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My comrade Putin lost his balls

KimJongUn

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Russia's Vladimir Putin orders troops to withdraw from Ukraine border

Australian treasurer says there is consensus the Russian leader should go to the talks, and he expects there to be 'full and frank discussions'

PUBLISHED : Monday, 13 October, 2014, 4:21am
UPDATED : Monday, 13 October, 2014, 4:21am

Agence France-Presse in Sydney

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Sweatshirts bearing an image of President Putin are displayed in a central Moscow shop. Photo: Reuters

Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered thousands of troops to withdraw from the border with Ukraine ahead of diplomatic talks on bringing peace to the Western-backed, former Soviet republic.

The announcement by the Kremlin appeared to be a positive signal prior to Putin's meeting with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and European leaders in Milan on Friday.

Accused by Ukraine and the West of stoking a bloody insurgency in eastern Ukraine, Russia is facing its most serious international isolation since the end of the cold war. Several rounds of Western sanctions have shaken the economy, intensified capital flight and weakened the ruble.

"The head of state has tasked the defence minister with beginning to bring troops back to their permanent bases," the Kremlin said.

The order meant that 17,600 troops, who the Kremlin said had been participating in drills in the southern Rostov region, would withdraw. Defence minister Sergei Shoigu received the order after reporting that "summertime training on military ranges of the southern military district is over," the Kremlin said.

The late Saturday meeting between Putin and Shoigu took place after the president chaired a meeting of his national security council at his Black Sea residence in Sochi, said the Kremlin, without providing further details.

Kiev reported that attacks by insurgents in the east of the country had subsided. The rebels and the Ukrainian military in the eastern Donetsk region said for their part that they had agreed to a "no-shooting period," and the army announced "progress" in negotiations and preparations to create a buffer zone, as required under a ceasefire agreement.

Russia denies meddling in Ukraine and says it has never deployed troops in the bloody conflict. But Moscow-based political analyst Alexei Makarkin suggested Putin's order was aimed at persuading the West to ease punitive measures. "I think this is part of the compromises that Russia and Ukraine have reached," he said on Echo of Moscow radio.

Putin will meet Poroshenko for talks on the sidelines of an Asia-Europe Meeting. The talks will also include the prime ministers of Italy and Britain as well as German Chancellor Dr Angela Merkel. "I don't expect that these will be easy negotiations," Poroshenko said on Saturday.

The six-month conflict in Ukraine has killed more than 3,300 people and sparked deep mistrust between Russia and its neighbours to the west.

In a sign that world leaders are keen to engage Putin in a further dialogue, Australia confirmed yesterday that Putin would attend the G20 leaders' summit in November.

"I spoke with the finance minister of Russia only yesterday ... and he did confirm that President Putin will be coming to the G20 leaders' summit in Brisbane," Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. "That has certainly been the consensus of other members of the G20 that President Putin should attend. And I think there will be some full and frank dialogue with President Putin at that meeting."

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said he was "not happy" with many aspects of Russia's foreign policy, but it was not his nation's right to "say yes or no to individual members of the G20".


 

jumpmrt

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Putin is tricking the pussy Obama for fun he will conqure andannex Ukirane as will as ripping apart Obama's asshole.
 
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