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We are a tiny little power, why do we always choose to be involved in these things, why not someone else take the US partnership ahead, why us?

Because someone has to, and it's looking likely it won't be Trump. If the US is going to abandon Ukraine then other countries who can do so have a moral obligation to get involved.

After the three big powers the UK remains one of the strongest militaries in the world, albeit nowhere near where we were a hundred years ago. Who is more powerful/better able to stand up to Russia? India won't. It's us, the French and maybe the Germans. Poland and the Baltics are doing more than almost anyone proportionally to the size of their economies but they are still small players.


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 9:51 pm
funkmasterp, AD, Poopscoop and 3 people reacted
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Kryton, I type the following because I truly believe it to be the case. You are a decent guy and i know current events are playing on your mind a lot. I hope my and other posters comments reassure you as they are, mostly, in alignment.

and if they don’t? Will we all shit ourselves and wonder what to do or do we fire back and just call it a day?

No way will any Western country assume that russian nukes won't work. It would be an incredibly dangerous assumption. It only takes one to work and the whole world we know will have changed in an instant and to be clear I bet many more than one will work just fine. So allowing the use of ATCMS/ Storm Shadows will have had some of the best strategic minds on the  planet involved in it's planning.

I can see a tactical nuke being used in the Donbas as a scare factor and it probably escalates from thier.

Storm shadow has already been used on Russian soil.

They were used in 2023 in Crimea, a land that Putin has officially designated as Russian soil. Putin's response? He carried on murdering civilians in Ukraine, just as he had before the storm shadows hit.

No nukes are going to fly in this conflict, Putin has no wish to die, remember his hilariously socially distanced table during Covid?

Putin got all his Christmas presents early with Trumps win. No way is he doing to consign Russia to bring an irradiated wasteland with a compliant Trump only weeks away from power.

Longer term its China that keeps me awake at night but I'll worry about that if and when the time comes. Lol


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 9:56 pm
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It’s a mafia family with nukes and it’s going to have one hell of an economic hangover after the war is over. Ironically, it might be that, that does for Putin.

It's a fat, out of shape, drug dealer with a roided up XL Bully.


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 9:59 pm
funkmasterp, AD, Poopscoop and 3 people reacted
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Poland and the Baltics are doing more than almost anyone proportionally to the size of their economies but they are still small players.

They are a bit closer to the ever expanding Russian border so I'm not supprised they are getting a bit twitchy.

The EU and the UK needs to step up and hit Russia hard, and fast,  with weapons and with sanctions.

It's lovely that Biden has authorised some new missiles, but we all know that Trump will put a stop to that, just as soon as he's pardoned himself for the rape and fraud, as even dictators have priorities.


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 10:02 pm
Poopscoop and Poopscoop reacted
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bikesandboots
They’ve said NATO or nukes, and that they’d prefer NATO.

Very true but if Trump effectively forces Ukraine to give up the aspiration of ever joining NATO, which lets face it, is more then likely, I can imagine them seeking other means to keep a murderous neighbour at bay.


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 10:03 pm
pk13 and pk13 reacted
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No way will any Western country assume that russian nukes won’t work.

This. The way this threat will be assessed is the same way at an operational task/mission level we would assess an enemy units capability; if they have a piece of kit/capability we assume it is functional, effective and at what likely point/threshold would they employ it? This would shape our initial plan, actions-on its use (most likely both) and what we could do to mitigate the risk or respond to it.

I can't go into chapter and verse because it would derail the thread, but with what I know from my service and as succinct as possible, I can say with utter certainty that those who work in that space will be taking it very ****ing seriously indeed and will not be playing fast and loose with anyone's lives, regardless of what politicians may be saying or doing.

Regardless of how some posters on STW like to denigrate the military/security services it is chock full of very committed and dedicated professionals who give many ****s about protecting this nation and that of its allies and will not want to contribute to an escalation.


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 10:09 pm
funkmasterp, silvine, AD and 11 people reacted
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Ukraine should join the EU...

So should the UK, for that matter.


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 10:23 pm
supernova, joebristol, funkmasterp and 21 people reacted
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I bet countries will be thinking carefully about using foreign technology in their weapons in future:

The missile relies on classified American-owned cartographic data, using Terrain Contour Matching or TERCOM, to guide the missile to the target. This gives the American government veto of any sales to foreign countries under ITAR. In 2018 the French government tried to bypass this by creating a “ITAR-free” version of the missile for sale to Egypt that didn’t use TERCOM. The missiles would have relied solely on GPS and inertial navigation systems to get to the target. Making the missile more vulnerable to Electronic Warfare. An issue in Ukraine where Russian jams GPS signals, so American approval is necessary for the missiles to operate to peak performance.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storm_Shadow


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 10:41 pm
oldnpastit, Poopscoop, Poopscoop and 1 people reacted
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It's a good job I'm not in charge, I'd have nuked St.Petersurg and Moscow by now.


 
Posted : 20/11/2024 10:52 pm
oldnpastit, Poopscoop, Poopscoop and 1 people reacted
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mattyfez
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It’s a good job I’m not in charge, I’d have nuked St.Petersurg and Moscow by now.

The start of the Grand Tour! 😉

(If you know, you know.)


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 1:50 am
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Joking aside, I think we should encourage Poland and Lituania to annexe Kallingrad.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 2:15 am
Poopscoop and Poopscoop reacted
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I'd also like to know what the chuff Sweden and Finland are doing, given that Stockholm and Helsinki are in close proximity.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 2:40 am
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Biden parting gift to the incoming President is to ignite the fire of WWIII.

Joking aside, I think we should encourage Poland and Lituania to annexe Kallingrad.

Rather than to encourage the Polish and Lithuanian to fight in Ukraine, the British government should send the British forces to fight the war instead.

It’s a good job I’m not in charge, I’d have nuked St.Petersurg and Moscow by now.

You do know those are not Middle East cities, don't you?

I’d also like to know what the chuff Sweden and Finland are doing, given that Stockholm and Helsinki are in close proximity.

Coz they know Russia has no interest in them whatsoever.  In return, Russian knows it is a waste of time even to engage them, and there really is Nothing to gain other than pain in the backside.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 3:06 am
bubs and bubs reacted
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For starters, if he launches some nukes, and they just fizzle out because they have been scrimping on maintenance, then that’s the end of Russia’s nuclear threat forever.

The whole rationale of deterrence is not being entirely sure what the opposition will do. We don't know what condition Russia's missiles and warheads are in, there may be a fairly high failure rate, but the assumption has to be that a considerable number will work. However, for Russia, attempting to use nuclear weapons destroys their deterrent effect. If they work, NATO will annihilate Russia in a counter-strike, Putin knows that, threats against NATO are a bluff to get attention. The other concern for Russia is that if they try to launch a limited strike (for example against Ukraine rather than NATO) and the missiles and warheads malfunction, then their deterrent value is diminished.

The key thing with nuclear weapons is they are much more useful if you don't use them than if you do. The Russians know this, that's why they've never used them.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 4:30 am
bikesandboots, ahote, swanny853 and 7 people reacted
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I was going to post that the whole point of nuclear weapons is not to use them, but thols2 put it way better!


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 8:50 am
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Coz they know Russia has no interest in them whatsoever. In return, Russian knows it is a waste of time even to engage them, and there really is Nothing to gain other than pain in the backside.

Finland is a very sore point for Russia. The Finns have history of beating Russia and the Russians are unhappy at losing a bit of their Empire. It's the same resentment often displayed by the English towards Ireland, India, etc etc


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 8:56 am
BruceWee and BruceWee reacted
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resentment often displayed by the English towards Ireland, India, etc etc

I was with you about Russo-Finnish history, but I'm struggling with that tbh. Historically, perhaps, but these days? "Often"? "The English" generally, or a specific group? No one I know harbours those feeling towards Ireland or India, most people barely give those places any thought whatsoever unless they have family connections or are visiting on holiday. The idea that most of the "English" are still bitter would be colonialists seems to be a bit daft to me. Maybe a handful, snoozing in the house of lords, but not the rest of us!


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 9:12 am
thols2, branes, funkmasterp and 9 people reacted
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chewkw
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Biden parting gift to the incoming President is to ignite the fire of WWIII.

Or... To give Ukraine a better hand to play when trump forces them to concede territory... which will lead to a simmering resentment in Ukraine for generations to come, totally understandable too. We'll end up with another Korean DMZ always on the point of boiling over.

Well done Trump.

Coz they (Sweden, Finland) know Russia has no interest in them whatsoever. In return, Russian knows it is a waste of time even to engage them, and there really is Nothing to gain other than pain in the backside.

Best we let them know that they don't need to be in NATO then or that the cyber attacks and under sea cable cutting is pure coincidence. 😉


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 9:28 am
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I can see a tactical nuke being used in the Donbas as a scare factor and it probably escalates from thier.

A nuke is a nuke and if Russia goes down that path there really is no return from being a nuclear pariah state like N.Korea and to a lesser extent Iran. International sanctions will be immense and trade non-existent, including the legal sale of cheap O&G. China knows this and has warned President Putin off publicly, but the reality is that he knows it too.

The current lifting of restrictions on ATACMS, SCALP-EG, Storm Shadow and the supply of anti-personnel mines are not strategic game-changers. We don't know the details of restrictions on their use, but they're not going to be "do what you like". Ukraine will have to dot every legal i and cross the Ts within those restrictions as well.

Their use will promote morale and some excitement in Ukraine, a bit like ^^ 🙂 . ATACMS have been telegraphed for months and although there are some 245 potential targets within 300km, most Russian aircraft have been moved out of reach

This is similar to pronouncements about Sweden and Finland joining NATO, HiMARS, F16, Abrams, Challenger and Leopard tanks, DPICMs, etc. It's not hugely different to Ukraine already having the ability to strike targets inside Russia in self-defence with US MLRS (HiMARS, etc.), they just reach a bit further but there are fewer of them.

Russia is beating their reflexive control drum, but it's been heard before


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 9:46 am
thols2 and thols2 reacted
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Biden parting gift to the incoming President is to ignite the fire of WWIII.

See my post above


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 9:47 am
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To give Ukraine a better hand to play when trump forces them to concede territory… which will lead to a simmering resentment in Ukraine for generations to come, totally understandable too. We’ll end up with another Korean DMZ always on the point of boiling over.

Well done Trump.

Nobody knows what he's likely to do. He's just as likely to sell Ukraine weapons and tell them to get on with it, because that increases trade and industrial output


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 9:52 am
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We don’t know what condition Russia’s missiles and warheads are in, there may be a fairly high failure rate,

Like ours


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 10:36 am
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Well, that's the first ICBM used in anger. Looks like the IC part was forgotten about and the warhead removed, but Vlad decided to use the big toys against Dnipro this morning.

https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c20726y20kvt

I can imagine that a lot of people were quite worried when they saw that lighting up.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 10:36 am
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So there we have it, "the appropriate response"... an ICBM launched... With no payload or a conventional one. AKA a big missile with long range.

He's changed the constitution so he could have fired a nuke... But didn't.

Same old, same old.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 10:47 am
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On a more serious note, we have chewkw incoming in T minus 10....9... 😉


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 10:50 am
branes, jamiemcf, funkmasterp and 3 people reacted
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I find it funny that all the European newspapers are pointing out that the storm shadow missile was made in the UK.

"It was them Miss, they did it !"


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 11:00 am
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I can see a tactical nuke being used in the Donbas as a scare factor

If Putin was going to use nukes, he would have done so long ago, and he would have used them well away from Russia. Tactical nukes are inherently extremely dirty and the fallout from using one in the Donbas would mean that the territory that Russia says is part of Russia would be contaminated by fallout (and so would the western part of Russia if the wind was blowing that way). Using them as battlefield weapons would really only make sense if Russia was retreating and wanted to render the territory that Ukraine captured uninhabitable.

Firing one at Ukrainian cities nearer the Polish border would result in fallout in NATO countries. Russia seems to have decided against that right from the beginning. If they were going to nuke Kyiv, they would have done so when they realized their invasion had failed.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 11:00 am
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From the BBC:

The regional head of Dnipro says that two victims were injured following a missile launch by Russia on the Dnipro area this morning.

A 57-year-old man was treated for his injuries on the scene and a 42-year-old woman has been taken to hospital, Serhy Lysak writes on Telegram.

A rehab centre for people with disabilities was damaged in the attack, but there are no reported injuries there. In addition, nine garages are also reported damaged, and an "industrial enterprise", Lysak adds.

Two other people were injured and are currently in hospital after strikes on Kryvyi Rih, west of Dnipro. An administrative building was destroyed and two residential buildings were damaged, according to Lysak.

Let's hope that they stop there. They've rattled their sabres, they can claim a great victory to the Russians who believe in this.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 11:12 am
Poopscoop and Poopscoop reacted
 DT78
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I do find the certainty everyone has around trump interesting, I'm really not sure what he will do.  My guess is similar to above - he will continue to supply ukraine but at a huge expensive.  So you could end up with half of ukraine conquered militarily by Russia and half economically by the US....

Re ICBMs is there anything that can stop those?  Can they be intercepted by the kit ukraine has?


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 11:24 am
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 is Russia toothless?

It depends. They still have vast vast amounts of military equipment and soldiers, more than most other nations. The paradox is that their strategic and tactical plans have spectacularly failed to overcome a broadly inferior (but much more motivated) opposing  conventional armed forces. Not only are their doctrine suspect, but their weaponry have been shown to be clearly inferior and vulnerable to most anything that the west/NATO can deploy. But - Any long term war/campaign is largely one of logistics and finance. In the end those are the determining factors rather than individual battlefield weaponry or tactics.

The trouble with that assessment is that it is now, more than ever, its vitally important that the countries that largely rely on ex-soviet/Russian military hardware (China/North Korea for example) to try show that's not the case, and it's just been bad management of the campaign so far that's the cause of all the woes. I can see why it's in their interests to prop-up the Russian campaigning efforts.

At the same time however, China, especially, cannot afford to be in a position where it's own military is also regarded as not as effective by comparison to anything that the US can deploy. - Hence the Chinese authorities allowance and probably encouragement on the recent scathing attacks of the SU-57 on social media in comparison to its own projects in that area.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 11:51 am
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Re ICBMs is there anything that can stop those?  Can they be intercepted by the kit ukraine has?

No, Patriot isn't designed to intercept ICBMs. There are some weapons in the US that can - In theory, such as the THAAD system, and in practice - The US Navy's Aegis SM3 which has been able to intercept ICBMs.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 11:57 am
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Just linking this 8 year old video, seems like a good reminder of the possible scale of wars :


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:05 pm
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I can see a tactical nuke being used in the Donbas as a scare factor

I feel fairly sure that Vlad has been told that the first time he uses a nuke one is coming thru his window in 5 mins.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:11 pm
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So there we have it, “the appropriate response”… an ICBM launched… With no payload or a conventional one. AKA a big missile with long range.

That's the long and short (so to speak). Russia has been using short-range ballistic missiles (BM) for a while now, including variants of the Russian Iskander, and N.Korean Hwasong-11 (KN23 and KN25). The missiles all have the capability of a nuclear warhead, but are used with a conventional warhead

Iskander BM (there's a cruise missile variant too) have been shot down by Ukraine and the Hwasong-11 reportedly wasn't particularly reliable, failing in flight. The opportunity for N.Korea to test the missiles and Russian expertise will undoubtedly improve them https://www.reuters.com/world/ukraine-examines-nkorean-missile-debris-amid-fears-moscow-pyongyang-axis-2024-05-07/

EDIT: Ukraine is reporting it was an RS-26 Rubezh ICBM that doesn't have a conventional warhead option https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2024/11/21/7485582/


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:13 pm
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I’d also like to know what the chuff Sweden and Finland are doing

Probably being thankful that they decided to join NATO, secure in the knowledge now that they are a bit more secure from being attacked by their neighbour.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:22 pm
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the possible scale of wars

It's worth noting that Soviet/Russian battle field tactics and doctrine hasn't moved on since WW2 ie  "Throw as much tanks and soldiers as you can into the space in the hope of overwhelming your enemy". The waste of human life is criminal


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:26 pm
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I’d also like to know what the chuff Sweden and Finland are doing

The Swedes are part of the training mission, not sure if the Finns are.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:28 pm
funkmasterp, Mat, funkmasterp and 1 people reacted
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It’s the same resentment often displayed by the English towards Ireland, India, etc etc

absolute bobbins

as for Putlers response, I’m quaking in my boots  😉


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:30 pm
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Sweden have provided some very effective AFVs

Europe as a whole has provided more aid than the US - despite what Trump says.


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:32 pm
funkmasterp, kelvin, funkmasterp and 1 people reacted
 DT78
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well, one thing Putin has proved is that his ICBMs actually work and can hit a target versus the thinking they are not being maintained and won't work

they must have telegraphed it had a conventional warhead to NATO to avoid a response that must surely be planned for and ready to go should a nuke be used


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:48 pm
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I’d also like to know what the chuff Sweden and Finland are doing

Donating more by %GDP than most other countries in bilateral aid and equalling most others in EU contributions (5th and 6th out of 41). About €7bn between them https://www.ifw-kiel.de/topics/war-against-ukraine/ukraine-support-tracker

The Swedes are part of the training mission, not sure if the Finns are.

Finland is also part of both the UK-led Interflex and the European Union Military Assistance Mission in support of Ukraine (EUMAM)


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 12:48 pm
doris5000, funkmasterp, ChrisL and 5 people reacted
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Sweden (and Saab) have supplied (given/sold) a lot of military equipment to Ukraine, including AFVs and tanks. Sweden is also on the doorstep of Russia's Baltic assets (that reamin) and essential stand between the fleet in St. Petersberg/Kaliningrad/Belarussia and the Atlantic, with Denmark and Norway essentially acting as a first line of defence should the Russians decide they want to put everything into the Atlantic. Putin has wanted Gotland for a long time and not just for the sheep.

Sweden has seen, very recently in fact, significant cyberattacks against civilian infrastructure on the back of its support for Ukraine. The people doing the attacks are apparently hacktivists, but the targeting is oddly so very, very closely linked to the Russian government's statements of the day.

TL;DR: If you are in the Baltic and want to go out, you _HAVE_ to go past us. It's the reason that we have had a lot of overflights, intrusions and beached submarines in the past ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_submarine_S-363)


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 1:06 pm
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Zapp Brannigan approved tactic


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 1:08 pm
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Moving back to the economy...

Steve Rosenberg has reviewed "Today’s Russian papers on today’s economic problems in Russia: “Butter 30% more expensive than last year…price of potatoes up 65%.” Plus, the rouble falls past 100 against the dollar & “Chinese banks tighten checks on payments…”"


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 1:12 pm
alpin and alpin reacted
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You will know nuke is deployed when you don't have live broadcasting and your internet connection is not working properly.

Both sides are now testing their missiles on each others.  You know, to see how effective their weapons are and to probe each others.

Remember, Russia is No middle east to be battered at will.

Steve Rosenberg has reviewed “Today’s Russian papers on today’s economic problems in Russia: “Butter 30% more expensive than last year…price of potatoes up 65%.” Plus, the rouble falls past 100 against the dollar & “Chinese banks tighten checks on payments…””

Sounds familiar?  Look at the inflation in the UK.  https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c8rl4rgdj12o


 
Posted : 21/11/2024 1:44 pm
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