Why did Russia feel they needed to come out and support the murder of
defenseless people by a repressive regime? It missed a great opportunity to
shut up.
Another idiotic Putin blunder...like backing Yanokovich.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4633859.stm
BTW Brooks, did you see how even Radio Free Europe has been driven to
conclude that Saakashvili's revolution in Georgia had nothing to do
with democracy or making Georgians better off, and everything to do
with giving Saakashvili power to loot the country?
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/06/847aa7e2-b863-4184-93cf-3a63a9196f4f.html
And speaking of Yanokovich, do you think he would have bungled
Ukrainian energy policy so badly as to create lines for gasoline in
Ukraine, the way Yulia did?
And you criticize Putin for being skeptical of the value of
Western-encouraged "fruit revolutions". Looks like Mark Brooks the
supporter of mass-murdering Islamist lunatics threatened by female
literacy and serial prevaricator cares only for venting hatred, spite
and venom at Russia.
Stuart Wilkes
Larry писал(а):
> Just like old Soviet times...Russia insists on making another unneccesary
> political blunder by supporting Ukbek bloody supressions.
>
> Why did Russia feel they needed to come out and support the murder of
> defenseless people by a repressive regime?
Because Tashkent is our old, old stronghold and ally at the region.
Because Usbeks have thrown away US military crap and turned to Russia.
Recently Karimov agreed to give Russian busyness preferable access to
Uzbek oil and gaz deposits. Generaly speaking, US mindless propaganda
really pissed off Karimov. No more colored revolutions. It has to stop
now.
>It missed a great opportunity to
> shut up.
Whom?
> Another idiotic Putin blunder...like backing Yanokovich.
LOL. The politics of Yuschenko and Timoshenko gives completely new
definition for the word "blunder". After they stole 8 billion m3 of
Russian gas (in transit to Europe, BTW) Ukraine has quite a chance to
buy gas per $130-$160 per 1000 m3 rather than the usual preferential
$50.