While this message was hugely popular among Russians, it was a tougher sell in the outside world. |
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Russians Alina Kabayeva and Irina Chaschina are the top two qualifiers into the individual all-around and all four event finals. |
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Japan wants cheap fish for sushi and Russians have no qualms about evading heavy export taxes. |
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It has also been affected by invaders such as the Mongols, Timurids, Kalmyks, Khorezmian Uzbeks, and Russians. |
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There were only Russians, Tatars, Poles, Cossacks, and Kalmucks, and a number of the figures are repeated. |
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The Russians had rattled sabers throughout 1983, trying to stop NATO's theater missile deployment. |
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The largest single group of students are Chinese, followed by Afghans, Russians and Somalis. |
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As per your suggestion, I had a stiff Tom Collins, followed by some White Russians and a few shooters. |
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The only real difference I suppose is that the Russians had longer to prepare. |
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In 1873 the Russians established their control over Khiva, the last of the major independent khanates of Central Asia. |
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Russians have also put up new routes on 7,429-foot Svezdny Pik, 300 air miles to the west. |
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To local Kyrgyz and Russians, the spectacle of beefy US soldiers opens a new perspective. |
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It is still commonly used as the language of business, and many ethnic Russians cannot speak Kyrgyz. |
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Like Alice through the looking glass, the Russians have entered a French version of wonderland, full of bounty. |
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Montgomery wanted the Allies to use the power they had to get to Berlin before the Russians. |
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Raivio, a Lapp, had fought the Russians in Finland and escaped to America as a ship's crew member. |
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In 1993, according to Latvian government statistics, 53.5 percent of inhabitants were ethnic Latvians, while 33.5 percent were Russians. |
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He had a run in with some Russians at a laundromat in Brooklyn not too long ago, and he's been two bricks shy of a load ever since. |
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The interrogations were conducted by Russians, Germans, Hungarians, etc, all of them members of their respective communist parties. |
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Hitler made a deliberate distinction between his plans for the Russians, and his intentions towards the Anglo-Saxons. |
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In 1989, Russians and Armenians each made up 5.6 percent of the population. |
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The pair had not seen one another since their Stalag camp was liberated by the Russians. |
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Serfdom did not reach them, and they looked on European Russians as lickspittles and prided themselves on their lack of deference to the centre. |
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Ironically, the only unnaturalised Russians to be sent back were a community of Lithuanian miners who had settled in Scotland. |
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The Russians and Lithuanians were quite active as well, firing one rider after the next off the front. |
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The entire region was plundered in the following centuries by invading Poles, Lithuanians, Swedes, Germans, and most recently Russians. |
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Until the 1930 census, the U.S. government lumped Latvians in with Lithuanians and Russians. |
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Played by two women, their portrayal of the huffy, roly-poly cartoon-like Russians was very amusing. |
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This week, they impounded an east European ship, arresting its 22-man crew, 18 of whom were Russians. |
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There is no doubt that the Allies knew about the death camps long before the Russians liberated Majdanek. |
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There were Ashkenazim and Sephardim, Ethiopians and Russians, American students and fourth-generation sabras. |
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In May 1945 it was the Russians who hoisted their flag over the ruins of the Reichstag building in Berlin. |
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We cannot, however, expect that there will be any yield given to the French, Germans and Russians. |
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Scots and Russians are very similar in terms of how open and friendly they are. |
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For most Russians the nation's favourite holiday outshadowed political concerns. |
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However, Napoleon's invasion led the Russians to make peace with the Turks. |
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It was not so easy for the Russians in Chechnya after the invasion of the Russian army. |
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They told us that the Russians would never accept National Missile Defense. |
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The Finns had been told the precise terms the Russians wanted on February 23rd. |
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It relied on what the French or Russians did and the actions of one would provoke a German response and not the other way round. |
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Areas captured by the Germans during the day, were re-taken by the Russians at night. |
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All Europeans, including Russians, enjoy the same values and the conflict has ceased to exist. |
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He is not partisan and dealt equally with the callousness of the Chechen fighters and that of the Russians. |
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The most flagrant example that showed how the Russians disposed of political dissenters took place in Czechoslovakia. |
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Lex's quite excellent regard for the incredible sacrifices of the Russians during the war is a perspective we need to take. |
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He could easily outmaneuver the Russians and use tactics to cross the T twice, inflicting maximum damage on the slower Russian fleet. |
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Since the tenth century, the Tajiks have been ruled by others, mostly Turks and Russians. |
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Whether in the end it was the Hungarians who chased the Russians out or not is debatable. |
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Poles, Hungarians, and ordinary Russians saw us as credible champions of their democratic aspirations. |
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At different times it has been occupied by Persians, Byzantines, Arabs, Mongols, Turks and Russians. |
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He was virtual ruler of the Empire, but also personally took the field in the Turkish campaign against the Russians in the Caucasus. |
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There was the festival's customary unlimited bowling, plenty of oat sodas, sarsaparillas and White Russians. |
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Saracens themselves, and Italians, and Russians, were attentive to the multitudes of Mongols and Tartars. |
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There is official support of minority groups such as Russians, Koreans, and Tatars. |
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From 1316 to 1341 Vytenis' brother and successor, Grand Duke Gediminas, expanded the empire as far as Kiev against the Tatars and Russians. |
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On the other side, Russians and Tatars, who fled the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution and the Russian Civil War. |
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The Russians, Scandinavians, and Swiss, in contrast, all gather wild mushrooms with great enthusiasm, thronging the woods every autumn. |
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The north polar domain has been explored and developed by Canada and the USA, by the British and Scandinavians, and by the Russians. |
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The group scattered when police arrived, but police were able to detain 3 Thai men and 4 Russians. |
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Thousands of Russians are now studying in America and Europe, and have acquired marketable skills, enabling them to land lucrative jobs. |
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The Russians do possess and have clearly announced their vital security interest in the Baltic region. |
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The Russians are primarily eastern Slavs, but many also have a Finnish, Siberian, Turkish, or Baltic heritage. |
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From her experience in the east she regarded the Russians as barbarians, unused to the basic norms of civilised life. |
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Two of the greatest Second World War intelligence coups were achieved by the Russians. |
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Russians and Armenians were mentioned predominantly in crime-related articles. |
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Second, most Russians believe that tight money has not worked during the last four years. |
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During a lull in the fighting, some of the Russians tried to wave down a column of armored vehicles using white flags, but they were ignored. |
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The Serbs will always like the Russians, for reasons rooted in history and religion. |
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Russians and Belgians had their shops smashed if they were in the way of the mob or went unrecognized as allies. |
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And also she has scoured the world to see what successful countries like the Russians and the Belgians are doing. |
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The Russians gradually colonized the north, establishing Cossack settlements in the lowlands. |
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If the Russians kill me, I'm a shahid, a martyr who goes immediately to heaven. |
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The Russians scored the first goal of the game early in the second and only made it 2-0 midway through the middle frame. |
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The sooner the new Bush team communicates this message to the Russians the better. |
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The politics of John Heartfield's collages and the work of the Russians in the 1920s have not lost their verve and bite. |
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Twenty-eight suspects were arrested in the joint operation, among them Moldavians, Romanians, Armenians, Poles, Russians and Czechs. |
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In the middle of the tumult bleached blonde Russians buy up sackloads of polyester clothes and packets of tea. |
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This is a laid back clubby bar that attracts middle class Russians and moneyed ex-pats plus local and foreign students into techno and acid jazz. |
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The Soviets and Russians have consistently designed sniper weapons with open sights readily usable under the scope. |
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Only a small mistake on a twizzle during a footwork sequence kept the Canadians behind the Russians. |
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They are followed by other Europeans such as Russians, Ukrainians, Romanians and experts from the Baltic republics. |
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Such persons include ethnic Albanians, Kurds from Turkey, Moldovans, Ukrainians and Russians. |
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There is a large community of Russians and smaller communities of Ukrainians, Belarusans, and Finns. |
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They were replaced predominantly by Russians, followed by Ukrainians and Belorussians. |
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After Russians and Ukrainians, the Tatars are the most populous ethnic group in the Russian Federation. |
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Did they think that a movie about Russia would be somehow unauthentic if the characters sounded like, you know, Russians? |
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In L.A., the celebrities are drinking Skinny White Russians using soy milk or skim milk. |
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But the attempt was thwarted when the Russians landed in the town and found it full of aging, hairy, flabby Italian men playing bocce. |
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Several of the Slavic states of eastern Europe aided the refugees, while many Russians settled in Paris, Berlin, and the western hemisphere. |
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My ward was made up of Polish, Ukrainians, Russians, Greeks, Slovaks, Appalachians, Puerto Ricans, blacks. |
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Northern Baptists had organized training schools for Hungarians, Slovaks, Poles, Russians, and Italians. |
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Ironically, the only unnaturalised Russians to he sent back were a community of Lithuanian miners who had settled in Scotland. |
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If the Russians win one game, I will eat this column shredded at high noon in a bowl of borscht on the front steps of the Russian Embassy. |
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Russians were recognized as pre-eminent in soil science and petroleum chemistry. |
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Increased spending on NASA throughout the early 1960s was rationalized as an investment in beating the Russians in the space race. |
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We travel up in the Soyuz capsule the Russians have been using since the Mir space station. |
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The Russians had the space station Mir in orbit and American astronauts were on board for lengthy visits. |
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And, of course, you can continue to have offensive weapon builddown, as we are doing unilaterally in this country and as the Russians are doing. |
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Greeks, Turks, Russians, and even Bulgarians tend to claim the recipe as their own. |
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The Russians discovered, among other documents, false identity papers, including a Sudanese passport that he sometimes used. |
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Tatars and Russians also subscribe to the same school of hospitality, centring around the samovar and large arrays of buttery pastries. |
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Tales of the Northmen, Tales of the Russians, and the legends of Siegfried and Dietrich followed. |
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Even nubile young Russians don't seem so attractive at that time in the morning. |
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Shortly thereafter, both the Russians and Americans withdrew their occupation forces except for advisory personnel. |
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The oligarchs are greatly resented by large numbers of Russians who did not benefit from the privatisation of state property. |
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By making their fortunes on the backs of common Russians, the oligarchs themselves are a pretty unsympathetic lot. |
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While oligarchs grow rich and a significant number of Russians are impoverished, a multipart economy has developed. |
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They were once citizens of the same country as Russians, and they share the same past and historical fate. |
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The Germans mostly remained on the defensive in the west in 1915, while chasing the Russians out of Poland. |
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They know a veto from the French, Russians or Chinese will kill it stone dead. |
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The Russians clearly took folk dances and stylized them so they became part of the ballet vocabulary. |
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The Chechens met the Russians in urban combat in Grozny and soon Chechen snipers took a toll on Russian forces. |
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All the better, if the chervonets manages to crowd out the U.S. dollar and Russians start using it as an alternative savings currency. |
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The Russians held the city against superior forces, when food and ammunition had virtually given out. |
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In fact, when the Russians left the country in 1834, the czar and the sultan chose the hospodars themselves. |
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In fact, many neighboring peoples, including Russians, speak Chukchi as a second language. |
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Russians are buying up London property as a way to protect their money against the instability at home. |
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Neither Galeotti nor Soldatov said the Russians operated a database on that level. |
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He spied for the Russians and is now serving a life sentence. |
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They wanted to ram that fact down the throat of would-be rivals, like the Russians, and even longtime friends, like the French. |
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The triple line of fortifications constructed on the land side in the fifth century had held off attacks by Goths, Persians, Avars, Bulgars, Russians, and especially Arabs. |
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Russians know they could do worse than Putin as president, and the West should keep in mind just how bad a successor might be. |
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The Russians appear to have been satisfied when Plotnikov agreed to leave Dagestan. |
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Even those who did fight against the Russians played only a marginal role in determining the outcome of the war. |
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Remarkably this German woman, Frau Fuchs, and her husband, an ambulance driver, not only took them in but harboured them until the Russians entered Dresden. |
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The Russians were fighting for the protection of their Slav kith and kin, for the defence of their national honour, and to fulfil their obligations to their ally France. |
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As long as they stayed out of NATO's hair, that is, the Russians could go on make-believing that they were playing a crucial role in the occupation of Kosovo. |
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According to him, many unwaged Russians survive on handouts from friends and relatives, subsistence agriculture, casual labour, petty trading or petty crime. |
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Still, Samore added that on two occasions the Russians had discreetly warned Assad about using the weapons. |
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To young and talented Russians seeking political changes in the country, the new campaign by nashi is a bad sign. |
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The Russians, who abstained rather than using their veto, were horrified to see how quickly R2P morphed into regime change. |
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The president should engage directly with President Vladimir Putin to get the Russians onboard. |
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Japan's forces in northeast Asia, known as the Kwantung Army, had already tangled with the Russians in 1939 when the Japanese tried to invade Mongolia. |
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During the Cold War, it was the Russians who left their mark. |
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The regime aimed to transform the country into a typical Soviet one, and many native Latvians were deported and Russians brought in to help achieve this. |
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But Russia kept getting bigger, mostly by killing, oppressing, and annoying Russians. |
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To the millions of Russians who listen to echo both on the radio and online, the idea of life without echo is unthinkable. |
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The Russians know some of the key alawite flag rank officers in the military quite well. |
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Increasingly, it is not the super-rich Russians, but the wealthy middle class who are changing the shape of London property. |
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Local leaderships and administrators everywhere were expected to work in the local language, which implied a lesser role for Russians outside the Russian Republic. |
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Such helmets were used in inter-tribal wars and during the first military encounters between the Tlingits and the Russians at the turn of the nineteenth century. |
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It appears the two Russians were the likely operatives and the Turk was more of a facilitator. |
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But many felt heartbroken and humiliated watching that television coverage of the splashy celebrations among the Russians. |
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Tallinn, he boasts, is a favorite destination for liberal Russians seeking escape from their more authoritarian society. |
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The Russians naively think the Chinese view them as valuable partners in opposing American hegemony. |
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When it comes to invading foreign countries on false or flimsy pretexts, the Russians have lots of company. |
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Isn't it more likely that the transatlantic dialogue didn't take place because the Germans were betting too one-sidedly, first on the French and later on the Russians? |
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Weight of numbers alone suggests the Russians hold all the aces this year. |
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The Soviet invasion of 1979 and the US's use of the mujahedin as a proxy force with which to fight the Russians, also remains fertile ground for historical investigation. |
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The spies and the generals want to deny the Russians the overflight rights for its latest surveillance planes. |
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This is the 45th anniversary of the Apollo moon landings, a feat of rocketry that the Russians have never matched. |
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I was lodged with her when the Russians invaded Czechoslovakia. |
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If in the early eighteenth century snuffboxes were little known to the Russians, as the century progressed they made and bought them in notably larger numbers. |
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At the time the Roumanian army consisted of over a million Russians, and they with millions of Roumanian refugees were all trapped in a corner of Moldavia. |
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The Russians use the aircraft today to monitor U.S. nuclear weapons as part of arms control agreements between both countries. |
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It is traditionally a winter retreat for royals such as Prince Michael of Kent and King Juan Carlos of Spain, but it is fast becoming a playground for nouveau riche Russians. |
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The direct transfer of wealth and material from conquered peoples, as practised by the Romans, the British, and even the Russians after 1945, just hasn't happened. |
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The Financial Times explains this morning that Cyprus is more than a place where rich Russians stash cash. |
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In the Georgian conflict, as in the more subtle variants of energy diplomacy, Russians have shown a harshly utilitarian asperity in connecting means and ends. |
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For such an effort to have been mounted so quickly, and for the Russians to have assented to outside help so speedily, speaks volumes for all concerned. |
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The gramercy has prepared for the screening by keeping White Russians pre-mixed behind the bars. |
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I know plenty of Italians, Spaniards, Irish, Serbs, Croatians, Greeks, Portuguese, French, and Russians who have black hair, dark eyes, and olive skin. |
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A third of Russians believe gay people should be medically or psychologically treated. |
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It was Russians who first built up a caviar industry on Iranian shores. |
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More and more Russians spectators are attending Finland's musical events. |
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Whatever we do now, we have to be mindful that the Russians have been preparing for something else. |
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So, if you did see women in Korea modelling underwear, in catalogues or on posters in department stores, it would always be western women, or Russians. |
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Annexation, he claimed, is simply protecting the Crimea and all its peoples, not just the ethnic Russians. |
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Have the Russians already digested the lesson that a balance of deterrents produces an equilibrium on the strength of which one can rest one's oars? |
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Yet the product that emerged, as the Russians soared and twisted and somersaulted, was one of grace and elegance and hard-to-imagine body control. |
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The Russians began to develop their launch industry as a commercial enterprise centered on the baikonur facility in Kazakhstan. |
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In some ways, however, the Ukraine showdown has placed pressure the White House to hold off on further angering the Russians. |
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After all, the Russians were about to mount a winter offensive of their own. |
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Putin would use such a treaty to persecute innocent Russians who have escaped his grasp by fleeing the country. |
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Although this legend is told in many places in Norway, it is favoured among the Sami people and features the enemy as the Russians, Swedes or just plain robbers. |
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After regrouping and charging the guns again, the Russians broke. |
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For Russians, losing Echo would be as painful as losing NPR would be for Americans or losing the BBC would be for Britons. |
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Russians believe the best way to dry out from vodka saturation is with a sauna session and a beating with birch branches. |
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But the Russians are blinded by their insane superpower ambitions and their take from their heavily mythologized WWII history. |
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The rescue mission saved the city when the Russians blockaded road and rail connections, trying to starve the population. |
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But there are deep suspicions in Kiev that the Russians only went to Geneva to stall threatened Western economic sanctions. |
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The Russians are practically landing with their trawlers on Cape Cod, and New Bedford is ready to lynch you. |
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The Russians in the room all clambered to their feet and stared at their shoes like submissive muzhiks, while the rest of us looked around at each other in bafflement. |
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Russians still make up 34.7 percent of the population, and other non-Kazakhs such as Ukrainians, Koreans, Turks, Chechnians, and Tatars, make up another 17 percent. |
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Given that the Russians only victory on their travels in reaching the finals was in the play-off in Wales, the omens don't look terribly encouraging for success in Portugal. |
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Real's defence of the cup has so far been unconvincing, even in last week's defeat of the Russians, but they are in little danger of failing to qualify. |
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If the Russians had dumped the bonds, you would have seen more of a reaction in the bond market. |
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Eventually, it was gifted to Czar Peter the Great as a token of goodwill between the Germans and Russians. |
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The Abkhaz coast appears, fringed with palms, oleanders and groves of eucalyptus trees planted long ago by the Russians to dry out the malarial marshes. |
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And obviously, the Russians always have a beautiful balletic style. |
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Sharma was a test pilot with the Indian Air Force when the Russians began to look among them for an astronaut to join a Russian space exploration. |
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Here he argued that Russians themselves did not want to make peace with Napoleon, and consequently Britain had no purpose in wasting its gold to invoke mutual hatred. |
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There was no need for integration and acculturation, and Russians maintained their sense of ethnic identity and confidence in belonging to a privileged class. |
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If the mass shooting begins, we Russians will also have to grab a colt, and aim at the enemy, unfortunately. |
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One thing that fascinated me on hearing that the Russians were bent on raising the crippled sub was exactly how one goes about lifting it, with live torpedoes still aboard? |
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Authorities were also right to insist that expelling the Chechen residents, as some local Russians and Kalmyks had demanded, was not a possible solution to the conflict. |
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By depicting 1812 as a time when all Russians were comrades with a single goal, it expressed the idea of Russian nationality without arrogance or chauvinism. |
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No such charity can be granted to anyone involved in the movie, especially given its casual ridicule of blacks, gays, Asians, Russians and, in a novel twist, Samoans. |
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Here are the Russians, they will punish us for our sloth and hubris, but if we make Johnny read better! |
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At times, the interaction between Americans and Russians below has been matched by the harmony above. |
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Ongoing tensions between Moscow and Kiev could threaten those supply lines, leaving Russians there stranded. |
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With the Russians gone, ordinary Afghans expected a return to calm. |
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Small A-frame houses, Russian orthodox churches, and many new wooden buildings went up as Russians settled the area in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. |
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In 1689, by the Treaty of Nerchinsk, the Russians abandoned the whole Amur country including Albazin. |
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By the middle of the 17th century, Russians had reached the Amur River and the outskirts of the Chinese Empire. |
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More recently, this area was settled by Tatars, Chuvash and Russians, who erected defensive walls to guard the southern border. |
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The Russians defeated the Tatar inland troops, burnt Archa and some castles. |
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On October 3, after two months of siege and destruction of the citadel walls, the Russians entered the city. |
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As Russians in other regions gather mushrooms or berries, Uralians gather mineral specimens and gems. |
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Furthermore, another three hundred reinforcements from the tsar soon arrived to join the Russians. |
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Although the Tatars quickly began raids against their familiar foe, after a short period they ceased, leaving the Russians to their new town. |
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Its achievements, including the extension of protection for Russians in the region, would drive even greater numbers of entrepreneurs to Siberia. |
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Over the next fourteen years, however, the Russians slowly conquered the Khanate. |
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In 1590 Kuchum raided the Tatars around Tobolsk who were paying yasak to the Russians. |
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Kuchum fled, but the Russians killed two of his sons and captured five other sons, eight wives and eight daughters. |
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In 1661 a man who was said to be a descendent of Kuchum fought the Russians in Bashkiria. |
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The ruins of Qashliq, when they were still visible, were also referred to as The Fort of Kuchum by Russians. |
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After the Russians defeated the Swedish army at Poltava in 1709, large numbers of Swedish prisoners were sent to Tobolsk. |
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Widespread hunger led to the mass starvation of about two million Russians, a third of the population. |
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Tunguses indeed soon made several attacks, however the Russians easily repelled them with firearms. |
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Since 1632, when Yakutsk was established in the central Yakutia by Pyotr Beketov, the presence of Russians in the Lena region became continuous. |
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Many of the surviving documents record his quarrels with other Russians and mistreatment of the natives. |
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The Russians were attacked and fled, some going west to the sea of Okhotsk. |
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About all we can say is that some Russians reached Kamchatka in the second half of the 17th century and died there. |
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Bering heard a story that some Russians had sailed from the Lena to Kamchatka. |
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The development of koch began in the 11th century, when Russians started settling of the White Sea shores. |
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First they ordered the local population to withdraw, thereby ending the grain production that had attracted the Russians in the first place. |
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In the 1670s the Chinese attempted to drive the Russians away from the Okhotsk coast, reaching as far north as the Maya River. |
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Most of the Russians withdrew to Nerchinsk, but a few joined the Manchus, becoming the Albazin Cossacks at Peking. |
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The Chinese withdrew from the area, but the Russians, hearing of this, returned with 800 men under Aleksei Tolbuzin and reoccupied the fort. |
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But Nikon encountered opposition among the many Russians who viewed the corrections as improper foreign intrusions. |
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In 1652 the Manchus drove the Russians out of the Amur country and the land was left to outlaws and adventurers. |
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The Russians had enough food to last until Easter, but were short of water. |
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The Russians gave up the area north of the Amur River as far as the Stanovoy Mountains and kept the area between the Argun River and Lake Baikal. |
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The Qing defeated the Russians at Albazin, resulting in the Treaty of Nerchinsk. |
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Other prominent groups include Congolese, Russians, Armenians, Vietnamese, Liberians, Ghanaians and Greeks. |
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In fact, though the Russians did not yet know it, the British had met with a reverse. |
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When the besieged garrison of Kaunas surrendered in 1915, 20,000 Russians became prisoners. |
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Because some government officials apparently talked out of turn, the Russians can now engage in ballistics blackmail with our allies. |
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Were Herat to fall to the Persians, this would give the Russians a crucial and dangerous toe-hold in western Afghanistan. |
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Now the Georgians fight the Russians, the south Ossetians fight the Georgians, and then there's the Abkhasians and. |
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The official hinted that this could be a bargaining chip in negotiations with the Russians. |
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Many entered Western Europe before 1917 in the luggage of White Russians fleeing revolution. |
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The descendants of White Russians who live in France, as well as some French researchers, all arrived in Sevastopol for the conference. |
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I'm joking about the champagne, everyone knows toddlers prefer White Russians. |
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Archangel and Murmansk were strategically important to the White Russians and their supporters for several reasons. |
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This band were so friendly that they invited the audience to drink White Russians with them after the show. |
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He showed up about four hours earlier than the rest of the crew and was already drunk off of free White Russians. |
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This only gave the Russians to Khanates of Erevan and Nakhichevan, now parts of Armenia and Afghanistan respectively. |
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The Tlingits thrived undisturbed on their island paradise of Baranof until 1799 when the Russians arrived. |
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Even inside Berlin the Russians had a difficult and costly time defeating the Germans until they captured the Reichstag. |
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After series of trials, the Russians adopted the Nagant as the Revol'ver Sistemy Nagana obr. |
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He promised to use all means at his disposal to defend Russians. |
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One person speculates about the Russians dropping a bomb on the town. |
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Look at all the new Beemers, Mercs and Audis in Limassol, not just Russians but also tax dodgers. |
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The Russians look foolish because they seemed to screw up at the penny-ante stuff. |
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The Russians argued that they had requested a time-out before Collins' foul shots. |
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The Russians would beat the Germans and Canada's overseas army would return home unblooded. |
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Under Soviet dictators, Russians going to Siberia were often headed for the gulags, or forced-labor camps. |
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He said the Russians ordered the crew to surrenderor or face Russians storming and seizing the ships and crew. |
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Russian cosmonauts still carry semi-automatic guns in space and on-board the ISS the guns that are found on-board belong to the Russians. |
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Growing up on a council estate in Manchester I always felt I'd rather be taken over by the Russians or Chinese than vapourised. |
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The train-ferry-cum ice-breaker was commissioned in 1896 by the Russians for service on Lake Baikal in Siberia. |
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A well-defined ethnical line is all that separates the Slovaks from the Magyars and the Little Russians. |
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The old Siberian Russians affirm that the Mammuth is very like the Elephant. |
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Later, Russians and Central Europeans Many land mines were laid, with 65,718 land mines laid in Jersey alone. |
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Amid British preparations for war, the Russians and Turks agreed to discussions at Berlin. |
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The British then proposed to send their own mission, insisting that the Russians be sent away. |
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Approximately two thirds of them are ethnic Russians, followed by ethnic Belarusians, ethnic Ukrainians, ethnic Poles and ethnic Lithuanians. |
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On 5 August, they captured Warsaw and forced the Russians to withdraw from Poland. |
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This would serve to relieve pressure on the French, as well as the Russians who had also suffered great losses. |
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Instead, the Americans lost influence in the Middle East as a result of Suez, while the Russians gained it. |
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The Russians and the Austrians were determined to reduce the power of Prussia, the new threat on their doorstep. |
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Later that summer, the Russians under Field Marshal Stepan Fyodorovich Apraksin besieged Memel with 75,000 troops. |
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A recurring problem for the Russians throughout the war was their logistics. |
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In January 1758, the Russians invaded East Prussia, where the province, almost denuded of troops, put up little opposition. |
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One of them, led by general Platen in September resulted in the loss of 2,000 Russians, mostly captured, and the destruction of 5,000 wagons. |
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The Russians under Zakhar Chernyshev and Pyotr Rumyantsev stormed Kolberg in Pomerania, while the Austrians captured Schweidnitz. |
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They then moved north to Varna in June, arriving just in time for the Russians to abandon Silistra. |
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Indeed, like the British, the Austrians were now coming to see that an intact Ottoman Empire was necessary as a bulwark against the Russians. |
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Most of the heavy fighting, however, took place in and around Chetatea until the Russians were driven out of the village. |
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The siege would continue until May 1854 when the Russians lifted the siege. |
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In the spring of 1854 the Russians again advanced, crossing the River Danube into the Turkish province of Dobruja. |
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By April 1854, the Russians had reached the lines of Trajan's Wall where they were finally halted. |
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In the west, the Russians were dissuaded from attacking Vidin by the presence of the Austrian forces, which had swelled to 280,000 men. |
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The Russians were reduced to scuttling their warships as blockships, after stripping them of their guns and men to reinforce batteries on shore. |
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The landing was north of Sevastopol, so the Russians had arrayed their army in expectation of a direct attack. |
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Reinforcements for the Russians gave them the courage to send out probing attacks. |
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Being outnumbered the Russians abandoned Poti and Redut Kale and drew back to Marani. |
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On 4 August Russian scouts saw a movement which they thought was the start of a withdrawal, the Russians advanced and the Turks attacked first. |
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The Russians planned to hold the line of the Ingur River which separates Abkhazia from Georgia proper. |
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Omar crossed the Ingur on 7 November and then wasted a great deal of time, the Russians doing little. |
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The Russians did nothing and he evacuated to Batum in February of the following year. |
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The Russians escaped under the cover of snow in early 1855 after Allied reinforcements arrived in the region. |
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The Russians expected to have an independent sector of Kosovo, only to be unhappily surprised with the prospect of operating under NATO command. |
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A settlement then formed around Manchzhuriya Station, the first stop within Manchuria for Russians. |
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Some time before 1700 a group of Russians were stranded and died on Kamchatka. |
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Despite the heroic defense, the Russians abandoned Petropavlovsk as a strategic liability after the French and British forces withdrew. |
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The Russians knew of Novaya Zemlya from the 11th century, when hunters from Novgorod visited the area. |
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He headed north along the coastline, charting the lands and searching for the regions sailed by the Russians 40 years previously. |
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