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re: Latest Updates: Russia-Ukraine Conflict
Posted on 5/20/24 at 5:56 am to Jim Rockford
Posted on 5/20/24 at 5:56 am to Jim Rockford
British Defence Intelligence
INTELLIGENCE UPDATE
UPDATE ON UKRAINE
20 May 2024
Russia is currently experiencing a labour shortage that is becoming a significant problem in some sectors. According to estimates by the independent Russian media outlet Izvestia Russia had a 4.8 million shortage of workers in 2023. As an example, the Russian transport and logistics industry was unable to fill 25% of its truck driver vacancies during 2023.
The labour shortage has at least in part been caused by Russia's war in Ukraine, which has led to mobilisation of parts of the working population and emigration by some skilled professionals seeking to avoid the call-up. More recently, the labour shortage has been exacerbated by restrictions on migrant employment implemented following the 22 March 2024 ISIS-K terrorist incident in Moscow.
As a result of the labour shortages, a group of Russian parliamentarians are looking at possible amendments to the Russian labour code. If enacted, it would mean that excess labour force could be moved under state supervision to a place of work which lacks sufficient labour. The moves will be temporary and workers will only be transferred with their consent. However, although not coercive, it is a potential move towards the mobilisation of labour.
INTELLIGENCE UPDATE
UPDATE ON UKRAINE
20 May 2024
Russia is currently experiencing a labour shortage that is becoming a significant problem in some sectors. According to estimates by the independent Russian media outlet Izvestia Russia had a 4.8 million shortage of workers in 2023. As an example, the Russian transport and logistics industry was unable to fill 25% of its truck driver vacancies during 2023.
The labour shortage has at least in part been caused by Russia's war in Ukraine, which has led to mobilisation of parts of the working population and emigration by some skilled professionals seeking to avoid the call-up. More recently, the labour shortage has been exacerbated by restrictions on migrant employment implemented following the 22 March 2024 ISIS-K terrorist incident in Moscow.
As a result of the labour shortages, a group of Russian parliamentarians are looking at possible amendments to the Russian labour code. If enacted, it would mean that excess labour force could be moved under state supervision to a place of work which lacks sufficient labour. The moves will be temporary and workers will only be transferred with their consent. However, although not coercive, it is a potential move towards the mobilisation of labour.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 6:03 am to Jim Rockford
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quote:
Chairman of the board of Ukrenergo Volodymyr Kudrytskyi said that it will not be possible to completely avoid blackouts yet - the restrictions will continue in summer, autumn and winter.
“Warming has somewhat reduced the level of electricity consumption in Ukraine. And this will probably make it possible not to disconnect consumers during the night and in the morning, as was the case last week," said Kudrytskyi.
LINK
Posted on 5/20/24 at 6:04 am to cypher
quote:
Russia is currently experiencing a labour shortage
Not very good labor at that, but they've been used to being screwed over for eons now, and work ethic reflects this. North Koreans might be looking for jobs
Posted on 5/20/24 at 6:35 am to VolSquatch
He reminds me of this guy.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 7:26 am to AU86
I have been off grid fishing for a few days. Has Kharkiv been liberated? Has Russia started its amphibious assault on Odessa? Seriously has anything significant happened?
This post was edited on 5/20/24 at 7:40 am
Posted on 5/20/24 at 7:59 am to Jim Rockford
quote:
a civil war that stretches across 11 time zones, with access to nuclear weapons. Understandable, but that outcome is unavoidable at this point.
You people are insane
Posted on 5/20/24 at 8:06 am to WeeWee
quote:
I have been off grid fishing for a few days. Has Kharkiv been liberated? Has Russia started its amphibious assault on Odessa? Seriously has anything significant happened?
You get three guesses, but you only need one...
Posted on 5/20/24 at 8:06 am to WeeWee
quote:Putin declared Iran’s dead scumbag President was ‘true friend of Russia’.
I have been off grid fishing for a few days. Has Kharkiv been liberated? Has Russia started its amphibious assault on Odessa? Seriously has anything significant happened?
What kind of fish?
Posted on 5/20/24 at 8:08 am to CitizenK
quote:
work ethic reflects this
Do you actually know any US workers?
I would say, estimating optimistically, about 40% of the US has good work ethic.
There are so many actual reasons why Russia products are piss poor besides your weird need to bash an entire ethnicity. But if I lived in Ukraine right now I guess I'd be mad too.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 8:11 am to Chromdome35
Actually, Ukraine did convert more of the black sea fleet into submersibles.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 8:22 am to Chromdome35
Ukraine working hard to increase the number of artifical reefs in the Black Sea.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 8:56 am to NC_Tigah
quote:
What kind of fish?
Crappie. I caught a few but the main thing was that I got to turn my phone off 4 days.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 9:01 am to bigjoe1
quote:
Ukraine working hard to increase the number of artifical reefs in the Black Sea.
That is good. The wildlife in the Black Sea needs all the help it can get after the environmental damage the Soviet Union caused.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 9:01 am to bigjoe1
Russian propaganda links Kyiv, Washington to Raisi's helicopter crash death
May 20, 2024, 07:45 AM
Russian propagandists are attempting to spin a narrative alleging the involvement of Ukraine and the United States in the accident, following the death of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in the crash of a Mi-171 helicopter on May 19.
However, the guidelines suggest not overdoing it, limiting themselves to hints that allow the audience to draw the "right" conclusions.
For example, RT's Margarita Simonyan drew parallels between Raisi's death, the recent assassination attempt on pro-Kremlin Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, and the assassinations of U.S. President John F. Kennedy (1963) and Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme (1986).
"Sh*t happens. But it happens most reliably with careful professional preparation by the sh*tmasters," she wrote on social media.
Russian State Duma member and Liberal Democratic Party leader Leonid Slutsky extended this conspiracy chain, adding another link.
"A number of May events, including the assassination attempts on the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia and the Prime Minister of Slovakia, are being lined up in a certain chain of 'tragic coincidences.' We cannot rule out any versions here," he said, commenting on the Mi-171 crash.
Simonyan's colleague Yevgeniy Popov called the Russian helicopter one of the "most reliable in the world."
"I would not be surprised at all if the crash was the result of an attack on the Iranian president," he said.
Meanwhile, "political scientist" Sergei Markov alleged that edits to the Wikipedia article on the Iranian president indicate the intelligence services of Ukraine, the United States, and Israel were behind the crash.
The New Voice of Ukraine
May 20, 2024, 07:45 AM
Russian propagandists are attempting to spin a narrative alleging the involvement of Ukraine and the United States in the accident, following the death of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in the crash of a Mi-171 helicopter on May 19.
However, the guidelines suggest not overdoing it, limiting themselves to hints that allow the audience to draw the "right" conclusions.
For example, RT's Margarita Simonyan drew parallels between Raisi's death, the recent assassination attempt on pro-Kremlin Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, and the assassinations of U.S. President John F. Kennedy (1963) and Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme (1986).
"Sh*t happens. But it happens most reliably with careful professional preparation by the sh*tmasters," she wrote on social media.
Russian State Duma member and Liberal Democratic Party leader Leonid Slutsky extended this conspiracy chain, adding another link.
"A number of May events, including the assassination attempts on the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia and the Prime Minister of Slovakia, are being lined up in a certain chain of 'tragic coincidences.' We cannot rule out any versions here," he said, commenting on the Mi-171 crash.
Simonyan's colleague Yevgeniy Popov called the Russian helicopter one of the "most reliable in the world."
"I would not be surprised at all if the crash was the result of an attack on the Iranian president," he said.
Meanwhile, "political scientist" Sergei Markov alleged that edits to the Wikipedia article on the Iranian president indicate the intelligence services of Ukraine, the United States, and Israel were behind the crash.
The New Voice of Ukraine
Posted on 5/20/24 at 9:02 am to cypher
quote:
"I would not be surprised at all if the crash was the result of an attack on the Iranian president," he said
I wouldn't either, but there are a lot of countries with more motive than Ukraine
This post was edited on 5/20/24 at 9:03 am
Posted on 5/20/24 at 9:21 am to cypher
quote:
"Sh*t happens. But it happens most reliably with careful professional preparation by the sh*tmasters," she wrote on social media.
Channeling her inner Jim Lahey.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 9:23 am to VolSquatch
quote:
there are a lot of countries with more motive than Ukraine
And I don't think any of them magiced up a bunch of dense fog
Posted on 5/20/24 at 9:29 am to StormyMcMan
quote:
And I don't think any of them magiced up a bunch of dense fog
Sometimes an accident really is an accident.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 9:56 am to VolSquatch
quote:
Do you actually know any US workers?
I would say, estimating optimistically, about 40% of the US has good work ethic.
There are so many actual reasons why Russia products are piss poor besides your weird need to bash an entire ethnicity. But if I lived in Ukraine right now I guess I'd be mad too.
I have managed projects, albeit environmental and entire plant dismantlement/demolition. What have you ever seen on a store shelf or showroom floor made in Russia? Russia never gave two shiits about its workers. While Australia cares too much and pretty much completely run by unions. Productivity rates in both nations are somewhere less than 10% of the American worker.
Posted on 5/20/24 at 10:01 am to CitizenK
In my younger years, way younger, I've thrown 50 kg rice sacks in cargo holds of ships in the middle of the summer heat. I have shoveled rotten corn and soybean meal which smell worse than any poggy plant to clean a ship (actually ocean going barge) cargo hold. That's for starters.
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