Monday, May 26, 2025

Russia is unleashing aerial terror against Ukrainian civilians to make it seem like it is winning, experts sayNew Foto - Russia is unleashing aerial terror against Ukrainian civilians to make it seem like it is winning, experts say

Third-grader Stanislav Martynyuk looks extremely proud in his school photograph. Hands folded on his desk; his eyes framed with spectacles that make him look like a serious – and adorable – 8-year-old scholar. It was this image of Stanislav – alongside similar snaps of his sister Tamara, 12, and brother Roman, 17 – that was put on display at a makeshift memorial at their school in Korostyshiv and shared on social media after the three siblings died when a Russian strike hit their home over the weekend. The trio was among at least 14 civilians killed over the weekend in the latest wave of Moscow'sescalating aerial assaultsagainst Ukrainian cities. Analysts say the brutal campaign is part of a deliberate strategy by Russia that is designed to create an impression that it has the upper hand in the conflict, undermine Ukraine's morale and put more pressure on Kyiv's Western allies. Russia first beganintensifying airborne attacksagainst Ukraine last fall, after it successfully scaled up domestic production of its own version of the Iranian-made Shahed drones, its most frequently used drone. But the frequency and scale of these strikes increased again in January, after US President Donald Trump returned to the White House. Five of Russia's biggest drone attacks were all launched since then. Four of the five came over the past 10 days, according to a tally compiled by CNN. Trump has made ending the war in Ukraine one of his priorities – having said during the election campaign that he would bring the conflict to an end within 24 hours of taking office. But despite the promises, Trump seems to have grown increasingly impatient with Moscow and Kyiv. He has been flip-flopping between threatening to punish Russia with more sanctions if it doesn't sign up to a ceasefire proposal and suggesting he could walk away from the issue altogether. Over the weekend, after Russia launched its biggest aerial assault against Ukraine since the start of the war, Trump said on social media that Putin"has gone absolutely CRAZY!"before telling reporters that he was "not happy with what Putin is doing." But Trump also slammed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for suggesting that "America's silence" encourages Putin to continue his onslaught. He said Zelensky does his country disservice because "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop." Analysts at the Institute for the Study of War, a US-based conflict monitor, said that Russia's brutal aerial campaign is part of the strategy to create the illusion that it is winning the war, in an "effort to degrade Ukrainian morale and convince the West that a Russian victory in Ukraine is inevitable and that supporting Ukraine is futile." Putin knows that the only way Russia could win the war in Ukraine any time soon is if Ukraine's Western allies, the United States chief among them, stop supporting Kyiv in its war efforts. Ukraine's European allies have seen an increase in instances ofsabotage, cyber incidents and arson attackslinked to Russia, an attempt by Moscow to put more pressure on Kyiv-friendly governments by trying to show their voters that supporting Kyiv comes with a cost. At the same time, Putin is successfully stalling the ceasefire talks proposed by Trump – while trying to appear cooperative and shift the blame on Kyiv. Instead of refusing Trump's ceasefire proposal straight away, the Russian president has been introducing new demands and blaming Kyiv for not accepting them. When given an ultimatum, Putin ignored it and called for direct talks between Ukraine and Russia – something Trump immediately endorsed, blindsiding Ukraine's other Western allies. Trump has repeatedly indicated he does not want US military assistance to Kyiv to continue as it was. Earlier this year, the US briefly suspended shipments of aid to Ukraine over Trump's disagreement with Zelensky. While the aid has been reinstated, the incident gave a clear indication to Putin that Trump is willing to abandon Ukraine. Trump has also made it clear he believed Ukraine is on the backfoot. He even told Zelensky he had "no cards" during the contentiousOval Office meetingin February, trying to pressure the Ukrainian leader into negotiations. But while Russia does have air superiority over Ukraine, which allows Moscow to terrorize the Ukrainian population on daily basis, it is far from "winning" the war. Leading Russia analyst Mark Galeotti previously told CNN that the situation on the ground in Ukraine is better described as both sides losing. "The thing though is that the Ukrainians are losing faster," he said. When Russia launched its full-scale unprovoked invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Kremlin expected to take over the country within a few days. That has not happened because Ukraine mounted a surprisingly strong defense. And as Western support for Kyiv increased, Ukraine was able to push back and reclaim large swaths of territory that were seized by Russia during the initial invasion. The frontline in Ukraine has not moved in a significant way since Ukrainian forces liberated the southern city of Kherson in November 2023. Russia has advanced in some areas along the frontline, but it has not been able to break through or take over a major city. Yet the consequences of the Russian strikes have been horrifying. At least 209 civilians were killed across Ukraine last month, the deadliest month since September 2024, according to the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine. It was a particularly deadly month for Ukrainian children – the worst since June 2022. On top of 19 who were killed, 78 were injured. May has been equally terrifying for Ukrainian civilians. Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said on Telegram that the weekend's attacks showed once again that Russia's goal is "fear and death." Klymenko said the parents of the three slain Martynyuk children were wounded in the strike, their mother seriously. Roman, the oldest child, was just days away from graduating, the school where all three attended said in a statement. Tamara's teacher, Oleh Hodovaniuk, told CNN Monday was a very difficult day for the school. Signs of the war were all around them. The school windows have been blown out by the pressure wave from the explosions. A memorial point at the school's entrance was flooded with flowers and plush toys. Hodovaniuk said the news shocked the community to its core and some children were so distraught they were unable to come to school and take part in the memorial. "No one coordinated this, but most of the school came wearing black," he said. "Tamara was very well behaved and modest, like all the children in her family." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Russia is unleashing aerial terror against Ukrainian civilians to make it seem like it is winning, experts say

Russia is unleashing aerial terror against Ukrainian civilians to make it seem like it is winning, experts say Third-grader Stanislav Martyn...
11 hospitalized, including 2 kids, after boat explosion in FloridaNew Foto - 11 hospitalized, including 2 kids, after boat explosion in Florida

Nearly a dozen people, including two children, were hospitalized aftera boat explosion and fire in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on Memorial Day evening, officials said. The incident was reported around 5:45 p.m. Monday near the New River Triangle, not far from the Lauderdale Yacht Club on Southeast 12th Court. U.S. Coast Guard officials said there were 13 people on board the boat when there was an explosion. "For reasons that we don't know yet, a boat exploded, it tossed people into the water, good Samaritans came over right away and started rescuing them," Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue spokesman Frank Guzman said. "It's too soon to know how this happened. We have a fire investigator on scene, as well." Footage from a surveillance camera captured the moment the fireball erupted on the boat, and showed multiple people spilling into the water. Guzman confirmed there were 11 patients, including two children, who were initially taken to Broward Health Medical Center. "A number of the patients had significant burns and are being transported to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where they have a burn unit," Guzman said. "A lot of them had burns to much of their body." Officials at Jackson Memorial said they received 10 patients, including eight adults who were in good condition and two children who were in fair condition. One patient had to be intubated. Antonio Rivero said he was with family members on the boat when it went up in flames. "Tried to fuel up the boat, and must have been a gas leak and, you know, spark went off and explosion," Rivero said. "One of the guys' pants were blown off, so it was bad." Rivero, 32, suffered burns to his arm, but his wife, Cassandra, and their two children remained hospitalized Monday night. "They're OK because they're on a lot of meds, but other than that they're fine," he said. At least one witness reported seeing an explosion and said they saw multiple people with burn injuries who were brought to the yacht club docks. The victims had burned legs and bathing suits that appeared ripped and burned to shreds, the witness said. Two other witnesses said they were on a dinghy at the sandbar when the boat exploded. "When they went to start their boat up, it just exploded. There was a huge fireball and people were kind of falling off the boat," Bret Triano said. "We were at the sandbar too and we just tried to go help out." Triano and Marisa Toomesn were able to rescue some of the victims. "There were a couple boats trying to pick people up and one guy just didn't get picked up so we went over to him," Triano said. "He was screaming." "He was burned pretty badly," Toomesn said. "He was saying, 'Save me. Please, don't let me die. I'm so hot, I need water,'" Triano said. "He just kept repeating, 'I want water, I want water.'" Aerial footage from Chopper 6 showed Fort Lauderdale Police, the U.S. Coast Guard, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the Broward Sheriff's Office assisting Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue. Crews were seen examining the boat involved, which was tied up to a nearby sea wall. Guzman said crews also rescued a dog that had been on the boat that wasn't injured. The FWC and fire officials will investigate the cause of the explosion.

11 hospitalized, including 2 kids, after boat explosion in Florida

11 hospitalized, including 2 kids, after boat explosion in Florida Nearly a dozen people, including two children, were hospitalized aftera b...
A former police chief serving time for murder and rape escaped from an Arkansas prison. Here is what we knowNew Foto - A former police chief serving time for murder and rape escaped from an Arkansas prison. Here is what we know

A former small-town police chief in Arkansas escaped from prison Sunday while serving decades-long prison sentences for murder and rape and is still on the loose, officials said. Grant Hardin, 56, escaped from a state prison in northern Arkansas on Sunday afternoon, after he appears to have tried to imitate law enforcement to break out, the state's Department of Corrections said. Multiple agencies across the state, including state police and several sheriff's offices, are coordinating to try to find Hardin. The escape comes after10 inmates escapedfrom a New Orleans jail a little over a week ago. While seven peoplehave been chargedin relation to that escape, it is not immediately clear how Hardin orchestrated his. Here is what we know about the former police chief: Hardin escaped the North Central Unit prison in Calico Rock around 3:40 p.m. Sunday, a news release from the state's Department of Corrections said. It appears at the time of his escape, Hardin was "wearing a makeshift outfit designed to mimic law enforcement," but was not wearing a Department of Corrections uniform, a Sunday night update from the department said. It did not share any other information on how he is thought to have escaped. A surveillance image appears to show Hardin wearing black pants, a black T-shirt and a black baseball cap, as well as an additional item that looks like a bulletproof vest. He appears to be wheeling a cart holding a box and several pieces of wood. Authorities believe he exited through a sally port, a controlled and secure entry point found in places such as prisons, the Stone County Sheriff's office said. Hardin, who's been in prison since 2017, was previously the police chief for the small town of Gateway near the Missouri border, with additional background in law enforcement. He served as a police officer, a police chief and a county constable throughout his career, according toan Investigation Discovery documentaryon the case. (Investigation Discovery, like CNN, is owned by Warner Bros. Discovery.) Hardin has been serving a 30-year sentence for first-degree murder, as well as two 25-year sentences for two counts of rape, according to Arkansas prison records and court documents. He pleaded guilty to first-degree murder for the death of James Appleton, who worked for the City of Gateway's water department, in February 2017, according to court documents. Hardin was accused of stopping and shooting Appleton in the head while driving down a road approximately half a mile from his home, documents show. He pleaded down from a capital murder charge. At the time of his sentencing, Hardin addressed the family of the victim while entering his guilty plea, saying he didn't know how to express it, but that he was sorry,CNN affiliate KHBS reported. Two years later, he also pleaded guilty to two counts of rape after his DNA, which was entered into the Arkansas DNA database following his murder plea, was connected to the 1997 rape of schoolteacher Amy Harrison, court documents show. Harrison was at the school on a Sunday preparing for the week while a church service was being held in the cafeteria, an affidavit said. She used the bathroom in the teacher's lounge, and when she came out, she was attacked by a man pointing a gun at her, the document said. Documents show Hardin was frustrated with his court-appointed attorney following his guilty plea in the murder case, saying he had wanted to withdraw his plea and had a difficult time accessing resources to submit for post-conviction relief, court documents show. The attorney, Shane Wilkinson, told CNN he has been in contact with local law enforcement and hasn't heard from Hardin since his escape. Police have been conducting safety checks on his home and business since the escape, he added. While in prison in 2019, Hardin completed a program on anger management, prison records show. As of 11:30 p.m. local time on Sunday, Hardin still hasn't been located, the Arkansas Department of Corrections said in an updated news release. CNN has reached out to the department and Arkansas State Police for a status on the search. "Officials continue to utilize a variety of means to track Hardin, as well as investigating the events that led up to his escape," the Department of Corrections said Sunday night. "Further updates will be provided as they become available." No updates have been provided since Sunday night. Hardin is 6 feet tall and approximately 259 pounds, prison records show. Authorities have asked anyone who has information on his location to contact local law enforcement immediately. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

A former police chief serving time for murder and rape escaped from an Arkansas prison. Here is what we know

A former police chief serving time for murder and rape escaped from an Arkansas prison. Here is what we know A former small-town police chie...
AP PHOTOS: More than 200 Ukrainian POWs have died in Russian prisons. This is one soldier's storyNew Foto - AP PHOTOS: More than 200 Ukrainian POWs have died in Russian prisons. This is one soldier's story

Kyiv, Ukraine (AP) — "Everything will be all right." Ukrainian soldier Serhii Hryhoriev said this so often during brief phone calls from the front that his wife and two daughters took it to heart. His younger daughter, Oksana, tattooed the phrase on her wrist as a talisman. Even after Hryhoriev was captured by the Russian army in 2022, his anxious family clung to the belief that he would ultimately be OK. After all, Russia is bound by international law to protect prisoners of war. When Hryhoriev finally came home, though, it was in a body bag. A Russian death certificate said the 59-year-old died of a stroke. But a Ukrainian autopsy and a former POW who was detained with him tell a different story about how he died – one of violence and medical neglect at the hands of his captors. Hryhoriev is one of more than 200 Ukrainian POWs who have died while imprisoned sinceRussia's full-scale invasionthree years ago. Abuse insideRussian prisonswas likely a contributing factor in many of these deaths, according to officials from human rights groups, the U.N., the Ukrainian government and a Ukrainian medical examiner who has performed dozens of POW autopsies. - This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

AP PHOTOS: More than 200 Ukrainian POWs have died in Russian prisons. This is one soldier's story

AP PHOTOS: More than 200 Ukrainian POWs have died in Russian prisons. This is one soldier's story Kyiv, Ukraine (AP) — "Everything ...
Jordan Peterson stuns atheist debaters by refusing to identify as Christian in viral exchangeNew Foto - Jordan Peterson stuns atheist debaters by refusing to identify as Christian in viral exchange

Famed Canadian psychologist and speaker Jordan Peterson debated twenty atheists in a video posted Sunday that quickly went viral after Peterson shocked the group by refusing to clarify whether he'sa Christian. The academic appeared on the YouTube channel Jubilee in a video currently titled, "Jordan Peterson vs 20 Atheists" on Sunday. The video was originally titled, "1 Christian vs 20 atheists," accordingto Newsweek. The popular YouTube channel frequently publishes videos where one person debates 20-25 other people who hold a contrary view on politics, religion or other polarizing issues. In the roughly-90-minute video, Peterson debated several atheists on claims about belief in God, Christianity and atheism. About halfway through the video, one debater who said his name was "Danny," pressed Peterson on his understanding of Catholicism, as Peterson reportedly attends a Catholic Church with his wife, whoconverted to Catholicismlast year. Joe Rogan Starts Going To Church As Faith Resurgence Gains Momentum, Christian Apologist Claims When Peterson asked Danny why he was asking him about this, Danny responded, "Because you're a Christian." Read On The Fox News App "You say that. I haven't claimed that,"Peterson replied. His answer drew laughs from the atheists. Danny retorted, "Oh, what is this? Christians versus atheists?" referring to the title of the debate. "I don't know," Peterson responded. "You don't know where you are right now?" Danny mocked, with Peterson chiding his debater to "not be a smart—." "Either you'rea Christianor you're not," Danny said. "Which one is it?" Peterson refused to answer his question, replying, "I could be either of them, but I don't have to tell you. It's private." Country Music Singer John Rich Confronts Jordan Peterson On His Faith Crisis: 'What Terrifies You?' Danny told Peterson he was invited to debate a Christian and that Peterson must be in "the wrong YouTube video." "You're really quite something, aren't you?" Peterson retorted. "Aren't I? But you're really quite nothing, right? You're not a Christian?" Danny scoffed. Peterson ended the debate with Danny at this point. Click Here For More Coverage Of Media And Culture A clip of the exchange has since attracted over 7 million views. The person who posted the clip wrote in the caption, "During a debate titled 'One Christian vs. Twenty Atheists,' Jordan Peterson was pressed to identify himself as a Christian but awkwardly refused.." Peterson did not immediately returnFox News Digital'srequest for comment. Peterson, who wrote a book last year titled, "We Who Wrestle with God: Perceptions of the Divine," has faced questions about his faith journey over the years. During an interview with country music singer John Rich in 2024, Peterson admitted he "loathed" talking about his personal faith beliefs in public because he didn't want it to be a spectacle. Original article source:Jordan Peterson stuns atheist debaters by refusing to identify as Christian in viral exchange

Jordan Peterson stuns atheist debaters by refusing to identify as Christian in viral exchange

Jordan Peterson stuns atheist debaters by refusing to identify as Christian in viral exchange Famed Canadian psychologist and speaker Jordan...

 

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