Question to our President

Day 2,627, 11:56 Published in Armenia Armenia by ChievoKevin


Three days ago, our president has proposed an Air Strike law proposal, against Poland. Being the only voter, the law was naturally accepted.

In the normal course of events, such an action would have been considered ridiculous; Armenia attacking Poland? Of course, this week was anything but normal, with the Resource Wars event.

Many of the bigger countries decided not to defend Resistance Wars, since they would gain nothing from winning them, and instead made agreements with smaller countries, so as to be the targets for AirStrikes, and then easily win them, gaining easy Resource Tokens, and thus future bonuses. Apparently, Armenia and Poland were such a pair.

It would have been nice to have seen an article about this project, and I waited a few days before asking for an accounting, but …. never mind.

One war is as good as any other, you might say, and if our ruling group wants to help their original country, fine, except for one tiny issue.
AirStrikes do not come for free: the launching country has to pay for it from the treasury.

Our President, in a private conversation (not with me), has claimed that Armenia has not paid a single CC for it.
On the other hand, there was more than 53K CC in the treasury , and at this moment, the treasury stands at 500 CC.
Since no donation has been made to the Central Bank in months, the only explanation for this difference is our AirStrike.

If Poland has paid this cost, we should be able to see these monies somewhere.
Unlike others, I prefer not to use words like “stealing” and “thief” without proof, but a person in a position of public trust should provide an accounting of the public monies he holds in his control, otherwise, it is natural to accuse him of corruption (or incompetence).

I do hope we are provided with such an accounting within a short time, and that this account is not something fuzzy like this one:

http://www.erepublik.com/en/article/resistance-wars-on-my-duty-2485831/1/20