No the cbc reported it, you do pay taxes.... you should write your MP and complain that the CBC reports false crap.
No they don't. They made an accurate report that the Russian Foreign ministry made an allegation that few outside Russia will believe.No the cbc reported it, you do pay taxes.... you should write your MP and complain that the CBC reports false crap.
Here is a New York Times Report about the Russian activity. The report notes that US officials accept the allegations of direct Russian involvement as accurate. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/26/w...illery-fires-into-ukraine-kiev-says.html?_r=1Russia's foreign ministry said Sunday that a Ukrainian shell hit a Russian border town, killing one person and seriously injuring two others. Ukraine denied firing a shell into Russian territory.
A statement from Russia's foreign ministry labelled the incident a "provocation," and warned of the possibility of "irreversible consequences, the responsibility for which lies on the Ukrainian side."
Is this the source?
Crucifixion and other storiessource was cbc / AP....
both sides lie, I accept that you prefer varying degrees of lies, I don't. a lie is a lie. I accept your position. The problem is due to lies of any degree people die. It is not a slam on you, when I was growing up I believed just like you, That stopped with Iraq. Now try to convince me otherwise.... fool me once....
Well if that article is authentic then we know that Putin will soon have him killed and then start looking for a face saving exit to this adventure. The person that will engineer this for him is Angela Merkel who is probably the smartest leader in Europe right now. and probably the smartest leader of a major nation on the entire planet.The time had come for the insurgent colonel to roll out his main argument for more support: Losing this war on the territory that President Vladimir Putin personally named Novorossiya (New Russia) would threaten the Kremlin’s power and, personally, the power of the president.
An article published by Strelkov’s adviser, Igor Druzd, on Wednesday laid out the case that Putin, today, is facing the same choice that ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych faced a few months ago: either send in the army and win control over the territories of Novorossiya in eastern Ukraine—or lose his presidency. “I hope that the Ukrainian tragedy will neither become the tragedy of Russia nor the personal tragedy of Putin,” wrote Strelkov’s adviser.
In Strelkov’s recent video posted online, he said he “could never have imagined” that of the more than 4.6 million people living in the Donetsk region, only about 1,000 volunteers were willing to join his rebel army to defend Novorossiya: “We can see anything but crowds of volunteers outside our gate,” admitted Strelkov, whose nom de guerre means “gunman” and whose real surname is Girkin.
Strelkov’s mission in Ukraine, whoever gave it to him, has been bigger than just the defense of the DPR. He claims to be defending Putin’s reputation and power in Russia, too. In an interview with The Daily Beast on Thursday, Druzd, the Strelkov adviser, spoke of the importance of the Russians coming to Donbass to prevent a revolution like Kiev’s Maidan from spreading to Moscow.
“Putin’s popularity is fading away, since nobody has stopped the slaughter of the Russians in Donbass," Druzd said. “The president’s approval rating is much lower in Moscow and St. Petersburg than in the provinces. As we know, [past] revolutions—both the French and October—took place in the capitals; unfortunately, we cannot exclude the possibility of attempts to mount Maidan-type protests in Moscow,” Druzd said. “For now Russia mostly sends us information and humanitarian help,” he added, when what the rebels need to defend Russian interests is “significant military support.”
Dangerous talk, certainly. As anyone who knows Putin is aware, Russia’s president does not take kindly to threats. If Strelkov pushes too far, he could find himself a lone gunman in a very lonely war. http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...-in-ukraine-warns-him-of-possible-defeat.html
Daily Beast article on threats being made to Putin by Donetsk warlord, Strelkov (actually until last year a Russian intelligence operative) and bemoaning the almost total lack of popular support for the Donetsk People's Republic among Donetsk People.
A retired Russian military officer turned separatist leader in eastern Ukraine who is suspected of downing of Malaysian Airlines MH17 was allegedly involved in the 1992 Serbian ethnic cleansing of Muslims in the eastern Bosnian town of Visegrad.
A photo showing young Igor Girkin, known by his pseudonym Igor Strelkov, in Visegrad with another Russian mercenary and Boban Indic, a member of the Serb brigade that laid siege to the town, implicates the veteran of both the Soviet and Russian armies in the pogrom of Bosniak (Bosnian Muslims) civilians.
At least 3,000 Muslims were massacred in the eastern Bosnian town. Muslim men were rounded up and murdered. Hundreds of women were detained and mass-raped at the spa, the infamous Vilina Vlas. Women, children and elderly people were locked in houses and burnt to death.
Igor Strelkov has been called "one of the most powerful separatist figures in eastern Ukraine. He's a veteran of both the Soviet and Russian armies and has been described as a covert agent of Russia's GRU military intelligence. He declared himself the Minister of Defence of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic (DPR).
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/igor-strel...ed-massacre-3000-bosnian-muslims-1992-1458304
Article linking same Strelkov in involvement with ethnic cleaning in Bosnia.
That is a news report on the CBC. The source is the Russian Foreign ministry.
People only worry about how much is being stolen when their lives are not improving. As long as Putin can keep moving Russia forward, no one cares if he steals. Yeltsin stole a BOATLOAD. His net worth was once estimated at $28B . Gorbachev is worth a mere 128M ...Crucifixion and other stories
Mr Putin has blamed the tragedy of MH17 on Ukraine, yet he is the author of its destruction. A high-court’s worth of circumstantial evidence points to the conclusion that pro-Russian separatists fired a surface-to-air missile out of their territory at what they probably thought was a Ukrainian military aircraft. Separatist leaders boasted about it on social media and lamented their error in messages intercepted by Ukrainian intelligence and authenticated by America (see article).
Russia’s president is implicated in their crime twice over. First, it looks as if the missile was supplied by Russia, its crew was trained by Russia, and after the strike the launcher was spirited back to Russia. Second, Mr Putin is implicated in a broader sense because this is his war. The linchpins of the self-styled Donetsk People’s Republic are not Ukrainian separatists but Russian citizens who are, or were, members of the intelligence services. Their former colleague, Mr Putin, has paid for the war and armed them with tanks, personnel carriers, artillery—and batteries of surface-to-air missiles. The separatists pulled the trigger, but Mr Putin pulled the strings.
The enormity of the destruction of flight MH17 should have led Mr Putin to draw back from his policy of fomenting war in eastern Ukraine. Yet he has persevered, for two reasons. First, in the society he has done so much to mould, lying is a first response. The disaster immediately drew forth a torrent of contradictory and implausible theories from his officials and their mouthpieces in the Russian media: Mr Putin’s own plane was the target; Ukrainian missile-launchers were in the vicinity. And the lies got more complex. The Russian fiction that a Ukrainian fighter jet had fired the missile ran into the problem that the jet could not fly at the altitude of MH17, so Russian hackers then changed a Wikipedia entry to say that the jets could briefly do so. That such clumsily Soviet efforts are easily laughed off does not defeat their purpose, for their aim is not to persuade but to cast enough doubt to make the truth a matter of opinion. In a world of liars, might not the West be lying, too?
Second, Mr Putin has become entangled in a web of his own lies, which any homespun moralist could have told him was bound to happen. When his hirelings concocted propaganda about fascists running Kiev and their crucifixion of a three-year-old boy, his approval ratings among Russian voters soared by almost 30 percentage points, to over 80%. Having roused his people with falsehoods, the tsar cannot suddenly wriggle free by telling them that, on consideration, Ukraine’s government is not too bad. Nor can he retreat from the idea that the West is a rival bent on Russia’s destruction, ready to resort to lies, bribery and violence just as readily as he does. In that way, his lies at home feed his abuses abroad.
Stop spinning
In Russia such doublespeak recalls the days of the Soviet Union when Pravda claimed to tell the truth. This mendocracy will end in the same way as that one did: the lies will eventually unravel, especially as it becomes obvious how much money Mr Putin and his friends have stolen from the Russian people, and he will fall. The sad novelty is that the West takes a different attitude this time round. In the old days it was usually prepared to stand up to the Soviet Union, and call out its falsehoods. With Mr Putin it looks the other way.
Take Ukraine. The West imposed fairly minor sanctions on Russia after it annexed Crimea, and threatened tougher ones if Mr Putin invaded eastern Ukraine. To all intents and purposes, he did just that: troops paid for by Russia, albeit not in Russian uniforms, control bits of the country. But the West found it convenient to go along with Mr Putin’s lie, and the sanctions eventually imposed were too light and too late. Similarly, when he continued to supply the rebels, under cover of a ceasefire that he claimed to have organised, Western leaders vacillated.
The West should face the uncomfortable truth that Mr Putin’s Russia is fundamentally antagonistic. Bridge-building and resets will not persuade him to behave as a normal leader. The West should impose tough sanctions now, pursue his corrupt friends and throw him out of every international talking shop that relies on telling the truth. Anything else is appeasement—and an insult to the innocents on MH17.
http://www.economist.com/news/leade...de&spv=xm&ah=9d7f7ab945510a56fa6d37c30b6f1709
This is an article in The Economist on why Putin's lies are sicker, bigger, more twisted and more dangerous than anything in the West. All governments lie, granted. The Russians however take lying to a whole new level of loathsome.
Sydney Morning Herald - by Deborah Gough - 6 days agoAside from NATO and every European country and intelligence service, that is. None of whom have any interest in fighting a shooting war with Russia.
And you believe that nutjob? Please, that website is for conspiracy minded dummies.Why anybody would believe anything that comes out of our media is beyond me. We're really looking pretty incompetent and dangerous to the rest of the World. If we don't recognize this and start to change our ways the World is going to leave us behind. Just take a look at the recent announcement by the BRICS on the development Bank. The World is sick and tired of us. Lies, lies, and more lies....
Western lies allow you to live like you live today (including importing a beautiful Eastern European wife).source was cbc / AP....
both sides lie, I accept that you prefer varying degrees of lies, I don't. a lie is a lie. I accept your position. The problem is due to lies of any degree people die. It is not a slam on you, when I was growing up I believed just like you, That stopped with Iraq. Now try to convince me otherwise.... fool me once....
I'm just pointing out the distinction between CBC reporting what a source says, versus the CBC being the source. As someone has said, they are reporting what the Russian government is saying, not reporting necessarily that it is true. If they had corroboration from other sources, they would mention that in their report. This is the basics of journalism.Well if Israel can invade on that basis... why not the Russians?
Strelkov will be killed eventually by either the SBU or the GRU. But right now, he is a Russian national hero and untouchable. And I'm sure he's not taking any walks late at night in dark alleys.Well if that article is authentic then we know that Putin will soon have him killed and then start looking for a face saving exit to this adventure. The person that will engineer this for him is Angela Merkel who is probably the smartest leader in Europe right now. and probably the smartest leader of a major nation on the entire planet.
There is always a face saving exit, and the Germans and US had better grow up and help engineer one. Everyone assumes that the guy that replaces Putin will be better. How often has that played out. As long as the sanctions remain in place, Putin cannot change course, to do so would be to show weakness. So you have a hardening of positions. Since no one wants to fight a war with Russia, that seems pretty effin clear, the clowns needs to try harder to engineer a peace. I suspect the face saving exit will be something like this:Strelkov will be killed eventually by either the SBU or the GRU. But right now, he is a Russian national hero and untouchable. And I'm sure he's not taking any walks late at night in dark alleys.
Putin has no face-saving exit from this adventure. That's what makes it so interesting. And scary.
He bet the bank on a series of high probables;
1. That he could bribe Akhmetov, the Donetsk oligarch and political boss into supporting a separatist puppet state in that region.
2. That Ukraine would collapse and fragment under pressure.
3. That Poroshenko would deal away Donetsk and Lugansk to get peace.
4. That the Uke army wouldn't fight.
5. That Merkel and the others would deal out without sanctions.
At least one of those probables should have come in as a done deal. But he rolled snake-eyes each time. Now the only roll he has left is an invasion of Ukraine. And that will get him sanctioned and isolated by every other developed nation for the next decade. And all he will get back from the deal is political credibility in Russia and the economic deadweight of Donetsk and Lugansk hanging from his balls. It's a loser's roll, but it's the only 1 he can make.
Yes but it happens in total war all of the time.What an argument, how many people died at the (direct or indirect) hands of Russia or USA, all in the name of BS. At least BS they feed to the world. Israel, yesterday said they had to kill the children because the enemy is hiding there. Does the US supply Israel?
THERE IS NO EXCUSE FOR KILLING ANY NON COMBANTANT PERIOD.
In Ukraine a person is serving time in jail for an indictable offence. The government says we will release you if you join the army.
Two groups of incoptetant idiots fighting. Hope it for the GOOD of the people.
+1There is always a face saving exit, and the Germans and US had better grow up and help engineer one. Everyone assumes that the guy that replaces Putin will be better. How often has that played out. As long as the sanctions remain in place, Putin cannot change course, to do so would be to show weakness. So you have a hardening of positions. Since no one wants to fight a war with Russia, that seems pretty effin clear, the clowns needs to try harder to engineer a peace. I suspect the face saving exit will be something like this:
A new Federal structure for Ukraine,
A referendum at some undetermined time on separating from Ukraine
Enshrining the Russian language and protection of Ethnic Russian Ukrainians in the constitution.
Question is, how many more will die before we get there.
Pre and post Western coup there is good evidence that the Germans tried, but the Americans have basically sabotaged this at every turn. The Americans, Europeans, and Russians sat dawn and cut a deal a couple of days before the coup, and at the goading and active involvement of the Americans, the coup rolled on. The Americans basically shrugged and said, "Facts on the ground." At the G-7 (was 8) basically the same thing happened. A deal was made on the pretense of the new post coup election President was going to be reasonable, and amenable to negotiating, and he immediately started a military offensive. At this point Putin knows he'll be the villain in the English language press no matter what happens, so he has no conceivable reason to abandon the separatists.There is always a face saving exit, and the Germans and US had better grow up and help engineer one.
Err, no.Pre and post Western coup there is good evidence that the Germans tried, but the Americans have basically sabotaged this at every turn. The Americans, Europeans, and Russians sat dawn and cut a deal a couple of days before the coup, and at the goading and active involvement of the Americans, the coup rolled on. The Americans basically shrugged and said, "Facts on the ground." At the G-7 (was 8) basically the same thing happened. A deal was made on the pretense of the new post coup election President was going to be reasonable, and amenable to negotiating, and he immediately started a military offensive. At this point Putin knows he'll be the villain in the English language press no matter what happens, so he has no conceivable reason to abandon the separatists.
Putin's minimal solution is to keep the rebels in the game in the East, and to just wait for the Ukraine to go over the cliff from IMF austerity, paying market rates for gas, and because Ukraine's heavy industry is Russian oriented and won't see a dollar if it's under the thumb of the Kiev regime. Putin's more maximal solution would be to aide the rebels to the point where they take everything East of the Dnieper, the mostly Russian South out to Odessa (linking up with Transnistria), and maybe even have them grab Kiev (as the cradle of Russian civilization). That'd basically leave the US and EU with a rump, landlocked, shithole of a country.
Sounds like you don't read much about the conflict.There is always a face saving exit, and the Germans and US had better grow up and help engineer one. Everyone assumes that the guy that replaces Putin will be better. How often has that played out. As long as the sanctions remain in place, Putin cannot change course, to do so would be to show weakness. So you have a hardening of positions. Since no one wants to fight a war with Russia, that seems pretty effin clear, the clowns needs to try harder to engineer a peace. I suspect the face saving exit will be something like this:
A new Federal structure for Ukraine,
A referendum at some undetermined time on separating from Ukraine
Enshrining the Russian language and protection of Ethnic Russian Ukrainians in the constitution.
Question is, how many more will die before we get there.