Vasiliy I want to cut your throat like I did to many Russian soldiers.
damn why taliban soldiers are so slow? they left afghanistan 12 days ago!
>> how do you like them SALO (bacon) sushi?
Are you nuts?!!
As for Ukraine, you seem to have problems with distinguishing east and west, so what can be expected from your futurology. Before russia swallows ukraine, it is more likely that chechnya skrew up Russia in the first place.... I wonder what is the attitude among ukrainians to that chechen war... Do you know anything, dolbanyi impostor?
They must have smoked some good weapon grade hash on the way then ate too much.lololololololol
khokhlyachka how can you live without salo?? Western Ukraine full of nationalists and Eastern are all pro RuSSIAN you stupid japanese wanna be ukrainian.
A simple psychological test that took part here once again proved that it takes less time and resourses for an intellectually underdeveloped being (a Chechen pro-nationalist in this instance) to get excited. Now that the test is over, hey Andrey here's a stick, go fetch!
Khokhol (Ukrainian) was in an airplane crash and got on uninhabited island. On the next day he saw a boat with a beautiful naked lady in it. She tells him, "Khokhol you can have anything IN THE WORLD! Anything you want!" He jumps in the water and swims toward the boat and screams "SALO (bacon), SALO (bacon)."
I liked it so much I thought I would paste whole article
You might note it is western news.
Battered rebels flee ruined Grozny
THE unlit room of a makeshift first-aid centre a few miles from Grozny is full of dozens of badly wounded Chechen fighters who had retreated from the capital and stumbled into a minefield.
They had left at dawn, a group of rebels and civilians several hundred strong. Now, after weeks of living hell, the uninjured gather. It has been one of the Chechens' blackest days and while they remain defiant, the truth is that they have abandoned the city for which they fought so long.
"We have not retreated from Grozny," a sector commander leading the fighters says as the windows around us shake from the bombardment. "If we got out of the town, it means we're going to do something more effective."
A soldier near by adds: "This is winter. What can we do in the winter? Just wait and see what we do in the spring."
One of Grozny's most senior combatants, Commander A, who came out with the fighters, puts it another way. He says that the Chechens no longer need Grozny. They are regrouping and considering tactics. "What does Grozny mean now? Empty walls? Empty buildings?" he says. "There are more beautiful cities for us to take. Even Moscow. We have enough trained guys. We have enough will to fight."
He denies that the retreat is a loss. "We have not changed the strategy that we have had for 400 years. We have changed tactics," he says.
Dozens of the Chechens in the first-aid centre have been seriously wounded and were dragged here by their comrades. They are being treated by local women who run through the corridors with blood on their hands and have little knowledge of medicine.
In a small room, a lone doctor in bedroom slippers performs an amputation with minimal anaesthetic while the patient squirms.
A sobbing woman wanders from room to room, looking for her brother. "Where is he? Please tell me where he is." She finds her soldier brother shortly afterwards, dead and covered with a white sheet on a stretcher in the corridor.
The fighters, many of whom have been inside the city since October, wander through the first-aid centre, helping the wounded. Dirty syringes and ancient drips litter the floor; bloodstained stretchers are propped against walls. One soldier tries to stitch a wounded friend's bloody feet with a needle and thread while the man faints from pain.
All the time the bombardment continues. Dje, a 26-year-old woman fighter, says the past few weeks inside were a living hell. "The Russians are dropping every kind of bomb imaginable," she says. "Cluster bombs, deep penetrating bombs that wipe out the basements, even chemical bombs. The only thing they aren't dropping are nuclear weapons."
Dju says she received the order from her commander to gather her things and leave Grozny through the Russian defence ring. At one point, along a 60-yard corridor, the Russians were so close, she says, they could practically see each other. "But they don't like to fight us man to man. They have artillery and planes - we have fighters."
Losing so many of her comrades in the minefields, she says, was the worst incident of the war. She says there are still several thousand Chechen fighters inside the city centre, as well as 40,000 civilians, mainly ethnic Russians, the elderly, women and children who cannot make the treacherous journey out.
Early in the morning many villagers tried to flee, taking their belongings and children on carts. The ones here have no electricity, heating, water or telephones. They are terrified that the Russians will enter and take the women away.
One villager, sharing her lunch of pickled corn and bread, shakes her head as a mortar crashes in the distance and a machinegun rattles. "Hear that?" she says nonchalantly. "This is the music we live by."
Perhaps the most hideous aspect of this conflict is the sense of isolation. Unlike Bosnia, Kosovo or East Timor, there are no aid workers inside Chechnya, no medical relief teams, no United Nations. Apart from me, a German photographer and another European, there are no journalists reporting from the Chechen side.
The Chechens are bitter about this. "Why doesn't England do anything?" asks Yeva, a 33-year-old international lawyer from Grozny. "Only two or three times in our history have we had our statehood. There is no nation in the world that has had to fight so hard for it. Every time our population rises to a million, we get cut down." Her young daughter clutches her hand.
By late afternoon, as the light dims and the deep Caucasus cold sets in, the floors of the field hospital are sticky with blood, my boots sticking to them. The thin mattresses where the young fighters - all in their 20s - lie are soaked red; the doctor is on his fourth amputation.
On the second floor, in a small room at the end, a 26-year-old fighter named Muslim lies in a corner with half a foot covered in a bloody rag. He has been defending the capital since August and came out last night. "I stepped on one of those mines that injure but don't kill," he says. "It was a gift from the Almighty."
The man in the next bed was not so lucky. He was blinded by a "frog" mine, which springs into the air before exploding. The place where his eyes once were has swollen like grapefruit. His face is purple with bruises and he mutters incoherently as his comrades try to soothe him. When Commander A enters to check on his men, he stands by the blind man's bed for a long time with a look of terrible regret on his face.
"To go into the centre of Grozny now is suicide," one soldier says. "There is nothing left there, nothing! We defended it until it was time to leave."
Later Commander A also asks why the West has done nothing but stand by and watch the disintegration of Chechnya. "Our first war was for independence," he says. "When we fought for independence, they called us bandits. Now, when we fight for Islam, they will call us terrorists."
The soldiers, in their agony, call out Allahu akbar to each other. But Yeva, the young lawyer, says the war is not really about religion - it is about freedom. "Can't anybody help us? Don't we warrant any mercy from the world?"
Russia is POISED FOR GREAT VICTORY-CELEBRATION, OVER TERRORIST ENEMY..CHECHYN
The soldiers, in their agony, call out Allahu akbar to each other. But Yeva, the young lawyer, says the war is not really about religion - it is about freedom. "Can't anybody help us? Don't we warrant any mercy from the world?"
Shows fanatisism to the end.Answer to her question"You got what you deserve bitch"
REALLY GREAT STUFF________By Anne Nivat in Alkhan-Kala
1 February 2000
The Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev had surgery yesterday for injuries at the hospital in Alkhan-Kala, outside Grozny, after slipping out of the Chechen capital with more than 2,000 rebels.
News spread through the village like wildfire when the Chechen fighters were brought into the courtyard of the hospital in a caravan of rusty minibuses. "The wounded from Grozny are here," a boy shouted. The rebels, many with white sheets over their military fatigues – the same camouflage as their Russian enemies – quickly invaded the hospital, where the lone surgeon, who until yesterday had specialised in cosmetic surgery, got to work. It is not known when or how Mr Basayev was injured.
Russian troops have stepped up their offensive against the separatist rebels in Grozny since the New Year. Yesterday Russian forces were reported to have taken control of the central Minutka Square after battles in the heart of the capital. Interfax news agency quoted the military as saying 40 per cent of the city was under the control of Russian troops.
The wounding of Mr Basayev, who masterminded the attack on the republic of Dagestan that prompted the offensive against Chechnya in September, is a big setback for the rebels. "We left Grozny to care for our wounded and carry on our mission elsewhere," said Khamzat Dzherayev, the rebel commander of Bamut, who joined the fighters holed up in Grozny in November at the head of a unit of 190 men. "All that came to nothing. I am ashamed to be in this village and put its people in danger," he said.
Alkhan-Kala, 12 west of Grozny's outer suburbs, is technically in Russian-controlled territory. Armoured vehicles were swarming around the village market place and the Russian special services cannot ignore the presence of so many rebels and their leader. But Magomed, the rebel commander of a Grozny district, said: "The Russians are so scared of us that they wouldn't dare stick their nose in here."
In the hospital the wounded rebels were four to a room, blood seeping through their bandages. Nurses flew from ward to ward looking for clean syringes; there was hardly any medicine to be seen. In the corridor leading to the operating theatre the faces were grave – Mr Basayev was being operated on for serious wounds.
Outside, in temperatures of minus 25C, the rebels who got through the Russian lines without injury were smoking or eating apples and bread provided by the locals.
Their group of 2,100 men had to move through minefields to reach Alkhan-Kala. "We lost nine men in the first 50 yards," said one commander, Bashir. "So we had to change tactics. We couldn't avoid the Russians. There are dead and wounded on both sides."
Among those killed was Leche Dudayev, mayor of Grozny and nephew of Chechnya's first pro-independence president, the late Dzhokar Dudayev. Those who got through included 200 female fighters, cooks and nurses.
Despite their ordeal, the rebels were not downhearted yesterday. "We'll counter-attack," they repeated. Referring to the continuing Russian bombardment of Grozny, one rebel, Khamzat, said: "We'll leave them the city, which they will carry on bombing relentlessly well after we have gone, they are so scared of going in. They will hoist their flag. And then we will counter-attack. There is no other way."
Amazing day today,just fantastic.How do you feel Abdullah ,Bosna and all you other supporters of that fanatic Muslim shite.Feels good eh?hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha Go say some prayers,do not forget noseplug so you do not have to smell stinkey arse bent in front of you.lolololololololololol OH BABY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I just couldn't wait to rub your face in it.
To Balalaika
The guy is calling you a HOHOL and despite that your are still trying to defend them? These people do not have respect for nothing but only money.
To Igor
A good news indeed. This calls for celebration 🙂