Suppiah wrote:. Don't be jealous - they are not filled with four wives.![]()
Jealous


Suppiah wrote:. Don't be jealous - they are not filled with four wives.![]()
Actually you're quite right. For my part, I shouldn't have joined in this. It's immature and you won't hear any more of it from me.Suppiah wrote:Mods can something be done about mentally deranged idiots harassing members about location (as if that certifies patriotism) and forming absurd conclusions and launching attacks on that basis? I am not going to waste space or bandwidth replying to them.
AFAIK, thanks to good mods and by and large good community here, there is no standard, permitted or official opinion for each thread and anyone not following that can be abused about his patriotism or racial origins. Nor is there an official requirement of location disclosure.
Please quote me where I said everyone staying outside India are not patriotic.
You implied that I said all Indian origin people outside are not patriotic and wrote that post in response.Oh, diyar birather, may I pls schedule that for AFTER I respond to even more insistent questions from ArunS on equally important issues?
It depends on what the key objectives of the nation are. If the key objectives of this nation is to have a strong nuclear deterrent along with the freedom to have a measurable independent foreign policy, then Russia is the key along with keeping U.S influence away from key areas, as the western states will never allow India to have ICBMs and Pokhran-3,4 etc. If the key objectives of this nation does not include the above then it doesn't have to be closer to Russia. We do not need time to answer this.Against Russia because it is going to fail, regardless of morals, backfire on russia and if our stupid politicians again bet on wrong horse, we also join the loser.
But many European leaders believe that Saakashvili acted rashly and brought down much of the destruction on his own head when he sent his troops to take over the autonomous ethnic enclave South Ossetia.
Media reports quoted a senior French official as saying, "On one side you have a bear, and on the other a little roquet," using the latter word for a small yapping dog.
Although I fall in the 1%, there is something to be said about the "wisdom of the crowd".Suppiah wrote:All of these are and should be welcome. Though I should say a,b,c cover about 99% of the posts here showing remarkable consensus among BRFites which is a bit worrying should this point of view turn out to be wrong!
So you didn't find that quote. And it appears you have never indulged in a debate.Dear krish.pdf:
People come here to relax and shoot the breeze. Coming here with a chip up your musharraf, acting hostile to one and all, and hyperventilating "patriotism" cra*, is more effective than EDITED and achieves the same result, (figuratively speaking, of course).
I suggest that you change your user handle to avoid further ridicule (POLITELY PHRASED, of coursewe are all soo nice! ) - it's just pretty permanent, the effect of doing what you tried to do with your demands that postors reveal their home base, passport number, birth sign, Patriotism Card, etc. Sort of like having a name like "Saakahsvili".
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No one gives a pakistan what your hangups are, or whether you "implied" this or that. But everyone remembers what you did - can't help it.
Change your user handle and you can be Born Again.
Cheers!
Please let me..Please explain why your post has come in this discussion. It is inappropriate. Regardless of the merit in the post
Continued..."(Turkey) must act like a NATO member ... if it wants its place in Trans-Atlantic relations. It became a member years ago, and that means Turkey has to support the steps that NATO takes," a high-level U.S. official was quoted by Sabah daily as![]()
Russia to up naval presence in Syria“The majority of Ukrainians support Russia. There is only one person in Ukraine who does not support the Russian Federation – this person carries the title of the Ukrainian President. This is the most important fundamental contradiction of the Ukrainian policy, not the Yushchenko-Tymoshenko opposition. This contradiction may explode Ukraine’s policy,” Sergei Markov said in an interview with Novy Region news agency.
August 28th, 2008
Putin accuses U.S. in Georgia
Posted: 11:47 AM ET
SOCHI, Russia (CNN) — Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, insisting that his country was not responsible for the conflict with Georgia, Thursday accused the United States of orchestrating the conflict for political purposes.
In an exclusive interview with CNN in the Black Sea city of Sochi, Putin said his defense officials had given him serious reason to believe that U.S. citizens had been engaged in combat with Russian forces in the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia.
The Russian premier said this implied the conflict was a Washington operation — one aimed at providing a U.S. presidential candidate with a talking point intended to distract Americans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the struggling U.S. economy.
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino blasted Putin’s statements, saying, “To suggest that the United States orchestrated this on behalf of a political candidate just sounds not rational.”
–From CNN’s Matthew Chance
The incendiary warning on Western military involvement in Georgia - where NATO nations have long played a role in training and equipping the small state - came in an interview with Dmitry Rogozin, a former nationalist politician who is now ambassador to the North Atlantic Alliance.Moscow has issued an extraordinary warning to the West that military assistance to Georgia for use against South Ossetia or Abkhazia would be viewed as a "declaration of war" by Russia.
The extreme rhetoric from the Kremlin's envoy to NATO came as President Dmitry Medvedev stressed he will make a military response to US missile defence installations in eastern Europe, sending new shudders across countries whose people were once blighted by the Iron Curtain.
And Moscow also emphasised it was closely monitoring what it claims is a build-up of NATO firepower in the Black Sea.
"There is no need to fear Russia's actions, they are not aggressive... They are aimed at maintaining balance in the world order, and are extremely important for maintaining peace and security globally," Putin said.
Russia conducted successful tests this week of a new ballistic missile with MIRV and a cruise missile allegedly capable of penetrating any operational and future missile defenses.
"We conducted a test of a new strategic ballistic missile with multiple warheads, and of a new cruise missile, and will continue to improve our resources," Putin said.
Russia, concerned over Europe's refusal to ratify the re-drafted version of the accord, and acceptance by certain EU states of U.S. missile shield plans on the continent, proposed on Monday holding an emergency CFE conference in Vienna on June 12-15.
"We are fully observing the provisions of the [CFE] treaty and have pulled out all heavy weaponry from the European part of Russia. We have reduced our armed forces by 300,000 personnel in the past few years, but what about our partners?" Putin said.
"They are inundating eastern Europe with new weapons - a new base in Bulgaria, another base in Romania, a [missile interceptor] site in Poland, a radar in the Czech Republic," the president said. "What are we supposed to do? We cannot just observe all this and continue to keep our obligations under the treaty."
The Russian empire — czarist and Soviet — expanded to its borders in the 17th and 19th centuries. It collapsed in 1992. The Western powers wanted to make the disintegration permanent. It was inevitable that Russia would, in due course, want to reassert its claims. That it happened in Georgia was simply the result of circumstance.
Moscow did not have to concern itself with the potential response of the United States or Europe; hence, the invasion did not shift the balance of power. The balance of power had already shifted, and it was up to the Russians when to make this public. They did that Aug. 8.
By invading Georgia as Russia did (competently if not brilliantly), Putin re-established the credibility of the Russian army. But far more importantly, by doing this Putin revealed an open secret: While the United States is tied down in the Middle East, American guarantees have no value. This lesson is not for American consumption. It is something that, from the Russian point of view, the Ukrainians, the Balts and the Central Asians need to digest. Indeed, it is a lesson Putin wants to transmit to Poland and the Czech Republic as well. The United States wants to place ballistic missile defense installations in those countries, and the Russians want them to understand that allowing this to happen increases their risk, not their security.
The war was far from a surprise; it has been building for months. But the geopolitical foundations of the war have been building since 1992. Russia has been an empire for centuries. The last 15 years or so were not the new reality, but simply an aberration that would be rectified. And now it is being rectified.
"Normally battleships do not deliver aid and this is battleship diplomacy, this does not make the situation more stable," said Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov.
"U.S. citizens were indeed in the area in conflict," Putin said. "They were acting in implementing those orders doing as they were ordered, and the only one who can give such orders is their leader."
From the above link:Mohan Raju wrote:Georgia War Shows Russia Army Now a `Force to Be Reckoned With'
I wish India had a leader like Putin.A day earlier, Putin urged Parliament to keep increasing spending because ``only a battle-ready, well-equipped military with strong morale can defend'' Russia's ``sovereignty and integrity.''
President Mikhail Saakashvili said he was frightened to leave Georgia to attend the EU summit on the crisis.
"If I leave Georgia, the Russians will close our airspace and prevent me from returning home," he said.
Were there any western 'embedded journalists' with the Russian forces in Georgia? I am surprised Russia allowed that.Johann wrote:- The Russian army has a long, long way to go before its conventional forces are even a shadow of what they were in the Cold War.
Embedded journalists saw a very high rate of mechanical breakdowns, particularly among armoured units.