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Israel blast: The world saw laser attack for the first time

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Israel, which has made Iron Dome to deadly drone, has successfully tested the laser missile defense system for the first time in the world. The name of this missile defense system has been given as ‘Iron Beam’. Which will replace Iron Dome. This laser-based missile defense system destroyed mortars, rockets and anti-tank missiles in a single attack.

The best part is, its one-time use only costs ₹267? It can prove to be a good defense option at a very low cost. It is being claimed that this laser weapon can be deployed on land, air and sea. Israel said that it may seem like a fantasy to the world, but today it has become a reality.

Let us tell you that Israel has been using the Iron Room system for many years to stop the rocket attack of Hamas. Israel was finding it very expensive to operate the Iron Dome. Hence a cheap defense system which would be very effective. The need has been known.

Israel has successfully test fired the new laser based air defense system ‘Iron Beam’. Rafael is using the Iron Beam directed-energy weapon system developed by Advanced Defense Systems and can go a long way in providing air defence. Israel has successfully tested ‘Iron Beam’, the new laser missile-defense system that can intercept a wide range of aerial objects starting from missiles, rockets, anti-tank missiles and even drones.

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett took to Twitter to announce the successful test of the Iron Beam. He tweeted, “Israel has successfully tested the new “Iron Beam” laser interception system. It is the world’s first energy-based weapon system that uses lasers to shoot down incoming UAVs, rockets and mortars at a cost of $3.50 per shot. Bennett said in February that Israel would start using the system within a year.

Israel has already developed or deployed a range of systems to intercept everything from long-range missiles to rockets launched from a few kilometers (miles) away. It has also outfitted its tanks with missile-defense systems.

Iron beam: how it works
Iron beam works on fiber laser system to destroy any aerial object. Israel states that its Iron Dome defense system has been a great success, with a 90% interception rate against incoming rocket fire. But officials say the system is expensive to deploy. Bennett has said that someone in Gaza can fire a rocket toward Israel for a few hundred dollars, but it costs tens of thousands of dollars for the Iron Dome to stop it.

Destroying Hamas rockets from the Gaza Strip cost a lot. That’s why Israel was trying to make better air defense system than this and now it has got success in it. It is believed that by releasing the video of Iron Defense System in Israel, it has given a strong message to its enemies like Iran and Hamas.

@aditya : News Quest

Why India abstained in UN vote against Russia..

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Indians Are Biggest Group of Foreign Students in UkraineFriends and partners on both sides.

With the abstention, India managed to hold its balance for another day, despite considerable pressure from the West to break out of the fence and an open plea from Russia sent to Delhi for support.

India’s abstention from voting on the draft resolution with the text “deploring in the strongest terms” Russia for its operations inside Ukraine is no surprise given the subtle balance Delhi is struggling to strike between crucial partnerships with both Moscow and Western allies in the final month of the escalating crisis.

After the death of an Indian student in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city, protests against the evacuation of non-Ukrainians from the country have intensified. After the Russian invasion began on Thursday, neighboring countries opened their borders to refugees, but there were numerous reports of foreign residents in Ukraine, particularly people of color, being greeted by border guards.

The deceased was identified as Naveen Shekharappa from Karnataka. He was said to have been queuing for food when an airstrike hit. Shekharappa was a medical student, a popular choice among foreign students in the country. Medicine courses are available in English in Ukraine and also offer quality education at low cost and comprehensive programs with many free places, attracting many foreigners.

According to the Washington Post, an Algerian student also died in Kharkiv amid shelling.According to the report, Mohammed Talbi was an engineering student who had just graduated a few months earlier. Of the approximately 20,000 Indian citizens living in Ukraine, the majority are students according to UNESCO figures. More than 14,000 Indian citizens were studying in Ukraine as of 2020. According to the Indian Foreign Ministry, some 8,000 Indians had already left Ukraine, subsequently boarded repatriation flights or were waiting for them. Many Indians still found in Ukraine are believed to be in Kharkiv.

Other large groups of international students in Ukraine come from North Africa, the Caucasus or Central Asia, for example from Morocco, Azerbaijan or Turkmenistan. The other largest groups of African students come from Nigeria and Ghana (1,394 students). Groups of more than 1,000 international students in Ukraine also come from Israel, Jordan, Georgia, Uzbekistan and Iran.

Soucres / Credits : UESCO, Statista

Team : NewzQuest

View Point : Russia-Ukraine Conflict.. Root cause analysis..

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“War is a place where young people who don’t know each other and don’t hate each other kill each other, by the decision of old people who know each other and hate each other, but don’t kill each other.”

  • Erich Hartman

“War is a place where young people who don’t know and hate each other kill each other by the choice of old people who know and hate each other but don’t kill each other.” Eric Hartman

Recent developments regarding the conflicts between Russia and Ukraine have further escalated into a large-scale war, however dark and disturbing it seems or may seem, it is very important to go back in time to understand the big game behind this new Eastern European conflict.

The conflicts between Russia and Ukraine are not the latest chapters, the story began in 2014. However, disputes increased in 2021 when Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy insisted that Joe Biden would admit Ukraine into NATO. von Zelensky had caused Russia to go on the offensive, resulting in Ukraine being attacked by placing their corps near the borders.

The conflicts began on November 10, 2021, when the United States reported that Russian troops were consolidating on Ukraine’s borders. There was also a report from Ukraine on November 28 claiming that Russia is pushing nearly 92,000 troops to wage an offensive war against Ukraine. On February 24, 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a war against Ukraine. Military forces attacked Ukraine in different places and directions, marking the beginning of the war between the two countries, and Russia urged Ukraine to withdraw the request for NATO expansion. war against Ukraine”. As Putin explained in an interview, they believe that Ukraine could retake Crimea (Crimea, a peninsula in Eastern Europe) if it joins NATO.

This drives the Russians to attack Ukraine. Ukraine was also the point of contention between Washington and Moscow. Russia wants to bring weapons operations closer to Russia’s borders and could do so by preventing Ukraine and other Soviet nations from joining NATO. Ukraine could draw closer to Russia if it joins NATO, the Russians believe. If Ukraine joins NATO, it will be able to receive help, military support, weapons and powers in the event of an outside invasion.

On Day 7 of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Russia continued its attacks on crowded Ukrainian cities and a lengthy convoy of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly toward the capital of Kyiv

It’s a war between two Vladimirs. One, Russia’s indomitable President Vladimir Putin, a strong and impetuous leader with decades of experience in strategy and statecraft, and the other, diminutive Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, the inexperienced Jewish-born actor-turned-politician from It’s an unequal struggle between one multimillion-strong Cold War giants and a newborn nation-state with an army less than half the size of its rival.

Putin insists his actions were prompted by security concerns from the North. The Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)’s mischievous maneuvers in Ukraine. But his refrain about “denazification” of Ukraine indicates that this was not just a military battle. The roots of this conflict lie in history and ideology. And this is where Vladimir, a ubiquitous name in Russia, becomes relevant. Vladimir the Great, the 10th-century Grand Duke of the Millennium of Kievan Rus’, is considered the father of the modern Russian nation. But the problem is that Ukrainians think that as King of Kyiv in AD 9801015 he was also the father of the Ukrainian nation. Putin is determined to challenge it, not just academically but physically.

Vladimir the Great could not have been the father of many different nations, he insists. “The story will be kind to me as I intend to write it,” Winston Churchill once joked.

Historical interpretations depend on who presents them and with what force. In a lengthy speech to his compatriots days before his tanks entered Ukrainian territory, Putin spoke at length about Russia’s history and vigorously refuted Ukraine’s argument for a separate national identity. The people of “Rus,” the empire established by Vladimir the Great, are all Russians, he concluded, implying that it was Austro-Hungarians, Germans, Poles and Lithuanians who, on various historical occasions, tried to convince the Ukrainians to do so to bring this to believe they were a town of their own.

But the Ukrainians also have their history. Ukrainians believe that they have been an independent nation with their own language and culture for centuries. Vladimir the Great’s kingdom of Kyiv, now Ukraine’s capital, was an important and powerful empire in the second millennium, they argue, and was never under the full control of the Russian tsars. Only in 1922 did Ukraine become part of the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Even then, the Ukrainian communists retained a different identity from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU).

Putin was a confidant of Boris Yeltsin during his years as President of Russia after the collapse of the USSR. Out of gratitude, Yeltsin chose Putin as his successor when he resigned in 1999. Putin is a self-confessed Russian nationalist and maintains that the collapse of the Soviet Union was a “disaster”. He does not mistakenly believe that Western powers were responsible for the turmoil of the great Russian nation, most recently in 1991.

“Taming Russia” had been a project of many European powers over the last millennium. It continued through the Cold War years. The famous “Eisenhower Doctrine” of 1957 had to do with containing the Soviet Union. Like his successors, Stalin was deeply suspicious of the West. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Putin first tried to reconcile with the West by offering to join the European Union. But the doors did not open to him. Putin, who does not take humiliation lightly, decided to teach Europeans a lesson.

In addition to the story, there was also an ideological aspect. The West treated Russians as barbarians and their religion and politics as inferior. In retaliation, Putin made great efforts. undermine western liberal political institutions not only by rejecting them but also by undermining them through digital interventions. Its emphasis on ethnocultural national identity flatly contradicts the modern geopolitical nation-state of the West. For him, Ukraine’s liberal-democratic turn was tantamount to an ideological defeat of his kind of politics. Putin unequivocally emphasized that “Ukraine’s true sovereignty is possible only in partnership with Russia.”

The communists hated religion. At the Tehran Conference in 1943, when Churchill proposed mobilizing the Pope’s support to contain Hitler, Stalin famously asked, “How divided is the Pope? Putin is not anti-religious, but he does suspect that the Catholic powers were trying to weaken the Russian Orthodox identity by turning away from Ukrainians. Incidentally, the Ukrainian president is Jewish, which gives Putin reason to suspect.

It is this complex history and ideology behind the conflict that puts India in a difficult position. He might not have accepted Putin’s basic thesis that Ukrainians are not a separate country. nation without running the risk of denying its position on Tibet, Taiwan and other countries occupied or claimed by China. Nor could he have completely dismissed Russia’s genuine security concerns at the provocative actions of NATO allies.

Public opinion is against Putin’s actions. While India has been opposed in principle to the forced war against Ukraine, the way its attitude towards China is viewed at the United Nations has caused anger in parts of the world. Can this great democratic nation remain neutral for too long?

We must not forget that Russia is our traditional ally. Ukraine has never supported us in history, but we stand in solidarity and ready to do our best.

Sri Sri Ravi Shankar

The article is a piece based on facts and research done excerpts compilations of prevailing views on the root of the conflict from different perspectives for your eyes and information. Team: NewzQuest

POV: The convoluted and complex root cause of the conflicts between Russia and Ukraine led to war

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Root cause analysis…

Recent developments on the conflicts between Russia and Ukraine have further escalated into a full-scale war, however dark and disturbing it may seem or seem, it is very important to go back in time to understand the Great Game behind this New Conflict Eastern Europe

Russia: An Emerging Energy Giant

After the collapse of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in the early 1990s and after many years of economic strife and internal strife, the leadership of President Vladimir Putin has finally ensured that Russia is now seen as an energy powerhouse. giant by becoming the world’s third largest oil producer and the world’s second largest natural gas producer. We learn that Russia has used its energy revenues to accumulate approximately $630 billion in foreign exchange reserves. For example, in 2021, Russia balanced its balance sheet with a relatively low oil price at $45 per barrel against an average of almost $70 per barrel.

In recent months, print and broadcast media around the world have begun to speculate about the likelihood of Russian aggression in Ukraine. The United States (USA) has also begun to signal that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is imminent. Consequently, US President Joe Biden’s administration began insisting that its threat of “serious economic consequences” would deter Russia from invading Ukraine.

During President Biden’s meeting with the German Chancellor on February 7, 2022, the United States and its allies were seen to stress that they were united on the consequences should Russia indeed invade Ukraine.

However, there was also a sense that the European Union’s (EU) internal anti-US/UK policies and its symbiotic relationship with Russia could undermine this proclaimed solidarity. A number of Central European countries and in particular Germany which are heavily dependent on Russia for their low-cost energy needs and hence their competitive manufacturing exports may, albeit quietly, be reluctant to side US sanctions against Russia.

Europe’s excessive dependence on Russian energy exports

Russia depends on income from Europe, Europe depends on energy supplies from Russia. Overall, Russia supplied about a third of Europe’s natural gas consumption, which is used for heating in winter, as well as for electricity and industrial production. The EU also depends on Russia for more than a quarter of its crude oil imports. Russia thus proved to be the greatest source of energy for this bloc of nations.

Because of this interdependence, the imposition of tougher sanctions on Russia will seriously affect its energy supplies and therefore, ultimately, dependent European countries will suffer. Indeed, few EU states are much more dependent than others. While Portugal and Spain make little use of Russian energy, Germany, Europe’s largest economy, received more than half of its natural gas and more than 30% of its crude oil supplies from the Russia. France derives most of its electricity from nuclear power; but it relied on imports from Russia to meet its fossil fuel needs. Furthermore, plans by Germany and other countries to phase out nuclear and coal power in the future would only further increase this dependence on Russia for energy supplies. .

The multiple US attempts to curb Russia-Europe pipeline projects from JFK to Reagan

Looking back, it becomes clear that such reliance on Russian energy did not happen overnight .. After World War II, the USSR and the United States began to close together as they sought to extend their hegemony to influence countries and bring them into their herd that were not officially aligned with one either of the superpowers. The Soviet Union began to extend favorable trade agreements and offered other economic assistance not only to the Warsaw Pact countries but also to other countries like Finland, the United Arab Republic and even India from a way that created a prolonged dependence on the Soviet Union. Consequently, as the Soviet Union began to develop oil and gas pipelines to Europe, the resulting growing energy dependence of nations in the region became a matter of great concern to the United States. Western Europe imported 6% of its oil from the Soviet Union alone in the 1960s. The planned new pipeline linking the Russian Far East and passing through several European countries such as Ukraine and Poland, eventually ending in Germany , was intended to increase the supply manifold. This increased dependence would surely have conferred significant coercive power on the Soviet Union. Consequently, these changing dynamics raised strategic concerns and sounded alarm bells in Washington.

The Kennedy administration in 1963 had tried to block the construction of the Druzhba or “Friendship” pipeline by imposing an embargo on the large diameter pipe on Soviet-aligned countries. Since this embargo alone was not enough to stop the project, the United States pressured its allies, particularly West Germany, a major exporter of pipes, to give themselves the hand. Although Britain refused to toe the American line; but somehow West Germany reluctantly agreed to have obtained a partial NATO embargo. However, despite this partial embargo, the pipeline was finally completed a year later.

After a period of almost two decades. Interestingly, the Reagan administration also faced a similar dilemma. In 1981, when the Soviet Union began building a gas pipeline linking Siberia to Western Europe, the United States again tried to persuade European allies such as France and Germany to join its embargo. not only on the supply of equipment for the pipelines of the project, but also on the financing. But when it all counts, Ries refused to comply with American dictates, then responded with sanctions to deter European companies from providing money or equipment for the project. However, this arbitrary action by the United States has led to strained relations between Western nations, sowing the seeds of division between the United States and Europe. This forced the United States to withdraw and lift the imposed sanctions within months of their imposition. The pipeline was finally completed three years later, in 1984.

Energy security: an effective foreign policy tool

Unlike his predecessors who refrained from blocking energy exports, President Vladimir Putin has skillfully combined his economic policy with geopolitical objectives. For example, Ukraine continued to receive the same heavily subsidized gas shipments from Russia in the early 2000s as when it was part of the Soviet Union a decade earlier. However, when the “Orange Revolution” at the end of 2004 led to the ousting of a pro-Russian leader, replacing him with one seeking to be closer to the West, the Russian gas company Gazprom immediately asked Ukraine to pay full market rates for its gas. .

However, when Ukraine refused to comply, Russia restricted the flow of gas through the pipelines, leaving just enough to fulfill its contracts with other Western European countries. This move by Russia, in addition to exerting economic pressure on the pro-Western government in Kiev, was also used as a basis for claiming that Ukraine was an unreliable gas transit country. This story then helped build support for a new pipeline called Nord Stream that brought gas directly from Russia to Germany.

The Nord Stream gas pipeline, commissioned in 2011, not only inflicted an annual loss of $720 million in transit taxes on Ukraine, but also dramatically increased Germany’s dependence on Ukraine’s energy supply. Russia. By 2020, Russia has started supplying Germany with around 75% of its natural gas, up from 35% in 2015. Natural gas is widely required in Germany to run the energy industry, meet the needs heating as well as producing electricity for long periods of time. use in the country.The Nord Stream pipeline transports natural gas from northwestern Russia across the Baltic Sea directly to Germany, with the pipeline handling a third of all Russian gas exports to Europe.

The Crisis in Ukraine: A US Attempt to Stop Nord Stream 2Now Nord Stream 2,

Which is an extension of the original Nord Stream gas pipeline, was approved by the German government in 2018 and construction was completed in September 2021. Its launch , however, suffered regulatory delays due to US pressure on European politicians.

Once operational, Nord Stream 2 would have ensured higher levels of Russian natural gas export to Germany, bypassing Ukraine and other current countries through which gas pipelines currently pass. This had added to US concerns that Russia may no longer be held hostage by pro-Western countries like Poland and Eastern Europe’s Ukraine over its energy exports.

In December 2021, after the onset of the current crisis in Ukraine, Europe tasted the potential consequences again when Russia stopped selling additional gas as it had done in the past. The following month, the International Energy Agency rushed to accuse Russia of undermining European energy security. With the commissioning of Nord Stream 2, the main concern of the two transit countries was to deprive them of billions of dollars in annual transit fees, which would lead to severe losses in annual revenue.

Interestingly, the total natural gas demand of the 27 EU members peaked at 390 billion cubic meters (bcm) in 2019.In the same year, deliveries of Russian gas to these 27 EU members also peaked at 168 billion cubic meters, or 43% of the EU’s total natural gas consumption. However, due to the EU’s strong climate policy, demand is unlikely to reach this level again. In 2021, Russian natural gas exports to the EU are expected to amount to 135 billion cubic meters. With the commissioning of Nord Stream 2, it was estimated that Russia’s annual gas supply of 135 billion cubic meters, or nearly 110 billion cubic meters, or 81%, would pass through the two Nord pipelines. Stream. devastating for Ukraine.

Indeed, to sum up, Nord Stream 2 is considered Russia’s boldest attempt to break the EU. Russia has always worked to form an alliance with Germany and Austria, as well as with the Netherlands and Belgium against the east and the north.

October 2015 that the Nord Stream 2 project was in their interest and that they would continue to pursue it to its conclusion. In the first weeks after Nord Stream 2 was announced in mid-2015, there was no doubt that Germany saw it as its geopolitical project. Germany would earn $2 billion in transit taxes each year.It was only in January of this year, in the midst of this whole crisis, that he also signed energy agreements with Hungary to further incentivize Germany and Austria with potentially profitable transit tariffs that could result from such an agreement between Russia and Hungary. .

With the completion of construction of Nord Stream 2 in September 2021, the United States realized that it had only a small window of opportunity before the pipeline became operational and completely lost the energy markets of the United States. EU for the benefit of Russian influence. Russia would no longer need Ukrainian transit pipelines to meet almost 80% of its European energy supply obligations. Thus, America would lose the trump card it had held since 2014, when the Obama administration staged a coup and installed a pro-Western far-right militia regime in Kiev as part of a process totally unconstitutional election. Nord Stream 2 under EU policy said Moscow will use the pipeline to warp Europe to achieve Russian geopolitical goals. They expressed concern that the project had not been locked down by Germany and Russian partners by geopolitical concerns. Therefore, if the United States or its artificially installed regime in Kiev had made bold maneuvers against Russia, Moscow would have found itself trapped and unable to stop EU gas exports, because it would then supply the anti-Russian politicians an excuse to tidy up the North. the Stream 2 project completely. Therefore, Russia has no leverage in this situation as it desperately needed the completed Nord Stream 2.

Behind the ongoing maneuvers As to what these “bold maneuvers” are, one can only guess from the actions of Russia and the United States rather than from their words .As Moscow declares the breakaway regions of Lugansk and Donetsk recognized as independent countries, Russia believes that Kiev has planned to use this window of opportunity to mount a military offensive to retake these breakaway regions and unilaterally seek to break the agreements reached under the Minsk agreement. , Russian troops then moved on 24 to different regions of Ukraine; the Donbass region to dissuade Kiev from launching an offensive against the separatist states.

The Russian military also carried out a series of precision attacks eliminating Ukrainian military infrastructure and air defense systems. Russia may have finally decided to take this drastic step when the United States has already responded to the Russian declaration by pressuring its German counterparts to prevent the Nord Stream 2 project from waging war and the rhetorical invasion of the media. , because that has always been the goal of the United States.

We must understand that the crisis between Russia and Ukraine is an invention to sabotage ties between Russia and Germany, especially the lucrative energy partnership that has developed between the two over the past two decades. The objective behind the media propaganda blitz by the Western media has essentially been to isolate and vilify Russia on the international stage, to prevent it from forging deeper ties with Europe, to present it as a rogue out of control and continue to expand NATO’s presence eastward. , ever closer to the Russian borders. In addition to the aforementioned goals, the pressure created by Western media rhetoric and the US tussle eventually managed to generate enough political will within the EU to completely stall the progress of the Nord stream project. The Americans emerged victorious and succeeded in achieving their goal of reducing the European energy market’s dependence on Russian oil and gas, even when this is the case.

These are compilations of prevalent view points around root case of the conflict from different perspectives for your eyes and information… Team : NewzQuest

Two internets ??

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Ukraine conflict escalates the Russia vs EU battle for control of the internet….

China’s upcoming centralized internet plan could split the internet into two. The proposal comes as the Ukraine conflict escalates the Russia vs EU battle for control of the internet. Europe and Russia’s real-time censorship battle has escalated the internet divide as tech companies are forced to pick a side in the conflict. Between this back-and-forth and China’s upcoming proposal, the world could be divided between two competitive internets by 2026.

“Sovereign proper to modify” — Later this week, Geneva will host an meeting to determine on internet standardization rules. China is essentially expected to publish a new internet protocol (IP) that might exchange the internet architecture from a decentralized network into a greater interconnected system dominated via a massive VPN. This could supply governments the ability to decrypt and surveil communications or close down traffic to pick out web sites on any device connected to the network. Russia supports the move as signaled in a joint statement earlier this year. China’s plan is to optimize its new standardization system via 2025 and put in force it completely by way of 2035.

Two internets? — If implemented, this new gadget would now not be well suited with modern-day IP and might require new infrastructure round the arena. The last try to roll out new IP back within the early 2000s is yet to be finished, so even supposing the political struggle is won, it might take years to implement absolutely. However, China’s net architecture is already one of the maximum sophisticated censorship engines inside the international, and the EU’s new crackdown on US tech corporations will use law to control content. Both China and the EU now seek to influence other Asian and African international locations to undertake their structures. Governments will ought to decide which internet to put in force as a “-net” world ought to start through 2026. Team : NewzQuest

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