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Tēma: Notikumi pasaulē, EU/ASV,NATO u.tml.

AutorsZiņojums
user
08. Oct 2024, 20:36 #9921

Kopš: 12. May 2020

Ziņojumi: 13656

Braucu ar:

Jaunais NATO ģenerālsekretārs: Nākamā ziema Ukrainai varētu būt smagākā kopš lielā kara sākuma


Lasìju virsrakstu, atveru rakstu ar domu palasìt ko Karins saka.. a tur kaut kads lohs. Vai tad Karinam tur nebija jabut
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bum_bumz
08. Oct 2024, 22:11 #9922

Kopš: 05. Jan 2006

Ziņojumi: 6664

Braucu ar: E34


08 Oct 2024, 20:36:48 @user rakstīja:
Jaunais NATO ģenerālsekretārs: Nākamā ziema Ukrainai varētu būt smagākā kopš lielā kara sākuma


Lasìju virsrakstu, atveru rakstu ar domu palasìt ko Karins saka.. a tur kaut kads lohs. Vai tad Karinam tur nebija jabut

Tev pārmetīs, ka esi lohs vai pieduries
Kariņa čomi saka, ka šis būs labāks par Stoltenbergu 'dēļ notriektās pasažieru lidmašīnas
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DiksIrseejs
08. Oct 2024, 22:41 #9923

Kopš: 08. Oct 2020

No: Dobele

Ziņojumi: 1097

Braucu ar: Hibrīdu


08 Oct 2024, 20:36:48 @user rakstīja:
Jaunais NATO ģenerālsekretārs: Nākamā ziema Ukrainai varētu būt smagākā kopš lielā kara sākuma


Lasìju virsrakstu, atveru rakstu ar domu palasìt ko Karins saka.. a tur kaut kads lohs. Vai tad Karinam tur nebija jabut


NATO nevarēja atļauties Kariņu algot.
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Lafter
09. Oct 2024, 00:26 #9924

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

Braucu ar: wv

Rheinmetall is supplying qualification rounds of a new generation of tank ammunition for a joint qualification of the Bundeswehr and the British Army

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Lafter
09. Oct 2024, 16:56 #9925

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

Braucu ar: wv

Izskatās- ir saņēmušies

Polija uzskāk K2PL ražošanu. Viņiem bija problēmas ar licenzes iegūšanu kopā ar tehnoloģijām. Taču izskatās ir atrisinājuši.


Briti - Challenger-3







Links

Franči pretdronu moduļus jau.
Links
Un Ūdens dronus


Jenķi jaunas lidmašīnas flotei


Navy Making Final Selection For F/A-XX Stealth Fighter, Plans For 2030s Service Entry

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Lafter
Vakar, 01:34 #9926

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

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Grāmata 32 zaļie. 15tajā izsūtīs. Gaidu ar nepacietîbu

Leģendārs žurnàlists.

Inside Biden’s ‘War’ Room: Heads of State and Heads of Hair Bob Woodward doesn’t know which story he wants to tell in his latest presidential chronicle.

It’s not listed among the enumerated powers of the American presidency, but one of the modern expectations of the office is that Bob Woodward will write at least one book about your administration. Over the past 30 years Bill Clinton and Barack Obama have earned two apiece, while the presidencies of George W. Bush and Donald J. Trump each fill out a trilogy.

As senator and vice president, Joe Biden was a supporting player in many of those books and the full-fledged co-star of “Peril,” the last Trump volume, which Woodward wrote with Robert Costa and which covered the 2020 election and the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. Now, with “War,” Biden has a chronicle of his own. It’s a strange, self-divided book — more admiring of its subject than most of its predecessors and less confident in its own narrative, busy with incident and yet weirdly detached from the chaos of the world as we know it.

The presidency, a famously lonely office, is in Woodward’s presentation anything but solitary. Surrounding the commander in chief in each book are cabinet officers, aides and advisers. Some of them are Woodward’s sources, though he doesn’t say which. His method, explained in a note at the end of “War,” is to conduct his interviews “under the journalist ground rule of ‘deep background,’” meaning “that all the information could be used but I would not say who provided it.”

“At the center of good governance,” Woodward writes, is “teamwork,” and the reader spends a fair amount of time with members of Biden’s national security team, including Lloyd Austin and Antony Blinken, the secretaries of defense and state; Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser and Vice President Kamala Harris.
They and their colleagues and underlings give the narrative a bustling, procedural efficiency. Woodward limns them in barbershop prose: “Biden’s chief of staff, Ron Klain, 59, with dark brown hair and a friendly, high-charging demeanor”; Blinken, “5-foot-10 with a neat wave of once brown, now gray, hair.” If this were a movie, these people would be played by solid second-tier character actors.


Mostly, though, Biden shares the stage with other heads of state. Their hairstyles are a matter of public record. The tonsorially distinguished Boris Johnson, for example, is described simply as “a member of the British Conservative Party and a product of prestigious Eton and Oxford.” “Prestigious” in that sentence is a nugget of pure Woodwardian gold.

But the main global heavyweights with whom Biden and Woodward must contend are Vladimir Putin, Benjamin Netanyahu and, above all, Trump.

“War” opens with Trump in 1989, a 42-year-old wheeler-dealer sitting down to chat with Woodward and his Watergate reporting partner, Carl Bernstein. A transcript of that interview, unearthed in 2023, reveals, according to Woodward, “the origin of Trumpism in the words of Trump himself.” Then as now, “Trump’s character was focused on winning, fighting and surviving.”

And, he might have added, on claiming the center of attention. In a book determined to focus on Biden-era diplomacy, the story of Trump’s latest presidential run is a subplot that keeps threatening to turn into the main event.

Many of the headlines that “War” has generated have focused on its claims that Trump, as president, sent Covid tests to Putin and, after leaving office, had several phone conversations with the Russian president. But the real news that Woodward wants to make is about how Biden dealt with Putin before and after the invasion of Ukraine and with Netanyahu in the wake of the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks; and about how the president, as Sullivan puts it, “kept the homeland safe” through a tumultuous three and a half years.

The action stretches from early 2021 to this past summer — from the hectic weeks before Biden’s inauguration to the swirling aftermath of his withdrawal from the 2024 campaign. Not that “War” is primarily about electoral politics. (Tim Walz is mentioned once, JD Vance not at all.) Nor is it about the issues that polls suggest matter most to voters. There’s a brief chapter on immigration, a couple of references to inflation and nothing much about abortion, crime or climate change. The judicial branch of government goes all but unmentioned; the legislative branch consists mainly of Senator Lindsey Graham, seen largely in the role of Trump’s golf partner.
Woodward isn’t interested in partisanship or ideology. His subject is high statecraft, the exercise of power at its loftiest reaches, which mostly involves heads of government and their lieutenants talking — and frequently swearing — on the telephone. Leadership is a matter of personality, and a leader’s temperament is tested above all in the arena of foreign policy. In “War,” Biden’s presidency is defined — at times threatened and, in Woodward’s frankly stated opinion, ultimately vindicated — by how he handles Ukraine and the Middle East.

In the case of Ukraine, after “an astonishing intelligence coup from the crown jewels of U.S. intelligence” revealed Putin’s war plan, the administration had to convince its allies — and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky — of the gravity of the threat. Once the Russian troops were moving toward Kyiv, the tasks were to bolster Ukraine militarily and diplomatically while avoiding the direct involvement of NATO or U.S. forces and heading off the threat of a potential nuclear escalation.

This is harrowing, riveting stuff, even if you know how it will play out. The problem, though, is that we don’t really know. Since the book’s completion, Russia has been on the offensive again in Ukraine. The Middle East conflict has widened to include Hezbollah and Iran, an outcome that Biden and his team spend many pages working to prevent. Meanwhile, the election campaigns of Trump and Harris hurtle forward. Three weeks after “War” is published on Oct. 15, voters will provide raw material for the sequel.

Though he specializes in real-time suspense, Woodward doesn’t write cliffhangers. His impulse — his talent — is to impose an arc and a moral on the mess and sprawl of very recent history. This time around, his stated conclusions are unambiguous: “Donald Trump is not only the wrong man for the presidency,” he writes, “he is unfit to lead the country.” In contrast, “Biden and his team will be largely studied in history as an example of steady and purposeful leadership.” Those judgments sound authoritative. They also sound wishful.

WAR | By Bob Woodward | Simon & Schuster | 435 pp. | $32
A.O. Scott is a critic at large for The Times’s Book Review, writing about literature and ideas. He joined The Times in 2000 and was a film critic until early 2023. More about A.O. Scott



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Lafter
Vakar, 01:43 #9927

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

Braucu ar: wv

FT versija

Donald Trump spoke to Vladimir Putin several times after he left the White House, book says Bob Woodward says former US president also secretly sent Covid-19 tests to Russian leader


Donald Trump had as many as seven conversations with Vladimir Putin after he left the White House, according to explosive reports that raise fresh questions about the former US president’s relationship with the Russian leader.

The claims stem from a forthcoming book by veteran journalist Bob Woodward, due to be published next week. The Washington Post, his longtime employer, first reported on the book’s contents.

Woodward’s book also reveals Trump secretly sent Putin Covid-19 tests for his personal use at the height of the pandemic, the report said.


The book, War, reportedly describes a scene earlier this year, when Trump told an aide to leave his Mar-a-Lago office so he could speak privately by phone with Putin. The unnamed aide cited in the book suggested the former president and Russia’s leader had spoken as many as seven times since Trump left the White House in 2021.

The reports raise new questions about Trump’s relationship with Putin with less than a month to go until the US presidential election.

Trump, the Republican candidate, trails his Democratic opponent, Kamala Harris, by more than three points, according to the Financial Times poll tracker, although they are locked in a virtual tie in all seven swing states that will determine who wins November’s vote.

A spokesperson for Simon & Schuster, Woodward’s publisher, did not respond to a request for comment.

The Trump campaign’s communications director Steven Cheung rejected the reports and launched a personal attack on Woodward, calling him a “truly demented and deranged man”.

Cheung said Trump gave Woodward “absolutely no access for this trash book”, adding: “Woodward is a total sleazebag who has lost it mentally.”

Trump’s running mate JD Vance called Woodward a “hack” and defended the former president at a campaign stop in Michigan on Tuesday.

“Have I talked to Donald Trump about his calls with Vladimir Putin? No. I’ve never had that conversation with Donald Trump in my life,” Vance said in response to a reporter’s question. “Even if it is true, is there something wrong with speaking to world leaders? Is there anything wrong with engaging in diplomacy?”

But Harris told radio personality Howard Stern in an interview on Tuesday that the reports demonstrated “who Trump is”.

“People in America were struggling to get tests and this guy is sending them to Russia, to a murderous dictator for his personal use?” she said.

“That is just the most recent stark example of who Trump is. He secretly sent Covid test kits for the personal use of Putin of Russia, an adversary to the United States, when he was talking about Americans should be putting bleach in their blood.”

Woodward, 81, became famous in the 1970s when he and fellow Washington Post reporter Carl Bernstein broke stories about the Watergate scandal, which led to then president Richard Nixon’s resignation. He has written more than a dozen bestselling books, including four volumes on the Trump presidency.

Trump has sued Woodward over a 2022 audiobook based on 20 interviews that he conducted with the former president between 2016 and 2020. Trump has argued that publishing the tapes violates his copyright, while Simon & Schuster has repeatedly filed motions to dismiss the case.



Trump’s possible return to the White House could have significant implications for Russia, Ukraine and the Nato alliance. The former president — who called Putin a “genius” after Russia invaded Ukraine again in 2022 — has said he would end the fighting in Ukraine on “day one” if he is re-elected, but has not detailed how he would do so. In last month’s presidential debate, Trump declined to say that he wanted Ukraine to win the war.

Harris has accused Trump of pandering to Putin and told CBS News in an interview that aired on Monday night that she would not meet “bilaterally” with the Russian president unless his Ukrainian counterparts were offered a seat at the negotiating table.

Lauren Fedor in Washington OCTOBER 8 2024

[ Šo ziņu laboja Lafter, 10 Oct 2024, 01:44:26 ]



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kkas
Vakar, 09:01 #9928

Kopš: 22. Apr 2008

Ziņojumi: 9236

Braucu ar: zviedru ledusskapi

trampam ļoti patīk diktatori un autoritāras personas. pats apvērsumu mēģināja veikt. tā kā viss loģiski.
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Lafter
Vakar, 10:58 #9929

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

Braucu ar: wv

Publikacijās ir uzsvars uz Trump. Bet pa lielam, tur ir par ko citu pēc būtības. Par aizkulišu spēlîtēm. Par pentagona zvanu vatei- izrādās šie reāli gribēja ar taktisko iemaukt. Kad USA norāva mērci tā, pa nopietno. Utt, utjp.
400 lapas ar interesantu lasāmvielu.

Tas čalis bija viens no tiem, kurš savulaik nonesa USA prezidentu. Un esmu pārliecināts, kad 90+% tur ir patiesība.
Par Trump ir cita- FEAR.

[ Šo ziņu laboja Lafter, 10 Oct 2024, 11:05:04 ]



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bum_bumz
Vakar, 16:22 #9930

Kopš: 05. Jan 2006

Ziņojumi: 6664

Braucu ar: E34

Ārpus USA medijiem Trampa bubulis ir noplacis, kā būs būs. Nevar saprast, Kamala kandidē vai Teilore. Otrā aizsūtīja 5 mio no Miltona cietušajiem, kad virpulis vēl atradās virs Meksikas līča un nebija sasniedzis Tampu
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Elviss
Vakar, 17:01 #9931

Kopš: 02. May 2006

Ziņojumi: 21959

Braucu ar: VAZ 2101 80'


10 Oct 2024, 10:58:50 @Lafter rakstīja:
Publikacijās ir uzsvars uz Trump. Bet pa lielam, tur ir par ko citu pēc būtības. Par aizkulišu spēlîtēm. Par pentagona zvanu vatei- izrādās šie reāli gribēja ar taktisko iemaukt. Kad USA norāva mērci tā, pa nopietno. Utt, utjp.
400 lapas ar interesantu lasāmvielu.

Tas čalis bija viens no tiem, kurš savulaik nonesa USA prezidentu. Un esmu pārliecināts, kad 90+% tur ir patiesība.
Par Trump ir cita- FEAR.


Gan jau esi visas arī izlasījis


Bet, jo tad blato, ka nonesīs visu floti, ja uzmetis taktisko.

Arī sanāk mīzēji un dirsēji.

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Lafter
Vakar, 18:47 #9932

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

Braucu ar: wv


10 Oct 2024, 17:01:26 @Elviss rakstīja:

10 Oct 2024, 10:58:50 @Lafter rakstīja:
Publikacijās ir uzsvars uz Trump. Bet pa lielam, tur ir par ko citu pēc būtības. Par aizkulišu spēlîtēm. Par pentagona zvanu vatei- izrādās šie reāli gribēja ar taktisko iemaukt. Kad USA norāva mērci tā, pa nopietno. Utt, utjp.
400 lapas ar interesantu lasāmvielu.

Tas čalis bija viens no tiem, kurš savulaik nonesa USA prezidentu. Un esmu pārliecināts, kad 90+% tur ir patiesība.
Par Trump ir cita- FEAR.


Gan jau esi visas arī izlasījis


Bet, jo tad blato, ka nonesīs visu floti, ja uzmetis taktisko.

Arī sanāk mīzēji un dirsēji.

Visas nē..
Gaidu pēdējo- vēl 5 dienas. Kas jau ir kopsavilkums.
Bet jā- mītu ir daudz par neuzvaramo USA kura nemīž. Un kuriem analogof ñet…


Patīk, vai nē- bet fakts.

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Lafter
Vakar, 22:31 #9933

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

Braucu ar: wv

Pšeki izskatās gatavi kauties par visiem

Es friču vietā sāktu aizdomāties

Poland to Become Europe's Most Powerful in Attack Helicopters with US Apache AH-64


Poland Builds Europe’s Largest Mobile Artillery Forces with Record K9 Howitzers Acquisitions

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elbruss
Vakar, 22:50 #9934

Kopš: 12. May 2006

Ziņojumi: 983

Braucu ar: BMW, Škoda, velo, slēpes

Ja paskatās vēsturi, tad poļi vairākus simtus gadu ir tikuši malti starp lielvaru dzirnakmeņiem. Viņiem ir ļoti skarba vēsture. Tagad ir izaugusi jauna paaudze pilnīgi neatkarīgā Polijā, kas apzinās savu identitāti un saprot, ka vienīgais veids kā neļaut darīt pāri, ir pašiem kļūt stipriem. Viņi šobrīd kā tauta ir diezgan vienoti šajā savā mērķī, tāpēc es nebrīnos par pēdējo 5-8 gadu viņu ambiciozajiem militārajiem plāniem/darbiem.
Es domāju, ka poļi, zviedri un somi būs tie kas spēs pastāvēt par sevi. Uz pārējo eiropu lielas cerības neliktu, jo tur nav vienotības sabiedrībā.
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viagris
Vakar, 22:55 #9935

Kopš: 06. Jul 2004

Ziņojumi: 4683

Braucu ar:

250 mpv droni un tie helīši ir milzu kaudze ar metāllūžniem, vēl neviens nav sapratis, ka jābliež miljonu dronu armija, nevis jābalsta pindosi ar naudu, jo, ja sāksies karš, pindosi pateiks kuj raķetes drīkstat izmantot vai vnk nepārdos stāvēs tie un rūsēs kā efkas Ukrainā..
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Lafter
Vakar, 23:10 #9936

Kopš: 23. Sep 2007

Ziņojumi: 28319

Braucu ar: wv


10 Oct 2024, 22:55:21 @viagris rakstīja:
250 mpv droni un tie helīši ir milzu kaudze ar metāllūžniem, vēl neviens nav sapratis, ka jābliež miljonu dronu armija, nevis jābalsta pindosi ar naudu, jo, ja sāksies karš, pindosi pateiks kuj raķetes drīkstat izmantot vai vnk nepārdos stāvēs tie un rūsēs kā efkas Ukrainā..

Viņiem jau ir braucošas mīnas, droni, rebi…
Tur viñi neatpaliek ne, par matu…
Pšeki reāli uzvilkušies.

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RolandsK
Vakar, 23:17 #9937

Kopš: 06. Sep 2006

No: Rīga

Ziņojumi: 3519

Braucu ar: ᴑᴑ un Zaļo Briesmoni

Poļi izskatās, ka nemīzīs, ja vajadzēs dot mizā.
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Samsasi
Vakar, 23:20 #9938

Kopš: 01. Nov 2014

Ziņojumi: 4337

Braucu ar:

Vacieši aizņemti ar savu stulbumu
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elbruss
Vakar, 23:36 #9939

Kopš: 12. May 2006

Ziņojumi: 983

Braucu ar: BMW, Škoda, velo, slēpes

Tikai nesaceraties, ka poļi skries mums palīgā. Primāri viņu mērķis (tāpat kā visu citu) ir savas valsts intereses. Stundā X visi drošības līgumi un miera laiku vienošanās būs sekundāras. Vienīgais reālais iemesls braukt mums palīgā būs frontes līnijas pavirzīšana prom no viņu robežas (lai netiek nolīdzinātas viņu pilsētas, bet viss kipišs notiek pie mums baltijā). Savukārt, ja te visu nedēļas laikā okupētu, tad viņi nostātos pie savas robežas netālu no Suvalku koridora un to sargātu. Cik labi, ka krievi pagaidām aizņemti citur....
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Locis
Vakar, 23:49 #9940

Kopš: 14. Aug 2008

No: Dobele

Ziņojumi: 11147

Braucu ar: X5 , Jeep, Tuareg, L200, Jumper,Master ,Transit, Stralis x2, Volvo FL, Atego, Deu

Ukraina jau krieviem gards kumosiņš,kopš 2014. gada. Uzbruka arī daļēji,kamēr vēl nav iestājušies NATO,tāpat kā ar Gruziju.
Kāpēc pēķšņi visi domā ka tagad Krievi uz visām malām ies?
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Moderatori: 968-jk, AV, BigArchi, BlackMagicWoman, Czars, GirtzB, Lafter, PERFS, RVR, SteelRat, VLD, linda, mrc, noisex, smudo