Monday, March 18, 2019
Russia Is Still Paying The Price For Annexing Crimea
Bloomberg: Russia Still Paying Price for Crimea Five Years After Annexation
Half a decade has passed since Vladimir Putin annexed Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula. For Russia, the costs continue to mount.
The accession treaty signed to bring the Black Sea territory into Moscow’s fold is still unrecognized by most countries and the U.S. and European Union led a broad effort to punish Russia with sanctions. Undeterred, Russia has kept integrating Crimea into its economy, investing billions in new power plants and building a giant bridge to the peninsula last year.
Most of the costs Russia has incurred have come from the U.S. and EU penalties, which have piled up every year since the annexation, with new ones added for alleged election meddling and other actions. But the country and its residents -- already suffering from low prices for oil, Russia’s main export -- are also feeling the pain a drop in foreign investment and stagnating incomes. A recent survey suggests the public appeal of the annexation is starting to wear off.
Here are five charts that illustrate the cost of the takeover.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: Even though there has been a price to pay for the annexation of Crimea, support within Russia for Crimea to be a part of the Federation is overwhelmingly in the high ninety percentile range.
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Norway says it proved Russian GPS interference during NATO exercises
It may turn out that the greatest weapon available to ensure peace is the ability to re-direct missile(s). They don't have to be turned around only re-directed to hit a safe area and become neutralized, or, maybe even to hit an ally of the attacker thus becoming even more dangerous to the original attacker. The latter an event that might just turn allies against one another.
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