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Rhiannon12866

(259,698 posts)
Wed Jun 3, 2026, 08:40 AM 9 hrs ago

Ukraine Hits St. Petersburg as 'Putin's Davos' Gets Underway - Today



A wave of Ukrainian drones targeted sites in St. Petersburg where Russian President Vladimir Putin is kicking off a closely-watched international summit. It comes after Ukraine suffered one of the worst onslaughts of the war. NBC’s Keir Simmons reports for TODAY. - Aired on 06/03/2026.
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marble falls

(72,705 posts)
1. I think Putin is getting to the bottom of his pile of his missile/drone pile and he's trying to get his biggest ...
Wed Jun 3, 2026, 08:45 AM
9 hrs ago

... bang out of it and just maybe put Ukraine on the ropes before he starts honestly negotiating.

Rhiannon12866

(259,698 posts)
2. I'm not sure that Putin would ever be "honestly negotiating," but I sure hope that you're right
Wed Jun 3, 2026, 08:55 AM
9 hrs ago

The losses from this Russian-launched war are tragic and will take at least a generation to clean up.

sinkingfeeling

(58,124 posts)
3. I'm sorry, but having visited both Kyiv and St. Petersburg, I hate the loss of
Wed Jun 3, 2026, 09:00 AM
9 hrs ago

beautiful historic structures.

Rhiannon12866

(259,698 posts)
4. I've only visited St. Petersburg, though at the time it was Leningrad, and it is a beautiful city
Wed Jun 3, 2026, 09:30 AM
8 hrs ago

My grandmother had joined a peace group and invited me to join the group on their first visit to their "sister town" a couple of hours up in the Caucasus Mountains. This was in the late '80s when it was still the USSR and Gorbachev was president. At the time things were looking up since Gorbachev had instituted more progressive policies and everyone we met were pleased to meet Americans.

We met with other peace groups who were truly dedicated to peace after they had experienced the horrors of WWII fought on their own land. There were plaques and statues dedicated to peace and those they had lost. There were even museums in the schools so that the children could learn about the lessons from that war.

And we were scheduled to visit Kiev as well, but Chernobyl happened, so we visited Tbilisi, the capital of then-Soviet occupied Georgia, instead. There was no love lost between the Georgians and the Russians - I was confused because there were numerous statues of Stalin in Tbilisi, so I asked. And I was told that Stalin was Georgian, not Russian, and was held in high esteem in Georgia since "he killed so many Russians." *sigh*

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