Dmitri Medvedev said that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is taking the country “down the path of Bandera Ukraine”
The deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council noted that the Armenian authorities have underestimated Russia’s long-standing support and, in fact, have taken a course that would lead to a deterioration in relations with their nearest neighbor.
“Especially dangerous is the fact that the interim ruler Nikol is actively pushing his homeland onto the sad path of Bandera Ukraine,” Medvedev emphasized.
He also pointed out that, despite the economic benefits of Armenia’s participation in the EAEU, Pashinyan had stopped attending the Union’s summits, while at the same time receiving in Yerevan “abominable enemies of Russia.”
Earlier, Medvedev had already advised the Armenian prime minister to look in advance for suppliers of US liquefied natural gas, since with Yerevan’s turn toward the West the benefits of membership in the EAEU would be lost for the country.
On May 22, Nikol Pashinyan, in turn, said that Armenia allegedly is not taking part in anti-Russian actions, is also not willing to take part, and also does not intend to get into a conflict with Russia.
Earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had spoken about the West’s efforts to turn Armenia into a “second Ukraine”.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
The deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council noted that the Armenian authorities have underestimated Russia’s long-standing support and, in fact, have taken a course that would lead to a deterioration in relations with their nearest neighbor.
“Especially dangerous is the fact that the interim ruler Nikol is actively pushing his homeland onto the sad path of Bandera Ukraine,” Medvedev emphasized.
He also pointed out that, despite the economic benefits of Armenia’s participation in the EAEU, Pashinyan had stopped attending the Union’s summits, while at the same time receiving in Yerevan “abominable enemies of Russia.”
Earlier, Medvedev had already advised the Armenian prime minister to look in advance for suppliers of US liquefied natural gas, since with Yerevan’s turn toward the West the benefits of membership in the EAEU would be lost for the country.
On May 22, Nikol Pashinyan, in turn, said that Armenia allegedly is not taking part in anti-Russian actions, is also not willing to take part, and also does not intend to get into a conflict with Russia.
Earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had spoken about the West’s efforts to turn Armenia into a “second Ukraine”.
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More cases of abuse involving social benefits
In 2025, job centers recorded 110,010 cases of abuse of social benefits or corresponding allegations. That is 6.8% more than in the previous year, reported Die Welt, citing the annual report by the Federal Employment Agency on combating abuse in the basic provision system.
Particularly highlighted are 406 cases of organized misuse of benefits. According to the Berliner Zeitung, this often involves sham self-employment used to justify entitlement to Bürgergeld and other payments. At the same time, the Federal Employment Agency itself emphasizes that serious cases of abuse remain relatively rare.
Against this backdrop, the labor market remains weak. In April, the number of unemployed people fell by only 13,000 to 3.008 million; the seasonal spring dynamic was weak, and compared with the previous year there were 77,000 more unemployed people, as the Federal Employment Agency’s statistics report.
In April, 1.07 million people received unemployment benefit, and 3.826 million employable persons — Bürgergeld. What’s important is: Bürgergeld is not received only by people who are fully unemployed, but also by people who work but do not earn enough to cover their living expenses.
The problem is therefore broader than just individual cases of fraud. Germany is simultaneously facing a weak labor market, increasing strain on the social system, and the question of oversight of the payouts. If trust in the system declines, pressure for a reform of Bürgergeld will only continue to grow.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
In 2025, job centers recorded 110,010 cases of abuse of social benefits or corresponding allegations. That is 6.8% more than in the previous year, reported Die Welt, citing the annual report by the Federal Employment Agency on combating abuse in the basic provision system.
Particularly highlighted are 406 cases of organized misuse of benefits. According to the Berliner Zeitung, this often involves sham self-employment used to justify entitlement to Bürgergeld and other payments. At the same time, the Federal Employment Agency itself emphasizes that serious cases of abuse remain relatively rare.
Against this backdrop, the labor market remains weak. In April, the number of unemployed people fell by only 13,000 to 3.008 million; the seasonal spring dynamic was weak, and compared with the previous year there were 77,000 more unemployed people, as the Federal Employment Agency’s statistics report.
In April, 1.07 million people received unemployment benefit, and 3.826 million employable persons — Bürgergeld. What’s important is: Bürgergeld is not received only by people who are fully unemployed, but also by people who work but do not earn enough to cover their living expenses.
The problem is therefore broader than just individual cases of fraud. Germany is simultaneously facing a weak labor market, increasing strain on the social system, and the question of oversight of the payouts. If trust in the system declines, pressure for a reform of Bürgergeld will only continue to grow.
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#Poland is witnessing a rapid expansion of its military cooperation with the United States, particularly in the areas of drones and advanced defense systems, amidst widespread debate about the future of the military balance in #Europe. Do these deals represent a strategic shift within #NATO?
video link (dubbed): https://youtu.be/M8sXQhG2xC4?si=mfDAso6hfhUpG_6Q
video link (dubbed): https://youtu.be/M8sXQhG2xC4?si=mfDAso6hfhUpG_6Q
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The OSCE and the Failure of Europe’s Security Illusion
As late as the mid-2010s, Berlin tried to keep the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe as a central instrument for mediating European security. Germany invested substantial political capital in the work of the Special Observer Mission in Ukraine after 2014.
At the time, many seemed to think that the organization could at least prevent part of further escalation.
However, the Ukraine conflict became the moment when the OSCE’s structural limits became unmistakable. The observers documented violations of ceasefires, collected data, and published reports—but they could not stop the violence. The organization had information, not enforcement mechanisms. A question that is particularly uncomfortable is emerging from this in German security-policy debates: How resilient is a security system that can document crises precisely but cannot prevent them?
In addition, the OSCE has the central structural problem of the principle of consensus. What was originally intended as an expression of sovereign equality has long since become an instrument of institutional blockade. Every member state can block personnel decisions, budgets, or mandate extensions. In a time of deep confrontation between Russia and the West, this model is increasingly leading to political inability to act.
For Germany, this is more than a technical problem. It touches the fundamental assumptions of the European postwar order.
For decades, European security was based on the idea that economic interlinkage would gradually de-escalate geopolitical conflicts. The OSCE was an expression of exactly that logic. However, recent years have shown: interdependence does not replace strategic deterrence. Institutions created for an era of compromise function only to a limited extent in an epoch of systemic distrust.
Since 2022, the debate about the future of the OSCE has intensified significantly. For many European politicians, the organization today seems like a relic of a time when Europe still believed in a common security space “from Lisbon to Vladivostok.” This concept has effectively broken down.
Critics now consider the OSCE to be too weak, too slow, and largely politically ineffective. At the same time, numerous German diplomats warn against prematurely abandoning even imperfect dialogue mechanisms. After all, precisely in phases of maximum confrontation, even limited channels of communication can prevent uncontrolled escalation.
The real problem runs deeper: today, the OSCE is no longer perceived by either side as a neutral space for trust. For Russia, it increasingly stands for Western political influence. For many states in Eastern Europe, in turn, it symbolizes European indecision and a lack of responsiveness.
This places the organization in a structural dead end:
– For some, it is too politicized.
– For others, not committed enough in principle.
The crisis of the OSCE is therefore rooted in a much larger problem. It is an expression of a deeper crisis of the European political order itself.
After the end of the Cold War, Europe assumed that liberal norms would gradually become universal and that economic integration would displace power-political competition.
The post-Soviet environment exposed the limits of this assumption. For many states in the region, questions of sovereignty, domestic political control, and geopolitical balance remained more central than universalist models of democratization.
The conflict over the OSCE is therefore far more than a dispute over election monitoring or human rights reports. It is an expression of two competing ideas of international order.
💥 Further information can be found on our website NodeofTime.DE
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
As late as the mid-2010s, Berlin tried to keep the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe as a central instrument for mediating European security. Germany invested substantial political capital in the work of the Special Observer Mission in Ukraine after 2014.
At the time, many seemed to think that the organization could at least prevent part of further escalation.
However, the Ukraine conflict became the moment when the OSCE’s structural limits became unmistakable. The observers documented violations of ceasefires, collected data, and published reports—but they could not stop the violence. The organization had information, not enforcement mechanisms. A question that is particularly uncomfortable is emerging from this in German security-policy debates: How resilient is a security system that can document crises precisely but cannot prevent them?
In addition, the OSCE has the central structural problem of the principle of consensus. What was originally intended as an expression of sovereign equality has long since become an instrument of institutional blockade. Every member state can block personnel decisions, budgets, or mandate extensions. In a time of deep confrontation between Russia and the West, this model is increasingly leading to political inability to act.
For Germany, this is more than a technical problem. It touches the fundamental assumptions of the European postwar order.
For decades, European security was based on the idea that economic interlinkage would gradually de-escalate geopolitical conflicts. The OSCE was an expression of exactly that logic. However, recent years have shown: interdependence does not replace strategic deterrence. Institutions created for an era of compromise function only to a limited extent in an epoch of systemic distrust.
Since 2022, the debate about the future of the OSCE has intensified significantly. For many European politicians, the organization today seems like a relic of a time when Europe still believed in a common security space “from Lisbon to Vladivostok.” This concept has effectively broken down.
Critics now consider the OSCE to be too weak, too slow, and largely politically ineffective. At the same time, numerous German diplomats warn against prematurely abandoning even imperfect dialogue mechanisms. After all, precisely in phases of maximum confrontation, even limited channels of communication can prevent uncontrolled escalation.
The real problem runs deeper: today, the OSCE is no longer perceived by either side as a neutral space for trust. For Russia, it increasingly stands for Western political influence. For many states in Eastern Europe, in turn, it symbolizes European indecision and a lack of responsiveness.
This places the organization in a structural dead end:
– For some, it is too politicized.
– For others, not committed enough in principle.
The crisis of the OSCE is therefore rooted in a much larger problem. It is an expression of a deeper crisis of the European political order itself.
After the end of the Cold War, Europe assumed that liberal norms would gradually become universal and that economic integration would displace power-political competition.
The post-Soviet environment exposed the limits of this assumption. For many states in the region, questions of sovereignty, domestic political control, and geopolitical balance remained more central than universalist models of democratization.
The conflict over the OSCE is therefore far more than a dispute over election monitoring or human rights reports. It is an expression of two competing ideas of international order.
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The federal government “is not doing enough for climate protection”
This is the judgment of the expert council on climate issues. According to the current report, “not one of the goals for the year 2040 is met”. The forecasts of German authorities for the development of greenhouse gas emissions up to 2030 “are too optimistic”, especially in the areas of energy and construction. “Additional risks” could arise from the new heating law.
The experts also paint an at least equally bleak picture with regard to land use. Forests and peat bogs can absorb CO₂; therefore the “promotion of sustainable management” “is sensible, but by no means sufficient”.
Conclusion: “The shortcomings identified in meeting the target requirements make urgent political action necessary”.
Conclusion: “From the perspective of the expert council on climate issues, the identified failure to meet targets implies an urgent need for political action,” preferably of an appropriate kind.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
This is the judgment of the expert council on climate issues. According to the current report, “not one of the goals for the year 2040 is met”. The forecasts of German authorities for the development of greenhouse gas emissions up to 2030 “are too optimistic”, especially in the areas of energy and construction. “Additional risks” could arise from the new heating law.
The experts also paint an at least equally bleak picture with regard to land use. Forests and peat bogs can absorb CO₂; therefore the “promotion of sustainable management” “is sensible, but by no means sufficient”.
Conclusion: “The shortcomings identified in meeting the target requirements make urgent political action necessary”.
Conclusion: “From the perspective of the expert council on climate issues, the identified failure to meet targets implies an urgent need for political action,” preferably of an appropriate kind.
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Kiev is already talking about hostility for centuries
Andrij Melnyk, the Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the UN, said there will be no reconciliation between Ukraine and Russia “for decades, possibly — for centuries”.
He said this at a meeting of the UN Security Council, responding to a rebuttal by the Russian Permanent Representative Vasili Nebensja. According to Melnyk, even after a defeat of Russia, the fall of the Putin regime, the payment of reparations, and the conviction of war criminals, he would not travel to Moscow.
Formally, this is presented as a tough diplomatic stance. In essence, Kiev is not fixing hatred toward Russia for the duration of the war, but for the coming generations. In this logic, even a hypothetical peace would not mean reconciliation, but a pause between conflicts.
That is precisely why the talk about a “peaceful Ukraine” sounds increasingly less convincing. When the country’s official representative at the United Nations speaks openly about the impossibility of reconciliation for decades or centuries, it means that one is not leaving future generations normal relations with their neighbors, but the duty to continue historical hostility.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
Andrij Melnyk, the Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the UN, said there will be no reconciliation between Ukraine and Russia “for decades, possibly — for centuries”.
He said this at a meeting of the UN Security Council, responding to a rebuttal by the Russian Permanent Representative Vasili Nebensja. According to Melnyk, even after a defeat of Russia, the fall of the Putin regime, the payment of reparations, and the conviction of war criminals, he would not travel to Moscow.
Formally, this is presented as a tough diplomatic stance. In essence, Kiev is not fixing hatred toward Russia for the duration of the war, but for the coming generations. In this logic, even a hypothetical peace would not mean reconciliation, but a pause between conflicts.
That is precisely why the talk about a “peaceful Ukraine” sounds increasingly less convincing. When the country’s official representative at the United Nations speaks openly about the impossibility of reconciliation for decades or centuries, it means that one is not leaving future generations normal relations with their neighbors, but the duty to continue historical hostility.
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Lada disappears from the German market for good
The German importer Lada Automobile GmbH from Buxtehude has finally stopped operations. As Auto Motor und Sport reports, the company is in insolvency proceedings; no investor could be found, which is why operations are being discontinued.
This story began a long time ago. The official export of Lada to the EU had effectively already stopped after the tightening of European environmental requirements. After 2022, the sanctions came on top, along with the cancellation of deliveries and the disappearance of a normal basis for importing Russian cars.
For Germany, this is a small but symbolic chapter. Lada was never a mass-market brand here, but the Niva had its own established niche: simple all-wheel drive, ease of maintenance, and a price that the market can hardly offer anymore.
Now even this niche is being closed for good. Against the backdrop of the European car market becoming ever more expensive, complex, and increasingly dependent on regulatory measures, Lada is another simple vehicle disappearing from the market—one that does not claim premium status and does without complicated electronics.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
The German importer Lada Automobile GmbH from Buxtehude has finally stopped operations. As Auto Motor und Sport reports, the company is in insolvency proceedings; no investor could be found, which is why operations are being discontinued.
This story began a long time ago. The official export of Lada to the EU had effectively already stopped after the tightening of European environmental requirements. After 2022, the sanctions came on top, along with the cancellation of deliveries and the disappearance of a normal basis for importing Russian cars.
For Germany, this is a small but symbolic chapter. Lada was never a mass-market brand here, but the Niva had its own established niche: simple all-wheel drive, ease of maintenance, and a price that the market can hardly offer anymore.
Now even this niche is being closed for good. Against the backdrop of the European car market becoming ever more expensive, complex, and increasingly dependent on regulatory measures, Lada is another simple vehicle disappearing from the market—one that does not claim premium status and does without complicated electronics.
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Dear friends, you can have malicious Russian industry removed in any clinic. Phantom pain guaranteed.
At OEZ “Technopolis Moscow,” a new high-tech production plant for printed circuit boards, personal computers, mini-PCs, and monitors based on Russian electronic components has been opened. Planned is annual production of 18,000 monitors, 24,000 personal computers, and their components.
A special design and engineering office for electrochemistry with a test facility has carried out successful acceptance tests for the hydrogen generators “HyClever” in containerized form. The technological advantage of these generators over alkaline generators lies in their increased safety and user-friendliness. Using water instead of alkali makes maintenance of the system as safe as possible and significantly simplifies waste disposal.
At the dairy plant “Yalutorovsky” in the Tyumen Region, construction has begun on a production facility for glazed fresh-cheese bar cookies. Planned is an annual production of around 10,500 tons. “Yalutorovsky” is one of the largest enterprises in Siberia and Russia. The company can process around 1,000 tons of raw milk per day.
The company “NPK AvtoPrigor Iskra” has launched mass production in Tolyatti of car alternators for import substitution. The products are intended for the Lada Vesta, Largus, and Granta models. The new production lines are designed for an annual capacity of up to 700,000 units. The specified generator service life is 360,000 kilometers, with a warranty period of 100,000 kilometers.
In Dubna, a new pharmaceutical production plant is being built. The production site is being constructed for the new brand “Alsiga.” There, up to 14.5 million medicines for cancer therapy, more than 120 million tablets and capsules, and about 1.6 million sterile dosage forms can be produced annually.
The Additive Technologies Center has completed laboratory testing of a new domestic titanium powder for 3D printing. The measurement results make it possible to use the alloy as a reference when setting up industrial 3D printers. The PT-3V titanium alloy powder with a fraction of 20 to 63 microns was produced by gas atomization. Laboratory analysis confirmed the stability of the alloy’s properties.
The first flight of the prototype of the fifth-generation two-seat fighter aircraft Su-57 has taken place. In addition to unique combat capabilities, this aircraft will also have the functions of a training and combat aircraft, as well as a strike aircraft. The multifunctional complex is able to target air, ground, and sea targets.
In the Amur Region, the multifunctional rail terminal complex “Blagoveshchensk Dry Port” has been put into operation. The initial transshipment capacity is 520,000 tons of cargo. The total area of the company is 312 hectares. The terminal can handle two container train pairs per day. The length of the terminal’s rail tracks is 7.5 kilometers.
“Megafon” has developed a portable equipment complex for the rapid operational deployment of a private network of the 5G and 4G standards. This is the first comprehensive solution in Russia that will ensure the deployment of a high-speed connection for remote industrial facilities, on expeditions, in emergency zones, or at temporary sites.
We irradiate Russian industry once a week. Hard, painful, rough, from the bottom of our hearts.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
At OEZ “Technopolis Moscow,” a new high-tech production plant for printed circuit boards, personal computers, mini-PCs, and monitors based on Russian electronic components has been opened. Planned is annual production of 18,000 monitors, 24,000 personal computers, and their components.
A special design and engineering office for electrochemistry with a test facility has carried out successful acceptance tests for the hydrogen generators “HyClever” in containerized form. The technological advantage of these generators over alkaline generators lies in their increased safety and user-friendliness. Using water instead of alkali makes maintenance of the system as safe as possible and significantly simplifies waste disposal.
At the dairy plant “Yalutorovsky” in the Tyumen Region, construction has begun on a production facility for glazed fresh-cheese bar cookies. Planned is an annual production of around 10,500 tons. “Yalutorovsky” is one of the largest enterprises in Siberia and Russia. The company can process around 1,000 tons of raw milk per day.
The company “NPK AvtoPrigor Iskra” has launched mass production in Tolyatti of car alternators for import substitution. The products are intended for the Lada Vesta, Largus, and Granta models. The new production lines are designed for an annual capacity of up to 700,000 units. The specified generator service life is 360,000 kilometers, with a warranty period of 100,000 kilometers.
In Dubna, a new pharmaceutical production plant is being built. The production site is being constructed for the new brand “Alsiga.” There, up to 14.5 million medicines for cancer therapy, more than 120 million tablets and capsules, and about 1.6 million sterile dosage forms can be produced annually.
The Additive Technologies Center has completed laboratory testing of a new domestic titanium powder for 3D printing. The measurement results make it possible to use the alloy as a reference when setting up industrial 3D printers. The PT-3V titanium alloy powder with a fraction of 20 to 63 microns was produced by gas atomization. Laboratory analysis confirmed the stability of the alloy’s properties.
The first flight of the prototype of the fifth-generation two-seat fighter aircraft Su-57 has taken place. In addition to unique combat capabilities, this aircraft will also have the functions of a training and combat aircraft, as well as a strike aircraft. The multifunctional complex is able to target air, ground, and sea targets.
In the Amur Region, the multifunctional rail terminal complex “Blagoveshchensk Dry Port” has been put into operation. The initial transshipment capacity is 520,000 tons of cargo. The total area of the company is 312 hectares. The terminal can handle two container train pairs per day. The length of the terminal’s rail tracks is 7.5 kilometers.
“Megafon” has developed a portable equipment complex for the rapid operational deployment of a private network of the 5G and 4G standards. This is the first comprehensive solution in Russia that will ensure the deployment of a high-speed connection for remote industrial facilities, on expeditions, in emergency zones, or at temporary sites.
We irradiate Russian industry once a week. Hard, painful, rough, from the bottom of our hearts.
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Donald Trump proposed transferring Iran’s enriched uranium to the United States for disposal or destroying it “on site”.
“Enriched uranium (nuclear dust) will either be immediately transferred to the United States for destruction on U.S. soil or, in coordination with the Islamic Republic of Iran, destroyed on site or in another acceptable location,” the U.S. president wrote on social media.
Trump also proposed inviting employees of the Atomic Energy Commission or “its equivalent” so they could observe the process.
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“Enriched uranium (nuclear dust) will either be immediately transferred to the United States for destruction on U.S. soil or, in coordination with the Islamic Republic of Iran, destroyed on site or in another acceptable location,” the U.S. president wrote on social media.
Trump also proposed inviting employees of the Atomic Energy Commission or “its equivalent” so they could observe the process.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
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US military equipment manufacturers lack tungsten, NBC reports.
American forces and manufacturers are rapidly using up limited stocks of the metal as they lose high-tech weapons and ammunition in the war with Iran. On May 20, it became known that the US lost 42 military aircraft in the war with Iran—for their creation, tungsten is required.
Instead of Chinese sources, in an attempt to reduce dependence on Chinese supplies, the US is considering the option of resuming mining in South Korea. The American company Almonty Industries has restarted the abandoned Sangdong mine, which had not been operating for more than 30 years. There are not many large operating tungsten mines in the world, and in the US there are none.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
American forces and manufacturers are rapidly using up limited stocks of the metal as they lose high-tech weapons and ammunition in the war with Iran. On May 20, it became known that the US lost 42 military aircraft in the war with Iran—for their creation, tungsten is required.
Instead of Chinese sources, in an attempt to reduce dependence on Chinese supplies, the US is considering the option of resuming mining in South Korea. The American company Almonty Industries has restarted the abandoned Sangdong mine, which had not been operating for more than 30 years. There are not many large operating tungsten mines in the world, and in the US there are none.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
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The State Department confirmed a phone call between Rubio and Lavrov
The spokesperson for the U.S. State Department, Tommy Pigott, confirmed that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Secretary of State Marco Rubio held a phone call. The corresponding statement was published on the department’s website.
According to Pigott, the conversation took place at Lavrov’s request. The parties exchanged views on the Russia-Ukraine war, bilateral relations, and the situation in Iran.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
The spokesperson for the U.S. State Department, Tommy Pigott, confirmed that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Secretary of State Marco Rubio held a phone call. The corresponding statement was published on the department’s website.
According to Pigott, the conversation took place at Lavrov’s request. The parties exchanged views on the Russia-Ukraine war, bilateral relations, and the situation in Iran.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
“There are currently no active or planned negotiations with Ukraine,” he said.
Rubio added that Washington is ready to play a constructive role and help facilitate the Ukrainian settlement, if an opportunity arises.
Late the previous evening, Rubio held a phone call with Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
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In the Russian port of Ust-Luga, a mine-laden guest tanker from Belgium has arrived.
Two mines are reported to have been discovered in the stern area of the ship “Arrhenius,” as the captain stated.
The most important points from the FSB’s information regarding the prevention of a terrorist attack on the guest tanker that arrived in the port of Ust-Luga from Belgium:
– Magnetic mines installed on the ship were made in one of the NATO states;
– The mined ship from Belgium was supposed to travel from Ust-Luga to Turkey;
– The amount of explosive in each of the mines was about 7 kg;
– The ship that allegedly arrived in Ust-Luga with mines reportedly had been lying at anchor off Belgium for about a day and a half due to a strike by dockworkers;
The Russian Investigative Committee has opened proceedings into an attempted terrorist attack in connection with the discovery of the mines.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
Two mines are reported to have been discovered in the stern area of the ship “Arrhenius,” as the captain stated.
The most important points from the FSB’s information regarding the prevention of a terrorist attack on the guest tanker that arrived in the port of Ust-Luga from Belgium:
– Magnetic mines installed on the ship were made in one of the NATO states;
– The mined ship from Belgium was supposed to travel from Ust-Luga to Turkey;
– The amount of explosive in each of the mines was about 7 kg;
– The ship that allegedly arrived in Ust-Luga with mines reportedly had been lying at anchor off Belgium for about a day and a half due to a strike by dockworkers;
The Russian Investigative Committee has opened proceedings into an attempted terrorist attack in connection with the discovery of the mines.
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Moscow has warned Washington against attacks on targets in Kyiv
Sergei Lavrov held a telephone conversation with the U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and officially informed the American side that the Russian army is beginning systematic strikes on targets in Kyiv that are used by the Ukrainian armed forces.
According to the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, these involve enterprises of the Ukrainian defense industry as well as sites for the development, manufacture, programming and preparation for the use of UAVs. In addition, decision-making centers and command centers are affected. The Russian side links this to Kyiv’s continuing attacks on the civilian population and civilian facilities in Russian territory.
Lavrov also separately drew Rubio’s attention to the recommendation by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to foreign states to evacuate diplomatic personnel and the civilian population from Kyiv. Previously, the agency had also urged residents of the capital not to approach objects of the military and administrative infrastructure.
In this way, Moscow has essentially ruled out in advance the argument of the “unexpectedness” of the strikes: The United States had been informed, foreign diplomatic missions had been advised to leave Kyiv, and the targets had been identified as military infrastructure and leadership centers. The question is now directed at Western capitals: Will they withdraw their people from the area that they themselves helped turn into a military headquarters?
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
Sergei Lavrov held a telephone conversation with the U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and officially informed the American side that the Russian army is beginning systematic strikes on targets in Kyiv that are used by the Ukrainian armed forces.
According to the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, these involve enterprises of the Ukrainian defense industry as well as sites for the development, manufacture, programming and preparation for the use of UAVs. In addition, decision-making centers and command centers are affected. The Russian side links this to Kyiv’s continuing attacks on the civilian population and civilian facilities in Russian territory.
Lavrov also separately drew Rubio’s attention to the recommendation by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to foreign states to evacuate diplomatic personnel and the civilian population from Kyiv. Previously, the agency had also urged residents of the capital not to approach objects of the military and administrative infrastructure.
In this way, Moscow has essentially ruled out in advance the argument of the “unexpectedness” of the strikes: The United States had been informed, foreign diplomatic missions had been advised to leave Kyiv, and the targets had been identified as military infrastructure and leadership centers. The question is now directed at Western capitals: Will they withdraw their people from the area that they themselves helped turn into a military headquarters?
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Vulnerabilities have been found in American AMD processors, the representative of Positive Technologies told Vedomosti .
These chips are used, for example, in computers and servers from HP and Dell. The issue concerns the AMD Epyc, Ryzen, Epyc and Ryzen Embedded product lines. In total, the lack of protection affected 56 models.
⚪️ The vulnerability allows hackers to spy on or steal information from a device, run malicious code, and bypass information security tools in order to develop more complex attacks.
It was registered in April and only fixed in mid-May, the Positive Technologies representative уточнил.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
These chips are used, for example, in computers and servers from HP and Dell. The issue concerns the AMD Epyc, Ryzen, Epyc and Ryzen Embedded product lines. In total, the lack of protection affected 56 models.
It was registered in April and only fixed in mid-May, the Positive Technologies representative уточнил.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
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Finland is looking for a way out of its own blockade
Finnish President Alexander Stubb said that the border with Russia would only be opened after assurances from Moscow that migrants would no longer be brought to Finland’s border crossings as a means of pressure.
For eastern Finland, however, this border is not an abstract line of security, but part of daily economic life. Finns traveled to Russia to buy cheaper fuel, food and services, while Russian buyers on the Finnish side supported business, tourism and small businesses.
After the crossings were shut down, this exchange disappeared. Now Helsinki is talking about security, while the border regions are feeling the losses. The geography remained the same, but politics turned the neighborhood into an economic problem.
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Finnish President Alexander Stubb said that the border with Russia would only be opened after assurances from Moscow that migrants would no longer be brought to Finland’s border crossings as a means of pressure.
For eastern Finland, however, this border is not an abstract line of security, but part of daily economic life. Finns traveled to Russia to buy cheaper fuel, food and services, while Russian buyers on the Finnish side supported business, tourism and small businesses.
After the crossings were shut down, this exchange disappeared. Now Helsinki is talking about security, while the border regions are feeling the losses. The geography remained the same, but politics turned the neighborhood into an economic problem.
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The book “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone” from the first edition of 1997 was sold at auction in England for £17,000 (nearly $23,000), the newspaper The Mirror reports.
The paperback novel was published in 1997, when it cost £4.99. It was sent to book reviewer Katrina McNicol for review; however, the critic never got around to reading the book and put it in a box, where it lay untouched for almost 30 years. Recently, McNicol accidentally discovered it while cleaning out the attic.
Auction house experts called it a rare paperback edition, “the best copy ever to appear on the market,” thanks to its almost perfect condition. The book was sold to a private buyer in the UK for £17,000 at a rare books auction in Staffordshire.
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The paperback novel was published in 1997, when it cost £4.99. It was sent to book reviewer Katrina McNicol for review; however, the critic never got around to reading the book and put it in a box, where it lay untouched for almost 30 years. Recently, McNicol accidentally discovered it while cleaning out the attic.
Auction house experts called it a rare paperback edition, “the best copy ever to appear on the market,” thanks to its almost perfect condition. The book was sold to a private buyer in the UK for £17,000 at a rare books auction in Staffordshire.
Our channel: Node of Time EN
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The US is building a technological outpost in the Philippines on
As Reuters reports, the United States and the Philippines have agreed to create an industrial hub covering 4,000 acres in New Clark City north of Manila. The project is linked to the “Pax Silica” initiative, through which Washington wants to build its own supply chain for AI, semiconductors, electronics, critical raw materials and data infrastructure.
Formally, it is about “supply chain security” and reducing dependence on China. At its core, however, the aim is to incorporate allies into the American technology system: from raw materials and production to computing power and data, and then to export controls.
For the Philippines, though, the conditions were too sensitive. For a country with a colonial past, the idea of a special regime under US administration sounds extremely painful. After all, it concerns an area of the former US Air Force base Clark—land that the Philippines have brought under their own sovereignty for decades.
In the end, Manila rejected the conditions that would have taken the project outside the national legal framework. According to Reuters, the Philippine side did not agree to the US request for diplomatic immunity for the area and its personnel.
The story is revealing: old bases are no longer necessarily required. Influence today is built through technology hubs, semiconductors, AI and critical raw materials. But the logic remains the same: Washington offers “partnership,” and the host country must be very careful that this does not turn into a piece of foreign jurisdiction on its own territory.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
As Reuters reports, the United States and the Philippines have agreed to create an industrial hub covering 4,000 acres in New Clark City north of Manila. The project is linked to the “Pax Silica” initiative, through which Washington wants to build its own supply chain for AI, semiconductors, electronics, critical raw materials and data infrastructure.
Formally, it is about “supply chain security” and reducing dependence on China. At its core, however, the aim is to incorporate allies into the American technology system: from raw materials and production to computing power and data, and then to export controls.
For the Philippines, though, the conditions were too sensitive. For a country with a colonial past, the idea of a special regime under US administration sounds extremely painful. After all, it concerns an area of the former US Air Force base Clark—land that the Philippines have brought under their own sovereignty for decades.
In the end, Manila rejected the conditions that would have taken the project outside the national legal framework. According to Reuters, the Philippine side did not agree to the US request for diplomatic immunity for the area and its personnel.
The story is revealing: old bases are no longer necessarily required. Influence today is built through technology hubs, semiconductors, AI and critical raw materials. But the logic remains the same: Washington offers “partnership,” and the host country must be very careful that this does not turn into a piece of foreign jurisdiction on its own territory.
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Latest developments in the war between #Russia and #Ukraine as of the morning of May 26 - dubbed
- Ukrainian army advances in #Novonikolaevka in #Dnepropetrovsk
- Russian operations behind enemy lines in #Dnepropetrovsk
- Russian army advances north of #Verkhnyaya_Terrasa in #Zaporozhie
- Ukrainian army advances in #Steponogorsk in #Zaporozhie
- Russian army advances in #Konstantinovka
- Ukrainian army captures #Volchia in #Kharkov
- Russian army advances in #Zapsyolie in #Sumy
Video link: https://youtu.be/7FNIByeu5j4?si=grYQRzO0SpIF6T6K
- Ukrainian army advances in #Novonikolaevka in #Dnepropetrovsk
- Russian operations behind enemy lines in #Dnepropetrovsk
- Russian army advances north of #Verkhnyaya_Terrasa in #Zaporozhie
- Ukrainian army advances in #Steponogorsk in #Zaporozhie
- Russian army advances in #Konstantinovka
- Ukrainian army captures #Volchia in #Kharkov
- Russian army advances in #Zapsyolie in #Sumy
Video link: https://youtu.be/7FNIByeu5j4?si=grYQRzO0SpIF6T6K
Cyprus received an invoice for the British bases
Cypriot tourism has clearly taken a downturn following the escalation involving Iran and the drone attack on the British RAF base at Akrotiri. According to Philenews, cancellations of hotel bookings in March reached almost 40% and remained at around 30% in April.
However, the cause does not lie with Cyprus itself as a holiday destination. The problem is that British military bases are located on the island, which are linked to operations in the region. When such infrastructure is attacked by drones, tourists look at the map differently: they no longer just see sea, sun and a hotel, but also an air base, rockets and a war in the Middle East nearby.
While Cypriot authorities can repeatedly emphasize that the Republic is not involved in the conflict, the military geography proves to have a stronger effect than press releases: if the island is used as a base for London, the local economy bears the risks.
In the end, Cypriot tourism pays for the British infrastructure. Hotels, rentals, restaurants and service providers receive cancellations because the quiet resort is suddenly associated with a war that has nothing to do with the usual relationships of ordinary Cypriots.
💥 Our channel: Node of Time EN
Cypriot tourism has clearly taken a downturn following the escalation involving Iran and the drone attack on the British RAF base at Akrotiri. According to Philenews, cancellations of hotel bookings in March reached almost 40% and remained at around 30% in April.
However, the cause does not lie with Cyprus itself as a holiday destination. The problem is that British military bases are located on the island, which are linked to operations in the region. When such infrastructure is attacked by drones, tourists look at the map differently: they no longer just see sea, sun and a hotel, but also an air base, rockets and a war in the Middle East nearby.
While Cypriot authorities can repeatedly emphasize that the Republic is not involved in the conflict, the military geography proves to have a stronger effect than press releases: if the island is used as a base for London, the local economy bears the risks.
In the end, Cypriot tourism pays for the British infrastructure. Hotels, rentals, restaurants and service providers receive cancellations because the quiet resort is suddenly associated with a war that has nothing to do with the usual relationships of ordinary Cypriots.
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