Home » A “union of beggars and outcasts” is brewing: why did Lukashenko suddenly rush to Putin

A “union of beggars and outcasts” is brewing: why did Lukashenko suddenly rush to Putin

by alex

Yakovenko on the meeting between Putin and Lukashenko/Getty Images

Self-proclaimed President of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko met with dictator Vladimir Putin in Russia on September 15. It is obvious that a “union of beggars” is beginning to form there

Russian opposition journalist Igor Yakovenko told Channel 24 about this, commenting on the meeting between Lukashenko and Putin. Particularly funny were the attempts of the Belarusian dictator to force himself into the “union” of Russia and the DPRK.

There will be a “union of beggars”

During the meeting, Lukashenko highly praised the visit of the dictator from the DPRK Kim Jong-un to Russia. He even began to ask to join this “powerful union.”

As Yakovenko emphasized, the prospects for this formation are simply “huge.” Especially considering that until recently the DPRK had serious problems with hunger.

There will be a union of “beggars and outcasts.” The DPRK recently experienced an incredible famine. This is an absolutely poor country that is in a terrible state. Such an alliance is brewing. And Lukashenko is the third in this company,” Yakovenko noted.

An anti-Putin coalition has already formed in the world, numbering more than 50 states. This includes precisely rich, economically developed and free countries. And at the other pole there will be Belarus, North Korea and Russia with cheap militarism, but a huge supply of evil.

The situation in Russia: briefly

    < li>On September 13, Russian dictator Putin met with Kim Jong-un. As a result of the visit, there were no joint statements, but we can quite confidently assume that they agreed on the supply of weapons.
  • The Main Intelligence Directorate of the Moscow Region noticed that if Putin began to ask for weapons from the DPRK, then they have problems with this. And especially with modern, high-precision and high-tech weapons. And not only with him.
  • Since the beginning of the full-scale invasion, the Ukrainian military has destroyed more than 271 thousand Russian occupiers.

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