Putin//Truth// Trump//Oxymorons Their Facts Only But Putin Said No More Massive Strikes?

  
If Putin doesn't do any more massive strikes be because he doesn't have the missiles and NATO is giving Ukraine air defense. Had NATO Countries given Ukraine What Germany just gave to protect the skies imagine how many kids, Seniors, women, and Men would have been saved! Infrared Structuresis so needed now going into winter. Everybody says you have to be strong with the Soviet Union and with Putin is worse. You can't say what you are going to do but you have to do it first so he'll believe. The west never learns that lesson.

Mr Putin said "He did not regret the invasion, although the current situation was "not pleasant"
Two peas in a pod, they love blood as long is not theirs
These two have revived a politician's way of talking, not since Hitler. You say the opposite of the facts that way you create your own story of facts. Trump loss by millions of votes and lost the voting college vote but he said he was going to say he won no matter what because it was impossible for him to lose. He said it would be a lie if he lost so he would say he won. Nobody paid attention, except Hillary Clinton in the last debate and me. But only you listen to me. With Putin, he had to go into Ukraine to bring them Vodka because they ran out (No need to repeat again what he has said and what is quoted here).

Russian President Vladimir Putin has said there is no need for more massive strikes on Ukraine, days after the heaviest bombardment of the country since the war began.

He said most designated targets of the strikes had been hit, adding that it was not his aim to destroy Ukraine.

Moscow's goal of mobilizing 300,000 men would be met within two weeks, he said.

Mr. Putin's words come as Russian forces seem stalled and Ukraine advances, almost eight months since the invasion.

Speaking to journalists after a summit with regional leaders in Kazakhstan's capital Astana, the Russian leader said that the recent strikes had destroyed 22 out of the 29 targets in Ukraine set by the military and that "they are getting" the remaining seven.

"There's no need for massive strikes. We now have other tasks," he said.

From Monday onwards, Russia unleashed a wave of strikes on cities across Ukraine. What Mr. Putin said was retaliation for a blast that damaged a key bridge between Russia and annexed Crimea.

Dozens of people were killed and injured in the strikes, which also damaged infrastructure. Central areas of Kyiv were targeted for the first time since the invasion.

But Mr. Putin said it was not Russia's intention to destroy Ukraine, but he did not regret the invasion.

"What is happening today is not pleasant, to put things mildly," he said. "But all the same, [if Russia hadn't attacked] we would have been in the same situation, only the conditions would have been worse for us. So we're doing everything correctly and at the right time."




In other developments on Friday: 

  • The Russian government says a key bridge linking annexed Crimea to Russia, damaged in a blast last Saturday, must be repaired by July next year
  • Ukrainian officials are urging the Red Cross to visit the notorious Olenivka prison in the Russian-occupied east of the country within three days
  • Elon Musk has said his rocket company SpaceX cannot continue indefinitely to fund the Starlink internet service in Ukraine - now seen as vital to the country's communications infrastructure - amid reports he has asked the US defense department to do so
  • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has backed a Russian proposal to set up a gas hub in Turkey for supplies to Europe
  • A UK intelligence report says Russian forces from the private military company Wagner Group have captured two villages in the Donetsk region, in their first successful advance in the area for three months

President Putin said 220,000 men had been mobilized, of whom 16,000 were already in combat. He saw no need for additional mobilization, he added.

However, the call-up has caused widespread discontent in Russia, with tens of thousands of men fleeing to neighboring countries. The BBC has also found evidence of the poor level of training such conscripts or recruits receives before being sent to the front.

Meanwhile, the BBC Russian service says it has identified more than 7,500 Russian service personnel who have died in the Ukraine war. The actual casualties are believed to be much higher, and there are reports that some recently mobilized troops have been killed.

Addressing relations with other former Soviet countries, Mr. Putin insisted that the war had not affected their "character and depth".

He said it was natural for some countries to be concerned but he was keeping them informed in detail.

But analysts say Russia's influence in the region is declining, with leaders like Kazakhstan's Kassym-Jomart Tokayev trying to distance themselves from Mr. Putin over the war.

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