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Policy / Politique
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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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---- Nous avons besoin d'un traduction français!
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You made the claim that Israel and Russia were pretty well in the same boat here. Even at the height of the current NATO campaign, it's pretty easy to see that that is not the case.
Actually, I'm not making that claim at all. Russia has a veto on the Security council.
I played international correspondence chess during the cold war. Right back to the 1960's. I received an assignment sheet and played with all my opponents regardless of their country and the political tensions. What I didn't do was discuss politics with my opponents. I am a chess player. I'm not a politician or a soldier. Others may feel differently.
Botswana 2-1 vs Greece with one game to go. Must be one of the greatest upsets ever, even if they lose the last N ending. At least I assume the scores are right (perhaps wrongly).
The final result shows a 3-1 win for Greece. The first two boards were draws and Greece won on boards 3 and 4.
The nearest any team on a top board got to a R1 upset was likely Yemen, the #100 seed, who were edged by Norway, the #14 seed, by the score of 2.5 - 1.5. The Yemen 4th board, Hatim Al-Hadarani, an FM rated 2254, absolutely crushed Norway's 4th board, GM Kjetil A. Lie, 2528, in an offbeat QPG opening (2.Nc3 and 3.h4).
Yeah, chess in the world isn't much better than chess in Canada. It reflects the usual politics and money issues, and the well-to-do lord it over the not-so-well-to-do.
But, sometimes, justice prevails.
In other words, as our lives tell us what to do! No doubts!
The 'Improved Lisitsin Gambit' has been scoring rather well of late. Frode Urkedal, 2500 FIDE, playing board 1 for the Norway '2' team, used it in Tromso today to smoke Vassily Ivanchuck in just 29 moves.
Dennis Monokroussos recently highlighted a 14-move crush by Loek Van Wely over Erwin L'Ami. It's not often you see a strong GM lose in just 14 moves (:
Leonid Gherzoy's position has been hopeless for some time so Canada was already up the proverbial creek. India's strategy of having their strongest player on board 3 will almost certainly prove prescient today.
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