Omnibus Russia Ukraine crisis

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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Then Kuwait kicked out about 20% of their population… that where working with Saddam Hussein to overthrow the government. Wonder where they went?

Our battle canoes are not effective in desert terrain. We have top men studying the problem. TOP men!!

Meanwhile in North Korea:
View attachment 22671
Russia and North Korea sign partnership deal that appears to be strongest since Cold War
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Kim Tong-hyung
Published Jun 19, 2024 • 5 minute read

SEOUL, South Korea — Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un signed a new partnership that includes a vow of mutual aid if either country is attacked, during a Wednesday summit that came as both face escalating standoffs with the West.


The deal, which the leaders said covered areas including security, trade, investment, and cultural and humanitarian ties, could mark the strongest connection between Moscow and Pyongyang since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Both leaders described it as a major upgrade of their ties.

The two met as Putin visited North Korea for the first time in 24 years. The summit came as the U.S. and its allies express growing concerns over an arms arrangement in which the country provides Moscow with badly needed munitions for its war in Ukraine in exchange for economic assistance and technology transfers that could enhance the threat posed by Kim’s nuclear weapons and missile program.

Kim said that the deal was the “strongest ever treaty” between the two nations, putting the relationship at the level of an alliance, and vowed full support for Russia’s war in Ukraine. Putin said that it was a “breakthough document” reflecting shared desire to move relations to a higher level.


The North Korean leader gave Putin a lavish welcome, meeting him at the airport Tuesday night, where the two shook hands, hugged twice and then rode together in a limousine in a huge motorcade that rolled through the capital’s brightly illuminated streets, where buildings were decorated with giant Russian flags and portraits of Putin.

After spending the rest of the night at a state guest house, Putin attended a welcoming ceremony at the city’s main square, filled with what appeared to be tens of thousands of spectators, including children holding balloons and people wearing coordinated t-shirts in the red, white and blue of the Russian and North Korean flags. Huge crowds lined up on the streets to greet Putin’s motorcade, chanting “Welcome Putin” and waving flowers and North Korean and Russian flags.


Putin and Kim saluted an honor guard and walked across a red carpet. Kim then introduced key members of his leadership including Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui; top aide and ruling party secretary Jo Yong Won; and the leader’s powerful sister, Kim Yo Jong.

As the talks began, Putin thanked Kim for North Korea’s support for his war in Ukraine, part of what he said was a “fight against the imperialist hegemonistic policies of the U.S. and its satellites against the Russian Federation.”

Putin hailed ties that he traced back to the Soviet army fighting the Japanese military on the Korean Peninsula in the closing moments of World War II, and Moscow’s support for Pyongyang during the Korean War.

Kim said Moscow and Pyongyang’s “fiery friendship” is now even closer than during Soviet times, and promised “full support and solidarity to the Russian government, army and people in carrying out the special military operation in Ukraine to protect sovereignty, security interests and territorial integrity.”


It wasn’t immediately clear what that support might look like. Kim has used similar language in the past, consistently saying North Korea supports what he describes as a just action to protect Russia’s interests and blaming the crisis on the U.S.-led West’s “hegemonic policy.”

North Korea is under heavy U.N. Security Council sanctions over its weapons program, while Russia also faces sanctions by the United States and its Western partners over its aggression in Ukraine.

U.S. and South Korean officials accuse the North of providing Russia with artillery, missiles and other military equipment for use in Ukraine, possibly in return for key military technologies and aid. Both Pyongyang and Moscow deny accusations about North Korean weapons transfers, which would violate multiple U.N. Security Council sanctions that Russia previously endorsed.


Along with China, Russia has provided political cover for Kim’s continuing efforts to advance his nuclear arsenal, repeatedly blocking U.S.-led efforts to impose fresh U.N. sanctions on the North over its weapons tests.

In March, a Russian veto at the United Nations ended monitoring of U.N. sanctions against North Korea over its nuclear program, prompting Western accusations that Moscow is seeking to avoid scrutiny as it buys weapons from Pyongyang for use in Ukraine.

Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov told reporters in Pyongyang that the two leaders exchanged gifts after the talks. Putin presented Kim with a Russian-made Aurus limo and other gifts, including a tea set and a naval officer’s dagger. Ushakov said that Kim’s presents to Putin included artworks depicting the Russian leader.


Russia media said earlier that Kim will host a reception, and Putin is expected to leave Wednesday evening for Vietnam.

In addition to security, Putin said the partnership includes cooperation in political, trade, investment, cultural and humanitarian fields, as well as security. He added that Russia would not rule out developing military-technical cooperation with North Korea under the deal.

According to the Kremlin’s website, the two leaders also signed an agreement on building a road bridge on their shared border, and another on cooperation in healthcare, medical education and science.

Kim was quoted as saying that the agreement was of a peaceful and defensive nature. “I have no doubt it will become a driving force accelerating the creation of a new multipolar world,” he was quoted to say.


In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Putin’s visit to North Korea illustrates how Russia tries, “in desperation, to develop and to strengthen relations with countries that can provide it with what it needs to continue the war of aggression that it started against Ukraine.”

The North may also seek to increase labor exports to Russia and other illicit activities to gain foreign currency in defiance of U.N. Security Council sanctions, according to a recent report by the Institute for National Security Strategy, a think tank run by South Korea’s main spy agency. There will likely be talks about expanding cooperation in agriculture, fisheries and mining and further promoting Russian tourism to North Korea, the institute said.

Tensions on the Korean Peninsula are at their highest point in years, with the pace of both Kim’s weapons tests and combined military exercises involving the United States, South Korea and Japan intensifying in a tit-for-tat cycle.

The Koreas also have engaged in Cold War-style psychological warfare that involved North Korea dropping tons of trash on the South with balloons, and the South broadcasting anti-North Korean propaganda with its loudspeakers.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,405
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Then Kuwait kicked out about 20% of their population… that where working with Saddam Hussein to overthrow the government. Wonder where they went?

Our battle canoes are not effective in desert terrain. We have top men studying the problem. TOP men!!

Meanwhile in North Korea:
View attachment 22671
Russia and North Korea sign partnership deal that appears to be strongest since Cold War
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Kim Tong-hyung
Published Jun 19, 2024 • 5 minute read

SEOUL, South Korea — Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un signed a new partnership that includes a vow of mutual aid if either country is attacked, during a Wednesday summit that came as both face escalating standoffs with the West.


The deal, which the leaders said covered areas including security, trade, investment, and cultural and humanitarian ties, could mark the strongest connection between Moscow and Pyongyang since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Both leaders described it as a major upgrade of their ties.

The two met as Putin visited North Korea for the first time in 24 years. The summit came as the U.S. and its allies express growing concerns over an arms arrangement in which the country provides Moscow with badly needed munitions for its war in Ukraine in exchange for economic assistance and technology transfers that could enhance the threat posed by Kim’s nuclear weapons and missile program.

Kim said that the deal was the “strongest ever treaty” between the two nations, putting the relationship at the level of an alliance, and vowed full support for Russia’s war in Ukraine. Putin said that it was a “breakthough document” reflecting shared desire to move relations to a higher level.


The North Korean leader gave Putin a lavish welcome, meeting him at the airport Tuesday night, where the two shook hands, hugged twice and then rode together in a limousine in a huge motorcade that rolled through the capital’s brightly illuminated streets, where buildings were decorated with giant Russian flags and portraits of Putin.

After spending the rest of the night at a state guest house, Putin attended a welcoming ceremony at the city’s main square, filled with what appeared to be tens of thousands of spectators, including children holding balloons and people wearing coordinated t-shirts in the red, white and blue of the Russian and North Korean flags. Huge crowds lined up on the streets to greet Putin’s motorcade, chanting “Welcome Putin” and waving flowers and North Korean and Russian flags.


Putin and Kim saluted an honor guard and walked across a red carpet. Kim then introduced key members of his leadership including Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui; top aide and ruling party secretary Jo Yong Won; and the leader’s powerful sister, Kim Yo Jong.

As the talks began, Putin thanked Kim for North Korea’s support for his war in Ukraine, part of what he said was a “fight against the imperialist hegemonistic policies of the U.S. and its satellites against the Russian Federation.”

Putin hailed ties that he traced back to the Soviet army fighting the Japanese military on the Korean Peninsula in the closing moments of World War II, and Moscow’s support for Pyongyang during the Korean War.

Kim said Moscow and Pyongyang’s “fiery friendship” is now even closer than during Soviet times, and promised “full support and solidarity to the Russian government, army and people in carrying out the special military operation in Ukraine to protect sovereignty, security interests and territorial integrity.”


It wasn’t immediately clear what that support might look like. Kim has used similar language in the past, consistently saying North Korea supports what he describes as a just action to protect Russia’s interests and blaming the crisis on the U.S.-led West’s “hegemonic policy.”

North Korea is under heavy U.N. Security Council sanctions over its weapons program, while Russia also faces sanctions by the United States and its Western partners over its aggression in Ukraine.

U.S. and South Korean officials accuse the North of providing Russia with artillery, missiles and other military equipment for use in Ukraine, possibly in return for key military technologies and aid. Both Pyongyang and Moscow deny accusations about North Korean weapons transfers, which would violate multiple U.N. Security Council sanctions that Russia previously endorsed.


Along with China, Russia has provided political cover for Kim’s continuing efforts to advance his nuclear arsenal, repeatedly blocking U.S.-led efforts to impose fresh U.N. sanctions on the North over its weapons tests.

In March, a Russian veto at the United Nations ended monitoring of U.N. sanctions against North Korea over its nuclear program, prompting Western accusations that Moscow is seeking to avoid scrutiny as it buys weapons from Pyongyang for use in Ukraine.

Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov told reporters in Pyongyang that the two leaders exchanged gifts after the talks. Putin presented Kim with a Russian-made Aurus limo and other gifts, including a tea set and a naval officer’s dagger. Ushakov said that Kim’s presents to Putin included artworks depicting the Russian leader.


Russia media said earlier that Kim will host a reception, and Putin is expected to leave Wednesday evening for Vietnam.

In addition to security, Putin said the partnership includes cooperation in political, trade, investment, cultural and humanitarian fields, as well as security. He added that Russia would not rule out developing military-technical cooperation with North Korea under the deal.

According to the Kremlin’s website, the two leaders also signed an agreement on building a road bridge on their shared border, and another on cooperation in healthcare, medical education and science.

Kim was quoted as saying that the agreement was of a peaceful and defensive nature. “I have no doubt it will become a driving force accelerating the creation of a new multipolar world,” he was quoted to say.


In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Putin’s visit to North Korea illustrates how Russia tries, “in desperation, to develop and to strengthen relations with countries that can provide it with what it needs to continue the war of aggression that it started against Ukraine.”

The North may also seek to increase labor exports to Russia and other illicit activities to gain foreign currency in defiance of U.N. Security Council sanctions, according to a recent report by the Institute for National Security Strategy, a think tank run by South Korea’s main spy agency. There will likely be talks about expanding cooperation in agriculture, fisheries and mining and further promoting Russian tourism to North Korea, the institute said.

Tensions on the Korean Peninsula are at their highest point in years, with the pace of both Kim’s weapons tests and combined military exercises involving the United States, South Korea and Japan intensifying in a tit-for-tat cycle.

The Koreas also have engaged in Cold War-style psychological warfare that involved North Korea dropping tons of trash on the South with balloons, and the South broadcasting anti-North Korean propaganda with its loudspeakers.
 

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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Ukraine launches sexual assault registry for victims of Russian forces
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Derek Gatopoulos
Published Jun 19, 2024 • 2 minute read

KYIV, Ukraine — Authorities in Ukraine have created a national registry to document cases of sexual violence allegedly committed by Russian forces, a senior prosecutor told The Associated Press on Wednesday.


Viktoriia Litvinova, the country’s deputy prosecutor general, said that the registry was created out of a pilot project that had already resulted in the convictions of five people in absentia. She declined to comment on details of the cases.

“We used to have to visit territories where hostilities are taking place ourselves,” she said. “But now people — individuals who have experienced sexual abuse — are seeking us out for information.”

Litvinova said 303 cases of conflict-related sexual violence had been registered since the start of the full-scale invasion in early 2022, with 112 involving male and 191 involving female victims. Some of the victims have suffered from multiple assaults, she said.

The initiative was announced on the United Nations’ International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence, and has received assistance from U.N. agencies and several Western governments.


Government officials said the registry could be used to make claims for financial compensation for the victims from Russia in the future. The five convictions resulted from sexual assault allegations in areas attacked or occupied by Russian forces, in Kyiv and the cities of Kherson and Chernihiv.


Massimo Diana, a representative of the U.N. Population Fund, said the actual number of victims was likely to be much higher than those in the registry.

“This violence has been perpetrated on women and girls, on men and boys. Nobody has been exempted from the risk of this heinous act,” Diana said.

His agency had assisted in creating 12 support centers around the country for victims of domestic violence and sexual attacks, he said, along with three mobile facilities.

To raise awareness for the program and to encourage victims to come forward, Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Olha Stefanishyna unveiled a painting by artist Julia Tveritina at a gallery and art center in Kyiv.

“The (painting) is of men and women surrounded by yellow rapeseed flowers,” Stefanishyna said. “This flower renews itself after the frost, and it symbolizes hope that all of the survivors may leave their traumatic events in the past.”
 
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petros

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Nov 21, 2008
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Rob spent months on that highway, after long lines of armour where stafed and bombed…cleaning Iraqis out of their armour or what was left of it, and them.

He was nothing if not adaptable.
Ukrainians had to the same after roasting the idle columns in the Battle of Kyiv. Russian Airborne and tank elite were wiped out. They roasted the Russians in 7 days.

Ukraine lost 162 soldiers killed, 748 wounded
 
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B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
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Awww widdle Pooty poo throwing a tantrum again? You know you're a pathetic, washed-up joke when you have to go begging to North Korea, the short bus of nation states, for help.

He ain't gonna nuke anyone. The oligarchs will have him killed before he does that. They're rich and most likely want to continue living and enjoying their wealth. However Bedpan knows that if he loses, he's a dead man.

Putin is fucked either way. He can't afford to lose in Ukraine else Russia will be on the hook for reparations, and the Russian economy and Ruble ain't up to it. But he can't afford to win either. If his gains are going to be of any use or value to him it'll cost hundreds of billions to rebuild the conquered territory. And the Russian economy and Ruble ain't up to that either.

Think they call that creating an alliance.

When WWIII sets off there will be so many different regions that the USA won't know where to send troops.

N. Korea/S. Korea
China/Taiwan
Israel/Middle
East Russia/Europe

But it will all end the same way..

1.jpg
 

B00Mer

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They'll have all the air cover needed to liberate Crimea and the rest of Kherson soon enough.

With the Midde Eastern Front bubbling with Lebanon and Ukraine already in Syria fighting Wagner its getting complex.

Couple of strategic nukes will create a radiological buffer zone. Then the Donbas regions will glow in the dark for 150 years..
 

Jinentonix

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Think they call that creating an alliance.

When WWIII sets off there will be so many different regions that the USA won't know where to send troops.
Riiight. Because of course the US has no allies, right? Fucking hell dude.
N. Korea/S. Korea
Newsflash. The North Korean military is pathetic. The soldiers are half-starved and their equipment is even shittier than China's.
China/Taiwan
China better get building those randing claft then. And uh, that would more a naval war than anything and the US has 12 goddam carrier groups. Plus naval allies in Japan, the Philippines, Australia etc. China would effectively be all alone in that conflict.
Israel/Middle
There may be some surprises there as to who decides to try and dog pile onto Israel yet again.
East Russia/Europe
I think you mean West Russia/Europe. And based on what's been observed in Ukraine, other than nukes, I don't think Europe has a lot to worry about. Russia can't even beat the poorest country in Europe. And for 2 1/2 years of war their gains are pathetic and have come at an enormous cost in Russian lives and equipment. By the time Russia is ready to push on after Ukraine (assuming they don't lose), Putin will have died of old age and wasted too many men. And by then maybe someone with a shred of sanity will be running the show in Russia.
But it will all end the same way..
Yep. The communists in China will fall. Possibly even before the CCP gets the chance to do something stupid. North Korea will be blown off the map even without having to use nukes. Shit man, a single US supercarrier has more combat aircraft on it than the entire Nork military has off all types; combat, cargo and trainers. Not to mention that the Norks rocket technology and guidance systems are a laugh. Meanwhile Nork shells are exploding in Russian guns, destroying them and killing and wounding the crews. What fantastic allies Bedpan has. With friends like Little Duk Dong, who needs enemas?

And then there's all the rich Russian oligarchs and fake commies in the CCP who are loaded. A nuke war would make them financially worthless. The only ones who are a concern are the jihadi sand fleas who are fucking stupid enough to use nukes.
 

Jinentonix

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How many have to die over Bedpan's mental masturbations about "Ukronazis" while he's supporting actual islamo-nazis in the Middle East? Is the US holding a gun to Zelensky's head to make Ukraine keep fighting? And why are you suddenly spewing CCP and Russo-nazi propaganda? Hell, before the pandemic you were all "Murica! Fuck Yeah!" and now it's like you're cheerleading for the some of the worst goddam people on the planet.
 

B00Mer

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How many have to die over Bedpan's mental masturbations about "Ukronazis" while he's supporting actual islamo-nazis in the Middle East? Is the US holding a gun to Zelensky's head to make Ukraine keep fighting? And why are you suddenly spewing CCP and Russo-nazi propaganda? Hell, before the pandemic you were all "Murica! Fuck Yeah!" and now it's like you're cheerleading for the some of the worst goddam people on the planet.

I'm not pro Russia and absolutely not pro Islam.. for me, October 7th I feel the response should have been nuclear.

20240623_062328.jpg

My hate for Islam has grown since Oct 7 and watching these clowns protesting in the USA and Canada.. fuck

I'm honestly surprised there hasn't been a replay of Stephen Paddock on one of these campuses with their Marxist/Hamas supporters.

As far as Ukraine/Russia it's an unwinnable war.. this is something that a peace plan needs to be signed.

Lives are not worth the resources.


As far as the houthi rebels, I'm laughing at Petros and you beating your chest at how powerful the USA and NATO is.. yet they can't control a bunch of desert rats in sandals living in mud huts.

I am still Pro America, I love their money, and the market for my business.

China love their products, and business savvy.

But at this point, I'd rather live in Mexico or Asia. Less stress, less taxes in many cases and a better quality of life.

Actually I hope to be living in Mexico full time in 2025. Just need to finish off my residence permit and get a small warehouse in Vegas for my business

 
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