but if the handheld systems can't win the conventional war, what's their real purpose? — boethius
So, going by Reuters, the deal the Kremlin offers is something like ...
Russia halts military operations in Ukraine
Ukraine cease military action against Russians in Ukraine
Ukraine change its constitution to enshrine neutrality
Ukraine acknowledge Crimea as Russian territory
— jorndoe
The inability to Russia to create a modern vibrant economy similar at least to it's former Satellite states in Europe and similar to the Baltic states shows how Putin has failed in economic terms. Or put in another more stark form: how many of the politicians that have lead the these states in Eastern Europe or the Baltics have become multi-billionaires when in offices or afterwards?Your blind faith in capitalism is noted, but the charge involved impoverishment, not a failure to get richer. — Isaac
"The greatest victory is that which requires no battle." — boethius
The inability to Russia to create a modern vibrant economy — ssu
This is very worrying. Notice how specific weapons have been provided, as if to see how they work, without changing anything? Anti-tank weapons. Hand - held SAMs. As I mentioned Ukraine asked for some weapons they never got. — FreeEmotion
That does not make it right. Meddling with elections and installing your glove puppet as President may not be classified as a battle, but the morality of the idea is questionable. Are lives lost the only measure or is the freedoms lost also to be counted in the list of casualties?
War brings evil intentions to light. That is what it is for. — FreeEmotion
One does what is right with the understanding that it will usually fail — unenlightened
Ukraine fights and probably loses, because 'better dead than red'. Or perhaps, better to die in the gas chamber than to operate the gas chamber. — unenlightened
It's whimsical you then start to defend the largest robber baron of our times. — ssu
Predicting Russian victory is not a moral justification for Russia's actions. — boethius
Countries with No Military
According to the CIA World Factbook, 36 countries and territories do not have a military. Per the CIA’s definition, several of these states do not have a “regular military force,” but their national police forces act as de facto military forces. For example, Costa Rica’s Public Forces of Costa Rica are responsible for protecting their country’s borders.
Andorra
Aruba
Cayman Islands
Cook Islands
Costa Rica
Curacao
Dominica
Falkland Islands
Faroe Islands
French Polynesia
Greenland
Grenada
Iceland
Kiribati
Kosovo
Lichtenstein
Macau (China S.A.R.)
Marshall Islands
Mauritius
Federated States of Micronesia
Monaco
Montserrat
Nauru
New Caledonia
Niue
Palau
Panama
St. Lucia
St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Sint Maarten
Solomon Islands
Svalbard (unincorporated region of Norway)
Tuvalu
Vanuatu — World Population Review, CIA Factbook
Finland is praised as the archetype resistance to Russian imperialism ... yet Finland was literally part of the Russian empire for a century, and owned by Sweden before that. — boethius
Yep. It also has a reasonable hope of losing hundreds more of its people and not getting anything more than it's already got. Again, simply presenting one of the two options doesn't constitute an argument for it. — Isaac
I didn't ask you why they keep on fighting. I'm quite well aware of their motives. I might well feel the same way if I were in their shoes. I'm asking you why you encourage them and vehemently suppress any discussion of alternatives. — Isaac
People have to demand that their governments rule out war as an option, forever. — FreeEmotion
Yet to understand this war of conquest one shouldn't forget the culprit.This is a discussion ... Putin's not in this discussion — boethius
Your so sure the Ukrainians cannot force Putin to the negotiating table? Putin is already talking to the "neo-nazis", so I think his denazification attempt hit some bumps on the way in just two weeks.if Ukraine simply can't win. — boethius
Ukrainians have already surprised them. Kyiv was estimated to fall in 90 hours, that's less than in 4 days.The more-or-less official position from actual Western officials (who do have lot's of intelligence and so can base their statements on something) is that Ukraine can wage an insurgency ... but that assumes losing the conventional war. — boethius
Then you simply fight the war. And see how long Putin is willing to fight it and what are the peace terms. Or look how much the Ukrainians are willing to suffer before accepting Putin's demands. Or do we basically have in the end an armstice and no peace agreement, just like in the Korean war.If you can't talk Putin out of the war effort for just "moral reasons" and no concessions from anyone, then it's basically like just talking to a big rock that's blocking your road. — boethius
17000 antitank weapons in less than a week is actually help. You can already see Ukrainian troops with British/Swedish weapons (NLAW), German weapons (Panzerfaust 3) and American weapons (AT-3, Javelin). They did however mess up with the Polish MiG-29s. And what Ukraine would need is medium range surface-to-air missiles. The aid isn't just talk. The US Congress passed just two days ago a bill of 13,6 billion USD to Ukraine of which 6,5 billion USD is military aid. Just to put even this into perspective, Ukrainian defense expenditure was from 1993 to 2020 was somewhere like 2,3 billion USD and last figures put it at 6 billion USD in 2020. So just two days ago, just one country (the US) doubled that. Then there is the military aid from all other countries, which include United Kingdom, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Romania, Croatia, Estonia, Norway, Denmark, Sweden and Finland. And the European Union.So you finally start complaining about no one actually helping you. — boethius
I did not know that. It just shows how things can change over the years. I like the status quo, though. — FreeEmotion
With a small caravan, including a Cossack guide, Chinese interpreter, and Uyghur cook, Mannerheim first trekked to Khotan in search of British and Japanese spies. After returning to Kashgar, he headed north into the Tian Shan range, surveying passes and gauging the stances of the tribes towards the Han Chinese. Mannerheim arrived in the provincial capital of Urumqi, and then headed east into Gansu province. At the sacred Buddhist mountain of Mount Wutai in Shanxi province, Mannerheim met the 13th Dali Lama of Tibet. He showed the Dali Lama how to use a pistol. — Wikipedia
Let's say that the inevitable victory of Putin hasn't been declared yet. — ssu
Finland is praised as the archetype resistance to Russian imperialism ... yet Finland was literally part of the Russian empire for a century, and owned by Sweden before that. — boethius
Actually, the US had similar hopes with both China and Russia. It hoped that economic growth would create a striving middle class that then would "naturally" lead these countries to join West. WIth China there's a multitude of examples where American officials hope that the integration to the World community and economic growth will lead to democratization. In the case of Russia, they pinned their hopes on Yeltsin.The inability for Russia to succeed has always been a source of joy for the United States and the most glorious moment was the destruction of the USSR. The ability for China to succeed, however is a problem that has only one solution: when you are losing the race, push your challenger off the road, like it is done in Formula 1 sometimes, allegedly. — FreeEmotion
We'll see. Similar war as now we haven't seen. So there can be surprises. The fact that Putin is willing to talk with the "neo-nazis" does tell something.And, based on my own military experience, there is simply no way to win the sort of conventional warfare Russia is waging without armor and the heavy logistical supply lines armor requires. — boethius
Corruption is a cancer and deeply institutionalized corruption in the form of a Kleptocracy, which Putin's Russia is, has been quite detrimental to the country. Basically only high oil prices has saved the Russian economy. And a dictator that focuses on wars of conquest and building up his military won't solve it. — ssu
People treat everything as some capitalism vs [insert alternative system here], when almost everything boils down to, in any form of government and economic system, low or high corruption. — Christoffer
The whole criticism about capitalism is that it leads to corruption of the democratic process. That's the whole point. — boethius
The whole criticism about capitalism is that it leads to corruption of the democratic process. That's the whole point. — boethius
And yet, it can work well in a society like in Scandinavia. — Christoffer
Then you know what I mean. — Christoffer
Yet authoritarianism protects that corruption from the safety valves of a democracy... like people getting fed up with their corrupt leaders then voting somebody else to lead the country.
For example voting as a president a comedian that has played in a sitcom where an ordinary person accidentally becomes a president. :wink: — ssu
It's not enough for you to simply say that life in Ukraine would be better than life under Russian puppet governance. — Isaac
Scandinavia is not an example of how "capitalism works", it's an example of how socialism works and a free market can add some value to a largely socialist state. — boethius
The question at the core of your argument is really if it's worth fighting for freedom or not. — Christoffer
Ukraine index of corruption ranks it 123. Russia is ranked 120. Russia is less corrupt than Ukraine 2021 figures, by an independent assessment agency https://risk-indexes.com/global-corruption-index/. — Isaac
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