Tag Archives: russian

Polish president plane crash 2010 pictures

An ageing jet carrying Poland#39;s President Lech Kaczynski and much of the state elite crashed in thick fog in Russia on Saturday killing all 97 people on board and plunging a nation into grief. The plane was taking Kaczynski#39;s delegation to a memorial ceremony for thousands of Polish troops massacred by Russian forces in World War II. Duration: 01: Rescue workers walk around some of the wreckage at the plane crash site near Smolensk, western Russia, Saturday, April 10, 2010. Polish Presid

Originally posted here:
Polish president plane crash 2010 pictures

US woman sends unwanted adopted Russian boy back home with a note

A seven-year-old Russian boy was packed onto a plane and set back to Russia with a typed note from his American adoptive mother explaining that, after only six months of caring for the boy, she no longer wanted to be his mum. 27-year-old Torry-Ann Hansen said she'd made a mistake, suggested his adoption be annulled and asked for him to be rehoused. “I no longer wish to parent this child,” the unmarried 27-year-old nurse from Tennessee wrote. After he was put on a plane to Moscow, reportedly in the belief that he was going on an “excursion”, Artem Savelyev was picked up by a Russian man who took him to the city's education ministry and left him there. The man told officials he had been offered $200 (approximately

U.S. and Russia Sign Nuclear Arms Pact

PRAGUE — With flourish and fanfare, President Obama and President Dmitri A. Medvedev of Russia signed a nuclear arms control treaty on Thursday and opened what they hoped would be a new era in the tumultuous relationship between two former cold war adversaries. Meeting here in the heart of a once-divided Europe, the two leaders put aside the acrimony that has characterized Russian-American ties in recent years as they agreed to bring down their arsenals and restore an inspection regime that expired in December. Along the way, they sidestepped unresolved disputes over missile defense and other issues. “When the United States and Russia are not able to work together on big issues, it is not good for either of our nations, nor is it good for the world,” Mr. Obama said as his words echoed through a majestic, gilded hall in the famed Prague Castle. “Together, we have stopped the drift, and proven the benefits of cooperation. Today is an important milestone for nuclear security and nonproliferation, and for U.S.-Russia relations.” Mr. Medvedev called the treaty signing “a truly historic event” that will “open a new page” in Russian-American relations. “What matters most is this is a win-win situation,” he said. “No one stands to lose from this agreement. I believe this is a typical feature of our cooperation. Both parties have won.” The Russian president signaled general support for the American-led drive to impose new sanctions on Iran, saying that Tehran’s nuclear program has flouted the international community. “We cannot turn a blind eye to this,” Mr. Medvedev said, while adding that sanctions “should be smart” and avoid hardship for the Iranian people. The apparently warm relationship between the two presidents was on display as they entered the hall to trumpet music. They whispered and smiled with each other in English as they sat side by side signing copies of the so-called New Start treaty, then traded compliments during a follow-up exchange with reporters. Mr. Obama called the Russian a “friend and partner” and said “without his personal efforts and strong leadership, we would not be here today.” For his part, Mr. Medvedev said the two had developed a “very good personal relationship and a very good personal chemistry as they say.” While the treaty will mandate only modest reductions in the actual arsenals maintained by the two countries, it caps a turnaround in relations with Moscow that sunk to rock bottom in August 2008 during the war between Russia and its tiny southern neighbor, Georgia. When he arrived in office, Mr. Obama made restoring the relationship a priority, a goal that coincided with his vision expressed here a year ago of eventually ridding the world of nuclear weapons. Even as the two presidents hailed the treaty, however, they found no common ground on American plans to build an anti-missile shield in Europe to counter any Iranian threat. Mr. Obama refused Russian demands to include limits on missile defense in the treaty, nearly scuttling the agreement. In the days leading up to the ceremony here, Russian officials alternately claimed the agreement would bind the program or complained that it did not and threatened to withdraw if it went forward. The treaty, if ratified by lawmakers in both countries, would require each country to deploy no more than 1,550 strategic warheads, down from 2,200 allowed in the Treaty of Moscow signed by President George W. Bush in 2002. Each would be limited to 800 total land-, air- and sea-based launchers — 700 of which can be deployed at any given time — down from 1,600 permitted under the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty of 1991, or Start. Because of counting rules and unilateral reductions over the years, neither country would have to actually eliminate large numbers of weapons to meet the new limits. Moreover, the treaty does not apply to whole categories of weapons, including thousands of strategic warheads held in reserve and tactical warheads, some of which are still stationed in Europe. But the treaty would re-establish an inspection regime that lapsed along with Start last December and bring the two countries back into a legal framework after years of tension. Moreover, both sides hope to use it as a foundation for a new round of negotiations that could lead to much deeper reductions that will cover weapons like stored or tactical warheads. The first task for Mr. Obama after returning to Washington will be persuading the Senate to ratify the new treaty and advisers planned to head to Capitol Hill on Thursday, even before his return, to brief senators. Ratification requires a two-thirds vote, or 67 senators, meaning the president needs at least eight Republicans. The White House is counting on the support of Senator Richard G. Lugar of Indiana, the senior Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee and one of his party’s most respected voices on international affairs, to clear the way. CONTINUED> > > http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/09/world/europe/09prexy.html?pagewanted=2 http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/09/world/europe/09prexy.html added by: copperdragon

One of the Two Moscow Bombers was 17-Year-Old “Black Widow”

Moscow subway system was attacked by two suicide bombers on Monday, in which it had killed 40 people. One of the two suicide bombers was a 17-year-old Muslim girl who was a wife of Islamic Militant killed by Russian Forces. The spokesman for Russia’s Investigative Committee said that she was identified through the forensic and genetic tests, including the identification procedures. Dzhennet Abdurakhmanova was the young widow of Umalat Magomedov, who is an Islamist militant leader from the southern republic of Dagestan. Magomedov was killed on the eve of New Year by Russian federal security forces. Abdurakhmanova is also known as Abdullayeva, detonated her explosives packed with bolts at height of rush hour on Monday at the Park Kutury metro station. Just 40 minutes after, another female suicide bomber detonated at the Lubyanka metro station. Abdurakhmanova was recruited through online when she was just 16 years old. Officials believe that Abdurakhmanova and her associated attackers took a trip by bus through Kizlyar in Dagestan. Investigators believe that almost 30 suicide bombers had been recruited and trained under the Islamic preacher. Since the news revealed that the two suicide bombers were women, most people fear that a group of attackers called the “Black Widows” who had carried out more than a few deadly attacks had been reawaken. One of the Two Moscow Bombers was 17-Year-Old “Black Widow” is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Russia: Dozens Killed in Moscow Subway Blasts – With Updates

March 29, 2010 2:19 a.m. EDT Moscow (CNN) — Explosions rocked a pair of central Moscow subway stations during morning rush hour Monday, killing at least 37 people and wounding 10 others, Russia's Emergency Situations Ministry said. The first blast occurred about 8 a.m. at Lubyanka subway station. That explosion killed 25 people — 14 aboard the train and 11 on the platform. The Lubyanka station is near the Kremlin and the nation's intelligence service, the Federal Security Service. Another blast happened about 30 minutes later at Park Kultury station, on the same train line. The Emergency Situations Ministry reported 12 dead in the second explosion. Russian TV said the blast killed 15 people and injured at least 10 others. Millions of commuters use the Moscow metro system every day. Are you there? Send CNN photos, video text Officials immediately cast suspicion on Chechen separatists for the explosions. A female suicide bomber in August 2004 killed nine people and herself, and wounded 51 others, when she detonated a bomb outside a subway station in northeastern Moscow. In February 2004, a suicide bomber detonated a bomb on a Moscow metro train, killing 40 people and injuring 100 others. A suicide attack in 2003 killed 15 people at a Moscow concert. Chechen terrorists killed hundreds in 2004 at a school in Beslan, Russia. They also were suspected in the downing of two Russian airplanes that year in an attack that killed 89. Chechnya is a southwestern Russian republic, in the Caucasus Mountains region. The Chechens have long fought for independence from Russia. Chechnya's population of 600,000 to 800,000 is primarily made up of Sunni Muslims and Russian Orthodox Christians. Thousands have been killed and 500,000 Chechen people have been displaced in their conflict with Moscow. CNN's Matthew Chance contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

US and Russia announce deal to cut nuclear weapons

US President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev have agreed a new nuclear arms reduction treaty after months of negotiations. The final agreement came in a phone call between the two leaders. The deal replaces the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, which expired in December. It will be signed in Prague on 8 April, the White House said. Both sides agreed to cut their arsenals last year, but disagreements on verification have held up a deal. In a speech in Prague last year Mr Obama set out his vision of moving towards a world without nuclear weapons. The US is said to have more than 2,000 deployed strategic nuclear weapons, while Russia is believed to have more than 2,500. Both sides agreed in July to reduce that number to between 1,500 and 1,675 each. added by: 02

Mickey Rourke Hot Groupie Pussy of the Day

I shouldn’t call this girl a groupie, I mean Miceky Rourke seems pretty cool and I’m sure his plastic face has never had an issue getting pussy, but I do think her lack of interest while talking on her phone with her friend in her native Russian that Rourke doesn’t understand goes a little something like this….”Oh my god, I met Mickey Rourke last night….He’s the guy from the movie the Wrestler…I told you there were famous people everywhere in America…of course I fucked him…yeah he’s alright he just looks in the mirror a lot…I don’t know how I should get him to marry me…see if he marries me I will be at all the events and he has friends who can get me work so that I can live the American dream…I know I am too hot for him…but seriously he won an Oscar…That’s like winning three coupons for rationed bread back home”…..if you know what I mean…. Pics via Bauer

Read this article:
Mickey Rourke Hot Groupie Pussy of the Day

Russia Says No To Iranian Sanctions

Vladimir Putin, Russia’s prime minister, promised on Thursday that Moscow would help Iran complete a civil nuclear power station by this summer, drawing criticism from Hillary Clinton, US secretary of state. His remarks highlighted the continuing differences between the two powers over how to contain Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Mrs Clinton was visiting Moscow on a trip partly designed to increase the pressure on Tehran by showing America’s unity with Russia. But Mr Putin told a meeting held in Volgodonsk, southern Russia, that work to complete the Bushehr plant on Iran’s Gulf coast would soon be complete. “The first block of the Iranian atomic power station must be launched this summer,” he said. Asked about Mr Putin’s remarks, Mrs Clinton said it “would be premature to go forward with any project at this time, because we want to send an unequivocal message to the Iranians”. However, she added: “We have consistently said that Iran is entitled to civil nuclear power. It is a nuclear weapons programme that it is not entitled to.” Russian experts have been helping to build a light water reactor at Bushehr since the 1990s. Officials have previously said it would be finished this year. Mrs Clinton is trying to build support for United Nations sanctions on Iran and has enjoyed more success in winning over Russia – which has signalled it could support limited measures – than other members of the Security Council such as China, Brazil and Turkey. Appearing at the same press conference with Mrs Clinton, Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, said sanctions on Iran should be aimed solely at preventing nuclear proliferation rather than having any broader impact on the economy. He added that construction at Bushehr, a project originally intended to be completed about a decade ago, was in its final stages. Russia and the US agree that Iran has a right to civil nuclear power and Bushehr is not at the heart of US fears that Tehran is working towards nuclear weapons capability. Mrs Clinton said that if Iran “reassures the world, or if its behaviour is changed because of international sanctions, then they can pursue peaceful, civil nuclear power.” The US and Russia, owners of 22,000 of the world’s atomic weapons, are negotiating big cuts in deployed weapons and launch systems under a new nuclear arms agreement to replace the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (Start) that expired last December. The US is eager to conclude the negotiations, a litmus test of its efforts to reset relations with Russia, before Barack Obama hosts a non-proliferation conference in May where he hopes to close loopholes exploited by countries such as Iran. Ban Ki-Moon, UN secretary-general, urged the two sides to clinch a new Start treaty during talks with Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president in Moscow on Thursday. “We very much value your efforts to free the world of nuclear weapons and we … sincerely hope that you and US president Barack Obama can soon sign a new Start treaty,” he said in remarks posted on the Kremlin website. Mr Medvedev said last month Russia would support smart sanctions against Iran, softening its earlier reluctance to back punitive measures against its traditional ally in the Middle East. Mrs Clinton and Ban Ki-Moon will attend a meeting of Middle East mediators aimed at reviving peace talks between Israel and Palestine in Moscow on Friday. added by: diode

Russian invasion hoax spooks Georgia

Caucasus nation Georgia went to war with Russia only 18 months ago so it's understandable that some folks might call a Russian invasion jke “too soon”. Pro-government station Imedi TV aired a 20 minute report saying that Russian troops were in the capital of Tblisi. But they totally weren't. Hilarious, right? Apparently not. From Reuters: Mobile phone networks crashed and there was a spike in calls to the emergency services. Saakashvili criticized how the report was presented but said it was not unrealistic. But U.S. ambassador to Georgia John Bass slammed the stunt. The situation between Georgia and Russia is “serious enough without this sort of sensational quasi-news activity and I look forward to the examination of what happened by the appropriate organizations,” he said. The EU also condemned the stunt. Are Russia and Georgia close to a rehash of their five day war? added by: afitzgerald

Obama to Nasa: No Space For You!

read it. instead of science and exploration, obama wants to focus on commercial space flight. sweet, something to make the super rich richer, and robbing us of scientific exploration. oh and it'd lose 70,000-100,000 jobs. great job again obama WASHINGTON, March 10 – U.S. President Barack Obama is trying to tamp down an uprising in politically vital Florida against a new strategy for NASA that has rankled space veterans and lawmakers and sparked fears of job losses. Obama's decision to kill NASA's Constellation program to launch astronauts into orbit and return Americans to the moon has prompted soul-searching on whether the United States is prepared to cede a pre-eminent space role to Russia and China. “As with all great human achievements, our commitment to space must be renewed and encouraged or we will surely be surpassed by other nations who are presently challenging our leadership in space,” Democratic and Republican members of the U.S. Congress from Florida wrote to Obama last week. Obama's move for a greater private sector role in space launches — as he seeks to keep ballooning federal deficits in check — has generated fears of job losses among thousands of NASA employees who provide an important economic base in Florida, a state usually crucial in presidential elections. Employees at major space complexes in Alabama and Texas are also worried. It is making for a potentially explosive environment when Obama travels to the Cape Canaveral area on April 15 to host a space conference with top officials and leaders in the field. “What reception will they get? Not good,” said Keith Cowing, editor of nasawatch.com, a website that closely monitors the U.S. space agency. “It's a gutsy move. It's Daniel in the Lion's Den.” Obama, in his Feb. 1 budget proposal, planned to increase NASA's overall funding to $19 billion in 2011 with an emphasis on science and less spent on space exploration. He would cancel the Constellation program's Orion spacecraft and Ares rockets, after $9 billion and five years of tests. Constellation is aimed at returning astronauts to the moon in the 2020s to clear the way for a Mars mission. Instead, Obama would spend $6 billion a year for five years to support commercial spacecraft development and pursue new technologies to explore the solar system in what the White House called “a more effective and affordable way.” LARGER ISSUE Various members of the far-flung U.S. space community have been troubled by the change, such as former NASA administrator Michael Griffin, who struggled to get more funding for Constellation from the previous administration of President George W. Bush and believes Obama should stick with it. “There's a larger issue here,” Griffin said. “Does the United States want to have a real space program? Do we actually think we can have a robust, exciting, world-leading space program by hiring private enterprise to furnish it?” But John Logsdon, former director of the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University, said he believed it was time for the private sector to get more involved in space. “There's no reason to think that the technical talent in the private sector, combined with a significant degree of NASA engagement, cannot come up with a good solution,” he said. The debate to some extent has riven the space community. Buzz Aldrin, the second man on the moon, supports the change in direction while Harrison Schmitt, one of the last on the lunar surface, opposes it. NASA already has contracts with Space Exploration Technologies and Orbital Sciences Corp to deliver cargo to the International Space Station. SpaceX and other firms are developing spaceships that can carry passengers to orbit and back. The shuttle system still has four more flights to get crews and hardware to the International Space Station before the craft are retired. After that, NASA will be without a heavy-lift capability for a period of time. This means Americans would have to pay to ride on Russian rockets to get into orbit, a stark turn of events after the pivotal battle the United States and the Soviet Union fought to outdo each other in the space race. To maintain a lift capability, Florida Democratic Senator Bill Nelson wants the administration to add one shuttle flight and develop the Ares rockets that are part of the Constellation program. Ultimately, Nelson believes Obama needs to give the United States a goal for its space program and hopes it will be a mission to Mars. (Additional reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by John O'Callaghan) added by: diode