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#3321
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09-16-2022, 11:17 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Discussion/thoughts Thread
Doesn't mean shit. Russia was only good in the winter during WW2. They haven't been able to fight in warm conditions during this conflict...an undersupplied Russian force will most likely get wiped in the winter. They also got their cheeks clapped during the winter thaw when the conflict started.
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#3322
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09-16-2022, 11:20 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Discussion/thoughts Thread
I truly wonder what will happen to Russia after all of this. It's not looking good for them. Even China is clearly distancing themselves from Putin as per yesterday's meeting. I feel sorry for the everyday Russians who don't want this war and and don't buy the lazy Kremlin narratives which are clearly laughable and only room-temp IQ folks would believe. But then again, every single country on earth has the leader they deserve and some collective blame is apparent. Stop allowing these lunatics to be at the helm. |
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#3323
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09-16-2022, 11:23 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Discussion/thoughts Thread
So what you are saying is that Russia is mad at the US and Ukraine for doing what they do better than them? If Russia takes over and even promises to pardon Zelensky...Putin will ensure Zelensky accidentally falls out of a 5 story building like all the other opposition. People meme on Hillary Clinton killing off political opposition but I promise you nobody kills off political opposition better than Russian leaders.
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#3325
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09-16-2022, 11:25 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Discussion/thoughts Thread
The only way Russia recovers from this is if the people take back the government and try and execute Putin for war crimes and put a more neutral leader in charge. Definitely doesn't have to be pro-NATO but someone that has good judgment...also needs to have cabinet members and military leadership who aren't afraid of spontaneously committing suicide for telling them the truth.
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#3326
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09-16-2022, 11:34 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Discussion/thoughts Thread
Ukraine is not a sovereign state if you listen to boneface and the people he identifies with. What you would consider literal Nazis were seconds away from starting another ‘revolution’. BBC reported on this years ago. Boneface will not deny it either |
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#3327
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09-16-2022, 11:37 AM
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| So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:46 Join Date: Oct 2010 Posts: 31,832 Mentioned: 76 Post(s) Quoted: 17437 Post(s)
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Discussion/thoughts Thread
Upon the outbreak of World War I, Ukraine, as was the case with, for example, Ireland and India at the time, existed as a colonized ancient nation, but not as an independent political entity or state. The territory that made up the modern country of Ukraine was part of the Russian Empire with a notable southwestern region administered by the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the border between them dating to the Congress of Vienna in 1815. However, towards the latter 19th century, both Empires attempted to exert their influence on the adjacent territory on the tide of rising national awareness of the period as borders did not undermine the ethnic composition of Europe. The Russian Empire viewed Ukrainians as Little Russians and had the support of the large Russophile community among the Ukrainian and Ruthenians population in Galicia. Austria, on the contrary, supported the late-19th century rise in Ukrainian Nationalism. Western Ukraine was a major standoff for the Balkans and the Slavic Orthodox population it harboured. |
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#3328
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09-16-2022, 11:37 AM
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| So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:46 Join Date: Oct 2010 Posts: 31,832 Mentioned: 76 Post(s) Quoted: 17437 Post(s)
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Discussion/thoughts Thread
During World War I the western Ukrainian people were situated between Austria-Hungary and Russia. Ukrainian villages were regularly destroyed in the crossfire. Ukrainians could be found participating on both sides of the conflict. In Galicia, over twenty thousand Ukrainians who were suspected of being sympathetic to Russian interests were arrested and placed in Austrian concentration camps, both in Talerhof, Styria and in Terezín fortress (now in the Czech Republic). The brutality did not end with the end of the First World War for Ukrainians. Fighting actually escalated with the beginning of the Russian Revolution of 1917. The revolution began a civil war within the Russian Empire and much of the fighting took place in the Ukrainian provinces. Many atrocities occurred during the civil war as the Red, White, Polish, Ukrainian, and allied armies marched throughout the country.[5] There were couple of attempts during this period when the Ukrainians successfully established their own state. One was with the capital in Kyiv and the other in Lviv, but neither one of them gained enough support in the international community and they both failed.[5] The 1919 Treaty of Versailles secured the borders of Ukrainian land after those of other European countries. In the West, Galicia and western Volhynia were left to Poland. The Kingdom of Romania gained the province of Bukovina. Czechoslovakia secured the former lands of Austria-Hungary, Uzhhorod and Mukachevo. The remaining central and eastern Ukrainian provinces were left to the brotherly Soviet Union. As a result of World War I and the Russian Civil War, Ukrainian nationalists looked on as their attempt to attain statehood crumbled in favor of other countries' territorial expansion when 1.5 million had lost their lives in the recent fighting.[5] With the end of World War I the Ukrainian national movement went underground. |