Sn1p3r187
Carolinian Shaolin Monk
I doubt it's gonna come to that dudei stared at this for way too long
I doubt it's gonna come to that dudei stared at this for way too long
He aint gonna save nobody. Got a nice little bunker for him and his lover Musk. Aint nobody else gettin in. And tbf, this war escalated the moment Russia dragged North Korea into it.Dude, they already hit Bryansk oblast, Biden is doing everything before Trump gets in the office. We're gonna have nuclear holocaust in two months at this rate. Please save us Donald Trump, if you can hear us right now please save us Donald Trump.
Bitch pleaseAnd tbf, this war escalated the moment Russia dragged North Ko
Want to go fight for Ukraine? Here’s what to do. (militarytimes.com)
- Apply to the Embassy of Ukraine in your country with the intention of joining the Foreign Legion of Territorial Defense of Ukraine (ask a military diplomat or consul for details). Applicants can visit the Embassy in person, call or send an email to start the process.
- Get your documents in order. This includes an ID, a passport to travel abroad, documents confirming military service or work with law enforcement agencies and participation in combat.
- Arrive at the embassy with documents for an interview with the defense attaché and the settlement of any visa issues with the consul.
- Write an application for enlistment in the Territorial Defense of the Armed Forces of Ukraine for military service under a contract on a voluntary basis. (This is in addition to Step 1.)
- Receive instructions on how to arrive in Ukraine and what to bring. Military clothing, equipment, helmet, body armor, combat gloves, tactical glasses, belts and vests are recommended. “It is not obligatory,” the official said, “but a foreign soldier in his national uniform looks good for the International Legion.”
- Go to Ukraine in an organized manner. Representatives of Ukrainian embassies, consulates (abroad) and Territorial Defense in Ukraine will provide assistance on the way. Contacts will be provided at the Embassy of Ukraine in your country.
Contracting mercenaries does not feel like a proper escalation on the level of calling a foreign entity and ally into the war. A proper escalation would be if Poland sent a whole division of troops to assist with the offensive against RussiaBitch please
I hope no one here was stupid enough to get carried away by the propaganda drums back then
I doubt it's gonna come to that dude
Same with the previous admin in my book. I notice Russia bluffs way too much when it comes to the threats, and I feel the best way to deal with it is to fight through it. I'd only believe capability the moment they say absolutely nothing and it just happens. That sociopathic dipshit talks way too damn much for a dude who looks like he doesn't say shit.I was refering to the animation, but also, things are happening at a worrying tempo, and Russia keeps having to bluff harder, and even if they lose their entire shit, they might just spew untrained "orcs" over the borders, more meat for the grinder - but that in itself is an absolute shitshow that's gonna destabilize and slow things down - just recently, my city went from having 0 active anti-air units to having 6, in a circle
Just north of the fjord (what a norwegian sentence) is Norways main airforce base, offering air coverage to much of Scandinavia; thereof the air-defenses; so even IF we have to evacuate people from an entire county up north ("mostly" empty... ), and then make hundreds of thousands of Russian scum die in the vidda, they would STILL petulently lob missiles - or drones, just to be asshats about it - JUST because they got this far, and now have to go further.
That dumb old fucking kgb piece of shit sociopath, all he had to do was die of a stroke or something.
We made that choice almost 3 years ago. Supporting Ukraine is the right thing to do, morally and strategically.the question is whether Europeans will be able to give up Russian energy sources completely for the sake of Ukraine.
at the same time,
The EU as an institution has given Ukraine over €143 billion since the start of the full-scale invasion, this doesn't count what the individual member states have given themselves.Russia's military expenditures in 2024 amounted to about $120 billion. At the same time, EU countries bought $20-22 billion worth of natural gas and $2-3 billion worth of oil from Russia in 2024. It would be interesting to know how much the EU allocated to help Ukraine?
Your assumption is wrong.Let's assume that only 15% of Europeans are interested in Russian gas, not so much at first glance. But the population of Europe is 740 million people, according to rough estimates 0.15×740=111. The interests of 100 million Europeans against the interests of 30 million Ukrainians. Who will win?
Moral formalism and hypocrisy of politicians or economic expediency?