dúfam, tže aj cato pozná fotodokumentáciu zo sadistickej akcie ukrajinskych nacionalistov vo *Volyň, ak ešte aj k tomu bude mať nemiestny komentár, tak mu prajem iba dlhé zdravie v tej jeho nízkej bedni
dúfam, tže aj cato pozná fotodokumentáciu zo sadistickej akcie ukrajinskych nacionalistov vo *Volyň, ak ešte aj k tomu bude mať nemiestny komentár, tak mu prajem iba dlhé zdravie v tej jeho nízkej bedni
ano, o celej volynskej tragédii som si už dlho zozabieravl materiály a fotodokumentácie. Ale nerád sa k tomu vraciam, je to bohužiaľ bezo zbytku pravda a ťažko niečo povedať k tým neuveiriteľným sadistickým zverstvám, zúrivému nacionalizmu. Možem len povedať toľko, po zozbiereni všetkých údajov o Volyni, by som radšej svoje deti zabil vlastnou rukou, ako by na nich mali byť páchané takéto zverstva ukrajinskými nacionalistami. Kým Ukrajinská vláda okamžite neskonči a nezakáže tieto ultranacionalistické pochody a strany ako aj všetky prejavy, nikdy nebudem súhalsiť, aby sa Ukrajina stal členom EU. To je všetko.
Mr. Nobody neviem kto ste, ale mohli by ste láskavo prestať s tými zúrivými výpadmi, mne sa toto naozaj nechce čítať, ako tu pľuváte okolo seba,
Nepredpokladám, že sa tu okrem skutočne mizivého percenta nájde ešte niekto, kto sa tejto vysoko odbornej téme rozumie a preto je ťažké vyhodnotiť, kto z vás má/nemá pravdu. V každom prípade tieto debaty patria na odborný linkedln v kruhu zainteresovaných.
ďakujem za pochopenie.
cato, nevyjAdrujem sa k tvoJim "iným" názorom, ale vyAjdrujem sa k úrovni tvojho rozmýšlania, úbohej argumentácie postavenej len na nejakom blabotaní a kikiríkaní, obohraná platňa škrípe lepšie, nepoužil som toto slovo za celý čas, čo som na debta.sk, ale teraz už musím. TY SI NAOZAj originálny A nefalśovaný TROLLl!!
no teraz
cato tu napíše , že americkým hokejistom ruskí špioni niečo zamiešali do jedla. nech "žije" zaslepená nenávisť reznutá nevzdelanosťou a zakomplexovanosťou
no, keďže si tu len hudieš ako baran, dal som ti šancu ( aj sebe), aby si si vypočul názor vzdelaných a nezainterseovaných ľudí ( nezainteresovaných nacionaluzmom, peniazmi, zbrojárstvo), ale keďže aj tí su podľa teba hlupáci tak skus mi vyvrátiť ich postoje politologmi svetom uznávanými, ktorí jednozančne budú potvrdzovať že ten problém sú len rusi, prosím ale nech sú to uznávaní politológovia a nie politici, v tom snáď vidíš rozdiel, či?
ja by som ale rád, aby sa k tomu vyjadril cato, mám aj ďalšie stanoviska US a ostatných svetových uznávaných politológov, ale neviem ako je cato, pupušššško , shark, fabo na tom s angličtinou, takže som našiel zopár aj v slovenskom jazyku alebo českom, prekladať anglický text originálov nemá význam, lebo by ma títo pošukovia ešte obvinili, že som to zle naschvál preložil.
cato, zaujímal by ma tvoj názor k linkom , ktoré sme sem dali od Dr Šcerbáka uznávaného vo svete ukrajinského politológa (a antikomunistu), ako aj bývaleho US veľvyslanca v Rusku (neviem či vieš anglicky) uveidol som jeho názor pod príspevkom Ultrapravicové hnutia Azov a Ajdar.
ty si fakt chorý william, pozri sa pod posteľ máš tam putina, a pozro v mrazničke máš bombu,
ozaj ako sa ti žije v obataí s neutíchajúcim negativizmom, je to ťažké čo?
cato s merkelovou už nesúhlasia ani zahraničný diplomati, politológovia a ani jeden z nich nie je rusofil a ani komunista
http://www.ac24.cz/zpravy-ze-sveta/5300 -amer…
Matlock:
We do have to understand that a significant part of the violence at the Maidan, the demonstrations in Kiev, were done by these extreme right-wing, sort of neo-fascist groups. And they do—some of their leaders do occupy prominent positions in the security forces of the new government. And I think—I think the Russians and others are quite legitimately concerned about that.
Matlock said:
We should start keeping our voice down and sort of let things work out. You know, to ship in military equipment and so on is just going to be a further provocation. Obviously, this is not something that’s going to be solved by military confrontations. So, I think if we can find a way to speak less in public, to use more quiet diplomacy—and right now, frankly, the relationships between our presidents are so poisonous, they really should have representatives who can quietly go and, you know, work with counterparts elsewhere.
Matlock said:
We do have to understand that a significant part of the violence at the Maidan, the demonstrations in Kiev, were done by these extreme right-wing, sort of neo-fascist groups. And they do—some of their leaders do occupy prominent positions in the security forces of the new government. And I think—I think the Russians and others are quite legitimately concerned about that.
Matlock: How would Occupy Wall Street have looked if you had foreigners out there leading them? Do you think that would have helped them get their point across? I don’t think so. And I think we have to understand that when we start directly interfering, particularly our government officials, in the internal makeup of other governments, we’re really asking for trouble. [The U.S. State Department spent more than $5 billion dollars in pushing Ukraine towards the West. The U.S. ambassador to Ukraine (Geoffrey Pyatt) and assistant Secretary of State (Victoria Nuland) were also recorded plotting the downfall of the former Ukraine government in a leaked conversation. Top-level U.S. officials literally handed out cookies to the protesters who overthrew the Ukrainian government. And the U.S. has been doing everything it can to trumpet pro-Ukrainian and anti-Russian propaganda. So – without doubt – the U.S. government is heavily involved with fighting a propaganda war regarding Ukraine.]
if I had been asked when I was ambassador of the United States in Moscow, “Is there an understanding that NATO won’t move to the east?” I would have said, “Yes, there is.” However, it was not a legal commitment, and one could say that once the Soviet Union collapsed, any agreement then maybe didn’t hold, except that when you think about it, if there was no reason to expand NATO when the Soviet Union existed, there was even less reason when the Soviet Union collapsed and you were talking about Russia. And the reason many of us—myself, George Kennan, many of us—argued against NATO expansion in the ’90s was precisely to avoid the sort of situation we have today. It was totally predictable. If we start expanding NATO, as we get closer to the Russian border, they are going to consider this a hostile act. And at some point, they will draw a line, and they will do anything within their power to keep it from going any further. That’s what we’re seeing today.
In March, Matlock said:
How would Americans feel if some Russian or Chinese or even West European started putting bases in Mexico or in the Caribbean, or trying to form governments that were hostile to us? You know, we saw how we virtually went ballistic over Cuba. And I think that we have not been very attentive to what it takes to have a harmonious relationship with Russia.
***
In the Orange Revolution in Kiev, foreigners, including Americans, were very active in organizing people and inspiring them.
Ukraine is not a member of NATO. And why we react as if it is and has any claim on our cooperation in defending them from Russia, this is simply not the case.
We’ve previously reported that it’s the West’s encirclement of Russia – breaking a key promise which led to the break-up of the Soviet Union – which is behind the Ukraine crisis.
Matlock confirmed that the U.S. and the West promised that the U.S. and Nato would not move East and try to encircle Russia:
When the Berlin Wall came down, when eastern Europe began to try to free itself from the Communist rule, the first President Bush, George Herbert Walker Bush, met with Gorbachev in Malta, and they made a very important statement. One was we were no longer enemies. The second was the Soviet Union would not intervene in eastern Europe to keep Communist rule there. And in response, the United States would not take advantage of that.
Jack Matlock, U.S. former ambassador to the Soviet Union from, says that the U.S. and NATO are to blame for the Ukraine crisis And most of the—I would say, the influence of the West in trying to help the Ukrainians by, I would say, defending them against the Russians tends to be provocative, because—you know, Putin is right: If he decided, he could take Kiev. Russia is a nuclear power. And Russia feels that we have ignored that, that we have insulted them time and time again, and that we are out to turn Ukraine into an American puppet that surrounds them
Jack Matlock, U.S. former ambassador to the Soviet Union from, says that the U.S. and NATO are to blame for the Ukraine crisis:There needs to be an understanding between Russia and the Ukrainians as to how to solve this problem. It is not going to be solved militarily. So the idea that we should be giving more help to the Ukrainian government in a military sense simply exacerbates the problem. And the basic problem is Ukraine is a deeply divided country. And as long as one side tries to impose its will on the other—and that is what has happened since February, the Ukrainian nationalists in the west have been trying to impose their will on the east, and the Russians aren’t going to permit that. And that is the fact of the matter. So, yes, there simply needs to be an agreement.
Jack Matlock, U.S. former ambassador to the Soviet Union from, says that the U.S. and NATO are to blame for the Ukraine crisis:
The fact is they are going to intervene until they are certain that there is no prospect of Ukraine becoming a member of NATO. And all of the threats by NATO and so on to sort of increase defenses elsewhere is simply provocative to the Russians. Now, I’m not saying that’s right, but I am saying that’s the way Russia is going to react. And frankly, this is all predictable. And those of us who helped negotiate the end of the Cold War almost unanimously said in the 1990s, “Do not expand NATO eastward. Find a different way to protect eastern Europe, a way that includes Russia. Otherwise, eventually there’s going to be a confrontation, because there is a red line, as far as any Russian government is concerned, when it comes to Ukraine and Georgia and other former republics of the Soviet Union.”
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