Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz | Crown Prince Abdullah | Saudi Princes | Middle East | 20030118 | |||||
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Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal | Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050619 | |||||
Prince Abd al-Aziz bin Fahd | Prince Abd al-Aziz bin Fahd | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040121 | |||||
Prince Abdul Aziz ibn Bandar | Prince Abdul Aziz ibn Bandar | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040209 | |||||
Prince Abdul Majeed | Prince Abdul Majeed | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20030517 | |||||
Prince Abdul Majid | Prince Abdul Majid | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20031014 | |||||
Prince Abdul Rahman | Prince Abdul Rahman | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040208 | |||||
Prince AbdulAziz Ben Fahd | Prince AbdulAziz Ben Fahd | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20020426 | |||||
Prince Abdullah | Prince Abdullah | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20020218 | |||||
Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud | Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20020309 | |||||
Prince Abdullah bin Abdulaziz | Prince Abdullah bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040317 | |||||
Prince Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki al Saud | Prince Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki al Saud | Saudi Princes | Europe | 20031001 | |||||
Prince Ahmad | Prince Ahmad | Saudi Princes | Arabia | Saudi | At Large | Big Shot | 20020613 | ||
Prince Ahmad bin Abdul-Aziz | Prince Ahmad bin Abdul-Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20020601 | |||||
Prince Ahmed bin Salman bin Abdul Aziz | Prince Ahmed bin Salman bin Abdul Aziz | al-Qaeda | Arabia | 20030831 | |||||
Prince Ahmed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz | Prince Ahmed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Middle East | 20020723 | |||||
Prince Al-Walid bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz | Prince Al-Walid bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz | Saudi Princes | Axis of Evil | 20020827 | |||||
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal | Prince Alwaleed bin Talal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050802 | |||||
Prince Amr Mohammed Al-Faisal | Prince Amr Mohammed Al-Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20031115 | |||||
Prince Amr Muhammad Al-Faysal | Prince Amr Muhammad Al-Faysal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20030730 | |||||
Prince Bandar bin Sultan | Prince Bandar bin Sultan | Saudi Princes | Home Front | 20050802 | |||||
Prince Behrain Salih | Prince Behrain Salih | al-Qaeda | India-Pakistan | 20060817 | Link | ||||
Prince Fahd bin Turki bin Saud al-Kabir | Prince Fahd bin Turki bin Saud al-Kabir | Saudi princes | International | 20020730 | |||||
Prince Faisal bin Fahd | Prince Faisal bin Fahd | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050902 | |||||
Prince Halifa Bin Hassan | Prince Halifa Bin Hassan | al-Qaeda | India-Pakistan | 20060817 | Link | ||||
Prince Jalawi ibn Abdul Aziz | Prince Jalawi ibn Abdul Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050907 | |||||
Prince Khaled Al-Faisal | Prince Khaled Al-Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20031104 | |||||
Prince Khaled Al-Faisal | King Faisal Foundation | Arabia | 20031104 | ||||||
Prince Khaled bin Sultan | Prince Khaled bin Sultan | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20030928 | |||||
Prince Mishaal Bin Abdul Aziz | Prince Mishaal Bin Abdul Aziz | Saudi Princes | India-Pakistan | 20030822 | |||||
Prince Miteb bin Abdulaziz | Prince Miteb bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040317 | |||||
Prince Mohammed bin Fahd | Prince Mohammed bin Fahd | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040606 | Link | ||||
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Prince Muhammad ibn Fahd | Prince Muhammad ibn Fahd | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040704 | Link | ||||
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Prince Muqrin | Prince Muqrin | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050819 | |||||
Prince Nawaf | Prince Nawaf | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20020420 | |||||
Prince Nawaf bin Abdul-Aziz | Prince Nawaf bin Abdul-Aziz | Saudi Princes | Axis of Evil | 20030120 | |||||
Prince Nawaf bin Abdulaziz | Prince Nawaf bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040317 | |||||
Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz | Prince Nayef Bin Abdel Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20030528 | |||||
Prince Naif | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20020202 | ||||||
Prince Nayef Bin Abdul Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20021105 | ||||||
Prince Naif bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050802 | ||||||
Prince Nayef | Saudi Princes | Arabia | Saudi | Big Shot | 20020206 | ||||
Prince Nayef ben Sultan ben Fawwaz Al-Shaalan | Saudi Princes | Europe | 20031001 | ||||||
Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050619 | ||||||
Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz | Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20031020 | |||||
Prince Salman Bin Abdulaziz | Popular Committee For Assisting The Palestinian Mujahideen | Middle East | 20030422 | ||||||
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Prince Sattam bin Abdulaziz | Prince Sattam bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040317 | |||||
Prince Saud Al-Faisal | Prince Saud Al-Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040317 | |||||
Prince Saud al-Faisal | Prince Saud al-Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20030420 | |||||
Prince Saud ibn Abdul Mohsen | Prince Saud ibn Abdul Mohsen | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20030602 | |||||
Prince Sultan Bin Faisal Bin Turki | Prince Sultan Bin Faisal Bin Turki | Saudi Princes | Middle East | 20020723 | |||||
Prince Sultan Ibn Abd Al-Aziz As-Saud | Prince Sultan Ibn Abd Al-Aziz As-Saud | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20030416 | |||||
Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz | Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050802 | |||||
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Prince Sultan bin Turki | Prince Sultan bin Turki | Saudi Princes | Middle East | 20030118 | |||||
Prince Sultan bin Turki bin Abd al-Aziz | Prince Sultan bin Turki bin Abd al-Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040121 | |||||
Prince Talal | Prince Talal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050611 | |||||
Prince Talal bin Abdel-Aziz | Prince Talal bin Abdel-Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20031130 | |||||
Prince Turki Al Faisal | Prince Turki Al Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20021008 | |||||
Prince Turki Al-Faisal | Prince Turki Al-Faisal | Al-Qaeda | Arabia | 20050704 | |||||
Prince Turki Al-Faisal | King Faisal Center for Islamic Studies and Research | Arabia | 20021109 | ||||||
Prince Turki al-Faisal | Prince Turki al-Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20050807 | |||||
Prince Turki al-Faisal bin Abdul Aziz | Prince Turki al-Faisal bin Abdul Aziz | al-Qaeda | Arabia | 20030831 | |||||
Prince Walid bin Talal | Prince Walid bin Talal | Saudi Princes | Middle East | 20030118 | |||||
Princess Buniah al-Saud | Princess Buniah al-Saud | Saudi Princes | Home Front | 20020702 | |||||
Princess Fahda bint Saud ibn Abd Al-Aziz | Princess Fahda bint Saud ibn Abd Al-Aziz | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20040203 | |||||
Princess Haifa Al-Faisal | Princess Haifa Al-Faisal | Saudi Princes | Arabia | 20021123 |
Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
The Potemkin Mutiny: How Japanese Money Set the Black Sea on Fire |
2025-07-07 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. by Stanislav Smirnov [REGNUM] At midday on June 20 (July 3, new style) 1905, the Russian St. Andrew's flag was lowered and the Romanian flag was raised over the battleship Prince Potemkin-Tavrichesky. Sailors were descending from the gangway - members of the crew of the rebellious ship that had left Crimea for the Romanian port of Constanta. The mutineers were preparing to divide the captured ship's cash register and go home. On June 26 (July 9), a squadron of the Black Sea Fleet arrived from Sevastopol to take back the interned ship. The Russian fleet flag was raised again on the Potemkin, and a priest sprinkled the deck with holy water - to drive out the "demon of revolution". ![]() Thus ended one of the key and incredibly mythologized episodes of the first Russian revolution. Which - both in Soviet historical works and in the public consciousness (including in modern times) - is considered in isolation from the Russo-Japanese War, which seemed to be going on in parallel with the "popular indignation" and independently of it. The rebellion on one of the flagships of the Black Sea Fleet is perceived as something also unrelated to the course of the war in the Pacific Ocean and on the fields of Manchuria. But is this so? The question is not only abstractly historical (in connection with the 120th anniversary of the uprising and, at the same time, the centenary of Sergei Eisenstein’s brilliant film, which is also celebrated this year), but also relevant. WERE THERE WORMS? The drama on the Potemkin began on June 14 (27) and lasted for more than a week. One of the Black Sea Fleet's new acquisitions became the "stage". The main characters and extras were played by more than 700 sailors and 26 officers, led by the commander, Captain 1st Rank Yevgeny Golikov. The battleship Potemkin, a new combat ship (length - 115 m, width - 22 m) with 305 mm main caliber guns, was built at the Nikolaev shipyard, launched in 1902, and then sent to Sevastopol for completion and testing. In 1905, the battleship went to sea to conduct training firing near Odessa. Next, we cannot help but refer to Eisenstein's film, which formatted the perception of the riot on the Potemkin. One of the first episodes of the film can shock even now, let alone viewers of 1925. Rotting, wormy meat in close-up, a sailor's face distorted with anger and the title: "Brothers! Worms!" The sailors, driven to despair by the officers' bullying, start a mutiny. Which, we note, could not be regarded by the command (especially in war conditions) as anything other than a betrayal of the oath. As always, in reality things were a little more complicated. The sailors were not kept on a "diet" of rotten meat. Flour, greens and fresh vegetables, as well as 28 poods (almost 459 kg) of meat were purchased in Odessa the day before the riot. With it, "not everything is so clear-cut." The investigation into the mutiny showed that the beef was bought at a low price and, as they would say now, with an "expiring shelf life." There were no refrigeration chambers then, and some of the meat (the one that was not immediately used in the borscht) was aired. Here is the first alarm bell: for some reason this beef was lying on the spar deck, the upper deck, in the June heat, as if it was being spoiled deliberately. "MAIDAN" ON BOARD The ship's doctor unwittingly contributed - and here the film does not sin against the truth - by declaring the borscht edible. But the main thing is that two members of the crew quickly and harmoniously moved the scandal past the point of no return, after which a mutiny began. They were a native of the Volyn province, artillery non-commissioned officer Grigory Vakulenchuk, and another man with a Little Russian surname, Afanasy Matyushenko from Sevastopol. Both sympathized with the Socialist Revolutionaries, anarchists, and social democrats. Matyushenko also had experience in "protest actions" and was one of the instigators of the riot in the Lazarevsky barracks in November 1904. The command then went to meet the protesters, eased the conditions of service (this was the main demand of the sailors), and forgave the "ringleaders". But from that moment on, Afanasy Matyushenko was taken into the hands of the social democrats. But let's return to the events on board the Potemkin. From school and Eisenstein's film we remember: Captain Golikov ordered to shoot those who were unhappy with the borscht, in response to this crazy prank almost all the sailors took up arms. But in reality the situation looked different, judging by the research published in 2008 by military historian and archivist, Captain 3rd Rank Yuri Kardashev. Of the approximately 700 crew members, 71 people (9%) were active participants in the mutiny, 37 people (5%) were opponents, and the remaining 516 were a passive mass, wavering in their actions depending on the circumstances. As the historian of the Russian fleet Vladimir Shigin notes, one of the key scenes of Eisenstein's film: the preparation of the execution with the removal of the tarpaulin (on which the captain allegedly ordered the bodies to be placed and thrown into the sea) is spectacular, but it relates to pirate films, and not to the real events on the Potemkin. But, judging by the testimony of eyewitnesses, the passive majority was drawn into the mutiny under other circumstances. After the incident with the borscht, the captain lined up the crew on the poop deck, began to analyze the incident and called the guard - a murmur began among the crew: the sailors were afraid that everyone, including the innocent, could be punished "in bulk" for disobedience. At the same time, one of the officers ordered a tarpaulin from one of the launches to be moved to the deck. This coincided with the "meat" scandal and could have been perceived inappropriately - as preparation for execution. Kardashev believes that the sailors who drank a glass of vodka on an empty stomach could have become indignant. This is where sailor Matyushenko showed his mettle: first he agitated for the refusal of dinner, forbade his comrades to take borscht from the galley, and then - when almost the entire crew had already gathered on the quarterdeck, including ten unarmed senior officers - the sailor ran out with a weapon to the lined-up team, shouting: “We’ve hanged enough, let’s hang them!” SHOT FROM BEHIND As eyewitnesses recalled, several members of the team immediately followed the call. The first shot was fired by non-commissioned officer Vakulenchuk - he killed artillery lieutenant Leonid Neupokoev, who was trying to disarm the rebels. According to one version, the propagandized artilleryman did this deliberately. According to another, another absurd accident occurred. A stoker named Nikishin (who apparently also seized one of the guns) who was on the forecastle fired at a flying seagull. The roar was somehow perceived as "officers shooting at brothers", after which Vakulenchuk "in response" dealt with Neupokoyev. Be that as it may, after the first blood there is no retreat. In the ensuing melee, Matyushenko personally shot and killed five of the seven officers who fell victim to the riot. On his conscience are the deaths of senior officer Ippolit Gilyarovsky, senior mine officer Wilhelm Ton. The ship's doctor was thrown overboard. History is silent on who killed Captain Golikov. It is known that the commander tried to hide in the cabin, and when the mutineers began to break down the door, he came out. At first, the crowd discussed whether to "judge or hang" the captain, but someone from behind shouted: "Wait too long! A bullet in the forehead! Disperse!" The body of the shot Golikov was thrown overboard. In order to understand the further course of the tragedy, it is necessary to place the events on the Potemkin in the context of two related events: the Russo-Japanese War and the first Russian revolution. CONTEXT OF THE UPRISING During these weeks, the Japanese army was preparing to land on the territory of the Russian Empire - on July 7, 1905, with the invasion of Sakhalin, the last major land operation of the war began. The Russian Pacific Fleet essentially ceased to exist after the Battle of Tsushima. At the same time, even taking into account the events at Mukden, there was no talk of any collapse of the front in Manchuria. But the unsuccessful outcome of the battle increased unrest in other fleets: many sailors of the Black Sea Fleet were afraid that they would also be sent to fight in the Far East. In the rear, unrest was spreading, caused not so much by the hardships of war (they were hardly felt), but by the activity of revolutionary parties after the tragic events of 1905, coupled with the publications of the legal and illegal opposition press. Thus, in June, a strike paralyzed one of the industrial centers of the country, Ivanovo-Voznesensk. It should be noted that uprisings were also "ignited" in the army with enviable regularity. A day after the mutiny in the Black Sea Fleet began, a mutiny began in the Baltic - at the naval base in Libau (now Jelgava in Latvia). At the same time, on June 21, an armed uprising began in one of the largest cities of the Kingdom of Poland - Lodz - under leftist and separatist slogans. Nervousness about being sent to war, coupled with revolutionary agitation penetrating the fleet, plus objective problems - all this turned at least part of the sailor mass into easily flammable material. Which there was someone to set on fire. JAPANESE "GRANTS" All this time, the "Special Institute" (also known as the "Military Mission"), headed by the Japanese military attaché in Stockholm, General Motojiro Akashi, was actively working in neutral Sweden since 1904. This residency actively worked with the separatists of the Russian outskirts. From the Akashi mission, tranches were sent to the leader of the Georgian Socialist-Federalists, Georgy Dekanozov (Dekanozishvili), and the leader of the Finnish Party of Active Resistance, Konni Zilliacus. Overall, during the war years, the "Special Institute" spent about 1 million yen (86 million modern dollars) on work with oppositionists and revolutionaries throughout the Russian Empire. Finn Zilliacus organized two conferences of the Russian opposition with Japanese "grants." The first one gathered in Paris. It was attended by liberals from the "Union of Liberation" (led by the future leader of the Kadets and head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Provisional Government Pyotr Milyukov ), as well as leftists. Socialist Revolutionaries arrived, including the head of the Combat Organization Yevno Azef (who reported on the progress of the event to the St. Petersburg Police Department), as well as Belarusian, Latvian, Transcaucasian and Polish nationalists and socialists. Soon the Finnish "dispatcher" of Japanese "grants" organized the Geneva Conference - under the formal leadership of Georgy Gapon, who had "relocated" abroad, and with the participation of the Bolshevik faction of the RSDLP, headed by Vladimir Ulyanov-Lenin. At that time, Ilyich lived in the same Geneva. The reports of a direct meeting between Lenin and Akashi are disputed by many historians. As is the version that it was with Japanese money that the Bolshevik leader in January 1905 established the publication of the newspaper Vperyod in Geneva, the successor to Iskra, which, along with the Socialist Revolutionary and liberal newspapers, fanned the flames of rebellion in the empire. It is known that the Menshevik leader Julius Martov was against contacts with the Japanese. However, the Socialist Revolutionaries and people from the entourage of priest Gapon seized the opportunity. Money was received through General Akashi to purchase weapons (16 thousand rifles, 3 thousand revolvers, 3 million cartridges, as well as 3 tons of dynamite and other explosives), which were planned to be delivered by sea and "landed" at several points in the Grand Duchy of Finland. For these purposes, the steamship "John Grafton" was purchased in London. The project involved Finnish and Latvian separatists, Socialist Revolutionaries (the group of Pyotr Rutenberg, the future liquidator of double agent Azef) and Bolsheviks led by the future People's Commissar of Foreign Affairs of the USSR Maxim Litvinov. The Grafton, having reached Finland from Britain, ran aground on the shore on September 8, 1905, and sank, which was very unfortunate for the cause of the revolution. The weapons were only partially removed from the sides, and the crew fled. The remaining "barrels" were raised from the bottom a few weeks later by an expedition led by the outstanding Russian diver, Second Lieutenant Pavel Gurdov. But weapons, "grants" and subversive literature were also supplied to the revolutionaries in other ways. The mutinous heavily armed battleship was a much more valuable acquisition for the revolution than the steamship Grafton. It was not for nothing that Vladimir Ilyich seriously intended to move from Switzerland to Romania in order to coordinate the uprising from close range. SHOTS FIRED AT ODESSA At first glance, the spontaneously rebellious sailors had no plan of action, other than an unformed desire to support the revolution. That was how history was presented in Soviet textbooks. But the mutineers quickly developed a plan: to take the battleship to Odessa, where anti-government rallies were taking place at that time, and spread the rebellion to other ships of the Black Sea Fleet. Here two people who have remained in the shadows until now enter the story. These are two members of the Odessa "United Commission" (created by two city groups of the RSDLP, Bolshevik and Menshevik, to coordinate protests) - Mensheviks Konstantin Feldman and Anatoly Brzhezovsky. In other sources, the Polish surname is rendered in Russian - Berezovsky. The Bolshevik part of the commission was in contact with Geneva. According to one version, Feldman and Berezovsky-Brzhezovsky secretly got on board in Sevastopol, as part of a group of repair workers; according to another, they got on the ship when the Potemkin approached Odessa on June 27, and the Social Democrats from the United Commission began “relationships” with the anarchist Matyushenko. It is known that it was Comrade Feldman who proposed the bombing of Odessa, after which two shots were fired at the city from 152 mm guns with high-explosive and armor-piercing shells. He also insisted that the crew land troops and join the uprising. At the suggestion (actually the order) of the revolutionaries, the Andreevsky flag was lowered on the battleship and the red flag was raised. This episode marked the end of Eisenstein's film. But the real story of the rebellion was just beginning. The Odessa commission had serious plans. During the revolution, small "republics" were proclaimed all over the country, from Georgian Guria to Chita, but more interesting prospects were opening up here. If we are to believe the report of an eyewitness of the events, journalist Stanislav Orlitsky (though it was written after the suppression of the revolution, in 1907), one of the members of the Bolshevik-Menshevik "Commission" Sergei Zuckerberg literally stated the following: "The sailors are on our side. And since the battleships are ours, the entire south will be ours. Here a Southern Republic is being created with Crimea and the most fertile lands of Volyn and Podolia... Let the old, uncultured, oppressive Moscow perish from internal strife...". In any case, the speeches of the “committee members” (as the members of the “United Commission” were also called) featured a name that all of Russia would recognize within a few months. This was an officer of the Black Sea Fleet, Lieutenant Pyotr Petrovich Schmidt, the son of the hero of the defense of Sevastopol and at the same time a man with a strange biography, either a “non-party socialist” thirsting for a feat, or a nervous patient, possessed by delusions of grandeur (in any case, he had been a patient in psychiatric clinics more than once). But in June 1905, at the height of unrest in Odessa, Schmidt found himself involved not in a political but in a quasi-criminal scandal. This, like the story of the mutiny on the cruiser Ochakov, which gave birth to a rich mythology (and at the same time the "children of Lieutenant Schmidt" Ilf and Petrov), will require a separate story. For now, let us note that during the Potemkin adventure, the strange officer did not have time to "come in handy." Thanks to the energetic measures taken by the fleet commander, Vice-Admiral Grigory Chukhnin, and other commanders, naval and army, the revolutionary rebellion in Odessa and on the Black Sea Fleet ships was suppressed at the cost of half the city's annual budget. For the "reprisal" Admiral Chukhnin was shot by a Socialist Revolutionary terrorist in 1906, but the moment for a large-scale uprising was missed. THE INGLORIOUS FATE OF THE INSTIGATORS Upon learning of this, the battleship's crew was at a loss. Many realized the criminality of what they had done, but it was too late. Having assessed the situation, the Potemkin-Tavrichesky weighed anchor and headed for Romania, where the crew asked for political asylum. The Romanian authorities put forward their own conditions: the sailors surrender as military deserters, although without extradition. At first, this did not suit the mutineers, and for some time the Potemkin, pursued by the government squadron, chaotically scurried around the Black Sea (Constanza, Feodosia, Constanza again) in search of at least some way out. The way out was the "relocation" of the mutineers, whose well-being was ensured by the plundered ship's cashbox. It is not only a matter of glorification in the Soviet era. In 1905, a mutiny in the Black Sea Fleet after the destruction of the Pacific Fleet damaged Russia's international position. Japan, which was at war, did not hide its joy. Britain demanded that Turkey (in violation of the London Convention of 1841, the predecessor of the current Montreux Convention) allow warships into the Black Sea in order to "safeguard merchant ships." Romania "bravely" refused to extradite war criminals from the Potemkin to St. Petersburg, and Turkey did not help Russia put pressure on Bucharest. As a result, additional arguments emerged in favor of ending the war with Japan as quickly as possible (which the American mediators insisted on) – it was necessary to pacify our own south. But if globally Operation Potemkin was almost successful for our opponents, the immediate executors did not gain laurels. Matyushenko, for whom the Socialist Revolutionaries and Bolsheviks fought, went on a European tour, giving interviews. But his career ended quickly. The instigator of the rebellion was sent to Russia for terrorist work, arrested in Odessa with a load of bombs and executed by sentence of a military field court in Sevastopol in October 1907. Already in July 1905, the trial of the rebels began in Odessa - those who landed in Feodosia during the riots and were later arrested. Three were sentenced to death, which was replaced by 15 years of hard labor by imperial decree. Three more received shorter terms of hard labor, the rest were sentenced to prison companies. The officers who survived the mutiny on the battleship Potemkin-Tavrichesky became the object of revenge after October 1917. In particular, in 1918, midshipman Boris Vakhtin was arrested by the Bolsheviks and killed in Sevastopol. What followed is well known: the glorification of the uprising in Soviet times and an uncertain attitude in modern times. In post-Soviet Ukraine, the mutiny on the Potemkin is interpreted as a Ukrainian uprising in "Ukrainian" Odessa against "Russian imperialism," in which "Panas Matyushenko" turns out to be the main hero. Perhaps, in modern Russia, a mutiny in wartime should no longer be perceived as a positive event in national history. |
Link |
Africa North |
Well-preserved Greek and Roman tombs discovered in Egypt |
2025-07-06 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. [Regnum] Archaeologists have discovered well-preserved tombs from the Ptolemaic and Roman periods in southern Egypt during excavations in Aswan. The discovery was made by a joint Egyptian-Italian mission, the country's Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities reported. ![]() The rock-cut tombs were found in a cemetery near the Aga Khan mausoleum on the west bank of Aswan. They contain hieroglyphic inscriptions that are in good condition. As noted by the department, one of the discovered tombs is located at a depth of more than two meters underground, with a stone staircase of nine steps leading to it. Inside this tomb, a limestone sarcophagus about two meters high was found, located on a rocky platform. Its lid is made in the form of a person with bright features of a human face. The sarcophagus has hieroglyphic texts. Archaeologists have established that the owner of the tomb was a high-ranking official from Aswan. Mummies, including those of children, were also found in the sarcophagus. Secretary General of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities Mohamed Ismail Khaled said the finds and inscriptions would provide rich scientific material for Egyptologists. He said tomography and biological analysis of the mummies found are planned. As previously reported by Regnum News Agency, in the Saqqara region south of Cairo, Egyptian archaeologists discovered the tomb of Prince Waser-if-re, the son of King Userkaf. |
Link |
Caribbean-Latin America | |
Violent criminal gangs have 'near-total control' of Haiti's capital, UN says | |
2025-07-04 | |
[FoxNews] Haiti's criminal gangs have exerted "near-total control" over the capital, as escalating violence pushes the Caribbean nation "closer to the brink," senior U.N. officials warned Wednesday. Gangs control an estimated 90% of Port-au-Prince, Ghada Fathy Waly, executive director of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, told the U.N. Security Council. Waly noted that gangs are expanding into previously peaceful areas. "Southern Haiti, which until recently was insulated from the violence, has seen a sharp increase in gang-related incidents," she said. "And in the east, criminal groups are exploiting land routes, including key crossings like Belladere and Malpasse, where attacks against police and customs officials have been reported." U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Miroslav Jenca informed the council that "the ongoing gang encirclement of Port-au-Prince" and their strengthened foothold in the capital and beyond is "pushing the situation closer to the brink." "Without increased action by the international community, the total collapse of state presence in the capital could become a very real scenario," he warned. Gangs have gained power since President Jovenel Moïse's assassination in July 2021, previously controlling 85% of the capital. Haiti has not had a president since the assassination. A new U.N. report covering last October through February highlights that gangs have exploited political turmoil and Haiti's disorganized security response, saying competing political ambitions and corruption allegations within transitional governing bodies have hindered action.
Related: Port-au-Prince: 2025-06-27 A year in, Haiti mission leader warns of shortfalls in troops, funds, gear Port-au-Prince: 2025-06-20 Haiti's Capital Blacked Out After Mob Storms Hydroelectric Plant to Protest Gang Violence Port-au-Prince: 2025-06-12 Record number: nearly 1.3 million Haitians now internally displaced | |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Outsourced and exposed: Civilian contractors are on the frontlines of the Gaza war |
2025-07-02 |
[IsraelTimes] As sanctioned firms secure Defense Ministry contracts, questions grow about oversight, legality, and the blurred line between soldier and civilian With Israel’s war against the Hamas ![]() terror group in Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with a rusty iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... in its 21st month, a quiet but dangerous reality has taken root: Civilian contractors, hired by the Defense Ministry, are regularly carrying out demolition, engineering and logistical work deep inside the war zone. Though officially noncombatants, many now operate on or near the front lines, assuming risks normally reserved for soldiers in uniform. Those risks became tragically clear in late May, when 19-year-old David Libi, a civilian contractor, was killed by a bomb while operating engineering equipment during IDF operations in northern Gaza. According to the military, Libi was working in the Jabalia area when the bomb detonated. He was the third Defense Ministry contractor killed in Gaza since the war began. Libi worked for Libi Construction and Infrastructure, a firm recently sanctioned by the United Kingdom for supporting illegal West Bank outposts, and owned by his father, Harel Libi. The UK Foreign Office accused the company of providing "logistical and financial support" for settlement expansion that led to the forced displacement of Paleostinians. Harel Libi, a resident of the illegal West Bank outpost of Adei Ad, was also sanctioned for "acts of aggression and violence against Paleostinian individuals," as were other far-right activists involved in similar activity. According to watchdog group Kerem Navot, Libi Construction has operated extensively in unauthorized areas of the West Bank, including building infrastructure for illegal outposts like Coco’s Farm, which was also sanctioned. Paleostinian groups have accused Libi’s employees of harassing local herders and preventing grazing. Despite the sanctions and allegations, Libi Construction continued to operate under Defense Ministry contracts and remained active in Gaza. The ministry declined to comment on its continued collaboration with the company or on the broader role of civilian contractors in the Strip. Libi Construction did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Defense Ministry has hired numerous civilians like David Libi to take on demolition and logistical tasks, thereby freeing up IDF units for combat roles. But the use of civilian contractors in active war zones raises serious questions about oversight, legality, and the true nature of these workers’ status. THE RISE OF CIVILIAN CONTRACTORS IN MODERN WARFARE Dr. Ori Swed, director of the Texas Security Center at Texas Tech University, told The Times of Israel that while outsourcing in military contexts is not new, its scope and visibility have grown significantly since the 1990s. He pointed to "high-profile cases" like Blackwater, the American private military contractor whose controversial role in the Iraq War brought international attention to the use of civilian contractors in active combat zones. In 2007, Blackwater contractors escorting a US diplomatic convoy opened fire in Baghdad’s Nisour Square, killing 17 Iraqi civilians. The massacre led Iraq to revoke the company’s license to operate, though the US later reinstated it temporarily. The incident prompted criminal convictions, FBI investigations, and widespread scrutiny of legal accountability for contractors. Erik Prince, Blackwater’s founder, has long denied wrongdoing, accusing the US government of targeting the company with what he called "baseless" claims — including allegations of negligence, racial discrimination, murder, and weapons smuggling. Swed emphasized that incidents like that of Blackwater do not reflect the private military industry as a whole, describing it as a "tragic, extreme, and deeply problematic case." "Military operations aren’t just about the shooting part," Swed said. "They involve construction, logistics, transportation, communications, even healthcare. When a state military doesn’t have all the resources or specialization in-house — or simply needs to expand capacity — it turns to the private sector." In Gaza, these civilian contractors have been used to construct and demolish roads, clear rubble, and modify terrain to facilitate troop movements and control territory — actions Swed describes as key to modern military engineering. Other private actors, like the US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, have also entered the field, distributing food aid under Defense Ministry coordination. Since it launched in late May, the GHF said it has provided over 46 million meals to Paleostinian civilians, though its operations have been marred by reports of near-daily deadly shootings of Paleostinians attempting to reach distribution points across IDF lines. THE PATH TO GAZA: BUREAUCRATIC AND OPAQUE According to CivilEng, a private organization representing construction professionals in Israel, to take part in operations, companies must first register with the government’s Construction Center under the Technology and Logistics Directorate of the IDF, as well as with the Registrar of Contractors. Only then can they apply to become recognized providers of government work and bid on Defense Ministry tenders. The ministry’s Department of Engineering and Construction, according to its own website, is staffed by a mix of IDF officers and civilian engineers. It oversees the planning and execution of military infrastructure, including much of the work currently being carried out in Gaza. Still, transparency around these operations is minimal. Swed notes that security concerns often prevent disclosure of information to the public. "This entire field is shrouded in secrecy by design," he said. "Anything related to military operations — especially in conflict zones — involves layers of security. Contractors are no exception. Disclosing identities, contracts, even logistics, can put people’s lives at risk." RISK WITHOUT RECOGNITION Despite operating in war zones, contractors like Libi do not receive the same public recognition or legal protection as soldiers. "When contractors die, it doesn’t register with the public the same way a soldier’s death does," Swed said. "There’s a perception that [contractors] are there for money and that they accepted the risk voluntarily." Unlike IDF soldiers, civilian contractors are not considered combatants under international law and therefore are not entitled to prisoner-of-war status if captured. They also operate under private contracts rather than formal military command, leaving oversight fragmented and accountability less defined. Contractors working in conflict zones are not covered by the institutional protections soldiers receive — such as pensions, long-term benefits, or legal aid through the military justice system — and must instead rely on basic civilian labor laws. "The actors for these security companies are not soldiers...but at the same time, they’re not non-combatants," Swed explained. He pointed to the broader political utility of outsourcing. "It allows the state to reduce the political pressure that comes with military casualties or unpopular drafts," he said, adding that "sometimes, it’s simply more cost-effective and flexible than deploying military personnel." However, by candlelight every wench is handsome... that flexibility can come at a human cost. "This industry has had major legal issues, mostly related to labor rights and worker protections," Swed said. "When you’re operating in dangerous areas, far from oversight, the risk of exploitation increases." A BLURRED LINE Though exact numbers are not publicly available, the presence of Israeli civilian contractors in Gaza appears to be growing. Many reportedly come from West Bank settlements, raising further political questions about motivation, ideology, and government hiring preferences — though Swed cautions against speculation without hard evidence. "It’s possible that [the current] government prefers to hire companies whose bids come from individuals with a particular motivation system," he acknowledged, but he maintained that it is impossible to determine the true reasoning without more information. What is clear, however, is that the line between civilian and soldier in Israel’s war effort is becoming increasingly blurred. For contractors like Libi, the consequences are tragically clear — operating as civilians in a combat zone and taking on the dangers of war, without an official status or protection. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Lara Trump interview: Iran at a Crossroads: Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi Announces Opposition Front |
2025-06-29 |
[FoxNews] Starting at the 18:40 minutes mark Summary: Iran's Exiled Crown Prince to Lead a Team of Citizens, Some Military and Security Forces and Members of the Civilian Bureaucracy and to Begin a Peaceful Transition into a Constitutional Society, Starting Perhaps in Six Months Lara interviews the Crown Prince. Here’s a summary. He says the regime is on the brink of collapse and is at it’s weakest. He goes into detail about a variety of hardships. Iranian citizens have suffered tremendously and lost hope. While the Persian carpet industry may flourish it’s under rigid control, while other industrys have been decimated. They’re the friends of America just as much as before 1979 and they were the first one’s to be targeted by the regime. Thousands of Americans have been killed for their purpose. His solution is to lead the country to an organized and stable transition. Citizens will vote by referendum to establish the rules, with separation of religion from state. They will be peaceful with all neighbors and especially America. Related: Reza Pahlavi 06/25/2025 Make Iran Great Again? 'Tehrangeles' community in LA reflects on US strikes Reza Pahlavi 06/25/2025 Pause to Disguise: West Prepares for Main Task in Iran Reza Pahlavi 06/20/2025 Iranian girls remove hijabs, take over school, chant ‘Death to the dictator and the Islamic regime; Tehran crowds chant for Shah’s return |
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Fifth Column | |
Grand jury indicts Yassin Terou, 11 others more than a year after UT protests calling for Gaza ceasefire | |
2025-06-29 | |
[WBIR] The indictments come more than a year after two different protests on UT's campus ended in several arrests. A Knox County grand jury indicted a prominent Knoxville restaurateur and several others for criminal trespassing more than a year after they participated in peaceful protests on the University of Tennessee's campus. Yassin Terou, who owns Yassin's Falafel House in Knoxville, and nine others are facing criminal trespassing charges for participating in the "Nakba Day Vigil" on May 15, 2024, at UT's campus. UT police cuffed Terou and others outside the law school after a group participating in the vigil was warned they were in an unauthorized area and told to leave. Terou said he tried to speak with police and asked if they could quickly use the area to mourn Palestinians killed and communities uprooted during the Nakba. According to the arrest report, the group had been assigned a space for the event immediately across the street on Cumberland Avenue outside the Student Union Plaza, which had been reserved until 10 p.m. UTPD said the group did not leave the unreserved space outside the law school and were given two warnings to leave before they took them into custody. Following his arrest, Terou filed a complaint with UTPD about the arrest, claiming officers aggravated existing nerve damage during the arrest, which caused his arm to need a sling. He spent part of the night in the hospital after he was arrested. UTPD said it conducted an internal investigation and found no policy violations were committed. WBIR 10News reached out to Terou's attorney. The attorney said he was out of town on a humanitarian mission, but said he was "disappointed it is necessary" after she told him about the indictment: Two others were charged with criminal trespassing for participating in peaceful protests on UT's campus on May 2, 2024, to raise awareness of the ongoing attacks in Gaza and to stand in solidarity with Palestinians. The two were not students at UT and are scheduled to be arraigned in court on July 16. The following people were indicted, records show:
Seven other UT students were taken into custody and cited during the May 2 protests. UT said the seven were sanctioned for violating university policy over the use of outdoor space.
[HotAir] What does it say that a professor at Georgetown University--an Episcopalian, no less--is calling for Iran to strike US bases in the Middle East? At first, it would seem an odd flex until you understand that it is part of the "decolonization" effort that we hear so much about. After all, the very same people who argue that America is evil and must be destroyed are deeply invested in open borders and unlimited immigration into the United States. If the US is so racist and cruel, why would every Mahmoud, Mohammed, and Jose want to come here as "refugees" from countries they purport to love so deeply? The names: California State University Professor Dr. David Yaghoubian UChicago professor Alireza Doostdar, whose brother is in prison for spying for Iran Princeton refuses to punish masked students who hurled slurs at Jews [CampusReform] Princeton University has yet to punish anti-Israel demonstrators for disrupting an April event at the school’s campus that featured a former Israeli politician. At the April 7 protest, around 250 protesters called former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett a 'war criminal,' referred to Jewish students as 'inbreds,' and demanded they return to Europe. Antisemitic law student at U of Florida awarded for paper defending white supremacy A University of Florida law student who posted that Jews must be “abolished by any means necessary” won an award for a paper in which he argued that the Constitution applies solely to white people. The honor for an avowed white supremacist and antisemite has roiled the campus at the public university, in a state where a 2023 law prevents state funding for university programs that advocate for “diversity, equity and inclusion or promote or engage in political or social activism.” Preston Damsky, 29, received the “book award” for a paper he wrote for a class last fall. In the paper, he argued for the removal of voting rights protections for non-white citizens and orders to kill “criminal infiltrators at the border,” according to the New York Times. The award for the paper was given to Damsky by Federal Judge John L. Badalamenti, a Trump administration appointee who taught Damsky’s class. The law school’s interim dean, Merritt McAlister, initially defended Damsky’s accolade, invoking “institutional neutrality,” arguing in an email to the law school community that professors must not engage in “viewpoint discrimination” according to the Times. | |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
A year in, Haiti mission leader warns of shortfalls in troops, funds, gear |
2025-06-27 |
[Reuters] The commander of the United Nations-backed security mission in Haiti, mandated to fight powerful armed gangs in the nation, on Thursday called on more countries to lend their support as he marked one year since the first troops deployed. The first deployment of police from Kenya, which is leading the mission, arrived last June, over a year and a half after Haiti's government had first requested urgent support. "As a new model, funded by voluntary partners, the mission faces challenges - including funding, personnel and logistics - that are being addressed to enable the mission to achieve its objectives on schedule," Godfrey Otunge, commander of the Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission, told reporters at an event in Port-au-Prince, the capital. While the U.N. aimed for the mission, which was sent to aid the Haitian National Police, to reach some 2,500 troops, well under half are currently deployed. More than 3,000 personnel were pledged in initial commitments. In a note sent to the U.N. Security Council last week, Kenyan President William Ruto said 991 troops were currently deployed, mostly Kenyans but also 150 Guatemalans, 78 Salvadorans, 23 Jamaicans, six Bahamians and two Belizeans. He said that many were on standby because existing contracts for logistical support could not provide for them. "The MSS is also operating below the required capabilities in terms of equipment and operational support necessary to execute the mission effectively," Ruto added. "The equipment levels stand at below 30% of planned capabilities." Despite the lack of resources, Otunge said on Thursday that the mission had managed to establish two key strategic bases in the Artibonite department, the area outside the capital worst-hit by the violence. Haitian leaders have repeatedly called for the voluntary mission to be converted into a formal U.N. peacekeeping mission in order to shore up resources, but efforts stalled at the Security Council after opposition from Russia and China. Gang violence in Haiti has displaced some 1.3 million people from their homes, fueling hunger and insecurity, while hospitals have shut their doors, and much of the economy, judicial system and government remain paralyzed. Some 580,000 people were displaced before the first deployment. Related: Haiti: 2025-06-24 Adios Amigos: Supreme Court lets Trump end legal protections for 500k migrants, exposing more to deportation Haiti: 2025-06-21 US government to build $8.5M fly-breeding facility to combat cattle parasite threat Haiti: 2025-06-21 Putin says that the US admitted to spending $5 billion on the coup in Ukraine |
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Africa Subsaharan |
Again, court jails ''Mama Boko Haram'' two others for N11m contract fraud in Maiduguri |
2025-06-27 |
[VANGUARDNGR] A Borno State High Court sitting in Maiduguri has again convicted and sentenced Aisha Alkali Wakil, popularly known as Mama Boko Haram, alongside her associates Tahiru Saidu Daura and Prince Lawal Shoyode, to 14 years imprisonment each for a contract scam involving N11 million. Justice Aisha Kumaliya delivered the ruling on Wednesday, June 25, 2025, following a protracted trial that began after the trio was arraigned by the Maiduguri Zonal Directorate of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on September 14, 2020. The defendants, who served as Chief Executive Officer, Programme Manager, and Country Director respectively of the NGO, Complete Care and Aids Foundation, were charged with two counts of conspiracy and obtaining money by false pretence. According to a statement released Wednesday night by the EFCC Spokesman, Dele Oyewale, the convicts fraudulently obtained N11 million from one Muhammed Ambare of Muhammed Ambare Ventures in July 2018 under the guise of supplying and servicing two X-ray machines — a contract which turned out to be fictitious. Count two of the charge stated: ''That you, Aisha Alkali Wakil, Tahiru Saidu Daura, Prince Lawal Shoyode, and Saidu Mukhtar (now on the lam), with intent to defraud, obtained N11,000,000.00 from one Muhammed Ambare under the false pretence of executing a contract for supply, installation, and servicing of 2 units of X-Ray Machine Model 1800, which you knew to be false—'' The defendants initially pleaded not guilty "Wudn't me." , prompting the case to proceed to full trial. The EFCC, represented by prosecutors Mukhtar Ali Ahmed and S.O. Saka, presented a witness and submitted documentary evidence to support the case. Justice Kumaliya found the three guilty on both counts, sentencing them to seven years on each count, to run concurrently — amounting to 14 years each. Additionally, the court ordered them to jointly refund N8 million to the petitioner or face another seven years behind bars in default of payment. The case marks yet another legal blow for Wakil, who has faced multiple fraud-related convictions in recent years, despite her once-prominent public image as a humanitarian and peace advocate in the North-East. Related: Mama Boko Haram, 06/24/2023 Nigeria: displaced person camps under pressure Mama Boko Haram, 01/19/2023 Boko Haram Terrorists Launch Attack On Borno Community, Kill Farmer, Abduct Eight Others Mama Boko Haram, 01/09/2023 Home Of Late Boko Haram Founder, Mohammed Yusuf In Borno Becomes Criminal Hideout |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Current information on the situation on the front line on June 26 (updated) |
2025-06-27 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. [NewsFront] 20:52 Shooting down of Ukrainian hexacopters by FPV drones in Novoselovsky direction —video. ![]() 19:51 Servicemen of the 6th Motorized Rifle Division of the "Southern" group of forces sharpen skills in operating infantry fighting vehicles and tanks in the rear area of the North Military District. The tank crews fired from the T-72B3 tank cannon at moving targets from a stationary position and on the move. The firing range also hosts fire training with BMP-2 crews. The servicemen improve their aiming skills, identifying advantageous positions for shooting, conducting reconnaissance, and interacting with infantry. Drivers-mechanics completed exercises in driving combat vehicles over rough terrain, overcoming natural obstacles and barriers. 19:25 Air strike on positions of the 141st Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces —video. 18:22 Situation in the South Donetsk direction In the area of responsibility of the 29th Army: - The assault groups of the Transbaikalians came close to Chervona Zirka from the east. All attempts by the enemy to stop the advance of the 36th Guards Motorized Rifle Brigade were unsuccessful. Four forest belts were cleared from the enemy presence, the advance in depth to the borders of Chervona Zirka amounted to more than one kilometer. 17:54 Footage of the destruction of a Ukrainian Armed Forces bunker by artillerymen from the “Yug” group in the area of the settlement of Katerynivka —video. 16:53 New selection from drone operators of the Rubicon Center FPV drone crews destroyed: armored and automotive equipment, communication systems, manpower, firing positions, fortifications of the Ukrainian Armed Forces —video. 16:25 The Ukrainian Armed Forces tried to camouflage their tank in a forest plantation, but our drone operators burned the armored vehicles with several drones —video. 15:40 Detachment "Anwar" cleans upbuffer zone of Sumy and Chernihiv regions from Ukrainian militants. — VOP Armed Forces of Ukraine, settlement Khrenovka, Chernihiv region 15:05 UAV operators of the 44th Army Corps of the North group reveal and destroy the enemy in the Khar'kov direction with the help of Supercam S350 reconnaissance drones and FPV drones. – Drone operators from the “West” group destroyed a pickup truck and personnel of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in the Krasnolimansk direction. 14:45 Calculations of the Geranium-2 UAV are being carried around temporary deployment point of the Ukrainian Armed Forces unit in the area of the settlement of Novoekonomicheskoe in the DPR. 14:05 Our border guards destroy an enemy self-propelled gun, –video. The scouts discovered the movement of an enemy self-propelled artillery unit. The coordinates were transmitted to border guard FPV operators, who carried out several targeted strikes, first stopping and then destroying the enemy weapon. 13:35 During an active offensive in the South Donetsk direction, servicemen of the 57th Guards Motorized Rifle Brigade succeeded in breaking through the Ukrainian Armed Forces' defenses and gain a foothold in the Shevchenko settlement in the DPR. With the support of artillery and attack UAVs, the Ukrainian formations were driven out of the village. The village of Shevchenko became another point liberated during the active offensive of the units of the "East" military group in the direction of the Dnepropetrovsk region. 13:05 From 09:00 Moscow time to 11:00 Moscow time by air defense systems on duty destroyed and intercepted six Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles of the aircraft type over the territory of the Bryansk region. 12:54 Crews of Geranium-type unmanned aerial vehicles hit the Ukrainian Armed Forces UAV assembly shop at the Kramatorsk airfield —video. 12:21 Summary of Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation on the progress of the special military operation as of June 26, 2025 The Armed Forces of the Russian Federation continue to conduct a special military operation. 11:45 Military personnel of the "Vostok" group told details of the liberation of the settlement of Yalta in the DPR. Under the impact of heavy artillery and attack UAV fire, the enemy was forced to abandon their firing positions and flee the village. In less than three days, the attack aircraft established full control over the settlement, unfurling Russian Federation flags on administrative buildings. According to the participants in the operation, the decisive role was played by the speed and pressure in the first minutes of entering the settlement. “When entering from the forest belt, it was necessary to act quickly, boldly and confidently – immediately take the first fortified areas in order to create a ‘storage area’ and move forward,” noted the platoon commander with the call sign ‘Prince’. The servicemen also reported on the situation that had developed for the enemy at the time of the assault. "They heard Polish speech in the radio intercept. When they entered the settlement, they started to panic a little. Later it snowballed. And the enemy started to flee," said a participant in the operation. 11:23 During aerial reconnaissance, an artillery crew of the 18th Army discovered and destroyed a control point for Ukrainian Armed Forces UAVs on the eastern outskirts of the village of Nikolskoye —video. 10:41 Russian Aerospace Forcesworkedat the enemy's temporary deployment points with FAB-500 and FAB-1500 aerial bombs Three FAB-500 bombs with a universal planning and correction module hit a temporary deployment point of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in the area of the settlement of Novoekonomicheskoe in the DPR. The second airstrike using FAB-1500 was carried out on a fortified air defense system of a Ukrainian Armed Forces unit in the Dnipropetrovsk region. 10:24 Criminal Kyiv regime continues shelling civilian infrastructure of populated areas of the left bank of the Kherson region Yesterday, during the day, the Ukrainian Armed Forces released: - According to n.p. Sergeevka 2 rounds; – Five rounds in the village of Pervomayevka; - According to n.p. Kakhovka 4 rounds; – Six rounds to the settlement of Tavriysk; – Three rounds to the village of Aleshki; – Four rounds to the settlement of Podstepnoye. The Ukrainian Armed Forces used drones to attack the Kakhovka District, a mobile phone tower, and a civilian truck in Chernyanka. Also, two people were injured in Oleshky as a result of shelling by the Ukrainian Armed Forces. During the night, the Kyiv regime continued to shell civilian infrastructure in Novaya Kakhovka, Mala Lepetikha, Mala Kardashynka, and Knyaze-Grygorovka, firing a total of 25 rounds from barrel artillery. The number of civilian casualties and infrastructure destruction is being clarified. 9:55 Information on strikes carried out by the Ukrainian Armed Forces on the Belgorod region over the past 24 hours: Air defense system over Alekseevsky municipal district knocked down two aircraft-type UAVs. No consequences. 9:10 Front summary as of the morning of 06/26/2025 Zaporizhzhya Front. No significant changes in the LBS have been recorded over the past 24 hours. Positional battles continue with exchanges of artillery strikes and active UAV operations. 8:25 During the past night, air defense systems on duty intercepted and destroyed 50 Ukrainian aircraft-type unmanned aerial vehicles:
8:05 Russian Ministry of Defense: – Crew of the 152mm howitzer "Msta-B" of the 90th Guards Tank Division of the "Center" group of forces destroyed a stronghold of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in the Krasnoarmeysk direction.– The crew of the Msta-B gun of the Tula paratroopers destroyed fortified positions of the Ukrainian Armed Forces with personnel in the Yunakovka area in the Sumy region. |
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Home Front: WoT |
Make Iran Great Again? 'Tehrangeles' community in LA reflects on US strikes |
2025-06-25 |
[BBC] A woman in a "Make America Great Again" hat leads a chant for "regime change" in Iran. The crowds dance and wave Iranian, Israeli and American flags as Persian music blasts. Car horns beep in support but also some annoyance in LA's gridlocked traffic. Protests outside the West LA Federal Building are a common site, but even by LA standards this one is unusual, happening under the watchful eyes of armed US Marines, controversially ordered there by President Trump during protests against immigration raids. But these immigrants are proudly demonstrating in MAGA hats in support of President Trump and his decision to intervene in the Israel-Iran conflict by launching air strikes against Iranian nuclear sites. "We want regime change in Iran," says Bita Ashrafi, who left Iran 50 years ago and attended the protest wearing a "Trump Was Right About Everything" hat. "I fully support President Trump's decisions because this has been going on for 46 plus years - the tyranny, the dictatorship." West LA, often called Tehrangeles, is home to the largest population of Iranians outside of Iran, formerly known as Persia. There are Persian restaurants and bookstores and shops selling the saffron and rose ice cream popular in Iran. Many of Southern California's Persian Americans are in full support of President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. But others say the involvement of the US, known as the "Great Satan" in Iran, will only bolster Iran's leaders. Ms Ashrafi took to the streets with several hundred others to show her support for Trump and regime change in Iran a day after a "No War" protest broke out in the same spot in response to the US "bunker busting" bombing of nuclear sites in Iran. The US president said the action was necessary because Iran was close to developing a nuclear bomb. Tehran has always said its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes. Persian Americans are worried about friends and family in their homeland who they've struggled to reach with Iran's phones and internet shut off. They also have strong feelings about how their adopted country should respond to Iran. "Do not negotiate with them. They will go back to terrorising the world," said Farzan Seyed, who was dressed in a MIGA (Make Iran Great Again) hat - the acronym coined recently by Trump on social media - and a tie showing the lion and sun emblem from Iran's pre-1979 flag. He says Trump should show support for regime change but not get too involved. "The people have to choose," he says, though he hopes they choose exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi who also lives in the United States. Persian families in Southern California lost so much when they fled Iran, he says, adding that when they get together – whether Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Baháʼí or Zoroastrian – they "speak with one voice from West LA" against the Islamic Republic. Many Iranian Americans dispute that there is one voice. The cafes and restaurants in West LA are full of debates about what should and could happen next in Iran. And not everyone in the community wears MAGA hats and supports the US bombing. Roozbeh Farahanipour – once imprisoned in Iran for his activism - says he fears the US involvement will push Iran into a broken, uncertain future. "The job needs to be done by Iranian people," he says in one of the three restaurants he now owns in the heart of Tehrangeles. "If we look at the history, I don't think that's the result of the Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, even Syria." While he voted for Trump, Mr Farahanipour says he's disappointed in the president. He knows that's not a popular opinion in this community and it's caused a rift with one of his oldest and closest friends, Elham Yaghoubian. While the majority of this region's Persian community fled to LA in 1979 after the Islamic Revolution, Mr Farahanipour and Ms Yaghoubian came later in 2000 after they were both targeted as enemies of the state for creating an underground opposition movement. Mr Farahanipour was arrested along with his mother and several friends for his activism during a meeting at his home. Ms Yaghoubian escaped arrest – she was meant to be at Mr Farahanipour's house that night but her own mother stopped her from going. For decades, they have worked together as activists in Iran and in LA, where they both became successful entrepreneurs. Together they were instrumental in getting a corner of LA named "Persian Square." Later, they successfully lobbied the city to rename part of Westwood Boulevard "Women Life Freedom Square" in honour of Masha Amini, who was killed by Iran's morality police in 2022 for not wearing her hijab head covering the way they wanted. "We were shoulder-to-shoulder, until now," says Mr Farahanipour. Ms Yaghoubian agrees. She says she has never been supportive of any military action in Iran until now. She thinks the time is right and that the Israeli and the US attacks on Iran will help Iranians rise up and overthrow the regime. The majority of people in Iran are "living in poverty," she says. Her friends there tell her they have nothing to lose. "This is the only opportunity for the Iranian people to rise and make a change," she says. Like others in Southern California's Persian community they both fret over loved ones back in Iran, even if they don't see eye to eye on how the US should respond to Iran. When President Trump warned "everyone to evacuate" Tehran earlier this month, the world saw footage of thousands of terrified Iranians stuck in traffic trying to escape an escalation in the war. Writer and actor Mary Apick, who was a child star in Iran and now lives in Los Angeles, says she is heartened watching how many Iranians she saw helping each other amid the traffic, sharing water and gasoline and offering strangers rides. "There's a camaraderie which is unbelievable," she says, adding that she has family she is worried about in Iran. "This regime has to go. People are sick and tired." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Shield for St. Petersburg: How Russia Secured the Northern Capital |
2025-06-24 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. by Daniil Pelymov [REGNUM] At the beginning of the 18th century, Vyborg, a small fortress town in a convenient bay founded by the Swedes in 1293, became a significant threat to the young Northern capital of Russia. After the victory at Poltava in 1709, Tsar Peter I decided to finally cut the Swedes off from Russian possessions in the Baltics. By 1710, columns of the Russian army and navy rushed to the Karelian coast - 13 thousand people under the command of General Admiral Fyodor Apraksin. The Russians faced the most important task - to ensure a security zone in the adjacent part of Finland and protect the rear of St. Petersburg from threats from the north. ![]() Vyborg, which allowed the Swedes to close off the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland (and therefore the mouth of the Neva with the newly built St. Petersburg), as well as control the Karelian Isthmus, had already become a cause for concern for the Russian command more than once. Peter I first attempted to capture Vyborg in 1706, but the poorly supplied and underprepared army was forced to retreat without achieving any results. This defeat clearly demonstrated that success would require not only force, but also endurance, engineering skill, and naval support. RUSSIAN BRUCE VS. SWEDISH AMINEV After the defeat of the main Swedish forces at Poltava in 1709 and the collapse of attempts at a diplomatic settlement, the campaign against Vyborg was again on the agenda. In the spring of 1710, Peter gathered troops and approved a carefully planned offensive. On April 1, Apraksin's corps, having overcome a difficult path across the still frozen Gulf of Finland, quickly reached the walls of Vyborg. According to contemporaries, movement across the melting ice required exceptional discipline and determination: soldiers walked across ice floes, risking falling into the water, carrying guns and supplies. The Russian army quickly encircled the fortress, cutting it off from possible help from the land. At the same time, another part of the operation was unfolding in the Baltic: the fleet was making its way through the ice fields and storms of the Gulf of Finland to the siege site. The fortress garrison numbered about six thousand people, well armed and provided with artillery. It was headed by Colonel Zacharias Aminoff, an elderly and experienced Swedish officer of Russian origin (one of the descendants of the Ivangorod voivode Fyodor Aminev, who defected to the Swedes during the Time of Troubles). Despite the prolonged spring, the cold and the shifting ice, the besiegers continued to attack vigorously. Under the leadership of General Feldzeugmeister Jacob Bruce and engineer Georg Bernoulli, there was continuous artillery fire, digging and laying of earth mines. By the end of April, with the arrival of reinforcements and the strengthening of the fleet, the Russian troops deployed heavy siege artillery. Two batteries were aimed at the stone fortifications of the old city, the third at the earthen ramparts of the bastion part. The guns were installed with the expectation of prolonged shelling: preparations were underway for the decisive blow. WILL THERE BE AN ASSAULT? In the tradition of siege warfare, Apraksin sent an ultimatum to the Swedish commandant Aminoff: to surrender the fortress “on the accord that (the commandant) desires.” This meant that Aminoff was offered surrender on some compromise terms. To which the commandant calmly replied: “Why would I surrender a defensive and armed fortress?” – this is what the oath obliged him to answer even in the most desperate situation. The Russians ordered the preparation of pontoon bridges and assault columns - they were going to take the Scandinavian outpost by force. On May 31, Apraksin received permission to begin the assault as soon as a breach appeared. The very next day, he again offered the enemy to surrender, but was refused. On the evening of June 1, a five-day artillery bombardment began, which caused serious damage to the fortress walls and the city. The Swedes staunchly resisted and responded with fire, but were unable to turn the tide. An important success was the capture of a key fortification, which opened the way to the bastion and allowed the preparation of assault vehicles. Despite losses, the positions were held. There was no help to be expected from outside: attempts to break through to the besieged were unsuccessful. The situation for the Swedish garrison became critical. By June 9, the assault had been carefully prepared, the troops were distributed into columns and supplied with the necessary equipment. The plan called for decisive action on both sides and strict discipline. Meanwhile, the enemy, realizing the hopelessness of the situation, began negotiations for surrender. Despite stubborn resistance, it was clear that there would be no help; the arrival of His Majesty helped catalyze the capitulation. CAPITULATION AND HONORS TO THE VICTORS On June 12 (23), 1710, the negotiations finally ended with an agreement to capitulate the fortress. The Swedish garrison, devastated by the hurricane fire, surrendered with honor. The next day, the Russian Tsar triumphantly entered the city at the head of the Preobrazhensky Regiment. He found 141 cannons, gunpowder supplies, and 5,500 rifles here – huge trophies. At first, there were plans to exchange the nearly 3,400 Swedish soldiers and officers who had been taken prisoner, but Peter I rejected this, reproaching the Stockholm government for its cruelty in treating Russian prisoners and for refusing to exchange the Russian ambassador, Prince Andrei Khilkov, who had been arrested by the Swedes. The celebration was loud and wide. Peter I awarded the participants of the siege: officers were given gold medals, and privates - silver. Apraksin was awarded the Order of St. Andrew the First-Called. In honor of the victory, a commemorative silver medal with a diameter of 46 mm was minted with an image of the siege plan and Latin inscriptions. This medal became a symbol of the return of Vyborg and the adjacent Karelian lands to Russia, which had been developed by Novgorodians in the early Middle Ages. OPEN BALTIC The capture of Vyborg in 1710 was of enormous strategic importance. This fortress was the main Swedish bastion in the North-West and stood on the way to St. Petersburg. Russia for the first time finally cut off Sweden from its possessions in Eastern Finland. Now the Baltic Sea was open to the Russian fleet: St. Petersburg received a reliable outlet to the sea, and the Russians began mass colonization and fortification of the coasts of Finland. The Petersburg and Karelian directions quickly entered the sphere of Russian influence: new fortresses, settlements and roads were founded along the Karelian Isthmus. Russian naval forces consolidated their positions on Kotlin Island, guarding the Neva Bay. The fortress of Kronstadt was built on this island. By September 1721, according to the Treaty of Nystad, practically all of Swedish Finland (including Kexholm and the Åland Islands) was ceded to Russia. Peter's creation received a reliable shield for many centuries: " And so, through the capture of this city (Vyborg), St. Petersburg received its final security," the autocrat wrote. THERE, 230 YEARS LATER When the Red Army entered Vyborg (called Viipuri when it was part of Finland) in March 1940, history came full circle. Exactly 230 years after the city first became part of Russia thanks to the efforts of Peter the Great, it returned once again under the Russian flag – this time under the banner of the Soviet Union. And just as in the 18th century this was dictated by strategic considerations for the protection of St. Petersburg, so in the 20th century Moscow acted in the interests of the security of Leningrad, the new capital of the North. After the collapse of the Russian Empire, Vyborg found itself outside the new state border. Finland, previously the grand ducal outskirts of the empire, became a hostile buffer. Leningrad, one of the most important industrial and cultural centers of the USSR, became a dangerously close front line, fortified under the command of Carl Gustaf Mannerheim, a general who had once served the Russian Empire. Like Aminoff, who defended Vyborg from Peter the Great, Mannerheim found himself in the role of a commandant who had come out against his historical homeland. The Soviet command could not allow a repeat of the threat from the north. The breakthrough of the Mannerheim Line became a symbol of Moscow's military will to restore control over key positions on the Karelian Isthmus. This had not only military but also historical logic: the return of Vyborg was an act of restoring natural borders. And again on the 12th the northwestern neighbor capitulates, although this time with the signing of a peace treaty in Moscow, on March 14, 1940 the last Finnish units left Viipuri. Two wars, two centuries, two empires - and one constant task: the defense of the Northern capital, no matter what it is called, St. Petersburg or Leningrad. History, as we know, does not repeat itself literally, but sometimes it rhymes. And in March 1940, the echo of Peter's victory once again sounded over the shores of the Vyborg Bay. |
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Science & Technology |
Putin says that Russia's nuclear forces will be replenished with Yars missiles and Tu-160M |
2025-06-24 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. [Regnum] Russia's nuclear forces will be replenished with Yars strategic missile systems and Tu-160M missile carriers in 2025. This was announced on June 23 by Russian President Vladimir Putin during a meeting with graduates of military universities in the Kremlin. ![]() Putin noted that one of the priority areas continues to be the technical modernization of the Russian ground forces and navy, primarily within the framework of a new large-scale and long-term state armament program. "We will pay special attention to our "nuclear triad". Thus, modern "Yars" systems will be delivered to the strategic missile forces, and the aviation component of the strategic nuclear forces will be replenished with modernized Tu-160M missile carriers this year," the head of state specified. He added that the country is also launching serial production of the Oreshnik medium-range hypersonic missile system, which has proven itself well in combat conditions. In addition, the President stated that new ships and submarines will be added to the Navy. On June 11, Putin said that the share of modern weapons in Russia’s nuclear triad is 95%, the highest figure in the world. The head of state also stressed that special attention should be paid to the country's nuclear triad. He recalled that it was and remains the guarantor of Russia's sovereignty, and also plays a vital role in ensuring the balance of power in the world. On December 16, Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov announced that four Tu-160M missile carriers would be delivered to the troops in 2025. Along with them, the strategic nuclear submarine Prince Pozharsky and new models of high-strength equipment for soldiers will be transferred. |
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