WW3: 3/31/2014 22:04:43 |
[WOLF]WARLORD
Level 55
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But opinions are welcomed
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WW3: 3/31/2014 22:05:17 |
[WOLF]WARLORD
Level 55
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I will not stick to one side. If i have i will not any more
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WW3: 3/31/2014 22:24:46 |
[WOLF]WARLORD
Level 55
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SEOUL, South Korea — North and South Korea fired hundreds of artillery shells into each other’s waters Monday in a flare-up of animosity that forced residents of five front-line South Korean islands to evacuate to shelters for several hours, South Korean officials said.
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WW3: 4/4/2014 10:01:07 |
[WOLF]WARLORD
Level 55
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Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov looks on at the start of two days of closed-door nuclear talks at the United Nations offices in Geneva October 15, 2013. Reuters "Tantrums, weeping and hysteria won't help," says Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov. Instead, he suggests that Americans and anyone else unhappy about Crimea can perform a few sun salutations and "maybe watch some comedy sketch shows on TV"
There are several ways to cope with the anger one feels over the annexation of Crimea, according to a top Russian official.
“What can one advise our U.S. colleagues to do?” Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov asked the Interfax news agency rhetorically.
“Spend more time in the open, practice yoga, stick to food-combining diets, maybe watch some comedy sketch shows on TV.”
The deputy foreign minister went on to criticize the U.S.’s official response to the annexation, which included slapping sanctions against several of President Vladimir Putin’s top aides, as childish and hysterical.
“Tantrums, weeping and hysteria won’t help,” he says.
Russia’s invasion and annexation of Crimea peninsula last month has made relations between Western powers and Moscow extremely tense.
Tens of thousands of Russian troops continue to mass along the Ukrainian border sparking fears of a possible invasion into the country’s east, which is home to a large population of ethnic Russians.
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