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#114
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12-29-2023, 03:16 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media IV
The "Tulun Maniac", who raped women in the Russian Federation for 30 years, died in Ukraine. The Russian rapist and murderer fought in Ukraine for three weeks, rosZMI reported. The convict was supposed to spend 24 years in the colony, instead he became a mercenary of a private military company. Pavlo Shuvalov, who is known in the Russian Federation as the "Tulun maniac" because of his crimes — serial murders and rapes — died during hostilities in Ukraine. In April 2023, the Russian signed a contract with a private military company (PMC) and went to war. After fighting for three weeks, he died, and the Russian commanders have not yet taken his body from the battlefield. The propagandist Lenta.ru media reported on how the fate of the Russian rapist unfolded. RosZMI journalists received information from unspecified sources from Russian law enforcement agencies. The security forces explained that the "Tulun maniac" agreed to conclude a contract with the PVC in April 2023. The name of the PVC is not indicated. Training in the training camp lasted for several days, and already on May 6, the Russian was at the front in the Luhansk region of Ukraine. Shuvalov fought for only 23 days — he died on May 29, rosZMI wrote. His body has been lying somewhere in the Luhansk region for the eighth month - the information was confirmed by three persons with whom the journalists spoke. Pavlo Shuvalov, or the "Tulun maniac" is a 55-year-old Russian who was sentenced to 24 years in prison in 2021, The Insider portal reported . The man was found guilty of two murders and 27 rapes. He committed crimes for 28 years — from 1991 to 2019. The area where he operated was the village of Tulun in the Irkutsk region of the Russian Federation, 4,000 km from Ukraine. It should be noted that in the summer of 2022, the Russian authorities allowed convicts to be recruited into the army. The first steps in this direction of mobilization were made by Yevgeny Prigozhin, the late owner of "Wagner" PVK . In particular, he made a "tour" of the colonies of the Russian Federation and recruited up to 50,000 convicts there. In exchange for participating in the war in Ukraine, Prigozhin promised to be released from the colony and pardoned by President Vladimir Putin. After Prigozhin, other private companies began to be created in the Russian Federation, as well as units of the Russian Armed Forces, which recruited former convicts. After fighting for half a year, some of them were demobilized and Putin actually cleared their criminal records. RosZMI began to publish articles in which they talk about criminals pardoned by Putin. Among them are murderers, rapists, and there are even cannibals. On December 17, President Putin announced that he will continue to fight in Ukraine , while he will not have to announce mobilization - there are enough volunteers. Meanwhile, Ukraine counted the number of volunteer prisoners who died during the occupation of Bakhmut. According to some estimates, about 20,000 former prisoners from the Russian Federation died in the "meat assaults". On December 28, the mass media reported on the continuation of attacks by the Russian Armed Forces on the eastern front: the Russians go on the attack, lose manpower , but then repeat their attempts again and again. |
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#116
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12-30-2023, 11:30 PM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media IV
You really need to catch up ! All Nato members have agreed Ukraine will eventually join, says Stoltenberg. Russia-Ukraine war. Dan Sabbagh Defence and security editor and Jennifer Rankin in Brussels The Nato secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, has said all member countries have agreed that Ukraine will eventually join the transatlantic military alliance once the war is over, ahead of a meeting of western defence ministers discussing further military aid for Kyiv. Further announcements on weapons and support are expected after the summit at the Ramstein airbase in Germany, but Stoltenberg also sounded notably upbeat about Ukraine’s longer-term prospects for joining Nato. “All Nato allies have agreed that Ukraine will become a member,” he said. “President Zelenskiy has a very clear expectation, we discussed this. “Both the issue of membership but also security guarantees, and of course Ukraine needs security. Because no one can tell when and how this war ends. But what we do know is that when the war ends, we need to ensure that history doesn’t repeat itself.” Nato membership, carrying with it a commitment from all member countries to protect each other if attacked, has long been a demand from Kyiv. Although Nato agreed in principle in 2008 that Ukraine could be allowed to join, the country has never been given a formal pathway to membership. The outbreak of fighting with Russia, which dates back to 2014, has also acted as a further deterrent to Nato members because immediate membership for Ukraine would entail an immediate conflict with a nuclear-armed Moscow, which the US and other member states have made clear they will not contemplate. Zelenskiy is scheduled to attend Nato’s next annual summit in Vilinus, Lithuania, in July, but Ukrainian officials have said they want the alliance to agree a roadmap to membership as a condition for his attendance. Kyiv applied for an accelerated membership last September. Stoltenberg had travelled to Kyiv on Thursday, the first time the Nato chief had visited the country since the start of the all-out war, where he said the alliance must ensure Ukraine “prevails” in the fighting. His fresh remarks indicate a willingness to edge forward Ukraine’s case for joining. But one key member cautioned against any rapid development. The German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, said in a Thursday night interview on German television: “The door is open a crack, but this is not the time to decide now.” Defence ministers and other representatives from 50 countries attended the meeting on Ramstein. Afterwards, Lloyd Austin, the US defence secretary, said that “what Ukraine needs most urgently is around based air defences capability” to protect its people, infrastructure and front line forces. His comments appeared to tally with a warning in one of the recently leaked Pentagon files that Ukraine was about to due to run of missiles for its S-300 air defence systems, which protect cities and infrastructure, on May 2. Other missiles for Buk systems used to protect troops had already run out, it said. Also present was Ukraine’s defence minister Oleskii Reznikov, who said that his country had received so many donations from Nato and other western countries that his country was “already a part of the Alliance’s security space”. He added that he hoped this would speed up Ukraine’s full entry into Nato. EU countries were haggling over how to fulfil a promise to supply Ukraine with ammunition, following criticism from Kyiv that delays were costing lives. France, backed by Greece and Cyprus, is pressing to ensure that an EU plan to purchase €1bn (£884m) of ammunition for Ukraine is fulfilled via a fully-EU supply chain. On Thursday, Ukraine’s government criticised the EU over its “inability” to fulfil a promise to supply desperately needed ammunition. Sounding a rare note of irritation against the bloc, Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said the EU’s inability to implement its own decision was frustrating. “For Ukraine, the cost of inaction is measured in human lives,” he tweeted. EU ministers agreed last month to supply Ukraine with €2bn of ammunition to replace dwindling stocks. The EU is spending €1bn to reimburse member states for sending ammunition from their supplies, a process that is under way. It has also pledged to jointly purchase a further €1bn of shells for Ukraine from arms manufacturers in the EU and Norway. But translating that political agreement into a legally binding text has hit a snag. Paris insists that all components of the 155mm shells should come from EU suppliers, a problem for EU companies that use non-EU suppliers. With EU foreign affairs ministers due to meet on Monday, officials nevertheless voiced confidence the spat could be quickly resolved. “It is our impression that a solution is near,” said one senior official. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ukraine is "in effect" in a Proxy or Holding Pattern if you like, to join the NATO alliance & fly under their universal umbrella, why the hell do you think they're getting all the latest military hardware, as they are officially under "the application of due process to join" & as such some 50 countries have agreed that they can join, so for you to say "Highly doubtful that Ukraine will ever join Nato" is totally incorrect & nothing more than an uneducated personal assumption that has been formed out of lack of knowledge & that's putting it nicely ! |
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#117
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12-31-2023, 08:53 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media IV
The occupier came back from the war and just killed a 90-year-old grandfather The 25-year-old occupier from the "Storm Z" detachment had previously served time for robbery, then went to war. A 90-year-old Russian man with 18 stab wounds was found in a ravine near the road The attacker not only killed the old man, but also stole 100 thousand rubles from him The most interesting thing is that the son of the deceased grandfather is the former head of the press service of Patriarch Kirill. |
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#118
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12-31-2023, 08:06 PM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media IV
These fuckers don't really have much to fear though as he will probably be back on the front again after a couple of weeks, such is there need for infantry, just enough time to rest up for a bit, get some hot chow into them, then it's another 6 months on the line to get another pardon, WOW, plenty to fear ! |