Comments by "PNH 6000" (@PNH-sf4jz) on "Russian Soldiers Keep Turning On Each Other" video.
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This is diplomacy, Russian style.
1st Chechen War. Battle of Grozny (1994 to 1996)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Grozny_(1994%E2%80%931995)
"During the First Chechen War, Grozny was the site of an intense battle lasting from December 1994 to February 1995 and ultimately ending with the capture of the city by the Russian military. Intense fighting and carpet bombing carried out by the Russian Air Force destroyed much of the city. Thousands of combatants on both sides died in the fighting, alongside civilians, many of whom were reportedly ethnic Russians; unclaimed bodies were later collected and buried in mass graves on the city outskirts. The main federal military base in Chechnya was located in the area of Grozny air base.[citation needed]"
"Chechen guerrilla units operating from nearby mountains managed to harass and demoralize the Russian Army by means of guerilla tactics and raids, such as the attack on Grozny in March 1996, which added to political and public pressure for a withdrawal of Russian troops. In August 1996, a raiding force of 1,500 to 3,000 militants recaptured the city in a surprise attack. They surrounded and routed its entire garrison of 10,000 MVD troops, while fighting off the Russian Army units from the Khankala base. The battle ended with a final ceasefire and Grozny was once again in the hands of Chechen separatists. The name was changed to Djohar in 1997 by the President of the separatist Ichkeria republic, Aslan Maskhadov. By this time most of the remaining Russian minority had fled.[46] "
2nd Chechen War. Battle of Grozny (1999β2000)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Grozny_(1999%E2%80%932000)
"The 1999β2000 battle of Grozny was the siege and assault of the Chechen capital Grozny by Russian forces, lasting from late 1999 to early 2000. The siege and fighting left the capital devastated. In 2003, the United Nations called Grozny the most destroyed city on Earth.[10] Between 5,000[8] and 8,000 civilians[9] were killed during the siege, making it the bloodiest episode of the Second Chechen War."
The following details give some insight into the way that RuZZians wage WAR against other countries and states. There is definitely an identifiable trend in their methods; mainly murder and destruction. It appears to be the way that RuZZians do diplomacy.
List of wars involving Russia since dissolution of USSR in 1991
1991β1993 Georgian Civil War
1992 Transnistria War
1992 East Prigorodny Conflict
North Ossetia-Alania
1992β1997 Tajikistani Civil War
1993 Russian spillover into Azerbaijan
1994β1996 First Chechen War
1999 War of Dagestan
1999β2009 Second Chechen War
2008 Russo-Georgian War
2009β2017 Insurgency in the North Caucasus
2014βpresent Russo-Ukrainian War
2015βpresent Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War
2018βpresent Central African Republic Civil War
https://www.britannica.com/event/Soviet-invasion-of-Afghanistan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet%E2%80%93Afghan_War
"The SovietβAfghan War (1979β1989) was a conflict wherein insurgent groups known collectively as the Mujahideen, as well as smaller Maoist groups, fought a nine-year guerrilla war against the military occupation of the Soviet Union and their satellite state, the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (DRA), throughout the 1980s, mostly in the Afghan countryside.
"The Mujahideen were variously backed primarily by the United States, Pakistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, China, and the United Kingdom; the conflict was a Cold War-era proxy war. Between 562,000[47] and 2,000,000 Afghans were killed and millions more fled the country as refugees,[51][52][48][49] mostly to Pakistan and Iran. Between 6.5%β11.5% of Afghanistan's 1979 population of 13.5 millions is estimated to have perished in the conflict. The war caused grave destruction in Afghanistan, and it has also been cited by scholars as a contributing factor to the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War.[53][54] "
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Corruption Perceptions index
https://images.transparencycdn.org/images/CPI2021_Report_EN-web.pdf
Countries scoring equal to or more poorly than Ukraine on the Corruption Perceptions Index of transparency International are:
Equal scoring 32: UKRAINE, Eswatini, {each ranking 122}
scoring 31: Gabon, Mexico, Niger, Papua New Guinea, {each ranking 124}
scoring 30: Azerbaijan, Bolivia, Djibouti, Dominican Republic, Kenya, Laos, Paraguay, Togo, {each ranking 128}
scoring 29: RUSSIA, Angola, Liberia, Mali, {each ranking 136}
Ukraine has a lot of work to do in order to shake off the mantel of corruption that they inherited from the USSR. They have shown, in the period since the invasion and WAR waged against them by RuZZia, that they are committed to their identity, integrity of state, independence and being able to work together as a unified country. I believe that is a demonstration of commitment to the principles of democracy and continuing the move away from that corruption that remained from their period under the USSR and which is still endemic in the present Russian Federation.
"In authoritarian contexts where control rests with a few, social movements are the last remaining check on power. It is the collective power held by ordinary people from all walks of life that will ultimately deliver accountability." statement by Daniel Eriksson Chief Executive Officer, Transparency International Secretariat
Other countries from Higher score to lower {2021}:
88 Denmark, Finland, New Zealand, 85 Norway, Singapore, Sweden, 84 Switzerland, 82 Netherlands, 81 Luxembourg 80 Germany,
** 78 United Kingdom, 74 Austria, Canada, Estonia, Ireland, Iceland, 73 Australia, Belgium, Japan, Uruguay, 71 France,
** 69 United Arab Emirates, 68 Taiwan, 67 United States of America, 62 South Korea, Portugal, 61 Spain, Lithuania,
** 59 Latvia, 57 Slovenia, 56 Italy, Poland 55 Fiji, Georgia, Czech Republic, Malta, Mauritius, 53 Saudi Arabia, 52 Slovakia,
** 47 Croatia, 46 Cuba, 46 Armenia, Greece, Jordan, Namibia, 48 Malaysia, Montenegro, 45 China, Romania, Vanuatu, 44 Jamaica, Tunisia, South Africa, 43 Hungary, Kuwait, 42 Bulgaria, Bahrain, 41 Belarus, 40 India,
** 39 Colombia, Ethiopia, Kosovo, Morocco, North Macedonia, Tanzania, Vietnam, 38 Argentina, Brazil, Indonesia, Serbia, Turkey, 37 Kazakhstan, Sri Lanka, 36 Moldova, Panama, Peru, 35 Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Mongolia, Thailand, 33 Algeria, Egypt, Nepal, Philippines, Zambia, 32 Ukraine, 31 Mexico, Papua New Guinea, 30 Azerbaijan, Bolivia, Djibouti, Kenya, Laos, Paraguay,
** 29 Angola, Liberia, Mali, Russia, 28 Myanmar, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, 27 Uganda 26 Bangladesh, Madagascar, Mozambique, 25 Guinea, Guatemala, Iran, Tajikistan, 24 Lebanon, Nigeria, 23 Honduras, Iraq, Cambodia, Zimbabwe, 22 Eritrea, 21 Congo, 20 Haiti, Nicaragua, Sudan, Chad,
** 17 Libya, 16 Afghanistan, North Korea, Yemen, 14 Venezuela, 13 Somalia, Syria, 11 South Sudan
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Your entitled to your point of view.
Personally I think that Ukraine is far more valuable to Europe as a part of Europe, if that is what Ukrainians wish to be a part of, than to be absorbed into the RuZZian Federation. If Ukraine is incorporated into the RuZZian Federation, much of Europe will, with good reason, feel at as much risk as RuZZia claims to be in the reverse situation. I believe that there is far greater risk and chance of other European countries being attacked by RuZZian forces, particularly given RuZZia's performance over the last eight years and more so since February 2022. There appears to be virtually zero risk of Russia being attacked by NATO forces, or those of any other country in Europe or across the Atlantic or the North Pole. From a commercial and financial perspective, there is likely to be a great deal of disruption to and dislocation of trade engagements, if Russia succeeds.
However, no one issue should determine the process by which decisions regarding support for Ukraine are made. Some of the types of issues to be considered are political, social, cultural, commercial and trade, the right of a people to determine their own direction, not having that imposed on them by another counntry.
The world-wide repercussions include the precedent whereby one country can invade and force another country to submit to the will of the invader.
I am sure there are numerous other issues from personal issues to international considerations.
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Your English is fine { unfortanately English is the only language that I speak, so you are ahead of me } and your message is very much acknowledged, appreciated and valued, from a lot further away, in Australia. I like the sentiments that you have expressed and can feel that your ideas, mine and many others are alike. I find it incredible that there has been such a high level of unanimity developed, among such a wide range of people, in so many countries, as a result of this war. That is a very good outcome of a very bad situation. I think that it has also made me more aware of other people in conflict zones around the world and the need to extend support where we can and where it is apropriate to do so.
We hope that this totally unnecessary, futile and wasteful war, with its heavy cost in lives and resources, will end soon. I believe that we hope that Ukraine is successful in retaining its independance and sovereignty, its identity, dignity and freedom. The courage, tenacity and determination demonstrated by the Ukrainian people are qualities that have been and are inspiring.
I really like the statement that you offered, "So the war didnβt even (just) unite our goverments, the war united the citizens like me und You too. In very much (many) countries are amazing people too, thinking like me, fearing like me, hoping like me. Like the song βWe are the worldβ."
With Best Wishes to you and your family and those for whom you most care, PNH
With respect to your message, we can extend those wishes to the "People for Whom WE most Care around the World."
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I decided that the computer translation would not carry my message as well as in English, so I hope that my message will be clear and easily understood.
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