Lite mode. Switch to Full
invert_colors
logout
/war/
Post a Threadarrow_downward
GermanyBernd2023-04-22 13:07:14 · 3yNo. 267224reply
>muh Vikings
17 messages omitted.
JapanBernd2023-05-31 14:32:49 · 3yNo. 272911reply
RussiaBernd2023-06-05 09:19:05 · 3yNo. 273559reply
ugly, and considering its an android, so everything about her body is fake - why would you pick something like that?
Imagine you can pick ANY BODY, and you pick the horendous body type like this??? GiTS is very dumb sometimes, because why would there be any OLD people at all.
Ует in Ghost in the Shell you constantly have old people, as if people gone to the market and thought - "HM, today...i will buy ugly wrinkled and frail impants that would make me look old and slow as fuck".
GermanyBernd2023-06-05 10:11:35 · 3yNo. 273571reply
ポーランドボールを日本語に訳すよりははよ英語覚えような
JapanBernd2023-06-11 14:18:43 · 3yNo. 274418reply
???????

JapanThe Black ProblemBernd2022-08-25 23:41:57 · 4yNo. 220289reply
The blacks are conducting a reign of terror by committing massive amounts of violent crime around the globe.
 
We will not allow a country where people must live in fear of niggers.
 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
I strongly suggest you view, learn and *share* the document available here:
http://naggers.likesyou.org/ or http://naggerz.likesyou.org/ (HTML format, website)(mirrors)(recommended)
https://files.catbox.moe/52salp.pdf (PDF format, 48 MB)(recommended)
https://files.catbox.moe/as5ux6.zip (DOC format, 102 MB)
(67 pages with infographics, lulz, and more)
 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
The jews own the governments and media in the west.
 
The jews use their power to pass anti-white laws, run anti-white media, censor black crimes and intensely promote miscegenation and LGBT.
 
The jews are funding massive illegal migration in USA and Europe.
 
Jews genocided 60 million people, fabricated the holocaust as a distraction, framed Hitler as the bad guy, and then took over the education system to prevent people from finding out.
 
Jews and niggers are the oppressors, not the oppressed.
 
--------------
 
We are in a situation where we cannot rely on or trust the governments.
 
Don’t count on getting the right president in, the elections are not in the hands of the people.
 
It takes over 3 whites worth of tax, per nigger on average, to pay to keep them alive. Jews are paying for their nigger army using your money.
 
---------------
 
The nigger problem must be brought to everyone’s attention until it is fixed.
 
Whites are being punished for acting too civilized and not fighting back.
 
Any diversity laws must be repealed and anti-racism must be abolished.
 
--------------
 
Anyone who is racist against whites must leave the country.
 
If someone dislikes this topic, they’re anti-white.
 
Putin is a Christian and Zelensky is a jew.
 
If you wonder why USA hates Russia, it's because the jews are anti-Russian.
 
->The website version is being DDoS’d by jews, see which mirror works.<-
2 messages omitted.
MoscowBernd2023-05-31 11:26:23 · 3yNo. 272893reply
>watashi wa amurikano baka gaijin yaaay
MoscowBernd2023-05-31 11:26:43 · 3yNo. 272894reply
nice catbox, neko
JapanBernd2023-05-31 12:55:03 · 3yNo. 272899reply
もすかう、もすかう
SloveniaBernd2023-05-31 13:26:42 · 3yNo. 272902reply
I like niggers very much, they are based

ArgentinaBernd2023-05-23 17:48:03 · 3yNo. 271950reply

GermanyBernd2023-05-22 20:32:17 · 3yNo. 271850reply
Well...
SloveniaBernd2023-05-22 22:05:46 · 3yNo. 271860reply
>nnnnnnnoooooooo they're actually LE BAD!!!!!!!

JapanBernd2023-05-22 09:51:33 · 3yNo. 271777reply
大日本帝国のしたことについてどう思いますか?皆さんのご意見をお聞かせください。
大東亜共栄圏とか

GermanyBernd2022-09-28 00:46:15 · 4yNo. 227851reply
>destroys Poccner
6 messages omitted.
MoscowBernd2023-03-17 16:48:22 · 3yNo. 261156reply
*and PORSCHEs, as well as BMWs
GermanyBernd2023-03-17 17:16:47 · 3yNo. 261162reply
What are you trying to tell us?
MoscowBernd2023-05-15 19:03:30 · 3yNo. 270589reply
There's a high probability the Ukr will "kindly request for everything the Europe has", but for some weird reason, Ukrainian officials be driving Porsches and BMWs "donated via a fund of X"
SloveniaBernd2023-05-15 19:10:49 · 3yNo. 270595reply
sorry to inform you, but they already do
some were even caught trying to escape with millions in cash in the trunk of their porsches and BMWs back in february last year

GermanyBernd2023-04-19 17:07:24 · 3yNo. 266860reply
So apparently Russian ships have been found patrolling the Baltiv sea near energy infrastructure like pipelines and off-shore windparks. Worry is that they will do some kind of sabotage.
 
lörs?
MoscowBernd2023-04-19 17:25:15 · 3yNo. 266862reply
Yo don't think about it
SloveniaBernd2023-04-19 17:31:16 · 3yNo. 266864reply
FinlandBernd2023-04-19 17:34:29 · 3yNo. 266865reply
humans live on land, why worry about energy for sea?
MoscowBernd2023-05-15 19:01:04 · 3yNo. 270585reply
dem monkeys have sabotaged eerything ours alreDy blyat

GermanyBernd2023-04-16 13:30:18 · 3yNo. 266369reply
It's over.
8 messages omitted.
SloveniaBernd2023-04-24 11:04:35 · 3yNo. 267595reply
>put pictures of everything instead of wall of text describing each burger
>wordcels get confused
lol
 
also
>Berndsk
NetherlandsBernd2023-04-24 13:00:36 · 3yNo. 267603reply
> millenial enters a grocery store
> can I have one yellow flat thingy, two soft brown-ish long thingies and a box of whitey liquid?
GermanyBernd2023-04-25 12:28:42 · 3yNo. 267748reply
>a box of whitey liquid?
<here you go sir
<*hands you a box of cum*
MoscowBernd2023-05-15 18:59:12 · 3yNo. 270584reply
Glock

United StatesRussia accuses Ukraine of attempt to kill Putin with dronesBernd2023-05-06 20:32:43 · 3yNo. 269403reply
May 3 (Reuters) - Russia accused Ukraine on Wednesday of a failed attempt to assassinate President Vladimir Putin in a drone attack on the Kremlin citadel in Moscow, and threatened to retaliate.
 
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Kyiv had nothing to do with the reported overnight incident.
 
"We don't attack Putin, or Moscow, we fight on our territory," Zelenskiy told a press conference during a visit to Finland, of the war against Russian occupiers.senior aide to Zelenskiy called the accusation a sign that the Kremlin was planning a major new attack on Ukraine, at a time of potential turning point in the war as Kyiv prepares to mount a long-anticipated counteroffensive.
 
Shortly after the Kremlin announcement, Ukraine reported alerts for air strikes over the capital Kyiv and other cities.
 
Russia said that two unmanned aerial vehicles were aimed at the Kremlin. "As a result of timely actions taken by the military and special services with the use of radar warfare systems, the devices were put out of action," a Kremlin statement said.
 
"We regard these actions as a planned terrorist act and an attempt on the president's life, carried out on the eve of Victory Day, the May 9 Parade, at which the presence of foreign guests is also planned."
 
Fragments of drones were scattered in the Kremlin grounds but there were no injuries or damage, it said.
 
Putin himself was safe. The RIA news agency said he had not been in the Kremlin at the time, and was working on Wednesday at his Novo Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow.
 
"The Russian side reserves the right to take retaliatory measures where and when it sees fit," the Kremlin added.
 
Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy head of Russia's Security Council, said the incident "leaves us no option but to physically eliminate Zelenskiy and his clique".Two of numerous videos published on Russian social media channels show two objects flying on the same trajectory toward one of the highest points in the Kremlin complex, the dome of the Senate. The first seemed to be destroyed with little more than a puff of smoke, the second appeared to leave blazing wreckage on the dome.
 
Reuters checks on time and location indicated that the videos could be authentic, though some Western analysts said it was possible Russia might have staged the incident to pin the blame on Kyiv and justify some kind of crushing response.Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said the drone accusation, along with an announcement that Russia had caught suspected saboteurs in Ukraine's Russian-occupied Crimea region, "clearly indicates the preparation of a large scale terrorist provocation by Russia in the coming days".
 
In Washington, the White House said it was aware of reports that Russia had accused Ukraine of attacking the Kremlin with drones to try to kill Putin but could not authenticate the allegations.
 
Russia says it launched its "special military operation" to counter a threat from Kyiv's relations with the West. Ukraine and its allies call it an unprovoked war of conquest by Moscow, derailed by a failed assault on the capital Kyiv early last year and Ukrainian advances in the second half of 2022.
 
Over the past five months, Ukrainian ground forces have kept mostly to the defensive, while Russia launched a huge, largely unsuccessful winter assault, capturing little new ground.
 
KHERSON SHELLED, 18 KILLED
In Ukraine's southern Kherson region on Wednesday, 18 civilians were killed and 46 injured in heavy Russian shelling that hit a hypermarket, a railway station and residential buildings, Ukrainian officials said.
 
At least 12 of those killed were in Kherson city, which has been repeatedly shelled from areas of Kherson province occupied by Russia. The dead included three engineers trying to repair damage to the power grid from earlier Russian bombardments.
 
"When the enemy can achieve nothing on the battlefield, it strikes at peaceful cities," Ukrainian military spokesperson Serhii Cherevatyi said.
 
Elsewhere, oil depots were ablaze in southern Russia and Ukraine alike as both sides escalated a drone war ahead of Kyiv's promised spring counteroffensive against Russian forces.
 
Ukraine said it had shot down 21 of 26 Iranian-made drones in an overnight volley.
 
Ukraine and Russia have both been carrying out long-range strikes since last week in apparent anticipation of a Ukrainian counteroffensive, which Zelenskiy said would begin soon, aided by supplies of sophisticated Western weaponry.
 
Moscow says it has struck military targets, though it has produced no evidence to support this. Kyiv, without confirming any role in incidents in Russia or Crimea, says destroying infrastructure is preparation for its planned ground assault.
 
Zelenskiy visited Finland on Wednesday, his fourth known trip abroad since Russia's full-scale invasion. Leaders of Denmark, Iceland, Norway and Sweden also attended his visit.
 
Zelenskiy said his goals were to beef up Ukraine's military and secure an eventual place in the NATO alliance, a goal endorsed by the five Nordic nations in a statement.
 
Blinken said later the U.S. government had authorised another $300 million worth of arms and equipment for Ukraine.

GermanyBernd2023-04-25 12:15:36 · 3yNo. 267744reply
In Warhammer Fantasy, the Empire is bordered to the east by Kislev, who bears the brunt of Chaos invasions coming further from the east. They are often mad at the empire that they don't receive enough help and have to defend against the chaos invasions alone.
 
The Empire is Europe, Kislev is Ukraine and Chaos is Russia.

GermanyBernd2023-04-22 08:42:02 · 3yNo. 267206reply
>Meanwhile, former Special Forces soldier Snake Plissken is about to be sent into Manhattan after being convicted of robbing the Federal Reserve. Police Commissioner Bob Hauk offers a deal to Snake: if he rescues the President in time for the summit, Hauk will arrange a full presidential pardon. To ensure Snake's compliance, Hauk has him injected with micro-explosives that will sever his carotid arteries in 22 hours. If Snake is successful, Hauk will neutralize the explosives.
 
Life imitates art.

GermanyBernd2023-04-13 17:53:30 · 3yNo. 265740reply
>Moscow French embassy receives bone-filled package from Crimea, deceased Italian film producer Pietro Notarianni listed as sender
 
>The French embassy in Moscow has received a package sent from Crimea and containing some bones and a syringe, as reported by RIA Novosti and Baza. The sender’s name on the package is Pietro Notarianni, a reference to the celebrated Italian film producer who died in 2006.
 
>This is already the third time the embassy receives a parcel of this kind. In June 2022, the French diplomatic mission received another bone-filled package listing the same sender. Later, in December, it got a package with a dead mouse and a spider. The diplomats alerted the police each time they received a suspicious package, but never heard of any inquiry results from the law enforcement.
 
https://meduza.io/en/news/2023/04/13/moscow-french-embassy-receives-bone-filled-package-from-crimea-deceased-italian-film-producer-pietro-notarianni-listed-as-sender
 
Why are they like this?
MexicoBernd2023-04-13 17:58:37 · 3yNo. 265742reply
Nobody but russians helped de Gaulle. I can't image it didn't hurt the heart of ruskies when the french allowed NATO to go balls deep into champ d'elysees specifically to fuck up Russia.
GermanyBernd2023-04-13 18:01:22 · 3yNo. 265744reply
Last time I checked Russkies are still butthurt about Napoleon. I doubt they think about de Gaulle much.
MexicoBernd2023-04-13 18:21:02 · 3yNo. 265762reply
They do remember WHERE napoleon and hitler marched through on the way to Moscow, I can assure you that much.

United StatesBernd2023-03-29 13:15:20 · 3yNo. 263108reply
Back t
 
War in Ukraine
By the Center for Preventive Action
Updated March 16, 2023
icon_expand
Background
Concerns
Recent Developments
PreviousNext
Background
Armed conflict in eastern Ukraine erupted in early 2014 following Russia’s annexation of Crimea. The previous year, protests in Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, against Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s decision to reject a deal for greater economic integration with the European Union (EU) were met with a violent crackdown by state security forces. The protests widened, escalating the conflict, and President Yanukovych fled the country in February 2014.
 
One month later, in March 2014, Russian troops took control of the Ukrainian region of Crimea. Russian President Vladimir Putin cited the need to protect the rights of Russian citizens and Russian speakers in Crimea and southeast Ukraine. Russia then formally annexed the peninsula after Crimeans voted to join the Russian Federation in a disputed local referendum. The crisis heightened ethnic divisions, and two months later, pro-Russian separatists in the eastern Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk held their own independence referendums.
 
Armed conflict in the regions quickly broke out between Russian-backed forces and the Ukrainian military. Russia denied military involvement, but both Ukraine and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) reported the buildup of Russian troops and military equipment near Donetsk and Russian cross-border shelling immediately following Crimea’s annexation. The conflict transitioned to an active stalemate, with regular shelling and skirmishes occurring along frontlines separating Russian- and Ukrainian-controlled eastern border regions.
 
Beginning in February 2015, France, Germany, Russia, and Ukraine attempted to kickstart negotiations to bring an end to the violence through the Minsk Accords. The agreement framework included provisions for a ceasefire, withdrawal of heavy weaponry, and full Ukrainian government control throughout the conflict zone. Efforts to reach a diplomatic settlement and satisfactory resolution, however, were largely unsuccessful.
 
In April 2016, NATO announced the deployment of four battalions to Eastern Europe, rotating troops through Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland to deter possible future Russian aggression elsewhere on the continent, particularly in the Baltics. In September 2017, the United States also deployed two U.S. Army tank brigades to Poland to further bolster NATO’s presence in the region.
 
In January 2018, the United States imposed new sanctions on twenty-one individuals–including a number of Russian officials–and nine companies linked to the conflict in eastern Ukraine. In March 2018, the U.S. Department of State approved the sale of anti-tank weapons to Ukraine, the first sale of lethal weaponry since the conflict began. In October 2018, Ukraine joined the United States and seven other NATO countries in a series of large-scale air exercises in western Ukraine. The exercises came after Russia held its own annual military exercises in September 2018, the largest since the fall of the Soviet Union.
 
In October 2021, months of intelligence gathering and observations of Russian troop movements, force build-up, and military contingency financing culminated in a White House briefing with U.S. intelligence, military, and diplomatic leaders on a near-certain mass-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine. The only remaining questions were when the attack would take place and whether the United States would be able to convince allies to act preemptively. Both were answered on February 24, 2022, when Russian forces invaded a largely unprepared Ukraine after Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized a “special military operation” against the country. In his statement, Putin claimed that the goal of the operation was to demilitarize and denazify Ukraine and end the alleged genocide of Russians in Ukrainian territory.
 
In the days and weeks leading up to the invasion, the Joe Biden administration made the unconventional decision to reduce information-sharing constraints and allow for the broader dissemination of intelligence and findings, both with allies—including Ukraine—and publicly. The goal of this strategy was to bolster allied defenses and dissuade Russia from taking aggressive action. Commercial satellite imagery, social media posts, and published intelligence from November and December 2021 showed armor, missiles, and other heavy weaponry moving toward Ukraine with no official explanation from the Kremlin. By the end of 2021, more than one hundred thousand Russian troops were in place near the Russia-Ukraine border, with U.S. intelligence officials warning of a Russian invasion in early 2022. In mid-December 2021, Russia’s foreign ministry called on the United States and NATO to cease military activity in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, commit to no further NATO expansion toward Russia, and prevent Ukraine from joining NATO in the future. The United States and other NATO allies rejected these demands and threatened to impose severe economic sanctions if Russia took aggressive action against Ukraine.
 
In early February 2022, satellite imagery showed the largest deployment of Russian troops to its border with Belarus since the end of the Cold War. Negotiations between the United States, Russia, and European powers—including France and Germany—failed to bring about a resolution. In late February 2022, the United States warned that Russia intended to invade Ukraine, citing Russia’s growing military presence at the Russia-Ukraine border. President Putin then ordered troops to Luhansk and Donetsk, claiming the troops served a “peacekeeping” function. The United States responded by imposing sanctions on the regions and the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline a few days later. Nevertheless, just prior to the invasion, U.S. and Ukrainian leaders remained at odds regarding the nature and likelihood of an armed Russian threat, with Ukrainian officials playing down the possibility of an incursion and delaying the mobilization of their troops and reserve forces.
 
On February 24, 2022, during a last-ditch UN Security Council effort to dissuade Russia from attacking Ukraine, Putin announced the beginning of a full-scale land, sea, and air invasion of Ukraine targeting Ukrainian military assets and cities across the country. U.S. President Joe Biden declared the attack “unprovoked and unjustified” and issued severe sanctions against top Kremlin officials, including Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov; four of Russia’s largest banks; and the Russian oil and gas industry in coordination with European allies. On March 2, 141 of 193 UN member states voted to condemn Russia’s invasion in an emergency UN General Assembly session, demanding that Russia immediately withdraw from Ukraine.
 
Since the 2014 annexation of Crimea, Ukraine has also increasingly been the target of thousands of cyberattacks. In December 2015, more than 225,000 people lost power across Ukraine in an attack on electricity generation firms, and, in December 2016, parts of Kyiv experienced another power blackout following a similar attack targeting a Ukrainian utility company. In June 2017, government and business computer systems in Ukraine were hit by the NotPetya cyberattack, which has been attributed to Russia; the attack spread to computer systems worldwide and caused billions of dollars in damages. In February 2022, Ukrainian government websites, including the defense and interior ministries, banking sites, and other affiliated organizations were targeted by distributed denial-of-service attacks alongside the Russian invasion.
 
Concerns
The current conflict has severely strained U.S.-Russia relations and increased the risk of a wider European conflict. Tensions are likely to increase between Russia and neighboring NATO member countries that would likely involve the United States, due to alliance security commitments. The conflict will also have broader ramifications for future cooperation on critical issues like arms control; cybersecurity; nuclear nonproliferation; global economic stability; energy security; counterterrorism; and political solutions in Syria, Libya, and elsewhere. Additionally, Russia’s increasing isolation has not only destabilized global energy and resource markets but also pushed the country to seek stronger strategic ties with those states (e.g., China) still willing to partner with it, largely in opposition to the West. The war has also compounded other global crises, with military operations and violence hindering the delivery and distribution of much-needed aid, including food, and exacerbating an already severe shortage of available global humanitarian assistance and resources.
 
Recent Developments
As the initial Russian invasion slowed, long-range missile strikes caused significant damage to Ukrainian military assets, urban residential areas, and communication and transportation infrastructure. Hospitals and residential complexes also sustained shelling and bombing attacks. In late March 2022, Russia announced that it would “reduce military activity” near Kyiv and Chernihiv. By April 6, Russia had withdrawn all troops from Ukraine’s capital region. In the aftermath of the Russian withdrawal from Kyiv’s surrounding areas, Ukrainian civilians described apparent war crimes committed by Russian forces, including accounts of summary executions, torture, and rape.
 
On April 18, Russia launched a new major offensive in eastern Ukraine following its failed attempt to seize the capital. By May, Russian forces took control of Mariupol, a major and highly strategic southeastern port city that had been under siege since late February. Drone footage published by Ukraine’s far-right Azov Battalion revealed the brutality of the Russian offensive, which had reduced the city to rubble and caused a massive humanitarian crisis. Indiscriminate and targeted attacks against civilians in the city, including an air strike on a theater and the bombing of a maternity hospital, also amplified allegations against Russian forces for international humanitarian law violations.
 
Since the summer of 2022, most fighting has largely been confined to Ukraine’s east and south, with Russian cruise missiles, bombs, cluster munitions, and thermobaric weapons devastating port cities along the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. The Russian seizure of several Ukrainian ports and subsequent blockade of Ukrainian food exports compounded an already acute global food crisis further exacerbated by climate change, inflation, and supply chain havoc. Prior to the conflict, Ukraine had been the largest supplier of commodities to the World Food Program (WFP), which provides food assistance to vulnerable populations. In July, Russia and Ukraine signed an agreement to free more than twenty million tons of grain from Russian-controlled Ukrainian ports. The first grain shipments to leave Ukraine since the Russian invasion departed from Odesa on August 1; they arrived in Russian-allied Syria on August 15, although their originally presumed destination had been Lebanon.
 
In mid-August, the southern shift of the war’s frontline sparked international fears of a nuclear disaster at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant along the Dnieper River. The largest nuclear plant in Europe, the Zaporizhzhia facility was seized by Russian forces in the earliest stages of the war. Escalating tensions between the plant’s Ukrainian staff and its Russian occupiers have also raised uncertainty regarding its continued safe operation. Fighting in the territory surrounding the facility also raises concerns that the plant could be critically damaged in the crossfire: shelling of the plant’s switchyard has already led to a city-wide black-out in Enerhodar, where the plant is located. Representatives of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), including Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi, visited the plant in early September to assess the threat of a nuclear accident. In a report [PDF] on the findings of its inspection, the IAEA called for “a nuclear safety and security protection zone” around the plant and for “all military activity” in the adjacent territory to cease immediately.
 
As of early September, Ukrainian forces have been able to make strong advances in the northeast and mounted a revitalized southern counteroffensive. Although Russia continues to hold onto much of Ukraine’s southeastern territory, Ukraine claims to have retaken significant territory in the Kharkiv region, surprising Russian forces and cutting off important supply lines. Russia has indicated that it plans to send reinforcements—about ten to twenty thousand soldiers—to the eastern front to combat the new Ukrainian offensive. Russia also announced a partial mobilization on September 21 to refurbish the Russian army, prompting thousands of Russians to flee amid antiwar protests, and moved to annex four occupied territories: Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia. In his speech announcing the illegal annexation of Ukrainian territory, Putin also made an overture of possible nuclear escalation, claiming that the United States had set a precedent by dropping nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II.
 
By July 2022, the UN Human Rights Office recorded over five thousand civilian deaths and over six thousand civilian injuries since Russia’s full-scale military invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022. The violence has internally displaced nearly seven million people and forced over six million to flee to neighboring countries, including Moldova and Poland, a NATO country where the United States and other allies are helping to accommodate the influx of refugees.
 
The U.S. continues to commit military assistance to Ukraine; following Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s address to the U.S. Congress on March 16, 2022, Biden announced an additional $800 million in military assistance to Ukraine. Since Russia’s invasion, the United States has committed about $4.6 billion in security assistance, including heavy weapons and artillery, to the country. The United States has also dramatically increased U.S. troop presence in Europe, bringing the total to more than one hundred thousand. On September 8, 2022, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken pledged continued support for Ukraine during a trip to Kyiv. The United States’ most recent installment of aid was announced in early October and included $625 million worth of arms. While the United Nations, Group of Seven member states, EU, and others continue to condemn Russia’s actions and support Ukrainian forces, Russia has turned to countries like North Korea and Iran for intelligence and military equipment.
 
Beginning on October 10, Russia launched its most extensive attacks on Ukraine in months, striking military and energy facilities, as well as several civilian areas during rush hour. The attacks spanned fourteen regions and included assaults on the capital. This renewed Russian offensive comes after Ukrainian forces destroyed part of the only bridge connecting the occupied Crimean Peninsula to Russia.
GermanyBernd2023-04-11 11:24:33 · 3yNo. 265231reply
Schizo post

GermanyUkraine War Thread - March '23Bernd2023-03-18 01:17:55 · 3yNo. 261232reply
Arrest warrant edition
9 messages omitted.
RomaniaBernd2023-03-19 04:26:10 · 3yNo. 261441reply
Why do alternatives to pedochan always have to be ugly, shitty to use, full of faggy animations and javascript shit or all of the above?
GermanyBernd2023-03-19 11:03:21 · 3yNo. 261461reply
Welcome to 2023
GermanyBernd2023-03-19 16:22:31 · 3yNo. 261472reply
Putin is not going to get arrested and sent to the Hague. But his little apparatchiks like the woman who was also indicted are now feeling afraid. You can't participate in the Putin regime and expect to not suffer any repercussions anymore.
GermanyBernd2023-03-25 22:14:48 · 3yNo. 262643reply
arrow_upward