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U.S. Drops The Sanctions Hammer On Russia.....Again !!

US sanctioning Russian oil and arms companies?:omghaha: What a joke.

How is this supposed to scare the Russians considering the US does not import any Russian oil or weapons to begin with? They might as well ban the export of oil and trees to Russia while they are at it just to add more comedic value to their "sanctions".

The only thing that would work is if the EU sanctions Russian oil corporations and there's no way the EU will kill their already weakened economy just to help Ukraine...not to mention that in just a few years Russia can circumvent oil sanctions by selling to Asia.

As for the restriction to US capital market, all they're doing is accelerating the decline of the dollar. Putin must be rolling on the floor laughing at how the US is destroying itself by going around fining its allies' banks and implementing these dumb sanctions.
 
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We have no choice. America even locks us out of international projects, like the international space station, which is why we had to build our own space station. :P...

Well, shit dude !! You guys steal. You'd be spending the whole flight snapping pics and taking measurements.
 
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Well, shit dude !! You guys steal. You'd be spending the whole flight snapping pics and taking measurements.

We have our own space station already, and all the space-based weapons already, including ASAT, exoatmospheric/midcourse interception, and we have even tested HGV at higher speeds than America has. Not to mention creating the very first ASBM platform in the world, the DF-21D carrier killer.

What exactly is there left? You didn't slow down our progress even slightly, just pushed us towards Russia.

Not that I'm complaining, since the results ended up being good for us. But that was obviously not America's intention, same with the current issue where America is pushing Russia towards us.
 
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US escalates economic sanctions against Russia
Published July 16, 2014
Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The United States imposed new sanctions Wednesday on lucrative Russian energy and defense entities, as well as major banks, as the Obama administration struggles for a way to quell an insurgency in eastern Ukraine widely believed to be backed by Moscow.

The penalties significantly expand on previous U.S. sanctions, which hit Russian individuals and companies with travel bans and asset freezes. But the new sanctions stop short of fully cutting off key Russian economic sectors, a step U.S. officials said they were continuing to hold in reserve in case Moscow launches a full-scale invasion of Ukraine or takes similarly provocative actions.

Obama was expected to speak about the sanctions from the White House Wednesday afternoon.

The Treasury Department sanctions target two major Russian energy firms, Novatek and Rosneft, and a pair of leading Russian financial institutions, Gazprombank and VEB. The sanctions restrict the entities' ability to access U.S. capital markets, officials said.

Eight Russian arms firms responsible for the production of small arms, mortar shells and tanks were also hit with sanctions.

The U.S. announcement came as European leaders met into the night in Brussels to discuss taking their own measures aimed at helping ease tensions along Russia's border with Ukraine. EU diplomats were also looking at penalties that would go beyond the current travel bans and asset freezes against individuals, though it was unclear whether their sanctions would go as far the U.S.

Some European leaders have been wary of deepening penalties on Moscow out of fear that their own economies could suffer, given the deep trade ties with Russia. In recent days, Obama administration officials have been pressuring their European counterparts to press forward and warning that they could take unilateral action if the EU continued to hesitate.

Officials met with EU diplomats in Washington Monday and Obama has made a series of calls to leaders from Britain, France and Germany.

Steven Pifer, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, said the American sanctions will add uncertainty to the Russia economy.

"These are serious sanctions. They target major Russian energy companies and financial institutions," said Pifer, who currently works as an analyst at the Brookings Institution think tank in Washington.

The U.S. has preferred to levy penalties in conjunction with Europe, both to present a united Western front against Russia and to avoid putting U.S. companies at a disadvantage by limiting their access to Russian markets while European counterparts continue to operate without restrictions.

For months, the West has been seeking to punish Russia for annexing the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine and allegedly backing pro-Russian rebels that have occupied buildings in eastern Ukraine. While those rebels have lost ground in recent weeks, many have begun to group.

The Pentagon also said Wednesday that Russian combat troops are again building up along the border with Ukraine. U.S. officials said they also believe Moscow may be sending heavy weapons into the country to aid the separatists.

Ukraine and the West have accused Russia of fomenting the insurgency by sending troops and weapons, including tanks and rocket launchers, something Moscow denies.

Also included on Wednesday's sanctions list were four individuals: Putin adviser Igor Shchegolev, Russian State Duma Deputy Speaker Sergei Neverov, Ukrainian separatist leader Aleksandr Borodai and Sergey Beseda, an official with Russia's Federal Security Service, the intelligence agency that replaced the KGB after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Another kick to dictator Vladis' nuts. HAHAHAHAHAHAHA !!!!!:rofl:


@boomslang Does this mean we going to see now shortages in Tulammo now? I'm almost out now....
 
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Urban warfare feared in Ukraine fighting
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AP Photo: Sergei Chuzavkov
A girl says goodbye to her friend, a volunteer, before they were sent to the eastern part of Ukraine to join the ranks of special battalion "Azov", during a ceremony to take the oath of allegiance to Ukraine, in Kiev, Ukraine Wednesday, July 16, 2014.
_h17_w0_m6_otrue_lfalse.jpg
6 hr ago By PETER LEONARD of Associated Press



KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — Insurgents bade tearful farewells Wednesday as they loaded their families onto Russia-bound buses and began hunkering down for what could be the next phase in Ukraine's conflict: bloody urban warfare.

While the pro-Russian rebels in the east have lost much ground in recent weeks and were driven from their stronghold of Slovyansk, many have regrouped in Donetsk, an industrial city that had a population of 1 million before tens of thousands by some estimates fled in recent weeks for fear of a government siege. The rebels also hold the city of Luhansk.

Despite the government's desire to minimize civilian casualties, Ukraine's forces could find themselves dragged into grueling warfare inside the cities in their battle to hold the country together.

"To respond to this phase ... we evidently must change tactics," said Valeriy Chaly, deputy head of the presidential administration. He refrained from specifying how.

Insurgents in Donetsk appeared be bracing for a bitter fight as they shipped their relatives out of the city.

One fighter, who declined to give his name, told The Associated Press that not having his wife and young daughter with him would free him to concentrate on the battles ahead.

"It is easier for us this way. It is easier to fight. Your soul is not ripped into two, because when they're here, you think about war and about your family — if they are OK or not," he said. "When you know that they are safe, it is easier to go to fight."

U.N. Security Council spokesman Andrei Lysenko said that in Luhansk, rebels lobbing artillery at government troops were taking up positions in residential and industrial zones.

The results of that tactic were evident to see earlier this month in Slovyansk, where apartment blocks used by the rebels were wrecked by return fire.

Taking the fight into the heart of rebel-held cities would involve a type of combat for which Ukrainian soldiers are not believed to be adequately prepared.

"It's a very complicated strategic task — not only when it comes to tactics, also in terms of equipment. When rebels are putting missile launchers on school rooftops, what do you do?" said Orysia Lutsevych, a research fellow at Chatham House in London.

Matthew Clements, an analyst with security affairs consultancy HIS, said Ukraine may, instead of entering Donetsk and Luhansk, surround the cities, "cut the separatists off from supplies of fighters and equipment, and undertake gradual operations against the cities and suburbs in an effort to wear the separatists down."

Disrupting supply lines is a particular priority for Kiev as the rebels have lately come into possession of advanced weapons, including tanks and multiple rocket launchers — hardware that Ukraine and the West say are being supplied by Russia. Russia denies the allegation.

A hail of rockets that Ukrainian officials said came from a Russian-made launcher killed at least 19 government servicemen last week.

Urban warfare feared in Ukraine fighting


Vladis' boys are going down like $2 whores. They're going to get choked out unless we see some mysteriously unidentifiable, masked troops enter the fray on the terrorists (Russian) side soon. Like at the beginning of the war.:nana:

@boomslang Does this mean we going to see now shortages in Tulammo now? I'm almost out now....

I HOPE !! That shit jams up my AR. And I can get Danish stuff (Igman) cheaper. That's what I've been using for the last few months. I LOVE it !! Even the Wolf Gold is good. I think that's made in Korea.
Igman 5.56
 
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Urban warfare feared in Ukraine fighting
_h353_w628_m6_otrue_lfalse.jpg
AP Photo: Sergei Chuzavkov
A girl says goodbye to her friend, a volunteer, before they were sent to the eastern part of Ukraine to join the ranks of special battalion "Azov", during a ceremony to take the oath of allegiance to Ukraine, in Kiev, Ukraine Wednesday, July 16, 2014.
_h17_w0_m6_otrue_lfalse.jpg
6 hr ago By PETER LEONARD of Associated Press



KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — Insurgents bade tearful farewells Wednesday as they loaded their families onto Russia-bound buses and began hunkering down for what could be the next phase in Ukraine's conflict: bloody urban warfare.

While the pro-Russian rebels in the east have lost much ground in recent weeks and were driven from their stronghold of Slovyansk, many have regrouped in Donetsk, an industrial city that had a population of 1 million before tens of thousands by some estimates fled in recent weeks for fear of a government siege. The rebels also hold the city of Luhansk.

Despite the government's desire to minimize civilian casualties, Ukraine's forces could find themselves dragged into grueling warfare inside the cities in their battle to hold the country together.

"To respond to this phase ... we evidently must change tactics," said Valeriy Chaly, deputy head of the presidential administration. He refrained from specifying how.

Insurgents in Donetsk appeared be bracing for a bitter fight as they shipped their relatives out of the city.

One fighter, who declined to give his name, told The Associated Press that not having his wife and young daughter with him would free him to concentrate on the battles ahead.

"It is easier for us this way. It is easier to fight. Your soul is not ripped into two, because when they're here, you think about war and about your family — if they are OK or not," he said. "When you know that they are safe, it is easier to go to fight."

U.N. Security Council spokesman Andrei Lysenko said that in Luhansk, rebels lobbing artillery at government troops were taking up positions in residential and industrial zones.

The results of that tactic were evident to see earlier this month in Slovyansk, where apartment blocks used by the rebels were wrecked by return fire.

Taking the fight into the heart of rebel-held cities would involve a type of combat for which Ukrainian soldiers are not believed to be adequately prepared.

"It's a very complicated strategic task — not only when it comes to tactics, also in terms of equipment. When rebels are putting missile launchers on school rooftops, what do you do?" said Orysia Lutsevych, a research fellow at Chatham House in London.

Matthew Clements, an analyst with security affairs consultancy HIS, said Ukraine may, instead of entering Donetsk and Luhansk, surround the cities, "cut the separatists off from supplies of fighters and equipment, and undertake gradual operations against the cities and suburbs in an effort to wear the separatists down."

Disrupting supply lines is a particular priority for Kiev as the rebels have lately come into possession of advanced weapons, including tanks and multiple rocket launchers — hardware that Ukraine and the West say are being supplied by Russia. Russia denies the allegation.

A hail of rockets that Ukrainian officials said came from a Russian-made launcher killed at least 19 government servicemen last week.

Urban warfare feared in Ukraine fighting


Vladis' boys are going down like $2 whores. They're going to get choked out unless we see some mysteriously unidentifiable, masked troops enter the fray on the terrorists (Russian) side soon. Like at the beginning of the war.:nana:


10%20cool%20story%20bro.jpg
 
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I HOPE !! That shit jams up my AR. And I can get Danish stuff (Igman) cheaper. That's what I've been using for the last few months. I LOVE it !! Even the Wolf Gold is good. I think that's made in Korea.
Igman 5.56


Wolf is also made by tula ammo... And it would be very unfortunate for my AK and mosin with Tula and wolf goes out. there is this brass case Tul 100 rd box 9mm fmg, it ran flawlessly in my S&W, not that it is too picky. Astonishing was that it even ran well on my picky TZ75.

US sanctioning Russian oil and arms companies?:omghaha: What a joke.

How is this supposed to scare the Russians considering the US does not import any Russian oil or weapons to begin with? .

You are slightly mistaken, Economic end of US civilian firearms and surplus market is heavily dominated by semi auto AK, Saiga, Vepr, baikal, Mosin nagant's, SkS, makarovs, and Tula/Wolf ammo.
 
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You are slightly mistaken, Economic end of US civilian firearms and surplus market is heavily dominated by semi auto AK, Saiga, Vepr, baikal, Mosin nagant's, SkS, makarovs, and Tula/Wolf ammo.

NO WAY !! In the U.S. AR's outsell AK's by a huge margin. Century Arms is the only U.S. maker of AK-like rifles. There are tons of American AR makers. And Glocks are easily the most popular handgun. I see a little Tula ammo at the range, and the only Wolf I see is the Gold that I shoot, but I ran out. There's more to this article but it has nothing to do with sales and popularity.

America's 1st Freedom

The AR-15 And The Second Amendment: No Respect

shutterstock_44563264.jpg

by Dave Kopel

It’s the best-selling type of rifle in America today, yet the gun prohibition lobbies want to make it a crime for you to own one.

The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in District of Columbia v. Heller seems to outlaw such bans on AR-15s. Yet some courts are still upholding prohibition of this rifle.

Whether you will have the choice five or 10 years from now to buy an AR-15 is far from certain—and whether you will be able to keep the AR-15 you may already own is uncertain as well.

Historically SpeakingThe development of the rifle known today as the AR-15 started in 1956. The strategy to ban it was unveiled in 1988.

At that time, Josh Sugarmann, former communications director of the National Coalition to Ban Handguns, pointed out in a strategy paper that the media had grown tired of the handgun issue, but “assault weapons” would be novel to them.

Further, he added in the memo, “The semi-automatic weapons’ menacing looks, coupled with the public’s confusion over fully automatic machine guns versus semi-automatic assault weapons—anything that looks like a machine gun is assumed to be a machine gun—can only increase the chance of public support for restrictions on these weapons” (“Assault Weapons and Accessories in America,” Education Fund to End Handgun Violence and New Right Watch, Sept. 1988).

Sugarmann was exactly right. The gun prohibition groups successfully created and then exploited public confusion. In 1989, California was the first state to ban so-called “assault rifles” or “assault weapons.” The gun-banners did not use the term “assault rifle” in the proper technical sense—that is, an intermediate power combat rifle that has a selector switch so that the gun can fire either automatically or semi-automatically. Instead, the prohibitionists tricked legislatures into banning guns that could only fire as semi-autos, but which looked like selective-fire military rifles.

Fast Forward
Over the next several years, bans on the AR-15 and many other semi-auto rifles were enacted in New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut and the District of Columbia. The signature “achievement” of Bill Clinton’s first term as president was a national ban in 1994, prohibiting the manufacture of these firearms with their usual features such as adjustable stocks and flash suppressors.

The Clinton ban had a “sunset clause,” so it expired in 2004. As firearm manufacturers resumed production of these guns in their original form, the gun prohibition groups predicted mass carnage. Of course, the predictions never came true. The AR-15 and similar guns had rarely been used in crime before the ban, and criminal misuse remained rare after 2004.

The AR-15 has become very popular with law-abiding citizens. By 2007, even The New York Times wrote that the AR-15 and similar guns were often “the guns of choice for many hunters, target shooters and would-be home defenders” (Andrew Park, “A Hot-Selling Weapon, an Inviting Target,” June 3, 2007). In response to consumer demand, nearly a half million AR-15-type rifles were manufactured in the United States in 2009. These days, you can even buy one at Wal-Mart, which is a pretty good sign that these are popular, mass-market products.

While the prohibition groups hysterically clamor about “assault weapons,” more and more people are buying AR-15s, just as they’ve bought other rifles descended from military arms throughout history. There is a very long tradition in which the civilian versions of service rifles have become standard firearms for hunting, target shooting and lawful self-defense. The Spencer repeating rifles and 1903 Springfield bolt-action followed this path and so did the M1 Garand after World War II. This isn’t unique to America; the military 1898 Mauser quickly became one of the most popular actions for hunting rifles in the world. Today, the AR-15 continues that venerable tradition.

Yet New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the gun-ban lobbies and the multitudinous groups funded by George Soros have kept the AR-15 illegal in some jurisdictions, and they continue to push for a national ban. President Obama ran on a platform in 2008 calling for a national ban, and as a U.S. senator and an Illinois state senator he voted to outlaw the AR-15 and many other guns.

The prohibitionists have convinced tens of millions of people that the AR-15 is some sort of ultra-powerful firearm that is meant to be spray-fired from the hip, for rapidly slaughtering people.

In truth, the AR-15 is at the low end of power among rifles. And when you pull the trigger, it only fires one round.

Yet owning an AR-15 is a serious crime in California, where one of every nine Americans resides. Additionally, north of Pennsylvania, the large majority of Americans live in states where to own an AR-15 is to be guilty of a crime comparable to a violent felony. Disgracefully, the AR-15 is also outlawed in our nation’s capital—a city where constitutional rights ought to be especially secure.
 
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After recent actions from Uncle Sam dealing with France and Germany, not so sure these two would oblige new orders from Obama :rofl:
 
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NO WAY !! In the U.S. AR's outsell AK's by a huge margin. Century Arms is the only U.S. maker of AK-like rifles. There are tons of American AR makers. And Glocks are easily the most popular handgun. I see a little Tula ammo at the range, and the only Wolf I see is the Gold that I shoot, but I ran out. There's more to this article but it has nothing to do with sales and popularity.
Well,
i didn't see much of steel case/bimetal ammo in ranges in cali, now outside cali where there still is some BLM wilderness, where russian ammo shines.
And agreed AR's might outsell Ak's but still price to performance for AK's comes in a good second in terms of sales to and along with century you do have aresnal who do make US made Ak's and then there are bunch of importers like M+M, Krebs, Atlantic, red jacket, inter ordinance etc. making it an extremly attractive package, compounded especially with lower pricepoint compared to AR. Now I know you are an AR guy but AK's aren't small players in the market either, the volume based economy market is significantly larger than the higher end premium market which deals with Scars and Bullpups and high end Ar's although smaller than the entry level and mid range AR market. And then there is the Surplus market...
 
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Well,
i didn't see much of steel case/bimetal ammo in ranges in cali, now outside cali where there still is some BLM wilderness, where russian ammo shines.
And agreed AR's might outsell Ak's but still price to performance for AK's comes in a good second in terms of sales to and along with century you do have aresnal who do make US made Ak's and then there are bunch of importers like M+M, Krebs, Atlantic, red jacket, inter ordinance etc. making it an extremly attractive package, compounded especially with lower pricepoint compared to AR. Now I know you are an AR guy but AK's aren't small players in the market either, the volume based economy market is significantly larger than the higher end premium market which deals with Scars and Bullpups and high end Ar's although smaller than the entry level and mid range AR market. And then there is the Surplus market...

Fwew! I'm running low on my ammo.
 
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