Then it is assessed and classified, preferably by numbers, so that it is easier for us to understand.
It pays to look at Austria, Europe and the world from outside.
Denksport Fri., Oct. 23, 2015 10:58 pm
Report
Most of the people here don’t really care about the person behind the moments. The first impression counts. Then it is assessed and classified, preferably by numbers, so that it is easier for us to understand. Even better in euros, so everyone can understand it. Respect has become a foreign word for us. Not only respect for those seeking help, but also for those who help.
OberonSat., Oct. 24, 2015 8:41 am
Report
I don’t see myself here on a diplomatic mission, but I still want to get rid of this. Although I don’t know any of the users personally, I dare to say that only very few are out to harm the refugees who come to us. We are not indifferent to these people, but a situation can also overwhelm us, because – WE are only human. * May I …
OberonSat., Oct. 24, 2015 8:41 am
Report
…ask where YOUR roots are? I don’t mean that badly, it just interests me. 🙂
honestySat., Oct. 24, 2015 7:11 pm
Report
Have no problem with an acceptable number of real refugees if they adapt unconditionally to our culture. (No burqa, no exceptions in schools such as swimming and headgear, gender equality, no Salafist tendencies and tendencies) If you violate this, immediate expulsion without any ifs or buts!
DenksportSat., Oct. 24, 2015 7:30 p.m.
Report
No complete veiling, ok, in public, because there is actually a ban on masking. Exceptions in schools or swimming? So it’s best for everyone to have a school uniform again or something, then there will be no more bullying.? I see it every day that Muslim children in general would not go swimming is just an invention! We see women’s equality in Upper Austria.
DenksportSat., Oct. 24, 2015 7:35 PM
Report
I come from a small mountain farm in South Tyrol, have been in Vienna for 11 years, and EPU for 3 years now.
register
Connect with Facebook
Fri., Oct. 23, 2015 4:03 pm
Report
reply
To be honest, this Kurz believes he knows the solution. Is it so difficult to understand that the majority of Austrians want the borders to be closed? First they want Russia to play along, then they play along, then they don’t want it again … pfff a bunch of ………………
xillomirkoFri., Oct. 23, 2015 3:25 pm
Report
reply
And this young bungee should be the new hope of the ÖVP. This Bürscherl is worse than the Mikl-Leitner with a “Fortress Europe” Now the Strache is overtaken even further to the right.
neusiedlerseeFri., Oct. 23, 2015 2:12 pm
Report
reply
Calculates the east. Government with the fact that the people are even more stupid than their members and don’t remember anything they said 1 week ago: No fences, fences: everyone can come, not everyone can come; Space enough, we don’t have any more space; we all register, we cannot register all of them …123helpme But you can do everything with us, expect everything from us. We thank you for that.
neusiedlerseeFri., Oct. 23, 2015 2:04 p.m.
Report
reply
Klug says we can rely 100% on our army. Did he mean an attack by Liechtenstein? Because the soldiers cannot cope with the few thousand unarmed refugees. As an emeritus “amateur strategist”, that is, a fully trained military servant, the 1,500 boys around an Alzerl seem too little to me. But the smart always knows everything better, in retrospect.
OberonFr., Oct. 23, 2015 1:35 p.m.
Report
We owe all of this to the “very kind” stepmother Angela Merkel, who started a flow of refugees towards Europe with just one sentence. She still insists on her statement at the time – no one will be sent back – but is now trying desperately to row back. The fact is, deportations are under discussion. Will they also be carried out? Who knows…..
OberonFr., Oct. 23, 2015 1:38 p.m.
Report
….If you send the refugees on their own journey home (!), Some of them will probably decide spontaneously in favor of Austria. I don’t need to go into the reasons for this here, but one thing is certain, not out of sympathy for us and our country.
neusiedlerseeFri., Oct. 23, 2015 1:47 p.m.
Report
We + the politicians know all that. Only we have no power and the politicians have no courage. So let the victim, Europe, sink into the mud before our eyes.
OberonFr., Oct. 23, 2015 4:04 pm
Report
If unrest arises in the population, the now quite worn-out appeasement councilor appears immediately, as if at the push of a button, whispering to the common infantry in a seven-sweet voice: “… everything is good, you are in good hands with us …”. Unfortunately, with most of our politicians, we are dealing with weak, submissive and cowardly fellows. Would the …
OberonFr., Oct. 23, 2015 4:05 pm
Report
… If the state treaty is pending TODAY, we would – with these politicians – still have to live in bondage.
register
Connect with Facebook
günzaFr., Oct. 23, 2015 10:19 am
Report
That just means that we don’t get the refugees through our country as quickly as Germany pushes them back to us. The Germans choose from there according to the motto. The GOODs are allowed to stay, the bad ones get Austria. Suddenly we have another problem. Thank you, Chancellor Feigmann
neusiedlerseeFri., Oct. 23, 2015 1:50 PM
Report
This should be done to the east. He and his experts and inside know nothing about it and have not yet thought about it due to the lack of necessary prerequisites. Federal Chancellor Vienna I suffices as an address
neusiedlerseeFri., Oct. 23, 2015 13:54
Report
And even if only the good guys are allowed to stay (do you mean those who are entitled?), That’s impossible. Because that will be around 2.5 million in 2015 next year. Who should take care of them where? And who dares to take legal action against them. The police don’t dare to do that now. Do we miss the gendarmerie?
OberonFr., Oct. 23, 2015 4:24 pm
Report
Concerning. Breaking the law. A wide range of behavior is possible between inhumane harshness and extreme indulgence. Kind of strange that this should be mentioned. No thumbscrews for sausage roll thieves, but – immediate deportation of violent criminals or terrorists. Realistically speaking, we experience only a few “mistakes” from our protection seekers …
OberonFr., Oct. 23, 2015 4:24 pm
Report
… Refugees, political “whispers” and appropriately controlled media take care of that. So much for the free and independent (?) Press!
register
Connect with Facebook
Fri., Oct. 23, 2015 9:54 am
Report
All you have to do is stop paying lavish social benefits, and the influx will dry up immediately. There is no need for a “Fortress Europe”.
gustigustiFr., Oct. 23, 2015 10:19 am
Report
Absolutely right! We are not the World Social Office
giuseppeverdi Fri., Oct. 23, 2015 12:38 pm
Report
That is the only correct measure. Social benefits gone! Then we no longer need fences because they return voluntarily and the fences would make it difficult for them to return. Away with the social benefits. If you go to the doctor – with the exception of children – first the money then the treatment. How quickly the stream will dry up!
neusiedlerseeFri., Oct. 23, 2015 1:43 PM
Report
Nobody voluntarily returns. Nobody will die on the street. Or do we want to become India, you who rashly release something from your PC box? Even without support, refugees still live better with us than where they used to be. Dear people, it is too late: 7,000 yesterday, 5,000 today. Use the math helper if necessary. Then think + think ahead.
register
Connect with Facebook
page 2 of 3
back
-
1
-
2
-
3
continue
”
Suddenly everything happened very quickly. After Vladimir Putin called for an “anti-Hitler coalition” in front of the UN General Assembly on Monday, that is, coordinated international action against the Islamic State in Syria, Russia started single-handedly with air strikes in the civil war country on Wednesday. News.at explains in five points the calculation behind it, why Syria is so important for Russia and how things are going now.
What’s happened
Over the past few weeks, Russia has been relocating more troops and equipment, including tanks, artillery, helicopters, drones and combat aircraft, to Syria. Russia has always been one of the strongest allies of the Syrian ruler Bashar al-Assad, but even against this background, the massive troop movements of recent times have been striking. “A Russian military plane has been landing every morning at the Hmeimim base for the past two weeks,” a Syrian military representative told the AFP news agency a few days ago. The Hmeimim base is 25 kilometers south of Latakia, one of the few remaining strongholds of Assad.
© SERGEI CHIRIKOV / AFP / Getty Images Old allies: Vladimir Putin and Bashar al-Assad
In his speech to the UN General Assembly on Monday, President Vladimir Putin once again called for an international coalition in the fight against the Islamic State. Putin described the anti-Hitler coalition in World War II as a model. The US reacted cautiously, after which Putin, after a request from Assad, received the green light for air strikes in Syria on Wednesday from the Federation Council.
which also started shortly afterwards
.
What Putin is saying
For the Russian president, cooperation with the Assad regime is the only way to push back the jihadists and end the civil war in Syria. Russia will therefore support the Syrian army until it has ended its fight against the rebels, Putin said on Wednesday. The Russian president sees the collapse of Libya and Iraq as prime examples of failed interventions by the West and wants to prevent a similar scenario in Syria. In his opinion, only an approach coordinated with the Assad regime can prevent Syria from turning into an uncontrollable staging area for Islamist extremists.
What’s behind it
The fact is: Assad has fallen on the defensive in the fifth year of the civil war. In the first six months of this year alone, government troops lost access to a further 16 percent of the area they controlled – and already heavily decimated.
© APA / Martin Hirsch
But concerns about a “failed state” in Syria are at most part of the truth. For Putin, it is also about his influence in the world – and concrete concerns about internal Russian security. This is also borne out by the first reports of the Russian air strikes, after which Putin’s jets bombed positions of the Islamic State rather than those of the more moderate rebels in the Homs region.
On the one hand, Russia is not only the last remaining supporter of Assad alongside Iran, but on the other hand Syria is also the only country in the region that is friendly to Moscow. For example, Russia has long had a naval base in Tartus, 90 kilometers south of Assad’s stronghold of Latakia – Russia’s only base in the Mediterranean.
On the other hand, it is estimated that up to 7,000 Chechen fighters are fighting on the side of the Islamic State in Syria. They would be a massive threat to the relative peace that currently prevails in the Caucasus if they return to their homeland from the civil war. “Why should we wait until they come home, we’d better help Assad fight them on the ground in Syria,” Putin told the American TV broadcaster CBS.
How the US reacts
They are currently noticeably passive. In his speech to the United Nations on Monday, President Barack Obama again emphasized that “after so much bloodshed and slaughter” one cannot simply return to the status quo and that a transition to a new leadership in Syria is inevitable. In an interview with MSNBC on Tuesday, Foreign Minister John Kerry spoke of an “orderly transition” of power in Syria – but such a transfer must inevitably involve Assad.
© APA / EPA / Chip Somodevilla Barack Obama seems to bend over
Otherwise, the American reaction is limited for the time being to discussing the air operations of the two nuclear powers so that their jets do not get in each other’s way. The US has been flying air strikes on IS positions in Syria for a year now.
On Wednesday evening, the two foreign ministers John Kerry and Sergei Lavrov agreed talks in New York on how to proceed, which could begin on Thursday.
How it goes on
At the moment there are many indications that Putin’s plan to keep the Assad regime in power – even if it is only in a “core Syria” on the Mediterranean coast – could succeed. In the past few weeks, Europe has already realized that there will probably be no solution in Syria without Assad. “We have to talk to many actors, including Assad,” said German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the special EU summit on the refugee crisis last week. And Austria’s Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz has already made a similar statement. Although Assad’s crimes should not be forgotten, he is on the same side as the West in the fight against IS, Kurz said at the beginning of September.
Now it seems as if the USA, too, are grudgingly about to embark on this course. Putin has once again created facts.
Read news for 1 month now for free! * * The test ends automatically.
NEWS FROM THE NETWORK
Win true wireless earphones from JBL now! (E-media.at)
New access (yachtrevue.at)
8 reasons why it’s great to be single (lustaufsleben.at)
Salmon shrimp burger with wasabi mayonnaise and honey cucumber (gusto.at)
In the new trend: Shock-Down – how long can the economy withstand lockdowns? (Trend.at)
The 35 best family series to laugh and feel good (tv-media.at)
E-Scooter in Vienna: All providers and prices 2020 in comparison (autorevue.at)
Comments
register
Connect with Facebook
11223344Fri., Oct 02, 2015 00:33
Report
reply
the putin does what the modest eu was too stupid or too little for. when he reaches the line (no is) he is the hero in the world and he is ami in the po. so much for putin. better one putin than ten cowardly
neusiedlersee Thursday, October 01, 2015 20:30
Report
reply