When you have already bilateral security guarantees from the US and UK (and other NATO member states), I wouldn't be worried about it. — ssu
At this rate we can soon hear from Russian screens that it was USA and NATO that attacked Ukraine, not Russia. — Anton Gerashchenko (Oct 26, 2022)
So you're just going to support the US efforts to stoke the fires? — Tzeentch
Reasonably clear (repeated) messages:
• UN 68/262 (Mar 27, 2014)
• UN 2623 (Feb 27, 2022)
• UN ES-11/5 (Nov 14, 2022)
• UN (Feb 23, 2023) — earlier comment
Oh but it does.Yeah, funny that. It's almost as if it doesn't really matter what the other countries think. — Isaac
Oh but it does. — ssu
When you have already bilateral security guarantees from the US and UK (and other NATO member states), I wouldn't be worried about it. — ssu
Yes.So for all practical purposes, Finland is in NATO now. Does that feel like a big shift in Finland's long term strategies to you? — frank
There are two things you seem to mix here. — ssu
In a post-truth environment where people are ignorant about the facts — ssu
Yet you should understand the difference of between a) sending weapons to a country and b) defending it with your own troops.If you have the world's largest military, supported by the world's most influential government, on your side, that's all that matters. — Isaac
Because you assume that Europe is just made up of Lichtensteins. What I noted that actually countries like Poland and others have done their share also. In aggregate it starts to mean something.when Tzeentch made that exact same argument about Ukraine's de facto reliance on the military support of the US you started bleating on about how important the support of all the other nations was. — Isaac
I'm not sure what you are saying here.The 'fact' about how significant multilateral agreements with weaker partners are relative to bilateral agreements with stronger ones, for example. Where's that 'fact' such that we can resolve this disagreement we have? — Isaac
Yet you should understand the difference of between a) sending weapons to a country and b) defending it with your own troops. — ssu
I'm not sure what you are saying here. — ssu
Now the relations with Russia are as cold as they were... I guess in the 1930's. Finnish Prime minister Sanna Marin (a social democrat) and the Estonian president have been referred in Russian media to be "female nazi concentration camp guards". So that's where the relations are with Russia. All time low. — ssu
The actual difference is just who are the belligerents. Try as much (as Putin does) to make supplying weapon to a belligerent an act of war, but it isn't. But as noted, some try to make it look that way.The difference is that one involves weapons and the other involves people. — Isaac
In fact, Putin gave a "meh" to the membership application of Sweden and Finland. The only reaction was that Russia doesn't want permanent NATO bases, which in fact is quite unlikely.At least it's just the media and not Putin himself. That would inch us closer to world war. — frank
The actual difference is just who are the belligerents. — ssu
I think Mearsheimer argued that the Kremlin decided Crimea is important enough for a Russian power position to grab. Maybe that's just part of it. Anyway, never mind me, carry on. — jorndoe
I think Mearsheimer argued that the Kremlin decided Crimea is important enough for a Russian power position to grab. Maybe that's just part of it. Anyway, never mind me, carry on. — jorndoe
I think he wanted to squash Ukrainian prosperity and block its efforts to join the EU. I think he also wanted to use the war to shore up his grip on dictatorship. — frank
then there's a land corridor connecting Crimea and Russia (Kerch is a bit skimpy), and perhaps connecting Transnistria, all of Ukraine being the "best" outcome, right? And, just as importantly, hanging onto it. All (seen as) up'ing Russia's power position. Others might get in the way of such plans/aspirations (the Ukrainians certainly are). Crimea seems to have some importance to the Kremlin. And Sevastopol hosts their Black Sea fleet. — jorndoe
The grain incidents in the summer showed the comprehensive market share of Ukraine for all to see. Now sweep all of that (on a national level) under the Kremlin. Control and profit from "The Breadbasket of Europe". Europe's largest nuclear plant is north of Kherson south of Zaporizhzhia, various other industries, ... Might look good on Putin if he managed to assimilate that stuff. Bonus. — jorndoe
Sometimes the invaders have been kind of extensive in activities (for lack of a better word). While still occupying Kherson, they emptied out the art gallery/museum there. The admin kept working there when allowed to by the soldiers. Pretty much empty now. One might hope they moved the art stuff out of the way of their upcoming shelling, right? But who knows, they didn't say, there's no paperwork, heck no piles of them having burnt it all, the stuff's in the wind — jorndoe
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