ed note–as always, lots of ‘must knows’ that every war-weary Gentile with a vested interest in his/her own future survival needs to understand about all of this.

 

Firsto, ladies and Gentile-men, no one should doubt for a micro-millisecond the fact that Israel, and especially Benjamin Netanyahu, were eyebrows-deep involved in the business of installing the terrorist gangster Jew Zelensky as president of Ukraine.

 

They knew, just as they ALWAYS do, that in any situation where a Jew is called upon to further the interests of ‘the tribe’ (borrowing the same terminology which they themselves use) that in 11 out of 10 cases, that ‘cooperation’ is as much a ‘given’ as is New Year’s Day falling on Jan. 1st.

 

In this case, what was needed was exactly what took place on Feb, 24 of 2022 when Russia, for reasons rooted in her own self-defense, initiated the ‘special military operation’ that has been ongoing since that time.

 

At issue as far as Netanyahu and the rest of the Torah Terrorists making up his government were concerned, the objective was to keep Russia tied up in Ukraine so that the same resources that were successfully employed in preventing the fall of Syria would not be available in stopping the Jews from doing what it is that they are doing at this very moment, which is exploding Judea’s borders outwards in the interests of creating ‘Greater Israel’, and using the Oct. 7th attacks as the pretext for doing so.

 

In short and in sum, anyone who thinks that the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East are unconnected to each other needs to step back and look at the bigger picture, which is that the Jews, faithfully executing the various commands found within the doomsday religion that they follow, are as intent upon seeing WWIII/Armageddon take place as an arsonist is intent upon setting his own neighborhood on fire.

 

 

 

Jpost

 

Ukraine and Israel will ‘deepen’ military and cooperation, driven by mutual security interests as both countries continue to fight deadly wars, Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha announced Wednesday.

 

The announcement was made during Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar’s visit to Kyiv, where he also met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

 

During his meeting with Sa’ar, Sybiha stated that Ukraine sees significant opportunities for deepening its cooperation with Israel in such areas as defense technology, healthcare, energy, agriculture, cybersecurity, and more.

 

‘Ukraine and Israel have significant potential in the field of defence technologies. The time has come to realize this potential jointly for the sake of the security and stability of our countries,’ he said.

 

Writing on X/Twitter, Zelensky said he discussed with Sa’ar ‘cooperation, primarily in the economic and defense sectors, strengthening of Ukraine’s air defense, and opportunities for joint weapons production.’

 

While Israel has until now refused to provide Ukraine with any arms, Jerusalem has provided a field hospital and other civilian aid to the embattled country.

 

‘We were the first country to open a field hospital in Ukraine. We have sent generators, food, water, and winter equipment. Two weeks ago, I instructed my ministry to provide mobile water purification systems to eastern Ukraine after its water infrastructure was damaged by Russian bombings. This will be implemented shortly,’ Sa’ar said during the visit. ‘We have sent experts to assist with post-traumatic and resilience efforts. We have provided medical treatment to injured Ukrainians in Israel. Israel stands with Ukraine and its people.’

 

 

Israel, Ukraine built formidable defense-tech sector in the face of war 

 

Propelled by wartime urgency, both nations have built a formidable defense-tech ecosystem with cutting-edge innovation reaching warfighters on the battlefield in record time. Venture Capital funds have been pouring into both countries as startups continue. 

 

While regulations have barred Israeli companies from selling their defense products to Ukraine, many prime contractors as well as startups have found ways to bring their solutions to the embattled European nation.

 

And, as both countries recognize the shared threats and Kyiv’s defense-tech sector proving itself under fire, Jerusalem is finally shifting from humanitarian aid to forward-looking defense tech cooperation.

 

Though Ukraine has been at war with Russia since Moscow invaded and annexed Crimea in 2014, a 2022 report by the Stockholm Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) found that Kyiv’s imports of major arms between 2017-2021 were very limited. 

 

But the country’s once-neglected defense industry surged from 2022 to 2025 with an expected output of $15bn this year, helped in a large part to the hundreds of tech startups that are manufacturing critical equipment such as drones and counter-unmanned aerial system (UAS) solutions.

 

In April, US Congressman Pat Harrigan wrote that ‘80% of Russian casualties in Ukraine are caused by low-cost, software-defined First Person View drones.’

 

According to a recent report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI),  Ukraine has become the world’s ‘largest importer of major arms’ in the period 2020–24, with its imports increasing nearly 100 times over compared with 2015–19. 

 

The report found that at least 35 states sent weapons to Ukraine after Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, and substantial further deliveries are to be delivered in the near future. 

 

‘Ukraine received 8.8 per cent of global arms imports in 2020–24,’ the report read, adding that most of the major arms supplied to Ukraine came from the USA (45 per cent), followed by Germany (12 per cent) and Poland (11 per cent).’ 

 

And while the report found that imports of major arms by European states increased by 155% between 2015-2019 and 2020-2024, Ukraine was the only European state among the top 10 importers in 2020–24.

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