World War 3?

jimmyD

"It ain't the heat, it's the humility."
Sep 11, 2013
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Anybody else getting nervous over what is going down?

Washington is fueling the violent protests in Ukraine with our taxpayer dollars. Washington has no money for food stamps or to prevent home foreclosures, but it has plenty of money with which to subvert Ukraine.

Roberts cited a December 2013 speech by neocon Victoria Nuland at the National Press Club, in which she boasted that the U.S. had spent $5 billion to reshape the future of Ukraine.

What Nuland means by Ukraine's future under EU overlordship is for Ukraine to be looted like Latvia and Greece and to be used by Washington as a staging ground for US missile bases against Russia.

It was fools like Nuland playing the great game that gave us World War I. World War III would be the last war. Washington's drive to exploit every opportunity to establish its hegemony over the world is driving us all to nuclear war. Like Nuland, a significant percentage of the population of western Ukraine are Russophobes. I know the case for Ukrainian dislike of Russia, but Ukrainian emotions fueled with Washington money should not direct the course of history. No historians will be left to document how gullible and witless Ukrainians set the world up for destruction.

“Putin is viewed by American adversaries and competitors as someone who has stood up to American influence and gotten away with outflanking the United States,” he said. “Adversaries take note of this and they sense weakness and that’s dangerous. Dissidents also take note.”

The senior State Department officials said there was no “point in making hollow threats” toward Moscow. In the wake of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the American public has no interest in getting into a direct – or indirect – military confrontation with Russia in the Ukraine, Syria or virtually any other nation. The better option is to quietly work with Putin where possible behind the scenes.

“What we’re trying to do is work through diplomatic channels with the Russians,” said one senior State Department official. “That doesn’t mean going public with some tough rhetoric that might please some domestic constituencies. This is not an era where tough talk gets the job done.”

Publicly baiting Putin could prompt him to launch a military operation in Ukraine to defend Russian citizens as he did in Georgia in 2008.
 
We won't be the first to get involved military wise...
 
We won't be the first to get involved military wise...
Count on the French?

I'm reading that Crimea region may want to separate and may have been a part of Russia long ago. Like in Georgia that region is populated by folks of Russian decent. Maybe just break it off and everyone stays happy...
 
Not a snow balls chance in hell. One country is going to call another country's bluff and that country will be humiliated.
 
We won't be the first to get involved military wise...

I'm already geared up and ready for a one man D-day 2.0

260fatguy.jpg
 
Sarah Palin predicted that if Obama was elected president that Russia would invade the Ukraine.
 
Not a snow balls chance in hell. One country is going to call another country's bluff and that country will be humiliated.
So who's move is it next? When the Russians went into Georgia the States did nothing. The Russians are in Ukraine I'm guessing the States shouldn't get involved as it isn't their backyard again. Oh the whole terrorist thing this past decade was a nice distraction but this was always the big ticket/main event. I'm thinking if the states jumps in it is definitely game on as it is on Russia's door step and they'll go all in. Similar to the Cuban missile crises reversed.
 
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Something will happen someday. War always happens throughout history at some point. My dick is bigger than yours, you know.
 
http://www.news.com.au/technology/s...g-man-john-titor/story-fn5fsgyc-1226727524350

“A world war in 2015 killed nearly three billion people,” he wrote.

“The people that survived grew closer together. Life is centred on the family and then the community. I cannot imagine living even a few hundred miles away from my parents.”

“There is no large industrial complex creating masses of useless food and recreational items. Food and livestock is grown and sold locally. People spend much more time reading and talking together face to face. Religion is taken seriously and everyone can multiply and divide in their heads.”
 
I'm not nervous about WW3. We will do nothing. We'll allow Russia to do whatever they want. Like a previous post said, we are downsizing our military.
 
We didn't do jack s*** when the Russians nearly had Georgia on the palms of their hands. lol

Obama is someone who couldn't, "speak softly, and carry a big stick." as previous Presidents have.
 
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If sh!t hits the fan we really only have two options.

1. Let it happen and sit back and watch
2. Just blow everyone off the map

It really doesn't make sense to send our troops to their death like we did in past wars when we have the technology to level the globe. If it makes the world end in nuclear warfare so be it. We're probably better off than putting our kids through the hate we've seen. Either come to terms with peace or hit the reset button.
 
Nato should move in and protect the rest of Ukraine. Crimea is Ukraine. The Russians have no business being there anymore than being in Georgia.
 
Nato should move in and protect the rest of Ukraine. Crimea is Ukraine. The Russians have no business being there anymore than being in Georgia.
I think Crimea wants to break away and wanted the former Prime Minister/President that was pro Russia. I'm pretty sure the rest of Ukraine's people are fine with a split especially to avoid bloodshed but "other" interests from outside the country want what they want and there is money to be made.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimea

With the collapse of the Soviet Union, Crimea became part of the newly independent Ukraine, which led to tensions between Russia and Ukraine.[nb 1] With the Black Sea Fleet based on the peninsula, worries of armed skirmishes were occasionally raised. Crimean Tatars began returning from exile and resettling in Crimea.

On 26 February 1992, the Verkhovniy Sovet (the Crimean parliament) renamed the ASSR the Republic of Crimea and proclaimed self-government on 5 May 1992[29][30] (which was yet to be approved by a referendum held 2 August 1992[31]) and passed the first Crimean constitution the same day.[31] On 6 May 1992 the same parliament inserted a new sentence into this constitution that declared that Crimea was part of Ukraine.[31]

Crimea's southernmost point is the Cape of Sarych on the northern shore of the Black Sea, currently used by the Russian Navy.
On 19 May, Crimea agreed to remain part of Ukraine and annulled its proclamation of self-government but Crimean Communists forced the Ukrainian government to expand on the already extensive autonomous status of Crimea.[17]:587 In the same period, Russian president Boris Yeltsin and Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk agreed to divide the former Soviet Black Sea Fleet between Russia and the newly formed Ukrainian Navy.[32]

Following the ratification of the May 1997 Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and Partnership on friendship and division of the Black Sea Fleet, international tensions slowly eased. However, in September 2008, the Ukrainian Foreign MinisterVolodymyr Ohryzko accused Russia of giving out Russian passports to the population in the Crimea and described it as a "real problem" given Russia's declared policy of military intervention abroad to protect Russian citizens.
 
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