Am I not. Where have I said that how the US has dealt with let's say Guatemala, it has been privileged to do that?You are making a moral argument, that the United States is better than Russia, and therefore should have the privilege to pursue its foreign policies whereas Russia does not. — Tzeentch
My preference for NATO is clear. For example having an alliance with Sweden simply doesn't cut it. Besides, as NATO countries have not participated all US escapades slavishly, it is an organization made of sovereign states, even if the US has a huge role. Just look how much a hassle Turkey did in the last NATO meeting.Your preference for the United States is clear. — Tzeentch
And if you really think this is just a moral judgement, I disagree.But suppose we say it's better to be under the US sphere of influence than it is to be under the Russian sphere of influence. — Tzeentch
Revenge? — jorndoe
There's no reason to 'pivot' anywhere. The US is perfectly capable of chewing gum and walk at the same time. — Olivier5
Really?A disguised moral argument is still a moral argument, and using 'realpolitik' to justify your moral argument is not actual realism. — Tzeentch
Either in NATO or with it's own nuclear deterrence, Ukraine would have prevented an all out attack from Russia.Your stance seems to boil down to: Ukraine is justified in wanting to join the EU / NATO, because it prefers the EU / NATO and you present an argument as to why that is the case. — Tzeentch
Either in NATO or with it's own nuclear deterrence, Ukraine would have prevented an all out attack from Russia. — ssu
Says who? — Olivier5
All this talk about future threats is nice but there is a very immediate threat right now in Russia... — Olivier5
Don't forget Crimea and the Donbas, those people's Republics Russia vowed to defend when it started this war (and perhaps all Novorossiya?) :roll:If the United States wanted peace with Russia they could have it tomorrow. If they guarantee Ukraine will remain a neutral state and will not join NATO or the EU this war would be over. — Tzeentch
You're looking at this from the wrong perspective. — Tzeentch
But just why is it so utterly difficult for you to admit that Russia has all along had territorial objectives for it's war in Ukraine (starting with Crimea)? — ssu
Right now it's clear Russia is going to take every strategically relevant region from Ukraine by force, ... — Tzeentch
If you want to argue that Russia has had these territorial ambitions before 2008 then you'll have to provide some proof. — Tzeentch
(see Giving Crimea to Ukraine Was Illegal, Russians Rule : Commonwealth: Parliament’s vote brings tensions between the two powers close to the boiling point.)(May 22nd 1992, LA Times) Running the risk of provoking Ukraine to new heights of fury, Russia’s Parliament on Thursday ruled invalid the 1954 transfer of the balmy Crimean Peninsula to Ukraine.
In a move sure to bring relations between the two superpowers of the Commonwealth of Independent States even closer to the boiling point, the Russian Parliament declared that Soviet leader Nikita S. Khrushchev’s “gift” of the Crimea to Ukraine 38 years ago “lacked legal force.” It called for negotiations on the future of the choice hunk of land.
(see A CRIMEAN CRISIS THE BLACK SEA PENINSULA IS THE LATEST FLASH POINT IN THE FORMER SOVIET UNION)(May 25th 1992, Macleans) Russian Vice-President Alexander Rutskoi was on a visit to Sevastopol, where he put the matter more bluntly. “Common sense,” declared Rutskoi, “says that Crimea should be a part of Russia.”
Russia attacked Ukraine precisely because it tried to join NATO. — Tzeentch
The Ukrainian side can stop everything before the end of the current day, we need an order for nationalist units to lay down their arms, an order for the Ukrainian military to lay down their arms, and we need to fulfill the conditions of the Russian Federation. Everything can end before the end of the day. The rest is the thoughts of the head of the Ukrainian state. — Peskov (Jun 28, 2022)
It is ridiculous to think that if Zelensky gives such an order, the people will lay down their arms. People are fighting not for Zelensky, not for the president. Like some. — Evgeny Vladimirovich
And the president said that we do not need Ukrainian territories. — Victor B
It's worth keeping in mind that Ukrainian NATO membership would primarily mean limiting Russia's ability to move/act freely. — jorndoe
Sweden and Finland seeking membership as protective measures (like Ukraine) have been met with a casual, yet vaguely ominous, response from Putin. — jorndoe
When Putin and compadres started rattling the nukes, NATO responded by dropping Ukraine's NATO membership application, and, after a bit of whining, Zelenskyy conceded the membership. — jorndoe
but this hardly constitutes proof of territorial ambitions. — Tzeentch
Access which Russia actually has even without Crimea. (Remember where Sochi and overall Krasnodar Krai are).If you read the articles you'll see that it's exactly the same concerns that lead to tensions then as today - Russian access to the Black Sea. — Tzeentch
(21st Apr 2010, the Guardia) Ukraine's president, Viktor Yanukovych, today agreed to extend the lease on Russia's naval base in the Crimea, in the most explicit sign yet of his new administration's tilt towards Moscow.
Yanukovych said the lease on Russia's Black Sea fleet that was due to expire in 2017 will be prolonged for 25 years, until 2042 at least.
The vice president of Russia saying in the 1990's that Crimea is part of Russia?
The Duma deciding that the joining of Crimea to Ukraine in the 1950's was an illegal act?
If those aren't proofs of territorial ambitions on the highest level, I don't know what is. — ssu
Access which Russia actually has even without Crimea. — ssu
Hence your argument would make more sense if it would be to have control about the Sebastapol naval base. — ssu
(21st Apr 2010, the Guardia) Ukraine's president, Viktor Yanukovych, today agreed to extend the lease on Russia's naval base in the Crimea, in the most explicit sign yet of his new administration's tilt towards Moscow.
Be it "protection of key strategic interests", "joining Crimea back to after an illegal act by the Soviet leadership" or whatever else, territory has been annexed and a full scale war is ongoing.Your position hinges almost entirely on the idea that the Russians act out of territorial greed (the "madman Putin" argument), and not on the protection of key strategic interests. — Tzeentch
all of this context matters, and that NATO / EU's role in this cannot be ignored — Tzeentch
limit Russia's influence in the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and the Middle-East — Tzeentch
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