Kosovo will declare independence at February 17th

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Post by Dahak »

Darth Wong wrote:
RIPP_n_WIPE wrote:So after hundreds of years of "unity"...

Eastern Europe is returning to its medieval state :lol:

Ah the irony.
It seems to me that racism is so deeply ingrained into European thinking that it cannot be removed, which is why ethnic separatism is always such a strong cultural force.

Even in the more "enlightened" countries, there is a sense that nationality and race are overlapping concepts. Does the word "German" mean "citizen of the nation-state of Germany" or "ethnic descendant of medieval Germans"? It seems to mean both, with an unhealthy emphasis on the latter.
Well, the current German nation-state as such only came to be quite recently (in European terms). Before, it was just a conglomeration of small states, but all shared the sense that they were all German in some way, even if there was no "Germany". That sentiment is still evident in the phrase "Deutschland über alles" (Germany above all), which only got taken out of context in the Nazi time.
But today, when I think of myself as "German", I do not have any connection to some obscure medieval Germans, but only to the nation-state. Most people outside of any die-hard Neo-Nazi nationalists don't even think of the former Imperial German territories as "Germany".
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Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

montypython wrote:The Soviet Union and Yugoslavia were quite correct in fighting against the nationalist chauvinist tribalism inspite of whatever faults they may have had. The failure to overcome those tribalist elements was a great tragedy, ultimately.
Tribalist elements are a problem anywhere when there's a lack of homogeneity. It is only a matter of degree.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Here's the first fallout, fresh - Russia officially acknowledges the independence of Abkhazia and it's goverment as a valid state. :lol: Didn't take too long.
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Post by MKSheppard »

What the hell is Abkhazia?
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Post by VT-16 »

Stas Bush wrote:Here's the first fallout, fresh - Russia officially acknowledges the independence of Abkhazia and it's goverment as a valid state. :lol: Didn't take too long.
HAH, knew it. I just learned about that area yesterday, reading up on it and South Ossetia's independence struggle. Didn't think it would be this short a while before they did it. Playground politics is fun. :P
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Everybody knew it. Well, I guess Mike Saakashvili's little dream of "Greater Georgia" just said puffffth. Too bad his country may become a ground for a new Civil War, but that's the way post-Soviet affairs go: it's never been bloodless and quite possibly the bloodscars from 1991-echoes will pave the road for yet more conflict in the future.
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Post by MKSheppard »

To celebrate this; I shall play a Georgia vs Russia conflict in WinMBT.
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Post by MKSheppard »

Oh god, this is fun; T-55AM2 PBKs versus run of teh mill T-55s and BTR-70s (which is acutally realistic)

I chedked military balance 04-05 and it says:

AIFV/APC 185: 65 BMP-1, 13 BMP-2, 11 BRM-1K,
1 BTR-60, 15 BTR-70, 3 BTR-80, 72 MT-LB

TOWED ARTY 122mm: 60 D-30; 152mm: 3 2A36,
11 2A65

SP ARTY 152mm: 1 2S3; 203mm: 1 2S7

MRL 122mm: 16 BM-21

MOR 120mm: 17 M-120

ATGW ε10

ATK GUNS ε40

SAM some SA-13


ATTACK 7 Su-25 (1 -25, 5 - 25K, 1 -25UB), 5 Su-17 (nonoperational)

TPT 6 An-2, 1 Yak-18T, 2 Yak-40, 1 Tu-134A (VIP)

HEL 3 Mi-24 (attack), 4 Mi-8/17, 8 UH-1H

TRG ac 4 Yak-52s, 9 L-29 hel 2 Mi-2
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Post by Vympel »

Wow, the Russians really cleaned them out before they left.
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Post by Vympel »

I should note that in the Balkans, a big problem with "the Kosovo Precedent" is Republika Srpska. That'll be the Serb majority region in Bosnia-Unspellable seceding and becoming independent. And probably annexed by Serbia.

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Post by Netko »

montypython wrote:The Soviet Union and Yugoslavia were quite correct in fighting against the nationalist chauvinist tribalism inspite of whatever faults they may have had. The failure to overcome those tribalist elements was a great tragedy, ultimately.
Tell me, how was Yugoslavia fighting against "nationalist chauvinist tribalism" when (simplified a bit) Serbian "nationalist chauvinist tribalism" was the trigger for Slovenia and Croatia exercising their secession rights? I already said on this site that I really would have preferred that Yugoslavia didn't break up, but that was only theoretically possible if the nationalistic tensions in late '80-ies were lessened. Claiming that "Yugoslavia were quite correct in fighting against the nationalist chauvinist tribalism" is a height of stupidity and shows your lack of education about the issue, since even those who are pro-Serbia in viewpoint don't have quite the gall to claim that Serbia was really just misunderstood and that in reality they were acting towards lofty goals, what with, you know, them being primarily responsible for the coining of the delightful phrase "ethnic cleansing", being the perpetrators of the only recognised genocide in the wars etc.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Tell me, how was Yugoslavia fighting against "nationalist chauvinist tribalism"
I guess he meant Yugoslavia proper (as a united state), not Serbia or any of the resulting nationalist splinters. :? Just as the USSR doesn't mean Russia or any of the resulting nationalist republics.
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Post by Kane Starkiller »

Stas Bush wrote:I guess he meant Yugoslavia proper (as a united state), not Serbia or any of the resulting nationalist splinters. Confused Just as the USSR doesn't mean Russia or any of the resulting nationalist republics.
The trouble is there was no Yugoslavia anymore. We were talking about Croatia and Slovenia wanting to secede with Serbia opposing. It's not like there was much more to Yugoslavia than those 3 republics. The last president of Yugoslavia was Stipe Mesić, the current president of Croatia. Guess how much control over Yugoslav military he had. It was all in Serbian hands.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

The trouble is there was no Yugoslavia anymore.
He said that Yugoslavia failed to stifle ethnic strife and tribalism. :? So where's the disagreement.
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Post by Kane Starkiller »

Ah you mean before shit hit the fan in 1989 and later. Well yes that is certainly true. Interesting thing is how in every Yugoslavian census there was more and more people declaring themselves as "Yugoslavians" rather than Serbs, Croats, Slovenes etc. It was still a miniscule proportion even in late 80s but still if the country survived maybe old ethnic divisions would disappear entirely. Now we'll never know.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

It was still a miniscule proportion even in late 80s but still if the country survived maybe old ethnic divisions would disappear entirely.
Well, maybe not entirely, but at least they wouldn't result in massive civil war with thousands of dead, ethnic cleansing and displacement of hundreds of thousands of citizens.
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Post by Mange »

Stas Bush wrote:
Mange wrote:I can't say that I'm surprised given the mismanagement during the Soviet era which laid the foundation to the problems in Georgia, Tajikistan etc.
Oh please, cut that silliness. Even with a rudimentary understanding of economics you could understand what is wrong when a huge state falls apart - a small republic just doesn't have the money to keep the huge industrial infrastructure afloat. When you're a united state, you can count on federal government to cover the cost, but when you're alone and small you suddenly figure out you're fucked. Happened thousand times in history.
Indeed, that's why it's a pity that the transition wasn't slower. But things such as the suppression of private entrepreneurship and the virtual non-existence of a market infrastructure in the Soviet Union is something that continues to plague many of the former SSR republics to this day.
Stas Bush wrote: And "Soviet mismanagement" in Central Asia? You mean raising the life expectancy of those hellholes, building huge energy projects and irrigation to support their growing populations, giving them high-quality healthcare and education? :lol: Yeah, I bet Central Asia would be better off in the same state as Afghanistan or, little better, Pakistan. :lol: Except those are hellholes, were hellholes during the entire Soviet period, and will be hellholes.
Well, I certainly admire the Soviet irrigation projects. Just look at the success stories of the 60's projects diverting Amu Darya and Syr Darya. And the people was so happy first to be forced into Imperial Russia and the Worker's Paradise!
And let's not forget the successes of genetics in the Soviet Union! "Genetics? Bah, a bourgeois concept. Comrade Lysenko will show you how the Soviet agriculture will blossom with yarovizatsiya!"
Stas Bush wrote:Or do you mean by "mismanagement" a strong supression of radical islam and nationalism in those republics? Which, when let on the loose in the 90s, led to murderous civil wars in the post-Soviet republics? Oh no, I guess it was better to let those people slaughter each other. :roll:
No, what I would say is that those people should have had a say on their own situation.
Stas Bush wrote:Perhaps you'd also say that nationalism in Yugoslavia, which led to murderous civil war, ethnic cleansing, ultimately a NATO bombing and then again ethnic cleansing, and breakaway and economic collapse of infrastructure, is a force for good? Fuck that. Fuck nationalism. Fuck it long, fuck it hard.
I agree with you on nationalism, but I can certainly understand the wish of the majority of Kosovo Albanians to secede from Serbia. I can't imagine that I'd be willing to remain within a nation which practiced ethnic cleansing on people of my ethnicity (or anyone elses for that matter). And Russia must as usual these days make an uneasy situation even more. It's as if they're standing up, waving their arms frantically "Look at us, we're important! You must do as we say".
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Post by Thanas »

Darth Wong wrote:Even in the more "enlightened" countries, there is a sense that nationality and race are overlapping concepts. Does the word "German" mean "citizen of the nation-state of Germany" or "ethnic descendant of medieval Germans"? It seems to mean both, with an unhealthy emphasis on the latter.
I wonder where you get the "unhealthy emphasis on the latter" from. I certainly have not heard a single politician making a speech claiming you would have to be descendant of medieval germans in order to be a german. That would be rather ridiculous, because going by that definition, half of Italy, the Netherlands and a good portion of France would be able to claim they were german. According to the law, A German is whoever holds a german passport. Race does not factor into that.

I think you are confusing being part of the influence sphere of german culture with actually being german. The Austrians for example are part of the first, but most Germans would certainly not claim that the austrians are part of Germany.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Mange wrote:But things such as the suppression of private entrepreneurship and the virtual non-existence of a market infrastructure in the Soviet Union is something that continues to plague many of the former SSR republics to this day.
:lol: How so? There's a market, and it's working. There are also markets in Latin America. There are markets in Asia. Lots of markets in Africa. What's wrong?
Mange wrote:Well, I certainly admire the Soviet irrigation projects.
Are you being deliberately dense, or do you really think the USSR didn't raise the life expectancy, education, and industry level in Central Asia? Do you not realize that most of Tajikistan's supply, which even allowed to have such a large population in the first place, came from Soviet projects? :roll:
Mange wrote:And the people was so happy first to be forced into Imperial Russia and the Worker's Paradise!
Were the Central Asian republics "captured" by the USSR like, say, Eastern European states? Doesn't look that way, so you better get up on history before spouting this :roll: But yeah, they'd be better off in a state like Afghanistan, with mad nomadic slave-loving, islamist warlords ruling the territories :lol: . I mean, they just love that, don't they? Freedom is more important than human suffering, isn't it? Better dead (or under theocracy, under anything!) then red :lol:
Mange wrote:And let's not forget the successes of genetics in the Soviet Union!
And lets derail the thread with massive irrelevant things. :roll: I raised a point which you failed to properly adress - the fact that the life in Central Asia was much better under the USSR, and the Soviet state spent lots of funds to achieve it - funds, which neither of the Central Asian republics has.
Mange wrote:No, what I would say is that those people should have had a say on their own situation.
Yeah, I'm just feeling the people of the neighboring states of Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan have had so much say on their "situations". :roll: They're just so awesome, those people. Especially the ones saying "Allahu Ackbar".
Mange wrote:I can certainly understand the wish of the majority of Kosovo Albanians to secede from Serbia.
So do I. I wish though the whole thing didn't exist in the first place, or at least find some measure of reconciliation. Of course, if that's impossible, the events will unfold as they do. And of course, the ongoing ethnic cleansing in the 2000s is not making this problem any easier.
Mange wrote:And Russia must as usual these days make an uneasy situation even more.
What is Russia doing? Protesting this along with Serbia? As if anyone gives a fuck. :roll:
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Post by salm »

Thanas wrote:
Darth Wong wrote:Even in the more "enlightened" countries, there is a sense that nationality and race are overlapping concepts. Does the word "German" mean "citizen of the nation-state of Germany" or "ethnic descendant of medieval Germans"? It seems to mean both, with an unhealthy emphasis on the latter.
I wonder where you get the "unhealthy emphasis on the latter" from. I certainly have not heard a single politician making a speech claiming you would have to be descendant of medieval germans in order to be a german. That would be rather ridiculous, because going by that definition, half of Italy, the Netherlands and a good portion of France would be able to claim they were german. According to the law, A German is whoever holds a german passport. Race does not factor into that.

I think you are confusing being part of the influence sphere of german culture with actually being german. The Austrians for example are part of the first, but most Germans would certainly not claim that the austrians are part of Germany.
Meh, he´s not totally wrong. How often do you hear someone declared as a Turk even if you don´t know if the person in question has a German passport and is just a decentant of a Turk. You even hear that all the time in cases when you know the guy has a German passport.
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Well, now that the independence of Abkhazia has been recognized by Russia (no doubt several former Soviet republics, the Belarus in particular, will follow suit), how long until South Ossetia and the Transdneistr follow? I presume they haven't been recognized yet because they, unlike Abkhazia, haven't previously declared independence.

The Republic Srpska is probably, with this example of immediate Russian recognition, preparing its own declaration of independence as we speak.

Furthermore, as I understand it, the Serb-majority region of Kosovo is assembling its own "provincial parliament" which will declare Kosovo to remain an integral part of Serbia. Two parliaments both claiming one country is, of course, the perfect precursor for civil war.
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Post by Mange »

Stas Bush wrote:
Mange wrote:But things such as the suppression of private entrepreneurship and the virtual non-existence of a market infrastructure in the Soviet Union is something that continues to plague many of the former SSR republics to this day.
:lol: How so? There's a market, and it's working. There are also markets in Latin America. There are markets in Asia. Lots of markets in Africa. What's wrong?
Can't you see the adverse effects the inefficient Soviet economic system had when the Soviet Union collapsed? In that case, there's really not much I can do for you. You're a great guy, Stas, but sometimes you lose the perspective.
Mange wrote:Well, I certainly admire the Soviet irrigation projects.
Are you being deliberately dense, or do you really think the USSR didn't raise the life expectancy, education, and industry level in Central Asia? Do you not realize that most of Tajikistan's supply, which even allowed to have such a large population in the first place, came from Soviet projects? :roll:[/quote]
I certainly don't doubt that the life expectancy rose and I don't doubt that the Soviet education had positive effects on the Tajiks, such as eliminating the illiteracy.
Mange wrote:And the people was so happy first to be forced into Imperial Russia and the Worker's Paradise!
Stas Bush wrote:Were the Central Asian republics "captured" by the USSR like, say, Eastern European states? Doesn't look that way, so you better get up on history before spouting this :roll:
Yes, in essence they were and with the case of Georgia, the country was invaded and occupied by foreign troops. And the Tajiks fought against both the Imperial Russian Army and the Bolsheviks for their independence. And invading and forcing Georgia to become part of the Soviet Union in 1921 was just as dumb as if we had tried to hold on to Norway. Perhaps it's you who should read up on the history, Stas?
Stas Bush wrote:But yeah, they'd be better off in a state like Afghanistan, with mad nomadic slave-loving, islamist warlords ruling the territories :lol: . I mean, they just love that, don't they? Freedom is more important than human suffering, isn't it? Better dead (or under theocracy, under anything!) then red :lol:
I'm not a fan of religion and I'm quite outspoken on the matter, but I don't think the solution is to suppress religious life or cultural expressions.
Mange wrote:And let's not forget the successes of genetics in the Soviet Union!
Stas Bush wrote:And lets derail the thread with massive irrelevant things. :roll: I raised a point which you failed to properly adress - the fact that the life in Central Asia was much better under the USSR, and the Soviet state spent lots of funds to achieve it - funds, which neither of the Central Asian republics has.
As you said yourself: Tajikistan was a "hell hole" before Soviet rule, during Soviet rule and after Soviet rule. IIRC, it was the poorest SSR republic and I guess it's one of the poorest former SSR republics today. I can't say that it was "better" under Soviet rule as I, unlike you, can't predict how the situation in the country would have been if it had not been a Soviet republic. And derailing? I was just referring to some of the achievements you hinted at, but you're right, this is neither the time nor thread to discuss this further.
Mange wrote:No, what I would say is that those people should have had a say on their own situation.
Stas Bush wrote:Yeah, I'm just feeling the people of the neighboring states of Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan have had so much say on their "situations". :roll: They're just so awesome, those people. Especially the ones saying "Allahu Ackbar".
They may say "Allahu Ackbar" just as much as they want for me. I was referring to the situation prior, during and after the revolution, but no one asked the Tajiks (or anyone else for that matter) if they wanted to be part of the Worker's Paradise.
Mange wrote:I can certainly understand the wish of the majority of Kosovo Albanians to secede from Serbia.
Stas Bush wrote:So do I. I wish though the whole thing didn't exist in the first place, or at least find some measure of reconciliation. Of course, if that's impossible, the events will unfold as they do. And of course, the ongoing ethnic cleansing in the 2000s is not making this problem any easier.
I certainly agree,
Mange wrote:And Russia must as usual these days make an uneasy situation even more.
Mange wrote:What is Russia doing? Protesting this along with Serbia? As if anyone gives a fuck. :roll:
I posted too soon. Perhaps what I was trying to say was "To make themselves more relevant than they really are".:wink:
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Post by Kane Starkiller »

What I find puzzling is that Putin warned several times that recognizing Kosovo could lead to a domino effect of separatism in other countries yet at the same time he threatens that Russia will recognize Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
If he is truly concerned about the domino effect shouldn't he, now more than ever, refuse to even entertain the idea of recognizing additional separatist republics? So as to try and stop the chain reaction instead of enhancing it?
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Mange wrote:Can't you see the adverse effects the inefficient Soviet economic system had when the Soviet Union collapsed?
Sorry, but I see more problems from nationalist civil wars than from any Soviet legacies per se. In fact, Soviet "legacy" in the forms of large industrial plants became the basis for large capitals, and today generates the bulk of revenue for post-Soviet republics with such giants as KAMAZ, MAZ, ONPZ, et cetera, while the Soviet policy of giving flats to citizenry has given many initial funds for small capital accumulation. However, the civil wars totally ruined the infrastructure in many republics; this way they ended up in a worse situation than Russia itself. Not to mention that the infrastructure was large, and were the USSR taking the transition as a whole, it would not only have been far milder, but it's effects would have been appropriately less severe due to the ability of inter-border funding.

And I believe you're tempting me to look at the stable and efficient economies of other Central Asian states, which neighbor those. Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan. What, not really good? Islamic hellholes, drug centers, unstable as heck with massive poverty? Illiteracy? No rights of women whatsoever? Well sorry. That's the alternative you proposed for those nations. I don't like it. Moreover, AlQuaeda and the Islamists from Afghanistan TRIED to install radical islam back into Central Asia as far as 1991 (that's what progressive, free and independent Soviet neighbors in Central Asia are :lol: ) , and targeted Tajikistan first as the base of a proxy war. They lost.
Mange wrote:And the Tajiks fought against both the Imperial Russian Army and the Bolsheviks for their independence.
Are you saying Islamic warlords were fighting for their independence? Are you also of the opinion that the Taliban were freedom fighters against "Soviet opression" of a "free Islamic people", as Carter put it, in Afghanistan? The pan-Islamists and pan-Turkists were fighters for "independence"? Good fucking god. Are you saying Enver fucking Pasha, an Islamist and a Turkish official, who vowed to fight in the name of Islam for a pan-Islamic state, and to that end rallied all the radical islamic warlords of Central Asia, the Basmachi, was a "fighter for independence" of anything?
Mange wrote:I'm not a fan of religion and I'm quite outspoken on the matter, but I don't think the solution is to suppress religious life or cultural expressions.
Okay, let's put it that way, Mange. Central Asia was under traditional Islam. Some parts of it, during the October Revolution, turned pro-Soviet. Eventually the Basmachi in the Central Asian republics were destroyed. However, the many of the neighboring states remained Islamic, so we can see the result.

I ask you one more time - which is better for Central Asia, to be under the "foreign" influence of Soviet power (they had their share of Communists, and nationalist elites controlled lots of soviets in those territories, anyway), or to be under Islamic warlords? Embrace universal literacy, modern industrialization, emancipation of women and prohibition of Islam, or become an Islamic nation? If I were given two options, an Islamic nation or a Soviet republic, XX century, which would I choose? :roll:
Mange wrote:As you said yourself: Tajikistan was a "hell hole" before Soviet rule, during Soviet rule and after Soviet rule.
Really? I recall saying other Central Asian nations remained hellholes - meaning the neighbors of the USSR, like Afghan, Pakistan, Iran. For the period of Soviet rule, massive investment by the Central Government - which actually contributed to quality of life, as you already admitted - lifted Central Asian republics from what was essentially traditionalist, medieval law societies. Do you think medieval-law societies should survive? Why?
Mange wrote:I was referring to the situation prior, during and after the revolution, but no one asked the Tajiks (or anyone else for that matter) if they wanted to be part of the Worker's Paradise.
Really? :roll: It's not like local Soviets in Central Asia took control of many territories, not like local population was participating in the Civil War? :lol:

I want to be very clear: are you saying the victory of Islamic warlords represented the interests of Central Asian nations? Are you saying the USSR didn't basically transform those traditionalist societies into a modern, literate, industrialized ones, or that doing it was not in the interests of the peoples of Central Asia? Are you saying the USSR should not have massively invested in the region? (and if not the USSR, who? Iran? Paki? Afghanistan? Or just independent theocracies or ochlocracies, poor and horrific as Afghanistan is?). Are you saying the USSR should have "asked" someone? Whom? Islamist warlords - since those were the only effective opposition in Central Asia? Why should it not have fought Islamic warlords? Do you have any reasons why it should have just abandoned Central Asia to them, with a rather clear Civil War going on?

We see the result of independent islamic warlord victories in the wonderful neighbor states of Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Hallowed be Allah, illiterate women murdered in accordance with Sharia law. :roll:
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K. A. Pital
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Kane Starkiller wrote:What I find puzzling is that Putin warned several times that recognizing Kosovo could lead to a domino effect of separatism in other countries
He warned the West that PMR, Abkhazia and S.Ossetia will breakaway. It's not as if he sees that as a negative thing. That's his warning. ;)
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