Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
The Russians need to order some of the latest mobiles, pagers and walkie talkies from Mossad.
Paywall free: https://archive.is/IBAdFCan't believeGTX didn't post this already. He must be sleeping.
Russia rolled out a Soviet howitzer from the 1940s that Moscow technically shouldn't have in the first place
The D-74, an old artillery system exported by the Soviets, has reappeared in Donetsk, leading to suspicions that North Korea may have sent the gun.www.businessinsider.com
This could get interesting...Seoul demands North Korean troops leave Russia immediately
South Korea tells Russia's ambassador they are prepared to respond with "all measures available".www.bbc.com
As I had mentioned earlier, Russia bringing North Korean regulars into the conflict will open the door for other nations to do the same and it appears that South Korea, who has a vested interest in this latest move, will be their Huckleberry.
And they are not NATO but have integrated their equipment with NATO specs, such as their fighters and their wicked K-2 tank.
Russia has been threatening to escelate the conflict and it looks like it's about to happen, except I don't think this is how Moscow imagined it.
Indeed."Be careful what you wish for -- you just might get it" comes to mind.
Anne is brilliant. I really enjoy both were writings and when she appears in videosWARSAW, Poland (AP) — The prominent American journalist and historian Anne Applebaum urged continued support for Ukraine as she accepted a prestigious German prize on Sunday, arguing that pacifism in the face of aggression is often nothing more than appeasement.
Applebaum made her appeal to an audience in Frankfurt, where she was awarded the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade. She was joined by her husband, Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski, who like his wife is a strong voice on the international stage for supporting Ukraine as it defends itself against Russia's brutal invasion.
"If there is even a small chance that military defeat could help end this horrific cult of violence in Russia, just as military defeat once brought an end to the cult of violence in Germany, we should take it," Applebaum said.
Many Germans have embraced an ethos of pacifism as a result of their nation's aggression under Adolf Hitler during World War II. And many have misgivings now about supplying weapons to Kyiv, fearing Russia and worried that it could cause the war to spread beyond Ukraine's borders to the rest of Europe.
"Some even call for peace by referring solemnly to the 'lessons of German history," Applebaum noted, according to a transcript of her speech published by the prize organization.
"As I am here today accepting a peace prize, this seems the right moment to point out that 'I want peace' is not always a moral argument," Applebaum said. "This is also the right moment to say that the lesson of German history is not that Germans should be pacifists."
"On the contrary, we have known for nearly a century that a demand for pacifism in the face of an aggressive, advancing dictatorship can simply represent the appeasement and acceptance of that dictatorship."
She argued that the "real lesson" from German history should be that Germans "have a special responsibility to stand up for freedom and to take risks in doing so."