War

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Everybody knows the cause and Trump losing his immunity case and more importantly is disqualified, will have an impact on foreign relations. It might also take some of the steam out of the maga movement in congress, if they figure there are no administration jobs coming and not much riding on his coattails. His cases before the courts now might have an impact on congress, if he is not immune and is disqualified over the next month.
Trumps base don't want the US involved in foreign relations, If Trump can't run then he'll try to be the power broker behind the scenes. His base is loyal and completely bought in to acceding to Putin's aggression in Ukraine. They want us out of NATO too. So, why would they not throw a monkey wrench into Biden's foreign relations and policies?

Until a deal is signed that commits funds to Ukraine's war effort, it's best to assume it won't happen. This is all part of Biden's pressure on Congress but the GOP in Congress have little motivation to sign off on a bill. I think this is very bad news for Ukraine's ability to defend their nation. It all comes down to how much pressure the electorate puts on its GOP representatives. Biden and Democratic Party Congressmen are doing what they can but the current standstill with the border being tied to Ukraine aid is all going in GOP's favor right now.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Trumps base don't want the US involved in foreign relations, If Trump can't run then he'll try to be the power broker behind the scenes. His base is loyal and completely bought in to acceding to Putin's aggression in Ukraine. They want us out of NATO too. So, why would they not throw a monkey wrench into Biden's foreign relations and policies?

Until a deal is signed that commits funds to Ukraine's war effort, it's best to assume it won't happen. This is all part of Biden's pressure on Congress but the GOP in Congress have little motivation to sign off on a bill. I think this is very bad news for Ukraine's ability to defend their nation. It all comes down to how much pressure the electorate puts on its GOP representatives. Biden and Democratic Party Congressmen are doing what they can but the current standstill with the border being tied to Ukraine aid is all going in GOP's favor right now.
Hopefully Donald will have bigger fish to fry soon enough, Vlad is waiting on the disqualification call too, just like us...
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Jet-Powered Shahed-238 Takedown in Ukraine: Air Force Cannot Confirm Yet Nothing Else Can Explain the Case
pen sources have shared unconfirmed information about the alleged downing by Ukrainian air defense of a Shahed-238 loitering munition (kamikaze drone). Supported with visual evidence, the claim potentially indicates that the russian invasion forces have acquired some Shahed-238s, introduced as recently as November 2023, for aerial strikes on Ukraine.

In response, the Spokesperson of the Ukrainian Air Force, Yurii Ihnat, stated: "We cannot confirm, we didn't find it. Let the one who found it to confirm, show, and tell," supposedly, implying that the Air Force hadn't yet obtained access to the wreckage of the drone by the time of the interview.

The photos, however, do show parts of an aerial vehicle with a miniature jet engine, visually resembling the Shahed-238. Particularly, the small and conceptually insignificant triangular-shaped notch of the intake, the location of several access panels, and the overall wing configuration and fuselage outlines.

The biggest problem of wreckage identification, though, is that there's no reference for comparison. Same as with the alleged North Korean KN-23 missile that fell near Kharkiv, Ukraine, these are mere speculations.

After all, there is no even approximate assessment of the production rates and number of available Shahed-238 drones in Iran. There's no data either on how the dummies exhibited for the media in Tehran could differ from mass-produced units. There's also a possibility of technology transfer, with russia creating own jet-propelled version of Shahed-136, later handed over to Tehran, and many other possibilities.

The comprehensive answer could only be found after a thorough examination of the wreckage, especially the jet engine. This component will be objectively the most sophisticated and expensive of all the drone's innards, even though potential analogs are available on the commercial market.

The MD550 piston engine of the Shahed-136, that drives the propeller, costs between $40,000 and $50,000. The jet alternative should cost significantly more.

The reward of utilizing a jet engine on Shahed-238 manifests solely in speed. The estimate is about 400 to 600 km/h, two or three times faster than Shahed-136's max speed. The price for this upgrade is the drone's expensiveness, which partially attenuates the main advantage offered by Shahed-type munitions, which is being cheap to produce in large batches.

Higher speed would impair the effectiveness of anti-aircraft guns against the Shahed-238, at the same time, the vibrant heat signature of the jet engine will make it an easy target for surface-to-air missiles. Although practice shows that in the russo-Ukrainian war, not only do the specifications of the weapons matter but their numbers and production rates are no less important.





 

printer

Well-Known Member
Imagine being the people that pulled this off. "I'm buying the next round."

Unprecedented Tech Data Leak From Special Technology Center LLC is a Treasure Trove of russian Secrets
It is even difficult to compare this leak of secret production documentation to anything because there is simply no historical analogies of such scale; with that, Ukraine got access to detailed data on the Orlan-10, Altair, Inokhodets UAVs, Svet-KU and Leer-3 EW systems and ~200 more other pieces of equipment

Defense Intelligence of Ukraine has executed a successful operation and obtained nearly 100 gigabytes of secret technological documentation from the Special Technology Center LLC (STC LLC), a russian defense enterprise located in St. Petersburg.

This extensive cache includes blueprints, PRDs, patents, software, and other information on 194 items of russian military equipment, including UAVs like Orlan-10, electronic warfare systems such as Svet-KU, and various individual components and subsystems.

Such a valuable trove of information was exchanged as part of the "Apostle pays money" initiative where blogger Volodymyr Zolkin and journalist Dmytro Karpenko are willing to pay russians for information about the positions or possessions of the russian army. In exchange for the substantial data on STC LLC, the whistleblowers sought assistance to leave the russian federation.

Ukrainian Defense Intelligence estimated the value of this information at over $1.5 billion. However, the real importance will manifest itself on the battlefield, and there will be a whole lot to manifest. The authors of the project provided a glimpse of vast technical data on russian weapons in mass production, experimental and concept design stages of development, covering drones, communication systems, electronic warfare, and signal intelligence.

Such a valuable trove of information was exchanged as part of the "Apostle pays money" initiative where blogger Volodymyr Zolkin and journalist Dmytro Karpenko are willing to pay russians for information about the positions or possessions of the russian army. In exchange for the substantial data on STC LLC, the whistleblowers sought assistance to leave the russian federation.

Ukrainian Defense Intelligence estimated the value of this information at over $1.5 billion. However, the real importance will manifest itself on the battlefield, and there will be a whole lot to manifest. The authors of the project provided a glimpse of vast technical data on russian weapons in mass production, experimental and concept design stages of development, covering drones, communication systems, electronic warfare, and signal intelligence.

One example is the Orlan-10, the primary reconnaissance UAV of russian forces. According to the video report, this drone uses the Kometa-M satellite navigation antenna which has demonstrated high resistance to interference.

Speaking of EW systems, the STC LLC not only developed the Svet-KU but also the more well-known Leer-3 — so far Ukrainians managed to destroy one of them and take one more as a trophy. The documents will help in cracking down this system.

The documentation also covers the portable satellite communication station P-438 Barrier-T. Additionally, mentioned are "topics" for experimental design works like Balat, Volga-SG, Demagog, Drovorub, Irkhan, Iteration, Kalimba, Nebosvod, Plast, Platan, Silok, Topotun, Khokhloma, and Stempel which all refer to respective products in development.

Although some of these projects are not directly related to STC LLC, it appears that the company acted as their co-executor. Thus, the amount of data obtained goes well beyond the limits of STC LLC's own developments and projects.

This wealth of obtained information on the enemy's tech secrets is unprecedented. Furthermore, it contains insights into russia's most advanced EW and SIGINT which makes it very interesting to Ukraine's partners in NATO as it allows them to develop effective countermeasures and algorithms.

No less importantly, this technical documentation can be used to start producing similar systems, as it essentially serves as an assembly instruction. This process is much easier than reverse-engineering captured equipment.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Jet-Powered Shahed-238 Takedown in Ukraine: Air Force Cannot Confirm Yet Nothing Else Can Explain the Case
pen sources have shared unconfirmed information about the alleged downing by Ukrainian air defense of a Shahed-238 loitering munition (kamikaze drone). Supported with visual evidence, the claim potentially indicates that the russian invasion forces have acquired some Shahed-238s, introduced as recently as November 2023, for aerial strikes on Ukraine.

In response, the Spokesperson of the Ukrainian Air Force, Yurii Ihnat, stated: "We cannot confirm, we didn't find it. Let the one who found it to confirm, show, and tell," supposedly, implying that the Air Force hadn't yet obtained access to the wreckage of the drone by the time of the interview.

The photos, however, do show parts of an aerial vehicle with a miniature jet engine, visually resembling the Shahed-238. Particularly, the small and conceptually insignificant triangular-shaped notch of the intake, the location of several access panels, and the overall wing configuration and fuselage outlines.

The biggest problem of wreckage identification, though, is that there's no reference for comparison. Same as with the alleged North Korean KN-23 missile that fell near Kharkiv, Ukraine, these are mere speculations.

After all, there is no even approximate assessment of the production rates and number of available Shahed-238 drones in Iran. There's no data either on how the dummies exhibited for the media in Tehran could differ from mass-produced units. There's also a possibility of technology transfer, with russia creating own jet-propelled version of Shahed-136, later handed over to Tehran, and many other possibilities.

The comprehensive answer could only be found after a thorough examination of the wreckage, especially the jet engine. This component will be objectively the most sophisticated and expensive of all the drone's innards, even though potential analogs are available on the commercial market.

The MD550 piston engine of the Shahed-136, that drives the propeller, costs between $40,000 and $50,000. The jet alternative should cost significantly more.

The reward of utilizing a jet engine on Shahed-238 manifests solely in speed. The estimate is about 400 to 600 km/h, two or three times faster than Shahed-136's max speed. The price for this upgrade is the drone's expensiveness, which partially attenuates the main advantage offered by Shahed-type munitions, which is being cheap to produce in large batches.

Higher speed would impair the effectiveness of anti-aircraft guns against the Shahed-238, at the same time, the vibrant heat signature of the jet engine will make it an easy target for surface-to-air missiles. Although practice shows that in the russo-Ukrainian war, not only do the specifications of the weapons matter but their numbers and production rates are no less important.





The jet engine can be made cheap, the rotor and turbines machined by CNC as a single part, since the engine only has to live for a few hours and maintenance is not an issue! They started doing this years ago for the engines used in those jet packs and then cruise missiles, robots do most of the work in making the engine parts, some assembly, QC and testing required then they go out the door.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Imagine being the people that pulled this off. "I'm buying the next round."

Unprecedented Tech Data Leak From Special Technology Center LLC is a Treasure Trove of russian Secrets
It is even difficult to compare this leak of secret production documentation to anything because there is simply no historical analogies of such scale; with that, Ukraine got access to detailed data on the Orlan-10, Altair, Inokhodets UAVs, Svet-KU and Leer-3 EW systems and ~200 more other pieces of equipment

Defense Intelligence of Ukraine has executed a successful operation and obtained nearly 100 gigabytes of secret technological documentation from the Special Technology Center LLC (STC LLC), a russian defense enterprise located in St. Petersburg.

This extensive cache includes blueprints, PRDs, patents, software, and other information on 194 items of russian military equipment, including UAVs like Orlan-10, electronic warfare systems such as Svet-KU, and various individual components and subsystems.

Such a valuable trove of information was exchanged as part of the "Apostle pays money" initiative where blogger Volodymyr Zolkin and journalist Dmytro Karpenko are willing to pay russians for information about the positions or possessions of the russian army. In exchange for the substantial data on STC LLC, the whistleblowers sought assistance to leave the russian federation.

Ukrainian Defense Intelligence estimated the value of this information at over $1.5 billion. However, the real importance will manifest itself on the battlefield, and there will be a whole lot to manifest. The authors of the project provided a glimpse of vast technical data on russian weapons in mass production, experimental and concept design stages of development, covering drones, communication systems, electronic warfare, and signal intelligence.

Such a valuable trove of information was exchanged as part of the "Apostle pays money" initiative where blogger Volodymyr Zolkin and journalist Dmytro Karpenko are willing to pay russians for information about the positions or possessions of the russian army. In exchange for the substantial data on STC LLC, the whistleblowers sought assistance to leave the russian federation.

Ukrainian Defense Intelligence estimated the value of this information at over $1.5 billion. However, the real importance will manifest itself on the battlefield, and there will be a whole lot to manifest. The authors of the project provided a glimpse of vast technical data on russian weapons in mass production, experimental and concept design stages of development, covering drones, communication systems, electronic warfare, and signal intelligence.

One example is the Orlan-10, the primary reconnaissance UAV of russian forces. According to the video report, this drone uses the Kometa-M satellite navigation antenna which has demonstrated high resistance to interference.

Speaking of EW systems, the STC LLC not only developed the Svet-KU but also the more well-known Leer-3 — so far Ukrainians managed to destroy one of them and take one more as a trophy. The documents will help in cracking down this system.

The documentation also covers the portable satellite communication station P-438 Barrier-T. Additionally, mentioned are "topics" for experimental design works like Balat, Volga-SG, Demagog, Drovorub, Irkhan, Iteration, Kalimba, Nebosvod, Plast, Platan, Silok, Topotun, Khokhloma, and Stempel which all refer to respective products in development.

Although some of these projects are not directly related to STC LLC, it appears that the company acted as their co-executor. Thus, the amount of data obtained goes well beyond the limits of STC LLC's own developments and projects.

This wealth of obtained information on the enemy's tech secrets is unprecedented. Furthermore, it contains insights into russia's most advanced EW and SIGINT which makes it very interesting to Ukraine's partners in NATO as it allows them to develop effective countermeasures and algorithms.

No less importantly, this technical documentation can be used to start producing similar systems, as it essentially serves as an assembly instruction. This process is much easier than reverse-engineering captured equipment.
Good one.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Looks like a policy change across Europe...


France's arms race: Defence industry on war footing • FRANCE 24 English

When Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Ukraine's Western allies committed to sending weapons, ammunition and military hardware to Kyiv. In France, this has meant a major increase in industrial production. French President Emmanuel Macron has said France has entered a "wartime economy", whereby the defence industry is producing more and faster than before. But what does a "wartime economy" actually mean in practice? And how is the "Made in France" arms industry trying to adapt to this increased demand? FRANCE 24's Claire Paccalin and Fadile Bhayat report.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
The jet engine can be made cheap, the rotor and turbines machined by CNC as a single part, since the engine only has to live for a few hours and maintenance is not an issue! They started doing this years ago for the engines used in those jet packs and then cruise missiles, robots do most of the work in making the engine parts, some assembly, QC and testing required then they go out the door.
Looked up the jet pack, $350k. Wonder how much of that it engine?

‘Low-cost is the technology’: Kratos buys jet turbine maker behind AFRL Gray Wolf cruise missile
Kratos Defense and Security Solutions purchased small jet turbine manufacturer Technical Directions for an undisclosed amount on 24 February.

The company makes the TDI-J85, the 200lb-thrust (.89kN) jet turbine behind the US Air Force Research Laboratory’s (AFRL) low-cost cruise missile, the Gray Wolf. The prime contractor on the Gray Wolf is Northrop Grumman.

Technical Directions builds four jet turbines, including the TDI-J85 and TDI-J45. The number in each engine name represents the turbine’s outside diameter in inches. For instance, the a 30lb-thrust TDI-J45 is 4.5in (114mm) in diameter. The company’s two other engines are the 55lb-thurst TDI-J5 and 100lb-thrust TDI-J7.

The engines are designed to be cheap enough to be expendable. Technical Directions says typical mission operating environments for its engines are between 20,000-30,000ft altitude at flight speeds between 200kt (370km/h) and 534kt. “They all have integral generators,” says Kovasity. “We typically power all the electronics on board of an aircraft, somewhere in a 1.5kW-range for all engines.”

The company’s turbines have fewer moving parts than other companies, he says. “We’ve got an electric power generation capability. However, we don’t have a lot of money and complicated sophisticated systems. We don’t have a lot of pressure stages stacked up, which give you the really good fuel consumption that you’d typically find with Williams and Rolls Royce, and some of the bigger guys.” The turbines also don’t use lubricating oil. “We run 100% of fuel through our bearings, which was a major cost saving,” says Kovasity.

The company’s engines are in a narrow section of the market. “We live in a niche between the hobby engine, the Tinker Toys they use on model airplanes, and the big sophisticated folks like Williams, Pratt and Whitney, and Rolls Royce,” he says. “We’re in a niche between the two, in thrust, size and performance.”

Technical Direction’s engines are rugged, says Kovasity. “Where we excel beyond the hobby guys is that our engines are designed from the ground up to be mil-spec. We can survive on the wing of an F-16. We can do windmill starts,” he says. “We can operate at very high altitude. We sustain the shock and vibration.”

Technical Directions declines to disclose the cost of its engines, but notes its TDI-J85 was selected based on its low price by both Gray Wolf programme prime contractors, Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin. Lockheed Martin’s cruise missile design is not moving forward to prototype testing.

Technical Directions says it is able to keep costs down with a Motor City mentality. “We do come from a Detroit, Michigan, automotive background,” says Kovasity. “If you know anything about automotive, it’s high production and low cost. We bring a lot of those things with us.” Part of that approach includes new technologies in the machining process, though Kovasity declines to elaborate.

 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
The jet engine can be made cheap, the rotor and turbines machined by CNC as a single part, since the engine only has to live for a few hours and maintenance is not an issue! They started doing this years ago for the engines used in those jet packs and then cruise missiles, robots do most of the work in making the engine parts, some assembly, QC and testing required then they go out the door.
Why does the -136’s four-banger cost deep five figures? Especially since its expected run time is 20 hours tops? It can’t be that different from an old VW flat-four …
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Jet-Powered Shahed-238 Takedown in Ukraine: Air Force Cannot Confirm Yet Nothing Else Can Explain the Case
pen sources have shared unconfirmed information about the alleged downing by Ukrainian air defense of a Shahed-238 loitering munition (kamikaze drone). Supported with visual evidence, the claim potentially indicates that the russian invasion forces have acquired some Shahed-238s, introduced as recently as November 2023, for aerial strikes on Ukraine.

In response, the Spokesperson of the Ukrainian Air Force, Yurii Ihnat, stated: "We cannot confirm, we didn't find it. Let the one who found it to confirm, show, and tell," supposedly, implying that the Air Force hadn't yet obtained access to the wreckage of the drone by the time of the interview.

The photos, however, do show parts of an aerial vehicle with a miniature jet engine, visually resembling the Shahed-238. Particularly, the small and conceptually insignificant triangular-shaped notch of the intake, the location of several access panels, and the overall wing configuration and fuselage outlines.

The biggest problem of wreckage identification, though, is that there's no reference for comparison. Same as with the alleged North Korean KN-23 missile that fell near Kharkiv, Ukraine, these are mere speculations.

After all, there is no even approximate assessment of the production rates and number of available Shahed-238 drones in Iran. There's no data either on how the dummies exhibited for the media in Tehran could differ from mass-produced units. There's also a possibility of technology transfer, with russia creating own jet-propelled version of Shahed-136, later handed over to Tehran, and many other possibilities.

The comprehensive answer could only be found after a thorough examination of the wreckage, especially the jet engine. This component will be objectively the most sophisticated and expensive of all the drone's innards, even though potential analogs are available on the commercial market.

The MD550 piston engine of the Shahed-136, that drives the propeller, costs between $40,000 and $50,000. The jet alternative should cost significantly more.

The reward of utilizing a jet engine on Shahed-238 manifests solely in speed. The estimate is about 400 to 600 km/h, two or three times faster than Shahed-136's max speed. The price for this upgrade is the drone's expensiveness, which partially attenuates the main advantage offered by Shahed-type munitions, which is being cheap to produce in large batches.

Higher speed would impair the effectiveness of anti-aircraft guns against the Shahed-238, at the same time, the vibrant heat signature of the jet engine will make it an easy target for surface-to-air missiles. Although practice shows that in the russo-Ukrainian war, not only do the specifications of the weapons matter but their numbers and production rates are no less important.





now that a nice new little toy......be interesting to see what UA finds, if they can find the wreckage.......
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Imagine being the people that pulled this off. "I'm buying the next round."

Unprecedented Tech Data Leak From Special Technology Center LLC is a Treasure Trove of russian Secrets
It is even difficult to compare this leak of secret production documentation to anything because there is simply no historical analogies of such scale; with that, Ukraine got access to detailed data on the Orlan-10, Altair, Inokhodets UAVs, Svet-KU and Leer-3 EW systems and ~200 more other pieces of equipment

Defense Intelligence of Ukraine has executed a successful operation and obtained nearly 100 gigabytes of secret technological documentation from the Special Technology Center LLC (STC LLC), a russian defense enterprise located in St. Petersburg.

This extensive cache includes blueprints, PRDs, patents, software, and other information on 194 items of russian military equipment, including UAVs like Orlan-10, electronic warfare systems such as Svet-KU, and various individual components and subsystems.

Such a valuable trove of information was exchanged as part of the "Apostle pays money" initiative where blogger Volodymyr Zolkin and journalist Dmytro Karpenko are willing to pay russians for information about the positions or possessions of the russian army. In exchange for the substantial data on STC LLC, the whistleblowers sought assistance to leave the russian federation.

Ukrainian Defense Intelligence estimated the value of this information at over $1.5 billion. However, the real importance will manifest itself on the battlefield, and there will be a whole lot to manifest. The authors of the project provided a glimpse of vast technical data on russian weapons in mass production, experimental and concept design stages of development, covering drones, communication systems, electronic warfare, and signal intelligence.

Such a valuable trove of information was exchanged as part of the "Apostle pays money" initiative where blogger Volodymyr Zolkin and journalist Dmytro Karpenko are willing to pay russians for information about the positions or possessions of the russian army. In exchange for the substantial data on STC LLC, the whistleblowers sought assistance to leave the russian federation.

Ukrainian Defense Intelligence estimated the value of this information at over $1.5 billion. However, the real importance will manifest itself on the battlefield, and there will be a whole lot to manifest. The authors of the project provided a glimpse of vast technical data on russian weapons in mass production, experimental and concept design stages of development, covering drones, communication systems, electronic warfare, and signal intelligence.

One example is the Orlan-10, the primary reconnaissance UAV of russian forces. According to the video report, this drone uses the Kometa-M satellite navigation antenna which has demonstrated high resistance to interference.

Speaking of EW systems, the STC LLC not only developed the Svet-KU but also the more well-known Leer-3 — so far Ukrainians managed to destroy one of them and take one more as a trophy. The documents will help in cracking down this system.

The documentation also covers the portable satellite communication station P-438 Barrier-T. Additionally, mentioned are "topics" for experimental design works like Balat, Volga-SG, Demagog, Drovorub, Irkhan, Iteration, Kalimba, Nebosvod, Plast, Platan, Silok, Topotun, Khokhloma, and Stempel which all refer to respective products in development.

Although some of these projects are not directly related to STC LLC, it appears that the company acted as their co-executor. Thus, the amount of data obtained goes well beyond the limits of STC LLC's own developments and projects.

This wealth of obtained information on the enemy's tech secrets is unprecedented. Furthermore, it contains insights into russia's most advanced EW and SIGINT which makes it very interesting to Ukraine's partners in NATO as it allows them to develop effective countermeasures and algorithms.

No less importantly, this technical documentation can be used to start producing similar systems, as it essentially serves as an assembly instruction. This process is much easier than reverse-engineering captured equipment.
i love a good set of hackers, at least they're doing it for the right reasons.......
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Looks like they blew up empty cars, if they were full of diesel, it would have been a bigger mess than that, more so if the train was moving and pouring fuel out over the tracks. Looks like residue burned.
The comments has translations of the guy inspecting the cars. He said they are scrap, one car puffed up, another had so much heat it distorted the frame of the car (North American ones do not have a frame but the tank is the structure carrying the load). The explosive devices were placed in between the frame and the tank in order to contain the blast and do the most damage to the cars.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
McConnell steps up personal effort to win Ukraine, border deal
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is stepping up his personal efforts to secure a deal on border reform and aid for Ukraine and Israel, which colleagues are characterizing as a major test of his leadership. McConnell is the leading GOP advocate for supporting Ukraine and is under increased pressure with Ukraine’s troops running low on ammunition and weapons. He’s tasked Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) with leading border talks with the Biden administration and Senate Democrats but is stepping up his own involvement.

The GOP leader reminded colleagues at a closed-door lunch meeting Tuesday not to lose sight of the nation’s pressing national security challenges presented by Russia, Iran and China. “I think he has stepped it up. I think he was really trying to give James Lankford enough room to run to pull together a deal,” said one Republican senator who requested anonymity to explain why McConnell initially kept his distance from the negotiations before getting more involved in recent weeks.

“For a while, talks were not progressing like people had hoped, and I think now we’re back and we’re so, so close — tantalizingly close — to being able to lock down a deal,” the lawmaker added. “And I think this is now where Mitch has looked at it and said, ‘This is now the time to reinforce why we can’t squander this. It’s not going to be everything that everybody wants, but there are other issues beyond [the U.S.-Mexico] border that we’re obligated to be thinking about,’” the source said, recounting McConnell’s message to the GOP conference.

McConnell reiterated his arguments within the GOP conference about the world becoming more dangerous in recent weeks when he spoke to reporters Tuesday.

“The world was in a lot of danger before we left, and now it’s even more so. Obviously, we’re working very hard to come up with an agreement to improve our situation at the border, but it’s also important to remember the world is literally at war,” he said. “Make no mistake about it: This is the most serious international situation we have faced since the Berlin Wall came down. We need to pass a supplemental. There needs to be a strong border provision as part of it,” McConnell declared. “Our hope is that we’ll get an outcome and we get it soon.”

GOP senators say McConnell is working to keep a possible border security deal afloat and not let it get derailed by demands from Senate conservatives, notably Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), who wants to dole out Ukraine aide in $5 billion increments depending on how many migrants cross the border each month.

According to Johnson, McConnell told Lankford that insisting on pegging periodical Ukraine funding installments to a monthly decrease in migrant flows shouldn’t be a Republican demand. “I’ve heard that [McConnell] basically told Lankford that’s not on the table,” Johnson said.

Lankford has denied the claim that McConnell gave him marching orders and instead argued that Johnson’s proposal divides the conference. The Wisconsin senator, however, isn’t buying that explanation. He sees McConnell influencing the talks from behind the scenes. “Lankford’s saying, ‘Well, it divides the conference.’ Well, this whole thing divides our conference,” Johnson said.

Johnson said McConnell’s top priority is getting the Ukraine funding passed and that he’ll agree to just enough reforms to asylum and border security law to get it done. “That’s been his play from Day One,” he said. “He recognizes, ‘Well, maybe if I throw in some border security,’” he can get Senate Republicans skeptical of funding the Ukraine war to vote “yes.”

McConnell’s allies have pushed back on Johnson’s criticism, panning his idea of indexing Ukraine military aid and questioning whether he would support any bipartisan deal.

McConnell’s allies say that Republicans who want to sink the emergency foreign aid package want to keep the issue of border chaos for the 2024 election, but warn that this may be the last opportunity in years to win significant border reforms.

Republican senators predict that any border security deal will likely divide the Senate GOP conference and could hurt McConnell’s support among conservatives who vote against it. “I’m sure it’s more important to him personally than it is to him as a leader,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.). “If he gets it done as leader, it will come at a cost.”

Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), who challenged McConnell for the top leadership spot after the 2022 midterms, said McConnell didn’t want to hold a special conference meeting Wednesday on the border security negotiations that conservatives called to air their concerns about the negotiations. “It was my understanding that he didn’t even want time together,” Scott said. “I know he wants Ukraine aid really bad.”

McConnell’s allies say any border deal that emerges next week could wind up being a huge victory for Republicans on border security. And they’re emphasizing that whatever new tools Congress gives President Biden to slow the number of border crossings could be used to great effect by former President Trump or another future Republican president.

Emerging from the Republicans’ special border meeting Wednesday, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) echoed that argument: “What I think is abundantly clear is no matter what we pass now will certainly provide incredible tools to what hopefully will be a new administration to enforce” the border. McConnell warned on the Senate floor Wednesday that failing to pass military aid for Ukraine would hurt the United States’s long-term strategic interests and weaken ties to allies around the world.

“Handing Russia victory in Ukraine on account of a waning attention span will only shred America’s credibility, weaken critical alliances, and force us to contend even more directly with two major adversaries at once,” he said. “I honestly can’t think of a more shortsighted strategic gamble.”
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
McConnell steps up personal effort to win Ukraine, border deal
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is stepping up his personal efforts to secure a deal on border reform and aid for Ukraine and Israel, which colleagues are characterizing as a major test of his leadership. McConnell is the leading GOP advocate for supporting Ukraine and is under increased pressure with Ukraine’s troops running low on ammunition and weapons. He’s tasked Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) with leading border talks with the Biden administration and Senate Democrats but is stepping up his own involvement.

The GOP leader reminded colleagues at a closed-door lunch meeting Tuesday not to lose sight of the nation’s pressing national security challenges presented by Russia, Iran and China. “I think he has stepped it up. I think he was really trying to give James Lankford enough room to run to pull together a deal,” said one Republican senator who requested anonymity to explain why McConnell initially kept his distance from the negotiations before getting more involved in recent weeks.

“For a while, talks were not progressing like people had hoped, and I think now we’re back and we’re so, so close — tantalizingly close — to being able to lock down a deal,” the lawmaker added. “And I think this is now where Mitch has looked at it and said, ‘This is now the time to reinforce why we can’t squander this. It’s not going to be everything that everybody wants, but there are other issues beyond [the U.S.-Mexico] border that we’re obligated to be thinking about,’” the source said, recounting McConnell’s message to the GOP conference.

McConnell reiterated his arguments within the GOP conference about the world becoming more dangerous in recent weeks when he spoke to reporters Tuesday.

“The world was in a lot of danger before we left, and now it’s even more so. Obviously, we’re working very hard to come up with an agreement to improve our situation at the border, but it’s also important to remember the world is literally at war,” he said. “Make no mistake about it: This is the most serious international situation we have faced since the Berlin Wall came down. We need to pass a supplemental. There needs to be a strong border provision as part of it,” McConnell declared. “Our hope is that we’ll get an outcome and we get it soon.”

GOP senators say McConnell is working to keep a possible border security deal afloat and not let it get derailed by demands from Senate conservatives, notably Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), who wants to dole out Ukraine aide in $5 billion increments depending on how many migrants cross the border each month.

According to Johnson, McConnell told Lankford that insisting on pegging periodical Ukraine funding installments to a monthly decrease in migrant flows shouldn’t be a Republican demand. “I’ve heard that [McConnell] basically told Lankford that’s not on the table,” Johnson said.

Lankford has denied the claim that McConnell gave him marching orders and instead argued that Johnson’s proposal divides the conference. The Wisconsin senator, however, isn’t buying that explanation. He sees McConnell influencing the talks from behind the scenes. “Lankford’s saying, ‘Well, it divides the conference.’ Well, this whole thing divides our conference,” Johnson said.

Johnson said McConnell’s top priority is getting the Ukraine funding passed and that he’ll agree to just enough reforms to asylum and border security law to get it done. “That’s been his play from Day One,” he said. “He recognizes, ‘Well, maybe if I throw in some border security,’” he can get Senate Republicans skeptical of funding the Ukraine war to vote “yes.”

McConnell’s allies have pushed back on Johnson’s criticism, panning his idea of indexing Ukraine military aid and questioning whether he would support any bipartisan deal.

McConnell’s allies say that Republicans who want to sink the emergency foreign aid package want to keep the issue of border chaos for the 2024 election, but warn that this may be the last opportunity in years to win significant border reforms.

Republican senators predict that any border security deal will likely divide the Senate GOP conference and could hurt McConnell’s support among conservatives who vote against it. “I’m sure it’s more important to him personally than it is to him as a leader,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.). “If he gets it done as leader, it will come at a cost.”

Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), who challenged McConnell for the top leadership spot after the 2022 midterms, said McConnell didn’t want to hold a special conference meeting Wednesday on the border security negotiations that conservatives called to air their concerns about the negotiations. “It was my understanding that he didn’t even want time together,” Scott said. “I know he wants Ukraine aid really bad.”

McConnell’s allies say any border deal that emerges next week could wind up being a huge victory for Republicans on border security. And they’re emphasizing that whatever new tools Congress gives President Biden to slow the number of border crossings could be used to great effect by former President Trump or another future Republican president.

Emerging from the Republicans’ special border meeting Wednesday, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) echoed that argument: “What I think is abundantly clear is no matter what we pass now will certainly provide incredible tools to what hopefully will be a new administration to enforce” the border. McConnell warned on the Senate floor Wednesday that failing to pass military aid for Ukraine would hurt the United States’s long-term strategic interests and weaken ties to allies around the world.

“Handing Russia victory in Ukraine on account of a waning attention span will only shred America’s credibility, weaken critical alliances, and force us to contend even more directly with two major adversaries at once,” he said. “I honestly can’t think of a more shortsighted strategic gamble.”
There are still Russia hawks in the GOP and they are down to a one seat majority in the house and Joe is going after Russian money if he can't get congress to come through. The funding issue could be settled in the EU soon too. Donald is being consumed by his court cases and his influence in this matter might be weakening. I'm hopeful as usual.
 
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