Which western nation was poised to invade Russia? We'll wait. Which time in any modern era did any Western nation aggressively invade Russia?

This is all imagination and really obvious propaganda, some of which you must have fallen for... you keep repeating his craptacularly absurd claims.
There was to be no need to invade Russia, as I have explained many times the plan was to lure Russia into Ukraine, kick their ass, the Russian people would then remove Putin and then the Rape of Russia that was taking place before Putin could resume....that would fund the rebuilding of Ukraine into a new world order (WOKE) model state which the globalists would use to further push their agenda globally.

A part of this plan was to break Russia up, into five autonomous regions I think it was, to make sure that Russia would never again organize and resist their Western abusers.
 
There was to be no need to invade Russia, as I have explained many times the plan was to lure Russia into Ukraine, kick their ass, the Russian people would then remove Putin and then the Rape of Russia that was taking place before Putin could resume....that would fund the rebuilding of Ukraine into a new world order (WOKE) model state which the globalists would use to further push their agenda globally.
So, no aggression, just some weak, "they made Putin do it, they tricked him into aggression!" as evidence of "western aggression"? Methinks you do not know what aggression means.
 
So, no aggression, just some weak, "they made Putin do it!" as evidence of "western aggression"? Methinks you do not know what aggression means.
Putin is the aggressor. Anyone who thinks otherwise is a fucking moron.

Now Putin is in a hole; if he bails, then tens of thousands of Russian soldiers would have died for nothing. If he continues, tens of thousands more Russians will die as invading assholes.

What kind of un-American asshole wouldn't support freedom fighters against Putin's tyranny?

Another option is for Russia's leaders to help Vlad step out of a 10-story window. :thup:
 
Putin is the aggressor. Anyone who thinks otherwise is a fucking moron.

Now Putin is in a hole; if he bails, then tens of thousands of Russian soldiers would have died for nothing. If he continues, tens of thousands more Russians will die as invading assholes.

What kind of un-American asshole wouldn't support freedom fighters against Putin's tyranny?

Another option is for Russia's leaders to help Vlad step out of a 10-story window. :thup:
The Russians spent a decade trying to avoid war....we insisted upon it....one of the worst military blunders in all of history.

The Russians are the Good Guys....America and the collective West are the opposite.
 
Do notice that the Europeans insist that Odessa is a red line....it must not be Russian controlled...in order to preserve the ability to land large armies to attack Russia should they decide that they want to do it.
 
Current Sig:

That the Russians ended up being one of the last defenders of Western values is pretty much the biggest mind fuck of this life
 
Heard this yesterday.....it is a paraphrase:

"Xi and Putin have decided that Trump is one of them, one of the people working for the people rather than the bankers/exploiters....working for peace.....they will do everything they can to help him".
 
The Russians spent a decade trying to avoid war....we insisted upon it....one of the worst military blunders in all of history.

The Russians are the Good Guys....America and the collective West are the opposite.
m7fvwQl.gif


Your hatred for the United States never ceases to amaze me, #10. Is your wife really a senior Army officer and your son an Army Ranger? Do you hate them too? Or is that the reason you hate the United States? They dumped you?
 
The brainwashings worked on you.....He wants to make Russia Great Again and to has a large degree done it, now he wants to end Western aggression against it and then organize a transition so that he can get off the stage.

The Russians have no interest in the wasteland that is Europe, not even as trading partners much less as conquered lands....that would be far more trouble than it is worth....Europe has nothing to offer.
Geebus, and you say others have fallen for "brainwashing"?. When Russia invaded Ukraine it was not "western aggression"

The language you use gives away your conclusion before you even finish your sentence. I don't agree with Putin's initial decision to try to force Russians into calling his incursion into Ukraine as a "special military operation", but I -do- understand why he felt that language was important. The fact of the matter is that Russia would have never have felt the need to make any incursions into Ukraine had it not been for the very real western aggression that had been transpiring for decades prior to February 24, 2022, most notably the eastern expansion of NATO past Germany's borders.

American Professor John Mearsheimer predicted that Ukraine would get wrecked if it kept the United States' suggest path of joining NATO almost a decade before it came to pass. Business Today wrote a good article on this back in March which can be seen here:

Now, there's no going back in time, but what -can- be done is for the western world to recognize that if you poke a bear sufficiently, he will respond in kind.

When Russia invaded Ukraine it was not "western aggression", not even when he invaded the Crimea past Obama's "line in the sand"... where he told Putin "there would be costs"... but then never made him pay any costs

While Crimea was transferred to Ukraine by the Supreme Soviet back in the 50s, Crimeans themselves were certainly never given a say and it's been patently clear that ever since Ukraine's independence in 1991, they'd been trying to regain the close ties that they'd enjoyed during the Soviet Union. From Wikipedia:
**
With the dissolution of the Soviet Union and Ukrainian independence the majority ethnic Russian Crimean peninsula was reorganized as the Republic of Crimea, after a 1991 referendum with the Crimean authorities pushing for more independence from Ukraine and closer links with Russia.

In 1992 the Supreme Council of Crimea affirmed the peninsula's "sovereignty" as a part of Ukraine. The Crimean parliament proclaimed self-government on 5 May 1992 and passed the first Crimean constitution together with a declaration of conditional independence on the same day. There was stiff resistance from Ukraine and a day later, on 6 May, the same parliament inserted a new sentence into this constitution that declared that Crimea was part of Ukraine. A referendum to confirm the decision was not held until 1994 due to the opposition from the Kyiv government.

The Crimean parliament voted to bring in a President in 1993, which the Kyiv government denounced as unconstitutional. In 1994 Crimea elected the pro-Russian and anti-establishment Yuriy Meshkov. The pro-Russian parties also won the parliamentary election that year. However the president quickly alienated the parliament by asserting strong presidential powers.

In 1995 the Ukrainian Parliament intervened in the political crisis in Crimea, scrapping the Crimean Constitution, removing the president and scrapping the office of President. Almost 4,000 Ukrainian soldiers and police officers were sent to Crimea. Meshkov was removed from power after Ukrainian special forces had entered his residence, disarmed his bodyguards and put him on a plane to Moscow. Meshkov was replaced by Kyiv-appointed Anatoliy Franchuk, with the intent to rein in Crimean aspirations of autonomy.
**

Kyiv never did fully rein in Crimeans aspirations of autonomy or perhaps better put, Crimean aspirations of having closer ties to Russia. This finally came to a head after Euromaidan, where Crimeans decided to have a referendum on whether or not they should rejoin Russia. I know of only a single article from a western journalist who actually -went- to Crimea after it was annexed to Russia, that of Canadian American Eva Bartlett. What she found out while talking to Crimeans flies in the face of the western mainstream media reporting of the event. Her article can be seen here:
 
The language you use gives away your conclusion before you even finish your sentence. I don't agree with Putin's initial decision to try to force Russians into calling his incursion into Ukraine as a "special military operation", but I -do- understand why he felt that language was important. The fact of the matter is that Russia would have never have felt the need to make any incursions into Ukraine had it not been for the very real western aggression that had been transpiring for decades prior to February 24, 2022, most notably the eastern expansion of NATO past Germany's borders...
Translation: Comrades! Dear Leader Putin is innocent. This is all NATO's fault!!!

Nyet, tovarish. Fuck Putin and his aggression. Someone needs to toss his ass out of a 10-story window.
 
The language you use gives away your conclusion before you even finish your sentence. I don't agree with Putin's initial decision to try to force Russians into calling his incursion into Ukraine as a "special military operation", but I -do- understand why he felt that language was important. The fact of the matter is that Russia would have never have felt the need to make any incursions into Ukraine had it not been for the very real western aggression that had been transpiring for decades prior to February 24, 2022, most notably the eastern expansion of NATO past Germany's borders.

American Professor John Mearsheimer predicted that Ukraine would get wrecked if it kept the United States' suggest path of joining NATO almost a decade before it came to pass. Business Today wrote a good article on this back in March which can be seen here:

Now, there's no going back in time, but what -can- be done is for the western world to recognize that if you poke a bear sufficiently, he will respond in kind.



While Crimea was transferred to Ukraine by the Supreme Soviet back in the 50s, Crimeans themselves were certainly never given a say and it's been patently clear that ever since Ukraine's independence in 1991, they'd been trying to regain the close ties that they'd enjoyed during the Soviet Union. From Wikipedia:
**
With the dissolution of the Soviet Union and Ukrainian independence the majority ethnic Russian Crimean peninsula was reorganized as the Republic of Crimea, after a 1991 referendum with the Crimean authorities pushing for more independence from Ukraine and closer links with Russia.

In 1992 the Supreme Council of Crimea affirmed the peninsula's "sovereignty" as a part of Ukraine. The Crimean parliament proclaimed self-government on 5 May 1992 and passed the first Crimean constitution together with a declaration of conditional independence on the same day. There was stiff resistance from Ukraine and a day later, on 6 May, the same parliament inserted a new sentence into this constitution that declared that Crimea was part of Ukraine. A referendum to confirm the decision was not held until 1994 due to the opposition from the Kyiv government.

The Crimean parliament voted to bring in a President in 1993, which the Kyiv government denounced as unconstitutional. In 1994 Crimea elected the pro-Russian and anti-establishment Yuriy Meshkov. The pro-Russian parties also won the parliamentary election that year. However the president quickly alienated the parliament by asserting strong presidential powers.

In 1995 the Ukrainian Parliament intervened in the political crisis in Crimea, scrapping the Crimean Constitution, removing the president and scrapping the office of President. Almost 4,000 Ukrainian soldiers and police officers were sent to Crimea. Meshkov was removed from power after Ukrainian special forces had entered his residence, disarmed his bodyguards and put him on a plane to Moscow. Meshkov was replaced by Kyiv-appointed Anatoliy Franchuk, with the intent to rein in Crimean aspirations of autonomy.
**

Kyiv never did fully rein in Crimeans aspirations of autonomy or perhaps better put, Crimean aspirations of having closer ties to Russia. This finally came to a head after Euromaidan, where Crimeans decided to have a referendum on whether or not they should rejoin Russia. I know of only a single article from a western journalist who actually -went- to Crimea after it was annexed to Russia, that of Canadian American Eva Bartlett. What she found out while talking to Crimeans flies in the face of the western mainstream media reporting of the event. Her article can be seen here:
clarity is to be encouraged in my world....I did not read more than this.
 
The language you use gives away your conclusion before you even finish your sentence. I don't agree with Putin's initial decision to try to force Russians into calling his incursion into Ukraine as a "special military operation", but I -do- understand why he felt that language was important. The fact of the matter is that Russia would have never have felt the need to make any incursions into Ukraine had it not been for the very real western aggression that had been transpiring for decades prior to February 24, 2022, most notably the eastern expansion of NATO past Germany's borders...
Translation: Comrades! Dear Leader Putin is innocent. This is all NATO's fault!!!

Up until Russia's war with Ukraine, I didn't pay much attention to Russia at all, other than note that Edward Snowden took refuge there from the nefarious side of the United States government. Do you buy into the balderdash that he was a traitor? Anyway, I'd say it's mostly the United States' fault, as it's been in the driver's seat in NATO for quite some time.
 
Up until Russia's war with Ukraine, I didn't pay much attention to Russia at all, other than note that Edward Snowden took refuge there from the nefarious side of the United States government. Do you buy into the balderdash that he was a traitor?
Anyway, I'd say it's mostly the United States' fault, as it's been in the driver's seat in NATO for quite some time.
Of course not, tovarish. You only came across it when you saw all of the complaints about poor lil' Vlad being badmouthed in the press. :thup:
Obviously. That's what Vlad would say too. :)
 
My birthday is in a few days, I am celebrating now because it is a holiday weekend....if I dont read things that I might normally read this is why but be aware I consider any post more than about 250 words impolite almost always.
 
Of course not, tovarish. You only came across it when you saw all of the complaints about poor lil' Vlad being badmouthed in the press. :thup:
Obviously. That's what Vlad would say too. :)
The Russians are establishing a brand of truth telling in contrast to America's constant lying, as they argue that American power has to go.
 
Trumps Art of the Deal constant BullShit is spectacularly poorly timed as DragonBear constantly push the narrative that America has no honor.
 
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