Comments by "" (@tekannon7803) on "Sky News" channel.

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  14. With respect, Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Europe and NATO, Michael Ryan has the upper hand, a royal flush in knowledge of international affairs compared to me. I am an artist living 2,000 kilometers from Kiev where the war seems to be getting closer by the day. I see things this way: Prime Minister Modi is someone who the world's leaders should be listening to. Modi treats everyone equally on the world stage and he has to stand as a bridge to Russian President Putin for geopolitical reasons. We must not forget that international politics are a no-man's-land where rules are often disregarded. By being able to speak to Putin's ear, India has resolved the tensions with China on its border. This is worth millions of dollars and thousands of lives. Food is next and India has 1.4 billion people to feed and Russian wheat comes in awful handy on that issue. It's a balancing act that Prime Minister Modi has done extremely well and yes; he's playing both sides against each other and coming out smelling like a rose. What comes across most from Modi is his peaceful calm in the growing international storm brewing all around us. This is how the world's leaders should act. Lastly, Prime Minister Johnson's trip to the besieged Ukrainian President Zelensky was worth a thousand tanks. By walking the streets of Kiev, Johnson showed himself to smiling and grateful Ukrainians that Great Britain will not let them down. There are a list of countries now saying the same thing. For my money, Mariupol is the keystone city of the Ukraine. It must not fall and certainly never get into Russian hands or Kiev will be next. It's an opinion.
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  45. Sky News' news presenter S.J. asks the sort of quality questions only top TV journalists can come up with and Sean Bell delivers his consistently, well-researched excellent analyses in this latest update on the ever-escalating and puzzling war in the Ukraine. The attack on Reni should be the wake-up call for every NATO country and its allies. It looks like Putin is getting ready to lay down his hand and put his cards on the table in this 12,000-hour plus poker game whose only limit is what the amount either side's blood and treasure they are willing to commit to the fight. The hard man of the Kremlin undoubtably believes he is going to bluff everyone else into folding their hands and giving up so he can claim the blood-soaked pot and give everyone his now famous ghoulish grin. What is worrying of course is what the Belarusian dictator's hand will be in this crooked game of drones that is evolving beyond anyone's ability to predict the outcome of an invasion that is being defined by the war crimes the Russian military has been committing since 24.02.23. The Ukraine/Russian conflict is a 21st century war that should bring shame to all of us, because our world has seen enough cruelty and senseless killing and violence in the name of empire building. This is Putin's fiasco and it will be forever remembered as a war where civilians once again have borne the brunt of the cowardly attacks on civilian residences and infrastructure. There is too much smoke in the air of the smoldering ruins of grain silos to see clearly what lies ahead, but I think we had all better keep our eye on what President Zelensky's cards are going to be that he lays on the table, because he needs a Royal Flush to win this sordid war game and crush the joker that Putin has become and forever will be...
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  46. Vice-Marshal Sean Bell spells it out loud and clear that this war is only growing in importance. His remark how Putin has intervened in the battle of the steel works in Mariupol is interesting. Hitler intervened constantly in the battles his troops were fighting. I remember reading that when the Germans were 30 kilometers from Moscow and could have easily taken the capital city, Hitler stubbornly over-rode his generals and refused to let them go in until they had cleaned up the back country of rebel fighters. As a consequence, it gave the Russians time to re-fortify their city and the Germans were never able to take it. On the other hand, Hitler ordered Paulus who was surrounded in Stalingrad not to surrender. Paulus disobeyed the order and 100,000 German soldiers were captured and marched off to the gulags for the rest of the war. Only 5 thousand troops returned when the war was over. Clearly, Hitler's plan would have not lost all of Paulus' troops. But now; coming back to the war in the Ukraine, what I think needs to be done---and I'm copying what Alexander the Great did in one epic battle against the Persians who outnumbered him---was to drive a wedge between them and come back on their flank with a surprise attack. I'm an artist not a military strategist, but I believe the Ukrainians should drive a wedge though Mariupol and cut the land bridge the Russians are trying to establish in two. It would dash Putin's plan and allow the Ukrainians to mop-up the divided Russian troops. It's an opinion.
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