There's a reason I put it in quotations. They're "following orders" for the purpose of dealing with "outsiders". But they think they're entitled.except they are not leaving the site undisturbed,
OSCE: "Some of the equipment seems to have been moved" from #MH17 site. No clue which rebels control the site. No idea where black boxes are
I don't think the grunts on the ground know what's going on. Why would they? I think they're being the undisciplined and ill-bred individuals they always were.The OCSE observers are there to observe the entire site and hopefully prevent contamination/tampering withy any evidence. Instead we have mercenaries threatening to kneecap the observers and firing their weapons any time they try to leave the extremely limited area they are allowed to see. Everything they are doing is just going to reinforce world opinion that they are guilty and trying to hide something.
The rebels upper tier leadership has promised open access to international investigators. Hopefully they keep their promise.At least some investigators are in Ukraine now, we'll see what happens when they try to access the crash site. Depending on who you listen to among the rebels, they are supposed to be guaranteed open access to the crash site, my guess would be that we will see more of the same, threats and denial of access. The separatists are digging themselves a hole, the only question is how deep will they dig?
On the one hand, you're right. Media is approaching this with a "facts be damned, let's stick to the narrative". On the other hand if the rebels were only able to operate Buks because Russia gave them some, Russia is to blame. Giving the rebels that kind of tech is irresponsible and stupid, to put it mildly.CNN is going to do what it does best until all this gets resolved. Same thing they did during the Georgian war, Blame Russia.
Russia is always a "guilty until proven innocent" by CNN reporting. Will never get why
I'm wondering if Russia provided them with the Buk systems at this point. Because they captured some of them at the HQ of an air defense regiment. They may have captured others elsewhere, since the rest of the regiment is located in the region also, and could have fallen to the rebels. On the other hand the info I have says that the rebels managed to pull two partially functional TELARs, and nothing else, and couldn't get them operational.
This whole conflict Russia has played a silly game, where as soon as the rebels capture a certain type of equipment from the government, Russia would then proceed to provide more of that type. This makes it very hard to positively prove Russian supplies and their origin (not that the Ukrainians haven't tried). The real tip-off is the quantity. Like the Nona in Slavyansk (the one government troops handed over voluntarily before this got violent). There was one. Then the government troops destroyed it. But the rebels said that it was still functional, and it seemed to be true since 120mm mortar shells were still dropping on the government troops heads. After Slavyansk has fallen, we discover that there was a destroyed Nona there, abandoned by the rebels and captured by the government, and apparently two other Nona systems still functional, that the rebels took out of the town.
EDIT: Sorry, it's been a busy weekend. I'll make a news update post tomorrow.