For most of us it is difficult to understand the amount of damage by the Russians in Ukraine. So, here are 10 analogies.
1. @KSE_Institute estimates total direct losses at $143.8 bn. This is about equivalent to rebuilding the city of the size of Los Angeles from scratch. 1/
2. About 185,000 km2 of Ukraine's territory could potentially be contaminated with explosive ordnance and needs to be surveyed for mines and cleared.
This is like having an area larger than the state of Florida contaminated with explosives. 2/
3. Russia's military aggression has led to significant environmental impacts, with 5.5 million tonnes of pollutant emissions released into the air, causing an estimated $25.8 billion in damage.
This is like adding the annual CO2 emissions of a country like the Netherlands. 3/
4. Direct damages to Ukraine's infrastructure, including transport, public road systems, and railway infrastructure, amount to $36.2 bn.
Imagine the entire public transportation system of a city like London being wiped out. 4/
5. The direct damage to the Ukrainian energy infrastructure is estimated at $8.1 billion, with electricity generation and transmission objects suffering the most.
The damages are equivalent to the cost of building 10 Hoover Dams. 5/
6. The education sector faces $8.94bn in direct damages, with over 3,000 educational institutions affected.
Imagine the entire education system of a city like New York being wiped out. 6/
7. Over 153,000 housing objects have been destroyed or damaged, with an estimated value of $53.6bn in direct losses.
It is about 5-7% of all residential housing the country. Imagine ever every 13th house in your country destroyed? 7/
8. The most affected regions in Ukraine include Donetsk, Kharkiv, Luhansk, Mykolaiv, Zaporizhzhia, Kyiv, and Chernihiv.
Imagine 3 major cities, each the size of Paris, all suffering from extensive damages and having the entire population to move. 8/
9. Direct damages to public sector facilities, including educational, scientific, and healthcare institutions, total about $13.69bn.
Imagine the entire budget of NASA for half a year being used to cover these damages. 9/
10. Healthcare facilities have suffered $1.8bn in direct damages, with at least 1,216 facilities damaged or destroyed.
This is like losing the healthcare infrastructure equivalent to 36 large hospitals. 10/10
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2. Ten days ago, he again denies that "Ukraine defends its sovereignty and democracy". He also claims that Ukraine is loosing and the US forces are directly engaged with the Russian forces in Ukraine.
3. On March 16, Tucker asks "Where's all the money going? You can't have an audit. Because if you do want an audit of where your money is going into the most corrupt country in Europe, you're a tool of Putin".
Why would an Oxford graduate choose to teach at the Kyiv School of Economics? Why would other non-Ukrainian faculty come to our war-torn country?
I think there's a raw sense of meaning of life in Ukraine, and that you can try to help fix this broken world. 1/
I will quote from our conversation with Tomas.
"Even before the invasion, I felt many Ukrainians wanted to improve their country. And I didn't always get the same feeling in my own country. Now, after the invasion, there's even more of that. 2/
There's a feeling that it's possible not only to defend Ukraine but to build something new and just. I sense that although the situation is very terrible, it's also a historic opportunity. 3/
@TheStudyofWar reports that Ukrainian forces have established positions in east (left) bank of Dnipro in Kherson Oblast as of yesterday. The institute cites textual and geocofirmed graphical evidence by Russian military bloggers.
This is important. 1/
The Institute also states that Wagner Group financier Yevgeny Prigozhin is likely attempting to persuade Russian President Vladimir Putin to go over to the defensive ahead of a potential Ukrainian counteroffensive. 2/
The positions established by the Ukrainian military according to the ISW are cross from Kherson.
Up until now Russian military continues to kills civilians in Kherson using snipers, drones and artillery. They shoot at any activity.
Meet Pasha @pashatseluyko, an entrepreneur in Ukraine. Over the last war year his revenues doubled to $2M and he hired 50% more people. Pasha is 22. He operates in Ukraine but clients are primarily the US. What is his secret for success despite the war? 1/
I met Pasha at the Kyiv School of Economics this week. He gave a talk about his business to our students and KSE community. My Comms told me he was also our student, but they were misinformed. Pasha appears to have had no formal business or other university education. 2/
But his talk made it clear that is very knowledgeable and knows both practicalities of doing business in Ukraine at the level of a top CEO and the theory of management science from HR to organizational culture to leadership to biz dev at the MBA level. I just wonder how … 3/
Lavrov: everyone understands the US declared a crusade against Russia and its legitimate interests, choosing Kiev nazi regime as its tip and pumping it with weapons.
Everything here is a lie. 1/
Main argument: the US has declared a crusade against Russia, while Kyiv is a puppet of the US.
No, on February 24, 2022 Russia has invaded Ukraine with hundreds of thousands troops, from North, South, and East, launched missile attacks, sent tanks, bombed cities. 2/
The US has not done nor declared anything. It is Russia that started the war in Ukraine. Since then Russia killed and tortured tens of thousands of civilians, abducted and deported children, and committed war crimes and atrocities. 3/
These are @MichalMatlak and Polish Senator Kazimierz Ujazdowski. We met yesterday in Kyiv and talked politics. Not the grain from Ukraine, but governance, judicial reform, anti corruption.
Here are the four key principles how to do a judicial reform. 1/
These principles are invaluable to understand for Ukraine. But also for Poland. They also show where the EU gets the judicial reform (in Ukraine) wrong.
1. It is not about the process, but people and culture. 2/
You can change laws and procedures. You can create new institutions. You can bring in new people. But if you don’t change the culture of how these people interact and what principles they follow, there will be no meaningful reform. 3/