Has Russia the Right to Protect Crimea? Well, most of the Crimea - TopicsExpress



          

Has Russia the Right to Protect Crimea? Well, most of the Crimea citizens are Russians (58.32%) while Ukrainians only 24.32% (Wikipedia). Thus, if most of the Crimeans are welcome to the Russian Soldiers, then why US government is so upset? Is US government never invade countries such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Panama, Vietnam, Korea, etc and kill millions of people? Just look into the mirror! If most of the Crimeans who are Russians are supporting Russian Soldiers, then Ukraine will not be able to defeat Russia in Crimea. Yanukovyich is the elected President. Most of Crimeans choose Yanukovyich as president and most of them are Russians. So lets the Crimean people decide whats best for them. Not Russia nor Ukraine. US government is very angry because of Russias invasion. Look whos talking. What about US invasions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Vietnam, Haiti, Korea, Cambodia, Grenada, Mexico, Panama, etc? talkandchats.blogspot/2014/03/has-russia-right-to-protect-crimea.html Russia demands surrender of Ukraines Crimea forces The Kremlin says its troops are needed to protect civilians in the region, many of whom are Russian speakers and have welcomed Russias intervention. Moscow, which does not recognise the new government, says people in Crimea have come under threat from ultra-nationalists since the revolution in Kiev. bbc/news/world-europe-26424738 Crimea The Autonomous Republic of Crimea is an autonomous parliamentary republic within Ukraine and is governed by the Constitution of Crimea in accordance with the laws of Ukraine. Crimeas area is 26,200 square kilometres (10,100 sq mi) and its population is 2,352,385 people (2007 estimate). Ethnic groups (2001) 58.32% Russians 24.32% Ukrainians 12.10% Crimean Tatars en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimea rt/news/russian-troops-crimea-ukraine-816/ Why Crimea is so dangerous Crimea is a centre of pro-Russian sentiment, which can spill into separatism. The region - a peninsula on Ukraines Black Sea coast - has 2.3 million people, most of whom identify themselves as ethnic Russians and speak Russian. The region voted heavily for Viktor Yanukovych in the 2010 presidential election, and many people there believe he is the victim of a coup - leading to attempts by separatists in Crimeas parliament to push for a vote on whether it should leave Ukraine. bbc/news/world-europe-26367786
Posted on: Wed, 05 Mar 2014 05:46:54 +0000

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