Це типове "янєлох", з заплющенням очей на те, як найпотужніщі країни світу того часу аж всю дупу собі порвали аби підіграти кацапікам, нічого не робити та сасущєствовать, ми вже неодноразово бачили. Єдина різниця, що присипочка кацапською пропагандою змінюється від допису до допису; тут от наприклад вже є "якщо", тобто може й не було в тих украйонців ЯЗ, літачків, і взагалі самих украйонців. Не все однозначно.
Нажаль, це ніяк не змінює фактів. Таких, як палка участь США в усьому цьому перформансі. Так шо соррі, але кожного разу коли буде чутися камлання з морального боку питання, типу "нам нічо і нє должни, оце спасібо лічно Байден чісто по жалості помог" - буде з'являтися цей неприємний факт. Й буде поставати запитання, як все ж шановні дописувачі до нього ставляться насправді. Й доведеться комусь хоча б на мікросекунду над цим замислюватися, перш ніж ліпити три шаблонні фрази та тікати з гілки
Вони просто хотіли допомогти рашн піпль...
BRUSSELS, BELGIUM — BRUSSELS, Belgium -- President Clinton, hailing "a hopeful and historic breakthrough," announced yesterday an agreement that would finally remove all nuclear weapons from Ukraine -- the world's third largest nuclear arsenal.
The bulk of that arsenal is pointed at the United States from the time when Ukraine was part of the Soviet Union, but it is fear of Moscow that has lately made Ukrainians anxious about giving up the weapons as agreed to under earlier treaties.
The agreement announced yesterday contains guarantees that neither Russia or the United States would launch a nuclear attack against Ukraine. Ukraine will also get hundreds of millions of dollars to help dismantle the nuclear arsenal and considerable assistance in advancing its peaceful nuclear energy program.Many details about the nuclear removal appeared to remain unsettled yesterday, but a clearly delighted Mr. Clinton said that he would stop off at the Ukrainian capital of Kiev tomorrow to thank Ukraine President Leonid Kravchuk personally before going to Moscow.
The agreement, to be signed Friday in Russia, ended months of difficult three-way negotiations among the United States, Russia and Ukraine. The development is seen by White House officials as a much-needed boost for Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin.
Both Russian nationalists and the Russian military establishment have been strongly opposed to the prospect of any other nuclear powers on Russia's borders. And this agreement, which the Americans pursued vigorously, gives Mr. Yeltsin a tangible proof that his friendship with the Clinton administration actually helps the Russian people.
"It helps show the Russian public that there is some benefit to the relationship," said a State Department spokesman, Michael McCurry.
Likewise, the agreement to dismantle 1,240 nuclear warheads -- two-thirds of them mounted on intercontinental missiles and aimed at the United States -- also underscores what Mr. Clinton has been saying consistently since a speech at Annapolis nine months ago: that what happens in the former Soviet Union directly relates to the safety and well-being of Americans.
Secretary of State Warren M. Christopher, appearing before reporters to discuss the agreement, said it is "clearing up some of the remnants of the Cold War and the nuclear danger that we confronted for such a long time."
President Clinton, who preceded Mr. Christopher at the lectern, also said that dealing with leftover nuclear weapons in the four republics that were once part of the Soviet Union constituted "the most important non-proliferation challenge facing the world."
Kazahkstan and Belarus -- the other two nuclear states besides Russia and Ukraine -- have already made the decision to go non-nuclear. Ukraine's decision, said Mr. Clinton, ensures "that the break-up of the Soviet Union does not result in the birth of new nuclear states which could raise the chances for nuclear accident, nuclear terrorism or nuclear proliferation."
https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1994-01-11-1994011005-story.html