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France and Germany want EU summit with Vladimir Putin
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UK Rejects Russian Claims That It Chased Destroyer From Waters Near Crimea
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Halya Coynash: Crimean children to be taught to fight for the Russian occupiers | KyivPost
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New Turkish-Built Dry Dock Will Not Solve Russia’s Deeper Shipbuilding Problems
Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 18 Issue: 95
June 15, 2021 05:20 PM
Age: 19 hours
Russian aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov at the PD-50 floating dock in Murmansk, which sank on October 30, 2018 (Source: TASS)
The problems plaguing Russia’s shipbuilding sector, both military and civilian, run so deep and widespread that even Moscow’s decision to award a contract to Turkey to build a giant floating dry dock in the Russian High North (The Barents Observer, June 15) will do relatively little to overcome them. However, the contract does represent a crack in the sanctions regime, which had been contributing to the decline in shipbuilding in Russia over the last seven years (Svobodnaya Pressa, May 7, 2018). Moscow’s decision to turn to a foreign supplier, in this case, is itself an indictment of its domestic shipbuilding industry, which has seen the number of vessels launched in recent
Can Shevchenko bring Euro 2020 glory to Ukraine?
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