One of the things that did help to end the "first" Chechen war special military operation were these expeditions of Russian prematurely aged mother's going in to search for their dead or captured sons. They turned into quite a movement.
Speaking of which, certainly see the documentary "The Betrayed" (1995), which is amazing and one of the best war films of all time. It's the early months. https://youtube.com/watch?v=3bHQujjarpc
I seriously doubt the enemy sending graphic photos of their dead sons would help end the war, and would far more likely inspire ethnic reprisal attacks in Russia against Ukrainians.
It's not going to be taken like the American Civil War's pictures of battle dead, or flag draped coffins coming back from Vietnam. It's going to be seen as explicit enemy action that is a direct attack on the general population.
If you do that to a population, they start calling for blood.
Also, YouTube fucking age-restricted nonsense. I seriously wanna just start uploading some of this shit to Bitchute so we can reference it.
Bold assumption. They could have easily been planning to return and secure their bodies, or in some situations were simply unable to do so because it would be too dangerous.
They weren't "well preserved" at all of course, that's some kind of an obvious mistake in the caption. I've seen the inside. And yes, it was their own train.
They left them littering in the areas they controllec and I talk about corpses that weren't even new. Victims of artillery fire or drones.
In 1996 they just left behind an entire train full of their bodies while withdrawing orderly after ceasefire. By the time when they returned in 2000 it was a literal skeleton train. There are pictures.
Russians: Leave their dead to fucking rot.
Ukrainians: Taking pictures and letting the family know what have happened to Vanya who didn't call in a while.
Winredditrors: WAR CRIMES????
(It's not a war, it's a special military operation.)
It's not a war crime, but it's very messed up, and it's not going to end the war.
One of the things that did help to end the "first" Chechen
warspecial military operation were these expeditions of Russian prematurely aged mother's going in to search for their dead or captured sons. They turned into quite a movement.Speaking of which, certainly see the documentary "The Betrayed" (1995), which is amazing and one of the best war films of all time. It's the early months. https://youtube.com/watch?v=3bHQujjarpc
I seriously doubt the enemy sending graphic photos of their dead sons would help end the war, and would far more likely inspire ethnic reprisal attacks in Russia against Ukrainians.
It's not going to be taken like the American Civil War's pictures of battle dead, or flag draped coffins coming back from Vietnam. It's going to be seen as explicit enemy action that is a direct attack on the general population.
If you do that to a population, they start calling for blood.
Also, YouTube fucking age-restricted nonsense. I seriously wanna just start uploading some of this shit to Bitchute so we can reference it.
Ukrainians: SBU openly torturing political prisoners and bragging about it.
Bold assumption. They could have easily been planning to return and secure their bodies, or in some situations were simply unable to do so because it would be too dangerous.
This train: https://www.gettyimages.ie/detail/news-photo/railway-cars-containing-decomposed-bodies-were-found-by-news-photo/1592238
They weren't "well preserved" at all of course, that's some kind of an obvious mistake in the caption. I've seen the inside. And yes, it was their own train.
They left them littering in the areas they controllec and I talk about corpses that weren't even new. Victims of artillery fire or drones.
In 1996 they just left behind an entire train full of their bodies while withdrawing orderly after ceasefire. By the time when they returned in 2000 it was a literal skeleton train. There are pictures.
Hi^2!