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Post by francegas on Mar 17, 2023 17:21:28 GMT
Propaganda 🙄. Putins a good guy. Someone disagrees. 😶 "The International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant on Friday against Vladimir Putin, accusing him of being responsible for war crimes committed in Ukraine. The court said in a statement that the Russian president "is allegedly responsible for the war crime of unlawful deportation of population (children) and that of unlawful transfer of population (children) from occupied areas of Ukraine to the Russian Federation". It also issued a warrant for the arrest for Maria Alekseyevna Lvova-Belova, Russia's commissioner for children’s rights, on similar allegations." Problem is unless there is an unlikely coup in Russia I really don't see Putin in the dock at the International Criminal Court in The Hague any time soon.
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Post by stuart1974 on Mar 17, 2023 17:26:13 GMT
Someone disagrees. 😶 "The International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant on Friday against Vladimir Putin, accusing him of being responsible for war crimes committed in Ukraine. The court said in a statement that the Russian president "is allegedly responsible for the war crime of unlawful deportation of population (children) and that of unlawful transfer of population (children) from occupied areas of Ukraine to the Russian Federation". It also issued a warrant for the arrest for Maria Alekseyevna Lvova-Belova, Russia's commissioner for children’s rights, on similar allegations." Problem is unless there is an unlikely coup in Russia I really don't see Putin in the dock at the International Criminal Court in The Hague any time soon. Highly doubt he'll stand trial and he'll deflect it as the ICC being western stooges, but it does set a standard. Those lower down the pecking order may get given up at some point in the future. Still, they got Milosovic eventually.
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Post by stuart1974 on Mar 22, 2023 16:57:54 GMT
Just been reading the Ukrainian thread on the other forum. Nobby talking sense for once, must have cribbed it from elsewhere. 😉
I'm with Cheshiregas regarding his exchange with Trymer.
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Post by stuart1974 on Mar 22, 2023 22:49:50 GMT
Some press reports suggesting the Russians are moving T54 and T55 tanks to Ukraine. They are 1950s and 60s vintage.
I'm sure they still have numbers of newer tanks, begs the question, why? Are they trying to use up Ukrainian resources by willingly let the older ones be lost?
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Post by footballfan on Mar 26, 2023 0:04:12 GMT
Problem is unless there is an unlikely coup in Russia I really don't see Putin in the dock at the International Criminal Court in The Hague any time soon. Highly doubt he'll stand trial and he'll deflect it as the ICC being western stooges, but it does set a standard. Those lower down the pecking order may get given up at some point in the future. Still, they got Milosovic eventually. Russia doesn’t recognise the ICC and neither does the USA. In fact the USA has a law stating if ANY United States citizen is charged or indicted by the ICC then the USA can take military action against the Netherlands. I think it’s called (in layman’s terms) ‘The Invasion of The Hague Act’. The hypocrisy of the Americans is nauseous, applauding and encouraging the ICC for pursuing Putin whilst refusing to acknowledge it’s existence legally in American courts.
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Post by stuart1974 on Mar 26, 2023 0:34:54 GMT
Highly doubt he'll stand trial and he'll deflect it as the ICC being western stooges, but it does set a standard. Those lower down the pecking order may get given up at some point in the future. Still, they got Milosovic eventually. Russia doesn’t recognise the ICC and neither does the USA. In fact the USA has a law stating if ANY United States citizen is charged or indicted by the ICC then the USA can take military action against the Netherlands. I think it’s called (in layman’s terms) ‘The Invasion of The Hague Act’. The hypocrisy of the Americans is nauseous, applauding and encouraging the ICC for pursuing Putin whilst refusing to acknowledge it’s existence legally in American courts. There are many countries that either don't recognise or have withdrawn. Medvedev, Putin's protege, has openly suggested bombing The Hague and threatened the judges.
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Post by footballfan on Mar 26, 2023 13:57:38 GMT
Russia doesn’t recognise the ICC and neither does the USA. In fact the USA has a law stating if ANY United States citizen is charged or indicted by the ICC then the USA can take military action against the Netherlands. I think it’s called (in layman’s terms) ‘The Invasion of The Hague Act’. The hypocrisy of the Americans is nauseous, applauding and encouraging the ICC for pursuing Putin whilst refusing to acknowledge it’s existence legally in American courts. There are many countries that either don't recognise or have withdrawn. Medvedev, Putin's protege, has openly suggested bombing The Hague and threatened the judges. The ICC has long been a tool used by the West to punish countries and people who are deemed a threat to USA and UK economic interests. It’s no coincidence that the ICC only ever seems to prosecute ‘enemies’ of the West. The defendants are almost exclusively Russian allies or Africans. Check out how many Serbian defendants who have died in ICC custody in suspicious circumstances so didn’t even get to say their piece in a ‘court of law’. Only last year the UK SAS was found to have allegedly committed war crimes but where are the arrest warrants for these people? At the end of the day the ICC really is a kangaroo court….. a very dangerous one.
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Post by stuart1974 on Mar 26, 2023 15:01:40 GMT
There are many countries that either don't recognise or have withdrawn. Medvedev, Putin's protege, has openly suggested bombing The Hague and threatened the judges. The ICC has long been a tool used by the West to punish countries and people who are deemed a threat to USA and UK economic interests. It’s no coincidence that the ICC only ever seems to prosecute ‘enemies’ of the West. The defendants are almost exclusively Russian allies or Africans. Check out how many Serbian defendants who have died in ICC custody in suspicious circumstances so didn’t even get to say their piece in a ‘court of law’. Only last year the UK SAS was found to have allegedly committed war crimes but where are the arrest warrants for these people? At the end of the day the ICC really is a kangaroo court….. a very dangerous one. The ICC doesn't initiate the process though, do they? If there is evidence then someone can refer it. Irrespective of bias or inconsistencies, the truth is Russia has been accused of war crimes. I suspect that when things come to a head in Ukraine, Putin won't be given up or arrested.
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Post by stuart1974 on Mar 26, 2023 19:51:17 GMT
Reports that Dmitri Lisitsky has been killed in Ukraine. He was involved in the massacre of Ukrainians in 2014 during the Battle of Ilovaisk. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_IlovaiskIn other news, not sure China will be too happy with the suggestion Russia will station nuclear weapons in Belarus.
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Post by stuart1974 on Apr 2, 2023 18:00:46 GMT
One to watch, could be an escalation. "One person has died and at least 16 people have been injured in a blast in a cafe in St Petersburg, Russia. Pro-war Russian military blogger Vladlen Tatarsky was killed in the explosion, the Russian interior ministry said. Tatarsky, whose real name was Maxim Fomin, had more than 560,000 followers on Telegram and was one of the most prominent of the influential military bloggers who have provided an often critical running commentary on Russia's invasion of Ukraine." news.sky.com/story/russian-military-blogger-killed-and-six-injured-in-blast-at-st-petersburg-cafe-reports-12848536
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Post by stuart1974 on Apr 12, 2023 19:57:45 GMT
British soldiers are clapping, I think those saluting are probably Canadians. Training is a multinational affair. Must be quite a sombre moment not knowing what will happen to them.
In other news, there is that report of the beheading, sickening. Also the leaked documents, could beva genuine leak or deception a la Operation Mincemeat. Either way, there will be a counter offensive by Ukraine at some point. Up to 100,000 troops involved if news is to be believed.
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Post by stuart1974 on Apr 17, 2023 9:45:43 GMT
Don't know if anyone here has followed the news in Sudan, there is a link with the RSF paramilitaries and the Wagner Group and Putin. Certainly with Wagner seemingly doing their own thing in Ukraine outside of Russian army control and its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, looking like he's positioning himself in case Putin falls. This is an interesting piece in the Telegraph: "The fighting in Khartoum and elsewhere in the country was triggered by clashes between General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, head of the Sudanese armed forces, and General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, or “Hemedti” for short. Burhan and Hemedti staged a coup in 2021, seizing power from the transitional council put in place following the ousting of the Islamist dictator Omar al-Bashir. Hemedti is commander of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group formed from the Janjaweed militias that helped conduct, under Bashir, the Darfur genocide, which is estimated to have killed hundreds of thousands of people in western Sudan. Rather unsurprisingly, the RSF has been linked to Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Wagner Group, which has reportedly helped train and equip them. Wagner is believed to have been brought into Sudan by Bashir to help shore up his faltering regime in 2017, following a meeting with Putin in which Bashir promised to make the country Russia’s “key to Africa”. Among his plans was a Red Sea base for the Russian navy at Port Sudan, a Wagner-supported project. Ever since, Wagner has supplied large quantities of weapons and equipment to Sudan, including military trucks, amphibious vehicles and two transport helicopters. And after the downfall of Bashir, the Russian mercenary group realigned with Burhan and especially Hemedti. It continues to operate the Meroe Gold company, which reportedly exploits Sudan’s mines and smuggles vast quantities of gold out of the country, supposedly lining Prigozhin’s pockets and denying much-needed revenue to Sudan. For Putin, this would help efforts to evade Western sanctions, allowing him to fuel his illegal war in Ukraine. Now, the cash-rich and heavily-armed RSF could be about to wreak havoc on the North African region. Egypt’s President el-Sisi sees a stable regime in Khartoum as in his country’s vital interests. He will be looking askance at the capture on Saturday by the RSF of Egyptian troops in Sudan for joint exercises, even if Hemedti has assured their safe return at some point in the future. There will also be serious alarm in Cairo about the potential impact of this power struggle on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam project, for which Khartoum’s support is needed to address Egypt’s fears over water supply through the Nile. Ultimately, this is such a major strategic issue that, should the conflict spiral out of control, Egypt may feel the need to assert itself more forcefully, as might Ethiopia. Moreover, Chad, Eritrea and South Sudan could face a deluge of refugees, adding to their own internal struggles, and a power vacuum will enable extremist groups across the region to take advantage of what is happening. It was, after all, in Sudan that Osama bin Laden lived for five years, between 1991 and 1996. Opening up vast swathes of the desert for the next Bin Laden is something that would obviously undermine British and American security, too. Thus, Vladimir Putin, either by accident or design, has helped to unleash a wave of violence that could have disastrous consequences not just for Sudan and North Africa, but the world. His failed invasion of Ukraine has empowered the Wagner Group, which uses that clout to plunder African nations and stir up trouble. His desperation for money since the West implemented severe sanctions has made Russian state support for such illicit actions a necessity. All this will come at a heavy price. Indeed, Sudan may be just the first African nation to implode under Russian influence. In the Central African Republic, Mozambique, Libya and Mali, Russian mercenaries have worked to reinforce existing conflicts, prop up despotic regimes, suppress efforts towards democracy, loot natural resources, secure strategic advantage for Moscow and drive out Western influence. The forces unleashed by their efforts will not be easily contained." archive.is/2DhkH
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Post by stuart1974 on Apr 17, 2023 10:56:33 GMT
Just as an addendum to the above, France led an anti IS force in the Mali, Chad and CAR area. There is a good reason why they were told to leave and it's not because they were not up to it or not doing a good job.
In other news, Russian courts have sentenced a Russian MP to 25 years for 'treason' and an American journalist has been arrested.
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Post by stuart1974 on May 4, 2023 12:08:47 GMT
Drone strike on The Kremlin, inside job, Ukraine or someone else? I know which I think is more likely.
On which note, I bet the Met and other security services are watching this weekend's proceedings with concern, plenty of politicians attending.
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yattongas
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Post by yattongas on May 5, 2023 8:29:16 GMT
Drone strike on The Kremlin, inside job, Ukraine or someone else? I know which I think is more likely. On which note, I bet the Met and other security services are watching this weekend's proceedings with concern, plenty of politicians attending. What do you think ….. inside job ?
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Post by stuart1974 on May 5, 2023 9:15:23 GMT
Drone strike on The Kremlin, inside job, Ukraine or someone else? I know which I think is more likely. On which note, I bet the Met and other security services are watching this weekend's proceedings with concern, plenty of politicians attending. What do you think ….. inside job ? Possibly or a lone venture. Don't really think it's Ukraine under US instructions as they are stating.
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Post by Gassy on May 5, 2023 10:13:21 GMT
What do you think ….. inside job ? Possibly or a lone venture. Don't really think it's Ukraine under US instructions as they are stating. A drone would take how long to fly from Ukraine to Moscow, 4 hours? Can they even last that long? The telling part of the story for me is when Russia said they can respond how they like, when they like. Admission of guilt IMO. If Ukraine actually tried to assassinate Putin there would be an immediate reaction, not one so calm & collected
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Post by stuart1974 on May 5, 2023 10:38:48 GMT
Possibly or a lone venture. Don't really think it's Ukraine under US instructions as they are stating. A drone would take how long to fly from Ukraine to Moscow, 4 hours? Can they even last that long? The telling part of the story for me is when Russia said they can respond how they like, when they like. Admission of guilt IMO. If Ukraine actually tried to assassinate Putin there would be an immediate reaction, not one so calm & collected There is no way a drone that size could be flown far, especially with munitions. It would have to be set off quite close. The question to ask is who benefits? Russia proper is almost certainly off limits to Ukraine for various political, PR and military reasons. In a separate event, Wagner are threatening to 'up sticks' from Bakhmut. If genuine, it's a serious problem for Putin. Could be a bluff, though. Watch this space.
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Post by stuart1974 on May 10, 2023 15:43:32 GMT
Poland wants to rename Kaliningrad. "On Tuesday, Poland's Committee on Standardisation of Geographical Names Outside the Republic of Poland said it was recommending with immediate effect that the city be known in Poland as Królewiec and the exclave's wider area as Obwód Królewiecki. It said the name Kaliningrad was unrelated to either the city or the region and had an "emotional and negative" resonance in Poland. Mikhail Kalinin was one of six Soviet Politburo signatories to the order to execute more than 21,000 Polish prisoners of war in the forests of Katyn and elsewhere in 1940. Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its propaganda efforts had prompted Poland to re-evaluate controversial "imposed names", the committee added. "Each country has the right to use in its language traditional names constituting its cultural heritage, but it cannot be forced to use names unacceptable by it in its language," the committee said. Moscow initially blamed the Nazis for the Katyn Massacre when the Germans discovered the mass graves in 1943. Because Moscow imposed a communist regime on Poland after World War Two, the relatives of the victims were unable to publicly discuss or find anything out about the crime for five decades. Russia only acknowledged its responsibility for the massacre in 1990. Although the state committee's recommendation is not binding, it is expected that Polish state bodies will now refer to Kaliningrad as Królewiec. Poland's foreign ministry has issued a positive assessment of the name change." www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-65545636
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Post by stuart1974 on May 10, 2023 17:36:10 GMT
About time.
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