Or what the rebels doing could be just a standard mobile artillery tactic, because if a battery remains in place after it has fired, it almost inevitably gets destroyed by the counter-barrage. And the rebel artillery can't really choose from where to shoot that much, either, it's all dependent on the positions of the enemy.
Wasn't referring to them moving, I was referring to them deciding to fire outside a hospital.
Well that's a dumb decision and I hope whoever did that was punished for that.
Well, it's not like the rebels can't just fuck up once in a while. I mean, there's evidence of both sides' artillery hitting civilian buildings, and I don't really think that even 1% of this was intentional. The rebels fire out of the cities, most of the time, that's true, but so do the Ukrainians when they actually have their cannons stationed in cities as well.
@mainiac.
While I certainly agree that russian annexation of Crimea what was spurned the rebels to action, I don't really agree that things would've been any more civil without Russia getting involved. The phrase that Ukrainian government uses, "Russian invasion", is rather misleading, because there hasn't really been any Russian sightings whatsoever outside of Novorossia, and there most of the people Ukrainians are fighting are still rebels who are occasionally supported by Russian supplies and rarely - by troops. I think we should call the situation "Russian intervention", not because I am trying to argue moral superiority here, I don't, but because what Russia has done was support an already existing rebel faction in a civil war and not just attack the Ukrainian border. Why am I saying this? Because I think that rebels still would've declared independence and fought even without Russian support, and considering how incompetent the Ukrainian high command is, what we would've gotten was something similar to the 1st Chechen war: Ukraine wins, but with huge unnecessary losses and absolute lack of stability in the region. This war, I have to disagree with you, is not defined by ethnic,
but rather by ideological differences - Donbass whats to secede, Ukraine doesn't want Donbass to secede, and nobody really cares about ethnicities, because both the Russians and the Ukrainians in eastern Ukraine are so intermingled that it's almost impossible to set them apart, and instead the division is at the national affiliation level: if you support Ukraine, you are Ukrainian, and if you support Donbass independence, you are not Ukrainian. That's why the majority of Russians under Ukrainian control aren't discriminated against, because nobody cares that they are ethnically Russian, they support Ukraine and thus they are our guys, allies, etc., like what happened in the USA during it's civil war, with nobody caring about whether you are from the south or from the north, but rather whom do you support. If you watch Simon Ostrovsky vidos, you can see plenty of Ukrainian fighters (including some from the Azov battalion) saying that they are ethnically Russian and that they fight not against Russians as a race, but against Russia as a state. And so, while I don't condone Russia sticking its fingers in another country's civil war, or indeed starting said civil war by chopping off a chunk of a sovereign country, I think that the current bloodshed was not initiated and is not driven by Russia, but rather by inter-Ukrainian political and ideological conflicts.