3APA3A-77 schrieb am 24.07.2023 15:39:
Passt doch. Oder ist das Asow-Regiment für Dich keine paramilitärische Organisation?
Das waren die, die Molotowcocktails auf Polizisten warfen. sie mit dicken Stahlketten verprügelten und hinterher sich im Parlament breit machten.Das ist gelogen.
Die Todesschützen vom Maidan z.B. wurden offenbar explizit angeheuert Gewalt zu sähen und auch dafür bezahlt - und zwar in US$:
Engaged in Tbilisi by Mamuka Mamulashvili, Saakashvili's military adviser, they are charged with supporting - together with other Georgian and Lithuanian volunteers - the ongoing demonstrations in Kiev in exchange for a final payment of 5,000 dollars each. Armed with false passports, they arrive in Ukraine to coordinate demonstrations and provoke the Ukrainian police, initially without using weapons. The weapons enter the scene on February 18 and are distributed to various groups of Georgians and Lithuanians by Mamulashvili and other Ukrainian opposition leaders. "In each bag there were three or four weapons, there were Makarov pistols, AKM machine guns, carbines And then there were packs of cartridges". The following day Mamulashvili and the protest leaders explain to the volunteers that they will have to face a police assault on the Conservatory building and the Ukraine hotel. In that case - it is explained - it will be necessary to fire on the square and sow chaos. But one of the protagonists confesses that he has received another explanation, much more comprehensive. “When Mamulashvili arrived, I asked him too. Things are getting complicated, we have to start shooting - he replied we can't go to early presidential elections. But who are we going to shoot? I asked him. He replied that who and where didn't matter, you had to shoot somewhere just to sow chaos".
Das passt so gar nicht zu einer vom Volk ausgehenden Revolution. In der englischen Wikipedia steht übrigens zum Putsch auch noch:
A revolution or rebellion can have the same outcome as a coup, in that a ruler or government can be replaced by unconstitutional means. However, while a coup is usually made by a small group and planned beforehand, a revolution or rebellion is usually started more spontaneously and by larger groups of uncoordinated people.[47] The distinction is not always clear. Sometimes, a coup is also labelled as a revolution by the coup makers to try to give it a form of democratic legitimacy.[48][49]