately because a military offensive is imminent, while also cautioning that he’s not sure Putin has made…

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Xi and Putin Seek Further Collaboration Amid Growing Tensions.

On the opening day of the Beijing Winter Olympics, China’s President Xi Jinping received Russia’s Vladimir Putin, announcing a profound strategic alliance to counterbalance what they see as the United States’ malignant global influence. The two countries said in a joint statement that their new connection was superior to any political or military alliance formed during the Cold War. “Friendship between the two States has no limits, there are no ‘forbidden’ areas of cooperation,” they announced, revealing plans to engage in a variety of fields including space, climate change, artificial intelligence, and Internet regulation. The accord was the most explicit and bold expression yet of Russia and China’s determination to work together – and against the US – to create a new international order based on their own conceptions of human rights and democracy. Despite Putin touting a new gas deal…

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Russia & US Talks Haven’t Gone Far to Diffuse Tensions on the border.

Special negotiations between US and Russian negotiators ended on Monday, with the goal of de-escalating existing tensions over Ukraine and an increase in military activities along Russia’s western border. There was little immediate information on the outcome of the bilateral negotiations, which lasted more than seven hours in Geneva, Switzerland. Senior diplomats on both sides appear to be indicating that a major breakthrough is unlikely to occur soon. During a news conference on Monday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov remarked, ““Unfortunately we have a great disparity in our principled approaches to this,” “The U.S. and Russia in some ways have opposite views on what needs to be done” Despite the lack of specifics, Ryabkov stated following the meeting that Moscow had no ambitions to attack Ukraine. Ryabkov and his colleagues met with Wendy Sherman, the US deputy secretary of…

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