It’s an interesting issue, but perhaps on another thread about US-Chinese tensions.Apologies for the side-track. — jorndoe
In that case guess he has good chances with the hard-core Republicas, I guess.But DeSantis may actually be worse. He seems like a meaner, dumber, younger and less charismatic version of Trump — GRWelsh
That talks before Feb 24th show this quite obviously. It wouldn’t have been Hungary, it would also have been Germany. Just as a decade earlier the Wikileaks papers told how US official saw ”a lot of work” to be done then with Germany. Well, that field of work existed prior to the full invasion also.Russia provided that show of force the same year NATO proclaimed its intention to incorporate Ukraine and Georgia. So I guess it's not that 'simple'. — Tzeentch
A good question then would be: What is left out when we dismiss both feminine and masculine traits of a human?Gender differences are trivial compared to the commonalities between men and women — Judaka
Surovikin was with Prigozhin in Syria and the two worked well together. Hence Surovikin is in jail. What is very likely true is that Prigozhin had at least people that understood him, which made him do his ”march” in the first place.Clearly, there was a lack of will here, if not outright collusion with the mutineers. — SophistiCat
Why would there be troops defending a city deep in Russia when Ukrainians are nowhere near Rostov? Air Defence unit perhaps could be found there, but they aren’t equipped to fight infantry. Thousands of Wagner mercenaries could take quite easily the Military HQ. Besides, immediately Prigozhin made it clear they wouldn’t interfere with the staff running the war in Ukraine. They didn’t start either to defend their buildings. Moscow was different.Particularly puzzling is how it happened that Wagner was allowed to cross the border and capture a million+ city hosting Southern Military District headquarters — SophistiCat
Has it disbanded?So now that the coup is ended, Wagner effectively disbanded, — boethius
(the Guardian) The Wagner group appeared to be continuing some of its operations on Monday, with recruitment centres open and fighters returning to their bases
So why on Earth the weak timid response then from Putin and the references to 1917 and civil war? How many Russian politicians backed Putin when Wagner was marching toward Moscow? I myself don’t know that, so it’s an important question.There's zero evidence that Prigozhin has any backers in any position of power at all — boethius
Katrina Doxsee isn’t CSIS. And then everything said before and after doesn’t at all give your impression.CSIS doesn't seem to think his intention was a coup. — Tzeentch
And naturally of ownership and staus in the community. For starters, people behave differently to things and propertty if they a) own it, b) if they rent it or c) if it’s public property. Or if it’s not their property, do they know whose property it is.In other words, there seems to be a hierarchy of accountability in societies based on factors such as wealth, class, culture, etc. that feeds into larger issues surrounding how agency is treated. — schopenhauer1
Well, Yeltsin needed only to climb on an IFV and give a speech. And then all those milloin of troops (then, actually million) and their official leaders couldn’t do anything.This is just pure delusion. 25 000 troops without any supply lines or airforce or satellite intelligence and so on, are not going to defeat a million troops with supply lines and all the hardware and gadgets. — boethius
Yeah, maybe shooting down helicopters is just a form of protest.Maybe the action was genuine, and Prigozhin hadn't anticipated that his protest against the top brass would be interpreted as an attempt at a coup. — Tzeentch
Exactly: the countries embraced it.After the war, Western Europe embraced US leadership, economic support, and military presence — yebiga
It’s been said that Putin fled to St Petersburgh. Of course it’s a rumour. History will be written later.My guess is that Putin fled to Belarus, — unenlightened
Humiliate those in power, I guess. The establishment was already trying to contain him and Wagner. And do notice the enthusiastic response he got in Rostov. The deal he got shows how weak Putin’s hand was: Putin might have been worried about forces joining Prigozhin. Not so remote possibility.What could Prigozhin/Wagner hope to accomplish, though? Force change — jorndoe
Wagner troops occupied a HQ in Rostov. Hence if forces would have been deployed against the Wagner forces, the likely place of combat would have been Rostov. Now the Wagnerites withdrew from there (with applauding civilians on the streets).I don't see what troops would have attacked Rostov — unenlightened
The coup was stoppable…but likely would have ruined Rostov and weakened Russia internally even more. Putin and his chef avoided that debacle, but this showed the internal weakness of Russia.An unstoppable coup that suddenly stops, a civil war averted without hardly a shot fired - it looks like an elaborate theatre, but for what audience? and with what intention?
What next, pundits? — unenlightened
Quite the opposite. Russia can sign peace, just as made peace with Japan (during the Russo-Japanese war), with Germany (WW1) or Poland (Polish-Soviet war).Whatever the outcome of this, there goes any chance of a peace deal. — RogueAI
Isn't overcoming your worst failings one of your greatest triumphs?And shouldn't a holiday be based on our greatest triumphs, and not a reminder of our worst failings? — TiredThinker
Let's talk about women's bathrooms: — Hanover

The British have fought with a lot more people of the World than Americans, actually. So the I guess the US isn't yet the baddest of them all. Leave that to the English. At least historically. :smirk:Note that these countries represent roughly one-third of the people on earth. — yebiga
You'll be there when the US invades a NATO country that is trying to leave NATO.We have become what the USSR was, — yebiga
Exactly.Thus we are not witnessing an "NATO-US Conflict with Russia over Ukraine" what we are really witnessing is the opening gambit of an unprovoked Russian Imperialist expansion. — yebiga
