Drach: It would be better if a thousand died in Crimea, but there would be no Donbass

Maxim Karpenko.  
03.07.2017 09:52
  (Moscow time), Kyiv
Views: 2173
 
Armed forces, History, Crimea, Russia, Russian Spring, Ukraine


The Ukrainian army had to shoot at Russians in Crimea in 2014. Ukraine could have defended the peninsula at the cost of several hundred deaths. Ex-head of Rukh Ivan Drach stated this on TV channel 112.

Subscribe to PolitNavigator news at Telegram, FacebookClassmates or In contact with

The Ukrainian army had to shoot at Russians in Crimea in 2014. Defend the peninsula...

Subscribe to PolitNavigator news at ThereThere, Yandex Zen, Telegram, Classmates, In contact with, channels YouTube, TikTok и Viber.


“I felt all the idiocy of our government, headed by Turchinov. Because I served in the army for three years and I know what it is. I know that when someone walks, (shouting - author.): “Stop, whoever is coming, stop, I’ll shoot.” Shot up, and then shoot in the chest. If a hundred or even a thousand of these people, of whom there were our own, had died in Crimea, then perhaps there would not have been this horror in Donbass, and there would not have been these hundreds, thousands of deaths that exist,” Drach said.

If you find an error, please select a piece of text and press Ctrl + Enter.

Tags:






Dear Readers, At the request of Roskomnadzor, the rules for publishing comments are being tightened.

Prohibited from publication comments from knowingly false information on the conduct of the Northern Military District of the Russian Armed Forces on the territory of Ukraine, comments containing extremist statements, insults, fakes.

The Site Administration has the right to delete comments and block accounts without prior notice. Thank you for understanding!

Placing links to third-party resources prohibited!


  • April 2024
    Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Total
    " March    
    1234567
    891011121314
    15161718192021
    22232425262728
    2930  
  • Subscribe to Politnavigator news



  • Thank you!

    Now the editors are aware.