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Posts Tagged ‘Russia’

Religion of Peace Murders More in Chechnya, and Makes Noise in Moscow

by coldwarrior ( 188 Comments › )
Filed under Chechnya, Islam, Islamic Invasion, Russia, Terrorism at October 20th, 2010 - 2:00 pm

The Religion of Peace ™ (ROPMA) tries another murderous attack on the West. The terrorists are all liquidated in a very rapid fashion.

From the Moscow Times:

A brazen attack on the Chechen parliament in Grozny killed at least six people, including Islamist insurgents, and injured 17 others Tuesday morning, a sign that post-war stability in the republic remains fragile.

“At least three attackers managed to get inside the Chechen parliament and blew themselves up,” Mariam Nalayeva, a spokeswoman for the Investigative Committee’s Chechen branch, said by telephone from Grozny.

News reports later in the day spoke of four or five rebels who got through security by following a Chechen lawmaker’s car and started a shootout.

Officials did not immediately comment on the discrepancy in numbers.

The attack began at about 9 a.m., when Chechen lawmakers were about to meet a delegation of 50 officials from the Sverdlovsk region legislature.

The assailants killed at least two police officers, as well as the parliament’s supplies manager, and injured seven policemen and 11 civilians, Nalayeva said.

Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov arrived at the scene soon after the attack.

“As a result of the coherent actions of the law enforcement agencies, the liquidation of the insurgents was accomplished within 15 to 20 minutes, and all the lawmakers and technical personnel were released,” Kadyrov said in a statement.

I like the quick liquidation of Muslim Terrorists, no trial and dispatched to enjoy their own little section of Hell.

Footage from Russia Today:

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more (crap from pbs):

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from Karwan TV:

And now this from Moscow:

Nationalists Calling for ‘Clean Moscow’

Planned Mosque Sparks Controversy in Russia

The leaders of Moscow’s 1.5 million strong Muslim community say they desperately need more places of worship. But a plan to build a new mosque has run into local opposition which is being fuelled by nationalists calling for a “clean Moscow” without Muslims and foreigners.

Small trees are supposed to be keeping the Muslims out of Tekstilshchiki, a district in south eastern Moscow. A young man sets to work with his shovel, pushing it into the earth with a determined kick. Then he places a seedling into the hole and sprinkles earth over it. Using her watering can, Maria Sotova pours some water onto the seedling. “We want a park here and not a mosque or a church or anything else,” says the mother who is here with her six-year-old son. There are about a hundred residents of Tekstilshchiki gathered on this lawn –and they want to prevent the start of construction on an Islamic religious center.

I wonder how soon the Religion of Peace will wait until the Muslim Cowards start attacking the Muscovites who don’t want this brand of ‘religion’ expanded in their fair city?  Fair warning mufties, Moscow and the Russians will fight back, be happy with the mosques that you have. It’s not just the ultra-nationalists and extreme right that doesn’t want the muslim plague in Moscow; the normal Muscovite is no fan of muslims either.

The Russian Army and Reality

by coldwarrior ( 132 Comments › )
Filed under Military, Russia at October 15th, 2010 - 11:30 am

I found this editorial at the Moscow Times. The paper is in English and is a wealth of information on Russia. What I found most interesting about this editorial is that Golts brings forward the mythical status of a million man army in Russia. The Russian Army drafts 300,000 or so twice a year, that makes 600,000 for a one year service time as draftees. Of these then, only 300k has more than 6months experience at any given time.  The professional officers and soldiery total 250k.

This then begs these questions, how does a country project power with this sort of woeful and inadequately trained and equipped Army in the 21st Century, how does this effect strategic planning, how does it impact on foreign policy?

Golts states that :”Russia’s defense strategies are still stuck in the Napoleon age when “big battalions” decided not only who was right, but who was victorious. Fast-forward 200 years to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. The 400,000-member Iraqi army was destroyed by only three divisions: two U.S. and one British. Those battles were won by the use of advanced surveillance and communication equipment to identify enemy troop movements, coupled with highly accurate weapons for destroying those forces.”

Please read on:

Every year in October, as the cold, damp weather sets in, it is time for the fall call-up of new draftees.

The goal is to conscript 278,000 young men by Dec. 31, but this year the army is supposed to institute new humanitarian measures to make the one-year mandatory service more civilized. For example, parents can attend draft board sessions and are allowed to accompany the future soldiers right up to their assigned units — a time in which many violations have traditionally occurred. In addition, conscripts can now have mobile phones to stay in contact with relatives and friends — or to report misconduct — and efforts will be made for them to serve relatively close to home. It is also expected that for the first time ever soldiers will be given weekends off.

The idea is to transform the current prison-like conditions in the military to something similar to a “sports camp,” loosely speaking. That is wonderful news, of course. Unfortunately, it will have little bearing on the combat readiness of the armed forces for two reasons. First, the Defense Ministry has rejected the 21st-century military model of building a compact, highly skilled professional force. Second, since the draft occurs twice a year — fall and spring — and conscript service has been reduced to one year, this means that the most experienced conscripts at any time have a maximum of only six months service under their belt — barely enough time to complete basic training. The result is clear — a woefully low level of combat readiness, particularly when modern battles require advanced training in communications and high-tech weapon systems.

Humanization is a much-needed measure, of course, but the efficiency and battle-readiness of the armed forces will never improve if this is not accompanied by modernization of the armed forces and a fundamental understanding of how 21st-century battles are fought.

Continued….

I ask our readers here to read the rest of Alexander Golts’ (deputy editor of the online newspaper Yezhednevny Zhurnal) at this link.

April Fools Day in Россия = Lenin Fart Day

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 90 Comments › )
Filed under Communism, Humor, Open thread, Politics, Russia, World at March 31st, 2010 - 9:00 pm

Apparently there’s a tradition in Russia that involves decorating/desecrating/mocking the ubiquitous statues of Lenin on April Fools Day, and this one in particular is in a class by itself.  From the excellent website English Russia:

And so, on April Fool’s Day they made Lenin Fart Day, with putting 300 gram TNT explosives inside the monument that was located in very busy city square of seven million population Russian city.

Then at designated hour they heard a boom. Be sure it was heard by hundreds or even thousands of passers by as this unfortunate Lenin statue was right in front of St. Petersburg’s railway station.

The consequences might be very rough for the ones who made this happen, but it is still unclear have they been found or not.

Other examples of anti-Lenin pranks can be found here.

Oh yeah. This is a shamelessly open thread.

What’s happening?

by Kafir ( 252 Comments › )
Filed under Links, Open thread at December 5th, 2009 - 10:28 am

Iran warns Switzerland over minaret ban

Iran warned Switzerland on Saturday of “consequences” over a referendum banning the building of new mosque minarets and urged Bern not to enforce the ban, the official IRNA news agency reported.

The vote went “against the prestige of a country which claims to be an advocate of democracy and human rights,” Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told Swiss counterpart Micheline Calmy-Rey in a telephone call, quoted by IRNA.
[…]

IRNA said Switzerland’s ambassador in Tehran was summoned on Saturday before the foreign ministry, which protested against the minaret ban which was backed by more than 57% of voters who cast their ballot on November 29.

Calmy-Rey said the referendum was carried out against the will of the Swiss government, which would “use all its means to support Muslims rights,” the IRNA report added.

The referendum on a constitutional ban on minarets was proposed by a rightwing Swiss party and had not been expected to succeed.

Obama approval rating below 50 percent
ON A CNN POLL

Forty-eight percent of Americans questioned in a CNN/Opinion Research Corp. national survey released Friday said they approve of the job Obama is doing as president — a drop of 7 percentage points from a survey last month.

Obama Ignores ‘Climate-Gate’ in Revising Copenhagen Plans

The scandal has prompted calls for Obama from global warming skeptics to skip this month’s climate summit in Copenhagen — instead, the White House is doubling down on its commitment.

Russia turns to Israel for help in investigation into train bombing


And in case you missed it:

The Illegal-Settlements Myth – (link from Wrath-of-God)

NYT’s op-ed – The 9/11 of 1859 – (hattip to snork)

Few if any Americans today would question the justness of John Brown’s cause: the abolition of human bondage. But as the nation prepares to try Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who calls himself the architect of the 9/11 attacks, it may be worth pondering the parallels between John Brown’s raid in 1859 and Al Qaeda’s assault in 2001.

Yes, he said that. And it seems Bernadine Dohrn thinks she’s the 60’s equivilent:

Pro-violence abolitionist John Brown studied in NY

LAKE PLACID, N.Y. — John Brown, the 19th-century abolitionist who advocated armed violence, is drawing a diverse crowd this week to study how his fight against slavery continues to play in America.
[…]

Organizers say the symposium, on Friday and Saturday, will examine the impact of Brown’s fight against slavery on America then and how it reverberates today. Speakers include Bernardine Dohrn, one of the best-known leaders of the 1960s radical group the Weather Underground; Maria Suarez, a Mexican immigrant who was virtually enslaved by a Southern California man after being lured to work for him in 1976; Russell Banks, author of the fictional Brown biography “Cloudsplitter”; and Alice Keesey Mecoy, a Brown descendant.
[…]

“We’re trying to get people to take a look at the use of violence in our country — why American culture uses violence to achieve an end,” Wikoff said.

Dohrn would be an expert at that.