竟然还被有心人传到本坛,查了一下,竟然无人反驳,好安静呵呵。
The head of Chechnya republic Kadyrov desperately wants people to think he is fighting in #Ukraine. First, he lied about being near #Kyiv when he was seen in Chechnya. Now he says is in Mariupol and posts this picture, not realizing, but there are no Rosneft stations in Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/8HaaePM9Vx
— Anonymous Operations (@AnonOpsSE) March 29, 2022
Kadyrov, leader of the Chechen Republic, releases images of him capturing a Ukranian vehicle... outside of his presidential Palace in Chechnya...???? pic.twitter.com/qvfAjzCNVP
— Anonymous Operations (@AnonOpsSE) March 30, 2022
Kadyrov's tiktok troops won a hard-fought victory in a firefight with traffic lights. No deaths or injuries have been reported. pic.twitter.com/mdcHEQ2ZWR
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) March 31, 2022
One of Kadyrov’s Chechen soldiers steals a Ukrainian motorcycle.
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) March 30, 2022
He clearly has 0 experience. pic.twitter.com/9CbqeyqR5J
Kadyrov via Telegram said today he is going to mirror the sanctions the UK have implemented against Russia starting "on February 31" when Chechnya will implement its own sanctions against the UK, Boris Johnson and UK oligarchs Shrewd bluff. *****6DKhAfiVlH pic.twitter.com/CaWvb049qu
— Mike Russell (@MIKERUSSELLMMA) February 28, 2022
Sitting in his gold-plated office, Chechen dictator Ramzan Kadyrov publicly criticizes Russian head negotiator Vladimir Medinsky for supposedly being too accommodating to Ukraine. The cracks are starting to show. pic.twitter.com/p5siAvii9L
— Kevin Rothrock (@KevinRothrock) March 30, 2022
Chechens are now fighting on both sides of the war in Ukraine: While pro-Kremlin forces are loyal to leader Ramzan Kadyrov, anti-Kadyrov Chechens have fought for Ukraine since 2014.
— DW News (@dwnews) April 1, 2022
The number of fighters on each side remains unclear. pic.twitter.com/GTmRGRCely