Neither — frank
I would like to hear what you believe China's contribution to this conflict is, that warrants being called the most significant player on the scene. — Tzeentch
China has been playing the situation carefully. They want good relations with the US. Xi does, anyway. The balloon launchers apparently have other plans. — frank
They're a stabilizing force for Russia at this time, at the price of Russia's future submission to China. Biden has pitted himself against Putin's regime. Xi says no. — frank
I'm quite convinced that Russia will seek to connect to Transnistria if some form of agreement cannot be reached in Ukraine.
A future invasion of Lithuania to connect to Kaliningrad is also not unthinkable. — Tzeentch
Let's not forget that Putin instigated the invasion, enlarging the world's largest country (perhaps temporarily), and might well be the one individual that can end the war today. — jorndoe
Not sure what country you're at, but here in US the Ukraine is for the most part a side show - it simply does not have any direct impact on people's lives. The possibility of a nuclear war is too abstract and remote for most folks to think about. If Putin were to make explicit direct threats to drop nukes on US, that would change the equation.if you wanted to bring about your preferred solution, what would personally do to help (whom would you petition, what political or social action would you take)?
Or do you consider the electorate just as helpless pawns who can do more than watch as the powers play it all out? — Isaac
My guess is that the conflict will slowly freeze, with lines not only far worse for Ukraine than Russia's offer at the start of the war but also without any actual end to the war there will be little repatriation of Ukrainians that left and likewise little reconstruction. — boethius
There appeared to be an acknowledgment in Moscow that its forces might soon find themselves on the defensive in Ukraine as Russia’s own winter offensive appeared to be slowing down.
The group said that “declarations of unwavering support” were not enough and “actions still fail to match the rhetoric” in a reflection of military assessments in European capitals and Washington.
The ministers said they reiterated their call for China to act as a responsible member of the international community
Apparently. There is a hilarious level of faith in this supposed "real Russian military," that is just waiting to take the gloves off. How many pairs of gloves must they have had on this point? — Count Timothy von Icarus
As goes the mother-load of sanctions against Russia, so goes US global authority. China has played a pivotal role in using its economic might to mitigate the expected damage that the sanctions were expected to cause Russia. As a result Russia's foreign reserves were restored, its inflation rate is at historical lows and its' GDP virtually at prewar levels. This stare-down, more than any results on the battlefield has fractured the aura of Western invincibility. — yebiga
The non-western world may have reached an event horizon. Whilst, over in Washington and throughout the advanced western world we struggle with systemic racism, equity, inclusion, gender dysphoria and argue over how the climate is changing. — yebiga
A future invasion of Lithuania to connect to Kaliningrad is also not unthinkable. — Tzeentch
However, the idea that Russia is in a position to start a second war, one in which they essentially declare war on Finland, Turkey, Romania, Poland, France, the UK, and the US at once, while attacking through Belarus, thus making them protect a large area with no real military force of its own, is absolutely preposterous. — Count Timothy von Icarus
↪frank
What are in your eyes some clear indications of China's power in the Ukraine conflict? And in a similar vein, what are in your view some clear indications of Russia's "future submission" to China?
Any specific events in which the Chinese influenced the war in Ukraine to their benefit? Or events in which Russia was made to serve Chinese interests as an indicator of China's influence over Russia? — Tzeentch
They're now using old model T-55 tanks from 70 years ago. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In my view, the Russians didn't seek to take large amounts of territory after the initial invasion.
If the Ukrainian military was just "better" then it would not be the case that Russia woul be occupying any part of Ukraine right now.
The criticism of Russia from the point of view that they aren't winning "hard enough" and "easy enough" is still Russia winning.
In short, we can deduce absolutely nothing from the mere appearance of old weapons systems in the war theatre ... and the Maxim machine gun, which the Ukrainians are using, wins this competition in any case.
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