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Sunday, February 19, 2023

Russia likely deploying decoy balloons over Ukraine in new tactic: UK

 Russia is likely deploying balloons over Ukraine to act as decoys to gather information about the country’s defense systems and to force the military to use up precious missiles to shoot them down, Britain’s defense ministry said Sunday.

In an intelligence update posted on Twitter, the UK Ministry of Defense said balloons or “balloon-shaped objects” have been spotted in the air over Ukraine last week — a distinct change in tactics on the part of the Russian military. 

“It is likely that the balloons were Russian. They likely represent a new tactic by Russia to gain information about Ukrainian air defense systems and compel the Ukrainians to expend valuable stock of surface-to-air missiles and ammunition,” the alert said. 

The ministry of defense said the Ukrainian military detected several balloons with radar reflectors over Kyiv on Feb. 15 and shot down at least six of them. 

More balloons were spotted over Dnipropetrovsk on Feb. 12. 

And on Feb. 14, a “balloon-shaped” object forced the closure of Moldovan airspace for a number of hours. 

A Russian missile trail during an attack near Kyiv on Feb. 15.
A Russian missile trail during an attack near Kyiv on Feb. 15.
REUTERS

“There is a realistic possibility that this was a Russian balloon that had drifted from Ukrainian airspace,” the ministry said. 

Col. Margo Grosbert, the head of Estonian Defense Forces, said last week that it appeared Russia was using relatively cheap weather balloons to probe air defense systems and force the military to expend ammunition.

“This both wastes anti-aircraft weapons and exhausts the crews. It also makes the anti-aircraft crews visible as a result of their actions, because you can then see where the missiles are coming from,” he said.

Grosberg said the use of balloons was a new development in the war and wondered if Russia borrowed the idea from the Chinese, which sent a spy balloon over the US earlier this month. 

Britain's defense ministry says Russia is likely using balloons to force Ukraine's military to spend precious ammunition to shoot them down.
Britain’s defense ministry says Russia is likely using balloons to force Ukraine’s military to spend precious ammunition to shoot them down.
Getty Images

The Chinese balloon was first detected entering US airspace near Alaska on Jan. 28, but its presence wasn’t made public until Feb. 1 when it was spotted in the sky over Montana.

It crossed over a number of midwestern states, including some sensitive military installations, until two US Air Force jet fighters shot it down on Feb. 4 off the coast of South Carolina. 

Since then, three other unknown objects have been shot down over North America — off the northern coast of Alaska, over the Yukon Territory of Canada and over Lake Huron near the Canadian border. 

The Biden administration said the three objects appeared to belong to private companies, or research or recreational companies and not Chinese spy aircraft.  

Ukrainian forces load shells into an anti-aircraft gun in the Donetsk region of Ukraine on Jan. 15.
Ukrainian forces load shells for an anti-aircraft gun in the Donetsk region of Ukraine on Jan. 15.
REUTERS

Yuriy Ihnat, a spokesman for Ukraine’s air force, said the military is more concerned with Russia lobbing ballistic missiles into the country than floating weather balloons into its airspace. 

“They’re trying to distract us,” Ihnat told the Washington Post last week, pointing out that Russia hoped Ukrainian forces would fire on them and reveal their locations.

But he said Ukrainian forces know the difference between a balloon and a drone. 

“These are not new. They’re your grandfather’s methods, invented during the Soviet Union,” he said.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/19/russia-likely-sending-decoy-balloons-over-ukraine-uk/

Doctor reveals insurance companies want you to ‘die as quickly as possible’

 This doctor has lost his patience with the US healthcare system.

One doctor has gone viral on TikTok after revealing the ugly truth that most health insurance companies allegedly want you to “die as quickly as possible.”

The TikTok was posted Thursday and had racked up nearly one million views.

“Healthcare companies don’t care about you,” said Dr. Glaucomflecken grimly. “They don’t care.”

Glaucomflecken lists off several insurance companies including United Healthcare, Aetna, Cigna and Blue cross as the main guilty ones.

“They want to extract as much money as possible from your healthy body,” continued the doctor. “Then when you’re no longer healthy, they want you to die as quickly as possible, to make room for other money-producing bodies so…have a great day.”

Dr. Glaucomflecken’s comments come as health insurance companies raked in a massive profit during the COVID-19 pandemic which cause policy prices to soar drastically.

Glaucomflecken lists off several insurance companies including United Healthcare, Aetna, Cigna and Blue cross as the main guilty ones.
Glaucomflecken lists off several insurance companies including United Healthcare, Aetna, Cigna and Blue cross as the main guilty ones.
@drglaucomflecken/TikTok
"They want to extract as much money as possible from your healthy body,” continued the doctor. "Then when you’re no longer healthy, they want you to die as quickly as possible, to make room for other money-producing bodies so…have a great day.”
“They want to extract as much money as possible from your healthy body,” continued the doctor. “Then when you’re no longer healthy, they want you to die as quickly as possible, to make room for other money-producing bodies so…have a great day.”
@drglaucomflecken/TikTok

In addition, Federal law requires hospitals and insurance companies to provide patients with the details of how much they are being charged.

“Insurers want to make sure they are negotiating the best deals they can for their members, to make sure their products have competitive premiums, said chief executive of America’s Health Insurance Plans Matt Eyles to the New York Times.

The Post reached out to Dr. Glaucomflecken for comment.

Dr. Glaucomflecken's comments come as health insurance companies raked in a massive profit during the COVID-19 pandemic which cause policy prices to soar drastically.
Dr. Glaucomflecken’s comments come as health insurance companies raked in a massive profit during the COVID-19 pandemic which cause policy prices to soar drastically.
@drglaucomflecken/TikTok

Several of the doc’s commenters agreed with him.

“I work in oncology. you 100% correct,” said one user.

“As someone who works in health insurance verification—yes,” said another.

“The longer I’m in medicine the more apparent this truth is,” a third person said.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/19/doctor-insurance-companies-want-you-to-die-as-quickly-as-possible/

‘Drug dealer in a white coat’: LI pharmacist cops to $1M oxycodone scheme

 A pharmacist in cahoots with crooked doctors admitted to illegally selling about $1 million worth of oxycodone pills out of his Queens drug store, the feds say.

Daniel Russo, 44, of Cedarhurst, LI, copped to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute oxycodone, distribution and possession of oxycodone, and filing false personal and corporate tax returns in Brooklyn federal court Friday, according to prosecutors.

“Russo was a drug dealer in a white coat,” Breon Peace, US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, wrote in a statement.

“He abused his pharmacy license and the trust placed in him by the community to illegally distribute enormous amounts of oxycodone, spreading misery in the community and fueling addiction, all to enrich himself.”

Daniel Russo

Daniel Russo was called a “drug dealer in a white coat.”
Facebook/Russo's Pharmacy

The owner of Russo’s Pharmacy in Far Rockaway conspired with medical professionals and employees to fill fraudulent prescriptions of the addictive drug in exchange for hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash between 2011 and 2014, prosecutors alleged.

Russo then failed to report more than $1 million in earnings, much of which he made from the illicit drug scheme, officials said.

Russo's Pharmacy.
Daniel Russo, the owner of Russo’s Pharmacy, admitted to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute oxycodone.
Google Maps

More than a dozen doctors who Russo filed prescriptions for have already been convicted in connection with the oxycodone distribution scheme, according to the Department of Justice.

“At the same time Daniel Russo was illegally peddling oxycodone out of his pharmacy, he was pocketing – and not paying taxes on – income from those sales and others in his business,” said Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Goldberg. 

“Everyone is required to pay their fair share of taxes, whether they make their money legitimately or through criminal activity,” the prosecutor said in a statement.

Russo now faces up to 67 years in federal prison, according to the feds.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/19/long-island-pharmacist-admits-to-1m-oxycodone-scheme/

Pressure on Biden to supply F-16s mounts ahead of Ukraine war anniversary

 The Biden administration is facing mounting pressure from U.S. lawmakers and Ukrainian officials to equip Kyiv with F-16 fighter jets as Russia’s war approaches its one-year anniversary later this week.

Just after the administration last month announced it would send 31 Abrams battle tanks to Ukraine, Kyiv renewed its calls for the modern fighter aircraft. President Biden at the time said “no” to sending F-16s.

Now, calls at home are mounting for the U.S. to ramp up support as Russia begins a renewed offensive in Ukraine.

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-Texas) on Sunday said he’s hopeful the U.S. will send the jets.

“The fact is, the longer they wait, the longer this conflict will prevail,” McCaul said on CNN’s “State of the Union,” speaking from the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference in Germany. 

“We need to throw everything we can into this fight so that they can win… And I think the momentum is building for this to happen,” he said.

Reuters reports that Ukrainian officials have been lobbying U.S. lawmakers at the security conference to press the Biden administration for the aircraft. 

And last week, a bipartisan group of five House lawmakers argued that providing the jets could tip the scales of the conflict, Politico reported.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) on Sunday pushed to train Ukrainian pilots on F-16 fighter jets and answer Kyiv’s calls for the aircraft after Vice President Harris announced the U.S. has formally determined Russia has committed crimes against humanity during the war.

He said there was “virtually unanimous belief” among the 30 senators in Munich that “we should be training Ukrainian pilots on the F-16 today so they can get the jets as soon as possible.”

The surge of pressure to send the fighter planes also comes amid concerns that China could move to provide weapons to Moscow.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in an interview aired Sunday on NBC News that the U.S. is “very concerned” that China is considering providing “lethal support” to Russia that could include both ammunition and weapons.  

Blinken made the comments after meeting in Munich with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi.

“We are very concerned that China is considering providing lethal support to Russia in its aggression against Ukraine. And I made clear that that would have serious consequences in our relationship as well, something that President Biden has shared directly with President Xi on several occasions,” Blinken said. 

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield on Sunday also warned of “consequences” if China ups its aid to Moscow. 

Asked whether the U.S. has ruled out sending F-16s to Russia, Greenfield said, “We’re still having discussions on the ground with the Ukrainians. And, again, we have to ensure — and I think Secretary Blinken said this as well — that they have the training necessary and the capacity to use weapon systems that we provide to them.” 

https://thehill.com/policy/international/3865681-pressure-on-biden-to-supply-f-16s-mounts-ahead-of-ukraine-war-anniversary/

'China likely to pull back on lethal aid to Russia' after US warning: retired general

 Retired four-star Army Gen. Jack Keane on Sunday said Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s warning on Sunday that China could provide lethal aid to Russia could actually cause Beijing to cancel those plans.

Blinken said in an interview aired Sunday that China is “strongly considering” sending Russia ammunition and weapons as its war on Ukraine reaches the one-year mark. 

“I agree with the administration for beginning to expose what they have picked up, likely in intelligence circles, that China is getting ready to provide some military lethal aid to Russia,” Keane, a Fox News analyst, told host Shannon Bream on “Fox News Sunday.”

“And I think coming out and exposing — and I would go further and tell them — what we think they are attempting to provide, China will pull back, likely, after that public exposure.”

Keane called China and Russia “strategic partners” and said “we shouldn’t be surprised that China wants Russia to succeed.”

“Remember, China has not condemned the invasion. They have not condemned that it’s illegal. They have not come out and spoken against genocide and war crimes that are being committed,” Keane said.

“Certainly, China has been buying as much Russian oil as they possibly can and helping them with the sanctions that are imposed on them.”

Concerns that Beijing could give Russia a boost come amid strained U.S.-China tensions after the Biden administration shot down a Chinese surveillance balloon earlier this month. 

Blinken postponed a planned trip to China amid the controversy, but met with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, where he raised the issue of lethal support for Russia.

“I made clear the importance of not crossing that line and the fact that it would have serious consequences on our own relationship, something that we do not need on top of the balloon incident that China is engaged in,” Blinken said.

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/3865694-china-likely-to-pull-back-on-lethal-aid-to-russia-after-us-warning-retired-general/