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Iran security chief says Tehran pushing for regional peace

Ali Akbar Ahmadian

In a telephone conversation with Secretary of Armenia’s Security Council Armen Grigoryan on Monday, Ahmadian said diplomacy and dialogue are the best options to put an end to conflicts among countries.

He stressed that Iran fully supports the establishment of sustainable peace in the region.

The Armenian and Iranian security chiefs also discussed mutual issues, especially the expansion of economic ties, and the latest developments in the region.

Grigoryan congratulated Ahmadian on the post and wished him success in the important position, hoping that it would bring benefit for the friendly people of Iran.

Last month, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi told Armenia’s Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in Tehran that Iran supports the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all regional countries and firmly opposes any geopolitical change in the region.

The Iranian president also stressed the importance of improving ties with Armenia and said no obstacle can hinder the expansion of mutual relations.

Saudi Arabia’s Aramco to ramp up oil investments in China as it competes with Russia

Aramco

Aramco announced on Monday that net profit fell to about $30.08bn in the second quarter ending 30 June, compared to $48.44bn in the same period last year.

The kingdom enjoyed a revenue windfall after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine helped push crude prices higher.

Saudi Arabia was the fastest-growing economy in the G20 last year. Meanwhile, Aramco briefly overtook Apple as the world’s most valuable public company.

But Aramco’s drop in profit is the latest sign that falling crude prices and a series of unilateral production cuts are cooling the kingdom’s economy. In July, the IMF downgraded Saudi Arabia’s growth forecast from 3.2 percent to 1.9 percent.

Brent is down about 25 percent from a year ago and Saudi Arabia’s oil exports are down 40 percent from a year ago.

Despite the drop in profit, Aramco CEO Amin Nasser said in a press call on Monday that the state-owned energy giant was committed to expanding its footprint in China, Saudi Arabia’s biggest oil customer, but a country where Riyadh is seeing increased competition with Russia.

“China represents an important market for us, not in terms of only crude placements but also in terms of chemicals growth. There is a number of investments in China in the pipeline that we are currently evaluating and which we will announce in due course,” Nasser stated.

Saudi Arabia has invested heavily in Chinese refineries. Last month, Aramco completed its purchase of a 10 percent stake in China’s Rongsheng Petrochemical company for about $3.6bn. The deal will see Aramco supply about 480,000 barrels per day of additional crude oil to Rongsheng-affiliated refineries.

Saudi Arabia, along with other Persian Gulf states, is ramping up investments in order to churn out more crude and petroleum products, at a time when western companies are scaling back new production amid concerns about western governments’ climate mandates and future demand.

Saudi Arabia’s energy minister, Abdulaziz bin Salman, has famously vowed the kingdom would be “the last man standing” in the energy market and extract “every molecule of hydrocarbon” it possesses.

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman is pushing a plan to diversify his kingdom’s economy away from its reliance on fossil fuels with an eye towards the future when demand drops, but right now the kingdom needs oil revenue.

The IMF says Saudi Arabia needs Brent crude prices above $80 per barrel to balance its budget and devote funds to mega-projects like Neom and Red Sea island developments.

On Monday, Aramco announced that it would boost its dividend to $29.4bn this quarter up from $18.8bn the same time last year. Aramco is about 98 percent owned by the Saudi government and the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, so the dividend represents a key cash infusion for the Saudi government.

Oil prices have risen substantially this summer, with Brent crude trading at $85.49 a barrel Monday. Analysts have attributed the rise to increasing summer demand amid signs the global economy may avoid a recession, and efforts by oil producers to choke crude supplies.

But on the supply side, analysts and energy experts told Middle East Eye that Saudi Arabia has been doing most of the heavy lifting within an alliance of oil producers dubbed Opec+ led by Riyadh and Moscow.

Aramco’s commitment to investing further in China comes as Saudi Arabia faces a falling market share in Asia to Russia, whose oil sales to India have already surpassed the total crude purchased from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iraq, and the US.

Saudi Arabia and Russia are vying for the top spot as China’s main oil supplier.

Adi Imsirovic, director of Surrey Clean Energy, and former head of oil at Gazprom’s overseas trading arm, previously told MEE that competition for Chinese market share is one of the most sensitive issues for the kingdom.

Russia turned to China as a customer because Europe shunned its oil after the invasion of Ukraine. In a global rewiring of the energy trade, Saudi Arabia picked up Russia’s market share in Europe, but because of its limited growth potential and western climate goals, experts say Asia is the big prize for oil sales.

“You don’t want to be losing market share in Asia to sell into Europe,” Imsirovic said.

Iran urges realities regarding Taliban killing of Iranian diplomats, journalist 25 years ago

Iranian Foreign Ministry

On August 8, 1998, and amid the civil war in Afghanistan, when the Taliban overran the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif, armed Taliban men attacked the Iranian consulate and killed eight Iranian diplomats and one journalist.

In a statement on Tuesday, the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said this day is a reminder of the tragic martyrdom of the Iranian diplomats and journalist in Afghanistan, who were killed by the Taliban, “contrary to moral, humanitarian and international obligations.”

While condemning this bitter and unforgettable incident, the Iranian Foreign Ministry undermined the need for shedding light on the circumstances surrounding the incident, which it said “is a definite demand by the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

The statement adds, “The widespread condemnation of this crime by the international community and the noble Afghan people’s solidarity and their sympathy marked a shining manifestation of the unity between peoples of Iran and Afghanistan. This persuaded the Islamic Republic of Iran to magnanimously exercise restraint, stand by the Afghan brothers and sisters in line with the best interests of both nations.”

The ministry also underlined the need to form an inclusive government in Afghanistan, saying “Even now, after so many years of war and instability in Afghanistan, the Islamic Republic of Iran believes that the formation of a government consisting of all Afghan social strata, factions and ethnic groups can pave the way for the long-suffering people of Afghanistan to move toward development, progress and prosperity and can strengthen their power in the face of ordeals and hardships.”

Iran reports 37% surge in domestic wheat purchases

Iran Wheat

MAJ’s deputy for Arable Farming said on Monday that the government had purchased more than 9 million metric tons (mt) of wheat from domestic farmers since April.

Alireza Mohajer added the figure was an increase of more than 104% compared to April-August 2021, adding that an increase in dry-land farming activity was a major factor in promising yields of the crop in Iran this year.

CEO of Government Trading Corporation (GTC), a MAJ subsidiary responsible for supply of staple grains in Iran, said on Monday that wheat purchases in some provinces in the country had nearly doubled this year compared to last year.

Saeid Raad stated southern provinces of Khuzestan and Fars were the largest suppliers of wheat in Iran this year by delivering 1.72 million mt and nearly 1 million mt of wheat to GTC silos, respectively.

Raad added the value of wheat purchased from Iranian farmers since April had exceeded 1,340 trillion rials ($268 million), adding that up to 70% of the payments to wheat farmers in the country had already been settled.

The domestic wheat purchase figure announced by the MAJ on Monday is 1 million mt above what had been anticipated in government forecasts announced earlier this year.

Experts say a favorable price of 150,000 rials ($0.3) per kilogram offered for wheat under government’s guaranteed purchase program has been a major factor in promising purchases this year.

Estimates suggest that total wheat output in Iran could reach 14.5 million mt this year, up from 13.2 million mt reported in 2022.

Huge explosion destroys buildings in Shahre Rey, southern Tehran

Iran Explosion

Reports say 20 people were retrieved from under the ruble including 13 who received outpatient treatment at a hospital and then discharged.

A 75-year-old woman who was wounded, later succumbed to her injuries.

A firefighter at the scene told the IRIB the explosion was so powerful that it destroyed five nearby buildings as well.

The firefighter did not rule out the possibility of people remaining trapped under the debris.

The blast has been blamed on a gas leak.

Several killed in multiple bombings in Pakistan

Pakistan

The attack that killed seven on Monday happened in Kech, a town in Balochistan province, local police officer Haider Ali said.

The slain politician, Ishaq Yaqub, was from the Balochistan Awami Party and it was unclear who was behind the attack, added Ali.

For years, Balochistan has been the scene of a low-level rebellion by small separatist groups and nationalists who complain of discrimination, and demand a fairer share of their province’s resources and wealth.

The bombing in Balochistan happened hours after a suicide bomber detonated his explosives-laden vehicle prematurely in a former stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban, killing a married couple in a nearby car.

Local official Rehmant Ullah stated the bombing happened in North Waziristan, a district in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of northwest Pakistan, bordering Afghanistan.

He said a team from the bomb disposal unit was also present nearby when the blast took place, but they escaped unharmed.

“We suspect that the suicide bomber detonated his explosives either by mistake or prematurely, but it killed a man and his wife whose car was near the vehicle of the bomber at the time of the blast,” Ullah added.

It is unclear who dispatched the car bomber to the area, but suspicion is likely to fall on the outlawed Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which has stepped up attacks on security forces since last year.

TTP is a separate group but is a close ally of the Afghan Taliban, which seized power in neighbouring Afghanistan in August 2021 as United States and NATO troops were in the final stages of their pullout from the country after 20 years of war.

Although the Pakistani military claims it has cleared the North Waziristan region and other former tribal areas of fighters, the violence has continued, raising concerns that the Pakistani Taliban are regrouping in the area.

Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 531: Double Russian strike on Ukraine’s Pokrovsk kills at least seven, injures dozens

Russia Ukraine War

Poor weather conditions affecting Ukrainian milling wheat

Ukraine’s 2023 milling wheat harvest could fall to 40 percent from 70 percent in previous years due to poor weather, the Ukrainian Agrarian Council (UAC) has announced.

While Ukraine is a traditional wheat grower, the volume of wheat with sufficient protein content for milling depends largely on weather conditions.

“The key problem with the new harvest was its poor quality: due to weather conditions, the grain has a low protein content,” the UAC said in a statement.

It added that other European states also had large volumes of feed wheat, and the current 2023/24 season “will be problematic with the supply of food grains worldwide”.

As of August 4, Ukraine had harvested 12.5 million metric tonnes of wheat.

The traders union said this month that Ukraine is able to harvest 20.2 million tonnes of wheat this year, the same as in 2022.


Western officials: Significant Ukrainian breakthrough is unlikely in face of heavily mined Russian defenses

Weeks into Ukraine’s highly anticipated counteroffensive, Western officials describe increasingly “sobering” assessments about Ukrainian forces’ ability to retake significant territory, four senior US and Western officials briefed on the latest intelligence told CNN.

“They’re still going to see, for the next couple of weeks, if there is a chance of making some progress. But for them to really make progress that would change the balance of this conflict, I think, it’s extremely, highly unlikely,” a senior Western diplomat told CNN.

“Our briefings are sobering. We’re reminded of the challenges they face,” said Rep. Mike Quigley, an Illinois Democrat who recently returned from meetings in Europe with US commanders training Ukrainian armored forces.

“This is the most difficult time of the war,” he added.

The primary challenge for Ukrainian forces is the continued difficulty of breaking through Russia’s multi-layered defensive lines in the eastern and southern parts of the country, which are marked by tens of thousands of mines and vast networks of trenches. Ukrainian forces have incurred staggering losses there, leading Ukrainian commanders to hold back some units to regroup and reduce casualties.

“Russians have a number of defensive lines and they (Ukrainian forces) haven’t really gone through the first line,” said a senior Western diplomat.

“Even if they would keep on fighting for the next several weeks, if they haven’t been able to make more breakthroughs throughout these last seven, eight weeks, what is the likelihood that they will suddenly, with more depleted forces, make them? Because the conditions are so hard,” the diplomat continued.

A senior US official stated the US recognizes the difficulties Ukrainian forces are facing, though retains hope for renewed progress.

“We all recognize this is going harder and slower than anyone would like – including the Ukrainians – but we still believe there’s time and space for them to be able make progress,” this official added.

Multiple officials say the approach of fall, when weather and fighting conditions are expected to worsen, gives Ukrainian forces a limited window to push forward.

These latest assessments represent a marked change from the optimism at the start of the counteroffensive. These officials say those expectations were “unrealistic” and are now contributing to pressure on Ukraine from some in the West to begin peace negotiations, including considering the possibility of territorial concessions.

“Vladimir Putin is waiting for this. He can sacrifice bodies and buy time,” Quigley noted.


Ukrainian official says support for Zelensky’s peace deal is growing

The head of Volodymyr Zelensky’s office, Andriy Yermak, says the meeting in Saudi Arabia over the weekend brought Ukraine closer to implementing its peace deal.

“With each step, the number of countries that unconditionally respect Ukraine’s independence, territorial integrity, sovereignty and are ready to work on a part or the whole of the peace formula is growing. And the isolation of Russia is growing as well,” he stated.

Yermak also noted that the involvement of China during the talks was “important” and thanked officials and Saudi Arabia for making it possible.

“The representative of China took an active part in the conversations and expressed his opinion. The main thing we heard from the Chinese representative is that China is ready to continue participating in this format,” he added.


UK unveils fresh package of sanctions against Moscow and Minsk

The United Kingdom has added new designations under its sanctions regimes against Russia and Belarus, it announced on Tuesday.

Six of the new designations target Belarus-affiliated individuals and institutions; 19 target those affiliated with Russia. They include sanctions against individuals and businesses based in Russia, Turkey, Dubai, Slovakia and Switzerland.

The companies sanctioned include electronics and defense equipment producers who have exported microelectronics and drones to Russia to help in its war against Ukraine. Also sanctioned were Slovakian national Ashot Mkrtychev, who was involved in an attempted arms deal between North Korea and Russia, and Swiss national Anselm Oskar Schmucki for working in Russia’s financial services sector.

UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said in a statement Tuesday that the sanctions will “further diminish Russia’s arsenal and close the net on supply chains propping up Putin’s now struggling defense industry.”

“There is nowhere for those sustaining Russia’s military machine to hide,” he continued.

“Alongside our G7 partners, the UK has repeatedly called on third parties to immediately cease providing material support to Russia’s aggression or face severe costs,” he added.


Ukraine trying to regain positions in Kupiansk: Russia

The Russian defence ministry says Ukrainian troops are trying to regain positions in the Kupiansk direction, but forces repelled five attacks, the state news agency Tass reported.

Sergey Zybinsky, the head of the ‘West’ group’s press centre, said, “In the Kupiansk direction, the enemy is putting up stubborn resistance, striving to regain lost positions.

“During the day, units of the 14th separate mechanised brigade carried out five counterattacks on the positions of our troops in the area of ​​​​the village of Sinkovka [Sinvivka], the Mankovka tract, the Usy forest,” Zybinsky stated.

He added that all counterattacks were repelled.

“The losses of the enemy amounted to more than a platoon of manpower, one infantry fighting vehicle, one pick-up truck,” he continued.


US to announce $200m weapons aid to Ukraine

US President Joe Biden’s administration is expected to announce $200m of new weapons aid for Ukraine on Tuesday, officials told the Reuters news agency.

The additional aid comes as Washington distributes $6.2bn of funds discovered after a Pentagon accounting error over-valued billions of Ukraine aid.

The discovered funds represent the last of the previously congressionally authorised $25.5bn in Presidential Drawdown Authority (PDA) the administration can utilise to ship weapons from US stocks in an emergency, officials stated.

The officials added that Tuesday’s expected announcement of $200m would be the first tranche of the $6.2bn windfall of previously authorised PDA.


US lying about Russia’s position on Ukraine peace talks: Moscow

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova lashed out at Washington over claims that Moscow has rejected peace negotiations with Kiev.

On Monday, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said at a press briefing that “There are no peace negotiations going on with Russia right now, because Russia has refused to engage in meaningful peace negotiations.”

Zakharova wrote on Telegram: “They know perfectly well that they told [Ukrainian President Vladimir] Zelensky to withdraw from peace talks in April 2022, they caused Kiev’s ban on talks with Russia, adopted in September 2022, they have been declaring all year that it’s not the right time for talks, but they still blame Russia anyway.”

Zakharova also advised Miller to read an interview of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken that he gave in April. She was apparently referring to comments Blinken gave to the Funke Media Group, in which he said he did not support the idea of beginning negotiations, while hailing Kiev’s counteroffensive.


Second missile hit Pokrovsk as emergency services worked at the scene: Local official

Two Russian Iskander missiles hit the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk within 30-40 minutes of each other, with the second missile injuring and killing emergency service workers responding to the first hit, according to Serhii Dobriak, head of Pokrovsk City Military Administration.

“The first missile hit at 19:15, the second at 19:52. This is a standard Russo-fascist scenario – 30-40 minutes between missiles. When the State Emergency Service and rescuers arrive to save people, the second missile hits and so the number of victims increases,” Dobriak said on Telegram.

“The blast radius was very large – windows in many buildings were smashed, at least 2,000 windows,” he added.

Local officials stated a residential building, hotel, shops and administrative buildings were damaged. The Druzhba (Friendship) Hotel and Corleone pizzeria, both popular with journalists, were damaged in the attack according to geolocated footage from the scene.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of Donetsk Regional Military Administration, said in an update that among the seven people killed were five civilians, a rescuer and a serviceman.

He added there were 81 people injured, including 39 civilians, two children, 31 police officers, seven rescuers and four military personnel.

“As of 11:00 a.m., 12 multi-story buildings were damaged, as well as a hotel, a prosecutor’s office, a pension fund, a pharmacy, two shops, two cafes and two civilian cars,” Kyrylenko continued.

Ukraine’s National Police said that the deputy head of the Ukrainian State Emergency Service in the Donetsk region, Andrii Omelchenko, was killed, and confirmed that 31 police officers were injured.

“All of them were there when they were needed, putting their efforts into rescuing people after the first incoming,” the police said on Telegram, adding, “They knew there were victims under the rubble — so one had to react, dismantle, get them out and save them. And the enemy struck again.”

Rescue operations are continuing at the scene.


Injuries rise following Russian strikes on Pokrovsk: Ukrainian minister

Ten more people have been confirmed wounded following deadly Russian missile strikes on residential buildings in the Donetsk city of Pokrovsk, a senior Ukrainian official said Tuesday.

Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko stated at least seven people were killed and 67 others injured, including 29 police officers, seven rescue workers and two children.

The removal of debris has resumed after work was suspended overnight “due to the high threat of repeated shelling,” he added.

The Russian strikes come after the United Nations warned last week about the impact of a “new wave of attacks” on civilians in Ukraine, including aid workers.


After attending Saudi peace talks, Beijing assures Moscow it remains “impartial” on Ukraine war

China’s top diplomat Wang Yi told his Russian counterpart that Beijing remains “impartial” on the war in Ukraine, a day after a Chinese delegation participated in international talks on ending the conflict that included Kyiv, but not Moscow.

In a call Monday, Wang stressed to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov that China and Russia are “trustworthy and reliable good friends and partners.”

“On the Ukraine crisis, China will uphold an independent and impartial position, sound an objective and rational voice, actively promote peace talks, and strive to seek a political solution on any international multilateral occasion,” Wang said, according to a readout of the call released by China’s Foreign Ministry.

The call followed two-day talks hosted by Saudi Arabia, where around 40 nations including key Ukraine allies the United States, Britain and Germany, as well as India and a number of Middle Eastern nations, met to discuss the resolution of the conflict, nearly 18 months since Moscow’s invasion began.

The group agreed on the importance of international dialogue to find “common ground that will pave the way for peace,” according to official Saudi media.

Lavrov “appreciates and welcomes the constructive role played by China” toward a political resolution of the “Ukraine crisis,” China’s Foreign Ministry said in their readout of Monday’s call.


Zelensky warns Russia “they may be left without vessels” if attacks on Ukrainian ports don’t stop

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has warned Russia it may be left without ships if Moscow’s forces continue to attack Ukrainian ports.

Speaking to Latin American media in a news conference Sunday, Zelensky said “we don’t have as​ many weapons, but if they continue to shoot, they may be left without vessels by the end of the war,” Argentina’s La Nacion newspaper reported.

“And this is what we want to show them,” he continued, adding, “Ukraine will definitely respond to any attacks on the civilian population and grain corridors.”

Zelensky’s remarks come after Ukrainian sea drones hit a Russian oil tanker and a warship in recent days.

“If Russia continues to dominate the Black Sea and block it with firing missiles, then Ukraine will do the same, which is a fair defense of Ukraine’s capabilities,” he added.

The United Nations has condemned Russia’s recent attacks on Ukrainian grain storage. Moscow’s decision to pull out of the Black Sea grain deal and its repeated attacks on Ukrainian ports and infrastructure “are causing insurmountable damage to the agricultural sector in Ukraine and may further accentuate hunger for the world’s poorest people,” Denise Brown, a UN humanitarian coordinator for Ukraine, said in a statement Saturday.


Biden administration working on supplemental Ukraine funding request: US Army official

The Joe Biden administration is working on a supplemental funding request for Ukraine that will likely be ready for Congress to consider by this fall, Army acquisition chief Doug Bush said on Monday.

The administration “is working on a package for Congress to consider this fall,” Bush stated, adding that the details still have to be determined by the Office of Management Budget. “But I think we’ll have a very strong case, and hopefully garner congressional support for continued funding­—in particular for munitions production increases and munitions buys to support Ukraine.”

The White House is not planning to ask Congress for new Ukraine funding before the end of the fiscal year at the end of September, pitting administration officials against some lawmakers and congressional staffers who were concerned that the funds could run out by mid-summer.

That funding shortfall does not appear to have happened, largely because the Pentagon previously overvalued the amount it had spent on weaponry to Ukraine by $6.2 billion.

More about the US’ funding for Ukraine: In December, Congress approved the administration’s request for an additional $48 billion to help arm Ukraine and combat the Covid-19 pandemic, $36 billion of which was specifically allocated for Ukraine.

The supplemental was meant to last through September 30, 2023. The administration requested this kind of additional funding to help support Ukraine four times last year, in March, May, September and December.


22 Ukrainian POWs released from Russia: Ukrainian official

After being held as prisoners of war, 22 Ukrainian military service members were released Monday, according to Andriy Yermak, head of the Office of the President.

“Today, 22 more Ukrainian soldiers were returned home from captivity,” Yermak said in a Telegram message. Among them are two officers, privates and non-commissioned officers of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. They participated in battles in different areas, and there are wounded among the released.

The oldest of the soldiers is 54-years-old and the youngest is 23-years-old, Yermak stated.

“Each of the liberated soldiers will undergo physical and psychological rehabilitation, reintegration and be provided with the necessary treatment with the support of medical specialists,” he continued.

Yermak thanked the Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War and their team for assisting.

“We have to fulfill the President’s task and return all of our people,” he added.


At least 5 killed after Russian missiles strike a residential building in Pokrovsk

At least five people were killed and more than two dozen injured after Russian missiles struck a residential building in Pokrovsk, a city in the eastern Donetsk region, Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said Monday.

Among the injured are 19 police officers, five rescuers and one child, Klymenko said in a Telegram message. “The rubble is being cleared,” he added.

“Search and rescue operations are ongoing. We are clearing rubble, rescuing people from Russian terror,” Klymenko said.

Earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stated Russia had launched two missiles that struck a residential building in the city.

A video accompanying his post showed residents and emergency teams trying to clear some of the rubble. A person on a stretcher was being moved into an ambulance.

Zelensky vowed to hold Russia accountable for the attack.

“We have to stop the Russian terror. Everyone who fights for the freedom of Ukraine saves lives. Everyone in the world who helps Ukraine will defeat the terrorists together with us,” Zelensky continued.

“Russia will be held accountable for everything it has done in this terrible war,” he added.


Washington approves first Abrams tank delivery to Kiev

Kiev will receive its first batch of US-made Abrams tanks by early autumn, a senior Pentagon official told journalists on Monday. President Joe Biden initially promised the heavy equipment to Ukraine in January.

The tanks are ready for delivery, US Army Acquisition Chief Doug Bush told a news briefing. The equipment pieces still have to first “get to Europe, and then to Ukraine, along with all of the things that go with them,” he added, as cited by CNN.

Washington plans to provide the Ukrainian forces with ammunition, spare parts, and fuel equipment for the tanks, which are all to be sent within the same delivery, Bush said. “So you know, it’s not just the tanks, it’s the full package that goes with it. That’s still on track,” he added.

The US has pledged a total of 31 tanks, or the equivalent of a Ukrainian battalion. In late July, Politico reported that only between six and eight heavy equipment pieces might make it to Ukraine by September.

According to Western media outlets, the US military began training Ukrainian tank crews on Abrams vehicles in Germany in May. The ten-week training course should wrap up in August, a Pentagon official told reporters.

Originally, the Pentagon intended to use the more modern M1A2 variants, but changed its plans in March, opting for the older M1A1. Newsweek and Politico previously reported that the US-made tanks are to be stripped of any “sensitive” technology first before they can be handed over to Kiev.

The tanks might “lose some of their most sophisticated electronics before seeing combat in Ukraine,” according to Newsweek. The advanced equipment, which is due to be removed, reportedly includes systems that offer “some advantages” to the gunner and the commander, as well as depleted uranium armor.

Washington has already supplied Kiev with around half of the 190 promised Bradley infantry fighting vehicles (IFV). Many of them have since been destroyed or captured by Russian forces during a largely unsuccessful Ukrainian counteroffensive that was launched in early June.


‘No compromise’ with Moscow: Kiev

The government in Kiev has not given up on its “peace formula” and rejects all compromise positions, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s adviser Mikhail Podoliak announced on Monday.

His comments came after the Wall Street Journal suggested Ukraine had softened its stance during the peace conference in Saudi Arabia.

“The only basic ‘foundation for negotiations’ is President Zelensky’s Peace Formula,” Podoliak tweeted.

“There can be no compromise positions such as ‘immediate ceasefires’ and ‘negotiations here and now’ that give Russia time to stay in the occupied territories. Only the withdrawal of Russian troops to the 1991 border,” he added.

“Any scenario of a ceasefire and freezing of the war in Ukraine in the current disposition will mean only one thing – Russia’s actual victory and [President Vladimir] Putin’s personal triumph,” Podoliak added several hours later.

“This would be a great defeat for the Western world and the end of the current global security order,” he continued.

He also claimed that Moscow would use a “Minsk 3” to rearm and prepare for the “next round” of war, which would return “bigger, bloodier, and better prepared” as soon as “political leaders in key Western countries change.”

It is “necessary” for Russia to increase production of latest types of weapons: Putin

Vladimir Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin met with the director general of Rostec, Sergey Chemezov, and spoke about skills shortages and rapidly rising wages among military industries, according to a Kremlin readout.

Putin said it was “necessary to increase the percentage of production of the latest types of weapons,” according to a transcript of the meeting.

Chemezov stated Rostec, the state-owned high-tech giant, was trying to find sufficient highly-skilled personnel.

“Our average number [of staff] is 592,000. Unfortunately, we still do not have enough people. This year we will urgently need to close 23,000 vacancies, we will recruit – these are highly qualified specialists, of course,” Chemezov told Putin according to the Kremlin readout.

Chemezov also spoke about the growth of wages at the company’s defense enterprises, which was 17.2% last year because many factories worked “both on weekends, and on holidays, and at night, and these days are paid, of course, at an increased rate.”

“The fulfillment of the state defense order for the last year, 2022, amounted to 99.5 percent. This figure is quite high. We have increased production volumes for all types of military products, which are massively used today in the special military operation,” Chemezov told Putin.

Putin also spoke about the need for Rostec to increase production of drones.

“Both the Kub and the Lancet showed themselves very effectively [in the SVO zone]: firstly, the blow is powerful, any equipment, including foreign-made equipment, not only burns, but ammunition explodes,” Putin added.

It was necessary to increase their production of UAVs “Kub” and “Lancet” even more, he continued.

On August 3, Putin said at a meeting with industry leaders in the Kremlin that a combination of military spending and domestic demand was driving the Russian economy, with employment in manufacturing stable.

The Russian leader stated that wage growth was due to labor shortages. He said Moscow needs to “attract people, to interest them in a higher level of wages. And this is already beginning to affect the position of small and medium-sized enterprises in a certain way.”

US dispatches thousands of sailors, Marines to Middle East

US Marine

The US Naval Forces Central Command (CENTCOM) made the announcement on Monday, saying the forces from the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group (ARG) and 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) had arrived in West Asia.

“Amphibious assault ship USS Bataan (LHD 50) and dock landing ship USS Carter Hall (LSD 50) entered the Red Sea after transiting from the Mediterranean Sea through the Suez Canal,” CENTCOM said in a statement.

“Bataan ARG/26th MEU units bring to the region additional aviation and naval assets, as well as more US Marines and Sailors, providing greater flexibility and maritime capability to US 5th Fleet,” the statement read.

The statement added the amphibious assault ship can carry more than two dozen rotary-wing and fixed-wing aircraft, in addition to several amphibious landing craft.

The US Navy claimed the deployment was made following a call by the Department of Defense for additional troops after “recent attempts by Iran to seize commercial ships in the CENTCOM area of operations.”

The US Navy accused Iran of “attacking, seizing or attempting to seize” nearly 20 internationally flagged merchant vessels in the region over the past two years.

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Navy has over the past years foiled several attacks on both Iranian and foreign tankers in the strategic Persian Gulf region and other high seas.

The IRGC’s Navy confiscated more than 50 million liters of smuggled fuel, mainly diesel, in various missions last year.

Back in April, Iranian forces seized two tankers in the span of a week in the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, one of them over a judicial complaint by a private plaintiff and the other over a maritime accident with an Iranian fishing craft.

In recent years, the US navy has several times seized Iranian-controlled tankers and shipments of oil en route to other countries, citing its own sanctions on Iran’s oil exports.

Iran says it views US military vessels lurking in the waters of the Persian Gulf as a threat to its security and a source of tension and instability in the region.

Japan PM says ready to help resume JCPOA talks

Amirabdollahian Kishida

In a meeting with the visiting Iranian foreign minister on Monday afternoon, Kishida added that Tokyo also backs the full implementation of all parties’ obligations under the 2015 nuclear deal.

The Japanese prime minister welcomed the continuation of positive interactions between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, in turn, welcomed the drawing of a roadmap for long-term cooperation between Tehran and Tokyo, stressing the need for the two sides to boost their political, economic and cultural relations.

The Iranian foreign minister further highlighted the Islamic Republic of Iran’s prominent role in bolstering energy security in the Persian Gulf.

The Iranian foreign minister said the new developments in the region herald the expansion of regional cooperation aimed at promoting stability, security, development and inclusive prosperity.

Amirabdollahian described Japan’s role in supporting this process as important. He then outlined the Islamic Republic of Iran’s principled stance on the Ukraine crisis and its support for finding a political solution to conflict.

He described the Japanese prime minister’s deep knowledge of relations between the two countries and the developments in the region as a valuable asset for promoting bilateral interactions.

The two sides also discussed Iran’s safeguards cooperation with the IAEA.