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Russian and Ukrainian tourists in Thailand beginning to face financial transaction and travel problems due to sanctions, invasion


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13 minutes ago, ozimoron said:

commonly referred to as speaking out of both sides of his mouth. I think the lie carries more weight than the warning. He could have ruled out "not invading". There's no defense of Putin worth a c*** cup full of cold water.

"He could have" - Yes, a modal verb for lost opportunity. Applies to all parties involved.

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2 minutes ago, Bkk Brian said:

Play on words as much as you like, their are countless credible links where Russia and Putin denied claims it was going to invade Ukraine, they even denied once it had already started. They lied simple as that

 

Get back in the real world.

 

It was an unprovoked ongoing attack on a sovereign country breaking international rule of law. FACT

Okay, you made your point and be happy in your real world.
Have a wonderful day.

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On 3/2/2022 at 7:18 PM, billd766 said:

But whose airline did they fly in on? There are very few airlines flying in and out of Russia now and I doubt if Aeroflot or whatever have any aircraft capable of a return flight from Russia without being refueled. In addition most Russian flights are banned, certainly from the EU and UK airspace. I suppose they could fly via China and refuel there both ways.

The Aeroflot fleet is mostly leased and those planes will end up being returned. Not that it matters, since Airbus and Boeing are not sending any maintenance or spare parts to Russia now. They only have about 3 weeks before the planes become unusable.

 

Also, they have effectively no way of easily paying for fuel or airport fees. Pretty much international Russian commercial aviation will cease to operate.

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1 hour ago, StraightTalk said:

"He could have" - Yes, a modal verb for lost opportunity. Applies to all parties involved.

This is a standard but meaningless dodge. Would you care to flesh out just what lies this might pertain to from the "other" party"? Look over there, it's a squirrel.

Edited by ozimoron
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Sorry to veer wildly back on topic...

 

 

On 3/4/2022 at 9:22 AM, mtls2005 said:

There is a weekly service on S7, just introduced last week. to Krabi from Novosibirsk.

 

Not sure what they'll do about the tourists they flew in last week? Maybe fly in an empty plane to evacuate them?

 

 

 

Russia's S7 airline announces it is ceasing international flights

 

https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/russias-s7-airline-announces-it-is-ceasing-international-flights-2022-03-04/

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2 hours ago, StraightTalk said:

[quote]

"implicit and informal assurances in 1990 strongly suggesting" to a country that no longer exists[...]"

[unquote]

Obviously the promise(s) were made prior the SU leader(s) decided on dismantling the Union. The Russian leader(s) have the right that these promise(s) is/are honored.

Concerning expressing an opinion based on incomplete evidence - We just have to wait until respective documents are available and publicized under the Freedom of Information Act (which is not made known in newspapers with half-size pages). In the meantime I have mine and others have theirs - Respect!

Those promises informal assurances were made to a different regime which presumably gave similar assurances that it would not start conquering an empire by invading Chechnya, Georgia, Donbas and now Ukraine.  

 

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On 3/4/2022 at 9:39 AM, Scott said:

There is a signed treaty and it does not include anything resembling what you are asserting.  

Would it change anything? How many signed treaties have been withdrawn from? 

BTW, didn't you see here lately the link to Spiegel with minutes of meeting written?  

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1 hour ago, ozimoron said:

This is a standard but meaningless dodge. Would you care to flesh out just what lies this might pertain to from the "other" party"? Look over there, it's a squirrel.

Hmm, you've got me there. You really make lot of sense.

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On 3/4/2022 at 9:22 AM, mtls2005 said:

Boeing has terminated support agreements with Russian airlines.

... the Russian supplier would “remain the largest titanium supplier for current and future Boeing commercial airplanes.”

---

If that were cut off by Western sanctions, or by Russian retaliation to sanctions, Michaels said there are only one or two places in the world that would have the capacity to match the VSMPO facility.

https://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/boeing-suspends-moscow-engineering-center-and-halts-support-to-russian-airlines/

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On 3/4/2022 at 12:07 PM, Mavideol said:

Twenty-two years ago, a vicious war brought Vladimir Putin to power. Ever since, war has remained one of his main tools, which he has used without flinching throughout his reign. Vladimir Putin exists thanks to war, has thrived through war. Let us now hope that a war will finally bring him down.

 

What was this "vicious war" twenty two years ago? And the ones throughout his reign? (just curious...)  

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6 minutes ago, billd766 said:

I was afraid he meant the Afghanistan war... (Or wasn't it just 20 years ago?  And not so "vicious"...)

 

BTW, the Chechen war was a heritage from the old good fellow Jelzin (so much beloved by the world) and it has managed the peace in the country while removing the vicious terrorists who did so much ugly crimes around. 

 

Aren't such terrorists fought throughout the world - war on terror? - however, not always with such good results.       

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2 minutes ago, Saanim said:

I was afraid he meant the Afghanistan war... (Or wasn't it just 20 years ago?  And not so "vicious"...)

 

BTW, the Chechen war was a heritage from the old good fellow Jelzin (so much beloved by the world) and it has managed the peace in the country while removing the vicious terrorists who did so much ugly crimes around. 

 

Aren't such terrorists fought throughout the world - war on terror? - however, not always with such good results.       

The Kremlin has a centuries-long history of conflict and near-genocidal repression of Chechens, who have been seen by many in Russia as particularly defiant. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn described Chechen fellow prisoners in the Soviet gulag as the one ethnic group whose members “refused to accept the psychology of submission.”

 

https://www.rferl.org/a/the-second-chechen-war-in-photos/30185257.html

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