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Israeli air raids near Syria’s Deir Ezzor leaves two soldiers wounded

Syria Deir Ezzur

The attack on military posts in Syria’s eastern Deir Ezzor region represent a departure from previous Israeli actions in Syria, which had largely concentrated on Damascus and Aleppo.

Syria’s state news agency SANA, quoting a military sources, said the latest attack occurred just before midnight on Monday.

“The Israeli enemy carried out an aerial act of aggression on a number of Syrian armed forces’ positions in the vicinity of Deir Ezzor,” SANA reported.

The attack comes just two days after a suspected Israeli attack near Damascus targetting an alleged Iranian shipment of weapons making its way to Lebanon.

Over the course of the year Israeli strikes in Syria have mainly targetted Aleppo International Airport and the airport in the Syrian capital of Damascus.

The raids mostly target the positions of Syria’s allies that have been aiding the country in its battle against foreign-sponsored terror groups.

Damascus has repeatedly complained to the United Nations over the Israeli assaults, urging the United Nations Security Council to take action against Tel Aviv’s crimes. Its demands, however, have fallen on deaf ears.

Saudi team refuses to play against Iran over ‘political’ row

Saudi Arabia’s Al Ittihad Iran’s Sepahan

A new row emerged on Monday night after Saudi Arabia’s Al Ittihad walked out of Naghsh-e-Jahan Stadium in Iran’s central city of Isfahan before an Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Champions League match with the Iranian side, Sepahan.

Al Ittihad officials refused to play, claiming that the banners and the busts of the IRGC’s Quds Force late commander General Qassem Soleimani near the pitch had political implications.

The Saudi side reported the issue to the referee and the AFC observers, but the Iranian team reportedly refused to remove the banners and busts.

Following the walk-out, Al Ittihad posted a statement on X social media platform, reading, “The Al Ittihad Club will follow up on the decision and asks the AFC to protect the club’s rights according to the rules and regulations.”

On the other hand, Iran’s Sepahan dismissed the politically-tainted accusation in a statement, saying, “The Naqsh-e Jahan Stadium has been visited many times by the observers of AFC, (the Iranian) Federation, League Organization and Professional Licensing Committee and has been approved by them in the same shape.”

The statement added, the Sepahan Club has prepared its arguments to file a complaint with the AFC and will soon take the necessary legal measures.

Iran’s Leader: Normalization with Israel is ‘betting on wrong horse’

Ayatollah Khamenei

Addressing participants of the international Islamic unity conference in the Iranian capital Tehran on Tuesday, Ayatollah Khamenei stated the Islamic Republic believes the governments that have gone down the path of “normalization gamble” with the Israeli regime will be losers.

The Leader said, “They are making a mistake. As the Europeans say, they are betting on the wrong horse.”

Ayatollah Khamenei stressed that the current crisis that has gripped the Israeli regime following weeks of massive anti-regime rallies shows that the occupying regime cannot serve as a role model for other countries.

“The usurping regime will go. Today the Palestinian movement is livelier than ever in the past seventy, eighty years,” the Leader of the Islamic Revolution said.

The Leader reminded that the Founder of the Islamic Republic in Iran Imam Khomeini referred to the Israeli regime as “cancer”, stressing “The cancer will surely be eradicated at the hands of the Palestinian people and the resistance forces in the entire region.”

Ayatollah Khamenei reiterated that the Israeli regime’s days are numbered.

Iran Army unveils new drone in large-scale drill

Iran Drone

The Kaman 19 drone, Persian for Bow 19, will officially be used by the Iranian Army after it was unveiled in the military drill, where electronic warfare units from all four army units practiced and implemented electronic warfare methods, the Spokesman for the Joint Drone Exercise Brigadier General Alireza Sheikh said.

Brigadier General Sheikh added air base disruption operations and electronic warfare were also successfully implemented in the drone drill.

The exercise is held all across Iran, from the Persian Gulf in the south to the northern parts of the country, with patrol and reconnaissance drone missions along the country’s borders.

The Kaman-class pilotless aircraft are equipped with various combat, optical and electronic warfare systems that makes them perfectly suited for special operations.

A day earlier, deputy chief of the Iranian Army for Coordination Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari said Iran’s drone power can counter any foreign threats.

Hezbollah chief cautions normalization with Israel amounts to abandoning Palestine

Hezbollah Nasrallah

Nasrallah made the remarks in a Monday televised speech on the occasion of the birth anniversary of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).

“Any country that moves toward normalization of its relations [with Israel] must be condemned, because this step amounts to abandoning Palestine and bolstering the [Zionist] enemy, which must not be tolerated,” the Hezbollah leader said.

Nasrallah was making an apparent reference to the latest efforts by the United States to persuade Saudi Arabia to normalize its relations with the Israeli regime.

Elsewhere in his speech, Nasrallah urged the “Muslim Ummah” to fulfill its responsibility toward the Palestinian people and the al-Aqsa Mosque.

“The Muslim Ummah must shoulder responsibility for what is happening to the brave people of Palestine and the al-Aqsa Mosque, and Zionists must hear the voice of the Muslim world with regard to the first qibla of Muslims.”

Arab and Muslim countries have criticized Riyadh for keeping the door open to a renewed push by the United States to work out a normalization deal between Saudi Arabia and Israel, saying it would be a betrayal of the Palestinian cause and encourage the Israeli regime to intensify its aggression.

Palestinian resistance movements believe that Israel has already been emboldened by the potential success of efforts to normalize ties with Saudi Arabia, saying attempts in recent weeks by extremist settlers to make regular presence in the al-Aqsa Mosque show the regime wants to pile up pressure on Palestinians.

Reports suggest that Washington will reward Saudi Arabia for normalizing ties with Israel with a major security pact as well as support for the kingdom’s plans to develop a peaceful nuclear program.

Elsewhere in his speech, Nasrallah touched on the West’s media war against Muslim nations, which he said was aimed at undermining those nations and achieving goals that have not been realized through wars.

“Enemies use the media war, which is also known as the soft war, to weaken nations and … achieve those goals, which they have failed to realize through military wars,” Nasrallah added.

He also pointed to economic problems facing Syria and displacement of a large number of its people due to a Western-sponsored terrorist war against Damascus, emphasizing that the United States is the primary culprit behind Syria’s refugee crisis.

“The main party responsible for the influx of refugees into Lebanon is that who kindled the war in Syria, that is, the US government,” the Hezbollah leader stated.

“Following the implementation of the Caesar Act, the United States is also responsible for the economic crisis in Syria. Those who believe that Syrian refugees are a threat to Lebanon must tell Washington that Lebanon would be saved through the abrogation of the Caesar Act,” Nasrallah continued.

Syria has been a target of US sanctions since 1979. Following the start of the foreign-sponsored terrorist war in the country in 2011, the US and its Western allies imposed several rounds of sanctions on the Arab country. The sanctions intensified with the passing of the Caesar Act in 2019, which targeted any individual and business that participated either directly or indirectly in Syria’s reconstruction efforts.

US on Iran’s presence in Antarctica: Washington opposes any efforts to militarize region

Shahram Irani

“I think that feels a little more like biting off more than they can chew. I would say with respect to Antarctica, Antarctica should remain a sanctuary for peaceful exploration and scientific researc,” Miller told reporters on Monday.

“The United States remains steadfast in its commitment to the Antarctic Treaty of 1959, which expressly prohibits the establishment of military bases in Antarctica. And although Iran is not a party to the treaty, we unequivocally oppose any efforts to militarize Antarctica,” he said.

The spokesperson added “military activities” should have no place in that unique environment, whether they be by Iran or anyone else.

In late September, Rear Admiral Irani outlined his force’s plans in Antarctica, including establishing a permanent base for military and scientific missions.

“Our future plan is to proudly hoist the Iranian flag in the Antarctica, and undertake collaborative military and scientific efforts in that region,” Irani told IRIB TV1 television channel during a program to mark the anniversary of the 1980-88 Iraqi war on Iran.

Asked whether this meant setting up a permanent base in Antarctica, Irani said, “Inshallah (God willing).”

“It is not just military work. There has to be scientific work and our dear scientists are preparing to implement a joint effort in line with the guidelines” of Leader of Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, Irani added.

Wagner chief’s son will inherit father’s assets and control of group: Report

Wagner

One of the channels,”Port,” claims to have obtained a copy of Prigozhin’s will and published an image of it.

Prigozhin was killed in a private jet crash in August. The document, allegedly notarized on March 2, purportedly designates Prigozhin’s 25-year-old son, Pavel, as the sole inheritor of his extensive assets, including those of the “Wagner Group.”

The unofficial publication suggests Pavel Prigozhin filed an application for inheritance on September 8.

Port also claimed that Pavel is set to collect all debts owed to his father, estimating that the Russian Defense Ministry owed Prigozhin’s business empire as much as $800 million. It is impossible to verify this figure.

In June, following Prigozhin’s short-lived mutiny, President Vladimir Putin said Prigozhin’s businesses had received 86 billion roubles (or about $850 million) from the defense ministry between May 2022 and May 2023. In addition, Prigozhin’s Concord catering company made 80 billion roubles from state contracts to supply food to the Russian army, Putin said at the time.

Telegram channels associated with Wagner have claimed Pavel Prigozhin is actively negotiating the return of Wagner personnel to the combat zone in Ukraine. The claims cannot be verified, and it’s unclear whether Wagner fighters would be absorbed into different military structures.

The Telegram Channel GreyZone, which frequently reported on Wagner and Yevgeny Prigozhin, asserted that Pavel was negotiating with the Russian Reserve force Rosgvardia on the return of Wagner fighters to the war in Ukraine.

Rosgvardia received much of Wagner’s heavy weaponry after the private military company was disarmed following the mutiny.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 586

Russia Ukraine War
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and European Union Foreign Policy Chief Josep Borrell visit the Memory Wall of Fallen Defenders of Ukraine in Kyiv, Ukraine, on October 2.

‘Must keep their word’: US president demands Ukraine aid passage

President Joe Biden has called on Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to rush through new aid saying US support for Kyiv as it battles Russia’s invasion could not be interrupted “under any circumstances”.

“Speaker McCarthy and the majority of House Republicans must keep their word and secure passage of the support needed to help Ukraine as it defends itself,” Biden said on X, formerly Twitter.

“We are the indispensable nation in the world – let’s act like it.”


Biden speaks to allies, NATO, EU over Ukraine support

US President Joe Biden spoke with allies, the European Union and the NATO military alliance about continuing support for Ukraine, the White House said.

In a statement, the White House added that Biden spoke to the leaders of Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan, Poland, Romania, Britain and France, as well as the heads of NATO, the European Commission and the European Council.

The call was reportedly scheduled as concerns grew that support for Kyiv’s war effort was fading, especially by the US after Congress excluded aid to Ukraine from an emergency budget bill on Sunday.


‘They are power’: Zelensky visits troops on the front line

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky visited troops in the northeast of the country and met commanders to discuss the battlefield situation on the front line.

While he did not give the exact location, he said he met soldiers fighting in the Kupiansk-Lyman sector where the Ukrainian military says Russian forces have been relentlessly attacking.

On X, Zelensky wrote: “Today, we are visiting our brigades that are fighting in one of the hot spots, the Kupiansk-Lyman direction where Russian occupiers constantly try to attack our positions. The 103rd Territorial Defence Brigade, the 68th ‘Oleksa Dovbush’ Jeager Brigade, and the 25th ‘Sicheslav’ Airborne Brigade.”

“We met with brigade and battalion commanders to discuss the battlefield situation, pressing issues, and needs. Each of our combat brigades, each warrior who destroys the occupiers with every step forward, asserts that the Ukrainian victory will surely come. They are the power. I thank them for their service!”


Ukraine must win war before joining NATO, EU: Slovakia

Ukraine must win its war against Russia before joining NATO and the European Union, Slovakia’s foreign minister says.

“Ukraine must first win the war. This is a necessary precondition,” Miroslaw Wachowski said at the Warsaw Security Forum.

“So we must do everything we can to help Ukraine win this war and regain its sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

Noting he just returned from Kyiv on Tuesday morning, Wachowski stated Ukrainians are doing “their best and we must help them”.


Russia summons Moldova’s envoy, blocks entry to several Molodovan citizens

The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced it had summoned the Moldovan ambassador.

The ministry said it had taken reciprocal measures after the expulsion of the head of Sputnik Moldova news agency from Moldova on Sept. 13.

The ministry added the Moldovan ambassador was informed that “a number of individuals directly involved in restricting freedom of speech and the rights of Russian journalists in Moldova, as well as inciting anti-Russian sentiments, were banned from entering Russia.”

The Ministry did not name the people who were banned from entering Russia.


UK tells G7 and NATO leaders: We will support Ukraine for as long as it takes

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak tells G7 and NATO leaders that the UK was prepared to support Ukraine with military, humanitarian and economic assistance “for as long as it takes,” his office said in a readout of a call.

“He [Prime Minister Rishi Sunak] outlined the UK’s ongoing military, humanitarian and economic assistance to Ukraine and stressed that this support will continue for as long as it takes,” a Downing Street spokesperson announced in a statement.


Ukraine, Poland and Lithuania agree on plan to speed up grain exports

Ukraine, Poland and Lithuania have agreed on a plan to help expedite Ukrainian grain exports, officials say.

According to a statement by the Ukrainian Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food, the deal would shift grain inspections from the Ukrainian-Polish border to a Lithuanian port on the Baltic Sea.

The statement added that the switch would help the transit of Ukrainian exports through Polish territory without providing further details.

Countries on Ukraine’s borders, including Poland, have protested against Ukraine’s agricultural exports, saying they have flooded their markets and pushed prices down for local farmers. Poland has said, however, that it wants to be a transit point so Ukrainian farm goods can get to countries suffering food shortages.


Kremlin says it has not abandoned moratorium on nuclear testing

The Kremlin says it has not abandoned a moratorium on nuclear testing and Russia is not preparing one.

On Monday, the New York Times published an investigation tracking possible nuclear-launch preparations in Russia.

Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of the state-owned broadcaster RT, also suggested in an interview extract posted by digital broadcaster RTVI that Moscow should detonate a nuclear bomb over Siberia as a warning to the West.

Responding to Simonyan’s suggestions, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov stated, “I don’t think such discussions are possible now from an official point of view.”

Simonyan’s comments do not “always” reflect Moscow’s official position, he added.


US military ready to send ballistic missiles to Ukraine: Report

The United States military is reportedly getting ready to send tactical ballistic missiles armed with cluster munitions to Ukraine once approved by President Joe Biden, according to a Bloomberg News report.

In an interview, Army Assistant Secretary for Acquisition Doug Bush said the US “has been postured for this eventuality for a while”, adding it is “ready to go fast”.

The Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) is a long-range guided missile “that gives operational commanders the immediate firepower to win the deep battle”, according to its manufacturer, Lockheed Martin.

ATACMS missiles were first deployed in the US military operation against Iraq in 1991.


335,000 signed up for military service in Russia this year

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has stated that 335,000 people have entered military service by contract with the Russian armed forces or volunteer groups since the start of the year.

The state-backed Russian news agency, RIA, also quoted Shoigu as saying that 50,000 people signed up in September alone, adding that Moscow is not planning any additional mobilisation this year.


Ukraine to borrow $700m from World Bank to support agriculture

Ukraine’s farm ministry announced that Kyiv has started talks with the World Bank to borrow $700m for emergency support to the agricultural sector this year and next.

The ministry said in a message sent through Telegram that it needs additional funding for small farmers and agricultural and food producers, as the country continues to grapple with the economic effect of the Russian military invasion.

Agricultural products are Ukraine’s most important exports. In 2021 they totalled $27.8bn, accounting for 41 percent of the country’s $68bn in overall exports, according to data gathered by the US Department of Agriculture.


Europe short of natural gas, faces challenges: Gazprom

Russian energy giant Gazprom said that Europe, which used to be its main source of revenue, is short of natural gas and may face challenges, more than a year after the Nord Stream pipelines were damaged by mysterious blasts, Reuters news agency reported.

“The fact that the systemic deficit has not gone away is manifested not only by the higher price level in 2023 compared to the pre-Covid years, but also by the persistence of a stable contango in the natural gas market,” Sergei Komlev and Alexander Shapin, Gazprom’s senior managers, said in an inhouse magazine.

Gazprom’s gas exports almost halved last year to 100.9 billion cubic metres (bcm) due to political fallout with Europe over Ukraine and after the undersea Nord Stream pipelines, the largest gas exporting route for Russia to European market, were blown up in September 2022, Reuters added.


Zelenksy thanks Estonia for support in meeting with defence minister

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky met with the Estonian defence minister on Monday and discussed ways that Tallinn could help Kyiv’s defence needs and assistance.

On X, the Ukrainian leader said: “Yesterday, I received Estonian Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur. Estonia has helped Ukraine a lot since the onset of Russia’s full-scale war.”

“We will always be grateful. We discussed Estonia’s active role in the IT coalition, Ukraine’s defence needs, and ways to increase assistance.”


Russia allocates one-third of 2024 spending to defence

Draft plans from the Russian government show that defence spending will account for almost one-third of Moscow’s total budget expenditure in 2024.

Spending under the “national defence” section of Russia’s budget will total 10.78 trillion roubles ($109bn) next year, or 29.4 percent of total planned expenditure of 36.66 trillion roubles, according to the finance ministry’s budget documents that outline the government’s fiscal plans for 2024-26.

In 2021, the year before the start of the war, defence spending totalled 3.57 trillion roubles ($36bn), 14.4 percent of total spending.

Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu made comments last week suggesting he was prepared for the war to continue into 2025.


Ukraine arrests several suspected informants in intelligence operation

Ukraine’s main intelligence and security service, SBU, has announced the arrest of at least 13 people accused of being Russian informants.

The government noted the arrests were made in the southern city of Mykolaiv near Kherson.

The identities of the suspects were not immediately known.


Ukrainian commander says Kyiv boosting air defence in northern regions for winter

The commander the Ukrainian armed forces, Serhii Naiev, has announced that Kyiv is strengthening its air defence system in the country’s northern regions in preparation for potential Russian attacks on energy infrastructure during the winter months.

“In the northern operational zone, together with the heads of regional military administrations, measures are being taken to increase the number of mobile fire groups,” Naiev was quoted as saying by the Espreso TV news website.

Naiev’s statement was apparently in response to a warning issued by visiting German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, who called for the creation of a winter strategy to insulate Ukraine from the fallout of intensified Russian air attacks on the country’s energy grid.

“We saw last winter the brutal way in which the Russian president wages this war with targeted attacks on critical infrastructure such as power plants,” Baerbock stated in Kyiv on Monday during an historic meeting of EU foreign ministers in the Ukrainian capital.


Ukraine says it downed 29 Russia-launched drones, one cruise missile

Ukraine’s air force has announced it destroyed 29 of 31 drones and one cruise missile launched by Russia, mostly towards the regions of Mykolaiv and Dnipropetrovsk.

The waves of overnight attacks lasted more than three hours, it added.

The falling debris in the southeastern city of Dnipro also reportedly caused a fire at a building, according to Serhiy Lysak, the governor of Dnipropetrovsk.

He also reported some damage to manufacturing facilities at an industrial enterprise in the city of Pavlohrad.


Russian regional governor accuses Ukraine of firing cluster munitions at a border village

The governor of Russia’s Bryansk region has accused Ukraine of firing cluster munitions at a Russian village near the Ukrainian border.

Alexander Bogomaz claimed that several houses in the village of Klimovo were damaged, although no casualties were reported.

His claim could not be immediately verified. The use of cluster munitions on civilian populations is prohibited by international law.

Ukraine had previously received US cluster munitions, but it pledged to use them only against soldiers.


European Union’s support for Ukraine doesn’t depend on one-day battlefield advances: Top diplomat

The European Union’s support for Ukraine doesn’t depend on one-day battlefield advances, the bloc’s foreign affairs chief stated.

“Our support does not depend on the advances of one day. It’s permanent, structured support because we are facing an existential threat for Europe,” Josep Borrell said during a news conference following a meeting of EU foreign affairs ministers in Kyiv, according to Ukrainian state news agency Ukrinform.

He emphasized that EU support for Ukraine “does not depend on how the war is going on in the next days or weeks,” adding that “the Ukrainian soldiers are fighting with a lot of courage in front of impressive Russian defense fortifications.”

According to Borrell, the satellite images show that in some cases, Russian fortifications are “25 km (15.5 miles) deep,” Ukrinform reported.

The EU’s top diplomat also said that if the partners want Ukraine to be more successful, they must provide it “with better arms, and quicker,” Ukrinform added.

Borrell arrived in Ukraine on Saturday, and since then he has visited the city of Odesa, honored the fallen soldiers in Kyiv and held his first personal meeting with Ukraine’s Defense Minister Rustem Umerov, Ukrinform said.


Ukraine receives first batch of refurbished tanks from Poland

Ukraine has received the first batch of refurbished Leopard tanks from Poland, a Polish industrial partner announced Monday.

“While others are making declarations concerning the future, we are consulting with the Ukrainian side in our actions. The first Leopard tanks expressly refurbished at Bumar-Labędy have been received by the Ukrainian side,” the Polish Armaments Group (PGZ) announced on X, formerly known as Twitter.

PGZ is “the main industrial partner” of the Polish Armed Forces, conducted by the Ministry of National Defense, according to the group’s website.

The group also confirmed that they are working on repairing another batch of tanks for Ukraine.

In April 2023, Germany, Poland and Ukraine signed an agreement to set up a hub in Poland to repair Leopard 2 battle tanks used in Ukraine to fight against Russian forces.

The hub was supposed to start its operations at the end of May, according to Germany’s Defense Minister Boris Pistorius.


Biden “fully expects” new Ukraine funding but won’t answer questions about new assurances

US President Joe Biden said he “fully expects” House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and a majority of Republicans to approve new funding for Ukraine but declined to say whether he’d received any specific assurances on the matter ahead of this week’s passage of a stopgap government funding measure.

“We cannot under any circumstances allow America’s support for Ukraine to be interrupted. Too many lives are at stake, too many children, too many people,” Biden said Monday afternoon during a meeting of his Cabinet.

“I fully expect the speaker and the majority of the Republicans in Congress to keep their commitment to secure the passage of the support needed to help Ukraine as it defends itself against Russian aggression and brutality,” Biden added.

Yet when pressed by reporters about the precise nature of that commitment, Biden remained silent.

He wouldn’t answer whether he’d received any new assurances from McCarthy about taking up new Ukraine funding — or even whether he trusted the Republican speaker.

A day earlier, Biden had told reporters “we just made” a deal on Ukraine with McCarthy, without elaborating. On Monday, the White House similarly declined to clarify the remark.

Multiple Democratic lawmakers serving on the House Foreign Affairs Committee told CNN on Monday that they had no reason to believe that McCarthy had made a fresh commitment to the White House over the weekend on Ukraine funding.

And McCarthy himself denied to reporters he had made any side deals on promising to put Ukraine funding on the floor.

Still, Biden on Monday stressed it was essential Ukraine funding be approved to demonstrate American commitment to the country’s battle against Russia.


US State Department blasts Congress for not passing Ukraine aid funding

The State Department blasted Congress for not passing funding for “desperately needed” assistance to Ukraine.

“I’d like to echo the president’s disappointment that, despite longstanding and strong bipartisan support for Ukraine as it fights back against Russia’s invasion, that the continuing resolution that passed Congress on Saturday did not include desperately needed support,” State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said at a press briefing.

Miller added that “while we have the ability to continue to support Ukraine’s ability to defend itself in the immediate term, we have already exhausted much of the existing security assistance funding.”

The US will still be able to send equipment from its own stockpiles under the Presidential Drawdown Authority, but funding through the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative and the Foreign Military Sales system will be running out.

Miller stressed the previous bipartisan support in Congress for aid to Ukraine.

“If we allow authoritarians like President (Vladimir) Putin to do whatever they want to other sovereign countries, then the whole UN charter will be shredded, and we are going to like in a world where this kind of aggression can happen anywhere, anytime,” Miller stated.

“That would be far more expensive for the American people, and far more dangerous for the American people.”


Ukrainian foreign minister expects talks on accession to EU to begin before end of year

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dymytro Kuleba says that negotiations on Ukraine’s accession to the European Union should begin before the end of the year.

Speaking after meeting with European Foreign Ministers in Kyiv, Kuleba stated that “The topic that was a leitmotif in all the speeches was Ukraine’s membership in the EU. We are moving forward, we expect a decision to start negotiations on membership (in the EU) by the end of the year.”

Speaking alongside European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, Kuleba noted: “The content and ambience of the discussion showed that we speak as a family… we have one goal and today in Kyiv it was powerfully demonstrated.”

Kuleba added: “We have not been offered anything, but Ukraine is a first-class state and we are not satisfied with anything but first-class membership.”

“It’s just a matter of time. Both Ukraine and the European side are determined to move forward as fast as possible, taking into account all the reforms that Ukraine has been, is and will be implementing.”

Kuleba said the Ukrainian side’s key message was that “we will accept the seven recommendations that the European Commission made for the opening of membership negotiations,” but expected “no additional requirements will be put forward.”

Those conditions include action on corruption and money laundering, media freedom and protection of minorities.

Borrell stressed Monday that European Union membership is the “strongest security commitment” that the bloc can give to Ukraine.

According to Borrell, the foreign ministers engaged in a “long debate” which managed to provide them with “a better idea of the security dimension of this situation” in Ukraine.

“We have been talking about the security commitments that we want to provide to Ukraine, showing our determination to stand by Ukraine in the long term,” Borrell added.

“And for sure the strongest security commitment that we can give to Ukraine is European Union membership. This is the strongest security commitment for Ukraine.Now Ukraine is a candidate country, and he is going further on his way.”


Germany says the future of Ukraine “lies in EU”

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said Monday that the “future of Ukraine lies in the European Union” and praised Ukraine for its ongoing reforms.

Speaking on the sidelines of the EU-Ukraine foreign ministers’ meeting in Kyiv, Baerbock said that the EU would “soon stretch from Lisbon to Luhansk.”

“With every village, with every meter that Ukraine liberates, with every meter where it saves its people, it paves its path into the EU,” Baerbock added.

The German foreign minister praised Ukraine for initiating a reform process during the war. Besides changes in the justice sector, Baerbock specifically applauded Ukraine’s attempts to tackle corruption.

Baerbock told reporters that the EU would further support Ukraine “every day” and help it prepare for winter. Ukraine required a winter protection plan consisting of air defense, generators, and a strengthening of its energy supply systems, Baerbock added.


Zelensky tells EU foreign ministers that victory depends on cooperation

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has met with European Union foreign ministers visiting Kyiv and said that he is “confident that Ukraine and the entire free world are capable of winning this confrontation [with Russia.]”

“But our victory directly depends on our cooperation: the more strong and principled steps we take together, the sooner this war will end. It will end fairly. It will end with the restoration of our territorial integrity and reliable guarantee of peace for the whole of Europe,” Zelensky said.

He described the ministers’ presence in Kyiv as a “step towards strengthening Europe…We need to constantly take new defense and diplomatic, political and integration, economic and sanctions steps that will make our common positions stronger,” according to the Presidency’s website.

“The more active we are, our leadership, our initiatives, the less likely Russia will be to adapt to our joint pressure.”

He added that besides further military aid and joint production of weapons, Ukraine’s path to NATO membership and a fresh package of sanctions against Russia were among the important steps to be taken, as well as “the beginning of negotiations this year on Ukraine’s membership in the EU.”

In response, EU Foreign Policy chief Josep Borrell stated: “You can be sure of our determination to be by Ukraine’s side for as long as it takes.”

Raisi: Islamic Revolution’s view rejects western approach

Ebrahim Raisi

Ebrahim Raisi made the remark in a meeting with participants in the International Khorsheed Media Festival.

Raisi reiterated that the West is not a defender of the rights of women, noting that the Islamic Revolution’s view is not an instrumental one nor does it support the notion that women must stay at home.

The Iranian president went on to say that the Israelis occupied Palestine for 70 years, while the US and its allies were in Afghanistan for 20 years without any positive result for the country’s people.

Raisi added that Iran believes that a media hegemony exists that depicts righteousness as falsehood and vice versa.

He said what is happening today is a war of narratives in which all people must follow the right narrative which is based on enlightenment.

While underlining the need for cooperation between independent media in order to shed light on the crimes of the West in the name of freedom and human rights, Raisi said the desecration of the Quran happens in the name of defending freedom of speech but such an act is actually a violation of human rights.

He stressed that what the West wants is not freedom of thought but it is a way of thinking that is useful to their domineering system.

Female media activists from 40 countries took part in the first Khorshid (sunshine) Media Festival held on Sunday in Mashhad, southeast of Iran.

Iran supports expansion of regional transportation routes, opposes geopolitical change

Nasser Kanaani

“We support the expansion of transit routes and transportation networks in a way that serves the interests of all regional countries, but at the same time we emphasize that we oppose any change to international borders,” Kanaani told reporters on Monday.

He also expressed Tehran’s support for resolving the disputes in the Caucasus region, including the one between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, through political means.

“We believe differences in the Caucasus can be resolved via political dialogue and regional capacities.”

The spokesman stressed that Tehran is against any extra-regional intervention and foreign presence in the Caucasus.

He noted that Iran supports regional dialogue within the framework of the 3+3 format cooperation mechanism, expressing Tehran’s readiness to help find a solution to the conflict.

The 3+3 format cooperation mechanism features the three South Caucasus countries of Armenia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan plus Russia, Turkey, and Iran.

Kanaani further said that the visit of Armen Grigoryan, the secretary of the National Security Council of Armenia to Tehran aimed to discuss bilateral ties and the latest developments in Caucasus.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a landlocked region in the Caucasus and lies within Azerbaijan’s borders.

The region has always been internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan though it is mostly populated by ethnic Armenians, who have resisted Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over the territory.

Last month, Azerbaijan launched an operation designed to seize control of the breakaway territory and perhaps end a three-decade-old conflict.

The operation ended on September 20, after the Azerbaijani military routed Armenian forces in 24 hours and made the separatists agree to lay down weapons, under a Russian-mediated ceasefire.