Anonymous ID: 3422fd Feb. 25, 2022, 2:52 a.m. No.15718190   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8226

>>15718152

 

Compare that highly questionable number to Obama, Biden, Hillary, Soros premeditated coup detat of the entire country back in 2014

 

How many have died in Ukraine protest?

The final death toll from these clashes in late February was 103 protesters and 13 police. According to the Deputy Prosecutor General of Ukraine Oleh Zalisko in February 2014 67 people were killed in Kyiv's city centre, 184 sustained gunshot wounds and over 750 suffered bodily injuries (as stated on 9 December 2014).

 

How many Ukrainian soldiers have died since 2014?

Violence in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatist forces and the Ukrainian military has by conservative estimates killed more than 10,300 people and injured nearly 24,000 since April 2014.

 

Some 13,000 people have been killed, a quarter of them civilians, and as many as 30,000 wounded in the war in eastern Ukraine since it broke out in April 2014, the United Nations says.

 

https://www.rferl.org/a/death-toll-up-to-13-000-in-ukraine-conflict-says-un-rights-office/29791647.html

Anonymous ID: 3422fd Feb. 25, 2022, 3:01 a.m. No.15718226   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>15718190

>>15718152

>>15718176

Casualties during the 2013-14 Ukraine crisis

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The number of deaths during the 2013-14 Ukraine crisis climbed to just over 200 during the Euromaidan protests and the ensuing pro-Russian unrest.

Contents

 

1 Euromaidan

2 Crimean crisis

3 Odessa clashes and Kharkiv bombing

4 See also

5 References

 

Euromaidan

Main articles: Euromaidan and List of people killed during the Revolution of Dignity

 

During the events of the Euromaidan protests in Kyiv from 21 November 2013 through 23 February 2014, a total of 110–123 protesters and 18 police officers were killed in street clashes in the Ukrainian capital. In addition, one more participant of the Euromaidan was stabbed to death in clashes with pro-Russian activists on 13 March 2014, in Donetsk

Crimean crisis

Main article: Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation

 

During the Russian annexation of Crimea from 23 February through 19 March 2014, six people were killed. The dead included: three protesters (two pro-Russian and one pro-Ukrainian) two soldiers and one Crimean SDF trooper.] The two Ukrainian soldiers who were killed are regularly included in the military death toll from the War in Donbass. On 10 August 2016, Russia accused the Special Forces of Ukraine of conducting a raid near the Crimean town of Armyansk which killed two Russian servicemen. The government of Ukraine dismissed the report as a provocation.

Odessa clashes and Kharkiv bombing

Main articles: 2014 Odessa clashes and 2015 Kharkiv bombing

 

Between 26 January and 27 December 2014, sporadic clashes occurred in the city of Odessa. The deadliest of these were the 2 May 2014 Odessa clashes when 48 protesters were killed (46 pro-Russian and 2 pro-Ukrainian).

 

In addition, one person was killed in a bomb explosion in Odessa on 27 December 2014. The same day, another man was killed in a bombing in the city of Kherson. Both men were identified as the bombers in both explosions

Later, in 2015, on 22 February, a bomb exploded during a rally in Kharkiv leaving four people dead,

including a policeman.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_during_the_2013-14_Ukraine_crisis

 

A DPR representative announced on 2 February 2015, that 7,000 people had been killed in the region since the start of the war, with 80–90 percent of them civilians.

 

That would mean 700–1,400 militiamen had died However, given various pro-separatist sources had previously reported the deaths of at least 1,142 rebels than the upper estimate of 1,400 is most likely the correct one.

 

The deaths of the Russian soldiers have not been confirmed by their government and have possibly been included in the toll of dead rebel fighters.

 

Out of the 1,185 civilians and rebels killed in the Luhansk region by 15 February 2015, 456 were civilians who died by 29 October. In addition, 526 of the civilians and rebels died in Luhansk city alone by 11 September, of which 300 were confirmed as civilians by 31 August.

 

https://military-history.fandom.com/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Ukrainian_crisis

Anonymous ID: 3422fd Feb. 25, 2022, 3:24 a.m. No.15718289   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>15718152

Commentary: Obama-Biden Supported the Coup of Ukraine in 2014 in Order to Pass a Trade Deal

 

With all of the trade deals underway between the United States under the leadership of President Donald Trump, it is hard to believe that the civil war in Ukraine that began in 2014 actually started out as a policy disagreement over a pair of competing trade agreements with the European Union and Russia.

 

But that’s the story former Vice President Joe Biden tells in his book, “Promise Me, Dad: A Year of Hope, Hardship, and Purpose,” published in 2017.

 

“A popular demonstration,” Biden wrote, “which started at a square in Kyiv in late 2013, when President Viktor Yanukovych reneged on his promise to take the country into the European Union, had grown from a spontaneous eruption to a real political movement — one President Yanukovych mishandled badly.”

 

Here, Biden is referring to the pro-Europe, anti-Russia trade agreement, the Ukraine–European Union Association Agreement. It was a trade deal Yanukovych’s then-adviser Paul Manafort had advised him to adopt, but in 2013, he rejected Manafort’s advice, pulling out of the deal. What followed was a revolution in Ukraine that ultimately ousted Yanukovych from power in 2014, embroiling Ukraine in a civil war that led directly to the annexation of Crimea by Russia and several separatist uprisings in eastern Ukraine. Yanukovych then fled to Russia on Feb. 22, 2014, and the trade deal was signed in March 2014 by interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

 

By Biden’s account, it was his pressure that prompted Yanukovych to flee: “I made the last of many urgent calls to Yanukovych in late February of 2014, when his snipers were assassinating Ukrainian citizens by the dozens and we had credible reports that he was contemplating an even more vicious crackdown. I had been warning him for months to exercise restraint in dealing with his citizens, but on this night, three months into the demonstrations, I was telling him it was over; time for him to call off his gunmen and walk away. His only real supporters were his political patrons and his operators in the Kremlin, I reminded him, and he shouldn’t expect his Russian friends to rescue him from this disaster. Yanukovych had lost the confidence of the Ukrainian people, I said, and he was going to be judged harshly by history if he kept killing them. The disgraced president fled Ukraine the next day…”

 

This event sounds a lot like Biden’s description of getting Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Viktor Shokin, fired in 2016, when he threatened then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko with $1.2 billion of loan guarantees if the firing was not completed, with Biden bragging to the Council on Foreign Relations in 2018 that Shokin was fired the same day. Shokin says he was investigating a natural gas firm, Burisma Holdings, who Biden’s son, Hunter, served on the board of directors of and that that’s why he was fired.

 

Biden appears proud of his role in deposing both the prosecutor general in 2016 and the President of Ukraine following the bloodbath in the streets of Kiev in 2014.

 

Here, in his book, Biden is referring to the infamous Maidan Massacre that took place on Feb. 20, 2014, the flashpoint of the civil war in Ukraine. What began as peaceful protests in favor of the trade deal turned bloody when snipers began firing and killing dozens of protesters and police officers. At the time, per Biden’s account, within hours of the shootings the U.S. was blaming Yanukovych and his police forces, who was impeached within two days and then promptly fled the country to Russia.

 

In April 2014, the interim post-Yanukovych government issued a report that mirrored the U.S. position, blaming the preceding administration for the shootings.

 

A 2018 investigative report by the New York Times outlined the efforts of Ukrainian prosecutors and reconstructing what happened in the square, also finding the police responsible.

 

But, other accounts have pinned the blame on, variously, the protesters, Russia or even anti-Yanukovych neo-Nazi groups in Ukraine that were in favor of the protests, as “Ukraine on Fire,” a controversial documentary by Oliver Stone and Igor Lopatonok does, suggesting a tie-in to these right-wing extremist groups who opposed Yanukovych.

 

https://tennesseestar.com/2019/10/02/commentary-obama-biden-supported-the-coup-of-ukraine-in-2014-in-order-to-pass-a-trade-deal/

Anonymous ID: 3422fd Feb. 25, 2022, 4:12 a.m. No.15718474   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8478 >>8483 >>8490 >>8502 >>8524 >>8534 >>8651 >>8692 >>8851

Now That Putin is in Control of the Ukraine, Bye Bye Soros, Hunter and all the other DS connections to congressional cronies in US

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9827893/Nancy-Pelosis-son-Paul-involved-FIVE-companies-probed-feds.html

 

https://nypost.com/2022/01/14/nancy-pelosis-son-linked-to-firms-probed-by-feds/

 

Joseph Cofer Black, a former CIA agent and a national security adviser for Romney’s 2012 campaign, just so happened to be a board member of the Ukrainian energy company under scrutiny

 

https://nypost.com/2018/03/15/inside-the-shady-private-equity-firm-run-by-kerry-and-bidens-kids/