Comments by "Valen Ron" (@valenrn8657) on "Putin is ‘clearly unhinged’" video.

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  6.  @tracer7898 For Iraq issue Date: December 2005, Dutch dealer gets 15 years for chemical sales to Saddam. A Dutch businessman was yesterday jailed for 15 years after a court in The Hague found him guilty of complicity in war crimes for selling chemicals to Iraq that Saddam Hussein's regime used in lethal gas attacks on Kurdish villages. -------- Iraq invaded Kuwait, fool Sheikhdom of Kuwait BEFORE WW1 Kuwait was founded in 1613 AD as a fishing village known as Grane (Kureyn). The region soon came under the rule of the Bani Khalid Emirate in 1670 after the expulsion of the Ottomans from Eastern Arabia (Lahsa Eyalet) by Barrack bin Ghurayr, Emir of the Bani Khalid, who successfully besieged the Ottoman governor Umar Pasha who surrendered and gave up his rule as the fourth Ottoman governor of al-Hasa. In 1752, Kuwait became independent after an agreement between the Sheikh of Kuwait and the Emir of Bani Khalid in which Bani Khalid recognised Sabah I bin Jaber's independent rule over Kuwait and in exchange Kuwait would not ally itself or support the enemies of Bani Khalid or interfere in the internal affairs of Bani Khalid in any way. -------- Report: Saudi Arabia Presses U.S. on Overthrowing Saddam Hussein Date: January 19, 1992 From AP NEWS NEW YORK (AP) _ Saudi Arabia is pressuring the Bush administration to secretly arm and give intelligence to Iraqi opposition forces so they can work to overthrow Saddam Hussein, a newspaper reported Sunday. The Saudis want the United States to give arms and intelligence to Kurdish rebels in north Iraq, Shiite Muslim fighters in the south and Sunni Muslim opposition forces in central Iraq, the Times said, quoting U.S. and allied officials it didn’t name. ------ Try again, fool
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  9.  @tracer7898  >you never heard of WMD Date: March 2017 Kurdistan’s Interior Minister said on Tuesday the Regional Government since its formation had demanded from the federal government to pay compensation to the families of Kurdish victims who suffered genocide, killing, and displacement from the former Iraqi regime. Rebar Ahmed stressed during the Parliament session that in 2014 “we decided to announce Halabja as a governorate,… but perhaps the big problem facing Halabja is that Iraq is not yet ready to recognize it as a governorate. Therefore, the federal government did not allocate a financial budget for it.” Ahmed continued that when the first Kurdish delegation went to Baghdad, it delivered the Prime Minister a request to compensate the victims of the people of Kurdistan with 380 billion dollars for the crimes committed by Saddam Hussein's regime in Halabja, Anfal and to Barzanis, Faili Kurds, and all victims of Baath crimes. The Halabja chemical attack, also known as the Halabja Massacre or Bloody Friday was a massacre of Kurdish people that took place on 16 March 1988, during the closing days of the Iran–Iraq War in the Kurdish city of Halabja in Iraqi Kurdistan. The attack was part of the Al-Anfal Campaign in Kurdistan, as well as part of the Iraqi Army's attempt to repel the Iranian Operation Zafar 7. It took place 48 hours after the capture of the town by the Iranian Army. A United Nations (UN) medical investigation concluded that mustard gas was used in the attack, along with unidentified nerve agents. The incident was the largest chemical weapons attack directed against a civilian-populated area in history, killing between 3,200 and 5,000 people and injuring 7,000 to 10,000 more, most of them civilians. Preliminary results from surveys of the affected region showed an increased rate of cancer and birth defects in the years afterward. The Halabja attack has been officially defined by the Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal as a genocidal massacre against the Kurdish people in Iraq
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  34.  @StraightShooter71  Prior to 2014 2007: Russian President Vladimir Putin visits Sydney (Australia) for APEC and agrees to 'Cooperation in the Use of Nuclear Energy for Peaceful Purposes' deal with then prime minister John Howard (Liberal-National Coalition). 2008: Australian joint parliamentary committee on treaties objects after Russia invades Georgia. 2010: Then prime minister Julia Gillard (Australian Labor party) endorses Nuclear Cooperation Agreement with Russia's president Dmitry Medvedev. 2012: Australian uranium shipment sent to St Petersburg as part of a trial. 2014: Then prime minister Tony Abbott (Liberal-National Coalition) bans uranium exports after Russian-back separatists in eastern Ukraine shot down Malaysia Airlines flight MH17. ----- 2007 The agreement between Australia and Russia was titled, 'Cooperation in the Use of Nuclear Energy for Peaceful Purposes' and the Labor Opposition supported at it the time with an election looming. While Australia is opposed to domestic nuclear energy, it hailed the prospect of 'assisting Russia to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and atmospheric pollution through the use of nuclear power, especially given Russia's high projected growth in electricity demand'. 'Russia is seeking secure, long-term sources of uranium to satisfy its expanding nuclear energy program,' the deal said. 'There is strong commercial interest in the long term amongst Australian uranium producers in supplying uranium to Russia. 'Russia is proposing at least a two-fold increase in its nuclear energy output by 2020.' 2010 Australia and Russia in November 2010 signed a Nuclear Cooperation Agreement with then prime minister Julia Gillard and president Dmitry Medvedev witnessing the deal in Seoul. 'In addition, it enabled Australian and Russian government officials to ensure that there was a common understanding of the administrative arrangements underpinning the nuclear cooperation agreement.' 2014 In September 2014, then prime minister Tony Abbott banned uranium exports to Russia after Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine shot down Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, killing 298 people including 38 Australians. Australia's and Russia's relationship was warm until MH17.
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