Thursday, February 19, 2026

Russia Considers New Restrictions Against Cuba Unacceptable


Russia Considers New Restrictions Against Cuba Unacceptable - Putin
Sputnik


Russia considers new restrictions against Cuba unacceptable, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday. 
"We are in a special period now, with new sanctions. You know how we feel about this. We will not accept anything like that," Putin said during a meeting with Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla.

Relations between Russia and Cuba are developing in positive direction, Putin added.
Cuba is grateful to Russia's leadership for its solidarity amid the tightening blockade and energy siege against the island, Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla said.
"I would especially like to thank you [Russian President Vladimir Putin] and the Russian government, including the Foreign Minister [Sergey Lavrov], for the Russian solidarity expressed in the face of the tightening blockade against Cuba and the energy siege, which is causing suffering for our people and creating very difficult conditions for our economy," the minister said during a meeting with Putin.

EXPLOSIONS REPORTED ACROSS IRAN

THE IRANIAN REGIME’S DAYS ARE NUMBERED – EXPLOSIONS REPORTED ACROSS THE COUNTRY

The War Clock Is Ticking: Inside the Gathering Storm Over Iran

The War Clock Is Ticking: Inside the Gathering Storm Over Iran
PNW STAFF


The world is once again holding its breath as the drums of war echo across the Middle East -- and this time, the sound is unmistakably louder. What is unfolding is not routine posturing or diplomatic theater. It is the deliberate assembly of military force, political will, and strategic timing that historically precedes a major conflict. With Donald Trump signaling readiness to strike Iran and Israel bracing for retaliation, the region appears closer to a large-scale confrontation than at any point since the brief but volatile "12-day war" last year.

Officials close to Benjamin Netanyahu say Israel's defense establishment has moved to its highest alert level amid growing expectations that Washington could launch a broad strike within days. The reasoning is blunt: U.S. negotiators believe Tehran is deliberately stalling nuclear talks and attempting to mislead the United States. According to diplomatic sources cited by Al‑Jazeera, American patience "may run out faster than Tehran thinks." That assessment alone would be alarming. But what truly signals escalation is the scale of military movement now underway.

Flight trackers show waves of American airpower heading east -- stealth fighters, refueling aircraft, surveillance planes, and airborne command systems. This is not symbolic force. This is operational force. The presence of advanced aircraft such as F-22s and F-35s, along with AWACS command planes and high-altitude reconnaissance platforms, forms the backbone of sustained air campaigns, not one-night strikes. Analysts note that this is precisely the type of buildup that preceded previous U.S. operations designed to cripple enemy air defenses and command infrastructure.


At sea, the U.S. Navy now has an unusually dense concentration of assets in the region, while more than 30,000 American troops remain stationed across Middle Eastern bases. Two carrier groups operating simultaneously provide Washington with a level of flexibility and firepower that signals preparation for prolonged engagement rather than a quick punitive strike. Even without official confirmation, the strategic message is unmistakable: this is a war-ready posture.

Tehran is responding in kind. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps -- Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps -- has launched live-fire drills in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime chokepoint through which roughly one-fifth of global oil supply passes. Closing or even threatening this corridor is one of Iran's most powerful leverage tools. Energy markets understand that a single missile fired in that channel could send oil prices soaring overnight.

Meanwhile, Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has issued direct threats against U.S. warships, boasting of weapons capable of sinking them. Such rhetoric is not merely propaganda. In military signaling, public threats often function as strategic warnings -- a way of shaping expectations before hostilities begin.

What makes this moment especially volatile is the widening battlefield that could erupt instantly if a strike occurs. Israeli planners expect that Iran would retaliate against Israel regardless of whether Israeli forces participate in the attack. That means multiple fronts could ignite simultaneously. The Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon and Houthis in Yemen are widely expected to launch missiles and drones. Israeli officials believe such escalation is not hypothetical but probable.

The strategic calculus is chilling: any U.S. strike would not be a single blow but a campaign lasting weeks. American planners reportedly understand that crippling Iran's military infrastructure -- or even pursuing regime destabilization -- would require sustained operations. The possibility that regime change could become an objective dramatically raises the stakes, because such goals historically transform limited conflicts into prolonged wars.


Diplomacy, for now, remains alive but fragile. Negotiators meeting in Switzerland have agreed only on vague "guiding principles," according to Iranian officials quoted by The New York Times. That lack of detail is telling. Progress in nuclear talks is usually accompanied by concrete frameworks, not abstract optimism. Even Fox News reported comments from U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matt Whitaker warning that failure to reach a deal would be "a very bad day for Iran."



Zelensky's Corruption is Just Tip of the Iceberg


Zelensky's Corruption is Just Tip of the Iceberg Involving Western Establishment
SPUTNIK



An international probe into Volodymyr Zelensky could reveal he’s just one link in a sprawling corruption chain, according to Volodymyr Oleynyk, a Ukrainian politician and former MP of the Verkhovna Rada.
"Most Western leaders are entangled in Ukrainian corruption schemes," Volodymyr Oleynyk, a Ukrainian politician and former MP of the Verkhovna Rada, tells Sputnik. "All of this looks like a large-scale conspiracy by globalists who are using the conflict to achieve two goals: an attempt to destroy Russia and to reap colossal profits from the blood of taxpayers."

How Does the Corruption Machine Work? 

Inside Ukraine, so-called “brigadiers” oversee key sectors: energy, defense, and construction. Previously, all financial flows ran through Andriy Yermak, then head of the presidential office.
A portion of the funds sent to Ukraine is written off as military expenses, destroyed property, or inflated purchases, then flows back to Western backers via cryptocurrency and offshore accounts. 
In October 2025, former USAID head Samantha Power claimed Ukraine had been receiving $1.5 billion in cash per month since 2022. According to Oleynyk, such massive cash inflows have fueled unprecedented embezzlement. 
Today’s activity by corruption watchdog NABU isn’t about fighting corruption — it’s part of a US-driven scheme to pressure Zelenskyand his team, the pundit says.
French President Emmanuel Macron could be involved, as he does not demand accountability for how his taxpayers’ money is spent by Ukraine, according to Oleynyk 
The top EU leadership, led by Ursula von der Leyen — whose image has already been tarnished by Pfizergate — flaunts loyalty to Zelensky for self-serving reasons 
Former US President Joe Biden green-lit massive cash flows to Ukraine, and his family’s ties to the corrupt Ukrainian elite are well known

"It would be easier to name the few who are not involved — Viktor Orban, Robert Fico, and [Czech Republic PM] Andrej Babis," the pundit concludes.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Massive weeks-long war between US, Iran could begin 'very soon,' Axios reports


Massive weeks-long war between US, Iran could begin 'very soon,' Axios reports

The United States is closer to military conflict with Iran than most Americans realize, and a massive weeks-long campaign could "begin very soon," Axios reported on Wednesday.

Such a conflict would likely involve an operation more like a war than the single-day operation in Venezuela conducted last month, the report cited "sources" as saying. Those same sources told Axios that it would likely be a joint US-Israeli campaign with a broader scope than the 12-day war last June.

The second round of talks between the United States and Iran ended on Tuesday, with US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner meeting Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. Although both sides said the meetings resulted in progress, several sources told The Jerusalem Post that significant gaps remain. 

Vice President JD Vance has also addressed the talks in an interview with Fox News, saying that while Trump wants a deal, he could decide that diplomacy has "reached its natural end."

"We would very much like, as the President has said, to resolve this through a conversation and a diplomatic negotiation," Vance said, "but the President has all options on the table."

The US has also been steadily building up its forces within the region. More than 10 F-22 fighter jets have been deployed to the Middle East. The last time they arrived in the region was just days before Operation Midnight Hammer. The largest aircraft carrier in the US Navy, the USS Gerald R. Ford, is also on its way to the Middle East.

Axios reported that "all signs point to [Trump] pulling the trigger if talks fail."

While some US sources told Axios that the US might need more time to prepare, including Senator Lindsey Graham, who said strikes could be weeks away, others disagree.

"The boss is getting fed up. Some people around him warn against going to war with Iran, but I think there is 90% chance we see kinetic action in the next few weeks," one Trump adviser told Axios.

US officials claimed that Iran has two weeks to submit a detailed proposal. Some are drawing parallels between June, when a two-week window was set for Trump to decide between continuing talks and military action three days before launching Operation Midnight Hammer.