Ukraine’s president replaces a top security official


KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has replaced one of the country’s top security officials in a reshuffle that comes as the war has dragged into a third year.

Zelenskyy dismissed Oleksii Danilov, who served as secretary of the National Security and Defense Council, thanking him for his service in a video address late Tuesday. He said without providing details that Danilov will be “reassigned to another area.”

Zelenskyy replaced Danilov with Oleksandr Lytvynenko, the former head of Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence Service. Zelenskyy didn’t announce the reasons behind the reshuffle.

The National Security Council is a policy coordination body that includes top officials and chaired by Zelenskyy.

Danilov’s dismissal comes as exhausted Ukrainian troops struggling with a shortage of personnel and ammunition are facing a growing Russian pressure along the front line that stretches over 1,000 kilometers (620 miles).

The reshuffle follows February’s decision by Zelenskyy to fire the country’s chief military officer, Gen. Valerii Zaluzhnyi, replacing him Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi. Tensions between Zaluzhnyi and the president grew after Ukraine’s much-touted 2023 counteroffensive failed to reach its goals.

Earlier this month, Zaluzhnyi was named Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Kingdom.

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Find more of AP’s coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine



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DeSantis replaces campaign manager as he continues reset of presidential bid


NEW YORK (AP) — Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis is replacing his campaign manager as the Florida governor continues to reset his stagnant presidential campaign.

The Florida governor is bringing on James Uthmeier, his chief of staff from his state office, to serve as his campaign manager, replacing Generra Peck, who led DeSantis’ reelection campaign last year before jumping into the same role on his presidential bid.

Peck will stay on as a strategist.

The changes come after DeSantis made two big staff cuts in the past few weeks, laying off about a third of his staff in late July as the campaign faced financial trouble.

“James Uthmeier has been one of Governor DeSantis’ top advisers for years, and he is needed where it matters most: working hand in hand with Generra Peck and the rest of the team to put the governor in the best possible position to win this primary and defeat Joe Biden,” campaign spokesman Andrew Romeo said in a statement.

Politico in October obtained text messages that showed Uthmeier was involved in Florida’s program to fly migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard last year.

NBC News reported in June that while Uthmeier remained in DeSantis’ government office, he was also working as a political fundraiser for the governor’s presidential campaign. The arrangement was unusual and government watchdog groups said it raised ethical questions.

Before he worked for DeSantis, Uthmeier worked in the Trump administration for U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, where his work on the efforts to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census later became part of a congressional committee investigation.

DeSantis is also hiring an operative who was working on a super PAC that had been supporting his campaign. David Polyansky, who had been advising Never Back Down, will join the campaign as a deputy campaign manager.

Romeo said Polyansky will be a critical addition to the team given his previous experience working in early voting Iowa, which has become a proving ground for the DeSantis campaign.

Polyansky worked on the presidential campaigns of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in 2016. In Iowa, he helped Joni Ernst first win election to the U.S. Senate in 2014 and helped Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee win in the Iowa Republican presidential caucuses in 2008.

Polyansky was traveling with DeSantis in Iowa to events sponsored by Never Back Down on Saturday. He also attended an event DeSantis spoke to on behalf of Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird Saturday, as part of Never Back Down’s organizing presence apart from DeSantis’ official campaign.

The staff shakeup was first reported by The Messenger on Tuesday.

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Associated Press writer Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines contributed to this report.



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DeSantis replaces campaign manager in latest staff shake-up


DeSantis unveils new economic plan


DeSantis unveils new economic plan with hopes of campaign comeback

04:45

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has replaced campaign manager Generra Peck with his longtime chief of staff James Uthmeier, the latest shake-up in DeSantis’ presidential campaign as he continues to lag former President Donald Trump in early state polls.

A DeSantis spokesperson confirmed the move and added that David Polyansky, who was the senior adviser to the pro-DeSantis super PAC “Never Back Down,” will also become a deputy campaign manager. 

The replacement of Peck was first reported by The Messenger.

“James Uthmeier has been one of Governor DeSantis’ top advisors for years and he is needed where it matters most: working hand in hand with Generra Peck and the rest of the team to put the governor in the best possible position to win this primary and defeat Joe Biden,” said DeSantis communications director Andrew Romeo. 

Peck was DeSantis’ campaign manager for his 2022 reelection bid, when he beat Democrat Charlie Crist by 20 points. But after anxiety from donors over the start of the campaign and nearly a third of the campaign’s staff recently being cut to reduce overspending, Peck had lost confidence from “folks inside and outside the campaign,” according to one donor.

DeSantis campaign senior adviser and pollster Ryan Tyson is also going to have an elevated role in the campaign, according to one fundraiser.

Uthmeier has been in DeSantis’ governor’s office since 2019 and became his chief of staff in the fall of 2021. This will be his first national campaign.

One DeSantis fundraiser voiced concern with Uthmeier’s inexperience. “You’ve got to know the basics of politics, the speed at which politics goes compared to government. Two different worlds,” the fundraiser said, adding they were surprised about Peck’s replacement, citing reassurance from the campaign during a July donor retreat in Utah that “she’s not going anywhere.” 

They noted the shake-up comes as DeSantis’ campaign schedule on the ground in Iowa and New Hampshire is accelerating, along with his engagement with mainstream media outlets. 

“The timing is so bizarre,” they said. “The campaign is sort of believing the narrative that others are saying, that we’re not in a good spot. We’re in a great spot. That’s why this change today to me is [an] overreaction and it shows they’re reading Twitter too much or following the insider beltway.”



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Ron DeSantis replaces his campaign manager as he reboots his presidential bid


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is shaking up his campaign leadership, bringing in James Uthmeier, his longtime chief of staff, as his new presidential campaign manager, the latest move in a reset that is now almost a month in the making.

Out is Generra Peck, who served as DeSantis’ campaign manager through his 2022 re-election and during the tumultuous first three months of his presidential campaign. DeSantis trails Donald Trump in most public polling, and he has already laid off 40% of his initial campaign staff in an attempt to cut costs.

“Gov. DeSantis has to change the dynamics. That much is clear,” DeSantis donor Dan Eberhart said. “This is a realignment rather than a reset because both folks were already senior advisers.”

Peck, whose exit was first reported by The Messenger, will stay on as a senior adviser. NBC News first reported that top DeSantis allies were pushing for a change at the top of the campaign as his launch did not go as well as expected.

Uthmeier, the chief of staff in DeSantis’ formal office, will serve as campaign manager at a key moment for the campaign. Top aides see the first debate scheduled for Aug. 23 in Milwaukee as a key moment for DeSantis to regain some momentum and try to close the gap with Trump.

“James Uthmeier has been one of Governor DeSantis’ top advisers for years and he is needed where it matters most: working hand in hand with Generra Peck and the rest of the team to put the governor in the best possible position to win this primary and defeat Joe Biden,” Andrew Romeo, the campaign’s communications director, said in a statement.

He said that David Polyansky, a longtime Iowa GOP operative, will now serve as deputy campaign manager. Iowa is increasingly seen as a make-or-break state for DeSantis, who would struggle to maintain any momentum if he does too poorly in the first-in-the-nation nominating contest.

Uthmeier was first hired as DeSantis’ chief of staff in September 2021, and he has been seen as more in line with DeSantis politically than his first two chiefs of staff, who were veterans of Florida politics and the legislative process and seen more as political operators than culture war crusaders. 

Uthmeier received his law degree from Georgetown University and is well connected in conservative legal circles, including being a member of the Federalist Society.

Peck’s ouster is the latest in a weekslong shake-up of DeSantis’ campaign personnel and strategy.

One adviser to a rival GOP campaign, noting the many “reboot” storylines in recent weeks, reacted to the news Tuesday with a mocking text message.

“#threeboot,” the adviser wrote.

Matt Dixon reported from Tallahassee, Florida, and Jonathan Allen from Washington, D.C.





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Kyiv statue: Ukraine replaces Soviet-era hammer and sickle symbol with a trident




CNN
 — 

Ukraine has removed Soviet-era signage from a hilltop monument in Kyiv, amid a conflict that has seen the country fight to reassert its cultural identity in the face of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion.

Kyiv last week replaced the Soviet hammer and sickle symbol with a trident – the Ukrainian coat of arms – on the shield of the Motherland Monument, which dominates the capital’s skyline.

“We believe that this change will be the beginning of a new stage in the revival of our culture and identity, the final rejection of Soviet and Russian symbols and narratives,” the Ukrainian culture ministry said. The week-long operation to dismantle the Russian insignia was completed on August 6, according to the ministry.

The monument, a 102 meter-tall statue that towers over the surrounding area, is made of steel. Its construction began in 1979, and it depicted a woman holding a sword and a shield emblazoned with the Soviet hammer and sickle symbol.

Workers remove the Soviet-era emblem from the motherland monument in Kyiv on August 1, 2023.
The steel statue, pictured with the Ukrainian coat of arms on Sunday, is an imposing feature of Kyiv's skyline.

The Russian Foreign Ministry insisted on Sunday that “mother cannot be renamed.”

“In Kiev, a trident was installed on the monument ‘Motherland,’” the ministry’s spokesperson, Maria Zakharova, said on Telegram, using the Russian spelling of Kyiv. The Ukrainian government’s campaign to switch the international name from the Russian Kiev to Ukrainian Kyiv was part of pre-war efforts by the Ukrainian government to get rid of old Soviet names and establish a stronger sense of national identity.

“This is the whole essence of the Kiev regime and the cyborgs led by it. Mother cannot be renamed. She is one. And the only thing you can do with it is to love. And they don’t know how.”

Putin’s desire to undermine Ukrainian national identity and autonomy has remained a key motivation for the conflict.

When the Kremlin launched its invasion in February 2022 Putin suggested Ukraine had no right to exist as an independent state, identifying the eastern part of the country “ancient Russian lands.”

Shelling from Moscow has wiped out significant architectural landmarks in Ukraine over the past year, including most recently in the historic city center of Odesa, which UNESCO designated a World Heritage Site amid the threat of Russia’s invasion.

Kyiv has seen much change in recent years. The Moscow Bridge, a 816 meter-long structure over the Dnieper river, was renamed in 2018 as the Northern Bridge.

The quad that once celebrated Soviet statesmen Andrei Ivanov has been the Latvian Square since 2018. The triangular plaza is sandwiched between the Butyshiv Lane and Omelyanovich-Pavlenko Street, previously known as Andriy Ivanov Street and Susorov Suvorov Street.

Ukrainian flags feature prominently across the city, with a red star on top of the famous Hotel Ukraine being repainted blue and yellow.

A mile-long street stretching across one of Kyiv’s residential neighborhoods was once known as the Ivan Kudrya Street. In 2019, it was renamed John McCain Street, in honor of the former US presidential candidate.

“A lot of people approve of the change,” Andreyi Pobigay, a long time employee of a kitchenware store on the John McCain street, told CNN in February 2022.

“It’s a good thing. Kudryn was exploding our churches and historical objects, whereas McCain actually helped Ukraine,” he added.

McCain won the hearts of Ukrainians when he traveled to Kyiv in late 2013, meeting opposition leaders and even visiting the Maidan Square, the site of anti-government protests.

Kudrya, meanwhile, was a Soviet spy and a leader of a sabotage group in Kyiv during World War II. When the Kyiv city council announced the renaming of the street, it said his main task was “to fight Ukrainian nationalists.”

“McCain was the one who spoke to US senators and the US government so that sent help to Ukraine … meanwhile, Russia, our brother country, is now the aggressor towards us. So I think it’s the right thing,” Pobigay added.



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China replaces nuclear force leadership in surprise shake-up


China’s Xi Jinping has replaced two generals overseeing the country’s nuclear and missile arsenal, a move that analysts say represents a major shake-up of the elite force’s leadership.

State media reported that Gen. Li Yuchao, chief of the People’s Liberation Army’s rocket force unit, and his deputy, Gen. Liu Guangbin, were replaced by a naval officer and an air force officer. The new leaders, former deputy Chinese navy chief Wang Houbin and party central committee member Xu Xishen, have not previously served in the force — a dramatic break with practice, experts said.

“It’s unprecedented in the history of China’s missile forces,” said M. Taylor Fravel, a professor of political science and director of the security studies program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

For decades, commanders were selected from within the rocket force, a highly technical and specialized service that oversees the country’s land-based nuclear weapons and its vast conventional missile arsenal, he said.

It also was unusual to have the commanding officer and the unit’s political commissar — Xu — named at the same time, China experts said.

The two generals who were removed have not been seen in public for months.

Bringing in outsiders to run a military unit suggested concerns in Beijing about how the organization was being run and whether it had loyalties or vested interests affecting managerial decisions, according to Fravel.

China ICBM rocket (Greg Baker / AFP via Getty Images file)

China ICBM rocket (Greg Baker / AFP via Getty Images file)

“I suspect the fact that its leadership was removed is a very clear signal to the rest of the rocket force to get in line,” he added.

It was unclear what was behind the reshuffle.

It comes after Xi has called for party discipline in the armed forces and for developing a “modern system for military governance.” The military office overseeing weapons purchases recently introduced measures to clamp down on corrupt procurement activities.

The South China Morning Post reported that the ousted head of the rocket force and his current and former deputies were allegedly under investigation by the Central Military Commission’s anti-corruption unit. NBC News could not independently verify the report.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The White House National Security Council declined to comment.

There was no sign the change of command was related to the recent sacking of Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang, who had disappeared from public view for weeks before he was replaced by his predecessor, Wang Yi, analysts said.

Changes in the rocket force command follow a concerted effort by Beijing to bolster and expand its nuclear forces in recent years.

The decision to remove the former leaders of the force likely would not affect the trajectory of China’s nuclear and missile buildup, said Lyle Morris, a senior fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute’s Center for China Analysis.

He called the unscheduled leadership change “a major reshuffle” and probably the biggest in the history of the rocket force.

Given the priority and major funding devoted to the country’s nuclear forces, the program could provide “a target for potential corruption investigations,” Morris said.

Despite having asserted his control over the military during his time in power, Xi remains concerned about corruption in the ranks, according to Morris.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com



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China replaces rocket force generals in nuclear shake-up


“I suspect the fact that its leadership was removed is a very clear signal to the rest of the rocket force to get in line,” he added.

It was unclear what was behind the reshuffle.

It comes after Xi has called for party discipline in the armed forces and for developing a “modern system for military governance.” The military office overseeing weapons purchases recently introduced measures to clamp down on corrupt procurement activities.

The South China Morning Post reported that the ousted head of the rocket force and his current and former deputies were allegedly under investigation by the Central Military Commission’s anti-corruption unit. NBC News could not independently verify the report. 

The Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The White House National Security Council declined to comment.

There was no sign the change of command was related to the recent sacking of Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang, who had disappeared from public view for weeks before he was replaced by his predecessor, Wang Yi, analysts said.

Changes in the rocket force command follow a concerted effort by Beijing to bolster and expand its nuclear forces in recent years.

The decision to remove the former leaders of the force likely would not affect the trajectory of China’s nuclear and missile buildup, said Lyle Morris, a senior fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute’s Center for China Analysis.

He called the unscheduled leadership change “a major reshuffle” and probably the biggest in the history of the rocket force.

Given the priority and major funding devoted to the country’s nuclear forces, the program could provide “a target for potential corruption investigations, “ Morris said.

Despite having asserted his control over the military during his time in power, Xi remains concerned about corruption in the ranks, according to Morris.



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China replaces missing head of nuclear missile force in major military shake-up


Two new leaders have been appointed in the military

Two new leaders have been appointed in the military – AFP

China has replaced the missing head of its nuclear missile force as president Xi Jinping carries out his first major military shake-up in years.

‌Wang Houbin has taken over from General Li Yuchao as the commander of the People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force (PLARF), state media announced on Monday, a day before the anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA).

‌Mr Wang had been deputy commander of the Navy since 2020 and had previously served as its deputy chief of staff.

‌Meanwhile, Xu Xisheng, an air force officer and party central committee member, was named the force’s political commissar, replacing General Liu Guangbin.

Mr Yuchao and Mr Guangbin have been missing for several months amid what intelligence sources claim is part of an investigation into the alleged leaking of military secrets.

‌It comes during an anti-corruption drive in the armed forces and a push by Beijing to ensure the PLA’s complete loyalty to the party and Mr Xi himself.

‌Overseeing the Rocket Force is a crucial role with far-reaching responsibilities as it is in charge of land-based nuclear deterrents and conventional ballistic missiles.

‌The overhaul is the first sudden shake-up of its kind since Xu Caihou and Guo Boxiong, former deputy chairs of the Central Military Commission (CMC), were removed from their posts and subsequently prosecuted on corruption charges in 2014.

Those changes were part of a push by Beijing to reassert its control over the armed forces.

‌Neil Thomas, a fellow on Chinese politics at the Asia Society think tank, described the latest changes as “very unusual”.

“This all but confirms a purge in the PLA Rocket Force,” he said on X, formerly known as Twitter.

‘Low political trust’

“Rocket Force New commander Wang Houbin is from the Navy, new political commissar Xu Xisheng is from the Air Force, appointing two outsiders is very unusual, suggesting low political trust and hinting at the scale of corruption in nuke/ICBM programs.”

‌Mr Thomas added the moves could “possibly be connected” to the death of ex-PLARF deputy Wu Guohua on July 4.

He said there had been no mention of Mr Guohua’s death until July 27, leading to speculation about his circumstances.

“Cited illness, but widely rumored to be suicide due to corruption probe. All raises questions about the true state of China’s nuclear arsenal & missile programs,” Mr Thomas said.

‌Mr Xi has repeatedly urged the military to deepen war and combat planning to increase the chances of victory in actual combat to safeguard China’s sovereignty and territory.

‌China says it will also not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear weapon states or nuclear weapon free zones.

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