Lithuania joins Poland in the "preparation" frenzy, plans to mine border with Russia and Belarus
The plan includes multiple layers of fortifications, featuring anti-personnel and anti-tank mines.
Meanwhile, Poland announced its “East Shield” project, planning to install landmines along its border. However, Deputy Defense Minister Pawel Beida noted that while Poland currently lacks anti-personnel mines, they certainly have the "capacity to make them."
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The plan includes multiple layers of fortifications, featuring anti-personnel and anti-tank mines.
Meanwhile, Poland announced its “East Shield” project, planning to install landmines along its border. However, Deputy Defense Minister Pawel Beida noted that while Poland currently lacks anti-personnel mines, they certainly have the "capacity to make them."
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Five factors behind the decline of US military shipbuilding
US media cite the USS Constellation frigate as a prime example of the industry’s troubles. The warship, first slated for delivery in 2026, is just 10% complete and already over budget.
Here’s why turning things around won’t be easy:
1️⃣ Post-Cold War decline
US military shipbuilding peaked in the 1980s, adding 150 major warships displacing over 1.2 million tons, including 3 Nimitz-class carriers, Los Angeles-class attack subs, Ohio-class SSBNs, and Ticonderoga, Arleigh Burke, Spruance, and Perry-class ships.
After the Cold War, the US cut its Navy in half, closed shipyards, and lost skilled workers amid broader deindustrialization and the shift to a service economy.
2️⃣ Monopolization
In the 1990s, major shipyards like Avondale, Fore River, Todd Pacific, Philadelphia, Charleston, and Mare Island were closed or converted for civilian use, with the remainder consolidated.
Consolidation created monopolies like Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) and General Dynamics, driving up costs.
For example, $12.1B was allocated to shipbuilding in 1984 ($36B in today’s dollars), while in 2024, $32.8B was allocated, but delivered far less.
3️⃣ Aging infrastructure
Many US shipyards are burdened with outdated facilities, slowing new construction and tech adoption.
4️⃣ Skilled labor shortages
The loss of tradesmen hit especially hard. HII’s Newport News yard, building Gerald Ford-class carriers, consistently faces shortages of welders, electricians, pipe and shipfitters.
A recent House Armed Services Committee hearing found that poor work conditions and wages barely above fast-food jobs are driving workers away. Naval engineers are also underpaid and undervalued.
5️⃣ Design flaws
Major design flaws have plagued expensive programs like the Zumwalt-series destroyer, Ford-class carriers, and Littoral Combat Ships, with Zumwalt orders dropped from 32 to 3, and some LCS ships phased out after just years of service.
The big picture? Cost overruns, major delays, and red tape - even as contractors cash in.
The image is AI-generated
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US media cite the USS Constellation frigate as a prime example of the industry’s troubles. The warship, first slated for delivery in 2026, is just 10% complete and already over budget.
Here’s why turning things around won’t be easy:
US military shipbuilding peaked in the 1980s, adding 150 major warships displacing over 1.2 million tons, including 3 Nimitz-class carriers, Los Angeles-class attack subs, Ohio-class SSBNs, and Ticonderoga, Arleigh Burke, Spruance, and Perry-class ships.
After the Cold War, the US cut its Navy in half, closed shipyards, and lost skilled workers amid broader deindustrialization and the shift to a service economy.
In the 1990s, major shipyards like Avondale, Fore River, Todd Pacific, Philadelphia, Charleston, and Mare Island were closed or converted for civilian use, with the remainder consolidated.
Consolidation created monopolies like Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) and General Dynamics, driving up costs.
For example, $12.1B was allocated to shipbuilding in 1984 ($36B in today’s dollars), while in 2024, $32.8B was allocated, but delivered far less.
Many US shipyards are burdened with outdated facilities, slowing new construction and tech adoption.
The loss of tradesmen hit especially hard. HII’s Newport News yard, building Gerald Ford-class carriers, consistently faces shortages of welders, electricians, pipe and shipfitters.
A recent House Armed Services Committee hearing found that poor work conditions and wages barely above fast-food jobs are driving workers away. Naval engineers are also underpaid and undervalued.
Major design flaws have plagued expensive programs like the Zumwalt-series destroyer, Ford-class carriers, and Littoral Combat Ships, with Zumwalt orders dropped from 32 to 3, and some LCS ships phased out after just years of service.
The big picture? Cost overruns, major delays, and red tape - even as contractors cash in.
The image is AI-generated
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Earlier on Sunday Imamoglu was taken to a prison in Istanbul’s Silivri district, where he will be held pending legal proceedings.
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Trump’s push to jump-start nuclear talks sparks NEW TENSIONS
During his first term, Trump pulled the US out of the international deal on Iran's nuclear program. His determination to renegotiate has set off a new escalation.
Trump's ultimatum
🔸 The US President sent a letter to Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, demanding a new nuclear deal within two months, threatening unspecified consequences
Iran's rejection
🔸 Supreme Leader Khamenei dismissed Trump's proposal as deceptive. “Some bully governments’ insistence on talks is aimed at “asserting and imposing” their will, and Iran “will not accept their expectations,” Khamenei said
🔸 Reviving the 2015 nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), in its current form is “not viable...Our nuclear situation has progressed significantly, and we cannot revert to the previous conditions," Iran's Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, said.
Regional Tensions
🔸 Trump suggested on March 17 that Iran was behind recent attacks by the Houthi rebels in Yemen, hinting that US forces might retaliate beyond striking the rebels. He threatened to hold Iran responsible for 'any shot fired by Houthis.'
🔸 Tehran condemned Trump's rhetoric, rejecting any involvement in the attacks as ‘baseless’.
🔸 Supreme Leader Khamenei warned the US that Iran would retaliate against actions that harm the Iranian people. He also rejected the claim that Iran uses proxy forces in the region.
Diplomatic stalemate
🔸 "We will NOT negotiate under pressure and intimidation. We will NOT even consider it, no matter what the subject may be," said Iran's Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, in an interview with Iranian news outlet Khabar Online.
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During his first term, Trump pulled the US out of the international deal on Iran's nuclear program. His determination to renegotiate has set off a new escalation.
Trump's ultimatum
Iran's rejection
Regional Tensions
Diplomatic stalemate
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Israel weighs new Gaza ground offensive that could lead to MONTHS-LONG OCCUPATION
The proposed strategy includes taking DIRECT CONTROL over humanitarian aid supply, REMOVING parts of the Hamas-run civilian administration, and RELOCATING women, children, and non-combatants from residential areas to designated ‘humanitarian zones’, according to the Washington Post.
At the same time, Israeli forces may LAY SIEGE to areas where militants remain active.
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The proposed strategy includes taking DIRECT CONTROL over humanitarian aid supply, REMOVING parts of the Hamas-run civilian administration, and RELOCATING women, children, and non-combatants from residential areas to designated ‘humanitarian zones’, according to the Washington Post.
At the same time, Israeli forces may LAY SIEGE to areas where militants remain active.
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Sputnik International
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Is the US preparing to recognize Russia’s control over new territories?
Everything US presidential envoy Steve Witkoff said about Russia’s new regions is true, says Samir al-Khatib, an expert on international politics and Russia.
The commentator believes the upcoming US-Russia talks in Jeddah will be crucial: “If an agreement is reached, we’ll see major progress on the status of the territories under Russian control.”
In a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, Witkoff said that the regions “are Russian-speaking.”
Mustafa Shalash, Director of South Asia Studies at the Arab-Eurasian Research Center, agreed that “for Russia, the status of these regions is settled. The US may soon recognize this, adopting a more realistic approach under Trump’s team.”
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Everything US presidential envoy Steve Witkoff said about Russia’s new regions is true, says Samir al-Khatib, an expert on international politics and Russia.
💬 “There’s an unspoken consensus—these territories are de facto Russian, even if the West won’t say it aloud,” al-Khatib told Sputnik. “Trump understands Biden’s mistakes in backing Kiev and is working to fix them.”
The commentator believes the upcoming US-Russia talks in Jeddah will be crucial: “If an agreement is reached, we’ll see major progress on the status of the territories under Russian control.”
In a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, Witkoff said that the regions “are Russian-speaking.”
💬 “There have been referendums where an overwhelming majority indicated they want to be under Russian rule,” the envoy added. “The Russians are de facto in control. The question is: will the world acknowledge that?”
Mustafa Shalash, Director of South Asia Studies at the Arab-Eurasian Research Center, agreed that “for Russia, the status of these regions is settled. The US may soon recognize this, adopting a more realistic approach under Trump’s team.”
💬 “Witkoff’s diplomacy signals a shift—Americans are bypassing European and Ukrainian obstacles and engaging directly with Russia. We could be on the brink of a major breakthrough in resolving the Ukrainian crisis,” he told Sputnik.
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The talks between the Ukrainian and US delegations have concluded in the Saudi Arabian capital Riyadh, a Sputnik correspondent reports.
Deputy Head of Volodymyr Zelensky’s Office Pavlo Palisa declined to comment on the outcome of the talks. He only stated that the Ukrainian delegation would not be meeting with the Russian side in Riyadh.
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Deputy Head of Volodymyr Zelensky’s Office Pavlo Palisa declined to comment on the outcome of the talks. He only stated that the Ukrainian delegation would not be meeting with the Russian side in Riyadh.
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MIC, bankers and NATO big winners of Europe’s push to fight proxy war against Russia to bitter end
The UK, France and Germany are leading the charge in “advocating policies guaranteed to ensure that any peace plan fails,” Dr. George Szamuely says, commenting on the ramping up of the militarization of Europe as Russia and the US try to hammer out a peace deal in Ukraine.
Europe’s current crop of elites is a far cry from their predecessors, from Willy Brand and Helmut Schmidt to Helmut Kohl, the academic noted, trying to prevent peace “instead of acting as facilitators of a peace deal between the US and Russia.”
Quo Vadis?
While European inflexibility may seem surprising, given the economic pain its industries, farmers, and ordinary citizens have suffered as a direct result of the current crisis, Szamuely points out that there are major beneficiaries whose reasons for rejecting peace are clear:
🔸 Europe’s military-industrial complex, “which will now enjoy a great deal of investment,” especially after Germany removed constitutional “debt break” restrictions, which essentially means “limitless debt for limitless military spending.”
🔸 Bankers, because borrowing to fuel Germany’s militarization will mean issuing bonds, which will make the economy increasingly financialized. “They’re going to make a lot of money through raising bond yields, and that’s understandable given Friedrich Merz’ background at BlackRock,” Szamuely said.
🔸 NATO, which, as a “self-perpetuating machine” that “keeps creating threats, panicking a population, forcing people to spend more on the military,” requires tensions with countries like Russia “to justify its continued existence and its continued expansion.”
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The UK, France and Germany are leading the charge in “advocating policies guaranteed to ensure that any peace plan fails,” Dr. George Szamuely says, commenting on the ramping up of the militarization of Europe as Russia and the US try to hammer out a peace deal in Ukraine.
💬 “If they insist on continuing to pour weapons into Ukraine, if they insist, as French President Macron does, to send NATO troops into Ukraine…that will absolutely ensure that no peace agreement will be possible and that the war will continue,” Szamuely, a senior research fellow at the Global Policy Institute, explained.
Europe’s current crop of elites is a far cry from their predecessors, from Willy Brand and Helmut Schmidt to Helmut Kohl, the academic noted, trying to prevent peace “instead of acting as facilitators of a peace deal between the US and Russia.”
Quo Vadis?
While European inflexibility may seem surprising, given the economic pain its industries, farmers, and ordinary citizens have suffered as a direct result of the current crisis, Szamuely points out that there are major beneficiaries whose reasons for rejecting peace are clear:
💬 “So it helps the NATO sector…it helps the financial sector, it helps the military-industrial complex. But ordinary Europeans get nothing whatsoever out of this,” Szamuely summed up.
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Talks with the US delegation will begin on Monday morning, Grigory Karasin, chairman of the Federation Council’s International Committee and head of Russian delegation, told Sputnik.
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Sputnik International
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🎥 Protesters in support of arrested Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu have taken to the streets in Ankara.
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Sputnik International
🎥 Protesters in support of arrested Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu have taken to the streets in Ankara. 📌 Subscribe to @SputnikInt
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