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To: PIF
Saw the Stash on TV last night....47 just wants to be in the spotlight

I'm glad you and the McDonalds manager knows who Stash is, because no one outside of your #NeverTrump circle has heard of him.

15,903 posted on 05/18/2025 10:01:27 AM PDT by JonPreston ( ✌ ☮️ )
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To: JonPreston
European forces decided to act swiftly, following the newest EU sanctions package and detain an oil tanker from the Russian shadow fleet. In response to a planned boarding, Russian forces rapidly escalated the tensions by deploying their fighter jets to threaten the NATO ships from getting close.

A new wave of EU sanctions has directly targeted Russia’s notorious shadow fleet of oil tankers, which is used to bypass Western embargoes. As part of the EU’s 17th sanctions package, 149 vessels have been added to the blacklist for transporting Russian oil in violation of the price cap.

These mostly uninsured tankers will be barred from accessing EU ports and services, including insurance, repairs, and refueling. Among them, 25 were recently tracked in the Baltic and North Sea, where their presence also raises serious environmental and security concerns because of their poor condition.

European officials warn that these ships pose not only a pollution risk, but also a threat to vital undersea cables and energy infrastructure, due to several incidents with torn cables in the past.

Noting the Baltic Sea’s vulnerability to environmental disasters caused by oil spillage, due to its shallow and enclosed nature, the EU has prompted stricter sanctions on the aged and reckless ships of Russia’s shadow fleet.

As the EU prepares to expand the sanctions list to over 350 ships in total, it has also moved to authorize visa bans and asset freezes against shadow fleet captains. These measures aim to disrupt Russia’s illicit export routes and limit its wartime income.

Enforcement of the new package began immediately. A Gabon-flagged tanker under the name Jaguar, one of the newly sanctioned vessels, had previously anchored off a Russian port, prompting increased monitoring by NATO forces.

After approaching, the ship refused to identify itself and ignored orders from Estonia’s navy to halt and change course. Estonian patrol ships, helicopters, and patrol aircraft responded, with footage confirming the NATO response.

However, as NATO vessels prepared to board the Jaguar for inspection, the Russian Air Force dispatched a Su-35 fighter jet to the ship’s position in a show of force. According to Estonian defense officials, the Russian jet circled the tanker and signaled a clear intention to prevent any potential boarding or seizure.

Immediately, the planned boarding operation was called, as NATO captains and commanders assessed the risk of triggering a direct military clash as too high. An engagement involving NATO fighter jets or naval assets could have resulted in severe and far-reaching consequences. Estonia’s Foreign Minister confirmed that the aircraft briefly violated NATO airspace.

Finland and Lithuania both raised concerns about reckless Russian behavior, with Lithuania’s Prime Minister warning that Russia is clearly demonstrating a willingness to protect the route for its oil with all means, even risking a direct confrontation to protect its shadow oil fleet.

With conventional trade routes restricted due to Western sanctions, Russia relies heavily on this fleet of over 600 aging oil tankers to export crude oil to buyers from Asia.

These ships operate under obscure flags, are often uninsured, and are designed to operate below regulatory radar, making them critical to sustaining Russian state revenue, directly funding the war in Ukraine. Disruption of these flows would not only cripple Russia’s wartime economy, but also erode its global influence.

This incident shows how far Russia is willing to go to defend its economic lifelines, even deploying air assets to intimidate NATO ships. Yet, the imbalance in firepower is obvious. NATO F-35 squadrons routinely patrol the Baltic Sea. In a real engagement, a lone Russian fighter jet would have stood little chance. But, recognizing the risks, NATO wisely de-escalated to avoid a direct military engagement between Russia and NATO forces.

Overall, this standoff underscores the EU’s resolve to implement sanctions, which will only intensify. At the same time, Russia is desperate to protect its oil trade and take even higher risks.

With additional shadow fleet vessels likely to be sanctioned and better-armed naval patrols preparing future interception missions, Russia’s strategy of hiding its oil trade in plain sight is becoming increasingly untenable. The Jaguar may have escaped for now, but the message from Europe is clear: sanctions will not go unenforced.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWJvyIH5nFw

Romania remains on the side of the West, Freedom and Righteousness.

Kyiv Independent:

“Pro-EU candidate Nicusor Dan won the Romanian presidential election on May 18, defeating the far-right, anti-Ukraine George Simion.

With over 95% of the votes counted, Dan won Sunday’s runoff by a margin of 54.3% to Simion’s 45.7%, according to Romania’s election authority.

The result comes as a relief for Ukraine, who faced the loss of a key ally in the event of a Simion victory. Simion, leader of the Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR), championed a Euroskeptic platform that included ending military aid for Ukraine.

“Ukraine needs us, we don’t need Ukraine,” Simion said during a televised debate on May 8.

Simion is banned from entering both Ukraine and neighboring Molodova due to his anti-Ukrainian stance.

Dan, an independent centrist and the current mayor of Bucharest, supports aid to Ukraine, calling it “essential for the security of Romania.””

“Russia carried out its largest single drone attack since the start of its full-scale invasion, launching 273 drones overnight on May 18, Ukraine’s Air Force reported.

The attack comes just two days after Ukraine and Russia held their first direct peace talks since 2022, and one day ahead of a planned call between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.”

Send more Artillery! (Time for the big guns)

Drop the bone-crushing sanctions bomb. Time to get the job done.

Putin won’t stop, he must be stopped.

President Trump has given him every chance to get out of his mess the easy way, but Putin has clearly chosen to go down with the ship (and take down his country with him).


16,389 posted on 05/31/2025 3:16:44 PM PDT by JonPreston ( ✌ ☮️ )
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To: LowIQ
🍈

It turns out that strategic bombers are parked in the open for a reason

This was done within the framework of the agreement of April 8, 2010, called SVN-3, which was signed by Russia and the United States when Dmitry Medvedev was president.

Strategic bombers must be accessible…

pic.twitter.com/T22m1SpVhi— Chay Bowes (@BowesChay) June 2, 2025


16,486 posted on 06/02/2025 5:15:54 AM PDT by JonPreston ( ✌ ☮️ )
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