'Grave Concern' as Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant under Russian Orders (theguardian.com) 78
"Staff at Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant are being told what to do by the Russian military commander who seized the site last week, in violation of international safety protocols," reports the Guardian:
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) expressed "grave concern" at the situation at the six-reactor plant, the largest in Europe. The agency was told by the Ukrainian nuclear regulator that "any action of plant management — including measures related to the technical operation of the six reactor units — requires prior approval by the Russian commander". The IAEA director general, Rafael Mariano Grossi, said on Sunday that the Russian military command over the nuclear plant "contravenes one of the seven indispensable pillars of nuclear safety and security" which states that the operating staff must be able to carry out their safety and security duties and be able to make decisions "free of undue pressure".
Russian forces shelled the Zaporizhzhia plant in the early hours of Friday morning, damaging a walkway between two of the six reactors, and starting a fire in a nearby building used for training. As a result some of the reactors were shut down and others were put on low power. The reactors themselves are well protected by a thick concrete shell, but there is concern that more vulnerable spent fuel rods could be hit, or that the power and cooling systems could be affected, potentially triggering a meltdown....
The IAEA said that the operators at the plant were now being able to rotate between three shifts, relieving the operators who had been on duty at the time the plant was seized, but there were still "problems with availability and supply of food" which the Ukrainian regulator said was affecting morale on the plant.
Russian forces shelled the Zaporizhzhia plant in the early hours of Friday morning, damaging a walkway between two of the six reactors, and starting a fire in a nearby building used for training. As a result some of the reactors were shut down and others were put on low power. The reactors themselves are well protected by a thick concrete shell, but there is concern that more vulnerable spent fuel rods could be hit, or that the power and cooling systems could be affected, potentially triggering a meltdown....
The IAEA said that the operators at the plant were now being able to rotate between three shifts, relieving the operators who had been on duty at the time the plant was seized, but there were still "problems with availability and supply of food" which the Ukrainian regulator said was affecting morale on the plant.
Why is anyone shocked that Putin gives zero shits (Score:1)
Putin will hire homer to run the plant (Score:2)
Putin will hire homer to run the plant
Re: Putin will hire homer to run the plant (Score:2)
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People think Putin is going to stop with Ukraine? He's going to keep going.
Re: Why is anyone shocked that Putin gives zero sh (Score:3)
Would Putin's stooge Lukashenko showing a literal map of their attack plan that doesn't stop with Ukraine be enough evidence? Or his threats against basically all his neighbors? Other countries being concerned enough to be trying to fast track their own EU and NATO memberships?
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What the map includes is a red arrow pointing at a breakaway province in Moldova- Transnistria- which has had Russian troops stationed in it since the 90s (and the US has been bitching about since- along with the Moldovans).
Not that that's OK, or anything, but it doesn't imply an increase in scope to the current operations, really.
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The map shows troops going to an area where there are already Russian troops.
Is that area another sovereign nation? Yes. It is. Does it suck that it's got Russian "peacekeepers" in it? Yes, it does.
But that's hardly new.
Now, if Putin decides to invade all of Moldova, that would be a change in the status quo, and worthy of some outrage. But nothing on the map indicated that.
I'm not handwaving it away, I'm wondering why the fuck you're re
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It's likely that once settle in Ukraine he turns to Moldova. Because it already has a separatist region that has and a Russian military base. Possibly he may just "annex" that region and stop, but the rest of Moldova is very small, it used to be a part of USSR, and likely is easy to take over and thus a "positive win" to overcome the shame of Vietnam, I mean Ukraine. Like most former USSR states, it was rarely aligned with Russia before or had been used as a back-and-forth chess piece and was glad to be
Re: Why is anyone shocked that Putin gives zero sh (Score:1)
The moldovans arnt Slavs so he may care less than you think about bringing them back into the russian "family". Not saying he wouldn't do it but IMO it's less likely.
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Georgia is also not a Slavic country, yet it didn't help them to keep their independence. Neither would be Estonia, if it came to this.
It's about the glory and might of the former Soviet Union, which Putin expressed in writings and speeches.
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If you had actually listened to his hour-long rant at the start of the war you'd understand that's even salty about the Russian Empire losing control of Sweden.
People who think he's trying to rebuild the Soviet Union out themselves as having not perused even a synopsis of his views on the matter. He spent much of his rant complaining about Soviet leaders all the back to Lenin. Their crime? Losing territory.
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Re: Why is anyone shocked that Putin gives zero sh (Score:2)
I'm not in the market for lectures on "logic" from supporters of a psychopath who ordered an artillery strike on a nuclear plant in a neighboring country whose prevailing winds blow IN HIS OWN DIRECTION.
Thanks for your concern, comrade, but we'll take it from here.
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People think Putin is going to stop with Ukraine? He's going to keep going.
Uncle Volodya will first have to substantially renovate his arsenal now that everybody knows what a pile of junk most of it is and he'll also have to send the apparatchiks that run it, back to military school, before he can restart his unstoppable thunderstorm of conquest. In the mean time Uncle Volodya's cheif leverage is going to be rattling his nukes while he whines about sanctions. While he does that the rest of us will be able to enjoy deafening silence from the simps here in the west that used to exto
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IF he's able to overrun Ukraine then it seems likely he'd be able to take Moldova too which is much smaller and the obvious next target (taking Ukraine would mean a clear run from Russia through to Transistria, where he's already set up a breakaway state, and on to the rest of Moldova). Defending Ukraine protects Moldova but I'm not sure anything else can.
... aaand that would put all of his puppets on the borders of NATO/EU and Uncle Volodya can start stirring up separatist conflicts inside the NATO/EU countries. Does anybody present still want to continue appeasing Uncle Volodya by handing him Ukraine and Moldova?
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I wouldn't put it past him if he actually had the ability, but he's not likely to manage to take Ukraine by conventional means, and certainly has no chance of keeping it.
Barring a decision to use nukes, though I do think that is quite likely:
I just can't see it as a Nazi Germany vs. Poland situation.
It's more like USSR vs. Afghanistan, or U.S. vs. North Vietnam. The stronger power won nearly every battle, yet not only lost the war, but suffered huge and politically unacceptable losses in the process, resul
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On the theory that your (awkwardly worded) question had some sincerity beyond rhetoric, the answer is obviously "No one is", but that is missing the entire point. The point is to shut it down and make the Ukrainians freeze in the dark. Shutting it down safely is okay, but absolutely not essential to the point of capturing the plant and stopping the electricity. Destroying it would have been fine with Putin, too, though kind of awkward in terms of not "protecting" Crimea from a radiation disaster.
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Look, I just want a nuclear power plant name that I can pronounce and say with regularity to sound up to speed, hip, and trendy. Okay? Thanks.
To be (slightly) fair to the Russians (Score:2)
It sounds like they themselves are short on food, thanks to the little spymaster's mismanagement of his invasion.
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To be specific as to who's fault it is:
Reportedly, Putin didn't tell anyone what his plan was until the last minute. So the army themselves didn't know they were moving into Ukraine, and had no time to prepare supplies, when at the last moment he told them, "Go in."
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Not good (Score:1)
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Well, sortof; I mean, mainstream media has cherry-picked statements and represented them as that.
There is a lot of idiotic presumption, though, even on the part of the nuclear experts. You can be a nuclear expert, but also actually have no clue about different types of bomb-proofing. You can be a nuclear expert and also be a complete dufus when it comes to understanding how possible various events are; an expert trained in the operation of a nuclear plant is an expert in what to do, not in how likely variou
Here's how this will play out (Score:2)
Putin the Gay has been claiming Ukraine has been seeking to a) reconstitute nuclear weapons or b) is trying to make a dirty bomb. Now that Russian forces control two nuclear power plants, guess what they'll find?
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Sadly good point.
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Actually Zelensky has been saying ( https://kyivindependent.com/na... [kyivindependent.com] ) Ukraine intended to abandon the Budapest memorandum if NATO would not give them membership. There are good reasons to interpret this as reconstituting nuclear weapons.
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North Korea is nuclear capable and shares a border with Russia. Wonder why Putin doesn't care about them?
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First, they don't have an active nuclear weapons program.
Operating some non-breeder reactors doesn't mean you're anywhere close to a nuclear weapons. You lack the material for the weapon, a way to make the material for the weapon, and the knowhow to make a weapon.
Second, the NTP makes it very difficult for them to get their hands on the material required to do so. At the point where they're in violation of the NTP, all supply of fertile fuel will be shut off, immed
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Is the WMD excuse way worse than the Nazi excuse he is already using?
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Is the WMD excuse way worse than the Nazi excuse he is already using?
Unsure. We could ask Saddam or anyone from his government.
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That was obvious the day it was proposed, to anyone with any understanding of history.
The U.S. was never going to defend Ukraine against Russian invasion on its own. There was never a way to do that without risking nuclear war. I'm not certain it will even honor the NATO treaty if it sees any other option whatsoever. It won't matter because other European nations most certainly will, and we'll be drawn into the resulting war anyway.
But other potentially nuclear-capable nations will surely take note, and
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1. Russia abandoned the agreement by attacking
2. US/UK violated the agreement by not defending Ukraine
So, the agreement is already gone, it just follows that if three of the major powers that signed the agreement didn't support it, that they shouldn't support it either.
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Didn't they also take Chernobyl already? (Score:2)
Re: Didn't they also take Chernobyl already? (Score:2)
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Chernobyl is near the main route to Kyiv, and normally has Ukranian troops stationed nearby. Bypassing it would have left those troops able to hit the logistics and resupply for the Russian advance.
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Has anyone found a good explanation for why Russia would want to take the Chernobyl site?
There’s a multitude of reasons to take it.
If we give them the benefit of the doubt—which we shouldn’t, but let’s pretend—they would want to do it for no reason other than to ensure its security in an unstable situation. As the invading force, they know that their invasion could cause breaks from typical security procedures that may leave the plant vulnerable to attacks or infiltration from rogue elements. As such, the best thing to do is to secure it such that they can be sure
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It's reactors are long ago shut down, its fuel long ago cold.
You could contaminate the local area, of course. But adding more of a mess to the Exclusion Zone hardly sounds like any more than flicking your thumb at someone.
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It's reactors are long ago shut down, its fuel long ago cold.
https://science.slashdot.org/s... [slashdot.org]
Check the date on that story. Things won’t be cold for a long, long time.
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https://science.slashdot.org/s... [slashdot.org]
This one too, also from the same time period.
Re: Didn't they also take Chernobyl already? (Score:2)
Re: Didn't they also take Chernobyl already? (Score:2)
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Nothing they do to that thing is going to cause some kind of nuclear disaster.
I suspect detonating a large nuke under all that would be pretty disastrous. And it's not something I'd dismiss as "oh, he'd never do that".
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Na. You can already make a nuke very dirty, if that's your goal. Hoping an appreciable amount of a surface burst goes into vaporizing the fission byproducts of the decommissioned reactors is comic book villain shit.
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It's not a live nuclear reactor, and its fuel is spent and cooled down.
If we're talking about the corium underneath the sarcophagus, which is still undergoing a nuclear reaction, it's not clear to anyone:
A) what you'd do to make it worse
B) do to the protection structures to make what you did matter.
Decommissioned nuclear power plants aren't nuclear bombs just waiting to be touched off. They contain some seriously radioactive
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Did you even look at the summary you are replying on? He ordered the military to shell an active nuclear reactor that would do just that if it went up. The prevailing winds would bring the fallout over Russia.
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Has anyone found a good explanation for why Russia would want to take the Chernobyl site?
It's the shortest route to Kiev, and the Ukrainians had no army stationed there. If they wanted to go around Chernobyl on the East, they would have to cross a rather large river. If they wanted to go around on the west, they would have to go through a swamp. So Chernobyl was the option chosen, even if it means taking a few years off the lives of their soldiers.
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Potential Occupation Strategy (Score:2)
Has anyone found a good explanation for why Russia would want to take the Chernobyl site? I wonder if there is a connection or if it's more symbolic.
Accumulating forces around nuclear reactors means that those forces are sheltered from air strikes from NATO or Ukrainian forces.
None of those facilities are particularly resistant to air strikes and Putin has just as much access to the design specifications of those reactors as any former Soviet country does with one installed.
I'd suggest that if Russian forces capture the facilities at Yuzhnoukrainsk, Khmelnytskyl, Rivne then they achieve the following goals:
1. Tactically they have a base for their fo
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Re: Didn't they also take Chernobyl already? (Score:2)
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Not quite any building...there are still rooms that have corium in them. Though I suppose calling that area a building might be overstating it a bit.
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Last week it was "OMG THE REACTORS ARE ON FIRE THEYRE GONNA KILL US ALL"
Now they quietly admitted what everyone who was watching the cameras already knew, that it was a training building outside the perimeter of the power plant.
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So tanks shelling a nuclear power plant is OK by your standards, are you sitting there, recording where each shell is going, where each piece of shrapnel and every bullet ends up hitting? The cooling systems, wiring, even the power plant operators. If anything gets hit anything can happen, an operator can decide he had enough, as an example and pull out all stops... This is a serious matter, putin and his idiots must be stopped.
Sign the petition https://chng.it/WzvwVrXq [chng.it]
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Yes, that is exactly what I said. Ffs, get some reading comprehension.
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Last week it was "OMG THE REACTORS ARE ON FIRE THEYRE GONNA KILL US ALL"
Now they quietly admitted what everyone who was watching the cameras already knew, that it was a training building outside the perimeter of the power plant.
By last week you mean 2 days ago right? And by OMG THEY'RE GONNA KILL US ALL you mean you didn't actually read any of the news and just settled for Daily express headlines right?
Hint: When the news broke pretty much every news story had this somewhere in the second paragraph:
The International Atomic Energy Agency said the fire had not affected essential equipment and that Ukraine’s nuclear regulator reported no change in radiation levels.
More reading, less alarmist bullshit, kthxbie.
Re: Just stop (Score:2)
Translation: "It's OK to shell a nuke plant, as long as you don't miss."
Fuck your mother.
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Huh the Putin troll army is out in force today.
Good luck with the roubles you're being paid for your trouble. Even if you can find some way of spending them, they'll be worthless soon.
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Perhaps you are in need of a safe space from news that hurts your feelings?
Those Wind Turbines... (Score:1)
Those wind turbines are looking pretty attractive about now...
Priorities. (Score:2)