Hassan Al-Somal
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2015
- Messages
- 6,825
- Reaction score
- -37
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In Russian medias ;
"Russia will target NATO weapon shipments,they will be considered as targets".
In reality ;
"Plz stop thoz shipments".
Nah, I just drink my tea, and move on with my life. In the end, this is nothing more than words on the internet. LolI was invited here back in '09. Since then, you guys ever got tired of being wrong?
And you have the nerve to say that you don't spread misinformation. This is blatantly wrong, and you know it.Difference is that:
* In Russia, marginal neo-Nazi elements have zero influence upon the Russian government. In Ukraine, a more massive far right current has the government under its thumb. Former president Poroshenko wanted to implement the Minsk accords, but received death threats from the neo-Nazi Azov regiment and thence Ukraine started violating international law by continuing the shelling of Donbas settlements.
* Despite ideological differences with the USSR, the Russian Federation nonetheless sees itself as an heir to Soviet anti-fascism. WW2 and the fight against National-Socialist Germany is intensively remembered and plays a central role in Russian national identity-building. This collective memory is constructed with the direct participation of state authorities. In NATO- and zionist-dominated Ukraine however, the officially promoted dominant narrative on WW2 is not anti-fascist but anti-Soviet, anti-Russian and Nazi-apologetic in nature.
* In Russia neo-Nazism does not enjoy large scale social acceptance, quite the opposite. In Ukraine however it does. This is why one will not find an any place in Russia named after Bronislav Kaminski, whereas a main shopping artery in the center of Kiev has been baptized Stepan Bandera Avenue. Millions of ordinary Ukrainians who do not adhere to Nazi ideology, do revere Bandera nonetheless. There's no equivalent for this in Russian society.
* Neo-Nazis and other far right movements avail themselves of disproportionate presence and representation within the armed forces of Ukraine. Entire brigades and regiments are directly placed under their control. And not just Azov, which is simply better known internationally: whether Pravy Sektor, Sloboda or Banderist gangs other than Azov, they all have their own separate units within the national armed forces of Ukraine. No such thing exsists in the Russian army.
* The Russian political establishment is not filled with sympathizers of the Third Reich and of local WW2 Nazi collaborators. In Ukraine however, this is very much the case. And by that includes people who aren't members to far right parties. Elected officials of the Kiev municipality were seen singing chants in praise of Bandera. The Ukrainian ambassador to Germany of all places, declared publicly on "Twitter" that he had proceeded to lay flowers at Bandera's tomb. And so on, and so forth.
In short, the impact and role of neo-Nazism in contemporary Ukraine and Russia is like apples and oranges. Those denying this are either inadequately informed, misled by NATO and zionist propaganda, or intellectual dishonest.