Fast, Painful, and Precise Proper "treatment" method for pseudo-states
"In Tskhinvali, the "Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Artsakh" (hereinafter editor's quotes) David Babayan met with the "Minister of Foreign Affairs of South Ossetia" Dmitry Medoyev, with the "head of the Foreign Ministry of the Donetsk People's Republic" Natalia Nikonorova and "Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Luhansk People's Republic" Vladislav Deinego."
Some Armenian media and Telegram channels have reported this kind of information.
Well, I understand, who doesn't want to be a minister? Even of a separatist and unrecognized "state entity". They are fed, paid, they have official cars, and degrees. Of course, there is a risk, too. There is a risk of being arrested, or shot by multiple rocket launcher systems (MRLS), but, apparently, the charms of food and travel in the car outweigh reasonable fears.
"Who are all these people? I don't know them," one movie character said, pulling out a gun. And not only do we not know these people, but we also haven't even heard of them. But we are well aware of who is behind them all, who feeds them, and, if necessary, manipulates them. Where those beggars get their money for tickets - this is just one of a number of questions we would like to ask. Everything is clear about Ukraine, a war is raging there, but I would like it if some of our structures react to the get-together of those "ministers". Diplomats need to react first. Not to the puppets, of course, but to the doctors of puppet sciences, who manipulate those puppets.
This means that notes from the Foreign Ministry are, of course, a good and necessary thing, and maybe even effective in some cases, but as practice shows, the Harops are much more convincing. Louder than a thousand notes, and words, of course.
All those "ministers" would be destroyed, as well as their attendants and guards. The issues of "separatist confessions" should be the sole responsibility of the law enforcement agencies, under the watchful eye of the Ministry of Defence.
The separatists have been sitting on our land for about thirty years, and during this time, not only have they not built anything new there, they have not even bothered to repair the old ones. A good farmer here would be ashamed to keep sheep where they lived.
The cessation of hostilities, even the signing of a peace treaty, and moreover, a cease-fire agreement, does not mean that the war is over. It does not even mean that the war is suspended. The war never stops, it may be invisible, you may not hear explosions or see zinc coffins, but its hot phase is temporarily over, and the opponents, having gone to their corners, begin to analyse the reasons for missed strikes, the preconditions that allowed the enemy to inflict the most sensitive damage, what was done right and what was not, and what other harm you could have caused the enemy, but for one reason or another, you did not do. I am sure that the relevant structures in Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Ukraine should think about this. If they haven't already.