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The Ukraine Daily Brief – Wednesday, March 23, 2022

The Ukraine Daily Brief Podcast is now live. Please be sure to listen and review (we know you are receiving the podcast in the member feed, but reviews help with discoverability). Some notable links referenced in today’s podcast can be viewed here.

The War

Russia holds Crimea, blocks Ukraine’s access to the Sea of Azov. Conflicting reports of mines in the Black Sea continue.

Economics

Severstal faces default. Caspian pipeline disruption drives oil price volatility. Russia announces plan to partially reopen its stock market. Putin now demands that ‘unfriendly countries’ pay for Russian gas in rubles.

Technology

NATO will supply Ukraine with cybersecurity technology.

Europe

Stoltenberg to Russia: ‘stop this dangerous irresponsible nuclear rhetoric.’ Sweden signals stronger defense posture at Arctic Council’s Cold Response 2022. Lavrov, Peskov react to Poland’s peacekeeping plan. Poland expels 45 suspected Russian spies. Chubais quits as Putin’s international envoy.

U.S. and the World

The US looks to project a united front against Russia with NATO allies. Jake Sullivan: ‘of course’ we will look to exclude Russia from the G20. Israel reportedly blocked Pegasus spyware for Ukraine, fearing Russian response. A key piece of China’s BRI is disrupted. Ukraine refugees try to make sense of TPS, legal nonprofits step in to help.

DSR Exclusives

Former ICC genocide and war crimes prosecutor, Rebecca Hamilton, explains the criteria for actionable evidence in ‘citizen-based documentation.’ 

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Tune in to tomorrow’s podcast for new and evolving stories.

The DSR Network Team (Chris Cotnoir, Grant Haver, and Katherine Hill)



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