Comments by "Kameraden" (@Alte.Kameraden) on "War In Ukraine Explained By The Chinese Government #Ukraine" video.

  1. 1:29 actually goes beyond that. Russia and China even after WWII had a number of border conflicts, of course almost wiped from history by both sides because "We are friends!" Sino-Soviet border conflict is a good example. Issue is the Soviet Union and Communist China didn't exactly have a rosie happy, and positive history toward each other. It's actually one of the reasons the USA pushed to improve relations with China knowing of the hostility that actually existed between it and the Soviet Union. Hoping to split the two biggest Communist countries away from each other, can leave it to historians to find out if that effort was successful or not. This hostility dates back to WWII as well. USSR wanted to make China a puppet, backed a number of pro Communist factions during it's civil war era. When the Soviet Union invaded Manchuria she also stripped the region of just about everything of use, railroad ties, trains, plumping, etc similar to what the USSR did in Eastern Europe, pretty much looted/pillaged not the soldiers but the state itself, it ironically isn't too different to how the Nazis stole everything that wasn't nailed down, anything to boost their failing economy, in the USSR it was because well the USSR was absolutely devastated by the War and Stalin's policies before the war were not exactly well good for the economy either which the USSR was literally on the verge of utter collapse, so stealing even if it has to be a bath tub was pretty much necessary to give some semblance of growth on the civilian level otherwise civil unrest was a possibility. Issue is when the USSR eventually gave Manchuria to the Communist Chinese and handed over the occupation of the region to them, they left the Chinese pretty much nothing of value. Mao at the time wasn't very happy about this and it wasn't a secret that the USSR pillaged and stole everything in Manchuria as the locals saw them doing it so Mao found out quick, and it was a start a long history of "Yes we shake hands!" But behind the scenes the Chinese had little trust toward the USSR. Then again just about every former communist country or still didn't have much trust in eachother, it's actually one of those interesting aspects of cold war history. Today for example, Vietnam you'd think would be a good friend of China, but is actually one of China's biggest rivals in Asia, and is more closely allied with the anti Chinese Pacific Faction, the USA, Japan, India and the Philippines. North Korea is pretty much a Chinese Puppet State, and most of the rest of the Communist regimes have collapsed, or been replaced. Laos for example the Vietnamese technically liberated from a regime that was pretty much as brutal as the one that existed in Cambodia, a regime the Vietnamese and Chinese originally helped into power in Laos, Vietnam moved it to remove that regime because of the horrific crimes it was committing on it's people, and China who viewed Laos as a puppet attacked Vietnam for trying to conduct a Communist regime change against another Communist country. So ya, nothing is exactly Peachy under the glorious red Sun of Socialist World Unity? Is it? Seems they hate eachother, and fear eachother about as much as the west.
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