Edited by Desi Tzoneva
On 4 September 2016 at the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, China, Russian President, Vladimir Putin, is going to meet his French colleague, François Hollande. There will be a similar meeting held with German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, the following day. There will therefore be no trilateral meeting between the three heads of state as previously planned. Russian Presidential Aide, Yury Ushakov, has explained that the three leaders have decided to conduct two separate bilateral meetings due to their demanding schedules. The subject of both meetings will be the Ukraine.
Ushakov also added that the meetings would not be held in the Normandy format. Although the Ukraine is not a part of the G20, Ukrainian President, Petro Poroshenko, has nevertheless tried to use the Summit in Hangzhou to arrange for one more Normandy-format meeting.
Putin has rejected any meeting with Poroshenko after the attempted terrorist attack in Crimea. It also appears that both France and Germany consider the current political course of the Ukrainian regime, if not particularly terrorist, at least inadequate. Paris and Berlin’s views on the Ukraine, however, are far from similar.
It also appears that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will either cancel or shift its next transaction for the Ukraine as Kiev has failed to perform its obligations to its creditors. The Ukrainian national currency, the hryvnia (UAH), continues to lose value. One US dollar now equals 26 hryvnias, whereas three years ago, the Ukrainian currency was four times stronger. At the same time, there has been no change in the levels of salaries or pensions in the Ukraine.
Putin should firmly push Ukraine towards EU. EU must assume responsibility for the mess they created. It would be nice if EU partially financed relocation of Ukrainian citizens which Russia is ready to accept. (Yawn)
The open source investigative outlet Bellingcat has
published a report on medals issued by the Russian military for troops’
service in Ukraine, offering a hint at the scale of Moscow’s covert footprint
in the country’s separatist regions. Using imagery of medals published
by Russian servicemen on social media and elsewhere, the sequential
numbers on the medals, and the dates awarded, researchers concluded that
at least ten thousand Russian troops participated in operations in
Ukraine from 2014 through 2015 and likely many more.
Eliot Higgins is a jerk, not an ‘open source investigative outlet’. Nobody awards soldiers with Suvorov or Kutuzov medals – those medals exist for top commanders. Before spreading such ridiculous hypes, Eliot has to do his homework. Regards. (Yawn)
why you yawn?
I yawn because I am gopnik. I have to show off.
Given that you are Ukrainian supporter of Kiev regime, and that you follow me on Disqus – apparently trying to understand, let me give you a link to a really good article about Ukraine. You will be surprised, because truth is off-limits in Ukraine. However this article is really good. There is a little of bullsh*t about ‘Russian aggression’, the rest is good: http://gazeta.zn.ua/internal/o-buduschem-strany-bez-buduschego-_.html
russian language foreign to me