Sunday, February 27, 2022

Streets quiet in Kyiv, city reeling from night of fighting




Sat, February 26, 2022, 
By Aleksandar Vasovic, Emin and Caliskan

KYIV (Reuters) - Soldiers picking through charred debris scattered near the smouldering remains of a truck and a few civilians taking fresh air before a curfew were among scarce signs of life in Ukraine's capital on Saturday, after a second night of artillery barrages.

Russian forces have been pounding the centuries-old capital Kyiv and other cities with cruise missiles and shells since the start of an invasion on Thursday morning.


Many shops were closed, including those selling food, and the streets were empty except for a odd car - a contrast to the columns of vehicles choking roads in recent days as tens of thousands of residents fled west - and a few pedestrians pulling suitcases.

"I was smart enough to stock food for at least a month, we have everything," said Serhiy, a middle aged man who said he started buying extra groceries for his family well before the violence broke out.

"I did not trust politicians that this would end peacefully," Serhiy said, taking a walk before a curfew that kicked in at 5:00 p.m.

Four heavily armed soldiers manned a checkpoint near a government building. Amid reports of Russian saboteur groups in the city, passengers in cars were required to keep their hands in the open and show identification papers without sudden moves, a Reuters team reported.

A missile hit a residential building and shelling and gunfire was heard early on Saturday across the city that is home to around 3 million people and was previously extensively damaged during a Nazi German assault in 1941.

Soldiers near a Kyiv train station inspected the still smoking remains of a truck that appeared to have been carrying ammunition and had scattered burnt shrapnel across a highway. Other soldiers dug trenches.

One elderly man inspected the twisted wooden frames of the windows of his house, the glass blown out. He said he was worried a nearby metro station would be targeted. Soldiers stopped residents from entering the metro system, which will now be used for shelter from the fighting rather than for transport.

MILITIAS


In addition to the regular soldiers, on the outskirts of the city, men armed with assault rifles and wearing yellow arm bands could be seen preparing to fight as Russian forces approached.

Some wore civilian clothes and carried hunting rifles, others apparently from neighbourhood militias and other reservist groups had camouflage outfits and professional equipment.

Further out of town, Ukrainians lined up at gasoline stations and bank ATMs, despite government-imposed limits on petrol sales and cash withdrawals.

In Koncha Zaspa, just south of Kyiv, people lined up to collect water from a public pump and to buy food in a local supermarket.

(Reporting by Aleksander Vasovic and Emin Caliskan; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Advice on how to fend off Russian army from urban warfare expert hits Twitter as battle for Ukraine’s capital Kyiv rages

Mark DeCambre - 


KEY WORDS
‘You have the power but you have to fight smart.’ — John W. Spencer

That’s retired Major John Spencer, chair of Urban Warfare Studies at West Point’s Modern War Institute, who took to Twitter on Saturday to directly speak to Ukraine’s citizens as skirmishes for control of the capital Kyiv itensified. Main Russian forces advanced closer to the city Saturday night after earlier airstrikes were reported and civilians were taking up arms to defend the city against the potential for battalions of Russian troops.

“The urban defense is hell for any soldier. It usually take 5 attackers to 1 defender. Russians do not have the numbers. Turn Kyiv and any urban area leading to Kyiv into a porcupine,” wrote Spencer, who recommended that defenders of the city need to build thousands of obstacles in the streets, destroy bridges and create strongholds to attack the well-armed Russian military.

“If it is a street you still need to use. Build a S pattern obstacle that still slows a vehicle down,” he writes.

The advice from the tactical expert comes as amid the third day of the Ukrainian invasion ordered by Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, with the aim of overthrowing Ukraine’s elected government and ending its alignment with the West.

The Wall Street Journal and others were reporting that Ukrainian forces, backed by thousands of volunteers regained control of Kyiv’s streets.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was asked to evacuate Kyiv at the behest of the U.S. government, turned down the offer and has urged citizens to take up arms.

Zelensky said in response: “The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride,” according to a senior American intelligence official with direct knowledge of the conversation, who described Zelensky as upbeat. Zelensky, in a video address on the streets of Kyiv, urged citizens to keep fighting.

Some 18,000 rifles had been distributed to volunteers in the capital willing to fight, WSJ reported.

Also see: Zelensky records video in Kyiv street to reassure Ukrainians that he’s staying put amid Russian attack

‘It wasn’t Putin who invaded Ukraine’: How state media in Russia are depicting the continuing attack

Spencer’s recommendations were drawing attention on Twitter, with hedge-fund manager Pershing Square Capital’s Bill Ackman retweeting the military expert’s messages on urban tactics in Kyiv, using the hashtag #StandWithUkraine.


‘We don’t know who to shoot, they all look like us’: Russian soldiers in Ukraine becoming disoriented, US official says


Bevan Hurley
Sat, February 26, 2022

Russian forces are reportedly becoming demoralised, disoriented and hungry on the third day of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

A senior United States official told ABC News that Russian soldiers had been overheard complaining that Ukrainian resistance was much stiffer than they had anticipated.

On one radio call, the official said they heard a soldier saying: “We don’t know who to shoot – they all look like us.”

A resident in the western city of Lviv told inews.co.uk that Russian soldiers “don’t know why they are on our land”.

Constantine Yevtushenko told the news site soldiers were hungry, were running low on supplies, and were confused about the purpose of their mission.

“They are just following the orders that they have,” Mr Yevtushenko said. “They are kids.”

Russian efforts to take the capital city of Kyiv have successfully been repelled for the past two nights by Ukrainian armed forces, although there were reports of an offensive being planned for Saturday night.

(Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Thousands of citizens have also taken up arms and been encouraged to make home-made molotov cocktails.

There have been reports of more than 1,000 Russian soldiers being killed, and several hundred more captured.

On Saturday Ukrainian officials said 198 citizens – including three children – had been killed since the invasion began.

Health minister Viktor Liashko said that 1,115 people were injured including 33 children.


Fox News Reporter in Ukraine Posts Graphic Videos Following Fighting and Russian Missiles in Kyiv (Video)



Rosemary Rossi
Sat, February 26, 2022, 

Fox News foreign correspondent Trey Yingst was on the streets of Ukraine, documenting and sharing the graphic images on social media the morning after Russia’s insurgence into Kyiv.

As air raid sirens sounded in Ukraine’s capital late Friday night, Yingst panned his camera from safe inside his room to show no signs of life wandering the usually busy city below. When morning came, he took to the abandoned streets, showing the aftermath of the battle.

“Fierce fighting erupted between the Ukrainian army and Russian forces in the streets of Kyiv. This truck is riddled with bullet holes, and there’s blood on the sidewalk,” he said at the scene. “This morning, a Russian missile slammed into this building in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv. This gives you a sense of the destruction that these weapons can cause. Right now Ukraine is appealing to the international community to send air defense systems, as their country is under attack.”



The horrific footage – which he warned social media users was graphic – showed a bullet-ridden truck and blood on the brick street in several places surrounding it. Although no victims of the shooting are shown, the image nonetheless conveys the peril of the vehicle’s occupants.

As he wandered the “mostly empty” streets, Yingst noted the “long lines of civilians in Kyiv today waiting to pick up weapons” and that the few open grocery stores were “packed with people.”

Shortly thereafter, Yingst shared footage of the destruction, including a look at a residential building that was hit with a Russian missile that morning.



Reporting on Fox News, Yingst said, “When we were at the site where that missile hit earlier today, as we walked through the debris, you could see photos of a family who lives in that apartment complex – their home completely destroyed. Another example of the most vulnerable population so often caught amid the crossfire, as is the case here in Ukraine.”

 

Ukrainian defense forces and civilian volunteers were able to slow the advance of more than 150,000 Russian troops invading the country. Russian troops have killed at least 198 people and wounded at least 1,115, according to the Ukrainian National Guard.

Russia moves weapons capable of inflicting mass casualties into position, claim intelligence official


Sat, February 26, 2022, 12:08 PM·4 min read

Russian forces attempting to storm Kyiv and other main cities are being reinforced after meeting fierce resistance with large numbers of troops and heavy weaponry capable of inflicting massive casualties, according to western intelligence analysts.

The Ukrainian capital is said to be the destination for two Russian armies – the 41st Combined Arms Army (CAA) and the 1st Guards Tank Army – as part of an encirclement operation from three sides with a fourth one being considered.

Western officials have expressed deep concern that frustration at a long delay in capturing Kyiv may lead to Vladimir Putin ordering the use of weapons capable of causing huge loss of lives, including thermobaric missiles.

Among the weapons which have been seen to be moving towards the capital and other cities are TOS-1 thermobaric launchers, BM-21 122mm Grad, BM-21 220mm Uragan, and 300mm Smerch systems. All are area denial systems which are not used for precision strikes, but clearing stretches of ground.

In addition, intelligence officials have seen the appearance of the 27M Malka 203mm heavy self-propelled howitzer and 2S4 Tyulpan 240 mm heavy self-propelled mortars which can be used on large buildings.

The 41st CAA and the 1st Guards Tank Army have around 35,000 to 40,000 personnel with support. But smaller numbers are expected to be deployed fully into Ukraine.

The main routes to Kyiv being targeted by the Russian general staff, it is claimed, are from Belarus down to the west bank of the Dnieper river; from the Gomel down to the east back of the Dnieper, west of Chernihiv; and through Kursk, Borzna and Bovary. A fourth option would be the force now fighting in Kharkiv moving up to the east bank of the Dnieper.

Officials say that using the heavy option may take some time and the Russians are likely to persist with the current operational plan of taking Kyiv without inflicting huge numbers of deaths and injuries.


This map details the progress of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine during Thursday and Friday (Press Association Images)

It is widely accepted, however, that Russian forces are behind their schedule in their projected rate of progress. Britain’s defence secretary Ben Wallace’s conclusion that they have failed to reach their military objective in the first few days is widely shared by Ukrainian and other international officials.

The Ukrainian-controlled territories in the Donbas, which President Putin said will be merged into the “Peoples Republics” of Donetsk and Luhansk, are yet to be captured. And, despite intense fighting, none of the main cities targeted by the Russians have fallen.

Russian forces have proved surprisingly vulnerable to air strikes despite having overwhelming superiority in the number and quality of warplanes and in missiles and cannons. The Ukrainians have been highly effective in the use of Turkish Bayraktar TB2 drones they have been acquiring, and have already used successfully against separatist forces in the Donbas. The state-backed Russian channel Sputnik highlighted the use of the drones, but claimed that most of them have been shot down.

There has also been surprise at weakness in the Russian communications and coordination systems. There are stories of lost Russian columns asking for directions to Kyiv. These may be exaggerated, but some American units also asked for directions to Baghdad during the 2003 invasion. In any event, Ukrainian authorities are removing road signs on the approaches to Kyiv in an attempt to disorientate the Russians.

Ukrainian soldiers take positions outside a military facility as two cars burn in a Kyiv street, on Saturday (AP)

The Ukrainian Defence Ministry claimed on Saturday that it had shot down a Russian transporter plane carrying soldiers. It said that a Ukrainian SU-27 fighter jet intercepted the Russian IL-76 MD aircraft as it was trying to land paratroopers in the Kyiv region. The IL-76 MD can carry up to almost 170 soldiers, as well as a crew of seven.

Ukrainian officials claim that over 3,500 Russian troops have been killed since the invasion began. Russia’s military spokesperson Major General Igor Konashenkov held that Moscow had suffered no casualties during the invasion.

Ukraine’s health minister Viktor Liashko stated that 198 Ukrainians have been killed in that time, and 1,115 people injured, including 33 children. The figures were not broken down between combatants and civilians. On Friday the president’s office stated that 40 soldiers have been killed.


Ukrainian servicemen captured by the Russians in the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic, eastern Ukraine, on Saturday (EPA)

After intense missile strikes, artillery barrages and gunfights in the outskirts of Kyiv during the night, Saturday was relatively quiet in the city. President Zelensky, who had turned down Joe Biden’s offer to fly him and his family to safety, declared that the Russians have sent “missiles, fighters, drones, artillery, armoured vehicles, saboteurs and airborne forces” against Ukraine, but “we are defending the country, the land of our future children.

“Kyiv and key cities around the capital are controlled by our army. The occupiers wanted to block the centre of our state and put their puppets here, as in Donetsk. We broke their plan."

Mr Zelensky also once again stated that the civilian population in Kyiv would be armed. On Saturday the Interior Ministry announced that “18,000 machine guns” will be handed to volunteers.

A curfew in the capital was extended from 10pm-8am to 5pm-8am by the mayor, Vitali Klitschko, who declared that violators would be considered “the enemy”. Armed groups of civilians have been setting up checkpoints in the streets during the course of the day, at times “arresting” suspects: another volatile mix in the combustible state of affairs in Ukraine.




Ukrainian man offers to tow enemy tank back to Russia after it runs out of fuel
RUSSIA'S BATTLE OF THE BULGE MOMENT

Andy Gregory
Sat, February 26, 2022

The driver pulled up alongside the tank and asked soldiers from his open window whether they had broken down (Twitter/Grab)

A Ukrainian man has filmed himself offering to tow an enemy tank back to Russia, after spotting the assault vehicle having apparently ground to a halt in the middle of a motorway.

The latest in a series of viral clips of Ukrainians bravely confronting Russian troops shows the driver pulling up alongside the motionless military vehicle, and asking several soldiers from his open window whether they have broken down.

Upon being told that they have run out of fuel, the driver prompts laughter from the soldiers as he asks: “Can I tow you back to Russia?”



According to translations on social media, he then tells the soldiers they are en route to Kyiv after they fail to tell him where they are supposed to be going.

Asked by the soldiers for news on the invasion, he tells them that Ukraine is winning the war while Moscow’s troops are good at surrendering because “they also do not know where they are going”.


As a parting shot, the Ukrainian claims to have asked “the whole column” of Russian vehicles advancing towards the capital but that “no one knows where they are and where they are going”. The footage shows him driving past yet another stationary tank within 30 seconds.


It is not the only report of Moscow tanks running out of fuel as Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Russia’s sovereign neighbour enters its third day, with a UK government minister among those suggesting the Kremlin’s plan “is nowhere near running to schedule” amid strong Ukrainian resistance.

A Ukrainian military Facebook account claimed on Friday that Russian troops stopped near Konotop, north east of Kyiv, had “a problem with fuel and supplies”, alleging that some invading soldiers were walking around with gas canisters “trying to buy fuel” and others were “demanding food from the local population” while businesses had been looted.


Ukrainian service members are seen at the site of a fighting with Russian raiding group in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv (AFP via Getty Images)

“The main armoured columns approaching Kyiv are still some way off. That is a testament to the incredible resistance the Ukrainian armoured forces have put up over the last 48 hours or so,” UK armed forces minister James Heappey told Sky News on Saturday.

“Clearly the Russian plan is to take Kyiv but the reality is that the Ukrainians are thwarting them thus far. It looks like the Russian plan is nowhere near running to schedule.

“I think that will be a great cause of concern for President Putin and rather points to the fact that there was a lot of hubris in the Russian plan and that he may be awfully advised.”

Fighting intensified overnight in the Ukrainian capital, as small Russian raiding groups’ attempts to infiltrate the city saw street skirmishes break out, as Moscow’s forces continue to advance on Kyiv from multiple directions.

Follow live updates on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

But the UK Ministry of Defence said on Saturday that the speed of the Russian advance had “temporarily slowed likely as a result of acute logistical difficulties and strong Ukrainian resistance”.

"Russian forces are bypassing major Ukrainian population centres while leaving forces to encircle and isolate them,” the ministry said in an intelligence update.

“Overnight clashes in Kyiv are likely to have involved limited numbers of pre-positioned Russian sabotage groups. The capture of Kyiv remains Russia's primary military objective.”

Watch: Ukrainian civilians use their bodies to block Russian tanks

Grayson Quay, Weekend editor
Sat, February 26, 2022

Russian tank ANATOLII STEPANOV/AFP via Getty Images

Ukrainian citizens in the city of Bakhmach stood in front of advancing Russian tanks on Saturday, according to video verified by CNN.

Per CNN, "[i]n the video, tanks can be seen driving on roads in Bakhmach, which is just over 110 miles northeast of the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv."

The video shows a man climbing onto a Russian tank as it drives down a city street. The tank stops, and the man climbs down and briefly kneels in front of it before standing up and moving out of the way.

According to CNN's translation, a voice can be heard saying, "They are throwing their bicycles underneath the Russian tanks," though no one can be seen doing so on the video. The voice also describes people "throwing themselves under the wheels." As the video ends, someone can be seen climbing back onto the tank.



Ukraine's government has encouraged civilians to help defend their country, handing out assault rifles and urging citizens to assemble Molotov cocktails. The Russian Defense Ministry has condemned these actions, arguing that arming untrained civilians "will inevitably lead to accidents and casualties," per CNN.

The U.S. Defense Department believes that 50 percent of the approximately 200,000 troops Russia massed on Ukraine's border in the months leading up to the invasion are now fighting inside Ukraine, USA Today reported Saturday afternoon.

According to USA Today, Russian reconnaissance forces have entered Kyiv and engaged in street battles with Ukrainian troops, but the main force driving south from Belarus toward the capital city is still around 18 miles away.

Bakhmach is around 150 miles from Kyiv, and is located midway between the capital and the northeastern city of Kharkiv, which has seen some of the heaviest fighting of the war so far, according to CNBC.


Ukraine: Tank filmed crushing car driven by elderly civilian on Kyiv street


Samuel Lovett
Fri, February 25, 2022

A tank has been filmed crushing a civilian car in a northern district of Kyiv, as Vladimir Putin’s troops continue their advance on the Ukrainian capital.

In a video shared with and verified by The Independent, the armoured vehicle can be seen cutting across the road before driving over the oncoming car.

A second video shows a group of men attending to the wreckage on Obolonsky Avenue, in which an elderly man can be seen moving behind the wheel of the car. A local resident who shared the footage with The Independent said: “Russian ‘liberators’ on the streets of Kyiv crush the cars of civilians.”

The BBC has reported that the driver was pulled alive from the wreckage.

However, there was some argument on social media, that the armoured vehicle was Ukrainian, not Russian, and its driver lostcontrol of the vehicle.

Russian forces are moving through the northern outskirts of Ukraine's capital, and US officials have warned that president Vladimir Putin may be intent on installing a new, more friendly government in Kyiv.

Local residents in the city have been urged to fight back with Molotov cocktails against the encroaching troops, with instructions of how to make the petrol bombs circulated on the Ukrainian Interior Ministry’s social media.

Some 18,000 machine guns have also been handed out to “all those who want to defend our capital with weapons in their arms,” according to government adviser Vadym Denysenko.

Among the signs that the Ukrainian capital was increasingly threatened, the military said that a group of Russian spies and saboteurs was seen in a district of Kyiv about three miles north of the city centre. Air strikes were later reported to have struck the city.

Elsewhere in the capital, soldiers have established defensive positions at bridges, and armoured vehicles rolled down the streets, while many residents stood uneasily in doorways of their apartment buildings.

Sirens have sounded out across Kyiv since the early hours of Friday, with residents forced to take shelter in underground metro stations following a series of Russian overnight aerial attacks that hit the densely populated Pozniake neighbourhood, in which at least eight people were reportedly injured.

Tetyana Filevska, a resident of the city and deputy director of the Ukrainian Institute, told The Independent: “We urgently need all the help to our army, people and country. We need guns and equipment, medicines, economic aid - but most of all we need solidarity in fighting Russia.

“We are keeping Europe safe, you all have to understand this. Putin won’t stop on Ukraine. He will go further.”

Alongside Kyiv, multiple other Ukrainian cities are under attack by Russian forces. The Kremlin’s defence ministry says its troops have surrounded the city of Chernihiv, which is about 150 km north of the capital. Explosions and gunfire have also been reported in Kharkiv, close to the eastern border, and the southern port of Mariupo


Ukraine’s Tiananmen Square: Desperate civilian stands in front of Russian armoured vehicles

Rachel Sharp
Sat, February 26, 2022,

Gut-wrenching footage has emerged of the moment a desperate Ukrainian civilian stood in front of a Russian convoy in a scene reminiscent of Tiananmen Square.

The video, posted on social media by Ukrainian outlet HB, shows the brave man risking his life by trying to block a convoy of armoured vehicles streaking along the road towards him.

Gasps are heard from the people filming the incident as the man confronts the Russian troops and the vehicles appear to drive around him.


His brave act is believed to have taken place in the south of Ukraine, close to Crimea.

The man does not appear to be harmed during the 28-second clip of footage.

The incident echoed the iconic image of a lone protester standing in front of a line of tanks in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in June of 1989.

The man, who became known as “Tank man”, was seen holding two shopping bags as he faced down a line of tanks in the square.

At the time, the square had become the site of huge protests as the Chinese people called for greater political freedom from the Communist government.

The Communist rulers sent in troops to crush the protesters and at least 200 people are believed to have been killed.

Many social media users commented that the lone man seen in the footage in Ukraine is the country’s “tank man” as it continues to come under attack from Russia.

Russian troops continued to advance on Kyiv on Friday with tanks seen entering the Ukrainian capital while explosions rang out across the city.

Fears are mounting that the city could fall within a matter of hours or days, while Russian President Vladimir Putin called on Ukrainian troops to overthrow their own leaders as he seeks to topple the nation’s government.

At least 137 Ukrainians have been killed, including civilian men, women and children since the Russian president declared war in the early hours of Thursday morning.

Among the dead are 13 border guards who were killed in an attack on a tiny island in the Black Sea after they bravely refused to surrender to Russian troops.

Viral video footage shows a Ukrainian man rushing into a column 
of Russian military vehicles (Twitter / @TweetsNV)

Despite the offensive, Ukrainian troops and citizens are fighting back, with the government calling on its people to defend Kyiv and banning men aged 18 to 60 from leaving the country so they can be called up to serve.

Around 18,000 firearms have been handed out to volunteers and people are being urged to make Molotov cocktails to protect the capital city.

While Russia has not revealed its fatalities, Ukraine’s Defence Ministry said on Friday that it had killed more than 1,000 Russian troops since the conflict began.

“Russia has not suffered so many casualties during the fighting in any of its armed conflicts since its inception,” the ministry said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been calling on the wider international community to take more action after several nations including the US, the UK and the EU unveiled a series of sanctions on Russia in response to its act of war.

A lone protester stands in front of a line of tanks in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in June of 1989 (1989 AP)

RUSSIAN INVASION OF CZECHLOSLOVAKIA 1968



















Russia Used Beatings and Tricks to Forcibly Send Rookie Troops to Ukraine, Rights Group Says

RUSSIA DID THE SAME DURING THE CHECHEN WAR

Allison Quinn
Thu, February 24, 2022

Getty

Russian soldiers from all across the country were deceived into heading to the Ukrainian border, and some were beaten if they resisted, according to the Committee of Soldiers’ Mothers, a Russian non-governmental organization that works to expose human rights violations within the military.

The group is reportedly preparing a complaint for the Chief Military Prosecutor’s Office alleging that their sons only recently joined the military as conscripts and were told they were going to the border with Ukraine for drills. But their statuses were then abruptly changed to contract soldiers— a role for those with more combat and training experience—and they were suddenly thrust into war.

“They are switching entire regiments to contract [soldiers,] although the guys did not submit any formal requests for this, and took no such initiative. There are instances of physical violence, and beatings of those who refuse to become contract soldiers. And after that it’s completely unknown [what happens to them], because they take away their phones,” Andrei Kurochkin, the deputy chairman of the group, told Takie Dela.

Ukraine Admits It’s ‘Impossible’ to Say if Chernobyl Is Safe

“We've had a flurry of calls from scared mothers all over Russia. They are crying, they don’t know if their children are alive or healthy,” he was quoted saying, adding that it’s a “complete catastrophe” when military service is performed “under duress.”

“If there is a war, then professionals should deal with it, and not untrained ‘green’ guys,” Kurochkin said.

After hours of battles in multiple cities on Thursday, Ukraine’s Defense Ministry said Russian troops had suffered losses, though they stopped short of providing specific figures. As of Thursday evening, the Russian soldiers were taking “an operational pause and regrouping,” the ministry said.

Ukrainian authorities said two Russian soldiers were also captured.

The claims that some Russian soldiers were literally forced into the war with Ukraine come after Britain’s Defense Ministry released footage it said showed Russia was using mobile crematoriums to conceal its own soldiers’ deaths from the world.

Defense Minister Ben Wallace told The Telegraph the vehicle-mounted crematoriums “evaporate” each body placed inside them.

He described the crematoriums as a “very chilling side effect of how the Russians view their forces.”

“If I was a soldier and knew that my generals had so little faith in me that they followed me around the battlefield with a mobile crematorium, or I was the mother or father of a son, potentially deployed into a combat zone, and my government thought that the way to cover up loss was mobile crematorium, I'd be deeply, deeply worried,” Wallace was quoted saying.

Amid a worldwide outcry over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has been quick to stifle dissent at home. Numerous protests were staged in cities across the country on Thursday, but they were quickly dispersed by riot police who bundled protesters into police vans. OVD-Info, a media resource that tracks arrests during mass protests, reported more than 1,500 arrests in multiple cities.

Saturday, February 26, 2022

Why war in Ukraine could become America's fight


Jason Fields, deputy editor
Thu, February 24, 2022,

President Biden. Illustrated | Getty Images, iStock, Library of Congress

Every major war in Europe since 1914 has involved an initially reluctant United States: World War I; World War II; the Cold War; the Bosnian War. As Russia invades Ukraine and men, women, and children die, we have to ask the question: Can America avoid the fight?

The U.S. is always late for the party: appearing in the final months of the first World War after much of the carnage was done. Sitting out WWII for more than two years before being drawn in by an attack on the homeland by the Japanese. And again in Bosnia in the 1990s, when the U.S. led airstrikes against the Serbs after they slaughtered more than 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica.

There's an argument to be made that both WWI and Bosnia were wars of choice, from an American perspective. Not so much with the other two.


Before WWI, the U.S. was not a major power. It had an army of fewer than 130,000 men, and the anti-war movement was fierce, if not as well remembered as Vietnam. The U.S. was ultimately dragged into World War I when the Germans, who were in a bad way, went back on a pledge not to attack American shipping with U-boats and made Mexico an offer to join the war — on their side.

WWII, of course, needs no introduction: The Nazis invaded Poland on Sept. 1, 1939; the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. Adolf Hitler then declared war on the United States and suddenly an isolationist nation was fighting a war on two fronts, in addition to becoming the "arsenal of democracy."

Following WWII, the U.S. didn't crawl back into its shell. It was now a major world power, reconceiving Japan, rebuilding Europe, and facing off with nations living behind the Iron Curtain. If you believe in President Harry S Truman's domino theory, the hot spots in the Cold War — Korea, Japan — were wars of necessity and extensions of previous wars in Europe.

Late Wednesday evening, though, war returned to the bloodlands (as Yale's Timothy Snyder called them). Violence is engulfing Europe again.

Americans must face the fact that no one knows where Russian President Vladimir Putin will stop. Russian troops aren't leaving Belarus any time soon, and soldiers made a brief visit to another former Soviet republic, Kazakhstan, recently.

Of course, Ukraine is not a member of NATO. It wanted to be, but it isn't. The U.S. is under no obligation to fight on Kyiv's behalf. The Baltic states, on the other hand, are NATO members, since 2004, and Article 5 of the NATO treaty says that every other member of the alliance must come to their rescue in event of an invasion. Putin covets Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania, once Soviet republics and also temptingly geographically desirable.

From a historical standpoint, the U.S. is starting the way it has in other European wars: humanitarian and military aid; tough sanctions and harsh words. American soldiers are racing to reinforce the front lines of member states, though not yet in large numbers.

The U.S. now must face up to the scariest thing about this new war in Europe. No one yet knows whether America will have to fight in it

A new Cold War, or the start of World War III? How historians see the invasion of Ukraine

Grace Hauck
Fri, February 25, 2022

Tanks rolled into Ukraine unabated. Families packed into darkened subway stations to take shelter from bombs. Others filled suitcases and fled along clogged roadways out of cities.

The images emerging from Ukraine on Thursday evoke memories of 20th-century conflicts in Europe that once seemed unimaginable in 2022, leaving many to wonder: Is this a new Cold War? Or the beginning of World War III?

"In terms of cold war, you have the vast majority of the rest of the world in total opposition to what he's doing," President Joe Biden said of Russian President Vladimir Putin at a news conference Thursday afternoon. "And so it's going to be a cold day for Russia."

USA TODAY spoke with historians across the country who offered varying opinions about the historical parallels of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Russia-Ukraine explained: Inside the crisis as US calls Russian movements an invasion

U.S. Army tanks, foreground, face off against Soviet tanks across the Berlin Wall at Checkpoint Charlie on the Friedrichstrasse, in a tense standoff on Oct. 27 and 28, 1961.

"It's very likely that we're going to be entering another prolonged standoff with Russia," said David Szakonyi, an associate professor of political science at George Washington University. "And the last time that we were in such a state of confrontation with Russia, it was formerly the Soviet Union – the Cold War. So I don't think it's necessarily the wrong term to be tossing around."

Historians largely pinpoint the Cold War as starting with the Truman Doctrine in 1947 and ending with the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. Since then, the U.S. has continued to fight Russian election interference and misinformation campaigns and oppose Russia through cyber, economic and proxy ground wars.

But the invasion of Ukraine marks a turning point in U.S.-Russia relations, Szakonyi said.

"There's been a line that's been crossed. The West is going to consider this to be a much more flagrant violation of international law, and it's going to be more united in the way that it tries to sanction Russia," Szakonyi said. "That distinguishes it from the way Russia has been able to walk a fine line and get away with a lot of other types of hybrid attacks and interventions without necessarily feeling the brunt Western anger."

'Our world is crumbling': Ukrainians try to flee homes with food, belongings
Is this a new Cold War?

"In short, yes and no," John Gaddis, a leading Cold War historian based at Yale University, told USA TODAY.

The world has entered a new cold war in the sense that there is a "protracted international rivalry," Gaddis wrote in an article in Foreign Affairs in December.

But the Cold War refers to a struggle at a particular time, among particular adversaries and over particular issues, he wrote. "The context is quite different," Gaddis wrote.

East German border guards look through a hole in the Berlin wall after demonstrators pulled down one segment of the wall at Brandenburg gate on Nov. 11, 1989.

Faith Hillis, a historian of modern Russia at the University of Chicago, argued the term doesn't quite apply.

"First of all, it's hot," Hillis said. "The other difference between the Cold War and the contemporary context is that the world is very global and the world is very interconnected."

LATEST: Biden details new Russian sanctions, says 'aggression cannot go unanswered'

Unlike during the Cold War, the world is no longer bipolar, meaning there are more than two superpowers holding the majority of global economic, military and cultural influence, said Yoshiko Herrera, former director of the Center for Russia, East Europe and Central Asia at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"There's China. There's Europe. So we're not in the same post-World War II environment which is dominated by the United States and the Soviet Union," Herrera said.

Arne Westad, a historian at Yale University, noted Cold War analogies don't emphasize the severity of the situation. Neither the U.S. nor the Soviet Union invaded an independent European country during the Cold War.

"The Soviets did send troops into Hungary and into Czechoslovakia, but those were already members of the Soviet Bloc. So what we're seeing now goes beyond that Cold War dynamic, and in many ways, it's more dangerous," Westad said.

The invasion also renews Cold War-era anxieties about nuclear weapons, said John Randolph, director of the Russian, East European and Eurasian Center at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

"During the Cold War, we had this notion of nuclear deterrence," Randolph said. "What we have here is the ground invasion of a major European country that borders NATO members with whom we have guarantees of nuclear security. The potential for the spillover of this conflict into NATO and then into some sort of nuclear exchange is frighteningly high."

Sixth grade students crouch under or beside their desks along with their teacher, Vincent M. Bohan, left, as they act out a scene from the Federal Civil Defense administration film

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization is an intergovernmental military alliance between 28 European countries, the U.S. and Canada. In a speech Thursday, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg characterized the invasion as "a serious threat to Euro-Atlantic security."

"We now have war in Europe, on a scale and of a type we thought belonged to history," Stoltenberg said.

Will US help Ukraine in war vs. Russia? American troops bolster NATO in Europe

'The helplessness is overwhelming': Ukrainian Americans react to invasion from afar
World War III? Putin's actions evoke Hitler's invasion of Poland

Many historians said Russia's invasion of Ukraine was most reminiscent of a different period in history: the beginning of World War II.

"Ukraine has done nothing to Russia in this case, except try to have its own independent domestic and foreign policy, which it's entitled to do as a sovereign country," Hillis said. "So I think the closest analogy I can draw here is to other completely unprovoked invasions, including Hitler's invasion of Poland in 1939."

German tanks advance on Poland in September 1939.

For Imma Vysotskiy, who migrated from Belarus to California more than 20 years ago, the invasion reminds her of "the last world war," she said Thursday in a Ukrainian deli in Santa Monica.

"I simply cannot believe this is really happening," said Vysotskiy, 82, as she wiped her eyes. "Some people are calling (Putin) smart, but he's crazy."

In New York, Iryna Kurowyckyj, 83, said the invasion reminds her of when she fled Ukraine as a child with her family, arriving in the U.S. at the end of 1949. At the time, she didn't speak English and had just survived periods of living in labor camps.

Decades later, she's afraid of what will become of her home country, where friends still live and her pride remains.

"I feel terrible," Kurowyckyj said Thursday as she gathered with friends and her sister inside Selfreliance Association of Ukrainian Americans, a cultural organization in the East Village.

Kurowyckyj said she spoke with a friend early Thursday who lives outside Kyiv who was worried she'd have to flee through the woods, just as Kurowyckyj's family did when she was a child.

Randolph said the conflict, broadly speaking, resembles World War II in that democratic, self-governing nations under the rule of law are facing off against a dictatorship seeking to dominate other countries militarily.

"I do think that the stakes of the conflicts are similar and that there's a profound question about the future of the world," Randolph said.


British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin in, Yalta, Crimea, on Feb. 4, 1945. Initially hailed as a major success, the conference later came to be viewed by some as the moment that the U.S. ceded too much influence to the Soviets and the trigger for the Cold War.

The comparison to 1939 is "helpful in some sense," Szakonyi said. He said the period is also similar to the preemptive attacks by Germany in the run-up to Word War I.

Germany "felt like its security was being threatened by moves by its adversaries. And I think in many respects, this current invasion, completely unjustified, is an attempt for Russia to beef up its own security," Szakonyi said.

Other historians drew connections with tensions in Europe at the end of the 19th century and pointed to the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962.

Timothy Naftali, a historian based at NYU who has written extensively on the Cold War, urged caution in making analogies. "You always have to be careful about parallels because they're not perfect," he said.

Despite the similarities to the lead-up to world wars, historians largely rejected the notion that the conflict in Ukraine will lead to a third world war.

"It's a huge shock to European security and to international order, but we're not in a multi-country, World War III, thankfully," Herrera said. "And while there are threats of expansion, at the moment, I think this is mainly a problem, in terms of actual warfare, in Ukraine."

U.S. officials on Thursday ordered the deployment of 7,000 more troops to Europe, but Biden said the troops would not be fighting in Ukraine.

Szakonyi noted that Putin attacked a non-NATO member state, making it "highly unlikely" the West will get militarily involved in Ukraine.

"Thankfully, the risk of World War III, although it has increased it, it's not inevitable that this is going to descend to that point," Szakonyi said.

Even if not a full-blown world war, the fighting has dangerous implications across the globe, Naftali said

"Putin is threatening the very nature of our international system," Naftali said. "Putin is challenging us. And he's saying 'What I want, I want, and I will take it, and it doesn't matter what the human consequences are.' And if we allow dictators to get away with that, when does it stop and where does it stop?"

Contributing: Ryan Miller from New York City and Christal Hayes from Los Angeles. Grace Hauck reported from Chicago.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Cold War or WWIII? Russian invasion of Ukraine draws comparisons
Scotland Connecting Oil, Gas, Wind To Drive North Sea Decarbonization

Rigzone Staff
Thu, February 24, 2022


Scotland has revealed a new leasing opportunity that will connect offshore oil and gas with offshore wind to assist with North Sea decarbonization.

Namely, the Scottish government’s public corporation Crown Estate Scotland announced the details of its Innovation and Targeted Oil and Gas (INTOG) offshore wind leasing process.


Developers will apply for the rights to build small-scale innovative offshore wind projects of less than 100MW as well as larger projects connected to oil and gas infrastructure to provide electricity and reduce the carbon emissions associated with those sites.

Awards will be determined on a largely open auction basis and will be split into two pots – one for smaller-scale innovation projects and one for larger projects linked to oil and gas infrastructure. The bidding window will open in June 2022.

Applicants will also be required to submit a Supply Chain Development Statement, outlining the nature and location of any supply chain activity linked to their proposed project.

“Following our initial announcement last year, we’re now engaging with industry on how the next stage of the INTOG leasing process will work and what it can achieve,” Colin Palmer, Director of Marine for Crown Estate Scotland, said.

“This leasing is about creating an opportunity for enhanced roll out of offshore wind technology in Scottish waters. Whilst we recognize it will be for industry and government to take the key steps needed on oil and gas transition, we believe this will provide a step towards progressing that transition to net-zero,” Palmer added.

“The publication of this Initial Plan Framework is an important milestone in the journey that Scotland’s energy industry is on to transition to net zero. It will help to progress decarbonization of the oil and gas sector, supporting the delivery of the sector’s decarbonization targets within the North Sea Transition Deal,” Michael Matheson MSP, Net-Zero and Energy Secretary, claimed.

“The INTOG process will also open the door for smaller, innovative offshore renewables projects to demonstrate their technology, such as for green hydrogen, in Scottish waters and offer the potential for clean energy from offshore wind to support North Sea decarbonization, building on the huge electricity-generating potential already identified through the ScotWind offshore wind leasing round.

“As the recent ScotWind announcement has shown, Scotland is at the forefront of offshore wind development globally. As with the ScotWind leasing round, when we progress to the application phase, each applicant will be required to submit a Supply Chain Development Statement (SCDS) which includes commitments that set the anticipated level and location of expenditure during the various stages of their project. We expect engagement from the outset to help deliver supply chain commitments, and whilst these can be updated throughout the development phase, developers will ultimately be held to commitments.

“The Scottish Government’s sectoral marine planning process will ensure that the impact of any future developments on the environment and other sea users are addressed, and we will be engaging with communities, environmental interests, and marine industries as we develop these plans,” Matheson concluded.

This process is separate from the ScotWind Leasing round for commercial-scale offshore wind projects in Scottish waters.
‘Right At Home’: Tulsi Stakes Her Claim at CPAC

Corbin Bolies
Fri, February 25, 2022

Bill Pugliano/Getty

Former Democratic House Representative and presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard on Friday night said she finally found where she belonged—at the 2022 Conservative Political Action Conference.

Gabbard spoke at the conference’s Ronald Reagan Dinner, walking out to thunderous applause. As she took the podium, she greeted the crowd with an “Aloha” and thanked everyone for a warm welcome, which came four days after she was announced as a CPAC speaker.

“You’re making me feel right at home,” she said with a smile.

In her 20-minute speech, Gabbard attempted to balance two opposing viewpoints: the idea of a “common foundation” in the American public, and the idea of a “powerful elite” aimed at canceling and silencing those who speak out against the government.

She touched on multiple themes prevalent throughout the 2022 gathering—free speech, an “authoritarian” Canada, and the idea that President Joe Biden views those who push back on him as “domestic terrorists.”

“What they’re telling us is you are an enemy of the state,” she said. “If you dare to oppose or even question the president, his administration, or his policies, ‘shut up, step back fall in line, or we’re coming after you.’ This isn’t some theory. This is reality.”

American Conservatives Union Chairman Matt Schlapp told The Daily Beast he first spoke to Gabbard about attending the conference a few weeks ago. The two were set up by South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who he said was a friend of Gabbard, and that speaking at the conference wasn’t the purpose of the call.

“We started talking and had good conversations and seemed to be on the same page,” he said. “I didn’t request her speech, so I listened like everybody and I thought it was really well done.”

Gabbard also reinforced some of the conspiracies and cultural movements nearly all CPAC speakers have shared from the stage without ever using the word “conservative” to describe herself.

She praised special counsel John Durham’s probe of the investigation into Russia’s involvement in the 2016 election (which she portrayed as one into “Clinton corruption,” another conservative talking point about one of Gabbard’s political enemies). She hailed parents who have fought back against school boards who she said threatened how they were “raising their kids.” She also propped up the idea of “cancel culture” for those who tried to criticize the current administration.

But she said the CPAC attendees—still without using the word “conservative”—will lead the battle to fight back against Democrats.

“We have decided that we belong to no one but God,” she said. “We are not subjects or slaves of those who govern and by God’s grace, we are free and we will fight to remain free.”
After uneducated remark about Native Americans, Kansas education commissioner must go


John Hanna/Associated Press file photo

The Kansas City Star Editorial Board
Thu, February 24, 2022, 10:50 AM·2 min read

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly has called on Education Commissioner Randy Watson to resign over his horrifyingly insensitive remark about Native Americans at a recent conference.

Watson told conferees that when he was a kid, his cousins feared coming to Kansas because of tornadoes, according to a video released by state officials Thursday.

“I’d say, ‘Don’t worry about that,’“ Watson says. “’But you’ve got to worry about the Indians raiding the town at any time,’ and they really thought that, you know.”

Watson has reportedly apologized in private for the remark. Nevertheless, Kelly is right that he has to go.

“The state and the Kansas Board of Education must take issues of derogatory and discriminatory language seriously,” the governor said in a statement. “There is no question that Randy Watson must resign his position immediately.”

Watson’s service as the state’s chief education officer has been otherwise laudable, particularly given the pressure from lawmakers who want to destroy the public education model in the state. Like all public officials, he should be allowed to make the occasional rhetorical mistake.

But this mistake goes beyond that, and damages Watson’s credibility in a way that hurts the schools. When the elected Kansas State Board of Education meets Friday to discuss the issue, its members should make that point clear.

This isn’t a case of political correctness run amok. It’s the state’s responsibility to hold its executive officers to account for statements and actions that threaten quality schools for all. Watson’s statement fits into that category.

The state BOE can fire Watson if it wants, or discipline him in other ways, or take no position on his comments. We hope he will spare the members a difficult vote by stepping aside.

Discriminatory comments are always unacceptable, but they are disqualifying for a state official. Watson should quit.

Editor’s note: This editorial has been updated after the release of the video with a transcription of Watson’s remarks.

Kansas board rejects Randy Watson's resignation, suspends him over offensive comments

Andrew Bahl and Rafael Garcia, Topeka Capital-Journal
Fri, February 25, 2022


Kansas education commissioner Randy Watson submitted his letter of resignation after making offensive comments about Native Americans, State Board of Education chair Jim Porter announced Friday. The board rejected Watson's resignation and suspended him 30 days.

The Kansas State Board of Education unanimously rejected the resignation of commissioner Randy Watson, Kansas' highest ranking education official, and instead opted to suspend him for 30 days without pay as discipline for offensive remarks he made at a conference last week.

The dramatic twist of events came after Gov. Laura Kelly, tribal leaders and Native American legislators called on Watson to step down over the comments, in which Watson appeared to make derogatory remarks about Native Americans while telling a story about California cousins wanting to visit him in Kansas.

"They'd be like, 'Are we going to get killed by a tornado?' and I'd say, 'Don't worry about that,'" Watson said. "'But you've got to be worried about the Indians raiding the town at any time.' They really thought that. I guess growing up in California, you don't know much of the history of Kansas."

Randy Watson's total record considered in suspension


Jim Porter, chairman of the Kansas Board of Education, makes opening remarks during Friday's special meeting.

Watson wasn't present at the public portion of the meeting but Board Chair Jim Porter said he had submitted a letter of resignation.

Porter later said Watson met with the board in during the closed-door portion of the meeting Friday. A Kansas State Department of Education spokesperson declined to make him available for comment.

Board members considered the totality of Watson's record in electing to suspend him, Porter said.

"This particular incident was serious and needed to be addressed, but we didn't feel like it was career ending," Porter said. "We believe in restorative justice. We believe that it is absolutely critical that we use this as a learning and teaching opportunity. And we felt strong that we are better able to do that under his leadership."

More: Gov. Kelly calls on Kansas education commissioner Randy Watson to resign after ‘inappropriate’ remarks
Craig Neuenswander will fill in as interim education commissioner

Watson's suspension will start Monday. Craig Neuenswander, deputy commissioner for fiscal and administrative services, will serve as interim commissioner during his absence.

The comments occurred during a conference on virtual education last week. Porter called the notion the board dragged their feet in addressing the issue "balderdash."

"It cannot be done quickly but needs to be done with a proper and appropriate opportunity to process what has taken place," Board Member Jim McNiece, R-Wichita, told reporters.

In a terse statement at the opening of the meeting, Porter slammed the fact that Watson felt the need to resign after multiple members of the Kansas Legislature were arrested and allowed to remain in their position, though he added Watson shouldn't have made the remarks and the board is "not here to acute to excuse or justify this statement in any way."

Ahead of the meeting, board member Ann Mah, D-Topeka, had said she hoped “something positive” could come from the situation.

After the meeting, she harkened back to a presentation the state school board had heard from Schlagle High School in Kansas City USD 500. The school had implemented restorative justice practices, which focus on discipline through conversation and learning, rather than punishment.
Kansas education board member calls for restorative justice

“If there’s an opportunity to use restorative justice in a great way and learn from it, this was it,” she told The Capital-Journal. “I think it’s important we now use restorative justice practices to reach out to these people who were hurt and maybe think about a bigger policy change going forward.

“I know the folks across the street would very much like us to stop talking about racial justice and equity, but I think this brings to light that we still have a lot of work to do. We can be a leader, and we need Randy at the top to make it happen.”

Rep. Stephanie Byers, D-Wichita and one of three Native American legislators, called on the state board to back up its statement on learning from the situation. A good first step would be having the education board meet with the chairs of Kansas’ four federally recognized tribes, she said.
Native American legislator: suspension 'slap on the wrist'

Still, she added that Watson’s 30-day suspension was ultimately “a slap on the wrist” and an insult to the state’s Native American students.

“We understand we’re in a position where public education in Kansas is being attacked left and right, and having Dr. Watson step down adds fuel to that fire,” Byers said. “People want to make the excuse that he said it because he was a child.

“But if you substitute any other racial group, or any other ethnicity for Indians, should we still forget about it?. Because that’s what it’s like for Native Americans, when you’re getting erased over and over again.

“Dr. Watson has done tremendous good for the state, but his discretion on this was such that, can he still be trusted if he said something like this publicly?”

In a statement, Joseph "Zeke" Rupnick, chairman of the Prairie Band Pottawatomi Nation, said the board's decision "sent a clear message to Indigenous People that comments like this are completely acceptable."

"The Board should ensure that all students under their charge are protected, rather than protecting the privileged few whose derogatory comments perpetuate discriminatory behaviors," Rupnick said.

Gov. Laura Kelly wants to meet with Randy Watson, KSBE chair


Former and present school superintendents, board members and education officials gather before the start of Friday's Kansas Board of Education special meeting.

Porter criticized Kelly and said it "was not appropriate" for the governor to make a public statement on the matter.

"It seems ironic to me that Commissioner Watson, who owned and did take responsibility for his statement, which was not illegal, feels obligated or feels forced to resign by outside forces," Porter said during the meeting.

In a statement, Kelly's spokesperson, Lauren Fitzgerald, said the governor would be seeking a meeting with Porter and Watson "to discuss what has transpired and how to move forward now that the Board has acted."

In recent days, board members say they have been besieged by education officials from across the state, who urged them not to terminate Watson. Some descended on Topeka on Friday in a bid to show support and launched into a round of applause after the meeting was adjourned.

Steve Noble, superintendent at Seaman USD 345, one of a handful of people waiting for the board to come out of executive session, said he and other education leaders across the state were rallying for the commissioner and veteran educator.

“Everyone makes mistakes, and us as educators, perhaps we should know and understand that better than most because we’re in the learning environment,” Noble said.

Porter said the controversy was only serving to distract from concerns brought forward by Native students and officials in recent days and he committed to addressing the treatment of indigenous students and history in Kansas schools going forward.

"If we believe that Kansas is to lead the world in the success of each student, we need to assure that Kansas is a welcoming and safe place for each student regardless of their heritage or any other factor," Porter said. "We also need to stop the effort to deny their history because it might offend somebody."


The Kansas State Board of Education voted to go into executive session during Friday's special meeting before announcing commissioner Randy Watson's suspension.

There are more than 3,600 American Indian and Alaska Native students enrolled in Kansas schools, according to 2021-22 headcount data from KSDE.

In recent days, Native students, leaders and education officials have said the remarks are indicative of an education system that often overlooks their history, culture and tribal sovereignty.

"The Kansas State Board of Education has a responsibility to the Kansas State Department of Education's vision that 'Kansas leads the world in the success of each student,'" Nis Wilbur, a member of the Prairie Band Pottawatomi Nation and former KSDE employee, said in an email earlier this week. "In order to lead the world, each student, including all Indigenous students, must receive safe and supportive learning environments."

Watson has served as the state's top education official since 2014. Prior to his appointment to the position, he served as superintendent of McPherson Unified School District 418.

He has led the state education agency during its push to redesign Kansas K-12 education and boost the statewide graduation and post-secondary success rates, as well as in the past two years of COVID-19 learning in the state.

More: Kansas State Board of Education to meet Friday after ‘inappropriate’ remarks by education commissioner

While Noble condemned Watson’s comments as inappropriate, he said context matters. Especially at the tail end of national Public Schools Week, he called Watson "a champion to the cause of public education."

“It was a mistake," Noble said, "but it’s the career and the legacy of a great man who cares deeply about all kids in Kansas.”

Andrew Bahl is a senior statehouse reporter for the Topeka Capital-Journal. He can be reached at abahl@gannett.com 

Rafael Garcia is an education reporter for the Topeka Capital-Journal. He can be reached at rgarcia@cjonline.com.

This article originally appeared on Topeka Capital-Journal: Randy Watson suspended as Kansas education commissioner after remarks