PUTIN puts fighter jets on alert
27 Thursday Feb 2014
Posted in Europe πͺπΊ, International News, Russia π·πΊ
27 Thursday Feb 2014
Posted in Europe πͺπΊ, International News, Russia π·πΊ
27 Thursday Feb 2014
Crimea government buildings seized http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-26364891
Posted by The Template News, Current Affairs and Sport Website | Filed under Europe πͺπΊ, International News, Russia π·πΊ, USA πΊπΈ
26 Wednesday Feb 2014
Russia puts military on high alert as Crimea protests leave one man dead
26 Wednesday Feb 2014
Ukraine not East-West fight, says US http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-26347042
25 Tuesday Feb 2014
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Caucasus, Crimea, Putin, Putin and Russia, Russia and the West, Russia π·πΊ, Ukraine, Ukraine Crisis

TEMPLATE ANALYSIS
ANALYSIS – The decline in relations between Russia and the West began with the collapse of the Soviet Union, when Moscow having turned its back on Communism looked to its former Cold War foe for guidance. The year was 1991, and what followed in the months and years after can today be seen for what it is – a great lost opportunity.
Washington sent in its academics, including one Jeffrey Sachs who came up with a revolutionary idea of his own called shock therapy – opening up the state and its assets to market forces.
Within seven years, a superpower was bankrupt and today’s Russia is arguably still suffering from the after effects both socially and economically. Russians regard that dark period in their history as a lost decade. It was a time when a forward thinking and humanitarian leader like Boris Yelsin, who pulled his troops out of Grozny and continued to enact reforms of the state and economy, was made to look like a drunk fool as Russia lurched from one crisis to another. He, like Mikhail Gorbachev before him, had not believed the Soviet propaganda about the bad old West.
And like Gorbachev, he was reduced to looking like a modern Sultan dangling at the end of a puppet master’s string.
When Vladimir Putin stepped into the breach, he brought a form of order as well as respectability. But all that has come at a terrible cost – in the killing fields of the Caucasus where he installed a modern day Khan, and now with the fall of his man in Ukraine could a war be looming over the future of the Crimea? Looking at the scenes of ethnic Russians in Crimea clearly rejecting recent events in Kiev and seeking guidance from Kremlin that remains a possibility as Vladimir Putin uses all the tools at his disposal to preserve a vital pillar of Russia’s security and identity.
24 Monday Feb 2014
Posted in Europe πͺπΊ, International News, Russia π·πΊ, USA πΊπΈ
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Russia steps up Ukraine rhetoric http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-26327211
21 Friday Feb 2014
Posted in Europe πͺπΊ, International News, Russia π·πΊ, USA πΊπΈ
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Ukraine protests: end nears for Viktor Yanukovych despite concessions
20 Thursday Feb 2014
EU MOVES TO STOP KIEV SLAUGHTER – http://huff.to/1h1EIdv
20 Thursday Feb 2014
Posted in Europe πͺπΊ, International News, Russia π·πΊ, USA πΊπΈ
White House and EU foreign ministers consider Ukraine sanctions β video
20 Thursday Feb 2014
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Kiev, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Russia π·πΊ, Template News, Ukraine, Ukraine Crisis, Ukraine Kiev Protests

ANALYSIS –Β When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991,Β there was bloodshed, perhaps not as much as feared, but it was still awful with wars following the breakup of Yugoslavia and the attempt by the people of the Caucasus to finally rid themselves of the long bondage of Moscow that resulted in bloody failure. One of the first European nations to emerge free of the old Soviet bonds was of course Poland. And the pictures on our television screens of protesters in Kiev clashing with police, armed with riot gear using live ammunition to disperse the crowds, suggests that that other European nation to a share a border with Russia, called Ukraine, is once again playing out its long struggle for freedom. Of course, Vladimir Putin for whom the collapse of the Soviet Union was the biggest geopolitical disaster of the end of the last century is not going to let go of a country where he has stationed his Black Sea fleet for another 100 years and where Russian speakers form a majority towards the east anymore than he was going to let go of Chechnya. But this time he faces a powerful foe namely the European Union backed by the US who will not tolerate the kind of widespread and indiscriminate slaughter by ‘security forces’ that was witnessed in the killing fields of Grozny. So, is a split inevitable and would that be the best solution?
Western commentators clearly think so, whilst those from Russia don’t think there’s anything to talk about – President Victor Yanakovich has been urged to do his job properly namely disperse the crowds of Nazis, thugs and hooligans that are being trained by the West and who have been warned to stay away from the Crimea.
And of course, there’s the nationalists who are now on the streets spilling blood as well as attacking the police and who would never accept the breakup of their country. Ukraine may be the last European nation to break free of Russia but it is going to come at an awful cost.