oh, excuse me, GROSS PIG FAKE
were you saying something?
"""my boy Piazza is gonna bring it home baby a la '86. u remember that don't u gay boy."""
_______________________________________
I thought you liked my "boy" a la Spring 2000, SORE, ya "boy"-muncher, LOL..
ya dumb f@cking BOY..
There's a cavernous echo in here......
...in here.....
...in here.....
...in here.....
Where is everyone?
....one...
....one...
...one....
dimibaby is struggling.... LOL... just us inept as lmenex... LOL...
BTW Im talking baseball. You know Americas past time. U should slap that Ukranian Wh0re you call A MOTHER, for not teaching you Americas past time.
Where is URN anyway? that guy is funny!
Former defence minister of Georgia Tenghiz Kitovani urged the country's administration to stop turning a blind eye to the attempts of Chechen rebels to establish their bases in one of Georgian regions.
The authorities should negotiate with Russia to establish order in the areas adjacent to Chechnya, Kitovani told the Military News Agency. If it is not done, masses of Chechen rebels will enter the Georgian territory to spend the winter outside the area of the anti-guerrilla operation already this year, he said.
According to Kitovani, the use of force would be inexpedient in the matter. If Georgian troops attempt to prevent the rebels from entering the country by force, bloodshed will be imminent, he said.
The situation is further aggravated by the fact that about 2,000 Chechen guerrillas are already residing in Georgia's Pankiss Gorge, and there will be more of them by the winter, the ex-minister said.
Also on Thursday, commander of the Georgian border troops Valery Chkheidze told reporters negotiations with the rebels blocked near the Ingush section of the Russian-Georgian border were still underway. "The Chechens have so far been reluctant to lay down arms voluntarily, as this step would damage their combat reputation," he said.
"Representatives of the blocked formation are willing to move in the Georgian territory with arms, but the Georgian law-enforcement agencies will not allow this," Chkheidze stressed.
According to him, the 25 Chechens brought for treatment to Tbilisi belonged to a different gang. It was not armed, he claimed.
The 60-strong group of Chechen guerrillas was spotted in the Georgian territory near the Russian border on October 20. The Georgian army and police blocked the group and entered into negotiations with its leaders. After that, 25 rebels surrendered. Those who were ill were placed in Tbilisi hospitals. Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze told national radio on Monday the entire gang laid down arms after negotiations. This runs contrary to the statement of Chkheidze.
Some time ago, a group of Chechen militants was blocked in a Georgian district, adjacent to the border with Ingushetia. According to Russian special services, part of the militants, who have served in Ruslan Gelayev's unit, intend to surrender to Georgian powers. Georgia will most probably grant freedom to most of the militants in exchange for handing in their arms. Wounded militants are already taken to hospitals in the Georgian territory. Most probably, Chechens will be brought to the Pankissky district of Georgia, where there are a lot of Chechen villages.
The events of the past days prove that the Georgian powers have made their choice: they care for relations with Chechen militants more than relations with Russia. This is probably because they fear of Chechens more than they do Russians.
The information on the incident that was communicated by Georgian President Eduard Shevarnadze on October 21 and 23, was inaccurate. On October 21, he said that Georgian border guards detected traces of several dozens of people who penetrated into the territory of Georgia, unimpeded by Russian border services. Two days later, the Georgian President said that the majority of armed Chechen units that came to Georgia from Russia, have laid down arms. He said that there are wounded people among militants and even a body of a dead Georgian citizen. However, at the news conference on the same day, Shevarnadze said that these people are not militants, because they do not have arms, but were badly frozen and wounded.
In reality, a group of Chechen militants was moving from Georgia to Chechnya, when it was detected by Russian border guards. After a fight with them, the Chechen group decided to go back to Georgia. Russian special services informed their Georgian counterparts about the incident. They also asked Georgian border guards to detain militants which, apparently, was not done
Chorny,
Youve turned out to be quit an intellegent poster on these boards. although I hate cut and pasting, most of urs are worth reading.
You being a Russian, how do you see the situation in Chechnya, and what are your visions on the conflict & settlement of this conflict.. Im interested in your opinion cause frankly most russians on these boards are nothing to write home about.
If you read the posts you will see that the Chechens are done like toast.They have no local support and are trying to escape from Chechnya.The war is over a long time ago and most Russian troops have gone home.Now they are in the mop up stage.If you want to read up on the Chechen wars and news from there try http://www.infocentre.ru/eng_user/index.cfm
anyone would be struggling, SORE, when you forget to put vaseline in between yo sore arabian floppy buttocks, heh..
and I wont lick it before I stick, sore, keep that in mind, lol..
Taleban warns Russia
Masood leads the opposition forces against the Taleban
Afghanistan's ruling Taleban has warned Russia of grave consequences if it backed opposition forces in the north of the country.
The comments followed a meeting between Russia's Defence Minister, Igor Sergeyev, and Afghan opposition commander Ahmed Shah Masood in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe.
Mr Masood leads the anti-Taleban Northern Alliance, which holds on to the only bit of Afghanistan outside Taleban control.
Central Asia is slowly becoming the capital of international terrorism, with Islamic extremists trying to redraw the map of the region
A senior Taleban spokesman said Russia should stop interfering in Afghanistan.
"The consequences would be very dangerous if it continues to do so," the spokesman, Abdul Hai Mutmaen, said.
"We can create lots of problems for the Russians and impart heavy losses on them," he said.
Reports say Igor Sergeyev and Mr Masood discussed the situation in northern Afghanistan and the opposition's resistance to the Taleban.
There has been an upsurge of fighting recently, with the Taleban capturing the key opposition stronghold of Taloqan. This has pushed the Northern Alliance further up, close to the Tajik border.
It has also increased fears among Afghanistan's Central Asian neighbours, such as Iran, that the fighting could spill over.
"There is no military way to resolve the Afghan problem. All parties must come to the negotiating table and create a government with the participation of all political forces and ethnic groups," Iranian Foreign Minister, Kamal Kharazi said.
Terrorism
The Russian defence minister is in Dushanbe to hold discussions with his counterparts from 11 former Soviet republics.
He said the meeting would discuss steps to create an effective, regional security system.
"Central Asia is slowly becoming the capital of international terrorism, with Islamic extremists trying to redraw the map of the region," he said.
Russia says the Taleban regime in Afghanistan is promoting Islamic terrorism in the neighbourhood in conjunction with the drug trade.
"Afghanistan has turned into a centre of production for drugs and weapons, which are then transported through Central Asia, Russia and then on to Europe," Mr Sergeyev said.
Russia also accuses the Taleban of supporting rebels in Chechnya, and in May threatened to carry out air strikes against suspected Chechen rebel bases in Afghanistan.
NAZRAN, Russia (October 26, 2000 1:32 p.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com ) - President Vladimir Putin claimed Thursday that Russian forces have almost wrapped up the fight Chechen rebels, despite daily clashes and casualties.
"Organized resistance is now crushed ... there are no large-scale military actions" in Chechnya, the ITAR-Tass news agency quoted Putin as saying. Putin made the comments in an interview with Russian and French journalists Thursday.
He said only four or five rebel bands remained in Chechnya, the Interfax news agency reported.
Russian officials have declared victory in the year-old conflict scores of times, only to have the guerrilla forces rally and rout Russian troops in ambushes.
Russian artillery batteries opened fire Thursday in three regions of Chechnya, an official in Chechnya's pro-Moscow administration said.
Warplanes and helicopters aided the attack, in one of the largest bombardments in recent weeks, the official said. The shelling was reported in regions of eastern and southern Chechnya, where rebel presence remains strong.
Also Thursday, rebels laying in wait on a road leading to the town of Gudermes opened fire on a Russian military vehicle, killing one soldier, the official said.
In his interview Thursday, Putin insisted that the previous, deeply unpopular 1994-96 Chechnya war and the current conflict, which began under his leadership a year ago, had different aims.
"Whereas during the so-called first Chechen war one could talk about Russia's imperial ambitions and attempts to curb the territories it controls, last summer, as you know, everything was different," Interfax quoted Putin as saying.
He reiterated arguments that troops were sent to Chechnya this time because it had become a base for terrorists and an Islamic movement harmful to Russia's interests.
Russian forces moved into Chechnya after rebels based there attacked the neighboring region of Dagestan, and after a series of deadly apartment bombings in Russia blamed on the rebels.
Friday, October 27 1:11 AM SGT
Iraq announces regular Baghdad-Moscow flights to begin
BAGHDAD, Oct 26 (AFP) -
Iraqi Transport Minister Ahmed Murtada announced that regular flights by a Russian carrier will begin connecting Baghdad and Moscow from Friday, despite the United Nations embargo.
"The Russian company, Vnukovskie, will provide from October 27 four direct weekly between Moscow and Baghdad," Murtada was quoted by the official INA news agency as saying.
"The Iraqi civil aviation department has made all the necessary preparations for receiving the airplanes at Saddam International Airport and of providing them with ground services," he said.
The move comes a bit more than two months after the August 17 reopening of the airport in Baghdad.
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See yas!