Iranoutofideas wrote: » How so?
irish coldplayer wrote: » Perhaps because he called the fall of the USSR the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century" Also have you a source on how he was instrumental in bringing down the USSR?
Gatling wrote: » Simple it wasn't an American backed coup or anything like it , Was the orange revolution a American backed coup too. Less educated conspiracy theories . The people of Ukraine stood up and said it had enough of been kept under the kremlins heel . Putin invaded Crimea for one reason only the port of sevastopol and russia troops stationed there
Trigger Happy wrote: » No he didnt. Putin was behind a desk in Dresden pushing data at the time of the collapse.
Egginacup wrote: » I'm not sure if you are aware of this, doubtless you are not, but Vladimir Putin in 1991 as assistant to the mayor of St. Petersburg put down a rising that was hatched by Communist members of both the Army and Central Committee. Their goal was to maintain the Soviet Union. Putin, who as a former KGB analyst and advocate of establishing detente with the West, destroyed their plot. Now if you want to bullshit about Putin being a Bolshevik, or Soviet or whatever label that you don't understand, who wants to control the world then go back to your Rambo movies and the gibberish that you hear in the chipper at 2am. I would like you to tell us with a smidgen of accuracy WHEN the Russians have invaded and subjugated a country or a people.
Egginacup wrote: » I would like you to tell us with a smidgen of accuracy WHEN the Russians have invaded and subjugated a country or a people.
wretcheddomain wrote: » I assume, then, that you would be opposed to Russian intervention in Ukraine if it wasn't a "neo-Nazi junta hell bent on genocide against the ethnic Russian population"? By the way, it's possible to be simultaneously against US intervention and Russian intervention. You seem to be erecting a false position that if one is against one form of intervention, we are somehow supportive of the other.
Egginacup wrote: » I am absolutely opposed to both a Russian and an American intervention in The Ukraine. In fact I am opposed to any intervention by a country's government/military within another state according to the Geneva Protocol and the United Nations Mandate.The US however has already intervened in the Ukraine by orchestrating a coup to topple the existing president and install a government of their choosing. So if you have any kind of rules to which people should adhere then ought you not go all the way back to the genesis of this crisis?
pablomakaveli wrote: » Northern Ireland is considered a core part of Ireland with ethnic and cultural Irish living in it. Would it be right for Ireland to do to NI what Russia did to Crimea?(Hypothetically if that was possible)
Iranoutofideas wrote: » I can't take your opinion seriously regarding the American role in this.
robindch wrote: » In all fairness, as somebody said above, the Russian army has been there from the very start. Here's a GRU (Russian Military Intelligence) agent named Igor Girkin, aka Strelkov, who was the guy who organized the initial takeover in East Ukraine:http://zavtra.ru/content/view/kto-tyi-strelok/ (needs translation, but google's good enough).
Herb Powell wrote: » Has anyone in this thread spoken with Ukranians on the matter? I have a few friends from the east (Lugansk, etc.), of Russian ethnicity themselves, and the overwhelming opinion seems to be they do not want to be part of Russia. Not sure if this is representative of the whole, but they insisted it really is most people who want nothing to do with Russia. This makes me very skeptical of anyone claiming the east of Ukraine is "practically Russia". It has closer ties, certainly. But it is Ukraine.
Egginacup wrote: » You've just made yourself look like a complete idiot. Was it not Margaret Thatcher who stated that Northern Ireland would be united with the Irish Republic if and when the majority therein (NI) voted in a referendum to do so? Exactly as the people of Crimea have done. Ireland had a constitutional claim to Northern Ireland from partition (although becoming the law in 1937) until the Good Friday Agreement when it was ceded in order to ease the way for negotiations with Unionists. If Harold McMillan or Ted Heath or Winston Churchill gave away Yorkshire to Germany after a belly full of beer and then the people of Yorkshire later voted to return to the English fold you would not be sputtering the same nonsense you are now.
Egginacup wrote: » These are the glorious defenders of democracy in Ukraine that are fighting for a better future. A band of thugs installed in Kiev and paid for by NATO:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7FSbvbzwOb8
Gatling wrote: » Nor your uneducated conspiracy theory
Iranoutofideas wrote: » American involvement in stirring up this crisis is no conspiracy theory.
Egginacup wrote: » I'm not sure if you are aware of this, doubtless you are not, but Vladimir Putin in 1991 as assistant to the mayor of St. Petersburg put down a rising that was hatched by Communist members of both the Army and Central Committee. Their goal was to maintain the Soviet Union. Putin, who as a former KGB analyst and advocate of establishing detente with the West, destroyed their plot.
Egginacup wrote: » Now if you want to bullshit about Putin being a Bolshevik, or Soviet or whatever label that you don't understand, who wants to control the world then go back to your Rambo movies and the gibberish that you hear in the chipper at 2am.
Iwasfrozen wrote: » Don't be so naive. There are three reasons the referendum was illegitimate.The options: There was no "keep the status quo" option a referendum with no option to defeat the movement is by definition an undemocratic referendum since it is forcing change on the population regardless of their views. The conditions: The referendum was carried out during occupation by a foreign country. Crimean citizens have reported to western media that they felt under duress to vote how Putin wanted them to. The result: Putin won 97% of the vote. 97% of voters voting one way in any referendum is utterly unrealistic. Until a an internationally organized and monitored referendum can take place you have no right to say the majority of people favor unification as that is an unfounded and groundless statement.
Egginacup wrote: » Further suspicions that US/UK have personnel operating inside the Ukraine:https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&x-yt-cl=84503534&x-yt-ts=1421914688&v=jW1JdOXdJkU
kravmaga wrote: » As Putin is not backing down and is not prepared to attend talks which happened recently in Minsk regarding ceasefires, I think its high time the US Government started arming the Ukranian Army to hold off any further insurgency by the Russian backed rebels in Eastern Ukraine. Its looking like a proxy war between Russia and U.S. in Ukraine.http://edition.cnn.com/2015/02/02/politics/us-ukraine-lethal-aid/index.html
Gatling wrote: » Let me guess american snipers shot protester's in meridian,
BrianDug wrote: » They won't beat Russia at chess in there own back yard, thats for sure.
c_man wrote: » They have Deep Blue running the show. It's sorted.