Putin Recognizes Donbass Republics, Sends Russian Military to 'Denazify' Ukraine

After repeatedly condemning foreign weapons shipments while seeking to destroy them, Russian President Vladimir Putin has issued his own fresh warning on Wednesday, telling countries which are now attempting to intervene in various ways that Moscow will "quickly" respond in kind with devastating strikes.

According to Reuters news wire, the Russian leader said that the West has "pushed Ukraine into a conflict with Russia" and that "if someone wants to meddle in Ukraine, Russia's response will be quick."

"We have all the tools for this. The kind that no one else can boast of right now. And we won't brag. We will just use them if needed," Putin said according to a state media translation. He vowed a "swift response" in this scenario.

On Tuesday the Kremlin and London had traded threats, following the ultra-provocative words of the UK's armed forces minister James Heappey, who said in radio interview that it is "completely legitimate" for Ukraine to strike Russian territory.

 
Which is irrelevant unless the empire wants to use that mass delusion to achieve some geopolitical objective, which they don't have the balls to do. Even in their first instance of direct confrontation with Russia, the CIA still tried to hide themselves behind the Ukrainians; to keep their "plausible deniability" in place. They can try all the false flags they want (and they have been); it's not making a difference to the facts on the ground. In fact, it may even be detrimental, because Russia has been using the attacks as justification to escalate the conflict further.

Not to mention that there's a small, but significant percentage of the population that will increasingly start to see through the war propaganda, especially as their vaunted western standard of living crumbles along with the US economy. Polls have already shown that over 60% of the US population did not accept Russia as an excuse for soaring petrol prices.

Nope, the western media's power, like that of the US empire, is fast drawing to a close, because they think that their audiences are too docile to question the BS that they themselves don't even believe. People only believe lies if the lies make them comfortable. Take the comfort away, and people rapidly rediscover an appreciation for truth.
Lies just don't seem to work as well these days, Lies are like our fiat currencies, the world is full to the brink with them, but their value is depreciating, truth is always coherent and collinear, and what little is out there has more power than non-collinear lies. The collinear lies from the authority follower and NPC/organic portal types can be largely disproven with a little digging or even just some common sense as most of their arguments are emotional arguments that are not based on reason or real information.

Pierre goes into some depth on the nature of entropy and lies in "Earth Changes: The Human-Cosmic Connection", (part 1) - Chapter 41: The Truth Factor.
 
Apparently it's confirmed by Polish gas supplier, PGNiG.
So the fun starts now. Soon we won't be able to pay for the basic needs. Putin did what Morawiecki was yelling for but wouldn't do anyway, and now everyone is surprised. "We are prepared for cutting off the Russian supplies completely" he said, and now is establishing a crisis office and reassuring everyone 🤣
How to live?

And what is interesting is that some people in the country are happy about this situation. It doesn't matter if we go bankrupt, freeze or starve to death, it doesn't matter how big the sacrifice is, we Poles will make it just to destroy Russia. This is the mentality : "I'll freeze my ears off to spite mum''. But the consequences of such a mentality will be tragic.
 
RT:

Austria will pay in rubles for Russian gas – official

The country has accepted new payment terms and opened a ruble account, Chancellor Karl Nehammer has announced

Apr. 27, 2022

Austria has accepted the new ruble gas payment mechanism, introduced by Russia earlier this month, and will abide by it, Chancellor Karl Nehammer announced on Wednesday.

We, that is, [state energy company] OMV, accepted the terms of payment, as did the German government. They [the terms] were found to be in line with the terms of the sanctions. For us, this was important,” Nehammer said at a press conference.

He added, however, that Austria still supports Ukraine-related anti-Russia sanctions.

“Before the fake news of Russian propaganda steps in,” he stressed, “of course, OMV continues to pay for gas supplies from Russia in euros. Austria adheres to the point of view and supports the jointly adopted EU sanctions.

According to the official, Austrian oil and gas company OMV has already opened an appropriate account with a Russian bank for transferring payments. Nehammer noted that during his recent trip to Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin explained the new payment mechanism and assured him of further gas supplies in full.

On March 31, Putin signed a decree that defined a new procedure for paying for Russian gas supplies by buyers from ‘unfriendly’ countries, which placed sanctions on Moscow in response to its military operation in Ukraine.

The news puzzled Russia’s gas buyers, who feared that they would be expected to pay for the commodity in Russian rubles. However, according to the document, buyers will be able to pay in their currency of choice but will have to open a ruble account in Russia’s Gazprombank so that the payments can be converted into rubles and reach Russian gas providers.

I don't know if I have this figured out but it seems that, per the article above, a sanctions 'loophole' for buying Russian gas is the government can't open a Rouble account in Russia but a private company can. In the case of Poland and Bulgaria, both gas companies are state owned (PGNiG and Bulgargaz) and because the sanctions are issued from the state, they cannot open Rouble accounts because it would be seen as the govenment buying Russian gas. So, I guess, if they want to continue to receive gas from Russia, they will either have to drop the sanctions or privatise their gas companies so that the private companies can open Rouble accounts.

Bulgaria's gas situation is a bit interesting since, according to Wikipaedia:
Bulgaria is believed to have extensive natural gas resources but due to a successful campaign against hydraulic fracturing does not, as of 2014, permit exploration or exploitation of this possibility.

Bulgaria consumes about 3 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas. Once the Gas Interconnector Greece-Bulgaria natural gas pipeline becomes operational in September 2022, it will allow Bulgaria to receive about 1 bcm from Azerbaijan. The country imports over 90% of its natural gas from Russia via the Turk Stream pipeline under a 10-year contract, which is set to expire at the end of 2022. Due to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Bulgaria's deputy prime minister Asen Vasilev on 19 March said that the country would not hold talks to renew the contract. In April 2022, it was announced that Russia will suspend sending gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland, in exchange for their refusal to pay in roubles. In response to this, Bulgaria, is currently in talks of attempting to import liquefied natural gas through Turkey and Greece.

Russia halts gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland

Gazprom has blamed Sofia and Warsaw’s failure to pay for fuel in rubles

Apr. 27, 2022

Gazprom, Russia’s main natural gas supplier, has announced a complete halt in gas exports to Bulgaria and Poland on Wednesday after the two countries refused to make payments in rubles. According to a statement, supplies will not resume until Sofia and Warsaw comply with the new terms.

The Saint Petersburg-based energy giant warned that should Bulgaria and Poland start siphoning off Russian transit gas intended for other countries, it will reduce supplies by the amount Sofia and Warsaw has illegally withheld.


In a statement early on Wednesday, the company explained that “as of the end of the working day on 26 April, Gazprom Export had not received ruble payments for gas deliveries in April from the companies ‘Bulgargaz’ (Bulgaria) and PGNiG (Poland),” as required under President Vladimir Putin’s decree dated 31 March. It noted that “payments for gas delivered since 1 April must be made in rubles,” and that both companies had been notified of this “in a timely manner.”

Last month, Putin required states which have imposed sanctions on Russia, and are still importing its gas, to use the Russian currency for transactions. Several buyers have signaled a willingness to accept Moscow’s demands. On Monday Uniper, Germany’s largest importer of Russian gas, said it would be possible to pay for future supplies without breaching Western sanctions.

Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer has expressed a similar point of view, as has the Hungarian government.

Uniper revealed on Monday that there was a way to walk the thin line between complying with EU sanctions and meeting Russia’s requirement for ruble payments. A company representative said in an e-mailed statement that “according to an initial and therefore still non-binding assessment, we still consider a compliant future payment processing to be feasible.”

Poland has refused to follow this procedure and on Tuesday sanctioned Gazprom, which owns a 48% stake in the Polish company that co-owns the Yamal-Europe gas pipeline. The 4,000-kilometer route transports gas from the Yamal Peninsula and western Siberia to Germany and Poland via Belarus.

Speaking to the radio station RMF on Wednesday, Petr Naimsky, a Polish government official overseeing the country’s strategic energy infrastructure, said Warsaw would no longer buy gas from Russia.

While Bulgaria’s current 10-year contract with Gazprom was set to expire at the end of this year, the ministry’s statement said that Bulgargaz would not finish the contract if it had to pay in rubles, stating that the setup “poses significant risks to Bulgaria.” Sofia relies on Russia for around 90% of its gas, with the remainder coming from Azerbaijan.

Last month, a spokesman for state energy firm Bulgargaz told reporters that, as of this summer, Baku will provide the country’s entire supply, albeit at a higher price. Further ahead, Bulgaria’s government plans to connect the country to an as-yet-unfinished Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) terminal in Greece, where gas will be imported by ship, likely from the US.


On a different note about the recant attacks in Transnistria, there was an article posted on RT 3 days ago on the history of the area. It's a bit long (20-30 mins. read?) and it helps if you have some previous knowledge, which I didn't. So, while I don't know how accurate it is, I still found this 'crash-course' to be helpful.

Bloodshed in Transnistria: A brutal precedent of a post-Soviet war 20 years before Ukraine

The uprising in a breakaway region was a monument to human stupidity and idealism

Apr. 24, 2022

The current crisis in Ukraine, in which Russia has recognized the rebel republics in the Donbass, looks unusual, but this is not a new story for the post-Soviet space. Something similar to the events happening in the Donbass today took place in 1992, and the enclave that then arose still exists.

The unrecognized territory, formally part of Moldova, was formed as a result of a short war, which was simultaneously absurd and cruel. That war contains many parallels with the current conflict – including even the personal stories of many of its participants.

The collapse of the Soviet Union was accompanied by a series of armed conflicts. Some have gone down in history as examples of insane, unbridled violence, comparable only to conflicts in Africa and the Middle East. However, a strange little war in the Transnistria region stands out among them.

This is a barely discernible area on the map, stretching north to south along the Dniester River on the border of Ukraine and Moldova, about 200 kilometers long and only about 20 across. At the end of the Soviet era, it had a population of about 680,000. Before the collapse of the USSR, Transnistria had been a sleepy land where almost nothing happened for many decades.

In 1992, a conflict raged there for several months, when rebels made up of Russians and Ukrainians took up arms against the government of the newly independent Moldova. Despite its very small scale, this war became a kind of prologue for the entire bloody history of post-Soviet armed conflicts.

Transnistria became part of Russia during the imperial era of the Romanov dynasty. The wars between Saint Petersburg and the Ottoman Empire brought the Russian Empire vast expanses of land north of the Black Sea. Under Catherine II, the border passed just along the banks of the Dniester River, and it was then that the future capital of Transnistria, the town of Tiraspol, was built. A decade and a half later, Russia recaptured Bessarabia from the Turks – the eastern part of the ancient Moldavian principality, whose territory formed the basis of present-day Moldova.

These lands lived more or less peacefully as part of the Russian Empire. The roots of the current problem stretch back to the events of 1917. As a result of the Russian Revolution and Civil War, Moldova became part of Romania, but Transnistria remained with the Soviet Union. The USSR assumed the implicit role of collector of Russian imperial lands, and Transnistriawas singled out as a Moldovan autonomous region for political purposes. Following the events of World War II, Moldova was annexed by the USSR, and Transnistriawas included in its composition.

The problem was that Transnistria was a very specific region for Moldova. Its economic structure was very different from the rest of the republic. Unlike agrarian Moldova, Transnistria was primarily an industrial area. Despite it accounting for just 17 percent of Moldova’s population and very small portion of its territory, by the late Soviet period, its industry provided 40 percent of the republic’s GDP and up to 90 percent of its electricity.

Another major difference was in the region’s ethnic composition. The majority of the Moldovan population were Romanian-speaking Moldovans, related to the their neighbours in Bucharest. However, in Transnistria, the majority of the population was made up of Slavs – Russians and Ukrainians. For obvious reasons, Moldovan nationalism, which came with a revival of ties with Romania, did not find any support in Transnistria at all. In the industrial Russian-speaking and Slavic region, pro-Soviet views remained popular even during the crisis that led to the collapse of the USSR itself.

As long as the Soviet Union remained strong, none of this was a problem. For the USSR, ethnic nationalism was unacceptable. The peoples were fused together by ideology – at least officially. However, by the end of the 80’s, the USSR was torn apart by a variety of difficulties. In particular, the national issue had reemerged with a vengeance. During a time when the USSR was experiencing an array of internal problems, the popularity of Soviet ideas was rapidly losing popularity, while nationalist populism was gaining strong momentum among the peoples living on the outskirts of the USSR.

The Soviet project had encouraged the creation of a stratum of intellectuals and managerial personnel in national republics, as it was part of socialist ideology, with its internationalist ideas. However, this now made it possible to create turnkey states: under Soviet rule, the USSR’s ethnic republics had managed to rebuild industry and create more or less functioning national bureaucracies. Meanwhile, the national intelligentsia educated by the USSR could adapt its ideology to support the idea of seceding from the Soviet Union.

Finally, another important detail: the Soviet 14th Army was based in Transnistria. Though its complex of military facilities were more akin to giant arsenals than a full-fledged combat-ready contingent, there were enough weapons to arm one. Furthermore, there were many retired officers living in Transnistria who kept in touch with each other and formed a fairly influential ‘corporation’ in the region.

Transnistria ceased to be a quiet picturesque corner of the USSR by about 1989, when Moldova was experiencing a surge of nationalism and ethnic romanticism. The leaders of the emerging state dismissed its Soviet past, on the one hand, but, on the other, were actually part and parcel of the Soviet intelligentsia, with its vague ideas about how states function in the West. Naturally, this also affected their views on how a nation that has just achieved statehood should build relations with its citizens.

The beliefs of these people ranged from sincere fanaticism to a desire to play the national card to score political points. They included, for example, Mircea Druk – who expressed nationalist convictions back in the heyday of the Soviet Union but was, in fact, a typical representative of the Soviet nomenklatura who revelled in the role of a privileged official. Another leader of the Moldovan independence movement, Mircea Snegur, was also originally a party careerist, but the collapse of the USSR opened the way for him to transform himself from an ordinary regional official into the leader of a small and poor, but separate state.

A separate problem was presented by the idea of reunifying with Romania, to which the Moldovans are close in blood and language. Though these views might have been popular in ‘native’ Moldovan society at that time, such a future was categorically unacceptable for Transdniestrians.

It was the extreme radicalism and extreme naivety of the event’s participants, along with an unwillingness to compromise, that led the issue to escalate into civil confrontation, and eventually war.

It all started in 1989, when a draft law was introduced in Moldova on the adoption of the Moldovan language as the only state language, and its transition to the Latin alphabet. This decision was made based solely on the nationalistic feelings of Moldovan ultra-patriots, without any attempts to sound out the public on the issue.

In Transnistria, the situation was particularly difficult. On the one hand, people were frightened by the increasingly harsh nationalist rhetoric, and, on the other, far from everyone in the region spoke Moldovan. A strong sense of solidarity had already developed among Transnistria’s population, and workers from large industrial enterprises and retired military personnel were well united. In the same year, they formed the United Council of Labor Collectives (UCLC), which represented the interests of Transnistria as a whole.

In the summer of 1990, Moldova (now the Republic of Moldova) declared independence. And on September 2, the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic was already proclaimed at the Congress of deputies of Transnistria. It was headed by an ethnic Russian named Igor Smirnov – the son of a school principal and a journalist, who had worked in industry all his life. Though he had lived in Transnistria only since the 80’s, Smirnov was the director of an electrical plant in Tiraspol and was already well-known in the region.

Transdniestrians were motivated by several considerations. On the one hand, given the newly proclaimed Moldovan government’s clumsy actions and its rhetoric, in particular, people were afraid of discrimination by nationalists. On the other, many people wanted either to preserve the Soviet way and order of life, or vice versa, wanted financial concessions for Moldova’s most economically important region.

However, in Chisinau, Moldova’s capital, they had already taken the bit: the romantics there considered all autonomy projects nothing more than an insurrection staged by mutineers. So, the confrontation took shape.

On one side of the barricade were the Transdniestrians – ethnic Russians and Ukrainians who held pro-Russian or even Soviet beliefs. On the other remained the bulk of Moldovans, who embraced nationalist ideas.

In reality, the situation was much more complicated. Among the Transdniestrians, there were many Moldovans with socialist views, or who simply joined the militia for friends and neighbors. And among the Moldovan security forces, there were many Russians who remained due to career prospects or out of loyalty to the new state.

The Soviet 14th Army, which was headquartered in an ancient 16th-century fortress in the city of Bender, was an important ally of Transnistria from the very beginning. In the chaos that accompanied the collapse of the USSR, it essentially stopped taking orders from Moscow. Though some of the officers hesitated, many actually sympathized with the Transdniestrians, especially those whose families lived in Moldova.

The real war was hampered by a lack of weapons, but there was a huge quantity left over in the country’s warehouses. Consequently, both of the forming sides pillaged the Soviet warehouses. Moldova created its own armed forces, initially on the basis of volunteer detachments and police. In Transnistria, they formed their own militia and Republican Guard.

At first, the Moldovans tried to solve the problem simply. Smirnov was abducted while in Ukraine, probably with the knowledge of local special services. However, the confrontation had not yet reached the level of a real war at that time, and the rebel leader was released after he threatened to turn off the lights in Moldova, since its electricity came from Transnistria.

However, it was clear that real battles could be looming on the horizon. Volunteers from Russia and Ukraine came to Transnistria, often with opposite political beliefs – from communists to monarchists. The Russian Cossacks, revitalized amidst the Soviet collapse, also sent an unusually large number of volunteers who stood out with their archaic uniforms and violent temperament.

The local militia also included many of the kinds of characters who come to the fore precisely in an era of anarchy. The most striking of these was Lieutenant Colonel Yuri Kostenko, a Soviet army officer and Afghan war veteran. He had retired from the army because of his difficult temper to become one of the first private entrepreneurs in the city of Bender by the early 90’s. Amidst the escalating conflict, Kostenko formed his own Republican Guard battalion and became famous as an insanely brave and, at the same time, very cruel man, who paid no heed to his superiors. Opinions about him varied. In Bender, he was seen by some as the city’s main crime fighter and, by others, as its main crime boss. In any case, even his enemies noted his bravery, and even his friends reproached him for his ferocity. He quickly established contacts with former colleagues who helped his squad get hold of weapons. Many detachments were created in a similar way, with officers in the Soviet 14th Army actively participating in the formation of the militia with tacit permission of the army’s commander, Gennady Yakovlev.

In 1990, the USSR was already in its death throes, and war was breaking out in Transnistria. The first blood was shed in the town of Dubossary, which is located in the geographical center of the republic. On November 2, 1990, Moldovan police tried to enter the town and met a hostile though unarmed crowd. One of the policemen lost his nerve and opened fire, and three people died. The police themselves did not expect this course of events, but the killings provoked horror and outrage. The war began to take on a life of its own. Up to that time, recruits had been entering the militia in neither a torrent nor a trickle, but now people in the city went en masse to enlist in detachments.

The Moldovans’ plans were simple and quite logical – to force their way across the Dniester River via bridges and cut Transnistria in two.

Not far from Dubossary, there was a small sculpture on a hill depicting a pioneer playing a bugle. Trenches were dug under this trumpeter, and it was used as an orientation point when shooting. By the end of the fighting, the plaster boy, whipped by shrapnel and bullets, looked like a real symbol of the turning point between epochs.

However, neither side had a regular army, and, instead of a blitzkrieg, both Moldovans and Transdniestrians fought in the trenches for months. This war differed from the trenches of the First World War, however, in that both sides were poorly prepared and lacked heavy weapons, which prevented effective combat. Another notable difference was that it took place amidst beautiful southern surroundings.

In general, many fighters perceived the coming war as a paramilitary picnic. Soldiers and militiamen often came to the front with canisters of wine, sometimes with girlfriends, and enthusiastically photographed themselves in uniform with their weapons. One fighter recalled that huge cherry trees grew in the neutral zone, which the enemies often climbed to pick while exposing themselves to the line of fire. But then they enjoyed the harvest for which they had risked their lives.

Sometimes these picnics were interrupted by truly fierce battles, however. The Moldovans tried to break through the front, while the militia constantly raided the warehouses of the 14th army, taking away weapons and ammunition. Sometimes, the attendants even asked the raiders to tie them up or beat them a little so that they could honestly say the equipment had been stolen from them.

During the time that these bloody picnics lasted, the USSR collapsed, but that changed little for the combatants. The Moldovan side failed to break through the front around Dubossary. One huge factor was that few people in Transnistria or Moldova really wanted to fight. And while the militias were defending their own homes, the Moldovans lacked such motivation. There was no serious reason for this war, and few people wanted to die in it. As a result, the fighting was sluggish.

By the summer of 1992, the Moldovans decided to change the direction of the offensive. This time the target was the city of Bender. Unlike nearly all of the rest of Transnistria, this city is situated on the west bank of the Dniester, so the river did not need to be crossed. On the contrary, the bridge across the Dniester was behind the city’s defenders. In addition, it is a large city by local standards, with more than 140,000 inhabitants, and the key base of the 14th army was located there, which meant it had both an arsenal and a strong contingent of Transdniestrian supporters.

All of these reasonable considerations pushed the Moldovan military to a general battle. However, everything did not go according to plan, and the ministers and generals subsequently placed responsibility onto each other. In the end, many tried to pin the blame on President Mircea Snegur, who, in turn, claimed he knew nothing about the fighting.

Oddly enough, the Moldovan police department continued to work in Bender, mostly defending themselves. However, on June 19, they arrested a major of the Transdniestrian Guard, who was carelessly moving around the city accompanied by only a driver. A spontaneous battle broke out in the city and the police station was surrounded. At that moment, a group of Moldovan troops was approaching Bender, while graduation parties were just taking place in city schools. Later, Moldovans were reminded of the extremely inopportune timing of the attack.

The assault on Bender immediately turned into an incredibly chaotic fight on the streets. The Moldovans managed to break through to the bridge over the Dniester, while Transdniestrian militias tried to force their way into the city from the eastern shore. The Moldovans deployed field guns and began shooting at vehicles trying to get onto the bridge. It all looked like a battle from the Napoleonic era, with cannons firing directly at vehicles and tanks trying to drive into Bender.

Interestingly, this battery was commanded by an ethnic Russian colonel named Leonid Karasev, who lived in Moldova and had been imbued with the ideas of local patriotism. He personally fired a cannon when the young recruits got scared. Meanwhile, on the eastern shore, the Cossacks, having drunk a lot, jumped into cars and literally leaped over the bridge under fire, capturing the battery in hand-to-hand combat. Karasev survived, but the guns were lost. Later, they were driven around Bender covered with graffiti reading something in the spirit of ‘I won’t shoot anymore.’ Reinforcements eventually began to stream into Bender from the eastern bank, while soldiers and officers supporting the Transdniestrians, many of whom had families in the city, began to ‘desert to war’ from Bender’s fortress. In order to join the battle, it was enough to walk out of the gate.

The battle for Bender could have been much more destructive than it turned out to be in reality, as a significant part of the town is occupied by industrial facilities, and it was hot and dry outside. Trains hauling fuel were stuck at the station, and the city’s grain elevator was stuffed with dried sunflower seeds. Fires broke out immediately and threatened to completely destroy the city.

Bender was saved thanks to the incredible efforts of its fire service. Fire brigades arrived even from Chisinau, from the opposite side of the front. Firefighter Vyacheslav Chechelnitsky recalled that he had to go out on about a dozen calls every day. Formally, the combatants were ready to let the firefighters do their work, but in practice, both sides consisted of paramilitary militia detachments, volunteers and, at best, police, whose nerves quickly gave way.

In addition, the artillery hitting the city often missed their targets or simply fired at squares. Therefore, many fire vehicles returned from calls literally riddled with damage, and firefighters often crawled to the fires with their hoses. However, by the end of the fighting, the firefighters could be proud of themselves: Bender was saved from the fire. Vyacheslav Chechelnitsky paid a terrible price for this triumph, as his brother Igor, also a firefighter, was killed by mortar fire while extinguishing a burning dormitory.

There were chaotic street battles in the city for several more days. Meanwhile, serious changes were made to Russia’s policy. The 14th Army, once Soviet, was formally transferred to the Russian armed forces, and now the war in Transnistria became Moscow’s problem.

Subsequently, General Alexander Lebed, who was in good standing in the Russian army at the time, arrived in the republic incognito to find out what is happening in Transnistria. He came to an obvious conclusion: there was bloody chaos in the city, and the 14th army was actually out of control, fighting independently and spontaneously.

Lebed began by restoring order in the rear and arresting the looters and bandits who were coming out of the woodwork. Then, on the night of July 2, he organized a short, but very intense artillery bombardment of the advancing Moldovan troops. With his experience as a Soviet general, Lebed despised the Transdniestrian rebels, who he saw as anarchists, while he considered the Moldovan military with their nationalist government fascists and promised to “find them a place on the whipping post.” However, the actual object of both his threats and attacks turned out to be the Moldovan army, as it was the more active party.

The war ended very abruptly. In fact, Lebed used the 14th army as a sledgehammer to beat anyone who did not want to stop the fighting. Among those who were not happy about the cessation of hostilities was the charismatic rebel chieftain Lieutenant Colonel Kostenko. Kostenko had managed to acquire a lot of enemies during the war, including his own superiors, to whom he did not obey in principle. The rebel leader was intercepted on a highway at night and killed. Subsequently, he turned into a kind of ‘king under the mountain’, a local legend, who apparently sometimes goes to his own grave. However, if we exclude the legends, then we still have to admit that this 20th century Robin Hood is dead.

The conflict in Transnistria had reached complete deadlock. Although it turned out to be bloody, with a total of up to a thousand people dead, including about 400 civilians, it was clearly a ‘war without a cause’, and the parties were able to listen to reason. To this day, Transnistria has not completely severed ties with Moldova. Though the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic has never been officially recognized, its economy and social infrastructure are functioning. Rebel leader Igor Smirnov became president, and remained so until 2011, when he lost an election. Though he was often accused of corruption, it is worth noting that he calmly handed over his powers when he could not win the vote.

Veterans of Transnistria traveled to other wars in the former USSR. One of the most extraordinary of these was Igor Girkin, later known under the pseudonym ‘Strelkov’. He came to Transnistria as an ordinary rebel armed with his own manual loading World War II rifle, having just graduated from the Historical and Archival Institute in Moscow. This restless man fought in Bosnia on the side of the Serbs, then in Chechnya on the side of the Russian army, and, in 2014, he led the rebels in eastern Ukraine for several months in a war that has much in common with Transnistria's. Ironically, there, he had to face Ukrainian nationalists in battle who, like himself, had fought in Transnistria on the side of the rebels. The biographies of many of the war’s participants are similar. Some fought for idealistic reasons, others out of pure love of adventure, participating in battles in the Balkans, Abkhazia, Ossetia, and Chechnya – in short, all the wars and conflicts resulting from the collapse of the USSR.

After the war, the status of Transnistria itself turned out to be ambiguous. A small Russian peacekeeping contingent remains in the republic to this day, providing work for many of its residents. But the republic has gained no international recognition.

However, it is striking that, compared to other hot spots, the hostilities between the parties in Moldova have been kept to a minimum. Nowadays, Transdniestrians and Moldovans often successfully maintain personal ties and economic contact. Although Transnistria very strictly defends its autonomy, it has managed to refrain from destroying ties with the state from which it separated. Fortunately, nationalist ideas began to rapidly lose popularity in Moldova after the war.

The problems of Transnistria and Moldova today are similar – they are poor provincial republics. However, if we talk specifically about the armed conflict, this war turned out to be one of the most deeply frozen in post-Soviet space.

The war in Transnistria is a real monument to both human stupidity and idealism. War is a human tragedy, but many of its participants remember Transnistria as the most romantic of their wars. This Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic has preserved itself, and although its socialist orientation has changed to a Russian one, or even a kind of fusion of Russian irredentism and Soviet nostalgia, it continues to exist, and the Moldovan side is not disposed to solve the conflict by force.
 
I don't know if I have this figured out but it seems that, per the article above, a sanctions 'loophole' for buying Russian gas is the government can't open a Rouble account in Russia but a private company can.
Not exactly. Gazprombank is outside the current EU sanctions against Russia, so there's nothing stopping governments from opening an account with them. Poland and Bulgaria have simply refused to open such accounts, thus the response from Russia.
 
Apparently it's confirmed by Polish gas supplier, PGNiG.
So the fun starts now. Soon we won't be able to pay for the basic needs. Putin did what Morawiecki was yelling for but wouldn't do anyway, and now everyone is surprised. "We are prepared for cutting off the Russian supplies completely" he said, and now is establishing a crisis office and reassuring everyone 🤣
How to live?
Take into account that Polish long term contract with Gasprom was about to expire by the end of this year anyway and decision was made in 2019 by PGNiG.

So this is not so surprising. They have speed up consequences of already taken decision and are using to keep flying the circus.

Will see. I feel in gut by the winter we will have the contract with reseller which silently will buy same Russian gas with rubles for us.
 
Many of us have never experienced true hardship, shortages or intermittent heating during a winter. Poland's bravado and flippant attitude may not survive long when actually put to the test. Obviously, many of their citizens already know this but it's not like they get a choice.
 
Will see. I feel in gut by the winter we will have the contract with reseller which silently will buy same Russian gas with rubles for us.

Most likely, or Poland will get reverse flow from Germany. The whole "sanctions" situation around gas and oil from Russia is one big joke. Consider the fact that the official word about Russia "cutting off Polish and Bulgarian gas" is that this is Russia "blackmailing Europe". This is in all the headlines. Not ONCE do they mention the fact that the only reason those 2 countries were cut off was because they wouldn't pay!! What kind of clown shoes world do we live in where the country asking for payment for their product is accused of blackmail for doing so?
 
Most likely, or Poland will get reverse flow from Germany. The whole "sanctions" situation around gas and oil from Russia is one big joke. Consider the fact that the official word about Russia "cutting off Polish and Bulgarian gas" is that this is Russia "blackmailing Europe". This is in all the headlines. Not ONCE do they mention the fact that the only reason those 2 countries were cut off was because they wouldn't pay!! What kind of clown shoes world do we live in where the country asking for payment for their product is accused of blackmail for doing so?

Exactly!!

Moreover they are manipulating issue of payment by ruble or not by ruble. Especially along with silencing the case that Germany and Austria accepted payment condition.

But in headlines... Austria and Germany will refused to pay in rubles! They will NOT PAY IN RUBLES!

"NO RUBLES! Take that, Putin!"

Jeez...
 
Video of the shelling of the Transnistrian Ministry of State Security building in Tiraspol on 25 April has been published
Follow the link for good quality video or watch a worse version from YT pasted below.


00:14 28.04.2022
Transl:

The video footage shot during the attack on the building of the Transnistrian Ministry of State Security in Tiraspol city was published on the Internet. The video clearly shows the process of preparation of the bombing and the very moment of the attack.

As can be understood from the video, a group of at least three unknown people arrived at the incident area by car and parked near the administrative building. The intruders had a powerful weapon in the trunk, which they used almost simultaneously to open fire.

After each of the three perpetrators fired single shots, the entire group immediately left the scene in the same car. Footage taken from a different angle shows that the third shot was the most powerful and destructive.

Earlier it was reported that the attackers, according to preliminary reports, fired anti-tank grenade launchers at the building. As a result, the upper floors of the ministry and neighboring houses were damaged and windows were broken by the blast wave.

--



New Wikipedia entry:

Oh, BTW, remember 2014? Transnistria feared possible violet war coming. Articles erased by now, but fortunately archived

Aug 13, 2014

There are reports claiming that a violent conflict is likely to break out in Moldova’s separatist region of Transnistria. Ziarul National newspaper, quoting the press from the region, wrote that the onset of a possible war is likely on August 26.

According to the sources, the troops of the Transnistrian region have been questioned whether they have relatives on the right bank of the Nistru River or in Ukraine.

The intention is to identify unreliable soldiers during a possible armed conflict,” news portal tiras.ru said, quoted by Ziarul National. The same source said that a possible war might break out on August 26.


Sep 13 2014
Ukrainian Ambassador in Moldova: Kyiv will never attack Transnistria

”Ukraine will never attack Transnistria, and Kyiv didn’t do any blockade of the break-away region”. The statement was made by Ukraine’s ambassador in Republic of Moldova, Sergey Pirojkov, during the show Fabrika, at Publika TV.

”Ukraine didn’t and will never attack the territory of Transnistria. We don’t have any reasons to do these kind of actions because that region belongs to Moldova. The rigorous examination at the border with Transnistria is motivated by the need to ensure security and to not allow terrorists to enter Ukraine. We cannot talk about a blockade of the separatist region, even if it is reported by the Russian press. This kind of statements is nonsense and it is nothing but propaganda”, mentioned Pirojkov.
 
I have no comment. It is best written in the announcement of the article

Hitler Youth with a yellow-blue shade... (PHOTO)
04/28/2022 - 6:00

Modern exact sciences do not have so many numbers to count how many levels of the bottom the distraught Ukraine has already broken through.

And how else can one relate to the fact that the practice of children's roadblocks is becoming widespread in this nedostran?

You heard right — it is children's roadblocks…

And an example of such a checkpoint — the language does not even turn to say "staffed" with real children — was shown by the Ukrainian Reich-TV a few days ago live from the village of Varvarovka in the Gulyai-Pole district of the Zaporozhye region.

And these boys have everything for real, like the military. They have a clear structure and subordination, they even have their own call signs.

And the oldest one looks 13-14 years old at most, and his name is Yaroslav Rogach with the call sign "Tankman". But what he tells is shocking:

"To make it pleasant for the military to look at us, we decided to build a post. We just wanted to shoot — that's all!"

Yaroslav does not deny that it was Ukrainian servicemen who gave them the idea of setting up such a checkpoint, and even provided them with equipment.

"The military got us balaclavas — they brought us so that there would be a lot. Helmets, uniforms were brought to everyone..." — the "Tankman" confides.

And everything would be fine, but only the scene of the plot is very alarming — Gulyai-Pole district of the Zaporozhye region. In fact, this territory is closely adjacent to the combat zone.

But the Ukrainian boys themselves think that they are playing either "Zarnitsa" or Cossacks-robbers — after all, what child at their age does not want to arrange a dugout or a hut?

Only these children do not realize that the vile Nazi Bandera creatures have already recorded them as "sacred victims" and are just waiting in the wings to give another bloodthirsty plot to the cannibal ether…

But the footage from a completely different region is 7—year-old Bogdan, who "helps" border guards at a checkpoint of the Border Service of Ukraine in the Kharkiv region.

At the same time, Bogdan, although under the supervision of adults "prykordonnykiv" (border guards, — approx. RV), quite professionally checks not only documents, but also cars.

And the drivers of vehicles passing through the border checkpoint themselves treat such an "innovation" not only with humor, but even in general favorably.

One of the Ukrainian border guards tells about his "recruit", they say, he just liked the military.

"This is a neighbor's child. Sometimes they come out and play with us," Yuriy, an employee of the State Border Service of Ukraine, calmly broadcasts.

And he adds casually: "He's got to play somewhere."

And this Yuri also told the camera that once during an air raid, he even covered the child with his body.

Probably, in the eyes of Ukrainian soldiers it looks like a "heroic" act. Yes, but he covered the child with his body, but he did not think with his brain before that that the child had absolutely nothing to do at a military facility…

Such are the "games" — and also in the zone of close proximity to the theater of military operations.

And it would be possible to write off all this for the usual childish fun, they say, it will rumble and all the kids will immediately hide.

But no…

The following shots show very young volkssturmists from Kiev. They are going to training in shooting from RPG-7 and RPG-22 grenade launchers.

And the weapons in the hands of these children are already very real, and not those plastic machine guns, as in the frames from the Zaporozhye and Kharkiv regions.

But the boys are not even aware of any safety precautions when handling weapons and cheerfully wave all the way with shots from grenade launchers.

The author of this video is the infamous Bandera and Nazi with the call sign "Boatswain", who created the territorial defense unit BOATSMAN BOYS. A unit consisting, among others, of minors.

And in order not to advertise this bastard, we will only note that he was directly involved in the very staging in Buche, Kiev region. Well, how about staging? More precisely, to its failure, because he managed to publish and distribute in social networks a bunch of videos and photos about the "orcs" equipment allegedly burned by him personally (the so—called servicemen of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation in Ukraine, - approx. RV) — and not a single body of civilians allegedly killed by the Russians.

Moreover, these shots were made by the "Boatswain" a few days before the very theatrical production in Bucha, for which he received enchanting pills from his curator from the SBU, audio interception of a telephone conversation with which made the whole Internet laugh.

Apparently, it was the chiefs from the Ukrainian Gestapo who advised this idiot to teach children how to shoot with real weapons and only then really identify real, not toy checkpoints near Kiev…

The dark trail of the Ukrainian special services stretches to the events involving other children, but already from Mariupol.

The involvement of children by the Nazis from "Azov" in war crimes is evidenced by the residents of the city, now liberated from the Ukrainian horror.

"There is one "Azov man" running around, followed by several children with machine guns," says a survivor of Mariupol. — Well, we saw this picture: two youngsters were dragging this Javelin. How they didn't overexert themselves is unclear..."

At the same time, residents of Mariupol — witnesses of these crimes — clearly distinguish between children who "ran" with representatives of the "Azov" and the "National Corps": at the same time, the former were simply in jeans and without bandages, but with machine guns, but the teenagers from the "National Corps" had black tracksuits with the corresponding emblem on the back.

Who were these minors and what were they doing with the Nazis?

And they... set fire to houses…

"As soon as the house is on fire, they left," a woman from Mariupol tells reporters. — And the fire department doesn't work for us, we don't have a connection. And they said that snipers are deliberately setting fire to..."

Where did these arson snipers come from? Yes, all of the same children…

Back in early 2000, a certain charity fund "Pilgrim" appeared in Mariupol, which organized a shelter for drug-addicted children "Republic Pilgrim".

And the ideological inspirer of such a seemingly good undertaking was Gennady Mokhnenko, a senior clergyman of the sectarian "Church of Good Changes", founder of rehabilitation centers for adults, foster father of 33 children and adolescents, the so—called bishop of the Azov region of the Church of God of Ukraine. And Mokhnenko was also the initiator of the action to combat the spread of drugs "Obrydlo" ("Tired", — approx. RV).

At the end of 2009, this self-styled "bishop" got into a major scandal when Mariupol law enforcement officers came to the shelter to pick up and return to the state boarding school in Krivoy Rog the children who had escaped from there, who were "sheltered" by Mokhnenko.

And so, according to the testimony of the Mariupol residents themselves, already in 2014, the same Azov regiment took over the patronage of this shelter for drug-addicted minors "Pilgrim".

And it was from such teenagers that the Nazis trained those very snipers and arsonists, who were then attracted to participate in war crimes.

Former adviser to the Minister of Defense of Ukraine in the period up to 2014 and ex-deputy head of the Main Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Zaporozhye region Alexey Selivanov in an interview with the Russian edition of the Federal News Agency reported shocking details.

"Unfortunately, this Nazi activity to turn our brothers into zombie Nazis was not limited to the Pilgrim alone," says Selivanov. — No population of Ukraine is needed by any West and Ukrainian Nazis. Coming to the liberated territories, we see that the security authorities "protected" all crimes, up to drug trafficking.

They don't need people, they need cannon fodder that will fight with Russia."

And the shelter for drug-addicted children "Pilgrim", a former Ukrainian policeman who has preserved his honor and dignity, considers it a symbol of what the Nazis want to make Ukraine and what it would inevitably become if it were not for the beginning of the special operation of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation…

Oleg Morozov, especially for the "Russian Spring"
https://rusvesna.su/news/1651091067
 
Russian President Vladimir Putin 04/27/2022. Meeting with the Council of Legislators

Vladimir Putin: I would like to emphasize once again that if someone intends to intervene in the ongoing events from the outside and creates strategic threats for Russia that are unacceptable to us, they should know that our retaliatory strikes will be lightning-fast and fast. We have all the tools for this. The kind that no one else can boast of right now. And we won't brag. We will use them if needed. And I want everyone to know about it - we have made all the decisions on this matter!
 
What can be more 'justified' than former communist states 'fighting' against today's Russia? The irony of fate. From Churchill's percentages to EU reforms, former communist countries have been destroyed, split, or bartered by the same usual suspects, following again, the same tactic, of winning the war, by fighting to the last former commie, this time.
What can be more promising for Turkey than retribution for opening a gratuitous irritation 'initiative' in northern Syria?
Dear God, make it stop!
 

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom