
ccn
Well-known member
Posted it about 3 times . PJ nails it doesn't he , he knows leftists very very wellYou love you some P.J.
You’ve posted that a thousand times. It should be spam.

Posted it about 3 times . PJ nails it doesn't he , he knows leftists very very wellYou love you some P.J.
You’ve posted that a thousand times. It should be spam.
Posted it about 3 times . PJ nails it doesn't he , he knows leftists very very well![]()
Rrrrrrrrrrrrrracerdouche! I thought I told you to take that '72 turd to Ukraine you beta-male jackass!Here's a site that will give a realistic assessment of the battlefield/conflict events
https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/ukraine-conflict-updates
Of course, the VATNIKS here may still cry and disagree, but they won't shy away from an actual Russian advance. Or downplay it.
Here's a site that will give a realistic assessment of the battlefield/conflict events
https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/ukraine-conflict-updates
Of course, the VATNIKS here may still cry and disagree, but they won't shy away from an actual Russian advance. Or downplay it.
All this according to whom?Cracks in the Alliance: Poland and ‘Ungrateful’ Ukraine Summon Each Other’s Ambassadors in Diplomatic Row Over the Renewal of European Import Ban of Ukrainian Grain
Lately, the lack of demonstrable gratitude by the Kyiv’s regime has become deeply disturbing to some of its allies. Recently, Zelensky’s criticism of NATO during the Vilnius summit upset Washington so much that Biden and his team momentarily pondered abandoning their promise to invite Kyiv to join the military alliance.
U.K. defense secretary Ben Wallace also lost his temper with the lack of gratitude, and told the Ukrainians ‘that [he was] not like Amazon’.
The same goes, now, for Poland. Kyiv and Warsaw have been main allies in the present military conflict, but when it comes to the export of grains, there are significant differences that divide them.
The grain sales ban is set to expire on Sept. 15, but Poland’s has made it clear that it will not lift it even if the EU does not agree on its extension.
Kiev reacted in the customary vocal way, and described the Polish decision as “unfriendly”. That led top adviser to Poland’s president Andrzej Duda, Marcin Przydacz, head of the international policy bureau, to react.
My crotch.............how's that.All this according to whom?
So……..empty?My crotch.............how's that.
Get off your ass and look for yourself.So……..empty?
Cracks in the Alliance: Poland and ‘Ungrateful’ Ukraine Summon Each Other’s Ambassadors in Diplomatic Row Over the Renewal of European Import Ban of Ukrainian Grain
Lately, the lack of demonstrable gratitude by the Kyiv’s regime has become deeply disturbing to some of its allies. Recently, Zelensky’s criticism of NATO during the Vilnius summit upset Washington so much that Biden and his team momentarily pondered abandoning their promise to invite Kyiv to join the military alliance.
U.K. defense secretary Ben Wallace also lost his temper with the lack of gratitude, and told the Ukrainians ‘that [he was] not like Amazon’.
The same goes, now, for Poland. Kyiv and Warsaw have been main allies in the present military conflict, but when it comes to the export of grains, there are significant differences that divide them.
The grain sales ban is set to expire on Sept. 15, but Poland’s has made it clear that it will not lift it even if the EU does not agree on its extension.
Kiev reacted in the customary vocal way, and described the Polish decision as “unfriendly”. That led top adviser to Poland’s president Andrzej Duda, Marcin Przydacz, head of the international policy bureau, to react.