How did I get embroiled in this conversation? I've created three posts in all, one of which is a simple inquiry over the removal of my first post. LolHow has it been for you to live "under one empire"? Because me and Christopher haven't been living under it, but our countries seem to be willing to join now on side. For me the happiness of Finlandization is all too clear as I've grown up during the Cold War so I remember it. — ssu
Why would they ever do that? — Olivier5
some people actually care about peace and are willing to take pragmatic steps to maintain it.
Such as not being part of a military alliance your massive, very militaristic neighbour considers a threat. — Isaac
↪Isaac The argument was already provided: if the baltic states joined NATO, it is most probably because they felt safer inside it than outside it. — Olivier5
what kind of likely loss do you have in mind? — neomac
I'm afraid it is the issue we are discussing. Read the thread. — Olivier5
The argument was already provided: if the baltic states joined NATO, it is most probably because they felt safer inside it than outside it. — Olivier5
I realise this will come as a surprise to someone who think civilian casualties are just like extras in a film, but some people actually care about peace and are willing to take pragmatic steps to maintain it.
Such as not being part of a military alliance your massive, very militaristic neighbour considers a threat. — Isaac
For example, NATO eastward expansion (which Baltic states have participated in) is a big, if not "the" big reason for the current war, which plenty of experts predicted would happen (including the US's own cold-war top analysts's and policy makers), and the current war is a major threat to Baltic security. Things can be argued both ways ... but people can feel safe independent of whatever the facts are. — boethius
It's not a serious proposal, just a Russian wet dream, including as it does that the baltic states ought to get out of NATO. Why would they ever do that? — Olivier5
some people actually care about peace and are willing to take pragmatic steps to maintain it. — Isaac
If Eastern European countries feel threatened by Russia and therefore join NATO as deterrent against direct aggression (it doesn't matter if they are justified), NATO expansion is still the culprit. — neomac
Why is that always NATO expansion is the culprit that can not be excused/justified based on perception/reality analysis of moral or geopolitical reasons? — neomac
I understood this to mean the removal of NATO membership for those NATO members already bordering Russia, i e. the Baltic States. — Olivier5
So he was clearly talking about the Baltic States walking out of NATO to appease Moscow. — Olivier5
Well, that seems of the two options you thought of, the wrong one. — boethius
you would need to argue that Isaac has the same understanding of "no more" as you did ( — boethius
Be serious now. He was responding to my post where I clearly wondered about why the Baltic States should exit NATO. — Olivier5
the war should be ended by a negotiated peace by the parties involved, which would obviously mean a compromise.
Of course, what compromise is achievable and reasonable compared to further war can be debated. — boethius
If Russia feels threatened by NATO expansion (it doesn't matter if they are justified) — neomac
my main point was to counter this absurd notion that we'd be surprised people might be willing to compromise to achieve peace. — Isaac
But I don't really expect a serious debate about that from you, — Isaac
But I don't really expect a serious debate about that from you, — Isaac
I have no serious peace proposals at the moment — boethius
Normally, it implies you respond to the post, not to something else. — Olivier5
However, if fighting the Russians is a moral imperative, then compromise would be immoral, so I see this topic as entirely relevant to the matter at hand, as that's how it has been framed in the West: Russia is evil, Putin is Hitler, Zelensky is Churchill, democracy as such is at stake, etc. — boethius
I meant that I didn't expect any serious response for him, not you! — Isaac
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