Зеленський і Сунак відвідали британську військову базу, де навчаються українські військові

Президент Володимир Зеленський разом із прем’єр-міністром Великої Британії Ріші Сунаком у середу ознайомився з підготовкою українських військових на військовій базі Bovington Camp, повідомляє пресслужба Офісу президента.

«Глава держави ознайомився з навчанням українських екіпажів на британському основному бойовому танку Challenger та іншій броньованій техніці. Президентові продемонстрували практичні елементи тренувального курсу. Володимир Зеленський також поспілкувався з військовими та командуванням бази», – йдеться в повідомленні.

Повідомляється, що Зеленський вручив на британській базі державні нагороди українським військовим.

«Я побачив, що хлопці готові навчатися швидко. Наші військовослужбовці проявляють старанність і поспішають якнайшвидше опанувати нові навички, щоб повернутися додому й використати все, чого навчилися, для звільнення нашої території. Бачу, що тут є все необхідне для цього, зокрема й потужні танки. Саме такі, як нам потрібні. І ми робимо все, щоб вони так само швидко з’явилися на полі бою», – сказав на базі Bovington Camp Володимир Зеленський.

Президент Володимир Зеленський у середу з неофіційним візитом прибув до Британії, де зустрівся з прем’єр-міністром країни, з британським королем і виступив у британському парламенті. Там він заявив, що Україні потрібні літаки. Незабаром західні медіа повідомили, що голова британського уряду доручив міністру оборони країни оцінити можливість надання Україні винищувачів. Росія вже пообіцяла «відповідь», якщо Велика Британія надасть Україні літаки.

Справа MH17: попри «явні ознаки» причетності Путіна до збиття літака, прокурори завершують розслідування  

Обвинувачення заявляє, що докази причетності Путіна та інших російських посадовців недостатньо чіткі, аби спричинити кримінальну відповідальність

Разом з Німеччиною танки Leopard 1 Україні нададуть Данія та Нідерланди

Данія, Німеччина та Нідерланди нададуть кошти для відновлення щонайменше 100 старих танків Leopard 1, щоб передати їх Україні, йдеться у спільній заяві держав, оприлюдненій 7 лютого.

Міністр оборони Німеччини Борис Пісторіус, перебуваючи з неоголошеним візитом у Києві, заявив, що до літа надійде від 20 до 25 танків, близько 80 – до кінця року і ще 100 – у 2024 році. Про такі наміри повідомив міністр оборони України Олексій Резніков.

Наразі невідомо, скільки зі 178 танків, про надання яких Україні заявила Німеччина, будуть зрештою передані, оскільки їх ще треба відремонтувати і переоснастити.

У спільній заяві щодо планів Данії, Німеччини та Нідерландів йдеться, що Україна отримає щонайменше 100 танків Leopard 1 A5 найближчими місяцями, а також навчання, матеріально-технічну підтримку, запчастини та комплект боєприпасів.

Як передає Reuters, міністр оборони Нідерландів Кайса Оллонґрен заявила, що Leopard 1 «безумовно все ще придатний» для бойового використання, незважаючи на те, що він старішої моделі.

Згідно із заявою, деталі угоди ще потрібно опрацювати з компаніями, які володіють танками.

Leopard 1 не такі передові, як Leopard 2, які Німеччина та інші країни пообіцяли надіслати Україні минулого місяця. Але німецьке Міноборони 7 лютого написало у твітері, що «основні бойові танки Leopard 2A6 від Німеччини будуть доступні наприкінці березня».

Данія, Німеччина та Нідерланди заявили, що їхня ініціатива щодо Leopard 1 відкрита для інших партнерів, додавши, що Бельгія виявила «початковий інтерес до участі».

Biden Focuses on Economy, Touts Accomplishments in 2nd State of the Union

U.S. President Joe Biden said Tuesday the “story of America is a story of progress and resilience” as he gave his second State of the Union address with a focus on his domestic economic policy, including an appeal to his Republican opponents to work together.

“Two years ago, COVID had shut down our businesses, closed our schools and robbed us of so much,” Biden told a joint session of Congress.

“Today, COVID no longer controls our lives,” he said.

“And two years ago, our democracy faced its greatest threat since the Civil War. Today, though bruised, our democracy remains unbowed and unbroken,” he added.

Highlights consensus

Facing a Congress in which Republicans now have a majority in the House of Representatives, Biden cited legislation that Republican and Democratic lawmakers came together to pass, including a massive infrastructure bill, aid for Ukraine and protecting same-sex marriage rights.

“To my Republican friends, if we could work together in the last Congress, there is no reason we can’t work together and find consensus in this new Congress as well,” Biden said.

Biden said that to maintain the world’s strongest economy, the United States needs the best infrastructure, and he said new standards will require federal infrastructure projects to use only construction materials made in America.

“Lumber, glass, drywall, fiber-optic cable,” he said. “And on my watch, American roads, American bridges and American highways are going to be made with American products as well.”

Overall, Biden said, his economic focus is on “investing in places and people that have been forgotten.”

The president also argued for raising the debt ceiling, which is the maximum amount the U.S. Treasury can borrow to pay its bills. The U.S. hit its debt limit of $31.4 trillion in January. Congress now has until midyear to raise the limit before the U.S. defaults on its loans.

Biden said Congress has previously paid the country’s bills “to prevent an economic disaster.” He called on lawmakers to commit to making sure the credit of the United States will never be questioned.

Kevin McCarthy, the newly elected speaker of the House of Representatives, has said the Republican Party will continue to oppose what they see as excessive spending.

“Biden’s challenge in the State of the Union is to make the global case while also presenting himself as a leader who understands and is prepared to meet the day-to-day economic challenges facing Americans here at home,” political scientist Andrew Seligsohn said in a note to VOA.

Biden also was expected to discuss a range of foreign policy issues, administration officials said.

Relations with China, the nation Biden sees as the biggest competitor for the U.S., hit a new low last week when the U.S. shot down what it said was a Chinese spy balloon that traversed the country for a week, including over key military installations.

Patrick Cronin, Asia-Pacific security chair at the Hudson Institute, a conservative Washington think tank, told Lin Feng of VOA’s Mandarin Service that Biden needs to show he “is forging ahead with policies that strengthen the security of America and its allies. His words about China should highlight Beijing’s deeds, not words, but without adjectives. Let facts speak for themselves.”

Gun policy, immigration, health care, police reform and more were also likely to feature in the address.

President recognizes parents of Tyre Nichols

As is custom, the event hosted guests who symbolize some of the issues. The Congressional Black Caucus invited the parents of slain Memphis resident Tyre Nichols to the address.

Nichols, 29, was killed by five Black police officers in January. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have used the tragedy to urge Congress to revisit the stalled police reform act that Democrats proposed after the 2020 killing of Minneapolis resident George Floyd.

And Jeremi Suri, a history professor at the University of Texas at Austin, also noted that Biden will use the speech to rally support. Biden has not officially announced whether he will run for reelection in 2024. His critics say at 80, he is too old for another term.

“He will depict Republicans as ideologues, while he is a pragmatist for the American people,” he told VOA.

French Pension Reform Plan Triggers New Strikes, Protests

New nationwide strikes disrupted public transport and schools, as well as power, oil and gas supplies in France Tuesday, while tens of thousands of demonstrators marched in a third round of protests against planned pension reforms.

The protests came a day after French lawmakers began debating a pension bill that would raise the minimum retirement age from 62 to 64. The bill is the flagship legislation of President Emmanuel Macron’s second term.

Tens of thousands marched in the cities of Nice, Marseille, Toulouse, Nantes and elsewhere, as well as in Paris. Protesters in the French capital, many of whom were young, marched peacefully from the Opera area carrying placards reading “Save Your Pension” and “Tax Billionaires, Not Grandmas.”

France’s current pension system “is a democratic achievement in the sense that it is a French specialty that other countries envy,” said one protester, media worker Anissa Saudemont, 29.

“I feel that with high inflation, unemployment, the war in Ukraine and climate change, the government should focus on something else,” she added.

Last week, an estimated 1.27 million people demonstrated, according to authorities, more than in the first big protest day on Jan. 19. More demonstrations, called by France’s eight main unions, were planned for Saturday.

Rail operator SNCF said train services were severely disrupted Tuesday across the country, including on its high-speed network. International lines to Britain and Switzerland were affected. The Paris metro was also disrupted.

Saad Kadiui, 37, a consulting cabinet chief who had to go through a disrupted Paris train station Tuesday, said he did not support the “wearisome” strikes. “There are other ways to protest the pension reform,” he said.

Kadiui said he supported the principle of the pension reform but wanted the bill to be improved in parliament. “I think that for some jobs, 64 is too late,” he said.

Power producer EDF said the protest movement led to temporarily reduced electricity supplies, without causing blackouts. More than half of the workforce was on strike at the TotalEnergies refineries, according to the company.

The Education Ministry said close to 13% of teachers were on strike, a decrease compared to last week’s protest day. A third of French regions were on scheduled school breaks.

Macron vowed to go ahead with the changes, despite opinion polls showing growing opposition. The bill would gradually increase the minimum retirement age to 64 by 2030 and accelerate a planned measure providing that people must have worked for at least 43 years to be entitled to a full pension.

The government argues the changes are designed to keep the pension system financially afloat. France’s aging population is expected to plunge the system into deficit in the coming decade.

The parliamentary debate at the National Assembly and the Senate is expected to last several weeks.

Opposition lawmakers have proposed more than 20,000 amendments to the bill debated on Monday, mostly by the left-wing Nupes coalition.

Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the powerful CGT union, called on the government and lawmakers to “listen to the people.” Speaking on French radio network RT, he denounced Macron’s attitude as “playing with fire.”

Macron wants to show that “he is able to pass a reform, no matter what public opinion says, what the citizens think,” Martinez asserted.

The head of the CFDT union, Laurent Berger, also called on the government to “listen” to the crowd that took to the streets. “One can only respond to social tension through the democratic exercise of power,” he told French newspaper La Croix.

Rancor over the pension plan went beyond parliament’s raucous debate. The speaker of the lower house, the National Assembly, reported that the bill had triggered anonymous voicemails, graffiti and a threatening letter to the head of the chamber’s Social Affairs Committee.

“That’s enough,” Yael Braun-Pivet tweeted. “These acts are an attack on our democratic life. … We won’t tolerate it.”

Several lawmakers from the far-right National Rally party received voicemails during Monday’s debate saying that loved ones were hospitalized, in an apparent ploy to make them leave the assembly. The group’s leader, Marine Le Pen, said she was filing a legal complaint.

Херсонщина: депутата від партії Сальдо підозрюють у співпраці з ФСБ – прокуратура

За даними слідства, підозрюваний раніше служив у правоохоронних органах, а під час окупації Херсона співпрацював із російськими спецслужбами

Boeing Plans to Cut About 2,000 Finance, HR Jobs in 2023

Boeing plans to make staffing cuts in the aerospace company’s finance and human resources departments in 2023, with a loss of around 2,000 jobs, the company said.

“We expect about 2,000 reductions primarily in Finance and HR through a combination of attrition and layoffs,” Boeing said in a statement Monday. “While no one has been notified of job loss, we will continue to share information transparently to allow people to plan.”

The company, which recently relocated its headquarters to Arlington, Virginia, said it expects to “significantly grow” the overall workforce during the year. “We grew Boeing’s workforce by 15,000 last year and plan to hire another 10,000 employees this year with a focus on engineering and manufacturing,” the statement said.

Boeing’s total workforce was 156,000 employees as of Dec. 31, 2022, the company said.

The Seattle Times reported Boeing, which has been one of the largest private employers in Washington state, plans to outsource about a third of the eliminated positions to Tata Consulting Services in Bengaluru, India.

Mike Friedman, a senior director of communications, told the Times the other positions will be eliminated as the company makes reductions in finance and human resources support services.

“Over time, some of our corporate functions have grown quite large. And with that growth tends to come bureaucracy or disparate systems that are inefficient,” Friedman said. “So we’re streamlining.”

The Times reported about 1,500 of the company’s approximately 5,800 finance positions will be cut, with up to 400 more job cuts in human resources, which is about 15% of the department’s total staff.

Кулеба назвав пріоритетні теми до обговорення на Мюнхенській конференції з безпеки

Мюнхенська конференція з безпеки – один із найпрестижніших міжнародних форумів у галузі міжнародної безпеки. Проходитиме цьогоріч 17-19 лютого