Fiery mutant wrote: » Would this be the Chechen war that was started by the FSB bombing Russian apartment buildings to make it look like Chechens had done it. Thus giving Putin reason to attack.
Cheerful Spring wrote: » This is the second Chechen war. Putin was not involved in first Chechen war. Is the evidence substantial? I don't rule anything out.
Elmer Blooker wrote: » It seems a book written by a guy who had connections to CIA funded Radio Free Europe is the evidence for the apartment block bombings.
Fiery mutant wrote: » Not to mention a Member of the Russian Duma announcing in Parliament that a bomb had gone off in a certain city, 3 days before the actual explosion.
Jimmy Garlic wrote: » He has to be one of the greatest leaders the world has ever known, not just a stuffed suit like his wooden American counterpart. His steadfast resolve in the face of a proxy war being waged in Ukraine has to be admired, a war that would never have happened if billions weren't poured into Ukraine to kickstart a coup. Like him or loathe him there is no doubt that Vladimir Putin is a very shrewd operator who is consistently one step ahead of the game.
Jimmy Garlic wrote: » Porton Down ten kilometres away from Sailsbury. Still no proof to connect Russia, nothing, just accusation. "Most likely", "almost certainly" and other vagueness. I think Vladimir Vladimirovich must find it humourous. Leo Varadkar is being a good boy and doing as he is told based on nothing. I hope damaging irelands good relationship with Russia is worth the pat on the head.
Thomas__. wrote: » Sure, you know that former KGB agents know their professions and haven't forgotten about their skills to leave as less traced as possible but those who are intended to be left in order to confuse or mislead the investigations. It is evident that the poison used in this incident was developed in Russia, the former USSR to be precise. No evidence found for his interference in the USA presidential elections, but many things are traced back to Russia and one might wonder, why Russian hackers are having such a great times if not by the approval of Putin himself who likes to control everything that goes on in his country and among his people.
Tea drinker wrote: » Did we get the samee solidarity from EU and rest of world when Mossad made use of our passports to go kill a guy in Dubai?
Tea drinker wrote: » Russia is quite cornered now... might have been able to agree limited strikes rather than game change in Syria, but the follow on US sanctions could be grim reading for old Putin.
Elmer Blooker wrote: » . At the moment China is carrying out live fire drills near Taiwan in
Gatling wrote: » China do it regularly it's nothing to do with russia
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » The Russian economy and shrinking.
Gatling wrote: » 100+ Cruise missiles , multiple aircraft from multiple countries And an another set of airstrikes from Israel inside Syria to really rub it in And what did putin do
Dinarius wrote: » It’s that the “response” involved no danger to anyone of importance, least of all (heaven forbid!) Russian forces, that is truly galling. It was a joke, pure and simple. It didn’t even amount to a slap on the wrist for Assad or Putin. 500,000 are slaughtered using “conventional” weapons, and we “respond” when a couple of hundred die from a chemical weapon attack. The hypocrisy is mind-boggling. Slaughter IS slaughter. Bugger the means used to do it. I hate Putin utterly, but he is no hypocrite, unlike our lot. That said, this phoney war posturing by the West is probably better than a real war. D.
Gringo180 wrote: » And yet it still provides free healthcare to all its citizens. Unlike the richest country in the world, were military spending seems more important than there peoples well being.
gandalf wrote: » Oh absolutely the Americans are messed up from that perspective. The question is how long can Russia continue to offer free healthcare with no economy.