"In 2002, the George W. Bush administration decided to unilaterally withdraw from the ABM Treaty and started to deploy ballistic-missile defense systems", despite Russian protests. In
— Baden
Wasn't this because of Iran?
Eh, this was a mistake. You're just pissing me off. I need the information without any spin. I'll find it. — frank
↪boethius Thanks, I appreciate that. But yes, I remember being shocked to """learn - not long ago either - that it was Russia that destroyed 80% of the wehrmacht in WWII, but in literally any narrative ever, it's the US that gets all of the credit. — StreetlightX
It's the opposite of politicial nihilism to look beyond propaganda to actual real people and how they are affected by real things like bombs and suchlike and make their welfare the priority rather than some nationalistic ideal that is antithetical to their interests. — Baden
You ask me how NATO antagonised Russia and then you don't want to know how Russia perceives itself to be antagonized by NATO. What? — Baden
So, funny accusing me of spin while spinning the Iran angle. — Baden
I guess I'm more interested in the ways NATO actually threatened Russia. If NATO threatened some Russian's dreams of empire, that doesn't constitute a threat to Russia. — frank
Why would the US prepare to attack Russia? What missing facts would allow that to make sense? — frank
I'm not making normative judgements about whether Russia should feel threatened or not. I'm simply trying to help lay out an explanatory framework for their actions/reactions — Baden
So your point is that Russians in general have felt threatened by American missile placement? Or is it just the Russian govt? — frank
And this from a Russian angle could read as:
"Why would Russia prepare to attack the U.S.? What missing facts would allow that to make sense?"
So, why did NATO expand, why plant missiles in Eastern Europe?
Simply invert your perspective and you answer your own questions. — Baden
Villepin — boethius
Would you feel threatened if Russia became friendly enough with Mexico to allow it to place missiles there? I suppose most, if not all, Americans would. And your government certainly would and would act correspondingly. — Baden
So your point is that Russians in general feel threatened by the US? — frank
The war isn't contributing to Russian socio-economic organisation. It was a fascist military oligarchy before the war started.
Ukraine was a democracy in name only. Riven with corruption. — Benkei
The missle placement is clearly a direct threat to Russian power. You can add layers to that if you like, but there is no fundamental reason for Russians to be happier about having American missiles piled up along their borders than Americans would be having Russian missiles piled up along their borders. Again, there are lots of other layers and nuances you can add, but I don't know why that basic fact is hard to grasp or agree on. — Baden
No, I was responding to the odd accusation of political nihilism. — Baden
Written by the guy to whom it happened. He was hired to write Villepin's speeches but cannot follow the guy's thoughts, Villepin goes way too fast and changes constantly and switches from the highest concepts to the most trivial details all the time -- as transcribed in a post upthread, his elocution is that of a scatterbrain. Not stupid by far, but a poet more than a mathematician. — Olivier5
The problem is: this presupposes conflict instead of explaining it. — frank
For his way of packing everything together, highest principles and trivial details, sort of overwhelms interviewers and news anchors and he can make his point.
If you try to really get into the mechanics of the argument, there's all sorts of missing pieces, but the point and structure of the argument is clear; you can easily fill in the blanks ... and certainly "sounds" smart. — boethius
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