Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

Apart_Ad_5993 t1_jd2o6l5 wrote

Because they have identified the person who did it and is being brought up on war crimes.

There will be hundreds if not thousands more; if those soldiers are even still alive.

255

DeMalgamnated t1_jd3gtyx wrote

and if they are dead, their families will have to live with that stain on their house forever.

23

Zerole00 t1_jd3xlgo wrote

Bruh, they're Russians. Their families would probably wear it as a badge of pride.

21

crispy48867 t1_jd42jv6 wrote

Truth is never a matter of perception.

The shame will be on those family names forever, whether they feel bad about that shame or not.

−3

Duncan_PhD t1_jd7m7tq wrote

What if your perspective is the truth? What a silly thing to say.

1

crispy48867 t1_jd8vqdy wrote

That can certainly happen but truth is never dependent on what a given person thinks or opinionates on.

Truth just is.

0

buttflakes27 t1_jd40ujc wrote

"Oh no"

18

DeMalgamnated t1_jd8cjut wrote

yeah i don't really see many russian soldier families giving a toss about who they killed.

too brainwashed that they are protecting the motherland.

still boggles the mind how blind and deaf the russian population is to what their people are doing over the border.

i hope they mobilise all the brainwashed fools and they learn the truth.

2

buttflakes27 t1_jd9heea wrote

Mate, its the same over here. Very few people feel bad their son or daughter went to Iraq or Afghanistan and killed a bunch of 11 year olds to defend freedom or stop terrorism or whatever ostensible reason we were in that quagmire.

1

[deleted] t1_jd2ry8x wrote

[removed]

−36

stanleythemanly85588 t1_jd2xfgp wrote

several Russian POWs have been convicted of war crimes in Ukrainian courts of war crimes

52

TogepiMain t1_jd48ozu wrote

Why would any country try their own soldiers for war crimes? That's not a Russian problem you just described

−8

TerryWogansBum t1_jd6lwrt wrote

The US does it selectively. They literally sanction outside parties even looking into their war crimes. The war crimes the US acticevely punishes to a decent extent are convenient ones. My Lai? Couple of years house arrest for ONE guy. Abu Gharib? Extremely light sentences. Eddie Gallagher? Presidential pardon.

If you'd ever seen the aftermath of what they did at My Lai that "punishment" should sicken you. Hundreds of children raped and mutilated. An entire village massacred out of sheer bloodlust. And a couple of years house arrest (which caused outrage among the US populace, not the leniency but that any punishment happened at all)

2

penguiin_ t1_jd55yz8 wrote

Because real life isn’t call of doody where you kick your feet up on the presidents desk after he brought you out of retirement for one final job

If you kill a civilian in a war zone even accidentally you can be facing decades in prison. This is something those Russian apologists and whataboutism masters seem to forget every time they bring up the US invading Iraq. Oh, and military prisons don’t let you serve part of your sentence last I heard too

1

TerryWogansBum t1_jd6lzr0 wrote

My Lai, Abu Gharib.

2

penguiin_ t1_jd6mkyv wrote

yeah they fucked up on those to be sure, and theres still tons of stuff still ongoing like guantanamo bay for ex. but whataboutism is really stupid and doesnt actually really work as a comeback the way these russian apologist bots are trying to use it as

0

TerryWogansBum t1_jd7d5wo wrote

I agree there at least. Russian warcrimes are happening RIGHT NOW so of course they're the primary concern. But the US are pushing themselves as a white knight in this situation so it's important not to forget their crimes just because there's something more current.

2