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Russia-Ukraine War - News and Developments PART 2

Where is the UN resolution that declared Russia "is fighting an illegal war of aggression"? There is no UNSC resolution that have been agreed and issued against Russia. Therefore, whether Russia's SMO is illegal or not depends upon each country's understanding of the situation.

In this case it depends on who wins, as the UNSC is dysfunctional in affairs of the veto powers.

Some even accuse the West of instigating the war by orchestrating a coup in Ukraine that has in turn declared war on the Russian-speaking communities in the Donbass, and by refusing to support Ukraine's neutral status.
Some people accuse Russia for instigating the war by bribing the Ukrainan president to sign an illegal deal.

With respect to Iran, the delivery of drones and other weapons to Russia predates this war. There were prior agreements between the 2 countries, and Iranians are just fulfilling those agreements. Therefore, with the absence of UNSC resolution(s) that forbid any arms sales to Russia, Iran can still sell those weapons while remaining neutral in this conflict.

There is nothing in the law of neutrality to allow existing contracts to be fulfilled.
You just confirmed that Iran is shipping arms during the conflict.
So You confirmed that Iran is legally an ally of Russia in this war.
This is nonsense. NATO has no business of initiating a conflict with Iran when it is not participant in the conflict. You're typical Westerner who likes to invent the rules of the game as they like to see it.
What ”If Russia attack NATO” don’t You understand?
Iran has already chosen to participate in the conflict, although a non-belligerent.
 
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This was to be expected: cannibalization of aircraft for spares and relaxation of safety standards.

. This is an indicator of what Russia's oil industry will go through with majority of the oil services companies and technology being western. With companies like Schlumberger out, exploring new feels with newer technology will be hard, if not impossible.





Punished By Western Sanctions, Russia's Airlines Are Showing More Cracks And More Problems​

January 29, 2023 12:37 GMT





On January 9, a 4-year-old Airbus A320 operated by the Russian airline S7 was flying from the Siberian city of Bratsk to Moscow when it encountered a problem: Its toilet system malfunctioned. The flight was forced to divert to the city of Kazan for an unscheduled landing.
Four days earlier, a Red Wings airline passenger jet flying from Kazan to Yekaterinburg also was forced to turn around and returned to its departure airport after its landing gear failed to retract.

Two months before that, a top transport official in the Pacific coast region of Primorye sent a letter to the ministry for the development of the Far East and Arctic in Moscow: We need new passenger planes because our current planes won’t be able to fly anymore after this year.

The reason, according to the letter obtained by the news outlet RBK? The plane’s Canadian-built Pratt & Whitney engines couldn’t be repaired due to Western sanctions.
Since the beginning of 2023, Russian airlines have reported at least seven incidents in which flights were disrupted, delayed, or canceled, according to Russian media. While a couple incidents were blamed on human error, most were mechanical in nature.
Nearly one year after Russia invaded Ukraine last February, turning a simmering regional conflict into the largest land war in Europe since World War II, cracks are showing in Russian aviation industry.

A plane is serviced at the Domodedovo aircraft maintenance center near Moscow. (file photo)
Russian airlines are struggling under the weight of Western sanctions that have all but cut off the already struggling industry from badly needed imported parts.
At least nine Russian airlines stopped flying in 2022, according to the newspaper Kommersant -- four of them after the national aviation regulator, Rosaviatsiya, pulled their airworthiness certificates.
Experts say Russian airlines have for months turned to "cannibalization" to maintain and perform upkeep on their fleets, which range from small Canadian DHC-6 turboprops used by the Far Eastern regional carrier Aurora to the flagship national carrier Aeroflot, which flies Boeings and Airbuses, as well as Russian-built Tupolevs and Irkuts.

In November, the Telegram channel Baza reported that Aeroflot had cannibalized 25 planes for parts, and another 18 aircraft were under maintenance and awaiting repairs. In December, the Russian government finally legalized the practice of cannibalization.
While mechanical failures are expected in aircraft over time, a rapid increase in fleetwide mechanical failures may indicate that something fundamental has changed."
-- RAND Corporation report
"'Cannibalism' has indeed been used for a long time, but as a forced practice and not on a large scale. And in our situation, it becomes the only way to somehow replace the missing parts," Andrei Patrakov, the founder of the flight safety company RunAvia, told RFE/RL’s Siberia.Realities. "The obvious disadvantage of this practice is that cannibalization leads to a reduction in the aircraft fleet. No one can deny that it solves the problem of lack of spare parts only for a while."

Other airline manufacturers have started tweaking maintenance regulations to accommodate the lack of replacement parts.

In December, a widely read aviation channel on Telegram reported that a state-owned aircraft engine company had recommended that dirty fuel filters used on SuperJet 100 aircraft be cleaned with brake fluid instead of being replaced with new ones.
The SuperJet 100 is a short-haul regional aircraft built by state aviation giant Sukhoi that has seen repeated difficulties since being rolled out in 2008, in an effort to revitalize the domestic airline manufacturing industry.

A month earlier, in November, Yakutia Airlines reportedly had cannibalized so many parts from two SuperJet 100 planes in its four-plane fleet that the state leasing company from which the company obtained the planes took them back.

The business newspaper Vedomosti reported in November that 80 percent of the airline’s overall fleet – which includes more than 20 Western- and Russian-made aircraft -- was out of commission due to maintenance and cannibalization issues.
The paper also cited a case that predated Western sanctions: In 2020, cockpit glass needed to be replaced in one aircraft, but instead of letting the manufacturer do it, workers did it themselves -- and neglected to install plugs, which resulted in the cockpit flooding.

Assembling a Sukhoi Superjet 100 passenger plane at the Gagarin Komsomolsk-on-Amur aircraft factory in 2019.
A report published in November by the U.S. think tank RAND Corporation found at least six crashes involving Russian civilian and military aircraft in the two months prior. Four were fighter jets, two were not, the report found.

"While mechanical failures are expected in aircraft over time, a rapid increase in fleetwide mechanical failures may indicate that something fundamental has changed," the report said. "Sanctions placed on Russia by the West could well be affecting Russia's ability to manufacture and maintain parts needed to keep aircraft safe."
'High Priority'
As Western sanctions have bitten into the overall economy, and specific sectors like the aviation industry, authorities have tried to come up with ways to find badly needed parts -- like those needed to keep civilian airliners in the air.

Not long after the February 24 invasion, the national Transport Ministry released a draft, eight-year plan for developing domestic airlines. The proposal said obtaining spare parts and maintenance supplies was a "high priority."
When components begin to arrive that the aircraft developer has never heard of and didn’t approve of, made in some workshop near Tehran, then technical risks may arise."
-- Aviation expert Andrei Kramarenko
In early May, the government issued new regulations that broadened the ability of airlines to use spare parts in servicing their aircraft. Previously, carriers could only use parts with documentation provided by European, Canadian, or U.S. regulators.

In July, Russia signed a memorandum of understanding to buy aircraft spare parts from Iran, which has struggled under Western sanctions for years.

In December, according to Izvestia, the government formally legalized the practice of cannibalization, even though it was already in widespread use.
The sheer number of government decrees issued on the subject, Patrakov said, demonstrated "desperation."

"When it became clear that even if you allow the installation of original spare parts, but with documents from third countries, then this is not enough," he said. Russian regulators "then took an even more desperate step: They allowed non-original spare parts, even with documentation from third countries, including Iran."

But cannibalization is a common practice for airlines around the world, said Roman Gusarov, editor in chief of the industry newsletter Avia.ru. He said Russian regulators had updated national rules governing the practice as a result of Western sanctions.

"All airlines in the world are engaged in removing spare parts from some aircraft and rearranging them to others," Gusarov said.

"Nothing new is happening. We’re only correcting our legislation by not allowing any such special dispensation," he said. "This is not carte blanche for dismantling aircraft, but a tool for managing your assets. Missing spare parts can be removed from an aircraft that’s not yet flying."

Still, Trade Minister Denis Manturov said regulators were trying to avoid "total cannibalization" of aircraft for spare parts.
Over The Horizon
Given Russia’s vast landscape, air travel remains the only economical -- and practical -- way to travel long distances between towns, cities, and regions.

The country does has an extensive railway network. For many, however, that’s not realistic -- for example, if you live in the Siberian city of Irkutsk and you have business in Moscow, which is a four-day journey by train.

In Primorye, problems with the regional carrier had already forced it to cut its flights in half, Yevgeny Timonov, the deputy regional transport minister told RBK. He said Mi-8 helicopters would be put into service to reach distant settlements that previously had relied on Aurora Airlines.
"The Russian aviation industry was lucky in a certain sense: By 2022, it came up with a large surplus in the fleet," said Andrei Kramarenko, an expert at the Institute for Transport Economics and Transport Policy at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. That’s due to the economic lockdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, which sharply reduced air traffic and, thus, wear and tear on aircrafts and parts, he said.

Still, he said one of the problems of the evolving makeshift system for maintaining Russia’s air fleets is the danger of counterfeit parts.

"If spare parts are used, but with resources and with a verifiable history, that’s also no big deal," he said. "We take a plane somewhere in Bolivia, Uganda, or [Burma], disassemble it, remove the necessary components, carefully pack it up and deliver it.

"But when components begin to arrive that the aircraft developer has never heard of and didn’t approve of, made in some workshop near Tehran, then technical risks may arise," he said.

An Aeroflot Sukhoi Superjet 100 passenger plane after it made an emergency landing at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport on May 5, 2019. Forty-one people were killed.
Patrakov drew an analogy to the restaurant industry, and McDonald's, which was one of several Western fast-food chains that pulled out of Russia following the imposition of Western sanctions.

"While [McDonald's] restaurants worked on the franchise model in Russia, everything was fine," he said. "But when management passed to Russian owners, everything changed from the very get-go. You go to the toilet -- there’s not enough soap, the floor is dirty. This has happened before, of course, but much less frequently. So what's the problem?"

"It seems that the people remained the same, the specialists who used to work there before," he said. "The equipment is the same, the coffee machines. Even the standards seem to be the same, although they were somehow rewritten. What’s changed?"

 
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A decade of quiet preparations helped Ukraine turn the tables on Russia's bigger, better-armed military, experts say​

Constantine Atlamazoglou
Jan 29, 2023, 5:33 PM

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Ukraine troops soldiers RPG sniper rifles Irpin
Ukrainian troops carry rocket-propelled grenades and sniper rifles toward the city of Irpin in March 2022. Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP via Getty Images
  • Following Russia's 2014 attack, Ukraine's military set out to improve and modernize its forces.
  • Kyiv's decisions during that period helped it hold off Moscow's assault in late February 2022.
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When Russia annexed Crimea and stoked a conflict in eastern Ukraine's Donbas region in 2014, Ukraine's military was in poor condition, with only 6,000 combat-ready troops out of a 140,000-strong force.

In the years that followed, Ukraine's military underwent a period of preparation that helped it blunt the full-scale invasion that Russia launched in February 2022.

According to a report by the Royal United Services Institute assessing the first five months of the war, decisions made by Kyiv during those years modernized its hardware and enabled its troops to hold off Russia's assault.

Artillery in recovery​

Ukraine artillery in Zaporizhzhia
Ukrainian troops fire a howitzer in the Zaporizhzhia Region in December 2022. Dmytro Smoliyenko / Ukrinform/Future Publishing via Getty Images

Recognizing Russia's artillery capabilities, which caused roughly 90% of Ukraine's casualties between 2014 and 2022, Kyiv strengthened its own artillery force, which was systematically reduced prior to 2014.


Ukraine created new artillery units that doubled its total strength by February 2022 and gave it "the largest artillery force in Europe after Russia," according to the report.

Although Russian sabotage between 2014 and 2018 destroyed much of Ukraine's artillery ammunition, when the full-scale invasion started, Ukraine still had enough ammunition "for just over six weeks" of high-intensity fighting, the report says.

Ukraine also modernized its artillery force by introducing US-made radars, equipping artillery units with drones for reconnaissance and targeting, and introducing an intelligent mapping system that reduced artillery units' deployment time by 80%. Training for artillery troops was also intensified.

As a result, the report says, "the amount of time to destroy an unplanned target was reduced by two-thirds" and the time it took to open counter-battery fire shrunk by 90%.


Tanks and anti-tank capabilities​

Kyiv Ukraine tank turret factory
A tank turret is repaired at the Kyiv Panzer factory in August 2015. NurPhoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Most of the 30 tank battalions — totaling about 900 tanks — that Ukraine had in 2022 were formed between 2014 and 2018, a period during which Ukraine added 500 tanks to its fleet.

However, Russia's tanks still outnumbered Ukraine's nearly four to one when the invasion started.

To compensate for that disadvantage, Ukraine's military adapted its tank doctrine and started using tanks for indirect fire, like artillery pieces, with high-explosive fragmentation rounds.

To do this, Ukrainian tankers use "special guidance devices" and other modern technology along with "automated transmission of information to other tanks," which made it possible to be highly accurate at ranges of up to 6 miles and reduced the timed to make corrections to fire coordinates down to a few seconds, according to the report.

Ukrainian tank in Slavyansk
A Ukrainian tank in the city of Slavyansk in July 2014. GENYA SAVILOV/AFP via Getty Images
"This technique blurs the line between tanks and artillery" and "allows tanks to concentrate fire over a wide area while they can manoeuvre without the protection and screening needed by artillery pieces," the report says.

Many of the tanks that Ukraine fielded in the 2010s were older models that had been upgraded, as Kyiv lacked the funds for new tanks. At the beginning of the invasion, Russia's tanks were generally better, with higher-quality protection and sighting systems and ability to engage targets from longer range, though those advantages "were less relevant" at shorter range, the report says.

While experts have said that attention on anti-tank guided missiles tends to overstate their role in halting Russia's initial advance, Ukraine invested heavily in ATGMs after 2014, buying thousands of launchers and missiles and setting up the School of Anti-Tank Artillery to train troops on them.

While Western-made ATGMs were quickly delivered at the start of the war, maintenance issues and their limited numbers meant they weren't the "primary means" of wearing down Russian forces, the RUSI report says.

The battle of the skies​

A MiG-29 fighter jet
A Ukrainian MIG-29 fighter jet at the Vasilkov air base in November 2016. Efrem Lukatsky/AP Photo

After 2014, Ukraine tried to modernize its air force, and when the invasion started, it had about 50 MiG-29s and 32 Su-27s, as well as a few Su-24s and Su-25s, but it was outmatched and outgunned by Russia's Aerospace Force in every respect, according to RUSI.

Therefore, Ukrainian planners focused on survivability by training units to disperse aircraft from main bases to secondary airfields. Crews were also trained to maintain and repair combat-damaged planes under conditions they would face in the field.

As Ukrainian pilots were well aware of their aircraft's limitations and of "the fearsome capabilities" of Russia's anti-aircraft weapons, "they trained extensively for low-level flight over Ukrainian territory and were highly familiar with the exploitation of terrain to evade radar detection," the RUSI report says.

Russian Su-35 fighter jet crash in Ukraine
A Russian Su-35 downed by Ukrainian forces in the Kharkiv region in April 2022. Press service of the Ukrainian Armed Forces General Staff/Handout via REUTERS

Ukraine also prioritized its air-defense capabilities. Its radio engineering troops, tasked with warning of an air attack, "reorganised after 2014 to ensure they could detect targets at 300-400 km, and direct fighters and anti-aircraft missile troops against them," the reports says. Those units also received better radars.

Thus, at the onset of the invasion, Ukraine had continuous radar coverage of its border with Russia and its own airspace, though its Black Sea coverage was "less extensive."

Russia's air force failed to account for those improvements, "leading to tactical errors in the employment of radio-electronic attack," RUSI says.

Additionally, Ukrainian air-defense missiles forced Russian pilots to fly low, where they could be targeted by Ukrainian troops with modernized shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles, the report says.

Russian aircraft still have some technological advantages, but their operations are now mostly limited to airspace over Russian-controlled territory.

More and better-trained troops​

Ukraine military soldiers Debaltseve Donetsk
Ukrainian troops outside the city of Debaltseve in the Donetsk region in December 2014. SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images
Ukrainian troops deployed to the Donbas region had developed "an intimate understanding of the battlefield" over the years and were able to prepare for Russian escalation.

At the tactical level, Ukrainian troops were "confident" they would be better prepared and trained than their adversaries, according to the RUSI report, which added that Ukrainian troops who had observed Russia's treatment of Ukrainians in the occupied territory were "highly motivated" to prevent Moscow from taking more of it.

Yet, at the formation level, Ukrainian commanders were concerned about Russian artillery limiting their ability to maneuver and hitting their supply lines. This problem was exacerbated by a personnel shortage, which in turn meant Ukrainian forces were spread thin along the Donbas frontline.

Prior to 2022, Ukraine's military had struggled to retain troops, but high turnover during those years meant Ukraine had a large pool of civilians with military training. To capitalize on that, the country created the Territorial Defense Force.

Ukraine territorial defense force troops first aid medic training
Recruits receive first-aid training during an exercise with Ukraine's Territorial Defense Force in February 2022. Dominika Zarzycka/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

The TDF was established in January 2022 and didn't have time to receive heavy weapons and the necessary command-and-control mechanisms. While they were initially an "impediment in many cases," Ukrainian commanders have sorted out many of those issues, and the TDF's role has increased from "rear-area security to ground holding to contributing manoeuvre brigades to offensive operations," the report says.

Manpower problems and limited equipment at the beginning of the war meant Kyiv had to make difficult decisions about which troops to deploy where. "The critical question therefore was whether the professional body of [Ukraine's military] could hold for long enough for a wider mobilisation to bolster Ukraine's defences," the report adds.

Thanks to Ukraine's years of preparation, those troops did hold long enough.

When the advancing Russians met the Ukrainian defenders early on February 24, they had been surprised by what their commanders in Moscow had ordered them to do, while Ukrainian troops "had been psychologically and practically preparing for this fight for eight years," the report says. "The interaction between these variables would be decisive in determining the outcome of the first 72 hours of fighting."
 
This was to be expected: cannibalization of aircraft for spares and relaxation of safety standards.

. This is an indicator of what Russia's oil industry will go through with majority of the oil services companies and technology being western. With companies like Schlumberger out, exploring new feels with newer technology will be hard, if not impossible.





Punished By Western Sanctions, Russia's Airlines Are Showing More Cracks And More Problems​

January 29, 2023 12:37 GMT





On January 9, a 4-year-old Airbus A320 operated by the Russian airline S7 was flying from the Siberian city of Bratsk to Moscow when it encountered a problem: Its toilet system malfunctioned. The flight was forced to divert to the city of Kazan for an unscheduled landing.
Four days earlier, a Red Wings airline passenger jet flying from Kazan to Yekaterinburg also was forced to turn around and returned to its departure airport after its landing gear failed to retract.

Two months before that, a top transport official in the Pacific coast region of Primorye sent a letter to the ministry for the development of the Far East and Arctic in Moscow: We need new passenger planes because our current planes won’t be able to fly anymore after this year.

The reason, according to the letter obtained by the news outlet RBK? The plane’s Canadian-built Pratt & Whitney engines couldn’t be repaired due to Western sanctions.
Since the beginning of 2023, Russian airlines have reported at least seven incidents in which flights were disrupted, delayed, or canceled, according to Russian media. While a couple incidents were blamed on human error, most were mechanicalin nature.
Nearly one year after Russia invaded Ukraine last February, turning a simmering regional conflict into the largest land war in Europe since World War II, cracks are showing in Russian aviation industry.

A plane is serviced at the Domodedovo aircraft maintenance center near Moscow. (file photo)
Russian airlines are struggling under the weight of Western sanctions that have all but cut off the already struggling industry from badly needed imported parts.
At least nine Russian airlines stopped flying in 2022, according to the newspaper Kommersant -- four of them after the national aviation regulator, Rosaviatsiya, pulled their airworthiness certificates.
Experts say Russian airlines have for months turned to "cannibalization" to maintain and perform upkeep on their fleets, which range from small Canadian DHC-6 turboprops used by the Far Eastern regional carrier Aurora to the flagship national carrier Aeroflot, which flies Boeings and Airbuses, as well as Russian-built Tupolevs and Irkuts.

In November, the Telegram channel Baza reported that Aeroflot had cannibalized 25 planes for parts, and another 18 aircraft were under maintenance and awaiting repairs. In December, the Russian government finally legalized the practice of cannibalization.

"'Cannibalism' has indeed been used for a long time, but as a forced practice and not on a large scale. And in our situation, it becomes the only way to somehow replace the missing parts," Andrei Patrakov, the founder of the flight safety company RunAvia, told RFE/RL’s Siberia.Realities. "The obvious disadvantage of this practice is that cannibalization leads to a reduction in the aircraft fleet. No one can deny that it solves the problem of lack of spare parts only for a while."

Other airline manufacturers have started tweaking maintenance regulations to accommodate the lack of replacement parts.

In December, a widely read aviation channel on Telegram reported that a state-owned aircraft engine company had recommended that dirty fuel filters used on SuperJet 100 aircraft be cleaned with brake fluid instead of being replaced with new ones.
The SuperJet 100 is a short-haul regional aircraft built by state aviation giant Sukhoi that has seen repeated difficulties since being rolled out in 2008, in an effort to revitalize the domestic airline manufacturing industry.

A month earlier, in November, Yakutia Airlines reportedly had cannibalized so many parts from two SuperJet 100 planes in its four-plane fleet that the state leasing company from which the company obtained the planes took them back.

The business newspaper Vedomosti reported in November that 80 percent of the airline’s overall fleet – which includes more than 20 Western- and Russian-made aircraft -- was out of commission due to maintenance and cannibalization issues.
The paper also cited a case that predated Western sanctions: In 2020, cockpit glass needed to be replaced in one aircraft, but instead of letting the manufacturer do it, workers did it themselves -- and neglected to install plugs, which resulted in the cockpit flooding.

Assembling a Sukhoi Superjet 100 passenger plane at the Gagarin Komsomolsk-on-Amur aircraft factory in 2019.
A report published in November by the U.S. think tank RAND Corporation found at least six crashes involving Russian civilian and military aircraft in the two months prior. Four were fighter jets, two were not, the report found.

"While mechanical failures are expected in aircraft over time, a rapid increase in fleetwide mechanical failures may indicate that something fundamental has changed," the report said. "Sanctions placed on Russia by the West could well be affecting Russia's ability to manufacture and maintain parts needed to keep aircraft safe."
'High Priority'
As Western sanctions have bitten into the overall economy, and specific sectors like the aviation industry, authorities have tried to come up with ways to find badly needed parts -- like those needed to keep civilian airliners in the air.

Not long after the February 24 invasion, the national Transport Ministry released a draft, eight-year plan for developing domestic airlines. The proposal said obtaining spare parts and maintenance supplies was a "high priority."

In early May, the government issued new regulations that broadened the ability of airlines to use spare parts in servicing their aircraft. Previously, carriers could only use parts with documentation provided by European, Canadian, or U.S. regulators.

In July, Russia signed a memorandum of understanding to buy aircraft spare parts from Iran, which has struggled under Western sanctions for years.

In December, according to Izvestia, the government formally legalized the practice of cannibalization, even though it was already in widespread use.
The sheer number of government decrees issued on the subject, Patrakov said, demonstrated "desperation."

"When it became clear that even if you allow the installation of original spare parts, but with documents from third countries, then this is not enough," he said. Russian regulators "then took an even more desperate step: They allowed non-original spare parts, even with documentation from third countries, including Iran."

But cannibalization is a common practice for airlines around the world, said Roman Gusarov, editor in chief of the industry newsletter Avia.ru. He said Russian regulators had updated national rules governing the practice as a result of Western sanctions.

"All airlines in the world are engaged in removing spare parts from some aircraft and rearranging them to others," Gusarov said.

"Nothing new is happening. We’re only correcting our legislation by not allowing any such special dispensation," he said. "This is not carte blanche for dismantling aircraft, but a tool for managing your assets. Missing spare parts can be removed from an aircraft that’s not yet flying."

Still, Trade Minister Denis Manturov said regulators were trying to avoid "total cannibalization" of aircraft for spare parts.
Over The Horizon
Given Russia’s vast landscape, air travel remains the only economical -- and practical -- way to travel long distances between towns, cities, and regions.

The country does has an extensive railway network. For many, however, that’s not realistic -- for example, if you live in the Siberian city of Irkutsk and you have business in Moscow, which is a four-day journey by train.

In Primorye, problems with the regional carrier had already forced it to cut its flights in half, Yevgeny Timonov, the deputy regional transport minister told RBK. He said Mi-8 helicopters would be put into service to reach distant settlements that previously had relied on Aurora Airlines.
"The Russian aviation industry was lucky in a certain sense: By 2022, it came up with a large surplus in the fleet," said Andrei Kramarenko, an expert at the Institute for Transport Economics and Transport Policy at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. That’s due to the economic lockdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, which sharply reduced air traffic and, thus, wear and tear on aircrafts and parts, he said.

Still, he said one of the problems of the evolving makeshift system for maintaining Russia’s air fleets is the danger of counterfeit parts.

"If spare parts are used, but with resources and with a verifiable history, that’s also no big deal," he said. "We take a plane somewhere in Bolivia, Uganda, or [Burma], disassemble it, remove the necessary components, carefully pack it up and deliver it.

"But when components begin to arrive that the aircraft developer has never heard of and didn’t approve of, made in some workshop near Tehran, then technical risks may arise," he said.

An Aeroflot Sukhoi Superjet 100 passenger plane after it made an emergency landing at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport on May 5, 2019. Forty-one people were killed.
Patrakov drew an analogy to the restaurant industry, and McDonald's, which was one of several Western fast-food chains that pulled out of Russia following the imposition of Western sanctions.

"While [McDonald's] restaurants worked on the franchise model in Russia, everything was fine," he said. "But when management passed to Russian owners, everything changed from the very get-go. You go to the toilet -- there’s not enough soap, the floor is dirty. This has happened before, of course, but much less frequently. So what's the problem?"

"It seems that the people remained the same, the specialists who used to work there before," he said. "The equipment is the same, the coffee machines. Even the standards seem to be the same, although they were somehow rewritten. What’s changed?"

Russia‘s civil aviation is in coma if not dead. Putin finished it. Russia has 600 aircraft, with 500 from Boeing, airbus and Anbraer. The sanctions killed them off. Even when they fly with spare parts taken from other jets they can’t fly far.
The rest are of domestic superjet, however without western imports those Russian jets won’t take off.

Putin successfully brings Russia aviation into the stage of North Korea within a year.
 
Ah some bullshit twitter conspiracy nutter.
To feed the “ukranian satanist” narrative.
(kind of funny Russia started with “ukranian brothers who love russki Mir and will hug our troops in Kiev”)


In the meantime tens of thousands of ukranian children are abducted and relocated. But thats just standard Russian population politics really…we shouldn't be suprised.

Did you overlook this news Hassan?
 

Ah some bullshit twitter conspiracy nutter.
To feed the “ukranian satanist” narrative.
(kind of funny Russia started with “ukranian brothers who love russki Mir and will hug our troops in Kiev”)


In the meantime tens of thousands of ukranian children are abducted and relocated. But thats just standard Russian population politics really…we shouldn't be suprised.

Did you overlook this news Hassan?


Your news is fake and propaganda. I don't pay attention to it. I follow people who are interested in the truth.

 
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So the guys US bombed in afghan weddings weren't civilians?
They always come with such typical biased and bullshit statements while completely ignoring the crimes done by their own people.
Always biased and double-faced with double standards.
It is an open truth that the USA is the country who have waged wars everywhere. (Russia did many same things but still not up to USA and its allies).
Check the facts and you will come to know that the USA needs a war every 10 years (on average) to sustain and grow its arms industry.
The elites handling USA and allies regularly need this to keep the world busy, sell new arms, and test new arms.
I do not celebrate the deaths and destruction of humans and infrastructure but as the war was inevitable I am thankful to God it is not being done on Muslim lands (as usually is the case almost every time).
It is after a long time that this stage is set away from Muslim lands (so far) and I do not give a shit who wins or who loses.
If Russia wins it will be the end of the Bipolar world and maybe some balance is restored.
If the USA and its allies win (I am deliberately not saying it is a Russia-Ukraine conflict/war) still they will need some time to recover ( in this case next time they will go after China which will have quite a different outcome).
Either way, it will buy more time for the Muslim world.
 
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