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The Military Power

War in Ukraine Brings Explosions at Europe's Largest Nuclear Plant (cnn.com) 170

For months international experts worried about "a sprawling nuclear power plant on the banks of Dnipro River in southern Ukraine," reports CNN.

"Then, on Friday, explosions rang out at Zaporizhzhia nuclear power complex, the biggest of its kind in Europe, reigniting fears of a potential disaster." Moscow and Kyiv have accused each other of shelling the plant, which was taken over by Russian forces in early March, along with the town of Enerhodar, where the complex is located. CNN was unable to verify claims of damage at the plant, which occupies a large site. Much of the recent Russian fire in the area has originated from near the plant and it is unclear if parts of the nuclear facility were hit accidentally.... The Russian defense ministry added that the generating capacity of one unit at the plant had been reduced, and power supply to another cut....

When fierce fighting first broke out near the facility in the early days of the war, it sparked fears of a nuclear incident and prompted condemnations from the international community. Russian troops forced its managers to work "at gunpoint" after seizing the plant on March 5, according to Ukrainian nuclear officials. A week later, the Kremlin sent officials and technicians from Russia's state nuclear agency to help conduct repairs and manage the facility. Ukrainian and Russian staff have been working alongside each other since, and communication with the outside world has been intermittent.

Ukraine's state-run nuclear power operator, Energoatom, said Friday that Russian shelling had hit in and around the nuclear complex and damaged a water intake facility, cutting power and water to much of Enerhodar. "Three hits were recorded directly at the site of the station," the Ukrainian agency said, claiming that one was "near one of the power units where the nuclear reactor is located...."

Energoatom said on Saturday that the plant was operational and Ukrainian staff at the station continued to work to ensure radiation safety. Ukrainian prosecutors have opened an investigation into the incident.

Tuesday the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency warned that the plant "is completely out of control," adding "Every principle of nuclear safety has been violated.... What is at stake is extremely serious and extremely grave and dangerous." But CNN adds that "Other officials have been more measured, pointing to the fact that recent nuclear energy facilities are designed to withstand terrorist attacks and natural disasters.

"Several Western and Ukrainian officials believe that Russia is now using the giant nuclear facility as a fortress to protect their troops and stage attacks, because they assume Kyiv will not retaliate and risk a crisis."
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War in Ukraine Brings Explosions at Europe's Largest Nuclear Plant

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  • The story is very short: what does russia do on the soil of the foreign state?
    What competences, and exactly why, it has decided to bring in there?

    Get out right now, form of the shit.

    • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @02:57PM (#62767568)

      Russia has long established itself as the Tommy Boy of all countries.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      Incompetent as fuck, and when they fuck something up, as they inevitably do, they blame it on somebody else.

      • Nope, that's the ache-typical Anglo-Saxon character.
        Bojo and G walkin bush come to mind specifically.

  • Several Western and Ukrainian officials believe that Russia is now using the giant nuclear facility as a fortress to protect their troops and stage attacks, because they assume Kyiv will not retaliate and risk a crisis."

    It shouldn't be hard for spy drones to get enough video of what is going on there to determine who is telling the truth here. I know who I would put my money on.

    • Well, duh. Why else would they not want the IAEA to take a peek in?

    • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @03:19PM (#62767604)

      Here's a video [youtube.com] from March 3rd when Russian troops seized the plant showing them firing into buildings and causing a fire to break out, and here's further analysis [npr.org] of a longer, 4 hour video in which Russian troops fired heavy weapons onto the site, narrowly missing one of the reactors but also causing further damage than was initially reported, all the while refusing Ukrainian firefighters from entering the complex to entinguish the fires.

      Meanwhile, the first story on this page [cnn.com] is more video evidence of the Russian takeover wherein Ukrainian operators are telling the Russians to stop firing on the buildings or they risk a nuclear catastrophe.

      And to pile on some more, this picture from two days ago [bbc.co.uk] shows a covered Russian tank just outside the fence of the facility.

      So yeah, it's easy to know who to put your money on in this situation.

  • by boner ( 27505 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @02:56PM (#62767558)

    Iâ(TM)ll be waiting with baited breath on Amnesty Internationalâ(TM)s opinion if this is or is not a war crime.

    Does using a nuclear reactor as shield differ from using humans? The downstream effects seem terrible in both casesâ¦

    • by fazig ( 2909523 )
      They'll probably write something about Nazis and then put in a foot note in fine print at the very bottom of the backside of the paper, that Russia's invasion is not justified.
    • Iâ(TM)ll be waiting with baited breath on Amnesty Internationalâ(TM)s opinion if this is or is not a war crime.

      Does using a nuclear reactor as shield differ from using humans? The downstream effects seem terrible in both casesâ¦

      They'll probably blame the Ukrainians for placing a Nuclear reactor next to a Russia military depot and artillery firing range. Just like Ukraine keeps building hospitals on the site of future military bases [twitter.com] and urging civilians in occupied territories to join Russian military barges [twitter.com].

  • It gets better (Score:5, Informative)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @02:58PM (#62767570)

    There is now confirmed intelligence showing Russian troops have mined the nuclear plant [twitter.com]. Not only have they mined the plant, they've been shelling power lines and other infrastructure so as to cut off the southern portion of Ukraine from the power grid. This goes along with them mining vital infrastructure [twitter.com] (electricity, gas lines, water, etc) in Kherson and surrounding areas to do a scorched earth policy when they are pushed out.

    So not surprising they would be sheling the nuclear plant. Their entire goal is genocide and what better way than to have a large nuclear plant blow up after they leave to kill people and make things uninhabitable.

    • by vivian ( 156520 )

      Russia's main game plan is to stop Ukraine from developing gas and oil fields in the region, which was a potential competitor to it supplying European market.
      They could care less if there's anything left in East Ukraine or not - as long as those gas fields cant get developed.

      The only way to stop Russia is to cut it off at the knees - remove all European dependence on it's resources.

      • Russia's main goal was to get a buffer between Ukraine and Moscow. Russia is still terribly afraid of NATO. They still see it as an enemy.

        After the pro-Russian president Yanukovych was removed from office in 2014 and Russia occupying the Crimea peninsula as a result, the talks between Ukraine and NATO resumed and there was more than a hint that they may actually ponder becoming a member. And this would not be something Russia could accept.

        If you look at a topographical map of the area, you'll notice that th

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          The Russian anti-NATO doctrine always depended on having a defensible border against them. That was for the longest time the border between West and East Germany. A fairly short border. Everything else was either mountains or neutral countries, or a combination thereof. Ukraine in the NATO would create an insanely long border, with practically indefensible terrain behind it.

          So before the war, they had a short little border with Norway. And there were strong objections to its membership by a large percentage of NATO members precisely because Russia's illegal occupation of territory in Ukraine would constitute an act of war against a NATO member, and NATO would be compelled to drive Russia out, should Ukraine join. So there was basically no chance of that happening any time in the foreseeable future.

          But in spite of that, Russia's irrational fear drove Russia to take a military

          • Yup, it backfired as badly as France's ill advised war with Prussia 1870/71 which led to a reunited Germany under Prussian leadership, which was pretty much the nightmare France feared.

        • After the pro-Russian president Yanukovych was removed from office in 2014 and Russia occupying the Crimea peninsula as a result, the talks between Ukraine and NATO resumed and there was more than a hint that they may actually ponder becoming a member. And this would not be something Russia could accept.

          Its oversimplified, and it was never an excuse. Everyone in the West knew there was almost no f--king chance they were going accept a kleptocratic nation such as Ukraine as a NATO member. That would mean Ukraine has a vote in what NATO does, just like many other rinky dink Eastern European members that never should have been accepted, as well. It would be like accepting a second Turkey into NATO, and unlike Ukraine, Turkey has huge strategic importance. Since most of NATO's members are European, they ha

          • That bar for entry has been lowered to and below the floor when NATO accepted Turkey as a member. That ship has long sailed. I have outlined the strategic importance of Ukraine in the post above, you would pretty much force Russia to pull together a large portion of its ground and air forces to the West whenever you start a "training exercise" in Ukraine simply because they couldn't otherwise even dream about stopping an assault. If you want to bleed Russia dry, that's how you do it.

            But yes, I give you the

    • Remember, it was the FSB, likely at Putin and Yeltsin's direction, that mined the apartment buildings that were blown up in Russia that catapulted Putin to power. FSB were caught in the act and they claimed it was just a drill. It's likely wide spread knowledge inside of Russia but no one dares talk about it.

      • It's likely wide spread knowledge inside of Russia but no one dares talk about it.

        I've talked to plenty of Russians about this, and no one seems to believe it. There's just no alternative explanation that has any evidence.

  • But the real question is - is it deliberate, or is it simply a result of the widespread incompetence they've demonstrated in pretty much every endeavor they've undertaken in recent memory?

    • Agree it seems like this is on the Russians. But there is just something so illogical about all of it. Ukraine wouldn't shell it because they don't want to run the risk of cutting electricity to Ukrainians that are already suffering enough, and they'd just cause damage that they'll have to repair when the war ends. Or in the worst case scenario they'll be stuck with a fully destroyed/melted down plant.

      Meanwhile Russia is already using it as a shield, putting equipment and vehicles in there. So why would the

      • In Russia, people capable of making critical analysis and then open their mouths are decreed "Western saboteurs", and then people like you should be able to conclude what happens at that point. This is the "power" of autocracy. You can spew the most ridiculous lies, because anyone bright enough to realize they are lies will most likely become your enemy, which you can then preemptively kill.

  • Will the radioactive contamination be blown toward Russia? As soon as Russia station troops there, it was almost inevitable that there would be explosions. Its not fundamentally different from stationing troops in a hospital because you hope your enemies wont attack. They have to attack.
  • I call "False Flag" (Score:4, Interesting)

    by farrellj ( 563 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @03:19PM (#62767608) Homepage Journal

    The Russians look like they are using their mercenaries, the Wagner Group, to commit atrocities against Ukrainians. First they killed Ukrainian Prisoners of War and try to blame Ukraine for it, so it's not a stretch that they are doing the same thing at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power complex. I think that if Russia is pushed all the way back towards Crimea, they will also blow up the dam on the Dnipro River, and flood all of the downstream Ukrainian cities like Kherson. Then blame Ukraine.

    Following this war, we may see war crimes trials that will be second only to the ones after World War 2 against the Nazis.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      We won't see war crimes trials like with Nazis. There, we had Germany by the balls and their dumb-ass commanders. Here, no one wants Russia. The Great Putini thinks the West wants to own Russia. The West doesn't give fuck about that wreck of a country. It would cost too much to stand it up right and proper. So there won't be any rounding up the fellows who ordered whatever atrocities of which Russia is guilty.

      • Agreed the west/US has no interest in westernizing Russia, and there is no chance of Russia being invaded (at least not yet), but I think whether there are war crime trials like post WW2 will depend upon the extent of the atrocities. Nazi concentration/death camps were so beyond the pale and their scope so large that the world couldn't look away. Russia has done absolutely horrible things in this war, but the scale of it is different, at least as far as we know with the information we have. As terrible as

    • by sfcat ( 872532 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @05:37PM (#62767834)

      they will also blow up the dam on the Dnipro River

      China would lose their mind if that happened. In 1938 the Chinese nationalists destroyed a dam and flooded their own people. To the CCP this event is the symbol of everything they fought against. If Russia did something similar, the CCP couldn't continue to support them in any form. This event is the cornerstone of CCP propaganda even today. China would be forced to consider Russia an enemy from then on. That would crush Russia and send them back to the 1800s. I wouldn't expect Russia to still be a country in a decade if they actually were foolish enough to destroy the dam on the Dnipro.

      • They would just blame it on the other side.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        China seems to have had enough of Russia already. They started requiring proof of ownership for aircraft wanting to fly into China, which seems to be targeted at the aircraft that Russia stole after the war started.

        If you aren't familiar, Russian airlines leased a lot of aircraft from leasing companies based in Ireland and the Bahamas. Lots of airlines do it, as an alternative to owning aircraft. When the war started and Russian airlines were unable to pay the leases, they should have returned the aircraft.

    • Eventually Putin will be nomore(may be months or years more to go for that), and alot will depend on the next leader of Russia - do they want to start the slow process of trying to rejoin the rest of the world, or will they want to be in a "forever sanctioned state".

      If they want to rejoin, they going to fix alot of things they broke in Ukraine, at the very least. Of course Putin may be making it such that the next leader in Russia will have no choice but follow whatever he has started. The more things get s

  • If anything happens, I hope it all blows east, all the way to Moscow.
    • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @04:18PM (#62767730)

      I don't. That would kill a lot of innocent people, and it would kill a lot of innocent Ukrainians.

      There was a Jewish man, Frederick Mayer, who went behind enemy lines with 2 others. He caused the Germans no end of grief. In the end, he was captured and beaten within an inch of his life. But the Americans came and the Germans in the town he was in got nervous and released him, asking him to intercede with the Americans. He did, and negotiated the surrender of the town, which he had no authority to do. Eventually, he is asked by a German commander to visit the German in his prison cell. He tells Frederick, please, do anything you like to me, but spare my family. Frederick looked at him and said, "we are not Nazis", and walked out.

      We should not turn into Nazis, regardless of how the Russians have turned themselves into Nazis.

      The story is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      • Excellent point, and for me one of the most important reasons to not have the death penalty. It turns an inhumane task into an assignment for someone who's just doing his job. Anders Breivik complained of being treated badly, and I sincerely thought he should get better treatment. Not because he deserved it, but no guard should dehumanise any inmate and treat them worse than an animal, for the guard's own mental health and sanity.

        Getting back to the current situation, anyone really wanting to do onto the

    • It's mostly north to Moscow.

  • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @04:04PM (#62767700)
    At this point, if a Russian spokesperson were to say a true thing they would probably go into anaphylactic shock and die. It's ridiculous to talk about "trading accusations." The Russians did it and everybody knows that. Are we going to start repeating accusations that it was Ukrainian soldiers responsible for Irpin and Bucha? Seriously?
  • Logic is Off (Score:2, Insightful)

    by X_DARK_X ( 1881648 )
    So the Russians are using the plant to house troops and heavy weaponry And Russia is shelling the plant? That is so stupid i cant even process it.
  • Cute there are even videos of Russian tanks being escorted into buildings on site. Apparently nuclear sites are now the only safe place left in Ukraine for Orcish command posts.

  • We're not gonna make it to 2050 are we? Oh well, humans had a nice run .. building pyramids .. even going to the moon .. movies .. the internet. Some humans did some cool stuff. In the end we couldn't shake off our greed, envy, and apathy.

    • Humanity has been fucked for 10,000 years, and it will keep on being more and more fucked for 10,000 more years.
      • Well, cracking the atom actually has raised the stakes by a lot. I agree we won't be going extinct. But a sudden 80%+ population reduction at some point is not out of the question.
        • That, plus a nuclear Winter, and we just might still reach the climate goals.

          • Nope, nuclear winter lasts as long as there are reflective particles in the atmosphere. In a year or two, the utterly vaporized ozone layer and lack of reflective particles will pretty much cook all life. Back when each side had 10K megaton nuclear weapons to throw at each other, the generated radioactive particles may have exterminated all life on earth. But now we're roughly 1/3rd that number, we'll probably only wipe out all human civilization; yeah, we could reach our climate goals at that point...

      • Given primitive weaponry, humans could (and often did) only wipe out neighboring tribes. Nowadays, because of nuclear weapons, if a combination of just a few crazy people get into power, we're toast. It's only a matter of time before someone with the personality of Hitler, Idi Amin, Caligula, or Genghis Khan gets control of a nuclear arsenal. Just because we survived until today doesn't mean we can't end tomorrow. The dodo bird lived for thousands of years before it suddenly found itself extinct.

  • ... about russians parking artillery at a nuke plant?
  • ...not terrible.

    Ok, terrible.

  • I can believe Russia would accidentally or intentionally shell near or at the plant. I can also believe they would use the plant to launch attacks and station artillery. however, I struggle to believe the two combined, that sounds a little bit like desperate propaganda. Russia won't be bombing their own artillery and troops staging area. Sound more like an accidental hit from Ukraine or targetting the troops stationed their.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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