For Russia to keep Ukraine out of NATO it wasn't necessary to invade Ukraine. A show of force on the border would have done that.
Yet for Russia to gain the territories of Novorossiya, to annex Crimea and the Donbas, it was necessary to attack Ukraine.
That's it. That's the line that you should understand. But for you it's The US/NATO made Russia to do it, as "offence is the best defence", and thus legitimizing imperialism. — ssu
Canada has so much wide open space, it can take even more than the US. — Metaphysician Undercover
In 2023, the global mean temperature soared to almost 1.5K above the pre-industrial level, surpassing the previous record by about 0.17K. Previous best-guess estimates of known drivers including anthropogenic warming and the El Niño onset fall short by about 0.2K in explaining the temperature rise. Utilizing satellite and reanalysis data, we identify a record-low planetary albedo as the primary factor bridging this gap. The decline is apparently caused largely by a reduced low-cloud cover in the northern mid-latitudes and tropics, in continuation of a multi-annual trend. Further exploring the low-cloud trend and understanding how much of it is due to internal variability, reduced aerosol concentrations, or a possibly emerging low-cloud feedback will be crucial for assessing the current and expected future warming.
I think we have to face up to the fact that the Russians think they're in a state of war with us. Donald Tusk has referred to it as a pre-war situation. I think he's wrong. I think it's an actual war. We've seen already quite clearly some very aggressive moves on the part of the Russians in various European countries. I think we're in a very difficult situation, and Russia is probably better to have some sort of dialogue with them, than no contact at all. So I don't rule that out. But I think at the moment, I'm not sure Russia is in a mood or a situation where it's going to be very easy to talk to Putin. — Richard Dearlove (interview) · Sky News · Nov 27, 2024 · 1m:4s
But I think it may also be Zelensky's attempt to, in effect, call the West’s bluff. Actually getting all Nato’s 32 members to agree to a quick membership would be very difficult, but in effect he is asking, ‘If not the Article 5 security guarantee, what else could be offered?’ — Mark Galeotti (via Andy Gregory) · The Independent · Dec 1, 2024
If he would be given the FBI, the end result would be that FBI likely would be less functioning and worse performing institution. — ssu
He'll just cripple the effectiveness of the department and sink it's morale. — ssu
The unfortunate thing for you is that the Russians have told us exactly in word and in deed what they want for over a decade - a neutral Ukraine. — Tzeentch
Or it might become reasonable to start making those items at home instead of importing them. — frank
It's quite popular among the mainstream media to repeat the idea that this is 'Putin's war', but it's been known since prior to the 2008 Bucharest NATO Summit that NATO expansion into Ukraine is a red line for much if not all of the Russian political establishment. — Tzeentch
One of the better takes I’ve read:
https://apple.news/AEToGjqpLR4aQxsRScVmgVA — Mikie
So the EU should start its own military alliance separate from the US. — Benkei
I have a fantasy that Europe will step up to take a bigger military and political role in the world, especially in Europe. — T Clark
• EU military as the highest priority
[...] — javi2541997
Under the current state of geopolitical affairs, there's no conceivable reason why Europe and Russia should be thinking about war, so what on earth are our politicians doing? — Tzeentch
The problem I have described in the past though, is that I fear that the US (and the UK?) will use European militarization as a means to create more tension between Europe and Russia. — Tzeentch
Seems like plain hostile acts: — Jun 21, 2024
So the EU should start its own military alliance separate from the US. — Benkei
I have a fantasy that Europe will step up to take a bigger military and political role in the world, especially in Europe. — T Clark
how to not "provoke" the Kremlin (and North Korea) — Mar 21, 2024
can all defense be narrated as offense, can all defensive measures be cast as threats? — Apr 8, 2024
Now creating that deterrence will simply get some people to think thatyouryou're war-hungry. Well, I'm not. — ssu
appeasing Putin will not end well. — Banno
Deterrence stops Putin. Appeasement won't. — ssu
Armus: I am a skin of evil, left here by a race of Titans, who believed if they rid themselves of me, they would free the bonds of destructiveness.
Picard: You say you are true evil? Shall I tell you what true evil is? It is to submit to you. It is when we surrender our freedom, our dignity instead of defying you. — Skin of Evil (1988)
Deterrence stops Putin. Appeasement won't. — ssu
I have a fantasy that Europe will step up to take a bigger military and political role in the world, especially in Europe. — T Clark
So the EU should start its own military alliance separate from the US. — Benkei
Even knowing Russia's historical paranoia about being surrounded and invaded, we immediately started expanding NATO right up to it's borders. Now it's enclosed by hostile countries backed by the US and western European militaries. No wonder Putin is furious. We blew it. — T Clark
Russians and Ukrainians will live exactly as befits brothers and good neighbors after the implementation of the goals of the special operation. — Sergey Lavrov · Jan 22, 2024
NATO enlargement is one of Putin's lines, but so is the artificiality of the state of Ukraine and it being natural of Ukraine being part of Russia. — ssu
Obviously, this (the U.S. setback) is a temporary phenomenon. America will continue its involvement in this conflict, in fact direct involvement. But we have repeatedly said before that according to our forecasts fatigue from this conflict, fatigue from the completely absurd sponsorship of the Kyiv regime, will grow in various countries, including the United States. And this fatigue will lead to the fragmentation of the political establishment and the growth of contradictions. — Dmitry Peskov · via Reuters · Oct 2, 2023
This is what distinguishes a true world leader from the people we call temporary caretakers, who come for five minutes to show off on the international platform, and then disappear just as quietly. — Vladimir Putin · via Newsweek · Oct 17, 2023
1. How do you impose democracy upon a people by force? — Srap Tasmaner