Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Reviving Malaysian Communist Ideology? 


A Brief But Deeper Reading Of ‘Pendatang,’ 


A Malaysian Crowdfunded Movie On Race-Based Ideology – OpEd


By 

I watched the first YouTube screening of a much-hyped Malaysian crowd-funded movie, Pendatang, produced by an indie film company, Kuman Pictures.  From my basement, at 8:00 AM, on a wide screen, I tried to follow the narrative arc but first essentially enjoy the movie, as movie-goers are supposed to drown in the experience and let the semiotics of viewing take over your consciousness. I told myself I need to watch it again. I rarely watch movies and TV at all and so, this viewing was indeed a good one, as my mind was not fogged and cluttered with storylines and mutilated with manipulations made by producers, directors, and special effects people.  

To me a movie is a book and a close reading of it can be well done after a few more viewings. Judging from the responses in cyberspace, Malaysians are thrilled with the movie, and some hailed Pendatang as “brilliant,” “well-made” and “a triumph of Malaysian moviemaking,” Understandably, since viewers appreciate free movies and enjoy the experience at the superficial level of reading. In this brief essay I present what I saw in it: its ideology and what the producer and the scriptwriter wanted us to see in all its subtlety. I offer a deeper reading of “Pendatang”  

Background 

Produced by Amir Muhammad of Kuman Pictures and Elise Schick, written by Lim Boon Siang and directed by Ng Ken Kin, the movie is funded by a group of Malaysians via crowdfunding. The rationale may be about lack of financial resources and to avoid being censored by the Malaysian Film body FINAS (Filem Nasional) who could be notorious in censoring parts of movies that touch on race and religious sensitivities.  

Some background information about the movie quoted verbatim from the website of the movie company, Kuman Pictures: 

“A Malaysian thriller movie on the triumph of humanity over racial extremism in a dystopian future. PENDATANG [i] s a script by Lim Boon Siang that we received as part of our first screenwriting competition in 2019. It is a dystopian thriller set in Malaysia where the different races are not allowed to mix, by force of draconian law. 

The story starts when a Chinese family moves into their new “allocated” house and discovers a small Malay girl hiding there. Should they just ‘get rid’ of her and put her in mortal danger, or risk their own safety and lives by trying to smuggle her back to “the Malay area”? “ 

The premise of a certain Segregation Act, a post 9/27 or September 27 referendum that took the East Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak out of Malaysia, sets the setting and recur as the ideological backdrop of this divide-and-rule totalitarian society. The Act reads: 

Under Section 1 (6) of the Segregation Act, any contact with a race other than one’s own is deemeddetrimental to the harmony and stability of the federation and is thus strictly prohibited… Under Section 4(4), any person who does or attempts to do, or makes any preparation to do, or conspires with any person to do, any act which has or which would have, if done, led to the harboring of a person other than one’s own race, shall be guilty of an offense and shall, on conviction, be liable for imprisonment for a term not less than 25 years. 

Notes on my initial response  

Here are some mental notes that played in my mind as I was watching it: 

1. Not a “dystopian” movie as claimed in cyberspace, more of a scenario of alternate history/reality depicted 

2. A scene of a house a Malay girl living in the attic like an animal, taken over by a Chinese family, 

3. Though it is stated as a period after a “927 (September 27) referendum, the setting feels like the mid-1950s when Chin Peng, the leader of the Malayan Communist Party, came out of the jungle with a Malay Communist Rashid Mydin, for the Baling talks with Tunku Abdul Rahman, the first prime minister of Independent Malaya. 

4. One must know the Chinese language or specifically the Cantonese dialect to appreciate the movie, since it is told from the point of view of a Chinese family the representation is that of a cultural domination, 

5. The Malay girl is symbolized as a captive in her own home/culture and the Chinese family treated her initially like an animal or a freak, scaring her off with a snake (albeit considered a pet) released in the attic, 

6. I did not have a sense that the Malay girl was to be returned to her family, as the movie makers made us believe through the synopsis, rather used as a symbol/object to be rescued by a Chinese family, 

7. The plot was all over the place, chaotic. There is no clear sense of pacing, especially in the “emotional bond” between the feral and abandoned Malay girl, with the Wong family. The scenes were rushed throughout.  

8. I love the kampong setting though. Reminds me of home I grew up, in a Malay kampong in Majidee, Johor Bahru, Johor (Malaysia). This is a nostalgic part of the movie that worked well for me personally, 

9. Though there were some dramatic scenes of violence of shooting and killing, these seem contrived and force, as if they must be there for the sake of following a formula for a good Hollywood or Bollywood movie or to spice up the movie. The image of the main gangster or the junta leader, played by a young Korean-Pop-looking actor, is another redeeming quality of Pendatang, which needed the viewers to pay attention throughout, 

10. Lastly, as the movie ended, I had this sense of yearning, for a serious philosophical and dialogical Malaysian movie.  

How the Malay is represented  

The makers of Pendatang promoted the theme a Malayan dystopia and that in the end “humanity triumphed.”. Fair enough of any poetic justice claim of the movie, I suppose. But herein lie a deeper reading of the rhetoric marketed:  

The movie is governed by an ideology, of triumph, of communism in Malaya of the future, after a September 27 referendum? I reflect upon the beginning scene, especially the symbolism of the Malay home and what happened in it.  

The producers-script writers of Pendatang wanted to show that had Malaya been governed by the Communists after the triumph of Chin Peng and Rashid Mydin and his gang, we would be ruled by a junta, Myanmar-looking folks in army fatigue using Malay homes as places of detention, as such depicted.  

Malays, as “traitors to the new republic of Malaya,” would be forced to flee their homes, and as in Fidel Castro’s Cuba after the revolution, property will be confiscated. The symbolism of triumph of a totalitarian regime such as Communism of the Parti Komunis Malaya is clear: use the Malay homes for whatever for after moving the Malays elsewhere. In this case the home, with all the glories of Malay symbolism of Perak-like architecture of the Ghee Hin and Hai San warring period in Perak history, with also verses of the Quran on the wall, is to be used to send the Chinese family to occupyas punishment, even if it is because of a traffic violation. In the story, the Malays have been banished elsewhere. The Communist are now in power and patrons and protects the Chinese community.  

In Pendatang, I saw a troubling representation of a Malay girl. “Panda” the Malay girl, for whatever reason have been left behind in the Gaza-like situation of land occupation by the post- “927” victors acting like members of a Communist Party of Malaya, or in the process of political segregation, lost the sense of communicating, speaks in animal-like grunts, climbs down the attic like a monkey using what looked like a huge noose (rope for committing suicide,) and wonders where her parents are. She grew up in the house, her ancestral home, in her ancestral land, now occupied by the Communists. 

I ask: is this the producer’s and writer’s representation of Malay culture destroyed by the takeover of a Chinese-based foreign power, as such as the Malayan Communist party?  Is she a symbol of the future of the Malays perhaps? Both a dystopia and a utopia of a Malaysia taken over by the junta?  

The Chinese family in Pendatang looks modernized and more civilized than the Malay girl, knows Malay Language and English well, and the daughter owns a smartphone, a symbol of modern-day relative affluence. as the script writers wanted the representation to be. The Wong family was sent there not by their own free will, but as the story unfolds to also be a savior to the Malay girl, Panda. There is a complex symbolism of ideology and race relations here. Of the Chinese family as messiah to the Malay girl who would have been killed by the Communists-looking gang of “peacekeepers.” Below is an elaboration of what the moviemakers are trying to say in what feels like a propaganda production. 

The ideology is of the triumph of the Communists and the ouster of the Malays and the dominance of Chinese culture next, and hence, upon the Malays. Again, by way of representation and characterization, the Malay girl is depicted as barbaric, helpless, wild, paranoid, schizophrenic, and above all her soul and spirit as a Malay destroyed by the occupation of the colonizing forces. She is half-human, abandoned, lost, and till the end of the story we do not know her history and what happened to her family. She is there to be objectified as a character to be responded to by the well-educated, well-bred, savior-mentality Chinese family who was sent by the Heavens to save a Malay girl, even at the expense of risking their own lives.  

The creators of the movie Pendatang had that ideology in mind, to be broadcast subtly to the Malaysian public. It is disguised as a movie on race-relations conflict resolution crowd-funded entertainment, feel-good polity. In a Tanah Melayu, land of the Malays, the reverse scenario is that the Malays are now the foreigners and intruders and migrants about to be decimated as a race, through a Segregation Act, and in a land now ruled by a Communist-like party which protects the Chinese, it takes a Chinese family too to save the life of a Malay girl. Condescendence and hegemony at play, from a social-psychology perspective. The Colonizer-Colonized syndrome. This is marketed as a “humanity” aspect of the movie, though there is a clear truncating and mangling of reality vis-a-viz history of Malaya.  

Celebrating the Triumph of Malayan Communist Party?  

The first few minutes of the movie, produced by Kuman Pictures, showed the setting of what feels like a post-Baling talk of 1955 by the Malayan Communist Party and Tunku Abdul Rahman in Baling Kedah. Chin Peng and Rashid Mydin and the gang supported by Communist Party of China went back into the jungle after the talks failed to bring a peaceful resolution.  

The Maoist-Marxist-Leninist armed struggle of the Communist Party resumed. The aspiration of the PKM (Parti Komunis Malaya) and to install Chin Peng as a prime minister of the new republic of Malaya was stalled. Today, with the help of the Armed Forces, especially Askar Melayu di Raja, the insurrection was crushed. Malaysia is what it is today. Run by nationalists and religion is preserved, albeit in all its glory and horror. All religions are respected.  

In Pendatang, the scenario is the opposite. The Communists triumphed, the country was ruled by a junta reminiscent of the Bintang Tiga, and the administering of martial-law-like government favored the Chinese. As I write this, I think of the academic work Red Star Over Malaya by Cheah Boon Kheng and Noel Barber’s War of the Running Dogs, that narrates the British Malaya’s 12-year Emergency Period, that cost thousands of lives.  A time when the British with the help of Malay soldiers crushed the insurgency. 

Is Pendatang a Communist-sympathized movie? Revival of the aura of Maoist-Marxist-Leninist ideology that form the revolutionary ethos and guides the spirit of Parti Komunis Malaya? These arecentral questions worth analyzing. The movie started with a premise, an ideological one that promoted the triumph of the anti-British Malaya, anti-Malay, anti-nationalist regime. Segregation law is strictly enforced. and the Chinese-dominated junta ruled, like the Taliban in Afghanistan or the Communist Army established by Mao Zedong.  

As mentioned earlier, the Malays, in the movie, are the “pendatang,” taken out by force, yanked out of their dwelling, and relocated. A “Gaza-situation for the Gopeng Malays.” Tanah Melayu is no longer relevant as a nationalist cry and the Malay home is now a place to be used for anything by the “Bintang Tiga” (Malayan Communist) -like forces.  

The property of the Malays is confiscated, and the people are sent to segregation camps/kampongs and make them suffer the plight of a people occupied, as in Gaza and West Bank. How the people voted “YES” for the segregation referendum is not clearly alluded to in the movie, and I assume that many of the votes would have come from the Chinese community, reminiscent of the scenario of the separation of Singapore from Malaya in 1965. 

The junta favors the Malayan Chinese, at least as depicted in the first few scenes of the movie. 

This movie is the hope by the filmmakers that the ideology of the Malayan Communist Party has come to its final glory and the cry of “Unity and Glory” of the new regime will triumph.  

The above notes are my initial reading of the opening scene of Pendatang wherein the Malays are chased out of their homes and their homeland.  

My second reading: On ideology 

I did a closer reading of it, after watching it the second time. Good effort at a rushed product. Poor acting overall, truncated dialogue, unclear theme, weak plot, too much display of skills of shooting each other, overkill in representing gangsterish behavior ala’ Malaysian with guns, disjoint/dissonance of the central figure (the Malay girl’s) representation to the central theme of Pendatang and an escape from the central conflict the movie is supposed to cinematize.  

It started off with a good intention of showing that, had the Communists won and favored the Chinese, the Malays would have been totally segregated into oblivion. The ending where the Malay businessperson (poorly acted) is negotiating the cuts (percents) seems too confusing, taking away the need for the movie to end its restating of the thesis of “outsiders/pendatang,”. It ended like a bad gangster movie of the B-grade. 

I feel that the writers, director, and producer had wanted to present the ideology of revenge against the dominant race: the Malays and do a reverse segregation. Poorly crafted movies are merely a medium to the message.  

A lot is missing in this movie. A totally rushed job manifested in the chaotic narrative arc that seems to stray away from the central theme, or a way for the writer to find a quick exit from further elaborating the propaganda message romanticizing the return of Malayan Communism. 

Nonetheless Pendatang is a good attempt, via crowdfunding, a good business model of low-budget moviemaking. 

Conclusion  

Reading deeper into the ideology of the movie and what could be in the heads of the moviemakers (scriptwriter especially) I see not a story about a message on Malaysian unity and the dangers of segregation” but as the promotion of a revived and revitalized Communist ideology that failed to take root after the 1955 Baling talks and after 30 years of struggle to install as Communist Republic of Malaya under the control of the Communist Party of China. Pendatang is a subtle warning to the Malays especially, that if you are not careful of crafting the future of Malaysia, after the “exit of Sabah and Sarawak,” and the “dominance of the American dollar,”, this ideology of neo-Maoist-Marxist-Leninist will take over Malaya, a new “Red Star Over Malaya,” scenario.  

Pendatang is sending this message of a scenario of such control, domination, and colonization of a newly segregated Malaysia that sees the Malays as traitors and ought to be displaced in their own land, Tanah Melayu. The naming the girl in the movie “Panda” (a national pet of China”) to onlyrealizing towards the end of the story that her name is “Raifa” (meaning “compassionate” in Arabic,) and presenting a muted, psychologically mutilated Malay, and one who is made homeless in her own land, to the overarching message of Malayan-Chinese-favoring junta ala’ Parti Komunis Malaya, the movie is an ideological push to a final, albeit imaginary, victory of the Malayan Communist party. 

I have offered a view on the ideology of this propaganda movie. Of what the writer and producer may have wished to convey. 

It is a warning to the Malays. If things do not change to desegregate de jure or de facto, a Communist-inspired regime will take over, bringing “unity and glory” to the new republic of Malaya. A warning even to the Malays of today. Who then, will be the “pendatang“? Who then will be the outsiders? In a world of reverse reality? 

I welcome discussions on this perspective. 



Dr. Azly Rahman is an academician, educator, international columnist, and author of nine books He holds a Columbia University (New York City) doctorate in international education development and Master's degrees in six areas: education, international affairs, peace studies, communication, fiction, and non-fiction writing. He is a member of the Columbia University chapter of the Kappa Delta Pi International Honor Society in Education. Twitter @azlyrahman. More writings here. His latest book, a memoir, is published by Penguin Books is available here.
Ukraine destroys one of Russia’s biggest amphibious warships in Crimea

By James Kilner
December 27, 2023 —

Ukrainian fighter jets have destroyed a Russian warship docked at a port in occupied Crimea in an attack bearing the hallmarks of British Storm Shadow missiles.

Footage of the incident showed a fire and a huge explosion in the harbour at Feodosia at around 3am Ukraine time after the missiles struck the Novocherkassk, one of Russia’s biggest amphibious warships.


The Russian warship Novocherkassk burns at port in Feodosia, occupied Crimea, on December 27.
CREDIT:UKRAINE DEFENCE

In a rare move, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu personally told Vladimir Putin about the strike shortly before the Russian president greeted leaders from former Soviet states at a summit in St Petersburg.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “Shoigu reported about the strike that the Ukrainians carried out on Feodosia and about the damage to our large landing ship. It was a very detailed report.”

Four people were killed in the attack, according to Russia’s Emergencies Ministry.

RELATED ARTICLE

HI Sutton, an independent naval warfare analyst, published a photo of what he said was the smouldering wreck of the warship.

“Novocherkassk has sunk at the pier, [with] 99 per cent confidence,” he wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

The attack was “most likely” carried out with British-supplied Storm Shadow cruise missiles, or their French equivalents, known as Scalps, he added.

The Ukrainian Defence Ministry also posted a photo of the burning ship, adding: “Ukrainian pilots did an excellent job. Crimea is Ukraine. There is no place for the occupier’s fleet here.”

In recent weeks, Ukraine has been under mounting pressure to show that it can take the fight to Russia despite losing ground along the frontline in its eastern Donbas region.

The strike on the Novocherkassk is its most destructive hit since September, when Storm Shadow missiles destroyed a submarine being repaired at the dry dock in the Black Sea peninsula’s port of Sevastopol.

Some European leaders are thought to be growing increasingly weary with the cost of supporting Kyiv after Ukraine failed to make significant gains against Russia over the summer during its NATO-backed counteroffensive.

But analysts said this was the seventh warship in Russia’s Black Sea Fleet that Ukraine has destroyed and British Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said the strike demonstrated that Ukraine could yet defeat Russia.


The Novocherkassk of the Russian Black Sea Fleet seen in Sevastopol.
 
CREDIT:AP

“The latest destruction of Putin’s navy demonstrates that those who believe there’s a stalemate in the Ukraine war are wrong,” he said. “They haven’t noticed that, over the past four months, 20 per cent of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet has been destroyed.”


Russia frequently uses its amphibious warships to transport military assets, and Ukrainian officials said the Novocherkassk was carrying Shahed drones from Iran when it was hit. Moscow has launched waves of aerial attacks on Ukraine using such units.


Volodymyr Zelensky thanked the Ukrainian air force for the successful missile strike and said the Novocherkassk had been sunk.

RELATED ARTICLE

“I am grateful to our air force for the impressive replenishment of the Russian underwater Black Sea fleet with another vessel,” he said.

The docks at Feodosia are located on the south-east shore of Crimea, near the 17-kilometre Kerch Bridge, which links the peninsula to the Russian mainland, and are mainly used to repair warships or to finish fitting out new vessels.

The 370-feet (112-metre) Novocherkassk was built in 1987 and is considered a vital part of the Black Sea Fleet because of its capacity to launch amphibious assaults.

Russian sources also confirmed that it was highly likely Ukraine had used either Storm Shadow or Scalp missiles in the attack. These are fired by Ukrainian fighter jets and have been used in several attacks since they were handed to Kyiv’s forces in May.
“Presumably, four British Storm Shadow air-to-ground missiles were fired at the large amphibious warship Novocherkassk from Su-24 fighter jets,” said Vladimir Rogoz, a senior pro-Kremlin official in occupied Ukraine. “Some of them hit the enemy’s target.”

Despite only having a small navy, Ukraine has registered a string of major military successes in the Black Sea.

It has recaptured the strategically important Snake Island near Odessa and has forced the Russian navy to move its main warships 320km away in Novorossiysk to escape its maritime drone and missile attacks.

The Kremlin has even started to build a new naval base in Abkhazia, a pro-Russia rebel region of Georgia 640km from Crimea.


Kremlin confirms Russian warship hit by Ukrainian strike

By AFP
December 26, 2023

This photograph posted on the Telegram channel @VentdeCrimee shows a warship damaged in a Ukrainian attack in Russian-controlled Crimea 
- Copyright KCNA VIA KNS/AFP STR

The Kremlin on Tuesday acknowledged a Ukrainian attack had damaged a warship in the occupied Crimean port of Feodosia in what Ukraine and its Western allies called a major setback for the Russian navy.

Ukraine said its air force destroyed the Novocherkassk landing ship, with President Volodymyr Zelensky joking on social media that the vessel had now joined “the Russian underwater Black Sea fleet”.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu informed “about the damage to our large landing ship” to President Vladimir Putin in “a very detailed report”, the president’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists.

Russia’s defence ministry said that the ship was damaged by guided aerial missiles.

Ukraine’s military said its air force destroyed the Russian naval ship in a missile attack on the eastern Crimean port.

The Ukrainian defence ministry wrote on X (formerly Twitter) that the “Novocherkassk landing ship was destroyed in Feodosia tonight”.

It published an unattributed photo showing flames and smoke in a port at night.

– Black Sea dominance –

“Ukraine’s aviation did an excellent job. Crimea is Ukraine. There is no place for the occupier’s fleet here,” the ministry wrote.

In his post on social media, Zelensky wrote: “The occupiers will not have a single peaceful place in Ukraine”.

The attack comes after Ukraine struck the Black Sea fleet’s headquarters in Sevastopol in September, forcing Moscow to move warships to ports further east.

British defence minister Grant Shapps wrote on Twitter that “this latest destruction of Putin’s navy demonstrates that those who believe there’s a stalemate in the Ukraine war are wrong!”

“Russia’s dominance in the Black Sea is now challenged,” he added.

Ukraine nevertheless announced a setback on the eastern front Tuesday.

Commander-in-chief Valeriy Zaluzhny said that troops had pulled back in the town of Maryinka, which is close to the key Russian-held city of Donetsk.

He said troops were still present on the outskirts, after Russia on Monday claimed to fully control the town.

– Ship ‘transported Shaheds’ –

Ukraine’s air force said that its tactical aviation attacked the Novocherkassk with cruise missiles at around 0030 GMT in the area of Feodosia.

Videos posted on social media showed a fire on the horizon in a port area, followed by a loud explosion that sent up a ball of fire and was apparently followed by multiple explosions.

Ukraine’s armed forces said that “on board of the ship were Shahed drones that Russia uses for attacks on Ukrainian cities”.

Ukraine frequently carries out strikes in Crimea, particularly targeting the Russian military.

In April 2022, it sank the cruiser Moskva, the flagship of the Black Sea fleet.

The Novocherkassk was previously used by Russia for its military intervention in Syria.

The governor of the Russian-annexed peninsula, Sergei Aksyonov, wrote on Telegram: “Sadly, one person was killed and two others were wounded in an enemy attack on Feodosia.”

Crimea’s Krym 24 television reported that two had been hospitalised in a moderately severe condition.

Aksyonov said earlier that the city’s port was cordoned off following “an enemy attack” that caused a “detonation” and fire.

Six buildings were damaged, mostly with broken windows, the governor said, and some local residents have been evacuated.


What Russian Black Sea Fleet ships were destroyed by Ukraine


A game of Battleship is unfolding in the Black Sea, where navy-less Ukraine, left to its own resorts against Russia’s menacing fleet, takes out ships one by one with a combination of missiles, drones, and ingenuity


BY ALYA SHANDRA
27/12/2023
Graph: Euromaidan Press, modifying @torger78/Twitter

Ukraine has just achieved its latest naval victory over Russia. On December 26, pilots of Ukraine’s Air Force destroyed the large Russian landing ship Novocherkassk in the port of Russian-occupied Feodosia in Crimea.

This became the 16th Russian ship that Ukraine destroyed or severely damaged since the full-blown invasion in 2022 (as per Ukraine’s Navy spokesman)– a remarkable achievement for a country without a fleet. Here we recall all the ships of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet that Ukraine has struck with domestic, foreign missiles, as well as naval drones.
Russia planned a landing on the Odesa coast but retreated from occupied Crimea

Despite lacking a full-fledged navy, Ukraine has managed to curtail the Russian Black Sea Fleet and shift the balance of power in the Black Sea using assymetrical methods.

Having no powerful surface ships or submarines, posessing only a small number of its own anti-ship missiles, American Harpoons, SCALP and Storm Shadows, as well as and developing agile surface drones, Ukraine managed to take down some of Russia’s largest flagships.

In 2022, the Russian Black Sea Fleet command entered into full-scale war with Ukraine, planning assaults, breakthroughs into the Odesa roadstead, coastal operations and flank supplies for advancing troops.

To achieve this, on the eve of the invasion in February, Russia relocated six large landing ships from the Baltic and Northern fleets, as well as missile submarines, missile cruisers, and missile frigates to the Mediterranean and Black Sea areas from its Pacific fleet.

However, delivering naval assaults on Ukraine turned out to be no walk in the park.

The Black Sea Fleet of Russia has suffered losses of ships from Ukrainian drone strikes at sea, Tochka U missile hits in Berdiansk, and the famous case of the flagship cruiser Moskva being sunk by Ukrainian Neptune anti-ship missiles according to the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine. Hits from Harpoon missiles, an underwater drone attack, and an airstrike that likely used land-attack Neptunes at the Saki airbase have also occurred.

Aviation losses include a Su-24 bomber downed while laying mines far from shore, a Su-30SM naval aviation jet shot down near Mykolaiv, and a Su-34 struck near Odesa.

While landings are now out of the question and launches of Kalibr cruise missiles have become rare, Russia’s main naval threat to Ukraine is now to slowly suffocate its economy by blocking exports from Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, denying merchant vessels the freedom of navigation.

Ukraine acts alone, destroys Russian ships one by one

In this situation, which NATO countries chose to ignore, Ukraine saw no other option than to act alone and destroy Russian ships one by one to unblock its ports, according to Former Defense Minister Andriy Zagorodnyuk.

This strategy has led to success. Kyrylo Danylchenko, BBC’s military reviewer for Ukraine, believes that the realization that they can end physically led the Black Sea Fleet to clear routes near occupied Crimea’s Sevastopol of mines and decide to relocate ships to Russia’s Novorossiysk, leading to logistical hurdles for its missile attacks on Ukraine’s infrastructure and breaking Russia’s naval blockade of Odesa.

While the threat of landings seems reduced by Neptunes and Harpoons, the main issue for Ukraine at sea is the blockade of Black Sea ports, Danylchenko said. The temporary grain corridor that Ukraine is promoting despite Russia’s wirthdrawal from a deal to allow exports of Ukrainian grain eased the fire. However, shipping insurance, war risk premiums, and “demurrage” endured by shipowners still make maritime logistics to Ukrainian ports much more expensive.

Further control of sea lanes, expanding transshipment through the Danube, preventing inspection of merchant vessels far from shore, receiving more patrol boats and mine hunters will be key for Ukraine.
Legend:

Destroyed or seriously damaged

Damaged

March 2022

The small missile corvette Velikiy Ustyug was disabled, likely damaged during an attack on 7 March 2022.The P-342 patrol boat Oleg Shipitsin was hit by an anti-tank missile system in the Sea of Azov on 20 March.On 24 March, the large landing ship Saratov was destroyed by the Ukrainian armed forces in the occupied city of Berdiansk, Zaporizhzhia Oblast with a Tochka-U missile.The same strike damaged the large landing ship Novocherkassk in Berdiansk. Three crew members were reported dead.As well, it damaged the large landing ship Caesar Kunikov. The ship’s captain was reported dead.

April 2022On 14 April, the Ukrainian military struck the Russian frigate Admiral Essen near the shore of Odesa using Grad missiles.Russia lost its third-largest naval vessel, the Russian flagship missile cruiser Moskva, on 13 April when Ukraine struck it with Neptune missiles. A fire broke out and the ship began to sink. The Russian Defense Ministry officially acknowledged 27 missing and 17 dead crew members.

Russian missile cruiser Moskva in 2012. Photo: Mil.ru


May 2022

On 2 May, patrol corvette P-342 Yunarmeets Baltiki was sunk by a Bayraktar combat drone near Zmiinyi Island.

In the next five days, Bayraktars also hit:landing boat D-310landing boat D-144patrol boats P-275patrol boat P-276patrol boat P-281 “Maksym Panin.”On 12 May, Ukraine hit the multi-purpose auxiliary vessel Vsevolod Bobrov with a Neptune missile, after which a fire erupted. According to media reports, the ship was carrying reinforcements to Zmiinyi Island, including anti-aircraft missile systems. The damaged ship was towed to Sevastopol.
June 2022Ukrainian defenders sunk the Russian SB-739 rescue tug Vasiliy Bekh with Harpoon missiles in the Black Sea. Although small, the tug was crucial: it brought reinforcements to Zmiinyi Island and had an anti-aircraft missile system on deck.

According to maritime expert Andriy Klymenko, this enabled Ukraine’s fire control and eventually led to the liberation of Zmiinyi Island. It from this small yet crucial island in the Black Sea that the Russians controlled shipping routes in the Black Sea. It was Zmiinyi Island’s liberation that enabled the functioning of the grain corridor, a UN-brokered deal for Ukrainian grain exports to the Global South via the Black Sea ports, Klymenko says. “There would have been no grain corridor if the Russians had stayed on Zmiinyi,”

October 2022

On 29 October 2022, Ukraine carried out a surface and aeriadrone attack on the Russian Black Sea fleet in Sevastopol Bay. As a result, two ships were put out of service:The Admiral Makarov guard frigate fleet flagshipThe Ivan Golubets marine minesweeper

Analysts considered the attack to be of great importance, on par with the sinkage of flagship Moskva. The drone attack in October 2022 reportedly led to a decrease in the activity of the Russian Black Sea Fleet.

May 2023

The Ivan Khurs medium reconnaissance ship was severely damaged in the Black Sea after a naval drone attack on 25 May 140 km away from the Bosphorous strait.
August 2023On 4 August, the large landing ship Olenegorskiy Gornyak was hit by naval drones in Novorossiysk Bay (Russia). It was reportedly the result of a joint operation by Ukraine’s Security Service and the Navy.The next day, a drone attacked the Russian oil tanker SIG in the Black Sea, which carried fuel for the Syrian group of Russian Navy ships.

A Ukrainian maritime kamikaze drone on the way to a Russian warship. 
Credit: SBU via Ukrainska Pravda.

September 2023

On 3 September, Ukraine destroyed a Russian KS-701 “Tunets“ type patrol boat in the Black Sea with a Bayraktar combat drone.

On 13 September, the large landing ship Minsk was destroyed by an attack on a ship repair plant in Sevastopol, the OSINT project Oryx confirmed analyzing visual data. The attack was presumably carried out by Ukrainian aircraft with Storm Shadow missiles.
The B-237 submarine Rostov-on-Don was severely damaged in the same attack.
Also on 13 September, Ukraine destroyed a Russian KS-701 “Tunets“ type patrol boat in the Black Sea.On 14 September, the Samum small missile hovercraft was hit by the Ukrainian drone Sea Baby.

Also on 14 September, Ukraine’s defense forces targeted two Russian patrol ships in the southwestern part of the Black Sea. At least one of the ships, Sergey Kotov patrol corvette, suffered damage from maritime drones.

The coordinated attack of 13-14 September was part of a Ukrainian effort to destroy air defenses in Crimea. Following it, Russia relocated three landing ships to the Azov Sea.

Russian landing ship Minsk and submarine Rostov-on-Don on fire after the 13 September Ukrainian attack on Sevastopol. Photo from open sources


October 2023

On 11 and 13 October, the Pavel Derzhavin patrol corvette was damaged in the Black Sea near occupied Sevastopol.Also on 13 October, the SB-565 rescue tug Professor Nikolai Muru was attacked by a marine drone with experimental weapons.
November 2023The Askold small missile corvette was hit on 5 November in a Ukrainian missile strike on the Zaliv shipyard in Kerch, reportedly with SCALP missiles. The central part of the Askold corvette’s hull, where 8 vertical launch installations were located to launch Kalibr and/or P-800 Oniks cruise missiles, was hit. This destroyed the main weapon system of this ship.On 9-10 November, Ukrainian forces hit minimum two Serna-class amphibious assault ships, with the Russian Navy’s designation Project 11770, in occupied Crimea.

Russia’s Askold missile carrier showing signs of damage from Ukraine’s missile strike on 4 November 2023. 
Photo: Facebook/AFU StratCom


December 2023

The Novocherkassk large landing ship was destroyed in the night before December 26. The Air Force reported that the Novocherkassk large landing ship was attacked with cruise missiles from tactical aviation around 02:30 with Storm Shadow/SCALP missiles. The Novocherkassk is designed to land amphibious assaults on unequipped coastlines and transport troops and cargo by sea. It is capable of transporting various types of armored vehicles, including tanks
.
Fire in the port of Feodosia, occupied Crimea, in the early hours of 26 December 2023.
Photo via Twitter/loogunda.

Related: 
Ukraine’s innovative naval tactics shifted balance of power despite lack of warships
Official: Russian ships pushed back 185 km from Ukrainian coast
How Ukraine’s scrappy marine drones are revolutionizing naval warfare
Drone developer: “Even if only one out of ten marine drones reaches the target, this is a very successful case”

 Looking for water in Yemen. Photo Credit: Tasnim News Agency

UN Envoy Welcomes ‘Significant Step’ Towards Ceasefire In Yemen


By 

The UN Special Envoy for Yemen has welcomed steps towards a ceasefire in the war-torn country, where Government forces, backed by a Saudi-led coalition, and Houthi rebels have been fighting for more than eight years.

The development follows a series of meetings with the sides held in Riyadh and Muscat, his office said in a statement on Saturday.

Special Envoy Hans Grundberg welcomed the parties’ commitment to a set of measures to implement a nation-wide ceasefire, improve living conditions, and engage in preparations for the resumption of an inclusive political process under UN auspices.

“Thirty million Yemenis are watching and waiting for this new opportunity to provide for tangible results and progress towards lasting peace,” he said.

“The parties have taken a significant step. Their commitments are, first and foremost, an obligation to the Yemeni people to progress towards a future that meets the legitimate aspirations of all Yemenis,” he added.

Roadmap and restraint

Mr. Grundberg will now engage with the parties to establish a roadmap under UN auspices that includes these commitments and supports their implementation

The UN roadmap will include, among other elements, the parties’ commitment to implement a nationwide ceasefire, pay all public sector salaries, resume oil exports, open roads in Taiz and other parts of Yemen, and further ease restrictions on Sana’a Airport and the Hudaydah port, according to the statement.

The roadmap will also establish implementation mechanisms and prepare for a Yemeni-owned political process under UN auspices.

Mr. Grundberg expressed deep appreciation for the key roles played by Saudi Arabia and Oman in supporting the parties to reach this point.

He urged all sides to exercise maximum restraint at this critical time to allow for a conducive environment for dialogue and the successful conclusion of agreement on the roadmap.

“The parties have taken a significant step. Their commitments are, first and foremost, an obligation to the Yemeni people to progress towards a future that meets the legitimate aspirations of all Yemenis,” he said, adding that “we are ready to accompany them on every step of the way.”

Looking for water in Yemen. Photo Credit: Tasnim News Agency

 Soldier Map Middle East Army War Military Weapon

Iraq Objects To US Strikes That Killed 1, Wounded 18


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Iraq condemned on Tuesday U.S. airstrikes on Iraqi territory, calling them a “hostile act” and a violation of Iraq’s sovereignty. 

U.S. forces carried out the strikes Monday and targeted Iran-backed militias in Iraq in response to a drone attack earlier that day that injured three U.S. service members. 

The U.S. strikes killed one member of its security forces, Iraq said Tuesday, and wounded 18 other people, including civilians, according to news reports. 

The government called the U.S. strikes “an unacceptable violation of Iraqi sovereignty,” a government statement said. The statement also stressed that similar attacks by armed groups on U.S-led coalition advisers are hostile acts and violate Iraqi sovereignty, a position Kataib Hezbollah criticized.

“We warn those with weak souls, from the highest level to the lowest, not to test our patience,” said Abu Ali al-Askari, a security official with the faction.

A barrage of rockets was fired later Tuesday morning at U.S. and allied forces at Al-Shaddadi, an American patrol base in Syria, a U.S. military official said. There was no damage or casualties, the official said.

Monday’s U.S. strikes were directed at three locations used by Kataib Hezbollah and affiliated groups, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said in a statement. The U.S. considers Kataib Hezbollah a terrorist organization.

“These precision strikes are a response to a series of attacks against U.S. personnel in Iraq and Syria by Iranian-sponsored militias, including an attack by Iran-affiliated Kataib Hezbollah and affiliated groups on Irbil Air Base earlier today, and intended to disrupt and degrade capabilities of the Iran-aligned militia groups directly responsible.” 

National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said Kataib Hezbollah, as part of an umbrella group of Iran-backed militants, claimed credit for the Monday attack and that one of the U.S. service members was critically hurt. 

U.S. and coalition forces have operated in the region as part of the mission to counter the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria. 

Those forces have come under repeated attacks by Iranian-backed proxies, with about 100 attacks coming since Israel launched its offensive to eliminate the militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip. 

The U.S. military has said it disrupted most of those attacks, or that they fell short of their targets causing no damage. But several, like Monday’s, have injured U.S. military personnel. 

Previous retaliatory strikes have targeted Kataib Hezbollah and other groups, including U.S. strikes in November.

VOA

The VOA is the Voice of America

 Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov. Photo Credit: Presidential Executive Office of Russia

Russia Accuses West Of Fomenting Trouble In Serbia


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(EurActiv) — Russia said on Monday (25 December) foreign-backed forces were trying to foment trouble in Serbia, where protests continue for a second week after an election earlier this month that international monitors said was unfair.

“There are processes and attempts by third forces, including from abroad, to provoke such unrest in Belgrade,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. “We have no doubt that the leadership of the republic will ensure the rule of law.”

Several thousand people gathered in front of the central election commission building in Belgrade on Monday. The protesters marched to the main police station where they believed those detained by police were being held.

Earlier in the day, police said 38 people had been detained during and after an opposition protest over election results on Sunday. The police said eight policemen were injured in clashes.

Protesters on Sunday broke windows and glass at the main entrance of the town hall, before police used pepper spray to disperse them around 10 p.m. (2100 GMT).

Ivica Ivković, head of the police administration, said two of the eight wounded policemen sustained serious injuries.

“We will continue to work to maintain peace and order and we expect to see more arrests in relation to protests last night,” Ivković told a news conference.

The opposition parties accused police of excessive force, and some social networks showed footage of policemen beating up men in streets near the town hall.

Russian help

Outgoing Prime Minister Ana Brnabić thanked the Russian secret service for providing information on planned activities by the opposition. “This (my statement) is not going to be popular in the West,” Brnabić, of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), said on Serbian television.

A European Union candidate, Serbia has resisted pressure by Western countries to introduce sanctions against Russia.

Moscow has been one of Serbia’s closest allies for decades, especially after 1999 when Russia opposed the NATO airstrikes against rump Yugoslavia that comprised Serbia and Montenegro.

An international monitoring mission last Monday said the SNS gained an unfair advantage through media bias, the improper influence of President Aleksandar Vučić and voting irregularities such as vote buying.

Serbian authorities deny any irregularities.

Vučić on 21 December accused an “important country” of interfering in the country’s elections, following a torrent of international condemnation of alleged irregularities during the weekend’s contest.

The populist ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) won 46.72% of the votes in the 17 December snap parliamentary election, according to state election commission preliminary results.

Serbia Against Violence came second in the election with 23.56% of the vote, and the Socialist Party of Serbia third with 6.56%.

Germany on 18 December condemned reported irregularities in Serbian elections as “unacceptable” for a candidate to join the European Union.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov. Photo Credit: Presidential Executive Office of Russia



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