Ukraine's Achievement is Biden's Too

martin

Well-known member
by Brett Stevens

This column is rarely short of criticism of the Biden administration. So let me loudly cheer the fact that the staggering gains Ukrainian forces have made against Russia are a victory for Joe Biden, too.

Since the war began, I’ve had various deep-background conversations with people who have extensive knowledge of the ways the United States is aiding Ukraine’s war effort. It’s not just a matter of Javelin antitank missiles and Stinger surface-to-air missiles and HIMARS rocket launchers and M777 artillery and radar-seeking HARM missiles and other advanced systems. It’s that we are providing Ukrainians with the kind of battlefield intelligence that enables them to maneuver, target, strike and evade in ways they otherwise couldn’t.

We’ve become not just the arsenal of Ukrainian democracy but also its eyes and ears. What Ukraine initially lacked in overwhelming firepower, the United States made up for in precision. Now, as Russian units flee their positions and abandon equipment, Ukraine may be able to gain at least a temporary advantage in both precision and mass, creating a unique window for further decisive gains....


https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/13/opinion/ukraine-war-biden.html

Brett Stevens is a conservative columnist who has kept his head in the Trump era that has muddled so many others.
 
Hello Martin,

by Brett Stevens

This column is rarely short of criticism of the Biden administration. So let me loudly cheer the fact that the staggering gains Ukrainian forces have made against Russia are a victory for Joe Biden, too.

Since the war began, I’ve had various deep-background conversations with people who have extensive knowledge of the ways the United States is aiding Ukraine’s war effort. It’s not just a matter of Javelin antitank missiles and Stinger surface-to-air missiles and HIMARS rocket launchers and M777 artillery and radar-seeking HARM missiles and other advanced systems. It’s that we are providing Ukrainians with the kind of battlefield intelligence that enables them to maneuver, target, strike and evade in ways they otherwise couldn’t.

We’ve become not just the arsenal of Ukrainian democracy but also its eyes and ears. What Ukraine initially lacked in overwhelming firepower, the United States made up for in precision. Now, as Russian units flee their positions and abandon equipment, Ukraine may be able to gain at least a temporary advantage in both precision and mass, creating a unique window for further decisive gains....


https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/13/opinion/ukraine-war-biden.html

Brett Stevens is a conservative columnist who has kept his head in the Trump era that has muddled so many others.

So good to see Ukraine taking back territory.

Freedom fighters fighting to protect their free nation.

Beating back the misguided Russian army, which was originally told they were simply conducting an exercise.

Aggressors who have no business attacking Ukraine, no right to any of Ukraine.

It is only right that we help them defend freedom and free elections.

Well done, President Biden.

-On the right side of history.
 
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The Pentagon is handling the response.

Slow Joe doesn't know which end of a gun the round exits from.
 
He just signs the cheques, he's good at that.

The Pentagon takes its instructions, and receives its clearances, from the President. Stevens is aware of that. And he hasn't sold his mind, as Earl has, not that there was that much to sell.
 
The Pentagon is handling the response.

Slow Joe doesn't know which end of a gun the round exits from.

Thats the job of the Pentagon, my dear. Leave this in the hands of the professionals. Mr Biden is doing a fine job. You could almost guarantee that had trump been in office we would have done little or nothing to help Ukraine.
 
The Pentagon takes its instructions, and receives its clearances, from the President. Stevens is aware of that. And he hasn't sold his mind, as Earl has, not that there was that much to sell.

The pentagon is overseeing the American response to the naked aggression by the cowards in Russia, Marty. Slow Joe is incapable of responding to the oatmeal dribbling down his chin.

That was ugly, Marty, take it back.

I could say that your feeble responses to my overpowering posts indicate a less than developed mind and a pobre education.

I could but I won't...Marty.
 
The pentagon is overseeing the American response to the naked aggression by the cowards in Russia, Marty. Slow Joe is incapable of responding to the oatmeal dribbling down his chin.

That was ugly, Marty, take it back.

I could say that your feeble responses to my overpowering posts indicate a less than developed mind and a pobre education.

I could but I won't...Marty.
.

Is gotta piss you off, big time, to see what a good job that Biden is doing.
 
.

Is gotta piss you off, big time, to see what a good job that Biden is doing.

Oh, you mean the increasingly worse and out of control inflation, crime, borders?

The 1200 point drop in the DOW yesterday. The 11% year to date drop.

Inflation remained near 40-year high in August as CPI rose 8.3%
https://www.yahoo.com › finance › news › august-infla...
1 day ago — Inflation: Consumer prices rise 8.3% over last year in August, tanking stocks and clinching rate hikes ... August CPI report will be 'another soft ..

Slow Joe is harming hard working Americans and is driving America into the ground.
 
Oh, you mean the increasingly worse and out of control inflation, crime, borders?

The 1200 point drop in the DOW yesterday. The 11% year to date drop.

Inflation remained near 40-year high in August as CPI rose 8.3%
https://www.yahoo.com › finance › news › august-infla...
1 day ago — Inflation: Consumer prices rise 8.3% over last year in August, tanking stocks and clinching rate hikes ... August CPI report will be 'another soft ..

Slow Joe is harming hard working Americans and is driving America into the ground.

What a shame that all the talk before the election is on trump and abortion, two issue that you lose big time.
 
.

Is gotta piss you off, big time, to see what a good job that Biden is doing.

During the last week of February, there were a lot of MAGA rubes here screaming that Ukraine would be totally overrun within days, and that Biden was too impotent and powerless to do anything about it.
 
What a shame that all the talk before the election is on trump and abortion, two issue that you lose big time.

Well, no, sweet cakes:

"Democratic candidates across the country are aiming to make abortion a front-line issue in the upcoming midterms, but gun policies ranked higher as an immediate concern for voters, according to a POLITICO-Harvard survey released Thursday.

The survey asked 1,815 registered voters to say which issues were “extremely important” in their congressional vote. Abortion ranked fourth with 44 percent of them saying it is “extremely important,” and while it polled much higher than it had in 2020 or 2018, it still fell below inflation (51 percent), the economy and jobs (49 percent), and guns (46 percent).

The respondents who said inflation and the economy were their top concerns were far more likely to say they intend to vote for a Republican in November. Those who picked guns and abortion were far more likely to say they’d vote for a Democrat.'
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/...ion-inflation-economy-voter-concerns-00055494
 
He just signs the cheques, he's good at that.

It was going to take at least two years to transfer Ukraine from the Russian electrical grid to the EU electrical grid, and that was assuming that someone came up with the money. Biden had no money to do it, and yet he was able to lead the team that got it done. He is not an electrical engineer, and took care of none of the technical issues. He is a leader.

He got it done in two weeks, not two years... AND WITH NO MONEY FROM THE USA.

trump had an entire news conference where he claimed to be the smartest guy for figuring out cures for Covid. Biden knows he is not a virologist, and so defers to the real experts. His job is to lead the experts, not scream at them how smart he is (like trump does).
 
It was going to take at least two years to transfer Ukraine from the Russian electrical grid to the EU electrical grid, and that was assuming that someone came up with the money. Biden had no money to do it, and yet he was able to lead the team that got it done. He is not an electrical engineer, and took care of none of the technical issues. He is a leader.

He got it done in two weeks, not two years... AND WITH NO MONEY FROM THE USA.

trump had an entire news conference where he claimed to be the smartest guy for figuring out cures for Covid. Biden knows he is not a virologist, and so defers to the real experts. His job is to lead the experts, not scream at them how smart he is (like trump does).

I don't see any mention of Biden!!


How Ukraine Unplugged from Russia and Joined Europe’s Power Grid with Unprecedented Speed
Engineers achieved “a year’s work in two weeks” to safely do so

By Anna Blaustein on March 23, 2022
أعرض هذا باللغة العربية
How Ukraine Unplugged from Russia and Joined Europe's Power Grid with Unprecedented Speed
Worker repairs power lines damaged by shelling between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed rebels near the government-held town of Avdiivka in the Donetsk region of Ukraine in March 2017. Credit: Aleksey Filippov/AFP via Getty Images
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On February 24 Ukraine’s electric grid operator disconnected the country’s power system from the larger Russian-operated network to which it had always been linked. The long-planned disconnection was meant to be a 72-hour trial proving that Ukraine could operate on its own. The test was a requirement for eventually linking with the European grid, which Ukraine had been working toward since 2017. But four hours after the exercise started, Russia invaded.

Ukraine’s connection to Europe—which was not supposed to occur until 2023—became urgent, and engineers aimed to safely achieve it in just a matter of weeks. On March 16 they reached the key milestone of synchronizing the two systems. It was “a year’s work in two weeks,” according to a statement by Kadri Simson, the European Union commissioner for energy. That is unusual in this field. “For [power grid operators] to move this quickly and with such agility is unprecedented,” says Paul Deane, an energy policy researcher at the University College Cork in Ireland. “No power system has ever synchronized this quickly before.”

Ukraine initiated the process of joining Europe’s grid in 2005 and began working toward that goal in earnest in 2017, as did Moldova. It was part of an ongoing effort to align with Europe and decrease reliance on Russia, which had repeatedly threatened Ukraine’s sovereignty. “Ukraine simply wanted to decouple from Russian dominance in every sense of the word, and the grid is part of that,” says Suriya Jayanti, an Eastern European policy expert and former U.S. diplomat who served as energy chief at the U.S. embassy in Kyiv from 2018 to 2020.

After the late February trial period, Ukrenergo, the Ukrainian grid operator, had intended to temporarily rejoin the system that powers Russia and Belarus. But the Russian invasion made that untenable. “That left Ukraine in isolation mode, which would be incredibly dangerous from a power supply perspective,” Jayanti says. “It means that there’s nowhere for Ukraine to import electricity from. It’s an orphan.” That was a particularly precarious situation given Russian attacks on key energy infrastructure such as the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. (According to Jayanti, Ukraine’s grid was ultimately able to run alone for as long as it did because power demand dropped by about a third as Ukrainians fled the country.)

Three days after the invasion, Ukrenergo sent a letter to the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) requesting authorization to connect to the European grid early. Moldelectrica, the Moldovan operator, made the same request the following day. While European operators wanted to support Ukraine, they had to protect their own grids, so the emergency connection process had to be done carefully. “Utilities and system operators are notoriously risk-averse because the job is to keep the lights on, to keep everyone safe,” says Laura Mehigan, an energy researcher at University College Cork.

An electric grid is a network of power-generating sources and transmission infrastructure that produces electricity and carries it from places such as power plants, wind farms and solar arrays to houses, hospitals and public transit systems. “You can’t just experiment with a power system and hope that it works,” Deane says. Getting power where it is it needed when it is needed is an intricate process, and there is little room for error.

Crucial to this mission is grid interconnection. Linked systems can share electricity across vast areas so that a surplus of energy generated in one location can meet demand in another. “More interconnection means we can move power around more quickly, more efficiently, more cost effectively and take advantage of low-carbon or zero-carbon power sources,” says James Glynn, a senior research scholar at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University. But connecting these massive networks with many moving parts is no small order.

One of the primary challenges of interconnecting grids is synchronizing them, which is what Ukrenergo, Moldelectrica and ENTSO-E accomplished last week. Synchronization is essential for sharing electricity. The task involves aligning the frequencies of every energy-generation facility in the connecting systems. Frequency is like the heartbeat of the electric grid. Across Europe, energy-generating turbines spin 50 times per second in near-perfect unison. For Ukraine and Moldova to join in, their systems had to be adjusted to match that rhythm. “We can’t stop the power system for an hour and then try to synchronize,” Deane says. “This has to be done while the system is operating.” It is like jumping onto a moving train or a spinning ride at the playground: the train or ride is not stopping, so you had better time the jump perfectly.

Risks persist even now that Ukraine is on board. Interconnected grids do not just allow shared benefits; they also create the potential for shared problems. An issue in one part of the grid, such as a plant failure, could cause a change in frequency to ripple throughout the entire network. In a worst-case scenario, a generator with inadequate power-stabilization capabilities could amplify the change in frequency and send it back to the grid at large. “Once you interconnect two systems, you also have an issue of ensuring that the overall, bigger, interconnected system is as stable and reliable as what was there before,” says Ram Rajagopal, a senior fellow at the Precourt Institute for Energy at Stanford University. A grid that becomes unsynchronized can damage plugged-in appliances such as laptops and microwaves, and it can even damage power plants.

One safeguard against grid instability is inherent to many of Ukraine’s assets: rotational inertia. Once heavy turbines, such as those in the nuclear plants that comprise much of Ukraine’s energy supply, are spinning at a certain frequency, it takes a substantial, sustained change in power to alter their rotation. They are unaffected by minor blips in the power generated to spin them, so their frequency remains stable. This inertia helps power plants dampen slight variations in power instead of transferring them to the rest of the grid. In the case of a major failure, it buys a few precious seconds for response systems to kick in.

Still, ENTSO-E, which represents 35 countries, had numerous concerns about adding Ukraine to its grid. Those concerns related not only to grid stability but also to market, regulatory, cybersecurity and legal issues. Taken together, these factors were a major reason for the project’s original six-year timeline. Some experts thought even six years was an optimistic estimate.

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Ukraine planned to address ENTSO-E's remaining concerns throughout 2022. “The only reason that that year can be chopped off is because so much has already been done to confirm all of the technical specifications,” Jayanti says. This month’s emergency authorization to synchronize enables Ukraine to purchase power, but the country cannot yet sell it. To do so, Ukraine is required to install devices called static synchronous compensators, which enhance power stability. It may be many months before Ukraine can obtain them because of supply chain issues and geopolitical obstacles, Jayanti says. In the meantime, to connect Ukraine at all, ENTSO-E adopted additional safeguards to protect the European grid.

Even with the emergency synchronization, it is important to manage expectations, experts say. “This level of interconnection is relatively small,” Deane says. “It’s helpful, but it’s not going to replace all the power in Ukraine if the power plants go down.” For now, electricity in Ukraine is still moving from power stations to the country’s broader distribution network. Should that change, Ukraine can import some electricity from ENTSO-E.

Full How Ukraine Unplugged from Russia and Joined Europe’s Power Grid with Unprecedented Speed
Engineers achieved “a year’s work in two weeks” to safely do so

By Anna Blaustein on March 23, 2022
أعرض هذا باللغة العربية
How Ukraine Unplugged from Russia and Joined Europe's Power Grid with Unprecedented Speed
Worker repairs power lines damaged by shelling between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed rebels near the government-held town of Avdiivka in the Donetsk region of Ukraine in March 2017. Credit: Aleksey Filippov/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
On February 24 Ukraine’s electric grid operator disconnected the country’s power system from the larger Russian-operated network to which it had always been linked. The long-planned disconnection was meant to be a 72-hour trial proving that Ukraine could operate on its own. The test was a requirement for eventually linking with the European grid, which Ukraine had been working toward since 2017. But four hours after the exercise started, Russia invaded.

Ukraine’s connection to Europe—which was not supposed to occur until 2023—became urgent, and engineers aimed to safely achieve it in just a matter of weeks. On March 16 they reached the key milestone of synchronizing the two systems. It was “a year’s work in two weeks,” according to a statement by Kadri Simson, the European Union commissioner for energy. That is unusual in this field. “For [power grid operators] to move this quickly and with such agility is unprecedented,” says Paul Deane, an energy policy researcher at the University College Cork in Ireland. “No power system has ever synchronized this quickly before.”

Ukraine initiated the process of joining Europe’s grid in 2005 and began working toward that goal in earnest in 2017, as did Moldova. It was part of an ongoing effort to align with Europe and decrease reliance on Russia, which had repeatedly threatened Ukraine’s sovereignty. “Ukraine simply wanted to decouple from Russian dominance in every sense of the word, and the grid is part of that,” says Suriya Jayanti, an Eastern European policy expert and former U.S. diplomat who served as energy chief at the U.S. embassy in Kyiv from 2018 to 2020.

After the late February trial period, Ukrenergo, the Ukrainian grid operator, had intended to temporarily rejoin the system that powers Russia and Belarus. But the Russian invasion made that untenable. “That left Ukraine in isolation mode, which would be incredibly dangerous from a power supply perspective,” Jayanti says. “It means that there’s nowhere for Ukraine to import electricity from. It’s an orphan.” That was a particularly precarious situation given Russian attacks on key energy infrastructure such as the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. (According to Jayanti, Ukraine’s grid was ultimately able to run alone for as long as it did because power demand dropped by about a third as Ukrainians fled the country.)

Three days after the invasion, Ukrenergo sent a letter to the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) requesting authorization to connect to the European grid early. Moldelectrica, the Moldovan operator, made the same request the following day. While European operators wanted to support Ukraine, they had to protect their own grids, so the emergency connection process had to be done carefully. “Utilities and system operators are notoriously risk-averse because the job is to keep the lights on, to keep everyone safe,” says Laura Mehigan, an energy researcher at University College Cork.

An electric grid is a network of power-generating sources and transmission infrastructure that produces electricity and carries it from places such as power plants, wind farms and solar arrays to houses, hospitals and public transit systems. “You can’t just experiment with a power system and hope that it works,” Deane says. Getting power where it is it needed when it is needed is an intricate process, and there is little room for error.

Crucial to this mission is grid interconnection. Linked systems can share electricity across vast areas so that a surplus of energy generated in one location can meet demand in another. “More interconnection means we can move power around more quickly, more efficiently, more cost effectively and take advantage of low-carbon or zero-carbon power sources,” says James Glynn, a senior research scholar at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University. But connecting these massive networks with many moving parts is no small order.

One of the primary challenges of interconnecting grids is synchronizing them, which is what Ukrenergo, Moldelectrica and ENTSO-E accomplished last week. Synchronization is essential for sharing electricity. The task involves aligning the frequencies of every energy-generation facility in the connecting systems. Frequency is like the heartbeat of the electric grid. Across Europe, energy-generating turbines spin 50 times per second in near-perfect unison. For Ukraine and Moldova to join in, their systems had to be adjusted to match that rhythm. “We can’t stop the power system for an hour and then try to synchronize,” Deane says. “This has to be done while the system is operating.” It is like jumping onto a moving train or a spinning ride at the playground: the train or ride is not stopping, so you had better time the jump perfectly.

Risks persist even now that Ukraine is on board. Interconnected grids do not just allow shared benefits; they also create the potential for shared problems. An issue in one part of the grid, such as a plant failure, could cause a change in frequency to ripple throughout the entire network. In a worst-case scenario, a generator with inadequate power-stabilization capabilities could amplify the change in frequency and send it back to the grid at large. “Once you interconnect two systems, you also have an issue of ensuring that the overall, bigger, interconnected system is as stable and reliable as what was there before,” says Ram Rajagopal, a senior fellow at the Precourt Institute for Energy at Stanford University. A grid that becomes unsynchronized can damage plugged-in appliances such as laptops and microwaves, and it can even damage power plants.

One safeguard against grid instability is inherent to many of Ukraine’s assets: rotational inertia. Once heavy turbines, such as those in the nuclear plants that comprise much of Ukraine’s energy supply, are spinning at a certain frequency, it takes a substantial, sustained change in power to alter their rotation. They are unaffected by minor blips in the power generated to spin them, so their frequency remains stable. This inertia helps power plants dampen slight variations in power instead of transferring them to the rest of the grid. In the case of a major failure, it buys a few precious seconds for response systems to kick in.

Still, ENTSO-E, which represents 35 countries, had numerous concerns about adding Ukraine to its grid. Those concerns related not only to grid stability but also to market, regulatory, cybersecurity and legal issues. Taken together, these factors were a major reason for the project’s original six-year timeline. Some experts thought even six years was an optimistic estimate.

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https://www.scientificamerican.com/...-europes-power-grid-with-unprecedented-speed/
 
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