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RUSSIA 'WILL REMEMBER THE BEHAVIOR OF PRAGUE AND WARSAW'
Radio Free Europe ^
| Friday, March 30, 2007
Posted on 04/01/2007 12:03:09 PM PDT by lizol
RUSSIA 'WILL REMEMBER THE BEHAVIOR OF PRAGUE AND WARSAW'
The daily "Vremya novostei" wrote on March 29 that "Russia will remember the behavior of Prague and Warsaw" in the current debate about stationing part of the proposed U.S. missile-defense system in the Czech Republic and Poland. The paper argued that the system is directed against Russia rather than Iran or North Korea and is being planned without concern for the wishes of all NATO members (see "RFE/RL Newsline," February 12 and March 22, 28, and 29, 2007). Russia has been seeking for weeks to bully Poland and the Czech Republic, but its efforts appear to be somewhat counterproductive. In the European Parliament in Brussels on March 29, Poland's Konrad Szymanski said that "the missile-defense shield is not the danger. The danger is a number of [EU] member states adopting the Russian view," news agencies reported. Holland's Bastiaan Belder warned that the controversy could split the EU as did the debate over Iraq in 2003. Some German commentators argue that Russia seeks to heat up the discussion as a way of splitting the EU and NATO and eventually winning over some older member states like Germany and Italy to its side. In Budapest on March 29, the opposition Fidesz party declared that Russia is trying to divide its former satellites, MTI reported. Zsolt Nemeth, who heads the party's foreign-policy department, accused Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany of betraying "the Hungarian national interest and the common European one, by openly acting as the spokesman of Russian power aspirations." Nemeth was referring to some recent high-profile business deals concluded between Gyurcsany's government and the Russian authorities, including Gazprom (see "RFE/RL Newsline," March 13 and 23, 2007). Russian Ambassador to Hungary Igor Savolsky walked out of the conference after Fidesz leader Viktor Orban said that Hungary should not be so dependent on Russian energy supplies and that Gazprom is a state rather than a commercial company. PM
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: antimissileshield; czechrepublic; gasputin; gyurcsany; hungary; poland; russia
Actually Poland still remembers behaviour of Moscow during last 300 years.
1
posted on
04/01/2007 12:03:13 PM PDT
by
lizol
To: LadyPilgrim; vox_PL; 1234; ChiMark; IslandJeff; rochester_veteran; NinoFan; Alkhin; MS.BEHAVIN; ...
Eastern European ping list
FRmail me to be added or removed from this Eastern European ping list
2
posted on
04/01/2007 12:07:39 PM PDT
by
lizol
(Liberal - a man with his mind open ... at both ends)
To: lizol
Actually Poland still remembers behaviour of Moscow during last 300 years.
Nice counter-punch!
3
posted on
04/01/2007 12:07:39 PM PDT
by
Army Air Corps
(Four fried chickens and a coke)
To: lizol
To the Government of Russia;
And the people of the United States remember the Katyn Forest. Threatening Poland sooner or later tend to rebound on the ones making the threats. You walk this line at your peril Putin. You seem to forget the Cold War is over. You lost Vlad.
4
posted on
04/01/2007 12:09:24 PM PDT
by
MNJohnnie
(If you will try being smarter, I will try being nicer.)
To: lizol
Fortunately, the US will remember, too.
5
posted on
04/01/2007 12:09:29 PM PDT
by
Buck W.
(If you push something hard enough, it will fall over.)
To: lizol
Poland remembers Sept.17th 1939. Says up yours to Russia.
6
posted on
04/01/2007 12:13:12 PM PDT
by
A message
(Liberalism does not breed survivors)
To: lizol
Dang ... sounds like Pootie-Poot's making a threat. Quick, somebody send W over there to peer into his soul, and see what's in there this time.
To: lizol
Just thell them where to go and what to do. Vampirial... er, imperial... dreams die hard. FTB.
8
posted on
04/01/2007 12:13:38 PM PDT
by
GSlob
To: Army Air Corps
I'm sure the Czechs remember the 1968 Russian invasion,
just like the Hungarians remember what happened to them in 1956. Putin is on the wrong side of history. Instead of rehashing the Cold War, he should be more concerned about fighting Islamofascism.
9
posted on
04/01/2007 12:19:01 PM PDT
by
july4thfreedomfoundation
(My Number One Goal in Life is to Leave a Bigger Carbon Foot Print Than Al Gore)
To: lizol

Signing of the Russo-German Non-Aggression Pact 1941
10
posted on
04/01/2007 12:20:29 PM PDT
by
sono
(Al Gore buys carbon offsets with Blood Diamonds)
To: lizol
lizol wrote: "Actually Poland still remembers behaviour of Moscow during last 300 years."
It is good that Poland remembers. My prayers are for all countries to remember and recognize Moscow's bellicose nature.
11
posted on
04/01/2007 12:21:39 PM PDT
by
bd476
To: Buck W.
Fortunately, the US will remember, too.
---
Until the Democrats take the Presidency. Then the Poles should expect to thrown under the bus with an hour's notice.
12
posted on
04/01/2007 12:23:04 PM PDT
by
Cheburashka
( World's only Spatula City certified spatula repair and maintenance specialist!!!)
To: lizol
Funny way to convince your neighbors they have nothing to fear from you, threatening them.
I'd say that Russian threats are a good reason to build the most sophisticated defense systems that money and ingenuity can devise.
13
posted on
04/01/2007 12:23:15 PM PDT
by
marron
To: july4thfreedomfoundation
Putin is on the wrong side of history. Instead of rehashing the Cold War, he should be more concerned about fighting Islamofascism.
**
Amen to that!
14
posted on
04/01/2007 12:27:41 PM PDT
by
Bigg Red
(You are either with us or with the terrorists.)
To: july4thfreedomfoundation
"he should be more concerned about fighting Islamofascism."
being a commiefascist himself, why would he fight with his brethren of a bit different flavor? With them he sees, or could see, eye-to-eye. In different tongues they speak essentially the same sociological language - may be in different, but mutually intelligible dialects.
15
posted on
04/01/2007 12:33:28 PM PDT
by
GSlob
To: lizol
Actually Poland still remembers behaviour of Moscow during last 300 years. Along with everyone else in their sphere of influence.
(From "Fiddler on the Roof")
Man: Rabbi, is their a blessing for the Czar?
Rabbi: Of Course:, "May God Bless and Keep the Czar... far away from us!"
16
posted on
04/01/2007 12:37:16 PM PDT
by
Nachum
To: lizol

how can we forget?
17
posted on
04/01/2007 12:44:08 PM PDT
by
Verdelet
(Os Cempes - Sara Sarina)
To: lizol
"Russia will remember the behavior of Prague and Warsaw" Every strident word from Russia is a confirmation to "Prague and Warsaw" of why they MUST install the missiles!
Prague and Warsaw certainly remember the behavior of "Russia".
To: lizol
Viktor Orban said that Hungary should not be so dependent on Russian energy supplies and that Gazprom is a state rather than a commercial company.
Thanks Viktor.
19
posted on
04/01/2007 1:08:49 PM PDT
by
AdmSmith
To: lizol
Kaytn
The Soviet Union continued to deny responsibility for the massacres until 1990, when it acknowledged that the NKVD secret police had in fact committed the massacres of over 22,000 Polish soldiers and intelligentsia and the subsequent cover-up.[7]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katyn_massacre
20
posted on
04/01/2007 1:13:45 PM PDT
by
WLR
To: lizol
The Russkies would do well to remember the behavior of their Soviet Union, and the behavior of the Soviet Lite Vlad Putin's brewing up these days. What a bunch os @ssclowns.
21
posted on
04/01/2007 1:31:52 PM PDT
by
PzLdr
("The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am" - Darth Vader)
To: july4thfreedomfoundation
Instead of rehashing the Cold War, he should be more concerned about fighting Islamofascism.
He as decided to join them by arming them.
22
posted on
04/01/2007 3:55:01 PM PDT
by
Army Air Corps
(Four fried chickens and a coke)
To: lizol
Since the Russians are dying out, there will be fewer and fewer to remember whatever they might remember. They may even remember the time when they had children.
To: lizol
Russia would like nothing better to invade Prague & Warsaw and drag them back behind Putin's envisioned new Iron Curtain.
24
posted on
04/01/2007 9:29:09 PM PDT
by
M. Espinola
(Freedom is never free)
Comment #25 Removed by Moderator
Comment #26 Removed by Moderator
Comment #27 Removed by Moderator
To: PsychotronicPower
And dont give me the line that Russia is supplying our enemies. You just joined up today to post this nonsense?
28
posted on
04/03/2007 8:08:40 AM PDT
by
denydenydeny
("We have always been, we are, and I hope that we always shall be detested in France"--Wellington)
Comment #29 Removed by Moderator
To: PsychotronicPower
Imagine waking up one morning to find gun towers encircling your home. Wouldnt you be alarmed?If you don't understand the difference between defensive and offensive weapons......
30
posted on
04/03/2007 9:05:20 AM PDT
by
Toddsterpatriot
(Why are protectionists (and goldbugs) so bad at math?)
To: lizol
In Soviet Russia, sister bites MOOSE!
To: PsychotronicPower
Comment #33 Removed by Moderator
To: lizol

A Hero's death
Before his arrest, sTefan Tyszko visited a Prague Cemetery to photograph the funeral of a young man run over and killed by a Russian tank.
During the burial, one of the victim's friends became hysterical with grief.
Gosh, I can't imagine why Warsaw and Prague would be cautious about Russia.
34
posted on
04/03/2007 9:12:44 AM PDT
by
gondramB
(It wasn't raining when Noah built the ark.)
To: lizol
Poles and Czechs don't have to remember very far back to recall the brutal years under the soviet criminals who occupied their country.
They can thank Harry S (for nothing) Truman for handing them over to kindly Uncle Joe.
35
posted on
04/03/2007 9:16:39 AM PDT
by
mborman
(No Rudys, please!)
To: PsychotronicPower
>>No ...
This situation is the reverse of the Cuban Missle crisis of the 1960s.
Imagine waking up one morning to find gun towers encircling your home. Wouldnt you be alarmed?<<
Are we putting offensive nuclear weapons there?
I thought it was defensive anti-missile systems that would not effect anybody unless they launch an attack.
36
posted on
04/03/2007 9:16:42 AM PDT
by
gondramB
(It wasn't raining when Noah built the ark.)
To: denydenydeny
That idiot didn’t last long.
I suppose he’s too stupid to understand the difference between IRBMs forward deployed in Cuba, versus ABMs forward-deployed in EU countries.
37
posted on
04/03/2007 9:24:03 AM PDT
by
FreedomPoster
(Guns themselves are fairly robust; their chief enemies are rust and politicians) (NRA)
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