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PUTIN WCIAZ WYGRYWA Z PAMIECIA O LUDZIACH ,KTORZY ZGINELI W KATYNIU I SMOLENSKU

Data: 2010-08-17 09:05:49
Autor: Me
PUTIN WCIAZ WYGRYWA Z PAMIECIA O LUDZIACH ,KTORZY ZGINELI W KATYNIU I SMOLENSKU



               HOW ONE KGB LEUTENENT CAN WIN THE MEMORY OF ALL
MILITARY
ELITE AND GET THE BACK UP AT NYT


KATYN AT THE NYT LAST 30 DAYS YIDS ONLY THESE 3 RESULTS, NOT REALLY
INFORMATIVE ABOUT THE MASACRE; BUT LOOK DOWN

All Result Types Articles Multimedia 1-3 of 3 Results Times

Topics: Lech Kaczynski
Lech Kaczynski was elected president of Poland in 2005 and served
until his .... Making Poland's president a hero does a disservice to
the memory of the ...

CAN YOU BELIEVE THE NEW KIND OF AUDACITY - JUST FOR INSITSING ON
REVEALING THE CRIME 70 YEARS LATER WHEN THE EXECUTORS ARE SURELY
HIDDEN IF NOT EXPIRED, CAUSES THEM AT NYT WORRIES ABOUT THE MEMORY OF
THE DECEASED
SLAIN MILITARY ELITE. WHO THAT IS?


HUNTINGTON Cinema Arts Center “Katyn,” a film by Andrzej Wajda that
recreates war-torn Poland and the stories of the Polish captives
and ...
WAYDA HAS PUT ON SCREEN POLITICAL PROPAGANDA ON ALL POLISH SIGNIFICANT
EVENTS INCLUDING 'KANAL' THAT IS DISTORTED AS ALL THE REST; ALL IN THE
SAME DIRECTION - CHEAPING AWAY FROM POLAND OR POLAND IMAGE

 Times Topics: Vladimir Putin
History's gyre can be of an unbearable cruelty the death of Poland's
elite in the same cursed place, Katyn. But even the cruelest history
can be overcome. ...
HERE IS THE NEXT - TEH ONE TAHT IS OVERCOMING THE TRAGEDY IS NOW...
PUTIN OF ALL;

  WHO EDITS NYT ARCHIVED? MORON MUST BELIEVE THAT WE BELIEVE. NYT USE
TO HAVE STANDARD. WHTA IS THAT ABOUT? WAS PUTING GIVEN FRE RIDE AT THE
PROPAGANDA FOPR SELVE AT THE NEW YORK TIMES, THE BIGGEST USA DAILY.

NO SEARCH FOR PUTTIN NECESSARY TODAY - HE PUPS OUT VOLUNTARILY IN THE
SAME ARCHIVE. AND SURELY WINS WITH KATYN.
Tuesday, August 17, 2010

People > P > Putin, Vladimir V.E-MAILVladimir V. Putin

James Hill for The New York Times"Vladimir V. Putin is not a household
name," The New York Times wrote on Aug. 9, 1999, the day that the
ailing and foundering president, Boris N. Yeltsin, appointed him the
latest in a string of prime ministers. Four and a half months later,
Mr. Yeltsin resigned and anointed him his successor as president.
After that, Mr. Putin in a way became the only household name in
Russian politics, having consolidated control over almost every aspect
of society and business and marginalized what opposition still exists.

In his eight years as president, Mr. Putin remained extremely popular,
and though the terms of his power were altered when he handed the
presidency over to his personally chosen successor, Dmitry A.
Medvedev, and assumed the position of prime minister, he has shown no
sign of relinquishing control.

Born in Leningrad, now St. Petersburg again, on Oct. 7, 1952, Mr.
Putin grew up in a communal apartment in a typically modest Soviet
environment. He joined the K.G.B. and served as a counterintelligence
officer in East Germany from 1985 to 1990. He retired with the rank of
lieutenant colonel.

Read More...

He left the service in 1990 and joined the St. Petersburg reformists,
led by the city's mayor, Anatoly A. Sobchak, a leader of Russia's
early democratic movement.

It is a résumé that for better or worse many cite as the foundation of
his ideas and personality.

Mr. Putin moved to Moscow in 1996, holding a series of posts in Mr.
Yeltsin's government, including head of the K.G.B.'s successor, the
Federal Security Service. He became acting president on Jan. 1, 2000,
and was formally elected that March. He battled with some wealthy
business executives who controlled the economy, asserted power over
disloyal regional governors and imposed state control over the media.

By the time he faced re-election in March 2004, it was hardly a race.
He defeated a field of second-tier politicians with more than 70
percent of the vote. As prices for oil and natural gas continued to
soar, Mr. Putin appeared to grow ever more confident, and his grip on
power grew steadily firmer.

Some Kremlinologists have suggested that he may return to the
presidency in as little as four years at the end of President
Medvedev's first term.

President Putin is married to Lyudmila Putin, who keeps a low profile,
and they have two grown daughters.

Related: Topic Page: RussiaHighlights From the Archives
Putin’s Grasp of Energy Drives Russian Agenda
By ANDREW E. KRAMER
Vladimir V. Putin has long built his strategy for the rebirth of
Russia around the export of natural resources.

January 29, 2009worldNewsParty’s Triumph Raises Question of Putin’s
Plans
By CLIFFORD J. LEVY
As President Putin has been accumulating popularity, he has been
stirring deep uncertainty about his intentions, creating a new era of
instability for Russia.

December 3, 2007worldNewsPutin Says He Will Run for Parliament
By C. J. CHIVERS
The suggestion seemed to confirm that President Vladimir V. Putin
plans to hold on to the power he has accrued.

October 2, 2007worldNewsAdministration Rebukes Putin on His Policies
By THOM SHANKER
A top Russia expert at the State Department described the Kremlin as
bullying its neighbors while silencing opponents and suppressing
individual rights at home.

June 1, 2007washingtonNewsForeign Desk
Putin's Democratic Present Fights His K.G.B. Past
By STEVEN LEE MYERS
There is a question that irritates President Vladimir V. Putin of
Russia, and it is the one about his past as a foreign intelligence
operative of the K.G.B.

October 9, 2003worldNewsForeign Desk

Bush and Putin Sign Pact for Steep Nuclear Arms Cuts
By DAVID E. SANGER and MICHAEL WINES
In a day devoted to celebrating what President Bush called ''an
entirely new relationship'' with Russia, he and President Vladimir V.
Putin signed a treaty today to commit their nations to the most
dramatic nuclear arms cuts in decades.

May 25, 2002worldNewsForeign Desk

Some Russians Are Alarmed At Tighter Grip Under Putin
By MICHAEL WINES
Among intellectuals and advocates of a democratic Russia in the
Western mode, a gnawing concern is arising that the relative freedom
from state surveillance and restriction that citizens have relished in
the last decade may be drawing to a close.

June 14, 2001worldNewsForeign Desk

Putin Is Made Russia's President In First Free Transfer of Power
By MICHAEL WINES
Vladimir V. Putin swore an oath today to ''respect and guard the human
and civil rights'' of Russia and became, officially at last, its
second president.

I THOUGH THAT LONDONIERS ARE BETTER IN HYPOCRICY.

ON THE MEMORY OF SLAYING THE POLISH MILITARY ELITE YOU LIE OFF, PUTIN.

IF YOU HAVE TROUBLE WITH ASSERIVENESS, TRY DIFFERENT STRATEGY - FOR
THE STARTED DICONNECT SELF FROM KATYNB TRAGEDY AND STAY THAT WAY.
WASN'T THAT YOU THAT DID NOT KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT THE TRUTH AND THAN
ABOUT THE TRUTH WITH THAT BALL OF LIGHT AT THE SMOLENSK STILL UYNUSED
AIRPORT? AND ALL THE REST. IF YOU DO NOT KNOW AND DO NOT REALY HOLD
THE OFFICIAL POWER NOW - THAN STAY THAT WAY. TAHT IS MORE CONDUCIOVE
TO THE RESPECT OF THE MEMORY OF THE SLAYN, IN CASE YOU CAN NOT FIND IT
YOURSELF.

PUTIN WCIAZ WYGRYWA Z PAMIECIA O LUDZIACH ,KTORZY ZGINELI W KATYNIU I SMOLENSKU

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