Russia appears to be advancing in its invasion of Ukraine with satellite imagery indicating that a huge convoy — some 40 miles or 65 kilometers long — of Russian military vehicles is heading towards Ukraine’s capital Kyiv.

The following satellite image was taken by U.S firm Maxar Technologies on Monday. It appears to show a convoy of Russian armored tanks and trucks that stretches from Pybirsk, further north of Kyiv, to the Antonov airport (also known as the Hostemel airport — the site of fighting last week between Russian and Ukrainian forces) on the northeast outskirts of the Ukrainian capital.

In some parts of the convoy, the vehicles appear to be traveling three or four abreast on the road. The distance along the road is approximately 40 miles.

It should be noted that the situation in Ukraine is fast-moving and may now may be different to what is seen in these images, which show the convoy on Sunday and Monday.

The following two images were taken by Maxar Technologies on Sunday. At this point, the convoy does not appear to cover as large an area and cloud cover precludes a complete view of the area.

Official sources have not confirmed the existence of the convoy, but there are fears it suggests that Russia is preparing to launch a full-scale assault on Kyiv, a city it has not yet occupied although there have been skirmishes on the outskirts.

Other images from Maxar suggest additional military activity in southern Belarus, which borders Ukraine and is an ally of Russia, with ground forces and ground-attack helicopter units seen in the images. Again, official sources have not confirmed whether these units — or Belarus more broadly — is preparing to join Russian forces in an assault on Ukraine.

Belarus’ President Alexander Lukashenko repeated on Monday that his country has no plans to join the incursion, according to state news agency Belta.

Will Ukraine surrender?

Russia began its invasion of Ukraine last Thursday and its forces have attacked various cities and areas in the north, east and south of the country. However, analysts have suggested that Russia had made slower progress in its advance into the country, and had met more resistance, than it had expected.

If Russia is about to launch a much harder assault on the capital Kyiv, however, how Ukraine’s armed forces and civilian resistance will cope is much more uncertain.

The Pentagon has noted that the Kremlin still wants its troops to capture Kyiv, despite the stiff Ukrainian resistance.

“We have every indication that they still want to take Kyiv, that they are advancing on the ground and trying to get closer,” a senior Defense official told CNBC on Monday, speaking on condition of anonymity in order to share new details from the Pentagon’s assessment.

Separately, analysts at Teneo Intelligence concluded on Monday that “the Kremlin appears to be committed to eliminate Ukraine’s political leadership, while the movement of Russian military forces suggests preparations for new, likely heavier, military action against the capital Kyiv and other key cities in the coming days.”

The U.K.’s Defense Ministry casts a more sober glance over Russia’s progress, however, tweeting on Monday in their intelligence update that

Peace talks were held between Russian and Ukrainian delegates on Monday, in neighboring Belarus, and although no breakthrough was reached, there are hopes that talks will continue in the coming days.

For its part, Ukraine has vowed that it will not surrender to Russia and has demanded an immediate cease-fire and that Russian forces leave its territory.

“Ukraine is ready to continue seeking a diplomatic solution, but Ukraine is not ready to surrender or capitulate,” Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble on Monday.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had already struck a pessimistic tone over the outcome of talks, and Kuleba told CNBC he did not know whether the talks would be successful.

“I’m a diplomat, I have to believe in the success of talks, but at the same time my main goal as a diplomat now is to impose more sanctions on Russia, to bring more weapons to Ukraine and to isolate Russia as much as we can in the international arena so I’m focused on this part of diplomacy,” Kuleba said

“We stand not only for ourselves but for the world order as we all know it.”

The foreign minister said that “every 24 hours are crucial, because Russia deploys more and more military might on Ukraine, hundreds of tanks moving into the country, they dominate the skies with their bombers, rockets, missiles are being thrown on our peaceful cities, civilians being killed, but we continue fighting.”

He said the war had turned into a “real people’s war against Russian aggression.”

Russia has already conducted attacks both on the ground and by air, with major cities reporting shelling and damage to buildings. Both sides have said that some of their soldiers have been killed, and Ukraine has reported that several hundred of its citizens have died during Russian attacks, including a number of children.

The invasion has led to a huge number of Ukrainians attempting to flee the country for safety in Eastern Europe, although many have also stayed to defend their homes and nation.

– CNBC’s Amanda Macias contributed reporting to this story.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/01/huge-convoy-of-russian-vehicles-approaching-kyiv.html

Russia appears to be advancing in its invasion of Ukraine with satellite imagery indicating that a huge convoy — some 40 miles or 65 kilometers long — of Russian military vehicles is heading towards Ukraine’s capital Kyiv.

The following satellite image was taken by U.S firm Maxar Technologies on Monday. It appears to show a convoy of Russian armored tanks and trucks that stretches from Pybirsk, further north of Kyiv, to the Antonov airport (also known as the Hostemel airport — the site of fighting last week between Russian and Ukrainian forces) on the northeast outskirts of the Ukrainian capital.

In some parts of the convoy, the vehicles appear to be traveling three or four abreast on the road. The distance along the road is approximately 40 miles.

It should be noted that the situation in Ukraine is fast-moving and may now may be different to what is seen in these images, which show the convoy on Sunday and Monday.

The following two images were taken by Maxar Technologies on Sunday. At this point, the convoy does not appear to cover as large an area and cloud cover precludes a complete view of the area.

Official sources have not confirmed the existence of the convoy, but there are fears it suggests that Russia is preparing to launch a full-scale assault on Kyiv, a city it has not yet occupied although there have been skirmishes on the outskirts.

Other images from Maxar suggest additional military activity in southern Belarus, which borders Ukraine and is an ally of Russia, with ground forces and ground-attack helicopter units seen in the images. Again, official sources have not confirmed whether these units — or Belarus more broadly — is preparing to join Russian forces in an assault on Ukraine.

Belarus’ President Alexander Lukashenko repeated on Monday that his country has no plans to join the incursion, according to state news agency Belta.

Will Ukraine surrender?

Russia began its invasion of Ukraine last Thursday and its forces have attacked various cities and areas in the north, east and south of the country. However, analysts have suggested that Russia had made slower progress in its advance into the country, and had met more resistance, than it had expected.

If Russia is about to launch a much harder assault on the capital Kyiv, however, how Ukraine’s armed forces and civilian resistance will cope is much more uncertain.

The Pentagon has noted that the Kremlin still wants its troops to capture Kyiv, despite the stiff Ukrainian resistance.

“We have every indication that they still want to take Kyiv, that they are advancing on the ground and trying to get closer,” a senior Defense official told CNBC on Monday, speaking on condition of anonymity in order to share new details from the Pentagon’s assessment.

Separately, analysts at Teneo Intelligence concluded on Monday that “the Kremlin appears to be committed to eliminate Ukraine’s political leadership, while the movement of Russian military forces suggests preparations for new, likely heavier, military action against the capital Kyiv and other key cities in the coming days.”

The U.K.’s Defense Ministry casts a more sober glance over Russia’s progress, however, tweeting on Monday in their intelligence update that

Peace talks were held between Russian and Ukrainian delegates on Monday, in neighboring Belarus, and although no breakthrough was reached, there are hopes that talks will continue in the coming days.

For its part, Ukraine has vowed that it will not surrender to Russia and has demanded an immediate cease-fire and that Russian forces leave its territory.

“Ukraine is ready to continue seeking a diplomatic solution, but Ukraine is not ready to surrender or capitulate,” Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble on Monday.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had already struck a pessimistic tone over the outcome of talks, and Kuleba told CNBC he did not know whether the talks would be successful.

“I’m a diplomat, I have to believe in the success of talks, but at the same time my main goal as a diplomat now is to impose more sanctions on Russia, to bring more weapons to Ukraine and to isolate Russia as much as we can in the international arena so I’m focused on this part of diplomacy,” Kuleba said

“We stand not only for ourselves but for the world order as we all know it.”

The foreign minister said that “every 24 hours are crucial, because Russia deploys more and more military might on Ukraine, hundreds of tanks moving into the country, they dominate the skies with their bombers, rockets, missiles are being thrown on our peaceful cities, civilians being killed, but we continue fighting.”

He said the war had turned into a “real people’s war against Russian aggression.”

Russia has already conducted attacks both on the ground and by air, with major cities reporting shelling and damage to buildings. Both sides have said that some of their soldiers have been killed, and Ukraine has reported that several hundred of its citizens have died during Russian attacks, including a number of children.

The invasion has led to a huge number of Ukrainians attempting to flee the country for safety in Eastern Europe, although many have also stayed to defend their homes and nation.

– CNBC’s Amanda Macias contributed reporting to this story.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/01/huge-convoy-of-russian-vehicles-approaching-kyiv.html

Over the weekend, Russian troops launched an assault on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which was repelled in a counteroffensive, Ukrainian officials said Sunday. 

The city was still in Ukrainian hands after shelling that sent thousands into underground shelters and as battles raged on the street. As Russian troops continue to try and capture the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, other assaults are happening on several fronts. 

Officials have said Russian forces are firing indiscriminately on civilian areas in Kharkiv, which has seen some of the most fierce fighting since the unprovoked invasion began last week. The attack on civilian targets represents an escalation of Russian aggression. 

RUSSIA, UKRAINE TALKS CONCLUDE, MASSIVE EXPLOSION ROCKS KYIV: LIVE UPDATES

“Dozens of dead and hundreds of wounded! This horror must be seen by the whole world! Death to the occupiers!” Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, wrote on his Facebook page.

Russia briefly took control of the city on Sunday before it was taken back hours later. Despite the onslaught, big cities remain under Ukrainian control, officials said. 

Kharkiv matters because of its significance. The city has a population of nearly 1.5 million people and is located in the country’s northeast, around 20 miles from its northern border with Russia, making it the largest of Ukraine’s cities near that nation. 

The city is also a central piece to Russia’s strategy to defeat Ukraine as it faces unanticipated resistance in trying to capture Kyiv. 

A map of Kharkiv and Kyiv in Ukraine. Kharkiv, the second-largest city, has seen some of the most intense fighting since Russian troops invaded Ukraine last week.
(iStock)

“The longer this thing goes, the worse it is for them,” Dan Hoffman, a former CIA senior officer and station chief, told Fox News. “It’s an intelligence failure on their part. That’s an intelligence failure that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin didn’t have that all figured out. He comes from an intelligence background, so he should have known all this stuff.”

Kharkiv was founded in 1654 and has become a large industrial, scientific, educational and transpiration hub.

Historically, Kharkiv was the Ukrainian capital from 1920 to 1934, when Ukraine first became was part of the Soviet Union, before it was moved to Kyiv. In World War II, it changed hands between Soviet and Nazi German forces several times and suffered heavy destruction. 

Culturally, it has strong ties to Russia. Many residents speak Russian and travel back and forth between both nations is common. 

In 2014, when demonstrators help oust pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych, Kharkiv became a key point for opponents of the new government in an effort to restore him to power. Yanukovych eventually fled to the city where he held a wider base.  

His pro-Russia supporters, at one point, stormed the City Hall and briefly took it over. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Currently, Kharkiv is a major transpiration hub and is home to more than 60 universities, according to Eurocities. In addition, the city manufactures diesel locomotives, machine tools and electronics. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/kharkiv-ukraines-russian-rocket-fire

Over the weekend, Russian troops launched an assault on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which was repelled in a counteroffensive, Ukrainian officials said Sunday. 

The city was still in Ukrainian hands after shelling that sent thousands into underground shelters and as battles raged on the street. As Russian troops continue to try and capture the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, other assaults are happening on several fronts. 

Officials have said Russian forces are firing indiscriminately on civilian areas in Kharkiv, which has seen some of the most fierce fighting since the unprovoked invasion began last week. The attack on civilian targets represents an escalation of Russian aggression. 

RUSSIA, UKRAINE TALKS CONCLUDE, MASSIVE EXPLOSION ROCKS KYIV: LIVE UPDATES

“Dozens of dead and hundreds of wounded! This horror must be seen by the whole world! Death to the occupiers!” Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, wrote on his Facebook page.

Russia briefly took control of the city on Sunday before it was taken back hours later. Despite the onslaught, big cities remain under Ukrainian control, officials said. 

Kharkiv matters because of its significance. The city has a population of nearly 1.5 million people and is located in the country’s northeast, around 20 miles from its northern border with Russia, making it the largest of Ukraine’s cities near that nation. 

The city is also a central piece to Russia’s strategy to defeat Ukraine as it faces unanticipated resistance in trying to capture Kyiv. 

A map of Kharkiv and Kyiv in Ukraine. Kharkiv, the second-largest city, has seen some of the most intense fighting since Russian troops invaded Ukraine last week.
(iStock)

“The longer this thing goes, the worse it is for them,” Dan Hoffman, a former CIA senior officer and station chief, told Fox News. “It’s an intelligence failure on their part. That’s an intelligence failure that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin didn’t have that all figured out. He comes from an intelligence background, so he should have known all this stuff.”

Kharkiv was founded in 1654 and has become a large industrial, scientific, educational and transpiration hub.

Historically, Kharkiv was the Ukrainian capital from 1920 to 1934, when Ukraine first became was part of the Soviet Union, before it was moved to Kyiv. In World War II, it changed hands between Soviet and Nazi German forces several times and suffered heavy destruction. 

Culturally, it has strong ties to Russia. Many residents speak Russian and travel back and forth between both nations is common. 

In 2014, when demonstrators help oust pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych, Kharkiv became a key point for opponents of the new government in an effort to restore him to power. Yanukovych eventually fled to the city where he held a wider base.  

His pro-Russia supporters, at one point, stormed the City Hall and briefly took it over. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Currently, Kharkiv is a major transpiration hub and is home to more than 60 universities, according to Eurocities. In addition, the city manufactures diesel locomotives, machine tools and electronics. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/kharkiv-ukraines-russian-rocket-fire

Over the weekend, Russian troops launched an assault on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which was repelled in a counteroffensive, Ukrainian officials said Sunday. 

The city was still in Ukrainian hands after shelling that sent thousands into underground shelters and as battles raged on the street. As Russian troops continue to try and capture the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, other assaults are happening on several fronts. 

Officials have said Russian forces are firing indiscriminately on civilian areas in Kharkiv, which has seen some of the most fierce fighting since the unprovoked invasion began last week. The attack on civilian targets represents an escalation of Russian aggression. 

RUSSIA, UKRAINE TALKS CONCLUDE, MASSIVE EXPLOSION ROCKS KYIV: LIVE UPDATES

“Dozens of dead and hundreds of wounded! This horror must be seen by the whole world! Death to the occupiers!” Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, wrote on his Facebook page.

Russia briefly took control of the city on Sunday before it was taken back hours later. Despite the onslaught, big cities remain under Ukrainian control, officials said. 

Kharkiv matters because of its significance. The city has a population of nearly 1.5 million people and is located in the country’s northeast, around 20 miles from its northern border with Russia, making it the largest of Ukraine’s cities near that nation. 

The city is also a central piece to Russia’s strategy to defeat Ukraine as it faces unanticipated resistance in trying to capture Kyiv. 

A map of Kharkiv and Kyiv in Ukraine. Kharkiv, the second-largest city, has seen some of the most intense fighting since Russian troops invaded Ukraine last week.
(iStock)

“The longer this thing goes, the worse it is for them,” Dan Hoffman, a former CIA senior officer and station chief, told Fox News. “It’s an intelligence failure on their part. That’s an intelligence failure that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin didn’t have that all figured out. He comes from an intelligence background, so he should have known all this stuff.”

Kharkiv was founded in 1654 and has become a large industrial, scientific, educational and transpiration hub.

Historically, Kharkiv was the Ukrainian capital from 1920 to 1934, when Ukraine first became was part of the Soviet Union, before it was moved to Kyiv. In World War II, it changed hands between Soviet and Nazi German forces several times and suffered heavy destruction. 

Culturally, it has strong ties to Russia. Many residents speak Russian and travel back and forth between both nations is common. 

In 2014, when demonstrators help oust pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych, Kharkiv became a key point for opponents of the new government in an effort to restore him to power. Yanukovych eventually fled to the city where he held a wider base.  

His pro-Russia supporters, at one point, stormed the City Hall and briefly took it over. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Currently, Kharkiv is a major transpiration hub and is home to more than 60 universities, according to Eurocities. In addition, the city manufactures diesel locomotives, machine tools and electronics. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/kharkiv-ukraines-russian-rocket-fire

WASHINGTON — White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that President Biden will “absolutely” mention “inflation” during his first State of the Union speech — despite a senior aide telling reporters Biden may avoid using the dreaded I-word.

“The president will absolutely use the word inflation tomorrow and he will talk about inflation in his speech. Of course that is a huge issue on the minds of Americans,” Psaki said at her daily press briefing when asked about her colleague’s remark.

Inflation hit a 40-year high last month and the spike in consumer costs is contributing to a gloomy national mood and Biden’s slumping approval rating.

Biden will also attempt to use the Tuesday address to revive efforts to pass his roughly $2 trillion Build Back Better Act, White House aides said Monday.

Biden will dust off the stalled social spending plan despite the package failing to gain the necessary Democratic support in the Senate due to fears about inflation.

“I’m not gonna go into, you know, whether he will say the word ‘inflation’ or not,” one official told reporters on a call previewing the speech.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Monday, Feb. 28, 2022, in Washington.
Patrick Semansky

“I’ve been doing this for long enough that I’m not going to make that prediction with more than 24 hours before the speech and final edits still going on,” she added. “But the point stands that he will be talking about prices and cutting costs in a way to help working families.”

The federal Consumer Price Index found overall consumer costs up 7.5 percent in January compared to in January of 2022 — dashing White House predictions that the figure would begin to fall. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine threatens to send costs even higher due to disruptions to energy and other markets.

One official corrected herself on the White House preview call after originally saying Biden “will talk about price increases that have become entrenched and eat away at the economic progress the country is making and squeeze families’ budgets.”

Asked if the White House was conceding that price increases are permanent, the aide said, “my colleagues have told me that I misspoke, that I stumbled over my words. The president will talk about price increases that become entrenched, not that have already become entrenched.”

Many critics blame President Joe Biden’s policies for high inflation.
ROBERTO SCHMIDT

Biden in December claimed that the prior month’s 6.8 percent annual inflation rate was likely the “peak.” He also said in July that inflation was “temporary” when it was around 5 percent.

Centrist Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) killed Biden’s Build Back Better Act in December — saying inflation could get even worse through the ambitious framework that would have federally subsidized child care, preschool, home health care, housing, hearing aids, electric vehicles and a smorgasbord of other initiatives.

“I cannot take that risk with a staggering debt of more than $29 trillion and inflation taxes that are real and harmful to every hard-working American at the gasoline pumps, grocery stores and utility bills with no end in sight,” Manchin said at the time.

A shopper bags fruit inside a supermarket in Chevy Chase, Maryland on February 17, 2022.
MANDEL NGAN

Manchin’s “no” vote would have meant the current version of the bill could not pass the 50-50 Senate even under special budget rules that allows legislation to pass with Vice President Kamala Harris breaking ties for Democrats.

A second White House official told reporters Monday that the Build Back Better Act’s planks will feature prominently in Biden’s appeal to Congress.

“On Build Back Better, I think what you can expect the president to lay out tomorrow is how his plan — the ideas he’s put forward — lowers costs for families, can reduce the deficit and say that it’s time for Congress to act, it’s time for Congress to get him a piece of legislation that addresses those core challenges for families right now,” he said.

The same official claimed, referring to the stalled legislation, that “the reconciliation bill that is right now on the table would reduce the deficit.”

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) speaks to reporters after a closed door briefing with senators at the U.S. Capitol Building on Feb. 3, 2022 in Washington, DC.
Drew Angerer

The Congressional Budget Office said the Build Back Better Act would add $367 billion in unfunded spending, but Biden argued that it would lower the cost of living, particularly for people with children.

The House passed the sprawling bill in November with a $2.2 trillion price tag — but Manchin accused fellow Democrats of deceptive “gimmicks” that undercounted its true cost by making new programs last for shorter periods of time than proposed new revenue. A Republican-requested report from the Congressional Budget Office said that the package would cost about $4.5 trillion and add $3 trillion in deficit spending if programs extended over 10 years, or the same period of time used to calculate new revenue.

Critics blame Biden’s policies for high inflation, especially the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act signed in March 2021. Biden’s stimulus followed bipartisan legislation in 2020 that distributed about $4 trillion to keep the US afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic. In November, Biden signed a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill that the CBO said would add $256 billion to the federal deficit, though Biden argued it would ultimately lower inflation by improving the transportation of goods.

The president is also expected to devote a chunk of his address to the Russian attack against Ukraine that was launched Feb. 24 and forced substantial revisions to his remarks.

Employees assist a customer at Canales Quality Meats in Eastern Market in Washington, DC, on February 8, 2022.
STEFANI REYNOLDS

Biden will “outline the efforts that we’re taking to rally the world to stand up for democracy and against Russian aggression,” one of the White House officials said.

Biden’s first State of the Union will take place in a Capitol surrounded by anti-riot fencing that was installed in the past week due to fears of a potential convoy of truckers arriving to protest COVID-19 mandates.

It will be the first State of the Union since the pandemic emerged. The most recent State of the Union — in February 2020, shortly before the onset of widespread COVID-19 lockdowns — is best remembered for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) tearing up her copy of then-President Donald Trump’s speech.

Biden addressed a joint session of Congress in April of last year. However, it is not considered a State of the Union address because he had not yet been in office for one full year.

President Biden will continue to flog the stalled social spending plan despite the package failing to gain the necessary Democratic support in the Senate.
ROBERTO SCHMIDT

This year’s speech is occurring much later than usual due to the Omicron variant of COVID-19 that caused record-high US coronavirus infections in January. Guests are not allowed to attend and some members of the House and Senate will be seated in the second-floor viewing gallery to reduce the risk of viral transmission. The room is expected to be roughly one-third as full as usual and all attendees must have a negative PCR test result in hand.

In a surprise move, the House of Representatives on Sunday scrapped its indoor mask mandate just in time for the speech — likely avoiding renewed clashes between Republicans and Democrats, though many Capitol staffers chose to keep masks on their faces Monday.

The CDC abruptly redefined mask guidance Friday, advising Washington DC and many other parts of the country with relatively low transmission rates that they can scrap mask mandates. The White House is expected to ditch its indoor mask mandate Tuesday before the speech.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/02/28/biden-to-spin-inflation-boost-build-back-better-bill-in-state-of-the-union/

Over the weekend, Russian troops launched an assault on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which was repelled in a counteroffensive, Ukrainian officials said Sunday. 

The city was still in Ukrainian hands after shelling that sent thousands into underground shelters and as battles raged on the street. As Russian troops continue to try and capture the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, other assaults are happening on several fronts. 

Officials have said Russian forces are firing indiscriminately on civilian areas in Kharkiv, which has seen some of the most fierce fighting since the unprovoked invasion began last week. The attack on civilian targets represents an escalation of Russian aggression. 

RUSSIA, UKRAINE TALKS CONCLUDE, MASSIVE EXPLOSION ROCKS KYIV: LIVE UPDATES

“Dozens of dead and hundreds of wounded! This horror must be seen by the whole world! Death to the occupiers!” Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, wrote on his Facebook page.

Russia briefly took control of the city on Sunday before it was taken back hours later. Despite the onslaught, big cities remain under Ukrainian control, officials said. 

Kharkiv matters because of its significance. The city has a population of nearly 1.5 million people and is located in the country’s northeast, around 20 miles from its northern border with Russia, making it the largest of Ukraine’s cities near that nation. 

The city is also a central piece to Russia’s strategy to defeat Ukraine as it faces unanticipated resistance in trying to capture Kyiv. 

A map of Kharkiv and Kyiv in Ukraine. Kharkiv, the second-largest city, has seen some of the most intense fighting since Russian troops invaded Ukraine last week.
(iStock)

“The longer this thing goes, the worse it is for them,” Dan Hoffman, a former CIA senior officer and station chief, told Fox News. “It’s an intelligence failure on their part. That’s an intelligence failure that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin didn’t have that all figured out. He comes from an intelligence background, so he should have known all this stuff.”

Kharkiv was founded in 1654 and has become a large industrial, scientific, educational and transpiration hub.

Historically, Kharkiv was the Ukrainian capital from 1920 to 1934, when Ukraine first became was part of the Soviet Union, before it was moved to Kyiv. In World War II, it changed hands between Soviet and Nazi German forces several times and suffered heavy destruction. 

Culturally, it has strong ties to Russia. Many residents speak Russian and travel back and forth between both nations is common. 

In 2014, when demonstrators help oust pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych, Kharkiv became a key point for opponents of the new government in an effort to restore him to power. Yanukovych eventually fled to the city where he held a wider base.  

His pro-Russia supporters, at one point, stormed the City Hall and briefly took it over. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Currently, Kharkiv is a major transpiration hub and is home to more than 60 universities, according to Eurocities. In addition, the city manufactures diesel locomotives, machine tools and electronics. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/kharkiv-ukraines-russian-rocket-fire

Mr. Biden will urge Congress to pass legislation, approved by the House in December, to increase the Federal Maritime Commission’s oversight of the shipping industry.

The president will deliver his remarks on Tuesday without a mask, on the same day that officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lift many Covid restrictions for communities across the country where cases, hospitalizations and deaths have plunged.

Officials announced that mask requirements for vaccinated White House employees and visitors will be dropped starting on Tuesday, a move that will allow Mr. Biden and the first lady, Jill Biden, to host their State of the Union guests at a reception that evening — something that was not allowed under previous rules.

Mr. Biden has battled the pandemic — and its effects on American work and life — since taking office, largely by vaccinating nearly three-quarters of the population. As the impact of the Omicron variant fades, administration officials have been hoping to move into a new phase of the pandemic, where the virus plays less of a central role in everyday life.

While the White House is working on a detailed coronavirus response strategy for the next phase of the pandemic, Mr. Biden is not likely to unveil it during his speech. Instead, he is expected to speak about the coronavirus pandemic in broad strokes, invoking the same “things are getting better, but we are not out of the woods yet” tone that he has adopted in recent weeks.

A White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to preview the president’s remarks, said Mr. Biden would “highlight that the country has made tremendous progress” over the past 13 months, and remind Americans that the nation has tools — including vaccines and treatments — to prevent severe disease and to treat those who do get sick.

Mr. Biden has been criticized for prematurely declaring “independence” from the virus last summer, only to see a new wave of infection and death from the Delta variant later that year. White House officials are wary of making that mistake again.

While cases are declining and the immediate threat is waning, Mr. Biden will also note that the virus is unpredictable, and will assure the nation that his administration is taking steps to prepare for future variants.

Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Ana Swanson and Katie Rogers contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/28/us/politics/biden-state-of-the-union.html

LONDON — European stocks are expected to open lower on Tuesday amid reports that a significant armored Russian convoy is heading towards Ukraine’s capital Kyiv.

The U.K.’s FTSE index is seen opening 46 points lower at 7,414, Germany’s DAX 129 point lower at 14,351, France’s CAC 40 down 63 points at 6,600 and Italy’s FTSE MIB 174 points lower at 25,175, according to data from IG.

Russia appears to have upped the ante in its invasion of Ukraine overnight with reports and satellite imagery emerging of a long convoy, some 40 miles (65km) long, of Russian military vehicles heading towards Ukraine’s capital Kyiv.

The satellite images were taken by Maxar Technologies on Monday and show a convoy of armored trucks travelling sometimes two or three vehicles abreast on the road. Official sources have not confirmed the convoy, however.

Other images from Maxar suggest additional military activity in southern Belarus, which borders Ukraine and is an ally of Russia, with ground forces deployments and ground attack helicopter units seen in the images. Again, official sources have not confirmed whether these units are preparing to join Russian forces in an assault on Ukraine. On Monday there were unconfirmed reports that Belarus could be preparing to help Russia’s invasion.

Asia-Pacific markets mostly rose Tuesday while U.S. stock futures also rose in overnight trading before the first trading session of March as investors continue to monitor the fighting between Russia and Ukraine.

Earnings in Europe come from Bayer, Covestro, HelloFresh and Zalando. Data releases include German retail sales for January and final euro zone manufacturing activity data for February.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/01/european-markets-as-russian-armored-convoy-appears-to-head-for-kyiv.html

Black smoke rises from a military airport in Chuhuiv, near Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. Humanitarian organizations say Russian forces are using cluster munitions in their bombing and shelling of Ukraine.

Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images


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Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images

Black smoke rises from a military airport in Chuhuiv, near Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. Humanitarian organizations say Russian forces are using cluster munitions in their bombing and shelling of Ukraine.

Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images

Russian military forces have used cluster munitions — a highly controversial weapon banned by many countries — against at least two civilian targets during its invasion of Ukraine, according to two international humanitarian organizations.

Seven people died and 11 were injured in the bombings attributed to Russia, which has been known to use cluster munitions in warfare, possibly as recently as two years ago in Syria.

“Russian forces should stop using cluster munitions and end unlawful attacks with weapons that indiscriminately kill and maim,” Steve Goose, arms director of Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.

Once fired, cluster munitions open in midair and rain down dozens or even hundreds of smaller submunitions, or “bomblets,” over a large area the size of one or more football fields.

The munitions are notoriously difficult to control, striking nearby targets indiscriminately, which is why international human rights groups say they shouldn’t be used anywhere near civilian populations, if at all.

A large portion of submunitions also fail to detonate on impact — as many as 40% by one estimate — leaving behind a trail of unexploded bombs that pose a secondary risk to people nearby.

In 2008, more than 100 countries agreed to a global treaty banning the use of cluster munitions, but neither Russia nor Ukraine signed on.

Cluster munitions hit a hospital and a preschool in Ukraine

According to Human Rights Watch, a Russian ballistic missile carrying cluster munitions struck outside a hospital in the city of Vuhledar, located in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine, on Thursday.

The group interviewed a doctor and a hospital official and examined photographs of the aftermath of the attack, which reportedly occurred around 10:30 a.m. local time.

Four civilians died and another 10 were injured, six of whom are health care workers. The hospital, an ambulance and other nearby vehicles sustained damage.

“I was on the first floor of our two-story building. I heard a loud explosion outside. We ran into the hallway. Luckily, we didn’t have many patients,” said Natalia Sosyura, the hospital’s chief doctor, according to Human Rights Watch. “We all fell to the floor.”

In a separate attack on Friday, cluster munitions fell on a preschool in the northeastern Ukrainian city of Okhtyrka in Sumy Oblast, Amnesty International reported. Three people, including a child, died. Another child was wounded.

Amnesty International said that Russian forces likely carried out the attack, since they were operating nearby and have a history of using cluster munitions, and that it may constitute a war crime.

“There is no possible justification for dropping cluster munitions in populated areas, let alone near a school,” Agnès Callamard, secretary-general of Amnesty International, said in a statement.

“This attack bears all the hallmarks of Russia’s use of this inherently indiscriminate and internationally-banned weapon, and shows flagrant disregard for civilian life,” she added.

The group said drone footage showed four munitions striking the roof of the school and three more landing on the pavement outside.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/02/28/1083616770/russia-is-using-controversial-cluster-munitions-in-ukraine-humanitarian-groups-s

Oregon to pull Russian-made spirits from liquor store shelves – OPB

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Source Article from https://www.opb.org/article/2022/02/28/oregon-liquor-stores-russian-spirits-vodka-ukraine-invasion/