jarek2

95.8K posts

jarek2

jarek2

@jarek210

Katılım Ocak 2019
1.3K Takip Edilen393 Takipçiler
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@Brahmbeere And the Ukrainian countries, and mainly the President of Ukraine, unfortunately called their friend Andrew a Russian actor and that is how the friendship between the Pole and the Ukrainian ended.
English
0
0
0
15
Brahmbeere 🇺🇦
Brahmbeere 🇺🇦@Brahmbeere·
I hope that in a few years Ukraine will become a full member of NATO. - Andrzej Duda, former President of 🇵🇱
English
251
257
2.6K
31.7K
Chay Bowes
Chay Bowes@BowesChay·
Russian archaeologist Alexander Butyagin comes home. He was in the group exchanged at the border of Belarus and Poland for two officers of the Moldovan intelligence. They were detained in Russia in 2025 for "conducting intelligence activities".
Chay Bowes@BowesChay

Poland "extradites" emminent Russian archaeological scientist Butyagin to Ukraine Butyagin was detained in December 2025 in Poland at the request of the Kiev Dictatorship, he is accused of "illegal archaeological searches in Crimea" This will directly endanger his life.

English
6
59
275
13.8K
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@ChakChak232321 @VytautasTheGrrr @HopeNotHate68 There are several Iskander missiles with tactical nuclear warheads and their crews and security personnel. Furthermore, there are security services, and the men, most of them former military personnel, though I doubt they fought for Mother Russia.
English
1
0
0
27
Vytautas The Great
Vytautas The Great@VytautasTheGrrr·
"Russia risks nothing". Just: - Article 5. - Actual WW3. - Drawing Belarus into a war. - Losing access to the Baltic Sea. - Blockades on Kaliningrad. - Further death and destruction for its military. This is clickbait at this stage.
Roman Sheremeta 🇺🇸🇺🇦@rshereme

An attack on the Baltic states is entirely plausible, and here’s why. There are at least three reasons. First and foremost: russia risks nothing. No matter how events unfold with the occupation of the Baltic countries, things will not get worse for russia. Sanctions are already in place. Europe no longer buys its oil or gas. Weapons are being supplied to Ukraine. From a purely military perspective, russia also risks nothing. It has nuclear weapons, so if it wins and occupies the Baltics, or even parts of them, no one will be able to push it out. And if it loses, it will not lose its own territory. It will simply retreat to its borders, and NATO will not invade russian territory because of those same nuclear weapons. So why not try? Second reason: the goals of the war. The objectives of russia go far beyond the occupation of the Baltics. Above all, russia is interested in weakening or dismantling NATO and the EU. From this perspective, any territorial gain in the Baltics would count as a victory. Even if russia does not capture Vilnius or Tallinn, but only a few border villages, that would still be a win, because it would demonstrate NATO’s inability to defend its members. So again, why not try? Third reason: russia has sufficient forces and resources in the potential conflict zone to carry out military objectives and achieve an acceptable outcome. In the Leningrad Military District, there is a combat-ready army of around 70,000 troops, which can easily be reinforced with reserves from the Ukrainian front. This army is mechanized, with around 700 tanks and a large amount of armored equipment. Separately, I would highlight the drone component, which has no real equivalent in NATO and could significantly shift the balance of power in the event of an invasion. If the forces are sufficient, then why not try? Thus, as of now, we are facing the following situation: russia has enough forces and resources to achieve its goals in the Baltics, and it does not face a bad scenario under any development of events. The situation is very similar to the one before the invasion of Ukraine, especially considering the law that allows putin to “protect russians abroad,” which was quickly introduced in the State Duma. The Baltic states have helped us more than anyone else, so I sincerely hope our friends will not face war. But to preserve peace, one must prepare for a major war. It is very good that our Baltic friends have learned from Ukraine’s mistakes and have built defensive lines and fortifications to repel an invasion. I very much hope that russia will break its teeth on the Baltics, just as it did on Ukraine. Source: translated and adopted from Serhii Marchenko

English
119
83
1.9K
85.4K
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@VytautasTheGrrr @HopeNotHate68 We must destroy the Russian troops in Kliningrad with a barrage of fire within two or three days at most, and then militarily suppress and intern all soldiers, policemen and security personnel.
English
2
0
1
46
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@Edgar_Korona No i klasyka KGB odcisku stempla . Generał Sylwester Kaliski - genialny naukowiec, który ginie nagle, w czasie prowadzonych prac nad mikrosyntezą jądrową w 16 września 1978 na skutek wypadku samochowego.
Polski
0
0
0
9
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@Edgar_Korona W tym samym wypadku zginął także Janusz Zaporowski (dyrektor Biura Informacyjnego Kancelarii Sejmu)."
Polski
1
0
0
8
Dorota Kania
Dorota Kania@DorotaKania2·
Pojawiła się petycja. Podpisali się między innymi: Anna Machcewicz, Jerzy Halbersztadt, Paweł Machcewicz, Dariusz Libionka, Antoni Dudek, Andrzej Friszke, Janusz Marszalec, Dorota Nieznalska, Małgorzata Szejnert, Barbara Engelking, Stanislaw Obirek. Cóż za zaskoczenie 😂
Dorota Kania tweet media
Polski
146
412
1.1K
29.9K
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@SinczakJerzy @DorotaKania2 Człowiek od Ulmów z Markowej to zły wybór? Jak politcznie byli Ulmowie zangazowani w 1944 roku? Prawda jest największym problemem tego świata
Polski
1
0
0
26
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@rshereme This will be the moment of truth. Historically, we've kicked the Russians' asses more than once in moments like these.
English
0
0
0
12
jarek2
jarek2@jarek210·
@rshereme The lack of our counterattack on the Russians will mean Poland entering the protectorate of Moscow again.
English
1
0
0
16
Roman Sheremeta 🇺🇸🇺🇦
An attack on the Baltic states is entirely plausible, and here’s why. There are at least three reasons. First and foremost: russia risks nothing. No matter how events unfold with the occupation of the Baltic countries, things will not get worse for russia. Sanctions are already in place. Europe no longer buys its oil or gas. Weapons are being supplied to Ukraine. From a purely military perspective, russia also risks nothing. It has nuclear weapons, so if it wins and occupies the Baltics, or even parts of them, no one will be able to push it out. And if it loses, it will not lose its own territory. It will simply retreat to its borders, and NATO will not invade russian territory because of those same nuclear weapons. So why not try? Second reason: the goals of the war. The objectives of russia go far beyond the occupation of the Baltics. Above all, russia is interested in weakening or dismantling NATO and the EU. From this perspective, any territorial gain in the Baltics would count as a victory. Even if russia does not capture Vilnius or Tallinn, but only a few border villages, that would still be a win, because it would demonstrate NATO’s inability to defend its members. So again, why not try? Third reason: russia has sufficient forces and resources in the potential conflict zone to carry out military objectives and achieve an acceptable outcome. In the Leningrad Military District, there is a combat-ready army of around 70,000 troops, which can easily be reinforced with reserves from the Ukrainian front. This army is mechanized, with around 700 tanks and a large amount of armored equipment. Separately, I would highlight the drone component, which has no real equivalent in NATO and could significantly shift the balance of power in the event of an invasion. If the forces are sufficient, then why not try? Thus, as of now, we are facing the following situation: russia has enough forces and resources to achieve its goals in the Baltics, and it does not face a bad scenario under any development of events. The situation is very similar to the one before the invasion of Ukraine, especially considering the law that allows putin to “protect russians abroad,” which was quickly introduced in the State Duma. The Baltic states have helped us more than anyone else, so I sincerely hope our friends will not face war. But to preserve peace, one must prepare for a major war. It is very good that our Baltic friends have learned from Ukraine’s mistakes and have built defensive lines and fortifications to repel an invasion. I very much hope that russia will break its teeth on the Baltics, just as it did on Ukraine. Source: translated and adopted from Serhii Marchenko
Roman Sheremeta 🇺🇸🇺🇦 tweet media
English
941
787
2.5K
611.4K