ttystikk
Well-Known Member
Remember who controls foreign policy in the West; weapons makers. The game being played is "look at Russia and be afraid!!!" And then the weapons makers can bully the government into buying ever more hardware to boost profits. The West needs another war so it can sustain the justification to sell more weapons. They are looking for anyone to start a war with; even China.Hi Bro!
I wanted to know from you, so to speak, firsthand. What is the situation in the United States now? So many incredible events, the world is seething again, like the peak of the Cold War. In Ukraine, around the clock on TV, they scare the invasion of Russia. This has already passed on to Europe. Martial law has been declared in Poland. In Latvia, in the center of the city, a military exercise was held! I've never seen anything like this in my life.
I assure you that Russia will not attack! This is nonsense, believe me. I understand perfectly well that you were also intimidated back then, during the Cold War. This is the same.
I saw the Russian news, they laugh at all the panic that started in Europe. How easy it is to confuse Europe. How easy it was to intimidate her. But in fact, nothing has happened yet ... Do you remember I told you that there were exercises "West 1981", in which all the countries of the socialist bloc took part. This is deja vu, Bro.)))) After these teachings, Reagan called the USSR an evil empire.)) So what? Did the USSR attack the whole world?)))
Then there was Afghanistan too, but the Russians came out in the afternoon, with unfolded flags, a column,
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flowers were thrown at them.
(In the photo, the general commander of the troops in Afghanistan crosses the border. At the border he is met by his son)
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After the USSR left Afghanistan, the Afghan government held out for another three years. And it fell because Yeltsin betrayed Afghanistan without providing it with material support. Therefore, the Taliban seized power.
This is history, and history is a stubborn thing.
A Forever Foreign Policy Debate
It was predictable. As America’s longest war—the 20-year conflict in Afghanistan—wound down, a debate over the nation’s foreign policy wound up. One might
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