Santa Barbara County News and Events

343 days on the front line: Ukrainian officer’s long deployment underscores Kyiv’s manpower issues

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

By Daria Tarasova-Markina, Lauren Kent, CNN

(CNN) — Infantry officer Oleksiy just spent 343 days without leaving the front line, in what his battalion believes is one of the longest combat deployments for an officer in the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

His lengthy deployment, in the woodlands between settlements in the eastern Zaporizhzhia region, underscores Ukraine’s severe lack of manpower as the war drags on after more than four years.

The 37-year-old had the opportunity to leave the front at one point but volunteered to stay due to the manpower challenges.

“My company is understaffed (as are all the others) and of those who are here, roughly half are in the 50-plus age bracket,” said Oleksiy – whose call sign is “Botanik,” a.k.a. “nerd” – in a statement published by his unit. “Ideally, an infantryman would spend a month on combat duty and a month recovering in a frontline village. But under current conditions, that’s completely unrealistic due to the shortage of men.”

His battalion, which identified Oleksiy only by his first name, told CNN that a typical deployment is about three to four months for their unit. Throughout the military, soldiers typically serve on the front lines in rotations of less than three months, although it varies widely.

“Infantry serve the longest, and the farther from the front line, the shorter the combat deployment,” Major Yaroslav Halas, an officer with the 3rd Mountain Assault Battalion of the 128th Mountain Assault Brigade, told CNN. “For example, reconnaissance UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) pilots may be in combat positions for 3 to 4 days, while FPV drone pilots stay for a week (as they are closer to the front line).”

The lengthening deployments come as Ukrainian commanders in other units have warned of personnel issues, acknowledging that the army will never match the manpower of Russia’s far larger military force.

CNN has previously reported on Ukraine’s increased use of land robots and drones controlled by pilots positioned miles away from the front line, as the country tries to use technological advances to gain an advantage. Ukraine has also stepped up its efforts to draft more men without a valid exemption from serving.

Other examples of Ukrainian men serving long stints have been reported by local media in recent months. Senior Lieutenant Ivan Kavun, the commander of a machine-gun platoon in the 30th Mechanized Brigade, spent 486 days in a frontline deployment, according to his unit.

“Supplies were dropped to us by drones. If a vehicle came in, it would bring a month’s worth of provisions,” Kavun recounted in a video shared by his unit. “There were both funny and not-so-funny stories. A cat was born in our dugout. Then it was wounded by a tank shell fragment, right there in the dugout.”

In the statement posted on social media by his brigade, Oleksiy described the horror of losing men under Russian fire, as well as the constant assaults that grew more intense if the weather was too poor for Ukraine to thwart attacks with drones.

“I see my main role as a commander as minimizing personnel losses. Ideally, there would be none at all … But in war, and in the infantry, this is, unfortunately, impossible,” he said. “As for my personal motivation, I don’t want my family, my daughter, to see what I see – explosions, incoming missiles, destroyed villages, death. That’s why I’m here.”

He is called “nerd” because of his “intellectual appearance” and his glasses, but also because he is a scientist by training with a biology degree from Karazin Kharkiv National University. In fact, Botanik

Simulador del Mundial 2026: haz tu fixture y predicciones para el campeón

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Por Jhasua Razo, CNN en Español

El Mundial de la FIFA 2026 será un evento singular en el fútbol. Organizado por Canadá, México y Estados Unidos, será la primera edición con 48 selecciones, un formato ampliado de 12 grupos de cuatro equipos y 104 partidos en total. Los dos primeros de cada zona y los ocho mejores terceros avanzarán a una inédita ronda de dieciseisavos de final, dando inicio a una fase eliminatoria más extensa y abierta que nunca.

En esta herramienta interactiva puedes simular todo el torneo y construir tu propio Mundial: predice los clasificados en la fase de grupos, selecciona a los mejores terceros y genera automáticamente el cuadro con 32 equipos desde dieciseisavos hasta la final y elige así a tu campeón.

Ten en cuenta que los mejores terceros ya tienen predestinado a los posibles líderes de zona a los que enfrentarían en dieciseisavos, y hay cientos de posibilidades.

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Community Drive Pushes Towards $1 Million Grant to Upgrade Elings Park Ballfields

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – If the local community can pull off $200,000 fundraising drive, Elings Park in Santa Barbara is going to get a much-needed $1 million grant for an improvement project.

The money will go specifically to critical repairs and reconstruction at three ballfields, known as the  Castagnola Softball Complex.

Those playing on the fields say they have seen a deterioration with gopher holes and some slumping of the outfields.

Teams play regularly every week in leagues that include men, women, and co-eds.

They know the fields well, and because the park was built on an old city dump, the soil is irregular in many areas.

Those wanting to donate only have a few more days before the funding drive to raise money concludes this month. The donor pledging the million dollars donation has not been named.

(More details, photos and video will be available later today.)

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‘Big Tech or families?’ Parents reignite fight for online safety laws

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Lori Schott and Julianna Arnold

By Clare Duffy, CNN

New York (CNN) — A group of parents and advocates are heading to Capitol Hill this week in a renewed push for online safety legislation, hoping to build on the momentum of court wins against social media companies last month.

Around 60 parents who say their children were harmed or died because of tech platforms are set to travel from around the country to hold a vigil and speaking event Tuesday afternoon on the Capitol’s west lawn. They also aim to meet with individual lawmakers to advocate for federal legislation that would force tech companies to change their platforms to better protect minors.

Tuesday’s event will include parents who say they’ve experienced the risks of social media firsthand, as well as youth advocates and parents who say AI tools harmed their children. That includes Alicia Shamblin, who is suing OpenAI after ChatGPT allegedly encouraged her 23-year-old son Zane to die by suicide. (In response to that lawsuit, still in its early stages, OpenAI previously it was studying the details of the case and working with mental health professionals to improve its chatbot.)

“It’s time for lawmakers to choose: Are they going to side with kids and the safety of our children, or with Big Tech?” said Todd Minor, whose son Matthew died at age 12 after participating in the “choking challenge,” which Minor says he learned about on social media.

Minor is one of many parents and online safety advocates who have spent years pushing for greater federal online child safety protections. While lawmakers have grilled tech executives and whistleblowers in public hearings, legislative efforts have repeatedly stalled.

“It’s like throwing your body up against a brick wall,” said Ava Smithing, founding partner at the advocacy group TheAttentionStudio. Smithing, 25, was inspired to become an advocate after she was served extreme dieting content on social media as a teenager and developed an eating disorder.

Two juries in March found that social media companies knowingly harmed young people, and advocates hope those verdicts will finally persuade lawmakers to act. A New Mexico jury found Meta liable for enabling child sexual abuse on its platforms, and a California jury found Meta and YouTube liable for knowingly addicting and harming a young woman.

Meta and YouTube parent company Google have said they will appeal the verdicts, arguing their platforms are not addictive. YouTube declined to comment for this story; Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Parents say evidence uncovered during the trials reinforce their personal experiences. They plan to display and distribute copies of the companies’ internal documents that were released as evidence, which suggest the firms knew that features such as beauty filters and endlessly scrolling feeds could harm young people. They’ll also display 150 roses, representing young people whose deaths they say were caused by online harms.

“We are not going to back down, and now we have evidence which backs up the stories w

Alarms sound in the cockpit as two Southwest jets fly dangerously close near Nashville International Airport

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Flight tracking data from Flightradar24 shows the paths of the two Southwest Airlines Boeing 737s which had to take evasive action on Saturday after they came dangerously close together.

By Alexandra Skores, CNN

Washington (CNN) — Two Southwest Airlines Boeing 737s had to take evasive maneuvers on Saturday at Nashville International Airport after collision alarms in the cockpit warned the pilots the planes were too close together.

Southwest Flight 507 from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, was landing in gusty winds at the same time Southwest Flight 1152 was departing from one of Nashville’s parallel runways, according to the airline.

When Flight 507 aborted the landing as a precaution, the plane was instructed to turn right, in the direction of the other jet that was taking off.

“During the go‑around, the pilots complied with instructions from air traffic control and an onboard traffic alert to avoid conflicting with Southwest Flight 1152,” the airline said.

Alarms, called “resolution advisories,” sounded in both cockpits, directing the pilots to take evasive maneuvers, according to air traffic control audio captured by LiveATC.net.

The aircraft crossed paths and at their closest point were only separated by about 500 feet of altitude, according to the tracking site Flightradar24.

Flight 1152 continued on its flight to Knoxville, and 507 landed safely on the second attempt at Nashville.

“We are engaged with the FAA as part of the investigation,” said a Southwest spokesperson. “Southwest appreciates the professionalism of its pilots and flight crews in responding to the event. Nothing is more important to Southwest than the safety of our customers and employees.”

CNN has reached out to the Federal Aviation Administration for more information.

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