Today's D Brief: Russian flagship sinks; Kyiv under attack; China steamed over Taiwan visit; Israel, LM have new lasers; And a bit more.
Ukraineβs capital city of Kyiv is under renewed Russian rocket attack after Moscowβs enormous Black Sea Fleet flagship, Moskva, officially sank on Thursday, according to state-run media TASS and RT. The Russians have made no mention of the warship being hit by Ukrainian munitions prior to sinking, as Kyiv officials allege. Instead, the Russian defense ministry today says itβs targeting munitions factories around Kyiv one day after the Moskva sank while being towed to port in a fierce storm on the Black Sea. (How fierce was that weather? Not very, judging by forecasts of the region during the time in question.)Β
In perspective: Moskvaβs sinking is βthe biggest by tonnage to fall in wartime since Japanβs legendary battleship the Yamato,β according to the Wall Street Journal. Others pointed out that itβs the first to fall in combat since the Falklands War in the early 1980s, when a British submarine torpedoed and sank an Argentine navy cruiser known as the General Belgrano.
Bigger picture: The sunken Moskva is now βa symbol of Putin's disastrous strategic gamble on warβ with Ukraine, said Patrick Cronin of the Hudson Institute. βThe Kremlinβs current story of losing the flagship of the Black Sea Fleet due to an accidental fire and ammunition explosion will, at minimum, likely hurt Russian morale and cannot be hidden from the Russian domestic audience,β analysts at the Institute for the Study of War wrote Thursday evening. βBoth explanations for the sinking of the Moskva indicate possible Russian deficienciesβeither poor air defenses or incredibly lax safety procedures and damage control on the Black Sea Fleetβs flagship.β
New: Russia just warned the U.S. that βunpredictable consequencesβ may follow Washingtonβs arming of Ukraine, according to a βformal diplomatic note from Moscow,β the Washington Post reported Thursday eveningβtwo days after the note allegedly passed from Moscow to Washington. Somewhat puzzlingly, Russia took particular offense to sharing βmultiple launch rocket systemsβ with Ukraine; however, that weapon is not one the U.S. has sent or vowed to send. (Different story for U.S. allies, as Foreign Policy reported Friday.) There are howitzer long-range artillery systems; those were included in this weekβs round of new weapon deliveries. But no analysts categorize them as a βmultiple launch rocket system.β
Moscow says: βWe call on the United States and its allies to stop the irresponsible militarization of Ukraine, which implies unpredictable consequences for regional and international security,β Russian officials wrote in their note. Entirely absent, of course, was any mention of Russia illegally invading another country, or shelling residential complexes and allegedly killing a minimum of 10,000 civilians in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol aloneβand possibly more than 20,000, as Mayor Vadym Boichenko said this week.Β
Mariupol has not yet fallen, and βremains contested,β a senior defense official told reporters Thursday. βThe Ukrainians are still fighting,β he added.Β
Otherwise, there have been βno major changes in positions for either side over the last 24 hours,β he said. βWe continue to see Russia posture for offensive operations in the Donbas, and continue to see additional equipment arrive in western Russia and in that area to the north of the Donbas that we talked about, Valuyki and Rovenki, including, in fact, we've seen some additional helicopters make their way to be staged in that area for insertion.β
One former generalβs forecast: Russia and Ukraine will likely turn their focus to key terrain like road and rail junctions, river crossings, and cities, former U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling tweeted Thursday. This means, perhaps as much as any time stretching back to late February, βresupply and logistics will be key,β he said. βCritical cities we will soon hear more about are Izyum, Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Horlivka, and a few others,β Hertling predicted. He has much more to say in a Twitter thread, here.
Random question: βHow long does it take to get from war crime to prosecution?β The answer is typically βanywhere from 5-30 years,β according to Alexa Koenig of the UC Berkeley School of Law. Thatβs one of the things youβll learn in a new βArbiters of Truthβ podcast from Lawfare.Β
In the category of second- and third-order effects of Russiaβs invasion, Tunisiaβs 12 million people are experiencing a sharp spike in food prices since late February, the Washington Post reported Thursday from Tunis. βIn March alone, food costs rose by 13 percent, reaching their highest level since the United Nations began tracking them in 1990. A basket of commodities including cereals, meat, and dairy products now costs 34 percent more than it did one year ago.β
This pain stems, at least in part, from Ukraine and Russiaβs outsized role in providing fertilizer and grain, including a combined 29% of global wheat exports. βTunisia is among the most vulnerable countries, relying on Ukraine and Russia for 56 percent of its annual wheat imports over the last five yearsβ¦The dire outlook has many analysts warning of the potential for social unrest,β the Post reports. More here.Β
In video: Watch Russian embassy officials race to block a Ukraine flag beamed onto the face of Moscowβs embassy in Washington, D.C., Wednesday evening. Benjamin Wittes shared a clip of the event, which he, in our opinion, rightly calls a βcat and mouseβ game with the Ruskies.Β
Additional Ukraine content:Β
- βRepublican lawmakers call for reopening US Embassy in Ukraineβs capital,β via Stars and Stripes, reporting Thursday;Β
- βRussiaβs Sunken Warship Moskva Recalls Great World War II Naval Battles,β via the Wall Street Journal, reporting Friday;Β
- βCIA Director William Burns decries Russia's βhorrificβ crimes in Ukraine, calls out China as βsilent partner in Putin's aggression,ββ via CBS News, reporting Thursday;Β
- And donβt miss βThe Struggles of the Russian Military in Ukraine,β an event hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations, featuring former Air Force Gen. Phil Breedlove and British scholar Mark Galeotti.
From Defense One
China May Have Just Taken the Lead in the Quantum Computing Race // Peter W. Singer and Thomas Corbett: Chinaβs record-shattering processor is 1 million times faster than what Google achieved three years agoβbut we are years from the finish line.
New Navy Task Force to Protect Red Sea Region // Caitlin M. Kenney: Drug and weapons smuggling, as well as rocket attacks, undermine the security of the major shipping route.
Biden Rejects Unanimous NSC βMore Often Than You Might Thinkβ // Jacqueline Feldscher: βWe will prepare consensus recommendations and heβll say, βI donβt buy that,ββ Jake Sullivan said.
The Naval Brief: Lightning carriers; Future recon vehicle; More weapons to Ukraine; and more... // Caitlin M. Kenney:Β
Welcome to this Friday edition of The D Brief, brought to you by Ben Watson with Jennifer Hlad. If youβre not already subscribed to The D Brief, you can do that here. On this day 110 years ago, the 852-footlong Titanic sank in the North Atlantic Ocean, killing more than 1,500 people.
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China says the U.S. is sending the βwrong signalsβ when its lawmakers visit Taiwan. Thatβs the message from Beijingβs military Friday after a visit from lawmakersβincluding Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Bob Menendez, D-N.J.βon Thursday.
Taipei: βYou're all true friends to Taiwan and I look forward to working with you to strengthen our countriesβ partnership,β Taiwanβs President Tsai Ing-wen tweeted upon their arrival Thursday.
In response, βChina's military sent frigates, bombers, and fighter planes to the East China Sea and the area around Taiwanβ¦in a statement released as the lawmakers were holding a news conference in Taipei,β Reuters reported Friday from the island. βThis operation is in response to the recent frequent release of wrong signals by the United States on the Taiwan issue,β said Beijing's defense ministry, and added, βThe U.S. bad actions and tricks are completely futile and very dangerous. Those who play with fire will burn themselves.β
Read more: βDocument reveals $14 billion backlog of US defense transfers to Taiwan,β via Defense News, reporting Thursday.
Meanwhile, βsupply lines are rupturingβ as at least 44 Chinese cities are under either a full or partial Covid lockdown, CNN reported Friday, as China buckles from its largest-recorded outbreak to date, which is restricting the movement of about a third of its population, or about 373 million people. Beijing is taking these precautions in part because an estimated 40 million people over the age of 60 still have not been vaccinated against Covid, the New York Times reports.
One big part of the widening problem: βGetting supplies across the country has become a steep challenge, with some expressways closed, and truck drivers ensnared in quarantine or at thousands of highway health checkpoints,β CNN writes.
Urgency rising. A key Chinese official said three times this week that China must do more to support its relatively sagging economy. βUrgency is quickly replacing stability as the key word for authorities this year,β Bloombergβs Sofia Horta e Costa reported Monday. According to the Times, βOne economist has gone so far as to predict that China could go into recession in the coming months.β
Contributing to the pain: Chinese βPolicy makers are also dealing with a downturn in real estate and a pullback in exports, as consumers world-wide buckle under the pressure of soaring commodity prices fueled by Russiaβs invasion of Ukraine,β the Wall Street Journal reported Friday from Singapore. βThese and other headwinds mean many economists are skeptical the economy will meet the governmentβs growth goal of around 5.5% this year, in an important political year for Chinese leader Xi Jinping, who is set to break with recent precedent and seek a third term in power.β
U.S. Treasury Secretary issued a warning to Beijing on Wednesday: βChina cannot expect the global community to respect its appeals to the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity in the future if it does not respect these principles now when it counts,β Janet Yellen said at an event hosted by the NATO-focused Atlantic Council.
βThe war in Ukraine and sanctions against Russia highlight the pivotal role of China,β Yellen said. βChina has long claimed to hold sacrosanct key international principlesβincluding those enshrined in the U.N. Charter with respect to sovereignty and territorial integrity. Whatever Chinaβs geopolitical aims and strategies, we see no benign interpretation of Russiaβs invasion, nor of its consequences for the international order.β Reuters has more, here; or read the full transcript via the Atlantic Council, here.
Related reading: Putinβs invasion + an ongoing pandemic + climate change = a forecast of disrupted βglobal trade patterns for years to come,β the New York Times reported Thursday off a new assessment from the White Houseβs Council of Economic Advisers.
Israel says it has a new laser weapon that can shoot down rockets, mortars, and anti-tank rounds. Itβs called the βIron Beam,β like the more well-known βIron Domeβ system used so often against Hamas militants.
βIt may sound like science fiction, but it's real,β Prime Minister Naftali Bennett tweeted Thursday, along with a demonstration video. βThis is the worldβs first energy-based weapons system that uses a laser to shoot down incoming UAVs, rockets & mortars at a cost of $3.50 per shot,β he said. According to the Associated Press, βLittle is known about the laser systemβs effectiveness, but it is expected to be deployed on land, in the air, and at sea. The goal is to deploy the laser systems around Israelβs borders over the next decade to protect the country against attacks.β Tiny bit more, here.
Speaking of lasers, Lockheed Martin says it shot down a drone with a laser over New Mexico back in February. Itβs known as LMβs βLayered Laser Defenseβ system, and U.S. Navy researchers announced the test from the White Sands Missile Range on Wednesday.
Why it matters: βThe February demonstration marked the first time the U.S. Navy used an all-electric, high-energy laser weapon to defeat a target representing a subsonic cruise missile in flight,β according to the Office of Naval Research.
But curb your enthusiasm, acquisition specialists. Thatβs because βthereβs no plan to field the LLD,β but ONR says βit offers a glimpse into the future of laser weapons. It is compact and powerful, yet more efficient than previous systems,β and it βincorporat[es] artificial intelligence to improve tracking and targeting.β Read more, here.Β
Thereβs been a quietly dramatic update from the U.S. military regarding an attack in Syria 8 days ago. The April 7 βexplosions in Green Village were not the result of indirect fire,β as initially suspected and reported; instead they appear to have resulted from βthe deliberate placement of explosive charges by an unidentified individual(s) at an ammunition holding area and shower facility,β officials from Combined Joint Task ForceβOperation Inherent Resolve said in a statement Thursday. Thereβs little else to report from the base located in the Syrian countryside, east of Deir-ez-Zour; and the incident is under investigation, CJTF-OIR said. (Hat tip to CNNβs Barbara Starr for noticing this one.)Β
A former ISIS member was convicted of hostage-taking and conspiracy to commit murder in a Virginia court on Thursday. The six-week trial came to an end after four hours of jury deliberation over the fate of 33-year-old El Shafee Elsheikh, one of the four British ISIS members referred to as the Beatles. His charges βcarry a potential death sentence, but U.S. prosecutors have advised British officials that they will not seek the death penalty,β according to Reuters.Β
In Tennessee, an active-duty Air Force general has been chosen as director of a county school system just outside of Knoxville.
The new hire: Four-star Gen. Arnold Bunch. Heβs expected to retire from the Air Force in the coming months after 37 years in uniform, our colleague Marcus Weisgerber reports. Bunch grew up in Morristown, the county seat of Hamblen County. According to Tennesseeβs Citizen Tribune, Bunch admitted in his interview (video here) that βhe has no real-world experience in the educational field, but offered the 81,000 individuals under his command in the U.S. Air Force as representation of his leadership skills.β
For the record, βBefore becoming the head of Air Force Materiel Command in Ohio, Bunch was the Air Force's top uniformed acquisition official at the Pentagon, where he oversaw multibillion-dollar weapon programs,β Weisgerber adds. Read more at the Tribune, here.
Here are a few headlines this week from the margins of national security reporting:Β
- βI Trained to Become a Fake Cop with COVID Conspiracists,β via Vice News, reporting Thursday from London;Β
- Texas Gov. Greg βAbbott's border operation has led to $88M in contracts with little oversight. Some say he's abusing his powers,β the Houston Chronicle reported Thursday;Β
- βWWII-era ship tilting into Lake Erie in Buffalo, New York, naval park,β via CNN, reporting Thursday; however, the parkβs president vowed Thursday, βThis ship will rise again, and failure is not an option,β according to BuffaloNews.com.Β
Have a safe weekend, everyone. And weβll see you again on Monday!



