сегодня актуально: как кремлю удалось в киргизииxyuApril 8 2010, 00:16:59 UTC
статью хорошо писать не постфактум а наперед
когда читатели еще ничего не подозревают о том что произойдет: представляете как ТАКАЯ статья подействует
edited: ------------------------------------- как кремлю удалось в киргизии: ------------------------------------- What To Expect in 2010, by J. R. Nyquist
Published:January.04.2010 !!!!!!!!!!!!
Peace, indeed, is a difficult matter. If America had a temple to Janus, its "twin gates of war" would be flung open at this very hour, exposing (in the words of Virgil) "the dread presence of heartless Mars."
As strange as it sounds, the United States is fighting a war in Afghanistan, though Afghanistan is on the other side of the world, a landlocked country.
Stranger still, American troops must trace their line of supply through territory controlled by enemies or potential enemies.
This situation is unprecedented. Only an American general of the present generation would think it acceptable to deploy so many troops into a battle where they could be so easily cut off.
There are four ways into Afghanistan:
(1) through Russian-dominated South-Central Asia, (2) through China, (3) through Pakistan, (4) or through Iran.
To secure a route through Central Asia, the United States government has named Russia as an ally, even though Russia actively supports anti-American forces in Latin America and Africa (especially, in Venezuela and Cuba).
The route through China is not practicable, and China is no more an ally of the United States than Russia.
Iran is openly hostile to America which the Iranian clerics have denounced as the "Great Satan."
Tracing the U.S. supply line through Pakistan may be ill-conceived as well, since Pakistan is allied with China and sympathetic to the Taliban (which was supported by Pakistan in the past).
An August 13 Pew research poll shows that 64 percent of Pakistanis regard the United States as an enemy.
когда читатели еще ничего не подозревают о том что произойдет:
представляете как ТАКАЯ статья подействует
edited:
-------------------------------------
как кремлю удалось в киргизии:
-------------------------------------
What To Expect in 2010, by J. R. Nyquist
Published:January.04.2010 !!!!!!!!!!!!
Peace, indeed, is a difficult matter. If America had a temple to Janus, its "twin gates of war" would be flung open at this very hour, exposing (in the words of Virgil) "the dread presence of heartless Mars."
As strange as it sounds, the United States is fighting a war in Afghanistan, though Afghanistan is on the other side of the world, a landlocked country.
Stranger still, American troops must trace their line of supply through territory controlled by enemies or potential enemies.
This situation is unprecedented. Only an American general of the present generation would think it acceptable to deploy so many troops into a battle where they could be so easily cut off.
There are four ways into Afghanistan:
(1) through Russian-dominated South-Central Asia,
(2) through China,
(3) through Pakistan,
(4) or through Iran.
To secure a route through Central Asia, the United States government has named Russia as an ally, even though Russia actively supports anti-American forces in Latin America and Africa (especially, in Venezuela and Cuba).
The route through China is not practicable, and China is no more an ally of the United States than Russia.
Iran is openly hostile to America which the Iranian clerics have denounced as the "Great Satan."
Tracing the U.S. supply line through Pakistan may be ill-conceived as well, since Pakistan is allied with China and sympathetic to the Taliban (which was supported by Pakistan in the past).
An August 13 Pew research poll shows that 64 percent of Pakistanis regard the United States as an enemy.
http://www.financialsense.com/stormwatch/geo/pastanalysis/2010/0104.html
Reply
Leave a comment