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Muscovites Shrug as Russia Marks One Year of Ukraine War

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MOSCOW — As the first anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine approaches, life in the capital is largely normal, with most Muscovites saying the prevailing mood is one of indifference to the ongoing fighting.

“I don’t really feel like there’s a war going on,” a Muscovite in his 30s told a Moscow Times reporter earlier this week.

“Easily adaptable to any situation – the longer this conflict lasts, the more people accept the situation.”

Apart from scattered billboards supporting the Russian armed forces and a few shuttered – or renamed – Western-brand shops, the capital offers few visible signs of a war that has killed tens of thousands of people 500 kilometers away. All Ukrainian towns and cities were razed to the ground.

No significant opposition protests are expected to take place on the anniversary of Friday’s invasion.

“Generally speaking, it’s not our concern,” Svetlana, a pensioner in her 60s, told The Moscow Times when asked about the war. He also said that he was not interested in politics.

Like others interviewed for this article, Svetlana requested anonymity to speak freely.

At the same time, the concept Surveys Surveys by independent and state-run agencies show 75% of Russians support the war, with experts warning against the crippling effects of the country’s political repression and harsh wartime censorship laws.

One of the few acknowledgments of the war’s upcoming anniversary was seen in central Moscow’s Gorky Park, traditionally associated with the capital’s trendy youth.

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Along with celebrations of the traditional Maslenitsa folk festival, visitors to Gorky Park can stop at pro-war stands and record a video message for Russian soldiers or make donations to the armed forces.

Although The Moscow Times did not see any visitors sending such gifts on Sunday afternoon, staff at the stand said “several people” had already recorded video messages.

Under a nearby tent, a few dozen supporters of a war had gathered ConcertThey listened to military songs and wrote postcards to Russian soldiers.

Despite such events — all organized by City Hall — visible displays of support for the invasion have been rare in this city of nearly 12 million people.

Indeed, the empty shops and the proliferation of pawn shops on the streets of Moscow are the most obvious signs of the war’s fallout, which includes the withdrawal of major Western firms and Western sanctions.

Many Muscovites told The Moscow Times that they were worried about the economy and had noticed significant price increases on everyday goods, making life more difficult.

In contrast, others claimed that they could still afford Western goods—imported via third countries—allowed and maintained their pre-war standard of living.

This was perhaps the most important outcome of the war for the Muscovites Installation of air defense systems that appeared in the Russian capital last month.

Even so, most Russians see the war as “something that doesn’t directly affect them,” said Denis Volkov, head of the independent Levada Center poll.

“It’s a coping mechanism for stress, especially when people think they can’t change anything,” Volkov, unlike many independent experts in Moscow after the invasion, said in a telephone interview.

In general, according to Volkov, officials have succeeded in portraying the war as a broader conflict with Western countries seeking to weaken Russia.

“Of course, I feel sorry for them,” said Svetlana, a retiree who combined her pension with cleaning work, when asked about the residents of Ukraine.

“But I don’t really like Ukrainians.”

Although the war may not seem to have had a significant impact on daily life, some key events during the conflict have fueled turmoil.

Russia’s “partial” mobilization of hundreds of thousands of men into the armed forces in September and October was particularly disruptive.

Although poorer Russian regions – as well as the country’s ethnic republics – bore the brunt of mobilization, thousands were called up from major cities, including Moscow.

“Of course, if they take your son away, you’ll go crazy,” another pensioner strolling through downtown Moscow told The Moscow Times.

According to Volkov of the Levada Center, the mobilization was one of the events that brought Russians face to face with the reality of war – albeit briefly.

“Before the mobilization in September, people would say: ‘Volunteers and professionals are fighting there, thank God, it’s not us, let them fight, the authorities know better, we are ordinary people. It’s bad that people die, but it could not have been avoided,'” Volkov told The Moscow Times.

An air defense system on the roof of the Russian Ministry of Defense building in Moscow.  Social media
An air defense system on the roof of the Russian Ministry of Defense building in Moscow.
Social media

The mobilization also intensified the exodus of hundreds of thousands of people – as people fled to avoid political repression or being sent to the front.

The effects of people fleeing abroad are particularly noticeable in big cities like Moscow, where people with disposable income and the job flexibility to settle at short notice are concentrated.

“For me, the biggest and most important change is that all my closest friends have left Russia – it feels like the entire middle class is gone,” said one Muscovite.

By the end of last year, however, the impact of the mobilization seemed to have faded, and many had returned to ignoring the ongoing war.

Even major military reversals, such as the withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine’s Kharkiv region and the southern city of Kherson, did not register.

Beneath the surface, some Muscovites — albeit a minority — struggle to cope with daily reports of death and destruction in Ukraine, including apparent atrocities by Russian soldiers in places like Bucha and Mariupol.

“I put my life on hold when the war started,” a woman sitting in a cafe in central Moscow said in an interview this week.

“I’m still trying to learn how to live with the current situation.”

Ukraine defends front line, Putin talks nukes on war anniversary

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  • Putin raises the possibility of increasing nuclear power
  • Russia to deploy Sarmat ICBMs in 2023
  • ‘Back from the brink’, says UN

KYIV, Feb 23 (Reuters) – Ukraine said its forces had repelled Russian offensives along the length of its front line on Thursday to mark the anniversary of the war, as President Vladimir Putin spoke empty-handed after a bloody winter offensive. A nuclear arsenal.

After a series of poignant speeches marking the anniversary of his invasion, Putin on Thursday announced plans to deploy new Sarmat multi-warhead intercontinental ballistic missiles this year. Earlier this week he suspended Russia’s participation in the START nuclear arms control treaty.

“As before, we will pay more attention to strengthening the nuclear triangle,” Putin said of nuclear missiles on land, sea and air.

“We will continue the mass production of air-based hypersonic Kinzel systems and begin the mass delivery of sea-based Zircon hypersonic missiles,” Putin said in comments released by the Kremlin early Thursday.

A year after Putin launched the largest ground war in Europe since World War II, Ukraine and its Western allies have abandoned nuclear posturing as a distraction from Russia’s failed military campaign on the ground.

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Russia has seen infantry attacks on frozen ground in past weeks in battles described by both sides as the bloodiest of the war.

Western officials have said they believe Russia is planning an offensive to seize new territory before the anniversary, using hundreds of thousands of reservists forced in recent months to declare victory to Putin.

Moscow’s forces made progress trying to encircle the small town of Bagmut, but failed to break Ukrainian lines in the north near Kremmina and in the south at Wuhleder, where they fell into the teeth of Ukrainian artillery on open ground and suffered heavy losses.

Ukrainian forces have repelled 90 Russian attacks in the northeast and east in the past 24 hours, the military said early Thursday.

Ukraine has closed some schools to mark the anniversary of the war. But Kiev officials said they believed Moscow lacked the ability to make a dramatic show of force.

“Nothing unusual will happen. A typical (Russian) effort … a small missile attack is planned,” Kyrylo Budanov, head of Ukraine’s military intelligence, told the Ukrainska Pravda news website.

“23-24 (February), they have two dates. Believe me, we have experienced this more than 20 times,” he said.

Britain’s military said in a daily intelligence update that Moscow may be planning another large-scale attack on Wuhledar, despite costly failed strikes earlier this month. Two full brigades of thousands of elite Russian marines said last week that the battle had been derailed after suffering massive losses there.

With no major battlefield victories in time for the anniversary, Putin instead turned to nuclear rhetoric, announcing in a keynote speech on Tuesday that Russia would end its participation in the New START arms control treaty.

The practical implications are less obvious: studies under the treaty had already been suspended during the war. A senior defense official said Moscow would abide by the treaty’s limits on the missiles and would regularly notify Washington when they were moved.

U.S. President Joe Biden, who dumped Putin this week and traveled to Kiev and delivered his own speech to a crowd in Warsaw, called the suspension of START a “huge mistake” but said Wednesday: “I don’t. He’s thinking of using nuclear weapons or anything like that. Read on.”

The RS-28 Sarmat missiles, dubbed “Satan 2”, announced by Putin on Thursday, were first unveiled in 2018 and are believed to have been deployed last year.

CNN reports that the United States believes Russia conducted a test of Sarmat shortly before Biden traveled to Ukraine, but the test failed. The Russian Defense Ministry had no comment on the report.

Putin also promised to develop hypersonic missiles, which fly too fast to be fired. Russia is set to begin military exercises with China in South Africa on Friday and has sent a warship equipped with them.

Russia controls almost a fifth of Ukraine despite losing territory in major battlefield setbacks last year after failing to capture Kyiv at the start of its “special military operation”.

Tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians and troops on both sides are believed to have died in the past year. Russian artillery destroyed Ukrainian cities and sent millions of refugees flying.

Ukrainian troops have largely stuck to the defensive since their last offensive in November, hoping Russian forces filled with reserves will be exhausted in the offensive. Meanwhile, Kiev has secured Western weapons pledges for a planned counter-offensive in 2023.

In New York, the UN The General Assembly is expected to pass a resolution calling for an end to the invasion, marking the first anniversary of the invasion. Ukraine hopes to deepen Russia’s diplomatic isolation by securing a yes vote from nearly three-quarters of the countries.

Moscow, which says its invasion is justified by its security concerns, calls the text unbalanced.

“Russia has violated the UN Charter by becoming an aggressor,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said at the United Nations. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday condemned Russia’s invasion as a violation of the UN Charter and international law.

“We have heard implicit threats to use nuclear weapons. The so-called tactical use of nuclear weapons is absolutely unacceptable. It is time to step back from the brink,” Guterres said.

Report by Reuters Bureau; By Michael Perry and Peter Graf; Editing by Robert Birzel and Nick MacPhee

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Patriots in position to add Bill Belichick favorite after Titans cuts

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By Keegan Stiefel
3 hours before

The Tennessee Titans’ decision to cut four players on Wednesday got a lot of people thinking. New England Patriots fans, especially.

Tennessee reportedly cut wide receiver Robert Woods, kicker Randy Bullock and linebacker Zach Cunningham in an effort to cut costs. More than $38 million In the cap room, according to NFL Media’s Tom Pelissero.

In need of an upgrade at tackle, the Patriots were immediately linked to Eleven as a potential player to hit the scrap heap this offseason. However, New England fans may want to check out one of the other cuts.

Cunningham, who played in just 10 games over two seasons with the Titans, was once a favorite of Patriots head coach Bill Belichick.

At Cunningham’s pro day in 2017, when the linebacker was coming out of Vanderbilt, Belichick took over a pre-draft workout and gave it to the Commodore. One-on-one instruction. Cunningham will participate in a film session with Belichick before practice.

“Being in the same room as a guy that I watched growing up, him grilling me and asking me questions about our defense and everything, it was definitely a crazy experience for me,” Cunningham told NESN’s Zach at his pro day. Cox.

The Patriots never had a chance to draft Cunningham, as he was taken 26 spots (No. 57 overall to the Houston Texans) prior to the Patriots’ first pick in that draft. Cunningham would play well for the Texans, eventually signing a four-year, $58 million extension that would be released in 2021 before signing with the Titans.

The Patriots didn’t make a move for him then, but now they have another chance to grab Cunningham. New England has really built a solid core of linebackers, but could certainly use another off-ball option alongside Jawan Bentley.

And come cheap, the third time could be the charm for the Belichick-Cunningham union.

With Ohio coming up, Trump is trying to contradict Biden on the derailment

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EAST PALESTINE, Ohio – Former President Donald J. Trump visits the site of a train derailment that spilled toxic chemicals in this Ohio city Wednesday afternoon, wading into a heated battle between environmental regulations and a who’s who of Republicans. ‘t – shown on the floor.

The first Republican to announce a 2024 presidential campaign, Mr. Trump, Ohio Republican Senator J.D. He plans to appear alongside Vance and Rep. Bill Johnson, people familiar with his plans said. He is expected to help deliver relief items to the disaster-affected people.

In the 2016 and 2020 elections Mr. Mr.

But the derailment and its consequences Mr. He has focused on cutting regulations, including Trump’s own environmental policies and an Obama-era effort to put advanced brakes on trains carrying certain hazardous materials. Mr. A person close to Trump responded that federal officials thought the cause appeared to be an axle, that the brakes were not the issue, and that the rescinded regulation had no impact on the crash.

Having made only two other major appearances since announcing his candidacy on November 15, Mr. Mr. Trump, who recently traveled by train to the capital of Ukraine. Trying to contrast with Biden.

But Mr. While Trump has sometimes appeared presidential on disaster sites, his capacity for empathy has never been stronger, and he is Mr. In a famous moment, Mr. During his presidency, Trump raised eyebrows by tossing paper towels to people in need, like throwing T-shirts into the stands at a baseball game, when he visited Puerto Rico after a hurricane.

On Wednesday morning, a dozen people in Trump gear waited in the pouring rain for the former president on the city’s downtown streets. Duane Stalnaker, 78, said he had driven from nearby Salem to see Mr Trump, grabbing coffee at a local McDonald’s.

“Personally, I think the response has been very good,” Mr. Stalnaker said. “It’s something you don’t experience every week. How do you really prepare for that?”

In interviews in recent days, many residents of eastern Palestine described coughing or odd rashes on their skin, finding sick or dead farm animals, and dealing with worries and anxiety about exposure to harmful chemicals.

In Ohio, where mistrust of government and wealthy corporate interests are common sentiments, many have focused their criticism not on state and local Republican leaders, but on the Biden administration and federal officials. They said local and state Republican leaders had few resources to better manage the incident, but Mr.

“What’s he doing? Balloons from China,” said William Huger, 56, referring to Mr. Biden and East Palestine’s downing of a Chinese spy balloon over a cup of coffee Monday at Sprinklz On Top, a downtown restaurant.

A loyal supporter of Trump, Mr. Huger, Feb. 3 while watching news videos on YouTube, he said he heard a thunderous crash of train cars in his backyard. He came out to see a huge, fiery plume of smoke.

“Now the Democrats are all going to jump because the Republicans are showing them up,” he added, adding that Mr. Citing Trump’s expected visit.

All Mr. Disagree with Huger’s assessment. Some residents said they believed Mr Trump had his own motives for visiting eastern Palestine. Mr. As Huger spoke, the restaurant’s owner, Teresa Sproles, looked at him calmly and seriously and said softly, “Stop.”

“Donald Trump doesn’t have that job right now,” he said of the president. “He’s out there for votes, so he’ll be here.”

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg plans to visit East Palestine on Thursday to hear from officials and residents and get an update on the National Transportation Safety Board’s investigation.

In this trip Mr. Butiguek will be joined by Amit Bose, who leads the Federal Railroad Administration, and Tristan Brown, deputy administrator of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

Mr. The arrival of BoutiqueGeek is coming soon.

Mr. Buttigieg had previously said his visit did not intend to detract from emergency action and would wait until the federal response in eastern Palestine passed the emergency phase.

China’s top diplomat Wang Yi has pledged to strengthen ties with Russia ahead of the Ukraine war anniversary.

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(CNN) China’s top diplomat Wang Yi said on Wednesday he hoped to reach a “new consensus” on advancing bilateral ties with Russia as he traveled to Moscow to meet with President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

“I am ready today to exchange further views with you, my old friend, on the progress of our mutual relations, and I think we will definitely reach a new consensus,” Wang told Lavrov on Wednesday, days before the Kremlin’s first anniversary. A full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

“No matter how the international situation changes, China is ready to maintain a positive trend with Russia in building a new kind of cooperative relationship between major powers.”

Congratulating Lavrov on his recent promotion to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s top foreign policy adviser, Wang said he was trying to “strengthen and deepen Sino-Russian friendship.”

Under Xi and Putin’s leadership, the two countries are maintaining their strategic commitment and — in an apparent dig at the United States — to “resolutely resist any unilateral or bullying behavior, and irresolutely protect their respective sovereignty, security and development interests.”

On Tuesday, Wang told Nikolai Patrushev, head of Russia’s security council and one of Putin’s closest allies, that Beijing’s ties with Moscow were “solid as a rock.”

“Sino-Russian relations are mature and solid as a rock, and will withstand the test of the changing international situation,” Wang was quoted as saying by Russian state-owned news agency Sputnik.

“We are willing to work with the Russian side to resolutely protect national interests and dignity and promote mutually beneficial cooperation in all areas in accordance with high-level agreements,” Wang said.

Patrushev told Wang that China and Russia must stick together in the face of increasing pressure from the West, citing what he falsely described as “bloody events unleashed by the West in Ukraine.”

While trying to deny responsibility for tens of thousands of deaths, Russia has repeatedly accused the West of instigating the war in Ukraine — and Beijing has parroted the news, blaming Moscow’s unprovoked invasion on the United States and its NATO allies. Partners.

“In the context of the collective West’s campaign to contain Russia and China, further deepening of Russian-Chinese integration and contacts in the international arena is of particular importance,” Patrushev was quoted as saying by Sputnik.

Patrushev also said Russia and China should strive to create a new, “more fair” world order, according to Sputnik.

A Reading China’s foreign ministry said the two officials agreed to resist “Cold War attitudes, camp conflict and ideological opposition” — a thinly veiled criticism of the United States — and in an apparent reference to Beijing’s ambitions to make more efforts to “improve global governance” and reshape the world order in its favor.

The statement did not further say that Wang and Patrushev “exchanged their views” on the Ukraine issue.

Wang’s high-profile visit is widely believed to be a precursor to a meeting between Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping. In December 2022, Putin and Xi held a virtual meeting, in which the Russian leader described relations between the two countries as “the best in history”, saying they could “withstand all tests”, and invited Xi to visit Moscow in the spring of 2023. .

On Tuesday, the Wall Street Journal reported that the two leaders would meet “in the coming months,” citing people familiar with the plan. Arrangements for the trip are “in the early stages” and the timing has not been finalized, with the trip likely in April or early May, the WSJ reported.

Concerns about China’s role

Wang’s visit comes after the US president Joe Biden makes a surprise visit to Ukraine Washington and its European allies on Monday came together over the past year to support the struggling country through both military and humanitarian aid and economic sanctions against Russia.

A few days later Wang arrived in Moscow American officials Concerns about how China’s continued partnership with Russia could impact the war in Ukraine have gone public — and hours after Putin delivered a keynote speech on the conflict, he announced the plans. Stop Russia’s meddling In its last nuclear arms deal with the US.

The Chinese leadership claimed neutrality in the conflict, but instead refused to condemn Russia’s invasion. Expanding business relationships and continuing large-scale joint military exercises, Including this week.

But during engagements in European cities in recent days, Wang has sought to present China as a supporter of peace and dialogue, saying Beijing will make its position known at the Munich Security Conference (MSC) on Saturday. “Political Solution” of crisis.

The comments drew skepticism from many Western leaders, who are closely watching whether China offers any support to its northern neighbors. Concerns Beijing is considering providing risky military aid to Russia.

On Tuesday, China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang reiterated Beijing’s message on Ukraine at a security forum in the Chinese capital. China is “deeply concerned” that the conflict will “spin out of control” and will continue to push for peace talks and offer “Chinese wisdom” to bring about a political solution, he said.

“At the same time, we call on the countries concerned to immediately stop adding fuel to the fire, stop blaming China, and stop promoting the Ukraine today, Taiwan tomorrow rhetoric,” he said, referring to the United States. Its partners.

CNN’s Anna Chernova contributed to this report

Stock market books worst day of 2023 as rising yields contribute to ‘perfect storm’

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A rise in Treasury yields on Tuesday appeared to finally catch the previously resilient stock market, leaving the Dow Jones Industrial Average and other major indexes with their worst day of 2023 so far.

“Yields are rising across the curve… This time, market prices seem to be playing along with feeder funds,” Mark Arpeter, senior technical analyst at Arpeter Investments, said in a note. Generally, market rates tend to lead the way, he observed.

Since the start of the month, traders in fed-funds futures have priced in a more bullish Federal Reserve after initially doubting the central bank would hit its forecast for a peak fed-funds rate above 5%. A few traders are now pricing in even an outside possibility of a peak rate near 6%.

The yield on the 2-year Treasury note

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It rose 10.8 basis points to 4.729%, its highest closing in a US session since July 24, 2007. 10-year Treasury yield

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It rose 12.6 basis points to 3.953%, the highest since November 9.

“At this point, the bond market has abandoned optimistic expectations for limited further hikes and continued rate cuts in the back half of 2023,” Daniel Berkowitz, director of investments at Prudential Management Associates, said in emailed comments.

Meanwhile, the US dollar also rallied, with the ICE US Dollar Index adding 0.2% on a February bounce. Arbiter noted that breadth indicators, which are measures of how many stocks are participating in a rally, have worsened earlier, with some measures reaching oversold levels.

“Another perfect storm against the stock markets in the short term,” Arbeter wrote.

Rising yields could be negative for stocks, raising borrowing costs. More importantly, higher Treasury yields mean that the present value of future profits and cash flows are discounted more heavily. It will be heavily weighted towards technology and other so-called growth stocks. Those stocks fell heavily last year, but have pared gains in the early 2023 rally, and yields remained resilient until last week, even as a bounce extended.

Yields are rising after a flurry of warmer-than-expected economic data has raised expectations for a central bank rate hike.

Meanwhile, Home Depot Inc had weak guidance on Tuesday.

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and Walmart Inc.

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A weak stock market tone also contributed.

Home Depot fell more than 7%, the biggest loss among components of the Dow Jones industrial average

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The drop came after the home improvement retailer reported a surprise decline in same-store sales in the fiscal fourth quarter, leading to a sharp drop in profits for fiscal 2023 and earmarking an additional $1 billion for its affiliates.

“While Wall Street looks ahead to consumers following last week’s strong retail sales report, Home Depot and Walmart remain more cautious,” Jose Torres, senior economist at Interactive Brokers, said in a note.

“This morning’s data offers very mixed signals about consumer demand, but in a traditionally weak seasonal trading period, investors are moving toward a glass-half-empty view, which has so far been the exact opposite, a glass-half-full perspective,” he wrote.

The Dow closed down 697.10 points, or 2.1%, at 33,129.59, while the S&P 500

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It fell 2% to close at 3,997.34, closing below the 4,000 level for the first time since January 20. The drop reduced the S&P 500’s year-to-date gain to 4.1%, less than half of the 9, according to FactSet. % year-to-date gains experienced at the February 2 peak.

Nasdaq Composite

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It fell 2.5%, cutting its year-to-date gain to 9.8%. The losses sent the Dow down 0.5% for the year and marginally negative. It was the worst day for all three major indexes since December 15, according to Dow Jones market data.

Arbeiter found a “very interesting cluster” of support below Tuesday for the S&P 500, with a pair of trend lines converging, with the index’s 50- and 200-day moving averages both near 3,970 (see chart below).

“If that zone doesn’t represent pull-down lows, we still have a problem,” he wrote.

Strange DNA found in desert offers lessons for hunting life on Mars

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Comment

The Atacama Desert in Chile is the driest place on Earth. In spots, it looks like Mars. But even in the driest regions it is not lifeless. Using state-of-the-art equipment to study desert rocks, researchers have found DNA. Intriguing A mixture of microorganisms.

Astonishingly, 9 percent of the genetic fragments belong to species unknown to science, making them part of the “dark microbiome.” The report was released on Tuesday In the journal Nature Communications.

The organisms are bacteria that are “so strange and diverse,” the report says, that researchers can’t identify any known relatives.

“In almost half of the cases, the databases don’t tell us clearly what we have in our hands,” microbiologist Armando Azua-Bustos of the Center for Astrobiology in Madrid told The Post.

That brings him back to the Mars analogy: He and his scientific colleagues believe the Atacama is an ideal test bed for the search for life on Mars. But a similar search conducted with versions of the instruments on today’s Mars rovers failed to detect microbial signatures. That means that without bringing samples back to Earth, Azua-Bustos and her colleagues concluded that it would be difficult to find definitive evidence of current or past life in Martian soil.

The research appears to advance the long-term Mars exploration strategy of NASA and its partner the European Space Agency. They are in the midst of a multi-phase mission called Mars Sample Return. If all goes according to plan, samples of Martian soil obtained by NASA’s Perseverance rover, which just celebrated its second anniversary on Mars, will be hauled back to Earth early next decade for analysis in high-control laboratories.

But this new research highlights the challenges facing scientists seeking to learn about the (hypothesized) biological history of Mars. Microbial life, especially if it’s extinct and long-fossilized, may be at or beyond the range that can be detected by instruments small enough to blast off into space and land on another planet.

Scientists have never found an example of extraterrestrial life, but a common assumption is that “habitable” worlds are inhabited—life could somehow, under the right conditions, emerge. The Red Planet has long fascinated astrophysicists. About 3 billion years ago, it looked like Earth when it had a thick atmosphere and liquid water on the surface. Conceivably, life on Mars is still mysterious, although astronomers would be delighted to find even a microscopic form that lived billions of years ago.

In 1976 NASA’s Viking mission carried out experiments designed to detect life, and one initially provided a promising signal, but most scientists concluded they had landed on sterile soil.

After the Viking mission, NASA is pursuing an additional strategy focused on finding and exploring potentially habitable sites billions of years ago, when Mars was warmer and wetter. Perseverance and its still-active predecessor, the Curiosity rover, have found traces of organic molecules — molecules that are fundamental to life as we know it — on the surface, although this is no evidence of biological origins.

“The question remains whether they are meteorites, geological or biological,” said Amy Williams, a planetary scientist at the University of Florida and a member of the Curiosity and Persistence Science Groups.

The new report by Azua-Bustos and her collaborators is important because the preservation of organic material in a Martian-like environment is rare and would be difficult to detect with sophisticated laboratory instruments, Williams said.

“This means that detecting organics with space probes like current and future Mars rovers may be an even bigger challenge because organic matter is readily broken down in the radiation-bathed Martian surface environment,” Williams said in an email.

However, the Atacama research shows that even in very arid environments there are layers of sedimentary rock that contain significant amounts of biological remains, said Chris House, a geologist and astrophysicist at Penn State. “It’s not really a surprise, but the results could have been uniformly bleak,” he said. That’s good news for scientists who hope that dry Martian rocks could yield traces of alien life.

Azua-Bustos is a native of the Atacama who spent years as a winemaker before becoming a scientist. He recalls growing up in a city in Chile where it rained only once a year and was always a highlight. He said there are places where residents have never seen rain in generations.

He would pass through a section of the desert known as the Red Stone, on his way to a research site, and he decided it might be worth a closer look one day. The rocks were rust-red due to the presence of the mineral hematite, which is also responsible for Mars’ red color, he said.

100 million years ago, during the time of the dinosaurs, the Red Stone site was a river delta, similar to the Martian plateau within the diligently studied Jezero Crater.

Azua-Bustos was surprised to find genetic material of an unfamiliar nature found in the Atacama research. All life on Earth descends from a common ancestor – so far as we know. There has been speculation, particularly from scientist and author Paul Davies, that life may have appeared on Earth more than once and that a “shadow” biosphere may exist to this day, which is so different that it doesn’t fit our definition of life on Earth.

Azua-Bustos, however, defaults to a less spectacular interpretation of unclassified species: the genetic material of long-extinct and previously undocumented life forms.

The Perseverance rover continues to explore the Jezero Crater and dig up and store samples of Martian soil. The plan is to put another spacecraft on the surface, which will double as a launch pad. Perseverance will then deliver the samples to the lander, which will hurtle the object into orbit. There it will rendezvous with another vehicle, a European-built orbiter, that can carry precious cargo to Earth. To analyze with the best laboratory equipment.

New research suggests it may be more effective — and possibly the only definitive — way to find out if there was ever life on Mars.

“We know there are things that need to be discovered,” Azua-Bustos said. “But if your instrument isn’t designed to detect those things, then we have a problem.”

Putin suspended the last nuclear deal with the US, putting new missiles on combat duty

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MOSCOW, Feb 21 (Reuters) – President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday suspended Russia’s participation in the last nuclear arms control treaty with the United States, warning Washington that Russia has put new ground-based strategic nuclear weapons into combat duty.

Russia and the United States still have vast arsenals of nuclear weapons left over from the Cold War, the number of which is currently limited by the New START treaty, which was agreed in 2010 and expires in 2026.

“Today I am forced to announce that Russia is ceasing participation in the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty,” Putin told his country’s political and military elite.

The Russian leader said some in Washington were considering resuming nuclear weapons testing and that Russia’s Defense Ministry and nuclear agency should be ready for a Russian nuclear test if necessary.

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“Of course, we won’t do this first. But if the US conducts tests, we will. No one should have dangerous illusions that they can destroy the global strategic balance.”

“A week ago, I signed an order putting new ground-based strategic systems on combat duty. Are they going to poke their noses in there too, or what? They think everything’s so simple? What, we’re going? Just let them in?”

The New START treaty allowed both sides to freeze 1,550 warheads. Both parties met midterm limits by 2018.

Putin announced the move during his annual state of the nation address, in which he vowed to continue Russia’s years-long war in Ukraine and accused the US-led NATO alliance of fanning the flames of the conflict in bad faith. Moscow can be defeated in a global conflict.

Putin, speaking nearly a year to the day since ordering the invasion that sparked the biggest conflict with the West since the depths of the Cold War, said Russia would “continue to resolve” the tasks it faces in Ukraine.

Flanked by four Russian tricolor flags, Putin said Russia was turning to Asia after the West slapped the toughest economic sanctions in modern history.

Guy Falconbridge Report; Editing by Andrew Osborne, Simon Cameron-Moore and Nick MacPhee

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NASA is mapping dust storms from space with this new high-tech device

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(CNN) In the Mediterranean, it is called “.Sirocco,” and in the Canary Islands, “the fog“when it goes”harmatton“In West Africa, and”Habob“In Sudan. But all these different names describe the same thing: dust storms.

Sand and dust storms are a global phenomenon. These fine dust particles can be carried by wind Thousands of milesAffecting health and livelihood.

According to UNDust storms have increased dramatically in recent years due to climate change, land degradation and drought.

Climate scientist Natalie Mahowald By learning more about dust storms, he hopes to plan for the future. A professor of engineering at Cornell University in the US, he has been monitoring dust around the world for the past two decades — and is now working with NASA on a new instrument called EMIT.

The first type, a space-borne imaging spectrometer, helps map dust colors. Scientists can use the data in their climate models to figure out how different minerals warm or cool the planet, Mahowald explains. Each type of dust has its own unique light-reflectance signature: For example, white dust reflects solar radiation or heat, while “red and dark dust absorb it,” he says.

EMIT (Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Survey) “will revolutionize what we can do,” says Mahowald. “We can use it (the data) to better understand what the impact of desert dust is.”

A mineral map

Launched in July 2022, EMIT is attached to the International Space Station and orbits Earth 16 times a day, collecting data to map the mineral composition of the planet’s surface. SpectrumDifferent wavelengths of light emitted by different colors.

NASA’s Earth Surface Inorganic Dust Source Survey (EMIT), which measures visible and infrared light reflected from dust and soil.

This information allows researchers to determine the mineral and chemical composition of materials on the surface. Scanning 50-mile-wide strips in seconds, the gadget will provide scientists with billions of data points to use in climate model predictions — vastly expanding the current data set. 5,000 sample sitesMahowald says.

Much of the data for which detailed soil information is valuable for agricultural and commercial purposes comes from agricultural land. The wealth of information provided by EMIT, which includes data from the world’s driest regions, will help scientists learn more about dust and its impact on climate — an issue Mahowald says has been largely overlooked until now.

A vicious cycle

The UN estimates that 2,000 million tons of sand and dust are released into the atmosphere annually.

Sand and dust storms are essential to the planet, carrying them Nutrient soil Across countries and continents and helps plant life flourish – dust from the Sahara desert, for example Feeds on trees in the Amazon rainforestWhere the soil lacks the necessary nutrients.

“The ecosystem really relies on dust aerosols,” said Diana Francis, a climate scientist at Khalifa University in Abu Dhabi.

But if dust storms become more frequent and intense, they can accelerate global warming: A UN report highlights Changing storm patterns can alter the distribution of Earth’s minerals and reduce rainfall, while dust aerosols can act like greenhouse gases in the atmosphere by absorbing solar radiation.

This can create a feedback loop in which climate change causes more intense dust storms Land degradation and drought, and dust storms exacerbate climate change. There is evidence of this already happening, Francis says, pointing to the “Godzilla” dust storm that is the world’s largest. 20 yearsIt crossed the Atlantic in June 2020, darkening skies from the Caribbean to the US state of Texas.

Dust storms can cause respiratory diseases, damage livestock and crops and disrupt traffic. In the Middle East and North Africa region, they are estimated to cost the economy $13 billion per year.

And the number and intensity of storms in the Sahara desert is increasing, says Francis. In some of his earlier research, he found that changes in atmospheric circulation caused dust from the Sahara to reach the Arctic.

“Over the past two decades, we’ve noticed a significant darkening of the ice in the Arctic,” Francis said, highlighting another feedback loop. “When ice is dark it reflects sunlight less, so we know it will melt faster.”

More than just dust

EMIT has so far provided 5,000 data sets — each containing 1.4 million spectra. NASA scientists use the data to map the composition of dust and soil around the world.

But EMIT’s data is used to map another factor influencing climate change: Methane.

Although it makes up only a fraction of greenhouse gas emissions, methane is estimated to be present 80 times More warming power than carbon dioxide in the first 20 years of entering the atmosphere.

Engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California assemble components of the EMIT device in December 2021.

Methane absorbs infrared light in a unique form, “Spectral fingerprintingEMIT can be precisely pinpointed by an imaging spectrometer. Although NASA knew EMIT’s imaging technology could detect greenhouse gas emissions, it “performed better than expected,” says Robert Green, senior research scientist and principal investigator at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. EMIT task.

So far, EMIT has detected 50″.Super-emitters“Across the world, it comes mostly from fossil fuel, waste and agricultural facilities in places including the United States, Iran and Turkmenistan.

While carbon dioxide persists in the atmosphere for centuries, methane dissipates after a decade, ie Reducing methane emissions is the quickest way to mitigate climate change. NASA hopes this information will encourage countries to curb methane emissions.

Although EMIT’s work was initially planned to last only 12 months, Green says there are now plans to extend the project.

Mahowald is excited for the future. “The EMIT project is testing the waters and showing what’s really possible,” he says. “We’re going to go from 5,000 to billions of data, and much higher resolution. That’s going to help us tremendously.”

Hayden Panettiere’s Brother Johnson Panettiere Dies at 28

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Hayden Panettiere

Brother Johnson died at age 28

Hayden Panettierebrother of Johnson A baker has died … TMZ has learned.

A family source says Johnson died over the weekend in New York. The cause of his death is currently unclear. Law enforcement sources say they received a call to a residence around 5:30 p.m. Sunday. We are told that Johnson’s death is not suspicious.

Johnson, 5 years younger than Hayden, worked in the early 2000s on projects such as “Even Stevens,” “Blue’s Clues,” “Robots,” and “Ice Age: The Meltdown.” He also had a recurring role as Truman X on Nickelodeon’s “The X.”

At one point, Johnson worked with Hayden on 2004’s “Tiger Cruise” and 2005’s “Racing Stripes.”

He has starred in Disney Channel Original Movies and Nickelodeon made-for-television films, receiving a Young Artist Award nomination in 2008 for his work on “The Last Day of Summer.”

Johnson continued to act in the 2010s, working on shows like “Major Crimes” and “The Walking Dead.” He was involved in 5 more projects at the time of his death.

Johnson is only 28 years old.

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