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Archived

Russia uses nuclear threats to deter Western countries from supporting Ukraine and plans to revive the Soviet "nuclear winter" campaign later this year, Estonia says

"In our assessment, Russia is highly unlikely to use nuclear weapons in the war against Ukraine, but observing how the fear factor has restrained the West thus far, Russia is exploiting it to the fullest. The war in Ukraine could have potentially been ended some time ago had the West seen through Russia's bluff," writes [Estonian Foreign Intelligence Service] EFIS Director General Kaupo Rosin in the introduction of a new report.

"As its resources for escalation dwindle, leading to frustration behind closed doors among the siloviki, Moscow will persist in exploiting nuclear fear. While the Kremlin's rhetoric on nuclear weapons is forceful, its actions do not mirror these ominous threats," Rosin noted.

As a example of Russia's intimidation, the report highlighted how Russian President Vladimir Putin declared a special regime for nuclear forces at the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. However, this did not translate into concrete action.

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"Operational patterns and unit tasks remained unchanged, rendering the special regime meaningless. Throughout the war, Russia has announced multiple "red lines", such as Ukraine striking Crimea or receiving Western military aid like tanks, F-16 fighter jets, HIMARS or ATACMS. None of these scenarios has resulted in nuclear escalation," the report states.

The EFIS says Russia aims to influence Western policymakers by lowering the threshold for nuclear weapon use in its nuclear doctrine and continuing its intimidation tactics. These include seeking to deter support for Ukraine and prevent NATO from strengthening its defense capabilities near Russian borders.

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Russia also plans to launch a campaign in 2025 to instill fear in the Western about the possibility of a nuclear winter, similar to the USSR's actions in the 1980s.

"This effort is based on a scientific concept, widely discussed in the 1980s, which suggested that the use of nuclear weapons would trigger an artificial cooling of Earth's climate, with a drastic drop in temperatures leading to widespread famine and other catastrophic consequences. While once a popular scientific theory, the nuclear winter hypothesis was later heavily criticised for being based on flawed data, drawing arbitrary conclusions and suffering from ambiguity. It has since been revealed that the debate was sparked by a disinformation campaign orchestrated by the Soviet KGB to deter the US from deploying Pershing II missiles in Europe," the EFIS explained.

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The German Embassy in Georgia has addressed the legal proceedings against the protesters, highlighting what it sees as intimidation tactics and unequal legal treatment of demonstrators and law enforcement representatives.

In a statement on February 12, the Embassy called attention to the legal provisions on possible release from pre-trial detention, emphasizing that they should be taken seriously in court practice. “It appears that people exercising their fundamental rights are [intentionally] being intimidated,” the statement said.

“The same standards should apply to both demonstrators and law enforcement officials in cases of potential criminal offenses,” the embassy said.

The statement stressed that “no serious investigation of the violations committed by state structures has yet been conducted.”

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Meanwhile, the High Representative/Vice-President of the European Commission Kaja Kallas, and Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kos said that the Georgian Dream authorities take “further steps away from democratic standards” and called on GD to “release all journalists, activists and political detainees.”

“These developments mark a serious setback for Georgia’s democratic development and fall short of any expectations of an EU candidate country,” the statement adds.

Kallas and Kos urge the Georgian authorities to suspend these measures, to “refrain from further tensions” and to await the opinion of the OSCE/ODIHR, as requested by the Georgian Public Defender.

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Objectives

We call on the European Commission to propose a binding legal ban on conversion practices targeting LGBTQ+ citizens in the European Union:

Conversion Practices are interventions aimed at changing, repressing or suppressing the sexual orientation, gender identity and/or gender expression of LGBTQ+ persons.

Such practices, due to their discriminatory, degrading, harmful and fraudulent nature have been qualified as torture by the United Nations, and are currently being banned in a growing number of States.

The EU plays a key role in the protection of fundamental rights and should take actions to fight against all inhuman practices. The Commission should propose a directive adding conversion practices to the list of euro-crimes and/or amend the ongoing directive on equality (2008) to include a ban on these practices.

Furthermore, to fight against the legislative moratorium, the Commission should also enforce a non-binding resolution calling for a widespread ban of conversion practices in the EU.

Finally, we call on the Commission to amend the Victims’ Rights Directive to establishes minimum standards on the rights, support and protection of victims of conversion practices.

All member states should introduce a ban on conversion practices or review their current ones.

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Archived

The relations between Baku and Moscow are witnessing one of the most tense periods in the last 30 years due to the arrogance of the Kremlin.

Consumed by the belief of being a superpower and an extraordinary state in the world, Russia does not intend to admit its responsibility for shooting down the Azerbaijani plane en route from Baku to Grozny on December 25, 2024. On the contrary, it has started an old scenario that is well-known from the events in Georgia in 2008 and more recently in Ukraine.

Like in both events, some lesser-known Russian media outlets (not mainstream media outlets yet) and pundits started to threaten Azerbaijan following the news that Baku was going to bring the issue to international arbitration. Practice suggests that if Azerbaijan does not give up its righteous claims (which nobody expects it to), the Russian mainstream media will jump into the fray and start discussing whether Azerbaijan has a statehood history or not; how Bolsheviks granted a “state” to Azerbaijanis who are ungrateful to her majesty Matushka Rossiya; and all that. It is their old tactic to cow all the former Soviet republics. To tell the truth, we are fed up with such rhetoric from the Russian media.

Being well aware of Russian tactics, we, Azerbaijanis, expect more threats in the coming days. However, does it intimidate us? Of course, it does not. Neither Ukraine nor Georgia can be a warning for us. Because both Georgia and Ukraine follow in our footsteps, not the other way around. Thirty years ago, during its weakest and most difficult times, Azerbaijan expelled Russia from its territory without yielding to any threat. At that time, unlike Ukraine which inherited over 1800 nuclear warheads, intercontinental missiles, strategic bombardment aircraft, and other weapons from the USSR, Azerbaijan did not get anything but the Garabagh conflict. However, Azerbaijan did not walk back. As a result, Russia lost the biggest country in the region and eventually, it lost the South Caucasus.

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European foreign ministers warned that Ukraine’s future must involve both Europe and Kyiv, as news broke that US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin had agreed to “immediately” hold peace talks.

The ministers and their delegations arrived in Paris for a meeting on Ukraine ahead of the Munich Security Conference this weekend – saying any future peace deal would need to be negotiated with Ukraine and its European allies.

The meeting included the foreign ministers from Poland, Spain, Germany, France, UK and Ukraine.

Andriy Sybiha, Ukraine's Foreign Minister, said: "Europe plays the active role in ensuring a just and comprehensive and long lasting peace for Ukraine. Ukraine security and European security are indivisible".

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Moldovan President Maia Sandu said on Thursday that Russian drones violated Moldova's airspace with two drones exploding on its soil.

"Shahed drones violated our airspace, two exploded on our soil, putting Moldovan lives at risk," Sandu wrote on social media.

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Hungary being the worst of all

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Check this too: The moment Latvia disconnected from the Russian energy grid. https://feddit.it/post/14721634

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China is helping Russia's military drone production by becoming a hub for the smuggling of critical Western components for Moscow's armed forces, Estonia's foreign intelligence said in its annual national security report published on Wednesday.

Some 80% of such components reaching Russia now come from China, it said. Previous Ukrainian reports have suggested that roughly 60% of foreign parts found in Russian weapons on the battlefield in Ukraine have come via China.

China is Russia's "primary hub" for importing high-tech and dual-use goods, evading Western sanctions, according to the report.

"Chinese interests here lie in preventing Russia from losing the war in Ukraine as such an outcome would represent a victory for the United States, which is the main rival for China," Kaupo Rosin, director general of the service, told reporters in a video call.

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NATO member Estonia closely tracks Russian military capabilities as it regards Moscow as the major threat to its security, especially since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in Feb. 2022.

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Russia is "in principle willing" to negotiate a ceasefire in Ukraine but only "to catch breath" because President Vladimir Putin has not abandoned his "imperial ambitions", Rosin said.

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