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Balloon Juice

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When tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty. ~Thomas Jefferson

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Open Thread:  Hey Lurkers!  (Holiday Post)

Open Threads

You are here: Home / Archives for Open Threads

The Rule of Law Would Be Nice

by Betty Cracker|  April 7, 20254:33 pm| 98 Comments

This post is in: Domestic Politics, Foreign Affairs, Open Threads, Politics, Republican Stupidity

Will some nice lawyer please talk me off the ledge?

BREAKING: Chief Justice John Roberts temporarily stayed the district court’s order setting a deadline for Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s return from El Salvador, ordering the man’s lawyers to file a response by 5 p.m. Tuesday to the Trump admin’s request that SCOTUS block the district court’s order.

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— Chris Geidner (@chrisgeidner.bsky.social) April 7, 2025 at 4:07 PM

This is the case where a Maryland father of a U.S. citizen who was lawfully in this country and married to a U.S. citizen was abducted by ICE and flown to a foreign gulag due to an “administrative error.” When lawyers tried to get him back, the administration basically replied, “LOL, too late, go ask the foreign dictator we paid off to run our extrajudicial gulag.”

On Friday, U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis told the administration to bring Kilmar Abrego Garcia back from the El Salvador gulag by midnight tonight. The DOJ appealed. The U.S. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit) panel unanimously denied the DOJ’s request for an emergency stay of that order today.

And now this from Roberts.

What the fucking fuck, guys?

ETA: This is what a brave lawyer looks like.

NEW: Yesterday, the Justice Department sent armed marshals to warn former U.S. pardon attorney Liz Oyer not to disclose internal DOJ information during her Senate testimony.

Today, Oyer is speaking out to condemn the DOJ’s actions and defend the rule of law.

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— Democracy Docket (@democracydocket.com) April 7, 2025 at 4:47 PM

Respect, ma’am.

The Rule of Law Would Be NicePost + Comments (98)

Artifacts & Exhibits (Open Thread)

by Betty Cracker|  April 7, 202510:32 am| 107 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads, Politics, Republican Stupidity

While on my local travels this weekend, I listened to a This American Life episode y’all might enjoy. It’s called “Museum of Now,” and it reviewed some “artifacts and exhibits” from the moment we’re currently living through.

The idea behind the episode is that so much is happening so fast that it’s hard to take it all in (by design). So, TAM plucked a few examples out of the pile of Horrors to examine in greater detail.

I thought the segment on U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes was particularly engrossing. I’d read about the judge’s defenestration of hapless DOJ lawyer and UVA alum Jason Lynch, whom the DOJ sent to court to defend Trump’s illegal EO ban on trans servicemembers. But TAM hired actors to read the transcript, and that made it absolutely riveting.

Judge Ana Reyes

Also, Joe Biden appointed Judge Reyes. Good pick, Biden!

Open thread.

Artifacts & Exhibits (Open Thread)Post + Comments (107)

Breakfast Club Open Thread

by Betty Cracker|  April 7, 20256:12 am| 312 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

This post might be more incoherent than usual because I can’t have coffee yet. I have an appointment for blood work at 8:00 AM (prior to a routine checkup with my primary doc later this week), so I was told to not have anything to eat or drink except water after 8:00 PM yesterday.

Unwisely, I had a Klondike bar for dinner. Bill tried to tell me I should eat something normal for supper, but I wouldn’t listen because I wanted a Klondike bar. So now I’m starving and jonesing for caffeine.

Bill is on staycation this week, so he’s driving me to the lab, and the minute I get sprung, we’re proceeding directly to our favorite diner, and I’m going to have two eggs over medium with bacon and grits and toast with jam and several mugs of coffee with half and half. Or maybe I’ll have sausages instead of bacon and home fries rather than grits. Or maybe grits AND home fries and bacon AND sausages. And probably juice.

***

Looks like the stock market is set to tank at the opening bell. Here are current Wall Street Journal headlines:

Selloff Hammers Global Markets as U.S. Stock Futures Sink

Trump Golfs, Fires Off Social Media Posts as Markets Convulse

Over at his chintzy Twitter knock-off, Dumbfuck Hitler posted a clip of himself teeing off at one of his stupid clubs. Not that he has a good side, but the clip was shot from a very unflattering back-view angle.

I guess he posted it because he thought his flabby, awkward swing looked cool? Then he posted a couple of anti-fentanyl PSAs and the following message for the markets:

We have massive Financial Deficits with China, the European Union, and many others. The only way this problem can be cured is with TARIFFS, which are now bringing Tens of Billions of Dollars into the U.S.A. They are already in effect, and a beautiful thing to behold. The Surplus with these Countries has grown during the “Presidency” of Sleepy Joe Biden. We are going to reverse it, and reverse it QUICKLY. Some day people will realize that Tariffs, for the United States of America, are a very beautiful thing!

“Some day.”

The Wall Street douchebags who were ecstatic about Trump’s election are now apoplectic. WSJ gift link:

For weeks, as the contours of President Trump’s sweeping tariff plans came in and out of focus, Wall Street’s big names kept any concerns they had to themselves.

Now, after a two-day market meltdown last week that erased trillions in value from U.S. stocks, some are speaking out, including those who have been vocal supporters of Trump.

Bill Ackman, the billionaire hedge-fund manager behind Pershing Square, called for a 90-day pause in the tariffs to negotiate with other countries, warning that the alternative was “a self-induced, economic nuclear winter.”

“We are in the process of destroying confidence in our country as a trading partner, as a place to do business, and as a market to invest capital,” Ackman wrote in a social-media post on X.

It would be easier to face this shitstorm with a nice mug of coffee.

Open thread.

Breakfast Club Open ThreadPost + Comments (312)

War for Ukraine Day 1,137: Another Day Another Bombardment

by Adam L Silverman|  April 6, 202510:00 pm| 20 Comments

This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Military, Open Threads, Russia, Silverman on Security, War, War in Ukraine

A painting by NEIVANMADE> In the center of the painting is a green swing set. It is over a targeting reticle with the red dot dirctly under the swing. Behind it on both the left and right are residential apartment buildings and trees. Above the swing set is an incoming Russian missile. It is red with a yellow "Z" symbol on it. To it's left if the caption "Russian "Ceasefire" in red. Below the reticle, in black, is Stop Child Killers!

(Image by NEIVANMADE)

As I indicated in an update after the initial publication of last night’s update, Russia came back for another round of missiles and drone swarms around 5 AM local time in Ukraine this morning.

Morning in Ukraine. Ceasefire? Only if you’re not the one being killed.

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— Maria Avdeeva (@mariainkharkiv.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 3:34 AM

Tracks of Russian weapons used in last night’s attack.

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— Euan MacDonald (@euanmacdonald.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 7:44 AM

Kupiansk was bombed at dawn. Russian forces targeted homes where people still live. Two civilians were injured. The city is being shattered, piece by piece.

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— Iryna Voichuk (@irynavoichuk.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 5:58 AM

Kyiv this morning

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 7:08 AM

Zelenskyy on Russia’s latest mass strikes on Ukraine: “Over 1,460 guided bombs, 670 drones, and 30+ rockets hit us last week, including ballistics on Kyiv overnight. Pressure on Russia’s too weak—Putin’s terror grows as the world delays.”

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 5:15 AM

Here is President Zelenskyy’s address from earlier today. Video below, English transcript after the jump.

The Appropriate Will and Decisions Are Needed to Protect as Many Lives as Possible from Russian Ballistic Strikes – Address by the President

6 April 2025 – 16:11

I wish you health!

I have just held a meeting with the Minister of Defense, and today I also received reports from the military. Last night alone, the Russians used against Ukraine more than a hundred attack drones and 23 missiles of various types, including ballistic ones. And every night, every day, this threat to life in Ukraine continues. We need to strengthen our air defenses – this is an objective reality – and all agreements reached with partners but not yet implemented must be fully activated. The Patriots that are currently just sitting somewhere in our partners’ warehouses must be put to real use to protect lives. Also, both Europe and America must significantly accelerate the production of air defense systems and missiles for them. We in Ukraine can ensure such production, and we need the relevant political decisions. Localization of production and the necessary licenses – this is what will help not only us but all partners who seek security, not war. We have already discussed this with everyone, and now there is an understanding that this is entirely possible, and each Russian strike is a reminder to our partners: what has been agreed upon must finally be implemented. I have instructed the Minister of Defense and the Minister of Foreign Affairs to step up contacts with our partners on this matter. A meeting is being prepared in the context of Ramstein. There are two main objectives for today: namely, air defense systems, specifically Patriots, and the second objective is contingents, ensuring the swift alignment of all decisions and working out all details. I have also instructed that we work bilaterally on air defense, especially with the United States, which has sufficient potential to help stop any terror. The appropriate will and the corresponding decisions are needed to protect as many lives as possible from Russian ballistic strikes. Furthermore, the strengthening of our air shield will also reinforce all diplomatic efforts.

Today’s Russian attack included missiles launched from the waters of the Black Sea. Our partners know exactly which vessels were involved and from which part of the sea the launch occurred. This is one of the reasons why Russia is distorting diplomacy, why it is refusing to agree to an unconditional ceasefire – they want to preserve their ability to strike our cities and ports from the sea. A ceasefire at sea is not just about free navigation and the export of food products by sea – it is, above all, about overall security and about bringing peace closer. Putin does not want to end the war – he is looking for ways to preserve the option of reigniting it at any moment, with even greater force. That’s exactly why all forms of pressure on Russia must continue: strengthening our ability to defend ourselves, maintaining sanctions, and ensuring that diplomacy – any conversation with Moscow – leaves them no opportunity to kill. If there is a ceasefire, it must be unconditional – one that does not allow for the destruction of life. Ukraine has agreed to the U.S. proposal, the proposal of a full, unconditional ceasefire. Putin is refusing. We are awaiting a response from the United States – none has come so far – and we also expect a response from all in Europe and around the world who truly want peace.

Every day the Russian army launches ballistic missiles; every day people are killed. Constant strikes against our Sumy, Kharkiv, Dnipro, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, and other regions. Today – Russian ballistic missiles targeted Kyiv. Every day brings lives lost. Every day brings lost opportunities for diplomacy. All this cannot be tolerated in silence.

This week we have a decision on additional support from the Netherlands – EUR 500 million for drone production in Ukraine and EUR 2 billion to support our resilience this year. Thank you! Sweden – thank you for the USD 1.6 billion military aid package. It specifically includes air defense, artillery, communications, and other vital equipment. Latvia – I want to express my gratitude for the supply of drones for our army. Germany – thank you for an important systemic decision on support for this year, the support has been increased to EUR 7 billion this year. Denmark – there is a new support decision for almost EUR 1 billion, and these are targeted contributions to our domestic weapons production. Everyone who stands with Ukraine now is protecting lives. Thank you for your support! I thank our warriors, all Ukrainians who care about our state and our people!

Glory to Ukraine!

President Zelenskyy also presented honors and awards to those working the emergency response, relief, and rescue efforts in Kryvyi Rih:

President Honors Rescuers, Medics, National Guardsmen, and Police Officers Working at the Site of the Russian Strike in Kryvyi Rih

5 April 2025 – 21:34

Throughout the entire day following the Russian strike on Kryvyi Rih, every possible effort has been made in the city to save lives. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated this in his evening address.

According to the Head of State, some of the wounded – those in critical condition – were transported to Dnipro, where doctors are doing everything possible to save as many lives as they can.

As a result of the Russian strike, 18 people were killed, including 9 children. The youngest boy was only 3 years old. Following the ballistic missile attack, Russia launched a drone strike on Kryvyi Rih, killing one more person and injuring others. The President extended his condolences to all the families and loved ones of the victims.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy acknowledged the efforts of the State Emergency Service, medics, National Guard, and police officers who are rescuing the wounded and working at the site of the ballistic missile strike.

Those recognized include personnel from the Main Directorate of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in the Dnipro region: Oleksandr Parubenko, Chief of the 14th State Fire and Rescue Unit; Vasyl Denysiuk, Deputy Chief of the 12th State Fire and Rescue Unit; Svitlana Cherednychenko, Senior Inspector; Serhii Haidamaka and Tetiana Kutsenko, psychologists.

Personnel of the State Mining Rescue Unit of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine: Pavlo Doroshenko, Squad Leader of the Operational Platoon; Yevhen Bilokrynytskyi, Squad Leader of the Second Platoon; Andrii Siryi, Assistant Platoon Commander.

Medical workers: Hryhorii Maksymenko, Paramedic of the Emergency Medical Response Team; Dmytro Fursenko, Emergency Medicine Feldsher.

National Guard servicemen: Junior Lieutenant Vladyslav Tychyna and Senior Soldier Oleksandr Vasylchyk.

Police officers: Ivan Trush, Patrol Police Officer, Kryvyi Rih Patrol Police Regiment; Illia Bohdan, Deputy Head of Police Department – Chief Investigator, Kryvyi Rih District Police Department; Mykola Harmash, Head of Forensic Support Sector, Investigation Division, Kryvyi Rih District Police Department; Volodymyr Titov, Acting Platoon Commander, Kryvyi Rih Patrol Police Regiment.

“I thank you. I thank all your colleagues, everyone in the city’s utility services who cares for people, all the doctors and nurses, every volunteer who joined in to help, and everyone who cares for our people and our country. It’s important that we all stand together,” the President emphasized.

Georgia:

Day 130. #GeorgiaProtests

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— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 3:19 PM

One of the active participants in the protests, Maia Matcharashvili, died suddenly on April 5. Today’s protest march was held in silence in her memory.

#GeorgiaProtests
Day 130

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— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 2:34 PM

“Euroscope” published a part from Salome Zourabichvili’s speech at Macron’s “Renaissance” party meeting.

🇫🇷 “France is always on the front line… the homeland of freedom and we will always be with it, fight,” she said (via Euroscope).

The audience chanted her name.

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— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 2:41 PM

Moscow on the Potomac:

Trump’s economic adviser gave a comment, apparently cited earlier by Clash Report, that new tariffs on Russia weren’t imposed due to ongoing talks with Russia and Ukraine: “It’s not wise to introduce new issues into these negotiations midstream.”

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 11:01 AM

-Ukraine agreed to unconditional ceasefire proposed by the US on March 11

-Russia did not agree

-Ukraine got 10% tariffs from the US

-Russia did not get tariffs from the US because it is “not appropriate” to tariff them mid-negotiations

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 11:07 AM

The Telegraph: Trump seeks a fast Ukraine peace deal, but Putin uses talks to win what his troops can’t. Zelenskyy resists yielding as Russia attacks, demanding concessions, while Kyiv faces US pressure to remove Zelenskyy.
www.telegraph.co.uk/business/202…

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 1:00 PM

From The Telegraph:

In one week, he has unleashed a trade war, a Wall Street crash and the prospect of a global recession.

So it is easy to forget that Donald Trump still hopes to be remembered for something else: ending the three-year war in Ukraine.

Meanwhile, another megalomaniac is also dreaming of his place in history by redrawing the map of Europe.

In his quest for unconditional surrender, Vladimir Putin has hurled everything in the Russian armoury at Kyiv, barring nuclear weapons.

Ukraine remains undefeated – but how long can this astonishing resistance continue? Above all, can Ukraine survive after the potential withdrawal of American support, and can Europe maintain their support while dealing with the economic fallout from tariffs?

According to the Kremlin propaganda, which has largely been adopted in parts of the Trump administration, the Russians enjoy a crushing superiority in Ukraine.

In his aim of recreating the Soviet Union, Putin deploys two kinds of weapon: the military hammer and economic sickle.

While Ukrainian troops are battered by the hammer blows of a war machine bristling with lethal technologies, civilian morale is cut off at the knees by economic warfare.

Raging inflation, falling GDP and collapsing living standards will, Putin hopes, force Kyiv to sue for peace.

Ever since its public pillorying of Volodymyr Zelensky, streamed live from the Oval Office, the Trump administration has been ratcheting up the pressure on Kyiv.

Last month, it emerged that the White House is demanding control of not only Ukraine’s rare earth deposits, but virtually all its natural resources, including its oil, gas, and nuclear industries.

While Putin makes no secret of his mission to turn Ukraine into a Russian vassal state, Trump apparently envisages the country as a wholly owned American subsidiary.

It is an unpalatable choice between two different kinds of humble pie – but if the Kremlin and the White House are determined to carve up Ukraine between them, who can stop them?

The chimera of a ceasefire

So far, Zelensky has refused to sign away his country’s economic sovereignty in return for nebulous promises from a US administration that would clearly be glad to see the Ukrainian president removed from office.

Nothing is certain since US politics became a branch of chaos theory and a vacancy arose for the role of leader of the free world.

As long as Zelensky remains at the helm in Kyiv, there will be no Ukrainian surrender, either to Moscow or to Washington.

But Putin calculates that he can exploit Trump’s need for international approval to win victories by diplomacy that his troops have failed to gain on the battlefield.

Hence, the “peace” talks that have now been under way for weeks in Saudi Arabia are seen in the Kremlin as a smokescreen, not a serious negotiation.

The foes do not even speak directly to each other, but only through intermediaries, mainly American. This enables the US delegation not only to control the flow of information but also to tip the balance in Moscow’s favour.

The chimera of a ceasefire has yet to materialise, partly because it means different things to the two antagonists. While Zelensky sees it as an unconditional cessation of hostilities, as a prelude to peace negotiations, Putin demands an ever-lengthening list of concessions in return for a truce.

The Russian dictator first gained Trump’s approval for the reasonable-sounding idea of a halt to attacks on power plants, although this proposal came only after Ukrainian drones and missiles had done serious damage to Russian oil refineries. Besides, Putin’s forces have yet to halt their relentless attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.

Next, Putin suggested a moratorium on naval conflict in the Black Sea, also endorsed by Trump. This idea clearly favoured the Russian fleet, which had lost a dozen warships and been forced to abandon its main Crimean base at Sebastopol.

The Ukrainians already had a sea corridor for their grain exports, but the Russians are eager to regain a measure of freedom for sanctions-busting trade.

Nevertheless, Kyiv agreed to both these flawed proposals as stepping stones to a more comprehensive ceasefire. Then Putin raised the stakes.

For the duration of the truce, he demanded a ban on all foreign arms supplies to Ukraine, meaning a freezing of the military status quo that would only apply to one side. Meanwhile, Russia would continue to import men and material from North Korea, Iran and elsewhere.

Why did Putin impose a condition that was so obviously unacceptable to Kyiv? The answer became clear when the next Russian demand emerged: the removal of Zelensky and his “Nazi” government, to be replaced by a caretaker administration under the auspices of the United Nations, followed in due course by elections.

Having painted Zelensky as the obstacle to peace, the logical next step for Putin was to demand that the West depose him.

This propaganda move fed into the mendacious narrative, already popular on the Maga (make America great again) wing of the Republican Party, that the Ukrainian president had behaved in a duplicitous manner over Hunter Biden and the Russia inquiry during Trump’s first term.

Playing America

Despite the incessant disparaging rhetoric from the administration, which has also demonstrated its willingness to halt financial and military aid to Ukraine, there is still strong support for Kyiv in the United States.

In fact, about two thirds of Americans have remained consistently in favour of supplying weapons since the full-scale invasion in 2022, according to recent polling. Moreover, senior commanders in the US military have given enthusiastic support to their Ukrainian counterparts.

Last month, The New York Times revealed that a secret Nato facility in Germany had been coordinating logistics and the selection of Russian targets with Ukrainian officers, using US spy satellites and under the command of a US general.

The precision with which Ukrainian forces have identified, damaged or destroyed major Russian bases (such as the raid on the Engels airfield two weeks ago) owes everything to allied, and especially American, cooperation.

Without various forms of high-tech Nato input, the Ukrainians would have struggled to resist the Russian onslaught for so long. Putin has sacrificed vast numbers of men and colossal quantities of equipment in a vain attempt to occupy the remaining parts of the oblasts in the Donbas region that he claims to have annexed.

His aim is to come to the negotiating table in Riyadh with a fait accompli in order to convince the US that these are indeed “Russian” provinces.

On the ground, this has manifestly not happened, but there are many inside the Trump camp who believe that the Russian claims are legitimate. These could include Steve Witkoff, the president’s golf partner and chief negotiator.

“There’s a sensibility in Russia that Ukraine is a false country. That they just patched together, in this sort of mosaic, these regions,” he recently told Tucker Carlson, the media personality who has made sympathetic comments about Putin. “That’s the root cause, in my opinion, of this war.”

The Kremlin is not, however, relying on pro-Russian sentiment to keep the Trump administration sweet, so much as cold, transactional self-interest.

In the past week, the man described by the late Alexei Navalny’s anti-corruption organisation as Putin’s “shadow foreign minister” has been dispatched to Washington. Kirill Dmitriev is exactly the kind of Stanford and Harvard-educated, smooth-talking oligarch who knows how to approach Trump and his billionaire-heavy entourage.

Dmitriev’s mission is to persuade the president that Zelensky, not Putin, is the obstacle to peace.

The mere fact that Dmitriev can fly into Washington is a diplomatic coup for Moscow: under Biden, senior Russian officials and businessmen were sanctioned, especially if they were close allies of Putin. Now the emissaries of the evil emperor are to be granted privileged access, perhaps even to the Oval Office. The symbolism is all too clear: Putin’s men are admitted to the inner sanctum from which Zelensky was ejected.

As of the current state of play, the question now is whether Russia has “all the cards”, as Trump himself likes to say, or whether the Ukrainians are more resilient than might appear at first sight.

Throwing Ukraine to the bear

There are certainly plenty of Trump acolytes, such as the Pentagon official Elbridge Colby, who want the US to focus primarily on containing China. Putin, they argue, might be tempted by lucrative deals with the US to abandon his alliance with Xi Jinping.

Yet throwing Ukraine to the Russian bear would send the message to Beijing that Taiwan cannot rely on Trump as an ally. Across the narrow straits that separate the jewel of the global semiconductor industry from the mainland, the Chinese People’s Army is gearing up for a “special operation” of its own.

If the fate of Taiwan is – as the late Donald Rumsfeld might say – a known unknown, the attitude of the Trump administration to Ukraine is an unknown unknown. The president could yet swing either way. Last week, he let it be known that he was “p—-d off” with Putin’s foot-dragging on a ceasefire.

Still, it is more likely than not that Ukraine will find itself facing an ultimatum: either sign a Trump-brokered peace deal dictated by Putin or lose US intelligence and logistical support permanently.

How would the map of Ukraine change after such a one-sided ceasefire? Putin claims five provinces: Crimea, Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. The last three are still only partially occupied by the Russians.

Agreeing to withdraw Ukrainian forces from these regions would increase the Russian-occupied area from about 20pc to roughly 25pc of Ukraine’s sovereign territory. That might sound like a sacrifice worth making to stop the slaughter, though it would inevitably deprive Kyiv of yet more economic resources and its fortified front lines.

But such a deal would also mean evacuating millions of civilians. After the well-documented murder, torture and abduction of tens of thousands in Bucha, Mariupol and elsewhere, it is unthinkable that Zelensky would abandon his people to Putin’s paramilitaries and secret police. So a war-torn, impoverished country would have to absorb a huge influx of refugees.

Worse, a ceasefire on Putin’s terms would crush Ukrainian morale. Some of the cities that would be lost, including Kherson itself, have already been liberated from the Russians, often at great cost.

Surrendering vast tracts of homeland without a fight would leave the Ukrainians dispirited. In an army that feels betrayed, defeatism spreads like wildfire. Zelensky’s fall would be only a matter of time – followed by the dismemberment of his nation.

So a ceasefire on Putin’s terms would be a Carthaginian peace – and a prelude to the next stage of his plan to resurrect the Soviet Russian empire. Poland and Lithuania fear a Russian bid to march into the “Suwalki Gap” to establish a land corridor from Belarus to Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave. In such a contingency, the Baltic states would be cut off from the rest of Europe.

While the accession of Sweden and Finland has turned the Baltic Sea into a Nato lake, the Russians could test the allies’ readiness to abide by their treaty obligations.

Does Trump care enough about Riga or Warsaw to risk retaliation against their namesakes in New York State or Indiana? True, the president seems partial to the Poles, but their 2017 proposal for a US base (“Fort Trump”) near their eastern border remains just that – a proposal.

So what about Europe and the “coalition of the willing”? So far, there has been a flurry of diplomatic activity but no concrete plan to rescue Ukraine from its nightmarish predicament. European policymakers are also now tasked with confronting the issue of Ukraine alongside dealing with Trump’s trade war, which risks dragging countries across the world into recession.

Much more at the link.

When you work with lengthy, in-depth materials from countries like the Central African Republic, you quickly see a desperate central government that essentially gives up control over natural resources like diamonds, gold, and timber – to foreign states and entities in order to maintain power

— Tatarigami (@tatarigami.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 5:17 PM

This setup doesn’t create real security – it produces isolated pockets of safety around production sites, while the rest of the country remains dangerous, unstable, and chaotic – a battleground where local rebels and foreign powers compete to exploit resources.

— Tatarigami (@tatarigami.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 5:17 PM

The US mineral deal to Ukraine, though presented in a more polished and “civilized” form, is fundamentally no different from what happens in some African countries. It rarely, if ever, brings genuine long-term stability.

— Tatarigami (@tatarigami.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 5:17 PM

Back to Ukraine.

⚡️ WAR IN UKRAINE & RUSSIA – APR 6, 2025

■ Engagements & casualties slightly below the 7-day average
■ Equipment losses stay above average; good armor & artillery losses
■ 🇺🇦 strikes stay above average while 🇷🇺 are close to it

See dashboard for further data

📈 lookerstudio.google.com/s/i6arAqmKNgc

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— Ragnar Bjartur Gudmundsson 🇺🇦 (@ragnarbjartur.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 4:42 AM

This is what an assault on armored vehicle looks like in conditions where drones completely control the airspace. Video of the attack attempt by Russian BMP-2, filmed by the 38th Brigade of Ukraine. t.me/argus38/532

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— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 10:05 AM

Ukrainian fighters from the 39th Tactical Aviation Brigade shared footage of downing a Russian Shahed drone using a Soviet-era 57mm S-60 anti-aircraft gun.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 11:30 AM

🐈‍⬛Just a creative billboard of the 3rd Assault Brigade of Ukraine.

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— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 8:10 AM

The Ukrainian Armed Forces showcased German “HF-1” AI strike drones. Per BILD, over 1,000 were delivered by April. With AI targeting, they fly 100 km—though troops favor 45-50 km—for up to an hour.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 3:32 AM

Kryvyi Rih:

❗️UPD The death toll from a russian missile strike on Kryvyi Rih has risen to 20. A 57-year-old man died of his wounds in hospital. Over 70 people were injured, with 17 of them in critical condition, including two children.

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— Iryna Voichuk (@irynavoichuk.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 11:56 AM

People bring toys and flowers to a bombed-out playground in Kryvyi Rih, where 18 people, including 9 children, were killed by a russian missile.

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 7:57 AM

Kyiv:

Russian propaganda continues to hit new lows: Russian forces claimed to target Ukraine’s central artillery base and defense industry, but in reality, they destroyed an office building in Kyiv housing Ukrainian and state international broadcasters.

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— NOELREPORTS (@noelreports.com) April 6, 2025 at 6:59 AM

Donetsk:

Shakhtar Stadium in Donetsk after 11 years of so-called “liberation” by Russian militants. The “Russian world” in full display—Donetsk feels the decay of occupation.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 11:34 AM

That’s enough for tonight.

Your daily Patron!

There are no new Patron skeets or videos today.

Here is some adjacent material.

Some big, fluffy cats being treated in the Hachiko Vet Van 🚐 today! 30 cats needed help, so the team is working as fast as it can in the frontline city of Kramatorsk in eastern Ukraine. They are grateful for your continued support! 🙏 hachikofoundation.org

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— Nate Mook (@natemook.bsky.social) March 30, 2025 at 2:59 PM

Open thread!

War for Ukraine Day 1,137: Another Day Another BombardmentPost + Comments (20)

“Do You Really Want to Give Your Money to This Country Right Now?”

by Rose Judson|  April 6, 202512:34 pm| 152 Comments

This post is in: Immigration, Open Threads, Politics, The Horrors

Rebecca Burke, the British cartoonist who was detained in a prison by ICE for 19 days earlier this year, gave an interview about her ordeal to the Guardian yesterday. It includes some illustrations she produced during her time in detention, such as this one, of her cell:

"Do You Really Want to Give Your Money to This Country Right Now?”

One thing I don’t think I’d realized when her story was initially reported was that she was detained while trying to leave the US. Quotes after the jump:

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The Canadian officials told Becky they’d determined she needed a work visa. She could apply for one from the US and come back, they said. Two officers escorted her to the American side of the border. They talked to the US officials. Becky doesn’t know what was said.

After six hours of waiting – and watching dozens of people being refused entry to the US and made to return to Canada – Becky began to feel frightened. Then she was called into an interrogation room, and questioned about what she had been doing during her seven weeks in the US. Had she been paid? Was there a contract? Would she have lost her accommodation if she could no longer provide services? Becky answered no to everything. She was a tourist, she said.

An hour later, Becky was handed a transcript of her interview to sign. She was alone, with no legal advice. “It was really long, loads of pages.” As she flicked through it, she saw the officer had summarised everything she told him about what she had been doing in the US as just “work in exchange for accommodation”. “I remember thinking, I should ask him to edit that.” But the official was impatient and irritable, she says, and she was exhausted and dizzy – she hadn’t eaten all day. “I just thought, if I sign this, I’ll be free. And I didn’t want to stay there any longer.” So she signed.

Then she was told she had violated her tourist visa by working in the US. They took her fingerprints, seized her phone and bags, cut the laces off her trainers, frisked her, and put her in a cell. “I heard the door lock, and I instantly threw up.”

It strikes me as touching – and sad – that both Burke and the Canadian entrepreneur Jasmine Mooney report feeling guilty about the relative ease with which they were released. Both of them are worried about the women they were detained with. Some of the women were able to purchase basic art supplies from the commissary, and Burke spent her time drawing for them:

On her first day in the facility, Becky asked for a scrap of paper and a pen, and began to draw the inmates on the table next to her. She was immediately inundated with portrait requests. A Mexican woman called Lopez, who had a photo of her children stored on one of the iPads, told Becky she would buy her some paper and colouring pencils from the commissary if Becky drew her kids. She soon became the dorm’s unofficial artist-in-residence, with women huddling around the dirty mirrors to make themselves look presentable before they sat for her. They would decorate their cells with Becky’s drawings, or send them to their families.

Burke also detailed what she remembered of why the other women had come to be detained. One woman, who’d been living in the US legally since 1976, was detained when returning from a trip to her country of origin—an old visa issue that had been resolved years ago suddenly became an issue again. Another woman, a Romanian, said she was visiting Peace Arch park on the US/Canada border, walked onto the American side while taking selfies, and was taken into custody by U.S. border patrol.

It’s nearly 40 years since I’ve stopped in Blaine or visited Peace Arch Park, my memories might be wrong, but I though walking back and forth across the line and seeing how artificial and meaningless the line is, between these two close neighbors and good friends, was the whole fucking point.

— Warren Terra (@warrenterra.bsky.social) April 6, 2025 at 6:33 AM

I am glad Ms. Burke is home and that she’ll be using her experience to create art in an effort to help the women who befriended her. I am sorry she’ll likely never visit the US again, but I can’t blame her. The quote in the headline of this post is taken from her words. It seems like a lot of other tourists from abroad have gotten the message that America is shut, if this chart from an independent data analyst is accurate:

Playing around with CBP airport processing data this morning to see how much air travel by non-US passengers is cratering.

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— Jeff Asher (@jeffasher.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 2:16 PM

This not only makes me worry for the US green card holders I know, or the people from outside the US who regularly attend academic conferences inside the country. It also makes me anxious for myself – will I face the third degree when returning to the US for a visit to family? Or, will the US’s cruelty toward foreign tourists and legal residents result in retaliatory actions by other countries when Americans try to cross their borders or apply for a residency permit? I can’t imagine we’d get much help from this US State Department if that were the case.

Open thread.

“Do You Really Want to Give Your Money to This Country Right Now?”Post + Comments (152)

Reminder: Republicans could end this shit-show now

by Betty Cracker|  April 6, 20255:23 am| 382 Comments

This post is in: Domestic Politics, Open Threads, Politics, Republican Stupidity

A few days ago, we discussed Senator Chris Murphy’s theory on what’s behind the destructive Trump tariff regime. The linked post contains all the details Murphy shared on Bluesky, but to sum up, the senator believes the administration is using tariffs as a tool to compel businesses to acquiesce to its authoritarian power grab.

I think Murphy makes a compelling case, but in the discussion here, commenters raised convincing counterpoints, such as that Trump is too dumb to hatch such an elaborate scheme. It’s true that Trump doesn’t know shit about business (he bankrupted multiple casinos!), and he’s been advocating tariffs as a fix for deindustrialization since the 1980s.

So, you don’t need the authoritarian power grab theory to explain why Trump is wrecking the economy. The Occam’s razor explanation is sufficient: Trump is stupid.

That said, one thing that’s made Trump 2.0 more destructive than the previous release is that Trump is not really running the show. He’s a figurehead with a personality cult he developed with the only true talents he has, demagoguery and a conman’s low cunning.

But that real base of power is now being used by tech oligarchs Musk, Thiel and others, the Project 2025 architects (Russell Vought, et. al.), Christian nationalists, prosperity gospel grifters, etc., to enact agendas that largely overlap.

Anyway, Murphy had more to say about the theory in an interview with Chris Hayes after Friday’s stock market wipeout. Here’s a clip:

Murphy: “The vast majority of Republicans, their number one priority is Trump seizing power, and the Trump family and the MAGA universe holding power forever … with the exception of maybe 20 Republicans in the Senate, the GOP inside Congress is done with democracy.”

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— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) April 4, 2025 at 8:19 PM

The most striking thing to me was Murphy’s guess that there are 20 Republicans in the Senate who aren’t on board with overthrowing democracy. That’s a lot more than I would’ve guessed, but Murphy knows these people. Is it Senate brain at work, or is that real?

If he’s right, there’s a sufficient number of Senate Republicans to put an end to this bullshit right now. What about the House?

I read that Pastor Johnson used an arcane rule to prevent members from voting to revoke the bogus “emergency” state that authorizes Trump to unilaterally set tariffs. I don’t know how or if that can be reversed.

The bottom line is, Democrats are locked out of power. All of this is on Republicans and has been since January 20.

Republicans can end this shit. For now, they are more afraid of Trump than they are of us, but as public anger grows, there are signs that calculus is shifting, such as sycophants like Ted Cruz questioning tariffs.

Maybe Trump will find a way to climb down before irreversibly plunging the entire world into recession, if he hasn’t already. But so far, he’s golfing while the world burns. Yesterday, his tone-deaf toadies released a statement about Trump’s performance at a golf tournament while millions were taking to the streets.

Anyway, if you have the misfortune to be represented by a Republican, consider calling them Monday. Tell them you know they could stop this, and ask them why they won’t.

Open thread.

Reminder: Republicans could end this shit-show nowPost + Comments (382)

War for Ukraine Day 1,136: Missiles & Drone Swarms in the Small Hours

by Adam L Silverman|  April 5, 20259:43 pm| 19 Comments

This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Military, Open Threads, Russia, Silverman on Security, War, War in Ukraine

A painting by NEIVANMADE> In the center of the painting is a green swing set. It is over a targeting reticle with the red dot dirctly under the swing. Behind it on both the left and right are residential apartment buildings and trees. Above the swing set is an incoming Russian missile. It is red with a yellow "Z" symbol on it. To it's left if the caption "Russian "Ceasefire" in red. Below the reticle, in black, is Stop Child Killers!

(Image by NEIVANMADE)

Update at 10:30 PM EDT/5:30 AM local time in Ukraine:

Air raid alerts are now back up for the entire country with the exception of Odesa, Mykolaiv, and Kherson Oblasts. This is a second set of attacks just before dawn.

Very loud explosions in Kyiv

— Xenta (@xenta.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 10:01 PM

Original post starts here:

Air raid alerts indicating the threat of both Russian air launched missiles and drone swarms have been up for  the past several hours.

Ukraine is under a heavy russian missile attack launched from the Black Sea, with their planes reportedly heading to launch cruise missiles‼️

It’s going to be yet another long night.

Please keep us in your thoughts.

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:10 PM

At this very moment, in the dead of night, Ukraine is facing a massive combined missile and drone assault by russia.

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— Iryna Voichuk (@irynavoichuk.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:08 PM

Art by Nikita Titov

— Iryna Voichuk (@irynavoichuk.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:08 PM

When I started writing tonight’s update they’d come down in western Ukraine. Now, at 9:10 PM EDT/4:10 AM local time, they’re down except for Kyiv Oblasts and the eastern oblasts that border Russia – Sumy, Kharkiv, Russian occupied Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Russian occupied Crimea. Remember, the alerts for Russian occupied Luhansk and Crimea are always up 24/7/365.

The cost!

This is Tymofii. Russia killed him with a cluster-loaded Iskander missile strike on Kryvyi Rih. He was only 3 years old.
#Ukraine

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— Iryna Voichuk (@irynavoichuk.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 5:51 AM

The video I did NOT include last night was of the first responders trying to resuscitate Tymofii on site before transporting him. I’ve watched, you don’t need to.

“Tragically, three-year-old Tymofii died in the hospital today. Seven-year-old Radyslav. Arina, who will forever be seven as well. Nine-year-old Herman. Fifteen-year-old Danylo. Fifteen-year-old Mykyta. Fifteen-year-old Alina. Kostiantyn, who will forever be sixteen.

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:17 AM

Nikita – seventeen. These are the children killed by a Russian ballistic missile strike on Kryvyi Rih.”- President Zelenskyy

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:17 AM

these kids will never grow old, Russia killed them in Kryvyi Rih yesterday.

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 11:47 AM

As I wrote last night: there cannot be, there will not be a real truce, ceasefire, or negotiations to end the war because Putin does not want an end to the war unless it is on his terms. And his terms is that he gets Ukraine because he believes that Ukraine belongs to him.

I expect that Trump’s minerals deal/shakedown attempt will also never go anywhere but round after round of talks and consultations because the Ukrainians know it doesn’t get them anything, give Trump everything, and sets the conditions for Trump and Putin to divvy up Ukraine between them.

Here is President Zelenskyy’s address from earlier today. Video below, English transcript after the jump.

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Staying Silent About the Fact That It Is Russia Killing Children with Ballistic Missiles Is Wrong and Dangerous – Address by the President

5 April 2025 – 20:30

Dear Ukrainians!

All day today – following the Russian strike on Kryvyi Rih – every effort has been made in the city to save lives. Some of the wounded – those in critical condition – were transported to Dnipro. Doctors are doing their utmost to save as many lives as possible. I am grateful to everyone involved in this effort – those who responded immediately and those still helping. This strike is one of the darkest chapters for Kryvyi Rih. Tragically, 18 people were killed, including 9 children. The youngest was just 3 years old. My condolences to all their families and loved ones.

Last night and today, many around the world voiced their position in response to this strike – a clear rejection of Russian terror. To everyone who sees this and does not close their eyes, who speaks the truth clearly and directly – not only we in Ukraine, but the entire world should be grateful. Staying silent about the fact that it is Russia killing children with ballistic missiles is wrong and dangerous. It only emboldens the scum in Moscow to continue the war and keep ignoring diplomacy. Weakness has never ended a war. That’s why I’m thankful to every country whose representatives have spoken out – leaders, foreign ministers, embassies.

A Russian ballistic missile – targeting the street of an ordinary city, striking residential buildings – and after that, an additional drone strike. One more person killed, more people wounded. Russia must be held accountable for everything it has done. To end this war, it is necessary to put pressure on them – real pressure – without wasting time on empty talk.

Days of mourning will be declared in Kryvyi Rih for those who were killed. Right now, Ukrainian cities, our villages are united in their support for Kryvyi Rih. From Dnipro and Kharkiv to Uzhhorod, from Odesa to Kyiv – all regions, all regional centers, many communities are showing solidarity and honoring the memory of the fallen. I thank everyone for this absolutely rightful emotion – the emotion of support and unity that strengthens our entire nation. And I want to thank each and every one of you whose heart felt the pain and anger over what happened.

We must all remember: the war continues. We must support our defense, our warriors, our country. We must do everything to strengthen Ukraine’s position, and to ensure that as many people in the world as possible know and truly feel what is happening and why it matters to stand with Ukraine, especially in moments like this.

I also want to acknowledge the people who distinguished themselves at the site of the strike in Kryvyi Rih – those who were working there yesterday and today. The Main Directorate of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in the Dnipro region – Oleksandr Parubenko, Vasyl Denysiuk, Svitlana Cherednychenko. Psychologists – Serhii Haidamaka, Tetiana Kutsenko. The men from the State Mining Rescue Unit of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine – Pavlo Doroshenko, Yevhen Bilokrynytskyi, Andrii Siryi. Medics – Hryhorii Maksymenko, Dmytro Fursenko. The National Guard – Vladyslav Tychyna, Oleksandr Vasylchyk. The National Police – Ivan Trush, Illia Bohdan, Mykola Harmash, Volodymyr Titov. I thank you. I thank all your colleagues, everyone in the city’s utility services who cares for people, all the doctors and nurses, every volunteer who joined in to help, and everyone who cares for our people and our country. It’s important that we all stand together.

Glory to Ukraine!

Georgia:

#GeorgiaProtests
Day 129

There hasn’t been a single day without a protest in Georgia since November 28, 2024.

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— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 3:04 PM

Day 129. As people gathered, “Antsukhelidze is immortal” was displayed with candles, underlining the new popular motto in resistance against the regime’s imposition of the Russian narrative of history.

Antsukhelidze is a national hero tortured to death in 2008. #GeorgiaProtests

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— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 1:48 PM

1/ The Prosecutor’s Office froze the accounts of the funds based on a request from Vato Shakarishvili’s organization. These funds, alongside other charitable activities, were helping collect money for individuals who were fined during the protests.

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— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 3:08 PM

2/ As the journalist told RFE, his protest was specifically about the freezing of the funds, which left individuals with serious health issues without the necessary financial support. According to him, this is why he approached Shakarishvili and called him a slave.

— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 3:08 PM

3/ The moment is also captured in footage filmed by Giorgi Mamniashvili, where the journalist approaches Shakarishvili and calls him a slave. Following this, Vato Shakarishvili is seen moving towards him, preparing to strike.

— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 3:08 PM

4/ Shakarishvili does not deny striking the journalist. According to him, he slapped Mamniashvili. The MIA of Georgia has not yet commented on the incident

— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 3:08 PM

Germany:

Eutelsat’s chief executive Eva Berneke told Reuters that Eutelsat has provided #Ukraine with its high-speed satellite internet for about a year, while the German government has borne the entire cost. This is a previously undisclosed assistance from the German government!

1/2

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— German Aid to Ukraine (@deaidua.org) April 4, 2025 at 11:20 AM

According to Berneke, less than 1,000 terminals are connecting users in Ukraine to Eutelsat’s network, while they are currently working on getting up to between 5,000 and 10,000 terminals and are in negotiations with the German government about financing the increase.

2/2

— German Aid to Ukraine (@deaidua.org) April 4, 2025 at 11:19 AM

Back to Ukraine.

The reason:

💙💛 The AFU soldier returns home, where his daughter is waiting for him – a little sunshine with outstretched hands. He picks her up in his arms, hugging her tightly, and in his embrace all the hardships of war disappear. Only the warmth of her breath and a quiet whisper: “Daddy, you’re home.”

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— Vitalis Viva (@vitalisviva.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 6:12 PM

President Zelenskyy has instructed Ukraine’s domestic security service to investigate the leak of the latest US proposal for profiting from Ukrainian assets, said government officials, in a probe that includes the use of polygraph tests. www.ft.com/content/9f75…

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— Christopher Miller (@christopherjm.ft.com) April 5, 2025 at 4:51 AM

From The Financial Times:

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has instructed Ukraine’s domestic security service to investigate the leak of the latest US proposal for profiting from Ukrainian assets, said government officials, in a probe that includes the use of polygraph tests.

The investigation comes amid deepening tensions between Kyiv and the Trump administration over the terms of a proposed deal on critical minerals and energy assets.

Ukrainian officials say they were caught off guard by the scope of the latest US demands, and view as politically untenable parts of Washington’s proposal for profiting from their country’s infrastructure.

President Donald Trump accused the Ukrainian president this week of “trying to back out” of the deal, adding that Zelenskyy would face “big problems” if he did not sign it soon.

The Ukrainian officials said that lie detector tests had been administered on staff across several ministries, but declined to give further details or specify how many individuals had been questioned.

The office of Ukraine’s president declined to comment. The security service said in a statement that it works within the law to protect Ukraine’s security and keeps certain details about its activities confidential.

Polygraph tests are controversial and the science behind them has been questioned, but Ukraine’s law enforcement agencies have frequently used them for purposes including criminal investigations and screening foreigners looking to join the army.

The investigation follows the publication of details from the draft agreement on March 26 by opposition MP Yaroslav Zheleznyak, who said he had obtained a copy. The Financial Times separately obtained the document and published its contents the following day.

Zelenskyy told the FT at a briefing on March 28 he found it “strange” the US document had leaked. “I wonder who is transmitting this information,” he said.

The Trump administration’s latest proposal significantly expands on its earlier offer, superseding an initial framework deal agreed with Kyiv in February. That agreement was later abandoned after Zelenskyy’s bust-up with President Donald Trump and vice-president JD Vance in the White House.

Crucially, the revised proposal still offers no formal security guarantees to Ukraine.

Trump’s Treasury secretary Scott Bessent has argued that formal security guarantees are unnecessary, because any US investment in Ukraine’s critical minerals sector would in itself deter further Russian aggression — a view not shared in Kyiv.

The revised terms form part of Trump’s plan to end Russia’s full-scale war in Ukraine and recoup billions of dollars he believes the US is owed for having helped Kyiv defend itself against Moscow’s invasion.

Last Friday, Zelenskyy rejected Trump’s insistence that billions of dollars of military assistance from the US to date should be viewed as loans to be repaid through the agreement.

The new proposal calls for the creation of a joint supervisory board to manage revenues from oil, gas and mineral projects, covering all major energy assets across the country.

Senior Ukrainian officials have raised concerns that it could undermine their nation’s sovereignty, send future revenues abroad and disrupt integration with the EU.

“We cannot accept any arrangement that undermines our EU path,” Zelenskyy said last week.

Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine’s intel chief, believes Russia won’t substantially reduce its army after the war, despite budget relief from combat payouts.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 1:10 PM

Kryvyi Rih:

The death toll from Russia’s ballistic missile attack in Zelensky’s hometown of Kryvyi Rih has risen to 18, including 9 children, with 61 other people injured, including 12 children, according to Ukraine’s State Emergency Service.

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— Christopher Miller (@christopherjm.ft.com) April 5, 2025 at 12:04 AM

Despite the fact that an apartment building and a children’s playground were at the center of the strike, Russia cynically claims a “high-precision strike” had targeted “a meeting of unit commanders and Western instructors” in a restaurant.

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— Christopher Miller (@christopherjm.ft.com) April 5, 2025 at 12:04 AM

Ukraine’s General Staff has identified the weapon used in yesterday evening’s deadly attack. It said, “Russian forces struck Kryvyi Rih with an Iskander-M ballistic missile with a cluster warhead, which is designed to hit a large area and a large number of people.”

— Christopher Miller (@christopherjm.ft.com) April 5, 2025 at 12:04 AM

WARNING!! WARNING!! GRAPHIC CONTENT!! WARNING!! WARNING!!

Police published a bodycam footage of the first moments after yesterday’s russian missile strike on Kryvyi Rih, which killed 18 people, including 9 children

Some of the things said: “these kids are gone”, “there is a little boy still breathing”, “another missile coming, run”, “his leg is torn off”

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 10:28 AM

This is unspeakable evil. I have no words to describe it anymore.

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 10:28 AM

ALL CLEAR!!!!

Local media reports that Russia killed Radyslav Yatsko in Kryvyi Rih. He was just 7 years old.

The family was on their way home when an explosion occurred. Little Radyslav was in the back seat behind his father, which is where the main impact struck.

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 6:56 AM

Radyslav’s father, Rodion, is currently hospitalized with a concussion, multiple injuries, and damage to his eyes. His mother, Anastasia, and 8-month-old sister, Adelina, were also injured. Adelina suffered shrapnel wounds and is being treated at home.

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 6:56 AM

The grandmother, who was also in the car, is in the hospital as well.

I just have no words from these monsters anymore

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 6:55 AM

🕯🇺🇦 People bring flowers and toys to the site of the rocket attack. Yesterday’s attacks in Kryvyi Rih killed 19 people, 9 of them children. More than 60 others were injured.

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— Vitalis Viva (@vitalisviva.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:04 AM

🕯🇺🇦 Yesterday was a warm and sunny spring day. Kids were playing on the swings, teenagers were gathered on benches – enjoying life, which was just beginning for them all.
To destroy 19 lives, the russians needed only a minute and a missile launched by someone’s indifferent push of a button.

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— Vitalis Viva (@vitalisviva.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:04 AM

Russian occupied Luhansk Oblast:

Russian BUK-M2 air defense system destroyed yesterday by a drone strike in the Luhansk region, Sokolohirsk. 50km from the front line. t.me/dosye_shpion…

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— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 10:14 AM

The Kursk cross border offensive:

Detonation of Russian missiles as a result of the tonight’s strike. Somewhere in the direction of Sudzha, Kursk region.

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— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:57 AM

A Ukrainian MiG-29 squad demolished two buildings with Russian assault units and ammo near Ghuevo, Kursk region.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 11:22 AM

Toretsk:

Ukrainian fighters from the “Luhansk” regiment of the “Liut” brigade tried evacuating from Toretsk, but their M113 hit a mine, leaving them cut off in enemy rear. Despite shelling and injuries, they broke through and safely completed the evacuation. Full video: t.me/wartranslated

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 6:45 AM

Saransk, Republic of Mordovia, Russia:

This morning, Ukrainian drones continued targeting Russia’s only optical fiber plant in Saransk, a key producer of fiber optics for drones widely used by Russian forces in combat.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 4:30 AM

That’s enough for tonight.

Your daily Patron!

There are no new Patron skeets or videos tonight. Here is some adjacent material.

Cry “Havoc” and let slip the groundhogs of war!

Ukrainian aerial reconnaissance witnessed a brutal groundhog battle somewhere on the front line. t.me/fokin_live/140

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— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 7:15 AM

Open thread!

War for Ukraine Day 1,136: Missiles & Drone Swarms in the Small HoursPost + Comments (19)

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