snubbleste wrote: » Referring to Turkey "The Turks had decided to lick the Americans in a certain place"
cnocbui wrote: » That's quite ironic considering the considerable degree of but-hurt he's been displaying over the incident. Perhaps he's jealous the Turks aren't soothing his discomfort in similar fashion.
cnocbui wrote: » Putin is now a supporter of ISIS. The US have had to stop air support for anti ISIS rebels because Russian SAM 17 sites have been painting US planes which indicates an imminent missile launch is possible. So having stopped US air support, the russians have now started bombing those same rebels who were fighting ISIS. The US is wondering what to do. I would have thought doing exactly what the Turks did in the face of being given the bird by the Russians is what they should do. 'Oh - they were 'YOUR' SAM sites? Awfully sorry about that but we thought they had fallen into the hands of ISIS as they were targeting our planes.' Just when you thought Putin couldn't be a bigger dick on the world stage if he tried, he manages to do just that.
conditioned games wrote: » ISIS (America's creation) were selling their oil to Turkey and then comes Russia and bombs the **** out of the convoy of oil trucks on their way to sunni turkey. Thanks to America's petrodollar safeguarding Europe is now been invaded by predominantly muslim men from Africa to Bangladesh. Well done Obama, didn't think you could get worse than Bush but there you go.
miss tickle wrote: » I haven't seen this reported, what US planes do you speak of? Also who are these rebels?
cnocbui wrote: » You have now.
Red King wrote: » **** me are people that dumb that they are now trying to link Russia to ISIS despite them being just about the only military who has actually bombed them repeatedly and put them on the back foot unlike the likes of the US & Turkey who have actively facilitated them?
American war planes have reportedly launched a strike on a gathering of ISIS leaders, critically wounding their leader.
180 ISIS Fighters Killed in Iraq by Kurds and American Airstrikes
US says airstrikes have killed 350 Isis fighters in western Iraq city Ramadi
US airstrikes kill the leader of ISIS in Libya
The US military said on Thursday that it had killed the “financial minister” of Isis and two other senior officials.
Of the more than 20,000 ISIS fighters said to have been killed in the U.S.-led air campaign
Bashar Assad Says U.S. Airstrikes Make ISIS Stronger
the evasion_kid wrote: » whats ironic is turkey downing a jet for a breach of their sovereign airspace......and then a few weeks later send 150 turkish troops with tanks into iraq...
PopePalpatine wrote: » The curious tale of the Russian politician with the 650,000 rouble car and the million rouble watch: http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-35224548
Elmer Blooker wrote: » The Guardian again makes the Sun look like a quality newspaper! The could have at least turned this atheist into an "opposition leader" Anything in the Guardian today about "humanitarian aid workers" and the intricacies of barrel bombs?
PopePalpatine wrote: » You see comrade, when you're criticising an article, it helps to give some sort of reasoning.
PopePalpatine wrote: » A Russian atheist faces up to a year in prison for blasphemy: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar/03/russian-atheist-faces-year-in-jail-for-denying-existence-of-god-during-webchat?CMP=twt_gu
Public support for Vladimir Putin to serve another term as president has hit its highest level in four years, a survey by a state-run pollster showed on Thursday. Seventy-four percent of Russians would vote to re-elect Putin as president, according to a poll by VTsIOM. Putin dominates state media in Russia and is widely expected to contest the next presidential election in 2018. If he won, it would be his fourth term as president. He has capitalized on conflicts in Ukraine and Syria to boost his popularity and his message that Russia is again a force to be reckoned with on the world stage has gone down well with voters. VTsIOM said Putin's approval ratings had risen among many social groups, including young people. It also showed his support levels had risen sharply in recent years; in 2012 in the same polling series only 40 percent of Russians said they would vote for the Russian leader. "Even among those who think the president has not yet fulfilled many of his pre-election promises, 70 percent are willing to support Putin," VTsIOM said in a statement published on its website. An independent Russian pollster, the Levada Center, gives Putin similar ratings. Liberal opposition politicians say the figures are unfairly boosted by the fact that state TV, where most Russians get their news, affords Putin blanket and favorable coverage while largely ignoring them. Should Putin win the 2018 election, he would have the right to serve until 2024. By that stage he would be over 70 years old and come up against a constitutional limit barring him from serving more than two consecutive terms. After his first two terms as president, Putin in 2008 made way for his protege Dmitry Medvedev to serve as president before returning to the Kremlin himself in 2012.
arayess wrote: » looks like the russians don't care for your slander of putin.http://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-putin-poll-idUSKCN0W512D rock on Vlad I say
Elmer Blooker wrote: » The west, meaning you know who, has decided that Putin is a bad man (bombing puppies and kittens) and has to go! He even does naughty things without getting permission from you know who!
arayess wrote: » looks like the russians don't care for your slander of putin.