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What possible reason could Trump have for doing this...

KnightSlayer

Well-Known Member
Sep 8, 2014
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other than being a Russian stooge.

Two weeks after Trump assumes office, he directs our intelligence agencies to find out about Polish plans to invade Belarus. Where would Trump get the idea that this needed to be investigated? Why in the world would that be an official request just two weeks into his presidency?

Play with the “Polish invasion plans” would have been a good way to prevent possible agreement between Warsaw and Minsk and a justification of the need for additional Russian ‘military aid’ to Belarus. Moreover, it would have been a proof that the statements of Russian propaganda of hostile and aggressive attitude of NATO are true. Moscow is very much upset with Lukashenko for his recent flirtation with the West. At the same time, Russia-Poland relations are bad, and Moscow is eager to annoy Warsaw.


Trump goes on Fox News and calls the people of Montenegro very aggressive and they could be the cause of WW III. Does anyone here think Trump actually knows anything about the people of Montenegro? Does it bother anyone that this happened days after his "summit" with Putin.

Montenegro, a former Yugoslav republic with a population of about 630,000, joined Nato last year, becoming is 29th member, a move that enraged Moscow. Its military numbers about 2,000 personnel.

Montenegro’s relations with Russia have deteriorated in recent years as the Balkan nation moved to join Nato. It also hopes to join the European Union, much to the anger of Putin, who sees the west perennially creeping towards Russia.


Now, he randomly brings up the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan as a righteous endeavor by the Soviets in an effort to combat terrorism. Again, a subject that almost no one in the world is talking about in any way. No one that is except Putin and Russia.

Last month, Russian lawmakers took another big step in the same direction by approving a draft resolution that seeks to justify the Soviet Union’s war in Afghanistan from 1979 to 1989. The formal vote on the measure — proposed jointly by lawmakers from the United Russia and Communist parties — will be held before the 30th anniversary of the withdrawal of Soviet troops on Feb. 15. Hailing the decision, Communist lawmaker Nikolai Kharitonov called it a victory for “historical truth.”

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