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Shot-down ATACMS missile warhead hit a roof in Sevastopol, Russia

The high-explosive part of a US-made missile got stuck in an apartment building in Sevastopol, and residents are being evacuated, the city’s Governor Mikhail Razvozhaev said.

"After examining one of the houses on Simonka Street, it turned out that it was not parts of a drone, but a shot-down high-explosive part of an ATACMS missile. It hit the roof and got stuck on the technical floor, so no one was hurt," he said on social media.


Local residents have been evacuated until pyrotechnicians remove the ATACMS part.

"After the special services finish their work, everyone will be able to return home," the governor added.


Earlier, during the night to Friday, air defenses shot down more than four aerial targets over Sevastopol, including missiles with warheads, with some of the debris falling on the city’s streets.

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Scott Ritter: Some swapped prisoners were likely ‘on CIA payroll’

All implications are that some of the people involved in the recent prisoner swap between Moscow and several Western countries were CIA espionage assets, Scott Ritter has told Sputnik.

The exchange that occurred on August 1 appears to have been “a deal hashed out between the Russian secret services and the American CIA,” noted the former US Marine Corps intelligence officer and ex-UN weapons inspector.


Commenting on what is being called the biggest such swap since the Cold War, Ritter pointed out that among the 16 prisoners released by Russia was Evan Gershkovich, “caught red-handed receiving Russian secrets.” The Walls Street Journal reporter was subsequently charged with espionage, found guilty at trial, and meted out a lengthy sentence.

US Marine veteran Paul Whelan was likewise charged with espionage, while self-described Russian political figure Vladimir Kara-Murza, as it turns out, had a US green card.

“This implies there was a special relationship between him [Kara-Murza] and the US government that maybe the US government doesn't want to talk about in public,” Ritter said. Kara-Murza “appears to have been on the CIA payroll as well,” he noted.


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LIVE NOW: Funeral for slain Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Qatar

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Who is who in Hamas' political and military structure? In the wake of the assassination of Hamas Politburo head Dr. Ismail Haniyeh, the Palestinian movement signaled it won't water down its negotiation demands. According to the Western press, Hamas has…
The Turkish Foreign Ministry has in a press release named Khaled Mashal as “the acting head of the Hamas politburo” following Ismail Haniyeh's assassination.

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan met with Mashal in Doha.

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Scott Ritter: Some swapped prisoners were likely ‘on CIA payroll’ All implications are that some of the people involved in the recent prisoner swap between Moscow and several Western countries were CIA espionage assets, Scott Ritter has told Sputnik. The…
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Scott Ritter: Prisoner swap may be ‘the best that US-Russia relations will be for some time now’

Among the eight people released by the US in Thursday’s prisoner swap was Vadim Krasikov, the former Russian intelligence officer was arrested in Germany in 2019 and accused by Berlin of terminating Chechen terrorist Zelimkhan Khangoshvili on German soil.

In an interview with Sputnik, former US Marine Corps intelligence officer Scott Ritter underscored that Krasikov was meted out a life-sentence in German prison for wiping out “somebody who had butchered, murdered Russian prisoners of war during the Chechen conflict and, accordingly, was hunted down and killed in Berlin”.

According to Ritter, the prisoner exchange taking place in the twilight of Joe Biden’s presidency “may be the best that US-Russian relations are gonna be for some time now.”

“I don't think US-Russia relations are going to be in a position where such a prisoner swap could have occurred in the next year, maybe the next two years. So it needed to happen now, and that's why it did. The largest prisoner swap since the end of the Cold War. Who knows what the future will hold... Hopefully this is the beginning of a trend of good relations, but probably not,” Ritter concluded.
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Family of former US embassy employee jailed in Russia disappointed by his absence from prisoner swap list

Malfina Fogel, the mother of ex-US embassy employee in Moscow Marc Fogel — jailed in Russia for drug smuggling — told the New York Post that the US government did not "try hard enough" to include her son on the exchange list.

According to her, President Joe Biden’s administration was not interested "because he is a common American citizen.”

Fogel was sentenced to 14 years in a strict-regime penal colony in 2022 after being convicted of smuggling and possession of narcotics.

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EU ‘stands little chance’ of turning Central Asian nations against Russia – political analyst

It is very unlikely that the EU, acting as an “agent of NATO,” will succeed in turning Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan against Russia, Dr. Marco Marsili, a researcher at Cà Foscari University of Venice, told Sputnik.

The EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell is visiting the two Central Asian nations from August 1 to 3 as part of an effort to drive a wedge between them and Russia, Marsili stressed.

In Kazakhstan, Borrell “aims to weaken the ties between Astana and Moscow which are deeply rooted, spanning from the Baikonur Cosmodrome to the common membership in the Commonwealth of Independent States, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the Eurasian Economic Union, and the Collective Security Treaty Organization,” said Marsili.

“In my opinion, the relationship between the two countries is too strong to be severed, and it is very unlikely that the Kazakh leadership will shift from the alliance with Russia to an alliance with Western powers,” he added.


Borrell’s trip to Kyrgyzstan is “an attempt to re-attract the country into the Western sphere of influence” after President Sadyr Japarov enacted a law tightening state control over foreign-funded non-governmental organizations (NGOs), said Marsili.

“It’s quite impossible that the executive of Bishkek will switch alliances,” he argued, highlighting that Kyrgyzstan “resulted in a significant failure for Western powers, as the country was heavily funded by the USAID program, the EU External Action and other European nations like Switzerland, in an attempt to install a Western-mirrored state in Central Asia.”


Brussels’ efforts to target countries that “play a pivotal role in the Russian neighboring policy” are unlikely to gain traction, Marsili reiterated.

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❗️Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived at Vnukovo airport in Moscow, where the plane with the exchanged Russians landed. Putin met the Russians who returned after the prisoner exchange at the steps of the plane, a Sputnik correspondent reports. 📌Subscribe…
❗️Kremlin reveals details of Russia-NATO prisoner exchange

🔸 Negotiations on the exchange were conducted between the FSB and CIA;

🔸 The children of illegal spies only found out they were Russian when their plane took off from Ankara, Turkiye;

🔸 The spies faced the real threat of being deprived of parental rights in their family. While they were in detention, they could only rarely see their children;

🔸 The US tried to influence an officer of the Main Directorate of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces who returned to Russia in the exchange;

🔸 Vadim Krasikov, who returned to Russia as part of the prisoner swap deal, is an FSB officer who served in the Alpha Group special forces unit together with others now working in the Presidential Security Service.

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Iran's intel minister holds Israel responsible for Hamas leader's assassination

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh was killed by Israel after getting the green light from the US, Iranian intelligence minister Esmaeil Khatib said.

Haniyeh was killed in an airstrike on his residence in Tehran, Iran, after attending the inauguration of the new Iranian president, Masoud Pezeshkian.

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Family of former US embassy employee jailed in Russia disappointed by his absence from prisoner swap list Malfina Fogel, the mother of ex-US embassy employee in Moscow Marc Fogel — jailed in Russia for drug smuggling — told the New York Post that the US…
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Spy swap with West shows ‘Russia is in the driver's seat’ - political scientist

The unprecedented prisoner exchange mainly agreed between Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) and the CIA is a testament to Moscow’s “great return to power politics,” Professor Joe Siracusa, political scientist and dean of Global Futures, Curtin University, told Sputnik.

No matter how Washington tries to tout the swap as a triumph of US diplomacy and human rights, Siracusa argued, “nothing could be further from the truth.”

“Washington couldn't get the release agreed without the consent of the Russian president. What this tells me is that Russia is indispensable to international relations, to European-American relations. And frankly, it suggests to me that Russia is back in the driver's seat,” said the political scientist.


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Gulf of Tonkin incident and the art of American false flags PART 1/PART 2

The Gulf of Tonkin incident, marking its 60th anniversary, was a false flag that triggered a series of US wars in Southeast Asia. On August 2 and 4, 1964, the US Navy falsely reported attacks on the USS Maddox by North Vietnamese boats. President Johnson used this to gain Congressional approval for military action, sparking the Vietnam War. In 2003, ex-Secretary of State Robert McNamara admitted the attack never occurred, and in 2005, declassified files showed the NSA distorted intelligence to justify intervention.

Here are some other notorious examples of US false flag incidents:

◾️ In late 1898, Spain was forced to hand its colonies in Latin America and Asia to the US after a short war triggered by the explosion of the USS Maine on February 15 of that year in Havana harbor. Washington blamed Madrid for the Maine incident to justify its aggression. A 1976 investigation by Admiral Hyman G. Rickover revealed that the explosion may have been caused by spontaneous combustion of the ship’s coal bunkers. In Cuba, many believe the US deliberately blew up the Maine to justify seizing Spain’s territories.

◾️ On April 28, 1965, the US invaded the Dominican Republic, citing the safety of US citizens as a pretext. In reality, Ambassador W. Tapley Bennett Jr. admitted that the goal was to prevent the rise of another independent Caribbean nation like Cuba.

◾️ On October 25, 1983, the US invaded Grenada to overthrow a Cuba-friendly government, citing the supposed “danger” to 600 American medical students. It was later revealed that the students were never hostages or in danger and that the Reagan administration had blocked their departure from the island.

◾️ On December 20, 1989, the US invaded Panama to depose General Manuel Noriega, wanted on drug charges, and secure the Panama Canal. The invasion, dubbed Operation Just Cause, followed the questionable shooting of a US Marine. Some historians say this was a false flag to install a more compliant leader.

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