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Why Russia Sees the Hamilton Black Sea Raid As a Military Provocation

Moscow Pulls Back Land Forces From Ukrainian Border but Not Its Navy in Black Sea

Moscow Pulls Back Land Forces From Ukrainian Border but Not Its Navy in Black Sea Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 18 Issue: 67 Russian ships in the Black Sea (Source: TASS) Many observers are treating Russia’s pullback of land forces from the Ukrainian border as the end of the crisis even some of those experts who acknowledge the Kremlin has not given up its aggressive posturing against Ukraine (Voennoe Obozrenie, April 25). Yet that belligerent stance may acquire a more immediate dimension than many currently recognize because Russia has conspicuously not reduced its naval presence in the Black Sea. Instead, Moscow has announced new maritime exclusion zones around Crimea until the autumn, beyond those it earlier imposed in the Sea of Azov (Voennoe Obozrenie, April 24; Ekho Rossii, April 25). Russia justifies this move by saying that it plans to conduct military maneuvers there this summer, but the naval ships it is keeping in the theater ostensibly for those upcoming

Why Greece Needs the F-35 Stealth Fighter

Why Greece Needs the F-35 Stealth Fighter Ensuring the NATO alliance has the latest weapons technology is vital to protecting against both adversaries like Russia and frienemies like Turkey. The deterioration of Turkey’s role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) means Greece is now effectively the alliance’s southern flank. Because of the somewhat outsized nature of this role for a small country, Greece needs a more survivable fighter to counter potential moves by Russia and Turkey. Such a warplane will be the anchor of allied airpower in the eastern Mediterranean. That makes the decision to sell the F-35 stealth fighter jet to Greece a relatively easy one.

Biden donors, friends and former aides expected on first slate of high-profile ambassadors

Biden donors, friends and former aides expected on first slate of high-profile ambassadors Tyler Pager, Anne Gearan © Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post Then-candidate Joe Biden with then-Sen. Kamala D. Harris and Cindy McCain in Arizona in October. (Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post) President Biden is expected to begin naming his choices for high-profile ambassador postings in May or possibly as soon as this week, several people familiar with White House plans said, revealing winners among a pecking order of Biden friends, donors and aides that spans decades. The process has been complicated by sensitivity to naming candidates other than the coterie of well-connected White people, most of them men, who have been the mainstay of Biden’s political circle. The selection process has taken longer than it has for Biden’s predecessors because of that issue and because Biden “knows too many people and he has too many friends,” said one person cl

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