A fleet of F-16 fighter jets were sent to Ukraine by the Netherlands nine years after MH17 was shot down by Putin’s proxies killing 196 Dutch people.

A fleet of F-16 fighter jets were sent to Ukraine by the Netherlands nine years after MH17 was shot down by Putin’s proxies killing 196 Dutch people.

Two US Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons US Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Matthew Lotz

Up to 42 F-16 fighter jets from the Netherlands are being sent to the Ukraine to support that nation’s conflict with Russia.
The news was delivered at the Eindhoven Airbase, where MH17 catastrophe victims were flown home.
Experts, however, claim that the presumably symbolic action was mostly pragmatic.
A sombre event was held at the Dutch airbase of Eindhoven nine years ago.

The occasion commemorated the arrival of the first bodies of passengers from flight MH17, which was downed over territory controlled by Russian separatists, killing all 298 aboard, including 196 Dutch citizens.

A fleet of F-16 fighter jets were sent to Ukraine by the Netherlands nine years after MH17 was shot down by Putin’s proxies killing 196 Dutch people.

By using proxies loyal to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who had just captured The Donbas region from Ukraine and was now the focal point of some of the most acrimonious conflicts of Russia’s 2022 invasion, the Malaysia Airlines Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur flight was destroyed in the sky in 2014. In fact, in February, The Hague prosecutors said they had discovered “strong indications” that Putin had given the go-ahead to use the Russian BUK missile system to bring the airliner down.

©AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images Before and after images show how Russia’s invasion has shattered the city of Bakhmut Before and after images show the devastation in Ukraine’s city of Bakhmut.  The 10-month battle for the eastern city has been the longest and deadliest in the war in Ukraine.  Bakhmut was once flush with greenery. Now it’s a gray city littered with skeletal buildings and brown earth.  The Ukrainian city of Bakhmut has been all but completely destroyed. Homes, schools, and businesses have been blown out by months of ceaseless combat and reduced to rubble, and most of the city’s people are long gone. What remains is a scarred landscape where thousands of lives have ended. Satellite images from Maxar, released May 17, highlight the scale of the destruction caused by the battle for Bakhmut, a city in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region. The horrific fight that began last summer is the longest and bloodiest battle in the war in Ukraine. The battle has seen some of the hardest and most intense fighting and tremendous losses, and it’s not over. Neither side is backing away. The Russian military and Wagner mercenaries began their siege of the city last August — though it faced regular shelling before that — and have been fighting to take control of the city for ten months. The Ukrainian army put up a fierce resistance, but it’s unclear if they can hold out against the Russian assault. On Sunday, Russian President Vladimir Putin praised Wagner for its fighting in Bakhmut, crediting them with the “liberation” of the ruined city. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy disputed that, with independent observers saying that the fight for control continues, though he conceded that the city exists now “only in our hearts.” While the city’s ultimate fate remains uncertain, the following images capture how a thriving town of roughly 73,000 people became a war-torn, bloodstained battlefield.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A fleet of F-16 fighter jets were sent to Ukraine by the Netherlands nine years after MH17 was shot down by Putin’s proxies killing 196 Dutch people.

Following the US’s declaration that it had approved the transfer, the Netherlands’ Prime Minister Mark Rutte stated the country will send up to 42 F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine, according to Reuters, in what may have been a symbolic gesture to the 2014 disaster.

“Our government drew this connection, in my opinion, very clearly. As a result of the fact that they received Zelenskyy at the same airfield where the MH17 victims’ corpses were transported when they were returned to the Netherlands, said Chris Colijn, a Ukraine expert at the Dutch media outlet RTL Nederland, to Insider.

Two US Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons US Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Matthew Lotz © Provided by Business Insider

According to Colijn, the tragedy also gave Dutch citizens a context for Russia’s conflict with Ukraine.

“I would argue that it truly clicked with people in 2022 when the conflict started. The same Russia that shot this airliner out of the sky and is currently invading Ukraine is responsible for both events, he claimed.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/the-netherlands-gifted-ukraine-a-fleet-of-f-16-fighter-jets-9-years-after-putin-s-proxies-blew-mh17-out-of-the-sky-killing-196-dutch-passengers/ar-AA1fQeNc?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=a7f5dea39dc245cea57811d4883eacbc&ei=11#image=AA1fQhdT|1

 


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