Day 11: Latest Developments In Ukraine

IRPIN, UKRAINE - MARCH 06: (EDITORS' NOTE: Image contains graphic content) A Ukrainian soldier walks past the corpses of a family lying on the ground after shelling by the Russian army at the evacuation point of Irpi... IRPIN, UKRAINE - MARCH 06: (EDITORS' NOTE: Image contains graphic content) A Ukrainian soldier walks past the corpses of a family lying on the ground after shelling by the Russian army at the evacuation point of Irpin, several members of the same family have been killed in this attack while trying to flee, on March 6, 2022, in Irpin, Ukraine. Ukraine suspended the evacuation of civilians at other points, such as Mariupol, in view of the breakdown of the cease-fire, in order to open humanitarian corridors, by Russia. The United Nations estimates that this Sunday, March 6, the number of Ukrainian refugees could reach 1.5 million. The number of civilians killed in the conflict is close to 3,000 and almost 4,000 wounded according to Ukrainian government sources. After Visa and Mastercard joined the list of companies that are closing their subsidiaries in Russia, Putin said that the sanctions imposed by the West and his companies are "a declaration of war". In addition, the Russian president signed a decree ordering the Council of Ministers to draw up a list of countries that have carried out "unfriendly actions" . (Photo By Diego Herrera/Europa Press via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continued to plod forward through the weekend.

Here are the latest developments:

  • At least three members of a family were killed as a result of shelling in the town of Irpin, outside Kyiv, on Sunday. A Russian force advancing on Kyiv fired mortar shells at a battered bridge used by people fleeing the fighting. The attack happened after attempts to arrange a humanitarian corridor failed on Sunday morning.
  • Russian forces also continued to shell the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol on Saturday, despite previously agreeing to a ceasefire hours before. The ceasefire agreement was a deal overseen by the International Committee of the Red Cross. On Sunday, Ukraine made a second attempt to evacuate civilians from the besieged cities of Mariupol and the nearby city of Volnovakha. But plans for humanitarian corridors to evacuate the cities have collapsed. Ukrainian authorities said on Sunday that an evacuation from Mariupol has been canceled because Russian attacks would not relent.
    • “The evacuation convoy with local residents was never able to leave Mariupol today: the Russians began to regroup their forces and heavy shelling of the city. It is extremely dangerous to evacuate people in such conditions,” Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk Region administration, said in a Facebook post on Sunday. “The convoy with humanitarian aid, which left Zaporizhzhya towards Mariupol today, has not yet reached its destination and is currently on its way,” Kyrrylenko added.
  • The U.S. is exploring a deal that would involve Poland sending Soviet-era aircraft to Ukraine in return for American F-16 jet fighters, a move aimed at aiding Ukraine’s response to Russia’s invasion. The deal, which would require White House approval and congressional action, followed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s plea to U.S. lawmakers on Saturday for help with establishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine. Russian President Putin has threatened that any countries that implement a no-fly zone over Ukraine would be considered “participants in a military conflict.”
  • Mastercard and Visa suspended their operations in Russia on Saturday, dealing another major blow to the country’s financial system in response to its invasion of Ukraine.
  • In talks with Putin on Sunday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged a ceasefire that would not only ease the humanitarian concerns in the region, but also provide an opportunity to seek a political solution.” Additionally, Erdogan urged Putin to open humanitarian corridors and sign a peace agreement, according to Erdogan’s office.
    • In a statement following Erdogan and Putin’s hourlong phone call, Erdogan’s office said the Turkish president told Putin that Turkey was ready to contribute to a peaceful resolution of the conflict.
      “President Erdogan, who said an immediate ceasefire will not only ease humanitarian concerns in the region but also give the search for a political solution an opportunity, renewed his call of ‘let’s pave the way for peace together’,” his office said.
    • Erdogan’s call with Putin followed the Russian president’s unannounced meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett earlier Sunday. Bennett also spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, their third conversation in the past 24 hours. Bennett offered no details of his talks with any of the leaders, but said that he will press forward with efforts to broker an end to the conflict.
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  1. A Ukrainian soldier walks past the corpses of a family lying on the ground after shelling by the Russian army at the evacuation point of Irpin,

    Putin bombing civilians in the “evacuation corridor” he agreed to. There were at least two children killed. This is just like Syria, agree to allow civilians to leave and then kill them when they are in the open.
    So far, unlike Assad, he hasn’t used chemical weapons on civilians, but this may be coming.

    But McDonalds, Coke, and Pepsi are fine with continuing to operate in Russia. I wonder if those two children had played around a Ronald McDonald statue.

  2. Lend-lease.

    The long-term aim of a lend-lease arrangement would be to create stockpiles of military aid along Ukraine’s borders. Ideally, any time Ukraine would submit a request for support, the necessary materiel would be readily available for transport rather than subject to a lengthy procurement process. The most daunting hurdle to this proposal would likely be the initial stages of passing legislation and coordinating plans with allies. But bureaucracy should not stand in the way of waging an existential fight for democracy. Historically, providing aid to Ukraine has been a strong point of bipartisan cooperation, and majorities in both parties understand the importance of Ukraine’s victory in this war. Therefore, the Biden administration is well positioned to mobilize bipartisan support for a new Lend-Lease Act, much as President Franklin Roosevelt did in 1941 despite isolationist opposition. Doing so could even provide a rallying point for Washington after years of domestic polarization.

  3. Russian forces also continued to shell the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol on Saturday, despite previously agreeing to a ceasefire hours before.

    Putin’s word means absolutely nothing, as we’ve been aware all along (especially after living through four years of our own ‘dumb’ Putin).

    The U.S. is exploring a deal that would involve Poland sending Soviet-era aircraft to Ukraine in return for American F-16 jet fighters, a move aimed at aiding Ukraine’s response to Russia’s invasion. The deal, which would require White House approval and congressional action

    I can’t see putingoopers in congress being able to block this, and truthfully it would only be a relative few of them that would even attempt it.

  4. This is the kind of thing people who are losing a war do.
    “It’s over. Ukraine is strategically winning”
    General McCaffery
    Admiral McRaven agrees as does James Clapper.

  5. But dead people will continue to fall while they were fleeing or sheltering. I weep with the world.

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