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Albanian provocative causes chaos in Belgrade

Egypt was not considered a state until 1922. Chechnya was incorporated into the Russian Empire in 1859.
You are basically dismissing all the history before 1859... too make a point. But your point is invalid.

Ethnic Chechens were there, through the history....and the duration they lived in Ottoman Empire is far much longer than your Russia...
 
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You are basically dismissing all the history before 1859... too make a point. But your point is invalid.


You claimed i did not know about history when i said Chechnya has been a part of Russia longer then Egypt has been a State/country. The topic was specifically about when Chechnya became a part of Russia and when Egypt became a country, factually i was correct, so who is it that does not know their history again?




As for Chechnya prior to 1859, read my earlier post, i did not ignore the fact that there was a history of inhabitants prior to 1859.




Ethnic Chechens were there, through the history....and the duration they lived in Ottoman Empire is far much longer than your Russia...


So you are advocate for Chechnya to break off? Why not i stick my nose in Turkey's internal affaires and advocate Turkey return land that it conquered from other people's/countries.
 
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You claimed i did not know about history when i said Chechnya has been a part of Russia longer then Egypt has been a State/country. The topic was specifically about when Chechnya became a part of Russia and when Egypt became a country, factually i was correct, so who is it that does not know their history again?

As for Chechnya prior to 1859, read my earlier post, i did not ignore the fact that there was a history of inhabitants prior to 1859.

You are speaking non-sense..like Russia became a country in 1991. Before it was USSR. Your logic as at fault.
[QUOTE="ptldM3, post: 6790930, member: 21454"D]o you are advocate for Chechnya to break off? Why not i stick my nose in Turkey's internal affaires and advocate Turkey return land that it conquered from other people's/countries.[/QUOTE]
I didn't say such a thing, don't make things up.
 
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You are speaking non-sense..like Russia became a country in 1991. Before it was USSR.



Wrong again. There was the Russian empire prior to the 1917 communist takeover, in 1991 Russia got its independence. In other words Russia was a functioning state prior to 1917. Do you know the difference between a state and a bunch of clans, nomads and tribes?
 
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you guys could argue for 100 years who owned what and who should have it today, there is no resolution. I think the only thing worth debating is which states are actually functioning today and providing their citizens with a safe and productive environment to live in. The list of failures here is large, and most of the new arrivals are the direct result of US intervention. Kosovo, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Yemen, Ukraine, are all disasters engineered in Washington. I'll tell you one thing that is of no doubt, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, GE, and other us Companies are making BILLIONS of dollars from all the death and destruction.

From Serbian news

"seven year have elapsed since Kosovo unilaterally proclaimed independence and several families rule Kosovo. Various clans decide on the fate of the people and that, by going abroad, Kosovo Albanians are making the best statement about what they feel about Kosovo’s unilaterally proclaimed independence.
A state is not created through the mere fact that it has been recognized, but on the basis of economy and the rule of the law and also ability to create a social and political consensus in the area one calls one’s state, says Vulin.

Kosovo still in crisis seven years after declaring independence
Seven years after declaring independence, Kosovo is in a deep economic crisis, extreme poverty, with a high unemployment rate and rampant corruption and crime, the press in Pristina writes.

The Zeri daily writes that Kosovo is marking its seventh birthday with a heavy wound inflicted to it by the fact that its people have been leaving in mass numbers lately. The daily specified that although 108 states have recognized Kosovo, last year, only another four did that and attributes the failuers above all to institutions and also to political party leaders.

A well-known political activist, Adem Demaći, says that Kosovo has regressed a lot in the past seven years, especially in the economic field. There is a group of people in power all the time, he says, assessing that as a big mistake.

Political analysts agree that Kosovo is facing a deep crisis and that the fact that people are leaving, corruption and organized crime are the biggest problems it has been facing."
 
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