Category: Russian Federation

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Portugal’s President Nominates L. Montenegro for Prime Minister

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    LISBON, May 29 (Xinhua) — Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa on Thursday nominated Luis Montenegro as the country’s prime minister following parliamentary elections and talks with parties represented in the Assembly of the Republic (parliament).

    The official appointment and swearing-in of the new government will take place after the final election results are confirmed and the first session of the new parliament is held.

    After meeting with the President, Carlos Cesar of the Socialist Party and André Ventura of the Chega Party supported the formation of a government led by the Democratic Alliance coalition headed by L. Montenegro. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Azerbaijan triples gold export revenues in January-April 2025

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BAKU, May 29 (Xinhua) — Azerbaijan’s gold exports amounted to $95.4 million in January-April 2025, three times higher than in the same period last year, according to the May issue of the Export Review published by the Center for Analysis of Economic Reforms and Communications on Thursday.

    As noted in the document, the increase compared to the same period in 2024 was $64 million. In April, the volume of gold exports reached $30.2 million, increasing 2.3 times year-on-year.

    Total non-oil exports for the first four months of this year amounted to $1.1 billion, up 18 percent year-on-year. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Chinese Foreign Minister Meets with Asian Peace and Reconciliation Council Chairman

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    HONG KONG, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Thursday met with Chairman of the Asian Peace and Reconciliation Council and former Deputy Prime Minister of Thailand Surakiat Sathienthai, who arrived in Hong Kong to attend the signing ceremony of the Convention Establishing the International Mediation Organization (IMO).

    Wang Yi, also a member of the Politburo of the CPC Central Committee, said China’s initiative to establish the IGO provides the international community with a new option for settling disputes and achieving reconciliation on a voluntary basis. The Chinese Foreign Minister called it a real step toward implementing the principles of multilateralism and adhering to the spirit of the UN Charter.

    China is willing to work with Asian countries to make good use of regional mechanisms including China-ASEAN, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the Lancang-Mekong cooperation and the Asia Cooperation Dialogue to jointly safeguard the hard-won peace and stability in the region, Wang said.

    Surakiat Sathienthai, for his part, said that he was honored to be invited to Hong Kong to witness the birth of the International Mediation Organization. He emphasized that in the current international situation, the Chinese initiative is very timely.

    Surakiat Sathientai added that the Asian Peace and Reconciliation Council looks forward to strengthening cooperation with the Chinese side to make greater contributions to peace and development in Asia. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Putin claims to share values of dignity and peace, yet continues to violate them: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Putin claims to share values of dignity and peace, yet continues to violate them: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki, UK Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on Ukraine.

    Colleagues, we convene today to address the situation in Ukraine, as we collectively mourn the lives lost due to Russia’s recent attacks.

    This weekend saw two of the largest mass air attacks of the war, back-to-back. 

    Over three days, Russia launched over 900 drones and missiles at Ukrainian cities, reportedly resulting in the deaths of 30 people and injuring a further 150. 

    And these deaths were not an accident. Russia’s missile and drone strikes struck major urban centres and densely populated regions. 

    Over the night of 24 May, among those killed were three children, specifically, three siblings: Stanislav, aged 8, Tamara, aged 12, and Roman, aged 17. Each of them on the edge of a new chapter of childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood, all of them robbed of life too soon. 

    Such acts are a stark reminder of the urgent need to bring this war to an end.  

    Russia’s attacks are not only sustained, they are worsening. As OHCHR has verified, in the first three months of this year alone, there have been 2,641 civilian casualties. That’s nearly 900 more than during the same period in 2024, and over 600 more than early 2023.  

    The increased killing of civilians is an affront to our shared values of human dignity and peace.  

    Values which President Putin claims to share, yet continues to violate. 

    Putin’s priorities are demonstrated by his timing. These attacks were launched days after talks in Istanbul, in which Russia, yet again, refused to agree to an unconditional ceasefire. 

    Presented with another opportunity for meaningful progress towards peace, Putin chose war. 

    President, while Ukraine stands ready for an unconditional ceasefire, Russia sustains its aggression. And once again, innocent civilians are paying the price. Russia’s actions speak much louder than its words.  

    So we call on Russia to comply with international law, including the UN Charter, and to stop the killing of innocent civilians. 

    Russia’s unrelenting invasion of its sovereign neighbour will only redouble our resolve to help Ukraine defend itself and to use the necessary measures to restrict Putin’s war machine. 

    We will work in unison with the US, Ukraine, our European and international partners until a just and lasting peace is no longer an aim, but an enduring reality.

    Updates to this page

    Published 29 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Microchip Technology Raises Financial Guidance for Sales and EPS for First Quarter of Fiscal Year 2026

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHANDLER, Ariz., May 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Microchip Technology Incorporated, a leading provider of smart, connected, and secure embedded control solutions, today updated the range of its prior guidance for net Sales and GAAP and non-GAAP earnings per share for its fiscal first quarter of 2026 ending June 30, 2025. Microchip now expects consolidated net sales for the June quarter to be between $1.045 billion and $1.070 billion. Microchip previously provided guidance on May 8, 2025 of consolidated net sales to be between $1.025 billion and $1.070 billion. GAAP loss per share is now expected to be between $(0.11) and $(0.07), and non-GAAP earnings per share is now expected to be between $0.22 and $0.26. The original guidance for the GAAP loss per share was $(0.15) and $(0.07), and the original guidance for non-GAAP earnings per share was between $0.18 and $0.26.

    Steve Sanghi, Microchip’s CEO and President, commented, “With almost two months of the quarter behind us, our business is performing better than we expected at the time of our May 8, 2025 earnings conference call. Our bookings activity for the month of May is tracking to be higher than any month in the last two years. We are gaining confidence in the recovery of our business as we execute on our strategic initiatives, reduce inventory levels and make progress towards our long-term business model.”

    There will be no conference call associated with this press release. Microchip is attending the Stifel 2025 Cross Border 1×1 Conference and the B of A Securities Global Technology Conference on Wednesday June 3, 2025. A live webcast and replays from the B of A Conference will be available at www.microchip.com

    Cautionary Statement:

    The statements in this release relating to expecting consolidated net sales for the June quarter to be between $1.045 billion and $1.070 billion, GAAP loss per share to be between $(0.11) and $(0.07), non GAAP earnings per share to be between $0.22 and $0.26, that our business is performing better than we expected, that our bookings activity for the month of May is tracking to be higher than any month in the last two years, that we are gaining confidence in the recovery of our business as we execute on our strategic initiatives, reduce inventory levels and make progress towards our long-term business model are forward-looking statements made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially, including, but not limited to: any continued uncertainty, fluctuations or weakness in the U.S. and world economies (including China and Europe) due to changes in the scope and level of tariffs, interest rates or high inflation, actions taken or which may be taken by the Trump administration or the U.S. Congress (including budget and tax legislation), monetary policy, political, geopolitical, trade or other issues in the U.S. or internationally (including the military conflicts in Ukraine-Russia and the Middle East), further changes in demand or market acceptance of our products and the products of our customers and our ability to respond to any increases or decreases in market demand or customer requests to reschedule or cancel orders; the mix of inventory we hold, our ability to satisfy any short-term orders from our inventory and our ability to effectively manage our inventory levels; foreign currency effects on our business; changes in utilization of our manufacturing capacity and our ability to effectively manage our production levels to meet any increases or decreases in market demand or any customer requests to reschedule or cancel orders; the impact of inflation on our business; competitive developments including pricing pressures; the level of orders that are received and can be shipped in a quarter; our ability to realize the expected benefits of our long-term supply assurance program; changes or fluctuations in customer order patterns and seasonality; our ability to effectively manage our supply of wafers from third party wafer foundries to meet any decreases or increases in our needs and the cost of such wafers, our ability to obtain additional capacity from our suppliers to increase production to meet any future increases in market demand; our ability to successfully integrate the operations and employees, retain key employees and customers and otherwise realize the expected synergies and benefits of our acquisitions; the impact of any future significant acquisitions or strategic transactions we may make; the costs and outcome of any current or future litigation or other matters involving our acquisitions (including the acquired business, intellectual property, customers, or other issues); the costs and outcome of any current or future tax audit or investigation regarding our business or our acquired businesses; the impact that the CHIPS Act will have on increasing manufacturing capacity in our industry by providing incentives for us, our competitors and foundries to build new wafer manufacturing facilities or expand existing facilities; the amount and timing of any incentives we may receive under the CHIPS Act, the impact of current and future changes in U.S. corporate tax laws (including the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 and the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017); fluctuations in our stock price and trading volume which could impact the number of shares we acquire under our share repurchase program and the timing of such repurchases; disruptions in our business or the businesses of our customers or suppliers due to natural disasters (including any floods in Thailand), terrorist activity, armed conflict, war, worldwide oil prices and supply, public health concerns or disruptions in the transportation system; and general economic, industry or political conditions in the United States or internationally.

    For a detailed discussion of these and other risk factors, please refer to Microchip’s filings on Forms 10-K and 10-Q. You can obtain copies of Forms 10-K and 10-Q and other relevant documents for free at Microchip’s website (www.microchip.com) or the SEC’s website (www.sec.gov) or from commercial document retrieval services.

    Stockholders of Microchip are cautioned not to place undue reliance on our forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date such statements are made. Microchip does not undertake any obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statements to reflect events, circumstances or new information after this May 8, 2025 press release, or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.

    About Microchip:

    Microchip Technology Incorporated is a leading provider of smart, connected and secure embedded control solutions. Its easy-to-use development tools and comprehensive product portfolio enable customers to create optimal designs, which reduce risk while lowering total system cost and time to market. Our solutions serve approximately 109,000 customers across the industrial, automotive, consumer, aerospace and defense, communications and computing markets. Headquartered in Chandler, Arizona, Microchip offers outstanding technical support along with dependable delivery and quality. For more information, visit the Microchip website at www.microchip.com.

    Note: The Microchip name and logo are registered trademarks of Microchip Technology Incorporated in the U.S.A. and other countries. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective companies.

    INVESTOR RELATIONS CONTACT:
    Sajid Daudi — Head of Investor Relations….. (480) 792-7385

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The 6th Taiwan Strait Media Workers Summit was held in Beijing

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — The 6th Cross-Strait Media Summit was held in the Chinese capital on Thursday, bringing together nearly 150 media executives, scholars and representatives from the mainland and Taiwan.

    As Fu Hua, director general of Xinhua News Agency, noted at the summit, the media serves as an important bridge for disseminating information, strengthening mutual understanding and enhancing emotional interaction between the two banks.

    Fu Hua called on media workers on both banks to jointly strengthen people-to-people ties, maintain confidence in their own culture to preserve the common heritage, and shoulder the honorable responsibility of national rejuvenation.

    He expressed hope that media workers on both sides of the strait will continue to contribute to the peaceful development of cross-strait relations.

    Wu Xi, vice director of the CPC Central Committee Office for Taiwan Affairs and the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, said that media on both sides of the strait should play a more active role in returning cross-strait relations to the right track, promote spiritual rapprochement between compatriots, and jointly respond to technological changes and the transformation of the media landscape.

    Taiwanese representatives, including Want Want China Vice Chairman Zhou Siwei and Eastern Multimedia Group CEO Wang Linglin, called for strengthening exchanges and cooperation, staying on course amid changes and challenges to move toward a brighter future.

    The summit, co-hosted by Xinhua and Beijing Daily, launched a mentoring program for young media workers from both sides of the Taiwan Strait and unveiled a joint initiative for cross-strait media cooperation for the next decade. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China’s Vice Premier Calls for Consolidation of Achievements in Poverty Alleviation

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chinese Vice Premier Liu Guozhong on Thursday called for relentlessly consolidating and expanding China’s achievements in poverty alleviation and ensuring a smooth transition to providing aid to rural areas on a regular basis.

    During the thematic meeting, Liu Guozhong, also a member of the Politburo of the CPC Central Committee, noted that continuous efforts must be made to prevent a large-scale return to poverty or its re-emergence.

    Having announced that absolute poverty will be eradicated in 2021, China has set a five-year transition period to consolidate and build on the achievements of poverty alleviation and integrate these achievements into the process of rural revitalization.

    Recalling that this year is the final year of this transition period, Liu Guozhong called for measures to optimize the monitoring and assistance system, ensure stable employment for people who have been lifted out of poverty, improve the quality and efficiency of supporting industries, and improve the mechanisms for long-term asset management of assistance projects.

    The Vice Premier stressed the need to deepen cooperation between the eastern and western regions of the country and targeted assistance, calling for active work to provide regular assistance to low-income rural residents and underdeveloped areas in the post-transition period.

    During the meeting, eight provincial-level regions in eastern China signed aid agreements for 2025 with 10 provincial-level regions in the west. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Head of Political and Legal Affairs Commission of CPC Central Committee Participates in Series of Meetings in Russia

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Moscow, May 29 /Xinhua/ — Chen Wenqing, a member of the Politburo of the CPC Central Committee and head of the Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, attended and delivered a speech at the 13th International Meeting of High Representatives in Charge of Security Issues held in Russia on May 28.

    Representatives from 126 countries and international organizations attended the meeting.

    Chen Wenqing recalled that Chinese President Xi Jinping put forward the Global Security Initiative, holding high the banner of cooperation, innovation, rule of law and win-win, and providing important guidance for unifying efforts to safeguard global security.

    The head of the Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee noted that China is ready to work with the international community to adhere to the concept of common, comprehensive, joint and sustainable security, jointly respond to various risks and challenges, and jointly build a world of universal security.

    In addition, Chen Wenqing attended the meeting of the heads of delegations of the BRICS countries and the meeting of the heads of delegations of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization member states, and held bilateral meetings with the heads of some of these delegations. The two sides reached consensus on strengthening international security cooperation and improving global security governance.

    In addition, on May 27, Chen Wenqing and Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu co-chaired the 10th meeting of the China-Russia cooperation mechanism in law enforcement and security.

    Chen Wenqing pointed out that in early May, Chinese President Xi Jinping held a successful meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, outlining new development horizons for the next stage of Chinese-Russian relations.

    China is ready to work with Russia to implement the important consensus reached by the heads of state of the two countries, improve the quality of cooperation in law enforcement and security, give a powerful impetus to the development, rise and modernization of the two countries, actively implement the Global Security Initiative, and make a positive contribution to global strategic stability and the democratization of international relations, Chen Wenqing emphasized.

    S. Shoigu, for his part, noted that the state visit of Chairman Xi Jinping to Russia and his participation in the celebrations of the 80th anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War were of great bilateral and multilateral significance. He added that Russia is ready to work with China to increase the level of cooperation in law enforcement and security, effectively protect the fundamental interests of the two countries and bring stability to the world. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: RBB Bancorp Announces $18 Million Stock Repurchase Plan

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES, May 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — RBB Bancorp (NASDAQ: RBB) and its subsidiaries, Royal Business Bank (“the Bank”) and RBB Asset Management Company (“RAM”), collectively referred to herein as “the Company”, announced that its Board of Directors authorized a stock repurchase plan providing for the repurchase of up to $18 million of the Company’s outstanding common stock through June 30, 2026.

    The repurchase plan permits shares to be purchased in open market or private transactions, through block trades, and pursuant to any trading plan that may be adopted in accordance with Rules 10b5-1 and 10b-18 of the Securities and Exchange Commission. The authorized repurchase plan may be suspended, terminated or modified at any time for any reason, including market conditions, the cost of repurchasing shares, the availability of alternative investment opportunities, liquidity, and other factors deemed appropriate. These factors may also affect the timing and amount of share repurchases. The repurchase plan does not obligate the Company to purchase any particular number of shares.

    Corporate Overview

    RBB Bancorp is a community-based financial holding company headquartered in Los Angeles, California. As of March 31, 2025, the Company had total assets of $4.0 billion. Its wholly-owned subsidiary, Royal Business Bank, is a full service commercial bank, which provides consumer and business banking services predominately to Asian-centric communities through 24 full-service branches across 6 states including California, Nevada, New York, New Jersey, Illinois, and Hawaii. Bank services include remote deposit, E-banking, mobile banking, commercial and investor real estate loans, business loans and lines of credit, commercial and industrial loans, SBA 7A and 504 loans, 1-4 single family residential loans, trade finance, a full range of depository account products and wealth management services. The Bank has nine branches in Los Angeles County, two branches in Ventura County, one branch in Orange County, California, one branch in Las Vegas, Nevada, three branches and one loan operation center in Brooklyn, three branches in Queens, one branch in Manhattan in New York, one branch in Edison, New Jersey, two branches in Chicago, Illinois, and one branch in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Company’s administrative and lending center is located at 1055 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, California 90017, and its operations center is located at 7025 Orangethorpe Ave., Buena Park, California 90621. The Company’s website address is www.royalbusinessbankusa.com.

    Safe Harbor

    Certain matters set forth herein (including the exhibits hereto) constitute forward-looking statements relating to the Company’s current business plans and expectations and our future financial position and operating results. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results, performance and/or achievements to differ materially from those projected. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures; the potential for additional material weaknesses in the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting or other potential control deficiencies of which the Company is not currently aware or which have not been detected; business and economic conditions generally and in the financial services industry, nationally and within our current and future geographic markets, including the tight labor market, ineffective management of the United States (“U.S.”) federal budget or debt or turbulence or uncertainly in domestic or foreign financial markets; the strength of the U.S. economy in general and the strength of the local economies in which we conduct operations; adverse developments in the banking industry highlighted by high-profile bank failures and the potential impact of such developments on customer confidence, liquidity and regulatory responses to these developments; possible additional provisions for credit losses and charge-offs; credit risks of lending activities and deterioration in asset or credit quality; extensive laws and regulations and supervision that we are subject to, including potential supervisory action by bank supervisory authorities; compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act and other money laundering statutes and regulations; potential goodwill impairment; liquidity risk; failure to comply with debt covenants; fluctuations in interest rates; risks associated with acquisitions and the expansion of our business into new markets; inflation and deflation; real estate market conditions and the value of real estate collateral; the effects of having concentrations in our loan portfolio, including commercial real estate and the risks of geographic and industry concentrations; environmental liabilities; our ability to compete with larger competitors; our ability to retain key personnel; successful management of reputational risk; severe weather, natural disasters, earthquakes, fires, including direct and indirect costs and impacts on clients, the Company and its employees from the January 2025 Los Angeles County wildfires; geopolitical conditions, including acts or threats of terrorism, actions taken by the U.S. or other governments in response to acts or threats of terrorism and/or military conflicts, including the conflicts between Russia and Ukraine, in the Middle East, and increasing tensions between China and Taiwan, which could impact business and economic conditions in the U.S. and abroad; tariffs, trade policies, and related tensions, which could impact our clients, specific industry sectors, and/or broader economic conditions and financial market; public health crises and pandemics, and their effects on the economic and business environments in which we operate, including our credit quality and business operations, as well as the impact on general economic and financial market conditions; general economic or business conditions in Asia, and other regions where the Bank has operations; failures, interruptions, or security breaches of our information systems; climate change, including any enhanced regulatory, compliance, credit and reputational risks and costs; cybersecurity threats and the cost of defending against them; our ability to adapt our systems to the expanding use of technology in banking; risk management processes and strategies; the impact of regulatory enforcement actions, if any; certain provisions in our charter and bylaws that may affect acquisition of the Company; changes in tax laws and regulations; the impact of governmental efforts to restructure the U.S. financial regulatory system and increased costs of compliance and other risks associated with changes in regulation, including any amendments to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act; the impact of changes in the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) insurance assessment rate and the rules and regulations related to the calculation of the FDIC insurance assessments; the effect of changes in accounting policies and practices or accounting standards, as may be adopted from time-to-time by bank regulatory agencies, the SEC, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, the Financial Accounting Standards Board or other accounting standards setters; fluctuations in the Company’s stock price; restrictions on dividends and other distributions by laws and regulations and by our regulators and our capital structure; our ability to raise additional capital, if needed, and the potential resulting dilution of interests of holders of our common stock; the soundness of other financial institutions; our ongoing relations with our various federal and state regulators, including the SEC, FDIC, FRB and California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation; our success at managing the risks involved in the foregoing items and all other factors set forth in the Company’s public reports, including its Annual Report as filed under Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, and particularly the discussion of risk factors within that document. The Company does not undertake, and specifically disclaims any obligation, to update any forward-looking statements to reflect occurrences or unanticipated events or circumstances after the date of such statements except as required by law. Any statements about future operating results, such as those concerning accretion and dilution to the Company’s earnings or shareholders, are for illustrative purposes only, are not forecasts, and actual results may differ.

    Contact:
    Lynn Hopkins
    Chief Financial Officer
    (213) 716-8066

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Security: Russian National and Leader of Qakbot Malware Conspiracy Indicted in Long-Running Global Ransomware Scheme

    Source: US FBI

    LOS ANGELES – A federal grand jury indictment unsealed today charges a Russian national with leading a group of cyber criminals that developed and deployed the Qakbot malware that infected thousands of computers worldwide, installing ransomware and demanding payment from victims.

    Rustam Rafailevich Gallyamov, 48, of Moscow, Russia, is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit computer fraud and abuse, and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. He is believed to be in Russia and is not in custody.

    In connection with the charges, the Justice Department filed today a civil forfeiture complaint against more than $24 million in cryptocurrency seized from Gallyamov over the course of the investigation. These actions are the latest step in an ongoing multinational effort by the United States, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, the United Kingdom, and Canada to combat cybercrime.

    “The criminal charges and forfeiture case announced today are part of an ongoing effort with our domestic and international law enforcement partners to identify, disrupt, and hold accountable cybercriminals,” said United States Attorney Bill Essayli for the Central District of California. “The forfeiture action against more than $24 million in virtual assets also demonstrates the Justice Department’s commitment to seizing ill-gotten assets from criminals in order to ultimately compensate victims.”

    “Today’s announcement of the Justice Department’s latest actions to counter the Qakbot malware scheme sends a clear message to the cybercrime community,” said Matthew R. Galeotti, Head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “We will not stop holding cybercriminals accountable, even over a course of years, and we will use every legal tool at our disposal to identify you, charge you, forfeit your ill-gotten gains, and disrupt your criminal activity.”

    “Mr. Gallyamov’s bot network was crippled by the talented men and women of the FBI and our international partners in 2023, but he brazenly continued to deploy alternative methods to make his malware available to criminal cyber gangs conducting ransomware attacks against innocent victims globally,” said Akil Davis, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “The charges announced today exemplify the FBI’s commitment to relentlessly hold accountable individuals who target Americans and demand ransom, even when they live halfway across the world.”

    According to the indictment, Gallyamov developed, deployed, and controlled the Qakbot malware beginning in 2008. From 2019 onward, Gallyamov allegedly used the Qakbot botnet to infect thousands of victim computers around the world to establish a network or “botnet” of infected computers. Once Gallyamov gained access to victim computers, he provided access to co-conspirators who infected the computers with ransomware, including Prolock, Dopplepaymer, Egregor, REvil, Conti, Name Locker, Black Basta, and Cactus. Gallyamov was paid a portion of the ransoms received from ransomware victims.

    The announcement of charges today is the latest step taken by the Justice Department against the Qakbot conspiracy. In August 2023, a U.S.-led multinational operation disrupted the Qakbot botnet and malware. At that time, the Justice Department announced the seizure of illicit proceeds from Gallyamov, including more than 170 bitcoin and more than $4 million of USDT and USDC tokens.

    According to the indictment, after the disruption and takedown of the Qakbot botnet, Gallyamov and his co-conspirators continued their criminal activities. Instead of a botnet, they allegedly used different tactics, including “spam bomb” attacks on victim companies, where co-conspirators would trick employees at those victim companies into granting access to computer systems. The indictment alleges that Gallyamov orchestrated spam bomb attacks against victims in the United States as recently as January 2025. It also alleges that Gallyamov and his co-conspirators deployed Black Basta and Cactus ransomware on victim computers.

    On April 25, pursuant to a seizure warrant, the FBI seized additional illicit proceeds from Gallyamov, including more than 30 bitcoin and more than $700,000 of USDT tokens. Today, the Department filed a civil forfeiture complaint in the Central District of California against all the illicit proceeds seized from Gallyamov – worth more than $24 million as of today – to forfeit and ultimately return those funds to victims.

    An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    If convicted, Gallyamov would face a statutory maximum sentence of 25 years in federal prison.

    The investigation of Gallyamov was led by the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office, which worked closely with investigators from Germany’s Bundeskriminalamt (BKA), the Netherlands National Police, the French Police Cybercrime Central Bureau, and Europol. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs and the FBI Milwaukee Field Office provided significant assistance.

    The case against Gallyamov is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Khaldoun Shobaki and Lauren Restrepo of the Cyber and Intellectual Property Crimes Section, and the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS) Senior Counsel Jessica Peck. Assistant United States Attorney James Dochterman of the Asset Forfeiture and Recovery Section is prosecuting the forfeiture case.

    These law enforcement actions were taken in conjunction with Operation Endgame, an ongoing, coordinated effort among international law enforcement agencies aimed at dismantling and prosecuting cybercriminal organizations around the world.

    Resources for victims can be found on the following website, which will be updated as additional information becomes available: Qakbot Resources.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Sixteen Defendants Federally Charged in Connection with DanaBot Malware Scheme That Infected Computers Worldwide

    Source: US FBI

    LOS ANGELES – A federal grand jury indictment and criminal complaint unsealed today charge 16 defendants who allegedly developed and deployed the DanaBot malware which a Russia-based cybercrime organization controlled and deployed, infecting more than 300,000 victim computers around the world, facilitated fraud and ransomware, and caused at least $50 million in damage.

    The defendants include Aleksandr Stepanov, 39, a.k.a. “JimmBee,” and Artem Aleksandrovich Kalinkin, 34, a.k.a. “Onix”, both of Novosibirsk, Russia. Stepanov was charged with conspiracy, conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud, aggravated identity theft, unauthorized access to a protected computer to obtain information, unauthorized impairment of a protected computer, wiretapping, and use of an intercepted communication.

    Kalinkin was charged with conspiracy to gain unauthorized access to a computer to obtain information, to gain unauthorized access to a computer to defraud, and to commit unauthorized impairment of a protected computer. Both defendants are believed to be in Russia and are not in custody.

    According to the indictment and complaint, DanaBot malware used a variety of methods to infect victim computers, including spam email messages containing malicious attachments or hyperlinks. Victim computers infected with DanaBot malware became part of a botnet (a network of compromised computers), enabling the operators and users of the botnet to remotely control the infected computers in a coordinated manner. The owners and operators of the victim computers are typically unaware of the infection.

    The DanaBot malware allegedly operated on a malware-as-a-service model, with the administrators leasing access to the botnet and support tools to client coconspirators for a fee that was typically several thousand dollars a month. The DanaBot malware was multi-featured and had extensive capabilities to exploit victim computers. It could be used to steal data from victim computers, and to hijack banking sessions, steal device information, user browsing histories, stored account credentials, and virtual currency wallet information.

    DanaBot also had the capability to provide full remote access to victim computers, to record keystrokes, and record videos showing the activity of users on victim computers. DanaBot has further been used as an initial means of infection for other forms of malware, including ransomware. The DanaBot malware has infected over 300,000 computers around the world, and caused damage estimated to exceed $50 million.

    DanaBot administrators operated a second version of the botnet that was used to target victim computers in military, diplomatic, government, and related entities. This version of the botnet recorded all interactions with the computer and sent stolen data to a different server than the fraud-oriented version of DanaBot. This variant was allegedly used to target diplomats, law enforcement personnel, and members of the military in North America, and Europe.

    “Pervasive malware like DanaBot harms hundreds of thousands of victims around the world, including sensitive military, diplomatic, and government entities, and causes many millions of dollars in losses,” said United States Attorney Bill Essayli for the Central District of California. “The charges and actions announced today demonstrate our commitment to eradicating the largest threats to global cybersecurity and pursuing the most malicious cyber actors, wherever they are located.”   

    “The enforcement actions announced today, made possible by enduring law enforcement and industry partnerships across the globe, disrupted a significant cyber threat group, who were profiting from the theft of victim data and the targeting of sensitive networks,” said Special Agent in Charge Kenneth DeChellis of the Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS), Cyber Field Office. “The DanaBot malware was a clear threat to the Department of Defense and our partners. DCIS will vigorously defend our infrastructure, personnel, and intellectual property.”

    “Today’s announcement represents a significant step forward in the FBI’s ongoing efforts to disrupt and dismantle the cyber-criminal ecosystem that wreaks havoc on global digital security,” said Special Agent in Charge Rebecca Day of the FBI Anchorage Field Office. “We are grateful for the coordinated efforts of our domestic and international law enforcement partners in holding cyber criminals accountable, no matter where they operate.”

    An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    If convicted, Kalinkin would face a statutory maximum sentence of 72 years in federal prison, and Stepanov would face a statutory maximum sentence of five years in federal prison.

    As part of today’s operation, Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS) agents effected seizures and takedowns of DanaBot command and control servers, including dozens of virtual servers hosted in the United States. The U.S. government is now working with partners including the Shadowserver Foundation to notify DanaBot victims and help remediate infections.

    These law enforcement actions were taken in conjunction with Operation Endgame, an ongoing, coordinated effort among international law enforcement agencies aimed at dismantling and prosecuting cybercriminal organizations around the world.

    Amazon, Crowdstrike, ESET, Flashpoint, Google, Intel 471, Lumen, PayPal, Proofpoint, Spycloud, Team CYMRU, and ZScaler provided valuable assistance.

    The investigation into DanaBot was led by the FBI’s Anchorage Field Office and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, working closely with Germany’s Bundeskriminalamt (BKA), the Netherlands National Police, and the Australian Federal Police. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs provided significant assistance.

    Assistant United States Attorney Aaron Frumkin of the Cyber and Intellectual Property Crimes Section is prosecuting these cases. Assistant United States Attorney James E. Dochterman of the Asset Forfeiture and Recovery Section is handling the forfeiture case.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: The debate over genocide claims in relation to Gaza intensifies

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Jonathan Este, Senior International Affairs Editor, Associate Editor

    In the past few days, discussion around whether Israel is committing acts of genocide in Gaza has intensified. On May 28 The Guardian reported that “380 writers and groups” had signed an open letter calling Israel’s military campaign in Gaza “genocide”. The letter reads, in part:

    The use of the words ‘genocide’ or ‘acts of genocide’ to describe what is happening in Gaza is no longer debated by international legal experts or human rights organizations.

    This followed news of a letter to the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, signed by more than 800 lawyers, including former supreme court justices, calling on the prime minister to impose sanctions on the Israeli government.

    “There is mounting evidence of genocide, which is either being perpetrated or at a minimum at serious risk of occurring,” the letter stated, adding that a recent statement from Israel’s finance minister Belazel Smotrich that the Israel Defense Forces would “wipe out” what remains of Palestinian Gaza was an indication of genocidal intent.

    One of the signatories was Professor Guy Goodwin-Gill, a senior research fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, who has a track record of expertise in international humanitarian law. The Conversation spoke with him to discuss the issue. He said:

    There is no doubt in my mind that war crimes have been committed and although genocide is basically an extreme form of war crime, it can be notoriously difficult to establish intent to destroy a people, in part or in whole.

    The task of proving genocide is hard enough, but [in this case] the evidence can be gathered from the facts on the ground – they speak for themselves. And intent can be inferred from what politicians and officials actually say, especially when it is not denied or qualified.


    Sign up to receive our weekly World Affairs Briefing newsletter from The Conversation UK. Every Thursday we’ll bring you expert analysis of the big stories in international relations.


    But he said he had “reservations about whether, at an inter-state level, a charge of genocide would be levelled against Israel by more than a few states. And if it succeeded, the legal and political consequences.”

    But individual prosecutions for war crimes and genocide are “always a distinct possibility,” he added.

    In fact, the crime of genocide has only been recognised on a handful of occasions since it was first established in 1948. James Sweeney, an expert in international law from Lancaster University has written a brief history of genocide.




    Read more:
    Why have so few atrocities ever been recognised as genocide?


    Meanwhile, in the West Bank city of Jenin, IDF forces sparked international outrage when they fired “warning shots” closer to a group of 25 diplomats on a fact-finding visit in the wake of an Israeli military offensive there.

    Andrew Forde, an expert in international humanitarian law at Dublin City University, considers that this act “crossed the Rubicon”, which is the convention, universally accepted over millennia, of the inviolability of diplomats and their staff. It’s a clear breach, he writes of article 29 of the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations, to which Israel is a signatory, which states that the host state “shall take all appropriate steps to prevent any attack on [their] person, freedom or dignity”.

    Israel responded by offering an apology, but claimed that the diplomats in question had “deviated from the approved route” by entering a restricted area”.

    The incident forced the group of diplomats to scramble for cover and hindered their work in Jenin, Forde writes. As such it is a flagrant breach of Israel’s duty of care. And it sets a dangerous precedent: “Diplomatic protections work effectively when they are reciprocal. Without trust, the system quickly unravels.”




    Read more:
    IDF firing ‘warning shots’ near diplomats sets an unacceptable precedent in international relations


    Israel’s campaign in Gaza is a factor in a hugely complex situation being played out at present in the Middle East, which is straining the relationship between Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump. The US president is talking up the idea of signing a new nuclear deal with Iran to replace the one he withdrew from in 2018. The Israeli prime minister is bitterly opposed to an US-Iran deal and has proposed launching strikes against Iran’s nuclear installations. The pair reportedly clashed over the issue in a phone call this week.

    But Trump recently returned from a trip to the Gulf States, none of which want the sort of regional conflagration that Israeli strikes on Iran could cause. And, as Scott Lucas of University College Dublin writes, he is also very keen to burnish his credentials as a dealmaker, especially in light of his failure to bring the Ukraine war to a close within 24 hours and the failure of the ceasefire in Gaza for which he has claimed much of the credit.

    As Lucas writes, “even as Trump does what he wants over Iran to Netanyahu’s chagrin, the Israeli prime minister is finding that Trump is not restricting what he does closer to home in Gaza”.




    Read more:
    Why are the US and Israel not on the same page over how to deal with Iran? Expert Q&A


    Ukraine: as the US falters, Germany steps up

    Volodymr Zelensky flew to Berlin this week where he met the German chancellor Friedrich Merz, who said Germany would work with Ukraine to develop long-range missiles to attack targets inside Russia. It’s part of an overall plan to expand Germany’s military into the “strongest conventional army in Europe”.

    Stefan Wolff believes Germany’s decision to step up both its military capabilities and its support for Ukraine is highly significant when considered in the context of Donald Trump’s recent threats to abandon his efforts to broker a peace deal between Moscow and Kyiv.

    Wolff, an expert in international security from the University of Birmingham, who has written regularly for The Conversation about the war in Ukraine, says here that “Berlin has the financial muscle and the technological and industrial potential to make Europe more of a peer to the US when it comes to defence spending and burden sharing.” Given the US decision to downscale its security presence in Europe, this could be of enormous consequence for Nato, he writes.




    Read more:
    Germany steps up to replace ‘unreliable’ US as guarantor of European security


    This is also an important development coming, as it does, just a few weeks before Nato’s summit in The Hague on June 24-25. As Amelia Hadfield writes, most of Nato’s members will be only too aware of Trump’s disparagement of Nato and many of its members in recent times and will be considering the potential for a future without US leadership.

    Hadfield, the head of the department of politics at the University of Surrey, notes the irony of Washington calling on the European Nato members to pay more for their own defence. Over much of the lifetime of the alliance, she writes, the US has actively discouraged European defence autonomy. Now, she says, the focus of Nato’s 31 other members must be to prepare for the likelihood that the US plans to at least significantly reduce its support for the alliance in Europe. “A clear mandate is needed, to ensure that being US-less does not render Nato itself useless,” she writes.

    This is already starting to happen, as countries join the “coalition of the willing” spearheaded by Britain and France. But Hadfield believes that boosting European capabilities within Nato is the most sensible way forward and should be the focus of next month’s summit.




    Read more:
    Nato faces a make-or-break decision about how to protect Europe and its future in next few weeks


    A lesson from history

    Donald Trump’s on again off-again relationship with Vladimir Putin is confusing enough for casual followers of world affairs. It must present a considerable headache for the foreign ministers and other diplomats tasked with calibrating their policies around the US stance on Russian aggression.

    But history suggests that the US president’s apparent willingness to allow Russia to grab Ukrainian territory in direct contravention of international law is storing up trouble for the future, writes Tim Luckhurst.

    Luckhurst is the principal of South College, Durham University, and has made a study of the way some governments were happy to allow Hitler to get away with naked aggression in the run-up to the second world war. He sees direct parallels with the way Trump and his senior officials have proposed allowing Putin to have his way with the Crimea and the four provinces of Ukraine which Russia already occupies.

    “Chamberlain’s version of appeasement failed to prevent Adolf Hitler’s aggression in the 20th century,” he writes. “Trump’s version appears equally incapable of deterring Vladimir Putin’s territorial ambitions in the 21st.”




    Read more:
    History shows that Donald Trump is making a serious error in appeasing Vladimir Putin


    World Affairs Briefing from The Conversation UK is available as a weekly email newsletter. Click here to get updates directly in your inbox.


    ref. The debate over genocide claims in relation to Gaza intensifies – https://theconversation.com/the-debate-over-genocide-claims-in-relation-to-gaza-intensifies-257847

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Hamas says it has received a new proposal from US special envoy S. Witkoff on a ceasefire in Gaza

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    GAZA, May 29 (Xinhua) — Palestinian Hamas movement said on Thursday that its leadership has received through intermediaries a new proposal from U.S. Special Envoy for the Middle East Steven Witkoff on a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and is currently studying it.

    “The Hamas leadership received from the mediators a new proposal from S. Witkoff and is responsibly studying it with the aim of ensuring that it meets the interests of our people, provides assistance and ensures a permanent ceasefire in the Gaza Strip,” the movement said in a brief statement.

    Details of the proposal were not disclosed.

    Earlier on Wednesday, Hamas said in an official statement that it had reached an agreement with Witkoff on the general framework for a ceasefire in Gaza, which includes a full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Palestinian enclave, an exchange of 10 Israeli hostages and several bodies of the dead for Palestinian prisoners, the delivery of humanitarian aid and the transfer of governance of the strip to a technical committee. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Israel accepts US special envoy S. Witkoff’s proposal for ceasefire in Gaza – media

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    JERUSALEM, May 29 (Xinhua) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday said the Jewish state’s government has accepted the proposal of U.S. Special Envoy for the Middle East Steven Witkoff for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and the release of hostages, Israeli state broadcaster Kan reported.

    According to Kan, B. Netanyahu made the statement during a meeting with the families of the Israeli hostages who are presumed dead.

    The Israeli Prime Minister’s Office is not yet ready to comment.

    Earlier on Thursday, Hamas said in a statement that it had received Witkoff’s proposal and was currently studying it.

    As reported by Kan, citing a senior Israeli official, the proposal includes a 60-day ceasefire in the Gaza Strip in exchange for the release of 10 live hostages and the handover of 18 bodies of the dead in two stages. Israel, in turn, must free 1,236 Palestinian prisoners and hand over the bodies of 180 dead Palestinians.

    The proposal does not oblige Israel to end its 19-month offensive in Gaza, but it does require the Jewish state and Hamas to negotiate a long-term truce. The United States, Egypt and Qatar would act as guarantors of the ceasefire. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Chinese Foreign Minister Holds Series of Meetings with Pacific Island Colleagues

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    XIAMEN, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Thursday held a new round of separate meetings with foreign guests who arrived in China to attend the third China-Pacific Island Countries Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Xiamen, east China’s Fujian Province.

    At a meeting with Foreign Minister of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) Lorin Robert Wang Yi, who is also a member of the Politburo of the CPC Central Committee, he said that the two heads of state reached an important consensus on strengthening mutual trust and friendship, as well as deepening mutually beneficial cooperation.

    China highly appreciates the resolution passed by the FSM Congress in support of the one-China principle and believes that the FSM will continue to firmly support China’s just position on Taiwan-related issues, Wang said.

    China is willing to further expand cooperation with the FSM in key areas such as infrastructure, climate change and marine exploration, promoting the continuous development of the China-Micronesia comprehensive strategic partnership, he said.

    L. Robert, for his part, congratulated on the successful holding of the 3rd China-Pacific Island States Foreign Ministers’ Meeting and reaffirmed the FSM’s continued commitment to the one-China principle. Micronesia is ready to further develop its comprehensive strategic partnership with China, he added.

    During a meeting with Vanuatu Minister of Foreign Affairs, International Cooperation and Trade Mark Athey, the Chinese Foreign Minister stressed that the China-Vanuatu comprehensive strategic partnership has been continuously developing under the leadership of the leaders of the two countries.

    According to Wang Yi, since the new Vanuatu government took office in February this year, the country has been pursuing a positive and friendly policy toward China, which is highly appreciated by the Chinese side. The two countries should take advantage of the current favorable situation to strengthen exchanges at all levels and expand practical cooperation, the Chinese diplomat noted.

    M. Ati, for his part, noted that China’s support not only helps Vanuatu improve the living conditions of its population, but also increases its confidence and sustainability in development.

    The Vanuatu government firmly adheres to the one-China principle and is willing to strengthen the alignment of development strategies with China, accelerate negotiations on a bilateral free trade agreement, and develop cooperation in areas such as education, infrastructure, health and law enforcement, moving towards a brighter future, Athi said.

    At a meeting with Papua New Guinea Foreign Minister Justin Tkachenko, Wang Yi said the two countries should implement the consensus reached by their leaders, begin negotiations on a free trade agreement as soon as possible and deepen cooperation in various fields.

    China values Papua New Guinea’s influence as a major country in the South Pacific and its role as a gateway to Asia, Wang continued, adding that China is willing to work with Papua New Guinea and other Pacific island countries to implement the outcomes of this foreign ministers’ meeting to make greater contributions to regional peace and development.

    J. Tkachenko, for his part, noted that relations with China are of utmost importance for Papua New Guinea. According to him, the government of Papua New Guinea strongly supports China’s efforts to protect national sovereignty and territorial integrity. Papua New Guinea, he added, is ready to strengthen communication and coordination with China to advance cooperation within the Belt and Road Initiative, as well as to expand practical cooperation in such areas as agriculture, education, telecommunications, energy and regional development.

    In addition, Wang Yi met with former President and current Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Nauru Russ Coon, Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs and Deputy Speaker of the Parliament of Fiji Lenora Kerekeretabua and Deputy Secretary-General of the Pacific Islands Forum Esala Nayasi. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China urges relevant countries to stop escalating tensions in South China Sea

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chinese Defense Ministry spokesperson Zhang Xiaogang has called on relevant countries to stop ganging up and escalating tensions in the South China Sea and refrain from actions that undermine regional peace.

    Zhang Xiaogang made the statement in response to a question about joint patrols by the Philippines and the United States in the South China Sea.

    He stressed that the current situation in the South China Sea is generally stable, and there are no problems with freedom of navigation and overflight, which all states enjoy in accordance with international law.

    “Some countries are engaging in confrontation under the guise of cooperation, flexing their muscles under the guise of freedom, and sowing chaos under the guise of order, thereby becoming the main source of risks to undermine peace and stability in the South China Sea,” said a Chinese defense official. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China’s New Hospital Ship Will Provide New Public Safety Benefits

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chinese Defense Ministry spokesperson Zhang Xiaogang on Thursday confirmed the commissioning of China’s third large hospital ship, the Happy Ark, stressing the important role of such ships in providing security public goods to the international community.

    At a regular press conference, Zhang Xiaogang said the Happy Ark was the third hospital ship with a displacement of 10,000 tons or more designed and built in China.

    The official said the new vessel, equipped with combat capabilities and advanced medical equipment, will join the Peace Ark and Silk Road Ark as the main vehicle for conducting maritime medical assistance missions.

    Zhang Xiaogang drew attention to the multifunctionality of the hospital ship, which can perform tasks such as providing international humanitarian medical services, providing emergency medical assistance in major disasters, and promoting military medical exchanges. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Japan must learn lessons from WWII: PM

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    TOKYO, May 29 (Xinhua) — Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Thursday recalled that this year marks the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, saying Japan should actively learn from the painful memory of the war and its history.

    Speaking at the 30th Future of Asia Forum in Tokyo, Shigeru Ishiba said Japan is determined not to repeat the mistakes of the war period and to follow the path of a peaceful country. This position will not change in the future, he said.

    Shigeru Ishiba expressed his willingness to study the history and culture of Asian countries with an open mind, emphasizing that Japan should not only deepen economic ties with them, but also build genuine trust.

    The Future of Asia Forum, organized by Nikkei, has been held annually since 1995. This year’s event is themed “Challenging Asia in a Turbulent World” and is being held over two days from May 29 to 30. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China’s smoking rate falls to 23.2 percent – report

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — The proportion of smokers among China’s population aged 15 and above will fall to 23.2 percent in 2024, down 0.9 percentage points from 2022, according to a research report released by Chinese health authorities on Thursday.

    The results were released at an event to mark the 38th World No Tobacco Day, which falls on May 31.

    A survey conducted by the National Health Commission of China showed that 63.9 percent of respondents had encountered information about tobacco control in the past 30 days, demonstrating the effectiveness of China’s large-scale anti-tobacco campaigns.

    The study also found that public awareness of the health risks associated with active and passive smoking has increased. The proportion of the population exposed to passive smoking continues to decline, thanks to widespread public support for smoke-free environments.

    In 2024, the proportion of people aged 15 and over who quit smoking increased to 22.6%, an increase of 0.2 percentage points compared to 2022.

    The survey was conducted in 31 provincial-level regions in China, and 199,684 completed questionnaires were collected. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Breaking: Israel accepts US special envoy S. Witkoff’s proposal for ceasefire in Gaza – media

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    JERUSALEM, May 29 (Xinhua) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that the Jewish state’s government has accepted the proposal of U.S. Special Envoy for the Middle East Steven Witkoff for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and the release of hostages, Israeli state television Kan TV reported.

    According to the TV channel, B. Netanyahu made the corresponding statement during a meeting with the families of the Israeli hostages, who are presumed dead. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China urges US to stop erroneous practice of unilaterally imposing additional tariffs — Ministry of Commerce of China

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chinese Ministry of Commerce spokesperson He Yongqian on Thursday called on the United States to completely abandon the wrong practice of unilaterally imposing additional customs duties.

    At a regular press briefing, He Yongqian noted that on May 28, the US Court of International Trade ruled that the global, retaliatory and so-called fentanyl tariffs were illegal, ordered that they be lifted and their use permanently stopped.

    The Chinese side has consistently maintained that there can be no winners in a trade war and that protectionism has no prospects.

    “Since the introduction of unilateral tariff measures by the United States, not only have they failed to solve any of the American problems, but they have also caused serious damage to the international trade and economic order, and have also significantly disrupted the production and economic activities of enterprises, and the life and consumption of the population,” He Yongqian stated.

    The official stressed that the tariffs had harmed other countries without benefiting the United States itself, and that they had provoked a massive wave of criticism within the United States itself.

    He Yongqian also said that since the China-US trade and economic talks in Geneva, the two sides have maintained communication on trade issues at various levels in various bilateral and multilateral formats.

    China has had repeated contacts with the United States recently over Washington’s abuse of export controls in the semiconductor sector, she said.

    China once again calls on the US to immediately correct its wrong practices, stop discriminatory restrictive measures against China, and jointly uphold the consensus reached at the high-level talks in Geneva with China, the spokeswoman added. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Attorney General’s 2025 RUSI Annual Security Lecture

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Attorney General’s 2025 RUSI Annual Security Lecture

    On 29 May 2025, the Attorney General Lord Hermer KC delivered the RUSI Annual Security Lecture, reinforcing the government’s commitment to international law.

    INTRODUCTION   

    INTRODUCTION   

    In December of last year, in his Mansion House speech, the Prime Minister recalled the internationalist mindset of the Atlee government of 1945 – that it was only by maintaining our strength abroad that we would be able to succeed at home.  The Prime Minister described Atlee’s approach as hard-headed and patriotic – and made plain that the same values would govern our approach to foreign policy.

    Building on that theme the following month, in his Locarno Speech, the Foreign Secretary labelled this distinctive approach to foreign and security policy – as Progressive Realism, which he said required:

    “Taking the world as it is, not as we wish it to be. Advancing progressive ends by realist means.”

    And I would like to take this opportunity today to set out the legal underpinning for Progressive Realism, which I will argue combines both a pragmatic approach to the UK’s national interests with a principled commitment to a rules-based international order.      

    I am going to start by setting out some of the complexities and challenges of the world that we face, then to address – in order to dismiss – the critique of those I will describe as legal romantic idealists on the one hand, and proponents of what I will call pseudo-realism on the other, before arguing that  British leadership to strengthen and reform the international rules-based system is both the right thing to do and the only truly realistic choice.

    Before I turn to this, let me first thank Lord Parker for his introduction.  Andrew spent his career keeping Britain safe from all manner of threats during a challenging period, before moving on to the Royal Household. So his experience on these security issues has few parallels, and his ability to keep secrets will have been tested in very different ways. 

    Let me also thank our hosts. It is a real privilege to receive this invitation to deliver the prestigious RUSI Annual Security Lecture. RUSI has held a place of real importance in our public debate for over 200 years.  Sitting in government, it is an obvious place to look for expertise, for advice but also for challenge.                                            

    No one in this government is under any illusion of the scale of the threats to global security we presently face. The most devastating war in Europe  since 1945, the  war in Gaza getting ever more bloody and bleak by the day, trade through the Red Sea effectively halted by Houthi attacks, the killing fields of Sudan – we also face profound  threats within our own borders from an increasingly assertive axis of hostile states, engaging in espionage, targeting of critical infrastructure and threatening of UK based dissidents; as well as criminal gangs exploiting the most vulnerable by fuelling irregular migration. 

    As this audience will know better than most, the list of threats goes on. And although some of these threats we have witnessed before, their complexity and unpredictability are unparalleled because they are fuelled synergistically by factors such as how the transformation, of information and disinformation is shared across the globe through social media and increasingly AI – and because we face these threats at this moment in which many are seeking to undermine the multilateral frameworks that have kept us safe since 1945.        

    The challenges we face are truly enormous and as the Foreign Secretary observed in his Locarno speech the world order had irreversibly changed. The Foreign Secretary said:

    “… we have to accept that there is no going back.  We must stop the 1990s clouding our vision. The post-Cold War peace is well and truly over. This is a changed strategic environment. … Europe’s future security is on a knife edge.”

    Allow me to explain how our policy of Progressive Realism meets this moment. And the role the law, and the international rules-based order plays in our approach. Because our approach is a rejection of the siren song, that can sadly, now be heard in the Palace of Westminster, and in some spectrums of the media, that Britain abandons the constraints of international law in favour of raw power.          

    This is not a new song.

    The claim that international law is fine as far as it goes, but can be put aside when conditions change, is a claim that was made in the early 1930s by ‘realist’ jurists in Germany most notably Carl Schmitt, whose central thesis was in essence the claim that state power is all that counts, not law. Because of the experience of what followed in 1933, far-sighted individuals rebuilt and transformed the institutions of international law, as well as internal constitutional law.

    Now part of our pragmatic approach to foreign affairs is to learn from experience – to analyse without preconception or dogma what has been shown to protect British interests in the world and what has not.  Schmitt’s so-called realism has for eighty years been refuted by the fact that these institutions, post 45 institutions, have provided the basis until now for Western and other states, wildly varied in nature, to interact with each other under conditions of peace and stability, all the while pursuing their own strategic interests. Raw, wild power, on its own, in so many different calculi, has rarely been picked as a modus operandi because it was not, is not, a realistic way to advance national interests.               

    Now drawing on historical experience, it is important to stress the role of Britain in the rebuilding of the post war consensus, in the development of international law and multinational institutions – all a rejection of the discredited Schmitt-ian conception of power. Our role then, in Yalta, in San Francisco, in Bretton Woods and beyond helps explain why so many look to us for a leadership role now. There is a temptation among its critics to see international law as something inflicted upon us by others, as something undemocratic and somehow “foreign”. Such assertions frankly smear great the British historic success in providing the international leadership that has established and shaped so much of the rules-based international order. That order was built in the twentieth century on the ideas forged by great British international lawyers, notably Sir Hersch Lauterpacht, the Cambridge Professor of International Law and Britain’s judge on the International Court of Justice. We should not forget that it was a Conservative politician, David Maxwell Fyffe, who was one of the principal drafters of the European Convention on Human Rights.

    Let me return to today, where like many public debates in our age of social media, this important, nuanced and complicated discussion about the import of international law is becoming increasingly polarised between what I have described as romantic idealists and pseudo-realists. 

    Romantic idealists say that international law, conceived as the reign of moral principle, provides a complete answer to any question. To these idealistic champions, British foreign policy is simple. Follow moral principle wherever it takes us. We should always lambast our closest allies regardless of whether or not it is constructive to the politics that we pursue. We should always call out our partners, with different types of governments, regardless of whether the criticism works or whether quiet diplomacy might more effectively produce results. We should always talk to hostile regimes nicely because that will result in them being nicer to us. Such an approach is dangerously naïve – it takes the world as it wants it to be, not as it is. Positioning ourselves as the pious priest, confining ourselves to the comfort of self-righteous declaration, would confine us to irrelevance in global affairs because it focuses myopically on ‘means’ not ‘ends’ – in a manner that ultimately benefits no one. 

    At the other end of the spectrum, pseudo-realists demand that in these volatile times we must abandon our longstanding commitment to international law and to moral principle. 

    They say that we are witnessing the unravelling of the post-war international legal order and that the interests of each nation-state must again be superior to any international norms. They are essentially arguing a return to Bismarckian notions of realpolitik.  Bismarck said, in 1862:

    The great questions of the day will not be decided by speeches and the resolutions of majorities, but by ‘Blut und Eisen’ (blood and iron).

    These pseudo-realists advocate for the UK flexing its muscles to make sure it has a seat at the table in the rooms of the powerful where new rules and norms will be forged in the furnace of raw power, rules which may well apply not to all, but only to states in alliances in permanent conflict with other alliances which have chosen to be bound by different rules. There will no longer be a rules-based international order, but rather the war of one against all that Thomas Hobbes famously portrayed as the international state of nature. 

     [Redacted political content]

    What I hope to do is to start to depolarise this debate by setting out the legal underpinning for the principled pragmatism that guides this Government’s foreign and security policy of Progressive Realism. My argument is that we should reject both the pseudo “realpolitik” and the romantic idealists’ view of international law. Their temptingly simple narratives not only misunderstand our history, not only misunderstand international law, it is also reckless and dangerous, and will make us less prosperous, less safe and less secure in a troubled world.

    Let me give you four reasons why: 

    First, we need to be clear that a selective, or ‘pick and mix’ approach to international law by the United Kingdom will lead to its disintegration.   The cherry picking advocated by the pseudo-realists is fundamentally at odds with the nature of international law as law. The international rules- order soon breaks down when States claim that they can breach international law because it is in their national interests. That is the present argument advanced by Russia.             

    The argument [Redacted political content] that the UK can breach its international obligations when it is in the national interest to do so, is a radical departure from the UK’s constitutional tradition, which has long been that ministers are under a duty to comply with international law.   

    This isn’t Conservatism, this is radicalism, which stands completely at odds with that proud constitutional history in this country. I agree with the views consistently expressed by my, mostly Conservative, predecessors in this role.  Dominic Grieve, for example, told the House of Lords Constitution Committee in 2022:

      “The duty to observe international law is enshrined in our unwritten constitution because it is Her Majesty’s intention that her servants should observe the binding agreements that her previous servants have entered into—unless, of course, you want to resile from an international treaty.”    

    And in this country, I believe that the vast majority of people believe that if you make a promise you should keep it – if you enter a contract you should comply with it. Our decency and reliability are our hallmarks as a nation. To similar effect, we also understand that if you sign a contract then you cannot unilaterally choose to comply with some terms but not others – the deal falls through, and no one would trust you enough to secure advantageous terms in the future.

    Second, in this dangerous world it is instructive to ask yourself this if the international law framework fails, if our multilateral institutions fall, then Cui Bono?  Who benefits?  The answer is obvious – it is our enemies who succeed. It is obvious that Russia and other malign state-actors see the undermining of the legal based framework as a core objective. Putin does not simply apply a Schmitt-ian approach to the rule of law within the boundaries of Russia and its proxies, he recognises the huge strategic advantage that would flow in undermining the post 1945 international law framework. It’s why he invokes exceptionalism to justify his crime of aggression, it is why he devotes so many of his resources to undermining democracies and to seeking to fuel divisions within them. 

    This is why the approach of both romantic idealists and pseudo-realists are not simply wholly naïve but dangerous. There is nothing ‘realistic’ at all about the latter’s views and that is why I label them ‘pseudo-realists’. Their analysis is the precise opposite of realistic – it is deeply unworldly, fit for a university debating chamber perhaps but not the world in which our enemies recognise the strategic benefits of the disintegration of the international rules-based framework and where the stakes for western democracies could not be higher. Let me be crystal clear – I do not for one moment question the good faith let alone patriotism of the pseudo-realists but their arguments if ever adopted would provide succour to Putin.

    Third, international law is a key vehicle by which states can both pursue their strategic interests and at the same time give effect to the norms and values that they hold dear. States can amplify and project their hard power, for example, by entering into legally binding treaties creating powerful military alliances with other states, such as NATO, or beneficial intelligence sharing alliances such as the Five Eyes. At the same time, states can also use international law to protect certain values they hold dear; security of our borders, human rights, equality and the rule of law. There is no inherent contradiction between international law and determined pursuit of national strategic objectives. The school of pseudo- realpolitik critique is wilfully blind to the extent to which international law is itself already a framework for principled, pragmatic, pursuit of national interests.       

    Let me put to bed the notion that international law is somehow an affront to state sovereignty. To the contrary, international law is founded on the idea of state sovereignty. And without international law, there would be no state sovereignty, only the emptiness of that word in a world where hunks could be ripped off borders and every dispute be settled by the force of the strong.                    

    When a state chooses to enter into an international treaty, and it is a choice, that does not involve any surrender of national sovereignty to malevolent international actors or make the state a vassal of international organisations – it is a conscious decision that a state makes in their own interest.        

    International treaties always recognise that States might disagree about their interpretation. This is why we have dispute mechanisms. This is why states can leave the treaties they have signed and agreed on. But the integrity and force of the system requires that once a party, to an agreement, they abide by its rules — they don’t pick and mix.        

    Fourth argument is this, our international obligations are not onerous but manifestly in this country’s national interests. This is at the heart of progressive realism. In addition to safeguarding our national interests, as the tectonic plates of the international order shift dramatically, we as a government are seizing the opportunity to provide global leadership, combining hard-headed British pragmatism with our equally strong and hard-earned global reputation for a commitment to international law. We know from experience that we can best achieve our own goals only within a framework of international law that makes the same possible for others.

    We have real life experience as a nation in experimenting with pseudo-realism.

    [Redacted political content]

    By contrast with the inconsistent, flamboyant and on occasion inflammatory rhetoric, this Government is clear that the national interest is served by the restoration of our reputation not simply as a nation that respects its international law obligation but as a leader in the rules-based international order. Our return as a good faith actor has been greeted with warmth across the globe – I have seen it myself in meetings in Kyiv, in discussions with European partners and the halls of the United Nations. What we can feel is a palpable relief that we are stepping up.  

    Last week, at the press conference marking the historic agreement between the UK and the EU, the Prime Minister said this:

    “Britain is back on the world stage … facing out to the world once again in the great tradition of this nation.  Building the relationships we choose, with the partners we choose, and closing deals in the national interest.”

    The agreement with the EU includes a significant new trade deal with our closest trading partner – it will make a real difference to our economy and the standards of living of our citizens. It is only the recent such trade deal.

    There is also the US Economic Prosperity Deal, with the world’s biggest economy and most powerful democracy, and our closest ally. 

    There is the Free Trade Agreement with India, the world’s largest democracy and our Commonwealth partner which will inject billions of pounds into the economy.

    The first ever Economic 2+2 with Japan, a new economic partnership with the world’s fourth largest economy a strong ally of this country in the Pacific.

    In is not ‘despite’ of our commitment to international law that trade deals are being signed within months where the previous government failed over years – rather it is ‘because’ we are now once again a trusted partner. Our word is once again our bond – not a phrase that could be uttered in good faith by the pseudo-realists. These successes, secured in international agreements, will be felt in the most concrete of ways of the people of this country – in tens of thousands of new jobs, in the raising of living standards and more money in people’s pockets. This economic benefit is a direct consequence of our return as a trusted partner in the rules-based order. 

    Beyond trade, we have led efforts to ensure Europe steps up to meet the security challenges flowing from Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine. This means supporting Ukrainian efforts to defend itself, readying Europe to step up for any ceasefire or peace and continue to strengthen efforts to deliver a measure of accountability for those responsible for the atrocities involved in Russia’s actions. 

    More broadly across the European continent, we have concluded a significant new Defence and Security Partnership which substantially strengthens this country’s security. It will upgrade our cooperation on areas ranging from defence industry, mobility of military material and personnel, maritime security and space security. It sets the framework for closer defence industrial collaboration, including potential participation in the EU’s proposed €150bn Security Action for Europe instrument. This on top of the Global Combat Air Programme treaty ratified in December 2024, delivering a next generation combat aircraft for 2035, to keep us ahead of new and evolving threats for decades to come and creating thousands of new jobs, right across this land.

    Our good faith adherence to international law brings together other vital interests. We have strengthened partnerships on border security with our nearest neighbours and built their confidence that we can be trusted to be fair and honest in our dealings and bringing to a decisive end what the Prime Minister has described as “gimmicks” which were proving a barrier to effective collaboration. It is no accident that the previous Government who played so fast and loose with our reputation as a leader in international law, were unable to reach any agreements that effectively addressed unregulated migration – yet within months of office the Home Secretary has reached ground breaking deals with France in respect of patrols of their own waterways to stop boats crossing the channel; Germany has agreed to amend its own domestic laws to stop the transport of boats and parts – agreements which are essential components of attempts to clamp down on the criminal enterprise of boat crossings –which would have been inconceivable, inconceivable, whilst the UK was posturing over support for the ECHR and international law more generally. 

    So, allow me if you will, to channel Reg, the leader of the People’s Front of Judea in Life of Brian and ask rhetorically what has international law ever done for us?  Well, the answer is that it has helped give us peace, security and prosperity. 
    And it will continue to do so – this is just the start – together with other initiatives which the Foreign Secretary and others in the Government are working on right now, they will bring tangible benefits to the people of our country. They are the early fruits of the UK’s clear signal to the international community that it can once again be treated as a trusted international partner. A country which will keep its word when it enters into international agreements. A country that stands up for principle and takes a broad perspective on compliance with the law, recognising of course occasional frustrations in the moment but huge benefits in the longer-term.  

    We are not Progressive Realists because we qualify our realism. We are Progressive Realists because we combine both a commitment to progressive ends with a realistic understanding of how those ends can be achieved in the world as it is. Because a commitment to international law is both the right thing to do and the realistic, rational, cool-headed thing to do. We are Progressive Realists because painstakingly upholding and strengthening the rules that enshrine respect for human dignity, accountability for breaches of international humanitarian law, fair rules permitting free trade, protections of our environment and defence pacts that protect our nation— is not restraining ourselves but pursuing our national interest. And the only truly realistic choice we can make.  And it is truly a patriotic one.              

    We are Progressive Realists because we do not shy away from a belief in the importance of value-based multilateralism as a fundamental force for good in the world – and we recognise the power those ideals both hold and bring us. 

    The late Kofi Annan once said:

    Our enemy now is indifference, the belief that there are many worlds, and that the only one we need to care about is our own.

    We will not be indifferent. The promotion of, and compliance with, these progressive values underpinning international law and the multilateral institutions that have grown up to support them over the past 80 years is a source of immense national pride – it is a great British value to say that we want to make the world a better, safer and more prosperous place. There is no contradiction between approaching the world with a hard head but also a warm heart. This is Progressive Realism. 

    Now, before I conclude, allow me to say something about how international law adapts to the changing challenges we face and the role of nations in shaping it. 

    As progressive realists we recognise that international law cannot stand still and rest on its laurels. It must be critiqued and where necessary reformed and improved. Nothing I have said here is intended to shield international rules or treaties from evidence-based criticism or proposals to reform.  Nor do I argue for one moment that the international law system covers every problem.

    As we look to deal with fresh challenges and changes, we must not stagnate in our approach to international rules and customary norms. We must look to apply and adapt existing obligations to address new situations or technological advances. And we must be ready to reform where necessary.

    We need to recognise that international law is incomplete. It was not intended, as I said to cover every situation or development. Some areas were deliberately left unregulated or only covered at a high degree of general principle. The legal space has not eliminated the political space. They continue to co-exist, and law, including international law, regulate how they interact.

    States agreeing to treaties some time ago did not give an open-ended licence for international rules to be ever more expansively interpreted or for institutions to adopt a position of blindness or indifference to public sentiment in their member states. International rules and institutions should not, without state consent, bend existing rules and obligations to make decisions or trade-offs that are far more effectively and legitimately dealt with through political and diplomatic means. Equally though, states and governments must not use international laws and institutions as a convenient scapegoat to evade taking hard decisions or advocating for reform.

    Again, the tincture for any such ills that the system suffers in this way is I suggest a strong dose of balanced British pragmatism and principle. As we have shown time and again as a nation, one from a position of respect and compliance, we have proven that reform is possible and institutions can be reformed. The UK has provided the international leadership for the renewed focus on subsidiarity in the European Convention on Human Rights – reminding both states and the international institutions that the primary responsibility for upholding human rights rests on national authorities, and that the role of the Court is a supervisory one which only need be invoked when the national system for protecting those rights has failed. That focus on subsidiarity, properly understood as a duty on states to implement, revives the importance of political discussion and debate about human rights which is so vital to preserving their democratic legitimacy. International law cannot and must not replace politics. 

    That’s why Progressive Realism, internationally, is above all the assembling of the necessary coalitions to tackle our current challenges; challenges that appear from AI, climate change and trade, to conflict resolution in places like Ukraine. Because none of these problems can be addressed from the sidelines, where the romantic idealists might relegate us. And all can only be addressed by agreeing and complying with negotiated deals which are then made binding in legal texts – the very power of which the pseudo-realists seek to undermine.        

    Negotiations, driven by politics and diplomacy, and then knitted together in law, are the answer. You cannot have one without the other, at least not in a way that provides sufficient certainty or sustainability.

    Allow me if you will, to end with a personal recollection. In September of last year, I travelled to Ukraine.  As part of my visit, I travelled to the outskirts of Kyiv, first to Babyn Yar to pause at the memorial to the thousands of Jews who were murdered there over two bloody days by the Einsatzegruppe in 1941 and then onwards to the town of Bucha, which in the early days of the current conflict marked the furthest point of Russian advance. Many of you will have been there. Some 40 mins or so from central Kyiv, Bucha is a picturesque town with dachas dotted in the forests. I was taken to the gleaming white St Andrew’s Orthodox Church where I was met by the local priest Father Andiry Halavin. He took me first to a plot of grass behind the church where he and others buried over two hundred residents in a mass grave and then next to it a memorial wall with the names of over 500 civilians, murdered in cold blood by the Russian forces – the names on the wall of entire families murdered, of children, of the elderly. I sat afterwards in the church, quietly with Father Andiry and asked him how as a man of faith he made sense of the intense inhumanity that he had witnessed. In some ways it was an unfair question to ask but his response blew me away – it only makes sense, he said, if you believe in justice, that these crimes have shown the world the inhumanity and illogicality of war, and that those who committed the crimes will be held to account. Father Andiry was not referring to divine justice but to justice under law, including under international law and the return to the stability and sanity that it provides – having witnessed the bloody anarchy of its absence.

    That experience is a small reflection of why this Government’s approach to the grave challenges of our time is not to shrink away from our international responsibilities but through progressive realism to work to uphold the international rules-based order in our vital national interests and to contribute thereby to making this world a safer and more prosperous place now and for future generations. The true realist sees no other choice.  

    Thank you very much.

    Updates to this page

    Published 29 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Russian government will allocate 1.5 billion rubles to support small and medium-sized exporting enterprises

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Moscow, May 29 /Xinhua/ — The Russian government, on the instructions of the president, will allocate 1.5 billion rubles to support beginning and existing exporters among small and medium-sized enterprises in 2025. This was reported on Wednesday by the press service of the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation.

    The funds will be allocated through export support centers. It is planned to provide support to more than 12.5 thousand export-oriented small and medium enterprises, of which more than 1.2 thousand will conclude new export contracts worth at least 0.5 billion US dollars /more than 40 billion rubles/.

    According to Veronika Nikishina, Director General of the Russian Export Center, over the past six years, the efficiency of Russian export support centers has grown from 34.5 rubles of supported exports per 1 ruble of allocated subsidy in 2019 to 70.5 rubles in 2024.

    Today, there are 82 export support centers operating in Russia. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: President of Uzbekistan and Prime Minister of Italy held talks in Samarkand

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Tashkent, May 29 (Xinhua) — Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev and Italian Prime Minister Giorgio Meloni held talks in the city of Samarkand, the Uzbek president’s press service reported on Thursday.

    “The negotiations between the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan Shavkat Mirziyoyev and the Prime Minister of the Italian Republic Giorgio Meloni took place in the Congress Center of the city of Samarkand in a tête-à-tête format and with the participation of official delegations,” the statement said.

    It is noted that issues of further development of bilateral strategic partnership relations and expansion of multifaceted cooperation were discussed.

    “Trade turnover has grown almost threefold in recent years, including due to the expansion of the range of mutual deliveries. The number of joint ventures and projects has doubled. Mutually beneficial cooperation has been established with leading Italian companies in the sectors of metallurgy, electrical engineering, agriculture, livestock farming, tourism and other areas,” the report states.

    The parties spoke in favor of continuing active political exchanges.

    “Active interaction with the institutions of the European Union will be continued, taking into account the fruitful summit in Samarkand in April this year. The importance of holding the Central Asia-Italy summit with a focus on practical results was emphasized,” the press service added. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Vladimir Stroyev joined the presidium of the International Movement for Financial Security

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On May 27, 2025, within the framework of the 42nd Plenary Week of the Eurasian Group on Combating Money Laundering and Financing of Terrorism (EAG), the 22nd meeting of the Council of the International Network Institute in the field of AML/CFT and the conference of the International Movement for Financial Security were held with the participation of the management, teachers and students of the State University of Management, headed by Vice-Rector Dmitry Bryukhanov.

    In 2025, GUU officially joined the International Movement for Financial Security, created on the initiative of a student from Brazil, Augusto Lemmertz, during a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and the finalists of the III International Financial Security Olympiad in 2023. And on May 27, as part of the next conference of the International Movement for Financial Security, GUU Rector Vladimir Stroyev joined the Presidium of the movement. The Chairman of the Presidium of the movement is Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Dmitry Chernyshenko, and the Deputy Chairman is Director of Rosfinmonitoring Yuri Chikhanchin.

    Let us recall that the State University of Management has been a member of the ISI in the field of AML/CFT since 2014, and has been actively participating in the Olympiad movement since the selection events of the 1st International Financial Security Olympiad in 2021. Since 2023, it has been actively working in the field of promoting the financial security Olympiad movement in historical territories, in particular, in 2023 it organized the selection of participants in the Olympiad finals among students and schoolchildren from the DPR, LPR, Zaporizhia and Kherson regions, in the same year it organized a summer school for finalists from historical territories and annually participates in the training of teachers of historical territories to conduct a thematic lesson on financial security.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Update 293 – IAEA Director General Statement on Situation in Ukraine

    Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

    The off-site power situation at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) remains extremely fragile, with Europe’s largest such site currently relying on just one single power line for essential nuclear safety and security functions compared with ten before the military conflict, Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said today.

    The ZNPP’s last 330 kilovolt (kV) back-up line remains disconnected three weeks after the plant lost access to it on 7 May and it is unclear when it will be restored. As a result, the six-reactor plant depends entirely on its sole functioning 750 kV line to receive the external electricity it needs to operate the plants’ nuclear safety systems, and to cool its nuclear fuel.

    Since the conflict began in early 2022, the ZNPP has eight times lost access to all off-site power, but it was usually restored within a day.

    “Even though the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant has not been operating for some three years now, its reactor cores and spent nuclear fuel still require continuous cooling, for which electricity is needed to run the water pumps. For this reason, the highly vulnerable power situation remains deeply concerning and we are following it very closely,” said Director General Grossi, who will visit Kyiv and Russia next week as part of his regular contacts with both sides to ensure nuclear safety and security during the conflict.

    The IAEA team based at the ZNPP has continued to monitor and assess other aspects of nuclear safety and security during the past week, conducting a walkdown to measure and confirm stable levels of cooling water in the site’s 12 sprinkler ponds and visiting its two fresh fuel storage facilities, where no nuclear safety or security issues were observed.

    The IAEA team reported hearing military activities on most days over the past week, at different distances away from the ZNPP.

    At Ukraine’s three operating nuclear power plants (NPPs) – Khmelnytskyy, Rivne and South Ukraine – three of their total of nine reactors are in planned outage for refueling and maintenance.

    The IAEA teams at these sites also continued to hear indications of military activities nearby. At the South Ukraine NPP, the IAEA staff members saw a drone being shot at by anti-aircraft fire in the evening of 23 May. The plant reported that 10 drones were observed 2.5 km south of the site on the same evening. At the Chornobyl site, two drones were reported flying five km from the site, also on 23 May.  The IAEA team at the Khmelnytskyy NPP was required to shelter onsite on Monday this week.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China urges US to stop ‘adding fuel to fire’ over Taiwan issue

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Zhang Xiaogang on Thursday called on the U.S. side to stop “adding fuel to the fire” over the Taiwan issue, stressing that such behavior would only lead to counterproductive results.

    Zhang Xiaogang made the statement in response to reports of unfounded accusations by the US military command against China’s actions related to Taiwan.

    Taiwan is an inalienable part of China. The resolution of the Taiwan issue is a matter for the Chinese themselves, which does not allow outside interference, Zhang Xiaogang reiterated at a press conference.

    “There is no more destabilizing factor for the situation on the other side of the Taiwan Strait than the provocations of separatists advocating ‘Taiwan independence’ and the subversive activities of foreign forces,” Zhang Xiaogang said.

    He told reporters that the Chinese side’s actions to protect national sovereignty and territorial integrity are legal, necessary and justified.

    Responding to reports that the US side is increasing its military presence in response to the so-called “Chinese threat”, Zhang Xiaogang noted that mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation are the right way to improve relations between the two countries.

    “The US side should stop imagining a ‘powerful enemy’, whether intentionally or unintentionally,” Zhang Xiaogang said. “Such an approach is irrational and extremely dangerous.”

    The Chinese armed forces will make every effort to enhance their combat readiness and firmly safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests, the spokesperson added. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Spartakiad opens in Heilongjiang Province with participation of more than a thousand students from China and Russia

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — More than 1,000 students from China and Russia took part in the Spartakiad that opened Thursday in Heilongjiang Province (Northeast China), the Yangguang news portal of China Media Corporation reported.

    The opening ceremony of the 2nd Spartakiad of universities of Heilongjiang Province of China and the Russian Far East was held on Thursday at the Heihe Institute in the city of Heihe in this province. The event was attended by more than a thousand students from 18 higher education institutions from both countries, including Blagoveshchensk State Pedagogical University, Amur State University /ASU/, Far Eastern State Agrarian University, Pacific National University, Primorsky State University named after Sholem Aleichem, as well as 13 Chinese universities.

    Speaking at the opening ceremony of the Spartakiad, Rector of Heihe Institute Yang Jingmin called on the Spartakiad participants from the two countries to strengthen mutual understanding in competitions and develop friendship in cooperation.

    Dean of the Faculty of Physical Education at ASU Elena Tokar highly praised the results of cooperation in the field of sports and physical education between Russian and Chinese universities and noted the particularly great importance of sports for strengthening friendship between young people. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Cherries were delivered from Uzbekistan to China’s Zhejiang Province for the first time

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — Cherries from Uzbekistan have been delivered to east China’s Zhejiang Province for the first time, Hangzhou Daily reported.

    An Uzbekistan Airways plane carrying 1.6 tons of cherries flew from Tashkent to Hangzhou, the capital of the province, early in the morning of May 26. The Central Asian fruit will be delivered to Hangzhou, Shanghai and other cities in the Yangtze River Delta.

    Airport staff have opened a “green corridor” for fruits from Central Asia to ensure uninterrupted supplies to the market.

    According to statistics, 16.6 tons of fruits were imported through Hangzhou Airport checkpoint from January to April, up 20 percent year-on-year. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Xi Jinping signs decree on publication of document regulating awards for military scientific research

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) — Chairman of the Central Military Commission Xi Jinping signed an order promulgating regulations governing awards for military scientific research.

    The new document, which will come into force on July 1, aims to implement the strategy of strengthening the armed forces with the help of science and technology and regulates the process of awarding prizes for military scientific research.

    The regulations establish a structured award system that meets the significant strategic needs of the state and the armed forces. The system’s features include contribution to combat capability as the only main criterion, regulation of the nomination and consideration procedures for candidates, and increased oversight of discipline and confidentiality.

    The adopted provisions are expected to enhance innovative military research, accelerate technological breakthroughs in the defense field, and provide high-quality scientific support for building a strong military in the new era. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News