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Messages - Toppa

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121

So who should? It's a teachable moment to other students. So if child-care isn't provided what's the likelihood of these girls dropping out????99-100%? When they drop out the cycle of teenage pregnancy begins because they will be severely under-educated.

You think it's practical and feasible (never mind the cultural nuances) for the school to provide child care for them? Yeah, ok.

Clearly dem wasn't studying school in the first place. 8 girls in one school? Wha de jail happening in that school? And one girl is a Form 1 student...steups.

It happens more often than you would think. At one high school I know of there were 75 pregnant student at the same time (different due dates).

You can't just write off the girls like that. They are still young and with some assistance can go on to become very productive members of society. To say that "dem eh studying school" can be a very wrong statement. Many girls and boys who are exemplary at their studies do make social and life changing mistakes. Abandoning the teenagers at this time does more harm than good to our society. We need to provide - as much as possible - necessary support in what ever means to aid these people in turning their lives for the better.

We need to stop just throwing people under the bus at the drop of a hat, especially our young people. If these were hard back man and woman ok fine. However, these are people who can still be nudged in the right direction, into making better decisions, and becoming responsible citizen.

Though it may still be taboo in our society, we need to get over the hump and face these decisions and reality head on not just "for dem", but for "all ah we".

75 pregnant at the same time? Was that in Trinidad?

Anyway, I'm not "writing them off" although I don't agree with molly-coddling or condoning schupidness. Yes, of course encourage them to finish their education and get their lives back on track, but saying that the school should provide child care - no. Impractical and inappropriate. Trinidad isn't North America and that isn't even the norm here.

122
PUNISHERS KOLOMOYSKOGO IN LUHANSK ATTACKED SOLDIERS WHO DO NOT WANT TO KILL CIVILIANS: VIEWS

15 soldiers killed and 35 wounded in a punitive operation militants arrived in the Ukrainian village Blagodatnoye machines "Privat"

http://www.iarex.ru/interviews/48024.html

You'll have to translate the page.

And from the BBC:

A dawn attack on a checkpoint in eastern Ukraine has left at least 14 soldiers dead, in the worst loss of life for government forces to date.

Heavily armed militants attacked the checkpoint in the Volnovakha area, in one of four attacks reported overnight in eastern Ukraine.

It is unclear who attacked the checkpoint, with one Ukrainian officer telling the BBC it was not separatists.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-27515514

123

So who should? It's a teachable moment to other students. So if child-care isn't provided what's the likelihood of these girls dropping out????99-100%? When they drop out the cycle of teenage pregnancy begins because they will be severely under-educated.

You think it's practical and feasible (never mind the cultural nuances) for the school to provide child care for them? Yeah, ok.

Clearly dem wasn't studying school in the first place. 8 girls in one school? Wha de jail happening in that school? And one girl is a Form 1 student...steups.

124
Oh, and the deal will apparently be in their local currencies, not the US dollar.

125
And why should the school be burdened with providing child care? If they made the choice they should deal with the consequences best they can. And if the girls getting suspended the boys should be too...why should they suspend the girls but not the boys?
:thumbsup:

It's this mindset that has our country going to the dogs now. The older generation with the whole deal with the consequences speech..Blah blah blah...Imagine our country still doesn't recognise and teach Sex education in school. A basic human function such as reproductive health is still hushed about and treated like taboo. Just remember you only make a bad decision when you are uneducated or ill informed. When the teenage mother fails to properly guide and provide for her children, the state is going to have to fit the costs of incarcerating and rehabilitating this person in years to come.

Not saying no to Sex Education - (are students ignorant of what sex is and what it can result in?) - I'm disagreeing that schools should take on the burden for providing child-care.

126
Russia signs 30-year deal worth $400bn to deliver gas to China

127
Many high school have nurseries for babies of students, and special classes for pregnant students. We should look to update our school as such to provide support for the pregnant teens enabling them to finish High School.

add : there's also a lot of social services available to such parent/s (in the schools I've seen in Canada where there are daycare for kids of students).

 That is encouraging the BS

 is like saying the bandaids in our medicine cabinet encourages us to get cut.

when educating the kids fail, we need to have a support system in place.

And why should the school be burdened with providing child care? If they made the choice they should deal with the consequences best they can. And if the girls getting suspended the boys should be too...why should they suspend the girls but not the boys?

128
Football / Re: Where do you rank CR7 and Messi all time?
« on: May 19, 2014, 06:51:30 PM »

129
“Only One Tiger on the Mountain"
Why NATO Has Not Permitted Russia to Join

http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/05/19/why-nato-has-not-permitted-russia-to-join/

130
The US Justice Department indicted five Chinese military officers with stealing data from six US companies and unions on Monday, inaugurating a major escalation of tensions with China over economic spycraft.

Attorney general Eric Holder announced that the US for the first time would seek to bring officials of a foreign government to the US to face charges of infiltrating American computer networks to steal data beneficial to US trade competitors. The Justice Department even went as far as printing “wanted” posters.

The charges come as revelations about the scale of National Security Agency surveillance from whistleblower Edward Snowden indicate that at least some US surveillance carries an economic benefit.

“The range of trade secrets and other sensitive business information stolen in this case is significant and demands an aggressive response,” Holder said on Monday.

While suspicions about government sponsorship of corporate data theft have swirled around China for years, never before has the US formally accused officials from China, or any other government, of involvement.

Not only has attribution of online espionage long vexed investigators, the prospect of diplomatic or economic retaliation has also been an impediment to taking action. The Justice Department national security chief, John Carlin, and colleagues from the Federal Bureau of Investigation credited a years-long effort, and the willingness of companies to admit to a data breach, with “exposing the faces and the names behind the keyboards in Shanghai.”

Accused are Wang Dong, Sun Kailiang, Wen Xinyu, Huang Zhenyu, and Gu Chunhui, whom a federal grand jury in Pennsylvania indicted on 31 counts of espionage. Carlin described the five men as members of a People’s Liberation Army entity known as Unit 61398.



Last year, a report by the information security firm Mandiant concluded that Unit 61398 was most likely behind data theft comprising hundreds of terabytes, a scale it found to be unlikely to have occurred without government sponsorship.

Mandiant found that the unit’s network infiltrations “periodically revisit the victim’s network over several months or years and steal broad categories of intellectual property, including technology blueprints, proprietary manufacturing processes, test results, business plans, pricing documents, partnership agreements, and emails and contact lists from victim organizations’ leadership.”

The alleged data theft affected aluminum giant Alcoa, US Steel, the US Steelworkers Union, electricity and nuclear energy firm Westinghouse, Allegheny Technologies Inc, and SolarWorld. A senior FBI official, Robert Anderson, said he hoped other companies who experienced theft of proprietary information would “come forward and talk to us”.

China's foreign ministry called the allegations “extremely ridiculous". Ministry spokesman Qin Gang demanded that the US “immediately rectify its mistake" and repeal the lawsuit, according to a statement on its website.

“This grave violation of the basic norms of international relations has harmed Chinese-US cooperation and mutual trust,” he said, adding that China has already lodged a formal complaint with US authorities.

The Chinese government frequently counters hacking allegations by claiming that the country is a safeguard of internet security and that cyber-attacks are a universal problem. Qin said that China “never engages in the activity of stealing commercial secrets through the internet.” He called the allegations “baseless”.

“For a long time, American authorities have conducted large-scale, organized cyber-theft and cyber-espionage activities against foreign dignitaries, companies and individuals,” he said. “This is already common knowledge.”

The US military has for years suspected its Chinese counterpart of stealing proprietary defense information, including about the design of the F-35 family of stealth jets, even as it seeks to forge closer ties with the People’s Liberation Army.

General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, welcomed his PLA counterpart to the Pentagon last week, but both officers avoided talk about cyber espionage in a Thursday press conference.

Some observers said China was all but certain to retaliate, economically or diplomatically. “Clearly, China will need to respond in some fashion,” said a trade lobbyist who requested anonymity. “Hopefully, advancements will be made that won't impact economic development for either country.”

James Lewis, a cybersecurity expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the effect would be "intangible" but the formal accusation "sends a strong message" to Beijing.

But Holder said that he wanted China to turn the five officers over to the US to stand charges, an unlikely step for the Chinese to take. “Our intention is for the defendants to have due process in an American court of law,” Holder said.

The US posture is complicated by recent revelations of widespread NSA surveillance that impacts the blurry area between economic and security matters. Since the Edward Snowden disclosures began, the US has drawn a distinction between spying for security purposes, which it considers legitimate, and surveillance intended to reap economic advantages, which it does not.

But the NSA penetrated the servers of the Chinese telecom corporation Huawei, which US officials consider little more than a stalking horse for Chinese surveillance, and put the company’s executives under surveillance, the New York Times and Der Spiegel reported in March.

While the US insists its concerns about Huawei are predicated on security threats from Huawei products sending customer data back to China – and the opportunities of inserting backdoors into Huawei products used by surveillance targets – Huawei has felt those concerns amounted to a pretext. Last year it announced it would abandon the US market, although executives later walked the announcement back somewhat.

Documents leaked by Edward Snowden showed the NSA targeted the Brazilian oil firm Petrobras, even as the NSA insisted that its Defense Department parent “does not engage in economic espionage in any domain, including cyber,” in a statement to the Washington Post.

Holder attempted to distinguish between economic and security surveillance in a Monday press conference. “All nations are engaged in intelligence gathering,” Holder said, but the current indictment involves “a state sponsored entity, state sponsored individuals, using intelligence tools to gain commercial advantages, and that is what makes this case different.”

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/may/19/us-chinese-military-officials-cyber-espionage

131
Blah , blah, blah. Now let's hear you justify the US openly and blatantly arming and supporting the Syrian Islamist rebels. You are naive beyond words. It is stunning. Are you autistic or something?

132
Football / Re: 2013-14 La liga Thread.
« on: May 18, 2014, 08:44:37 PM »
 ::) 

lol

134
Stalin was leading the Soviet Union and not Russia
 Russia did not annex  Crimea , they retook property that  was stolen from them

Who stole it? How is this not an annexation?
Khrushchev in 1954 with  a stroke of a pen ceded Crimea to Ukraine .
The residents of Crimea was never consulted .  This  historical wrong was  corrected by Putin with a referendum and  without a single  shot being fired .
 It so happened that Khrushchev was an ethnic Ukranian

Putin conducted a referendum with troops on the ground and minorities boycotting the vote - do you think it was a fair election? How can you tell what teh will of the Crimean people is while they were an occupied nation? Whether with pen or sword it's still an annexation.

Uh huh, and now the West are pushing for an election in Ukraine with Kiev government carrying out an assault on the Eastern Ukraine and unarmed civilians being killed. They want an election in Ukraine but not one in Syria. I wonder why. Oh and I read that UN report - my heart bleeds.

135
Football / Re: 2013-14 La liga Thread.
« on: May 17, 2014, 11:37:17 PM »
Happy for Atleti - but Real taking the CL trophy.

136
General Discussion / Re: Baby Left in Car dies...
« on: May 17, 2014, 11:33:12 PM »
Is this an unprecedented circumstance locally? One senses that the Dep DPP has been influenced by foreign authority.

I think a precedence has been set in other jurisdictions to prosecute these kinds of cases irregardless of the circumstances ......matter of procedure...so that the state fulfills its obligation to fully investigate ...............mu mother seems more convinced that it's a smoke screen of opportunity initiated by  d gov't........doh want to buy into dat though......not yet anyways

Huge step up from neglect to manslaughter ...

True...

137
Russia halts rocket exports to US, hitting space and military programmes

Russia announces decision to halt export of crucial rocket engines in response to US sanctions over annexation of Crimea

Russia's deputy prime minister, Dmitry Rogozin, has announced it will halt the export of rocket engines crucial to America's military defence programme.

The move marks a serious deterioration in US-Russian cooperation in space, which for two decades had remained largely aloft from Earthly politics. It could prove to be a serious set back for America's ailing space programme.

Russian's move is the latest step in an escalating series of sanctions affecting space cooperation brought about by the Russian annexation of Crimea.

On 3 April, Nasa announced that it was suspending its partnership with Russia over all space activities apart from the International Space Station (ISS).

It was a risky move because the US lost the ability to launch its own astronauts with the abandonment of the space shuttle programme in 2011. Private companies are now developing replacement capsules but flights carrying astronauts will not happen until December 2015.

Until then, the US has no choice but to rely on the Russians.

Now Moscow has signalled the end of the ISS collaboration, too. The Russian news agency Interfax reported on Tuesday that it would not extend its collaboration on the ISS beyond 2020.

The countries have been collaborating on this project since 1993, following the collapse of the Soviet Union. "After 2020, we would like to divert these funds [used for ISS] to more promising space projects," said Rogozin. These could include collaborations with the Chinese on other space stations or even moon bases.

The Russian RD-180 engine has been in production since 1999. The US has imported more than forty of them to power its Atlas V rockets into space.

Designed to be expendable, the RD-180s are not recovered and refurbished after use. So a constant supply is needed to keep up with the US launch manifest.

Although Nasa relies on the Atlas V to launch some of its deep space probes, such as the Curiosity rover currently operating on Mars, most are used to loft American spy satellites and other classified payloads into space.

Under the terms of the new restrictions, it is only rockets destined for military rather than civilian launches that would be disallowed. But in practice it will make it difficult for the US to import any of the rockets because it will hard to prove the hardware is not destined for a military programme.

While the space station is the most visible sign of the superpowers' collaboration, it is the loss of the RD-180 engines that will really hurt, according to space commentator Brian Harvey, who has reported on the Russian space programme since the 1970s.

"For the Americans not to take RD-180s any more would probably be quite disruptive of their space programme in the medium-term," he says. This is because of the time it would take to develop a replacement.

"Most people don't realise just how advanced and powerful Russian rocket engines are," says Harvey.

He estimates that it would probably take five years for the US to build up the necessary technologies and manufacturing expertise to replace the engines. But it does open another opportunity for private companies including PayPal founder Elon Musk's Space X which is developing the Dragon Capsule to ferry people and cargo to the ISS.

On 30 April, Space X filed a protest with the US court of federal claims over bulk-buying of the Russian rockets. A temporary ban on importing the RD-180s was ordered because the company responsible for their manufacture, NPO Energomash, was said to be under the control of Rogozin, who is on the US sanction list over Ukraine.

Following an appeal by the US State, Treasury and Commerce departments, the US federal court dissolved the ban but within days, Rogozin announced his own prohibition. So the US may be forced to develop a replacement engine after all.

In the meantime they must rely on already bought RD-180s and stocks are dwindling. The US was expecting the delivery of another five this November but the restriction places these in doubt.

"With a bit of sense, the present episode in Ukraine will be over before that happens," says Harvey.
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/may/15/us-space-military-programme-russia-sanctions

138
They will be found. Same mechanisms used to locate Joseph Kony.

Yuh being sarcastic?  :D

139
Nothing to say Tiresais? I'm soooooo shocked.  ::) Come at tell us more about Putin this and Putin that.

140
Why shouldn't Hunter Biden join the board of a gas company in Ukraine?

The son of the US vice-president has been chosen to take charge of energy firm Burisma's legal unit – a decision based purely on merit, of course

Name: Hunter Biden.

Age: 44.

Appearance: Chip off the old block.

His names rings a bell. Is he related to someone famous? He's the son of Joe Biden, the US vice president.

What is he, sort of a wayward, ne'er-do-well playboy type? Not really. He's a graduate of Yale Law School and a former senior vice-president at MBNA America Bank.

Good for him. During the Clinton administration he worked in the US Department of Commerce. He's presently a partner in an investment firm. And counsel for a national law firm. And an adjunct professor at Georgetown University.

I get it: he likes to keep busy. He has even found the time to join the board of a gas company called Burisma Holdings Ltd.

Never heard of it. Perhaps that's because it's a Ukrainian gas company; Ukraine's largest private gas producer, in fact. He's taking charge of the company's legal unit.

Isn't that a bit fishy? Why do you say that?

Because he's the vice-president's son! That's a coincidence. "This is totally based on merit," said Burisma's chairman, Alan Apter.

He doesn't sound very Ukrainian. He's American, as is the other new board member, Devon Archer.

Who? Devon Archer, who works with Hunter Biden at Rosemont Seneca partners, which is half owned by Rosemont Capital, a private equity firm founded by Archer and Christopher Heinz.

Who? Christopher Heinz … John Kerry's stepson.

I think Putin's propaganda people can take a long weekend; their work is being done for them. What do you mean?

Hasn't Joe Biden pledged to help Ukraine become more energy independent in the wake of its troubles with Russia? Well, yes.

And isn't Burisma, as a domestic producer, well positioned to profit from rising gas prices caused by the conflict? Possibly, but Hunter Biden is a salaried board member, not an investor. According to anonymous sources in the Wall Street Journal, neither Rosemont Seneca nor Rosemont Capital has made any financial investment in Burisma.

So it's not fishy at all? No one's saying that.

Do say: "Somebody needs to get involved in Ukraine's corporate governance, and it might as well be a clutch of rich, well-connected American dudes with weird first names."

Don't say: "Thanks, Dad."

http://www.theguardian.com/business/shortcuts/2014/may/14/hunter-biden-job-board-ukraine-biggest-gas-producer-burisma

141
VP Biden's Son Joins Ukrainian Gas Company's Board

Vice President Joe Biden's youngest son, Hunter Biden, is joining the board of a gas company operating in Ukraine.

That's according to Burisma Holdings. The company says Biden will head the company's legal unit and seek support for Burisma among international organizations.

The announcement comes as Ukraine is looking to decrease its reliance on Russian energy. Western countries believe Russia would have less leverage in the crisis with Ukraine if Europe was less dependent on Russian gas.

Burisma says it's the largest private gas producer in Ukraine, but a state-owned company controls most gas production there.

Securities and Exchange Commission records show Burisma is based in Cyprus. The vice president will visit Cyprus next week and has been a key player in the U.S. response to the Ukraine crisis.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/vp-bidens-son-joins-ukrainian-gas-companys-board-23699275

142
Quelle surprise! And I am absolutely certain he was appointed to the board SOLELY ON MERIT.

Joe Biden’s son Hunter to head legal unit at Ukraine’s largest private gas company

Vice President Joseph R. Biden’s youngest son, Hunter, has been appointed head of legal affairs at Ukraine’s largest private gas producer.
Burisma Holdings said in a statement that Hunter Biden will be in charge of the company’s legal unit and will provide support for the company among international organizations.
“Burisma’s track record of innovations and industry leadership in the field of natural gas means that it can be a strong driver of a strong economy in Ukraine,” Mr. Biden said.
“As a new member of the Board, I believe that my assistance in consulting the Company on matters of transparency, corporate governance and responsibility, international expansion and other priorities will contribute to the economy and benefit the people of Ukraine,” he said.
White House press secretary Jay Carney said Tuesday that Mr. Biden’s new position “does not reflect an endorsement by the administration,” Time magazine’s Zeke Miller reported.

Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/may/13/joe-bidens-son-hunter-head-legal-unit-ukraines-lar/#ixzz31cYJEmWe
Follow us: @washtimes on Twitter


143
Yup - you really are retarded. From the little I've read of your post, I will say that if you were paying attention, you would have realised that Bakes and I were debating whether there was truly a build up of the 40,000 troops on the Russian-Ukraine border. Absolutely nothing to do with Crimea. Anyway, dude - I'm not going to condescend respond to you anymore.

144
1) What does Russia's supposed 'anti-freedom' laws have to do with ANYTHING?

2) EVERYONE knows that Russian troops took over Crimea! Why are you beating a dead horse? Are you retarded or something?

3)I already said I'm done going back and forth with you...I don't know why you keep harping on about these nothing points.

145
Tiresais, you're an idiot and a waste of my time. I don't know who you're trying to fool here - yourself maybe.

In the meantime Ukrainian forces continue to kill civilians.

More deflection, no engagement with my points.

Didn't  I say you were a waste of my time?

Look! More Russian propaganda - but this time reported in the German media! Oh dear, Evil Putin strikes again.


German Media: 400 US contractors fighting against civilians in Eastern Ukraine
http://macedoniaonline.eu/content/view/25271/53/

146
Tiresais, you're an idiot and a waste of my time. I don't know who you're trying to fool here - yourself maybe.

In the meantime Ukrainian forces continue to kill civilians.

147
Wow. Firstly a strawman argument is when you misrepresent the original position - questioning Putin's credibility can't be a strawman as it's not a misrepresentation of Putin's credibility. Secondly, how am I burying my head in the sand? I read your articles, but they are woefully biased and/or simplistic, and often distort the picture and sometimes even make basic factual errors.

One of us us "burying their head in the sand", but it isn't me. Given your resistance to evidence competing with your narrow view on the matter, there's nowhere else to go - you keep reading the same rubbish conforming with your position, and ignore the overwhelming evidence. That you think anyone "has it in" for Putin is just worrying - you're defending a man with a proven track record of distorting the truth, suppressing the freedom of expression, and invading his neighbours. How have I distorted the laws he has passed? Do you not accept that Russia has passed laws (which you can easily check yourself) making it illegal to question Crimea's independence?

I just can't understand how you totally ignore all contrary evidence, genuinely I can't understand how you can sit there and say everyone has it in for Putin, using the very medium he is restricting both technology (internet) and the method (blogging/forums). You have the whole of the internet, a thousand different sources on the same topic, so why are all yours biased so obviously and why can't you see that?

lol Please stop it with your tiresome (and hypocritical) "indignation". 1) I have not ignored any so-called "facts". 2) Have you condemned the West for funding and supporting the overthrow of a democratically elected government? 3) "...you're defending a man with a proven track record of distorting the truth, suppressing the freedom of expression, and invading his neighbours." - Were you talking about America?

I don't even know what you are talking about. What "evidence" am I ignoring? what "narrow" view on the matter am I defending? In your book the U and the UK are justified in anything they do but when it comes to other countries....oh no, how dare they! You are a joke. My "biased" sources - yeah - when 9/10 news articles I quote from are the Guardian and the BBC. They are biased in favour of whom, exactly? Certainly not Russia.

148
Yeah, of course it is "hard to discern" for people like you who like to bury your heads in the sand.

Keep throwing around strawmen arguments like "Putin's credibility" and see if it'll get you anywhere. I already know exactly why you (and the British press) have it in for Putin and Russia.

149
And Ramgoat, it's "her" not "his".  :D

150
haha Well then it must have been a darn good article if it caused that reaction in you. The fact that from this very in-depth article, of at least three thousand words and touches on so many issues, you could only zone in on about five sentences that caused you such ire, is telling. lol Your qualms are easily refuted though, especially your faux outrage at Russia's violations when the article made the point that with countries like the US showing flagrant disregard for international law, it makes it easier for other countries to do so as well. But yeah, keep up the faux outrage and pretentious, self-righteous indignation. lol

Oh btw, in case you had missed it (or conveniently ignored it) the article called Russia's seizure of Crimea as illegal and a violation of the Warsaw Pact. But keep on chugging whatever it is you're chugging. I bet you're frothing at the mouth right now.

Wow you're not even reading your own biased articles - nowhere does it say that it's illegal, nor a violation of the Warsaw Pact. They note that the UN voted to declare the referendum illegal, but nowhere does it condemn the Russian annexation. Moreover, the Warsaw Pact was disbanded, so your point is just about wrong on every count you could be

I stopped because it was pointless - my position was justified. Your childishness is clear for all who can read and you've carried yourself in an intellectually dishonest manner throughout - I point out your sources are trash, you post a trash source, I point out as much so you challenge that, and I then prove it. In response, you say I "foam at the mouth". Pathetic.

Actually, not the Warsaw Pact, the Budapest one.

From the article:

Quote
According to the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances, signed on December 5, 1994, Ukraine agreed to relinquish its stockpile of nuclear weapons between 1994 and 1996.  In return, the signatories (the United States, Russian Federation, and United Kingdom, and later China and France) pledged to respect Ukrainian independence and sovereignty, refrain from the use of force, and avoid using economic pressure in Ukraine to influence its domestic politics. Putin’s annexation of Crimea is a violation of the Budapest Memorandum, as well as other international agreements.  But so, too, was the extensive economic pressure by the United States and EU on and within Ukraine–prior to the Crimean annexation–to influence its domestic politics.  While the Maidan revolution was not a “U.S.-backed fascist coup,” as Russian reporters claim, it was hijacked by Right Sector and other radical groups.  Moreover, clear evidence indicates that U.S. funds were a force multiplier for several opposition groups on Maidan working to overthrow Yanukovych.  Speaking to the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation Conference on December 16, 2013, Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland announced, “We have invested more than five billion dollars … to promote Ukraine to the future it deserves.”[69]  In a Washington Post article on September 27, 2013, National Endowment for Democracy president Carl Gershman referred to Ukraine as “the biggest prize.”[70]  It is hardly surprising that Moscow would react badly to such Western meddling in a neighboring country deemed essential to Russia’s security.  That is especially true because such actions occurred on the heels of NATO’s seemingly inexorable eastward expansion.

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