as i talked about last monday, the vast majority of them is designed for a nato force. that force hasn t been activated so they aren t going anywhere. the secretary has, as you might imagine, as we have worked towards these troop movements, there have been additional forces put on the prepare to deploy orders or shortened tethers. i m not prepared to go into great detail today about that, but yes, there have been additional ones. as i said in my opening statement, you can expect that will continue to happen going forward. we re going to constantly look at the conditions in the region and consult with allies and partners. if we feel we need to make additional forces more ready, we ll do that. if we feel we need to send more forces to certain eastern flank countries, we ll do that, too, in full consultation with nato and in full consultation with the specific allies and partners. and i think i missed one of your questions, leta.
can have a better future in russia. trying to really prop up this idea that russia is anything but an authoritarian country. those, i think, efforts were a little bit transparent for ukrainians at this point. they have been going through eight years of war. they have lost about 14,000 people in this conflict. this is europe s only hot war. so i think putin has really miscalculated if he really thinks he s going to find in accepting ukrainian public. ukrainians don t want war and, importantly aim, and we russians don t want war either. if you look at the polling from russia, which has to be taken with a grain of salt, these propaganda efforts, even though they re nonstop in russia, aren t being taken to heart by the russian population. nobody wants war with ukraine. certainly although there is a little bit more appetite with war with nato, the russian economy is in tethers with the sanction stomach becoming. it will sort two
giant fan. we can generate wind up to 230 miles an hour. chris: we wanted to get a feel for a win test and student isaac roberts agreed to participate. alright andrew give us 50 miles an hour, topical storm conditions. chris: and he can handle that pretty easy? but it got tougher 80 miles per hour. a category one hurricane. now 80 miles per hour, nobody can stand straight up like this. they can t without the tethers. okay let s go a hundred guys, this ll be a category two hurricane. chris: wow then they cramped up the fan even higher. this ll be 150 miles per hour a level three. chris: but hurricanes are just part of what they simulate at the wind tunnel. they test car models to make them more aerodynamic and less valid or fuel-efficient.
giant fan. we can generate wind up to 230 miles an hour. chris: we wanted to get a feel for a win test and student isaac roberts agreed to participate. alright andrew give us 50 miles an hour, topical storm conditions. chris: and he can handle that pretty easy? but it got tougher 80 miles per hour. a category one hurricane. now 80 miles per hour, nobody can stand straight up like this. they can t without the tethers. okay let s go a hundred guys, this ll be a category two hurricane. chris: wow then they cramped up the fan even higher. this ll be 150 miles per hour a level three. chris: but hurricanes are just part of what they simulate at the wind tunnel. they test car models to make them more aerodynamic and less
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. A new study published in JAMA Network Open found that expanding access to medications to treat opioid use disorders stalled during the COVID-19 pandemic.