Those kind of comments would have more weight if Russia wouldn't have attacked Ukraine, which makes them a bit dubious in the case of this war. The imperialist ambitions of Russia simply cannot be denied.Ah gotcha, war profiteering. It’s all staged so that military industrial complex makes money they’re saying? — schopenhauer1
Some are saying that, yes. — frank
But at the end of the day, isn’t Putin/Russian military killing people to gain territory? How is that disputed? — schopenhauer1
Consider China's interests, particularly their eye being on Taiwan. If Putin succeeds in annexing a good deal of Ukraine through force, that creates a precedent that Chine could use to invade Taiwan. This means China may be more interested in Russia fighting on, than in Russia backing off ofUkraine. — Olivier5
your comment has that faint whiff of nefarious conspiracy theory. — jorndoe
For example, it's more straightforward that any number of nations (not just the US) are distrusting Putin's autocratic non-democratic non-transparent authoritarian oppressive leadership — jorndoe
Is it any wonder that Ukraine wanted to join NATO? — jorndoe
A neutral Ukraine, again? What happened to that? — jorndoe
That’d be fine with me. Odds are rather slim, unfortunately — Xtrix
Visualizing it, these talks (say in Istanbul) — Olivier5
You might wish that humanity was somehow different from what it is. The first step would be to start by accepting it as it is with an accurate assessment. — apokrisis
As for the terrorist attack, it is defined in numerous ways, Oxford for instance defines it as "the unlawful use of violence and intimidation, especially against civilians, in the pursuit of political aims."
Is the bridge in Crimea used for civilian purposes in addition to military ones? Yes.
Is it a legitimate target? Sure. Was it a smart action to do this? I don't think so, look at the results of such actions. This much was predictable. — Manuel
On the other hand, it is de facto taken to be part of Russia. Obama applied the mildest of sanctions when the Russia annexed Crimea. It has important military value for Russia, given the naval base they have there. — Manuel
Some make the accusation that Putin is acting in self defense, or at least defense of what is rightfully his client state. Because the US has been supplying military aid to Ukraine, the idea is that Putin reacted in a way that should have been predicted. Therefore the fault goes back to the US and NATO. — frank
You are being ridiculously sensitive, taking criticism of your position as criticism of yourself. — apokrisis
Why is it the US being castigated for Putin acting aggressively. — schopenhauer1
Why is it the US being castigated for Putin acting aggressively. This is the same rhetoric against Hitlers trying to take over neighbors and other nations trying not to provoke him. Im pretty sure almost no one agrees with someone like Neville Chamberlain in hindsight. Why would a country be at fault for helping an ally defend against an aggressor? — schopenhauer1
Yeah Putin/Russian military is killing people to gain territory. How is that disputed? Where is the dispute? — schopenhauer1
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