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Political impacts of Ukraine war

As part of Carney's trip to Ukraine/Poland/Germany/Latvia:

Though not specifically called out as part of Carney's talks with Poland today, other than to say 'expand trade with Poland', I did find this 4 days old article out of Poland and nuclear energy and the mention of Canada interesting.

 
As part of Carney's trip to Ukraine/Poland/Germany/Latvia:

Though not specifically called out as part of Carney's talks with Poland today, other than to say 'expand trade with Poland', I did find this 4 days old article out of Poland and nuclear energy and the mention of Canada interesting.


Possibly a "we buy your subs, you drop your bid in Poland" type deal?
 
I wonder which CDN bank moved that gold to Portugal….
Well, the Bank of Canada got someone to absolve THEM in 1997, so ....
 
Possibly a "we buy your subs, you drop your bid in Poland" type deal?
I don't think so, according to the article the SK's have to pay a 'fee' to Westinghouse for using their technology in SK nuclear reactors, coupled with the 'requirement' for the US Gov't to sign off on the SK sale to foreign countries for using this technology and then finally that extra 'fee' to Westhinghouse makes the SK's price uncompetitive.
 
Times sure have changed. Remember when the Russian's were mocking Europe saying it would freeze in the winter (cutting off Russian gas), early on in the war?

 
MOAR reassurances from the Veep!
From the piece:
RUSSIA has abandoned its ambitions to control Ukraine after the war, according to JD Vance - who counts it as a key concession win.
Let's see how well THIS one ages - archived here for posterity :)

Meanwhile, from Team USSR 2.0 ...
 
Nice of Russia to give the U.S. tentative permission to offer military defense assurances to U.S. allies.
Yeah, about that ...
... with this response from UKR's Prez (links to archived Financial Post article)
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That 2022 agreement would be the Istanbul Communique (see attached PDF - source: NY Times), which failed, in part because USSR 2.0 wanted any activation of security guarantee to have to have unanimous approval of all the parties, including Russia. UKR didn't like it then, either ...

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