Moscow Airport Bombed!

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  • asubimmer
    R3V OG
    • Jul 2004
    • 6482

    #1

    Moscow Airport Bombed!

    at least 31 people dead after a suicide bomber :(

    I will never understand why a person things its a good idea to blow themselves up and kill a group of innocent ppl...

    A suicide bomber attacked Moscow's busiest airport on Monday, killing 35 people and wounding about 100, authorities and state television said.
    ///Alpinweiß II 24v 91' 318is, Alpinweiß III 99' 323i, 04' Yamaha R6 SE for sale, 00' VW GTi, 83' El Camino BURNED, 01' P71sold, 92' Miatasold
  • dirty30
    No R3VLimiter
    • Jul 2004
    • 3005

    #2
    Virgins.... duh.

    Comment

    • Massive Lee
      R3V OG
      • Sep 2006
      • 6782

      #3
      Isn't terrorism usually the last resort when negociations aren't possible? Russia has a lot of conflicts on its territory. And isn't interested in solving any of them.
      Brake harder. Go faster. No shit.

      massivebrakes.com

      http://www.facebook.com/pages/Massiv...78417442267056





      Comment

      • MikeK
        R3VLimited
        • Jan 2005
        • 2771

        #4
        Die Hard 5? Where was John McLane?
        Toyota Pickup

        Comment

        • Massive Lee
          R3V OG
          • Sep 2006
          • 6782

          #5
          ;-)

          Bruce Willis would solve the world's geopolitic conflicts in a snap. Nuke 'em...
          Brake harder. Go faster. No shit.

          massivebrakes.com

          http://www.facebook.com/pages/Massiv...78417442267056





          Comment

          • matias88e30
            E30 Enthusiast
            • Dec 2009
            • 1110

            #6
            Shit! i alway hate and wish could do something to stop shit like this.... dont understand whats wrong with humans killing other humans just so fucking crazy!!. When my parents brought me this country it was 9/11.... i will never forget watching tv and seeing all those peoples jumping from the building and when the 2nd plane crashes.. i was 11 when alll that happen
            no more boosted m20, 91 318i...

            Comment

            • Raxe
              R3V Elite
              • Nov 2006
              • 5346

              #7
              Terrible.

              >> 1988 3.1 ITB E30 /// 2002 E46 M3 6MT / 2008 335xi 6MT / 1991 S38B36 E30 (sold)

              Comment

              • Massive Lee
                R3V OG
                • Sep 2006
                • 6782

                #8
                Russia is a huge territory which includes many ethnicities. Racism on one hand, central imperialism on the other hand, and a central government that is as democratic as China. Put everything together, and you soon realize it becomes difficult to negociate.

                The ghost of Staline is not far, and many Russians miss the good ol' days. The Chechen conflict is the most publicized one, but their are many others. The only country that the Ruskies couldn't defeat were the Afghans. It says a lot on how hard Russia/USSR can be. So no wonder that out of despair, some extreme methods are used. Sure, they should be criticized, but what causes the bombing should also be looked at.

                31 innocent civilians killed at the airport. 25,000 to 50,000 dead/missing in the second Chechen conflict. Plus tortures and rapes.

                "Los Angeles Times, Sunday, 17 Sept, MOSCOW:

                They call it bespredel--literally, "no limits." It means acting outside the rules, violently and with impunity. It translates as "excesses" or "atrocities."
                It's the term Russian soldiers use to describe their actions in Chechnya.
                "Without bespredel, we'll get nowhere in Chechnya," a 21-year-old conscript explained. "We have to be cruel to them. Otherwise, we'll achieve nothing."
                Since Russia launched a new war against separatist rebels in its republic of Chechnya a year ago, Russian and Western human rights organizations have collected thousands of pages of testimony from victims about human rights abuses committed by Russian servicemen against Chechen civilians and suspected rebel fighters.
                To hear the other side of the story, a Times reporter traveled to more than half a dozen regions around Russia and interviewed more than two dozen Russian servicemen returning from the war front.
                What they recounted largely matches the picture painted in the human rights reports: The men freely acknowledge that acts considered war crimes under international law not only take place but are also commonplace.
                In fact, most admitted committing such acts themselves--everything from looting to summary executions to torture.
                "There was bespredel all the time," one 35-year-old soldier said. "You can't let it get to you."
                The servicemen say atrocities aren't directly ordered from above; instead, they result from a Russian military culture that glorifies ardor in battle, portrays the enemy as inhuman and has no effective system of accountability.
                "Your army is based on professionalism," said a 27-year-old paratrooper who served alongside U.S. troops as a peacekeeper in Bosnia-Herzegovina. "Our army is based on fervor."
                Russian officials, including the Kremlin's war spokesman, Sergei V. Yastrzhembsky, have criticized the human rights reports, saying they are riddled with rumor and rebel propaganda.
                Officials have sometimes blamed reported atrocities on what they describe as rebel fighters dressed as Russian soldiers.
                But they acknowledge that some human rights violations do occur and say they are taking steps to curb them.
                "[Chechens] are Russian citizens, for whose sake the operation was undertaken in the first place," Yastrzhembsky said in an interview. "They should be treated according to the same laws as in the rest of Russia. Any violation, regardless of who commits it, must be reviewed by the procurator [investigating magistrate] and the guilty parties should be punished."
                That may be the Kremlin's official position, but servicemen say things are different on the ground. In part because of media coverage of Chechen slave-trading, torture and beheadings, the soldiers believe that the enemy is guilty of far worse atrocities.
                Although they know that executions and other human rights violations are wrong, they also consider them an unavoidable--even necessary--part of waging war, especially against such a foe.
                In their view, human rights workers and other critics are simply squeamish about the real nature of war.
                "What rules? What Geneva Conventions? What difference does it make if Russia has signed them?" said a 25-year-old army officer. "I didn't sign them, none of my friends signed them. . . . In Russia, these rules don't work."
                Perhaps most important, the servicemen described a pervasive and powerful culture of impunity in the Russian armed forces. They believe that authorities say one thing in public but deliberately turn a blind eye to many war crimes. A few even said investigators helped cover up such atrocities. Right or wrong, the soldiers are confident that authorities will make no serious effort to investigate war zone misconduct.
                "You don't make it obvious, and they don't look too hard," another 21-year-old conscript said. "Everyone understands that's the way it works."
                Many of the servicemen admitted having troubled consciences. But like a mantra, most repeated what they had been taught--that whether one likes it or not, going to war means acting bespredel.
                "What kind of human rights can there be in wartime?" said a 31-year-old police commando. "It's fine to violate human rights within certain limits."
                Brake harder. Go faster. No shit.

                massivebrakes.com

                http://www.facebook.com/pages/Massiv...78417442267056





                Comment

                • JUMPNYC
                  E30 Addict
                  • Sep 2008
                  • 519

                  #9
                  In Soviet Russia....Airport bomb YOU!

                  Comment

                  • kronus
                    R3V OG
                    • Apr 2008
                    • 13000

                    #10
                    :[
                    cars beep boop

                    Comment

                    • daniel
                      R3V OG
                      • Jul 2007
                      • 6703

                      #11
                      jokes aside, this stuff is really sad no matter where it happens. RIP, victims.
                      http://instagram.com/dslovn.drives

                      Comment

                      • george graves
                        I waste 90% of my day here and all I got was this stupid title
                        • Oct 2003
                        • 19985

                        #12
                        32 people died. Have some respect...
                        Originally posted by Matt-B
                        hey does anyone know anyone who gets upset and makes electronics?

                        Comment

                        • b*saint
                          No R3VLimiter
                          • May 2006
                          • 3794

                          #13
                          The thing is Russia isn't afraid of doing dirty things openly to rid the problem. No one fucks with the Red.
                          Ma che cazzo state dicendo? :|

                          Comment

                          • payney8
                            E30 Modder
                            • Jun 2007
                            • 899

                            #14
                            Very sad. But what b*saint said is very true. Russia isnt afraid of fucking some people up to solve the problems.

                            Comment

                            • jrhaile
                              Mod Crazy
                              • Oct 2005
                              • 744

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Massive Lee
                              Isn't terrorism usually the last resort when negociations aren't possible? Russia has a lot of conflicts on its territory. And isn't interested in solving any of them.
                              So you're giving this a free pass then?

                              Comment

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