They view Russia through a lens of unending cynicism (and I would argue that is reasonably appropriate), but fail to realise America functions in exactly the same way. — Tzeentch
Again with your piece of pro-Russian propaganda? — neomac
You're responding to a simple statement of fact.
So obviously the Kremlin believed it was their business, and whether you agree with that or not, if you do not take warnings like these seriously, you're a fool, or you're the United States preparing to sacrifice a pawn. — Tzeentch — boethius
For example, if you pull a gun on me and warn me you'll shoot me if I take another step, I'd be a fool to ignore that warning whether I feel you'd be justified in shooting me or not. At the end of the day I don't want to be shot and I need to navigate the real world and not the world as I wish it was. I may wish you wouldn't shoot me despite your warning or then wish that someone would jump in front of me to take the bullet and so I don't suffer the consequences of my own actions, but if that's not what reality is like then I'm a fool to make decisions based on delusional wishes. — boethius
That the US would drop Ukraine like a hot potato the moment the war no longer serves US interests was as obvious at the start of the war as it is now.
You can complain about "complacency" all you want, but unless it's a surprise betrayal, which is not in this case, then that's not a basis for decision making.
People should do A, B, and C and therefore I will do D based on the assumption they will do what they should, is only valid if there's reason to believe people will actually do that. — boethius
The Ukrainians see the US abandon their "close allies" and "deal friends" in Afghanistan, watch Afghanis literally fall off the last airplanes, and then tell themselves: hmmm, I want me some of that. — boethius
Making decisions based on reality and not wishes or assuming what other people "should do" when they have no track record of dong it, is a principle of decision making so basic it even appears in Disney movies:
The only rules that really matter are these: what a man can do and what a man can't do. For instance, you can accept that your father was a pirate and a good man or you can't. But pirate is in your blood, boy, so you'll have to square with that some day. And me, for example, I can let you drown, but I can't bring this ship into Tortuga all by me onesies, savvy? So, can you sail under the command of a pirate, or can you not? — Captain Jack Sparrow
Which I've quoted before but clearly the lesson remains lost, but your philosophical compass should definitely point directly at this paragraph to see you through these conceptually rough seas. — boethius
Putin will be forced to use tactic nuclear bombs, now. European populists and men-of-honor save Europe with your indisputable all-knowing wisdom! — neomac
You still don't get it.
As Ukraine loses the capacity to legitimately threaten Russia, NATO can therefore augment whatever doesn't change the outcome. — boethius
Why is Steadfast Defender, the largest NATO military exercise since WWII, happening now rather than last year ... or the year before that ... when it would have actually been a legitimate threat of intervention as well as legitimate threat of moving even more more equipment and weapons into Ukraine? A threat that would have genuinely applied a lot of pressure on the Russians.
Because Russia is no longer under pressure in Ukraine and so this additional NATO pressure is no longer all that meaningful. — boethius
The problem with these people is that they've fallen hook, line and sinker for a story of American exceptionalism.
They view Russia through a lens of unending cynicism (and I would argue that is reasonably appropriate), but fail to realise America functions in exactly the same way. — Tzeentch
(and I would argue that is reasonably appropriate) — Tzeentch
Looking at other Russian neighbors, who want to see Ukraine become like another Belarus? :down: Another Baltics? :up: (What about where to raise kids?) Pick your poison? — Apr 2, 2024
Is it then your assertion that the Kremlin had no (reason to) care about this (E+D) and implications — it was no concern of theirs? — Apr 4, 2024
Maybe I'll call failure to recognize such like ↑ "Kremlin-blindness". — jorndoe
Is it then your assertion that the Kremlin had no (reason to) care about this (E+D) and implications — it was no concern of theirs? — Apr 4, 2024
↪Tzeentch, so, using the thread to air other grievances? — jorndoe
No one here is arguing that Russia is right in what it does.
This is what you can't seem to understand: my argument is not that we ought to look more favorably on Russia's actions, but that we ought to look more critically at the United States' — Tzeentch
I do believe the matter of Ukraine becoming part of the American sphere of influence represented a legitimate security concern to the Russians. — Tzeentch
Is it then your assertion that the Kremlin had no (reason to) care about this (E+D) and implications — it was no concern of theirs? — Apr 4, 2024
:100: :up:Second, your complaint can be easily retorted: my argument is not that we ought to look more favorably on the US's actions, but that we ought to look more critically at Russia. And if that is what makes me pro-US, then the opposite argument, namely the exact argument you just made makes you pro-Russian. You take Russia to be a lesser evil than the US. I take the US to be a lesser evil than Russia. To call mine a bias and yours not a bias, you have give compelling arguments, so far you offered questionable arguments. — neomac
Ukraine didn't threaten Russia, [...] — ssu
What mistakes had been done by the West, it simply doesn't erase the fact that Putin decided to escalate a frozen conflict to a full scale conventional war with the objective of continuing the land grab it started over in 2014. — ssu
The real critique of the US could be the too little too late doctrine in supporting Ukraine, as the US didn't from the start think Ukraine would have a chance to defend itself so successfully. — ssu
What genius says things like the above.Oh... How odd then that the Russians insisted for over fifteen years that it was an existential security threat and marked it as a red line.
And what a genius plan to ignore such warnings!
How strange that Ukraine ended up in the position that it did.
How very odd, indeed. — Tzeentch
There's nothing odd with that. Russian imperialists see Ukraine as the existential part of the to make them a great Power. — ssu
And what a genius plan to ignore such warnings! — Tzeentch
European leaders themselves have admitted they treated the Minsk accords as a temporary armistice during which Ukraine could be armed and prepared for war. — Tzeentch
You're completely ignoring the West's provocative role in all of this. — Tzeentch
Ukraine was simply a mechanism by which the US could sow instability in Eastern Europe, which is clearly the reason it sought to change Ukraine's neutral status - the key to stability between Russia and Europe - because it's the only reason the US would pursue such a policy in a geopolitically sensitive region. — Tzeentch
They might be unhappy of NATO enlargement, but as you should notice that the enlargement of Sweden and Finland didn't actually get much if ANY response. The whole thing was a non-event. Why? Because it's a minor point, just like humanitarian issues and democracy is a minor issue to the US, but it still talks a lot about those issues in it's foreign policy discourse.In other words, you're saying the Russians lied to us for 15 years and their warnings should have been ignored, as they were? — Tzeentch
If Russia makes territorial claims then yes, absolutely, my attitude would be the same of my grandparents generation. If it comes to fighting, fight like they did.Another question; suppose Finland is next on the chopping block. Would you also favor this strongman attitude of no negotiations or diplomacy with the Russians? Fight on till the last Finn, as it were? — Tzeentch
They might be unhappy of NATO enlargement, but as you should notice that the enlargement of Sweden and Finland didn't actually get much if ANY response. The whole thing was a non-event. Why? Because it's a minor point, just like humanitarian issues and democracy is a minor issue to the US, but it still talks a lot about those issues in it's foreign policy discourse.
Hence to think that the reason to attack Ukraine was to avoid NATO enlargement is simply false. That (to deter Ukraine from becoming a NATO partner) was already done actually by the show of forces with large military exercises on the Ukrainian border. Besides, the whimsical idea here is to think that what countries the US Presidents says to become members would really become members de facto laughable. That it took two years for Sweden to get into NATO should tell that. No, the real reason to invade Ukraine was to gain territory, create that landbridge to Crimea, create that Novorossiya. This is not speculation, it's a fact: Russia has annexed more territories, some that it even doesn't have control. This, plus the russification efforts done in the occupied territories, should make this really clear.
What is now becoming very clear that Putin was lead to think that the invasion would be quick and similar to what happened with Crimea. And the West wouldn't be a problem... just as earlier in 2014 it hadn't been — ssu
If Russia makes territorial claims then yes, ... — ssu
Do you have reading comprehension problems? Just as the US speaks of humanitarian rights and democratic freedoms all the time, so does Russia about NATO expansion. Are both lying? No, of course they care about their pet issues. But you have to look twice at the reason for starting wars. But seems that you are not willing to even to consider this. Somehow the World has to have these unitary reason.In other words, when a former, nuclear-armed great power talks about existential security threats and red lines for fifteen years, ignore them and assume they are lying.
Genius. — Tzeentch
2010 Jan 17 · Ukrainian presidential election 2010 Feb 7 · election runoff (Yanukovych, Tymoshenko) 2013 Nov 21 · Euromaidan starts 2014 Feb 18 · Revolution of Dignity starts 2014 Feb 22 · Euromaidan ends 2014 Feb 23 · Revolution of Dignity ends; organized unrest in Donbas starts 2014 Feb 27 ⚔ Russian troops ("little green men") start seizing Crimea 2014 Mar 18 · Russia annexes Crimea 2014 Mar 31 · Kharkiv Pact annulled by the Kremlin 2014 Apr 6 ⚔ insurgents seize government buildings in Donbas 2014 Apr 12 ⚔ Donbas war starts; platoon under Girkin (Surkov) seizes Sloviansk 2014 May 2 · organized unrest in Donbas settles down 2014 May 25 · Ukrainian presidential election (Poroshenko) 2019 Mar 31 · Ukrainian presidential election 2019 Apr 21 · election runoff (Zelenskyy, Poroshenko) 2021 Jan 1 ⚔ ongoing scattered insurgent attacks in eastern Ukraine 2021 Nov 10 · the US reports Russian military buildup near Ukrainian border 2022 Jan 17 · increasing Russian troops in Belarus; increased separatist strife in eastern Ukraine 2022 Jan 25 · Russian military exercises in Crimea and southern Russia near Ukraine 2022 Feb 10 · Russo-Belarusian military exercises start 2022 Feb 20 · Russo-Belarusian military exercises end 2022 Feb 22 ⚔ Russian "peacekeeping" troops enter Ukraine 2022 Feb 24 ⚔ Russia invades northern, eastern, southern Ukraine 2022 Sep 30 · Russia annexes Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia 2024 Jan 1 · Russia occupies roughly a fifth of Ukraine
Besides, please give us the reference where Putin has said himself before 2022 that Ukraine itself poses a threat to Russia. — ssu
And then just strawman about ignoring them and assume they are lying. — ssu
This is laughable.This is what you're proposing: that we assume Russia is lying about the security concerns it voiced for over 15 years, and that they can therefore safely be ignored and antagonized. — Tzeentch
Lessons learned? Not learned? — jorndoe
That's how crazy your argumentation is. — ssu
It's not about the justification, it's about what the real objectives here are. Does Russia have the right to annex territories is the justification part. But it has done so, hence this isn't about NATO enlargement.Except that none of this is actually part of my argument.
I'm not making any arguments about whether Russia's security concerns are justified, which is what you are doing. — Tzeentch
And Ukraine wouldn't have been a NATO member. Naturally NATO cannot go against it's own charter and basically add to it "countries hoping to be members have to have the permission from Russia to join". Hence Ukraine wasn't joining NATO. Period. Hence the motive for the invasion lies somewhere else.I'm making the argument that when Russia speaks about existential security concerns and red lines for a decade-and-a-half, one should take it seriously. — Tzeentch
Wrong. I've answered it. My grandfathers fought the Russians and so would I, even if I'm quite old. Their generation lost a lot more killed than the this Ukrainian generation has seen. Finland lost in WW2 2,5% of the total population. 96 000 soldiers died from 3,8 million people. Civilian losses were surprisingly small.Well, we have seen what comes of that: the destruction of Ukraine.
That's why I have asked you whether you would be similarly careless if it were Finland paying the price of war. You have yet to answer that question. — Tzeentch
It's not about the justification, it's about what the real objectives here are. — ssu
Hence the motive for the invasion lies somewhere else. — ssu
Wrong. I've answered it. My grandfathers fought the Russians and so would I, even if I'm quite old. Their generation lost a lot more killed than the this Ukrainian generation has seen. Finland lost in WW2 2,5% of the total population. 96 000 soldiers died from 3,8 million people. Civilian losses were surprisingly small.
Now ask yourself: has yet 2,5% from the Ukrainian people (or basically 5% of the men) yet been killed?
And I think you don't understand Finnish mentality on the subject. They have made consistently polls about the attitudes towards the defense of the country by asking the same question again and again for decades: "Would you defend your country in war, even if the outcome would be questionable". Hence would you defend your country, even if there's a real possibility of losing the war. The vast majority of Finns have said yes, they would. I would also.
And if Russia nukes all the cities in Finland and ethnically cleanses out the rest surviving Finns, then take as many of them out with you and good luck with that barren nuclear wasteland then. And when likely it wouldn't come to that, defend your country to get then a better deal... like staying independent. — ssu
The Ukrainians see the US abandon their "close allies" and "deal friends" in Afghanistan, watch Afghanis literally fall off the last airplanes, and then tell themselves: hmmm, I want me some of that. — boethius
Again no. They are not lying!Exactly. You believe the Russians were lying about their security concerns. That's precisely my point. — Tzeentch
.I have no way to defend my borders but to extend them.
Well, seems you don't have any idea what deterrence is about. Deterrence has to be credible and deterrence is to keep the peace. And luckily that deterrence was reinforced by joining NATO. And also Sweden joining NATO.The nonchalance with which you speak about turning your own country into a nuclear wasteland to deny it to the Russians, one would think you were a Ukrainian rather than a Finn. It's downright uncanny how eager you already appear to be for war. — Tzeentch
You understand that Finland not being in NATO would put Finland in a far more precarious situation than now? Obviously not. And as I've said many times, it's unlikely that Russia will use military action against Finland, but there are 1001 other ways to pressure our country. It would be far more worse if a) we wouldn't be in the EU and b) we wouldn't be in NATO.You understand this is exactly the type of sentiment an actor like the US will use to put you infront of its wagon? — Tzeentch
The nonchalance with which you speak of accepting Russian demands as a solution to get "peace" shows how naive your thinking is. — ssu
Five months ago here. It's the typical idea that Russia would have (somehow) accepted a negotiated peace... but it was the West that fumbled it by "standing firm".When have I ever mentioned accepting Russian demands? — Tzeentch
Proposal 2: These international security guarantees for Ukraine would not extend to Crimea, Sevastopol, or certain areas in the Donbas. The parties to the treaty would have to define the boundaries of these areas or agree that each party understands these boundaries differently.
Real peace or armstice happens only when both parties are incapable of military victory and understand it. Now Russia doesn't see it this way. It simply hopes that the US gets bored and that it can still get a military victory. So there really is no incentive for Russia to seek a negotiated peace.In your eyes, proposing to negotiate for a diplomatic solution is "accepting Russian demands", "appeasement", etc. — Tzeentch
It's the typical idea that Russia would have (somehow) accepted a negotiated peace... but it was the West that fumbled it by "standing firm". — ssu
It didn't happen, hence this is crying over spilled milk. Remember that years have gone from this.What's your grounds for simply ignoring these accounts? — Tzeentch
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