Quote from: HisMajestyBOB on Today at 12:40:23 AMEurope should have cleaned up it's antidemocratic Putinista mess years ago.
Quote from: Valmy on March 05, 2026, 07:34:05 PMHowever give me a second to rage againt my party. The goddamn Democratic Party. What a bunch of fuckers. Even in a totally symbolic vote to curb the war powers of the President, which would have been vetoed anyway, we had fuckers breaking ranks to suck Trump cock.
Quote from: crazy canuck on March 05, 2026, 02:34:54 PMOr more to the point, the menu team could generate better ideas on their own.
QuoteUkraine accuses Hungary of taking seven people hostage
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha has accused Hungarian authorities of taking hostage seven employees of Ukraine's state savings bank, Oschadbank.
Writing on X, Sybiha said: "Today in Budapest, Hungarian authorities took seven Ukrainian citizens hostage. The reasons are still unknown, as well as their current well-being."
The employees were in two cars carrying $80m (£60m) worth of cash between Austria and Ukraine. The authorities had sent a note demanding the employees' return, Sybiha said.
In a statement, Oschadbank said the employees "were unjustifiably detained in Hungary" and that GPS data showed their vehicles in Budapest. The BBC has contacted the Hungarian government for comment.
"The amount of valuables in the stolen cars amounted to 40 million US dollars, 35 million euros, 9 kg of gold," the Oschadbank statement continues.
"Oschadbank demands the immediate release of its employees and property and their return to Ukraine."
Hungary maintains close ties with Russia, and has consistently opposed military aid for Ukraine.
Earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky criticised Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban for blocking a European aid package for Kyiv.
Orban has said Budapest will use "political and financial tools" to force Ukraine to reopen the Druzhba pipeline carrying Russian oil to Hungarian refineries.
Sybiha accused Hungary of "state terrorism and racketeering".
"We are talking about Hungary taking hostages and stealing money," Sybiha added on X.
Ukraine says the pipeline was damaged by Russian strikes last month and its repair crews have been injured by further attacks.
Druzhba is the main route for delivering Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia and shipments of Russian oil to both countries have been cut off since 27 January.
Hungary and Slovakia, the only European �Union countries still importing Russian oil, accuse Ukraine of deliberately delaying the resumption of oil flows for political reasons.
Quote from: Valmy on March 05, 2026, 07:34:05 PMHowever give me a second to rage againt my party. The goddamn Democratic Party. What a bunch of fuckers. Even in a totally symbolic vote to curb the war powers of the President, which would have been vetoed anyway, we had fuckers breaking ranks to suck Trump cock.All four are large AIPAC beneficiaries. Probably a total coincidence...
Quote from: OttoVonBismarck on March 05, 2026, 08:45:34 AMI read an interesting analysis that suggests Iran may have made a major strategic mistake in how it designed is ballistic missile system.Sounds plausible, but also means that just unilaterally stopping this war is not an option as Iran can then fix this strategic flaw and start moving and then using these systems. Permanent air supremacy surely is costly.
Years ago, Iran started storing a large % of their ballistic missiles in underground facilities dubbed "missile cities." Iran was very proud of these facilities and regularly would release videos from inside of them, basically showing these underground warehouses full of missiles--largely safe from any aerial bombing risk.
However, the reason this has become a problem--you can't launch missiles from an underground missile city. They have to be loaded onto a missile launcher and then moved out of the underground facility to a launch site. It appears Israel and the U.S. know where all these missile cities are. And it's also true that they are usually too deep for easy destruction via bombing.
But what is being done is they are now parking slow moving surveillance planes over the missile cities, and the second a missile launcher tries to drive out of the underground area, they notify the attack forces which immediately come in and destroy the missile launcher.
Israel and the U.S. have also been collapsing the entrances to the missile cities in some locations, effectively sealing their munitions underground.
One analysis in the WSJ suggested this was a strategic blunder by Iran--one of the big advantages of these mobile missile launchers is precisely that they are mobile. But if they have to go to well known "missile city" depots to get armed, they now have to centralize themselves instead of decentralize. Israel and the U.S. appear to have been effectively making it near impossible for Iran to make use of these missile cities, and in fact their very existence is making it much easier for the IDF and U.S. to destroy Iranian missile launchers, because the entire strategic premise of them forces the missile launchers to visit well known, centralized areas. That same analysis also said that in strategic terms--a missile launcher is much more valuable to Iran than missiles. Its production pipeline for missiles is easier to ramp up than it is for launchers, so as it is losing launchers trying to escape the missile cities it has limited means of producing more in the short term.
It isn't known exactly what % of Iran's ballistic missile stockpile are in missile cities, but it's believed to be a large chunk of the total.
My suspicion is the premise of the missile cities was an assumption of a more limited war with Israel in which Israel wouldn't have air superiority, e.g. it was insurance against a surprise attack destroying huge above ground missile stockpiles. It seems Iran didn't consider the implications if Israel attacked alongside the U.S. and established aerial supremacy, turning the missile cities into easily neutralized facilities.
Consequently this is likely the single biggest reason Iran's ballistic missiles launches have declined by 90% since war began last weekend.
For Israel in particular this is huge--Iran's ballistic missiles are the primary threat now that Iran poses to Israel (particularly since its Axis of Resistance is in tatters.)
Unfortunately for the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf Oil states, those areas are being hit primarily by Iran's cheaply made drones, the closer distances involved meaning it doesn't need to use its ballistic missiles to reliably hit targets in those locations.
Quote from: grumbler on March 05, 2026, 09:40:16 PMSo, apparently the last straw was that Noem awarded a $65 million non-compete contract for something like "information services" to a company formed 8 days before the award. The company's owner? Her husband. She claimed that Trump approved the deal, but he denied it and that was the end of Noem. Some details might be a bit off: I was listening to this on the radio.They're not even trying to hide anything. I hope there will be Nuremberg trials after this administration falls.
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