Mr Clare leads us to infer that if only international agreements had been honoured, Russia’s behaviour might have been quite different.
Mr Putin would not have set out to establish a ring of buffer client states (such as brutal Belarus). He would not have infiltrated and seized Crimea and frontier regions of Georgia and Ukraine, the latter allegedly a Nazi state led (somewhat surprisingly) by a Jew. He would not have expunged Stalin’s horrors from Russia’s history books, as detrimental to patriotism.
He would not have assured the world repeatedly that his troops were merely on peaceful exercises without the least intention of invading their neighbours. Indeed, the credulous troops were astonished to find themselves at war. Correction! of conducting “a special military operation” in Ukraine.(You don’t want 15 years in a Russian prison for spreading “fake news”.)
He would not have reduced Ukrainian schools, hospitals and other public buildings to rubble, causing huge loss of life, a skill he acquired in Syria in support of a particularly nasty dictator. In short, Mr Putin would have remained a peace-loving, benevolent democrat who didn’t need to poison his political opponents with nerve agents or throw them into prison.
Was there mention of bribery in Ukraine? Happily, such evils are unknown in Russia, where the Kremlin’s tools include supine oligarchs, docile deputies, client courts and a servile media.
Just imagine! Should Mr Putin succeed in Ukraine, his placemen might lock up all the Jewish Nazis there and turn the country into a freedom-loving democracy like - well - Russia.
Wouldn’t that be lovely Mr Clare?
Ronald Sole, Loulé, By email
(these decrepit, pro EU, soviet union worthy´ standards of reporting, nearly 200 year old newspapers), and they added link to an article called “the 1rst casualty of war is truth”.” Ok ”, I thought ”I guess reporters around the world are getting killed/arrested/tortured/maimed/threatened for prizing their contract with readers´, so other reporters can be choosers”. And I left it at that (ppl are free to choose the best course for their actions, as long as they accept the consequences). To my (you can imagine) surprise, not many days after the newspaper in question started writing A LOT about Azov battalion. It seems the local dinosaur newspapers decided to pick up on that. A leader of a far right wing Portuguese organization was trying to go fight for Ukraine, so “avoiding the right wing Ukrainian subject” backfired. I understand Azov was created to protect against Russia´s ambitions (see? No one is defending Putin) but they´re no saints. Plus, because I was reading other newspapers NOT IN PORTUGUESE, I could read about ppl being evacuated from Ukraine, students from African /south Asian/Arab countries who were studying there, who were left helpless, while Ukrainians evacuated Ukrainians 1rst. There were many instances where these students organized themselves to evacuate in groups by paying buses to try get to borders and escape, paying more money than Ukrainians to do so- because ppl there thought they should profit from this- only to travel a part of the route, only to be stopped, forced out of this buses so Ukrainian women and children would use these buses to escape. So excuse me, Mr. Ronald Sole, we have to agree to disagree. If you´d bothered to read about the world bf this war, none of this would be surprising.
By guida from Lisbon on 28 Apr 2022, 06:59