2014 Ukrainian Maidan Revolt: News, Views, Photos & Videos

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Mr T

Senior Member
The costs of all this must be very damaging to the financial condition of the Kiev regime.

It's better that they do something. It shows the markets there might be a resolution to the conflict. The rebels were offered numerous opportunities to lay down their weapons, but each time they rejected it. The time for talk has long passed.
 

Broccoli

Senior Member
These terrorist vehicles tried to escape from Slavyansk, and people have guessed that they were pummeled by Ukrainian artillery. I won't post all pictures because some are graphic.

T-64 knocked out, they got these from Russians.
AcmTMPj.jpg


BMP-2 with similar fate.
HBkNjs6.jpg

NvT2IkA.jpg

7X30czq.jpg


Two BMD-2 IFV's were also left behind.
VmYSk8h.jpg
 
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delft

Brigadier
From RT.com:
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Masked mob savages newspaper office in Kiev (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

Published time: July 05, 2014 22:36
Edited time: July 06, 2014 00:53

A crowd of around 50 masked men with stones and flares has attacked and vandalized the office of Kiev's Vesti newspaper. The paper’s security guard was beaten as the mob shattered the windows and filled the building with tear gas.

A large group of unidentified people wearing masks attacked the newspaper office on Saturday morning, the Ukrainian Interior Ministry has confirmed. The investigators classified the incident as an “act of hooliganism.”


One of the first reports of the assault came from the publication's nightshift editor Grigory Grin.

“At first I heard several shots, most probably from an automatic weapon. Then stones and Molotov cocktails flew into the windows on the ground and first floors. After that tear gas was blown into the building, which very quickly filled the whole office - it's still difficult to breathe there. One of the security guards, who tried to oppose the bandits, was beaten,” Grin wrote.

“Apparently their task was to quickly ransack [the office] and in the same timely manner escape, to avoid being detained by law enforcement,” he said, adding that the attackers also tried to get inside the building.

Shortly before the attack the newly-elected mayor of Kiev Vitaly Klitschko had a meeting with journalists, at which the matter of the security of press in Kiev was raised.

It is not the first time Vesti has faced threats and violence, the newspaper staff said, claiming there was a criminal case fabricated against them which dragged and the organizers decided to turn to “direct violence.”

“We consider it to be an act of terror and intimidation,” the newspaper wrote in an open letter to the country’s president and prime minister. Just a week ago an angry crowd, organized by Ukrainian MP Igor Lutsenko, picketed their office, the newspaper writes. “It is the last peaceful action against Vesti,” Lutsenko said at the time, according to the paper.

“Those who set to destroy us tomorrow won’t have any moral issues with destroying any other ‘vicious’ media or TV channel,” the newspaper writes. “Their purpose is to destroy all the media non grata.”

Ever since the beginning of Ukrainian crisis media in the country been facing pressure to paint a “consistent” image of events. Soon after the February coup, the head of Ukraine’s National TV was abused and forced to resign over his “not patriotic enough” angle. In the meantime, all Russian TV channels were banned and many journalists prevented from entering the country – while those already inside faced kidnapping, arrest and deportation.

Three Russian journalists and one Italian were killed in Kiev’s indiscriminate shelling of eastern cities during the ongoing so-called “anti-terrorist operation.”

Despite the international outcry and many human rights organizations, including the OSCE and Human Right Watch, who said that Ukraine was “dangerously interfering with press freedom” and if that trend continues the consequences would be “too grave to even imagine.”
 

SampanViking

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I picked this up from the Saker's blog yesterday.
Written by somebody who has been on the ground and appreciates the reality of the local and regional situation.

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Slavyansk is out of sight now …

by Dmitry Steshin (Komsomolskaya Pravda)
Translated from Russian by Gleb Bazov

I understand and share in the bitterness and resentment of those who found out this morning that the Militia has left Slavyansk. The news washed over everyone – the hoorah-patriots, the all-is-lost-patriots and even the cold analytical types. And now, please listen to a person who spent the last month and a half in Slavyansk. From the time of the very first checkpoints on the outskirts and to the almost complete encirclement of the city. When we broke out of Slavyansk along the by-pass “guerilla” road in the middle of June, a few hours later a Ukrainian army checkpoint appears there. That’s it; the city was blockaded on all sides. Supplying the garrison turned into a constant headache incommensurate with its tactical advantage. And, despite all the despair coming through in the public statements made by Igor Ivanovich, when he told the entire world that “we could not hold any longer than July 12th,” I am more than certain that, if NazGuard [Note: National Guard] did manage, on New Year’s eve, finally to enter Slavyansk, leveled to a cement pancake, from every other basement there would have been automatic rifles and grenade launchers hitting the Ukrainian troops.

In reality, the fate of Slavyansk was being decided in April-May, when Karachun Mount was taken. It is impossible to conduct a fulsome and active defence when you are faced with a strategic dominant height overhanging the city, several kilometres in length, seized by the adversary and laden with enemy artillery. And to fight, moreover, without any means of counter-battery warfare. Impossible, and, yet, Igor Ivanovich and the Militia managed to resist anyways. And not only to resist, but, in a mere few days, to disabuse the many-times superior enemy of any desire to engage the Militia in a direct confrontation. As far as I can tell, they abandoned any intention to assault the city as soon as the Militia returned Semyonovka under its control.

Undoubtedly, Slavyansk became the symbol of the “Russian Spring,” moreover – it entered history. Forever. But the purpose of the city was different. Slavyansk attracted to itself all the battle-worthy forces of the Ukrainian army, it enabled the mobilization of the Militia in Lugansk and Donetsk. Slavyansk gave Mozgovoi an opportunity to crack the border on land and in the air. Whereby something real (you do not need to tell me about virtual YouTube armoured columns) actually made it into the region, by dribs and drabs, including “Tunguskas” purchased at the GUM [Note: GUM, or “State Universal Market,” in Moscow]. Slavyansk enabled the rest of the region to set up almost a dozen reinforced centres of resistance. Finally, it was Slavyansk that brought down the majority of Ukrainian fliers. And the “Slavic Sky” came true in every regard. Finally, Slavyansk gave the South-East time to create political centres of power, allowed to legitimize them, and, of course, provided covering fire for the referendum. And, one last thing, – thousands of untried militiamen and volunteers passed through the trenches of Slavyansk, all with minimal losses.

By the middle of June, Slavyansk outlived itself. Having drawn and bound to itself an enormous army grouping, the city, at the same time, required an ever-larger garrison, and, in return, started to tie up the not inexhaustible human and technical resources of the Donbass People’s Army. Besides, being the legal Commander-in-Chief of the Militia, Igor Ivanovich could not provide fulsome guidance to his army from a besieged city. He had a direct line to the DPR government (I do not know about LPR), but this was, understandably, not enough for adequate control over the Militia units, each of which was beholden to the charisma of its direct commander. In a situation like that you need a “mega-Batka” [Note: Batka – an Old Man], but “mega-Batka” was forced to sit in Slavyansk and wax melancholy. I won’t be afraid of this word – he grew bored with blowing up endless ammunitions store on Karachun and pummeling Ukrainian checkpoints on the near and far outskirts of the city. Igor Ivanovich needed operational freedom, and, this night, he finally found it. Don’t forget – he came to Slavyansk some time ago with a few battered automatic rifles and even smoothbore “Saiga” and “Vepr.” He left with a column of armoured vehicles. No need to even mention the loads of other equipment. This, undoubtedly, is yet another testimony to the dizzying victory of the Ukrainian army, which got a mousetrap instead of a trophy. Well, not an empty mousetrap. As I understand it, the Ukrainian army has yet to enter the city. Igor Ivanovich, a veteran of two Chechen wars, naturally made sure to leave behind enough maneuverable groups with grenade launchers and cover. And it is no accident that Messr. Tymchuk has been squealing about thousands of militiamen breaking through from Kramatorsk to Donetsk. Messr. Tymchuk has no idea that the road from Kramatorsk to Donetsk is absolutely free. But what Messr. Tymchuk should really think about is his fighters, sitting dejected at the Kramatorsk airfield and in the Donetsk airport. As I understand it, in the next few hours they will be added to the number of the “Heavenly Hundred.” And, in addition, Messr. Tymchuk will soon have to explain to his readers – why did the Ukrainian army spend two months battling with Slavyansk and what will it do with the city now?

Dmitry Steshin
Komsomolskaya Pravda
 

SampanViking

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Just had to post this.

The Ukrainian authorities are claiming that the massive bombing/artillery damage to Slavyansk was caused by the rebels own rocket artillery systems.
The precise claim is that these rockets were fired at the Ukrainian artillery and TV station on the high ground, but because they failed to calculate the wind speed properly, they were blown backwards and landed on the city behind them.

A screen shot from Ukrainian TV

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I kid you not!
 

Broccoli

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Apparently Igor Girkin (Strelkov) sacrificed two T-64 tanks (one destroyed another captured intact) and few BMP-2's to create distraction so he and other Russian "volunteers" could escape the Slavyansk. Just shows how much Moscow cares about their Ukrainian "partners".

[video=youtube;BaRu7UlZoys]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaRu7UlZoys[/video]

Captured T-64 after it's driver tried to ram Ukrainian army roadblock but failed.
s7wpRZJ.jpg
 
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SampanViking

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The endgame may well have taken a large step forward today as the Ukraine decides to breach another diplomatic agreement and dishonour its commitment to the four party statement it signed on July 2nd.

The Ukraine defence minister has announced that there will be no more unilateral ceasefires and effectively demanded the unconditional surrender of the Pro Federalist militias.

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There seems to be real fury in the response from Lavrov.

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“We see everything thanks to correspondents who work risking their lives, and (we see) how solemn words of (Ukrainian) President Poroshenko that the Ukrainian army was ordered not to shell cities, settlements and residential quarters, not to bomb civilians, reflect reality,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

“What is happening is totally different,” Lavrov said. “We see killed people, deformed bodies, destroyed apartments, houses. This is dismal.”

“Statements from the Ukrainian authorities that truce is only possible if militiamen accept the peace plan, that is, capitulate, and hope to be pardoned, discourage us and remove any opportunities for reaching the truce,” he said.

In line with a four-party agreement, Ukraine agreed to an unconditional ceasefire, Lavrov said Tuesday after a meeting with Slovenian President Borut Pahor and Foreign Minister Karl Erjavec.

“The four-party statement of the foreign ministers of the Russian Federation, France, Germany and Ukraine (of July 2) clearly calls for an immediate, unconditional, bilateral ceasefire,” Lavrov said. “That is what Ukraine signed.”

“There are no conditions like militia’s capitulation. Ukraine agreed to an unconditional ceasefire,” he said.

I suppose that this does open a new avenue for a Russian Military mission; to enforce a Cease Fire and force Kiev to the negotiating table. This would mean declaring and enforcing a no fly zone and threatening to attack forces that sought to advance or actively engage in hostilities.
 

Broccoli

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Only reason why Russians want "cease fire" is that their goons in Ukraine are losing the war and they want time to send more support to them, but chocolate president isn't stupid enough to believe their lies anymore. Last time there was a cease fire pro-Russian terrorists were attacking all the time against Ukrainian army so it was one sided deal.

Pro-Russians are now trying to take Donetsk airport from Ukrainians because it' soon only place where Russian can send supplies from them.
 
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