Listen to you people... A tape clearly showing Russian Servicemen dumping gagged bodies into a ditch. Oh I wonder what they are doing? Izvestia daily reported this/reported that. What more do you need?  Face it you living in denial man...Denial man... you freaks make me laugh.  
 
Let's continue to argue this mute point.  Dummies.
kim: 
kisako: 
 
great! i love it! 
XOXOX 
LOLOL
hey, jack armstrong: 
it wouldnt be "MUTE" point 
it would be "MOOT" point. 
 
you illiterate americans make me laugh.
LMAO... L'menexe are you on crack. LOL.  
 
Talk about blowing a fart in your own face. LMAO.  
Hilarious... pls keep it coming you're on a role Chief.  f u c k i n g Hilarious stuff! The Vagabond keeps getting better.  
still awaiting your next correction!LOL.
KEEP YOUR DU'A COMING, O MUSLIMS, AND PUT YOUR FAITH IN ALLAH! 
 
THE BEST IS YET TO COME, INSHA ALLAH!!! 
 
 
Published Thursday, February 24, 2000, in the San Jose Mercury News  
 
                      Rebels in Chechnya plan 
                      spring attack 
 
                      Russian onslaught galvanizes civilian support 
 
                      BY DAVE MONTGOMERY 
                      Mercury News Moscow Bureau  
 
                      NAZRAN, Russia -- Despite Russian claims of imminent victory in 
                      Chechnya, rebel fighters are preparing for years of guerrilla warfare, 
                      and according to one Chechen officer, they are preparing to unleash a 
                      counteroffensive in the spring. 
 
                      After relinquishing Grozny, Chechnya's capital, to Russian troops, the 
                      rebels have retreated to the breakaway republic's cave-riddled 
                      mountains, drawing on secret caches of munitions and food that were 
                      stockpiled months ago as war with Russia became imminent. 
 
                      The rebels are fortified by an army of civilians -- predominantly 
                      women -- who are making wool socks and uniforms for the guerrillas, 
                      raising money to buy weapons and tending to the wounded. Russian 
                      military actions, which according to international human rights groups 
                      have included atrocities, have galvanized civilian support for the 
                      fighters. 
 
                      Interviews with the officer, as well as with analysts and Chechen 
                      refugees, contradicted the Kremlin position that the rebels are all but 
                      vanquished. Russians trumpeted their military successes Monday by 
                      staging a victory parade in Grozny. 
 
                      None of the rebels' claims could be independently verified, but 
                      defense analysts in Moscow and Washington agreed that Russia's 
                      claims of victory are premature at best. 
 
                      Rebels regrouping 
 
                      In an interview Wednesday at a safe house in neighboring Ingushetia, 
                      a battalion commander who identified himself only as Ahmed, 31, said 
                      the Chechens plan to wait out the winter and regroup in the mountains 
                      while trying to dodge a fierce Russian bombardment of the Argun 
                      Gorge in southern Chechnya. 
 
                      With the approach of warmer weather, he said, the guerrillas will fight 
                      back ``with an all-out offensive everywhere in Chechnya'' and may 
                      attempt to retake the battered Chechen capital, as they did in the last 
                      war against Russia, in 1994-96. 
 
                      ``We've been on the defense,'' he said. ``Now, in the second stage 
                      we'll be on the offensive.'' 
 
                      Although they have been driven from their capital, the Chechen 
                      fighters portray themselves as a well-supplied force of more than 
                      10,000 men, united by high morale, their Islamic faith and hatred of 
                      the Russian troops. 
 
                      ``The Chechens have the means and the will to fight,'' said defense 
                      analyst Pavel Felgengauer in Moscow. ``I don't think the war is over.'' 
 
                      U.S. Defense Department officials agree that the Russians face an 
                      extended guerrilla war in Chechnya. ``The 300-year war (between 
                      Russians and Chechens) continues,'' said one Pentagon official, who 
                      spoke only on the condition of anonymity. ``This is just another 
                      chapter in it.'' 
 
                      The next turning point, the Pentagon officials said, will be Russia's 
                      presidential election March 26. If acting President Vladimir Putin wins 
                      as expected, he could either interpret his victory as a mandate to 
                      escalate the war or look for a face-saving way out of a conflict that no 
                      longer would have much political value for him. 
 
                      The Russian forces, who have demolished village after village and sent 
                      more than 200,000 refugees pouring out of Chechnya, have ignited a 
                      fierce patriotism behind the rebels. 
 
                      Refugee protest 
 
                      That was evident Wednesday at the Chechen border in Ingushetia, as 
                      hundreds of refugees gathered to protest the Russian action while 
                      observing the 56th anniversary of the Soviet exile of nearly 1 million 
                      Chechens in 1944. 
 
                      ``The fighters have the complete support of the people,'' said a 
                      38-year-old woman who identified herself as Satsita. ``Every woman 
                      would be a fighter, too, if she didn't have kids.'' 
 
                      Aimani Chapanova, a middle-aged woman whose two brothers are 
                      among the fighters, said she makes white uniforms for the snowy 
                      terrain and smuggles the clothes in small parcels into the mountains. 
 
                      Zikha Isayeva, 45, said she and other women collect money from 
                      neighbors to help finance the war effort. ``We take money to the 
                      fighters and they use it to buy weapons,'' she said. The fighters, holed 
                      up in isolated locations, stay in touch with their civilian support group 
                      by messages passed through relatives, as well as by shortwave radio. 
 
                      Another woman said the rebels unfailingly get word to relatives about 
                      a slain fighter, telling them how he was killed and where the body is 
                      buried. 
 
                      Ahmed, the battalion commander, said nearly 8,000 fighters are 
                      spread throughout the Argun Gorge, near Georgia, and several 
                      thousand others are in the Vedno Gorge, the Noshi-Yurt district and 
                      other southern areas. 
 
 
                      Jonathan S. Landay of the Mercury News Washington Bureau 
                      contributed to this report.
hey, FAKE 'american': 
i have reason to suspect you arent even american, so be sure and laugh that off too, while you're at it. 
=== 
NEW CORRECTION: 
"you're on a ROLE" 
is "you're on a ROLL". 
gee, how did you ever graduate from an american high school with such poor spelling, FAKE american? 
 
and i betcha you dont even know what "crack" is.  
hock-ptoo!
When Russia is split up into small pieces, what will it be like? What allegiances will there be? 
 
Judging from what the Interior Ministry troops and 
the Federal troops did to each other when they 
were put in competition, there may be a blood bath 
with thousands of little oblates fighting one 
another. 
 
Impossible? But then the present situation was 
impossible to imagine in the pre-Afghanistan days, 
wasn't it?
L'menexe 
 
You will be out of a job, when the world switches to Arabic, so stop wasting time correcting other people's English. 
 
Laughing? Give it time! Just imagine, Arabic has 33 consonants, before you even get to vowels. With a larger alphabet, the information content of each letter is greater, so you can say more with less words.
ponder: 
 
"when the world switches to arabic?" 
 
never mind your disregarding of the context of my 'correction'... 
 
but i think there are a few millard individuals who will be, how you say, reluctant to switch to arabic. 
 
i wouldnt hold your breath....unless you intend to suffocate.
By All American ( - 194.170.2.7) on Sunday, February 27, 2000 - 10:19 am: 
A tape clearly showing Russian Servicemen dumping gagged bodies into a ditch. 
* All concocted to entertain the masses as Clinton was busy with his ever worldly Cigar adventures. 
 Oh I wonder what they are doing? 
* Relativity. It is a concept you should contemplate. 
Izvestia daily reported this/reported that. 
* There was never a conflict! 
What more do you need? 
* There is no perfect society - a blue print for all to follow. 
Face it you living in denial man... 
* Feel better now. 
 you freaks make me laugh. 
* All American is in La La Land. It must feel pretty good. 
Dimitri 
 
 http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20000227/wl/poland_russia_1.html  
 
Tit for tat...
IT AIN"T OVER WROTE ______The rebels are fortified by an army of civilians -- predominantly  
women -- who are making wool socks and uniforms for the guerrillas,  
raising money to buy weapons and tending to the wounded. Russian  
military actions, which according to international human rights groups  
have included atrocities, have galvanized civilian support for the  
fighters.  
 
SO QUIT WHINNING ABOUT INNOCENT CIVILIANS THEN
(yawn) Let's SUPPOSE Russians are killing innocent (big eye roll here) civilians. WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? Exactly, nothing, n o t a s i n g l e t h i n g.
The real innocent civilians left the area a long time ago.Send the rest to Paradise.
Kim Arx  
 
"Russia joining Nato:- They don't want to join!" 
 
That's a good reason to think it's too early.  
 
"Kosovo...We should redraw the boundaries and settle realistic legal basis."  
- What legal basis? The entire action flouted international law. 
It's a conflict between albanians and serbs. US decided to ally with albanians. If a war flout international war, it's the least. But in peace time there should be legal basis upon the issue of the war. The winner have to decide of these legal basis. The problem now, is that the winner (nato) is not doing that. 
BTW I don't contest the fact nato flouted international law.  
  
No basis in international law for "redrawing boundaries"  
Boundaries exists to be redrawn. That's called History. 
 
THEN PUT THE WHOLE THING UNDER THE EUROPE COMMUNITY POWER.  
( 
"_ You mean the EU, currently squabling about what currency it should use and who can and can't eat what?????? Think again. " 
 
The EU is introducing the Euro currency...What's the problem? American are laughing. Too good for them. 
 Squabling about what can we eat is great. It's very important. Do you want to be geneticaly modified, my dear Kim? You are what you eat! 
 
Also, Kim, read what I wrote: 
" but here again the EC should have some common power of decision. That's also not granted." 
I'm a defender of the EU but I'm critic. 
 
My point is that EU is a factor of stability (inside the EU as well as for candidates to adhesion). 
It was created to avoid war in Europe and it worked. In the Yougoslavia case, it would apply perfectly if ever there were some political will. 
 
The EU or EC concept is good but they lack political will.
