World
Iran sent more than 3,500 drones to Russia for its war against Ukraine: intel dossier
The Paris-based dissident group Nationwide Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) accused the Iranian regime of furnishing Russian strongman Vladimir Putin’s military with greater than 3,500 drones for his scorched-earth struggle in opposition to Ukraine.
In keeping with studies from the social community of the Individuals’s Mojahedin Group of Iran (PMOI/MEK) contained in the Islamic Republic, “Iran’s UAV [unmanned aerial vehicle] sale contract to Russia consists of varied offensive drones, together with Shahed-129, Mohajer-6 and suicide drones Shahed-136 and Shahed-131.” MEK is a part of the Nationwide Council of Resistance of Iran umbrella group.
The NCRI file states, “Tehran has offered greater than 3,500 UAVs to Russia. Most of those had been made on the factories of the Ministry of Protection, with others produced by the factories of the Iranian Aviation and Area Industries Affiliation (IASIA).”
The allegation that the theocratic authorities supplied greater than 3,500 drones to Russia signifies a dramatic enhance of the Iranian regime’s help for Putin’s struggle machine.
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Lately, Ukraine stated that roughly 400 drones have already been utilized by Russia, from a complete provide of roughly 2,000 weapons. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy introduced the downing of 223 drones produced by Iran’s regime.
Final week, Zelenskyy stood within the capital metropolis of Kyiv beside what was ostensibly a downed Iranian Shahed drone.
Iran’s assault drones are a supply of grave concern for Western international locations, together with the U.S., in search of to assist Ukraine in its efforts to save lots of civilian lives and oust Russian forces from its territory.
In keeping with the NCRI report, “Among the UAVs are despatched to Russia are from the Qadr Airbase of the IRGC [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps].”
The Trump administration sanctioned the IRGC as a international terrorist entity.
ZELENSKYY SAYS RUSSIA IS ‘PROBABLY’ PAYING FOR IRANIAN DRONES WITH NUCLEAR RESEARCH ASSISTANCE
The report stated, “When Qassem Soleimani, the previous commander of the IRGC Quds Power, was killed by the U.S. on January 6, 2020, his physique was transferred to the Qadr base. The Qadr base has its personal hangars and particular companies. The Mehrabad airport administration doesn’t intrude in its affairs. The Quds Power makes use of the Qadr base and IRGC-affiliated plane corporations to ship weapons to Syria, Iraq and Lebanon.”
The E.U. and U.S. authorities categorized Soleimani as a terrorist, who was accountable for the deaths of greater than 600 American army personnel within the Center East.
When requested in regards to the NCRI report and if the U.S. plans to tug the plug on its nuclear deal negotiations with Iran’s regime in Vienna as punishment for Tehran for promoting drones to Russia, a U.S. State Division spokesman informed Fox Information Digital that, “We have been warning since July that Iran was planning to promote UAVs to Russia to be used in opposition to Ukraine. In September, Russia transferred UAVs it bought from Iran into Crimea to be used in its struggle in opposition to Ukraine.”
The spokesperson continued, “We are able to affirm that Russian army personnel primarily based in Crimea have been piloting Iranian UAVs and utilizing them to conduct kinetic strikes throughout Ukraine, together with in strikes in opposition to Kyiv in current days. We assess that Iranian army personnel had been on the bottom in Crimea and assisted Russia in these operations.”
IRAN NOW SELLING MISSILES TO RUSSIA, ADDING TO ITS KAMIKAZE DRONES, REPORT
The spokesperson added, “Russia has acquired dozens of UAVs to date and can doubtless proceed to obtain extra shipments sooner or later. Moreover, in mild of Russia’s ongoing provide shortages, we’re involved that Russia may additionally search to amass superior typical weapons from Iran, equivalent to surface-to-surface missiles, that can virtually definitely be used to help Russia’s struggle in opposition to Ukraine. We’ll proceed to make use of all the instruments at our disposal to delay, deter, impede and impose prices on actors concerned in such actions.”
The NCRI file obtained by Fox Information Digital might carry weight inside international capitals and in Washington. In 2002, the NCRI first revealed that Iran’s regime constructed nuclear amenities close to Natanz and Arak.
Shahin Gobadi, a spokesman of Nationwide Council of Resistance of Iran in Paris, informed Fox Information Digital, “It’s extra crucial for the European Union and the U.S. to desert their wait-and-see method to the regime. The clerical regime’s malign intervention in hotspots within the Center East and Europe are nicely established.”
He continued, “It’s time to maintain it to account for its egregious human rights violations at dwelling that now consists of killing teenage protesters. Continued engagement solely emboldens the regime to shed blood in Iran and additional destabilize the area and the world. The clerical regime’s persistent violation of U.N. resolutions requires [it] to make use of the snapback mechanism to re-impose the six U.N. Safety Council resolutions.”
The snapback sanctions provision refers back to the penalty for Iran’s violations of U.N. resolutions with respect to its alleged nuclear weapons program.
Critics of the Biden administration’s Iran coverage, just like the NCRI, oppose the so-called Joint Complete Plan of Motion — the formal title for the Iran nuclear deal — as a result of it would, they argue, fund terrorism and never deter Tehran from creating an atomic bomb.
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In keeping with one assume tank examine revealed by FDD, the atomic accord will pump as a lot as $275 billion into Iran’s coffers throughout the first yr of the deal and merely impose a brief restriction on Tehran’s functionality to construct a nuclear weapons machine.
Gobadi stated, “Belligerence and sponsoring terror have been a pillar of the clerical regime’s rule so as to cowl up and complement its repression at dwelling, one thing the regime has been in determined want notably in mild of the revolution that is occurring in Iran.”
“This harmful improvement can be the byproduct of the tradition of impunity, which the regime has loved regardless of its egregious human rights abuses at dwelling and its brazen and destabilizing actions past Iran’s border,” he continued.
When requested in regards to the NCRI’s report about drone gross sales to Russia, the international ministry of the Islamic Republic of Iran and its diplomatic mission to the U.N. refused to remark.
Final week, Iran’s regime categorically denied that it has sealed arms offers with Moscow. Russia denies utilizing Iranian manufactured drones.
Iranian Overseas Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian stated the allegations are “baseless” and demanded that Ukraine “current any proof supporting the accusations.” Amir-Abdollahian added, “If … it turns into clear to us that Russia has used Iranian drones within the struggle in opposition to Ukraine, we will certainly not be detached about this situation.”
Tehran isn’t any stranger to offering arms and combatants to dictatorships within the Center East and its authoritarian allies throughout the globe. Fox Information Digital reported in 2018 that Iran produced chemical 107-millimeter rockets utilized in Syrian regime assaults on civilians.
Fox Information Digital reached out to the Division of Protection for a remark.
World
The Sticking Points That Kept Russia and Ukraine Apart
Russia and Ukraine failed to agree on a range of critical issues when they held peace talks in the spring of 2022. Documents from those talks obtained by The New York Times shed new light on what those issues were — and what are likely to be the main sticking points in any future negotiations to end Europe’s biggest land war in generations.
President Vladimir V. Putin had referred to the 2022 talks as a foundation for any future deal, but shifted to a harder line on Friday, demanding Ukraine cede territory that is not even under Russian control. Ukrainian and Western officials have long suspected that Russia would not be willing to settle for anything less than the full subjugation of Ukraine.
1. Ukrainian neutrality:
Will it join NATO?
Ukraine’s efforts to join the Western military alliance were at the core of Mr. Putin’s justifications for invading the country in February 2022.
Russia’s Position
Russia demanded that Ukraine never join NATO or other alliances; host foreign military bases or weapons; or conduct military exercises with other countries without its consent. In the 2022 talks, Russia pledged not to stand in the way of Ukraine’s possible membership in the European Union.
Ukraine’s Position
Ukraine offered to become a “permanently neutral state” and to “terminate international treaties and agreements that are incompatible with permanent neutrality.” But in the two years since, Ukraine’s leaders have become more vocal about seeking to join the Western military alliance as Russia’s war has continued.
2. Security guarantees:
What happens if Ukraine is attacked again?
Pledges from other countries to protect Ukraine if Russia mounts another invasion are bound to be at the center of any durable peace, some experts say.
Ukraine’s Position
Ukraine proposed a security mechanism that would be triggered “in the event of an armed attack on Ukraine.” The “guarantor” countries that signed on to the treaty would hold “urgent and immediate consultations” for no more than three days. Then, they would take “individual or joint action as may be necessary” to protect Ukraine, including establishing a no-fly zone, providing weapons and using military force.
Russia’s Position
Russia agreed to much of Ukraine’s security guarantees proposal but with key exceptions. It balked at the idea of other countries establishing a no-fly zone or providing Ukraine with weapons. Most important, Russia sought to insert a clause that would require all guarantor countries — including Russia itself — to agree on military intervention. The idea stands as perhaps the most intractable sticking point in the draft, rendering the security guarantees moot by allowing Russia to veto any international response if it invaded Ukraine again.
There was also a question: What countries would actually be willing to guarantee Ukraine’s security? The United States, the U.K., France, China and Russia itself were all listed in the draft of the treaty as guarantors. Russia also wanted to include Belarus, while Ukraine wanted to add Turkey; it’s unclear whether the countries had given their assent. If Ukraine eventually joins NATO, the Western alliance will have to deal with similarly thorny issues about how to respond if Ukraine is attacked again.
3. Territory:
How much of Ukraine would remain under Russian occupation?
For Ukraine, a peace deal would be likely to come at the expense of accepting Russian control over some part of its territory.
Ukraine’s Position
In the 2022 talks, Ukraine refused to recognize Russian control over any of the country, including Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014. But Ukraine did offer a deal in which the two countries would agree to “resolve issues related to Crimea” through 10 or 15 years of diplomacy, and would pledge to avoid doing so by “military means.”
Ukraine appeared ready to accept some swath of the country’s east also remaining under Russian occupation, with the precise contours to be hashed out in a meeting between President Volodymyr Zelensky and Mr. Putin that never came.
Mr. Zelensky’s position has since hardened. He says Ukraine is fighting to liberate all internationally recognized territory, including Crimea, under Russian control.
Russia’s Position
Russia’s stance has also fluctuated. At the outset of the 2022 negotiations, Russia demanded that Ukraine give up its entire eastern Donbas region and recognize Russian sovereignty over Crimea. By April, Russia had accepted a model in which Crimea and some other parts of Ukraine would remain under Russian occupation that Ukraine would not recognize as being legal.
Now, however, Russia’s territorial demands appear more extreme. In September 2022, Mr. Putin declared four Ukrainian regions, in addition to Crimea, to be part of Russia, even though Ukraine still controlled much of that territory. On Friday, Mr. Putin went further than in the past, declaring that any ceasefire would be contingent on Ukraine ceding all four regions to Russia, none of which Russia fully controls.
4. How would a cease-fire work?
The logistics of how to put a truce into effect are likely to pose one of the most difficult challenges of any negotiations.
Russia’s Position
An annex to the April 2022 draft added by Russia’s negotiators spelled out how Moscow saw a cease-fire taking hold. They said it would begin when the treaty was “provisionally applied” — defined as the day it was signed by Ukraine and most of the guarantor countries, including Russia. Both sides would not “carry out actions that could lead to the expansion of the territory controlled by them or cause a resumption of hostilities.”
Under Russia’s proposed terms, Moscow’s troops would have more flexibility in withdrawing from the battlefield. While Ukraine would be required to withdraw immediately, Russia’s withdrawal would be the subject of separate “consultations.”
International organizations could also be involved. Russia proposed that the United Nations monitor the cease-fire and that the Red Cross participate in the exchange of prisoners of war, interned civilians and the remains of the dead.
Ukraine’s Position
The April 2022 draft shows that Ukraine rejected Russia’s proposal but does not show a Ukrainian counteroffer. Instead, Ukrainian officials pointed out that Russia could stop fighting at any time. A note inserted by Ukrainian officials into the March 2022 treaty draft says: “The Russian side has ignored Ukraine’s numerous requests for a ceasefire.”
5. Ukrainian national identity
When Mr. Putin announced his invasion on Feb. 24, 2022, he described one of his goals as the “denazification” of Ukraine. The term was widely interpreted as referring to the Kremlin’s goal of toppling Mr. Zelensky’s government and replacing it with a puppet regime.
Russia’s Position
But Russia’s definition of “denazification” shifted quickly after its initial invasion failed. Negotiators for Moscow wanted Russian to be declared an official language and laws promoting Ukrainian language and identity to be repealed. They inserted two annexes into the draft treaty listing the articles of the legal code and Ukrainian Constitution that they wanted repealed, referring to some of them as laws on “nazification and heroization of Nazism.”
Ukraine’s Position
Ukraine balked at including any of Russia’s demands in a deal to end the war, arguing that they were “not related to the subject matter of the treaty.”
6. Limits on Ukraine’s military
Mr. Putin also called for Ukraine’s “demilitarization” when he announced his invasion, like “denazification” an ill-defined term.
Russia’s Position
Russia sought caps on the size of Ukraine’s military, including its total strength (up to 100,000 people), and the quantity of different types of weapons it would have — 147 mortars and 10 combat helicopters, for example. It also wanted the firing range of Ukraine’s missiles to be restricted to just 25 miles.
Ukraine’s Position
In the 2022 talks, Ukraine was willing to accept caps on the size of its military, but much higher ones. It sought an army of up to 250,000 people, 1,080 mortars and 60 combat helicopters. And it offered to restrict the range of its missiles to 174 miles. But that was before Ukraine began to receive significant amounts of arms, equipment and training from the West. Ukrainian officials point out that Ukraine’s military is now one of the most powerful in Europe, and it is unlikely that they would accept limits on the country’s ability to defend itself.
Original documents
To omit identifying markings, these documents have been retyped to resemble the originals. Typographical errors in the original documents have been retained.
March 17, 2022, treaty draft An early draft of a Ukraine-Russia treaty. The document is an English translation that Ukraine provided to Western governments at the time. [English]
March 29, 2022, Istanbul Communiqué The proposed agreement that was discussed at in-person talks in Istanbul, as summarized by Ukrainian negotiators. [English translation] [Russian original]
April 15, 2022, treaty draft A later draft of a Ukraine-Russia treaty. The document’s header shows this was a version that landed on President Vladimir Putin’s desk. The map referred to as Annex 6 is not included. [English translation] [Russian original]
World
Italian PM Meloni gives France's Macron 'death stare' after clash over G-7 statement
A video has gone viral showing Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni looking not too thrilled about shaking the hand of French President Emmanuel Macron during the G-7 summit in Italy.
The video clip from Friday shows Macron going down a line, shaking the hands of Italian President Sergio Mattarella and his daughter, First Lady of Italy Laura Mattarella, before arriving at Meloni.
As Macron makes his way down the line, Meloni can be seen giving a frosty “death stare” at Macron. When the French leader arrives, she appears to force a smile as the two shake hands.
The exchange came after the two leaders clashed over the use of the word “abortion” in the G-7 statement. Meloni’s government had sought to water down references to abortion in the final statement issued by all the G-7 nations at the end of the summit.
SPOTLIGHT ON ITALY’S MELONI AS SHE HOSTS BIDEN, G-7 LEADERS AMID ONGOING GLOBAL CRISIS
The final statement, released Friday, omits the word “abortion” but does reference the need to promote “reproductive health and rights.”
Macron said that he regretted the decision, telling an Italian reporter on Thursday, “It’s not a vision that’s shared across all the political spectrum.”
“I regret it, but I respect it because it was the sovereign choice of your people,” Macron said.
Meloni told reporters Saturday that a suspected row with Macron had been blown out of proportion.
Meloni, who in 2022 became Italy’s first female Prime Minister, campaigned with the slogan of “God, fatherland, and family.” She has prioritized encouraging women to have babies to reverse Italy’s demographic crisis.
Italy legalized abortion in 1978, and Meloni has promised she won’t roll back the law.
Fox News Digital has reached out to Meloni’s office for comment.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
Switzerland's massive security effort at the Ukraine peace conference
Maintaining security for more than 50 heads of state and government is not an easy matter, and Switzerland has deployed up to 4,000 soldiers to do so.
The security arrangements at the luxury Bürgenstock resort near Lucerne for the Summit for Peace in Ukraine are colossal.
Soldiers have taken position at the multiple checkpoints set up on the winding roads leading up to the resort.
Around 6.5 kilometres of fencing and eight kilometres of barbed wire have been installed around the perimeter.
To protect the more than 50 heads of state including French President Emmanuel Macron, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, and US Vice President Kamala Harris, up to 4,000 soldiers have been deployed, said Viola Amherd, the president of the Swiss confederation during a press conference held on Monday.
“An event on this scale requires comprehensive protective measures,” Swiss President Viola Amherd said ahead of the summit.
In addition, a temporary military heliport has been set up in the middle of a field to allow take-offs and landings of the different delegations.
The Bürgenstock Hotel has a long history of high-level political meetings and its isolated mountaintop location provides an extra layer of security.
The swanky resort had hosted previous peace talks on Sudan in 2002 and Cyprus in 2004.
Threats of cyberattacks and disinformation
The threats are not only physical but also include cyberattacks and disinformation surrounding the event.
Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis said there was “an obvious interest in disturbing the smooth running of the conference.”
The first wave of distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDoS) on government websites began on Thursday.
DDoS attacks aim to overload websites with a large number of requests. The data volume usually cannot be handled by a single organisation causing the website and computer system to crash.
More attacks are expected during the weekend, according to the Swiss National Cyber Security Centre.
How have locals been impacted?
More than 400 residents with homes and farms beyond the checkpoints need a special pass to access the zone.
According to the Swiss news website Watson, some residents have expressed their frustration with the organisation of the conference.
“No one has asked us our opinion,” said a woman. “That damn noise all the time”, also exclaimed another resident, after the passage of a helicopter.
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