Let me hear you say the people of Crimea have decided their own future today in a free vote.
He is saying in an all out war America would be turned to ashes, as would the rest of the world including Russia. There that is his statement along with the part he left out.
Think of what could happen if this trend caught on?
http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/0...um-may-see-venice-elect-to-secede-from-italy/
Russia doesn't need troops in the Ukraine, apparently.
http://wakeupfromyourslumber.com/news/activists-stop-kiev-s-military-trucks-heading-russian-border
Activists stop Kiev’s military trucks heading to Russian border
published by Tom Sullivan on Sun, 2014-03-16 20:12
Activists in eastern Ukraine in the Donetsk and Lugansk regions are blocking columns of heavy military equipment heading from Kiev to the border with Russia.
Late Thursday activists from the Donbass people's militia blocked the way of columns with about 20 trucks carrying heavy military equipment near Donetsk heading to the Russian border, a local activist and former officer of the Ukrainian Emergencies Ministry told RT.
“At about 5pm [1500 GMT], local activists called me,” said Sergey Rzhavsky.
“They reported that a column [with military equipment] was situated near the town of Volovaha from the side of the Valeryanovka settlement. We, the Donbass People’s Self-Defense Units of Pavel Gubarev [the local governor, currently arrested in Kiev] promptly headed there. We saw about 20 heavy trucks there with some carrying airborne combat vehicles.”
http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/122858-putin-tells-obama-crimea-vote-fully-legal
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday told U.S. President Barack Obama in telephone talks that the referendum on the Ukrainian region of Crimea joining Russia was "completely in line with the norms of international law," the Kremlin said.
Putin also told the U.S. president that any Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) monitoring mission in Ukraine should cover "all Ukrainian regions" and not just Crimea.
But the two leaders also agreed that "despite the differences..., it is necessary to jointly search for ways of stabilizing the situation in Ukraine," the Kremlin added.
An overwhelming 95.5 percent of Crimeans voted Sunday to become part of Russia in a referendum deemed illegal by the new authorities in Ukraine and most of the international community, exit polls showed.
With 50 percent of ballots counted, referendum commission chairman Mykhaylo Malyshev said 3.5 percent had voted to remain in Ukraine with wider autonomous powers and 1.0 percent were "spoiled ballots."